Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's the Mark Pleaser show.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
You know.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
The first thing that I noticed today when I walked in, well,
Zach attack.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Is not here.
Speaker 4 (00:25):
I know, does to smell much better?
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Man, you just stole my part last Thanks a lot. No,
don't hey Ella, whenever I start talking, don't turn chuck
on till I'm finished with my thought, please, because I
don't need him stealing my stuff all.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
But that's even better that he said it too.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
But I just want to say I didn't even shower today,
So whatever that says, well.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Then that is unbelievable, because, uh I what does that say, Zach?
Speaker 5 (00:56):
I cannot believe we were both thinking the same thing
that holds that Grizzly Adams aroma just is not around today.
Speaker 1 (01:05):
And look, I'm obviously I'm giving Zach a hard time.
He doesn't stink, and there's no Grizzly Adams or roma,
love of God. But the first thing I walked in
and I go hey, Ellen, and she goes hey, and
I was giving her the show's sheet, and I go, man,
it smells a lot better in here than when Zach
is normally in. I got like a strawberry kind of something,
(01:28):
and it might be some sort of hand cream or
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:32):
It always smells nice.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
Well, I'm just saying she's now come clean and with yeah,
I didn't know. I'm showered today, so whyn't what you two?
Speaker 2 (01:39):
Any fancy lotions or anything. It's like whatever gold bond
or something.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
I have never seen a strawberry gold bond, but I
swear I got a whiff of strawberry and it wasn't
I wasn't even next to you. I mean I was
on the other side of the room, you know what.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
I hate to not take credit for this, but I
do have a bag of dried mangoes in here, so
it might be vemo.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Ah, that's it, the fruity fruit. That's it. It had
like a it smelled though, yes.
Speaker 4 (02:09):
And it did kind of poporehation thing.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
Well, it did remind me of like a hand cream that.
A lot of times we'll be in the vehicle and Josephine,
who's you know, my daughter who she'll use that and
Jenny does sometimes too, and it's to the point where
I'm like, my eyes are almost watering. I'm like, what
are you doing? And She's like, what, I just put
(02:33):
on some lotion on my hands. I'm like, good Lord,
crack your window. I was like, I'm gonna throw up.
My nostrils are burning. You know, I'm just like Geeminy Christmas.
But you know, as everything else diminishes in my life,
it seems like for me physically, the smell, the sense
of smell. It's like, is it getting more acute? Am
I turning into a dog?
Speaker 5 (02:53):
I'm like that first thing in the morning at five am,
if the queen goes in the bathroom and starts springing
all the bath and body works stuff or whatever, it
can make me nauseous.
Speaker 1 (03:03):
It like wafts through and and I as a result, Man,
I don't you know, I some guys and I don't.
I'm gonna guess Ella that you're somebody who doesn't like
guys that bathe in it, even if they've taken a shower.
But whatever. And I don't wear cologne much. But it's
literally like one and it hits here and literally that's
(03:24):
it's not even a full depression of it. It's just
just a little missed. Because if somebody is five feet
from you, I don't think that they should be overcome
by whatever you're wearing.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
Correct, No, you spray it you sprints it in front
of you and then walk walk through it.
Speaker 4 (03:40):
Yes, and took a church.
Speaker 5 (03:43):
It took me to a church out on the east
side of Columbus where she would go. And she was
a little girl and a lot of old ladies in
there wearing old lady perfume and powder and all that stuff.
And I threw up in the church. Oh as a kid,
And I think subliminally that's probably still with me. Really
strong punge stuff and you know old ladies, man, they
put it on.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
Well, I don't think it's there trying to cause people
go and what are they trying to hide? I just
think it's their sense of smell is diminished, and so
as a result they have to they go nose blind, right,
that's a great term. And they just because they're like, ah,
I can finally smell it, and they legitimately, you gotta
like the smell that you're wearing, so you legitimately are
(04:24):
looking for and you.
Speaker 5 (04:25):
Go, ah, there's that's affirming that. I like light stuff
for just that reason. Yeah, I don't like real Remember
back when we were young, everybody's the dragcar noir. Oh yeah,
I thought that stuff was just too much it was
too heavy. I'd liked h Cody Musk, which was not
Joe Van but Cody Musk, because it was a nice
(04:45):
light and even if you smelled it, it wasn't an
overpowering heavy I've never liked, you know, real heavy colowns, perfumes,
anything like that. Yeah, but mangoes work.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
Yeah, that is exactly what it is. That's kind of
a and it was real light. And I was like, oh, man,
immediately I noticed that, and I'm like, man, I hope
she doesn't. As soon as I walk in the studio,
I see her high tail it down to hr. Do
you know what he just said to me?
Speaker 4 (05:13):
He said he liked.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
My mind goes, well, everybody save on cologne and perfume.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
Just put some fruit in your pocket.
Speaker 1 (05:21):
I love it?
Speaker 4 (05:22):
Why not?
Speaker 1 (05:22):
I love it? Man, that's so good. I like it.
And if you feel the knee, you can grab one
out and popt it, you know, like And so it's
the dual. It kind of accomplishes a couple of things.
If you get a little hungry and you smell good
when you have the fruit in your pocket. Nothing like
having some good fruit in your pocket, Chuck.
Speaker 5 (05:42):
I try to remember that each day. Yeah, it's something
I keep in mind.
Speaker 1 (05:46):
What kind of what kind of fruit would you keep
in your pocket?
Speaker 5 (05:52):
I think probably something that's not too juicy, wouldn't leave stains,
anything like that.
Speaker 4 (05:58):
I don't know. Maybe banana.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
Is that a banana in your pocket?
Speaker 4 (06:05):
I'm going to hr too.
Speaker 3 (06:08):
I don't work here, I don't care.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
I love it. I love it. I love it, I
love it. I love it. You're like, I don't work here,
I don't care. March down there. I don't give a crapy.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
Joy zack smell again tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (06:24):
Oh good lord, please leave some fruit in the studio.
Just leave some in there. Heide it though, so he
can't like get it and do anything with it. That way,
it'll just smell good when he's in there tomorrow.
Speaker 5 (06:36):
You know, with a vampire, you hold up a cross
and they back off. With Zach, you hold up like
a peach and a pear, and the same thing happens.
Speaker 4 (06:42):
It's funny, that's it.
Speaker 5 (06:45):
Man.
Speaker 1 (06:46):
Victoria's Secret used to have. And I don't know if
you ever wear any of their And I'm talking about
the perfume or sense. No, no, no, not, I'm sorry,
not the clothing or any of the oh, garment.
Speaker 4 (06:58):
No, I was going to have to.
Speaker 1 (06:59):
Yes, No, they they had a a and I can't
think of the name of it. But Jenny had that
when I first started dating her, and so she's still
I track some down because I love that scent and
I can't. I'm like on here looking while you guys
are talking. I can't find it.
Speaker 3 (07:13):
It is probably was it called angel or angels?
Speaker 2 (07:16):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (07:16):
Sure they had one called angels.
Speaker 1 (07:18):
It is dream. There's a dream rapture. Oh uh, I
think it's called rapture. That's the one. Because I it
literally is discontinued. Several Victoria's secret perfumes have been discontinued.
Speaker 4 (07:32):
Rapture. That's they quit doing that.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
That's it. I know.
Speaker 4 (07:35):
It's like, uh, discontinue stuff that.
Speaker 5 (07:37):
So I had a bathroom body work sent dark amber
that I actually landed on.
Speaker 4 (07:41):
I said, this is me. I like this a lot,
and they quit making it. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
I mean, well they clearly don't. They don't continue selling
a lot of whatever it is. If they discontinue, why
would a company go, we're making too much money with this,
we need to get it.
Speaker 5 (07:53):
I think they just freshen it up so they can
act like they're you know, there's only so many scents
in the world.
Speaker 4 (07:58):
You're going to create.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Any well, then keep the old ones too. Yeah, how
hard would that be? And if you know what, magically
it continues selling out, there's your sign, you know, stop,
don't discontinue it. If you want to introduce new ones, great,
But Keith, have you ever heard of that rapture hella?
Speaker 3 (08:15):
No, I don't remember that one.
Speaker 1 (08:16):
Okay, but that's going to be Yeah, that's going to
be a little probably a little before you kind of
got into that.
Speaker 4 (08:24):
Give me a white shoulders to ware.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
I used to wear, uh a perfume called fresh cut.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
Grass, No kidding. It smelled like that.
Speaker 4 (08:35):
Yeah, wow, my son.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
It attracted divorced dads.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
Smells like a lawn.
Speaker 4 (08:44):
We're back to Zack again.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
So the candles, I've heard of that candle.
Speaker 5 (08:51):
My son got me the fresh cut grass candles for
Father's Day one year. Yeah, and they smelled, yeah, like
fresh cut grass.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
I don't know about it. For perf I like that smell,
but I don't know about on my woman and not
you know whatever.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
It would attract too many divorced that maybe.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Just it wouldn't attract me. I can tell you that
whether I was divorced at or not. Again, I like
that smell, but I I associate it with usually there's
a cold beer involved when I'm smelling that typically, and
it's usually just gazing out at my lawn, like, yeah,
it looks good today kind of thing. A woman, Yeah,
(09:28):
she looks good today, and it smells like my lawn.
Speaker 5 (09:31):
If I had a smell that could make me like
envision frick fresh cut grass, but smell of ice cold beer,
that would be nice.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
There's that. Did you didn't have dogs trying to go
on you?
Speaker 3 (09:42):
Not that I recall.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
They smell that in their immediately like stop it, what
are you doing? Knock it off with that. I smell
like it. That's not your bathroom. Stop it.
Speaker 4 (09:53):
Not that I recall, But then I was young. I
don't remember everything, all right.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
The torn siren yesterday? Did you you live far away?
Speaker 4 (10:04):
Ella?
Speaker 1 (10:05):
Don't you you live kind of farther away?
Speaker 5 (10:07):
No?
Speaker 1 (10:08):
Oh you don't. Do you live near the west side?
Did you hear the time?
Speaker 2 (10:10):
I didn't have the siren, but I did hear people.
I saw people like asking about it online.
Speaker 3 (10:15):
Anybody else hearing this? What's going on?
Speaker 1 (10:17):
Yeah? So Chuck because we're going on, Hey, did you
hear that? He's like, yeah, he heard it. You sent
a note to Marshall, which Marshall's got to bring. He's
going to talk about that here in about twenty minutes
or so when he joins us.
Speaker 5 (10:29):
But he assured me there were no other emergencies to
worry about. He didn't know why he checked into it,
but yeah, it kind of scared everybody because I mean,
we had a nice, warm day and it's that time
of year, and all of a sudden, with no warning,
those sirens started going off. So yeah, the neighborhood was
all over Facebook.
Speaker 4 (10:45):
Did anybody know what's going on here right now? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (10:48):
So did you hear it? Straight away? And then go
I got to check with Marshall.
Speaker 5 (10:52):
The queen heard it first, and she said, come here
because I'm pretty sure I'm hearing the tornado siren. But
and it wasn't the one closest to us. It was
farther away. But I came out, I'm like, yeah, that
is a tornado siren going off. I didn't know they
could segment him. Then I'm thinking, okay, did they see
a tornado that only is going to affect like Grove
City to our southwest or what the deal was. I
(11:15):
don't know how the sirens work anymore, and it was
it was a little worrisome, but Marshall said, nothing to
worry about, so I'm good.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
Well, they it was raining right when that happened. It
was there was rain.
Speaker 4 (11:27):
Yeah, not real heavy, but it was raining.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
They're staying around nine to twenty last night. I thought
it was earlier than that. Yeah, it seems like it
was earlier than that, maybe nine. But it went on
for like twenty minutes though, they Yeah, so you noticed
like it was prolonged. You're like, man, it's going on. Yeah,
it's like yeah, it's like somebody somebody driving on the
freeway with their turn signal on and you're following them, going, hey,
(11:52):
turn your what are you like? You're going left around
the world here, you know, or whatever. So you're hearing that,
going why isn't somebody just doing something? Why? Well, I
guess they ended up disconnecting the power supply and then
started working on it to try to get it, try
to get it fixed. But they had to disconnect the
power supply. It's like possessed. It wouldn't stop.
Speaker 5 (12:12):
The whole crew wasn't available because many of them are
working on the videos at the New Jersey Airport. I guess,
so is that the same group of people? Yeah, I
mean all the technology's fighting us back right now. I
don't uh, And it's it's worrisome again this time of year.
You want those things to work when they're supposed to
work as they're supposed to work, and for one of
them to go off like that or a series of
(12:33):
them to go off like that with no known reason, Right,
that's that's Bothersome goes to the machine. Yeah, wouldn't bug
me as much into December. I was gonna ask that now. Yeah, Yeah,
that's that's a little worrisome.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
Like it's snowing outside and that goes off. Why doesn't
that ever happen? Where are you going? Okay, nothing, that
ain't gonna be anything.
Speaker 4 (12:51):
And something out.
Speaker 5 (12:51):
This is gonna sound crazy, But while we're talking about
the sirens, I've often wanted what are.
Speaker 4 (12:55):
They called air raid sirens?
Speaker 5 (12:58):
Torn it going back to world or to the possibility
of bombers come in and.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
Would did they change?
Speaker 4 (13:04):
And we still use those? But what we still use those?
Speaker 5 (13:07):
If you know another nine to eleven moment approached and
something was going on. Would we still use those sirens
to warn people or is that no longer part of
what they're supposed to do?
Speaker 1 (13:15):
Well, I think it becomes a larger thing on your TV.
The notification if if somebody were coming to bomb us
and they had, you know, enough advanced warning. I'm pretty
sure something you'd see on TV. I don't know that
those But what if you're not near a TV.
Speaker 5 (13:30):
That's all right, Yeah, in the per for a picnic
or something, you're away from it, you went fishing and
you don't want to hear from anybody that day, and
you hear those sirens, should you? I mean, are they
Would they still be used for? That just made me
curious when I was thinking about the name of them.
I think they should change the sound for tornado. But
is it too late to teach us old dogs a
(13:50):
new trick. With regard to the type of sound coming out.
You could use the same mechanism or the same piece
of equipment, but just with a different sound. Now though,
it's getting a little more complicated because you're going to
rely on whoever's doing that to send the correct sound.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
Not an air raid siren, but a tornado and then
if it malfunctions, then God forbid, the air raid siren
gets going, and then you're like, oh, somebody's got a bomb.
Speaker 5 (14:15):
Us, you know, and if you think it can happen,
it wasn't all that long ago Hawaii under missile attack.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
I know that was crazy, but yeah, it was a
false alarm and much ado about nothing, and I just
thought it was interesting that they had to disconnect the
power supply to get it to stop. Anyway, Marshall may
have a little more of an explanation here.
Speaker 4 (14:36):
Of course he will. Yeah, he's Marshall.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
Yeah, I'll I don't know how much he can nerd
out on this, but as much as he's able to,
he will. Trust me. Sports and the Mark Leaser Show. Yeah,
we're just talking about that false alarm yesterday, tornado siren
(14:59):
and all right, Chief Meteorologist Marshall McPeak is joining us
right now. So yeah, we were kind of talking about
this opening the show, Marshall, and yeah, the fact that
they had to disconnect the power supply to get that
thing to stop was kind of interesting. But yeah, yeah,
told me he sent you an email and said, hey, man,
you know what gives what's going on?
Speaker 4 (15:19):
With it.
Speaker 6 (15:19):
Yeah, so there was no severe weather in the area
last night, and thank goodness, because you want to talk
about what would have costed some confusion, but thankfully the
weather was quiet and you had a malfunctioning siren. But
you know, when you think about this, we have almost
two hundred sirens as part of this system in Franklin County.
We have more sirens than most counties in Oklahoma. So
(15:43):
we are well protected by this system. And it's a
complex beast. There's a lot of moving parts to this,
and it takes a lot of maintenance, and every once
in a while you'll get a mechanical issue that ends
up triggering one of those sirens. So unfortunately, it does
cost some confusion when it happens, but more often than not,
they work flawlessly and everything's everything's in good working order.
(16:06):
So this is an unusual situation. But thankfully they were
able to get it taken care of fairly quickly.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
But there was a lot of concern last night.
Speaker 6 (16:16):
Because we know what those sirens mean now, and so
when you hear one, you pay attention, and that's actually
a good thing. So we want to make sure that
we don't not pay attention to those those sirens.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
So I guess the question there is and I don't
know if you meant it, you know, by anything, you
meant anything, by the way you said it. But at
one point, were people just not paying as much of
attention to something like that? Do you feel like now
people are more attentive for whatever reason?
Speaker 6 (16:44):
I think it's both because there's actually a thing we
call it siren fatigue, and a lot of times what happens,
especially in the middle of a busy storm season, is
you'll hear the sirens go off and then you say, yeah, yeah,
that again, and you maybe don't pay much attention to
it because well, the last time it didn't hit my neighborhood,
(17:06):
it may have been somewhere else, And so the siren
fatigue becomes a real situation. What it leads to is
secondary confirmation. So you hear the siren and the first
thing you do you probably grab your phone, or you
turn on the TV, or you call a neighbor and
say what is it about? And then you get that
(17:26):
secondary confirmation, which then leads you to take some kind
of action. So, yes, siren fatigue is a real thing,
and it's been studied a lot by the social scientists
at the National Weather Service because we want the There
are studies about how people react to watches and warnings
(17:47):
because it helps us understand what's most effective for getting
the message across. So these watches and warnings can literally
save lives, but only if folks pay attention to it.
So you have to make sure that the messaging is
right so that we all pay attention to it and
that we take action when these things happen. And so
(18:08):
that's why you know, when there's a siren malfunction, you
know it's a mechanical beast. You know your car breaks
down now and then, Well, these are mechanical things that
can also break down now and then, and so it's
important to get those fixed as quickly as possible so
that we can have faith in them when it's time
to actually put them to use. So we have a
really incredible system here in Franklin County. We're very fortunate
(18:31):
to have the system that we have. Every once in
a while, though, you know, much like your cars, things
can go awry once in a while, but we got
it fixed, so that's good. We're going to be mostly
cloudy for the night tonight, with some scattered rain showers,
some patchy fog in the morning.
Speaker 1 (18:45):
Nothing's severe tonight.
Speaker 6 (18:47):
Seventy eight for the day tomorrow with scattered showers and storms,
and another round of storms on Thursday, with a high
of ready for this eighty five and humid.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
All right, marshall, thank you very much. It is four
right now, seventy four.
Speaker 5 (19:04):
I would love to get in a room with those
people to make those decisions about what the sirens should
sound like and what, because I'm thinking, I remember when
they changed the sirens when I was a kid, and
we were thrown.
Speaker 4 (19:15):
Into turmoil over that.
Speaker 1 (19:16):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, because it was a.
Speaker 5 (19:18):
Different sound, and it wasn't that that old almost I
got old the factory horn from the Flintstones when Fred
got off work, That's what it was. And then they
went to these things and people to and then remember
when we started in radio, Remember we had the emergency
broadcast system which was just at like a five K
tone deep. Then suddenly they decided to go to emergency
(19:41):
alert system and you got that gang thing. I don't
what makes one better than the other. We tried yellow
fire trucks in Columbus. Do you remember that nobody could
see them any better? And so they went back to
red fire trucks.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
The thing that Marshall just kind of pointed out might
be kind of in tandem with what you just talked
about with regard to the sirens. Why did they change them,
because siren fatigue could have been setting in where they're like, Okay,
that one's just worn out. It's welcome, we need to
switch it up. Which is a different sound that goes, hey, hey,
something's going on. You better look into it. Before it
(20:17):
just kind of just kind of melded into the background.
You're like, okay, it's that again. So maybe that's why
it changed.
Speaker 4 (20:23):
I'd just like to see that process.
Speaker 5 (20:25):
And you know, but being that in radio and hell,
when we started, we still had to take meater readings,
go look at things and fill out logs way yeah,
And I was to the point where if I heard
an emergency broadcast system tone in the middle of the night,
I would jump straight up out of bed. You just
get programmed that way because it was our job to
make sure that information got dispersed. But I just i'd
(20:47):
love to see the conversation that goes into making those
changes and who goes, yeah, let's add some act to it.
Speaker 4 (20:52):
This time, that'll be good.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
So occasionally, you know, when you're a homeown, you have
stuff happens that is kind of unexplained and you're just like,
how is that breaking? How is that going bad? And
that would be my exhaust fan that stopped working in
the upstairs bathroom and you know, to turn it on here,
(21:17):
I'm just like, oh, it sounds like something there's gonna
be a fire locked or something. Because think about this.
You go into the east and you sell the homes
that are a million years old. You go in there,
and the ceiling fan, not the ceiling fan, the exhaust fan,
the bathroom fans, they go and go and go. It's like,
I don't even know what they're made out of, but
somehow they do not go bad or something. Just takes
(21:39):
forever for those things to go bad. Yet this was like,
so I decided I was gonna pop off the cover
that goes you know, it's a flat up against the ceiling.
So I popped it down and decided to kind of
take a gander. And then there's these little clips in
there that kind of hold it in these little slots
(22:00):
that you know were up there, and so I started
kind of undoing those and stuff started falling out on me,
and I didn't realize what the stuff was until I
looked down on the ground and I saw.
Speaker 5 (22:13):
It was a wasp. Oh okay. I was thinking maybe feathers.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
No, no, because the way that that's situated and the blades,
they're too small, I think for a bird to really
get in there. But when I started pulling that little
cover off, I ended up counting there were seventeen wasps.
But they were carcasses that were in there, and there
(22:39):
was dust all over them, and like to the point
where I started to freak a little bit because I
was watching them intently, going is there about to be
boo like coming out of the ceiling, like like just
an invasion? Dude. These things were so old and crispy.
I'm like, what happened? I think they got in there
(23:00):
somehow and stopped it. But I there was a I
don't know, probably a half inch layer of dust or
what do you call fuzz, like over the little motor
there or whatever. I was like, oh man, this is
this could have been something that saved me. Well, I
wipe that off. I got all of the accounted. The
carcasses ended up getting rid of somehow Jenny still ended
up seeing one somewhere either it was it might have
(23:23):
been in the trash can. But I flushed. I thought
I flushed all of them because I didn't even want
to alert her. But then I go over and I
turn on that fan and it's working again. Yeah, it
just started working again. That's all just crudd in.
Speaker 5 (23:34):
One of them managed to get their carcass right where
the blade would stop. And yeah, but that could You
know what, you haven't had Lops in your house, right,
There's been no problem with him in your house.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
At one time, back when Josephine was a lot smaller,
I remember there were like a couple in our bathroom,
which is where this was where these and then I
ended up having somebody come out who said they sealed
it all up. They they went out and went up
in there and looked around and they said, yep, there
was a little and they sealed it up. But clearly
they figured out another way. Again, they're back, but not alive.
(24:06):
They weren't flying around the bathroom. They were just trapped
up in there and dead. We's sure exhaust fan actually
is a vented exhaust fan. Yes, see, so many places
are not they're just they just move air around.
Speaker 5 (24:17):
Okay, what good is that? So yours actually vents to
the outside of the house. Correct, the price you pay
is I guess the occasional was.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
I suppose, But it has to be in a bathroom.
It needs to suck the air out of the bathroom. Yeah,
and up through what the stink pipe they call it
or what have you on?
Speaker 5 (24:36):
How many are they just they just circulate the stink
like oven hoods? How many oven hoods have I seen that? Are?
They're not vented anywhere? They just moved the smoke around
in the kitchen. That's the points they're.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
Just I guess checking a box their code. Then I go,
even though it's not.
Speaker 5 (24:52):
Doing what strange came with the hood, we might as
well put it in.
Speaker 7 (24:55):
Yeah, peer show, did you see a King Jefferies just
(25:18):
daring the Department of Homeland Security to arrest those three
uh in New Jersey Democrat members of Congress because they'll
find out quote unquote after they stormed an ice detention center.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
Yeah, King Jeffries is gone, Yeah, I dare you because
you'll find out.
Speaker 5 (25:35):
I would love for him to expound upon what finding
out means in his world.
Speaker 1 (25:41):
He said it three times. They'll find out, they'll find out,
they'll find out. What are they gonna find out? There
a keen mister, it's.
Speaker 4 (25:48):
Amazing what you can find out after a cavity.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
Search house minority leader guy, and that would be who?
That would be no good. He goes, that's a red line.
It's a red line. He said it twice. That means
he's real serious.
Speaker 4 (26:01):
Oh, he's serious serious.
Speaker 1 (26:03):
It's very clear we're not going to be intimidated by
their tactics to try and force principled opposition from not
standing up to their extremism. I guess the rules don't
apply to them. Did you see the one congress woman
who was shoving the police. She was shoving them like
with her. She goes, well, I wouldn't actually say I
was shoving them. There's video of you and like using
(26:26):
your body, which, by the way, there's a lot of
it to I'm just look, it's just an observation. But
she's like trying to push him out of the way,
and I'm just like, wait a minute. Because you're Congress,
you're above the law. I thought nobody was above the law,
especially the president. Now, if we're gonna say anybody might
be above the law, would you say the president would
(26:46):
be above the law before you as a sitting House member.
Speaker 4 (26:49):
No, they'd never say that.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
That's the thing I'm saying is like they talk about
how they're allowed to do whatever they want. No, that
has to be done in a correct fashion. There are
checks and balances in place. You're not allowed to just
show up and storm the place. What the what is
wrong with these people? You've never seen anybody conservative do
that ever. Ever, it's a fantasy existence.
Speaker 5 (27:14):
I don't know how to what they see and what's
actually happening are usually two different things. And it's sad
because I really think they are in such a mindset
as a whole that they've deceived themselves into believing that
what they think it is is what it is.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
Trump is mulling this over, I know, that's from what
I understand. With regard to arrest from this just depends
on you know, and even if it comes across, if
they violated and it's enough, I mean, really, you're messing
with the wrong president, the wrong guy that you rated,
the wrong guy that you've had all these bunk charges against.
(27:53):
You're messing with the wrong the wrong the most wrong
president in history. By the way, if you're thinking he's
going to give anybody a.
Speaker 5 (28:02):
Pass, you notice he was nice during forty five. He
did not go in he didn't he didn't go after
Hill Earny three. Yeah, yeah, he didn't do any of that.
Speaker 1 (28:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (28:11):
I don't think he's inclined to be that nice this
time around. And all it's gonna take is one, just
one time for Tom Holman to go take a mayor
out of his office who refused to assist Ice with
detaining somebody one time, and that the ball is rolling
at that point, because I'll tell you what, the outcry
of support and righteous laughter from people in this country
(28:33):
when they start seeing those people who are in control
of them getting their upcomings for that, all people are
gonna love that, and it will it'll get big.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
I think Leticia James could be Yes, she could be
the one that kind of gets the Soul Party started.
Possibly possibly Anyway, he goes on to say, no one's
intimidated by President Trump, No one. They're clear lines that
they're just dare not cross. Uh huh. I'll throw down
the gauntlet there, please came threw it down the gauntlets
Sounds like you have kind of We played this last
(29:04):
week the clip from Bernie Sanders when he was on
with Brett Baher, and it was basically, he defended refusing
to He just defended refusing to stand in line and
fly excuse me commercial and all of that, the use
of his private jet. Bernie Sanders was doing this, and
so the absence of self awareness is hilarious. But in
(29:27):
this situation, Bernie is aware and he just doesn't care.
And I love the fact that he tried to make
the point that Trump flies around and Brett just shot
him down and said, he's not on a fighting oligarchy tour.
You are. Trump makes no bones about he's not talking
about the carbon footprint. You're the one who flies that flag.
(29:50):
President Trump is not. And for you to try to go, well,
President Trump, no, that's that's really not how that works.
Speaker 4 (29:57):
Man.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
So I like the angle there or what have you.
But he's power The future founder and executive director Daniel
Turner is joining us now, and man, to watch this
whole thing play out is just laughable. Daniell, welcome again
to the Mark Blazer Show. How are you Man?
Speaker 8 (30:13):
It's great to be back on with you, and I
think the segue into this conversation is perfect for what
you gentlemen were talking about. When it comes to elected democrats,
especially in Congress, rules don't apply to them, whether it's
you know, storming a Homelands DHS facility, whether it's COVID
rules right, COVID lockdown rules don't apply. And in this
(30:35):
case with Bernie Sanders, the olagarkia doesn't apply, the carbon
footprint doesn't apply, None of these rules apply to them,
because they'll tell you their agenda is larger than the
rules itself. Only us nameless, faithless, powerless people have to
be subjected to the rules of elected democrats.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
Yeah, he's like, no apologies, no apologies. You know, He's like,
do you think I have time to stand in that
It's like, oh, I'm sorry, mister. And nobody said you
have to stand in that line or you don't. But
the problem here is your carbon footprint fight that you've
been flying that flag for how long and then you
just it flies in the face everything that you do,
(31:13):
every move that you make, and then you're going to
continue to try to tout that it's it's the hypocrisy
is off the charts.
Speaker 8 (31:20):
Here, and that's why we wanted to calculate it and
put out the actual equivalencies of what his carbon footprint
would be. Remember, it wasn't long ago that the President
of the United States was assuring us the greatest threat
we faced was climate change. The generals told him, the
greatest threat we face is climate change. Climate change undergirded
(31:42):
every single policy of every agency. Hood had a climate
change office, the military had a climate change office. And
suddenly climate change doesn't seem to be the existential threat
at once was. So I'm just going to make these
people continue to eat their eat their dinner right like
a little toddler. If you tell me this is existential
and we need to alter all of Western society to
(32:05):
attack the climate crisis, well then you can't. When it's
no longer politically feasible or inconvenient, you can't decide you
don't want to have to worry about your carbon footprint anymore.
If Bernie Sanders had power, which as he does have
someone as a senator, but if he had power, as
if you were elected president, he would put people like
me in jail for climateness information. He's voted that way
(32:28):
wolves that of course never got signed into law. But
he has voted to lock up fossil fuel executives for
climateness information, he's voted to punish people for climate change,
and yet here he is, in his personal capacity flaunting
all the rules he would put the rest of us
in jail for violating.
Speaker 1 (32:46):
So tell me about this, Daniel Turner, Power the Future
founder and executive director. Daniel, tell me about this carbon
footprint that his private jet emits. Do you have that information?
Hopefully you're right in front of you.
Speaker 8 (32:59):
We do put it and I was thrilled that Fox
News ran with the exclusive, and it's also on our website. So,
for example, Bernie is from the town of Burlington, Vermont.
His stop Oligarchy tour right now has emitted the carbon
equivalency of every single resident of Burlington for about five weeks.
His carbon footprint has been the equivalency of your average
(33:22):
American over almost a decade of their life. It's the
equivalent of sixty two thousand tons of coal. It's just
you go through the list of the equivalencies and it
just becomes more and more absurd. Perhaps the funniest of
all of this when he told Brett Baer that he's
not going to wait in line. It's the only way
(33:43):
to get to these rallies. He's flying to places like
Los Angeles. We calculated that there were almost two dozen
direct flights from Washington, DC to Los Angeles the day
of his rally. So it's not the only way for
him to get there. It's just the most convenient. And
that's the beauty of fossil fuels. They give us the convenience,
(34:04):
they give us autonomy. I can't afford a private jet,
but lord knows, if I could, I would never go
through TSA and get felt up again in my entire life. Right, So,
I don't blame Bernie for taking the convenient lifestyle, but again,
he would deny you and I that ability to give
him the power.
Speaker 5 (34:22):
I think we should say right here that some of
those TSA people are really, really attractive. I just want
to get that in there, because he's right, right. But
you know, I just I'm listening to everything you're saying
about Bernie Sanders and how much he's burning, the fossil
fuel consumption and so forth. And Mark and I were
just talking this past week. You remember al Gore when
he was selling the car in credit Crapola and his
(34:43):
mansion was using more power than any other home in
the town, or all of them combined, or something's crazy
like that, more.
Speaker 8 (34:50):
Than anyone in the entire state of Tennessee. And when
it comes to al Gore, I'll always remember the line
of the great Rush Limbaugh. May you rest in peace,
and I repeat all the time, beware of a profit
making a profit. And al Gore went from nobody to
worth almost a billion dollars selling carbon change, carbon credits,
(35:10):
carbon swaps. Beware of a profit making a profit. The
green movement has been very lucrative for people like al Gore.
So when he tells me I should worry about climate change,
I just know he's worried about his bottom dollar.
Speaker 5 (35:23):
John Carey wanted to take away our SUVs. He was
questioning about his ownership of an suv. His logic was,
I don't own an suv. My family owns an suv.
Speaker 8 (35:33):
He blamed his private jet on his wife, the most
chivalrous thing you could do. It was similar to when
Sheldon Whitehouse, the senator from Rhode Island, was questioned about
being members of a white only country club, and he said,
I'm not a member, my wife is. If you're an
elected Democrat, throw your wife under a bus as soon
as something bad happens, blame the wife. Chivalry is dead
(35:56):
in the Democrat Party. Not only do they want men
to be women in sports, they want to beat up
their wives when it comes to bad pr It's remarkable
how John Kerry immediately threw Port Teresa under the bus
and blamed the private jet on her catch up husband.
Speaker 1 (36:11):
You know, it's been calculated that Sanders generated more carbon
dioxide emissions on this single tour than the average American
produces in five years five years. It is amazing, it
is it's staggering. And you know you saw him dig
in there. If you saw that clip with with Brett
or that interview with Brett Pear, he dug in. He's like,
(36:33):
no apologies, and the guy is, I don't know what's worse.
Somebody who tries to spin it or just in that
situation is just like, I don't care, I'm entitled, I'm
better than you. I don't know what's worse there, Daniel.
Speaker 8 (36:48):
But we saw this again and I'll always like and
it to COVID when every Democrat or even some Republicans,
when they were caught violating their COVID lockdown. We did
not get apologies. We got excuses. Avenussen said he had
to go to that dinner. They were important fundraisers. Lori
Lightwood said she had to get her haircut. She's on
TV a lot. Nancy Pelosi, of course, blamed the shop owner,
(37:10):
said they told me I was allowed to come in
to get my hair done. Every Democrat and Republican who
violated COVID, none of them were apologetic. They were indignant
that we had the gall to question their behavior.
Speaker 1 (37:22):
Right.
Speaker 8 (37:22):
I'll never forget Deborah Burkes, who was President Trump's COVID
person at the White House, famous for her different arm
made scarves every day. Deborah Burks told us not to
go out to Thanksgiving that year, we should all stay home.
And what did she do? She had Thanksgiving with her
whole twenty person family, and when caught, she said, well,
we took the precautions and we haven't seen each other
(37:44):
in a while. Barack Obama said, Martha's Vineyard is not
allowing parties, but I am going to have my sixtieth
birthday because we're a sophisticated crowd. And that's the way
Bernie is behaving in all of the greens do this.
AOC is not concerned about her private jet use none
of them. We commented on at Power the Future, how
many climate change activists flew to the post funeral a
(38:06):
couple of weeks ago. I watched it on TV, you know,
but they didn't because the carbon footprint doesn't matter when
you're powerful. And that's the that's the exposing the hypocrisy
makes you realize the climate crisis is just completely fabricated.
It's completely made up. It is dead, and people like
Bernie helped kill it.
Speaker 1 (38:26):
Founder and executive director Daniel Turner of Power the Future,
and where can people go to see more of you know,
all of the stuff that you're talking about? I mean,
it's just that it it feels like an endless supply.
But where can they go to read all of this
and so on?
Speaker 5 (38:41):
Daniel?
Speaker 8 (38:42):
It's on Power the Future dot com. And I appreciate
you going there, reading it and sharing it and fighting
back against these little pettygreen tyrants who are trying to
ruin our lives.
Speaker 1 (38:51):
So good, I mean, a really good, really good information again,
Power the Future Founder and executive director Daniel Turner. Daniel,
thank you very much for joining us today. Appreciate it.
We'll talk to you again soon.
Speaker 8 (39:03):
Thank you.
Speaker 7 (39:04):
Got it, Brother, Traffic, Weather, Sports, and the Mark Plazer
Show on sixtvah.
Speaker 1 (39:22):
Me myself and I. It just keeps going and a
going and going.
Speaker 5 (39:28):
That's that right, there is like probably thirty percent of
all the eighty songs.
Speaker 4 (39:33):
I remember.
Speaker 1 (39:34):
It seems like that little yeah, that kind of sound,
yeah for word synthesizer.
Speaker 4 (39:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (39:39):
Chief Meteorologist Marshall McPeak is joining us right now. So, Marshall,
I don't know. I know, it really wasn't supposed to
be a wash out today. I was telling Chuck, I'm like,
look out it going, man, I might have been on
two wheels today had I known it's like this, But
would I have rolled the dice then?
Speaker 6 (39:56):
I guess right, yeah, I think so, yeah, you might
have been taking your chances at that point.
Speaker 1 (40:01):
Because it's rain in buckets right now.
Speaker 6 (40:03):
From Lancaster on up into Pickerington, thirty three is wet
pretty much all the way up to Franklin County, and
then it's wet again headed up from Marysville all the
way up into Bell Fountain and then up into Kenton.
Speaker 4 (40:15):
It's wet.
Speaker 6 (40:16):
Busyrus Delaware, there's rain all over the place, and some
of this has some pretty good thunder to go along
with it. So yeah, you might get home on the
two wheels dry, but you'd be better off in the car.
Sixty one for the overnight load tonight with some patchey
fog possible by sunrise. And then on Wednesday, showers and
thunderstorms again with a high year seventy eight degrees.
Speaker 4 (40:39):
Eighty five and humid.
Speaker 6 (40:41):
On Thursday, it's gonna feel like mid July out there,
and it's gonna be muggy all the way through Friday.
Speaker 1 (40:48):
Showers and thunderstorms possible both days. I'm ready bring it on,
Thank you, Marshall. It is seventy four right now. So
Rby's introducing the new Prime Rib State Nuggets in select
US markets, the new Steak Nuggets. They describe them as juicy,
bite sized pieces of smoked prime rib steak. They're served
(41:10):
with a side of hickory barbecue sauce for dipping. Of course,
so for a five piece, five ninety nine, ten ninety
nine for a nine piece order, and so yeah, they're
now available for a limited time a select Arby's locations Arby's.
And what's interesting is during the break. I saw this
post on x Twitter or whatever Arby's posted. Unlike Dad
(41:34):
our Ham and Swiss actually came back, and so people
the reaction is different. And I'm trying. I'm looking at it,
and Chuck and I are talking about it. I'm going,
what did I miss here?
Speaker 4 (41:45):
Is this? Is?
Speaker 1 (41:46):
Are you supposed to be offended by this? Because if
we're going just off of unlike Dad our Ham Swiss
actually came back, I'm like, oh man, that's you know,
that's kind of brutal for people who their dad didn't
come back or I don't know, is that and look
you're going, eh, you know what, it's humor, But is
Arbi's really in the humor business? Well I can see
(42:07):
a stand up like somebody stand up doing that on stage,
but who's dad.
Speaker 5 (42:11):
I don't understand it's like that without having a target
for the insult, it doesn't make sense. You know, your
mama jokes were your mama jokes because it was your mama,
not just mama.
Speaker 4 (42:25):
It was your mama.
Speaker 5 (42:26):
That's why we did it all the time, right, Just
saying something like that about a generic dad doesn't make sense.
Speaker 1 (42:33):
You think of a good your mama joke yeah, can
you say it on the air?
Speaker 4 (42:36):
Probably not.
Speaker 1 (42:39):
Your mama's so fat. She jumped up in the air
and got stuck.
Speaker 4 (42:42):
I remember that. Yeah, we used to do that a lot.
Speaker 5 (42:46):
But that was back in the days when we had
since of humor as a country, right, you know, nobody
actually made it.
Speaker 4 (42:51):
We just had fun.
Speaker 1 (42:53):
You know, we talk about this kind of stuff all
the time. Guy used to be on the air with
on the rock station a million years ago. He sent
me a text the other day He's like, hey, man,
I think back to a lot of the stuff we
did on the air. He's like, hey, we couldn't get
away with any of that right now. And I'm like, man,
never a truer statement. And then you start going back
in history, like Archie Bunker, you know all in the family. Well, Jeffersons.
Speaker 5 (43:16):
Somebody posted the Sandford and Sun link from Lamont's court
appearance when he got the traffic ticket. Lie, do you
remember that Fred dropped the in bomb twice? And he goes, also.
Speaker 4 (43:28):
Wow, Timson, why don't you never rest no white people?
And I was like, I do a rest white people?
Look around the room.
Speaker 5 (43:37):
There's enough uh oh, and he they actually let it
go through over Network Television at NBC. Yeah, and just
when you thought, oh my gosh, I can't believe he
said that, then he said something even more offensive, and
I'm thinking, and we laughed. We were able to black people,
white people, all people. We laughed at it. It was
Sanford and Son. It was hilarious. Now that right, there
is a lawsuit waiting to happen.
Speaker 1 (43:58):
Was it enough in that to make a Tarzan? That's
exactly how you say. I was just like, but yeah,
but like when that first aired or whatever, You're right,
it was just such a different it was a different
landscape the average person. I mean, think about how many snowflakes.
Everyone's offended at everything that you do and say. Now,
(44:20):
no matter what, even something you say you think is benign,
it's like somewhere someone is having a problem with it
and they're losing their minds. Which is why I was
really struck by RB's posting. This is from like four
hours ago. They have been taking it down and man,
it's just under three hundred comments, four hundred and sixty
(44:42):
two reposts, and then two point four thousand likes.
Speaker 5 (44:47):
Wendy's has really set the standard for social media humor
when it comes to restaurants. I don't know who Wendy's has,
whether it's a team of people or just one twisted individual,
but they have really set a standard, and I think
nobody else is trying to, you know, kind of clean
that title and catch up to what they do. But
they're they're pretty funny. Yeah, I'm still thinking about jumped
(45:08):
in the air and got stuck. It's funny.
Speaker 1 (45:11):
Uh, she's so fat. She uses a boomerang to put
on her belt. There's so many of.
Speaker 5 (45:19):
Those, man, I remember your mama so fat. She got
on the talking scale and it said no phone numbers please.
Speaker 1 (45:26):
I love it.
Speaker 5 (45:27):
Oh, so there's an endless right. And yes, they went
on forever, and none of us ever joked, none of
us ever got in a fight and beat up each
other over it. There were no dry by shootings because
of your mama jokes. It was funny.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
Her hair so short, she rolls it with rice.
Speaker 4 (45:44):
Oh, there's so many.
Speaker 1 (45:47):
Oh these are just pop what popped into my otherwise
empty head. I can't even believe I remember them.
Speaker 5 (45:52):
How much of a box office hit was was Beverly
Hills cop Eddie Murphy. He ruled everything the man could
wake up in the morning and make twenty million dollars.
But but I'll tell you what if anybody did a
movie today and so could you tell Victor I have
heard his simple xt N lawsuit jars on the phone.
We we were freer to be human beings and enjoy
(46:14):
our lives fifty years ago, more so than we are
right now.
Speaker 1 (46:17):
Hey man, I'm following from O Banana and a tailpipe,
so many good lines. You're right, man, that's when that's
when they made stuff that uh was, I don't know
it for better or for worse. It was real, you know,
and it was real funny most of the time. You
know what, Even if I was in the group of
people they were taking a shot at, it was still
(46:38):
funny because you knew it was just that, just humor.
And guess what, human's at someone's expense every single time,
so it.
Speaker 4 (46:45):
Has to be the butt of the joe every single time.
Speaker 1 (46:49):
This is interesting, this new book claiming that Biden's aides
had a secret plan to get the president a wheelchair
and his close circle floated the idea of getting the
aging politician a wheelchair if he was re elected. And
they're calling it. See here's this word whenever bombshell is
used with the bomb, according to a Bombshell New book.
(47:10):
I'm always like, is it really a bombshell? Do you
have to describe it as bombshell if it is, because
it will just be that you don't have to describe it. Though.
That's usually a turn off for me when I see
that word original sin. And that's Jake Tapper from CNN
and Axios Alex Thompson. They say the AIDS were so
(47:30):
concerned by his perceived decline that they started scrambling for
ideas his spine was in particular decline, Axios reported, citing
the book, which will be released on May twentieth, again,
is this something they're getting ahead of trying to you know,
this is a salacious Oh you gotta read this. It's
going to tell you all kinds of stuff we as
the public already knew. We were watching real time. We
(47:53):
know that this president easily could have been in a
wheelchair depending on which complete, which appearance were.
Speaker 5 (48:00):
Those were deep fake videos. I didn't believe any of them.
Joe Biden is an Olympian man. He's an Olympic champion.
Speaker 1 (48:08):
He was sharp as attack.
Speaker 4 (48:10):
Give me a stick, I'll jump over the you know
the thing.
Speaker 1 (48:13):
I saw this on Guttfeld the other night. They were
talking about how the Bidens are being offered a thirty
million dollar book deal for a tell all, and it's like, well,
they're going to tell all on themselves? I mean, have
they no shit? Is this going to be a Doctor
Jill production where she's going to be the one that
tells all so that you can't get thirty million dollars.
(48:33):
I don't know how much longer we're going to have
with him, but I think if we're looking just at health,
I think I think Doctor Jill's going to be around longer.
So is this an effort? And really what kind of
tell all are they gonna they have to give it
up in order to get that kind of an advance,
And what are they really what is she really going
to give up?
Speaker 5 (48:53):
Just if you, if money's all that matters, be the
dirt balls you are and find a way to profit
from it. It's sad said, Look, have Hunter write a book.
Every It's gonna be in a cell a phone bag
covered in white powder. That's how you market his book.
People would buy it simply for the novelty of Hunter
Biden's book being covered in white powder. Nobody really cares
what you say or don't say. What you admit to
(49:13):
or don't admit to, you got to sell it some way.
So if you want to make money, poke fun at yourself.
Bill Clinton could have done a memoir and you know,
give you a gift certificate for a free blue dress
and people would have bought the book.
Speaker 1 (49:24):
That's a good point.
Speaker 4 (49:25):
You gotta say.
Speaker 5 (49:26):
Look, if you're going to be crash and it's all
about dollar signs, be crass and make the dollar signs because.
Speaker 1 (49:30):
People can call you anything but trying to earn a buck. Yeah,
you can't go. Well, you were you were just no,
that is what you were trying to do. And guess what,
it probably would work to your point. Interesting