Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Dana Lashes of surd Truth podcast sponsored by Keltech.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida Man. That's right.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
This is Craig Collins filling in on the Dana Show.
Time for Florida Man. I'm actually now technically a Florida man.
We have just relocated to Florida, so I will be
living in this place where I'm gonna see a lot
of this awesome stuff. I assume two quick ones. First,
a Florida man threatened stormwater maintenance workers with a machete
for blocking the road. This is from w FLA in Florida.
(00:40):
Not a good move usually to go full machete and
to yell at people for certain things.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
It's probably not gonna work out for you.
Speaker 1 (00:46):
I don't know where you have the machete too, how
you store it, what decisions you make to make sure
it's by your side throughout the totality of your day,
just in case you need to threaten somebody. No one
was hurt, luckily, and the guy is in trouble for
well a lot of things. I don't think that also
makes people work faster. We've had several versions of that story.
Recently out of Florida where people are noticing, say, and granted,
(01:11):
there's been so many difficult things with all the hurricanes
recently and all the digging out and then having to
get hit again. Luckily, even though Milton was bad, none
of it feels anywhere near as bad as Ian does.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
To people I talked to in the area.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
So truthfully, it's still not good, but it's nowhere near
as bad as it's been in the past. So there's
some weird silver lining in that. But maybe it's just
people being so angry. I'm now defending Florida man. I
got here and immediately my mentality is to try to
defend them.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
I guess I should leave it be.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
But maybe that mentality the frustration is overboard and the
guy also has a machete. The other story, a man
faces over five hundred charges for allegedly dealing stolen items.
Speaker 2 (01:52):
He violated He violated pawnbroker laws.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
He does not have any TV show, any pawnbroking thing
out there in order to do this with. But CBS
News reported on this one that's not going to go well,
that's that's a lot of charges. You're going to struggle
just a bit in court to go through all of them.
I wonder how you even go through that. Do you
do you read them all off one at a time,
and then when he's eventually either convicted or found innocent,
(02:17):
do you again go through them one at a time?
Does the jury get asked for five hundred different questions?
I'm not sure. I don't really want to know.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
I imagine he's just gonna plead guilty, because why not.
This makes no sense.
Speaker 1 (02:28):
You gotta have some licenses and stuff in order to
open a pawnbroking shop. You can't just tell people to
drop stuff off at your house or place that you're
renting and then sell it to other people. That's not
how it works, even if Facebook Marketplace makes you think that.
Oh by the way, real quick side note caveat selling
things on fake Facebook marketplace is horrific. It's the worst
(02:51):
experience in the world. As someone who recently moved and
did some of that with some of our stuff that
we were getting rid of. So many people click the
button is this available, and then never talk to you again.
I don't know what version of the world that would
be like if we had to deal with this in
real life, but I think anyone who does something stupid
(03:11):
on the Internet should be subject to that exact behavior
in their real life to see if they like it.
Because what I'd love to do is find every one
of the people that asked me if the things I
was selling was still available, and for a day hound
them with.
Speaker 2 (03:25):
Is this still available? Is this still available?
Speaker 1 (03:27):
And then not answer any other questions and not talk
to them at all. It is the most annoying. I
don't know who else has done it recently. Facebook get
rid of that feature. Do not allow people to click
a button asking if something is available. Just assume that
anyone selling stuff on your website has it available, and
if it's not available, they'll go ahead and take it
down off of your website.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
Just do that for me, please.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
And if they don't do that, then when someone else
asks a different question other than is this available, guess what,
they still wind up with the same answer, I'm sorry,
it's not available. That's fine, we can live in that world.
It's so annoying. I couldn't get over how terrible it was.
There were moments where I just wanted to leave stuff
just on the side of the street, because it'd be
better than having a stranger pay me some amount of
(04:10):
money for it because of how annoying it was. But
that's real, and I don't know how that works in
Florida compared to other places like Illinois that I was
living in, but I assume this is a thing that
happens all over the place. I was tempted to do
one more story in the Florida Man segment that is
not a Florida Man story, but I'll hold it. I'll
save it for you till later. But there was a
hot pocket attack. This happened in Boston, not in Florida.
(04:33):
I feel like this is appropriate to happen in places
all throughout where I now am, So maybe we'll see
it in the near future.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
Maybe it's not news because it happens every day.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
But essentially, a guy was attacked with a hot pocket
and it was reported on beautifully by Boston News.
Speaker 2 (04:46):
So we'll get to that later today. Not here.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
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Speaker 2 (05:57):
All right, let's move on to this.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
John car ABC News surprised how well Trump did in
Madison Square Garden.
Speaker 4 (06:05):
I was there for about six hours yesterday.
Speaker 3 (06:07):
First thing I've got to say, Madison Square Garden was packed.
Speaker 5 (06:12):
People waited hours to get in.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
They sat through hour after hour of this rally.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
They were fervent in their devotion to all things Trump.
Speaker 5 (06:20):
Trump has created a movement. There is no doubt. I
cannot think of another Republican figure of my lifetime who
could have come into a democratic city like New York
and put together anything like.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
That, anything at all like what Trump did. Absolutely, I
think a lot of us agree with him that the
ability to do that, and honestly, just to demonstrate that
he could, because it doesn't really feel like he's actually
trying to fight to win New York. I don't think
people would make that argument, but to have a sellout crowd.
They sang God bless America at one point, which is
(06:51):
as somebody who was born in New Jersey, somebody who
certainly remembers specific times that we all remember in our
country and our world, And how much America came together
after nine to eleven support for New York and support
for America as a whole was incredible. And honestly, I'm
also a Yankee fan that hasn't been going so well
(07:13):
the last couple of days. Although Game three is tonight
and hopefully things I go better this evening for the Yankees,
But I vividly remember after nine to eleven watching on TV,
wasn't able to go to the game myself, and seeing
the way in which America kind of surrounded themselves, even
in the Yankees, even in a World series, and things
going on at that time, and the support for the
(07:35):
city itself and the firefighters and police officers, first responders,
because we pictured that community being like any other community
in our country, anyone else in the world, dealing with
what they were dealing with and struggling the way they did.
Speaker 2 (07:50):
And so God bless America, saying.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
At Yankee games now because of that, because of nine
to eleven, And so it's just sort of surreal to
see the people of New York, at least the people
who go out up in Madison Square Garden, creating that
same environment of you know, patriotism that exists only in
certain moments for a lot of our society, very much
to the detriment I would say, of our society as
(08:13):
a whole.
Speaker 2 (08:14):
All right, Another thing.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
I want to play because even though you could take
that version of a conversation or that version of a
path on describing what Madison Square Garden with Trump at
the forefront.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Of it was. You can also say this stuff if
you're AOC was not.
Speaker 5 (08:30):
This was a hate rally. This was not just a
presidential rally. This was also not just a campaign rally.
I think it's very important for people to understand that
these are many January sixth rallies. These are many stop
the Steel rallies. These are rallies to prime an electorate
into rejecting the results of an election if it doesn't
(08:50):
go the way that they want. Because Donald Trump and
that entire cadre of people up on that stage, Stephen Miller,
do not respect the law of the United States of America.
Speaker 2 (09:05):
Don't respect it. They don't respect us.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
She is so mad that this successfully happened so close
to her turf in New York City. She's so upset
about that, you can tell in the way in what
she talks about it. And Democrats are calling it a
hate rally. Democrats are saying that Trump went to extremes
in order to discuss his positions on things. Now, I'll
tell you one, just honest for anyone that's never been
(09:30):
to New York City or lived in New York City
or understand it at all. The collection of people there
as massive as you can probably guess, and people's opinions
are all over the place. But you watch something like
a Saturday Night Live, for example, and especially early on,
they're making jokes about Joe Biden and the crowd goes silent.
There's a lot of New York that winds up showing
(09:51):
itself in a certain way in these moments, and then
you have a Trump rally with that amount of people
responding to the things he's saying. Yes, he did say
that if a migrant I think was the word he chose,
killed a cop, that he would push for the death
penalty as a punishment for someone who took the life
of a police officer. Now, granted, that's the moment that's
getting played all over media by the left to try
(10:13):
to claim that this was a hate rally and that
was the entirety of the discussion, which it was not.
But more importantly, and this is the only way I
can say this, and I can play the audio again,
but I'm not even going to play it.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
That's what he said.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
There was a time in our society again around nine
to eleven, where support for cops and firefighters was so
through the roof, and honestly for years and years, for
decades before that, that if a cop was hurt in
the line of duty, it was the kind of thing
that a community rallied around, and the community wanted the
person to be held responsible. They wanted the punishment to
fit the crime. Whatever narrative that takes for you in
(10:50):
your own life. And so it's sort of surreal to
think that the things that Trump is saying are shaped
the way they're shaped by media because they intentionally misrepresent
the core of the idea and they sort of love
to dabble in what is a change society for some people.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
I don't know if the death penalty is the right
decision or not.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
A mechtholic part of me says certain things in my
brain as far as my religion goes, no matter what
the crime was, the pope infamous or famously forgave someone
a form of prope for shooting him, Pope John Paul.
So there's something about that. But nonetheless, regardless of if
that's the line for you or not, or however you
(11:33):
go through that part of the discussion, a significant punishment,
a tremendously negative punishment for someone who kills a cop
in our country that's not here legally shouldn't be as controversial.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
Of a statement as it is.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
But it's because they want to paint that as well,
now they hate anyone from another country.
Speaker 2 (11:49):
That's not true.
Speaker 1 (11:51):
If you are completely fine with legal immigration, you're completely
fine with this, that, and all these other things that
exist in our world, and you only have a problem
with someone who's a criminal who hurts a cop, as
like the reason to get the punishment.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
To be what it is, Why would that It's sort
of a here.
Speaker 1 (12:09):
I know I'm not getting my point out, Well, let
me try one more time, because I want to.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
Make sure this is crystal clear.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
It'd be like being in the middle of an argument
and someone just deciding that anything you're saying, any of
the topic of discussion is irrelevant, and like kicking you
in the face. I love that version of a thing,
and then only wanting to talk about how mad you
are that you got kicked in the face, not not
even taking blame themselves, Like, yeah, I kicked you in
the face, but so what look at how mad you are?
Look at how mean of a person you are just
(12:37):
because somebody kicked.
Speaker 2 (12:38):
You in the face that one time.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
That's what this is, That's what this discussion is is
is the point matters but needs to be forgotten, so
the emotion has to take control, and the emotion has
to then be blamed on things that have nothing to
do with what you're talking about in the first place.
I hope that made more sense. I hope we got
there and now all of the news you would probably
miss time for Dana's quick five.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
That's right where cruising along. We're doing great.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Does masculinity shorten your life span? A study suggests manly
men are at higher risk of heart problems.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
This feels somewhat.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
As if it was intentionally put out there into the world,
although studyfinds dot org is not necessarily a place that
I think has a political sway or agenda. It depends
on what you define as toxic masculinity, which is just
a crap term that's us so often in the world.
But researchers from the University of Chicago say there was
a pattern that begins in adolescence and continues through adulthood,
(13:36):
which potentially puts certain men at greater risk of heart issues.
These are men who are more prone to certain types
of I love how this is described male behavior like
risk taking and whatnot or adrenaline junkies. High blood pressure
and diabetes are also issues they see more with men.
But you know what's so funny about this. The thing
(13:58):
that's missing, and I think a product of the toxic
masculinity conversation, is people are in like good shape, people
who work out, people who behave like the kind of
individuals that would fight to protect you or fight to
protect this country. The alpha men. They're not in this list.
They're not part of the toxic masculinity group that's suffering
with health issues because oh yeah, by being that health
(14:20):
conscious you actually are doing quite well for a lot
of your life. They're more talking about the people who
have certain mental versions of approaching life that might not
actually match their physical ability. People like me, I guess,
who jump off of peers in high school and college
into freezing cold water that you shouldn't do. Guys like
friends of mine who jumped off of roofs of houses
(14:43):
into pools.
Speaker 2 (14:44):
Just the stupid things that you do.
Speaker 1 (14:46):
But that's not a totality or not a full description
of I think toxic masculinity. So it's kind of amusing
that in order to get to this point in this study,
they left out a lot of the people who probably
are not struggling with any of this. More of quick
five stuff. Google is developing AI that can take over
your computer information is reporting on this finance Yahoo. I
think ran the story to essentially the Google AI would
(15:10):
realize that your computer needs to not be run by
you or and then just do their own thing. It's
called Project Jarvis, which is a reference to Marvel stuff
and Jarvis who eventually in one of those Marvel movies
became his own sentient being. And that would be just crazy,
and it seems.
Speaker 2 (15:28):
To be the path we're barreling toward.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
For whatever reason, wealthier Americans are paying millions to age
in luxury campuses. Is another viral story. This was from
the Wall Street Journal. This is not something I would
blame anyone for spending money on personally, But if you
have the cash, and you don't want to grow old
in your house that you've been in a long time,
(15:51):
no matter what darnet nostalgia feelings you have about it,
but you'd much rather age somewhere fancy with the professionals
around you that can help you. More and more Americans
are choosing to go this road. This might be I
know this is supposed to be a quick five and
a lighter set of topics, but it might also be
a reflection of the difference in family today and in
years in the past. Maybe more people are less connected
(16:14):
to their family, and for that reason, they don't feel
they could be taken care of by being at home
with loved ones. I don't know if that's true, but
it feels like it could be a byproduct of choosing
to spend a ton of money to live somewhere that's awesome,
which I again would probably do myself, as opposed to
living somewhere that has say you know less of the
cool things that you would have living in some of
(16:36):
these fancy complexes. And then one other thing I thought
this was interesting a viral story about a super rat
that was spotted on a Spirit Airlines flight inside a
light fixture.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
The super rat may have actually been.
Speaker 1 (16:49):
A raccoon and not a rat at all, but it
was giant and it was very happy to be living
inside a Spirit flight. I don't know if there's any
sort of extra charge to remove the rat from.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
Your or the area near you, the light fixture near you.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
In Spirit, I feel like they would charge for that,
maybe the whole plane would get together completely into it.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
But I just love how viral this story went and how.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
Crazy this thing looks. It's either a very small raccoon
or a very giant rat. Neither scenario is very good
to have with you on an airline. To have with
you on a flight, I feel like Samuel L. Jackson
might start in the next version of this next movie.
But nonetheless, what I really love about it is the
fact that as they're looking at this, it was Spirit,
(17:30):
Because most people would not have been surprised if you
had to guess the airline and I told you the
story without the airline. I think people's first guest, unfortunately,
would have been Spirit Airlines, because well, okay, I don't
have to explain that any further.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
Hope they're not a sponsor. This is the Dana Show.
Speaker 1 (17:46):
My name is Craig Collins, filling in, Thrilled to be
with you. A bunch of stuff as always to talk about,
although actually I just found out producer Steven was at
a heck of a football game yesterday a game that
actually beat the crap out of the Chicago Bear. Here,
I'll play the audio real quick. I do want to
do this first before we get to anything else.
Speaker 3 (18:04):
Comes down to one last play, and it's gonna be
getting longer by the second.
Speaker 4 (18:11):
You're all the way back at the thirty yard line.
Now you get step into it. Here comes to hail
Mary with the game on the line and the balls
to it's a mirror Cole that it's insane.
Speaker 5 (18:26):
Oh my goodness, this town is going crazy.
Speaker 2 (18:32):
Yes, and you were there going crazy, Steven? Is that right?
Speaker 5 (18:35):
I was.
Speaker 4 (18:35):
I was with the Bears fan, so he wasn't excited
to see what happened.
Speaker 2 (18:38):
But it was a.
Speaker 4 (18:41):
Great moment.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
What well, what happened for you?
Speaker 1 (18:44):
Like after did your phone get blown up with people
asking you how you could be at the game? Were
you one of the people that holds up your cell
phone and you're taping it or are you actually doing
the good thing and watching it like a human being
in an event that doesn't need a record of it yourself.
Speaker 4 (18:58):
I watched it happened, and then about thirty seconds later
I pulled my phone out to get there because they
were still hollering and cheering for a while, so oh yeah,
I got like thirty seconds of it at the app
and then I was as soon as I got self
service walking into the train and my phone blew up
and our fantasy group chat was just going nuts because
it's a lot of Commanders fans around here.
Speaker 1 (19:16):
So sure, so, not only does fantasy football probably get
impacted by that, a lot of other things getting packed
by that.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
You know, I've only.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
Been to one, you know, Marquee Sports moment in my life.
I've seen a lot of games, but not ones that
are terribly significant. I was in the student section and
people might not know about this, for the Bush push
when Notre Dame lost to USC, when USC was ranked
number one with the very last play of a football
game because Reggie Bush shoved Matt Lioner into an end
(19:45):
zone and I was on the field as some students were.
I was not a Notre Dame student. I was a
Holy Cross student. You were allowed to have tickets and
go to the game like cheering, thinking we won, and
then one more play gets run. They make all the
students get into the tunnel. You watch horrifically the other
side of the end zone as the team loses and
then you walk out very sad. That was a national
(20:06):
story and I was there. There's something cool about being
at those. You now get to be at one that's
a national story too. Is there anything you take away
from it yourself that experience?
Speaker 4 (20:16):
I don't know. This team hasn't been good in this
town for a while, like a long time, and it's
nice to see like there's some culture and people are
actually excited. It's cool to see.
Speaker 1 (20:24):
Yes, yeah, they probably won't have a lot of Hail
Mary wins, to be honest, and the Bears, who are
known for their defense, probably don't feel so good today
after the way that you lose that game. I was
amazed at how open he was at the end of
that play though, you know, in all honesty, like to
have that one player for the Commanders just standing in
the end zone behind the ruckus where the ball is
(20:45):
falling to be able to catch that pass like that,
like that almost never happens where it's just one dude
by himself being like, I don't know, if the ball
bounces a certain way, maybe I'll get it.
Speaker 4 (20:56):
Yeah, dude, I mean the guy that tipped it into
the Noah Brown hands was like chirping the fans on
the sidelines before and he didn't even know the ball
was snapped, right, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
It's crazy, all right, Well, thank you man, after you
told me that you were there, and I know that
was a big story and a lot of people were
paying attention to it. And actually, if I'm going to
take a slight break from serious topics, yes, where just
a few days away from the election, and everyone is
talking about, or at least should be talking about pull numbers.
Everything is demonstrating that the election is at the forefront
(21:26):
of our minds, but it really is only a very
simple topic. Who do you think is better suited to
run the country for the next four years, Kamala Harris,
someone who couldn't even run a presidential campaign to gain
a nomination, or someone who's been in that role before
after everything has gone so poorly. I can oversimplify that
because I kind of want to talk about one other
(21:47):
sports thing. The Dwayne Wade statue has been viral. It's
made the rounds all over the internet. Dwayne Wade was
standing there in front of the statue the other day
talking about how he couldn't believe, you know, that he
had a statue he actually seemed like genuinely moved by it,
and I think at one point Dwayne Wade said, like,
who is that guy? But sadly that was actually the
(22:09):
question for a lot of people watching, and I saw that.
I think some people on some of the broadcast sports
stations claimed that it looks better in person than any
of the photos make it look. But it looks horrendous.
It's not if you google it right now and check
it out. The face of the Dwayne Wade statue, which
is an iconic moment in his own basketball career, unfortunately
(22:32):
also against Chicago sports team. So apparently today a lot
of the Marquee Sports stories involve teams from Chicago losing
and stuff.
Speaker 2 (22:42):
But that is what it is.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
But what I think is so interesting about it he
just looks like an old guy. Part of it looks
like it's supposed to be much more beard than the
sort of stubbly look that Dwayne Wade has. And then
the face, the eyes, the nose, everything, the way that
he crumples his face, and I guess it's supposed to
look as though he's in that moment where he's saying
not in this house, or I think this is our house.
(23:07):
I can't remember exactly what the phrase is, but as
Dwayne Wade is pointing to the ground and saying, like,
you know, we just won this game, they made him
look old, not someone who's in moments of joy. Like
everything about his face doesn't look like someone who's squinting
or are squishing his face because he's happy. It looks
like father time has wreak t havoc on him. He
(23:28):
looked younger, saying thank you for his statue. Then he
looks behind him like, you know, looking at the statue,
and I wonder how much of a gut page that is.
And Dwayne Wade won't say it, but if any of
us are ever to have a statue, which very few
of us ever will get in our lifetimes, we want
it to be the epitome of when we looked our best.
(23:48):
I would think, I think you'd want to look at
it me like that was me as a young man.
Speaker 2 (23:52):
You know.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
I would bring my wife to the statue, essentially pointed
it and say, look, honey, that's the man you married
back when he was in his prime.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
It's not what Dwayne Wade got.
Speaker 1 (24:01):
Dwayne Wade got a very different experience version of that,
and for some reason, I found that both amusing and sad.
I feel bad for the man. He doesn't seem to
feel bad for himself. The Internet absolutely agrees. It looks
nothing like him. Thanks for tuning in to today's edition
of Dana Lash's Absurd Tuthe podcast.
Speaker 4 (24:18):
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