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November 9, 2024 • 67 mins
We talk today about all the ADULT-AGED college students and professors turning to therapy ducks and hot cocoa to deal with election anxiety, some disturbing text messages going around the country blamed on MAGA, and -- finally -- end this week in the most atonal-but-appropriate way possible.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vorhees.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
I am Scott Vorhees. There is Lucy Chapman. Big thumbs
up this morning from Lucy Chapman. That's why she's the
best in the business. No one does nonverbal cues better
on radio than El Chapman. De Lucy, what do.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
You want me to do? You want me to say?

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Here check chief Bueler Bueller Chapman. That would be alphabetic order.
It's hard to start off here. Incredibly chipper. When I
look at what just happened in Amsterdam last night, there
was a soccer game. It was Maccabee Tel Aviv and

(00:43):
this is an Israeli soccer team. They were in Amsterdam
for a soccer match. They played Ajax, a Europa League match.
I don't have any idea is whether there's any additional
significance to this game. I know the Israeli team lost five.

(01:06):
Nothing that's getting smoked in in soccer. I know that.
Afterwards though, it turned into an absolute soccer brawl. But
this one's a little different. People were getting beat up
and forced to say free Palestine. There were groups and

(01:30):
groups of people chanting anti Palestinian slogans. Ripping down Palestinian
flags is what people said, this is how this started.
And then people started to fight back, and now the
Prime Minister of the Netherlands is warning people not to
fly Israeli flags and not to display Israeli symbols on

(01:53):
the city's streets. Things got out of hand in Amsterdam
last night. Five injured, sixty arrested, arrested, and what officials
described as anti Semitic attacks. What I don't know is
who started tearing down what flags first, or why people
were flying Palestinian symbolism outside of an Israeli soccer match,

(02:19):
if if it was anything other than to intimidate the
Jewish people who went to just watch a soccer game.
The video out of Amsterdam is incredibly disturbing. People getting
cold cocked and laid out there in the ground, will
crowds dance around their almost lifeless bodies, and it was
lots and lots of people. Wasn't like a group of

(02:40):
a dozen or so people, giant crowds of people. Meanwhile,
here in America, Quactavius, the therapy duck is on hand
in case you need some help this week, we'll get there.
I know you're wondering, how do I duck all or wrong?
How do I book an appointment with Quactavius, the therapy Duck.

(03:04):
I'll I'll help you. We'll get to that story here.

Speaker 3 (03:08):
Crispy Duck is good. I love Crispy Duck.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
Is that a breakfast Cereal? No, that is not that's
a breakfast Cereal mascot. It could be Crispy Duck. He's
the duck for an off brand of Rice Crispies.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
Yeah, it doesn't say snap crackle pop.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
It's snap crackle and quack snap.

Speaker 3 (03:29):
In a giant tree.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
It's snapped, snap, quackle and pop. Oh, it's off brand
Rice Crispies. It's Crispy Duck.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
Well done. Why Crispy Duck well done?

Speaker 2 (03:43):
Yeah, it was the voice of Crispy Duck. A lot
of people don't know that. You know what else I
have was the voice of You've Got Mail.

Speaker 3 (03:51):
Yeah, I was fooled. Almost checked my computer just now.

Speaker 2 (03:54):
That wasn't me. It was Elwood Elwood, a guy named
Elwood Edwards seven five No seventy four years old. He
died one day before his seventy fifth birthday, and he
was the voice of You've Got Mail for aol, Explain
it to your kids.

Speaker 3 (04:13):
And in the movie right, or did it say it?
I think it said it the movie.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
The line is you've got mailed? The movie is you
got mail. There's always been a question as to what
that line is. Is it you or you've the more
grammatically correct.

Speaker 3 (04:32):
Now he's dead. He's dead and we can't ask him.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
Well, it sounds like, based on all the news reports,
it was you've But I don't know if you actually
heard that line in the Tom Hanks Meg Ryan movie.

Speaker 3 (04:47):
Why Oh, okay, I got you. I thought, why wouldn't you?
But no, I see what you're saying. You're saying we
never heard the line at all, whether it's you or You've.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
I don't think we heard the ding you got mail.

Speaker 3 (04:57):
Yeah, it's been too long. I don't remember.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
You want to hear about the blue dot issue? Yeah, okay,
this is the latest problem for the blue dotters now.
The head of the Nebraska Democratic Party, our dear friend,
Jane Fleming Kleb, was celebratory after the election results here
in Nebraska. Again, an election that in Nebraska saw a

(05:24):
Democratic backed candidate for statewide office absolutely just get avalanched
by Pete Ricketts. But there were two open Senate seats,
not open, but there were two Senate seats up for
grabs here, and Pete Ricketts decimated the Democrat Preston Love Junior.

(05:44):
The beating was so bad and pressed in such a
nice guy. I think he called Senator Ricketts the night
before to concede. What a gentleman. That's how bad this was. Meanwhile,
some independent candidate who was working over at Kellogg's said,
for Senate no one else wants to, I'll do it,
and nearly took down a two term incumbent Republican not

(06:07):
backed by the Democratic Party, showing just how incredibly irrelevant
the Democratic Party is statewide. And when I say statewide,
you get out of the core of Omaha, Nebraska or
the core of Lincoln, Nebraska, you've got no Democratic Party.
You've got no Democratic Party. He also voiced that line.

(06:30):
A lot of people don't remember that one.

Speaker 3 (06:33):
Well he's still voicing it. Let's be fair.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
You got smoked. So other than what are we talking
about twenty four square blocks in all of Nebraska, there
is no statewide Democratic Party. They've got nothing. The days
of Bob Carey and Ben Nelson absolutely gone as it
stands right now. Yet the head of the Nebraska Democratic

(06:55):
Party Jane Kleb was very very happy with the election results. Ah,
look at this, the blue dot prevailed. We gave Kamala
Harris one electoral College vote, and as was pointed out
to her on social media by several people, I believe
the most overriding analogy was that's like saying, after you

(07:15):
get beat seventy to three in a football game, you're
out there going, hey, how about that field goal? That
was a heck of a field goal, thirty seven yarder.
You know you miss those, you miss You don't take
those for granted, they go in a lot of the time,
but you still you gotta have the snap, you gotta
have the hold, you gotta have a kick, you gotta

(07:36):
have blocking. There's a lot that has to go right
for that field goal. How about that field goal. But
while a lot of people are leaving those signs out
still happy, Hey, hey you Trumpet people, we got our
blue dot. You said we couldn't do it. You had
all the signs of Trump as pac Man eating our
blue dots. Yeah, you think it's funny. You think it's

(07:57):
funny to you, it is, actually, I mean, don't care
who you voted for on Tuesday. That's funny, right, it is.
It is funny the little red dot with the wavy
yellow hair and the pac man eating the blue dots.
Come on, that's just funny. Well, they're leaving the signs up,

(08:21):
but a lot of the political signs are going away.
And here's the story from KMTV three News when eighteen
forty no, yes, maybe no. KMTV three news now. Oh,
I don't know why I can't ever remember that. It's
some sort of time. KMTV three News now has a

(08:45):
story that says, now that the election is done, when
you're ready to take your signs down, and they note
in the story you don't have to take them down.
A lot of homeowners associations would have something to say
about it, though that part's not in the story, or
a lot of hoas say, look, you can have your
political signs up, but it's got to be during an
election season. There's you can't just have these signs up

(09:07):
all the time. People fight about it. But when you're
ready to take the signs down. The recycling organization Keep
America or Keep Omaha Beautiful wants to remind people all
those blue Dots signs, all those Harris Walls signs, all
those Tony Vargas signs. All those signs all completely unrecyclable.

(09:32):
You cannot recycle your political signs. Apparently the material that's
needed to have them weather proof during this time of
year means that they can't be recycled.

Speaker 3 (09:47):
What are we gonna do with them? Then?

Speaker 2 (09:49):
Well, you've got two options. Well you've got you've got
at least three, maybe three options.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
Wait, not even the sign holder.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
The sign holder, the little metal thing here, I don't
The story just says that the signs signs are not
The signs are not to be put in your recycling bin.
We'll put it that way because the city of Omaha
doesn't recycle metal, and the signs themselves, most of them
are not made out of recyclable material. I don't know

(10:20):
if anyone knew that when they were going around handing
out all the blue Dots signs and all the rest
of this stuff, like hey, blue daughters, let's let's vote for,
among other things, climate change. And then they found out
these signs are not recyclable.

Speaker 3 (10:34):
Nice, go one way to pollute.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
Yeah, so here here are the things you can do
with them. You can shove them directly up your or
I should excuse me in your trash bin. That's what
I was gonna say. You can shove those in your
your trash ban. You can just throw them away in
the trash. Now that's gonna be grating to the ears
of the pro recycling crowd. You can throw them away.

(11:01):
You can check back with the candidates or the local
political party and say are you collecting all of these signs?
Can I give them back to you? Do you need
them for anything? And I'm sure that that's got to
be a real fun phone call calling up the local
office of the Harris Walls campaign. Hey do you want

(11:22):
these signs? They probably say the same thing. Watch take
those signs and shove it right up.

Speaker 3 (11:26):
Your I'm sure that there is a lovely Democrat person
who would be happy to give up a little storage space.
Maybe they have some big warehouses to hold onto these signs.
It's only four years, four more years, you're gonna want
them out again. Well that's the one, not four games.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
For the blue dot sign. That's something you can have
for ever.

Speaker 3 (11:51):
Oh really, don't You can just keep it in your
own house.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
Yeah, you can just put a sign, put it in
the garage.

Speaker 3 (11:57):
Save our planet.

Speaker 2 (11:59):
That's what I'll laughed at with our late friend, the
state Senator Scott latin Ba. He lived in my neighborhood,
and so he was. His house was between my lean
to shanty and the neighborhood park. So I would be
pushing my kids up in a stroller go by his house.
And in his garage he had nothing but beer cans,

(12:21):
empty collectible beer cans that he'd have on display all
over his garage, and all of his political signs from
his years running for office, a giant like the big
signs latin Ba. First of all, it's a long name.
You've got to have a big sign. So it's been
all these signs all over his garage and walk by
and go, boy, the guy who lives here must really

(12:43):
love Scott latin Ba. As he'd be out, you know,
weed whacken or something. It was funny joke, I thought so.

Speaker 3 (12:49):
So I would worry what would he do when he
comes to the the the Scott or the yeah, the
sign and the billy beer because one's political and one's
but they're both political. Ooh, I don't know, store them together?

Speaker 2 (13:06):
Yeah, I don't. I don't, I don't know. I'd love
to trust me, I'd love to ask him. We lost
him about a year ago. So the political signs, you
can keep him in your garage for keepsake. Some people
that were interviewed by cam TV three said, oh, yeah,
this is uh. I might just keep it, you know.
I think that was a Trump supporter who said that, Yeah,

(13:30):
that's great sign. The pac Man Trump leading blue dots signs. Yeah,
I might just keep this one. I might frame it,
put it on display. Who knows. Uh, some people might
just keep them. I think you could probably hang on
to that Tony Vargas sign. He I wouldn't be surprised
if he's running again in two years, maybe for re
election with the election still officially not called whatever. But uh,

(13:55):
the Harris Walls signs, I don't know if you're gonna
knee those again. The blue dot you can use those
again four years when Trump is running for another term.
I hang out wait for it. There's always like a
twelve second broadcast delay when I say things like that,
and then twelve seconds later I have to listen for

(14:17):
the sounds of heads exploding from what I said twelve
to their day. Yeah, you know he can't run for
another term.

Speaker 3 (14:25):
Right, I don't care who you are. That's funny, you can't.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
It's it's you're limited to two terms consecutive or non consecutive.
That's how it works. Of course, since Oprah said We're
never going to be able to vote again, you know,
all bets are off on this one. But so the
Harris Walls signs probably not blue dots. Yeah, but you
can't recycle it. How did all of you people, with

(14:49):
all of the especially liberal leaning signs, because stereotypically these
are people more concerned about the environment so far, how'd
you make a bunch of political signs that were non
recyclable that seemed like a bad idea among many. So

(15:12):
you can throw them away, you can return them to
the to the candidate or the party if they will
take them back, or you can repurpose them. I don't
know how you go about repurposing them, Harris. I mean,

(15:33):
who could be what could that ticket look like here
four years and will Kamala Harris be on it? You
know what, We'll leave the twenty twenty eight election to
another three years from now. Anyway, we talked about this
yesterday how locally there were parents telling me, yeah, I'm

(15:58):
getting text messages from my kids. The last couple of
days that it's getting kind of scary in their schools
based on what some students and what some teachers are saying.
One girl said she was afraid to go to school
because she was afraid the Trump supporters were gonna make
her pick cotton. As it turns out, there's a nationwide
reason for that wording. But don't worry. Quacktavius the Therapy

(16:24):
Duck is there for you. I've teased that too long. Here,
I'll tell you who Quactavius is and why next. Scott, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
any money one of my favorite guests we've ever had
on this program. There's another one we've lost. Anyone whose

(16:44):
name I mentioned today has already died. Any money. The
guy who said you got mail, our good friends got
Latin bah. Lucy Chapman still here. Lucy Uh got a
thumbs up from Lucy. She's alive. I'm Scott Vordiez. Didn't
this got morbid, didn't it? I'm Scott Vorhees. This is

(17:07):
News Radio eleven ten kfab all all right, all right.
They call him Quactavius the Therapy Duck, and he is
just one of several things or people on college and
high school campuses camp by around the country helping students
cope with the loss and the victory by Donald J.

(17:30):
Trump on Tuesday. This is at the University of Oregon
one such example, where they've got baby therapy goats and
therapy dogs, as well as something called Quactavius, the therapy duck.
They're brought to campus to promote well being and lessen
anxiety for students. This is on the school's event calendar

(17:52):
at the University of Oregon. They were there yesterday and
they're probably still there again today to help Duck fans.
It's the Oregon cope with the absolute destruction that their
volleyball team suffered last night at the hands and forearms
of the Nebraska Cornhusker volleyball team. But the story here

(18:13):
from Fox News reports that several universities across the nation
canceled classes, provided safe spaces for students to recover from
the election, and brought in, among other things, Quactavius the
therapy duck to be there for students, including at college
campuses where these people are all alleged adults. There is

(18:38):
so much more to this story, and in the high
school level and here locally there's one of the TV
stations talked to a mom said, my daughter got one
of these text messages. There's a text going around the
country about where what field black people need to show

(18:58):
up into soon to pick. I will go through all
of these stories after a Fox News update next.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Scott Voice News Radio eleven tab.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
All right, let's see how things are going here. This
is read like school closings on a bad weather day,
by the way, and another thing that might be with
us for years I learned from series. Yeah, I'll tell
you they're rich, aren't paying their fair share. You can't

(19:31):
get enough of Dana Carvey is Joe Biden. He Carvey
does a great Trump too. They should just boot the
guy on Saturday Night Live that does Trump right now
is really good at He looks kind of like him.
He does a good job with it. Dana Carvey does
a wonderful Trump impression as well. One of them is

(19:53):
Trump is a batman villain called trump Card. You won't
get away with this trump card, you know, think I will?
You know, it's just perfect so stupid. Now where was I? Oh?
I was thinking about Saturday Night Live real quick.

Speaker 3 (20:09):
Yeah, what's Maya Rudolf going to do.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
What's Maya Rudolph going to do? And what is SNL
going to do Tomorrow night? Remember eight years ago Trump
beat Hillary Clinton. Kate McKinnon had been playing Hillary Clinton,
and Saturday Night Live has twice unless I'm forgetting something,
and maybe it started off somber after the October seventh attacks,

(20:30):
I don't remember, but at least two big times in
fifty years of Saturday Night Live or whatever we're at,
they have started off the show on a very very
somber note. One when they got on again after the
nine to eleven terror attacks, and two after Trump beat

(20:51):
Hillary in twenty sixteen. That was Kate McKinnon is Hillary
Clinton sitting there at a piano, candles everywhere, and it
was just her playing Hallelujah by Leonard Cohen, which is
not an I don't honestly know what that song is about.

(21:13):
It's not a love song, it's not a Christian song.
It's a beautiful, haunting song. I don't know what it's about,
but that's anyway, that's what they chose to do. And
she honestly had a tear in her eye as she
as Hillary was singing that song. So that's how they
treated a Trump when last time? What are they gonna

(21:36):
do this week? And I think the host is Bill Burr,
who I adore and I know you do too. This
is one rare agreement. I thought you liked Bill Burr.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
I do like his comedies. Like many actors, actresses, singers,
band people, I like what they do, but they just
some of them. Just look, I don't talk about my
political belief.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
Yeah, you do take us every morning? Not really, okay,
Bill Bird, though he takes shots at everybody, he doesn't care. Yeah,
he's a bit more left leaning, but he's incredibly reasonably
left leaning. I think I do like his work. Yeah,
he's very funny, and I don't care. I don't care

(22:20):
how left or right you are if you're a comedian.
I only care if do you make me laugh? Do
I gufa at things you say? That's really all I
care about. And if you just go on social media
just got back tramp tramp tramp, and I'm like, well,
this isn't even funny. Bill Burr's funny. This will be

(22:42):
an interesting one tomorrow night for Saturday Night Live. Not
sure how I got all that. Oh yeah, I was
gonna say that. I was gonna say this, uh, school
closing list is going to sound like snow day school closings.
And then I started to say, by the way, and
another thing that we got into that my son told
me that OPS has instituted snow days again, not where

(23:06):
you have to go on for stupid remote learning that
most people don't log onto from their computers, their their iPads.
The teachers sometimes are like, I don't have anything for
you guys today. You can just work on your stuff.
They're like, all work on my stuff and they turn
off the iPad and go back to sleep. It's a
waste of everyone's time, and just let these kids have

(23:26):
a snow day. And so what my son said is
OPS had said, yeah, we're doing snow days again. If
there's snow and we cancel class, there's no remote learning.

Speaker 3 (23:37):
That's great.

Speaker 2 (23:38):
I know that that is really really good.

Speaker 3 (23:41):
Now they can all go to the mall. All yeah,
that's what we used to do.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
Oh, it's too dangerous out there. We can't go to school.
Let's go to the mall. See at Oakview.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
I guess there's westwards there.

Speaker 2 (23:54):
They go to a west Roads. But I don't think
you could pay these kids to go to Oakview. Sorry Oakview,
Like if you have a feeling like Oakviews listening going, Oh,
come on, remember what I used to be real popular?

Speaker 3 (24:08):
I missed the big malls.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
Colleges, colleges, colleges, colleges. This is going to sound like
schools that are canceling classes because of severe weather, snow
day or whatever. Here we go. Georgetown, Washington, d C.
Drew mockery, according to Fox News on social media, after
news broke that the college invited students to a self

(24:31):
care suite on Wednesday to recover from the stress of
the twenty twenty four election. They were offered milk and
cookies and hot cocoa, as well as things like coloring
books and legos to play with to get their minds
off the election results. This isn't at a daycare. This
isn't even at a middle or high school. This isn't

(24:51):
even at a regular college. This is Georgetown, allegedly one
of the most prestigious universities in America. Georgetown said, if
you guys need some milk and cookies or hot cocoa,
And the truth is even if I'm I fine at
Georgetown and I'm all jacked up, Like, hey, all right,
Trump won. This is great. Oh, they're offering milk and

(25:14):
cookies and hot cocoa and stuff over there for kids
who are wallering in this election result. I'll go in
there and act sad and get some milk and cookies,
hot cocoa.

Speaker 3 (25:25):
Oh was it just?

Speaker 4 (25:26):
Was it adjust for the people who were It just
said to recover from the stress and to deal with
the anxiety of all of it.

Speaker 3 (25:36):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
Yeah, I'd go in there all sad like. Yeah, I
know Trump's terrible, right? Can I have one of those
chocolate chip cookies that Oh wait, we got ones with
M and m's on them. I'll do an M and
M cookie. So, but I'm not excited about the cookies.
I'm very, very sad. Can I have some more hot?
Can I get some of those tiny marshmallows for my
hot cocoa?

Speaker 3 (25:55):
I'm that sad.

Speaker 2 (25:57):
I am so sad I need the tiny marshmallows for
hot chocolate. This was at Georgetown Harvard HARVD University. Several
courses in the sociology, math, and general education departments at
Harvard canceled classes on Wednesday, or they made attendance optional

(26:17):
or extended assignment deadlines, because how could you possibly get
your work done at a time like this. Again, this
is Harvard.

Speaker 3 (26:27):
Those for adults.

Speaker 2 (26:29):
These are absolutely adults.

Speaker 3 (26:30):
It's going to be running manufacturing and companies and corporations and.

Speaker 2 (26:36):
Political teaching our math classes, teaching our math classes. This
is an economics lecturer that told students in the Intermediate
Microeconomics course that in class quizzes would be optional on Wednesday,
but students could really just take the day off if
they need to process the horrible election results. That is

(26:57):
at Harvard University. At the University of Puget Sound, all
the Way to Tacoma, there's your Garth Brooks reference for
this segment of the radio program. There's a bit of
a deep cut, but Garth Brooks fans know that's one
of his best songs, Tacoma great song. All the Way
in Tacoma. At the University of Puget Sound, a full

(27:20):
week of self care election activities have been planned to
help anxiety riddled and stress students. Students are invited to
stroll in a walkable labyrinth with calming lighting and music,
where they can recharge their mental health in an arts
and crafts corner, or make a collage in a supportive
space for election processing wholly. Pardon my language, but holy crowd.

(27:46):
I don't watch my language. But this is at a college.

Speaker 3 (27:52):
Hold on, No, did they do this four years ago
as well?

Speaker 2 (27:56):
I doubt it?

Speaker 3 (27:57):
Why not? That was a very stressful election two.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
Not for academia. Another event on the schedule this week
at the University of Puget Sound included support spaces exclusively
for LGBTQ plus students as well as students of color
to talk about their election anxiety. I told you about
how the University of Oregon brought in baby therapy goats,

(28:25):
therapy dogs, and something called Quactavius the Therapy Duck to
help students deal with this and promote well being and
lesson anxiety. I don't know if Quactavius the Therapy Duck
is an actual duck or the Oregon Duck mascot. Either way,

(28:47):
what adult someone is twenty twenty one, twenty two years old.
It's just going in there, going I had really hoped
that we wouldn't elect Trump again. Hearing some bad stuff. Man,
This project twenty twenty five. I haven't read it, but man,

(29:08):
some of the people I follow online say it's going
to be really, really bad. Wait a second, is that
a duck? Give me, give me my duck.

Speaker 3 (29:16):
I was just thinking I would go in there and
play with the baby goats all day long.

Speaker 2 (29:20):
Do you see how much those billionaires made on the
stock market results the day after the election?

Speaker 5 (29:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (29:25):
Crime, yar man.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
I just just someone hand me my duck. What do
you do with a therapy duck? Lucy Lucy wants to
eat it. Yeah, it's not crispy, it's not orange. It's
just it's quacktavious, the therapy duck.

Speaker 3 (29:46):
Crispy quatavious duck.

Speaker 2 (29:50):
Quacktavious. Don't make fun of this.

Speaker 3 (29:53):
I'm not making this is news.

Speaker 2 (29:55):
If it's a duck, this is a news story.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
It can be eaten. I mean, unless it's a pet.

Speaker 2 (30:04):
Yeah, the huskers ate those dogs last night. Yet at
at Columbia University in New York, they tried to bring
in Peanut the therapy squirrel, but there's something bad happened
there and so he wasn't available.

Speaker 3 (30:17):
And or missing.

Speaker 2 (30:18):
Fred the Raccoon, Fred the Therapy Raccoon and Peanut the
therapy squirrel are gone. Students at Virginia Tech could play
with therapy dogs all right. Now. There are people right
now who have therapy dogs saying you don't play with them.
I think you could, but that's not it's more than that.

Speaker 3 (30:37):
But life for the dog?

Speaker 2 (30:39):
Then, is that Virginia Tech play with therapy dogs, do
arts and crafts, or join a guided stretching class. Oh
that's nice. Yoga restorative dialogue? Yeh, see how that? See
how long that lasts? We're gonna ask some restorative dialogue.
I have a difference of opinion from some of you
in the stroom. Get out there, that felt good? Didn't

(31:00):
just yell at that guy until we feel better? And
the therapy dogs are holding not office hours but pofice
hours at Virginia Tech. The University of Michigan, I'm not done.
University of Michigan School of Social Work invited students to
attend various post election activities, including an empowering art therapy

(31:23):
workshop to Process your Emotions. At Michigan State, another Big
ten institute, a professor, a Spartan professor, went viral after
canceling her classes to grieve about the election, writing quote,
I am canceling class today to grieve the presidential election results.
As a queer immigrant woman of color check check check.

(31:47):
I cannot in good conscience go on about my day
like everything is all right, unquote, What did you think?
What do you honestly think is going to happen? That
there are students and professors at Michigan State who voted
for Trump, and now that Trump is won, they are
emboldened to go get you. They're the same people that

(32:09):
you were working with or on campus with a couple
of days ago. They're the same people. This is the
same thing. I see this all over the place going
as people of color or gay people whatever. We're very scared.
You know, Trump's not going to go door to door
going all right, bring out them homos. This is not
how this works. The people who elected Trump are the

(32:31):
people that you've been living with with, working with, driving around,
going to the market with, going to concerts with. They're
the same people. Some of them voted the way you did.
Some of them didn't vote the way you did. None
of them are going to change any of their behavior,
and thankfully, none of their behavior has been going out
and getting any people of gay, people of color, immigrant status.

Speaker 5 (32:53):
This is completely ludicrous, and we've got colleges feeding into it.
These colleges are creating the quote experts that the media
ends up quoting when they say experts say Trump's economic plants,
foreign plants, social plans, whatever are going to ruin the

(33:15):
world as we know it. Where did these experts from?
They came from this?

Speaker 2 (33:25):
Who? You know what? This whole getting your emotions out
really does make you feel better. And I didn't even
need a therapy. Duck Scott goes more details about this
coming up. But here's what this text message is going
around the country is saying. It says, good morning, You've
been selected to pick cotton at you at the nearest plantation.

(33:46):
Be ready at five am, November twenty fifth, sharp. Bring
your belongings you will need them. Our exclusive slaves will
come get you in a white van. Be prepared to
be searched, so don't try anything. You are in group
plantation c. This text message is going around to students
and at least one twelve year old black girl here

(34:08):
in the community that's received this message with her name
attached to it. Now that's interesting and unique, isn't it.
I have some more thoughts on this, we'll talk about
it next. A lot of local national stories here about
this text message that young people mostly like young people.
But it seems, as I look across social media, there

(34:30):
are black people of various ages receiving this text message
or some variation of this text message. And it says
good morning, and then it has the person's name attached
to it. The person's name is there, so it would
say good morning, Lucy, if indeed Lucy received this message.

(34:52):
Good morning. You have been selected to pick cotton at
the nearest plantation. Be ready at five am sharp, November
twenty fifth. Bring your belongings. You will need them. Our
executive slaves will come get you in a white van.
Be prepared to be searched, so don't try anything you

(35:16):
are in group plantation c story here from k ETV
News Watch seven is one of the local stories with this.
A mom of a twelve year old girl who's black,
who received this text message from an unknown number had
her name on it. So, of course, the way that

(35:37):
this has been reported because there are now student newspapers
at colleges across the country picking up on this, nationwide
news organizations picking up on this. I believe someone even
asked Karine Jean Pierre about it yesterday at the White
House Press briefing. What's interesting about this story is that

(36:02):
it lacks some of the specificity about well, wait, how
are people getting how do they have my number and
have my name attached to it? And is it just
through text? Because a lot of these stories, and I

(36:24):
don't know all of this stuff, my apologies, but a
lot of these stories say that the message was sent
from a text app. I don't know exactly what that means,
but it suggests to me that you or anyone can

(36:50):
go into this particular app. Like if I have Lucy's
phone number and I want to mess with her, and
I do, But if I Lucy's phone number and I
want to, you know, freaker out a little bit, I
just put your number into the app, type the message
or copy paste the same message everyone else is getting
across the country, and I send it to you and

(37:11):
it comes from some untraceable phone number. Because people are like, well,
why don't the FBI, why don't you just call back
the number and go who is this? Why are you
sending me this? But it's all these these numbers that
don't actually exist, because they all are kind of coming
through and around this text app that's all completely anonymous,

(37:31):
and I don't know what app that might be or
how exactly this works, but it seems like there are
there are a few things at play here now. The
national news media is quick to say, in the wake
of Trump's victory, black people across America are receiving a

(37:53):
text message that says, it's time for you to report
to the nearest plantation. Where is the nearest plantation here
in Omaha? I guess I have to ask coach McDermott
tonthing to.

Speaker 3 (38:08):
Call him that anymore? Ye say, where's the nearest?

Speaker 4 (38:11):
What?

Speaker 2 (38:12):
Farmstead Well plantation has a certain connotation to it. By
the way, Sorry for the McDermott shot. I just couldn't
help it. But Lucy, do you even know that that's
not worth getting it? Never mind, McDermott said. McDermott said
something inelegant to his team. It got blown up way
out of proportion. I ranted about that in Coach McDermott's

(38:35):
favor a few years ago. I was prepared. I was
prepared to let it go, but I'm sorry the word
triggered something. Go Jays, that's the anyway, where is the
nearest plantation here in Omaha? And is this even the
season where you would be picking cotton? And like, let's

(38:58):
let's follow this through. If we are now making slaves
of people here in this country, and you're gonna be
picked up and taken to the nearest plantation to pick cotton,
where is it? And is this cotton picking season? And
by that I literally mean cotton picking season, not cotton
picking season. You know it's cotton picking the season for

(39:18):
cotton picking is is this when this? I don't know,
because I think the nearest cotton picking plantation would be
somewhere down in Georgia or someplace down there. And that
seems ridiculous that we're now recruiting people up here in
the Midwest to go down there. I would think that
if we're just gonna make slaves of everybody, that you

(39:41):
could probably get this done in a more localized manner
and use less on gas. I mean, this just seems
completely unwieldy to me. But and then it says our
executive slaves will come get you in a van. Well,
wouldn't they, now, if they're a way from those who
are making them do stuff, wouldn't they say We're not

(40:03):
gonna do it. Don't they have that free will anymore?
So it's ridiculous, just on its face as all this is,
let's get in to the racist portion of it. I
have a hard time believing that this that some racist

(40:26):
cabal of people are like. And here's how it's gonna
be under Trump. So here's what we're gonna do. All
you racist people. You're gonna go into this technology. You're
gonna use this app. You're gonna get the phone numbers
of all the Black people that you know that you
have stored in your phone. Remember we're talking about hardcore

(40:48):
racists here. Just get the numbers of any black people
you know, especially these kids. And sure you've got all
the twelve year old black girl's numbers in your your neighborhoods.
You just bring all those numbers in here, put those
number there, and then just and then we'll put them
into the phone and we'll send them out. I don't

(41:09):
think that hardcore racists have a lot of phone numbers
of black people. And I don't think they have a
lot of phone numbers of young black people. This girl
here locally is twelve years old.

Speaker 3 (41:24):
Where are the numbers coming from? Where are the message
is coming from?

Speaker 2 (41:26):
I don't think hardcore racist, mouth breathing, knuckle dragging morons
in this country know how to use this technology. They
can barely tie their own shoes. These racist Neanderthals probably

(41:47):
about the last people i'd figure that are gonna be like,
all right, here's this incredible tech we have at our disposal,
and I'm sure all of you guys know how to
use it. They don't. Stereotypically speaking, I don't think they
know how to use the technology. So then the question is, so,

(42:11):
who's sending this in? Why? I can't help thinking Jesse Smollett,
Juicy Jesse Smollette, or as Dave Chappelle called him, that
French actor Juicy Smolet. Jesse Smollett was an actor on

(42:34):
a television show that pretty much every single actor on
the show was black. It was written by black writer
produced it was lack of better terminology, it was a
it was a black show called Empire. I never watched it,
not because of the racist thing or whatever. I just

(42:55):
I only have so much room in my life for
new shows, so I never That's all Empire looked interesting,
but about a record producers that it's a good I
think Terrence Howard was in it. I like him anyway.
The idea was that Jesse Smalley, who was a gay
black actor, was walking in the middle of the night

(43:17):
in the frozen streets of Chicago, where he was suddenly
approached by two white guys wearing Maga hats and who
just also happened to be carrying a noose. Incredibly excited
that there he is a gay black actor. This is
a dream come true. And with no one around for
Miles to hear his screams and protestations, they decided not

(43:39):
to kill him. They just kind of put a noose
around his neck and roughed him up a little bit
and let him go. And like, what are the odds
if you're just trudging through the frozen streets of Chicago
in the middle of the night, and you're hardcore racist,
what are the odds that you would find a gay
black actor and know who he is? Like, Oh, hey,

(44:01):
you're that Gayesler from that TV show? How would they
know that? Seems like someone's gonna be exposed at the
next Clan rally. Yeah, Claytus over here says he watches Empire.
No I didn't, No, I didn't. I walked into the
room it was on. I didn't, Like, what are the odds.

(44:22):
A lot of us felt like the odds were infinitesimally small,
and no one believed that story or some of the
other stories that went around of people claiming racism. Not
to say there are no racists out there, but there
are some high profile stories. Oh yeah, they tied me

(44:43):
to a chair and called me gay and all the
rest of the stuff, it turns out wasn't It wasn't true,
and the Jesse Smalllett story wasn't true. And it just
seems like there are some individuals out there, and I
don't even think they're black people. I think you've got

(45:05):
some white people who want black people to think this
is the America that we just voted for, and why
specifically go after some black people. Well after the news
stories came out, they said a lot of black men
ended up voting for Trump. Probably some people are like

(45:27):
and they and some of these guys might need to
be punished and their girlfriends for letting them get away
with it. How dare they so? Who's racist? Now? If?
And who knows if this will ever be proven. Sorry,
my gut is telling me, And maybe the reason my

(45:47):
gut's telling me this is because I don't want to
believe that we live in a world where you've got
actual racist people Like you know what I'm gonna do.
I'm just gonna start texting black people that they are
due at the nearest plantation. Again, I don't think they
have a lot of phone numbers for black people. I
realize my evidence on this gut instinct isn't real strong,

(46:10):
but kind of hard to argue against, isn't it. Any Anyway,
I think that there are a lot of white people
who are punishing some black people for voting for Trump
and wanting to scare black people, terrorize black people with
messages like this, including their name. That's the part of
people be like, what in the hell including their name

(46:33):
in it? Well, they're wanting to terrorize black people to
get them to think that they are racists. Who know
who they are. And so what is going to happen
at five o'clock sharp on November twenty fifth? What is
that gonna have? Is the week of Thanksgiving? That's a
terrible holiday week gift right there. So they got you know,

(46:53):
got it. They gotta be thinking, So what's going to
happen at that time on that day? They know my name,
they have my phone number, these individuals receiving these text
messages have been terrorized, and I think it's from people
who aren't going to do anything to them. They just
want them to think a bunch of racists out there,
and this is what America is like now under Trump. Meanwhile,

(47:15):
the people who voted for Trump, they're just walking around going,
hey great, uh stock market went up, looking forward to
some deregulation that are really going to help small business
people be able to hire more people and invest more
in their company, and kind of looking forward to seeing
what Trump might do to help out the people of Ukraine. Now,

(47:36):
Iran has got to be really interested in what's going
to happen next. That whole border thing needs to be
taken care of, too sweet a little more French for you,
and uh, And I'm just kind of curious about what's
gonna Like the Trump supporters they've basically had since Tuesday night,

(47:57):
like at three day orgasm here, they're not sitting there
going and now what our next step is, Let's start
terrorizing black people. I'm just not seeing this for anything
more than a hoax. And I hope I'm right, because,

(48:21):
like I said, maybe I just don't want to believe
that we live in such a world. We have technology.
Smart racist people just happen to have a whole bunch
of black college students and local students' phone numbers, and like,
oh I got one. Here you go, Bethany, you know,
send out the text me. I I'm just it's too

(48:47):
just smallet for me. It's just way too convenient. It's
to the video cameras. The security cameras in this area
just happen to be pointed the other way. It's just
too convenient.

Speaker 1 (48:58):
Right.

Speaker 2 (49:01):
If I'm wrong, well, we got bigger problems here. I
hope I'm right. And even if you're one of those
whose daughter just received this message, you have to hope
I'm right too. It's because the reality is, oh, someone
is threatening my daughter. No one wants that. I think

(49:23):
it's more likely that this is the work of Jesse
Smolett Scott Bodies.

Speaker 1 (49:30):
News Radio eleven ten kfab that's right.

Speaker 2 (49:33):
I'm I'm just gonna blame him, call him out personally here, right,
maybe not anyway, Joe in Columbus has emailed via s
good morning Joe and everyone else in Columbus. Good to
have you with us here on news radio eleven ten
kfab Zonker's custom would was inbox Scott atkfab dot com.
Regarding these text messages, Joe says, this is definitely Russian

(49:57):
or North Korean disruption activity. Yes, but how did they
get in this local story? Here is a twelve year
old girl who got the text message. How did they
get her name? Now? I would think if you're on
the voter rolls, because we all got the text messages,

(50:18):
ooh do we get the text message here? Leading up
to the campaign, a lot of them, whether it's emails
or text messages. They say, hey, Scott, hoping we can
count on your vote for Tony Vargus in Nebraska's second district.
And then I get another one, Scotty, hoping we can
count on your vote for Don Bacon and Nebraska's second district.

(50:38):
You know, I get all these text messages like how
did they get my number? I don't No one has
my number. Lucy doesn't have my number. You know why?
I don't even know my phone number. I don't even know.
I just hold my phone up and go this this
is all how do they get my number? Well, a
lot of times when you do anything marketing, there's any

(51:02):
number of ways they got your name and the phone
number any number of ways, and so they just start
taking shots at it. Some could be voter registration and
so forth comes just regular marketing. You signed up for
a credit card, you signed up for a contest. Yeah,
I want to win a golf trip to Scotland. I

(51:24):
always say I'm not signing up for anything. I'm not
doing a these contests. And then I see the Hey,
we're getting away a golf trip to Pinehurst, North Carolina.
I'm like, here, just here's my credit card numbers, phone,
you know, social security number, what else do you need?
I want to go. I want to go play Pinehurst.
And then I find out like, it's not even the
Pineers number two, it's number four out a budget bunch

(51:47):
of crud. Yeah, but it's you go there and you
want to play the deuce.

Speaker 3 (51:50):
So it's, uh, well that's when you just find your
way in, I know, and then talk your way in
I know.

Speaker 2 (51:57):
So it's they get your phone number through any number
of things and have your your name attached to it.
Twelve year old. Now that's interesting. That suggests that there
are some people who are just messing with their friends, classmates, whatever,
and all right, we want to make sure someone at
this school gets this message so we can have other

(52:19):
people at the school believe that this is just how
it is now.

Speaker 3 (52:25):
Well, when you have family lines, you know you can
get four or five phones on the same line. Do
you have to name them like you do cameras within
your house?

Speaker 2 (52:35):
Maybe?

Speaker 3 (52:36):
So if the phone records of the phone numbers have
been hacked, then they have all of the information, okay,
by whoever hacked them. This seems like it's a find that.

Speaker 2 (52:48):
Out someone in Russia would know. This is the cell
phone number for a twelve year old girl who is black,
and we're going to send her with her name attached
to it this text message.

Speaker 3 (53:01):
It is a stretch.

Speaker 2 (53:04):
There's just so much about technology and everything here that
I don't understand. But there is one thing that I
have a pretty good read on. It's human nature. And
this seems so Jesse Smollett to me. There are people
who just read the social media post. They hate this country,

(53:26):
They hate the people who voted this way in this country.
They have ignored why people in this country voted this way,
and now they just want the everyone to know that
it's even worse than you thought it was. Look at
these text messages going around, look at the terrorizing of
black people by all these racists who voted for Trump

(53:49):
and all these Republicans. Let's just look at just a
microcosm of what exactly happened on Tuesday. And for that,
let's look at what just happened in the city elections
in San Francisco. We'll get to that next. Scott, if
I had a filter, I wouldn't say this. And dropping

(54:09):
my son off at school today and he points out
a teacher walking through the parking lot and he just says, Oh,
that teacher is gay and dates a stripper. And I said,
how in the world do you know that? And he said, oh,
it's on his Instagram.

Speaker 3 (54:28):
Like when we were in school, if we even knew
the teacher's first name, that was kind of surprising. But
to know anything about them, their phone numbers, anything like
that would just be we get in trouble for it.

Speaker 5 (54:44):
I know.

Speaker 2 (54:45):
It just kind of makes me and I would say
the same thing. His being gay has nothing to do
with it. I would say the same thing. If he said, Hey,
that teacher over there, he only dates strippers, a female stripper,
I'd be like, how in the world do you know that?
And what's he doing this weekend? Because he sounds like

(55:05):
a guy I want to hang out with. So it's
just everything is just really really weird. You got just
what we talked about just today, colleges across the country
bringing in therapy ducks and milk and cookies for adults,

(55:26):
these alleged adults on college campuses to help deal with
the stress and anxiety of Trump being reelected. Therapy duck Quactavius,
the therapy duck was brought into the University of Oregon
and then the Nebraska volleyball team killed it last night.
Oh that was the Oregon Ducks. So that's going on

(55:48):
in college campuses with young people. A. Teachers are just
getting like way too And this kind of goes along
with what I just said there about this local teacher,
like the blurring between teachers lives students' lives. It's, as
Lucy just pointed out, it's just very, very different from
when we were in school. I didn't even know my

(56:10):
teacher's first names. They were mister and missus. When I
see these teachers today, I say hi, missus, so and
so or coach. These are I don't say this just
because I respect the title. I don't know their first names.

(56:33):
Never occurred to me to go see what they were
doing on social media. And as a but if we
were in school at this time, would we be checking
out what our teachers were doing on social media? And
who initiates that? Here's what should happen. I'm not saying

(56:54):
teachers can't be on social media or in the case
of the very specific example are brought up here, you
can't be gay, dating strippers and on social media. In fact,
you know, if that's your life, have at it. Some
people have a lot more fun than I do. Have
at it, and you can post all that stuff on
social media, but you can make it a private profile.

(57:19):
And when someone, say a student says I want to
be friends with you on this social media platform, you say, no,
you're a student, I'm a teacher, and that's inappropriate. And
then you can just have your social media just be
for all your friends and family or whatever. I'm sure
grandma wants to see what stripper you're dating. Why not?

(57:42):
So that's why in the world. Oh yeah, I was
going to tell you about San Francisco. People are all
sick and saying college students can't go to class because
they're so bothered by this. Black especially young black people

(58:05):
across the country are getting a weird, random, anonymous text
message telling them to go to the nearest plantation to
pick cotton. This is just a terrible country. How dare
Trump do this? Completely ignoring a couple of different things.
As I shouted about an hour ago, it's not Trump
doing any that's not Trump doing anything. It's people deciding

(58:30):
to vote for Trump. And these people you can disparage
them by any names or titles that you want, but
they are the same people who you've been living around,
you know, neighbors, friends, co workers, family members, people just
you know, passing you by a concerts at the grocery
store for the last four years. And all this stuff
here that you feel is suddenly going to happen in

(58:51):
this country now didn't happen over the last four years.
So who do you think is going to be instituting
this stuff? Why do you think all these horrible things
are going to happen now? Maybe Trump won the election,
because you need to do a little introspective soul searching
as to why not so much Trump won the election,

(59:13):
but a very left wing agenda lost the election, and
you can look at America and go no, no racism,
and so okay, calm down. Do you think there's a
lot of racist Trump maga people in San Francisco. If
you do, then you have never been to San Francisco.

(59:35):
San Francisco just bounced London breed. She was the first
black female mayor of San Francisco. One election. I don't
know if it was last cycle or eight years ago, whatever,
but it was. You know, she landslide victory. We love her,

(59:57):
this is great. She's our choice for mayor. Since then,
this woman who has an incredible story, raised by her
grandma in public housing, and then worked her way up,
fought claude, didn't let any potential obstacles or alleged obstacles
hold her back. She became the mayor of San Francisco,

(01:00:19):
one of the biggest cities in the world. It's an
amazing story. Unfortunately, what she did as mayor of San
Francisco has made the streets unsafe and filthy, littered with
in many instances criminals and homeless encampments and piles of

(01:00:40):
waste in the streets. Not from any animals going around there,
but from what's going on here with these homeless encampments,
open air drug use. People wouldn't take their kids out
businesses that decided to stay open these last few years.
If you wanted to just rush into the market to
get a cucumber, you had to be let in through

(01:01:00):
a locked door, and then the cucumbers were probably also
behind locked glass. This is what happened under her leadership,
under this left wing agenda in San Francisco. So what
happened All of that was on the ballot on Tuesday,

(01:01:21):
and she lost a guy named daniel Leary Lurie, just
one who apparently is noteworthy as his family is the
Levi Strauss family. Everyone's getting blue jeans or one of
Lucy's stonewashed denim jackets everyone that she just put on
because apparently it's cold in the Total Traffic Center. Is

(01:01:44):
that a Levi Strauss stonewashed denim jean jacket. It's not stonewashed,
but no, it's my cag R jacket. If I wanted
to go out in nineteen eighty nine and look cool,
I was putting on my Michael Jordan T shirt, the
one with the big big head caricature of all the

(01:02:06):
different sports figures that Michael Jordan T shirt and my
stonewashed him jean jacket and my white Lakers had. I
know I'd kind of mixed my NBA references there, but I.

Speaker 3 (01:02:18):
Don't know that you're always making fun of me.

Speaker 2 (01:02:20):
I'm not I like a stonewash in nineteen eighty nine.
I loved the stonewashedem Jean Jaggon, and I think it's
great that you never let it go. The classics never die,
and that's why I'm anyway. Levi Strauss. This guy's the
heir to the Levi Strauss fortune, my uncle, so his
upbringing is probably a little different than hers, who yeah

(01:02:43):
raised by her grandma in public housing. I know just
how you feel. I asked my mom wants if I
could buy wranglers, and she hit me so with what
a little different jeans with denim. So this guy won.

(01:03:03):
Not so much, this guy, but the people of San
Francisco said, the streets are I mean homeless, temp encampments,
open air drug use, retail theft, retail theft proliferated during

(01:03:24):
her It was six years in office, so voters said,
this is it, We're not doing this anymore.

Speaker 3 (01:03:32):
Well, all drugs are legal there, correct.

Speaker 2 (01:03:34):
I don't know, and I know that some business owners
were really happy to hear this because now maybe we
can actually get back to doing the business that you
would expect anywhere else in this country. There's no reason,
just because you're a big city on the left coast
that you'd have to let people into your store with

(01:03:55):
a security guard, like letting you in like to a
bank vault, need to see two forms of ID, we
need a fingerprint scan, and you gotta be let into
this door like I just wanted to pick up a
steak for dinner. So that's what just happened in San Francisco.
You don't think that same feeling in San fran didn't

(01:04:17):
proliferate across the country here on Tuesday and in the
days leading up to it. Now, not all cities were
as bad as what had happened in San Francisco, but
people recognize the mindset and the agenda that was on
display here our southern border, for example. So all these
people saying, oh, it's racist, horrible Trump supporter, are the

(01:04:40):
people in San Francisco racist horrible Trump supporters? Is that
what you really think happened on Tuesday? All right, Lucy,
we've been using the song as a punchline all week
teraoke Friday. We haven't done this in weeks. Let's do it.
Come on, you know the words, young man. There's no

(01:05:01):
need to feel down, I said, a young man. Pick
yourself off the ground, I said a young man, because
you're in a new town. There's no need to be unhappy,
young man. Do you at least say the young man's
I was gonna say, a young man, that's fine when
you short on your dough. You can stay there, and

(01:05:23):
I'm sure you will find many ways to to really
high songs. Good time, here we go. It's fun to
stay at the why mc A. It's fun to stay
at the why MCA. They have everything, poor.

Speaker 1 (01:05:42):
Young man, do it joy.

Speaker 2 (01:05:44):
You can hang out with all the boys. It's fun
to stay at the why mc A. It's fun to
stay at the.

Speaker 1 (01:05:52):
Why mc A.

Speaker 2 (01:05:55):
You can get yourself clean, you can have a good meal,
you can do what you fee.

Speaker 3 (01:06:03):
Oh yeah, I tell you could have a good time.

Speaker 2 (01:06:05):
Felt good.

Speaker 3 (01:06:06):
I know it is a good meal.

Speaker 2 (01:06:07):
Yeah you can. You can do all those things, a
whole variety of things that you can do at the YMCA.
You know what, I think you probably could sing at
the ys here they're working on a treadmill or something
like that, hitting the weights, hitting the gym, swimming laps
in the pool, and just singing that song. It's been.
As we talked earlier this week, it's so weird that

(01:06:29):
that song became so tied in to the Trump campaign.

Speaker 3 (01:06:34):
It is a bit odd.

Speaker 2 (01:06:36):
Yeah, well, I think it's so funny and perfect because
people who have never been to a Trump rally and
would never go to a Trump rally, think they know
what it is. They think it's just a bunch of angry,
old racist, domestic terrorist people in there doing giving Nazi
salute to each other and showing off their guns to

(01:06:57):
each other. They don't understand what a party it is.
And that song plays and everyone's dancing, and Trump's up
there doing his little jig. It's so what a what
a week? Huh?

Speaker 1 (01:07:13):
Scott Voies Mornings nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven
ten KFAB
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