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July 11, 2024 31 mins
ICYMI: Hour Three of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – An in-depth analysis of the most viral stories of the week in “The Viral Load” with regular guest contributor Tiffany Hobbs weighing in on everything from the rising celebrity of Haliey 'Hawk Tuah Girl' Welch; to the "Euthanasia Rollercoaster" that utilizes extreme G-force to achieve death and MORE…PLUS – A look at the countdown to the end of times courtesy of blind mystic Baba Vanga - on KFI AM 640…Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app
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Episode Transcript

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(00:00):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kellyon demand from KFI AM six forty.
Now it's tun My Lovely Timpany liveon camfi o Kelly. She'll talk about
the time. Is on social media, Red with Tiffany Hubs, CAFI AM

(00:30):
sixty is Later with Mo Kelly.We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
Not it's the Viral Load with TiffanyHobbs. God I love Eric Lesardo and
hearing that song shout out to him. I love it every single time.
Let's get into it. So thefirst story comes from Reddit and YouTube.
There's been some crossover appeal with thisstory. There's a visual simulation that's going

(00:52):
viral because it depicts the size thatone million dollars, one billion dollars,
and one trillion dollars can actually takeup physically. What do I mean?
Well, this this channel on YouTubecalled red Side, which deals with graphics
and representations, decided to bring attentionto the size of stacks of money.

(01:18):
He might be thinking, well,why would they do that. There's been
interest apparently on their channel about justhow much space this sort of quantity or
these quantities may in fact take up. So what they're doing is they created
these digital graphics on their YouTube channel, and in that channel, they'll take
one million dollars and they'll stack upthese blocks. Again it's digitally, but

(01:42):
you're seeing how these blocks then couldincrease in size, and they use humans
for scale, trucks for scale,and you get to see again how much
square surface. Basically that quantity cantake up. One million dollars took up
quiet a bit was the size ofmaybe a large shed or a garage,

(02:04):
whereas one billion dollars became a multistory building with a person next to it
looks really small, and a truck, a big truck that looks small as
well. And then one trillion dollarsjust completely obscures all of that. We
have a multi, multi, multistory building and a lot of square space.

(02:25):
But the issue here in what's goingviral is not just the fact that
this money has increased and you getto see how many stacks turn into a
story or you know, the sizeof a building. But what people are
noticing is that when it was onemillion dollars, the area around or the
background in this digital representation was leafy, was green, there was a blue

(02:50):
sky. It looked really pretty atone billion dollars, there's less blue sky,
fewer trees, more concrete, andwhen you get to one trillion dollars,
the entire digital background looks like thisapocalyptic wasteland of just concrete and gray.
And people online are causing this conversationto go viral because they're saying that

(03:13):
it really does, in fact illustratethe importance or the value placed on money
over nature. I've seen this viralvisual simulation. It's been out there for
a while. I'm kind of surprisedthat it's just now really catching on.
But we know the math, thebasic math. Okay, a billion is

(03:34):
a thousand million, and a trillionis a thousand billion, But to see
it in physical jars jarring, Yeah, it's jarring. It's jarring, especially
again with the people as representation orthe personification therefore showing that these stacks just
are huge there you can't really conceptualize. And that's what people are also surprised

(03:57):
by that what they thought they knew, or what they thought might be the
size of the block or this buildingof money is not in fact true.
It's a lot larger than they hadeven expected. So it's going viral because
of it. It's a story that'scome back around, like you said,
Mo, but it has new legsnow because people are catching on on Reddit
and on YouTube. The next storyis something that has also been around for

(04:21):
quite a while, for as longas I can remember, and quite honestly,
well before that. And I'm gonnaask the clip to be played now
because I want you guys to hearit. A woman is going viral after
sharing the sweet gesture her ninety eightyear old neighbor maid after she moved into
her new home, walking a cakeover to her house to welcome her to

(04:42):
the area. In a video postedto TikTok, Kelly McDuff can be seen
on the verge of tears as shedisplays a chocolate bunt cake with white frosting,
before panning the camera up to herwindow, where the neighbor who dropped
off the cake can be seen walkingback to his home. So, as
that just told you, there's ayoung woman. She's newly married, and
she and her husband have moved intothis neighborhood. They're in this nice house,

(05:05):
they're starting their life, and they'rein their mid to upper twenties.
But why this has gone viral?It's because Kelly McDuff, the woman who
uploaded this video to TikTok, isvisually stirred. She is shocked, and
she is so moved by this verysweet gesture from her ninety plus year old

(05:26):
neighbor who did, in fact bringa chocolate cake to her doorstep to welcome
her to the neighborhood. And thisis why I say this is not new.
This is something that's been around.Welcoming gifts or welcome gifts have been
around for ages, whether it's cookiesor cakes or pies or flowers. Done
myself, yeah, I've done itas well. And the thing that has

(05:47):
made this story go viral is notjust the gesture from the neighbor, but
that people are reacting to Kelly's shock, her again being moved and it is
a moving gesture, but feeling likewow. And this is what she shows
in the TikTok. She's practically intears that this is something so unusual,

(06:09):
but it is it kindness now,Yeah, kindness is unusual, and being
neighborly and knowing your neighbors knowing ofthat is unusual. This reminds me of
where I live when I speak tomy neighbors I know when I first moved
in, I went around and introducedmyself because I wanted them to know they
had someone who was watching their back. They were so shocked that I was

(06:30):
personable that people really actually wanted tomeet them because they had been kind of
secluded. It's a lost art,this idea of being neighborly. So Kelly
took it upon herself to upload itto TikTok and it has gone viral millions
of times over. Of course thegesture again is a beautiful one, but
I am most surprised that people areare just with Kelly and they're shocked that

(06:50):
this could possibly happen because it shouldbe the norm. And when we come
back to a girl, she's goingviral again again again. She just won't
get out of the news. It'sbeen a month. We'll talk about it.
Hawk dude spit that night. Hereit's Later with Kelly. You love

(07:10):
it. More of the Viral Loadwhen we come back KFI AM six forty
left everywhere in our heart radio appyou're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on
demand from KFI AM six forty secondportion of the Viral Load with Tiffany Hobbs
starts right now. The hawk tuahgirl. Never thought I would say that
on radio ever, Honk dude,spit all that night here. God,

(07:30):
she just won't go away. Andat this at this rate, she's not
going anywhere. And it's not necessarilybecause of her, but it's because social
media just can't let go of thenewest viral sensation. Whereas others have expired,
hers has continued to soar. Solast month, exactly a month ago,
Hailey Welch again coined the phrase hawktua that's you're gonna play it.

(07:57):
I am mad you want to stepon you punk spit all that night here
during what is now a very widelyseen viral video posted on TikTok YouTube you
name, and it's been everywhere.She's everywhere, And the update that I
have is just how far her viralityhas now taken her. One month later,

(08:18):
since the beginning of this entire phenomenon, Haley Welch has been doing club
appearances for thirty thousand dollars stop thirty. I am jealous. She's getting thirty
thousand dollars just to show up andmaybe take selfies with people in Florida money,

(08:39):
So that's really like sixty thousand dollarsin Florida, thirty thousand dollars just
to show up and take pictures withpeople, just to show up and say
tua into different mics. Fuck,dude, spit all that night. What
bothers me, unfortunately, is theguy who conducted the interview. He's and

(09:00):
afterthought and doesn't really get some benefitfrom this at all. Those two guys
are two of them, both intheir early mid twenties. No one knows
them. You have to look upthe story to find out their names.
I didn't know them until I Ididn't the update on this story. But
yeah, they're not the ones you'reremembering. Hailee Welch is the one who
has soared from TV appearances club appearances. She has a line of clothing that

(09:24):
she has used the now trademark phraseI hope that she did trademark. She
trademarked it, and she has combinedwith another wholesaler to release T shirts and
hats that say hawk to A twentyfour because it's a political climate, it's
a political year, hawke to Atwenty four. And she is just again

(09:45):
soaring thirty thousand dollars to make theseclub appearances. So I wanted to bring
the viral load and KFI that updateabout how viral stories can actually really truly
change your life. Hawk dude,spit all that time here rolling my eyes
down the street. Life think fair? Let me take me? I think
fair. If you decide you knowlife isn't fair and you kind of want

(10:07):
to check out early, there's anotherway you can do that. If you're
a fan of roller coasters, thenthis story will appeal to you. There's
a TikToker named Luke Davidson and he'sgone viral after posting about something called a
euthanasia roller coaster. What is aeuthanasia roller coaster? Well, Luke Davidson,

(10:31):
the TikToker, didn't invent this,but he has gone viral for sharing
the details of this roller coaster.A man named Julie Jonas designed this roller
coaster called the Euthanasia Coaster. It'scapable of holding up to twenty four passengers,
so it's fairly small, and oncethese passengers are all on board,

(10:54):
the roller coaster makes a slow ascentto the top. Have you ever been
on a rock tiktik tik tik tiktik, You keep going up. That's
where your anxiety anxiety builds. Butonce you're up there, you then drop
at such a high G force andyou go through these series of spirals and
spins and turns that all of thispressure, all of this force will essentially

(11:20):
eventually kill you. They're talking aboutmore than ten g's, more than ten
G so that when you think offighter pilots, have you ever seen top
gun, they get into the Gforce stuff, all of that science,
and g's are extremely deadly at highernumbers. Ten will take you out.
Well, let me just be realscientific for a second. But G force

(11:41):
is a level of atmosphere. Soif you say ten G forces, you're
talking about ten Earth atmospheres pressing downon you at the same time. Thank
you, doctor Kelly. And withthat pressing you will then die. And
so Julie Jonas or Bonis is hislast name, design in this roller coaster
to allow people to participate in whatthen would be their own demise willingly.

(12:07):
It is elective, you know,ending your life and you're taking this roller
coaster ride. It doesn't sound likefun. Knowing forces G forces are not
pleasurable. It's not for you,or I imagine just something crushing you to
death. That's what a g forceis, and people are going to pay

(12:28):
for this. Sleeping pills would bea better choice. I think these are
thrill seekers and that the thrill isgone well, But to be a thrill
seeker, it presupposes that you flirtwith death, but you don't actually die,
Like I don't get on a planeto actually crashing to the side of
the mountain and call it thrilled seeking. Not you or I, but these
people are taking it to another level. And of course this has gone viral

(12:54):
all around social media, and peopleare weighing in, just like you and
I have, about whether or notthat's a good idea or whatever the case.
You and I say no, butothers will do it, and we'll
hear about this as this continues toflesh out last story really quickly. Sean
Ditty Combs, we've heard a lotabout him in the last few months,
from the abuse that's not just allegedbut actually videotaped and that we saw,

(13:18):
to all of these other things thatinvolve his houses being raided and allegations across
the board. Well, he's beenlaying low, but he's not been able
to stay low for long because theInternet has taken his name and inserted it
into a phrase that has now goneviral. It's the newest catchphrase and it's

(13:39):
called quote nice try diddy, Nicetry diddy. You may have seen it.
If you've been on face shook yourInstagram, you've seen it. I
saw it and it made me actuallylook it up. I said, what
the heck is going on? Isaw this Instagram post and it was something
from a shopping site, a furnituresite. And in the comments of this
post post were not people responding towhat they were seeing as far as the

(14:03):
furniture. No. Instead, allI saw were nice try ditty, Nice
try ditty, Nice try ditty,all the way down, tens and tens
and tens of comments. And thenI went to another post and I saw
it, and then get another post. So I said, something's going on
here. I researched and I foundout that this started on Reddit, another

(14:24):
popular commenting site, where people havedecided that because they feel that Sean Ditty
Combs has had his hand in manythings, including these negative allegations, that
they are now going to flood theInternet with this phrase and take over every
comment threat called flood zone. That'swhat the young people say flood zone.

(14:45):
I didn't know that they're flooding thezone. Thank you today, years old,
I didn't know that flood zone.They're flooding the zone with nice try
ditty. So I wanted to educateyou that if you see nice try ditty
in any comment thread or someone saysit and you're confused, like I,
you're saying, what the heck doesthis have to do with this burger recipe
that I'm looking at or this whateverit is that I'm looking out online?

(15:07):
This is where it started. Itstarted on the reddit and people are doing
it just to be funny. Arethey trying to manipulate algorithms? No,
it's not even that, because there'snothing other than a continuation of seeing more
posts that have nice tried diddy.But there's nothing that they're pulling up.
There's no news that's new on SeanDitty combs or nothing really connected to the

(15:31):
phrase. It's really just a prankthat has just taken off and now it's
everywhere. Is it like the newrick Roll? It's just like the new
rick Roll, just like that.And they have these things periodically and this
is the newest one, and that'sthe viral. Okay them make sure that
I'm not too old here, Elmer. I know you're busy, but I

(15:52):
have to ask you. Do youknow who Rick Rick Astley is? Oh?
Yeah, okay, I just wantto make sure you know, so
you know what we mean when wesay Rick rolled a lot of people.
Okay, all right? And iffor those who don't know, there was
a time where people were putting fakevideos on like YouTube, and you would
start the video and you think it'sgonna be I don't know, cats scratching

(16:15):
a post, and then all ofa sudden it turns into a Rick Astley
video and they call that getting Rickrolled. Mm hmm. That is this
is the new Rick Road. Nicetry ditty. It's a viral load with
Tiffany Hobbs always like when you comearound. You didn't stay with us on
Friday last week? Why is thatnice try ditty? M you're listening to
Later with Moe Kelly on demand fromKFI AM six forty. Baba Vonga or

(16:41):
Vanga also known as Vangelia Pandevaova orsomething like that, was a blind Bulgarian
clairvoyant, supposedly what was widely knownfor her alleged powers of pre cognition,
so called Nostra Damas of the Balkansis said to have predicted nine to eleven

(17:03):
and the war in Ukraine. Thismissedic healer, according to published records,
died in nineteen ninety six, butthe psychic's followers, according to The New
York Post, still await some ofthe predictions she made before her death.
Some reports have claimed that Vanga warnedthat the world would end in twenty twenty
three due to nuclear bio weapons anda solar storm. Well this twenty twenty

(17:27):
four, it neither happened. We'restill here. But the latest of Vanga's
late predictions have resurfaced, and theclaim that the end of the world is
going to begin in twenty twenty five. But there's a hitch to all this.
The end of the world begins,the events which set it in motion

(17:48):
begin next year, and God willing, all of us will be here still
next year, But the actual endof the world or humanity being wiped out,
won't happen until fifty seventy nine.So it really doesn't matter, at
least not for anyone listening right now. It's twenty twenty four. We're talking
about three thousand and fifty five years. I don't think anyone's going to be

(18:14):
around here to see it, andhonestly, I wouldn't want to be around
for the end of the world.But it's a step by step progression.
According to this timeline for the endof humanity, next year, a conflict
in Europe will devastate the continent's population. In twenty twenty eight, humans will
begin to explore Venus as an energysource. I guess we're just going to

(18:37):
skip over Mars and go straight toVenus. In twenty thirty three, the
polar ice caps will melt, raisingsea levels to drastic heights worldwide. Now
that's quite possible. I'm twenty thirtythree. Is this like Kriswell just making
predictions that just throwing things, justpulling stuff out of their ass? Okay,
yeah, all right, pretty much. Yeah. In twenty seventy six,
communism will make a comeback and spreadall around the world like a virus

(19:03):
in twenty seventy six, and noneof us listening will be here for that
moment. But I wish I couldbe here in twenty one thirty because according
to this, we will officially makealien contact in twenty one thirty. You
got to get your head frozen likeTed Williams. Yeah, I don't think
that worked too well. They frozehis head and then I think they lost

(19:23):
his head. They threw it ina corner. There's this big legal battle,
and I don't know if it's stillfrozen. You really have to be
more organized with frozen heads, youdo. In twenty one seventy, this
is forty years after we make aliencontact, and this is after the polar
ice caps, which have melted onehundred and forty years prior to Okay,

(19:45):
in twenty one seventy, Despite thepolar ice caps melting, a drought will
devastate much of the world. Howyou reconcile those two things, I'm not
exactly sure. I just don't know. In the year three thousand and five,
Earth will go to war with acolony of Earth on Mars, kind

(20:06):
of like the Expanse TV show.If you've seen it, that's the year
three thousand and five. In thirtyseven ninety seven, I do appreciate the
accuracy and the specificity thirty seven ninetyseven. In that year of our Lord
Idle Domini, humans will have tovacate the Earth because it's become uninhabitable.

(20:29):
The upside is global warming. Climatechange will not get us until thirty seven
ninety seven. According to this,and then in fifty seventy nine, for
events not really clearly articulated, theworld will end. I hate to be

(20:51):
selfish, but after I leave upout of this place, whatever, just
pull up the ladder. That's it. Look, I've said it before.
I'm not all that concerned about climatechange because whatever does happen, I'm not
going to be around to see theeffects of it. I'm really not how
enlightened w I am? I am? Have you ever heard me talk about

(21:11):
climate change seriously on the show?I don't recall. No, No,
it's not one of my things.There are things that I do worry about
within the space of my existence onthis earth. I think this next election
is very important. I'll talk aboutthat. I will talk about the issues
domestically and internationally. What's going onaround the world, be it in Israel

(21:32):
and Gaza, Ukraine and Russia.I think that has great impact of what's
going to happen in our country nextten, fifteen, twenty years. I'm
told how that might impact us,But at that point I'm going to be
like seventy four. It's going tobe for everyone else to deal with.
At that point, there's nothing elseI can do. I would have given
all that I can give in thenext twenty years. And there are not

(21:55):
enough illuminum cans that I can putin the blue bin. There's not enough
short showers that I can take.There are not enough electric cars that I
can buy, which is going tochange the trajectory of the trash bend that
this world is going to end upin. That is some first rate fancy
thinking. I know, I knowit's regressive. I get it, I

(22:18):
get it. I believe the childrenare a future. Teach them well and
let them lead the way. Wouldyou like to hear some Kriswell as a
companion piece to what you've been reading, Show them all the beauty that they
have inside, give them a senseof pride and make it easier. Let
the children's laughter and guide them howit used to be. Well, we

(22:40):
heard a traffic sounder. There'll beno Kriswell. The whole show is blowing
up. Yeah. First we havehad mister Roboto for traffic. I want
to say I like the auto tunetraffic reports. I don't know if that's
going to be an ongoing thing.But it was fun the one time.
Well, we'll see if we canget it right the second time. But
the world is going to end,you know. And yes, to be

(23:00):
absolutely serious, I don't believe thishuman civilism, this human civilization can avoid
self immolation. I don't know ifwe can avoid self destruction. No,
God, please, no. Idon't think that we are smart enough.
I don't think we want to think. We are too tribal, we're too

(23:23):
ignorant. We will do something that'sagainst our best self interests and we'll just
be up out of here. Idon't know if it will be a nuclear
war. I don't know if it'llbe a pandemic. I don't know if
it'll be AI. It could beall of that or some of that,
or none of that. I justknow I don't want to happen in the
next fifty years after that do whatever. At the rate we're going, nuclear

(23:44):
war will be redundant. Now here'sChriswell, you're gonna dig this, okay.
We are all interested in the future. For that as where you and
I are going to spend the restof our lives, whether we want to
or not. And remember my friend, these future events will affect you.
The future is in your hand.Can you argue with reasoningly? No,

(24:06):
I can't. We are in thefuture. It's where we're going to spend
the rest of our life. Yeah, you know what, We're in the
future now. And wait, wait, we're in the future again. It's
going to be the future in fiveminutes too. Well, how about a
future newscast if you insist you're listeningto Later with Moe Kelly on demand from

(24:27):
KFI AM six forty and before wego, I want to finish up that
conversation I was having last segment,and Mark usually gives me a hard time
because we may not value the samethings to the same degree. I wouldn't
say I'm a fatalist, but I'mnot under any illusion. As far as

(24:47):
I'm very cynical, I don't havehigh hopes for this civilization. I don't
think we'll be able to get outof our own way. I think our
demise is going to come at ourown hand. It won't be a meteor,
it won't be alien, It'll beus. It'll be something that we
did to bring about the end.Well, we're seeing it right now,
and it's we talked about COVID gettingpoliticized. You think climate science hasn't been

(25:10):
politicized. Oh, it's a partof all of our politics. It's about
how we view politics. If ifyou are for addressing climate change, you're
a pink o comi, And ifyou're against climate change, then you're on
your maga all the way to theright. And unfortunately, that's where we

(25:34):
are pretty discouraging. And that's whyI say, hey, have at it.
It's not something I'm even going toargue because ultimately, you know,
when the world does come crashing toan end, good for y'all. Not
gonna be here, not gonna beAnd part of the reason I got to
this point, this is the actualpoint I wanted to make mark. When

(25:55):
I was a kid growing up,I used to worry about the future,
what it was going to look likewhen I became an adult. When I
was seven, I remember I wasworried about the killer bees coming from South
America and they were supposed to gethere. I did the math when I
turned twenty one and they didn't.But those are the things i'd worry about.
I remember being in elementary school anddoing the nuclear war drills. I

(26:18):
can cover where we would get underour desks like it was an earthquake prep
drill. And if you're not oldenough to remember, we had nuclear war
drills, as if getting under ourdesk was going to protect us from a
nuclear warhead landing in the middle ofdowntown LA. That's right, the cutting
edge technology of wooden metal school deskswas going to prevent you from being vaporized

(26:44):
in a nuclear holocaust. And theyshowed us this video and I remember it,
it's clear as yesterday. Well,not only that, there was a
part in a video where they said, if you see the light from the
flash of the of the bomb,not only did they not tell you it
was to blind you, but theysaid if you saw the light, they
told you to get down in thestreet next to a curb and get as

(27:07):
low as you can so all ofthe debris and the explosions would just go
over you. Yeah, the curbwill save you. Yeah, not that,
not that the concussive force of theblast would just throw you like a
piece of paper a mile, butthe curb, all eighteen inches high of
it, would protect you. Right. And then when we were kids,
the day after TV movie came outand we were all like, yes,

(27:30):
oh no, the desks aren't goingto do anything, are they No,
And that put a chilling. Ithink that made it as real as they
could. It made it real fora lot of people. When you're talking
about the degree of destruction and deathwhich would be associated with a nuclear war.
Steve Gutenberg's hair is falling out.I have no hope. Terminator too.

(27:52):
Oh, I'm just messed up yourrim shot. I'm sorry. That's
okay, that's what he didn't itthat terminator to the scene where Sarah Connor
is at their Yeah, that scarredme for life. Yeah, I get
it. For me, just worryingabout what the world was going to turn
into the catastrophes of the future wassomething that I really really obsessed about as

(28:15):
a kid, and then I gotto a certain age just like you know,
I can't worry about it. Ican't emotionally burden myself with all the
problems of the world. What mighthappen, whether civilization is going to make
it, nobody's getting out of thisalive, and whatever's going to happen fifty
years from now is going to beup to my nephew, my blended sons.

(28:38):
They're going to have to deal withthat, and they'll have to wrap
their minds around it as best theycan. I can't. There's something to
be said for they're what we areleaving them. But meanwhile you've become Bill
Murray in Meatballs. It just doesn'tmatter. It just doesn't matter. And
also, if you've seen the movieTitanic, I am that couple curled up,
the old couple curled up on thebed with the water rising around.

(29:00):
It's like if it look I'm tooold to swim. You know, the
water's too cold. Where are wegoing to go? Well, at least
you're not to chick the hogging thepiece of wood for yourself. So Leo
has to sing because you won't makeroom for him on the thing that's floating
and it's going to die from hypothermia. At least it's the sharks, don't
get them. Yeah, that's justrude. Make room on the piece of

(29:22):
wood for Leo didn't even offer rudeselfish But you know, so that's how
we got here talking about the endof the world in the last segment.
So I don't think about it anymore. Be it climate change, be it
nuclear war, be it famine,pestilence, be it some sort of pandemic
which is going to envelop the world. Can't worry about it because I know

(29:47):
I have more behind me than Ido in front of me. I know
that sounds selfish, Yes it isselfish, but you know, self care
is more important to me for theyears I have left than worrying about what
I can't control with the years Ihave left, the scant few years you
have left. Look, tomorrow isnot promised. And I say that seriously,
I seriously, And that's why Ilive. Not with complete reckless abandon

(30:11):
but I try to live a lifenot in fear that goes back to you.
I don't like to fly, butI'm going to fly because I want
to see the rest of the world. As Frank Sinatra said, you're gonna
live until you die. He saidthat, yeah, you're gonna live until
you die. You're gonna laugh insteadof cry. He also said, fly
me to the moon, let meplay among the stars. Yeah, don't
do that. Okay, you needoxygen, don't do that. Well,

(30:33):
he didn't say untethered with no oxygentank. He just said, fly me
to the moon, play among thestars. We can't imply things. Let
me see what life is like onJupiter and Mars. In other words,
hold my hand, in other words, please be true. Mark, did
you catch that Fill my heart withsong? And let me sing forevermore with

(30:56):
diarrhea? Are all I long forhere? If I am s exported,
were life everywhere? The heart radioup indifferent The b k F I,
M K O S T h Dtwo, Los Angeles, Orange County lives
everywhere on the radio

Later, with Mo'Kelly News

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