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May 15, 2024 18 mins
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(00:00):
Hello, killing aesh. Hello,it's tomorrow show. Two day, Tomorrow'll
be Thursday. Working for the weekend. Next Weekend's momorld a weekend the unofficial
kickoff this summer. We got alot of ground to cover. All right,
let's talk about some of the stuffwe can tell about tomorrow. And
we have a follow up story becauseI remember talking about this. We've got
a guy who won over a billiondollars in the lottery. Now he must

(00:24):
He's got an doesn't sound like avery good family dynamic to begin with,
and this has only exasperated the problems. So he lived with a baby mama
at the time when he won it. Last year, take home after taxes
was a lump same payment of likefive hundred and eighteen million dollars after taxes,

(00:47):
after all the fees. Whatevs,I got over a half billion dollars
sitting in my bank account. Nowwow. He had told the baby mama,
you're not allowed to tell anybody aboutthis, and then made her sign
a non disclosure agreement like a StormyDaniels deal. And then she treated it
just like Stormy Daniels and started runningher mouth. Huh. She told his

(01:10):
parents and he didn't want his parentsto know, so he immediately brought a
lawsuit against her, moved out.That was the end of that relationship.
According to his father, this isour update now. He came to his
parents, tried to play nice nicetold his dad because I guess his mom

(01:34):
and dad are divorced. Told thedad, I am going to build you
a new garage because apparently his dad'sfavorite thing to do. His dad,
by the way, retired police chief, so not a guy who you would
think is going to be lying alot. He documented. It was on
such and such a date, atsuch and such a time, he came

(01:56):
to the house. We had along discussion. As we were wrapping it
up, we walked outside, hepointed to decrepit garage that I currently have,
and he said, I'm gonna buildyou a new one, and I'm
even going to buy you a coupleof old junkers that you can fix up,
because that's his favorite thing to dohere. And he said, You're
never gonna have to worry about yourhealth care. I'm gonna make sure that

(02:19):
you never have to spend a dayin a nursing home. If I will
make sure that we get private nursesto come to the house, and I'm
also going to give you a milliondollars so you'll always have plenty of money
your set. Now, I mean, if you run all that up to
two million dollars, it would havetaken his net worth from five eighteen to
five sixteen. So it's not asignificant deal for him. It is a

(02:43):
significant deal for the rest of usif somebody's going to give you two million
dollars worth your goods and services.But he didn't do it and then cut
off contact with his father, wouldn'treturn his calls. The baby Mama says
he also has a security team thathe's hired that travels with him all he

(03:04):
lives in Maine. The security teamtravels with him around Maine, and she
says they're harassing her, like shecan't go to work without having these people
follow her to work those types ofthings. And she says, I believe,
I believe they have tapped into myphones because I hear clicking on the
phones now. Oh, and itseems as if he knows about my emails

(03:30):
even sometimes before I've read them.So they're both suing together. And you
know, obviously this is a tragedy. You hear these stories where people win
a lot of money and everything goesto helen and hand basket. It seems
as if his life is turned intoa helen of hand yesterday. He's got
to at best can be described asa strained relationship with the woman he was

(03:53):
living with until he won this money. I'm guessing that he's having less access
to his child than he wants.I'm guessing that him and his dad mate
might have had a strained relationship,but at least they were on speaking terms.
Now they're not even on speaking terms. If you're the dad, do
you sue him? Well? Imean, what would it take for you

(04:14):
to sue your child? Wow,you're right, there's a lot of the
family dynamics going on here, becauseI'm feeling like, if I'm the dad,
it's like you turned into a pieceof crap. All right, that's
partly on me. I did abad job, I guess raising you,
you know, but I didn't dothat bad of a job. You are

(04:34):
just you are who you are.You are a piece of crap. You
probably get that from your mother,Okay, but I'm not going to sue
you about it. You promised mea bunch of things. So what that's
the way I look at I mean, it would have been great if you
had done the things that you saidyou were going to do. It would
have been amazing for me. Iwould have had a great end of my

(04:56):
life. But now I'm not goingto have a great end of my life,
and you clearly don't hair You're noteven talking to me. Every time
I walk into my torn my shackI call a garage, I'm going to
curse your name and spit on theground. But I'm not suing. I'm
not suing the kid for that.I'm not suing anybody who made a verbal
promise on that, because here's theI would if it had changed my life

(05:20):
in some way, meaning I hadI expected the money that you promised,
and I altered my life in away where that now I can't fulfill those
expectations. I've already started building thenew garage based on what you said,
right, I need the money toat least pay off the guy who's done
the work so far. That then, okay, I can see a lawsuit

(05:41):
for that, But just you're justdisappointed. I gotta feeling we're gonna hear
some wide and varied and surprising answersto that question, would you sue tomorrow
in the morning? Wash? Well, interesting when you go to the pro
levels when college people bump up.Last night, I guess, was the

(06:01):
very ANTICIPATEDWNBA debut for Caitlin Clark.And apparently she didn't have a great first
quarter because they played quarters in women'sbasketball. She didn't have a great second
quarter, third quarter or fourth quartereither. I thought. She ended up
scoring twenty sixteen points. And theonly record she broke is most turnovers and

(06:26):
team history turnovers. That's the mostin the history of the team. Now
was because she's playing with a newteam and she passed the ball anticipating the
player to be somewhere where the otherplayer wasn't or she just threw it away
non they picked her pocket. Ohjeez, you can't dribble who We saw

(06:47):
a little bit of that in thechampionship game. Wow, is this the
biggest letdown in sports debut history?Now? I know they got a guy
who was playing for like the guywho debuted for the Nationals a few years
ago. That pitcher came in andthrew a one hitter and everybody was all

(07:09):
excited to watch him play. Therewas a guy who pitched, I think
for the Diamondbacks the other night.He was a rookie guy who played for
LSU last year. Came in andjust mowed down major league hitters. Everybody
was like, this is incredible.They were waiting and waiting and waiting,
and when he showed up, hedelivered. Lebron James comes into the NBA,
the chosen one, destroys people.Kobe Bryant was kind of wrecking fools.

(07:30):
Michael Jordan came into the Bulls,wrecked people. Sequon Barkley comes into
the NFL and just running fools over. There are people who come in and
live up to expectations, and thenthere's others. You know, I can
remember what's his name playing for Dukecame into the NBA. Sucked. So
just didn't translate this. And Iknow that Caitlin Clark's team got blown out

(07:57):
of the water, right, twentyone point loss. Yeah, and so
first game jeners could be I hope. So, because you've already been at
Monust even by our president, thatwe're not watching enough female sports, right,

(08:18):
that's one of those weird things you'reyelling at America for not watching more
sports. Yes, and then it'snot just you gotta watch more sports,
you gotta watch specifically, yes,women's basketball, because we've got to get
the ratings up high enough so wecan dictate and demand the same salary level
for women's sports. Is that reallywhere the President's I should be? I

(08:39):
don't know. I mean, he'salso the guy pushing for transgender sports,
so I'm confused on what his positionis here. Hmm. We'll have to
you know what, We'll try toget a hold of them. Okay,
well, see if he's got anyclarification on that. I'll send an email
to the White House and see ifthey respond. This guy is asking the

(09:01):
question why am I a jerk?Apparently he's being identified as a jerk because
he overtipped and then, once herealized what he had done, Yeah,
asked for them for the moment.No, he didn't ask for it back.
Now, I know you have eatenlike a hundred dollars tip when you

(09:24):
meant to give ten or something Ihave. I ate it hurt. Let's
see, I got some work donein my house. I had to pay
cash for it. That that,and like an hour later, Okay,
super honest, dude. He justsays Hey, I gave you an extra

(09:46):
fifty in here. This isn't onehundred, this is one fifty. But
I don't know. Let me readthis again. I got some patio work
done. It was like a twothousand dollars job. I gave him this
wad of cash and an envelope andwe didn't count it. And it was
like an hour later. He callsme and oh, he's a super honest

(10:11):
guy. And he says, hey, you gave me some extra money in
here. It's probably an extra fiftybucks. And I said, oh,
yeah, can I get that fiftyback? And my wife said, you're
a jerk. Let him keep thefifty. Yeah, you got to eat

(10:35):
it. You got to eat it. You got no pride, man,
come crawling back here on your billy. I want to know who the guy
was who did the yard, theworkout his patio. That guy's awesome.
Dude. You you overpaid me.I just want to let you know you

(10:56):
overpaid me. Wow, who isthis guy? Who is that? But
but you know, you can takethat to an everyday occurrence where you meant
to give the waitress five and yougave her twenty, Or remember the meal
where I didn't realize because there aremore than fifteen people or twenty. Oh
you tipped on top of the mandatoryfifteen, I tipped another fifteen. I

(11:20):
tipped a thirty percent tip on adinner for twenty people. No, of
course, I meant, of courseI knew that that was already in there.
And to his credit, he cameback to me and he said,
I don't know if you know thatthere's a fifteen Well, if he'd have
sent it to me. When Iwas like, you know, standing outside
of the men's room, just bymyself, I'm like, oh, yeah,
I didn't recognize that. But hesaid it in front of the people

(11:41):
at the table. Gosh, yourpride is so expensive. No, it's
fair. I hate myself because ofit. I said, no, no,
no, no, no. Didwe all have a good time?
Oh yeah it was it? Foodgreat? Yeah? Absolutely that really you
earned that extra two hundred dollars that'sfor you by himself. Something nice with

(12:03):
that there. Billy Sally looks atme and I said, oh, no
vacation this year. I know Icould have fed the kids for a month
and a half off PP and J'sfor the rest of your family, and
they want to embarrass you. Yeah, I did it for you, Sally.
That's great. I heard another storythe other day about one of those

(12:26):
situations where everybody goes. It's agroup of people eating, and they just
split the bill up evenly at theend of the night. Okay, and
there's always alcohol involved in Oh yeah, if you're buying alcohol, I shouldn't
be splitting it with you. Ohyeah. So I heard one of these
stories and somebody was telling us usthat John was there, and John said,

(12:50):
oh, don't get him started.I said, you can get me
started. I learned my lesson.Did you learn your lesson? They said,
yes, I learned my lesson.You'll never forget it. I paid
four hundred and seventy eight dollars formy four kids to eat pizza off the
kids menu, and Sally and Ihad like just a regular entree with no

(13:13):
alcohol. And how much was itseventy four hundred and seventy eight dollars?
Was my split four hundred and seventyeight dollars. I can't remember the exact
change total, but I can tellyou it was four hundred and seventy eight
bucks. And my kids had amini pizza off the kids menu. Four

(13:37):
of them, and Sally and Ihad, like, I don't know,
an entre probably had to be twentybucks age. That's crazy. Jelly Roll
had a nice moment. I guessit was yesterday. He was basically kicked
out of high school. When hewas a kid. He was a bad
kid, a lot of drugs,a lot of fights of whatever. Ended

(14:00):
up in jail. What a bunchof times, he said. He got
arrested the first time at age fourteen, and then just kind of became an
annual tradition that the cops were slappingthe cuffs on Jelly Roll. So I
guess rather than have him back anddisrupt the classes, they said, you're
all done here. You're not goingto be coming back to Antioch High School

(14:22):
ever again. Those are the keywordsto Jelly Roll. You will not set
foot on this campus. Yeah,but he got to come back to the
campus and his wife filmed it andshe says, I got to watch my
husband walk the halls again. Hewas warmly welcomed by all the kids and
the teachers for him. The loveand giving back that they showed him is

(14:43):
the sweetest thing ever. The smileon the kids' faces was priceless. Thank
you Antioch High School and staff,Go Bears. So apparently his dad died.
Jelly Roll got the news that hisdad died, and as he was
talking about it, somebody from AntiochHigh School commented on it and said something

(15:09):
about, you know, we alwaysloved your dad, you know, happy
to see how you've turned your lifearound, you know, congratulations. Well
he was so blown away by that, just the message that he reached out
to the people and told them thestory about how he was told he could
never come back, and it canabsolutely come back. We'll have a whole
We'll have a jelly Roll day.So it was a jelly Roll day at

(15:31):
his high school. Right. That'skind of like, you know, good
for him, an unexpected surprise,and it's nice to see nice things happen
to people like that when they whenthey do turn their lives around. Because
he's definitely headed for life in prison, yes, and now he's now he's
an inspiration to people all around theworld. Have you have you ever have
you gone back to your high school? Uh? Huh. I have not

(15:54):
been in the halls of my highschool since I walked out in nineteen eighty
five. Wonder what that would belike it's weird. And I went on
one of those like anniversary things andeach room had like different eras of graduates

(16:15):
stuff in it. Like okay,so all the classrooms had different eras of
those students, mementos and stuff likefootball jerseys and stuff like that. Sure
it was really it was really cool. Yeah, especially someone like you who
loves to hang on to the memories. I loved it to walk in and

(16:37):
see your nineteen seventy eight you knowwhatever. Yeah, these are these are
the types of desks that we satat back then. These were the types
of shirts that they give one ofthe one of the hell but had the
picture of the homecoming queen. Dothey still make kids buy fizz ed shorts
and T shirts? I don't know. We had to buy hours, Yeah,

(17:00):
I remember. That was like abig thing. Sure, I kind
of liked them. I thought theywere cool looking shorts. I wasn't a
big fan of the T shirt,but I did like the shorts that had
like the property Why was it theproperty of Pittkin Middle School? I paid
for it, Yeah, it shouldbe the property of question. Shut up,
just wear them. You could takemy shorts off me that I paid

(17:22):
seven dollars for I don't think so. It's property of names. Write your
name on it. Get the hellon the field. It's an extra two
laps, smart alley. Let's seeyou sweat those pants up out there.
Oh yeah, you know you're notgonna be able to wear your shorts playing
Go Go Duck or Duck Duck goor whatever whatever. Today's gym class consists
of, Hey, what's going onin your high school? We should know

(17:45):
about it? Are you allowed backin? Were you told you couldn't go
back? Would you sue your familymember? Would you sue them over that?
That's that's Have you ever been ina lawsuit with a family member?
How did that come about? I'msure that happens. Sure it does.
I mean, I'm you know theyalways And by the way, isn't it

(18:07):
funny that I guess now it's likecommon knowledge. I don't think it was
common knowledge in the seventies and eightiesthat whenever somebody's murdered, the number one
suspect is the spouse totally, likewe always, oh, you got to
check the spouse out. But Idon't think we thought that way in the
seventies, Like, why would thehusband, kill the wife. He loved
her, he married her. Hello, but now, no, no,
no, that's the person most likelyto kill you get that some of them?

(18:30):
Yeah, he probably already did it. We are he's probably gotten the
blood still on his hands. Hey, what's going on we need to be
talking about. Let us know.We reached out to us on social media.
If you want to email us,you can't Rush at ninety seven five
w COS dot com or Nash atninety seven to five to b CUS dot
com. We start talking, Youstart talking to ninety seven eight nineteen sixty
seven. Tomorrow in the morning,Rush
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