Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You know, I'm fascinated by like that where are they now?
Stuff we were just kind of talking about. And then
we'll be so my wife and I, well, I roll
tape on. Basically it's eighties videos and it's uh, I
can't even remember the name of whatever it is, but
it's all it's eighties stuff. The video you know when
(00:21):
MTV played video. Yes, so we she and I. That's
a Saturday or Sunday morning thing. If the house is
pretty quiet and it's kind of early, and we got
to we'll have that on and be watching and I'm like,
I wonder where they shot this video? Remember pop up video?
Speaker 2 (00:38):
I couldn't get enough of that, and I didn't pay
much attention to anything on the screen except the pop ups.
I wanted to read all this, like reading liner notes
and album covers when I was a kid.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
Yes, so, uh what it's an excess song? Uh standed?
You were there two worlds called did I can? They
never the pot?
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:05):
So that's boom. Yeah, So we're watching that. We're watching that,
and I go, I wonder where this was shot. So
then I've googled it. Boom it was in Prague, Czech Republic.
They that's where they actually shot, and they tell the
name of the park where that. That stuff is fascinating
to me and I so, oh, yeah, this is it. Yeah,
(01:30):
Michael Hutchins who died by hanging himself.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
Yeah, that's sad. I I've never understood that. You have
to wonder what kind of demons people carry around when
you got seemingly everything and the rest of the world
does not know it.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
What's the name? There's a name for that where you're
trying to uh oh yeah, auto erotica, asphyxiation, that's it,
Thank you, Zach exactly.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
And that's that's uh.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
What's his name? David Carrodine? Same thing, man, and think
kung Fu, same thing.
Speaker 2 (02:02):
Bad way to go, grasshopper.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
I know. It's like, man, what happened there? Anyway? Yeah?
I liked an excess back in the day, but that
kind of stuff, So I'll do. I sit there. It's
like it's like the broke ass version of Bob Video.
We're sitting there watching videos on top of my wife. Hey,
you know where this shot. She's like this kind of
(02:24):
rolls her eyes where she just humors me. It's great.
Speaker 2 (02:27):
Oh I did that this before I came in here today,
you know, because I watch a lot of old TV
shows and the Queen is like, oh my gosh, you're
watching old westerns again. Yeah, oh, special guest. Hey, that's
Charles Bronson. Loved him except I found out that, you know,
Jill Ireland was his wife, and Joe Ireland not much
of an actress, but she was cute and popular. But
before Charles Bronson, she was actually married to David McCallum,
(02:47):
who was ducky on NCIS. Bronson meets her and tells McCallum,
I'm taking your wife. Sure enough he did, and that
crazy Wench went with him. So I don't like Bronson
or or Joe Iowa. And she's like, you.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
Know all that.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
I'm like, yeah, I don't know why.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
It's all that. It's useless info. But you never know.
If you end up on a game show someday they
can ask, oh, I know you can tell by listening
to you, thank you very much on the air, you will.
You have a lot of very useless knowledge on a
lot of stuff, but interesting sometimes too.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
Sometimes sometimes not all times. Most of the time I
tell you about Charles Bronston, Joe Ireland, you did okay.
Speaker 1 (03:29):
Just now you sure did. So one of the mysteries.
You know, they started focusing on that huge bulge on
Will Howard's hand from the game during the Cotton Bowl,
and I remember they started showing that. I go, what
the hell is going on with that? It looks did
you see it?
Speaker 2 (03:45):
I saw it?
Speaker 1 (03:46):
How painful?
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Does that open? Like a calcium sist or something like that.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
That's what I was thinking too, something like that. And
so he said that that was Uh, he popped a
blood vessel during the second quarter, and the swelling did
go down, because by the fourth quarter, I noticed, you know,
it was pretty much gone and it and all that
swelling had, you know, kind of flattened out. And he
(04:11):
said he's dealt with it more than once this season.
He said, it didn't even hurt you just I just
looked down. It was pretty big. Happened earlier in the season.
Nobody really noticed then. So he said, he hopes his
left hand. Here's the thing. He's like, I hope it
stays calm during Monday's game. Well, if it doesn't hurt,
who cares? Yeah, I mean, it's not even somebody tried
(04:34):
to say he did it on him on like a
mask of some one of the players, one of the
defensive players. He hit it on whatever. But yeah, he
popped a blood vessel. So that's all that was.
Speaker 2 (04:46):
Man, that's a very big thing for just a blood vessel.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
I know, I don't. You're not going to convince me
it's not pain It looked painful.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
It had to be painful, had to be Yeah, well,
if it doesn't bug him, it doesn't bug me. Just
keep doing what you do at least one more time
this year.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
Right, Atlanta is talking about how they're ramping up security
ahead of the game, of course, the National Championship. The
Buckeyes will be there to battle Notre Dame. And you know,
this is all this is a lot of the normal
stuff that you would think if you were headed to
Mercedes Benz Stadium. You know, I maintained these kinds of
(05:24):
things when what happened in New Orleans happened. And then
you know, the Super Bowl, of course, is going to
be back there in New Orleans next month. And then
this is happening of course in Atlanta. Like I just referenced,
Mercedes Benz Stadium, safest places on earth for those ye
for those things. It's like and I'm sorry to use
this comparison, but it's like when an aircraft goes down,
(05:47):
a commercial jetliner goes down typically for the next, you know,
few months. It's probably one of the safest modes of
transportation on Earth because there will be extra per cautions
taken when getting those things airborne and so on. Now
there's nothing you can do against you know, somebody hijacking
(06:10):
or whatever. You can only do so much. And I
feel like that is always happening as far as jetliners go.
But mechanically, if something And look, we're flying over the
Potomac going into DC, and I want to tell you,
I never even I didn't tell you, but man, when
we were coming in, that's one of the roughest landings
I've ever experienced on an airline. I mean, it felt
(06:33):
like we were sliding left and right the wind. Oh
my gosh, dude, it was crazy. And you know, they're
banking pretty hard over the Potomac as we're coming into
Reagan and I'm looking down there and man, it is
cold outside. I'm going man, and my mind goes back
to the one that ended up in the Potomac. Was
that in the eighties, No, no, no, no, that was
(06:55):
the Hudson in New York. There was one in the
Potomac I think it was in in the early eighties
or seventies, something like that, and that all of that
obviously escaped me right the second, but my mind goes
back to that and then we're landing. I swear when
we hit, we were touched down and it felt like
the whole aircraft it was. It was crazy. But I
think about stuff like that, I'm like, how is this
(07:17):
thing staying together? How is it staying together? But anyway,
back to Mercedes Benz Stadium on Monday, again, I feel
like it's going to be one of the safest places
on earth for this, just given how much precaution is
going to be involved. But then they start talking about
you know, if you see something, say something, and all this.
I mean, those are all the normal things you would
(07:37):
think as a lot of people from this area are
going to be heading there. So watch our Buckeyes win
the national champion.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
When you said you know things happen and you said
the word hijacking, I'm trying to think the last time
I actually that really Back in the seventies, that was
going on all over the place. Everybody wanted to be
dB Cooper or whatever. I haven't heard of a hijacking,
you know. And I'm just thinking, if you get like
on a jet filled with Buckeye fans headed for Atlanta
and jobaba, go oh dare everybody we going to Cuba?
(08:06):
Your budd ain't making it off that yet. I'm just
telling you that is not the crowd you want to
try with Bowl game.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
No, no, Yeah, they're dead set on getting there, no question. Yeah,
they're they're dead set on getting to Atlanta. So what
do you make of Starbucks reversing this open door policy?
You know, I heard Beck talking about it earlier. Yeah,
and I saw that this was a you know, this
is a story today. This is a big story, and
(08:34):
there is no other way to quantify something like this
other than forty seven is headed to a White House.
And I don't care what you try to tell me
at this point that it's a coincidence as far as
timing goes. Look what Zuckerberg did. He did it about
face with Facebook and Instagram. He's taking the fact checkers,
(08:57):
those independent fact checks, which by the way, we're all biased.
The people that were fact checking, they were, but they
needed fact checked. So now it's a community. I forget
the term for it with the regard to Facebook and Instagram,
and then people are going on, I'm going on, I'm
not gonna be on here anymore. You can tell right
away who is a raging liberal on social media when
(09:18):
they tell you, because there's no more fact checkers, there's leaving.
They're leaving. And so when you see Starbucks reversing this
open door, imagine this. Imagine this. You own you own
a business. Let's say, Chuck, you owned a couple of
Starbucks and you had to because you were told allow
people to just loiter in there. They weren't spending a
(09:41):
nickel in your store, right, but they had to stay there.
You were not allowed to kick them out. You're automatically
racist if you do that, if you asked them to leave. Now,
I say to you, are you automatically racist if it's
a white homeless person or what is the what's the
word now? Unhap Yes, if it's a white unhoused person.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
I've never gone man, you smell unbathed. I've never used
that term. So I don't know where unhoused comes from.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
But my point is, imagine Starbucks is going, we're reversing course.
If you're in one of our places, you have to
spend money. You can't just hang around in there for
no reason, just come in and hang out.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
I understand they're also changing the bathroom policy. You can't
just walk in and use the bathrooms. I guess you
have to be a customer or something like that. That's
that part of it kind of bugs me because I'm
old and I like bathrooms. So it's just like, all right,
there's enough places I grape about that in Columbus all
the time. I can understand not letting people sit around
(10:44):
use your WiFi, not buy anything, and that makes sense.
But the bathroom thing, if that's the case, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (10:51):
You know, it seems like that's been a thing for
a long time, depending on which business you're talking about.
But I got to be honest, what would you do
if you walked into a McDon almost? Is this crazy
that I kind of felt guilty sometimes while we're traveling.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
No, because you have given them so much money over
the years. It's a public place. You want to use
their public facilities, and you have to go. You're on
the road, you go. You should not feel bad about that.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
That was my justification after the thing. Yeah, because my
wife and I'm like, almost feel bad. I went in
and used there. I didn't even buy anything, and I'm
thinking to myself, I just wasn't hungry, you know, because
I'm like, look, I'll buy a filet. I don't have
a problem buying a file of fish, you know.
Speaker 2 (11:36):
Or put it in the mail sentator Broy. He'll he'll
be happy Raason doesn't send me a file a from
the road. He'll be happy about that.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
But I would think to myself, I'm driving down the
road going man spenny. But you're right, that's what I
would say. It's funny you say that because I've told
my wife before. I'm like, well, you know, think about
how much money we spent over the years with McDonald's. Oh,
I'm probably I got to be cresting twenty thousand and thirty.
I mean, it's got to be a lot of money
over the whole time that I've been buying McDonald's my
(12:07):
whole life.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
There's a gas station convenience store over on the West
side where I go in, and I don't know, a
month ago or so, I went in, grabbed some smokes.
All the way home, I'm going, man, hurry, up, I
got I gotta get home. Good At the bathroom, he goes,
you gotta go to the bedroom. Yeay, number one, number two,
just a quick number one. Drag a lot of out
here here do go mad? And it's me And he
handed me the key to the bathroom because he sees
me all the time. Yes, but the doors are locked.
(12:28):
I mean, you know, the general public might not have
that rapport with somebody where they could get in there.
And it just you know, I complain about the city
parks all the time. These are city parks, man. They
tore down the bathrooms that were there. They allow homeless camps,
but they don't have anything but porta potties when the
weather's good.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
Well, got me the guy you're speaking about, is is
it a thing where people go in there and they
shoot up or they do There's everything going on, but
going to the bathroom.
Speaker 2 (12:57):
That's the problem all over the West Side. Hookers and heroin,
so they lock the bathroom so that normal people cannot
go in and do what nature calls them to do. Yea,
And that that bugs me. How about we get rid
of the hookers and heroin and let me pee what
I have to. I'm sorry, maybe i'm a little simplistic,