Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Friday Show coming up. Remember when you thought Jim Acosta
had hit the top limits of insufferability. It was post
really fake news because like at first when he was
just fake news on that first one, and like, ah,
that was what a moment. Like there were a few
moments early in Trump's presidency. There was the initial labeling
(00:23):
of Jim Acosta, Jim Acosta fake news. And if I
remember correctly, that happened at the how are we going
to handle the finances press or? Do you remember that
they held a press conference and they had all what
do they have? They had like all the papers in
front of them. I remember, I don't remember the totality
(00:45):
of what it was, but basically it was when they
talked about the structure of how Trump's not going to
be involved, his boys are going to do it. Here's
what they're going to do, some stuff having to do
with the hotel they owned in Washington there and and
it was at that one where he earned his first stripe.
And then not that long after was the famous Yellow
(01:06):
Room press conference where Trump just sat up there for
well over an hour just sparring with reporters. April Ryan
Jim Acosta again, that's where he earned very fake news
second stripe and I talked about it. I might you know,
Jim Acosta should be naming children after Donald Trump? Had you, Russ,
(01:33):
We work in this history industry. Have you had you
ever heard of Jim Acosta? Really? I mean maybe you'd
heard it before, but that name didn't stick with you
until Trump labeled him, right, they didn't.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
Never heard of him? Yeah, I mean you know, he
was the annoying guy from CNN who yelled at Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Yes, that was it, and then he got like he
made Trump made you, bro. You you can tell it.
You can even say that you made you by getting Trump. Fine, whatever,
but if not for Trump, then not you.
Speaker 3 (02:09):
You're you were.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
His foil and everybody has to This is I mean,
this is straight comic book one oh one, and I
know it's du dau well, no, no, no, no, it's
because comics. The concept that comics utilize is a concept
from real life, or at least they used to utilize
the inherent struggle of good versus evil. And yes, you
(02:30):
can even murky it up right, And so you would
have protagonists that are not altogether good people, which in
a way is is a foundation of spirituality because you're
you're you're only human, right. I'm trying to keep this
as secular as possible. But but understand, and I know
(02:51):
that some of you hate this. Understand that the best
use and in character arc, which it was a consistent
one in Hollywood. Look, we didn't even coordinate. We didn't
even let me make sure Ross isn't screen and call.
We didn't even coordinate this ross. What is the proper
heroes arc used to be? As you understand it, because
(03:15):
I this is, this is defined, this is something culturally
we know.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
You mean a storybook like the hero's journey.
Speaker 3 (03:24):
Yes, the hero's journey.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
This is the most classic thing in life and in
cinema and in comic books and books, in literature, you
name it.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
Sure, you're sort of like maybe a nothing or a
normal person. And then you have a challenge and you
fail and you overcome it and then you succeed and
you you you you know, you overcome whatever it was
that was keeping you down.
Speaker 3 (03:46):
But you have to fail.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
For you have to fail, there has to be a struggle.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
Yes, doesn't that sound a lot like the Bible? Again,
I'm trying to keep it secular, but but you know,
because without and this is the trans and this is
and this is why I think people, this is why
this is what's roady movies too, because we're not going
to do this thing, and that's how you end up
with these uh you know, uh female superheroes that are are.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
That was the problem with Captain Marvel, right, yeah, or
the problem with Ray and Star Wars yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
Op from the jump, right, nothing to overcome, nothing to overcome,
or if if there was, you know, in Ray, it's
implied that basically your life sucks there and that's fine,
but you don't you don't see it, and then there's
no there's nothing past that. There's adversity, but it's always
met on an equal footing and then eventually it's just
it's far exceeded. So when when you're when you're looking
(04:40):
at all of this stuff and and you look at
those narratives, Jim Acosta was was one of the things
that Trump had to overcome. And if you want to
reverse it, right, because sometimes this is why we have
discussions about who was actually who was portrayed as a
but was actually right. You see those lists all the time.
(05:03):
Then you can have people who, through the lens of
political ideology, they see Jim Acosta as currently in that
he needs to overcome him mode. I don't care how
you view it. The one needs the other, the ying
and the yang. So whether you look at it, you
know from a spiritualist sense where you need to overcome
(05:25):
and then you do so by you know, from you know,
accepting Jesus and living your life and knowing that.
Speaker 3 (05:32):
You know you're always valuable fallible, that's fine.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
Or if you just want to look at purely from
a comic book heroes arc these are classic elements that is,
subconsciously people identify form opinions about like this is this
is getting into some more deep divy stuff, but like,
(05:56):
subconsciously we like to have somebody to root for and
root again anst. Obviously, when it comes to politics, there's
many instances where.
Speaker 3 (06:04):
We take it too far, but you still like to
know who's who for.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
The same reason we're sitting there breaking down the uh
the Philly fan Green Bay fan thing. Because life's complicated.
It's not just some guy yelling the sea word at
a woman. It's some guys yelling the sea word at
a woman who's man and is pushing it on for
like clout and and and requiring her to sit there
(06:32):
and take more abuse like sometimes sometimes there's there's really
it's very difficult to figure out who who the good
people are. There's lots of movies like that too, lots
of movies like that. There's no fight Club. There are
no good people in fight Club. So that's where we
(06:53):
get the anti hero and all this stuff. All right, Well,
we're not gonna get into film philosophy and this stuff.
I'm just pointing out that Jim Acosta should name a
a family member after Trump as a thank you or
you know, his estate. We'll see if he gets to
stick around there doing some some chair shuffling on the
decks of the Titanic.
Speaker 3 (07:14):
Over there, we'll tell you about that.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
Unfortunately, we had a couple people pass away yesterday. We
got to talk about I don't know who the third
is yet, and what the hell is going on in Georgia.
Uh did you see that? You see the video of
the state senator there who was either either tripped over
a stanchion took himself a soccer dive. That's not important.
(07:40):
I don't care why he ended up on well, I
care why he ended up on the ground. I don't
even care if he played it up a little, it's
how they got there. And if you don't know the story,
and this is a Republican of Republican violence, that's what's
even crazier. When I first saw it, I didn't realize
that the speaker in Georgia was Republican and not a Democrat.
(08:01):
Based on what was happening there and the reason why
it is absolutely insane. So we'll fill you in on
that so you don't have to get into the muck
trying to figure it out. Also, of course, Pete Calender
will join us at eight o five, So stick around
back in just a few because there's there's a story
(08:22):
about something Wyoming wants to do, so I'm interested, so
I'm clicking on it and it makes a ton of sense.
Then I see people mad at the state of Wyoming
for for no reason I can understand, and then they
have to in true Internet fashion, is if Wyoming was
a person, right, and they're mad at this person for
(08:44):
something else, they then have to go deep dive to
try to find an obscure takedown point. And then, trust me,
when I fill in what these two things are, it
sounds crazy, I'll defended and I'll mock the people mad
at and you'll learn something. We'll get into that here
(09:05):
at six thirty five. Okay, uh, first this, I was
reading this article this once as w r L looks
like it's AP with some localization or whatever. No, okay,
all right, no no, no, this one's this is just
ril on the slug here, all right, Triangle residents brace
for TikTok band impact amid uncertain future for local creators.
(09:28):
So Sunday could be the day goes today though, and.
Speaker 3 (09:35):
Then what are they are?
Speaker 1 (09:36):
They are they waiting for? Try to find the timing here?
When is the Supreme Court thing supposed to? Is that Monday?
So it could you shut off Sunday but then starting
getting Monday. I don't know what's going to happen. And
but let me say this because the article is mostly
them talking to North Carolina based TikTok creators, and they
(09:58):
a variety of things. They talk to a woman who
does parenting stuff, another one that does cookings, and the
what's it called where they're doing the makeup get get
ready with me or something? I am. So I'm gonna
sound so old on the TikTok stuff because really the
only time I dip in to TikTok is to talk
(10:20):
about his political impact and stupid challenges where people are
clearly trying to get other people killed. So, but I
want to say is I don't begrudge the creators. It's hard.
Speaker 3 (10:34):
It's hard to.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
Build followers on you know, on on one of these platforms.
It's just like it's hard to build followers and listeners
or viewers and in in in any sense of it,
unless you're Ross's Twitch channel, which blows up immediately. But hey,
we can't all be that, you know. And so they
worked and they built this and not and they when
(11:02):
and when they built this stuff. Nobody I don't think
anyone really seriously had the concerns that has has led
to this. And and for every minute the company, the
parent company, indicates that they're unwilling to even sell this thing,
that they're not going to be able to do anymore
in the US and would rather shut it down, it
(11:26):
becomes that much more suss that if you ever got
to look at the code, Holy hell, right, like what
is going on? Like the concerns with behavior like that,
you're kind of telling on yourself. But I also feel
bad for people who either this is their primary income
(11:48):
or it's a side thing. I don't know. I don't
even know what normal follower numbers on TikTok are, Like
what's the number where it could become your own job,
your only job? Like what is that break even number?
Because it's different on every you know, YouTube subscribers are
far more valuable from a revenue standpoint than Twitter impressions, right,
(12:12):
So I don't know what that is, but I thought
it's usually high. So I don't think these are their
primary jobs. Like one of the women here runs cooking
one uh Gigi's kitchen. She has one hundred thousand followers.
I'm assuming that's not that's not a full time job,
but you know it's obviously creators with with with much more,
(12:35):
and I feel and hopefully you've you've diversified on some
other platforms. But also like, this isn't a decision. Just
if this decision was just about TikTok, stupid and people
keep eating cinnamon, so we need to stop this. But
that's this is this is far different, and there's a
lot of different opinions on this. But like even that
(12:58):
one of the creators their interview, I mean her, she's like, yeah,
it sounds like a valid reason to shut this down,
and I'm I'm glad they're taking a critical look at it,
and I really hope they're able to get a deal done,
even as little interest as I have with TikTok in general,
if they get a get a job, or get it done,
sell it to I don't know, pick somebody here in
(13:20):
the US and want to move forward, trying to get
teenagers eat too much cinnamon whatever, do your thing, go
along with it along the way. Uh yeah, okay, no, no, no, okay,
So are those the Supreme Court is expected to release
their TikTok.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
Band this morning.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Okay, all right, that's good. I could I always just
assume it's Monday unless stated so it will happen before
when the thing, So it will happen probably right after
the show. Uh so we'll uh, we shall see, all right.
It is that time of the year. It is that
(13:58):
time of the year, Monday, of course MLK Day, right,
but diration m okay, the holiday, the observant of the holiday.
We will not be on the air Monday, just FI
on that company holiday. And you know I you don't
want to say no to the company, so uh and
(14:18):
that's fine, because really Tuesday is what you want, like
what happened to the inauguration? Because nothing will be happening
in the morning. But and then you get you know,
Black History Month, and every year, like clockwork, there is
a story that we wait and see, you know how
around Halloween. Eventually there'll be a frat or a sorority
(14:38):
that hosts a party where people are running around with
shoe polo shud every year like clockwork. Can't can't understand it.
But also, I don't think we missed a year.
Speaker 4 (14:51):
Ross.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
I haven't seen our our annual story that we see
this time of the year, you know, the one Acoday
Radio for Oh it was down such a rabbit hole there,
but I not remember what I teased for six point thirty. Oh,
that's right, this audio, okay, or might make a little
note for myself what's going on down in Georgia? So
(15:15):
and this is his best I understand it. So I'm
sure that if I lived in Georgia, there's probably a
lot more behind the scenes, little nuanced stuff that adds
a little flavor to this. But I think that we've
got more than enough to get a pretty good understanding.
(15:36):
And it starts with a situation that we have seen
in the North Carolina elected official in General Assembly here.
We've seen it at the congressional level obviously, and that
is establishment versus upstart. Okay, and you have it on
the Republican side, and you have it on the Democrat side.
You got the squad, and then you got Pelosi, You've
(15:59):
got the Freedom Caucus, and you've got you know, your
your country club GOP or however you want to describe
them leadership, and they butt heads. It's the reason that
Massy was probably removed from his cushy committee thing the
other day. They get pay because Mike Johnson, if you
(16:21):
step out of line.
Speaker 3 (16:21):
This is what they do.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
And they always do it, even when you say that
they're going to do it, they do it because it's
them ruling with an iron fist. I'll let you make
your own opinion as what your party does, but you
know this scenario. So that's what's going on down in Georgia.
You have the establishment Republicans, the old school Republicans, and
(16:45):
you have some of these guys and gals who are
you know, Freedom Caucus or outliers or whatever.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
And they don't suffer. They don't fall in line.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
They are they're very outspoken, and that is but prompted
all of this because you have this dude from like
northwest Georgia who is I don't mean this as an
insult that boy is country af okay, but seriously, and
(17:18):
he and I guess it was surrounding the.
Speaker 3 (17:21):
Naming of a building.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
For the for a former Speaker of the House who
had passed away in Georgia. Again, I don't know all
of Georgia's politics there, but and the Speaker of the
House is a Republican. This state senator is also a Republican.
But they are the opposite ends of that spectrum I
just talked about, and so and also his name is
(17:48):
Colton Moore, by the way, who's the senator who got arrested.
He was attempting to attend the State of the State,
the Joint Session, which is held in the House Chamber.
Because I think people were confused by editor was trying
to go in the House chamber. He was trying to
go in the House Chamber because it's the larger chamber,
which is why we.
Speaker 3 (18:06):
Went to the State of the Union.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
It's held in the you know, the House representatives at
the federal level, and he was told he's not allowed
to go to it.
Speaker 3 (18:15):
Well, he was elected.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
He represents I think it's about a quarter million Georgians,
if that's what they're called, and he was going to go,
but he had gotten a letter from the Speaker of
the House saying that unless he did certain things, he
wasn't going to be allowed to attend. John Burns is
(18:37):
the speaker. Because when they were considering what is usually
a pretty innocuous thing to have this the former now
deceee Speaker's name slapped on the side of the building.
He criticized the former speaker openly, and the old school
people there they lost their crap, including Burns, And he
(19:02):
sent a letter. And I don't know how any of
this is constitutional, whether it's under the federal constitution, but
more specifically under George's constitution, which I'll explain in a moment.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
He sent a letter to Moore saying that unless he.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
Apologized publicly and did it, did a literally one of
the apologies in front of all the members. He had
to burn said he had to go over the other
chamber and apologize to all the represent and he said no,
he said, I can say whatever I want you guys
are proffering a bill thinking that this guy should have
(19:37):
his name on something, and I think he's I think
he was a jackass. And again, maybe War's right, maybe
he's not, but it doesn't matter. And so butterert was
this speaker that he barred him from being able to
access where the Moore does his job because he was
duly elected. But Moore shows up anyway, and he's not
(20:00):
swinging fists or anything. In fact, he's he's he's you
can tell he's very intentionally, slowly just moving his body
forward trying to enter. And you have are they they
called the door manager or something whatever, and you have
all these Georgia State Police there, and the door manager
(20:21):
kind of pushes his way back into him, and more
whether he tripped over a stanchion there's like a little
metal footing for this thing that's there, or the foot
of one of the officers standing there. More goes backwards,
and you know, people like it's exaggerated, but all like
he clearly it started with the guy pushing him, is
(20:42):
pushed to the ground, he gets up and the Georgia police,
the guy who pushed him fades into the back the
Georgia police surround him, they put him in handcuffs and
arrest him. Well, in Georgia, it says no member during
a legislative session, which they are in right now, or
(21:04):
during a legislative you know, an event that was called
into session basically, and the state of the state is
an event called into session. They can't Georgia, this is
pretty They can't get arrested, which is the law in
a lot of states with the accept you know, they
get arrested for murder and stuff, but for most things
during any official capacity or time and up to fifteen
(21:26):
days after I actually read the statute in Georgia something
like this. You can't arrest people that are elected members
that are attempting to do something that's part of their duty.
Speaker 3 (21:36):
There and you know, demanding.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
An apology of struggle session because he disparaged your dead
friend's name.
Speaker 3 (21:46):
It doesn't work like that.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
So, I mean, what's going on down there is I
understand it is pretty pretty bad man, and that's something
the governor doesn't want to get involved because he's being
a coward.
Speaker 3 (21:57):
He probably should will there be.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Consequences for the guy, for the guy who shoved this.
How about those police officers. This is why this is
the concern people have with police officers, is because there
are far too many instances where any normal person should
recognize that what's happening here shouldn't be happening, and because
you have powerful people telling you to do this, like
(22:24):
the speaker of the house or the official they have
some weird name for again, the door open or the
door holder or something whatever they call it. The officer,
the presiding officer is what this is. They literally committed assault.
Now you got to ask yourself, does the assault rise
(22:45):
to the level enough of being able to arrest the speaker?
Probably not because of the way that the thing, but
for the same reason that more shouldn't be barred from it.
And the Georgia police that are that join in on this, no,
they this is easy and if you don't understand it,
(23:10):
you have an obligation to try to understand it. I
read the statute. It seems very clear to me. And
I'm not a lawyer. We had a Russhack before the show.
I'm not a lawyer, but there's a lot of lawyers
around there, and I think it's more a lawyer.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
He might even be a lawyer. The whole thing is.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
Pretty wild and uh, deeply disturbing for again for a
number of reasons. Again, so there's not a lot of screaming,
there's not even a ton of pushing because bors A
(23:48):
keeping his.
Speaker 5 (23:49):
Hands down to Northwest Georgia, who duly elected me to
be here today.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
All right, Yeah, so that's it, that's him and uh
and just moments later he's in a handc huffs getting
let out of there. Yeah, they get them themselves a
little bit of a problem down there, Atlanta and Georgia.
They're they're going to feature prominently in the show today
with one other story, and that's the one I teased
(24:15):
for you about. It's not the menu thing where we
generally see that outrage. It's arguably arguably something a lot
crazier man, a lot crazier. Uh And uh, well you'll
tell you what we'll put we'll pair these two together.
It's again, it's not the special MLK day menu story.
(24:38):
Like every year, that is a thing where they decide, hey,
let's have a let's have an MLK menu and then
it's fried chicken and collar greens and you know, usually
that kind of stuff and then everyone apologizes and and
almost every I don't think I've seen a story where
anyone wasn't just trying to be nice. I don't know
about this one though. And we don't really have the
(25:02):
promoter scene as much. I mean, I know it's around
in the Try and the Triangle. Anywhere you got people
and you know, concert venues or party places, you're going
to see this stuff.
Speaker 3 (25:13):
You know, usually they put together.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
Very very bright graphic little little cards to hand out
promoting parties, little posters you see. When I was in
southern California, it's craps. Everybody's a damn promoter and they
do parties. And I have to assume Atlanta's like this too.
Ross Ross used to live in Atlanta.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
Yeah, No, when I worked there was awful.
Speaker 6 (25:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
And you've got you've got some experience because doing Top forty,
you've you've done a bunch of club parties.
Speaker 2 (25:41):
A bunch. I had a club gig Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Wow,
three hours every night, open bar, early twenties, and I
did it so much of the promoters were like they
tried to get me to work with them, like as
a promoter, They're like, you'd be great at this, And
I'm like no, I hate this.
Speaker 1 (25:58):
Yeah, oh a good promoter, man, they make bank dude.
But it's but I wanted to establish that just because
a venue is doing so now the venue has obligation
go hey, what are we reading you this for? But
there's three parties. There's the you know, there's the venue,
there's the promoters and slash artists if they're doing something
(26:18):
like that, and then there's you know, everybody else, the customer,
so to speak. So initially people saw what I'm going
to delicately explain to you be for an event that
was being promoted surrounding MLK Junior also including Rosa Parks,
but a MLK Day event party, and it's it's clearly
(26:41):
just a club party popping bottles, you know, people twerking
and and a couple couple hip hop artists, uh three,
they're listed on here and you know, so that's pretty innocuous.
But what they chose to go with, Rossie, you've seen
the Oh that's right, I texted you this morning. You've
(27:04):
seen the flyer. Probably not the one you would have
gone with, though, right if.
Speaker 2 (27:09):
Yeah, I know I would have opted for something different, Okay,
Like if that was me, if I took that gig
and I'm like, yeah, let's let me be a club promoter.
This is now my passion. I would probably went in
a different direction than the flyer.
Speaker 3 (27:20):
The name of the event is.
Speaker 1 (27:25):
Good Lord all right. It's at a restaurant called Mela,
which is a restaurant lounge.
Speaker 3 (27:31):
It looks you know, it's a club that also serves food.
Speaker 1 (27:34):
During the day. And then you get everybody in their
bottle service. They they got hookahs and whatever. And the
event is entitled first is MLK Weekend Celebration, So it's actually, uh,
tomorrow is the event, and it's entitled he Scared of
the Woman part, the thing, the the hats the other
(28:02):
word for cats, okay, And the graphic is a photo
of a dude, you know, in modern day like athletic clothing.
He's got big gold chains around his neck and he
is behind a woman who is splayed out in front
(28:25):
of him wearing modern day tiny lingerie with a giant
butt that this guy's behind. Right, you understand what's going on,
and also when you think about the name, that'll give
you a little insight into what they're indicating is happening there.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
And listen, man, they put a torque in Rosa Parks.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
I didn't even say that I had that was the
listen and their heads are on the bodies.
Speaker 3 (28:51):
MLK is behind Rosa Parks.
Speaker 1 (28:53):
Ye, listen.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
I don't want to maybe that. I don't think that's
her body, that's all I listen. It's that's Rosa Parks's
elderly face. Yeah, that went with the old face onto
like a hold up body. Yeah, directly behind her butt
because she's bent over is MLK. I don't think that's
MLK once again with the big gold shot.
Speaker 1 (29:18):
Okay, I'm trying to read what's on the and the
top of the flyer says scared of the P word yeah,
which implies that there's something else.
Speaker 2 (29:32):
Like how does this get made?
Speaker 1 (29:35):
And this is the second year because you see the
word reloaded god, which is also a pun. They had
the same last year and I guess it just didn't
make it into the news. Well this time it made
it into the news. The only upside here, I don't
know that this is an upside, but at least it's
(29:56):
it doesn't twist it in this other thing. I'm pretty
sure everyone from club ownership to promoter to artists are
all black. So there's like it wasn't. Wasn't some white
dude who came up with this, so we don't have
to have that slice of this. But I don't care
holy cow man, because the people who are upset are
(30:17):
are obviously the black community, which I don't blame them.
Now Here's the thing is is that any more offensive
than dipping a crucifix in urine and calling it art?
This comes down to whose ox is getting gored? But
that just seems like a bad idea all around. So
(30:38):
initially they went after the club. They're like, ah, They're like,
we're going to cancel the club, and the club's like,
there's a promoter he booked with us, which is half correct.
But also if I have an if I rent out
space to people, I don't care whether you're you you
have an apartment or a condo that you rent like
an Airbnb thing, or you you have a club and
(30:59):
people you know book it for concerts. You ask, don't
you I know you do? We were Russia? How many
times have you worked with like Live Nation folks, and
and where every step of the way, everybody's got to
be on the same page on stuff, right for we
have to like we do if we give tickets away
(31:20):
or contest, we have to get it has to go
through all of these different people because everyone wants to
make sure everyone's gonna look good.
Speaker 2 (31:27):
There's so many departments, like the imaging and the graphics
have to be approved, and like the yeah, the way
you're gonna say things, it has to be just right,
m the verbiage, you know, the words that you're gonna say.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
I've done, I would, I did. I hosted an event
at kocabooth Amphitheater one time and it had you had
sponsors attached, and I had a ten minute briefing on
exactly how the sponsors how to mention them.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
Oh, they wanted to what orders we're supposed to.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
Be in you So if you don't know who the
spikes are in uh NYC, they got a little bit
of an issue. And you've probably seen video. Well I
know we've seen video because we talked about that. One time.
A news crew just stood by the turnstiles and one
of the subway stops and just pointed a camera to watch.
Like every other person either double load behind somebody's pain
(32:13):
or you know, you do the hop right, you put
your hands on the turnstile and then swing your legs
over like you're a kid going over a fence or
like it's a pomer horse or something, and then you
ride for free, or you get your buddy to open
the gate and you pop in a lot of different ways.
So but it's a problem. And I remember the number
they were saying in NYC that weren't pain and it
(32:34):
was a substantial amount, and so they they decided to
do the thing where on the turnstile there's just metal
like a metal grate now, and at the top it's
cut into like a spiky pattern. I mean, it's not
razor sharp or anything, but if you were to put
the palm of your hands on those spikes and lift
(32:56):
your full body weight, you'd probably injure yourself. And they're like, there,
that'll solve it. And now the news crew went down
and it's everybody who has figured out that, well, if
you just pushed the sides of the spike plates and
don't put your hand on there, you can swing, or
if you have gloves, and then they're just evading all
the affairs again. So that's.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
That's working out pretty well there, and.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
I'm sure it costs them an absolute crap ton of
money to go ahead and do that. Yeah, man, that's
or see I'm looking at all the different pictures here. Yeah,
he's got his hand to the side of the spike plates.
I don't know how to describe it. And then he
puts a foot where the reader is because it's kind
(33:42):
of at an angle. And then I mean it's minimal athleticism.
I even me today, I could probably swing myself over then,
So they stopped literally nothing. Here's a guy who's using
his sleeves to disperse the pressure where his hands are
on the spikes, and that seems to be working. It
probably took him like a year to do it, and
(34:03):
a billion dollars. I don't even see what the price was.
So a good job, you've you've prevented nothing. All right,
let's get into this. So yesterday the final press conference
for Anthony Blincoln happened. Okay, so the big State Department,
(34:23):
bye bye, and it went went poorly, went rather poorly.
So you have the credential State Department. There's three big credentialings.
Well there's four, right, there's the Congressional and Senate credentialing.
No that that's not really as much the White House
press pool is the top dogs. The Pentagon press pool
(34:46):
is number two in state department, Okay, at number three there.
Speaker 3 (34:50):
So it's it's.
Speaker 1 (34:53):
Competitive in how many spaces there are. But you have
to generally, you had to meet certain requirements, be of
a certain size and notoriety to basically be able to
credential in there. And so you have two journalists. You
have Max Blumenthal. I'm sure you've heard the name Blumenthal.
Used to be New York Times or Post. I can't remember.
(35:15):
It doesn't matter. He's in there. He's working for grey
Zone News now. And who is the other journalist? Who? Oh,
Hussani Husseini, Sam Husseini, Who's he's substack, but he has
a big distribution and he writes for Atlantic I think
sometimes and various others. All right, So why am I
(35:36):
pointing these two out? Because here's how it was structured.
So Blincoln was going to say, you know, hey, here's
what I did a Secretary of State. Kumbayia. I was
a little bit of a victory lap. But it had
a dual purpose because of what just transpired or what
is transpiring with what's going on in Israel. And so
as part of it, he was giving his assessment of
(35:58):
what they've done, but also laying out the Israel Gaza
where they're at, what's the hostage thing going to look like?
What do they and then after that it was gonna
be questions. Pretty standard setup mirrors so many press conferences
I've gone to to cover and everybody knows what's up. However,
(36:21):
as soon as Blincoln started getting into what's going on
these two reporters I'm making air quotes, starts screaming questions
at him. And at first he's just like, nah, we'll
do questions after. And now they start screaming accusations at him,
(36:42):
and they had to be like physically restrained and moved
out of there. Again, they're not to the Q and
A thing yet and they're screaming genocide at him. They're
clearly not engaged in journalism anymore. They are pro hamas
protesters at this point. They're the same lunatics sitting around
banning bagel donations at Columbia University, which will never not
(37:07):
be funny, will never not be If you don't know
what that is, I'll explain it again because I would
want to teat you of this. On the list of
things we need by the student protesters at Columbia University.
They also had a list of things they don't need.
And some of it's practical, like they're like, oh, we
already have enough water, so maybe get us something else,
(37:28):
but it's just randomly floating around on the do not
donate list. We're bagels, which makes sense if you think
about it, right, they're like, ah, that's too jewish, and
it's just it's also so childish. But that's what these
two and they're not young people who's saying. He looks
like he's probably in your retirement age. And so he's
(37:50):
sitting there screaming, criminal, criminal, Why aren't you in the Hague?
Why aren't you in the Hague? Why aren't you in
the Hague. The other journal lists too, are looking at
him like what are you doing? And then Blumenthal starts screaming,
and he goes, why don't you answer? We're a free press.
(38:12):
So they tried to go that round. They're just a
reporter doing that, whereas every other reporter was listening to
it probably had their own questions, and by the way,
I probably were questions that were very not you know,
very negative, because they're all basically in the bag for this,
you know, this anti Israel kick in the way that
you see these stories emulate. And but no, they couldn't
(38:35):
even wait and they're screaming at blinking Weich, don't get
me wrong, and a love for Anthony blinkn running around.
We made it one of his state ad missions to
essentially promote and then you know, insane social justice stuff
worldwide and then get money funded to it. You know, nobody,
You have no idea how many woke NGOs have your
(38:58):
money to run around in foreign countries and try to
woke it up. Like in the same way that we
felt it was our job to spread democracy, this administration
thinks it's their job to spread wocism, which I think
the voters uh weighed in on that back in November.
So we'll see how that goes. Do you know the
(39:19):
FBI shut down their DEI office already.
Speaker 3 (39:24):
I wonder why that is.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
Weird? I why you shut it down? You think they
retained all records? That all thing's a mess.
Speaker 2 (39:36):
No, dude, I heard that we both had the same idea,
So I read that yesterday. I'm like, dude, that paper
shredder was like an old time.
Speaker 1 (39:42):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, all there's twenty dudes in a room
right now, just sweating on their an eighth cup of coffee.
Just like that scene in the firm right where Tom
Cruise looks to the door that what's going on in there?
Like nothing? Nothing is having a shred night. Nothing to
see here? Crazy, But uh, these two should never be
(40:04):
credentialed again.
Speaker 2 (40:06):
Am I wrong?
Speaker 4 (40:07):
Here?
Speaker 1 (40:07):
I have to think a death sentence for your ability
to get credentialed in Washington or anywhere if that matter,
but definitely in Washington, definitely.
Speaker 3 (40:14):
One of these high level.
Speaker 1 (40:17):
Is when you when you've decided you're no longer a
journalist and you're an activist. And who's in he as
an activist? It's not even close. Bloomenthal is he is
an activist? I don't I never got to read he
was as committed. But he is a giant moonbat. And
you can't in the middle of press conference turn into
one of these protesters that glues yourself to stuff. So
(40:40):
what's crazy is both of them should never be credentialed
again ever, and that the first the first thing that
Trump's State Department's got to do is revoke those I
don't know what the what the Biden State Department's done.
But you can't do that. You're not journalists trying to
get an answer. You're you're you're this performative stuff. Do
(41:02):
you remember when and oh yeah, it was our old
boy jimmy College, Remember when Jim Acosta wouldn't give the
microphone back And that was a whole that whole event,
just the just the smugness of it. But no, you're
gonna wig out and have to get drug out like
somebody getting extracted from a plane by by a.
Speaker 3 (41:21):
Team of security.
Speaker 1 (41:22):
And this I saw people were comparing it to what
happened to that senator down in Georgia we talked about. No,
these are remarkably different things. One of the first, the
senator is an elected official who is mandated by his
oath of office to attend these events.
Speaker 3 (41:42):
So that's one thing.
Speaker 1 (41:43):
This is a reporter who if he stays in his
lane and does reporting, not only will get questions and
even can yell over his colleagues if he wants, But
you don't get to disrupt the whole thing. And and
now you're not he's not even asking questions anymore. He's
just screaming genocide, and and you should go to the
Hagen stuff. Uh and uh I I don't. I've scanned
(42:09):
like three stories this morn. I have not seen where
they've they've said that they're pulling the uh you know,
in a normal world, their outlets.
Speaker 3 (42:17):
Well, Hussein, he's independent, but Blumenthal's.
Speaker 1 (42:20):
Outlet would fire him because the you penalize the outlet
too if they don't. It was a really really bad look.
And uh, I I expect because we saw examples with Trump,
it'll be handled a little differently should it break out.
All right, coming up on the show, I mentioned the
(42:41):
Washington Post there will get a little update on one
of their employees.
Speaker 4 (42:44):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (42:46):
And wait till you hear what the city of la
is doing. They just can't help themselves. And we'll even
hear from Jim Acosta and Pete Callender at eight oh
five he'll come up, so lots to get to hang on. Well,
we'll well, what would you think is not worth your time?
Not a good idea? Gun stores? Right, that's probably I mean,
(43:06):
that's probably very lucrative if you can get through there.
But I don't think I've ever been in a gun
store where an employee, or for that matter of customer
didn't literally have a gun at the ready, and there's
a lot of ideos of people coming in and getting
just blasted. Man, but that'd be up there. How about
this one? How about a VFW post? You didn't it'd
(43:29):
be a good idea to rob a VFW post. Obviously
there's probably not gonna be as much money readily available
to you. And there's the part where it's a VFW
But that didn't stop two cretens up in come on Massachusetts.
What is the name of the stupid town bill Billy Rica, Billerry,
(43:51):
I don't care. I don't even know where it is
in Massachusetts. But anyway, two people decided they were going
to go rob the Bill Bill Rica VFW post.
Speaker 3 (44:03):
And actually I will say this, they went in there
and they were.
Speaker 1 (44:07):
Able to, like the two of them, haul a safe
out of there. But here's where the story gets crazy.
They get the safe out and obviously the police didn't
get involved, and they're looking for him, and then randomly,
not the police, but rather some of the VFW guys,
one of which I had a tow truck with the
(44:30):
safe literally loaded on it and brought it back and
then police had to go figure out how they got
their safe back. There's a lot more to this story.
And then I guess the police ended up finding the two. Yeah,
they did arrest They did eventually arrest them with whatever
information some of the VFW members provided. You know, who
(44:52):
thought that was a good idea? Who thought going into
a building that you know, is going to be at
the very least filled with people have had basic training,
let alone the types of folks that tend to hang
out at a VFW right generally, generally in the VFW,
(45:14):
the types of folks there because you know, I, you know, I, uh,
every I had a lot of military service in my
family and so, you know, including grandfather and two of
my uncles and cousins and all the rest. I spent
some time at a VFW. Especially if you live in
a small town. The VFW is a hub for a
lot of stuff. I've been too, multiple weddings at the
(45:37):
VFW and where I grew up a lot of things. Generally,
that seems like the it seems like the group who's
not going to sit there and put up with it.
The fact that these idiots got their safe left and
somehow got the safe back, and then police had to
code to them to find the suspects. I want to
(45:58):
know the condition the suspects are in, because if the
the other thing is you get a lot of retired
guys here in the VFW and they're like, I don't
got anything to do. Hey, you guys want to use
our training to go track down these idiots get our
stuff back. Well they did so good on them. All right.
It's a little weird, weird story I saw there, but
(46:20):
I love it absolutely all right, let me uh, I
promise him, Jim Acosta audio, but I want to play
the whole thing for you, and I'm gonna need a
little more time. Yeah. Oh wait, Oh we have Austin
Paul here, all right, well maybe he was in on it, Yes,
Boston Paul. What's up?
Speaker 4 (46:38):
Bill A record? Bill a record?
Speaker 1 (46:41):
It's our I c or r I c A at
the end, Bill a RecA.
Speaker 3 (46:47):
You know what you get?
Speaker 1 (46:48):
This is why we got you.
Speaker 3 (46:51):
Guys should be absorbed into some other state.
Speaker 1 (46:54):
Man.
Speaker 4 (46:55):
Hey, if you were describing a poster earlier and I wasn't,
I wasn't getting the picture, can you describe it against me?
But a little more detail.
Speaker 3 (47:02):
I'll tell you what I will email it to you.
Speaker 1 (47:04):
How's that?
Speaker 6 (47:05):
Ros?
Speaker 1 (47:06):
Ross.
Speaker 3 (47:06):
Did you post the link to the article?
Speaker 2 (47:09):
Yes?
Speaker 5 (47:09):
I did.
Speaker 1 (47:10):
Okay, if you go to Twitter Boston Paul, it's the link.
A toddler found wandering around alone outside on the Jersey Shore.
So how did that happen?
Speaker 6 (47:23):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (47:24):
Well, it went like this. It was let's see twelve
thirty yesterday afternoon. So there's that the toddler had been
under the care of a babysitter, that the family had hired.
The babysitter. Oh lord, she's on one of these babysitting
(47:44):
sites mom trusted. Oh she has a good rating too.
She's thirty years old, elementary education degree, but I guess
she has her own or she's pursuing an RN So
now she's babysitting. So what happened? Well, police find this
toddler and like, what the hell's go is there a
toddler roaming around? They figure out where the toddler lives
(48:05):
to go to the house. The babysitter is almost dead,
not from a home invasion. She got into the family's
booze stash and drank herself to the point she had
to have her stomach pumped. So obviously at that point
she to nighted. Looking after the toddler. Yeah, she almost died
because she consumed so much alcohol. In fact, it was
(48:27):
the toddler probably walking around and then subsequent police coming
to figure out where the kid lives and coming to
the house that probably saved her. Okay, now I'll try
her profile. She was thirty, she's thirty five. Now she's
been doing that for a while. Then that's scary stuff too,
because it sounds like the family, Yeah, they had not
(48:51):
used her before you people? Is that a thing? I guess.
I don't have kids.
Speaker 3 (48:57):
I don't know how it works.
Speaker 1 (48:58):
I don't I don't When I was a kid, I
don't remember all of our babysitters. But I don't think
I remember any babysitter that wasn't known to my family.
Do you We had a couple, we had a couple
that were family friends, like the older daughters that were
a primary, But I don't remember any babysitters that weren't
(49:22):
in like where they didn't know them before you left
your kids? Is that a thing that you do now?
Speaker 3 (49:28):
If you go on a.
Speaker 1 (49:28):
Website and there's a good enough star rating, you're comfortable
enough leaving your kids with them. I'm just asking. I
don't know and I don't have kids, and I could
criticize how you do stuff, but that.
Speaker 3 (49:38):
Just seems insane to me.
Speaker 1 (49:43):
Like it'd be one thing if you had a very
trusted family friend and their babysitter who maybe you didn't know,
but you've known your friend thirty years and the babysitters
worked for them for five years, and maybe you take
a leap there. But hiring off the internet feels like
like buying drugs on where the all the stuff's misspelled.
Speaker 3 (50:05):
Just the roll of the dice.
Speaker 1 (50:07):
But also it seems like a very efficient way for
people who want to be caregivers. And I'm sure most
of them are, you know, fine with your kids. But
she's like, I'm in the Jersey Shore, I'm gonna I'm
gonna party up, and you pay a membership fee to
use the website. Well, that sounds like that website is
gonna have themselves a problem. Nanny Nanny Laine issued a
(50:33):
statement said we're very happy to hear the toddler is
safe and the okay, so it was a neighbor, was
the because I was trying to figure out because the
toddler couldn't say where they lived. I guess a neighbor
saw the police went over and was like, oh, that's
the kid from there. Okay, yeah, they had tried the
site for three days, so they didn't they din't't have
(50:54):
trust in the site. They sign up for the site.
Three days later they a complete stranger comes over like, here,
watch our kids, and she almost died and your kid
almost died. Oh yeah, there's a lawsuit coming there. Man,
Holy cow. All right, let me get to the gym
Acosta audio. All right, what is this? Some people said,
I've used care dot com to find it, so I'm
(51:16):
just asking again, I don't know, and I also don't
know what those sites promise you from a vetting perspective.
And then also you have to trust that the site's
going to do it. So do you vet the site
to make sure they're telling the truth. That's the part
where it just seems seems a little strange to me.
(51:36):
But because I can't you know, obviously, I can't remember
when I was young, young, but I don't remember any
babysitter that wasn't well known to my family ever. Ever,
I remember that I felt bad for them. Oh we
were a little rambunctious, but they handled it, so whatever,
all right. Let me get over to the Jim Acosta stuff.
(51:56):
So I'm not a fan of and you see it
mostly with sports, but a lot of politics stuff. I
hate going click in a video where somebody's up at
a podium speaking, So it could be like a coach
in a post game, or it could be Anthony Blincoln,
or could be Joe Biden. It doesn't matter. And I
click on it assuming I'm gonna hear whatever it is
(52:19):
they're saying, because they haven't disclosed it, and it's just
somebody with this with an Ai dub who's a poor writer.
It's half the time, it's never even fine. It's clearly
not real. I clicked on this Acosta video and there
was a part of me. I'm so untrusting now that
there's a part of me the whole time until he
pulls the stupid sign out where I'm like, is this real?
(52:44):
Is it? Because yeah, the guy's an ego maniac, but really, really, okay,
it's clearly it is clearly delusional. What you're gonna hear
a Costa say, I'm gonna play right here talking about
how the media is the lifeblood of America and they're
great and we're here and here's proof.
Speaker 3 (53:07):
Listen to this stupidity.
Speaker 7 (53:08):
I want to take a moment to talk about something
President Biden said during his farewell address. He warned, the
free press is crumbling in this country. I would add
that's only if we, the people, let that happen. Journalists
exist to seek the truth, to tell people's stories, to
lift up voices that may not be heard otherwise, to
shine a light on injustice, and to hold the powerful accountable.
(53:30):
We are not the enemy of the people. We are
the defenders of the people. Walter Cronkite once said, freedom
of the press is not just important to democracy, it
is democracy. I want to take a moment to show
you something. A woman sent me this sign eight years ago.
She carried it here at a march in Washington. She
wrote on the back of the sign to me and
the press here in DC, you have our support to
(53:54):
Nora wherever you are.
Speaker 1 (53:56):
Right back at you, Oh yeah, we're We're not We're
not there. We're the defenders of the people. Well, clearly
the people haven't got the memo, and less and less
of them actually believe that, and especially with you, sir,
and you are no Walter Cronkite, how's that to quote
another quote that is usable here and then this science
(54:20):
so right, you think it's a legit sign. I'm so cynical.
I think he had his daughter make it put some
glitter on there, even if it is, because yeah, I
did see some of those marches. Who the hell knows? Man,
holy is? What is Jamal hate date night? Hold on,
let's check this out.
Speaker 3 (54:38):
Yeah, Jamal, what's up?
Speaker 6 (54:40):
Well, just real quick, the press is the defenders of democracy,
the podcasts are defenders of the republic. But Kingsey, well,
my kids were children. I never had a babysitter. I'm
one of those parents, Kasey that was always scared that
something may happen like that when it comes to the
(55:02):
drunk babysitter. The only people that have ever watched my
children is their grand their grandmother, my wife's mother, and
my wife's father because both of my parents passed away.
So that was the only people who ever watch my children.
Other than that. Of course, you know daycare, well Christian
(55:22):
Daytare we send them to you know, we pick them
up after work.
Speaker 1 (55:25):
But okay with my on the culture and says, you've
never had your children, never had a babysitter, So that's a.
Speaker 6 (55:31):
You know, I've never had a babysitter. I've never had
a babysitter never.
Speaker 1 (55:35):
Well, yes you have. There were relatives and daycare. So
I thought you were so. I thought you were like
never never so, And it's fine. I'm not criticizing you
for it, but I mean, just don't know them. They
don't count as a babysitter.
Speaker 6 (55:48):
No, their family, they don't count as babysitting. Your grandmother,
your grandmother, and your granddaddy do not count as babysitters.
And of course the school, because I want to make
sure I say this because if you' somebody hear me
say it, doesn't tell my wife. My wife will email
me immediately. I'm not saying teachers are babysitters. No, Ma,
(56:09):
daycare there not babysitters. They are there to educate and
teach and stuff like that. No, we're adding tiing a
babysit or someone like from an agency or the next
door neighbor kid. No, never had them, and I will
never have called baby city.
Speaker 1 (56:26):
I hear the best ones are on the dark web.
Speaker 6 (56:28):
Actually, so now see that those are the daddy that's
the biggest hit in Daddy.
Speaker 1 (56:35):
Those are sugar baby. I just assumed those were babysitters
that brought candy. That's something different, Okay, all right, well
I'll do some research, all right, Jamal, have a good
one there, yeah, Ross you heard that right. The dark
web is where the best babysitters are film right there?
So oh wait, no, hold on, that's for people who
have a toddler fetish where they pretend to be babies,
and that's that's different, all right, Yeah, should have research that.
(56:58):
Speaking of research, Ken Boone's research in the weather.
Speaker 3 (57:01):
So do you have kids, Ken Boone?
Speaker 5 (57:04):
I do too, but they're they're in college.
Speaker 1 (57:06):
Well let me ask you this, would you did you
ever hire a babysitter off of like a website and
then just leave your kids with them? I never did that.
Now there's a story where in New Jersey family did that,
and they the babysitter almost died. The toddler's out wandering
around in the cold. The babysitter got in the liquor
cabinet and was put herself in critical condition drinking so much.
(57:28):
Oh wow, And only the finding the toddler were they
able to find hersh but I would have died. And
it's like the family had never met her. They went
on a website and just say all right, here's our kid,
and then left and I don't know, it seems crazy
to me, but anyway, all right, sorry to drag you
into that, sir, no proper for other purposes, So ruin
everybody's travel plans go.
Speaker 5 (57:49):
Yes, Well, we've got some some wet weather that's going
to head in this weekend and then turning really cold
as we look towards the early part of next week,
and the possibility for some winter precipitation as we head
toward the middle of next week. So sunshine today, temperatures
into low part of the fifties. Clouds will roll in
here tonight load to bit thirties. We have a chance
of rain tomorrow, best chance through the morning, highs low fifties.
(58:10):
We'll keep a chance of raining around on Sunday, mainly
again through the first half of the day, highs up
her forties. And then here comes that cold air, clearing
skies and near twenty Sunday night, low thirties, Monday and
Tuesday for highs with lows in the teens, and again
Tuesday night into early Wednesday. If we're gonna see any
winter precipitation, I think that would be the best chance
to see something.
Speaker 1 (58:29):
Okay, well, let's let's hope we don't so, all right,
thanks man, I appreciate it. Alrighty, all right, thought to
kem boone here in the next hour. You know what,
I think we have a strong leader for our get
the wood chippers story of the day.
Speaker 3 (58:44):
Well we have, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (58:45):
I'll let you decide. We'll we'll do a little contest
kind of other thing. I'm gonna tell you two stories.
When we return, you tell me who most needs the
wood chipping. Okay, we'll do it next hang on, that's
my confirmation. We got a lot to get into with
with him. That'll that'll be at eight oh five. All right,
well we got two stories. Let's pretend we only got
(59:08):
one wood chipper and see who gets it, shall we?
All right, let me start here. Washington Post pullets are
prize winning cartoonists and obviously a seething moonbat TDS sufferer.
Speaker 3 (59:23):
Was arrested Darren Bell and he is where's he lives?
Speaker 1 (59:29):
He lives in Sacramento. And they they went in full
like full kit and arrest of this dude over eight
over What did he have? Okay? So what triggered it
is somebody uploaded eighteen files of child porn, child sexual abuse.
They ended up busting him allegedly. This is what the
(59:50):
arrest report says, with one hundred and thirty four videos
like tens of thousands of folk, I mean of just awful, awful,
fully sharing this stuff is what they're saying online, all right.
And it's ironic because Bell there's several of his cartoons
where he was literally tackling like groomer stuff, and you know,
(01:00:15):
the Nazism of Republicans calling people groomers, and you know,
it's it is really weird how so many times we
find ourselves going the loudest critics of people being critical
are telling on themselves, and then the story turns out.
Speaker 3 (01:00:32):
To be true. We don't know yet. Here, these are
just alleged. The arrest was made.
Speaker 1 (01:00:37):
They hold them on a million dollars bail though, and
remember he was arrested in California. Also, they say that
he was using an AI child porn generator. So that's
that's a new thing that's now in my memory as existing.
So that's awful. So so that's contestant number one. Contestant
(01:01:03):
number one contestant number two in a moment, let me
grab a quick phone call Hannah, what's going on?
Speaker 8 (01:01:10):
Hey, Casey Salla's calling because I'm a pediatric PA and
I see new parents all the time who just needs
all kinds of new parent advice. And one of the
biggest things I tell them is like, do not use websites.
Do not use Facebook pages to find a babysitter. Don't
post I need a babysitter. Don't get anything. This is crazy.
(01:01:32):
You can't bet people like that, you have no just
because they have a background check just can mean nothing.
It means they haven't been caught. I mean, it's just terrible.
I've had two, like in the past five years to
molest station cases from the in home daycare where it's
you know, Susie from church is watching them. But you
can't control nephew or grandson that comes in and out
of the house.
Speaker 1 (01:01:52):
All the time. I mean, but you know that, and
I know you know this, but you know the the
idea that somebody's good, if somebody's gonna mess with the.
Speaker 3 (01:02:00):
Kid, there's a huge chunk of.
Speaker 1 (01:02:02):
That that's coming from inside the family right where you
see these cases. So you're never going to be one
hundred percent, but at least you got to on those folks, right,
you gotta beat us. And I feel bad for people
who literally just want to care for kids and are
good at it and trying to expand what they're doing
because and this this creeps it out. All right, Well
(01:02:23):
that's uh, I'm sorry, but that's that's part of your
gig and I hate that you have to see it.
But yeah, this whole thing seemed weird to me, and
I appreciate you calling in there. Oof, there's no there's
no winners in any of these stories. All right, here
is contestant number two for the chip.
Speaker 3 (01:02:40):
Are you ready?
Speaker 1 (01:02:41):
An Australian social media influencer has been arrested and charged
by police after she was drugging her top. I guess
he's one, the one, Yeah, he's one. She's drugging her
own one year old. She to make videos and uh
part some of the videos look like early on like
(01:03:02):
she's trying to do the David at the dentist, But like,
what's a one year old saying? But these are prescription
drugs that she's misusing. She's using essentially her anxiety medication
and you know the stuff they give you if you're
afraid of flying and drugging her kid with it. But
then she spun it allegedly into her kids having health problems.
(01:03:24):
It's a.
Speaker 3 (01:03:27):
What's the what's the thing.
Speaker 1 (01:03:28):
Where you where you make your kids sick? Right, so
you can get the attention that goes Yeah, Munchausen by proxy.
It feels a lot like that. And so then she
would make these weepy videos about how she's a single mom.
She's just trying to raise this kid who's got all
these medical concerns, and when she sticks on the camera,
(01:03:48):
the kid looks like he's off, but it's because he's
on all this medication. So I know, I don't know
who gets the wood chipper there, man, somebody would drug
their own one old for internet clout and you know,
could have killed him very easily, could have killed him,
or the dude with the AI child porn generator, or
(01:04:12):
maybe we just need to buy more woodshippers. I don't know, man. Uh.
She's charged with five counts of administering poison. I don't
know how that stacks up in Australia, but they did.
They did hit her with a with like a top
charge of torture. You know what good I did the
math and the math doesn't math. The math I'm referring
(01:04:32):
to would be the number of minutes and or hours
necessary for our next guest, Pete Callander and I to
thoroughly go through the absolute slog that has been the
last week. But we will make every every calendar midday's WBT.
How you doing, brother?
Speaker 4 (01:04:48):
I am doing well, sir. How are you?
Speaker 1 (01:04:51):
I wish I would all. I wish we weren't drinking
out of a fire hose every day.
Speaker 4 (01:04:54):
But I have a I have a stack of prep
that is probably about two inches thick. Because I'm old school,
I print out all of my you.
Speaker 1 (01:05:06):
Know, poor Ross has to cobble the document together every night.
So yeah, so but yes, that's how our forefathers did it,
damn it, That's how we dies so exactly well.
Speaker 4 (01:05:17):
But you know what you could like I hear hosts
every now and again who run off of uh strictly
like a laptop or you know, a tablet or something,
and you can always tell when they're searching for the
tab that they had opened for the article that they
want to reference, because they're like really long pause and
(01:05:38):
they're trying to find the tab and you can hear
the clicking and stuff, and so well, so.
Speaker 3 (01:05:42):
Here's the deal.
Speaker 1 (01:05:43):
You don't I don't necessarily need a paper copy, but
I need the word document because in a word document
you have you can show the navigation pain and if you,
if you if and so when Ross puts it together,
like I'll send them all the links and then he'll
grab whatever, like in my laptop in front of me.
Now you still you still want to have paper of
(01:06:03):
your computer craps, but and you post that, and on
the left is just all of the headlines of your stories,
so you just stare over the one you want and
click over to it, whereas tabs are hard to see,
but you can see the full headlines.
Speaker 3 (01:06:16):
So so yeah, I for the middle, I agree.
Speaker 4 (01:06:20):
I use Google docs. Google documents for that very.
Speaker 3 (01:06:24):
Thing right right here, right now, right because you sent
it to me.
Speaker 6 (01:06:27):
So yeah, So.
Speaker 4 (01:06:28):
It's very helpful because it converts all the links into
the headline so you can easily find. So I've got
that open during the show in case for some reason
I come across something that I slapped into the Google document.
But that, like my Google document is now I think
thirty eight pages long of just prep links that I
don't ever get to because drinking from a fire.
Speaker 1 (01:06:48):
Hose, Yeah, that's exactly it. But there are predictive things
in this business. And now I want to point out
that Pete and I have not coordinated this conversation. I
intentionally didn't do it, but I think that Pete will
know exactly the answers to these questions. And when I
talk about predictive events, if you've been doing this as
long as you and I have been doing this, you
know that when you hit certain milestones.
Speaker 3 (01:07:10):
Dates of the year, holidays.
Speaker 1 (01:07:12):
Weekends, specific things, that there is a type of story
that you're just kind of waiting for. Okay, it's kind
of you just you know, it's you know it's coming, like.
Speaker 3 (01:07:22):
Fourth or tween. Somebody somebody's losing there.
Speaker 1 (01:07:25):
I was just going to say, how okay, So, and
again we have not coordinated this. What is the story
around Halloween that you and I both know will eventually
emerge on a college campus somewhere.
Speaker 4 (01:07:36):
What is it right somebody will have dressed in a
culturally insensitive manner and outrage will ensue.
Speaker 1 (01:07:44):
Correct, absolutely one percent. What is the story that during
it could be either as early as MLK holiday, but
will have absolutely transpired at some point by the end
of February. What is that story every year on the
food front that we know is going to happen on
(01:08:08):
the food front, Yes, yes, yes, yes, m OK or
Black History Month a food oh yeah, story that will
happen every year.
Speaker 4 (01:08:18):
Well, I mean there's going to be something involving, you know,
inappropriate use of iconic figures and maybe insensitive events that.
Speaker 3 (01:08:29):
Command the mark.
Speaker 1 (01:08:33):
You're getting swayed because the one story we have, which no, no, no,
there will inevitably be a story of a restaurant or
a cafeteria that decides to do an m l oh.
Speaker 4 (01:08:43):
Yeah yeah, yeah right, and they'll sell collared greens or something. Right, Yeah,
They'll have a they'll have a menu that has culturally
insensitive food on it, and outrage will ensue.
Speaker 1 (01:08:55):
Well, in most cases too, the foods is good, and
in most of those stories, there's not. They were doing
it to be mean, like there, right they they literally
were trying to do it too, and it just it
blew up. This year we went in a different direction
down in Atlanta. I did not see this one referencing
you didn't this I poisoned you a little with it
(01:09:16):
because this is I didn't expect to see this one.
So if you miss a part of the show in Atlanta,
a promoter who had partnered with a venue was promoting
a party which I can't read the name of, but
the you know the bill, the little flyer for it
has a a a modern in modern clothing, right. It
(01:09:38):
has a dude with like athletic clothes and big gold
chains who is right behind a woman who's bent over
a table. Clearly you know what's going on. She's wearing
a little nothing, basically little long and the name of
it implies that that he they're they're using an alternative
(01:10:00):
in that. And the heads of the figures are rows
of old rosa parks from when she's getting the Congressional
Medal of Honor the Presidential Medal of Honor, or not
medal of honor, what's the Medal of Freedom. That's the
photo from her on stage getting it. And it's that
on the on the woman's body and MLK and the
man's body. And they said, and it's the second year
(01:10:24):
they've done this party, right, what's going on?
Speaker 4 (01:10:29):
So it's so then the name of the event, but
I'll help you out with this one. Is he scared
of the cat the kitty?
Speaker 1 (01:10:39):
Yes, yes, yes, yes, right.
Speaker 4 (01:10:40):
Reloaded so yeah obviously right, yes m LK weekend celebration.
Speaker 6 (01:10:50):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:10:52):
And it's at some Ethiopian restaurant, which they look just
as an aside. They've come a long way, I would say,
because when I was a kid, you would not ever
expect to see an Ethiopian restaurant. I'm just saying due
to the current events at the time, I feel like
famine and yes, so the idea, yeah yeah, yeah, so
(01:11:14):
the idea now, I mean, and I think it is
very important that we honor progress where it occurs, because
so many times in our political culture and in our
society kind of at large, we never stop and recognize
the progress that we have made. Particularly it's bad among progressives,
ironically enough, they never think that we've actually progressed. And
(01:11:37):
so I think it's important to note that that here
they are now with restaurants in America, right, God bless America.
So there's that. Now. The other thing here is that
I like, I'm not sure who is in charge of this,
like the restaurants as I understand it, has come out
and said like we didn't do anything about this, like
we just like both.
Speaker 1 (01:11:58):
And to have a party. You and I have worked
in radio enough and and we're we have promoters, and
we have a vent whether it's spoke and the amount
of bureaucracy for us to do like a show, you
know with a guess maybe we d PAK or something like. Yeah,
everybody kind of knows what's going on. I don't think
(01:12:20):
the restaurant's off the hook, even if they didn't plan it, because.
Speaker 3 (01:12:23):
No, I'm not saying completely.
Speaker 4 (01:12:26):
Right. I'm not saying they're completely off the hook. I
don't know what the branding was like last year. Maybe
this year is different or something. But also, if this
isn't Ethiopian restaurant, I am assuming that the owners are
in fact Ethiopian. I know that's a big assumption, but
I'm just going to assume that they may not actually
And so think about think about like somebody coming from
another country, they arrive in America, they set up a
(01:12:48):
restaurant in Atlanta, I assume, or a restaurant and club
I guess, so they are catering to a clientele, right,
think about when they are presented with this poster that
they are not sort of steeped in the cultural ways
of America of the last you know, thirty forty years
(01:13:09):
or so, so all they know is what they have
recently been exposed to culturally. So when they look at
a poster of this sort, they don't see anything wrong
with it. They don't see something And again this is
not a defense to anybody that it is.
Speaker 1 (01:13:26):
This is, but you're in culture minutes, if you're in
Atlanta for five minutes, you're gonna hear about mk no.
Speaker 4 (01:13:33):
I agree, yeah, yeah, yeah, down there, yes, absolutely, no, absolutely.
But the idea though that this isn't sort of in
line with the cultural norms, I think that might be
a bit too much to ask somebody who's not from America,
and they just they're exposed to the current cultural norm
where this kind of imagery is. It's pretty normal. Not
(01:13:57):
with the faces on the bodies obviously, but like this
kind of use of the body and the selling of
sex and promiscuity and all.
Speaker 1 (01:14:06):
Of that rightsolutely right.
Speaker 4 (01:14:09):
So they get presented with this this poster, even if
they knew who Rosa Parks was by you know, by
the photo identification, right, So let's assume that they knew
that that was Rosa Parks. Think about it, that they
are in this current culture and they would not recognize
that this is egregious, right, That to me is an
(01:14:31):
indictment if true. Again, I gotta keep saying, I don't
know who the owners are, you know, what they knew,
what their body of knowledge was about these uh, these
historical figures. But if they were unaware and of who
these people are, or even if they knew who they are,
but they think that this is acceptable because of what
(01:14:51):
they see all around them all the time currently, that's
an indictment.
Speaker 3 (01:14:55):
Well, you know what, I'll meet you halfway on it.
Speaker 1 (01:15:00):
Do you know what I should do is I should
have gone instead of see how long the restaurant's been there,
you know, and they're about me?
Speaker 3 (01:15:05):
Yeah they're there twenty years?
Speaker 4 (01:15:06):
Then then yeah they should know better.
Speaker 1 (01:15:09):
Absolutely all right, I'll meet you halfway on that. And
you know what I think it is. I think that
they just have really poor planning when it comes to
bar events in Atlanta.
Speaker 3 (01:15:17):
Did you see the story a few weeks ago or
do I guess it was just.
Speaker 1 (01:15:20):
Before the bit we all kind of took our big vacation.
Speaker 3 (01:15:23):
Of the bar.
Speaker 1 (01:15:24):
It's just outside of Atlanta, and it's very rule. And
if you look at what I do you do this
when you want to look and get a sense for
a place, do you ever go to like Google Earth
and look at a street view or or if you're
on there, if you click on a restaurant and on
the Google and they they have photos, they have photos
of what it looks like when there's a bunch of
(01:15:45):
people in there, so you can get a sense of
Do they have a bar, a nice bar to sit at.
They have a pool table, even if it's not just
I use it all the time. This bar, this one
not for this one, but for this other story. So
the bar and the other story from a few weeks ago.
So it's pickup trucks, many of which have like blue
collar you know, like Mike's plumbing all that, motorcycles and
(01:16:09):
uh you know, dirt parking lot. And it looks like
it looks like it's it's uh, you know, very very
blue collar, probably a little rednecky. From the juke box
and the posters that are up there, it looks like
kind of place I'd actually like to go. And those
are the places I like. So so they hire a
band to come in and one of the singers in
(01:16:30):
the band starts screaming about killing white people, and the
owner didn't vet it well. And then it turned into
the stereotypical where they were breaking pool cues to fight eGain,
and it's the whole thing is insane. It's like I'm
looking at the bar and I'm like that, and and
(01:16:50):
every and every one of the photos it's a bunch
of it's a bunch of white people, bikers and uh,
you know, farmer looking dudes, and and so you brought
in the Bill Whitey thing. And what was so funny
is the old Eddie Murphy bit when he did the VFW.
Speaker 3 (01:17:06):
Do you remember that?
Speaker 9 (01:17:08):
No, but.
Speaker 1 (01:17:11):
If you can quickly find that he's probably doing something
else but.
Speaker 4 (01:17:14):
The jazz singer Neil Diamond, he dresses up in black face.
Speaker 1 (01:17:18):
You have you never seen the old Eddie Murphy. You
never seen the old Eddie Murphy of vf W skit
from ESSENL. It's dude, it's one of they have. It's
one of the So Eddie Murphy is part here. It
is okay?
Speaker 3 (01:17:31):
Is that the is that the no, give me the hook?
Is that the hook?
Speaker 1 (01:17:34):
Okay?
Speaker 4 (01:17:35):
Here?
Speaker 1 (01:17:35):
It is all right. So it's a there're a they're
a reggae band, and so.
Speaker 3 (01:17:39):
It's it's all a bunch of old veterans. It's all
a bunch of old veterans.
Speaker 1 (01:17:44):
And uh, and Eddie Murphy's guys go up there and
start singing this hold on, hold.
Speaker 10 (01:17:52):
On, what fun my record?
Speaker 1 (01:18:04):
All Right? He did the meme, and it's like, that
is our society now doing the meme. You saw Kirsten
gillibrand Pete Hegseth did the meme the other day with
the came for the plate of salad and all that.
So I'm going to use this transition, probably a lot
later than I should have. H What have you thought
of the confirmation hearings? Do you think anyone's been disqualified
or you think they're going to sound through?
Speaker 6 (01:18:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:18:26):
I think they're all going to get through. I think
they're I think hag Seth was the toughest one to
get through, and he did well. Yeah, he did well.
Speaker 1 (01:18:35):
Women, I'm sorry, I don't want to make this about women,
but like Democrat women, you're not doing yourself any favors.
Speaker 4 (01:18:44):
No, No, it's uh, it's yeah, it's have you heard
this term the long house? I you know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (01:18:53):
I've heard I've heard of reference from a Native American perspective,
but I think you means so, right, So what is.
Speaker 4 (01:18:57):
It about the long house? And these remember the native cultures,
the indigenous people who their their villages and their societies
were governed and led by women. And so this is
what is now kind of emerging, is this narrative if
you will that uh, like, this is what the long
house looks like? And uh, I mean yeah, like, I
(01:19:22):
like there is a way to you know, express passion
and uh and emotion and you know, lay into account
for me or something. But there's also a line that
you shouldn't cross when it turns into shrieking, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:19:40):
And you're telling on your stuff because you don't think
you can compete unless you do that. That's what's that's
what's crazy about it, right, Yeah, you have to do
that even though your male counterparts are being equally as
jerkish and bringing up irrelevant stuff, but you feel you
have to do it at a higher decibel, right.
Speaker 4 (01:19:58):
And yeah, and that's the thing. We all know what
these hearings are about. They're all going to get confirmed,
it looks like, and what these hearings are about is
creating the thirty second clip so you can send it
out to your big time donors and then they all
know that you're fighting for them and they'll throw you
some more money. That's that's all these things are good for,
I think at this point. I honestly though, the best
(01:20:19):
one I saw was Rubio's Marco Rubios, where I guess
because he is a senator and he has good relationships
with the people that you know, he served with that
it was actually a discussion about like geopolitics and American
posture toward the rest of the world. It was actually
very substantive. It was three hours long, but I enjoyed it.
Speaker 1 (01:20:38):
Why look, I watched a whole bunch of Democrats Republicans
who were asking substantive questions. I appreciate that there's also
Republican posturing, but it's just oh yeah, so all right,
I got a roll. And by the way, shriek skull,
Kirsten Gillibran shriek scolding hag Seth over drinking is hilarious.
But that's for another day. All right, Pete, have a
good weekend. Brother who wants to talk about exploding livestock?
(01:21:12):
Raise your all of you, Okay, good, good, good good.
But we're not gonna start there. But I'm gonna go
there because, yes, even though I don't live in Wyoming anymore,
that's where I come from. And uh, there's a So
I follow the news and there's a there's an interesting
story out there, and I went to go read it,
(01:21:32):
the latest update on it, because it sounds like the
thing's getting approved. And the comments were insane. People are upset,
and they got all different things, and then they started
pulling up old stuff and going, well, there's a way
you can't trust wyomingites. They blow up horses. So don't worry.
(01:21:54):
It's all gonna make sense.
Speaker 3 (01:21:55):
Here we go.
Speaker 1 (01:21:56):
So this is interesting. One of the things we know
about the windmills, the big you know, the big wind turbines,
is the blades have a lifespan, and when you take
them apart, it is they generally just they it's landfill city, man.
They're not reusing them. It's you know, it's the part
(01:22:16):
of green energy that they don't dwell upon. You know,
where it's eating all the eagles and then there's massive
amounts of waste. But there is so what do you
do with those blades? Well, some lawmakers in Wyoming had
an idea because Wyoming has their own issue when it
comes to energy production, albeit of the older school variety.
(01:22:37):
If any of you have ever spent any time out
in Wyoming around the Gillette area, they have mines, including
the largest open faced coal mine in the world.
Speaker 3 (01:22:51):
And it's not close.
Speaker 1 (01:22:52):
In fact, if you're in Gellette and you go on
the old highway like five ten miles towards Claremont and
Flow where I'm from, which is like ninety miles away,
you are presented with the that mine and it's right
alongside the road.
Speaker 3 (01:23:09):
In fact, there's like a pull off rest stop.
Speaker 1 (01:23:11):
And then these and then there's a viewing tower. It's
just and i'll describe it's like a platform for speakers
or whatever. And you walk up there and you look
down in this thing. When you look down, you see
what looks like a regular sized dump truck, but it's
so far down. It's one where you if you stood
next to it, your head wouldn't come up to the
(01:23:31):
middle of the wheel. And you and so on many occasions,
me and my buddies a stare down into that thing
just because I don't know, we're dudes whatever. But once
you're done with that particular mine. And there are two
where they start on a new hole. They have to
backfill it, but they don't have enough earth to backfill
(01:23:53):
it because there's the earth they took.
Speaker 3 (01:23:56):
But once they hit the coal and you can see
the coal, it's pure coal.
Speaker 1 (01:24:00):
There's so much and that's all been extracted and utilized.
So now what do you fill it with? Well, some
lawmaker in Wyoming is like, hey, what if we we
offer essentially a hole for them to throw all.
Speaker 3 (01:24:16):
Their stupid old blades in.
Speaker 1 (01:24:17):
We charge them a crap ton of money that and
then we don't have to pay for, you know, having
to fill it in with other stuff, and then we
save money and make money at the same time. It's
that fiscal responsibility in Wyoming I love so much. So
who would hate on this? Apparently everybody because it's got
the word coal in it.
Speaker 3 (01:24:40):
It's just the dumbest stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:24:41):
And then somebody decided to roll the exploding horse hand grenade.
I have heard this insult for as long as I right,
as long as I've been alive, as long as I
paid attention to this stuff, and I realized people don't
know about this very much. But let me, let me
explain it. Really, it got some prominence here. I don't
(01:25:04):
know about a year ago. I don't think we did
it on the air, but in in Wyoming rangers forest
rangers because of how dry it was announced that they
would cease or temporarily cease uh A, something that they do,
(01:25:26):
and that is blowing up dead horses. And I know true,
you're like, what why would you literally detonate a horse carcass? Okay,
they're not killing the horses. Are these are either these
are horses that they utilize and then the horse dies.
But they're up at they're in patrol cabins. A patrol
(01:25:47):
cabins up in the Shoshone wilderness there. That's where these
rangers come in. And if you've got a horseback country falls,
gets injured, has to be put down. What do you
do with the carcass? And you don't leave it? And
the reason you don't leave it is because if it's
in proximity to where you are, you're going to be
in proximity to grizzly bears and wolves in a minute.
(01:26:10):
So I'm not making this up. In fact, there is
a there is little There are documents that you can
get from the US Forest Service that give you a
tutorial on how to.
Speaker 3 (01:26:24):
Blow up a horse.
Speaker 2 (01:26:25):
No, I encountered this, Actually, no I did. I'm being serious. So, okay,
like two thousand and three, I took a job I
was working in Omha, Nebraska. I took a job at
a radio station in Salt Lake City and I drive through. Yeah,
there was about I don't know, I want to say,
fifteen to twenty minute span when I'm driving through Wyoming
and it was just raining cattle parts onto my car.
Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
Okay, that's I remember, like fifteen the big thud. Damn,
Like is that like a hoof? Yeah, it's free meat.
So all right, I'm sorry that happened to you. That's
that thing that totally happened. I'm sorry that happened to you. No, No,
this is serious and many and we don't explain if
we have a cow die.
Speaker 3 (01:27:06):
Here's the deal.
Speaker 1 (01:27:07):
On a ranch, you'll have what's called a boneyard usually
and so and it's it's as far away from one
where the higher elevation, but two you want it as
far away obviously of where you're going to be on
the regular. And while we don't explode a dead cow,
we'll load them up in the front loader or whatever
(01:27:29):
or whatever we need, pop them on, drive them out there,
and then carcass there and you can burn them. Now
I'm such a jerk. What I would do is I
drop the carcass there because we don't have down that
lower part the proximity. They're probably gonna get a grizzly
bear down there. I get some wolves, but but I'm
(01:27:50):
looking for coyotes, baby, So if we had a cow die,
I'd be sad, but I'd also be happy cause now
I'm gonna put that fresh carcass there and you show
up and there's bones of cows. There's bones of cows,
just bacon in the sun there from my great grandparents.
Because we don't have a lot of critters that eat
bones and antlers like you see it like North Carolina's
(01:28:11):
got a lot.
Speaker 3 (01:28:12):
We don't have a lot of.
Speaker 1 (01:28:12):
Forest floor and so we don't like That's why you
can find shed hoorns. I found a shed horns that's calcified.
That's amazing. That's clearly from an elk from probably before
I was born. They just don't go away. And I'd
put the carcass there and then about two hundred yards away.
There's this like this very random rise, little butte looking thing,
(01:28:36):
and you can I can drive up on top of
it and I go up there and at dusk and
me and my buddies would just be sitting there shooting
the breeze and then we just slay in coyotes man,
which in Wyoming, even if you're not a resident, you
don't need to tag for it. They're considered varmits. So yeah,
and then eventually you gotta go and you hit it
(01:28:57):
with the gasoline and you burn it, and you stand
Aroundbviously it's control burn and then there you go. That's
but they can't burn it when they're up in that stuff.
So they literally explode the horse. And there is a guy.
There's literally a guide to do it that the Forest
Service publishes. I'm not making this side. In fact, I
said it to Ross so he could confirm that it
(01:29:18):
is a thing I did.
Speaker 3 (01:29:20):
I not send you any how to explode horses.
Speaker 2 (01:29:23):
You send me the PDF and it's like a blueprint
of how to properly blow up a horse. And that
reminded me of my drive through I know, my.
Speaker 1 (01:29:30):
Yeah, because like because I kid you not, You're like,
why would why would you need a guy. It shows
you where to place the explosives. But most importantly, you
got to strip the horse first. Uh, if they're shod,
you got to take those shoes off. You're going to
get killed by a fly and shoe.
Speaker 2 (01:29:46):
Plus, you don't want it to be like those idiots
in Oregon with the whale.
Speaker 3 (01:29:50):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (01:29:50):
That's why I'm so judgmental of the whale because obviously
those rookies didn't know what they're doing. Now have I
seen a carcass, a horse carcass, Yes, I have. I
have watched it. It wasn't by the forest Service that
did it. One of the ranchers did it. And he
did it because it was a thing that there's a
(01:30:11):
frigging guide showing you how to do, and he had
some explosives. So what are you gonna do? And you
know what, pretty efficient that. Don't get me wrong. You're
still gonna have scavengers in there. But because it spreads
it out and there's a couple other things you do
where you kind of dig around there, you can you
can mitigate a lot of the the predators from coming in.
(01:30:32):
It's just it sounds crazy, but it's like it makes sense.
If you understand trying to mitigate an encounter with the
grizzly bear, which you don't want.
Speaker 3 (01:30:45):
None of.
Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
You want none of that. I've and down the lower
part of the property. I think my entire lifetime, I
saw only one brown bear. And I'm not even sure
of it. I'm seventy five percent because he was so
far away. But the body size was so big. It
couldn't have been a black bear because they just don't
get that big. And or we been a black bear
(01:31:09):
that was in more of a browner phase, which we
have a lot of in Wyoming. So yeah, yeah, there's
reasons you do this stuff, and then people use as
an insult and they don't understand that it is wild
and it happens to this day. Okay, that we all
learned something. And for those of you have a horse
that's getting near the end, maybe you got some ideas.
(01:31:31):
I don't know if that's legal in North Carolina. Look
it up Ken Boon for the Weather Channel. Got he's
got some weather here and you're not gonna like it
anyway unless.
Speaker 3 (01:31:41):
You're a weirdo who likes to freeze.
Speaker 1 (01:31:43):
So what's up man?
Speaker 6 (01:31:45):
Not much?
Speaker 5 (01:31:45):
We do have some rain, that's gonna head in this weekend,
followed by really cold air looking towards next week. Sunshine
out there today, so a nice finish here to the week.
Temperatures into low fifties this afternoon. Clouds expected to roll
in tonight, low to mid thirties, rain tomorrow. Best chance
will be through the first part of the day, the afternoon,
I think, mad extu to see some sunshine. Temperatures tomorrow
into the middle part of the fifties. Chance to shower
(01:32:06):
Sunday to finish the weekend upper forties, and then he
gets really cold as we head into early next week.
Clearing sky's force on Sunday night. Temperatures on Sunday night
head it all the way down to near twenty degrees
thirty two for a high on Monday.
Speaker 1 (01:32:22):
All right, thank you sir, having good weekend you too. Yeah. Oh,
and by the way, it's not just horses. Also, if
they come across a moose or an elk carcass, they'll
blow that thing up too. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:32:34):
Let's uh oh is that? How crazy?
Speaker 1 (01:32:36):
Is that what they're doing at Chris Christie's funeral when
it happened? Come on, sir, I mean, maybe what if
what if some dude road in his will that's what
he wanted, would you have to follow it? Because like,
what does it matter? He just wants to go out
with a bang. See what I did there? No, okay,
all right, we'll be back. Hang on three day weekend
coming up, Jeff. I'm assuming for you as well, So
(01:32:56):
let's make it a good one. What's up.
Speaker 11 (01:32:58):
Yeah, we'll get a good start to today's session. At
least that's what the futures are suggesting a case. S
and P futures are up forty Nasdaq futures or up
two hundred sixty one in the Dow futures or up
two hundred and thirty three. Just got a report that
homebuilders were at work on a lot of new projects
last month. The government reports housing starts surge nearly sixteen
(01:33:20):
percent in December. A three percent increase was expected. The
report says groundbreakings for multifamily projects were especially strong. The
jump and mortgage interest rates sent pending home sales lower
last month. Redfinn says pending sales were down four and
a half percent from November. That was the biggest month
over month declined since twenty twenty two. Mortgage interest rates
(01:33:43):
moved even higher this month, so that could mean more
trouble for housing sales. Now appears TikTok will be around
for at least a while longer, even if the Supreme
Court upholds the ban scheduled to take effect on Sunday.
The timing of the band works in TikTok's favor. It
comes on a Holly Day weekend, just ahead of Inauguration Day,
and Donald Trump has said he will allow more time
(01:34:05):
for the app's Chinese parent company to divest. American Express
settled charges related to its sales practice. The company will
pay two hundred and thirty million dollars in penalties. The
Justice Department had accused MX of using deceptive practices to
sell products to small businesses. Those practices were discontinued in
twenty twenty one. United Healthcare will pay two and a
(01:34:28):
half million dollars to settle charges that it violated the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act by placing telemarketing calls to non
members after attorney's fees or paid. The remainder of the
settlement will be distributed to more than twelve thousand plaintiffs
with valid claims, so no Hawaii vacations coming there In Casey.
A new report is fueling debate over whether calorie labels
(01:34:51):
are worth keeping. Researchers looked at twenty five studies from
the US, UK, France, and other nations. They found that
posting calorie information and supermarkets and restaurants has just a
minimal impact on consumers food choices. Having the dietary information
available resulted in an average calorie reduction less than two percent.
(01:35:11):
One review says, that's like removing two almonds from a
six hundred calorie meal.
Speaker 1 (01:35:16):
Casey, every little bit and every little bit, Okay, maybe
a little more would be I needed there. Jeff, have
yourself a good long weekend. We'll talk Tuesday, sir.
Speaker 11 (01:35:25):
Okay, you have a good one too, Casey, take care.
Speaker 1 (01:35:27):
There you go. Jeff Ellinger, Bloomberg News, oh man, oh man.
All right. Let me.
Speaker 3 (01:35:36):
I'm gonna try to fit all this stuff in.
Speaker 9 (01:35:37):
All right.
Speaker 1 (01:35:38):
We have lost a couple Folk director David Lynch. You
either love him or hate him. I like me some
David Lynch, but it's those movies are going to be strange.
Has passed away. Also. Bob Youuker, Bob Youker, Yes, everybody
you know this.
Speaker 3 (01:35:58):
This thing is really getting.
Speaker 1 (01:35:59):
Kind of serious.
Speaker 3 (01:36:00):
No, I haven't been able to locate Vana White.
Speaker 9 (01:36:02):
And I was supposed to a Hi Andrey my good buddy.
Speaker 1 (01:36:07):
Because Ross has a clip involving wrestling for every potential
news story. Why are you laughing? I was?
Speaker 7 (01:36:16):
I was.
Speaker 2 (01:36:17):
I was sad to hear of his passing yesterday, But
as soon as it happened, I said to myself, I
have a clip of him in the system with Andre
the Giant from WrestleMania three.
Speaker 1 (01:36:26):
All right, hold on, let me.
Speaker 3 (01:36:27):
Finish your clip.
Speaker 9 (01:36:27):
You got me, you got the Giant, the only profession
the wrestler was still undefeated and all Fulgan, I'm put
to be it because now that did yes all his
way up. That's why you're paying me for to keep
you out of the tournament, Olgan. And you are and
(01:36:48):
I know one thing, and that's why the people go
to know through and that's why they go to remumber.
You are the ex shopion.
Speaker 1 (01:36:57):
Hell are you there? You have it?
Speaker 3 (01:36:59):
I still haven't found.
Speaker 9 (01:37:00):
Yes, champion, don't worry about Vana White. Now I'll throw
hidden all faminga is all the.
Speaker 1 (01:37:13):
How about getting here?
Speaker 3 (01:37:14):
How about getting your foot off my shoulder?
Speaker 1 (01:37:20):
All right? And because I don't want to cheat Rossa,
and he has had a cut in the system for years,
anticipating this day.
Speaker 2 (01:37:27):
As a kid, I saw that happen to Live a
wrestling at three, and I'm like, I'm like, that guy's
gonna kill Bob Buker. Yeah, and I'm like, man, Bob Buker,
really he's really into Vana White?
Speaker 1 (01:37:36):
Why is that? Oh?
Speaker 4 (01:37:38):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:37:39):
And then of course you know major League. There's so
many good quotes there, so very sad there. But yes,
just as there's a fetish for everything on the internet,
there's a wrestling cut for all the stories we do,
uh clogging our next gen system