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July 3, 2024 35 mins
ICYMI: Hour Three of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – Thoughts on the impact of internet addiction on teenagers…PLUS - FloriDUH News with a stripper suing Florida over the state’s new “adult entertainment business age restrictions” AND a look at Hailey “Hawk Tuah Girl” Welch’s 5 minutes of fame - on KFI AM 640…Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kellyon demand from KFI AM six forty,
and I would say just self analysis, self diagnosis. I would say I'm
Internet addicted, always on my phone, albeit for justifiable reasons most of the
time, be it searching for newsstories, trying to stay up to date

(00:24):
on the news. I have todo a BBC interview after I get off
the air tonight, so I'm researchingall the time. But I do know
that I'm on my phone far morethan probably would be recommended by any physician
or psychiatrists or sociologists. But thinkabout the impact it has on developing minds

(00:46):
such as young people, and toomuch of anything is probably a bad thing
when you're talking about kids and theirdevelopment, be it food, what they
put in their bodies, or whatthey put in their minds, or just
how they're spending time on their phones. I've long said most of the problems
that we have with young people todayare probably connected to their use of the

(01:10):
Internet, either the information that they'regetting on the Internet or their lack of
socialization skills. Look, you've runinto a young person and many times they
don't have eye contact with you.They don't know to have a real conversation
with you. I talk to teachersand they say they don't know how to
write papers because everything is internet shorthandand text shorthand. We're raising a generation

(01:36):
of people who are probably broken anddysfunctional. But we can cross this study
about internet addiction what it's doing toteen brains, So listen to this.
We know how often kids and teensare online, especially social media, and
this is looking into how much timethey're spending online and on social media and
then eventually complaining about how they're notable to focus on things like homework or

(02:00):
spending time with friends and families.So it's pretty interesting research and that experience
we're talking about this morning that's reflectedin the new findings of this study.
It was actually just published in theJournal Plus Mental Health. It found in
teams with internet addiction, the signalsand their brain that are important for things
like controlling attention or memory. Thoseareas and their brain were disrupted from what

(02:24):
these researchers saw. The study wasa review of twelve neuroimaging studies of a
few hundred kids and teens ages tento nineteen between twenty thirteen and twenty twenty
two researchers this morning say their findingsare comparable to looking at people who deal
with substance addictions. In the US, internet addiction is not listed as a

(02:46):
mental disorder, but internet gaming disorderis. If this sounds relatable at all,
or if you have a teenager who'salways on their phone at home or
tablet, experts say the best wayto mitigate your child's Internet addiction if that's
the case, by teaching them somebalance, find ways to keep them offline,
and if you find something that keepsthem offline, encourage them to do

(03:07):
more of that. There's also familyscreen time goals. We've talked about goals
that you can set as a familyso everyone at home is involved in healthier
Internet habits. See how she soundedfar more professional than the DUI woman the
PRESD. I'm sorry, that's justa callback, but Internet addiction is defined
as the problematic, compulsive use ofthe Internet that results in significant impairments in

(03:31):
an individual's functioning in various aspects oflife, including social work and academic arenas.
I didn't have the study to quantifywhat I already believe to be true.
That's just more evidence to support whatI already believe to be true.

(03:52):
I don't think anyone is surprised whenwe say we're raising a generation of young
people who are addicted to the Internet. And also it makes it more difficult
for them to do well in school. It makes it more difficult for them
to have fully functioning, mature relationshipswith not only their classmates, but just

(04:12):
people like parents and family. Youknow, I don't know if we learned
anything differently than what we already suspected, But I am on the outside looking
in. Mark Ronner is looking atit from a news perspective. You Tualla,
you're an administrator at a school andalso a father of two teenagers,
you probably have a different perspective.One thing I know for a fact is

(04:36):
that, especially at our school,almost all of the children that attend our
school are all heavily, heavily influencedby a technological device, being an ipat
or something, and a lot ofthose are used for helping them cope their

(04:57):
like for free time, to kindof help them regulating things like that,
and they are necessary tools. Butwhen I look at my own children and
I see how hard it is forthem to to actually even do something that
they want to do. Like meand my son, we watch you know,
anime on Saturday nights, and itis tough for him to just sit

(05:18):
and watch something he wants to see, but also not have his phone in
his hand and something. I stopand say, hey, if you don't
want to watch this, we don'thave to because you're on your phone.
He's like, no, no,no, no, no, I'm not
I'm not I'm not gonna put itdown and then I'll watched it next day.
I know. I look back overand it's magically back as head.
I'm like, come from what areyou doing? And he said, oh,
no, it's this conversation or it'sa game or something. And yes,

(05:41):
he grew up in the age ofwhen we started getting our kids,
you know, for me, wentfrom the little Nintendo switches or the little
video handheld video games, and itmorphed into phones and things like that.
And yeah, I definitely definitely seethe damage that it does because everything that
you're saying it is true. Althoughwe have done a lot to invest in

(06:03):
that into our children to kind ofget them involved in programs and different things
to help socialize and get them outof the phones or devices. But it's
still a struggle. Yeah, Imean struggle. How do they even meet
each other? I mean, dothey talk on the phone at all?
Or is everything digital communication? Theytalk Like my son, he talks to

(06:23):
his friends mainly mainly when he's talkingto them, it is on a game
that they're all playing. They're ona game that they're all playing. He
was a part of a gaming group, like like a competitive gaming group,
and they would meet, you know, via online and things like that.
But no hanging out and and Butthat's also partially partially on us as parents,

(06:46):
because we were very overprotective about lettingour kids go hang out. To
us, hanging out is not thesame as when we were kids, and
we felt it was a lot saferfor me. Hey, Dad, can't
go hang out at the mall myfriends? Hell no, the hell is
you doing at the mall? That'show he gets shot. Yeah, that's
where you get shot. This iswhere you get beach today. That's what
I'm no saying that right there.Now they want to go to the mall

(07:06):
again, Hell no, kids outthere just robbing and shooting and killing each
other. No, So that's partof the problem. We also live in
a society where we as adults arealso heavily influenced by the things we see
and read that make us super protective. So it's this is this is the
Pandora's Box. I keep telling people. We opened Pandora's Box with the in,
with the Internet, with social media, that was it for society.

(07:30):
The Internet is way too powerful toput in the hands of children with well,
as they say, literally no adultsupervision. All the things that we
wondered about as kids, well it'son the internet for them as kids.
You know, we we couldn't finda Playboy back in the day. We
had to really hunt and search forit. Well, they have ten times
worse on the Internet. Hell,adults can't handle the Internet. Look at

(07:54):
the stuff that people send you,the utter madness that they send you that
they found on the internet to ouryou some point. That's like I told
you that this guy was red Mo. Look at this study from doctor red
Bob. It's like, what areyou talking about? These idiots? Look,
I wish my email was just thatcraziness. I wish I should show

(08:16):
you some of the stuff that peoplewere sending while I was away complaining and
I wasn't even on the damn radio. You shouldn't be on the air.
I'm not. I think Korea.You think I sound like Chris Merrill.
I'm sorry, but speaking of soundedlike you know. I was really appreciative

(08:37):
of this internet addiction story because itwas done in an unsexy way. Do
you? I do you? I? Do you? Why? Then you
get a real professional and she handlesit like a professional. More of that.
There's also family screen time goals.We've talked about goals that you can
set as a family, so everyoneat home is involved in healthier internet habits.

(09:00):
She didn't have to sex it up. She's say healthier internet habits.
I don't think you want to soundquite so seductive if you're trying to wean
people off of internet porn. Well, you shouldn't sound seductive when you're talking
about a car which rammed a sevento eleven. Well no. My theory
on this is that you're less likelyto be outraged and angry at the news
if you want to sleep with theperson delivering the news. Do you wh

(09:22):
There you go? She's hot?Oh yeah, I don't know what she
looks like, but she sounds hot. You wi Yes? Yes? Say
my name? What's my name?Yes? All right, I need a
shower. I'll be right back.I'll get one during the break, can't.
I AM six forty one lavee Everyoney, I Heart Radio app you're listening

(09:43):
to Later with mo Kelly on Demandfrom KFI AM six forty. When I
was doing the mo Kelly Show,News from Florida was a very popular segment.
We started later with mo Kelly.We said no, we're not going
to do any of the old segments, and so we put News from Florida
to the side. Well, wedecided to bring it back, at least
for tonight because there's some stories whichdemand the News from Florida. Treatment.

(10:09):
A Florida stripper has sued Florida's attorneygeneral and two local prosecutors to stop enforcement
of a new state law prohibiting adultentertainment businesses from employing people who are under
the age of twenty one. Theclaim is it violates their constitutional rights.

(10:30):
Serenity Michelle Bushy come on, Iswear to you. I don't think so.
No, that's not her dancer day, that's her real name. Serenity
Michelle Bushy Yes No, claims inthe lawsuit that she lost her job at

(10:56):
Cafe Risk gay from the air.Yeah. Here's satism in the Gaysville area
after the law took effect on Monday. She is nineteen years old. The
law obviously you must be twenty oneto work in a gentleman's club or an
adult entertainment establishment. According to thestate, the purpose of the law was

(11:20):
to deter human trafficking. That's whatthe Florida says. The lawsuit filed yesterday
in a federal court in Tallahassee onbehalf of Miss Bushy, the owner of
Cafe Riskue and two adult businesses inJacksonville. It seeks a permanent injunction stopping
the law from being enforced, claimingit violates their First Amendment right to free

(11:43):
speech and shake their ass. No, it doesn't say that. It says
right to free speech on fourteenth Amendmentright to equal protection. Besides Bushy,
Miss Bushy, eight other adult performerswho are older than eighteen but younger than
twenty one are unable to work therisk because of the new law. Let
me just say this, it doesseem rather odd that they would have that

(12:07):
many employees impacted by this law.No. No, Because Florida is home
to many trade school and junior college. That these girls are trying to work
their way to try to get theireducation. Yes, why are you gonna
stop them from getting an education?Well, I mean they could have gotten

(12:28):
a job doing something else. Idon't know, like news, you know,
talking about I don't know, likea car crashing into seven to eleven?
Do you that's sexy? That's adultentertainment work. I think work in
the poll pays a lot better thandoing the news. How do you know?
How much do you want to know? Oh? That's way too much.

(12:50):
I think miss Bushy is gonna havea close shave with the law on
ahead. He thought all segment forthat one. Yeah, I was saving
that up. That's what he said. Gross. I'm waiting, waiting.
It's starting rondo too gross, toogross, okay. Quote. As with

(13:11):
similar performers around the state, Bushyearned her living through her art while providing
entertainment for the benefit and enjoyment ofher audience. This is a lawsuit.
Plaintiffs have a clear legal right toengage in protected sex a speech of this
nature. Close quote. But thenew law also prohibits hiring cooks, DJs,

(13:31):
waitresses, and security guards who areolder than eighteen. But younger than
twenty one and even or even useworkers in that age group from third party
contractors hired to perform tasks such asair conditioning repairs or carpentry. That's random.
Well, I mean I understand theissue, because why is it you're

(13:52):
going to penalize me. I amof age, I am not consuming alcohol.
You know why the random nature ofthe age of twenty one that's supposed
to deter human trafficking. I don'tsee how this sounds like. This law
was written by an individual who wasdenied access to the champagne room. And

(14:15):
I'll stop no, probably got accessto the champagne room and left with an
unhappy ending. That could do ittoo, that could get a law ridden.
There's a lot of perverted senators inFlorida and congresspeople period, you know,
local judges, cops, they're allin Florida, and they're probably all
behind this law. Remember what MattJates got busted for? True story?

(14:39):
Yeah, true story, And therewere a lot of investigations swirling around him.
Did I say squirreling you know,around him circainly? Yeah, buzzing,
right of wi. He only hadone, He only had one.
But actually I went to my firststrip club when I was eighteen, was
around my eighteenth birthday, and therewere a lot of eighteen year olds.

(15:00):
And here, how, here's howit was back in the day. I
don't know if it's still true nowbecause I don't go to strip clubs anymore.
I missed them. But when Idid go to strip clubs, if
you went to a fully nude stripclub, they didn't have alcohol, also
didn't have food. Still like that, Yeah, no, it is still
like that. How do you know? Because I've done research, like your

(15:24):
it is his birthday, that's right. Yes, yes, I think I
got some think I got some dollarbills somewhere for you. Get it,
just don't try to stick it inmarks g string. Okay, I'll try.
Not enough real. No, Butthere were two clubs, and I've
told this before I saw I'll remindpeople. There was the First Kings and

(15:46):
the Barbary Coast if you know themin the LA area. I think they're
both closed now to shut down.I think the pandemic sad story. But
if you went to the First Kings, they weren't fully nude, so they
had alcohol, and I didn't understanand why alcohol made the difference like,
if you only see this this anatomy, you you can have alcohol, but
if you see the full and nowanatomy, you can't have any alcohol.

(16:08):
But I don't get, I don'tget. The First King was also a
place where you were likely to seebullet wounds. Oh yeah, oh no,
it was. It was in thehood. You were gonna see.
You were gonna think, it's awoman who should have named and named Bushy.
A problem that there was a problemwith that club. But also it
was well known that if you wentinto they didn't have a champagne room.

(16:30):
It was too ghetto to have achampagne room. It took. But if
you went to the back and youhad some money, then you might be
treated a certain way. Oh thatwas a fact, Yes, a certain
way. What do you mean exactly? You would you might be looked favorably
upon my first king name. Afterthe Book of the Bible, you would

(16:52):
find out, Yeah, you wouldfind out why her name last name was
Bushy. Yeah. Well, wait, you're slow on a draw in your
old age step and I'll tell youyou turn thirty six and just everything just
starts falling apart. Even the laughwas delayed, kind of a flaccid laugh.

(17:15):
There Lord, look at the timeyou are sixty. We're live everywhere
on the iHeartRadio app. And whenwe come back, we're going to get
into well, why not Tulla perfect? Perfect? What could be more perfect?

(17:36):
And just in case you don't knowabout the Tua girl, want to
tell you the whole history why she'sInternet famous and now she has an agent
and I don't know, probably atelevision deal, but she's world Internet famous.
Will tell you why in just amoment. We're live everywhere on the

(18:02):
iHeartRadio app. We talked at thetop of the hour talking about Internet addiction,
how most people are addicted to theirphones, always on our phones,
young and old. And we alsotalked about how the Internet is probably not
the best tool to put in anyone'shands because we don't know how to act.
It's not something where you're going tofind a lot of good information or

(18:26):
meaningful ways to spend your time.And you have people who I caller Internet
famous who go viral on TikTok orsome social media platform and it changes the
conversation, it changes that person's lifeindividually. And we're going to tell you
about another example of that. Thereis this cottage industry of all these mini

(18:48):
micropodcasts, these Men and Woman onthe Street sort of shows. They're not
even shows. They're just short videoswhere someone with a microphone will walk around
and walk up to random people andusually ask a sexually suggestive question relationship questions,
trying to get a good SoundBite ora video which will go viral.

(19:11):
And it happened. And if youcome across a story which reads as follows
something having to do with a hawktua girl, it's not hawk tua.
It's more a sound effect about howa young woman who was approached by one
of these men on the street teams. I think the name of it is

(19:34):
the Tim and d TV show,and they were asking her what she would
do or what she does to pleaseher man or any man. This is
the origination of the hawk to agirl, which is not actually pronounced that
way. It's more like puh spitshinegirl. Here we go go ahead,

(19:56):
here we go, tub and man. That makes a man go crazy every
time. Oh you gotta give himthat honk, Dude, spent all that
time you get How do you getover a breakup? Y'all? Get over
a breakup right now? On.My way to get over one is get
under amen. So, so yougot a Sibbs. Maybe have I got
three? Have I got seven?How many he's on your roster? There's

(20:18):
only one now? Won? Butokay, when someone asked how many on
your roster? How many people you'redating? How many people you see?
That's all? How many people you'resleeping with? Maybe? Have I got
three? Have I got seven?How many he's on your roster? There's
only one now, won? Butto be serious, I have a pot.
So how many you got on yourroster? I know? Maybe four?
One? One? I mean yougot on your roster line I went

(20:44):
to it one? Yeah, maybeI don't know, so I can get
your number, Yeah you can.Okay, here you rather I have backshots
for the rest of your life ormissionary for life? Okay? The question
was would you rather have backshots ormissionary the rest of your life? Okay?

(21:04):
I need to just figure out whatthey mean by that because I can't
define it on air. Okay,thank you, all right, but here's
her answer. For her answer,I have backshots for the rest of your
life or missionary for life. Youcan always choose one shots backshots, one
back flat life. Smile looking atme in my face. That is the

(21:29):
girl seems like a nice girl you'dwant to bring home to your folks,
or just bring home. I mean, if your folks were One of your
folks was Ron Jeremy Well. Peoplehave been searching high and low for who
she was because she didn't give hername in the video, but she has
been revealed as Haley Welch, obviouslyfrom the South. Is a very thick

(21:51):
Southern accent. Probably a nice younglady. But she is now becoming viral
sensation. She has a manager,probably a TV show coming. She did
an interview recently with TMZ and shewanted to come forward and dispel some of
the myths and lies that are outthere about her. But I guess because

(22:12):
she's worried about her image. Didyou delete all of your social media?
Okay, So I deleted all mysocial media like six months ago due to
like personal reasons. I never reallygot on it or anything like that.
Oh okay, So it didn't haveanything to do with this. Oh no,
I was long gone before that.You were already gone from social media,
and everyone thought that you deleted yoursocial media because you were like scared

(22:33):
of all of this blowing up.But you were gone. I've been gone
from it. So are you goingto come back this? I think we're
working on that right now because youhave a full management team. You have
a manager now you have She comesin with like this big ass camera,
like she's the real deal. Already, this happened like a week ago.
What were you doing for your job? Well? I have to sit up
and get ready for about thirty minutesand then I'll just go on and go

(22:56):
get me something to eat for breakfast, and then I'm going to work.
But I worked at it. Waitwait, wait, wait, wait,
wait, that wasn't answer to thequestion I'm talking about. I'm confused.
Wait wait, okay, did Ihear that right, Tulla? Because I
thought she was asked about one thingand then she answered another thing. You
already this happened like a week ago. What were you doing for your job?
Well, okay, the question iswhat were you doing for your job?
What were you doing for your job? Well? I have to sit

(23:18):
up and get ready for about thirtyminutes and then I'll just go on and
go get me something to eat forbreak What were you doing for your job?
Well? I have to sit upand do something for thirty minutes and
then go get breakfast. What you'reworking on in the corner? What were
you doing for your job? Well, I have to sit up and get
ready for about thirty minutes and thenI'll just go on and go get me
something to eat for breakfast, andthen I'm going to work. But I
worked in a spring factory. I'mnot a school teacher. That was my

(23:41):
next spring factory testing out the springsof course. Oh the jokes right themselves.
Hey hot, how was that mattress? Now I'm going to work.
But I worked in a spring factory. I'm not a school teacher. That
was my next question teacher and gotfired from your job. No, I'm

(24:04):
not even old enough to be ateacher. I was gonna say, because
you're twenty one, I'm like,this is illegal. Who exactly why you
were a teacher or a bartender?So the one everything. Also, I've
heard rumors that your dad is apreacher. My father so far from a
preacher is crazy? So everything hasjust been made up? Yeah, like,
no, it's true at all.She's the next Internet famous superstar for

(24:30):
doing something related to uh sex.This goes back to the exposure of making
young women famous by way of sex. And some of the offers from what
I've read that she's got all haveto do with something sexual. Well,
her management team is Penthouse, notthe Penthouse. Yes, that's very,

(24:55):
very coincidental. I have for therest of your life missionary for a show.
I chose one back shots backshots?Why backs slate a smile looking at
me in my face. You knowthere's such a quick answer too. It's
like she had an answer to outthese things on the job. That's this
great factory. Yeah, that makesa man go crazy every time. You

(25:18):
got to give him that. HOWKdude spit on that time? Spit on
that thing? Yeah? I thoughthawk too. It was the name of
an old Burt Reynolds show from thesixties. I didn't give him that.
HOWK dude spit on that that HOWKdude spit on that night. I don't
know where she's from. Don't askme what state might be Florida? Who

(25:41):
knows? Who knows? So whendo you see pulla girl? It's talking
about Haley Welch houck. Dude spiton that name? You spin on that
thing? Dude spit on that night? How do you get we like to
deliverance theme for her. You knowwhat. And in her first day of

(26:06):
selling merchandise online, well she started. She started selling T shirts and hats
and stuff with her making the hatto a face and just and it and
it sold like sixty three thousand dollarsworth of just jump. I cannot be
mad at the hustle, to beserious, I can't be mad that she
realized she had a moment. She'smaximizing the moment and she could change her

(26:32):
place in the station in life.I do not hate on her in any
way, of course, not famousgrandma. Well it's a long story.
No it isn't. N Is thatyour grandma? Yeah, you saw spit
on that thing used to that day. How do you get over a breakup?

(26:55):
Y'all? Get over a breakup rightnow. Only way to get over
one is get under Okay, that'spoor. No, no, no,
she's grown. She's gonna make herown decisions like working in the Florida Strip
club. You know she's she's twentyone, or she'll be on the ever
so uh low, degrading, filthysuccessful that is social media on the internet.

(27:18):
Punk dude, It's later with MoeKelly Uh yeah, We're going to
very carefully, gingerly check in withJorge Snory next segment, and hopefully he'll
speak to us find out what's happeningon Coast to coast. AM, It's
probably not puck, dude, noguarantees. Can if I am six forty,

(27:41):
we're live everywhere in the iHeartRadio app. Can if I am six forty
it's later with Mo Kelly, We'relive everywhere the I Heeart radio app.
Coming up in just a few momentswill be Coast to Coast a m with

(28:02):
George Nori. He joins me rightnow with a preview. Good evening,
my friend, mister Kelly. We'regoing to talk about protecting the power grid
and then later on using your mind, body and soul to make yourself the
best you can. I can't waitto listen to that because I always wonder
how vulnerable we are with our infrastructure, and it just seems like we're just

(28:22):
waiting for something to happen to ourinfrastructure, a big solar flare from the
sun or an EMP attack, rightright, very easily. Well, I'll
be listening in. We'll we'll talkto you soon. Did you notice George
wanted no parts of Hawk too.I was prepared for some awkward silence on
that, and I didn't asking methere, Mode, don't you even think

(28:45):
about it. Don't even think aboutasking me about Hawk tour. He probably
knows about it. You know,he's a well read man in the world.
Look, he keeps up with thenews. There's no way that he
would not know about to punk.Dude, speed all that. So you
get me, yeay, dude speedall that. She seems like a lovely

(29:11):
young lady. Lady is the keyword, I think, lady. Look,
all I know is she's twenty onewhen I was twenty one. That's
a twenty one year old guy's dream. Really those yes, yes with you,
Yes, you can watch that stuff, but in real life, when
you're confronted with it, it's alittle different. No, no, no

(29:33):
matter. It's like three d IfI were twenty one years old, I
would be seeking out Hawk to agirl. You don't want more like the
girl next door than the Hawk toa girl. If I'm twenty one,
I'm not trying to get married toher. I'm just trying to one.
I'm trying to, like, youknow, see if it'll do what to
do? Just go to a professionaland get it over with. Okay,
Well she might be, well she'son that road. No, put it

(29:56):
this way. She speaks very authoritativelyabout it subject that she knows intimate.
She is decisive about hawktua and backshotsas well. Fuck, dude, that
is never gonna get old. Idon't care what anyone says. But it

(30:17):
also speaks, if I could makea semi serious point, please, It
speaks to the internet culture, wherewe're always ready to say something because there's
a microphone put in our face.As a person who works in radio,
I'm always thinking about, okay,where the line is, so I don't
go over it. Oh we wentover it all evening. I don't know

(30:40):
we did, but okay, mostof the time. Yeah. But young
people today, and I would say, twenty one years old, you're still
a young person. They just tellall their business about everything to a random
stranger who just walked up and askeda question about So, how do you
please your man? Well, I'mglad you asked, Puck said, all

(31:00):
that night, you get me.Yeah. She doesn't seem to suffer from
a lot of inhibition. No,no, and and and if I were
a twenty one year old man.That would be a great thing. That
would be a great thing. Didyou see that how Shequille O'Neill sought her
out and they know there's there's apicture of them meeting. I don't know
what type of conversation they had,but you know, Shock likes I'm young,

(31:22):
I'm being serious, So he probablyput it in his bed I'm being
serious his bid. That's that's,that's what the young people say. Okay,
yeah, you know, you know, I'm cool like that. Well,
I hope there's a follow up tothis. Well, I don't know,
but I just saw it on socialmedia that he sought her out and
he was able to meet her.They had some sort of conversation that took

(31:44):
a picture together and it shows shocked. That's like really looking at her.
It's like he's starstruck. Is somethinglike that? That's that's that's a word
you can use for it. ButI think he was more thinking about what
she had to say. Yeah,you think a basketball player has a lot

(32:07):
of experience with the back shots?Is that what you're saying. No,
I'm saying that Shaquille O'Neil is aformer NBA player. It would not surprise
me if he were trying to introducehimself to her. That's all I'm saying.
I don't know a lot about sports. I just assume that's a kind
of a basketball move. The backshot. No, no, no, no,

(32:30):
that's a bank shot. Oh see, I was a wrestler. We
don't know about that. I don'tdon't. I don't want to give you
the definition you have Google. Yes, I'm not going to look it up
on a company computer. Are youout of your mind? You have a
phone? If you do, well, wait till I'm out of the building.

(32:51):
No, no, no, no, no, you can look it
up right now. No, becausesomebody over the air, somebody could walk
in here while I'm looking up somethingthat has created an instant hostile working environment,
and really that's last you're looking itup. Will not be the hostile
working environment you responding to it personallyby yourself in the booth. It's already
plenty hostile. What else do wehonestly need to do here? I don't

(33:14):
know. Play the sound bite,dude, that thing she said it was
such confidence and glee, like youget me. You know exactly what I'm
talking about. You know what Imean? As if she's done it plenty
times before she even knew how todo it to where you can play it
on every platform because it's not andthere's nothing bad that she said. The

(33:35):
way she did it, you justkind of assume what she's doing. But
if you listen to the fullness ofthe clip, the question is asked and
she immediately answers immediately with a fullanswer like oh yeah, this was on
I can't stay on the tip ofmy tongue. Well, I just said
it, but it was like itwas right there. She didn't even have
to think, Like if you wereto asked me like, mo, what

(33:57):
is you gonna do next week?Well, I don't know. Let me
think of about that for a second, and you start digging around in your
mind you come up with an answer. She did not have to wait at
all. For example, hub andbed that makes a man crazy. Every
time she interrupted him, you couldsay she has a firm grip on the
subject. Bub and bed that makesa mano crazy every time that hunk dude

(34:24):
spit. Look at the risk ofover analysis, the young man was trying
to ask a question and she rudelyinterrupted him because she felt the need to
let everyone know be damn your question. Here is the answer, and she
shut down the internet bub and bed. That makes a man go crazy every

(34:44):
time that hunk dude spend on thatnight. It's like she had that one
in the chamber ready to go.Oh it was ready to go. She's
she's ready to spend it and itjust relie stall at once, tub and
mad. That makes a mango crazyevery time. You gotta give him that

(35:05):
a dude spend all that night.I'm sorry, George, so Red White
and Blue Show and it is forfreedom holding. There is no parking in

(35:29):
the Red, White and Blue Show. Safe travels, Happy for k f
I N k O S T HDtwo Los Angeles, Orange County Live everywhere on the

Later, with Mo'Kelly News

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