All Episodes

July 31, 2025 73 mins
We're all fired up today, mostly about cute blondes:  Sydney Sweeney, Pamela Anderson, and Hulk Hogan!
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vordy email here from Kyle and he sent a
photo a photo of some it looks to be a
homeless encampment, and he said, I sent this to the
Mayor's hotline asking if it was allowed. He didn't say
where it is, he replied. The Mayor's office replied that

(00:21):
they will forward it to the homeless services manager. I
took note how some of the tenths are the same
and very new looking. So my thought is that someone's
helping them. How is this allowed in the City of Omaha.
I guess we do want to be like Kansas City,
but not in the ways that people actually want. That's
from Kyle. Well, that's an ongoing issue. It just is.

(00:43):
I mean, we had the mayor. Stothard is the one
who appointed a homeless services coordinator. I think John Ewing
has embraced that and the stories behind those ten encampments,

(01:06):
and you can ferret this out from various sources, and
you can you can hear from Sheriff Hansen directly. Is
their heartbreaking. It's horrible. And the solution apparently is to
just let these folks be out there alongside walks and
in public spaces and regardless of the weather and there

(01:28):
you go. I don't know what, if anything, we're going
to do about that, but the issue is not going away.
Thank you Dennis for that email, or Dave Brother or Kyle. Sorry,
and a lot of emails this morning, Scott wore he
stops by the pent House studio. Good morning, Scott's been
a busy morning here.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
Really, has did you encounter anything? Because Lucy's been reporting
all morning West Maple that area, and I know you
live out in northwest Omaha. What did you find? Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:53):
Nothing, I don't The issues that Lucy was talking about
are well west of me on West Maple, but it's uh,
you know, I think for a lot of people, they
were probably surprised to wake up this morning to find
out there was so much rain across the metro.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
I was.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
I woke up a couple times in the night and
I heard some rain. I thought, oh good, it's raining,
and then I heard I jump on the radio and
I wake up, See what's going on? You're talking about
three to six inches of rain in some parts of
the area. Yeah, we didn't and we didn't have room
for anymore.

Speaker 1 (02:25):
Just in terms of the moisture is very beneficial, but
it caused some serious problems there for a while.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
Yeah, because we got a bunch of rain the night before.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
Yep, souh are we up to where we're supposed to
I would think up to where we're supposed to be
now in Omaha for the certainly for the month. Uh,
maybe for the year, although it depends. I mean like
much of the Metro did not get anything like that
that amount, you know what I mean. Anyway, I hope

(02:57):
you came through it. Okay, I have a tip here
because we had the caller yesterday accusing Rosie and me
of having dementia. So I you hear that one, Scott, No.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
But I heard you struggle with the name of that
emailer a second ago, so maybe.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
Maybe he's on. The Scientists have founded a combination of diet, exercise,
and brain training can improve your thinking and memory. The
Pointer study. They looked at sedentary people in their sixties
and seventies and showed that those on the intensive regiment
improved mental abilities and reduced age related declines. Aerobic exercise,

(03:41):
a heart healthy Mediterranean diet, online cognitive training, social activities,
and health monitoring. Let's see, I'm doing, Uh, I'm doing
I'm doing two of the five.

Speaker 2 (03:58):
So what are you doing? I know you're not having
a Mediterranean diet.

Speaker 3 (04:02):
Yeah, you went down the list of things. No, no, no, no,
no no, I don't wait a minute.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
Maybe I'm doing social activities that probably not the kind
they recommend it. And the health monitoring, I do that.

Speaker 2 (04:13):
Okay, So that's health monitoring.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
Oh god, I assume what that means. Mirror right? Was
I able to get the annual physical? If I and
if I got something bout me, I'll go to the doc.
That's about that's health monitoring.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
To me, annual physical is a joke and the doctor
it's not. Yeah, is because you don't have to the
company makes us do an annual biometric screening or physical.
You don't have to be healthy, you just have to
do the screening.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
Well, that's for insurance purposes, but I think it's always
a good idea to get an annual checkup. It's your
blood panel and all that. You don't do that.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
I've been doing the annual checkup for twenty years, and
each time they say you're cholesterol slightly elevated, and it's
been slightly elevated for twenty years. Haven't changed much of anything.
Other than I keep getting older.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
I always refuse. I always refuse to do one of
the things that the doc always tells me.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
What's that?

Speaker 1 (05:09):
Do that at home? Blood pressure mount the cuff thing?

Speaker 2 (05:13):
You don't want to do that.

Speaker 1 (05:14):
It's notoriously unreliable. Okay. The only ones that are reliable
is when you go in there and they put the
thing around your an actually human nurse puts that thing
around your arm and then they squeeze. That's the only
one that's accurate. Well, that's all I do.

Speaker 3 (05:28):
An annual stress test, and that makes me nervous because
I'm afraid. I'm afraid the number one I'll fall off.

Speaker 1 (05:33):
You're a ticking time or yeah, I'll have the big
one right there.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
You are a daily stress test. No, I'm a daily handful.
You're talking about for the rest of us.

Speaker 3 (05:45):
None of you would exchange places with anybody else in
the stress givers.

Speaker 1 (05:50):
All right, somebody's got to do it. That means you're
all getting soft. Oh yeah, yeah, here we go. Here comes.

Speaker 2 (05:57):
The lecture just suggested that neither of us would change
trade places with anyone else in the world for the
opportunity to sit here with him for three hours every
day in a small room. I'm only here for three minutes.
I can fairly take it.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
I know, Lord, Lord help me, uh Scott Forhie's programmed
nine oh five.

Speaker 2 (06:18):
If you wouldn't trade places with anyone the world, the
world and to sit here with you.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
By the way, I gotta say I got one more.

Speaker 2 (06:27):
Thing right by the way.

Speaker 1 (06:28):
Uh, that I haven't talked about it all for n
I'll tell you why there couldn't be anything more preposterous
going on right now that everybody seems to want to
make a big deal about than this American eagle ad
with with a young hottie.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
I don't get it.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
Why are we paying any attention to these people that
want to claim that this is some kind of a
white supremacist thing. Why do we pay any attention to
these people when they say this stuff? That's all. That's
why I haven't.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
Talked about because the mindset is on the ballot every
single election from your community to your country.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
That's why I don't understand.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
What I don't either, the mindset of people who look
at a woman wearing jeans and it says Sydney Sweeney
has good jeans a play on genetics. Obviously, is as well.
It's kind of a clever. And she's in an ad
for blue jeans and people say, oh, because she's blond hair,
blue eyed, white girl, that means that the good jeans
are the Hitler's Aryan nation.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
Yes, that's ignored. It's outrageous.

Speaker 3 (07:37):
The people who say that don't know anything about Adolph.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
People have been tearing down statues, they've been renaming things,
they've been renaming school mascots and all that. I'm telling
you that's the mindset. And that mindset has its tentacles
and a lot of different things other than that ad
and that mindset is on the ballot every That's why
we talk about it. Also, it gives us a chance

(08:03):
to talk about Sydney Sweeney.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
Well, they all that's their whole message. The left has
nothing else but to try to sew hatred, racist division.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
Ignore them.

Speaker 3 (08:14):
But the problem is there's so many of them, and
social media amplify.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
I see them say something like that about the Sydney
Sweeney and.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
You ignore them to the point and next thing you know,
you got people in brand new tents living in your city.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
That's what happened. That's how it happened, all right, what's
on your program that.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
You're not ignoring any of them? This is great stuff.
I'm glad i'm here. I'm not ignoring any of it.
You wouldn't trade places else in the world.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
I would not trade places.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
I'll be back on the radio in twenty minutes with
a whole lot more of whatever. This has been excellent
on a lot of different fronts. It's Nebraska's news, weather
and traffic station News Radio eleven to ten kfab so
as I was saying, Gary Sandlemeyer, if you missed the
segment about twenty five minutes ago, Gary said, I don't

(08:59):
know what the big deal is with this American Eagle
genes ad featuring this sim Sydney Sweet up to speed
and this is People said, oh, because she's uh, the
area nations, you know, playboy model, white, blonde hair, blue eyed.
Are those the genes you're talking about? We are you

(09:22):
saying that we need to exterminate anyone who's not blonde, hair,
blue eyed and white? And American Eagle said no, no,
we were just we're trying to sell some genes. And
it was kind of a cute play on words and
uh and so people have been loosing their minds over
and then fighting online about who did what, And there
was a commentary on the news networks over whether or

(09:44):
not this was a call for some sort of eugenics
operation to exterminate anyone who's not white. And Gary said,
why this is this? Why do we even pay any
attention to these people when they're out there saying this
crazy stuff? And I said, because that mindset is out

(10:04):
there pulling down statues, changing the names of locations, making
schools change their mascot names, wanting to defund the police,
and all the rest of this stuff. It's the same mindset.
And that mindset is on the ballot every single election,
in every community and across the country, every single election.

(10:24):
And that's why it needs to be called out. And
here's another way that some people are doing it. You've
heard about this guy that wants to run America Town,
New York City, Zohan beware the what was the name
of that? I was yesterday at this time talking about
how much I loved Happy Gilmore Too, the latest really
really good Adam Sandler movie. And some people hate Adam

(10:47):
Sandler and say there's no such thing. That's because he's
made a lot of bad movies. One of them was,
don't mess with the Zohan. This guy's name is Zorn
mom Donnie. He is the Democrat slash socialist slash Bernie
Sanders acolyte mayoral candidate. And there was a situation we

(11:11):
talked about it the other day where well, this happens
often in New York City. The most recent one was
the guy that went in to what he thought was
the NFL offices to hold them accountable for his CTE
from playing in the NFL. And he said, according to
his manifesto is note that was left on this guy.

(11:34):
You know I've got untreated CTE in the NFL. Won't
do anything about it. I got this brain disorder that
makes me violent and deranged because of my years playing football,
and the NFL's covering it up. One problem, that guy
never played in the NFL. I don't even think he
played college football. Who knows if he had CTE, but

(11:54):
the NFL probably said we have nothing to do with you.
You didn't play in our league. So this guy takes
a gun, goes into those offices, goes into the wrong offices,
and starts shooting people, including a police officer and Zoron Mamdanni,
who is running for mayor of New York City, talked

(12:18):
about how it was a shame what happened to this officer. Well,
a lot of people have found and they didn't have
to go back fifty years. They just went back a
few years when the defund the police movement was in
full swing. This guy, Mamdanni was tweeting his support with
phrases like quote, there is no negotiating with an institution

(12:41):
this wicked and corrupt. Defund it, dismantle it in the
cycle of violence, wicked and corrupt law enforcement. That's how
he really feels about cops. So now people or finding
these tweets. That was from twenty twenty and he says,

(13:04):
I am not running to defund the police. No, of
course not. You won't get elected running to defund the police,
though you'll have a lot of people vote for you.
You can't come out there right now and say, yeah,
you vote for me as mayor, we'll dismantle this law
enforcement agency. But it doesn't mean that's not what he'll do,

(13:24):
or make their lives more difficult. He says. Over the
course of this race, I've been very clear about my
view of public safety and the critical role the police
have in creating that public safety. Wow, what happened in
the last five years for you to talk about defund it,
dismantle it and the cycle of violence. There's no negotiating

(13:48):
with an institution this wicked and corrupt. Just a few
years later, Oh, these guys are great. We need these guys,
who can't live without them. Is there anyone in your
life who five years ago you thought was wicked and
corrupt and there was just no talking to this individual

(14:10):
five years ago. How's your relationship with that individual now
five years later, happily married. Now I'm talking. I don't
mean like, in a moment, maybe a coworker ticked you off,
and for a few minutes you're walking and you're stomping
around going a guy that son of a I can't

(14:30):
believe it. I can't of you know, yeah, maybe for
a moment, but to the point where you washed it
around in your brain for a couple of weeks, and
he said, I need to tell people what I think
about this this person. There's no negotiating with this individual.
He or she is wicked and corrupt. This person needs

(14:52):
to be fired. This person needs to be held accountable.
This person's to be put in jail and the cycle
of violence. People are dying because this person is out there.
Is there anyone you said that about five years ago.
Who five years later you're like, no, no, no, no, no,
I didn't mean that a person's great. I've been very

(15:13):
clear that the that the critical role of this person
plays in all of our lives is very very important,
and that's why we need this person. Is there anyone,
I mean, you look at this down to the very
very smallest microcosm of what's going on. Is there anyone
in your life five years ago you would have had

(15:35):
such a very, very different thought on This guy hates cops.
This guy's saying anything to get elected. This guy might
get elected to run America Town. And among those criticized,
it's not just these evil Republicans, it's Andrew Cuomo, the

(15:56):
former New York governor who's running for mayor as an
independent because he got beaten the Democratic primary by this guy,
Mom Donni, and Cuomo's out there saying, look at this
guy's old post, this is who he is, this is
what he thinks. And he criticized Cuomo for trying to
score cynical political points. Where's the part of the story
where he says, hey, he took my comments out of contacts.

(16:18):
Where's that part? Where's the part where Mom Donnie plays
the victim. Here our friend Brandon Stock of the hashtag
walk Away movement to walk Away from Democrat Movements movement,
the Nebraska native, he's gone back to New York City,
where he spent a lot of time, lived there for
a while. He's gone back there for a time to

(16:40):
march against Mom Donnie and try and save New York City.
There are still those people think that it is worth saving,
and I hope that they're right, and I hope that
they're able to do it. I hope that this guy
doesn't get elected and dismantle and defund the police. But
he's doing this and there are those who are holding
a him accountable for things that he has said here,

(17:04):
and it's amazing because that's a Democrat and that doesn't
normally happen. Instead, you have situations like this. Last night,
Joe Kent was confirmed to lead the National counter Terrorism Center.
This is President Trump's pick to lead this group, and

(17:27):
the Associated Press, which is incredibly left leaning, super anti Trump,
the immediately note, well, this guy has ties to right
wing extremists and supports conspiracy theories. All right, let's take
a look in ninety seconds right here, Scott Lucy Chapman's

(17:49):
right there in the late latest message. While you were
you were busy in the last segment, completely ignoring me.
I had a lot of really good things to say
in the last segment.

Speaker 4 (17:58):
We were working on this Maples doing stuff and.

Speaker 2 (18:01):
What's going on on West Maple, West, West Maple.

Speaker 4 (18:03):
The water is receding, but it is left behind lots
of mud and very slick conditions. So city and police
are all working on getting getting this settled and getting
this worked out. And that's that's due to that over
that water was over over the water again. It's been
a long morning over the road at two hundred and

(18:26):
sixteenth on.

Speaker 2 (18:28):
Okay, two hundred and sixteenth in Maple. That's kind of
down in that valley right by like the relevant center,
relevance Center, Ramble Ramble Wood would yeah, you know, the
area that got absolutely destroyed by the tornado last year
now has flooding and mud, mud and flood Now. The

(18:49):
nice yeah, the nice thing about those homes that got
hit by the tornado is uh there, you know, as
you go back up the hill. That's where you have
that neighborhood there on the north side of Maple. So
it's not like they're gonna have a bunch of mud
in those properties. But trying to get out of the
neighborhood is going to be an adventure.

Speaker 4 (19:08):
Yeah, you'd have to almost go all the way up
to go through Waterloo over to Dodge at the are
two seventy five at any rate, and two seventy five
is still closed, by the way, if you're southbound, you.

Speaker 2 (19:18):
Can work your way through that neighborhood to the east
and come out a little higher up the hill, so
where you're not down in that valley. But if you're
going to say the relevant center, oh I.

Speaker 4 (19:26):
See if you went up to two hundred and fourth
out of the neighborhood, Okay, gotcha, got.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
Yeah, you can. You can find a way to get
out of there. They're not completely like, oh we have
to wait until the till spring for the past to clear.
It's not like that.

Speaker 4 (19:37):
No, it should be clear within the next couple of hours.
For sure.

Speaker 2 (19:40):
We'll get the snowplows out there and get that mud
off the road.

Speaker 4 (19:43):
Well, sand, a little snowplow.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
Throw some kiddy litter out there. And I don't know
if that has anything to do with mud, but I
was talking a moment ago. Yes, a Boot, the Democratic
Socialist mayoral canon the New York City who's been held
accountable for his previous statements things that he has said,

(20:06):
and I quote talking about the New York Police Department
and other members of law enforcement. Quote, there is no
negotiating with an institution this wicked and corrupt. Defund it,
dismantle it in the cycle of violence. He said that
on Twitter in the wake of twenty twenty George Floyd

(20:27):
Black Lives Matter, defund the police, that all that stuff,
And so people are now saying, hey, you came out
and talked about how awful it was that this member
of New York's police department was just shot and killed
the other day. Don't you see this as a good start,
since you want to get rid of the entire department? No, hey,
come on, hey, who you talking to. It's a right, No,

(20:48):
I wouldn't say that any of this stuff. Come on, like,
here's the tweet right here, And he's like, oh, people
are trying to score some cheap political points by quoting
you directly from what you said just a few years ago.
As I said, Lucy, is there anyone in your life
five years ago who you considered corrupt and wicked? And
people will die if this person was allowed to continue?

(21:12):
And now five years later you're like, you know what,
I love that guy anyone? Nope, no, checking the rolodicts
me either, me either. How long has he been here?

Speaker 4 (21:25):
When did he?

Speaker 2 (21:26):
Mom?

Speaker 4 (21:26):
Donnie, I don't know when did he come to the
United States.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
I don't know that he. I don't know enough about
him to know whether he came here or was born
and raised here. Don't know. I can look that up
for you if you like. Or you know, you've got
computers in front of you and a phone, you know, Yeah,
there you go.

Speaker 4 (21:51):
It was no, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (21:52):
Yes.

Speaker 2 (21:53):
It reminds me of one of my favorite bits from
the Daily Show. Even Steven Stephen Colbert and Steve Carell
would argue loudly against each other, but when John Stewart
would go to them, they were both at their computers,
pounding comically at their keyboards like you just were, and
then they start yelling each other. It's a great way

(22:15):
to start that bit. So what was I saying this guy? Mom?
Donnie is having some of his thoughts come back here
in this race. He's been held accountable for things he said.
You compare and contrast that with this guy who just
last night was finally confirmed by the United States Senate

(22:37):
to lead the National counter Terrorism Center. This is Jack
Bauer said. His name is Joe Kent, and it says,
according to the Associated Press, who hates President Trump and
all those who vote for him. The AP says Republicans
look past his connections to right wing extremists and support
for conspiracy theories. Okay, let's what are we talking about. Well,

(23:03):
he once paid a guy named Graham for consulting work
when he was on his congressional campaign in twenty twenty two. Well,
who's Graham? Well, this guy is uh has some ties too.
He's a member of the far right military group, the
Proud Boys. Oh they're a military group now, now is that.

Speaker 4 (23:29):
Because they were allegedly dressed all in Kaggi.

Speaker 2 (23:31):
Sometimes let's let's take another look without making it sound
like I am some sort of kouk who didn't see
the KKK coming when they were starting off as the
were there the Knights of the ku Kluck Clanwell, I
don't know that sounds nice. They want to have a potluck,
and I'm just going down there going, well, these boys
are swell. You know. I don't want to I don't

(23:53):
want to make it seem like I'm naive. I'm I'm
sure that there are members of this group who are
are crazy extremists who want to do crazy extremist stuff.
And they think, well, these guys are my guys. But
let me tell you about the people I've talked with
associated with this group, and let me tell you about
the things that they have done in this country, what

(24:17):
mostly they've done. When you look and say what illegal
things have the Proud Boys done as a far right
military group, the most things you'll find that they're associated
with is Antifa has taken over part of a town,
or they're having a rally or a protest, or they're

(24:38):
doing something, and the Proud Boys decide to show up
as the counter to Antifa, and sometimes they all fight
each other right there in the streets. Apparently the Proud Boys, yeah,
they probably, they're probably showing up at these things saying, hey,
Mike and ugly out there, we might get in a fight.
It's the Greasers and the Socials. There's your eighties movie

(25:02):
reference for this segment of the radio program.

Speaker 4 (25:04):
I prefer sharks and jets.

Speaker 2 (25:06):
Well, I say, I'm a child of the eighties. I
go Greasers and Socials. What movie and book?

Speaker 4 (25:12):
Oh, Outsiders?

Speaker 2 (25:14):
Outsiders? That's right, Stay Gold, pony boy, stay Gold. So
it's these guys show up there and there might be
a rumble. Sometimes you make a musical about it. Sometime
you make a book and a movie starring Patrick Swayzey
and every other soon to be superstar of the eighties.

(25:34):
I got to watch The Outsiders again. That was really good.
Great cast in twenty twenty, twenty, twenty, twenty twenty one,
twenty three, four five. You know, we got all this stuff.
These guys would just show up there because Antifa were
terrorizing communities, taking over public and private land and mostly

(25:56):
private land, blocking streets and deciding that this is a
demilitarized zone and law enforcement can't come in, and feckless
mayors were like, hey, let's just give him some space,
and the proud boy said no, and so they showed
up and sometimes fights broke out. I don't note that

(26:16):
the Associated Press calls Antifa a far left military group
but the Proud Boys get that tag because they have
shown up there and fought with this Antifa group. They're
out there looking for a fight. And this guy paid
one member of this group for consulting work on his

(26:39):
congressional campaign. I don't even know if this guy Joe
Kent knew who he was or just hired a team
and a team member said we're gonna pay this guy
a couple thousand bucks to do some consulting for one
little area. There's no idea. They're just like, well, you know,
he's got ties to the Proud Boy. This is his
tie to the Proud Boys. But he also worked closely

(27:02):
with Joey. Joey was the founder of Patriot Prayer. Oh
my gosh, those two words together. Patriot, well, we know
what that means. Racist, militaristic Trump support and prayer. Oh
this is, according to this Associated Press, a Christian nationalist group.

(27:24):
Patriot Prayer Christian as in, we believe in our Lord
and Savior, Jesus Christ who died for our sins, and nationalist,
we like America. Oh no, no, you wait. He worked
closely with this guy, a guy who likes America and God.
And we're letting him work in the Trump administration? How why?

(27:49):
How long do we have to live? These are the
things when they say this, Republicans look past his connections
to right wing extremists and support for conspiracy theories. Oh yeah,
what's that? January sixth, during a Senate confirmation hearing, he

(28:09):
was asked, do you believe that federal agents had somehow
had anything to do either instigating or allowing people into
the Capitol Building January sixth, twenty twenty one? Do you
believe when Trump says that the twenty twenty election was
rigged in favor of Biden? To believe these things? And

(28:30):
what did he do? He says, I'm not going to
address those things today. They have nothing to do with
this hearing. He Oh, he refused to distance himself from
these conspiracy theories. Oh my gosh, Well, I guess the
terrorists is going to come. Walton right in here. Then

(28:51):
this guy he likes America and God, he doesn't like
far left militaristic extremist groups like Antifa. And he doesn't
know exactly what happened in the January sixth capital siege,
And he doesn't know exactly what happened in the twenty
twenty election. Yeah, it's amazing when this is the kind

(29:15):
of guy who he gets his feet held to the
fire regularly. You know people like this, people like those
who would be in the Trump administration. And everyone says, well,
this's just fair game. This is the Associated Press. They
ferret out their news stories to news organizations and websites
across the world. They are the name in news Unbiased RDE.

(29:41):
And the first line of the story is the Senate
on Wednesday evening confirmed Joe Kent, President Trump's pick to
lead the National counter Terrorism Center, with Republicans looking past
his connections to right winging extremists and support four conspiracy theories. Yeah,
let me find the Associated Press story that says left

(30:05):
wing extremist and cop hater zorn mom Donniere running from
mayor in New York. Oh, doesn't happen. Doesn't happen with Democrats.
And this just goes right back into what I said
about an hour ago when Gary said, why do we
pay any attention to these people when they complain about
this this actress wearing a pair of jeans, and people say, oh,

(30:28):
this is about eugenics, this is about trying to exterminate
anyone who's not blond hair, blue eyed, white skin. This
is about propping up white supremacy. And Gary said, why
do we pay any attention to these people? And I said,
because they've got their political tentacles and all of these
different things from media to politics to criticism of gene advertisements.

(30:50):
And you got to put a spotlight on this stuff
because next thing you know, you end up voting for
a whole clan of them, and it's too late at
that point. I am very happy to be a part
of calling it out, and I'm not done. We've got
a Fox News update here in just a moment scot
for News Radio eleven ten k FAD so appreciate you

(31:14):
being with us, especially in mornings when Lucy's been doing
a great job throughout kfab's morning News letting you know
where there's water and now mud over the road or accidents.
In the case of heading out between Elkhorn and Valley,
we had an accident out there and not sure what's
still open or closed out that way.

Speaker 4 (31:34):
Right now, Miggs is still closed both in both directions
right at two seventy five just to the on to
the east side of.

Speaker 2 (31:41):
It, not to seventy five.

Speaker 4 (31:43):
Two seventy five is open. Megs Higgs is closed and
you cannot exit from southbound two seventy five onto Miggs,
but a tow truck is on the scenes, so hopefully
we'll be able to get that open pretty quickly.

Speaker 2 (31:54):
What about Stewie's.

Speaker 4 (31:56):
Stewie's is looks like it's moving along.

Speaker 2 (31:59):
What Megs Megs, Megs Griffin, Oh, Megs, Yeah, I know.
Oh that's a different thing.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
Yeah, I just heard somebody called Meigs.

Speaker 2 (32:10):
I've always thought it to be Megs me E, I
g s Megs Meg.

Speaker 4 (32:17):
I always thought it was Megs.

Speaker 2 (32:21):
Is that the Dairy Queen exit? I think, I think so.

Speaker 4 (32:26):
I don't think so.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
Then may I know it a Dairy Queen exit? Well,
it's it's it's one either before or after. But that
area two seventy five has already got so much construction
on it. You're down to one lane and there's all
these signs out there that say, hey, if you even go,
if you even think about going over the speed limit

(32:47):
out here, we're gonna quadruple the fine because we don't
want any of these construction workers getting hit. And people
are going one thousand miles an hour and one of
the reasons why I think they're okay doing it is
there's no construction workers out there, not all the time.

Speaker 4 (33:03):
Not a lot. I'm just a real quick funny story.
I used to I was very familiar with that area time,
what with that whole area Dodge and two seventy five
and ninety two and all of that, because I just
have to come out going back and forth to Wahoo.
But I had to go out to Wahoo. Hadn't been
through there in a while, and I had to get
there quickly. And so I just hit Dodge Street and

(33:23):
going out Highway six Dodge and I missed my turn.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
Oh yeah, you gotta go up because it used to
be right. You stay on, you just go straight. Yeah, yeah,
now you got to you gotta take that little jog
up to the right, and then you go across and
there you have the uh, the glory that is Wahoo, Nebraska.

Speaker 1 (33:39):
Right.

Speaker 4 (33:39):
And so remember, now I had to I was in
a hurry going the speed limit, but I needed to
get there. So I'm on two seventy five. Now, so
I get off at Waterloo. No, No, I just yeah Waterloo, Yeah,
get right back on two seventy five. Okay, Now I
know what I'm doing. I ended up back on TODG.

Speaker 2 (33:56):
Yeah, and you shove that until you're like, wait a second,
Boystown one.

Speaker 4 (34:01):
Up to Skyline, turned around again and finally hit it.
So I did that entire circle.

Speaker 2 (34:06):
I was driving on a Friday night from Kansas City
to go visit my friends in O Sage Beach. I
had to work and they were already down there, and
I said, I'll just come down there and find you
guys at whatever bar on Friday night and.

Speaker 4 (34:20):
Hang out through the season.

Speaker 2 (34:21):
Yeah, through the weekend. So it's not exactly real real
easy to get from Kansas City over to the Ozarks.
At some point you got to take a left at
like Clinton or Harrisonville or something like that. So I'm
driving and that it just so happened that this was
a particularly really good playoff basketball game between the Lakers

(34:42):
and the Spurs, which I was listening to on w
AI San Antonio, and that second half of that game
was amazing. Lakers are coming back, it's the fourth quarter,
it's a close game. I am completely enthralled. And that's
when I look up and see the sign Arkansas six miles.
I'm like, whoa, my wow. I just kept driving south. Wow,

(35:06):
and this and this was before smartphones.

Speaker 4 (35:10):
You should have gone to Branson.

Speaker 2 (35:12):
Well, it would have been easier I had. I basically
had to just say, all right, well, if Arkansas is
in front of me, the place I'm going is way
up there. I'll just keep driving that way and just
keep stopping at gas stations and asking for directions. I'm
still somewhere in the middle of the Ozark St.

Speaker 4 (35:33):
Louis. Yeah, I oh, here's seventy Okay.

Speaker 2 (35:37):
One of two times in my life I've just started
driving and it was a while before I realized where
am I going.

Speaker 4 (35:47):
That's when you turn the radio down.

Speaker 2 (35:49):
Right, Yeah, Lakers won, by the way. Here was the
other time. I had just taken a job in Kansas City,
and in so doing, I left at the mid year point.
Over the winter break, I left college at Carney because
I like, all right, I'm I'm pulling out of my classes,
I'm moving my stuff and I'm going down to Kansas City.

(36:12):
And I I think it was like, after a weekend
or two in Kansas City, I was back home for
the weekend. I had to get more stuff or do something,
and it was time for me to leave. That Monday,
morning because I had to be at work like by
one o'clock in the afternoon. So I left in the morning,
gave myself plenty of time, and just started driving like

(36:35):
I normally do on I eighty westbound back back towards
Carne because that's that's where That's where I that's where
I've been driving. I leave home and head towards Carney.

Speaker 4 (36:50):
Was your new job in traffic?

Speaker 2 (36:52):
I made it. I think the Waiverly exit was. I
suddenly like what am I doing? Well? I also, I
have to tell you I get I've always loved radio,
So I'll start listening to radio stations and programs and
I'll just get sucked in like no one is doing
during this segment. Right, Okay, you asked when or where

(37:17):
mom Donnie was born. The Democratic socialist who wants to
be mayor of America Town, New York City, born in
Uganda in nineteen ninety one. His family moved to South
Africa when he was five, and then two years later
came to New York City, settling here in the United States.

(37:38):
So he's been here since the age of seven. He's
thirty three years old. Does that answer your question?

Speaker 4 (37:44):
Does answer my question?

Speaker 2 (37:45):
You know what else this guy, in addition to wanting
to defund dismantle the police, who he called wicked and
uh whatever else he said about them, I oh, wicked
and corrupt, That's what he said. Accuse the police of
being involved in a cycle of violence, and they're like, yeah,

(38:05):
we are trying to stop it. Mondani hates the cops.
People are calling him a hypocrite for honoring the memory
of this latest police officer murdered in New York by
a crazy person who keeps getting let out by the
City of New York, and say like, wait a second,
how can you who hates cops, how can you honor

(38:29):
the life of this cop? Oh, because you're running from
mayor now you think it's politically expedient. You know what
else he thinks? He thinks Israel's mean. He thinks they're
mean to those Palestinians. And that phrase, I say, dripping
with sarcasm. There is no such thing as Palestine. There's

(38:49):
an area of land that some people call Palestine or
the Palestinian territory, but it doesn't actually exist as much
as they wanted to. As much as France last week
Emmanuel macarn said we're going to recognize Palestine. Hey, why
not you recognize all sorts of things that don't actually

(39:12):
exist in nature of science? Why not do this? And
now Canada is doing the same thing. Yesterday Prime Minister
Mark Carney announced that Canada will be recognizing a Palestinian
state and they'll do so in their September meeting of
the United Nations this year. And Mom, Donnie probably thinks

(39:34):
this is just great because those those darn Jews committing
all that genocide against the Palestinians. We're going to recognize Palestine.
You know what's interesting about Well, we'll go with their
parlance here Palestine. Do you know who the ruling party
of Palestine is? They have elections, well, when they're allowed to,

(39:55):
and you think that, you know, Trump says an election
is rigged, however it is that they come to power.
Do you know who the ruling governing party of quote
unquote Palestine is? HAMAS, a recognized terror organization. HAMAS is

(40:16):
the governing body of Palestine. So for France or Canada
or this socialist who wants to be the mayor of
New York to say no Israel's mean they're just wiping
out these Palestinians that's Hamas. They're at war with Hamas.
And remember what was Israel doing October seventh, a couple

(40:37):
of years ago, when Hamas Palestine attacked them. Nothing hanging
out going to it. They were at a concert, people
were shopping at the market, and several people were murdered
in cold blood. Those who weren't held hostage and attacked
for years on end. That's the ruling body of Palestine.

(40:57):
So for Canada and France, ants or mom Donnie to say, well,
I recognize Palistine, I recognize a palace inning in state.
You guys are recognizing a terrorist organization. You guys are celebrating, honoring,
propping up, and allowing a terrorist organization to exist in

(41:18):
that part of the world.

Speaker 4 (41:20):
I imagine Ireland will probably follow suit if you go
off of the stats that both Canada and France have large, large,
large communities of Middle Eastern people that are probably probably
part of maybe supporters, yeah, or sympathizers of Hamas.

Speaker 2 (41:43):
Maybe because there's also something else that's a dynamic here,
and that is just because you're Middle Eastern or even
Muslim doesn't mean you like Hamas, right, of course. I
mean you look at what's been going on with, for example,
the Sunnis and the she Heites and so forth. There
are a lot of warring tribes and sects within the

(42:03):
Middle East beyond just Arab and jew So there are
a lot of people. Just like the idea of illegal
immigration into this country, there are legal immigrants who come
here and say, thank goodness, I came here. Close the
door behind me. These people behind me are crazy. That's
why I got away from them. Just because you come
to this country from an area south of America doesn't

(42:27):
mean that you want open borders and everything is just great.
Just because you're Arab, Muslim, whatever, doesn't mean that you
like Amas. There are a lot of people like, oh,
we don't like Hamas. Hamas has ties to Hasballah, which
has ties to Iran, which has ties to Russia. We
don't trust any of these guys. These guys are crazy.
In fact, when Trump came out and said we are
instituting a travel ban against these nations, the Associated Press

(42:51):
and other members of the media came out and said, well,
they're Muslim majority nations. We know who else has a
travel ban against some of those nations, other Muslim majority nations.
Because some of these groups are terrorists running these groups
running these countries, and Canada and France are among the
Neville chamberlains of today who are saying, well, let's just

(43:12):
pacify these guys and maybe they'll be fine. And France,
especially as that mindset of strict Islamic adherence to a
Hamas brand of the Muslim faith is taking over France
more and more every single day. And it is not
to the success the long term success of France, its people,

(43:37):
its heritage, or its culture which frankly they want to
wipe out because it's Western. But by all means, please
tell me more about your thoughts on how the Middle
East can be so much better if France and Canada
recognizes Palestine, which is hamas Trump said, Yeah, making a
deal with Canada just got more difficult because this is

(43:58):
what they're doing with Palestine that doesn't exist. Scott kfab
dot com anything anyone else want to get a word
in edgewise inboxes? Open Scott Voice News Radio eleven ten Kfab.
Here's another thing, Lucy, and another thing. President Trump is

(44:23):
looking to hire more people to work for immigration and
customs enforcement. I don't know if you heard about this,
but he's got a pretty big project underway, and he
needs more people. The project is for those who decided
not to self deport. All right, this is the game
you want to play. I guess we'll have to play
a little game of hide and seek. So they need

(44:45):
more agents. And this is either for the benefit of
those who have brought human trafficking victims into this country
and they need to be rooted out, or they brought
a bunch of drugs, guns, gang mentality into this country
and they need to be rooted out. Or there are

(45:06):
some people who need to get their paperwork in order,
or there are some people who know their PaperWorks not
in order, know that they've stolen someone's identity. Someone else
has had their identity thieved because someone has taken it
and they're working over at this place. These are all
variations on illegal activities that we have law enforcement going

(45:28):
out to deal with. When it comes to border patrol
issues and immigration, it's ice. So President Trump has put
out a recruiting campaign to entice brave and heroic Americans
to serve as new deportation officers. Immediately, the media and Democrats,
sometimes a distinction without a difference, have set in saying,

(45:50):
oh well, if we're just suddenly just hiring people all
over the place. You're gonna get a bunch of trigger
happy cowboys that are racists that just want to go
out there and just start harassing people and tearing families apart. Well,
we would hope that that wouldn't happen. Hiring is not
an exact science, but maybe one of the questions is
are you just racist towards brown people? And do you

(46:13):
want to tear families apart? Hell, yeah, dude, all right,
well we're not hiring you. I would hope that that
wouldn't happen. And then they say, well, you know, this
fifty thousand dollars signing bonus with Department of Homeland Security
could get a bunch of people away from law enforcement
to go work for ICE. They get a nice signing

(46:33):
bonus and they get a chance to do this job.
And therefore law enforcement might be dismantled across this country
by this.

Speaker 4 (46:42):
And I'm like, they care about that?

Speaker 2 (46:43):
Yeah, when did you guys start caring about funding a
full law enforcement We don't see that anywhere in this country.
Scott Voices. Hulk Hogan died last week. We noted his
passing as we learned about it late in the show
on Friday, and I was I was sad by that because,
as I said earlier, the nostalgia beams are directed right

(47:06):
at me. Basically, if you were a child of the eighties,
the nostalgia beams, you grew up in the eighties, you
came of age in the nineties. It's like all the
pop culture is directed other than that which is for
the kids today, which should not even be trifled with.
Most of pop culture stuff is like, hey, let's do

(47:29):
another top Gun movie. Forgot to mention that one. That
was amazing, that was so, so, so good and happy
Gilmour too. I loved it, thought it was great. I
don't immediately love every single sequel they put out. Beetlejuice
two was an incredible disappointment in the first movie is
one of my favorite movies of all time. So I

(47:51):
like the nostalgia. But the problem with that is there's
always another side of that coin, right, is that our
the people we grew up consuming as entertainers on some level,
well you know, they're older now and sometimes they die.
So when halk Hogan died last week, that was sad.

(48:14):
Hal Hogan was one of the literally one of the
biggest people in America in the eighties. You think about
the eighties, it's Reagan, Michael Jackson, Madonna, hal Cogan. Who
else Joe Montana, Magic Johnson, and Larry Bird, Michael Jordan,
I mean, theose are some of the big names of
the eighties. Hal Hogan's right in there. But during the

(48:39):
Republican National Convention about a year ago, halk Hogan did
the inexcusable. He went to the Republican National Convention, tore
his shirt off to reveal a Trump Vance twenty twenty
four shirt, and he talked about his hero brother, my

(49:02):
hero when they took a shot at my hero, Donald Trump.
Pretty good hal Cogan impression, and he said that Trump
should be re elected as President of the United States.
Well that was that was it. He had made some
mistakes in his life, which he willingly admits, and had

(49:28):
he not gone out to the Republican National Convention and
supported Trump, he would have passed away on Friday from
cardiac well Thursday, I guess, from cardiac arrest at the
age of seventy one. And it just would have been like, oh,
here's some clips of hal Cogan wrestling or being in
movies like Rocky three and that would be it. But no,

(49:54):
you have people like I've seen some of this on
my social media, which I found to be very, very sad.
But also here's a school board member in Florida, in
Lucia County, Florida, who said, oh, did halk die? I
didn't even know good one less maga in the world.

(50:17):
So she was glad he was dead because he's a
Trump supporter. One less maga in the world. That's that's great.

Speaker 4 (50:28):
If thinking like that doesn't show you absolute pure evil
of heart, I don't know what does. The fact that
he's dead and she celebrates it. Anything that comes after
that makes no sense. You're celebrating somebody. I have no
time for you.

Speaker 2 (50:44):
This also happened last year when he spoke in favor
of Trump at the convention. I was talking with a
very very dear friend of mine who is very very
anti Trump. Yes, we can coexist, and we don't shot
away from talking politics. I love talking politics with this individual.

(51:06):
We just, you know, understand that there's really nothing that
either of us can do about any of this stuff,
and so let's talk about it and not take things personally,
not start fighting about it. And just have some conversation.
Sometimes it turns into some robust conversation, but it doesn't
have to be personal or ugly or anything like that.

(51:27):
So last year, when I met hall Cogan and posted
on social media the pictures of me and the video
of me interviewing hal Cogan, this individual reaches out and
and said, it's just too bad. What has happened to
hal Cogan? I said, what do you mean? And he says, well,
he's been using the N word a lot. I said,

(51:48):
He's not been using the N word like he's just
walking around dropping the N word. There was, as he admits,
he was referring to his daughter's then boyfriend. His daughter
is white, the boyfriend was black, I guess, and he

(52:09):
was recorded going on he was really angry about something
and he was using the N word liberally. Is probably
an understatement, and people say, well, that's who he is.
He's a hardcore racist, no wonder he supports Trump.

Speaker 1 (52:29):
Good.

Speaker 2 (52:30):
I'm glad he's dead racist. Maga. Here's what haul Hogan
said about where he was in his life at that time.
He said, I was to the point where I wanted
to kill myself. I would sit by myself in my house.
My wife was gone, ran her out. I was estranged

(52:53):
from my children, they were gone. I would sit there,
he says. I was completely broken and destroyed, and I
was suicidal. It was the ugliest, worst, most broken version
of a man as a man can be. And that's

(53:17):
the hit. He lashed out to be as hurtful and
hateful as possible, because that's who that's who he saw
when he looked in the mirror, and so for a
time there, that's who he was. It's it's awful to
be judged by your worst. I am down as deep

(53:41):
in this hole of life as I can possibly be.
Haul Cogan didn't kill himself. He did clean himself up.
He bettered himself. He repaired his relationships with his daughter
and son. I think he was even on pretty good
terms with his ex wife. And when I saw him
here in Omaha last year, out there signing autographs, posing

(54:06):
for pictures, there was a line from the high Ve
there at about one hundred and eighth and Fort Street
that went through the store out the door down the building.
High Ve is a really big building, and around the
corner way down the other side of this giant building,
And as I walked out because I got in front
of the line access because I'm very important. I got

(54:27):
a chance to talk to hal Cogan before the rest
of you sweaty, unwashed masses. You know, I'm in radio.
This is the lifestyle afforded important people like me. As
I walked out, I actually got a little choked up
because I saw everything from grandparents to parents to kids,
all halk of maniacs, all very anxious to just spend

(54:50):
a moment meeting Hal Cogan. And I saw people wearing
Trump hats. I saw people from all walks of life.
I saw white people, I saw Hispanic people, and I
saw a lot of black people too, who were very
excited to go meet Haulcogin because they saw a man
who they watched growing up. For those who are about

(55:12):
my age, they saw a man who lifted up the sport,
including for wrestlers like Junkyard Dog, Coco Beware, Tony Atlas,
Special Delivery Jones, and other black wrestlers. He lifted the
whole sport up, and he also lifted himself up from

(55:32):
the really dark, suicidal, addicted place he was when he
made those horrible comments. If you choose to believe that's
who he was. I guess I can't stop you. A
total look at the entire person would tell you that's
not who he was. That's the person he was ashamed

(55:52):
of being for a short time. So the man who
died last week was someone who found redemption, not someone
who was racist. We talked about some pretty big issues,
but this one might be the biggest of them all. Lucy,
is Liam Neeson dating pam Anderson.

Speaker 4 (56:16):
I see that that is possible probably the case.

Speaker 2 (56:20):
Yeah, we're gonna let this happen.

Speaker 4 (56:22):
Why why do you not want it to?

Speaker 1 (56:26):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (56:26):
I want them both to be happy. Okay, but it
just it seems doesn't It seem a little odd.

Speaker 4 (56:35):
They seem to be maybe a little bit uh opposite
on the political scale. But I don't know that.

Speaker 2 (56:42):
Well, wasn't Pamela Anderson like involved.

Speaker 1 (56:46):
With that uh.

Speaker 2 (56:51):
Yeah, that guy who is a fugitive from justice hiding
in Estonia or wherever he was? This is the Wiki
leaks guy Julian Assange, and Pamela Anderson's like, but you
got to come back to America.

Speaker 4 (57:03):
He was? She was involved with him in some aspect, yes,
was it romantic? I don't know, because he's with somebody else.

Speaker 2 (57:12):
Liam no oh A signed oh. I don't know. I
don't know about his love life, but so Liam Neeson
of course, was famously married to the love of his life. Yes,
Natasha Richardson, an actress, and then she died. I don't
know how long it's been now. It's a skiing accident.

Speaker 4 (57:33):
Sixteen years ago. And I only know that because they
just saw that a couple of days ago.

Speaker 2 (57:38):
Okay, he's seventy three, she's fifty eight, and they're starring
together in The Naked Gun. That's another question.

Speaker 4 (57:48):
Why do we know that?

Speaker 2 (57:50):
When you do a reboot, can you call it the
exact same thing as the first one? Now, as I
understand it, this is a continuation of the story, including
the characters of the original Naked Gun cast. Well, it's
Leslie Nielsen as Lieutenant Frank Dremen Police Squad. One of

(58:13):
the greatest movies of all time. I can't hear you.
Try not firing the gun while you're talking. That movie
was so brilliant. Naked Gun two and a half good funny,
had some really good parts in it. One of my
favorite quotes from that one is, I love it. You

(58:34):
have to see it in context. I say that one
a lot. Oh that would be me. I've been swimming
in raw sewage. I love it. I love it. Naked
Gun thirty three and a third Okay, not great, don't
need to if if it happens to be on on

(58:54):
my watch ten minutes of it. If I if I
just want to sit eat a quick Boloney sandwich and
I just need to stare at something for ten minutes,
that's probably good enough. Not a great movie. Well, but
so shouldn't this then be if if? Because the idea
here is that Liam Neeson is the son of Leslie Nielsen.

(59:17):
We've gone from Nielsen to Neeson. So Leslie Nielsen Frank
Dreben had a son who we didn't know about in
those original movies, and that's Liam Neeson, who's not heading
up police squad. They have the sons of George Kennedy's character,
OJ Simpson's character and all the rest of it. So
then it seems to me this should be Naked Gun

(59:39):
forty four and a fourth.

Speaker 4 (59:41):
No, just forty five. You have thirty three and a third.

Speaker 2 (59:45):
Yeah, I get what you're going there.

Speaker 4 (59:47):
From a record to catch the other half.

Speaker 2 (59:49):
But two and a half though they did Naked Gun
two and a half. So you did a fraction involving
the first number, then thirty three a naked gun. Did
you watch it called thirty three and a third or
three in a third? Did you watch it which that
one naked gun? Three?

Speaker 4 (01:00:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (01:00:08):
And did it have any reason to did anything stand out?
Why they named it.

Speaker 2 (01:00:12):
That from a record standpoint? Thirty three third? No, just
it was just funny.

Speaker 4 (01:00:17):
Okay, So this is anything they want?

Speaker 2 (01:00:20):
Yeah, they could so naked gun four in a quarter
I guess.

Speaker 4 (01:00:24):
I don't know, but they're on the floor.

Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
But it's right.

Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
Yeah, I like it. So this one's just the naked gun.
Well that's what the first one was called.

Speaker 4 (01:00:34):
Oh, but you know for sure it's a continuation.

Speaker 2 (01:00:37):
Yes, and the love interest here is not uh, Priscilla
Presley or presumably her daughter though I don't know what
they're gonna do with this, but Liam Neesen's love interest here,
Frank Dreben's love interest is Pamela Anderson.

Speaker 4 (01:00:58):
And so they may not be together.

Speaker 2 (01:01:00):
Yeah. So they've been doing interviews for this movie, and
they've been kind of playing up the rumor that maybe
they're more than co stars and friends. There was one
where I don't know which news source it was, but
they said, all right, let's we welcome here Liam Neeson
and Pamela Anderson for the new movie that they could Gun.
And the camera turns to them and they're making out

(01:01:23):
as a joke and it's like, oh, hey, we're on hi,
excuse me, you know that kind of thing, which is funny.
But there there was also People Magazine said, oh yeah,
Liam Neeson told friends, is how the tabloids do it.
He was madly in love with Pamela Anderson back in

(01:01:44):
nineteen ninety six, No October. Who wasn't I know? That's
what I'm saying. I mean, women were, Yeah, Pamela Anderson has.

Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
She was.

Speaker 2 (01:01:56):
She was quite the attraction, don't you back in the day.

Speaker 4 (01:02:00):
Don't you go there?

Speaker 3 (01:02:02):
What?

Speaker 4 (01:02:03):
Go ahead?

Speaker 2 (01:02:04):
You call me? Goathead?

Speaker 4 (01:02:05):
Nope, GoAhead, cheese.

Speaker 2 (01:02:08):
No, I'm not you're you're thinking. I'm gonna say, yeah,
she's lost a little bit of her curveball. She's gotten
on in years. She's fifty eight. She's allowed to look
like she's fifty eight. I'm the last person that's going
to criticize someone for looking older. I'm the guy that
every single person I see, including Oftentimes Lucy feels compelled.
I don't know if you guys get paid every time

(01:02:29):
you say this, but everyone I see feels compelled to
say you look tired. Yeah, you know why because I'm
old and tired. They say to you, yes, and I yes,
you have Okay, Well, sometimes you say, uh, my favorite
is are you in a bad mood today?

Speaker 4 (01:02:49):
Why you look tired?

Speaker 2 (01:02:51):
No, it's not, it is It's like I just have
RBF and you just look at me and go, oh boy,
and uh And the worst is when I'm not. This
is just how I look. I just look like a tired, old,
grumpy RBF resting.

Speaker 1 (01:03:08):
Thanks.

Speaker 2 (01:03:09):
Yeah. So I'm not going to say, well if Hanla Anderson, boy,
you know she used to be whoo but now uh, okay,
you might look she looks she looks great for fifty eight.

Speaker 4 (01:03:24):
Yeah, you might not say it, but but other people do.
And I know that because I know it's said about me,
because I'm getting people and whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:03:34):
You know only in your brain.

Speaker 4 (01:03:36):
No, no, no, no, no, look not fishing for compliments.
I know it. It's it's just the way it is.
And so I know that people have those thoughts. I
know because I've heard them said about other people back
in the day.

Speaker 2 (01:03:50):
When let's talk about aging for a second. Okay, why
is it now that if once you get a little
bit older, whatever you decide that number is for you,
suddenly you have to go out there and participate in things,
and do athletic things and achieve incredible, adventurous athletic things

(01:04:17):
that people fifty years ago at the same age never
would have conceived of. So we can all look and go, wow,
look what he did. And he's sixty four, you know,
or whatever when I'm sixty and so he you know,
he's out there, you know, sprinting marathons up and down
mountains and will carrying barbells and all the rest of

(01:04:39):
this stuff. You know what else you can do just
you can get a little bit older and you can realize, hey,
there's some stuff that I can't do like I used to.
I still want to do them because I think the
biggest mistake you can make. Like last night, I got
home and my son said, let's play basketball. Now, normally
that's probably two games, sometimes three. We pushed it to

(01:05:04):
four last night. I lost the last two, which makes
me which makes you think, did you win the first
two heck, yes I did. Then I was tired and
I felt like my uh, there was a muscle on
my left leg that was about to snap. So we
should have played a fifth one, as you know, best
best of five, but not. Yeah, I couldn't do it.

(01:05:25):
I looked at my schedule and realized I needed to
walk today, so I couldn't do it. So, yeah, is
it impressive to me that I was able to go
out there and play four games of basketball against my kid?
My son's fifteen, and we have some good battles. I've
had bruised ribs and black eyes from some of these battles.
He scratched my finger, Lucy, look it's bleeding still, well,

(01:05:49):
its kind of looks like it was bleeding. It hurts.
It's right there in the fold owt I just touched
it hurts.

Speaker 4 (01:05:55):
Would you want me to answer that question?

Speaker 2 (01:05:57):
So I think what I was saying is the worst
thing you can do. Like last night, did I really
feel like playing a bunch of basketball? No, I'm old
and tired, remember, So what I felt like saying was
I don't want to play tonight. What I said was, yeah,
let's go, because as old and tired as I felt

(01:06:19):
last night. In ten years from now, I'm going to
be ten years older and tireder, and I'm going to
look back at how I felt today and thought you
had no idea how great a shape you were in.
So whatever it is that like for me, I like
to walk the golf course and do I still like

(01:06:40):
go out and go. I'm walking thirty six today. Sometimes
I don't really have the time. Sometimes I can still
do that. It hurts. And I got up in the
middle of the night when it was raining and I
went to use the restroom and I couldn't walk because
suddenly my right foot was killing me. I don't even
know what happened. But when I come home from work tonight,

(01:07:05):
if my son's around and wants to play, We're playing
that fifth game and I'm gonna beat him best of five.

Speaker 4 (01:07:10):
I think that the reason people try to do more
than they really want to do as they age is
because they don't want to age.

Speaker 2 (01:07:19):
And you, well, it doesn't It doesn't stop you from aging.

Speaker 4 (01:07:22):
It doesn't stop you from aging, but it makes it
a little bit slower because if you're still active, like
I don't necessarily want to mow the grass every week.
But I also want to mow the grass every week because.

Speaker 2 (01:07:36):
It don't want to be You don't want to be
that neighbor with the jungle. You got that too, you know,
you got those nice houses on your block. It's like
perfect yard, perfect yard, Jumanji perfect yard. You don't want
to have Jumanji yard.

Speaker 4 (01:07:51):
Well, that's true. But being active in any kind of
a way. When I look at how much weight I
have gained now and think about the things that I do,
and I still am actively doing anything, Eah's so what
if I didn't act? What if I wasn't active at all?
I mean, how much more we would I have gained?
So I think that, yeah, it's not about all I
must be sixty four and running marathons. I don't think

(01:08:12):
that's it. I think it's just that as you age,
you get more cognizant of the breakdown of your body
if you're not doing anything, because it's going to break
down anyway even if you do.

Speaker 2 (01:08:21):
Here's the thing. I think there's a difference. And I
don't know what the percentages in each of these groups,
but you've got those who feel like, all right, I've
gotten older, but I still want to go out there
and I'm hitting the gym and I'm getting balked up,
and I'm running marathons, and you see me riding my
bike all over the place makes you feel And I'm
doing this thing and you see me on the tennis

(01:08:44):
court just absolutely beaten guys half my age. You've got
people in that group who are doing those things because
they feel better when they do it right. It might
take them a little longer to recover, but they feel
good and they love doing it. They love still doing
these things. But then you've got the people who are

(01:09:04):
doing some of those things. They're in this other category
and they're trying to do all this stuff because they're
friends of family, co workers or whatever doing it. And
they're doing that stuff because they feel like, well, I
got to go out there and shred, I got to
go out there and take on the world. I got
to go out there. And they hate it. They just
hate it. They're not having any fun. They're constantly, constantly sore.

Speaker 4 (01:09:29):
I don't know, and most of us are soaring at
this age, just sitting there right.

Speaker 2 (01:09:36):
Well, then you've got the two groups. On the flip
side of that coin. You got the people who are
just sitting around getting fat and that breaks also down
into two mental categories. Those who are sitting around getting fat,
who love it, like I've never been happier. Look at
all this great TV I'm watching. And then you know
these guys you can binge watch this whole thing. It's

(01:09:57):
people who live in this house and there are ghosts
and the funny what's the show called ghosts?

Speaker 4 (01:10:03):
That is actually pretty good?

Speaker 2 (01:10:04):
Sar is it it looks stupid?

Speaker 4 (01:10:06):
No, it's it's a little bit stupid, but I.

Speaker 2 (01:10:08):
Like it, okay. And then you've got the people who
are sitting around getting fat, who they and they hate it.
They can't muster up the mental energy to start to
try to do something because they feel like, well, I
gotta go out there and I gotta ride a bike
eight miles today. No you don't. You just got to

(01:10:29):
go out and do something, and then tomorrow do a
little bit something more, then take a day off and
then do a little bit you know. That's so. I
just hope that, however it is that you're living your life,
or whatever stage you're in or you think you're in,
I think the reality is in ten years, you will
feel ten years older and more tired than you are today.

(01:10:49):
So appreciate where you are today, but make sure whatever
you're doing, make sure you're enjoying it. Because here's the thing.
Whether you are out there just killing it, looking great,
doing great, all that stuff. If you're just killing it
or you're sitting around being miserable and getting old and fat,

(01:11:09):
you know who cares. Hardly anyone. The people that you
think that you're letting down don't care. The people that
you think like, oh no, I'm not out there doing
the stuff and they're all disappointed me, they don't care.
And the people you think that you're impressed by there

(01:11:29):
are people you think that you're impressing by being out there,
like oh yeah, I'm sixty eight years old, I look
like I'm forty eight. And here comes the twenty eight
year old beer cart girl, and she's going to be like, wow,
you know what, look at this guy. She's not she
doesn't care. She does not care. She doesn't care, her

(01:11:49):
friends don't care. No one cares. But if it makes
you feel good, then do it. It's the only person
who has to care is you. And if you like
where you are, have at it. But if you're just
like I hate doing this, then don't do as much.

Speaker 4 (01:12:08):
That's well, you've just fixed the world.

Speaker 2 (01:12:10):
Yep life coach, Life coach, god vorhees we free. Do
we figure out where whether Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson
are really dating, and whether we're going to allow this
to happen.

Speaker 4 (01:12:19):
I'm gonna go with a no.

Speaker 2 (01:12:21):
The Naked Gun movie comes out tomorrow, and I do
not know because on one hand, I'm like, Ah, don't
ruin the Naked Gun. And I see some of the
commercials for it. Some of it looks dumb, some of
it looks bad, some of it looks funny. The scene
where he's got a guy in the interrogation room, He's like,

(01:12:43):
I see you did twenty years for man's laughter. That's manslaughter.
Must have been some joke, you know. That's original kind
of Leslie Nielson Naked Gun humor, And that's that's good stuff.
But the only thing that I think might be a
saving grace for this movie is Seth MacFarlane has written
and produced or directed. He's got his hands in it.

(01:13:06):
Seth MacFarlane is the guy behind Family Guy, and I
don't think he set out to make a movie that
destroys the memory of one of the greatest comedies of
all time The Naked Gun. I hope not so. I'm
rooting for this movie. If it's half as good as
Happy Gilmore Too, that'll be pretty good. Scott Voyes Mornings

(01:13:27):
nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven ten Kfab
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

24/7 News: The Latest
Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton tackle the biggest stories in news, politics and current events with intelligence and humor. From the border crisis, to the madness of cancel culture and far-left missteps, Clay and Buck guide listeners through the latest headlines and hot topics with fun and entertaining conversations and opinions.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.