Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I was gonna say, wrapped in a bow for you,
but Lord knows that this weekend probably will include something.
I don't know what that something is, but something.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Well, this is a last call for Alky Hall.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
Only in this case, of course, we're referring to October surprises.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Even though it is technically now November.
Speaker 1 (00:28):
Course, election right around the corner, and they had a
couple I guess, I don't know lobs, but and we'll
get into some of those. There's a little bit of
a stenographer controversy, which we'll fill you in on. But
if they're gonna get something out, they really got to
do it by I don't know, like early afternoon today, right,
(00:52):
because here's what you need for that. And don't get
me wrong, there's always the possibility of a Monday, but
you really want Friday. You want it not at the
super end of the day, because you got to get
a little lead time and then you know, like one
o'clock this afternoon. Perfect gets the story out there. The
(01:16):
journalists can pretend like they do their due diligence regardless
of whatever the allegations are, but not so much due
diligence that they're able to I don't know talk to
people that maybe able to either debunk or put a
different perspective on stuff, and then that will be the
finalized narrative. You head into the weekend, you got the
(01:39):
weekend shows, and there you go. And then Monday, maybe
some more stuff comes out that you know, it's like, ah,
that thing you just said, maybe that's not what happened
with your anonymous sources, but really not enough time to
chase it down. And in the state of North Carolina,
by the way, this is the other thing that makes
(02:00):
me wonder about the scheduling of these. I just saw
that the numbers that they're reporting saying that like half
of North Carolina may have voted already.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
So that's a problem. I don't know what it looks like.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Yeah, here we go, almost half of North Carolinian voters
have already cast ballots.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
There you go.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
By the way, if you are planning on still early voting,
you have, well, let me say this. Check what I'm
going to tell you, because I suspect some of these
our county specific but about seven thirty tonight and then
tomorrow what three in the afternoon, So check your whatever
(02:46):
county you vote in. But those are wake counties numbers
and yours will be somewhat similar.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
All right. Oh, and we got the big ral scandal. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
Man caught on video removing Comma ripping up Harris Wall
signs outside Raleigh early voting site.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
Well, I'm looking at.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
The video here, and uh yeah, yeah, maybe I don't understand.
Here's what I don't understand these folks, And here's where
I understand them less. When it's a political candidate. There's
always one of those every year. I guess maybe I
understand that more because you're like, you have this personal
(03:33):
like super personal. People will tell all voting's personal, and
to some extent it is.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
But still with candidates do it?
Speaker 1 (03:42):
Those are the ones that amaze me, although I almost
to some extent, understand it more just randomly being so
angry when you're pulling into a polling beer.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
Oh why are there so many signs?
Speaker 1 (03:54):
I'm like, have you been to a polling place or
have you been I don't know, outside with eyes in
in an election here in North Carolina, people love signs, man,
So I don't get that.
Speaker 2 (04:08):
My only question would.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
Be uh yeah, and and and and and the video
here uh was was acquired by witnesses.
Speaker 2 (04:19):
Okay, here's my question.
Speaker 1 (04:23):
Uh, we got a video right now of an incident
in Carrie the other day. Clearly, uh, it looks like
this dude is is uh vandalize This is what it appears.
I'd be curious if there's another explanation of a dude
by the Carry Senior Center right by Bond Park there
on High House, clearly uh, taking Trump signs. By the way.
(04:49):
I just want you all to know you you you
all look like you're three. Okay, That's what's so. That's
the thing, honestly, even more than the voting.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
Part of it.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
It's like, why would you expose yourself to be an
absolute mental toddler with this stuff? And that dude, that
dude from the reporting I'm seeing, might be a professor
at NC State. That sounds like a pretty big story,
not that you know, not that this guy you got
in your story here r e L and the and
(05:21):
the video, if that is in fact what was going on,
is deeply stupid in my opinion. But like, it's not
like you didn't know about the other thing. It was
all over it's still all over social media pictures, video,
there's video of the dude doing it. Now, you don't
(05:44):
know his name. People were trying to figure out who
he was. I took a look at him, and I
couldn't decide if he was well. I thought he looked
like the dude from the six Flags commercials, Remember the
old guy who dances from a distance.
Speaker 2 (06:00):
It looks like it's him. But I'm being I'm being.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
Told from some of the articles here, probably not the
six Flags old guy who dances from the commercials from
decades ago, but instead perhaps a professor.
Speaker 2 (06:14):
And that's where this thing gets crazier. You're a professor, I'm.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
Going if you if you tell me you're a profess,
if we meet, I'm like, hey, good to meet you.
What do you do, Oh, I am a professor. And
then you throw out a prestigious for your university or whatever,
not picking on your community college. But let's just be
let's let's deal with who we're dealing with. If you
tell me you're a professor at one of the big,
(06:42):
big schools here, I'm going to assume you're smart enough
not to stand there in the middle, like literally out
in the middle of public on one of the busiest
roads in a community jack and signs. No matter how
you feel it, no matter how you feel. And yet
I don't know why it is so many stories are
(07:05):
predicated on professors or government officials or whatever who just
turn into children.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
This chick right here, TSD. We love that drap remember her? Yeah, GTSD.
That woman is not only an.
Speaker 1 (07:24):
Elected official, she's also a college professor driving around acting
like a moonbat. So, uh, you know, if we're going
to cover it, let's let's cover all of it.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
I'm happy to.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
What an easy thing to sit here and not be
biased about and just go, hey, you know what, we
don't like this thing where people are doing this thing
because they're absolute toddlers. Okay, well if you think that,
what are we gonna do about it?
Speaker 2 (07:51):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (07:52):
We have we we literally have statutes dealing with this. Well,
if you have, if somebody did something, you got statutes.
I don't know, why don't you go do them? Maybe
maybe as a deterrence is a word they like to
use in the criminal justice system. I know it's not
the crime of the century. And also, and I guess
they wouldn't do it if it didn't work, or maybe
(08:15):
they think it works. But like how many of you
have been driving to a polling place? You get you know,
wherever you got to vote, you get out and you're
walking in, you walk past the barrage of signs there
and went.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's what I'm voting for.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
How many of you were sold at a sign that
you saw walking up to a polling place. I understand
it's a name recognition thing, right, especially for down ballots
more so.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
But still.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
Nobody ever walked by those signs and went all right.
I counted them and Doug Smith versus Regina Johnson, and
Doug had eleven signs of Regina had ten, and I
got to vote for Doug.
Speaker 2 (08:55):
Or maybe that's how undecided.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
In UH a certain percentage of undecided. So I'd just
like to keep our tickets splitting heritage live in North Carolina.
Speaker 2 (09:07):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
I don't know, but there is I suspect more dumb
assy to come on this front. All right, six fifteen
CaCO Day Radio program will get into the rest of it,
and reminder Pete callaner, he joins us coming.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
Up at eight oh five. Hang on.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Election of course is Tuesday, and we do a thing
for the candidates who are on the ballot on Tuesday,
and we do that next week on Monday and Tuesday
because it's a big boy election where we will we'll
create an opportunity, well, we'll have an opportunity for candidates.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
To call in.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
Now, I want to be abundantly clear here, do not
call us in schedule. We're not going to do that.
You're just going to annoy Ross. You don't want to
do that. It's a Friday like. I'm just letting you know,
because if you have a candidate running, or you are
a candidate and you're going to be on the ballot
on any of the ballots within our listening area, so
(10:11):
triad triangle and points outline. I guess basically, if you
can hear us on a standard radio signal.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
We will. We'll just we'll do what we.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
Normally do, and that is provide the opportunity for any
candis is not a right left independent, None of that
doesn't matter if you're on a ballot because Ross is
gonna have to verify you. And that's how we do it,
so I don't have to send letters and do equal
time and screw with all that crap. Okay, Plus, I
get a thousand emails people saying I can't tell if
(10:41):
they're with the campaign they want to get on all
that it's it would be you would.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Hate the lead up two or three weeks in.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
So this is how we do it, and you know
what it tends to average about, right, I'd never Ross,
I don't know that we've left a bunch of people
on the phones at the end of the show. I
think it's about the amount of time. So that'll be
Monday and Tuesday. But I'm giving you a heads up now,
and again, we're not scheduling anything. You just you call
in the phone number that you hear eight eight eight
(11:12):
nine three four seven eight seven four. But on Monday
and Tuesday, okay, all right, rock.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
On, look at that, all right?
Speaker 1 (11:21):
Eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four.
Everybody's got everybody's got a voice that they do when
they're or voices that they do. I find myself doing
them every now and then when we're doing a story
where I'm like, you know, just just to just to
add a little bit of a flourish to whatever point
(11:44):
we're making. That being said, if your voice is bad,
whatever little fake voice like Ross's mom does I don't
know that she's said, does she sound like that in
real life?
Speaker 2 (11:58):
I shouldn't say this or are you doing it?
Speaker 3 (12:01):
She's complete opposite.
Speaker 1 (12:03):
Okay, that's the point I'm making, So like, yeah, but
you do the voice. That being said, if you're not
good at doing the voice, we're all gonna laugh at you.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (12:13):
Ended up calling the press that were there in a
hostile environment scum.
Speaker 2 (12:21):
So there you go.
Speaker 5 (12:21):
The the hypocrisy Mika over over a misstatement by Joe Biden,
which he quickly corrected, is so laughable because this guy
does this every day, and then you turn on Fox
and say, Cake, Oh, how.
Speaker 6 (12:36):
Could anybody do this?
Speaker 2 (12:38):
I've never seen this before. Despite whose voice is Elmo?
Speaker 1 (12:47):
When they're trying to do that generic, fake funny voice
to actend what what you leaned into Elmo?
Speaker 2 (12:54):
I'm so confused by that's Elmo? Right morning?
Speaker 1 (12:57):
Joe is doing Elmo because he can't his td Is
that a TDS symptom?
Speaker 2 (13:03):
Right? You just start speaking in elmen.
Speaker 5 (13:05):
The fact one of the people saying that yesterday and
Fox News stood by while Donald Trump watched violence erupt
on January the sixth and kept allowing violence to erupt
on January the sixth and said the people that were
beating the hell out of cops were patriots.
Speaker 4 (13:24):
So yes, yes, yes, Willie Us and Gad writing never ends.
Speaker 5 (13:30):
They really do think that their voters are that stupid,
and it it makes me sad for those voters that
Donald Trump and people on TV on other channels really
think Americans are that dumb.
Speaker 1 (13:45):
I uh, you know, they say, there's always that transition point.
You saw it with George Bush, right, George w and
of course you know seventy two people before him, But like,
how many times, how many times we within the Trump
era have you seen the Bush come save us? Why
hasn't Bush weighted.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
In on this? They just did it the other day
on something like.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
Why isn't bushwait, why isn't he siding with the Democrats
on this? Because I suspect even if you don't like Trump,
he don't like you either. And you called him either
an absolute booger, reading moron, unable to lace his own shoes,
or an evil genius as per usual, and you'd run
(14:30):
around and scream at him for troop deaths and you know,
my pet goat and all the like. They don't have
time for you. But the fact that you make fun
of voice is Elmo bro. You got to check that,
how did you get this far in a pretty public
facing position doing that? That's what's even more amazing. But
(14:51):
he's not the only lunatic out there espousing their thoughts
on TV. We've got some other audio for you.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
Who is it you think he looks like?
Speaker 1 (14:59):
Now people are the other we're looking at the the
carry the alleged carry sign stealer that I thought looked
like the the six Flags dude. He does look Oh,
it looks like him again in the video. And then
you see the the actual foot ross. Who did you
say the professor looked like.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
I'm looking at I just think it's the mugshot and
he looks like Christopher Lloyd from who frames? Who framed
Roger Rabbit as the judge with the mugshot?
Speaker 2 (15:26):
Not you say mug shot?
Speaker 3 (15:28):
Well whatever that one photo is in the artica. Yeah, yeah, headshot.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
Yeah, maybe maybe a mug shot soon, but all right, yeah, yeah,
so it's it's like, yeah, it's like one of those
weird painted car colors, or it kind of looks different
depending on where you're looking. But uh yeah, I'm just
saying that we're gonna if ariol Is gonna run a
breathless story about this dude, who, by the way, looks
like an absolute menace in this video. This is Optimist Park.
(15:55):
Early voting side witnesses saw voters shouting at other voters
tearing up signs in some bard of Harris Walls. Video
shared with w r a L show people confronting the man,
who then gets into his Honda Van sir put the
signs down. One man said to the other man, they're
not yours. It's illegal to assault people, said the alleged
(16:18):
sign steeler. Wait, where's the line that kind of got me?
Speaker 7 (16:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (16:26):
Whatever, Yeah, So he's he's a pretty unapologetic there. Although
here's what I here's the thing, and you guys, you
guys did this to me, uh talking to the media
out there. Why is it when I see this and
(16:47):
I see this dude interacting with the people, like he's
not hiding his face or anything like he's he's given
them as good as they're getting. And he's doing it
while wearing his maga hat. Brous Do you understand what
I'm kind of getting at here? Kind of wondering aloud
about why this dude, in a very visible manner would
(17:11):
roll up and start defacing these signs in front of
all these.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
Folks wearing the Maga hat while he's doing it. Maybe
maybe he just loves him some Trump.
Speaker 3 (17:20):
I think I am picking up what you're putting down.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
Yes, maybe that's the pot. Maybe he loves him some
Trump so much he never takes the hat off. Maybe
he's got a bet or somebody's like, I can't take
the hat off till election day, or I gotta I
don't know, break a shot or whatever.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
So he thinking it might be like one of those
when it was the Trump boat parade, right, and then
suddenly the boat came up with all the swastikas and
the Nazis on it.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
I don't know what you're now implying, Well, those weren't
just standing and running the middle boat parade participants.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
Are you? What are you saying there? So I don't know.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
Again, it's possible, but also it's it's not how I
would go about. If I was like, I'm gonna go
get some signs to change some minds, right, I probably
wouldn't roll up to a wide open And that's the
other thing is wide open visibility. There it's a park, right,
(18:15):
everyone like, what's that guy doing over there? He looks
like a lunatic. Is he is he ripping signs up
like they're gonna see you? And then but and also
you have the hat, you know, which is like Hunter Orange.
As far as people remembering that and being able to
see you at a distance, is that doing a Maga
hat or what looks to be a Maga hat, ripping
those signs up and then engaging with folks.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
I don't know. Again, I don't know. I don't know
what the answer is.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
But I but like you all have forced me to
process almost process that as a possibility. First, I just
don't believe anything that comes out out on any of
this stuff anymore, because we have so jettisoned lines that
(19:06):
you won't cross to do stuff. And for those of
you go, oh, you're just trying to I'm not. I'm
if this dude's out there doing that stuff and he's
wearing his Maga hat and all that, then and there's
a crime to charge him, I don't care. I'd actually
prefer because I think all this stuff is so stupid
that being said, cover it all, deal with it all.
(19:26):
Some Mirando in a Honda with Maga hat versus what
might be a professor at one of our big universities
shaping young minds.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
Who do you think? Is? Who do you think?
Speaker 1 (19:44):
And with the totality of their actions, is probably going
to have the most impact on voters in this area.
And we're we'll cover all of it right here, but
I'll also leave open the possibility after what you know.
Remember remember the guys you showed up up in Virginia
with the tiki tordo, not Charlottesville. After they showed up
(20:06):
to they younkin rally paid for by Lincoln Project and
some of the local Dems in that county. But you
chose to do that. I'm now I'm allowed to sit
here and go with that's weird. A guy would show
up to this place in particular, but maybe he lives
by there, he drives by every day and he just
had enough. Still, you can't do that, but at least
(20:27):
it would explain the motivation and then to do it
in the maga hat. I'm just I'm gonna tell you
this as not as Ross and I are big criminal
higst dudes, But if we were, I think part of
us where we're sitting there with the dioramas and the
schematics and all that stuff, or in out the heist.
I think one of the rules would be like, hey,
(20:48):
could you not wear your bright red Maga hat because
I feel like that's gonna stand out like that's heist
one on one stuff there. But also we you know,
every day we do stories about lunatics doing crime stuff
where you're just like, are you dumb? And they are,
but we got to get there. Did he bleach the side?
(21:09):
I don't think he bleached the sign. I did, but
you know, you don't have the whole video. Maybe he
did bleach it. Again, I don't know what happened. I'm
just letting you. I'm giving you an honest assessment, and
I know people, no, I'm not. I'm firmly on the
record if if dude violated a law, just like the
guy in Carrie the Professor dude alleged allegedly did that, then.
Speaker 2 (21:35):
Uh deal with them, deal with them the same.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
It's it's it's so weird that like even with like
the J six stuff or the way that they treat
Trump or any of the rest. I'm just I'm I'm
like the voice of duality. I'm like, hey, just if
you're gonna go at it, go out at the same. Oh,
Biden had stuff in his garage next to his corvette
that his kid lifted passages from to send prison spectuses
(22:00):
to shake down other countries for money. And that's not alleged.
That's true, that that part's not even like disputed. He
lifted parts from a document so that he'd sound smarter
and a prospectus, and it turned out the document, well,
the part he lifted.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
Wasn't as problematic.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
It include data that was done as part of top
secret research. And had he used other parts of that document,
he would have printed some of the top secret research.
So you know, that's what people want. And if people
are running around crumpling signs up like lunatics, then deal
with them. But allow me the possibility to sit here
(22:42):
and go that's weird, and then to have your car
right there too. That's the There's so many things. But
also criminals are dumb sometimes, So what the hell do
I know?
Speaker 2 (22:54):
All right?
Speaker 1 (22:55):
Six forty three Cacoda radio program Phone call now, Rick's
what's up?
Speaker 7 (23:01):
How you doing, sir?
Speaker 2 (23:02):
I'm good.
Speaker 1 (23:03):
I don't understand all these adults acting like toddlers though, Man,
I don't get it.
Speaker 7 (23:08):
I was driving on Creamore Road just day heading towards Crabstree,
and I noticed this lady walking in the median right
there in front of Burger King if you know where,
it said on Creeble Road, And I said, wait a minute,
she's she's pulling up signs. Well, I did a U
turn and I pulled up into turning lane and I
started filming her and she noticed me. So she took
about five or six trump vant signs only to her car. Oh,
(23:33):
and so I tried to get a bitch of a
license plate that she was going to opposite direction. I couldn't.
So I did a U turn and then she didn't
know the U turn, and I followed her, got a
bitch of a license plate, and then she noticed I
was following her. She started driving crazyly erratical, crossing rains.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
And became, well, well, I just want to be clear.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
So you think that she was she knew that you
were following her, or she just drive crazy because she
was a woman which no.
Speaker 7 (24:02):
Full of the signs up and she knew she knew
I had filmed her pulling the episode.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
Your high speed chance, It.
Speaker 7 (24:10):
Wasn't no, it was going normal speed limit. But she
finally got in front of a car where she turned
right and I couldn't turn right.
Speaker 5 (24:20):
So that was into that.
Speaker 7 (24:21):
But uh, the only thing I told is I did
call Republican headquarters, but they have not called me back.
Speaker 1 (24:27):
I'm shut. Well, I don't know, maybe they'll do so,
I don't know exactly. At that point, police are probably
not gonna want to do anything but question yes, sir, yes,
as as a man. Can I ask you a question
as a man?
Speaker 7 (24:41):
Yes, sir?
Speaker 2 (24:42):
How do you feel about losing the chase?
Speaker 7 (24:47):
Well, I had an appointment to get to because.
Speaker 2 (24:51):
Sir, I understand, but also, you lost the chase.
Speaker 7 (24:57):
That's true, but I have a logo on my I
have a logo on my vehicle, so I had to
be very careful.
Speaker 8 (25:03):
Ah.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
Well but yeah, that's as far as chases go or surveillance.
You don't want to do that. So all right, well,
you know, do better next time. But appreciate the call. Yeah,
you know what I'm saying, Ross Like, I don't know
what I would call a radio show and be like, oh, yeah.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
It's embarrassing. I saw somebody pulling up signs yesterday. Oh
and I chased them. I went through a pane of
glass of fruit. Stand, what the fruit?
Speaker 2 (25:30):
The whole fruit stand would have happened to the fruit My.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
Car went down these steps in pars, did.
Speaker 2 (25:35):
It bounce the weird bouncy front back front back?
Speaker 3 (25:37):
Then we went right over the fountain at the bottom
of it called tray or that's rome.
Speaker 1 (25:41):
But yeah, yeah, okay, and you're okay though, right, fine, okay,
did you do the thing where as you're doing that,
you caused two police cars to slam into each other.
Speaker 3 (25:53):
I did, and I went right between them at the
last second. Oh then then the bus came through and
cut them off.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
Yeah, I'll do that.
Speaker 1 (26:00):
Also, where were they going with that pane of glass
in the middle of a road like stupid?
Speaker 2 (26:04):
Like, I don't know what's up with you. Glass guys.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
Wouldn't you pull into whatever the area is where you're
doing the glass installation so you don't have to walk
down busy sidewalks or god forbid, through streets. I'm not
in the glass business, but that would that would see
seem proper That fruit stand guys looking at the phoe,
that guy's never going to recover, man, that's the thing.
That's That's the other thing too about it. Like any
(26:29):
of those movies they buster a fruit scan I'm like,
that guy's done. Man, you just destroyed like the small
infrastructure and all of his inventory. You absolutely glass guys
will get over it. Right, it's probably a bigger business.
Fruit guy that stands all he had right taking care
of his sick wife. You absolute monster six forty seven
hang out number eight eight eight nine three four seven
(26:50):
eight seven four. You want to participate on the show,
that's a good way to do that. Or you can
scream into the void as some people do. Most people,
actually most pop people, and you give us a person
I don't remember exactly what it is the most recent,
but it's very small.
Speaker 2 (27:05):
Percentage of people who actually call a radio show.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
So to those of you screaming into the void when
I do these stories, God bless you. Your family probably
thinks you're a lunatic, but because you're not going to
trouble them with this stuff, like having to tell your
family that Jimmy Kimmel's going to prison.
Speaker 2 (27:24):
Yeah, yeah, Jimmy. I'm assuming.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
I'm assuming because last time I saw a guy do this,
although it was with memes, the dude went to jail.
Speaker 6 (27:33):
If you guys know about this, But we have an
election coming up on I feel pretty relaxed about it.
Speaker 2 (27:38):
I've really been enjoying the league.
Speaker 6 (27:41):
It's in times like these it is important remember that
cannabis is legal in our state.
Speaker 9 (27:47):
Vote.
Speaker 6 (27:50):
If you can vote early, vote early. If you can't
vote early, vote on time. If you want to vote
for Trump, votely, vote very late.
Speaker 2 (27:58):
So you're voting on Thursday or maybe Friday.
Speaker 6 (28:00):
This will be my third time voting against Donald Trump,
fifth if you count the two times he was nominated
for an Emmy for reality show host.
Speaker 2 (28:09):
All right, so so there you go again.
Speaker 1 (28:12):
It's you know what you're gonna get on those And
and by the way, do I think Jimmy Kimmel should
go to jail?
Speaker 2 (28:17):
No?
Speaker 1 (28:18):
Was he telling jokes. I mean, we could argue whether
those are jokes, but he intended them to be. And
it creates again this this weird conundrum because they literally
sent a dude to jail for me, meaning the hey
make sure you vote Wednesday stuff, right, But also like there,
(28:38):
you know that is also a thing that is rooted
in people who are trying to deceive. But dude making
a meme doesn't strike me as dude trying to deceive
in the same way that I don't Jimmy Kimmel, Nobody,
nobody with two brain cells to rub together, believes that
if you're a Trump voter, you should wait and vote
on Thursday or Friday because he is a quote unquote
(28:59):
comedian doing his thing, Which then begs the question, well,
if I'm supposed to know that that is comedian doing
his thing and it is coming across pretty nasty to
a big portion of people who may be alienated from it,
is that Okay? Now, comedians doing their thing in the
world of politics. So I just wanted to point out
(29:21):
the irony there. All right, let me let me flip
over to this audio. I promised you Bill Clinton every
I've seen three stumps. I know he's done more because
we didn't play audio when he was in was it
Winston or Greensboro where he was that Sunday a couple
(29:42):
of weeks, oh whatever, he was in the triad And
and it's like, I guess the Harris campaign isn't like.
Speaker 2 (29:50):
Hey, can we see your talking point? Can we see
what you're gonna talk about?
Speaker 1 (29:54):
We're just curious. I want to have some case we
get asked any questions who want to know? And and
because like every time he does a speech, damn near
he says something that is so insanely a Trump position.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
That I cannot fathom.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
While you put this guy on the road, now, Ross
and I talked about the soft there, and we'll bring
it up here in a moment. Some theories, and I
think it's an accurate theory, even if they won't admit it.
But remember he went out and he's like, yeah, yeah,
we shouldn't have open borders, that this woman would have
been killed down in Georgia, and like guys in Maga
hats and are like, ah see boom. He knows, he knows.
(30:37):
How many times let me ask you a question for
I play this side you. How many times in last
year have you been scrolling on Twitter or Facebook or
whatever and somebody posted a.
Speaker 2 (30:48):
Video of Hillary or Joe.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
Or even Kamala as so many said, but it's more
Hillary and Joe because you have such an excessive length
amount of tape easily accessible from like two thousand and eight. Right,
Hillary's out two thousand and eight doing her thing, talking
about whatever she's talking about or video when back when
she was running against Barack Obama, and she's like, she's
(31:17):
giving Donald Trump's speech, right, and that's the point of
why they had the video. Like, listen to this and
it's a minute of Hillary Clinton. We got to lock
down the border. People can't just come here. We can't
be relocating people. They need to stay in whatever country
while we probably like you're literally expousing that position. And
with Joe Biden, it gets much creepier the further you
(31:37):
go back, right, racial jungles and stuff.
Speaker 2 (31:44):
So yeah, yeah, man, it's oh, what is hold on?
So the wait there was.
Speaker 1 (31:54):
Oh, okay, all right, so he hasn't gone to jail.
I want to be accurate here. So the guy, the
guy made the memes that they literally well they was
sentenced to jail, so the appeals court gave him a
stay while they hear the case. Okay, still they're they're
putting the guy in jail, or they're trying to put
the guy in jail with the power of the US government.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
The oj is trying to put the student in jail.
So well, that's good. Frankly, that's probably probably should have
happened earlier. I don't know. But back to the Clinton
stuff or the Joe stuff. It's like.
Speaker 1 (32:26):
You were just you were on a campaign stump like
ten years ago, and this was your position. It would
almost be interesting to see what the Republican position was then,
was it? Was it summary execution or or was that
did that used to be one of the because I
claim that immigration is one of those things where when
(32:47):
you talk about the Mono Party or the Uni Party
or any of that stuff, but really it was one
of those strange things where there seemingly a comfort level
for the most part amongst the sides. Right every then
he'd have a blow up like with Reagan did with
Tip O'Neil and and then Reagan would get screwed, and
but but you had you had a win for quote
(33:10):
unquote both sides of the aisle. It's like the ABC
system in North Carolina. I can't understand why you why
you still do that if you're if you're a person
in government in North Carolina, while you look at that
and go, I'm for small government, but what the hell
is this?
Speaker 2 (33:26):
I don't understand that.
Speaker 1 (33:27):
But I also realized that anytime they talk about doing
away with it, you have some very prominent traditional conservative donators,
supporters and stumpers, a lot of it's you know, religious related,
but who are like, no, we shouldn't do that because
more people will drink. And the Dems they just love
anything where government has the reins of it, so they're
(33:48):
cool there. And he's so weird to me. And immigration
kind of felt like that at one time. Again, it's
got his peaks and valleys. So when you send Bill
Clinton out and he's going to go out there, but
needs to be twenty twenty four Bill Clinton, I don't
know that he's capable of it.
Speaker 9 (34:04):
I understand why young Palestinian and Arab Americans in Michigan are.
I think too many people have died since. I get that.
But if you lived in one of those kibutsen and
(34:28):
in Israel right next to Gaza, where the people there
were the most pro friendship with Palestine, most pro two
state solution of any of the Israeli communities, we're the
ones right next to Gaza and Hamas butchered them.
Speaker 8 (34:53):
Right.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
So this is, by the way, this is Bill Clinton
talking in the same way. And you have to understand, Bill,
part of Bill Clinton's legacy is at stake here, right.
He was Camp David President, the Camp David Summit, that
was Clinton, right, and if you remember it, while it
was lauded for his attempt to do something. It also
(35:14):
was a little egg on his face because their fat,
as we found out, was stealing all that money, a
lot of that money, by the way, from us. So
I don't know if it's like a little revenge tail
in his head or whatever, or if he's just being
normal Bill Clinton from about that time, because that's what
it kind of sounds like. And it gets more in
(35:34):
the Trump.
Speaker 9 (35:35):
Camp and so then the people who criticized that are
essential sin. Yeah, but look how many people you've killed
in retaling? So how many is enough for you to
kill to punish them for the terrible things they did.
That all sounds nice until you realize what would you
do if it was your family and you hadn't done
(35:57):
anything but support a homeland for the fowl sentience and
one day they come for you and slaughter the people
in your village. You would say, well, you will have
to forgive me. I'm not keeping score that way. It
isn't how many we've had to kill, because hamas make
sure that they're shielded by civilians. That'll force you to
(36:26):
kill civilians if you want to defend yourself.
Speaker 1 (36:31):
Can you imagine Bill Clinton trying to how long do
you think a speech about this would last on the
campus of Columbia.
Speaker 2 (36:38):
Right now a millisecond.
Speaker 1 (36:40):
No, they would have heard this, and they probably would
try to barricade them coming in.
Speaker 2 (36:44):
The hell is going on?
Speaker 1 (36:46):
I can only chalk it up to he doesn't have
there's no higher aspirations. Here's a two term president. Even
with all this stuff, He's he's generally remembered positively and
frankly over LA. I would I take Bill Clinton all
day over the last four years we just had. And
he's out there saying these things that are that are
(37:07):
provable facts that are if you say them in other settings,
like people go, oh, why do you why do you
hate Muslims? What what do you talk? I'm talking about
a strategic thing that's happening. They're literally there's a tunnel
under the hospital in like Barrick Man. But Bill Clinton's
out there and he's stuck in two thousand mode. You
(37:28):
didn't even have to go look for an old clip
of him. And I point this out because that was
it was also Hillary's position. As much as they probably
had some rocky moments in their marriage, they generally run
the same page. And it shows you with Hillary still
being in it, how much it evolved her. It's it's
(37:50):
it's a it's a fascinating litmus test there, right, because
she stayed in the muck.
Speaker 2 (37:56):
Don't get me wrong, they're all in the muck.
Speaker 1 (37:59):
With Global Initiative and the speaking stuff and of course
the circles that they you know, they still run in.
But like, because Hillary was actively pursuing to be in
a position of power again, she had to evolve her positions,
which clearly don't seem to match that of her husband,
and they were always very much the same positions. You know,
(38:23):
they talk about it. It's like the meme that Elon
tweeted in others, it's the whole Overton window thing, like a.
Speaker 2 (38:32):
I I would love even though they Hillary would be
she'd have some little cutesy way of getting out of it.
Speaker 1 (38:40):
But like, just sit, just sit any of these cats down, Biden, Hillary, Bill,
any of them and just be hey, I'm gonna play
some tape of you giving a speech to the friggin
un in two thousand and two or something, and then
we're gonna put a paid for Donald Trump thing at
the at the end, and it's going to look like
you're in Dorset him because that's the positions you're expousing.
(39:07):
So anyway, all right, seven eighteen coming up Pete Callen
or he'll join us. That'll be at eighth five. I
don't know why Mark Cuban keeps wading in it, but
he does. So we will get to get to that
here in just a moment. We did have a hit piece,
although it was more on.
Speaker 2 (39:27):
The media, or at.
Speaker 1 (39:29):
Least the media who might be considered positive to Trump,
not in all cases.
Speaker 2 (39:35):
And you know how anytime they.
Speaker 1 (39:38):
Run a gun article and it becomes really really clear,
really really quick, like the whoever's writing this doesn't know
about guns except maybe from video games or something. Okay,
what happens if you don't know about trucks? Well, Politico
would like to show you. We'll get to that much
(39:58):
more coming up here on the case O Day radio program.
This is that I literally just saw this story, so
bear all right. So here's here's the here's the crux
of the story. So there was a Halloween party.
Speaker 2 (40:12):
What did they do?
Speaker 1 (40:12):
It was earlier in the week for firefighters in Nova Scotia.
This is up in Canada, and so they have the
the big Halloween party and it's for I don't know.
I don't know if it's a volunteer system where they
are or what. But they call it, they refer to
it as the fire club and those associated with it.
(40:33):
So you have firefighters, E mts and family and friends
and whoever else they invite.
Speaker 2 (40:39):
So anyway, so they had their big they had their big.
Speaker 1 (40:40):
Party, and uh, here comes for individuals into the party.
You can't see who they are because they're in costume.
And when I say they're in costume, I mean they're
in clan robes. Showed up to the party which was
literally at one point being streamed, and not because they
(41:01):
were there, just somebody was saying, that's where a lot
of the video emerged from.
Speaker 2 (41:09):
Four of you.
Speaker 1 (41:09):
And now they're saying, although they're being a little cagey here,
they say they haven't confirmed the four are. Let me
read their statement. I want to be one hundred percent clear.
We apologize to any and all community were offended or
hurt by our lack of action. The four individuals are
not firefighters, though they may have been.
Speaker 2 (41:31):
So here's what it sounds like. It sounds like the
four in the clan outfits.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
Were either related to or invited by people who are
firefighters or family of I don't. I don't know, but
holy hell, man, that is when you told me Lincoln
was going to go as the goat simulator goat, I
mean that thing is a spot on man.
Speaker 3 (41:54):
His backpack too, He's wearing his custom Simulator three backpack.
Speaker 2 (41:58):
So is it?
Speaker 1 (41:59):
I kind of pretty good looking at the one picture
your wife posted here. Yeah, no, there's another while he's
still facing me so I can't see him. Yeah, very cool.
You got so candy was acquired.
Speaker 3 (42:09):
I'm assuming he probably got more candy this year than
any previous year.
Speaker 2 (42:12):
Yeah, I'm looking at that. It's so weird. I'm looking
at the houses in the back of the neighbor that
doesn't I've been. That doesn't look like your street? Where
is that? Where is that? All right? I mean slightly sarcastic.
Speaker 1 (42:25):
So when you open any of the candy where there
are edged weapons or firearms inside any not yet? Okay,
all right, Well maybe you'll get lucky and there'll be
a glock somebody stuffed into a Hershey's or something. By
the way, I understand that it's clickbait, but to some extent.
But then I saw like ESPN's host started embracing this.
Speaker 2 (42:46):
Who is a dan Orlowsky? I think really got it going.
Speaker 1 (42:49):
And so yesterday for a little while you had this
big conversation on social media and then with some of
the sports guys like dah the most overrated.
Speaker 2 (42:57):
Halloween candy and.
Speaker 1 (43:02):
I'm not a big candy guy, but the one they
picked is the one that I'll probably eat if you
offer it to me.
Speaker 2 (43:08):
Reese's peanut butter cups.
Speaker 3 (43:11):
That's absurd.
Speaker 2 (43:12):
Can we get elon?
Speaker 1 (43:16):
I know you've done what you weren't gonna send people
on that first rocket to Mars, but can I add
some folks, dude.
Speaker 3 (43:22):
Reces is so popular, like they have it for every holiday,
every holiday, Llween, Christmas, Eastern nine.
Speaker 1 (43:28):
Different For I was literally grocery shopping yesterday and I
was at the checkout, you know, and they got all
the cant you know, the bad decision, last minute of
bad decisions there and they have like there's like nine
reces there with pumpkins, some with pumpkins on there. They
have this giant one that's in the shape of a pumpkin.
Like if you want Rece's, they got you covered for Halloween, man,
(43:51):
and the Easter and Valentine's and all the days, right,
and if you're a candy company, that's probably a good thing.
But yeah, overrated. Right straight into the sun man, you
get on the rocket, Oh, we're going to Mars. I
guess you know, at least they're not executing me summarily
here on Earth or going to Mars. And then like
(44:13):
you blast off and you take a left turn, they're like,
what's going on?
Speaker 2 (44:17):
Where are we going? You hear that, by the way,
where I did a little fake voice.
Speaker 1 (44:20):
It kind of has a Bill Burr sound, and I
don't do it as much because I don't want people
think I'm copying Bill Burr. But I don't sound like Elmo,
like Morning Joe.
Speaker 8 (44:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (44:28):
I wanted to get in there and be like, why
are we going left? What's over there? Why is it
getting so hot in here? Like, you know, put a
can in there? Number two butter fingers.
Speaker 2 (44:41):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
Maybe people have strong feelings on the butterfingers. It's not
for me, which is weird because it's also, I guess
purportedly peanut buttery, but I don't know.
Speaker 2 (44:54):
That was on there. And then uh, oh, I do
where's the other one? Yeah? Here we go all right,
now that I'm in this, we're just gonna get this,
all right.
Speaker 1 (45:02):
So number two is butterfingers, number three, Twizzlers, number four nerds.
How did you feel it, Ross, when you were a kid,
the little boxes of nerds? Those were those were a staple.
I don't know if they still are. Again, I'm not
a big candy guy. Like those weren't the ones you
were trying to trade away to your siblings because you
(45:22):
didn't want them. No, Like nerds were okay, fantastic. Yeah,
and you get that little sound of them rattling in there.
Oh yeah, number five Hershey's original case. This is why
you think it's trolling.
Speaker 2 (45:36):
But yet, like.
Speaker 1 (45:43):
There's so many what's the worst candy? Let me let
me ask this and not the worst thing you can
get a Halloween because I get it, there's a dentist,
he gives toothbrushes whatever that monster, But like, what's the
thing where if you you're like were even when you're
a kid, and they're like you can take one, You're like,
I'm good, I'm okay, I can tell you what it is.
Speaker 2 (46:07):
Ross.
Speaker 1 (46:07):
What was the no go candy when you were a
kid where you didn't want nothing to do with it.
Banana laughy taffy bury that in the landfill. Man, Oh no,
ain't nobody got time for that. As one wise female
philosopher one said, all right, let me grab a call here, Donna.
Speaker 2 (46:28):
What's up?
Speaker 10 (46:29):
Good morning, casey. I would say, black liquorice.
Speaker 2 (46:34):
No, black liquorice is fine.
Speaker 1 (46:35):
I understand that people go very different ways on it,
but I mean universally, who's eating banana laffy taffy?
Speaker 2 (46:41):
Explain that to me?
Speaker 8 (46:43):
Oh yeah, oh no.
Speaker 2 (46:48):
You bet.
Speaker 1 (46:48):
If you said it over to us, I said, set
it over the Russia putin probably love it.
Speaker 10 (46:55):
You could send it to North Korea. You know they
they would love it too, because they don't even have. Hey,
I was calling about Mackie the guy who uh went
to jail.
Speaker 2 (47:08):
I think that the meme dude I was talking about earlier.
Speaker 10 (47:12):
Yeah, yeah, I mean everybody knew it was a joke.
What he had done and what got him in trouble
was that he targeted African Americans and with an AD
that will look like an AD and it said to
avoid the line vote from home textillery, YadA, YadA, YadA.
Speaker 1 (47:32):
Well, he targeted, He targeted a geographic district, and so
this is when you get into the causation stuff. But yeah,
here's the here's the thing he made. Actually you're gonna
say it, so go ahead.
Speaker 5 (47:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (47:46):
Well what Jimmy Kimmel did was just the same, pretty
much the same. He targeted Trump voters and not only
not only that.
Speaker 2 (47:58):
Yeah, so the dude with who made the meme.
Speaker 1 (48:01):
Dude, he also did others that targeted quote unquote other areas.
So thereby other groups.
Speaker 10 (48:07):
So hearts with women, you know. But the thing is
too he only had fifty eight thousand followers on Twitter.
How many people watch Jimmy Kimmel? How many people does
he read?
Speaker 2 (48:19):
Ten? I don't know, you know, you know.
Speaker 1 (48:23):
He should watch him basically his closest family and friends,
of which you.
Speaker 10 (48:28):
I agree, But he should go to jail.
Speaker 2 (48:33):
Neither of them should go to jail. I'm gonna neither
of them should go to jail.
Speaker 10 (48:38):
Yeah, okay, I'll agree with that. But if one's going
to go to jail, the other one should be pulled
on the carpet.
Speaker 9 (48:44):
Two.
Speaker 2 (48:45):
No, no, no, that's all we're arguing for here. And you
know what, if you want to should.
Speaker 10 (48:50):
I have said it all in a different voice.
Speaker 1 (48:52):
Yeah, if he wants to get on the Sun Express
with the guys who besmirched Reces, then that's fine.
Speaker 2 (48:58):
We'll find him a seat.
Speaker 8 (48:59):
So I thank you very much.
Speaker 2 (49:02):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (49:03):
Yeah, we're gonna eat a bigger ship, Elon. And I
know what you're saying. Hey, my ship, the literally the
one we just launched off than the one you saw
get caught.
Speaker 2 (49:12):
With the little.
Speaker 1 (49:13):
Uh metal chopsticks thing was the biggest space per That's
the other thing too. For everyone wants to deport Elon,
you have to recognize that that ship, that the one
you saw get caught while you're all rooting for it
to explode maybe, uh, judging by some of the live
streams I watched with lunatics uh hosting, that was the
largest thing we've ever put in space. Not by a
(49:37):
little that's the biggest. That is the biggest thing that
we have ever fired into the Cosmos and returned to Earth.
It's the biggest thing we've ever fired into space. But
also on top of it, having never fired something that
big into space instead of what would have been absolutely
okay refire into space and and what it does re entry,
(50:00):
it does the whole splash.
Speaker 2 (50:01):
Down old school thing.
Speaker 1 (50:03):
No, they went, all right, Not only is this gonna
be the biggest thing we've ever fired into space have
and have the most complexity to it, but we're also
gonna catch it on the launch pad the first time.
So we're gonna need a bigger Sun Express ship, is
(50:24):
what I'm saying. And I know you guys are the
guys for the job over at SpaceX, because I'm making
a list, all right, seven forty four Jeff mar from
the Weather Channel. We're trying to figure out who to
put on the Elon ship and then we're gonna fire
him into the Sun because I'm just annoyed with people
this morning. So we're telling they're going to Mars and
then when they get out there, they're gonna turn left
and they're gonna be and they're gonna be like, what's
(50:46):
going on?
Speaker 2 (50:46):
Where are we going? And it's just gonna get warmer.
It'll be great.
Speaker 1 (50:49):
So that's how I'm spending my Friday. Jeff, give me
some good weather to make this list too.
Speaker 2 (50:55):
Well.
Speaker 11 (50:56):
Were you happy with that high of eighty two yesterday
for Halloween?
Speaker 1 (51:01):
I mean yeah, but then it just caused kids to
be everywhere knocking on doors and stuff.
Speaker 2 (51:06):
I don't know, some loose the well.
Speaker 11 (51:08):
I was going to say, if you liked it yesterday,
you'll be happy as we start off November today, because
we're going to climb up to eighty two again for
a high, a little bit of fog early, then a
mix of clouds and sun for the afternoon with a
light breeze out of the southwest initially. Then we we'll
pick up a little bit more through the afternoon of
the high of eighty two, and then tonight increasing clouds,
possibly an isolated chower too after midnight with a low
in the upper fifties, and this is going to feel
a little bit more like fall during the weekend behind
(51:29):
that front, some clouds tomorrow up to sixty eight. Party
cloudy is Saturday night alone, you're fifty. On Sunday, plenty
of sun. We'll hit sixty eight and then we warm
back up with the mix of clouds and sun on Monday,
mid seventies for Election Day, sunny with a high and
your seventy nine degrees.
Speaker 2 (51:42):
Okay, Jeff, we'll chatt in an hour. Appreciate it, sir.
You got there, you go, Jeff Maher.
Speaker 1 (51:46):
From the Weather Channel, Oh yeah, all right, So I
mentioned us it's funny when a report that's not funny,
it's sad actually. But when a reporter writes about guns
and it's clear they don't know anything about gun, right,
and we point those things out, how deep does that
pit go? Apparently it extends to other things as well,
(52:07):
And we'll give you that story next here on the
CaCO Day radio program. News stories you claim to have researched, right,
you dug into it so that you had, because that's
your job. Really, you are on behalf of me, the consumer.
When I'm consuming media. You're digging into it and you're
going to go ahead and you're going to tell me, hey,
(52:28):
this is here's what I found, here's the facts, and
do with it what you will.
Speaker 2 (52:33):
Now, that's in a perfect world.
Speaker 1 (52:35):
Obviously, we we know the state of modern journalism where
either by story selection, headlining for headline readers that you know,
belie what is in the actual story, and of course
just the manipulation of what's in the story itself.
Speaker 2 (52:51):
These are all problems.
Speaker 1 (52:53):
But when you screw some up or you get a
very basic thing, it just flushes all credibility in most
people's minds. So when you're you know, when you're a
member of Congress running around saying we need gun control
because there was a fifty caliber AR fifteen, which is
technically a possibility that weighs as much as six boxes
of paper. I'm assuming that the standard sized printer paper
(53:16):
boxes you get in an office, and no they don't.
There's if a gun weighed as much as six of those,
it wouldn't be very useful in that size. But I digress.
But when you're the reporter rit man, you gotta get it.
Case in point Politico doing their fair share of the
Trump garbage truck incident. By the way, Ross, my favorite
(53:39):
line yesterday in a story was a bit of a throwaway,
and they said Trump seated in a garbage truck and
referred to as campaign stunt. But then they uttered this line.
It's not clear whether he actually retrieved any garbage what
(53:59):
So did Trump claim that he just did a shift
picking up garbage because we played his audio, Yes, I'm
pretty sure he said that they were like on the plane, right,
you know, and yeah.
Speaker 3 (54:12):
You know in the speech he said he was in
the truck for about two minutes, then he went in
his car, went to the rally.
Speaker 1 (54:17):
Yeah, he talked about. He spent more time describing how
he how getting in the truck right, and he even
ross had to bleep it because uh, and it's funny
if you listen to it, I'm bleep and you're an
adult because he says the S word. He's like, I
started up at that first step and it's right here,
and I went, oh, you know, sword.
Speaker 3 (54:34):
It's the best delivery of the S word I've ever heard.
Speaker 2 (54:37):
Yeah, it's funny. So so I I I.
Speaker 1 (54:42):
So now you're debunking whether he went and and did
a shift.
Speaker 2 (54:47):
It's just so stupid.
Speaker 1 (54:49):
Did Kamala manufacture silicon? She just tried to kill herself
with it the other day. I'm I'm unclear. Did she
run the uh the the assembly line? I want photos?
Or you're just being dumb, but I digress. So Politico
they got to cover it. Here's the headline, Trump a
dump truck, a bright orange vest. And it's only Wednesday.
(55:13):
Obviously this was from Wednesday. Trump a dump truck, a
bright orange vest?
Speaker 2 (55:20):
Are we so?
Speaker 1 (55:21):
I understand people who don't shoot.
Speaker 2 (55:26):
That never round guns.
Speaker 1 (55:27):
Really their gun education is well, most of it is
what's you know, shoved down their gullets in pop culture which.
Speaker 2 (55:35):
Can or cannot be accurate. Most times it's not accurate.
Speaker 1 (55:40):
I would argue ninety nine percent of the time when
you see somebody using a firearm depicted in a movie,
there is a high probability that it's not accurate the
way it's being depicted.
Speaker 2 (55:49):
I don't know if you also know this.
Speaker 1 (55:51):
And I own several glocks, very popular handgun you'll see
in you know, movie thrillers and all that stuff. They
stop shooting after just well a dozen or so, depends
what model you have, but we'll go a dozen ish
a little more, especially if you get the one with
(56:13):
the extra finger on the UH.
Speaker 2 (56:18):
Magazine there.
Speaker 1 (56:19):
Okay, all right, well now, because now I'm thinking I
need to go get another one of those.
Speaker 2 (56:22):
But that's not what we're here for. But a truck.
Speaker 1 (56:26):
You can't tell a dump truck from a trash truck.
You don't have to be in either business. I've never
been a garbage man. And while I have worked on
a job site where dump trucks may have been because
in roofing, they you know, you throw all the old
roof off into there the way we did it, I've
never driven a dump so but I know what the
(56:47):
difference is and if under the little slide off the
top of the roof where we were showing throwing all
the old roof and the wheelbarrows down so it would
slide down into the truck, if I glanced off the
side of the building and saw that somebody pulled a
garbage truck up to it, I would alert my boss.
I'd be like, I don't know, man, you ordered the
wrong truck. So the political reporter and the thing is,
(57:10):
and this is why it's so heinous that you got
this wrong. The whole reason for this was predicated on
the word garbage, right, So it like the truck that
was selected wasn't an afterthought. It was very specific to
(57:30):
be a garbage truck. If Joe Biden had said that,
I don't know, Trump supporters are a bunch of cement heads,
which by the way, sounds like an insult, he would
lob when his brain flashed back to his flapper days
or whatever, like, oh, there's cement heads, right, and like
only your nana recognizes. Oh yeah, they used to say
that all the time, Like then a cement truck would
(57:52):
be appropriate, but they called him garbage. It's a garbage truck,
so you got literally arguably the most important aspect of
this story, not you know, excluding who's in it, the
presidential candidate. Wrong, and then your editor, I'm sure looked
at it and what that looks good to me?
Speaker 2 (58:13):
Good job, here's a raise. All right, go tear some
Trump signs down or whatever you do in your free time,
mister reporter. Well, radio guys, shoot the breeze. Pete Calender
mid Days WBT down and Charlotte joins us, Good morning, Pete.
How you doing sir?
Speaker 8 (58:29):
Hey? I am okay. How are you today?
Speaker 1 (58:31):
Are you so happy that it's almost Tuesday? Or are
you so like, oh my god, it's almost election day?
And then all could you and I both know this
isn't going to be something that's clean and summed up
by eight o'clock next Tuesday.
Speaker 8 (58:44):
Night, correct, Right, So I guess to answer your question,
I know it was an either or kind of a question,
but I'm gonna say yes to both. So that went. Yeah,
it's like, oh yeah, we're almost there, because you know,
for the last you know, six weeks or so, it's
just called it kind of a sprint to get to
(59:04):
the you know, to the election day, just you know,
very busy time of year, a lot of events going on,
lots of stuff going on, and so I just got
to get on the other side of election day. But
we also know that it's probably gonna get worse, you
know what.
Speaker 2 (59:19):
It's like. It's like the Bush Gore thing, where, yeah,
that it was all done, even though not you know,
obviously a bunch of people weren't happy and they still
claim though it stole an election, which I that's weird.
Speaker 1 (59:31):
But like I remember a getting to the other side
of that going, oh, thank god, we don't do that
every time. And now I'm like, right then, you look
at like Pennsylvania, like we may not know for three days, right,
they put out all these things, and you're like Brazil
break in Brazil. You ever see viral video from Brazil.
It's always the most insane thing, right, some guy, Why
(59:52):
would you, by the way, why would you stick up
rob anyone in Brazil?
Speaker 2 (59:55):
Is a good question.
Speaker 1 (59:56):
Almost every one of those shop owners fights back. You
can hear little Portuguese.
Speaker 2 (01:00:00):
In the background.
Speaker 1 (01:00:01):
Okay, they managed to do their elections last Saturday, and
they had the results at the end. Now, granted wasn't
the presidential It was kind of like their their midterm elections,
but like they have a whole city that they put
in the middle of the Amazon because they could, and
still they got all their stuff. They got it all
handled in Brazil, and you know that's obviously they're they're
(01:00:25):
very political. Animosity in Brazil is very high if you
followed any of that.
Speaker 12 (01:00:29):
So well, yeah, well, what is kind of amazing is
how the more technologically advanced our society becomes, the.
Speaker 8 (01:00:41):
Less ability we have to conduct timely elections. And Florida
you mentioned the year, you know, the two thousand election,
and they were Florida with such a laughing stock that
they cleaned up their system to the point where they're
basically done. You know, they've got way more people now
(01:01:02):
than they did in two thousand, so there are more
people voting. So that's that's obviously not the problem. It's
it's the administration. It's the system that is used, and
so they were able to figure it out and clean
it up and get results quickly enough. But some states
they've gone backwards. It takes longer now than it did
(01:01:22):
when they were like having to ride the ballots by
horseback to the county seat, you know, for counting. It's
just it's almost makes me think that it might be
somewhat intentional.
Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Oh okay, yeah, maybe, Well I don't ask you another question,
since you just you can't see if Pete just grabbed
himself a tinfoil hat. Do you think it's also interesting
that following the Gore Bush thing that since then Florida
isn't really a swing state anymore and it's a red state.
Speaker 8 (01:01:58):
I then repealing these ways is through the tinfoil hat.
I am getting what you're sending down.
Speaker 2 (01:02:04):
Clean everything up, and then now it's the other thing.
Speaker 8 (01:02:07):
So I don't know, that is kind of interesting to note.
I don't know what the what the explanation on that
might be, but I don't want to say it's causation,
but it does appear to be correlation.
Speaker 2 (01:02:20):
Okay, all right, I like that. We'll get some science
terms in here. We you know what we need.
Speaker 1 (01:02:24):
We need a grant, a bunch of money. What did
Wake Forest get for giving those monkeys cocaine? It was
like two hundred thousand, so we could get that.
Speaker 8 (01:02:34):
Well, you're gonna you're gonna give me a grant for
doing cocaine?
Speaker 1 (01:02:39):
No, no, no, do you remember the wake for it?
It was in the you know that annual book of
government waste? Uh who is it that used to put
it out?
Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
Oh, I don't know.
Speaker 8 (01:02:49):
It wasn't like it wasn't coressional quarterly or something what' No,
it wasn't down I know, the Book of.
Speaker 1 (01:02:54):
About Yeah, I think Grassley took it over for a
while and then I don't point is that one of
the things in there. We did a parody song to it,
because how could you not, uh wake fort They got
a they got like two hundred thousand or a hundred
and eighty thousand I think it was, and they wanted
to study what happens if they gave primates cocaine, and
believe it or not, it amps them up.
Speaker 2 (01:03:16):
So really yeah, yeahs of it.
Speaker 1 (01:03:19):
Yeah, and then you give them a bunch some of
them are like that's amazing, and they will literally try to,
you know, hurt you for it so.
Speaker 2 (01:03:26):
To get more accomplished. Interesting.
Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
Yeah, But going back to going back to the presidential
thing there, yeah, I don't dude, I'll tell you what's interesting.
So one of the things that we have in possession,
my family has, my brother has it is.
Speaker 2 (01:03:40):
We have a lot of a lot of people don't realize.
Speaker 1 (01:03:43):
And I don't know if it was a Western expansion
thing as people went and homesteaded.
Speaker 2 (01:03:49):
Out in the West.
Speaker 1 (01:03:51):
It was during the era it was very popular to
keep pretty extensive like diaries of what's going on, and
it's fascinating and I have and one of the entries
in there is my great great grandparents finding out that
James Garfield was the president in December, right, wow, Yeah,
news came of Christmas. I can't remember how it's written
(01:04:13):
or something. So it's almost Christmas and they find out
who the damn president is. They probably could have found
out sooner because you've got telegraph lines and all that stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
They were just out there. They didn't care, man.
Speaker 8 (01:04:23):
So then it was a different time where the election
of a president really didn't have that much of an
impact on your life. And this is one of the
things I've said to people for years. Why when they
complain and lament about the you know how sick they
are of politics, and I don't care about this stuff,
and oh my gosh, it's all crazy and everything. If
(01:04:46):
you want to reduce the effect of politics in your
personal life, then you need to you need to limit
the size of government, because that's the only reason everything
is political. It's because the government is involved in everything.
And the bigger the federal government becomes, the more it
wants to be a part of your life. And if
(01:05:08):
you don't want it to be a part of your life,
and you don't care about this stuff, and you're annoyed
by all the ads, and you know, why do I
have to care about all this stuff, then you should
be for a limited government. Unfortunately, I think a lot
of people are looking at government now is sort of
a stand in for religion.
Speaker 2 (01:05:24):
Oh yeah, or.
Speaker 1 (01:05:25):
Let me just because I want to be one hundred
percent here. Or you can get a constoga wagon ahead
about one thousand miles into what is literally described in
your diary is quote the savage territory and set up
shop there and try not to get murdered by you know,
nature and the people that are there and everything else.
And then you don't have time to worry about whether
James Garfield.
Speaker 8 (01:05:46):
Won that's true. Yeah, whether there's a cat or a
dog as president.
Speaker 1 (01:05:50):
Yeah, yeah, you're like, please don't burn my homestead and
murder my family and anyway, all right, So from that
happy note to this, here's the other reason.
Speaker 2 (01:06:01):
I'll just be so happy it's over.
Speaker 1 (01:06:03):
And I'm sure this happens to you as well, so
I don't have to in every social setting inevitably get
the question.
Speaker 2 (01:06:10):
Do you know the question I'm talking about? Pete?
Speaker 8 (01:06:12):
I can I take a guess?
Speaker 2 (01:06:14):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
Yeah, yeah, go ahead, all right?
Speaker 8 (01:06:18):
Who do you think is going to win?
Speaker 2 (01:06:23):
You're in radio? Who do you think is gonna win?
Let me? Let me just say this? And Pete you
can you can? Yeah, you're nay this?
Speaker 9 (01:06:28):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
If I knew who was gonna win every time, I
wouldn't be in radio anymore. I would be the.
Speaker 1 (01:06:33):
Richest political consultant you've ever seen. I would I would
buy Elon's companies just to you know, just to flex.
Speaker 2 (01:06:41):
The amount of money i'd make that willing to throw
at you. I don't know, Pete doesn't know unless you
do know, Yes, that's correct, right?
Speaker 8 (01:06:52):
Like if you look at what what's his face? Nate
Silver and Harry Enton and like some of the guys
that are like the one that I mean, these people
are paid quite handsomely, way more than radio people are.
They're paid a lot of money to crunch a lot
of numbers to try to make predictions, which I'm really
(01:07:13):
I'm not really sure what the point of that is
for public consumption. I know why campaigns do it, you know,
in order to try to ship strategies and that sort
of thing.
Speaker 2 (01:07:20):
Well, I don't.
Speaker 1 (01:07:22):
Els they put it in fund raising emails, so they
do make some public facing use of it.
Speaker 8 (01:07:27):
But you're right, yeah, right, But but like, why would
why do media companies want to know what the prediction
might be? It's like it's all speculative. Who cares? Like
there's no value to you predicting who might win or
whether it's too close to call or something like that.
I this this constant obsession with the you know, the
(01:07:51):
horse race of it all. And I know why it's
it's a substitute for actual journalism, right, because it's cheap
and easier to just report on pulling and then speculate
where nobody will ever hold you accountable for, uh mispredicting
the outcome of an election if no one's going to
remember what you predicted. So it's well I shouldn't say that.
Speaker 1 (01:08:17):
How many times have you seen the New York Times
Hillary's going to win ninety three percent? You know election
night graph right, used as a meme like people play
so what's the.
Speaker 8 (01:08:27):
What's the payoff on that too? Like this is like
the cost benefit is if you are wrong and you
make a big deal about your prediction and then you
are wrong, right, the downside is pretty substantial. And if
you're right, what do you get out of that? You
get to say, oh, well, I predicted it, and everybody's like, okay, well,
good for you. Like nobody cares about that, you know,
(01:08:48):
And what is the value in being able to predict
the outcome of a race? You're basically saying, Hey, look
at me, I pulled the slot lever, especially in a
race like this, I pulled the slots lever and I won,
So I'm awesome at slots.
Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
Uh yeah, I honestly, I think you know a lot
of this stuff, and you know you know it as
well as I do. In this business, in the media business,
there are a lot of things that we do that
we still do that we used to do that I
don't necessarily know why we do them anymore. Right, there's
certain service elements that are probably not how people get them.
Speaker 8 (01:09:24):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:09:25):
In the example, school closings, right, we used to have
that was that was our jam.
Speaker 2 (01:09:30):
Right, school closings in the world of radio.
Speaker 1 (01:09:32):
We were gods mana wait are our twelve plus numbers?
Speaker 2 (01:09:36):
And six plus numbers looked amazing on the low end
if there was a little bit of snow in the
air and then and that went by the wayside. So
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:09:44):
And that brings me to this other conversation. Do you
think that we're finally seeing some forced evolution within some
of the media entities. Jeff Bezos would be the big example.
Jury's out on the LA Time stuff. But what do
you what do you think's up with that? Because now there,
you know, a lot of them are taking their ball
(01:10:04):
and going home. And I say, good riddance, And he
says he wants a conservative columnists. But then I say,
like Gen Rubin, you mean and I don't know? So
is that is that the theory is that he wants
his space which is a much bigger part of his fortune,
his space company, to be on good terms with Trump
since he's all about space and he doesn't care.
Speaker 2 (01:10:26):
So that's the conspiracy.
Speaker 1 (01:10:28):
Or do you think Bezos is going this is not
a model that works long term, and we got to
make some changes.
Speaker 8 (01:10:34):
Right Well, he wrote in the op ed, and I
read like the whole thing twice. And you know, do
you take him at his word when he says like
that these decisions were made independent of that meeting that
occurred between one of the Space Division guys and Trump.
Speaker 2 (01:10:51):
I don't know. I have a hard time.
Speaker 1 (01:10:52):
I have a hard time with Bezos, and it's his
own fault. And I think it was not because he
was actively trying to go out to deceive. I think
he was dismissive to be smug and it got been
received as that, which is that's his sin, and it's
going to attach to him. So no, I don't take
him in his word. I don't take anybody at their
word anymore.
Speaker 8 (01:11:08):
Right, But having no other information, then it's like, okay, well,
I don't know what the actual motivation was because I'm
not in the room with the guy or asking him
his you know, true motivations and being able to interview
him to try to get at the truth.
Speaker 7 (01:11:23):
So all I have.
Speaker 8 (01:11:25):
Are the public facing statements, right, and the actions and
the guy's losing millions of dollars every year subsidizing left
wing activism that is now the Washington Post and the
readership is greater. So you either want to be you know,
a dominant player in the DC market, or you keep
doing what you're doing. And he says, we're going to
keep doing what We're not going to keep doing what
(01:11:46):
we're doing anymore. And I don't know about hiring more conservatives.
I saw over at RedState dot com. I don't know
the writer what their real name is. They go by
streafe or strife, str ei f F. And he suggest yeah,
he suggested, you really want to show good faith return
the Puetzer for all of the Russia gate craft that
(01:12:07):
you won, like that would be an indication that that
you should that you should not be rewarded for that
kind of garbage. Oh sorry, I didn't mean.
Speaker 1 (01:12:16):
Oh wow, well actually actually aphrophe. No, I'm sorry, it's
it's too late. I am the official boy. This stenographer letter.
They're gonna try to play, but let me let me
ask you. Let's transition to this just.
Speaker 2 (01:12:30):
About two and a half minutes, yeah, or two minutes
the I remember.
Speaker 1 (01:12:35):
Did you watch that comedian live at Trump's rally? I
remember thinking, oh, man, why why? I don't know that
that was very and then within two days it's Trump
in a garbage truck. Will Politico called it a dump
truck because it's they got their gun reporter out, I think,
and he didn't know anything about guns or trucks and
and like and all of a sudden, it's like it's
(01:12:58):
like Trump playing, It's.
Speaker 2 (01:13:02):
The reversal of fortune.
Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
How do you not think Biden's actively working against her
tinfoil hat back for the last ninety seconds?
Speaker 2 (01:13:09):
What do you think?
Speaker 8 (01:13:09):
Yeah, full circle, I don't. I don't think that Joe
Biden is actually trying to do the fact that he
came out and tried to clean it up immediately, like
I I don't think you have to attribute to you know,
I don't know a cognitive willingness. What can probably be
accurately described best.
Speaker 2 (01:13:29):
By the life cycle of the story is crazy for That's.
Speaker 8 (01:13:33):
What's nothing right. Well, because they're they're they're they're trying
to make it into this thing where Donald Trump hates
Puerto Ricans, he hates Hispanic males and sees so guys,
you can't vote for him now. It's the standard stuff.
It's and the insult comic was just a stupid idea.
But they were trying to tap into this you know,
YouTube influencer, uh generation and yeah, no, yeah, yeah, I
(01:13:55):
would not have booked him for a political event, but
they did. He makes a joke about the landfill issue
on Puerto Rico, and.
Speaker 2 (01:14:03):
Which is.
Speaker 8 (01:14:05):
Yeah, which is the thing?
Speaker 2 (01:14:06):
Yeah is the thing?
Speaker 1 (01:14:07):
And and like I was told the story when I
was in Puerto Rico. There's a there's a little town
on the north shore there where like Hemingway used to
go and write and they got you know, the exact
tours kind of stuff, and they're like, yeah, but but
there's a big dump next to it and it's stinks
that don't go there. I've been told this at the hotel.
So anyway, all right, Pete, I got a roll man.
He didn't even tell us who's gonna win. But on
(01:14:29):
you know, next visit, we'll have some answers. Maybe we'll
see you then maybe yeah, yeah, yeah, all right, and
we'll be back. Hang on, dude, it's so funny all this,
all the politics and stuff going on, and people have
been emailing and sending their least favorite Halloween candy. So
look that's what gets the clip ross run the wrong business.
We just need to do three hours at Halloween candy discussion.
(01:14:50):
Mounds is the most overrated.
Speaker 9 (01:14:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:14:52):
I was never a mounds onm enjoyed person. But I
understand that some people like it. Maybe I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:15:00):
AnyWho. All right, let me throw this out.
Speaker 1 (01:15:02):
So obviously Tuesday there's a thing coming up election or something,
and so we're gonna do our normal let's get the
candidates on thing that we do, but we have refined
it so as to not require Ross and I to
well mostly Ross to have to go out and you know,
(01:15:24):
get in connection with all the candidates and schedule all that.
Speaker 2 (01:15:26):
So we don't do it.
Speaker 1 (01:15:27):
The way that we do it is we provide on
Monday and Tuesday an opportunity during the normal course of
the show while we're doing the other stuff, for if
you are a candidate who is on a ballot in
the in one of our listening areas. So try a
triangle and basically, if you can get a radio signal
and you're on a ballot and you want to call
(01:15:48):
in and say hello, talk to me for a few minutes.
I'll ask you a few questions. Rossill verify to make
sure it's you, So there's no shenanigans. That's how we'll
do it. But there's no scheduling nothing. So don't reach
out and be like, can I have a fifteen Monday.
You will be ignored, not the personal, well that point
it is because I told you not to, but that
will open it up. The cattle call will be coming.
(01:16:09):
Just know it's Monday or Tuesday. So look, if you're
somebody who works with a candidate and you're like, hey,
this is great, just let him know and then be
listening Monday and Tuesday morning.
Speaker 2 (01:16:20):
And we'll, uh, you know, we'll do.
Speaker 1 (01:16:23):
The thing that we do very simple. So that's your
that's your head's up there. And but that's not today.
We only got thirty minutes left anyway, and I frankly
rather talk about anything but this. Hey, let's go here
from Mark Cuban, shall we who? And I guess I
have to remind people of this every time Mark Cuban
(01:16:45):
Donald Trump got.
Speaker 2 (01:16:47):
A little beef.
Speaker 1 (01:16:48):
I don't know if it's as much as it was
on Trump's part, where like I think he sees Cuban
as a bit of a foil, but he hasn't leaned
into him, kind of Jim Acosta ish but man, And
maybe that's what's ramping Cuban up because he keeps doing
more and more interviews.
Speaker 2 (01:17:04):
He's had to it. He just apologized for something I'm
going to play for you, which again I don't.
Speaker 1 (01:17:10):
And here's the thing. I didn't really have beef with
Mark Cuban. Hell, I almost worked for Mark Cuban. One
of the jobs I was considering it was, and frankly
I probably should have because I think everyone in that
company ended up getting a nice little payoff.
Speaker 2 (01:17:25):
When they went public.
Speaker 1 (01:17:26):
But like he was doing, he was doing some He
was trying to be into satellite and delivery of radio,
TV and a bunch of other stuff, which he has
those companies still. So with that in mind, you have
to know why Mark Cuban really doesn't like Trump. And
it's so funny that I always bring it up. So
(01:17:48):
in two thousand and four, Donald Trump was doing The Apprentice.
I don't know if you heard of it. It was
kind of a big deal, and in two thousand and
four it was a hell of a big deal, but
it was killing it, man. And I will tell you this,
I never watched The Apprentice, but I'm not really a
TV guy, and I'm sure not a reality show guy,
so I don't know. I vaguely saw clips who was
(01:18:10):
the chick on there?
Speaker 2 (01:18:11):
Who was kind of the the heel Amerosa.
Speaker 1 (01:18:17):
Yes, that's right, right, And I would see the stories
about her, And that was a weird thing too, because like,
didn't she jump on the let's attack Trump train when
you were in for president? I think she did almost
immediate or no, she initially was for him and then
against him. It was a whole weird thing. So that's
what I know of it. But when he was doing it,
(01:18:37):
he was having an immense amount of success, so much
so as TV stations do. Another network decided they were
going to do their own and they carved out a
show that you probably don't remember, and I got Mark
Cuban to host the thing. It was called The Benefactor,
but it was basically The Apprentice, And sometimes you can
(01:18:57):
have multiple shows, but sometimes you can't. In fact, his
was so bad it did six episodes and it canceled it.
It didn't even make a full season. And I don't
know if Trump. Obviously Trump was aware of it because
he responded to it, but I don't know if the
two were talking. He wrote Mark Cuban this letter in
October of two thousand and four. It said, Dear Mark,
(01:19:19):
I am truly sorry to hear your show has been
canceled for lack of ratings. When I initially called you
to congratulate you on the Benefactor, little did you or
I realize how disastrous and embarrassing it would turn out
to be for you. If you ever decide to do
another show, please call me and I'll be happy to
lend a helping hand.
Speaker 2 (01:19:40):
Best wishes, Donald Trump. He sent that letter to Cuban man.
Speaker 1 (01:19:47):
And by the way, the reason that we have a
picture of the letter is it was Cuban who posted
a picture of the letter, so it's not even an
alleged thing there. Cuban said, that's the letter he got sent.
So yeah, that's uh, that's uh. I've seen the Niagara
Falls story. I just don't want to do it. People
(01:20:09):
keep sending it to me this morning.
Speaker 2 (01:20:11):
I just I don't want to do it.
Speaker 1 (01:20:17):
I feel now I have to because I've just finally
snapped on it. It's a horrible story. Please a Niagara
Falls say a mother intentionally went over Niagara Falls with
her two kids.
Speaker 2 (01:20:31):
I'll tell you because you're gonna see the damn thing
I have.
Speaker 1 (01:20:37):
I'm not even gonna I'm not even gonna appeal this
story up. I'll just let me give you the details.
Thirty three year old mother climbed over a safety rail
and intentionally went over the falls with her kids, a
nine year old and a.
Speaker 2 (01:20:47):
Five year old. Yeah. So it's just horrible and and.
Speaker 1 (01:20:50):
Just like all the aspects of all I like, the
thought process that went into going yet this, that we
will do this I can't even fathom.
Speaker 2 (01:21:01):
But yeah, so.
Speaker 1 (01:21:06):
The search and rescue efforts unsuccessful, which which is actually
pretty crazy to me. Right, but if you Russ, you
ever go to Niagara Falls?
Speaker 2 (01:21:15):
I mean you were in New York. Do you ever
go to the falls itself?
Speaker 1 (01:21:19):
Okay, Like it's messy down there at the bottom because
it's a giant waterfall. And I didn't go on the
missed the boat thing. I'm like, I'm good up here.
This is fine. But yeah, I guess maybe it would
be hard to find folks you're looking for there, but
holy cow man, Yeah, it's it's awful. So there you
(01:21:43):
go to me into sharing it.
Speaker 2 (01:21:44):
You're happy? All right? Back to the Mark Cuban thing.
Speaker 1 (01:21:46):
So Mark Cuban obviously he's got some Trump beef and
he's been out there, and then him and Elon although
I don't know how serious.
Speaker 2 (01:21:51):
The elon thing is, but it is what it is.
Speaker 1 (01:21:55):
But that means because you have a tmu uh elon
uh in your in your sights, the networks keep putting
this guy on. So it was inevitable he was going
to say something because Mark Cuban.
Speaker 2 (01:22:10):
One of the things I used to.
Speaker 1 (01:22:11):
Like about Mark Cuban is the way that he told
the NBA to kiss his petard so often. Right, Remember
the fines used to dish out on this too. He's like,
I don't care. You guys are dumb. And I thought
that was funny. But I'm also anti establishment dude, And
I guess maybe I thought Mark Cuban was for a while,
but I was wrong. Here is Mark Cuban sticking his
(01:22:32):
foot in his mouth.
Speaker 13 (01:22:33):
Donald Trump, you never see him around strong intelligent women ever.
Speaker 2 (01:22:38):
It's just that simple? Yeah, no, is it? Is it
that simple? Donald Trump?
Speaker 1 (01:22:43):
The women around Donald Trump, and he's not referring to
his wife. He's referring to and they're talking about campaign
surrogates and the women that a photo of some win.
I think there were women from North Carolina he was
referencing in the U in the speech of Mandison Square Garden.
Speaker 2 (01:23:01):
But whatever, it is.
Speaker 1 (01:23:02):
It's like Cuban off and as you can imagine telling
you know, the way that it was read is that
Mark Cuban was saying that GOP women are not intelligent,
not smart. I don't know how else you would necessarily
take it, but he has he is, he said he misspoke.
Speaker 2 (01:23:20):
It was it was.
Speaker 1 (01:23:21):
An air and all right whatever, Yeah, but it was
borne from just trying to fill space with hate man
and not a well thought out thing. And and the
difference is he wasn't trying to make a joke. That's
not Mark Cuban, the comedian. That's Mark Cuban, the bus
the guy from Shark Tank, right, the business dude, the
Maverick's owner, that guy. So make of that what you will,
(01:23:45):
but probably not a good campaign strategy.
Speaker 8 (01:23:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (01:23:47):
Yeah, We're going to have another warm day to start
off November, and then it'll feel a little bit more
like fall into the weekend with cooler air moving in
behind to front of the meantime today partly Tumulty. Cloudy
wins will continue out of the southwest through the afternoon,
boosting the high to eighty two, and then tonight, ahead
of the front a cloudy sky there will be a
slight chance for a show or two after midnight with
a low falling into the upper fifties, and then during
the weekends some clouds tomorrow and the high sixty eight,
(01:24:09):
some breaks in that cloud cover on Saturday night with
a loanear fifty, and then wrapping up the weekend on Sunday,
mostly Sunday with the hind yepper sixties high, so we
hit the midw upper seventies from Monday into election Day
on Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (01:24:19):
All right, thank you very much, have a good weekend.
You're with us Monday, right, Jeffino is in on Mondays. Oh, okay, have.
Speaker 1 (01:24:27):
A great week jeffs We'll have a Jeff and then
thank you, and then we'll talk to a different Jeff,
this one from Bloomberg.
Speaker 2 (01:24:31):
Jeff Bellinger.
Speaker 1 (01:24:32):
Next, hang on, Jeff Bellinger's here with the latest from Bloomberg.
Speaker 2 (01:24:36):
All right, go ahead, sir.
Speaker 13 (01:24:38):
Okay, here it comes, Casey. The job creation took a
hit in October. Labor Department reports just twelve thousand workers
were added to pay rolls last month, far below the consensus.
It was likely the result of Hurricanes Helene and Milton
and the strike at Boeing. More than half a million
workers were unable to work because of bad weather last month.
(01:25:00):
Nation's unemployment rate held at four point one percent, and
stocks are actually higher. The futures are higher than they
were before the report came out. S and P futures
up thirty points, Nasdaq futures up one hundred two, the
Dow futures are up two hundred and eighteen, all up
about half a percent. A Boeing is making another offer
to its striking machinists, hoping to end the walkout that
(01:25:22):
has shut down airplane production. The latest deal is backed
by union leaders. It would hike workers pay by thirty
eight percent over four years, and the machinists will receive
a twelve thousand dollars signing bonus if the pact is ratified.
A vote is set for Monday. Apple posted record revenue
for the latest quarter, but investors were disappointed by a
cautious forecast for the holiday period. Apple expects sales for
(01:25:45):
the current quarter to show a percentage gain in the
low to middle single digits. Amazon dot Com pleased investors
with a quarterly report that showed the company humming on
all cylinders. The internet retailer has been cutting and reallocating costs.
Annalys say Amazon's retail and cloud computing businesses are both
on sound putting now. Sony Pictures Television alleges it's being
(01:26:08):
shortchanged by CBS Studios, which distributes the game shows Jeopardy
and Wheel of Fortune. Sony produces both of the popular shows.
It has filed a lawsuit that claims CBS is not
working aggressively enough to maximize revenue from licensing the shows
to local TV stations and then selling the advertising within them.
And Casey, Besides the Dodgers, the World Series produced another winner,
(01:26:33):
Fox Sports. An average of nearly sixteen million people tuned
in for each of the five games. The final game
drew more than eighteen and a half million viewers. Only
complaint was that it didn't go seven games, as far
as the network is concerned.
Speaker 2 (01:26:46):
Casey, Yeah, yeah, it was some. It was.
Speaker 1 (01:26:50):
I thought it was going to be a longer series.
But that was an absolute driven here.
Speaker 10 (01:26:54):
All right.
Speaker 13 (01:26:55):
Thought I thought the Yankees would do better, certainly.
Speaker 2 (01:26:58):
Yeah. Well anyway, well, okay, thank you for that, Jeff.
Have a good weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:27:03):
Wamp bump in the pinstripes there. You know how sometimes
we say bury him under the prison. I'm gonna go
there with this. I'll give you the gist of this story.
So excuse me flip back over to this. This is
out of Florida and Boston actually because the main dude
here is a Boston lawyer who set up this thing.
(01:27:26):
So and it makes sense when you hear what it is.
So in Florida there was a nonprofit lawyer's nonprofit called
the Center for Special Needs Trust Administration, and it worked
like this, if you have a family member that has
a disability, or you have a disability, or you have
(01:27:46):
a family member that is cognitively impaired, and you want
to ensure financially after you're gone that they're going to
have money obviously for their needs.
Speaker 2 (01:28:00):
You would, you would. These were the go.
Speaker 1 (01:28:03):
To guys for it, and so they had you'd set
up these trusts, they would administer it. There was actually
it was cheaper right because there was a charitable angle
and it provided a lot of peace of mind for
a lot of people. Well, it turns out, according to authorities,
the the attorneys, including the who's the top guy, Leo Gavoni,
(01:28:24):
a from Boston Finance Group. Uh, basically, we're just they
spent all the money, not all of it. Technically they
say only about seventy five percent of the trust were
fully drained, the rest partially. So they spent all this
money that had been put there by families wanting to
ensure you know that there was financial management for folks,
(01:28:47):
a lot of which who frankly are not in the
power of attorney position.
Speaker 2 (01:28:51):
To handle their own finances.
Speaker 1 (01:28:54):
And these guys bought boats and hookers and blow and
who the hell does what else?
Speaker 2 (01:28:59):
All right? I don't know for the hookers.
Speaker 1 (01:29:00):
I'm assuming though, if you're draining a hundred million, you
stole one hundred million people or a hundred million dollars
from disabled people like they can't get you in gen
pop fast enough.
Speaker 2 (01:29:13):
So we'll see where that goes.
Speaker 1 (01:29:15):
That whole thing's unfolding down in it's out of Saint Pete,
I think is real their headquartered, but down in the
Tampa area, all right. And finally, police in Rhode Island
made a rather interesting DWI arrest Jacqueline Nunez. Yeah, is
that okay? That is the woman that was resting. Okay,
(01:29:36):
I just want to make sure here, all right, so
check this out. And why am I telling you this
because two things. One she would initially they tried to
stop or she sped off, so you have also eluding
where was she going. Well, it appears after taking police
on a brief pursuit through town, during which she kept
(01:29:56):
randomly swerving and rapidly accelerating, eventventally.
Speaker 2 (01:30:02):
Pulling up to her.
Speaker 1 (01:30:02):
Home, that they realized this is the woman that lives
in the house from the Conjuring the movie series, which
is an actual house in Rhode Island. Is it Berryville
or wherever it is, right, that's an actual It's like
the Amityville House.
Speaker 2 (01:30:14):
It's a thing that exists.
Speaker 1 (01:30:15):
This woman lives there, and they took her into custody.
They did the whole high risk traffic stuff because again,
just because you drive home during a police chase and
you get on your pridect that it's not a base,
you're not safe.
Speaker 2 (01:30:29):
But also I think she might have been trying to
injure the officers