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April 7, 2025 52 mins
News, Politics. Sports
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's the Mark Pleazer Show.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
All right, I'm so happy it's Friday.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
I'm so happy?

Speaker 3 (00:16):
Are you?

Speaker 4 (00:16):
I'm so happy the most starts at the winnings come on.

Speaker 5 (00:19):
Right a little the best grapes in the world. Do
we go? Oh we got to stop this now, let's
go on the radio.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
I'm so happy it's Friday.

Speaker 5 (00:27):
Well I know exactly.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Even Headfield's happy, but you know, yes, Well, we're sitting
here right before well, I don't know, like a couple
of minutes left and we're getting ready to go on.
And I love it because you were like, so were
you able to work in any relaxation time last night?
And then I just started laughing because I thought to myself,
what did I do?

Speaker 5 (00:48):
What did I do? Oh?

Speaker 1 (00:50):
Well, I I.

Speaker 2 (00:52):
Come in and there is well it's the tail end
of I think some sort of a lifetime movie or.

Speaker 5 (00:59):
Oh those are great, but you can't be to watching him.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
I well, my wife had something on and I think
Jennifer Aniston was in it, and can't go wrong.

Speaker 5 (01:08):
Something boy, I didn't expect that was Jennifer Aniston. I'll
watch it. Well, yeah, with no sound fine, as.

Speaker 4 (01:17):
Long as I can see put Jennifer Anison or or
Bullocks and or Bullock in anything.

Speaker 5 (01:23):
I'll watch it. Okay, all right, Uh fair enough? Then?

Speaker 2 (01:28):
Well okay, so were you a fan of Friends? Just
as a side note.

Speaker 4 (01:33):
No, I didn't even know who she was during Friends.
I never watched an episode of Friends.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
Never. Okay, Now I'm you know, I'm.

Speaker 4 (01:40):
There's like two cults the Friends called the Seinfeld called
as a Seinfeld guy.

Speaker 2 (01:44):
I missed both of those real time because of this gig.
And I was nights during both of those. I was,
you know, working rock radio doing nights then, and I
missed all of that real time, if you will.

Speaker 5 (01:56):
Yeah, so, but anyway, back to it.

Speaker 2 (01:59):
So I I come in and that's on, and then,
you know, my wife is like, she's.

Speaker 5 (02:04):
In a good mood, seems to be in a good mood,
and so she's like, uh, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
I Immediately she goes, here's the remote. I go, well, honey,
you know you don't. We don't have to turn this.
It's not even over, is it. We don't have to
turn this. She goes, no, no, it's over. And I
look over and now the credits are going. I go, oh,
literally was the very end of it. And she goes, hey,

(02:30):
you want to watch like a movie. So she starts,
and I was just staring at her, and I'm going,
this isn't gonna go. Well, just just ain't gonna go. Well,
it's sports night. I got two Ohio teams. I got
left eye on one of them, right eye on the
other one. And uh so then she's like, and I go, well,

(02:50):
well the Jackets are coming on, and she's like, oh,
and I go and the Reds are coming on. She goes, oh,
I got to finish doing stuff upstairs.

Speaker 5 (02:59):
So like she and so You're like, she gid any
relaxation time.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
I'm like, well I was starting to do that, and
and then both of the Ohio teams ruined any relaxation
that I was supposedly.

Speaker 5 (03:11):
Having last night or attempting.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
To have, because that was absolutely awful between both teams.

Speaker 5 (03:17):
Uh you know, I'll get to the Jackets in a second.

Speaker 2 (03:20):
But the Reds lose a third game one nothing, back.

Speaker 5 (03:25):
To back to back one to nothing losses. I think
the big Red machine needs a loop job.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
Get out.

Speaker 5 (03:34):
Oh my gosh.

Speaker 2 (03:36):
Yeah, I'm reading some of the Red sports writers and
people who are in our business, Reds Radio and Cincinnati
and reading some of the stuff.

Speaker 5 (03:45):
It's already I'm like, are you kidding me?

Speaker 2 (03:48):
It's it just can't even be I'm like, what are
we against the Brewers team?

Speaker 5 (03:54):
Who who has a worse record than than the Reds do?

Speaker 2 (03:57):
Oh So, anyway, I was like, okay, I was legitimately
going to try to relax, and then you know, the
Jackets start getting their butt whooped, and we're in that
for a while, and then you know what good teams do.
They always do to the Jackets. They pull away in
a very strong fashion. It's almost like they're like, we're

(04:18):
gonna go ahead and take it out of third gear now,
and we are still stuck in third gear, and they
get into fourth and then into fifth and you know, so.

Speaker 4 (04:29):
For those two endings, you burned like four or five
weeks worth of bridges with your wife.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
Well, no, because she did come around. She's like, okay,
but god, lover, she's you know, we're into the third period,
is getting ready to start as far as for the Jackets,
and I look over and she's she's, you know, asleep,
laying there asleep, And I was like.

Speaker 5 (04:51):
Honey, why don't you you want to go to bed?
I mean, she's like, yeah, yeah, you're right, I should
you know? And then I thought that went to bed too. Well,
turns out I don't know.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
About halfway through the third period, he comes downstairs and typically,
you know, she puts him into bed.

Speaker 5 (05:08):
I mean, he's still whatever. He likes her to tuck
him in if you will, or whatever, even though he's eleven.

Speaker 1 (05:14):
And he comes down, I go, I like him.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
I'm sitting there looking at him as almost ten o'clock,
I'm like, excuse me. I'm like, I thought you already
went to bed, And I was like, your mother's already sleep,
don't you dare wake her up for her to tuck
you in or whatever?

Speaker 5 (05:27):
It was that kind of a thing. So but no
I didn't burn a bunch of bridges.

Speaker 4 (05:31):
Kay, No, No, I'm always very paranoid. I walk in
a room and the queen hands me the remote. Yeah
that's first of all, I feel, what kind of ogre
do you think I am? That I must control the remote? Secondly,
I know, dog gone. Well what the remote means is,
here's the device you can use to push buttons to
change the TV to what I want to watch, not
what you want to watch, but what she they want

(05:54):
to watch yesh yes, and if I choose something she
does not want to watch, I'm gonna go clean the kitchen.

Speaker 5 (06:01):
What hang on a man?

Speaker 1 (06:03):
Right?

Speaker 2 (06:03):
So she went up and started. She started, she was
changing the sheets on the bed. So she's like, I'm
gonna and I go, oh, here we go.

Speaker 1 (06:11):
Yep.

Speaker 5 (06:12):
I'm like, well, I go. Are you coming back? And
she's like yeah, I'll be down. I'm like, what day
is this?

Speaker 6 (06:23):
Man?

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Do you have a specific spot that you sit in
the room where? And is anyone typically in it when
you come in?

Speaker 7 (06:35):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (06:36):
And do they move when they see you?

Speaker 4 (06:38):
Generally if they know I'm coming to see feel bad
because I'm the same, I'm not Sheldon.

Speaker 5 (06:44):
I don't.

Speaker 4 (06:44):
I don't have to. You don't have to get up
for me. It's okay. I can sit on this end.
It's all right.

Speaker 1 (06:49):
I do that. Man.

Speaker 5 (06:50):
I'm like, I just almost kind of feel bad in
that situation.

Speaker 4 (06:56):
And you and again go back to wondering what kind
of ogre do you think I am that you you
do this kind of thing.

Speaker 5 (07:03):
You don't. I don't need the remote, you don't have
to move. It's okay.

Speaker 4 (07:07):
I'm nice until you're stupid, and I'm not nice, don't
be stupid.

Speaker 5 (07:12):
We're good. I don't know how to I get so.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
Then I feel bad, But at the same time i'd
feel how would you feel if you did come in
and you're like kind of stalling and they keep sitting
in that spot, and you're like, that's the spot, you know,
but do you have that's you know, that's a good?
Do you have a are you should you have a
quote unquote spot or should you have to move around

(07:40):
just what's available.

Speaker 5 (07:41):
Or the good of the furniture.

Speaker 4 (07:42):
And being that I've always been a substantially a large person,
it's probably best that I don't have a continual spot.

Speaker 5 (07:48):
I should move around just to balance.

Speaker 4 (07:50):
The room because eventually that end of the couch is
gonna go have me.

Speaker 5 (07:58):
You don't want that to happen.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
From one heaven move tick get up.

Speaker 4 (08:06):
YouTube video to see if everything's okay? Incorrect, spring should
remain inside sofa.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
I always I.

Speaker 5 (08:14):
Always think to myself, I'm like, am I a jerk
for that? You know?

Speaker 2 (08:18):
But it's always I always have the same spot, whether
it was we just got a new couch, so whether
and it's one of those ones that like it's like
a wrap around and the ends both like you know,
and then one of them and then there's an additional
one that reclines in the in the feet come up
and all of that. So there's one next to the
spot where I sit now, and I'm like, that's your
spot right there, honey, you know, like but it doesn't

(08:40):
have any like arms or it's just you just kind
of float your arms just.

Speaker 4 (08:46):
So.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
Then I'm building like pillows up on each side to
act as makeshift armrests, you know, So you have like
two or three pillows stacked on each side.

Speaker 5 (08:56):
That's a mistake that's going to come back to bite
you too. So what are you putting up a wall?
Mister Trump? Set a wall between that? Mister Trump? Little
Trump Junior is what you are? Your pillow wall? Fine,
keep me out, did part me? I'll go upstairs. Mister Trump.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
You're probably right all that's going on, and I don't
hear a word of it, by the way, but it's
all right in there, isn't it.

Speaker 4 (09:19):
What. Don't worry about what's happening right now. Just know
everything you do will come.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
Back call being logged.

Speaker 4 (09:26):
Exactly exactly where did you put my car keys? I
don't know what did I do seventeen years ago at
three pm on a Wednesday.

Speaker 5 (09:35):
Well, first, you that's just there's a list.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
And you know I get up every day and move
so you can sit in your spots.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
I don't even know what this evolved into. But uh, anyway,
So back to the Jackets. Yeah, last night it was
it was really bad. I think Elvis would tell you
he played terribly last night. I think a lot of
guys were out of position multiple times, led to multiple goals.
But you know what, that's what teams like the Colorado
Avalanche do. They get you out of position and then

(10:10):
they score. That's what they do. There are those guys
are this well, you know? And I heard I heard
Warinsky saying after the game, the great Zach Warinsky was going,
He's like, look, we can't bank on Montreal losing the
Islanders Detroit. If we're winning hockey games, you know, we're
not winning hockey games.

Speaker 5 (10:30):
We don't deserve to be in the playoffs.

Speaker 2 (10:32):
I mean, he was, he was adamant about that, and
I don't think one person can disagree with him on
the Blue Jackets right now. And I saw another post
from a buddy of mine, Pete, who put basically, and
I'm paraphrasing because I don't have it right in front
of me, but he's like, they they have basically taken
an otherwise surprisingly good year. They weren't even supposed to

(10:53):
be in this conversation right now, and they have laid
an egg here in these last fifteen or so games,
and it's just like, how did this happen?

Speaker 1 (11:02):
How did this collapse happen?

Speaker 2 (11:04):
It's mostly the same guy as a matter of fact,
it's not the same guys. It's the same guys plus
some of the starters who were out, Boot and Jenner,
ericad Branson, Sean Monahan, Dante Fabreau. You got guys who
were not playing who are back that you would think
added or contributed.

Speaker 5 (11:23):
Doesn't make this doesn't make any sense.

Speaker 4 (11:26):
You would think when essentially you've got the B team
on the ice. Okay, well, all these guys were out,
You had the B team on the ice, B plus
A minus Nate found a way to bring themselves into contention.
Suddenly you bring back those that were missing, those that
they were making up for in their exuberance.

Speaker 5 (11:47):
Those guys are back.

Speaker 4 (11:48):
Maybe their level of play declines because of well, Jenner's
back on the ice, so I'm not doing what even
if they're not to being it consciously, it's like the
big guys came back, your zest goes down because and
you know, having them back may actually have been detrimental.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
I mean, looking back now, that's a good way to
quantify it. How else do you quantify it. Jenner has
really come to life, So I don't think it. And look,
I'm not pointing any fingers or saying one specific thing.
You just have to point to the facts, which are
you did have a team that is a little bit different,
and then you get more starters back from being injured,

(12:26):
and then it's like it took it's taken a while,
and then there's still like a question mark over some
of the production with some of them, and it's just
a head scratcher. It is a head scratcher, for sure.
The good part is is how young the team is.
And I know this is cliche, but the team is young,
and I feel like there's really really solid future for them,

(12:50):
and I feel like the front office is going to
keep this squad intact and that is a good thing.

Speaker 5 (12:57):
There's no question about that. I just that they would
be getting some.

Speaker 2 (13:02):
Playoff some playoff action this year in order to put
that with their memory for next year when hopefully we
get into the mix again, because that's what you draw
off of and you learn little by little with those
kinds of things. It's all situational and the more you
can have of that and having your memory banks, the better.

(13:25):
And I think that applies to most sports quite frankly,
but hockey especially, and if you're moving around with specific
guys on your line, and I mean, that's that's the
magic that Dean Everison has really kind of created this
year that nobody expected. But now they got us all
salivate and going, yeah, all right, we're we're.

Speaker 5 (13:42):
Possibly going to be in the playoffs. And now it's
like what why, I.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
Mean, there are eight games left, but Zach pointed out,
we can't be hoping Montreal loses and the Islanders lose
and these you know, we can't. It's like you don't
control your own destiny then, And I don't know exactly
where where we're at, but I do know that we've
got two amazingly hard tests north of the border over
the weekend tomorrow the Leafs and then on Sunday Ottawa.

(14:09):
So you got two teams that are really firing on
all cylinders right now, and we'll be on away ice.

Speaker 5 (14:15):
So I don't put a lot of hope into it,
but you know, I don't know. Anything can happen. I suppose,
but man oh man, it's really frustrating.

Speaker 4 (14:25):
Sometimes almost this season is a great motivator for next season.
So if they can't do it, then let's hope that
they take that into next seasons as the motivation to
be a little bit better.

Speaker 6 (14:35):
Use traffic, Weather, Sports and the Mark Blazer Show on
six ten WTV.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
So we were still getting some precipitation last night.

Speaker 5 (14:51):
I mean you got some right, did it? Did it rain? Yeah?
I didn't hear anything about it. Did you hear your
someun pump work?

Speaker 4 (15:00):
My gosh, it was I was just waiting for rowboats
in the street.

Speaker 5 (15:04):
How how wed?

Speaker 4 (15:05):
And if we're gonna keep up with this middle of
the night stuff, seriously, we're gonna have to change the
hours of this show because I'm not gonna stay up
all night with that and then come in here in
the afternoon.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
A cheap meteorologist Marshall McPeak joining us. Schood, You tell right,
there's the guy going both of y'all shut up about that.

Speaker 5 (15:22):
I'm the one that needs to be you know.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
I was thinking to myself too, and you know the fact,
you know, Buck's on vacation, and I'm like, you guys
are stretched thin right now, you know.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
I mean, so yeah.

Speaker 8 (15:33):
Let's see, I got home at four o'clock in the
morning the other day. It was two o'clock last night.
I mean, it's just this is this is what to do, right,
You got to you gotta keep an eye on these things.
So sometimes it rolls into the morning. We're trying to
keep the weather center staffed twenty four to seven, just
because with all of this out there, we want to
make sure there's somebody keeping an eye on it all

(15:53):
the time.

Speaker 5 (15:54):
And so that's why.

Speaker 8 (15:55):
What we do at night is whoever, whoever's late, stays
was ever early, comes in early, so we sort of
cross paths that way, so we make sure there's always
somebody here to keep an eye on it.

Speaker 5 (16:06):
Boy, it's just pouring off to the south right now.
Great here it comes.

Speaker 8 (16:10):
There's drizzle here in Columbus, but there's a lot of
rain down from Chillicothee over to Hillsboro, then over to
Hamilton and down into Cincinnati. That's all coming north. So
we're gonna get some of that in the next few hours.
We're gonna get more of it during Chuck's favorite time
of the day, about midnight to four am.

Speaker 5 (16:29):
Here we go again, start drinking again. So it's here.

Speaker 8 (16:35):
I'm I literally was sitting here a few minutes ago
trying to sort of wrap my brain around the timeline,
like how is this going to play out?

Speaker 5 (16:45):
So here we go.

Speaker 8 (16:46):
So tonight we have an overnight event that runs about
midnight to four in the morning, still raining well into
your Saturday. Then Saturday afternoon there's another chance for some
strong storms, and that's going to be it's more early evening,
so let's say six to ten. And then on Sunday

(17:07):
it's raining for most of the day and some of
that is going to be really heavy at times. And
what I'm really not happy about is that by the
later part of the evening it gets cold enough some
of that turns into what non liquid what?

Speaker 5 (17:22):
So do we have any pepto? Chuck's getting sick? Oh no, oh, no, heavens.

Speaker 8 (17:29):
So that's kind of the timeline of what we have coming.
So it's overnight, tonight, afternoon, evening tomorrow, more of it
on Sunday with the chance for some non liquid precipitation
late in the day. So yeah, here it comes tonight
down to around fifty six tomorrow seventy. We've got that
going for us, which is not actually a good thing

(17:50):
because it's going to fuel the storms forty seven on Sunday.

Speaker 5 (17:53):
All right, Marshall, thank you, it's uh, it's not a
good thing. Marshall's the kind of guy that trick or
treat go to his house. He gives you empty wrappers.
Don't shoot the messenger. Here's what we almost like if
the Reese's cup was still in there. See those chocolate smudges,
that's where it used to be. Oh my gosh.

Speaker 4 (18:14):
We get into these patterns, like I know, that's the
thing about every weekend it's going to rain, or every
Monday it's going to be hot, and.

Speaker 5 (18:22):
We'll go for like three or four weeks where we
it just repeats.

Speaker 2 (18:25):
And why can't we get into the it's seventy five
and sunshine pattern?

Speaker 7 (18:30):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (18:30):
What about that pattern?

Speaker 4 (18:31):
How about that one two weeks ago felt more like
spring than now is going to feel because of all
this water, and it's just.

Speaker 2 (18:38):
Well, Zach has taking a break from the lawnmowing repair
business because the lawn mowing right now, a lot of
people are beginning to stare at their lawns.

Speaker 5 (18:48):
If you're like me and you go, oh boy, I.

Speaker 2 (18:51):
Need to do something about this sooner rather than later,
because it is getting furry out there. So he's got
to put that on hold because people. Yeah, a lot
of people are ready to do that, but they haven't
gotten into where they need them repairing as of yet.
So now he's into the arc building.

Speaker 4 (19:08):
Ah, you have to have a sideline. I knew you
were going to tell me there was something else. Is
that going?

Speaker 5 (19:13):
Well, it's going.

Speaker 9 (19:15):
The construction of the boats aren't that bad? Like people
are looking for comfort, That's what I get. This ain't
for comfort. It's for survival.

Speaker 5 (19:21):
That's good.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
And I like the angle because when people try to go,
well can I get this or that, you go what
that's like? First of all, there's too big of a
markup because of the tariffs with that kind of equipment.

Speaker 9 (19:33):
All the lumber from Canada.

Speaker 2 (19:37):
Secondly, like you pointed out, no, no, no, this is
for survival. You're not supposed to be in there sleeping
or whatever. You got two of every kind. You're trying
to get in there as well.

Speaker 5 (19:47):
At least.

Speaker 9 (19:47):
Yeah, you will be provided food and the natural cost effects.
But you want something special, you're to pay for it.

Speaker 5 (19:54):
Well yeah, you know, so look just get ready for that.
We got too George Farming girls per bote. So those
are relics. Do they still sell those? Yeah? Man, his estate,
I mean he's not personally.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
I was gonna say yeah, because he passed, but I
was gonna say his estate is going to surpass Michael Jackson.
I think because those Dagon things made him stupid rich.

Speaker 4 (20:19):
He got all them. George's defeat man. He had to
do something after he got done boxing, And you know
it was kind of funny though. They never used his
boxing as a sales tool. They used him as the big,
lovable teddy bear guy because I would get I'm George
Bueman by my grill. I knocked you out, That's what
I would. But never they always made him the nice
guy in the red apron and such charm to sell

(20:42):
and people love them.

Speaker 5 (20:43):
I've got two of them at my house, a big
one in a little one.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
Well, you're right, they did not use that as an angle,
which is interesting, interesting analogy there.

Speaker 5 (20:50):
They didn't you.

Speaker 4 (20:51):
Take yourself a tortilla shell, put your you know, chicken
and cheese or whatever in here, and maybe he put
a little butter brush, a little broder on you put it. Oh,
beautiful panini. It is good and very easy. Yeah, I
love them.

Speaker 5 (21:04):
Hey, this is interesting.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
Zach sent me this article Barbarians who toppled Roman Empire
were high on hallucinogenic drugs.

Speaker 5 (21:12):
At the time, and I was like, I go, what
the hell kind of websites is he looking at?

Speaker 4 (21:17):
Exactly where do you get this time he comes.

Speaker 2 (21:20):
Up with it, I'm just like, okay, I'll I'll bite
and I click on it.

Speaker 5 (21:25):
You guys left my stuff I sent you.

Speaker 2 (21:27):
Oh well, I love it, dude, seriously, please never stop.
Because I clicked on it and started reading it, I go, now,
this is hilarious.

Speaker 5 (21:34):
It's and it might be true.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
And you're going immediately, you're going, now, how are they
gonna put any of these How do they put that together?
That that's what they they were high on hallucinogenic But
what it is, it's they work backwards and they talk
about how they're drugs. They were on these hallucinogenic drugs.
At the time of their great conquest, and these are
from Polish experts. They studied two hundred and forty one

(21:58):
spoon like utensils found across Northern Europe and Scandinavia that
were worn on the warriors' belts. Now, these spoons were
not big enough to be dipping, you know, putting in
your coffee or anything like that. They talked about how
they were small enough. The size of the utensils meant
that they were impractical for any other use. So then

(22:22):
what's the normal deduction there. Well, it was a small spoon,
there had to be drugs related with it.

Speaker 5 (22:28):
I mean, that's part of what they're saying. Barbarians on coke.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
They had a tiny spoon attached to their belts, smaller
than served with espresso today.

Speaker 5 (22:38):
So why do they need such a tiny item.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
You can't eat soup with this right, However, it's large
enough to be considered unsuitable for ear hygiene.

Speaker 5 (22:47):
I was like, well, that's a bizarre angle.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
The only rational explanations that it was used to dose
some substance. So examining the territories where they lived, they
found that they would have had acx us to opium
to relieve fear or pain, which that's really not a stretch,
is it.

Speaker 5 (23:05):
I mean for me when I hear it. Poum was
pretty common at that time.

Speaker 2 (23:08):
And psychoactive hemp or cannabis sativa. They could also have
used deadly nightshade and black henbane to induce hallucinogens and rage,
and fly a fungus to cause aggression and tramps like states.

Speaker 5 (23:25):
And here's the other part.

Speaker 2 (23:27):
We calculated the capacity of the spoon hanging from the
belt guaranteed not only to be an.

Speaker 5 (23:33):
Effective but also a safe dose. So they had that
Oh that's good. Yeah, you want to be safe with
your henbane, that's for sure. Is that what that is?
I don't even know. I never heard of hen babe.
I probably mispronounced it, you know me.

Speaker 9 (23:49):
How many of those fight How many of those people
took those many drugs, had no idea what they were
doing and just walked off a cliff. It had to
happen over and over and over until they got to
handle it.

Speaker 4 (24:00):
Probably did. Using drugs without your knowledge is a great tradition.
I wish, honestly, just as an observer, I could go
back to the late eighteen hundreds or whenever Coca cola
was introduced, so I could watch all of the puritanical
Americans walking around on cocaine.

Speaker 5 (24:14):
That would be hilarious.

Speaker 4 (24:15):
Hey, guys, that's something's wrong with him.

Speaker 2 (24:19):
Then they do cite this. The weakness of the findings
is we have no physical remains in the stimulants. They
just didn't survive. However, we have analogies from the graves
of Barbarian nomads where archaeologists were more fortunate in finding
opium lumps with them, So.

Speaker 5 (24:39):
Maybe they did do that. I don't know. I thought
it was hilarious. Was this a government funded study? By chance?
I cought four billion dollars?

Speaker 6 (24:46):
And you're right the Mark Blazer Show.

Speaker 5 (25:15):
Talk about feeling sick, you know I have. I think
basically I've had this kind.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Of dream before where I know that I've got a
winning lottery ticket, but I do something dumb with it,
not specifically like this what this woman did, but something
to the effect of maybe laundering it while it's in
you know, a pair of pants or jeans or whatever.

(25:42):
But this lady in Pennsylvania, and they say, no good
deed goes unpunished, But she did a good thing. She
made a clothing donation to the Vietnam Veterans of America,
and then things backfired. She had left a lost lottery
ticket in the jacket that she donated, and the winning ticket,

(26:04):
that she says is worth two.

Speaker 5 (26:05):
And a half million dollars. Two and a half million
makes me sick. She claims.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
She bought the winning ticket last May at a grocery store. Now,
there might be some holes in this. If you at
a two and a half million dollar winning lottery ticket,
would you have if you bought it in May of
twenty four, would you still have said ticket?

Speaker 4 (26:31):
No?

Speaker 5 (26:32):
See, I don't think so either, she said.

Speaker 2 (26:36):
A couple of weeks later, after she bought this at
a grocery store, she learned the ticket was a winner,
but she couldn't find it.

Speaker 5 (26:43):
But did you have a picture of it? Did you
write down the numbers? I'm like, wait a minute, I mean,
think about how frantic you would be. Let's say you
did take a picture of it, because you go, I
got to make sure that I and I can. This
will be easier than But but don't you put them
all in the same spot if you're going to store them?

Speaker 2 (27:04):
And then you decide I had a buddy who would
just check every couple of weeks. He would look at
ones that he had bought and then he would go
over okay, because it was wasn't something that he did
every time there was a drawing. He played every single drawing,
but he wouldn't check them every single drawing. So there

(27:27):
are people who do that. I again had a buddy
who did that, so I can understand that. Maybe, but
he kept them all in the same spot for obvious reasons. Yeah,
because then he would go back and go all right,
I need to check the last six draws to see
if I and he would sit and do it, and
he would dedicate, you know, five ten minutes, and they'd

(27:47):
be like, oh, okay, I want two dollars here, I
want four dollars here, or I want nothing, or that
kind of thing.

Speaker 5 (27:54):
It's like, well, check my lottery tickets. I didn't win anything,
you know.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
But he would check them periodically instead of every draw
Maybe she's one of those people. But she says she
left the ticket in the jacket that she donated and
they told her, well, it could be anywhere in the
world by now, and so she's probably not going.

Speaker 5 (28:17):
To get this ticket back. They go on to talk
about in this story.

Speaker 4 (28:20):
But if I had a winning lottery, the first thing
I would do is to write across the top of
the ticket property of Charles Douglas and put my signature
at the top.

Speaker 5 (28:30):
That's the first thing I do.

Speaker 4 (28:31):
Second thing I do as quickly as possible get to
a bank with a safe deposit box until I had
made arrangements to go cash the ticket or establish the
trust or whatever I was going to do. But I
would put my name on it. It's show something to
show it's mine, and then I'd worry about all the
technicalities of how to cash it, the most effective way

(28:54):
to cash it, all that kind of stuff. But unless
somebody can show up at the lottery commission with my
ticket and say, yes, I'm Charles Douglas, here's my then they're.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
Not getting my money.

Speaker 4 (29:04):
I could call the lottery commissioner and say, my name,
my signature is on the front of this ticket and
it's been lost or stolen or whatever.

Speaker 5 (29:11):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (29:12):
I've always been scared that I'll have one and forget
I have it, and go back and check it on
like the one hundred and eighty first day after it's
no longer valid.

Speaker 5 (29:20):
Go ah, because I forgot to check it. It was a winner.
I got to be honest.

Speaker 2 (29:24):
I only play for the most part when they get
ramped up and they become and I check it literally
the next morning.

Speaker 4 (29:32):
Well, this weekend, the prizes aren't ramped up. The cost
is though. This is when we go to the five
dollars ticket. Yeah, I'm done.

Speaker 5 (29:43):
How many people are they pricing out? Probably a lot,
probably a lot.

Speaker 4 (29:47):
You know, you go in there, you hand them a
ten dollar bill, you get five plays on the power
Ball right now, the Megan Ellies, you go in there tomorrow,
you hand them a ten dollar bill, you get two.
That's not working for me. I'm just sorry, I just
I think this is a very bad strategy.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
So it goes from starting at twenty million to starting
at fifty million. Correct, Yes, okay, so that's the only
that's the only perk with this from what I understand.

Speaker 4 (30:14):
But will that continue if the number of people drops
in half? Because the jackpots are dictated by how much
people are spending on the tickets. Correct, So if the
you get half the people playing, is that fifty million
dollars start going to remain or are they gonna have
to adjust that and go, Yeah, we're gonna have to
go back to twenty million.

Speaker 2 (30:31):
Well, then they're gonna have to go back to two
dollars too. How many raise your hand? If you know
of any transitory type things related to bumping up the
cost of something, because I'm not familiar with any, please
point them out to me. It seems like every time
we hear something like that, although that wasn't part of
the story, that would seem to be a normal trajectory

(30:55):
if it did, if it went that direction. So, yeah,
they couldn't keep up the fifty million dollars starting jackpot
if they go, well, now we're only selling X amount
of money for these tickets, and you know it's going
to be fifty million for at least the first few
and then would they try to They wouldn't dare leave

(31:17):
it at five and then go well, we're gonna have
to go back to twenty million.

Speaker 5 (31:20):
Oh yeah, and it's going to stay five dollars.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
Yeah, no way.

Speaker 5 (31:24):
Uh I know. Look when it gets up to the
seven hundred and eight hundred million range, six hundred million range,
I'm probably still a guy who unfortunately I'll go and
give them twenty bucks and I'll get four plays out
of it. And I'm sad to say, but I'd rather
take a swing like that because I'm spending twenty dollars
typically when it gets up that high.

Speaker 2 (31:46):
Anyway, maybe even a little more depends, and you're just
not going to have as many chances unfortunately. But I'm
still going to take a swing in.

Speaker 4 (31:54):
What if you did something like a three month lottery,
a quarter lottery four times a year. The jack is
one billion dollars one billion dollars, and the tickets are
like twenty bucks. But you've got all that quarter to
buy tickets, so you're gonna get a billion dollar jackpot

(32:15):
and twenty dollars you can you can buy a couple
of tickets a week for you know, you know, every
week for three months before they actually draw that. I
can see you know, you want to charge me twenty
bucks for a ticket, Okay, because it's a guaranteed billion
dollar jackpot every time. That might make a little more
sense than this to to more than double the price.

(32:39):
I mean, face it, what else goes up? What is
that one hundred and fifty percent that is? Yeah, that's crazy.

Speaker 2 (32:44):
It's go to the Legacy Retirement Group dot com phone lines.

Speaker 5 (32:47):
George, Welcome to the show.

Speaker 3 (32:49):
Yeah, Mark and Chuck, they're gonna blame that price increase
on the Trump tariffs.

Speaker 7 (32:57):
I'm sure they'll do that.

Speaker 5 (32:58):
Lottery numbers imported from Canada are now costing US more,
is what it is? You only get half of what
you win in Canada, I guess or something, and it
always tastes like maple.

Speaker 2 (33:10):
Right, Yeah, I don't know. I mean, George, thanks, that
could be they're gonna end up playing it. I could
see where they where The legacy media would be like,
and this is because of the Trump tariffs. That well,
oh really, because they announced this a couple of weeks ago.

Speaker 4 (33:28):
I don't know if they're solvent again in Illinois, but
remember it wasn't that long ago.

Speaker 5 (33:31):
Illinois.

Speaker 4 (33:32):
They kept running their lottery to bring in lottery proceeds,
but they weren't paying out. They didn't have the money
to pay out, so what the hell? Yeah, I know
that was crazy, and people kept buying lottery tickets until
the lottery Commission was solvent again and they could pay
out on the prizes. But if you bought a you know,
winning mega millions in Illinois, even if you were just

(33:53):
traveling through, you weren't collecting that money.

Speaker 5 (33:56):
Hey, so do those new prices start tonight?

Speaker 4 (33:59):
I think it's tomorrow at least my carry out guy
he said it's the fifth.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
There was a transgender student that and what I think
happened here is this this guy who is named Marcy,
transgender college student.

Speaker 5 (34:16):
I think this is.

Speaker 2 (34:19):
His way of being the first to be arrested in
history for this particular area, and he just wanted to
be part of the history books.

Speaker 5 (34:26):
We all have to have goalsgs tranny, tranny, tranny. I
don't really care. Nancy. Is that Nancy Mace? I think yeah, yeah,
she's a firecracker man.

Speaker 2 (34:42):
Anyway, she he I'm gonna call him he. He informed
state lawmakers of his intentions in advance with the words,
I'm here to break the law. So he walked into
a women's restroom at the Florida State Capitol and then
now legal battle and what's believed to be the first

(35:03):
arrest under the law the bathroom restrictions passed by several states.
So again I feel like this is him doing this going.
I will then be in the record books. I'll be
in the history books as the first person.

Speaker 4 (35:20):
If you will get convicted, get out of jail, have
a nice job with the acou.

Speaker 5 (35:24):
Arrested after entering a women's restroom.

Speaker 2 (35:27):
This was at Florida State Capitol on March nineteenth, and
Florida is one of the one of at least fourteen
states that have the laws barring transgender women from entering
certain women's restrooms, but is one of just two to
criminalize this act. So he announced his intent to violate

(35:48):
the law in letters sent to all one hundred and
sixty Florida lawmakers. He set a letter to all one
hundred and sixty Florida lawmakers making sure everybody knew what
he was going to be doing, and Tallahassee Democrat, he
included a picture of himself. Make sure you don't you

(36:10):
recognize me, that it's me. I'm the one. It was
a selfie and it was a recent selfie, to make
sure they knew exactly who it is and who it was.
And so the capitol police were there waiting on him
when he arrived. They said in parentheses it says, while
misgendering him that he'd be given a trespass warning if

(36:31):
he entered the bathroom. Well, he walked in, washed his
hands and prayed the rosary and was ultimately arrested when
he refused to leave. People are telling me it's a
legal test and this is the first case that's being
brought again.

Speaker 5 (36:45):
That's my take. Good for him.

Speaker 4 (36:46):
I disagree with his choices and his lifestyle and everything else,
But you know what, the courage of your convictions, if
you truly believe it, good for you standing.

Speaker 5 (36:54):
Up to the system. Just be willing to take whatever
repercussions come with it.

Speaker 2 (36:58):
Yeah, he goes on to say, it's how they test
the law. But I didn't do this to test the law.
You're a liar. You are a liar. You are doing
this to test the law. Look, if you're going to
go this far and give them a picture of you
and give them the date and where you're going, please
stop lying in the rest of your statement. Just say
the truth then and to your point, Chuck, if those

(37:19):
are your convictions, great, fine, but don't lie and say, yeah,
I didn't do this to test the law. I did
it because I was upset. I can't have any expectations
for what's going to happen because this has never been
prosecuted before. I'm horrified and scared. Oh really, so going
into this, you didn't think I'm going to be horrified

(37:40):
and scared. Is it really worth it to you being
charged with misdemeanor trespassing facing up to sixty days in jail?

Speaker 5 (37:47):
Listen to this. He fears he could be placed in a.

Speaker 2 (37:49):
Men's jail, forced to cut his hair, or prevented from
taking gender affirming hormones.

Speaker 4 (37:54):
Well, if you cut something else, maybe you can go
to the women's jail, But otherwise worry about cutting your hair. Yeah,
I'm just look, I'm sorry. I don't care how nice
your makeup is, how expensive the dress was.

Speaker 5 (38:07):
If you still stand you're a man.

Speaker 2 (38:11):
There's really no two ways about that. That is what
it is, as they say.

Speaker 1 (38:16):
And the Mark Bleezer Show on six WTV, and.

Speaker 2 (38:24):
Well, we go from rain, rain, rain, rain, rain to
non liquid precipitation, chief videor relogist martial peak.

Speaker 1 (38:34):
I'm not going to say the S.

Speaker 5 (38:35):
Word, not aren't we How many would this make since
the for Cynthia Bush Bloom thing?

Speaker 8 (38:45):
What we want to well, yeah, I mean yeah, right,
I want to say too, because we had some almost flurries.

Speaker 5 (38:54):
So he's not going to say the word, which is
hard because I want to count this word. The others work.

Speaker 2 (39:02):
But yeah, same amount of letters though true true once
the next letters and and the ones at h.

Speaker 5 (39:09):
But anyway, go ahead, yes, right, so let's let's just
go with two.

Speaker 1 (39:14):
Let's let's let's just do that.

Speaker 5 (39:16):
I mean, the good news is that it's folklore. There
aren'ty real rules on this, so let's just do it
and call it too. Our bigger issue is we.

Speaker 8 (39:24):
Have an alert for tonight overnight, and then another one
on Saturday, another round of strong storms. We're going to
string together four different alert days. Uh today I just
found the notice is actually a few minutes ago. We've
confirmed at least four more tornadoes in Ohio from the
past couple of days. So the Weather Service sends survey

(39:46):
teams out and they look at the damage and they
figure out, yep, this indeed was a tornado. So they've
confirmed a couple now in Van Wert County. Uh, there
was another one in Putnam County. There was another one in.

Speaker 5 (39:59):
I just lost it. I don't have Clerrown County.

Speaker 8 (40:02):
So we already yep, we already had the ones in
Brown and Fayette Counties. Okay, so yeah, we're I have
to go back. It's all kind of new. I haven't
really totalled up the numbers yet. I think we're looking
at five or six from the last couple of days,
so we're adding to our total and here we go forward.
We could still have another chance for strong storms overnight tonight.

(40:23):
The tornado thread is very low with this, but we'll
call it non zero and that's why we're gonna babysit
this through the night tonight, so we'll have somebody monitoring
in the weather center.

Speaker 5 (40:32):
Okay, that somebody is me.

Speaker 8 (40:34):
Whatever, fifty six overnight tonight, seventy for your day tomorrow.
We could get a round of storms in the afternoon
that are probably not severe, but stronger storms by about
seven eight o'clock in the evening, and those do have
a chance for some rotation, so watching those very carefully.
On Saturday Sunday it's mainly just rain coming down in

(40:56):
buckets again, but by Sunday evening we're cold, and especially
for northern Ohio, some of that turns non liquid.

Speaker 2 (41:05):
Okay, all right, marshall, thank you, and good for you
holding on to your promise saying I'm not using the
S word.

Speaker 5 (41:13):
No, it's fifty three right now. Yeah, we were just
talking about.

Speaker 7 (41:20):
That.

Speaker 5 (41:21):
Where did it go. Yeah, the uh walked into a
room and forgot why you were there again, didn't you.

Speaker 2 (41:28):
The toddler eating the cremated grandfather's ashes.

Speaker 5 (41:31):
Yeah, good lord, Boots. Are you traveling?

Speaker 2 (41:35):
Is that?

Speaker 1 (41:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (41:36):
I'm traveling.

Speaker 3 (41:37):
I took a fifty seven Corvette down a weird West
Virginia for cruising classics. I do that every Tuesday. I
take a classic cars people.

Speaker 5 (41:44):
Well that's yeah, that gets really cool, man, it's cool.

Speaker 4 (41:46):
Hey, I sent you a video ing on the messenger.
Take a look at it as soon as you can,
because you'll love it.

Speaker 7 (41:51):
Yeah. Yeah, well I'll go look at it. I'm driving.

Speaker 3 (41:54):
But I gotta tell you the grossest cremation story out.
Oh yeah. My uncle was a little older my father,
and they were both airplane nuts and had My uncle
had a beatter Cessna and one of their good friends
had passed away, and his goal was to have his
ashes spread over the Higher River by where the old
airport used to be, down by Martin Stree, Ohio. So

(42:16):
they took off. I'm ten years old, I'm in the
back of this old Sessna and my dad had the ashes. Well,
my dad opened his door, my uncle opened his door,
and then my dad started pouring the ashes, and all
the ashes blew back in the plane and we all
ate this guy.

Speaker 7 (42:33):
Oh man, yeah, and I'm ten years old.

Speaker 3 (42:38):
I'm crying. I'm spitting out kitty litter like body parts.

Speaker 7 (42:42):
And we landed the plane. We shot back being back up,
but no one bothered emptying the shot back, so we
put all the crap in there with him. So when
we took me back up, my dad opened the door,
my uncle didn't.

Speaker 3 (42:53):
And we freed threw the guy down the river, along
with all the degree that was in the bottom of
the shot back day I have.

Speaker 5 (43:02):
Yeah, there's uh, there's some science in that. It's like, no, no,
only one person to open up their side.

Speaker 7 (43:10):
Yeah, there was the only side inside the plane was white.
I mean just covering a like in most but those
cremation is like kitty litter, but a lot of it's
funny dying powder. And I remember crying.

Speaker 3 (43:26):
It was like in my nose, in my ears and.

Speaker 7 (43:29):
My mouth, Oh my god, what ninety mile hour? Except well,
don how fast airplanes go.

Speaker 3 (43:35):
But I I can tell you that I hate a
dead man. A lot of people can't say that.

Speaker 7 (43:39):
He's not called it because I can't know if they
even thought that one, it's disgusting.

Speaker 5 (43:43):
That's a that's a fantastic story.

Speaker 2 (43:45):
Seriously, especially if you know if you're not you, but
that that is a really that's a funny story.

Speaker 5 (43:50):
Dude, tooth in your hands Browns, I guess, oh.

Speaker 7 (43:55):
It is bad.

Speaker 3 (43:57):
Oh it was terrible. Yeah, I remember it was yesterday.

Speaker 7 (44:00):
It was traumatizing.

Speaker 2 (44:03):
They say, yeah, you remember trauma like that. It's hard
to block it out. Actually, you probably have to go
through so therapy to get it blocked down.

Speaker 3 (44:10):
I mean, not many guys can say they a dead man.

Speaker 7 (44:14):
I mean Jeffrey Dahmer and I was gonna say you
Dahmer and uh, what's his name?

Speaker 5 (44:19):
Elector Hannibal Lecter? Right, So Boots, thanks man A safe
travels brother, be safe.

Speaker 4 (44:29):
You see, man, I did that for about six months
after Silence of the Lambs hit, just to just to
scare people no matter who you are, how you doing
Clari's And.

Speaker 5 (44:39):
Then they're like yeah, yeah, just it was kind of weird.

Speaker 2 (44:42):
I I just saw a quick story about the guy
who played the psycho path in that and he talked
about how he was doing that role, that he he
got so into that role that it scared it. Like
he said, I've out to never play any kind of
character like that ever again because he had to to

(45:06):
get so into it. And look, that's what happened with
Heath Ledger and the Joker. He talked about that too.
He went into the state of depression and all this stuff. Now,
I think there has to be some underlying issues there
and I don't know that it ultimately led to him
end up bo ding and all of that stuff like Heath,
but this guy still like his name escapes me. And

(45:27):
it just reminded me because of the way you were
doing Hannibal Lecter there. But it was the guy that
was you know, the uh that Hannibal No.

Speaker 5 (45:37):
No, no, it was the serial killer in that Buffalo Bill,
Thank you, geez. I couldn't remember his name. Yeah, yeah,
trying to figure out who he was speaking of.

Speaker 4 (45:47):
Yeah, that's crazy. That's being able to flip into a person.
And I'm gonna be blatantly honest with you there there
were at least two people that were worried about me
doing something like that many years ago because of the
way that I just flip in and out of whoever.
Springfield native Jonathan Winters had gone into a institution for
a while because it said that that's what happened to him.

(46:09):
He got into a character and he was just there. Yes,
And I used to do that a lot too when
I was younger, and you know, I had a couple
of people in my life. Dude, you need to pay
attention to that kind of thing, because I would just
zone out. I would start a voice, and the next
thing I know, that voice became a person and I
it took me a while to shake it sometimes.

Speaker 2 (46:29):
Well, and that's I think what actors and actresses kind
of go through, depending on how deep they get into
their characters and so on.

Speaker 5 (46:36):
But that's a thing, that's absolutely a thing. He used
to work for Missus Lippman. Did you know her?

Speaker 1 (46:43):
Oh huh huh oh wait? Was she a great, big
fat person?

Speaker 2 (46:49):
Buffalo Bill. It puts the lotion on its skin like ah,
that is so creepy. I saw that on the big
screen in the theater. It is different than watching it
on just your TV. Still gonna be wrong, still creepy,
but holy cow, what an amazing that is, What an

(47:10):
amazing movie. And some serious thought, some serious demented people
writing all of that stuff.

Speaker 5 (47:17):
It's crazy.

Speaker 4 (47:18):
Perfect Storm was one of those. I don't think Perfect
Storm had to be seen in a theater, prefer the
surrounds down and everything. That was the Woolburg cluding movie
with the Ship of Fishing.

Speaker 5 (47:29):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4 (47:31):
You can see watching it on TV, I was like,
that's nothing, But in the theater it was. It was chilling.
It had you moving in your seat.

Speaker 1 (47:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (47:38):
The cinematic effect, there's something to be said for that
depends on the type of movie. Again, but those are
like the top gon and you know you're hearing the
subsnic and those kinds of things you can't create in
a home theater, even if you have a really great
home theater. It's not like the Dobey surround or some
of these extra large screens some of.

Speaker 5 (48:00):
The the Imax greatest exactly. I have yet to see
an Imax movie.

Speaker 4 (48:04):
I have yet to be in an Oh wow, they're
just using modern screens and sound equipment.

Speaker 5 (48:10):
They're awesome enough. I don't know if I could handle Imax.

Speaker 2 (48:12):
Well, they're awesome enough, but then they're really awesome if
you were to be able to see them in Imax.

Speaker 5 (48:17):
Hey, you know it is tax time right now, and
this is funny.

Speaker 2 (48:20):
So during the break, you know, Josephine, I said to
her last night, she for the first time, is having
to pay this year.

Speaker 1 (48:29):
Now, I don't know if you know this.

Speaker 2 (48:30):
Works, but when you work for when you work in
Columbus but you live in Delaware, there's like a percent
or a percent and a half that is not taken
out of your check.

Speaker 5 (48:40):
And I deal with that here. I have to deal
with that every year. I've dealt with that every year
I've ever worked in Columbus. And then you get a
credit for some of the two percent that you pay.
I mean, it's a whole thing. And so she works
in Columbus, of course, lives in Delaware. She lives with
us still, and I said, you're probably gonna end up
having to pay this year. Well, I have my tax.

Speaker 2 (49:00):
Just go ahead and do hers real quick. Because she
didn't make a lot of money. So I had him
do that, and I'm like, you owe money this year.
She's like okay. And I told her this was in
you know, last month, or actually it was in February,
late February.

Speaker 5 (49:13):
We had it done.

Speaker 2 (49:13):
I go, you're gonna have to pay by April first
or April tenth, you're gonna need to send this money
in and all that.

Speaker 1 (49:20):
Well, I said to her the other day.

Speaker 5 (49:21):
I go, hey, are you gonna be sending that in soon?
She goes, are they gonna send me a.

Speaker 1 (49:24):
Bill for that?

Speaker 2 (49:27):
That was the first thing she said. I go listen
to what I'm telling you right now. As your dad,
you do not want to blip on the IRS radar,
and then you'll never get rid of them, I promised you.

Speaker 5 (49:38):
And I was given her the speech. Man, I'm like, listen.

Speaker 2 (49:41):
So today she doesn't have checks, so she goes, well,
i'll just order some checks that. I go, they won't
be here in time for you to send to the IRS.
So now you're gonna have to get a money order.
And she's like, what's that?

Speaker 5 (49:54):
Oh my goodness.

Speaker 2 (49:55):
And I go, well, you're gonna have to get it
at the bank. Well, they don't do money orders at
the bank. Can they do cashier's check? Cashiers check exactly?

Speaker 5 (50:04):
So I go, and it won't be free. They're going
to charge me for that. I go, listen to me.

Speaker 2 (50:08):
When you're in a bank, they're gonna charge you for
anything that they It has been a process.

Speaker 4 (50:14):
It's a shame that I and you know, part of
this is our fault too. We did not teach them
the old ways, and occasionally you still need the old ways.
Because I went through the same thing with the Princess
when she got her first paycheck a couple of years
ago working at McDonald's and she goes, so, how do
I get the money for this? Like, well, you endorse
it and we'll take it to the bank and cash.
She goes, what's that mean? So just endorse the check?

(50:35):
And well I had to actually put the check in
front of her, turn it over instead of right here,
sign your name. That's an endorsement. She didn't even didn't
even know what that was.

Speaker 5 (50:45):
You know, the public school system. It's on them, because
you know what she said.

Speaker 2 (50:49):
She's like, and the lady at the bank, God Lover,
was like, here's how you fill this out the check?
She's and I said, Josephine, She's like, I had mom
help me out.

Speaker 5 (51:00):
Listen. Good for you asking because.

Speaker 2 (51:02):
You don't want to send that and then the money
they don't get their money on time, They will hit
you with fees. Even this generation, Chuck, It's so scary
because this generation will go, well, I know, but I
sent it to you on time, and then you're telling
me now that I owe you.

Speaker 5 (51:22):
I told her, I.

Speaker 1 (51:23):
Said, listen to me.

Speaker 5 (51:24):
You don't understand.

Speaker 1 (51:26):
Please listened to anything I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (51:28):
It's not even they have to send it on it's
on the dress or I mean, I've got the.

Speaker 5 (51:33):
Money, that's it. That's their mindset. Yeah, I don't get it.

Speaker 1 (51:37):
It's scary.

Speaker 2 (51:37):
And man, I've worked with her. Look, she pulled the
lever for the right person. So I feel like I
accomplished a lot so far in this. You know, she's
now nineteen, but she was old enough to vote in
the election, so I got her the correct direction with
regard to that. Now, I'm I'm chipping away one thing
at a time.

Speaker 1 (51:55):
But this is so foreign to them.

Speaker 5 (51:58):
It's funny, it's weird. It's like, you know. So I'm
walking her through all of this, and during the break
it's like the cutest stuff.

Speaker 2 (52:03):
But she said me, I'm it's like, honey, please just
make sure you get this money to them. It's not
very much, but they will you know, one hundred and
fifty dollars you owe them if you wait long enough,
I go, you'll owe them six hundred dollars.

Speaker 5 (52:16):
I go, do you understand?

Speaker 1 (52:18):
How do they do that?

Speaker 5 (52:19):
I go exactly, your.

Speaker 4 (52:20):
Tax payment cannot show up late, or you're in trouble,
your your absentee ballot can be like you know, four
or five years down the line.

Speaker 5 (52:27):
I'm good with that. Great point man,
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