Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Two things happened over the weekend simultaneously in just a moment.
Arguably three things happened in a moment, but it was
the beginning of the journey for the third thing. So
the first was I'm on Twitter, mine of my own business.
(00:22):
You may call it X whatever I got. I've decided
I'm old enough. And a Supreme Court decision came down
with Twitter in the name even after the change, so
I'm correct. Check the case law. Two things happened. One
I laid eyes upon the libs of blue Sky account
(00:43):
and followed so fast. This was an easier follow than
what's his bucket back in my space days. I can't
remember what his name look at that it's already been usurped, right,
you just follow that, dude, Just this this guy to
computer looks nice enough. Follow that libs a blue Sky
on it too? So mad We didn't think of it,
(01:03):
stephf Ross, How did we miss this man? That's gonna
be a that person's that's a million dollar idea. It's
her right, Libs of TikTok, check I think it is
and immediately starts delivering. And then the third thing that
happened once I saw that it existed and immediately followed that.
(01:24):
But two kicked myself for not thinking of it. Three,
I lost half a day. I don't know where it went.
So I'm gonna warn you before you click on the
Libs of Blue Sky account there and start scrolling through,
make sure you got nothing on your calendar that day,
(01:45):
at least for a few hours, cause you're gonna deep
dive that bad boy Ross. You don't tend to fall
into holes over the weekend of news and pop culture,
tend to separate yourself. We're gonna have a conversation about
some Ross is doing this morning. But had you fancied
by the old libs of Blue Sky account this week?
Speaker 2 (02:05):
I have, and thus far I haven't been as impressed
as the low.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
No no, no, no. It's it's gonna take some time,
but because you gotta we you know, you gotta you
gotta digest everything over there. But as it gets a
fan base, inevitably, how those accounts are successful. Kicks in
the trick is you're doing all the work right. So
and I don't begrudge the business model, but you need minions.
(02:32):
You need people to go through stuff, and once you
get people inspired, then they're gonna go over to Blue Sky.
They're gonna you know, stick their toe in the chummy
murky waters, and the cream as it is, will start
to rise, and I think the account will improve greatly.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
I did think it was funny that I was reading
how they've they've been inundated with all these complaints over.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
No. No, would it be with what the servers crashing or.
Speaker 2 (03:05):
The No, it's where you people when you report people
for like content that you believe is like inappropriate or
like bad, like like fact checking people.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
So like wait, wait, wait, what who you're telling me
that the people over on Blue Sky are constantly butt
hurt to use a scientific term. A lot of people
don't recon it, but hurt.
Speaker 2 (03:29):
Isn't that weird?
Speaker 1 (03:30):
Yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:32):
So it's just all of them. They're in their echo
chamber now because they have like the old sort of
modeling of the old Twitter. Yeah, you can report people
and there's all this censorship.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
Blue Sky was like, yo, y'all need to slow down
because we have there are too many complaints. They're just
like Nazis on each other. Ah.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
So it's so weird. You put a lot of people
into a place that I'll have the same kind of
the same mindset. Some would argue, and well, that's what
today shows about. I want to I just I think
that some people get caught up in symbolism, their own
party stuff, and it fails to recognize what is probably
(04:14):
the intended messaging of so much of this stuff. Yeah,
did people go to Blue Sky as a protest to
you know, what happened and the inability to deal with
information that's not under their control that they can manipulate. Sure, some,
but a lot of people just went over out of curiosity,
(04:34):
just a better way of doing things. Like let me
give you an example. Okay, you ready for this. It
would be very easy this morning for me to see
Ross wearing that hat to describe it to you. It's
blue primarily, Okay, there are tinges of red, you can
(05:00):
you can see that from even this distance, a little
bit of white. There's a little bit of white on
there too. The hat looks worn. That worn is is
and he's wearing it. Obviously he's wearing it. But I
mean us as has always worn it for some time.
As as a as some messaging and symbolism of these
(05:23):
those three colors, primarily the blue with the tinge of
the red and some of the white and on it
Americana right, one of the and as somebody who is
a true student of the West, one of the most
iconic things that that we utilize as symbolism of expansion
(05:46):
and manifest destiny and everything an American bison. Right, It's
got a bison upon it, which, strangely, even though it
you know, it symbolized the expansion of the West. One
they say that one of the largest ranges of the
American bison. I don't know if you knew this at
(06:06):
the time this country was colonized Florida actually, and in fact,
the term cowboy actually is a derivative of names that
were to be utilized in the state of Florida, as
it was essentially a large it was like Texas, it
was a large cattle plantation at the time. And so
with that symbolism upon his head, I see Ross's full
(06:31):
throat and endorsement of American expansionism, the ideal of the West,
without dealing with the realities of it. As somebody whose
family did deal with the realities of it, I can
I think speak to that in journals that we have
and things that we know and might misinterpret that as
(06:52):
some sort of I don't know, picking aside, so to speak,
perhaps in a pugilistleton's sport like football or something. Some
would see that, but I don't see that, because I
am a learned journalist in the same way that I
see this article from w R E. L entitled Chapel
Hill banner sparks outrage among Jewish community over kaifa yah?
(07:19):
Is it? Is it coffee? Yeah? Kafifia? I don't whatever. Symbolism.
So basically a banner that's displayed that as a student,
a graduating student of the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill,
adorned in those colors of you know, white and blue, right,
(07:43):
that that in a particular patternattern a pattern so particular.
I might point out that it is copyright in countries
that will allow it. It's, as you know, for monetary purposes.
The actual assembly and symbolism of those colors in this painting,
(08:05):
some would say, appears to show an affinity for like
I don't know, hamas or something and uh. And then
the title of the piece, which the artist describes as
and I'm quoting here quote the image of a graduate
adorned with their blue cap and gown definitely defiantly protesting.
(08:31):
Those two words are in there end quote. Some would
interpret I I will not allow you to interpret as that,
because I'm ri l I am learned, I am smart.
I am here for journalistic reasons, and that's of course
not what it means, not from the river to the sea.
In the same way that Ross's hat is simply Americana
(08:56):
in a hat, not picking a side in this this
this pugelist simpleton sport of football, but rather just a
fan of the game, and in this case the game
the expansion and establishment and flourishing of the US Empire.
Is that what you mean by that Ross with the.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
I'm sorry, all those words put me to sleep. What
I'm sorry, But that's what your hat means, right, I
know it's a Bill's had Bills fan, go Bills, but
the but the Bison. But I also believe in manifest
destiny and the conquering of this landsage.
Speaker 1 (09:30):
Oh okay, all right, all right, all right, all right.
Speaker 2 (09:32):
I mean both can be true.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
I'm I'm I'm at a loss here, So you're what
you're telling me is that that hat I should have
known that it symbolizes your affinity for in fact, a
particular pugilist endeavor, in this case that of the city
of Buffalo, New York. That's that's okay, all right. Who's
(10:01):
writing stuff over there? Is it dumb ai or is
it act? Because they don't even have a byline on
this thing. I swear to God, the byline on this
is just titled WRL Staff.
Speaker 2 (10:12):
So let me figure this out. So that you have
somebody over there Chapel Hill who put up like a
pro Hamas flag and they're trying to say that it's
not pro Hamas well.
Speaker 1 (10:20):
No, No, it's an artist that has put a thing on
at the old post office, which is a place that
is literally about putting protest stuff up, and in it
it depicts a person graduating but also wearing this thing,
but also not really graduating more protesting. And some because
(10:40):
of the color pattern, the color and pattern which again
is copyright protected in many municipalities as the official logoing
and specifically the political stuff for Hamas, some are trying
to say that the artist might have been sending one
of those from the River to the Sea messages in there,
(11:03):
and WRIL just want to make sure people didn't get
that idea.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
Right, but sometimes right the thing means the thing?
Speaker 1 (11:11):
Yeah, yeah, no, I mean, but so what is your
thing mean? Does it mean? I don't know a person
who's just like gonna put it all on their shoulders
and go, you know what, thirty yards I got that,
watch out everybody, that type of manifest destiny or would
it be the raping and pillaging of the continent by Whitey?
(11:35):
So is it?
Speaker 2 (11:37):
I've already said I'm for manifest destiny, the conquering of
this land and the Buffalo bills, because you know, the
greatest country ever made.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
Let me do you know what turned me on a lot?
I shouldn't say turned me in a lot of it
as somebody who makes a good faith effort to try
to fully understand history, and and poor Ross got waterboarded
with this info. But I just there was a time
I was touring as you know, Oh wait, hold on,
(12:06):
true Americana. No, that's why. Now, look, I have some
other fans of people, also floating red, white, and blue
motifs who call themselves patriots. And that's fine, that's fine.
This is why I don't think it's fair to sit
here and decide that a single bit of imagery artist
(12:31):
imagery in fact, is sending a message, even though really,
if you're a student of art, you realize that the
imagery you do notice, and the imagery that sometimes we
only notice hundreds of years later, was intentional by the
artists to send a specific message in imagery. That's why
(12:51):
I'm attempting not to complate these two things. So if
you're offended, I apologize. But Ross's hat is what did
it because it's a very neutral statement there so, good
for you, good for you not to break in the
fourth wall there so, And I'm sorry other fans, but
but let's face it, I think that Hack covers it
(13:14):
based on the results here. Like some would say, if
you want to symbolize greatness and power and all that,
you might symbolize someone or something who conquered something that
had previously been unconquered. Right, isn't that what manifest Destiny
was about, the expansion into the west of lands unknown?
(13:35):
So if perhaps maybe you were to go and meet
a foe that had never lost, the David and Goliath
of our time, some people might want to Anyway, Dude,
that was the greatest run I've seen a quarterback do,
probably in forever.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
We're not talking about football this year, yes, yes, yes, yeah, yeah, no, No,
I'm talking about human ever, the body, yeah right right
right yeah yeah, but where you just like the fighting
human spirit. Yes right, you're just saying, oh Choctaw warrior, No,
I got you. And oh the French coming out for Nope,
(14:13):
no juke, oh you Oh look at you Spain holding
out even after the purchase. Boom.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
I'm just gonna levitate over you. I'm gonna come up
standing after scoring a thirty yard touchdown in that environment.
Speaker 2 (14:27):
And to do it in a shotgun and fourth and two.
But we're not talking about football because we don't want
to jinx the team.
Speaker 1 (14:31):
No, what go No, we're talking about the human spirit,
right yeah so so No, I'm not a pig who
interpreted what you wear upon your head. There is anything
but purely a celebration of the human spirit.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
Banks left now to gonna run forty stop, We're not
let's stop.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
Boom right there, Rocky Mountains, Jim Bridge. That had to
be what Jim Bridger heard in his If you if
you're not familiar with Jim Bridger, one of the greatest
people as far as the topography and the mapping and
everything very Lewis and Clark, but doesn't get the recognition
he deserves. That's I'm sure what Jim Bridger heard as
(15:29):
he for the first time in the in the recorded
history of US explorers gazed upon, sketched, and reported on
Glacier National Park, which, if you've ever been there, is
one of the most visually amazing things on the planet.
Speaker 2 (15:48):
That's what Jim Bridger heard. I was thinking Lewis and Clark, right, like,
what's over that mount? And look at that? It's Freedom
from Tyranny.
Speaker 1 (15:54):
It's fourth and two, though it's fourth Tony's at fourth
and two and then boom casinos. Oh, I'm sorry what
Look at that six twenty two here on the oh
right now, Ross has turned off all the lights but
the rest. Oh my gosh, look at that hat, dude,
that looks like imperialism. What is happening? Oh, we'll be back.
(16:17):
I have to explore. Nice discussion there about symbolism and
what it means and all of those things this morning.
Appreciate that with again not everything for you football junkies
sending me all your old You see how my team did? No,
I didn't. I was big. I had better things this
weekend to focus on, Like how the Ravens jacked up
(16:42):
a wonderful parlay that I had going on? Are you
kidding me? I just looked. I looked at my the
one dude in our group, Grand I'm like, I just like,
I can't even look at you wearing all of his
stupid Raven stuff because usually that's just a license to
print money there. You should look at the stats. Didn't
have that, and and so that's I just want to
(17:04):
make sure there was no confusion over what was going on,
like like with the the little post game with the
Raiders player little brock Bauers action. Did you guys see that?
So yeah, they look Did they have a good game altogether? No,
not really, they lost. They just they're like any other team.
(17:25):
They just got the big new stadium and stadium deals
so they don't have to try for a while. Fans
are going to come anyway. You're seeing it there in Vegas.
But uh no, brock Bowers decided to go a little different.
So he's the tight end, if you don't know, for
the Raiders, and he caught he caught a twenty three
(17:46):
yard pass. Decided to do a little celebrating, and he
did the thing after this where he, you know, put
his two hands up in the air and started shaking
his body back and forth. And that made Safia Dean
from USA Today very upset. He was big mad. And
(18:07):
so here's his tweet. Ask Brock Bowers about his TD selly,
which he refers to as the Trump TD selly. Apparently
there's some similarities when you put your two hands out.
So if you just for a moment this morning, just
visualize stand there, take your two arms, put them up
like you're going whoa stop, but instead clench your hands
(18:28):
and then, in rhythmic motion back and forth, alternating, you
put one hand forward and back and then rinse and repeat. There,
Saphie Dean over at USA Today saw what he thought
might be an acknowledgment of Trump's existence, and he just couldn't.
And so in the postgame, when they bring Bowers up
(18:50):
to answer questions about like why did you do that
thing after you got the touchdown even though you guys
didn't win, Why would you do that? And his response was, quote,
I've seen everyone do it. I watched the UFC fight
last night, John Jones did it. I like watching UFC
(19:10):
so I saw it and thought it was cool and
then proceeded to do it. At which point, and I'm
not making this up, the pr people for the Raiders
stopped his media avail to get another player, like, all right,
that's enough from Brock, Let's get somebody else in there.
And Saphie Dean from USA today is just left seething
(19:30):
over this.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
So it was a good weekend. I appreciate that from
the busy bodies over there. Oh how dare you?
Speaker 1 (19:41):
You know why? Hours in spite of his team losing.
And we can argue whether you should celebrate on an
individual standpoint, the reason that Brock Bauers was celebrating as
a young player is he had thirteen catches. He's on
my fantasy tea one hundred and twenty six yards and
and had never been that good in an individual game
(20:05):
in his NFL career. So yes, we can debate celebrating
when when the team's not winning. But now we're in
the aftermath, and at the time he did it, he
was in the moment and he had with the game
he was having, he probably had every thought that his
team was going to be victorious, So that's why he celebrated.
(20:29):
Saphi Dean, who is who is literally tasked by the
second largest circuit might be the largest circulation in the
United States of papers. And you're hired to be an
NFL reporter and you can't understand that. It's almost as
(20:52):
if you were not hired for your NFL reporting chops,
but rather your ability to go in and just ruin
everyone's day with this crap. So really appreciate that. All right,
So there's your football, but not really football, more of
a bigger, broader discussion about how smart we are in
the media, you know. Roundup. I hope you all appreciate that.
(21:15):
Who we got tonight, Oh, that's right, it's the Cowgirls
and the other Texas team. I don't know. I don't know.
By the way, I think that Houston can cover just
my two cents. But hey, you know, I would never
give you a betting advice, but things get a little crazy.
(21:37):
I think Houston's actually a better team that people give
them credit for anyway, all right? Eight eight eight nine
three four seven eight seven four Wait, hold on, I
hope people are sending me they're like, oh, but what
about some of the other teams. I'm just it's not
about teams. People, I'm talking about the stories that unite us,
and not the affinities for individual teams that divide us.
(21:59):
In the same way that rel was able to look
past this artist rendition of what is clearly hamas gear
and pretend like that is not an endorsement of From
the River to the Sea ideology, we're able to able
to get past that. What is this patriot really?
Speaker 2 (22:17):
Patriots fans you want me to bring you want to
bring that up. I wouldn't do that to you.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
You're welcome. Also, the Lions are terrifying. I want nothing
to do with that. Fifty two six against the Jags?
Are you kidding me? Donny Ross my greatest nightmare, and
the only reason that I don't worry about it too
much is I don't think I feel like the universe
(22:46):
won't allow it. And that's Bill's Vikings super Bowl Man
every day because I'm just looking at the NFC and
other other than the Lions, I think I think the Vikings,
in any situation, if they would actually show up, could
beat him, and that includes against the Eagles man. But
(23:08):
Ross doesn't. He doesn't have time for such childish endeavors.
So let us pivot and as we pivot, we got
to talk about the Michael Browning going on with this
officer involved shooting at the food line, which is a
tragic situation, regardless of where you land with us, that
(23:30):
a police officer who yes, signed up to use his gun,
I understand all of these things, but doesn't want to
and sure as hell doesn't want to against a sixteen
year old, not that he might have any knowledge that
that's a sixteen year old, but rather just somebody who
clearly presents as an adult male who might be raising
(23:50):
a firearm at them. And we got body cam galore
on this stuff. It's a tragedy for the family of
and it's a tragedy for the officer and the officers
family who maybe have never had to discharge a weapon
and in this case did not kill the suspect but
(24:12):
got them. And now we're going to have the great
re revisioning of apparently how this was approached. So yeah,
well we'll go ahead get into that. We'll do it
next here on the CaCO Day radio program, Biden gives
Zelensky green light to fire long range American missiles into Russia.
(24:34):
So in the same way that we played the Anthony
Blinkin audio for you, infect do I still have that
other button? Bar? I'm sorry, Ross, would you put mister
Anthony Blinkin up there again from Friday talking about all
this extra money we got laying around so in in
in the same way that the Biden administration is sitting
there and they're looking at all, right, what do we
(24:55):
do between now and January twentieth. That is a provocation.
And yes, I understand it's not us flying firing those missiles,
but one, there are missiles, and granted we've sold them
or given them or rented them, however you wish to
(25:19):
look at it, but it is it is a potential
risk in a provocation because, let's face it, this is
a proxy war. I've told you this entire time. I
understand the logic of getting other people to go die.
In further, it's to fighting somebody who, if given the opportunity,
(25:41):
is very much our enemy. And that but that's if
you divorce yourself from the morality is surrounding it.
Speaker 2 (25:51):
So a calculated risk is a calculated risk.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
And escalation here. But I think what they're hoping is
that as soon as they are doing that, they go, well,
look now, you know, now they're annihilating homes in Russia.
You're really bringing the war home. But from what I
gather within Russian society, they're very aware of this, which
is why you had a mass exodus of military age
(26:17):
males of means in most parts of the country. They
decided to go study in Europe or do any of
those things to avoid inscription within what Russia's trying. It like,
they're aware of it. So this brings it further home
and they think at that point it'll stop. But also
the other side is they went, all right, all right,
(26:39):
game on, now we can do whatever they're firing Russia.
They'll they'll they'll have some videos of some lady in
a babushka just you know, hanging out making borsch or whatever,
and that will then be utilized as justification for them
to fire stuff that they haven't yet but have the
capability of doing. And that's what's going on be left
(27:00):
at the feet of the incoming president. Meanwhile, Anthony blink
and at the same time, the Small Business Administration says
they don't have money to help businesses impacted by the hurricanes.
Is saying things like.
Speaker 5 (27:11):
This, as we're working to make sure that Ukraine has
what it needs to effectively defend itself.
Speaker 3 (27:18):
The United States continues to step up. We've obligated just recently.
Speaker 5 (27:22):
And pushed out the door another eight billion dollars.
Speaker 3 (27:25):
In security assistance for Ukraine.
Speaker 5 (27:27):
That was the September another almost half a billion dollars
just a few weeks ago, and President Biden has committed
to making sure that every dollar we have at our
disposal will be pushed out the door.
Speaker 3 (27:38):
Between now and January twentieth.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
So that's all the dollars, every dollar at the disposal,
all the dollars not getting spent on Hamster Fight Club
or the monkeys on the treadmills with parts of their
brains removed, which is a thing. They did it to
cats too, For all you cat people, that's part of
a bunch of money in there. But they're like, hey,
(28:01):
what if we remove a part of the cat's brains
and let's see if they can still do a treadmill,
to which I say, one, how did you locate their brains? Two? Really,
how much is a little?
Speaker 2 (28:16):
And and three this is what I paid three million
dollars for.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
For this thing right here. Okay, So while all that's
going on, I just want to remind you that the
guy at USA today is mad that Brock Bowers did
a shimmy. Okay, just if we're if we're weighing everything
out that you know, stuff like this, wow.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
Tests the Trump test spinning back into the bobbing.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
Back because Rogan obviously you hear him doing the play,
and you know what, everyone was enjoying it. Everyone was
having a good time, and it just stuck in the
craw of reporters. Man, they just couldn't function when it
was going on. And we're like, yeah, no, if you
want to, if you want to fire long range missiles
(29:19):
into Russia that we that we gave you, sure, yeah,
go ahead and do that. That won't be a giant
problem for the next guy. So that's where we that's
where we are this morning. Oh did I mention Trump
showed up at this event which was at Madison Square Garden,
which I believe, Ross, can you check and see if
(29:40):
Trump's ever held a Nazi rally? There? All right, Ross's
gonna look that up real quick.
Speaker 2 (29:44):
See if let me check a Nazi rally. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, sure,
let me check. No, no Nazi rally.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
No, no, wait, hold on, hold, on it says right here
in USA Today, the same publication we've been talking about
reminiscent of the Nazi gathering of the nineteen thirt All right.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Let me let me double check that. No, it's not.
Speaker 1 (30:05):
No, I see it right here on their page. Oh,
it's the same guy's byline on it. Who's now a
sports reporter who's mad? I'm sorry, USA Today, did you
send a reporter who's not the sports guy in to
shame people for doing a shimmy? How does that work?
(30:25):
That's so weird that the same guy who termed it
as a symbolism of a Nazi rally is now.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
The guy who's trying to figure out why a Raiders
tight end who had thirteen catches, which is kind of
a big deal, might have done the shimmy. But no, no,
we got we got Trump showing up too. I guess
the six richer, whichever one we're up.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
To now present, he is ross clarify if Donald Trump
(31:11):
is in full form as when.
Speaker 2 (31:14):
He was the WWE guy right back in the day,
when he did the bits and the sticks and all
of that, and he just settles right into it. And
I think Dana White's allowed him to embrace this thing,
which unfortunately he's not going to be able to recapture
obviously over at WWFWWE and he is, he is in
(31:38):
his purest form there of the showman, and he just
he just loves it and and and every moment that
it's going on. It's also sticking in the craw of
sports reporters slash sometimes regular journalists who are there to
police the shimmy. And when you have Trump walking in
(32:00):
a Madison Square garden in the middle of New York
City after being accused of holding a Nazi rally there
just weeks ago, and he is, he gets bigger reception
than John Jones.
Speaker 1 (32:13):
I want you to think about that. If you know
anything about UFC fighting or the sport in general, one
of the guys who arguably is the greatest to ever
do the thing, pays deference to Trump coming in there.
It does the shimmy. That's that's a big, big, that's
(32:35):
a very monumental sports thing because and it's because of
the media's own creation. The reason it's so important is
because they did it in spite of the crap that
they're not having to eat or take, which they don't
care about, and is now muted in modern society. But
the idea that you would do it is and I
(32:55):
know that this is going to irritate some of you,
but I'm going to go there is fist on the
podium stuff. Okay, the part where we don't have to
be here next week together doing this thing again because
we're off the whole week. H Yeah, that's right. Prepare yourself.
That's going to be a thing that's happening for off
(33:15):
all next week. We didn't get fired, well maybe who knows,
we could have been fired simultaneously and they're just taking
advantage of it. It is a possibility, but more likely
than not, we're just going to be on vacation. Okay,
I'm going to remind that, remind you of all that
fun stuff is we get things rolling in this hour.
So what was the first hour about other than me
(33:36):
rambling incessantly, Well, it was the convergence of pop culture
and sports and politics and everything, plus a preview, a
sneak preview of what could be the escalation that takes
us into a full born war with Russia by an
administration on their way out, which is particularly insane if
(33:58):
you think about it. Why you would pick this this
thing that you could have picked previously, right, the US
given the wink wink, nod nod kind of thing to
the idea of them using these long range devices that
they wouldn't have access to if not for US was
a known escalation point. And it is being done specifically
(34:22):
to see if Putin blinks does he want to deal
with rockets hitting inside the interior of Russia? And I
don't know the answer to that, but I know that
if you wanted to test this theory, doing so in
the waning days, where you will not hold responsibility based
on the timeline of how this thing could escalate is
(34:43):
pretty evil. A lot of evil stuff going on, So yes,
I will, I will package it all together. Because you've
chosen to invade things like sports, You've chosen to take
reporters who will simultaneously write stories about how the very
clear and concise imagery of a UNC graduate with their
(35:09):
constantly excuse me, patiently protesting is attempting to align themselves
with a with a terrorist organization and shout you know,
from the river to the sea and other things like that,
and that very same reporter will then be expected to
understand why brock Bauers, who just scored thirteen receptions one
(35:33):
hundred and thirty yards, had the game of his career
as a young player. Also did the shimmy. And the
reason that they did it and then the convergence, and
what's driving you so mad in all of this is
they did it in spite of what you would think.
Brock Bowers didn't care. Joey Bosa got fined ten grand,
what does he care? He wore a hat. The UFC guys,
(35:57):
they're completely off your resume. You can't control them, and
people don't care. You're seeing the death spasms of the media.
I know, I don't mean to be overly dramatic here,
but that's what you're watching. And uh, Ross you said it. Uh,
I don't know if you said it on the air.
You said the two words that I think are very
(36:19):
important here, and that's popular vote.
Speaker 2 (36:20):
Yeah, I mean before right, they would have the supposed
moral uh superiority. Now let's go on.
Speaker 1 (36:26):
And then yeah, and if anybody went out of it,
they would have, you know, an old school Chinese revolutionary
struggle session on them. And now they're just like, oh,
you did that, We're going to cancel you. And they're like, hell,
here's me doing the shimmy in another angle. Right, they
don't care, and you don't. You don't have this perceived
moral superiority, not that you ever did, but they don't care.
Speaker 2 (36:49):
Right, they didn't, but that's how they could report it.
Speaker 1 (36:52):
And so watching that is just so delicious, and AND's
and and and then if they want to, if they
want to look to how is pop culture responding? They
whee allowed Katie Lang? Remember her?
Speaker 6 (37:06):
If you thought we were woke before you done went
and woke the beast? What welcome to woke two point zero?
Oh god, oh my woke warriors.
Speaker 3 (37:19):
Give me a blue heart and share.
Speaker 1 (37:22):
Let's spread on the blue sky. I see what you
did that?
Speaker 2 (37:25):
Yeah, what you want to do is double down?
Speaker 1 (37:27):
Should do that?
Speaker 2 (37:29):
You want to go? You thought you were crazy before? Yeah, yeah,
you haven't seemed crazy yet. Yeah. And you know what
do do you more crazy and take it over to
blue sky?
Speaker 1 (37:40):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (37:41):
Super crazy over there and being in that echo chamber
is completely going to help you.
Speaker 1 (37:45):
Yeah, absolutely, And then just see the watch things and
giving each other blue blue sky or blue hearts or
what is it blue hearts. This is the only way
I'm understanding how this is because you will not. I'm
not going to go there. I treat it like TikTok nope,
thank you, nope.
Speaker 2 (38:02):
And then you know, going along with that. Over the
weekend you saw Jensaki and John Oliver saying the problem
is the same as what that uh the person has said.
They need to double They didn't explain it enough. They
need to keep explaining it.
Speaker 1 (38:13):
That's a good point.
Speaker 2 (38:14):
Just keep doing that.
Speaker 1 (38:15):
You should do that with your the music. I mean,
just how much of a bubble are you in? I
get it, but is there anything in that video where
that woman doesn't one hundred percent believe what she's saying.
I just want to I just want to be very
clear here. Lang believes that she has deluded herself on
(38:40):
this because now she's in the comfort of you know,
the friends over there where it's it's virtue. But like
they couldn't even virtue signal because they'd virtue signal on
Twitter and they get destroyed because people are like, shut
up and sing, shut up and do this. I told you,
did I ever told you? The one of the craziest
(39:05):
concerts that I ever worked, well, there's two of them
with female artists, and Katie Lang was one of them.
And like the expectations she had for Tory Amos was worse,
if that's possible. But there was a reason for her madness.
She has a lot of weird things based on an
incident that happened to her. And I'm not gonna very
(39:26):
depressing stuff, but like, when you understand why she has
the rules that she has for staff in and around concerts,
which I didn't at the time, then it makes sense
because when she was a performed, when she was a
younger performer, she was literally assaulted by a stage hand
back there and they have a very like I didn't
understand it, and like and there was like she doesn't
(39:49):
allow plastic cups in her concerts, and there's a lot
of things there that makes up with Katie Lang. It
was sheer ego. It was just it was the brown
M and M stuff. It was just so she's deluded
herself and to think that she makes this cool video
with some cool music attached to it, and.
Speaker 2 (40:07):
I need, I need to ask a serious question because
that is that really Katie Lang? Are you joking?
Speaker 1 (40:13):
What's that?
Speaker 6 (40:14):
Is?
Speaker 1 (40:14):
That?
Speaker 2 (40:15):
It's Katie Lane?
Speaker 1 (40:16):
Yeah? Was I is it? It's my understanding that's Katie Lane.
Speaker 2 (40:22):
No I believe you, Like, I just didn't know because
she just looks like a caricature of every person you've
ever seen, right, Like, she's well, and her name is
Katie Lane, right right. But in the tweet attached and
prep and didn't say who it was.
Speaker 1 (40:33):
It just well, maybe I'm wrong. It's my understanding that
that's Katie Lane.
Speaker 2 (40:38):
That's fine.
Speaker 5 (40:39):
You know.
Speaker 2 (40:39):
Actually yesterday was in prep and I just saw the
first half of the video. Yeah, you see like the
nose up right, and I assumed it was Keith Oberman.
When I came in this morning, I was like, because
I just saw the first half of this, it looks
just like Keith Oberman. And then I scrolled out, was
oh it's a woman. Okay, well what does she have
to say? Then I reported the audio and it said,
oh she's a lunatic.
Speaker 1 (41:00):
Yeah no, no, no, no.
Speaker 2 (41:02):
And now learning that is fame musician Katie Lang.
Speaker 1 (41:06):
Am I wrong? Just google Katie Lang and look at
the picture and tell me that's not her, Okay, Ross,
I do a little experiment, the Katie Lang experiment. You'll
check that out.
Speaker 2 (41:22):
Yeah, no, I think it is.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
Yeah, that's maybe.
Speaker 2 (41:28):
I mean she's older now from the photos that.
Speaker 1 (41:30):
Are yes, yes, yes, yes, those are clearly her pub
photos there. I'm I'm unless I am wildly misinformed. I
believe that is Katie Lang saying. But here's the deal.
It doesn't matter if it's Katie Lang or not, which
I believe it to be because that's reporting I saw.
Speaker 2 (41:47):
But yeah, it doesn't matter be Katie Lang or Keith
Oberman or Mark.
Speaker 1 (41:50):
Or any encapsulation of people who took nothing from what.
Speaker 2 (41:55):
Just And they all look the same. I mean, they're
going along with the the NPC moniker. That's what they're
called NPC because now they're all looking exactly the same
and sounding exactly which.
Speaker 1 (42:02):
Is a meme, which has been a meme for a while.
Eventually they blend in, right, so they'll turn into each other.
So think of the most memorable, stereotypical, you know, resistance
freedom fighter imagery you can in your head and it's
(42:25):
not hard to hear them say this.
Speaker 6 (42:28):
If you thought we were woke before you done went
and woke the beast, welcome to woke two point zero,
All my woke warriors, give me a blue heart and share.
Let's spread the love.
Speaker 1 (42:46):
Like the similar the music, there's something the timing of
them like that is a professional a bit of messaging,
or at least they think that is clearly not connected
to No.
Speaker 2 (43:00):
It isn't like the market is spoken when it comes
to entertainment, and then the people have spoken the silent
majority in the in the election from just a few
weeks ago, right like, yeah, that's over.
Speaker 1 (43:09):
Man.
Speaker 2 (43:10):
People just tired and you're doubling down.
Speaker 1 (43:14):
And you know what, you're also you're feeding into the
insanity that is then striking people who don't who can't
just live in the Hollywood bubble, go on the blue sky,
talk about it the cocktail parties and feel like they're
doing activism. It it it goes down. Do you see
the video of the woman with the dating apps over
(43:35):
the weekend? I haven't sent it. Let me do this.
I'm going to send this to Ross little bonus audio.
I saw it this morning and then I got distracted
by some football stuff. I send this over to Ross.
Because when when you're making videos like that and you're
not dealing honestly with people who obviously look to you
(43:56):
for some sort of direction, and especially at a time
where they feel kind of abandoned within their own beliefs,
like I get that, and I'm sure any of you
out there have gotten it. Maybe you got it when
Trump lost last time around, or you still don't think
he lost or whatever. But but like you, you got
(44:17):
that and you needed to look for something, and a
lot of people they just turned to anything that's not
the thing, right, They just unplugged from politics. But that's
not what's happening here. It's more dangerous because they're not
unplugging from it. They're just echo chambering it more. And
and what you end up with is a woman who's
having she's having a full mental breakdown because she can't
(44:40):
use dating apps because she thinks that there's a Trump
guy on the other end. Oh you don't believe me.
We'll get into that coming up CaCO Day Radio program.
Uh yeah, So what does this right here? Stuff like this?
Speaker 6 (44:56):
If you thought we were woke before you done went
and woke the beast, Welcome to woke two point zero,
all my woke warriors, Give me a blue heart and share.
Speaker 1 (45:12):
I love how it's also just pandering for engagement as
a measure of your because look, in a world of
hashtag activism, no better a platform has been designed for this.
Speaker 2 (45:27):
Right where it's just about the blue Heart. It's the resistance.
So make sure you like subscribe and ring that bell?
Speaker 1 (45:33):
Should I follow? Though?
Speaker 2 (45:34):
You should follow?
Speaker 1 (45:35):
Oh? I should? Okay? Does it really help the channel though?
Speaker 2 (45:40):
We know, not just the channel but the resistance, oh
the whole thing.
Speaker 3 (45:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (45:46):
Meanwhile, on the other end of this garbage pipe, those
suckling at the teet sound like this woman who doesn't
know she can trust dating apps anymore. Wait, hold on,
before I even start this bucket of crazy, let me
just share with you real quickly. The while she's blubbering
(46:07):
over the screen, it says, F Trump and everyone for
voted for him. H F Trump and everyone for voted
for him? For taking my sense of security away from me?
All right, So, what horrible, horrible thing befell this woman
(46:29):
as she headed onto her trusty app there to find
some some random hookups, throw some bodies on. Unfortunately she
hit this brick wall right here. Yeah, all right, ready,
all right here we go, triggering, Yeah, action too, scared
(46:56):
you stating gastuff? Oh my god, get scammed. Somebody did
somebody harm you? Look if somebody, if somebody showed up
from this app and and did something to harm you.
I don't even know you, and I think you're a lunatic.
But that's that ain't right, and I will stand up
for that. So what what? What did what did this
(47:17):
person do to you?
Speaker 2 (47:18):
Ma'am?
Speaker 1 (47:20):
Wouldn't go on.
Speaker 7 (47:23):
Every message and every profile.
Speaker 4 (47:30):
This makes me think that it could.
Speaker 2 (47:31):
Be somebody.
Speaker 1 (47:35):
Violent like evil.
Speaker 4 (47:42):
That's emboldment by trumb.
Speaker 6 (47:48):
The brotmile was so normal.
Speaker 1 (47:53):
I would never know.
Speaker 6 (47:57):
If you thought we were woke before you done went
and look the beast.
Speaker 1 (48:03):
But I just told Ross, I'm like, man, you think
Katie Lang's looking a little rough? Google Paula Cole. I
saw her. She's a a little bit of an activist.
Speaker 2 (48:11):
Yeah, I know, that's the song I was thinking of
the Waiting one. Yes, it was.
Speaker 1 (48:16):
Her big one was the Cowboys song. But they were
both those were I would say they were almost simultaneously
her big hits. Where have all the Cowboys Gone? And
I don't want to wait? So Ross was just telling
me that he did an interview with her back in
the day. Yeah, oh y.
Speaker 2 (48:31):
It was the worst interview I've ever done, Like the
rudest person I've ever interviewed.
Speaker 1 (48:34):
The worst, worst than Coolio.
Speaker 2 (48:36):
It was like nineteen ninety nine and I was super young, Yes,
like just just moved from New York and like, so
I prepared for this interview and like, I don't want
to wait. Whatever that song was called was her big hit,
then that's the song she had, and it was the
song from Dawson's Creek right right, So that's.
Speaker 1 (48:55):
Where it was. One of those two. I'd ever watched
the show, but I was aware of its existence. And
to be clear, you're broadcasting essentially in the market where
you could argue that Dawson's Creek is basically Fay is
set in right, right, because it was filmed in Wilmington, right,
Dawson's Creek.
Speaker 2 (49:15):
I think that's yeah, I believe though.
Speaker 1 (49:17):
Yeah, so it had that North Carolina Viye. It's not
as blatantly bad as the Outer Bank show, which I
saw three minutes of one time because somebody sent it
to me and dear God. So she's talking to somebody
who's talking who has knowledge of the market in which
the thing plays, which she's clearly licensed use it.
Speaker 2 (49:35):
And it's at night. It's the night show, so that's
when the kids are listening, right, the teen's are listening,
And like, that's a big show with the teens, So
that was going to be primarily the interview. And I'm
told by the record person right before she connects on
the phone that the one she does not want to
talk about Dawson's Creek. She does not want to talk
about the song from Dawson's Creek. She wants to talk
about some obscure songs that no one's ever heard before.
(49:57):
And it's just You've never the worst interview I've ever done,
the absolutely worst that.
Speaker 1 (50:02):
She was a Maggie May moment, and I'll explain why.
But so you did the interview anyway, right.
Speaker 2 (50:08):
Completely rude, like it was unairble, could not air it.
That's what I was gonna ask, chop it up?
Speaker 1 (50:14):
What did you do?
Speaker 2 (50:15):
Did you air it here? Having more experience now being older,
like if say I had to interview and it was
really bad, you would go then, yeah, you clown it.
I would play it and I would be like, listen,
how awful this is. But back then I was like
young and impressionable, very green, and I was like, oh,
I just completely could I screw up?
Speaker 1 (50:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (50:30):
Completely completely crushed me? Yes, yeah yeah.
Speaker 1 (50:34):
So anyway, she's all like resistance now, so.
Speaker 2 (50:37):
Well it doesn't surprise me, like, because that's how she
was internally back then. You could tell.
Speaker 1 (50:42):
Right, yeah, no, and they they're they're yeah, and they're
not my kind of music necessarily. I'm in a chant.
They were very popular songs. They're they're very catchy, good songs,
and that Cowboys song was everywhere.
Speaker 2 (50:54):
Man, Well, she doesn't want to talk about it. So
but I thought she said she didn't want to. Wait,
did she talk of the thing that I'm really famous for.
I don't talk about it.
Speaker 1 (51:05):
So the Maga mate, this is the thing that was
one of the most educational moments in the world of
public This is before I mean I was doing I
did radio in high school, but it was before I
really was making a career out of it. And I
was doing the concert stuff in California at the same
time I was at school, and part of that gig
(51:25):
was for IATZI. Is not just the concerts that they
would put on at the Santa Barbara Bowl or in
Ventura or at any of the theaters there. We could get
contracted to do stuff. I actually was contracted to go
down and I spent two days in La setting up
for the Oscars. Not the main thing, but another thing,
basically setting up lights and stuff now days days before
(51:47):
it went and so you'd have little jobs like that.
So a dude got married who was a very rich
guy who owned Star Telecommunications. His name escapes me. And
he married the daughter of the family that had started
two is it two pesos whatever the regional text mex
(52:09):
chain was in southern California, Texas and Arizona, New Mexico.
And so he's a billionaire. He's marrying essentially a billionaire, Okay,
so they're going to do it big. And so they
did a wedding in Hope Ranch, which we know anything
about Santa Barbara, that's crazy, where they literally bought lots
(52:30):
to build a chapelon. And then he bought this huge
ranch north of Santa Barbara up or like Reagan's stuff was,
and just buys this like eighteen million dollar ranch that
just really isn't anything. Just happens to sit on the
one on one there and they get a circus tent.
Pastel died and there and this is the con this
(52:52):
is on and you can look this up if you
think I'm in Beligian any of it. Because they had entertainment.
Tonight came out did a big peace and for a
half second you can see a very young version of
me running around running cables. And so this is going on.
It is mc by Jay Leno and Dana Carvey. This
(53:13):
is the after the wedding. This is obviously the reception.
They are the MC's and it has a reo speedwagon
journey and uh and of course, uh, Maggie, we're gonna
get into Maggie May right called the Maggie May Stories.
So you got Rod Stewart there and outside as the
one of the most insulting things. They had these mini
stages where Michael McDonald is like sitting in the cage
(53:36):
like he's a zoo animal, and uh, who who is
the other one sailing? Who does anyway? So they have
these guys like these these mid acts that are in
these like little so people just walk by them. It's
the most insane thing that a kid from Wyoming's ever seen.
And I just know I'm gonna make about two thousand
(53:57):
dollars that day because it's pure overtime. And so we're
there and Rod Stewart told him after all of this
that he wouldn't do Maggie May. You built a stadium
and and are have spent an ungodly sum of money
(54:18):
to go ahead and do this. And by the way,
their their their love story is very tragic one, if
you want to learn more about it. I didn't know
any of this. And you you contract Rod Stewart and
he shows up days before your wedding because he was
a show up for soundcheck, like two days before, and
he's like, oh, by the way, I'm not going to
do Maggie May. The guy was apoplectic, like what are
(54:39):
you talking about? And I don't know what he said
to him, but let me tell you what happened. He did,
Maggie May. He did it with the audacity of him
to go through all of that knowing that and and frankly,
it's probably a little on this guy's lawyers for not
getting this down quicker, but the audacity to go now,
I'm not going to do, Maggie May. You're Rod Stewart.
(55:01):
What are you there for? You're Paula Cole in the
studio in the late nineties. Your one song is connected,
you're other ones now connected to a show, a TV show,
but you won't talk about it. And it's really the
only thing people know you for Rod Steort at least
has a library catalog there.
Speaker 2 (55:17):
Right, Like Rod Stewart, you could work with that at least, right,
But you're like, Hey, this one person who we only
know you for this one song at this moment in
time in this show, I don't want.
Speaker 1 (55:26):
To talk about that. As a musician, you've earned the
right to go, here's something off the new album because
a lot of times it's it's good right because they
have trust in you.
Speaker 2 (55:39):
You can understand that you're Billy Joel or somebody and
you're like, yeah, I'm tired.
Speaker 1 (55:43):
Of a library. Tell me he's not doing piano. Man,
I'd be like, that's fine, I have nine others. But
here's the thing, like you can understand me from an Italian.
Speaker 2 (55:50):
Oh, you can understand why he wouldn't want to do
it right because he's been doing but he'll still do it.
Speaker 1 (55:55):
Yeah, and he's killed by the way. I heard the profrity.
I couldn't see it, but I heard the performance. It
was great. It was like, that's Rod Stewart, he's killing
it doing what he does. But having witnessed the first
part of that dust and then the rumor mill like
we're like, what's the problem and then we found out
what the problem was, and everybody there was like, they mean,
he won't do Maggie May, what do you mean he
(56:18):
won't do Just craziness, all right, not as crazy as
the weather. Uh we did, Jeff Mars Jeff Mar today.
Speaker 8 (56:26):
Yeah, I'd be like Christopher Cross not doing sailing.
Speaker 1 (56:28):
Come on, oh look at you, Christopher Cross. That's who was, dude.
I'm telling you. It was one of the most insane.
Did you hear the whole part of that? I did? Yeah,
I mean I was crazy. And then like their whole
it's it's very very bad what happened to their marriage,
But like it was, you know what it was. It
was the first fu money I'd ever witnessed. Oh person,
it's just like you bought an eighteen million dollar seaside
(56:51):
ranch in California just to have a concert for your
friends where you made, you know, guys who were legitimate
artists sit there like zoo animals, and then they just
took the check. Then I'm like, all right, that's what
that looks like. Oh crazy. But now the rest of
us toil, and you toil with a Doppler so toilewaser.
Speaker 8 (57:09):
Yeah, very quiet start to the week weather wise, and
some mild temperatures. Looking for to a little bit of
cool if you're about to head out this morning, but
during the afternoon we should climb to seventy one with
sunshine and then partly cloudy tonight, a low down to
forty nine, up to seventy one again tomorrow with increasing clouds.
The next route of rain moves into late tomorrow night
as we drop into the mid upper fifties, and there'll
be some more showers starting off Wednesday and into the afternoon.
(57:30):
Still a few showers to dodge if you're out about
a high seventy then dry and cooler behind the front.
Thursday and Friday it will be sunny each afternoon, high
temperatures in the load to mid fifties.
Speaker 1 (57:39):
All right, thank you appreciate it. By the way, the
guy's name Chris Edgecombe, who's he died early, died in
his fifties, but that was the guy's name, Chris Edgecombe,
co founder and CEO of Star Telecom. Yeah, look at
the wedding. There's the whole thing on entertain it's crazy
and that's the Maggi main moment. There you go, all right,
some forty hang on, how did they find a bunch
(58:02):
more ballots in California's forty fifth congressional seat, which is
now set to flip the district which has been a
GOP district for quite a while and Rep. Michelle Steele
had a had a lead and now they just they
(58:24):
got all these extra ballots over the weekend and it
looks like they're getting ready to flip that district. Currently
it shows that the Democrat has a thirty one vote lead,
which obviously you're in recount territory, but you have to
understand how California does the recounts, it's a little different.
So they just found that. Apparently they're still finding things
in Pennsylvania, even things that they acknowledge would be illegal
(58:49):
to include that they're including in in there. And the
response you always get is, well, these are soldiers overseas
fighting for their country and you want their votes. And
it's like, no, no, they're not. No, some of them
are that thing, but that thing is already baked into
the process. This is not that, this is misallocation. It
(59:11):
went to the wrong district. We found it in the
trunk of a car, which is a famous refrain where
people go, you know, you think it's hyperbole, but it's
not because I covered the race from which it emanated
most recently, which was Al frankinsonate race. And I'm not
making this when I tell you that when I heard
the first reports that there was a pile of ballots
(59:38):
that it inadvertently found their way into the trunk of
a Democrat poll worker's car, and then she forgot about them.
And they all came from Dinkytown, which is important because
that's where the University of Minnesota is, across the river
from the city of Minneapolis, in what's called dinky Town.
(01:00:01):
It's where a lot of Bob Billin's imagery from. It's
the Fourth Street he's talking about and others. And so
they're almost exclusively blue ballots. And they're like, yeah, they
found them a trunk. Ok it was Mark Elias. They're
making the argument. I'm like, there's no way they're going
to count those. How naive I was? They did so
(01:00:23):
explain to me how we're still doing this, and we're
all acting like this is sane, Like this is okay.
You have what's going on in Pennsylvania. Now here's the
thing with the Pennsylvania Senate race. Republicans are just as
hypocritical as Democrats. Right, everyone who thinks they have the
wind screams that you have to sort of I understand that,
but Republicans generally claim it based out of time. It
(01:00:47):
clearly looks like because they acknowledge what they're doing isn't
the law. It looks like manipulation. And you would understand
why people think that. You would look at what's going
on in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, realize some of this, Okay,
most none of this sounds normal. And if I guess,
if it's not happening in your own district, your own
(01:01:08):
your own votes imperiled. You have a certain level of separation.
But anything you've ross, has there been anything that you've
read in the continuation to attempt to count Bucks County,
Pennsylvania that sounds normal?
Speaker 2 (01:01:19):
No, it's on the No, they're cheating, that's what they're doing.
And it's just even their own supreme their own supreme
course that hey, you guys can't count those votes, and
they said, oh, yeah, we know that, we understand that
we're going to count them anyway until we take the
lead in this in this Senate race or whatever it is.
Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
It's just because they're the spirit. It's the spirit of
these undated where we have no way to find out
if those in fact we're cast prior mailed by the time.
But it's the spirit of it, and you're just disenfranchising people.
Speaker 2 (01:01:47):
It's statistically, we found these twenty thousand ballots or whatever
in California and they're all primarily for one person. It's
like statistically impossible, right, It's just it depends.
Speaker 1 (01:01:57):
But you know, the congressional race. But a congressional race
is is is a much more interesting way because the
lower the total voters, the easier it is to infer
what it could be. So if you're in a red
a lean red district, which this is three points red, Yeah,
(01:02:18):
are there pockets that are that are definitely blue. Sure,
but it's easier to predict. It's harder on a state level,
especially into a county that's a populous county.
Speaker 2 (01:02:27):
But when you look at the trend, you're looking at
an election where the whole country moved big time to
the right and you're already in the district that was right.
But a lot of.
Speaker 1 (01:02:36):
Races don't show that. The said North Carolina is a
good example. You can't argue they moved to the right here,
could you.
Speaker 2 (01:02:43):
I'm just saying the trend nationally.
Speaker 1 (01:02:45):
Right, No, no, no, I understand that. So but but
I'm saying you make You're saying that if it's within
the realm of possibility, you consider it right as as
normal people would like if you tell me the story
and the story makes sense, like it was on a
military plane and they really are soldiers' votes, but they
were grounded by I don't know something, and here's like,
(01:03:06):
tell me a story. But you're just saying, ah, trust you,
I trust me, Bro.
Speaker 2 (01:03:11):
There needs to be some sort of time limit, and
I know, like the arguments against that, they'll be like, oh,
like you said, like, oh well about the soldiers sending
in their votes and stuff. There needs to be a
time limit. You cannot be counting votes two weeks after
the election. It's absurd.
Speaker 1 (01:03:24):
You ever voted absentee? I have you?
Speaker 2 (01:03:26):
You ever have your power turned off?
Speaker 1 (01:03:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:03:29):
You know you're back in the day. Oh yeah, this
has happened before where you know, back when you would
write a check or write your bill and you'd send
it in and you know it was late. I send
it in late. But I like, there it is. And
they're like Hey, we're turning off your power because we
did not get your your payment, Like I just sent
it too late. Sorry, buddy, you should have gotten there
the day of or before. So now we're turning your
(01:03:49):
power off. There's no reason you should be counting votes
two weeks after the election. It's absurd.
Speaker 1 (01:03:53):
Yeah. Yeah, And as somebody who's done the absentee voting
thing before, it's really clearly laid out. But you have
to do this by this, by that, and the and
the reasons behind, and you have to attest and like,
like the process makes sense. So why if that process
made sense to me the one time I've voted absentee
(01:04:16):
once because I literally was out of the country at
the time of it. I found it government in in
you know, all the stuff you gotta get, but understandable,
and I understood the parameters of it, and I was
able to operate in that. And I don't understand how
this happens, and and I realized because there's no consequences.
(01:04:36):
We talk a little bit about this, a little bit
about that. That's a typical Monday. And yeah, we can
exist where one we can laugh at insanely but hurt
sports reporters over nobody caring what they think anymore, which
is just more of what you saw, right. It's the
big uh you know, it's the big postportem autopsy of
(01:04:58):
the election, and that is is nobody cares what traditional
media says anymore. They were rendered worthless because a candidate
staked his candidacy on it. You can argue he didn't
have a choice, that's fine, but the fact is they said,
all right, we're not going here, we're gonna buy, we're
gonna sidestep all of you, which, uh ross. Have you
(01:05:20):
ever heard a radio host in North Carolina, perhaps just
will you see this as an example who has preached
over the years two candidates, people who hold office who frankly,
I probably shouldn't be telling how to do their job,
but it's my job to tell them how to do
their job, to not do ral interviews, don't talk to
the media who hates you, ignore them. And what have
(01:05:41):
they always said when this radio host who apparently is
really really understands things and they say, well, you have to,
you have to because you run the risk of not
connecting with voters, and then they bring up the Hillary
not going to Wisconsin thing, and that's true to some extent,
but you hit a breaking point where you go so
(01:06:05):
audacious to the other side, you sit down and you platform,
as they say, oh, you platform Joe Rogan, who by
the way, has a platform, whether you like him or not.
You platform Joe Rogan. You platform, and then you know,
insert with the other podcasts are and they go out.
You know, by doing this, it's your death sentence. And
in reality it wasn't. So now people are like, oh,
(01:06:28):
I stick my head out of the hole, I don't
get shot. Game on. That's what you're watching. And that's
the real incredible observable thing, especially like when I broke
down the USA Today thing. Earlier, that paper had a
very neutral stance. USA Today was famously neutral because the
(01:06:50):
owner of the paper, while he was still alive, wouldn't
go there, and there were a lot of things that
he did under his tenure that were immediately undone. Literally
they waited by his bedside for him to gasp his
last breath and they made fundamental changes which ended up
destroying USA Today, or at least there any journalistic credibility. Yeah,
(01:07:13):
it wasn't the hard hitting newspaper. It was the fluff.
It was the fluff. Let me tell you one of
the most enjoyable things is somebody coming from Wyoming and this,
but this tracks for wherever. How many of you in
USA today used to go to the Fast fifty I
think is what they call it. I don't know what
they call it now, where it was the top state
story of each state and read that with great fascination.
(01:07:37):
Do you remember it? Ross? You remember that in USA
today where the like, they would list all the states
and this is the main story today in each of
those states. And so if you were if you were
living in one place, and you have to remember a
lot of this, This whole thing preceded the Internet, that
USA today would do it and we would get USA today.
At my high school in Buffalo, Wyoming, right, they had
(01:08:00):
like student editions and we do it in some of
the classes and you go through there and you can
look at all the different stuff, and they just they
cashed all that in. They bet on this horse that
they can go and they can operate like the rest
of the meeting. It would be beneficial. And as paper
started to decline and you had those who were going
(01:08:24):
to be the holdouts, USA today was still one of them,
but they had lost a lot of journalistic integrity, and
they decided then that they wanted to go kind of
hard on some of this stuff, so they brought in
these opinion writers posing as journalists, even in their sports department.
They just inundated with these a holes and watching that
bet not pay off much like my Ravens bet this
(01:08:48):
week warms my heart. I really enjoy it. You know
why because if I was still plugged into that apparatus
as many people are, I would my takeaway from the
weekend would be that every single one of Donald Trump's
nominees rape somebody. Oh yeah, this is a hard transition,
(01:09:13):
but follow with me. Like they're all in. They're all
in on the Kavanaugh thing again. So with the headset
they're they're looking at a quote unquote nuisance suit right
that he settled for very low dollars and and if
you're the trolls, and I don't know what happened, but
(01:09:36):
I know the process because we've we've seen the process
right where you have to make a calculated decision what's
it worth for this to go away? And is his
attorney pointed out at that time it was right in
the middle of me too. Obviously Fox News had some
pretty big exposure there, and he said, I don't want
(01:09:56):
to play this. But then it begs the question too,
why this romantic tryst from years before all of a
sudden became an issue at that exact moment. Are you
allowed to ask questions about that? Or are you just
gonna roll with this? The Matt Gates thing, which we
find out not only did the Washington Post report previously,
(01:10:18):
the sourcing is credulous at best. The two main sources
for that, the Washington Post deemed unreliable and uh, but
Matt Gates probably trafficked to seventeen year old to Raper
even though one it doesn't meet the legal requirements in Florida.
(01:10:38):
But two and I don't know the answer to it.
But why the hell are we only deep diving this now?
Remember they would have left. You're telling me that if
you had a Fox News associated person that the rest
of the media wouldn't have viscerated that individual if there
was credibility to it. Look what happened to the chipmunk dude?
Speaker 6 (01:11:03):
What is it?
Speaker 1 (01:11:04):
Why do I can never remember his name? And I
now his name will forever just be the chipmunk dude,
won't it? That's how I always remember it, but the
guy who looked like Theodore right, just what could go wrong?
And then you read it and it's like the the
banned version of uh, a harlequin romance novel. It's just
(01:11:25):
but with bondage. It's just the craziest crap. And then
the Roger ails stuff like they would they would have
floated all this, And so you expect me CBS News
to believe and Wril who ran the story President elect
Donald Trump's defense pick Pete Hegseth that paid a woman
who accused him of sexual assault in a settlement agreement
(01:11:46):
and included a confidential ali clause. Matt Lower, who I defended,
by the way, with the quote unquote rape button. Right,
he has a security lockdown of his office, which frankly
NBC probably forced him to do or installed not at
his but because they have him insured. You guys don't
(01:12:08):
realize this, can I can I mention this? I whatever
I'll get in trouble with the company. Whatever is this
is standard boiler plate. I'm not going to give you
the details of it. If you work in this industry.
One of the things, one of the things that is
very odd is and and you're reminded of it every
(01:12:30):
year when you do your open enrollment stuff through work here.
It's right, So I got to go through all of
the health insurance and I'm told it will just roll over,
though this year I had to do something. But everything
was just and at some point you hit the life
insurance and there's and the where you you select that
(01:12:51):
you want to, you know, include this as part of
your annual coverage. You know it. There's no button for that.
It just says employee competence or employer paid. And then
you realize what it is. My employer has a life
insurance policy on me that doesn't pay me, but protects
(01:13:15):
their interest in the brand that we've built here. I
do not begrudge it. It's what you do. It's smart.
You're protecting your brand. So just like they put this
lockdown button for one of their hosts making five mil
ten mili whatever he's making up there, Matt Lowery's probably
making a lot more a security apparatus. Like I never
questioned that. I thought that part was exaggerated and above
(01:13:37):
and beyond, but it points to the fact that they
understand in this journalistic realm that these are these are considerations,
these are things that you think about so that the
fact that my company is is it morbid, like if
I get hit by a truck after the show today,
that they have some financial protection because it would be
(01:13:58):
a sea change in a lot for a lot of
their advertising revenue. It's just the reality of it. No,
but it recognizes all of these things, and then the
inability to report honestly, honestly about this just because the
guy was just nominated. People are done with this. They're
just not buying it. So go over to bluesky and
(01:14:21):
post your links. And the problem is you may have
a dude or a woman for that matter, who is
nominated who is uniquely unqualified for something that a journalists
just found and that would have been the normal order
of things. But now it doesn't matter because we don't
believe you, because you're running headlines like Trump's defense secretary
(01:14:42):
paid accuser but denies assault because logical megos. This guy
worked for Fox News during the me too era and
you said that this was at least known and you
didn't roast him on a spit. I don't believe you,
(01:15:02):
and it makes it harder than for people who may
have actual things that frankly do require sunshine and an
honest journalist to parse it out. And this is frankly
know whether this is one we'll never know because people
don't believe it. In twenty twenty, Headset learn the woman
was considering filing a lawsuit. So this happened well before,
(01:15:27):
but a lawsuit was threatened right during the me too stuff.
As attorney said, the payment to the married woman. Now
this is also important because and in North Carolina we
have this law. Her husband, if it ruined the wedding,
or if it ruined the marriage, would have legal recourse
(01:15:50):
and could sue this guy who's making a bunch of money.
I don't know the details of it, and I'm not
saying that he should go sleep with married women, but
I don't know that she disclosed it to him, right,
We don't know any details here, But if that was
to destroy the marriage, think of the liability this guy
would have financially if you were able under the alienation
of affection to sue, which you can in a lot
(01:16:12):
of states, North Carolina be in one of them. So
in the phase of that in an accusation that's only
brought up in this very specific time, they settlement was
apparently reached and it was for a pittance compared to
what they were asking for. The payment, according to his attorney,
(01:16:34):
let's see here was settled due to the illuming me
too movement. He didn't want to lose his job at
the network if the accusations became public. They did not
say how much they's paid, but it was far less
than what it initial and palatour. That's this attorney said.
Every step of the way, we felt this was blackmail,
but this was the way to handle it. CNN briefly
(01:16:59):
spoke with the victim on Thursday, who became quote visibly
distraught at the mention of HEG. SAS's name. What a
journalistic observation to include there? What do you mean she
became You say that she became distraught. Was it because
you mentioned his name? Or was it because she had
(01:17:19):
a confidentiality agreement? Was she because they want you They
wanted it to sound like she was triggered at the
mention of his name and you know, looking for a
place to hide and hide under the covers. But she
also may have been triggered because you're bringing something up
she has an nda on, or you're bringing something up
that she realizes that if you dig too deep might
(01:17:40):
cast her in a bad light. But your journalism in
here on wr L. Obviously this is a wire story
that they just chose to run. But still you put
your name, your nameplate on it. You just infer that
it's because she's triggered by the incident, rather than stopping
(01:18:03):
to ask yourself all these weird other questions, like if
this took place in twenty seventeen at a busy Hyatt
Regency hotel in California, why is twenty twenty when this
gets brought up settled? And then now we're back here
at the well. I don't know, just things to you know,
(01:18:25):
things that make you wonder eight eight eight nine three
four seven eight seven four You want to be on
the show. We got much more to come here on
the CaCO Day Radio program. Didy Junior could destroy one
of civilization's greatest achievements. All right, that's the headline. Tell
me more. This is an op ed piece. This shockingly
(01:18:47):
ran on Rio and emanated with the North Carolina connection
a little further up the food chain. And I love
these pieces because right at the beginning they give me
the bio of the writer, and that is immensely helpful.
The bio of the writer. His name is Tuffeki Tuffeci,
I don't know how to pronounce that last name. Described
(01:19:11):
as a New York Times columnist, Professor of sociology and
Public Affairs at Princeton formally at the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, author of Twitter and tear Gas, The Power
and Fragility of Network protests. All Right, So when you
read that paragraph, this is the great disconnect in our
country right now, because not that long ago people would
(01:19:34):
have read that, and when this person probably knows what
they're talking about, but we're not there. We're at the
end of a Scooby Doo episode. Okay, that's where we
are in modern journalism, society, institutions of higher learning, and
purported experts. Right, We've ripped the mask off and it's
you know, it's old man Jenkins. And so when I
(01:19:59):
read that and whether and it's unfair, arguably, but I'm
forced into this situation. I assume whatever follows is complete
utther bs because I see how it's you know, where
it's positioned, where the articles getting run, the credentials that
are attached, what it takes to thrive in the sociology
department of a modern major university, and I that person
(01:20:23):
is captured. Even among the chaos generated by Trump's recent
cabinet picks, one stands out for the extensive suffering and
lasting institutional damage it may cause. Robert F. Kennedy to
lead HHS one of civilization's greatest achievements. In nineteen hundred,
(01:20:44):
up to thirty percent of infants in some US cities
never made it to their first birthday. Okay, I have
a question if the Department of Health and Human Services
the government bureaucracy, not the people who are focused on
solving diseases and instituting better care. And this is there's
a certain complexity to this because through HHS you have
(01:21:08):
actual funding that has been done for some pretty significant things.
But the question becomes it once you've decided that the
only reason that they would continue to create vaccines, therapies,
genetic therapies, different ways of doing things is because HHS,
(01:21:30):
you know, handle this, and not because people wanted not there.
You didn't want all their kids to die, right, which
is another good motivation. Right They're like, oh, you know,
basically like look at there's a reason they used to
have twenty kids. You guys all know this, right, because
you're like, let's see who wins, right, Let's see who,
(01:21:51):
Let's see who's still around end of their teenage years.
It was things were different, but they didn't want their
kids to die. So these things, these these it is
the idea that the only reason we have these achievements
is because of government, which is now the opposite mindset
(01:22:14):
that the majority of the country agrees with. And you
can sit there and go, well, they're they're they're ludites,
they're they're idiots, they're they're knuckle draggers. But you are
the ones who squandered this. After HHS embrace what was
going on with China and the manipulation of the UN
with all the COVID stuff, the China flu uh you know,
(01:22:39):
the Wuhan flu. At that point, people are stepping away
with the manipulation you saw or we're right, we know
these things. And if you get that vaccine, you can't
give or get it. You're just you're like an NPC.
You have nothing to do. Now, Well, that obviously turned
out to be complete and utterer bs like nobody believes
that the six foot thing, Yeah, we made that up.
(01:23:00):
These are all the things. So forgive me if even
I disagree with some of the things that Kennedy may
bring up, if I don't think that what you've been
doing couldn't be any isn't any better than anything he's
going to do, Because that's that's the real power of
(01:23:21):
the institution, not just HHS, but you know, our system
of government here is can it survive even people coming
in who don't know what they're doing and don't I'm
not saying that's the thing with Kennedy there. Look, if
Kennedy turns ninety nine percent of his attention just to
the nutritional side of things, and I think there's a
lot of win there, So I think he will. I
(01:23:45):
watched a quote where they were he said, I spent
thirty years basically pulling mercury out of fish, right, And
really it's instrumental if you look at from an environmental
law practice, what Kennedy did with the cleanup of the
waters just around New York City, just around New York City.
(01:24:06):
And he says, you know, because this was getting into
the seafood supply. This was his gihod and he was
very successful at it. He says it doesn't make me
anti fish. That's true, obviously not anti fish. So when
(01:24:26):
you approach it like that, let me tell you what
people are going to lean into, and it will come
down to whatever actions he takes. But just because you
got somebody with some PhDs in sociology, they may be
a very learned individual. But I assume and I gave
it the credit of reading it. And yes, I don't
have multiple degrees, I don't teach at Princeton all of that.
(01:24:48):
But I'm smart enough to recognize that this wasn't written
out of anything other than the same absurd This is
the credentialed version, right, This is the one with p
hds after it of the same diatribe that this woman
made because she went on a dating app and some
guy she almost one night standing and gave it up
to might have been a Trump supporter. This is just
(01:25:14):
the less polished version, too scared put in the brain
of the author of that article, who may be well intentioned.
Speaker 2 (01:25:31):
Every message and every prove of.
Speaker 6 (01:25:37):
This makes me thing.
Speaker 4 (01:25:38):
That it could be.
Speaker 1 (01:25:41):
YEA, yeah, I gotta here's the thing I don't know
this is. And to be fair, sometimes this comes with
wisdom and age and all that maybe don't hook up
with some dude who you you didn't even bother to
figure out the thing that you deter to be the
most intro like the biggest part of your personality, and
(01:26:04):
you were just you're just willing to show up, and
you know, drop the pants. I'm not trying to do
the moral thing. You know, that's not that's not me.
I would not sit on that, that that throne of
lies there, but maybe take a step back from that,
and then you have again this the polished version of
(01:26:25):
it in the form of an op ed that runs there.
And that's what people here now, and they don't take
you seriously, and it's your own fault. I don't know
that you'll ever get it back. All right eight eight
eight nine three four seven eight seven four. Let's get
Jeff Marf. He's ready from the Weather Channel, the little
weather thing here? Is it because the cowgirls play tonight?
(01:26:48):
Is that why he just can't even show up?
Speaker 6 (01:26:51):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (01:26:51):
I think maybe he's anticipating another crushing defeat, so he's
getting prepared.
Speaker 1 (01:26:54):
I don't know. I like the Texans and I just
I'll throw that out there. But all right, well, we'll
make fun of him when he returns. Let's make light
of the weather now.
Speaker 2 (01:27:03):
So yeah, we got not a bad way to start
off the week.
Speaker 8 (01:27:05):
Little on the cool side as you hit out this morning,
but during the afternoon you should warm all the way
up to seventy one with sunshine and then partly cloudy
tonight with the loan in the upper forties into the
low seventies again Tomorrow, there'll be an increasing cloud cover
and then some showers will pop up late tomorrow night
ahead of our front with a low fifty seven. That
front's going to bring in some more rainfall heading through Wednesday.
As the high temperature hits seventy degrees, then it certainly
will feel more like November later in the week with
(01:27:27):
cooler air moving in. For Thursday and Friday, there'll be
sunshine each afternoon. High temperature is hitting the load to
mid fifties. Overnight lows will settle in the upper thirties.
Speaker 1 (01:27:36):
Okay, all right, appreciate it, sir. Is it you again tomorrow? Then?
Speaker 2 (01:27:40):
Actually ken moon and then I think Ray returns Wednesday.
Speaker 1 (01:27:42):
Okay, all right, well, we'll talk to you soon. Appreciate it.
Thank you having a good one, yeah, yeah, and we'll
take a break come back. We've got Jeff Bellinger Bloomberg News. Next.
Hang on to Jeff Bellinger at inappropriate and proper time
today because he's not going to know what to do
with the time. So, Jeff, how is your weekend? And sir,
we'll do a little cross stock here.
Speaker 3 (01:28:01):
Oh it was very nice, had a good time. How
about yours? Casey?
Speaker 1 (01:28:04):
I was good. Cross is very excited?
Speaker 3 (01:28:07):
Good? What's he excited about?
Speaker 1 (01:28:09):
That thing that happened in the state you live in? Well,
do you love in Jersey or New York?
Speaker 3 (01:28:14):
I live in New Jersey.
Speaker 1 (01:28:15):
Oh, but you're in the Yeah, you know, you see
the thing with the team from New York the bills
there to see what happened that.
Speaker 3 (01:28:24):
I did not.
Speaker 1 (01:28:25):
Oh, after we're done, you should google that. Okay, I
will do that.
Speaker 3 (01:28:30):
I'll check that out certainly, all right, right anyway?
Speaker 7 (01:28:33):
Yes, Well, a stock market futures do suggest a little
bit of normalization after.
Speaker 3 (01:28:38):
A big down week last week.
Speaker 7 (01:28:40):
S and P futures are up four, Nasdaq futures up
sixty two, Dow futures are down sixty points. Right now,
if you'll be driving somewhere for Thanksgiving, you can expect
to have a lot of company on the roads, but
your wallet may get a break. It's projected that holiday
travel will be back to pre pandemic levels in ricks
has some big cities, we'll see double the usual amount
(01:29:01):
of traffic next week. Triple A expects the average nationwide
price of gasoline to be below three dollars a gallon,
the lowest in three years. Business leaders all around the
world are under a lot of pressure. A study by
Boston Consulting says most companies that set cost cutting goals
don't hit their savings targets. Netflix and Walt Disney will
get some new competition in Asia as Warner Brothers Discovery
(01:29:24):
and produces its Max streaming service to Asian markets this week. Netflix, meanwhile,
as hoping an NFL contest and a big music star
will draw new subscribers this holiday season.
Speaker 3 (01:29:36):
Beyonce.
Speaker 7 (01:29:36):
We'll perform on Christmas Day during the Houston Texas at
Houston Texans Baltimore Ravens game, which will be seen only
on Netflix. It's reported Warner Brothers, Discovery and the National
Basketball Association have settled their legal differences. Warner Brothers had
sued the NBA after it lost its decades old right
to broadcast games sources say this new settlement gives Warner
(01:29:59):
Brothers some international broadcast rights, but domestic rights still will
go to Walt Disney, Comcast, and Amazon. A lot of
tech workers think they'll have to do some career hopping
during their professional lives.
Speaker 3 (01:30:11):
Forty percent of the.
Speaker 7 (01:30:13):
Tech pros surveyed by Amadaeus expect to change careers at
least three times to adapt to new technologies and The
Amazon MGM film Red One was the weekend's number one movie,
with estimated ticket sales of thirty four million dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:30:28):
Casey, all right, real quick, I'm gonna play piece of audio.
Tell me if this stirs any memories.
Speaker 4 (01:30:33):
Okay, here we go, banks left now taken off.
Speaker 2 (01:30:40):
Canna run forty?
Speaker 1 (01:30:42):
Got it? And then it goes inside the turn to
five O, the pie P the un tel.
Speaker 3 (01:30:50):
Nothing that no a football game, I'm guessing right.
Speaker 1 (01:30:55):
You get that? Okay, all right, all right, I just
thought I would take a run at it. All right, Jeff,
we'll talk.
Speaker 2 (01:31:00):
About okay, all right, take care And you know I
appreciate him not breaking the jinks. That's what it is. Yeah,
he understands the jink situation and right.
Speaker 1 (01:31:11):
To his appear not to have any knowledge of it.
The thing that.
Speaker 2 (01:31:15):
Happened, I for one, am not interested in a silly
football game.
Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
No, yesterday, when I texted you something, let me quite complimentary.
Let's see here, and this is somebody who is a
fan of scrambling qbs. I said, uh well, I said
(01:31:42):
two things. One, what Alan just did is one of
the most amazing things I've watched a quarterback do. I
meant that I met that buddy. And then the other
thing I also meant was the amount of sadness the
universe is setting you guys up for should be criminal.
Speaker 2 (01:31:58):
Oh I can't wait to be completely rushed in January.
Oh yeah, Just just to reiterate, this has been my
strategy entire season, because every time the topic comes up,
I don't talk about it because I'm trying to completely
just a media blackout of all of it, because then
the team will win the Super Bowl, because when I
pay attention, they lose. So us just talking about this,
we're probably just I'm talking about what there's nothing. We're
(01:32:21):
talking about the spirit of America and stuff right with
the with the the rock photo things, that's all left.
Speaker 4 (01:32:32):
I'll take it all, gonna run forty got it and
then do it justice.
Speaker 2 (01:32:39):
It was spin mode, bumping into people, just knocking people
whose job is just to tackle people. Forty five percent
of the team. Uh, the chiefs there touched him on
that play.
Speaker 1 (01:32:52):
And they couldn't do anything. And just do you understand
how the officiating was during the first pick of Mahomes Nott.
Ross isn't talking about this.
Speaker 2 (01:32:59):
I am after they called a penalty for essentially embarrassing him,
but there was nothing they could do about him.
Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
And then it was just it was just ty. And
here's the thing too, I think they're probably good friends.
They could probably sit there and not even talk about
what happened in the game after, and that's fine, that's good,
but it was it was pretty crazy. And yeah, well
I hope you don't have to do a welfare check,
but it's a possibility for you know what Ross is.
They're screaming in the Parliament like he's this crazy lady
(01:33:30):
from New Zealand. Could we get tea pain to auto
tune that or whatever they did during that era for
five minutes?
Speaker 2 (01:33:51):
But apparently that's her thing. Really, she does that all
the time.
Speaker 1 (01:33:53):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And and there's also the part
where her own people, who again I got no problem.
I you know, celebrate that and and but it's a it's.
Speaker 2 (01:34:05):
A they're not indigenous to the area.
Speaker 1 (01:34:07):
Correct. They came to there and then murdered the other
people which had been there kind of an offshoot of
their own people.
Speaker 2 (01:34:15):
You know, they went there, they conquered them, but then
they also ate them.
Speaker 1 (01:34:19):
Yeah. Well I was that was gonna be the the
cherry on top, But now that I'm making a food
reference out of that, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:34:27):
Uh, Like these are things I I I remember one
of the things that I got to do was to
go because I'm a history and.
Speaker 1 (01:34:39):
So they're like, hey, do you want to go a
place where they sacrificed a bunch of people back in
like the meso American stuff. And I'm like, sign me up.
Speaker 2 (01:34:49):
I'll go check that. I know most people on vacationally.
I want to go sit on the beach with the
all inclusive. I'm gonna go see that. I want to
see the sacrificial altar.
Speaker 1 (01:34:57):
Sign me up. And so I'm there and like they're
going over all the stuff and basically here's what they do,
and then capture another one. And then it turned into
like a festival. Well, they basically executed all of them,
but they also like they would have these mass I can't. Basically,
they would rape captives to death, but they had to
(01:35:19):
do so in a manner where it was loud enough
the gods could hear it happening. And I remember the
tour got explaining this, and my only thought was Columbus
didn't get here soon enough, because what