Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly Nash. Hello, it is tomorrow show today. Looking
forward to month? Well I wouldn't say I was looking
forward to it. Well, yeah, I am. We've got some
good stuff coming down in the morning. Rush anyway, we'll
get another pair of tickets to give away for the
Warren Zeiders show that went on sell Friday morning at
ten o'clock and Tyler Braden's going to be here. I
like that song Devil. You know, we got that show,
(00:22):
tickets for that coming up, and more information about the
Field and Stream Music Festival and the Big Red Barn Retreat.
We got a kind of great concerts coming, so we'll
have tickets for that. I'll tell you what. Why don't
we go ahead? Kelly loves to give out the answers.
He's very generous, very kind. Yes, we're going to play
a contest on Monday for those Warren Zeiders tickets. So
when don't we go and give the answer?
Speaker 2 (00:43):
All right, the answer is going to be Farris Wheel,
Farris Wheel. Yes, the question is going to be because
the eyes of the world are going to be on
Chicago this week. What did Chicago invent In eighteen ninety three.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
They invented the fairest yep.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
First time the Ferrish Wheel had ever been seen on
the planet was in eighteen ninety three, and it was
happening in Chicago as they got ready for the Big Fair.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
Was it the was it a Chicago World Spare or
somebody just said, Hey, I got an idea, let's build
this for next year.
Speaker 2 (01:16):
Hey I got an idea.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
I got an idea.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:18):
I wasn't even specially designed for a world spare. It
was just, hey, what if we put a gigantic wheel
up in the sky. We put seats in it and
people can ride it round and round.
Speaker 2 (01:31):
Look, I'm afraid to ride a Ferrish wheel right now.
I can't imagine in eighteen ninety three the first time
I'd say, I mean, you go to a regular like
the South Carolina State Fair. I want to get on
that thing. Back then, when nobody had ever invented it before,
It's like, what the hell are you talking about?
Speaker 1 (01:48):
Okay, there's your answer. When we play for Warrensider's tickets
on Monday, when we'll have a Monday morning moral dilemma.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Well, I was going to say, front page first off
of the New York Post has Lauren Bobert This is
the number one story at the New York Post today.
Lauren Bobert, the politician from Colorado, took a photograph. I
guess posted a selfie. Well it's not really a selfie
because she's not taking the photo. It's her friend took
the photo of her. She was down in Florida, I guess,
(02:16):
this week, and everybody is shocked to see the tattoo
that she has. She has a tattoo, like she has
no tattoos on her arms, but she has a tattoo
that basically covers the entire right side of her torso.
So she's wearing a very small bikini in this photo,
(02:37):
and it starts inside the bikini bottoms and it comes
all the way up and underneath what would be the
top on the right inside. They don't know if this
is a new tattoo, because I don't know that we've
ever seen her in a bikini, or at least in
the last two or three years. But even her friends
are saying, I had no idea she had that. Did
(02:58):
you ever find out somebody had a tattoo like and
you never expected that? Like they for whatever reason, they
had to wear a tank top or something and you're
like that guy that gun he's got a skull. Yes, yes,
it's always bizarre. Like I I'm not a wrestling fan
per se anymore. I was a huge wrestling fan as
(03:19):
a kid, and that is the American dream. I love
Dusty Rhodes when I was a kid, and then I
remember his son, gold Dust. I think gold Dust son
is the one who is currently like the hot wrestler
right now, and I'm struggling even to remember. I think
it's Cody Rhodes is his name. He's like thirty five
(03:40):
years old, So Cody Rhodes. I just happened to see
him in a news story this morning. He's interviewing somebody
and they go after Lebron James in their podcast. But
Cody's got two tattoos, but one of them is a
neck tattoo. It's like you had to put It's like
from you're like right below his ear down to like
(04:03):
his collar bone. So even when he's wearing and he
apparently he likes to wear suits, so he's wearing business
suits all the time, but you see that tattoo right
there and it's like the rest of his body nothing
like why did you put that? Why did you pick
that area, that spot. How did you pick your tattoo spot.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
I do know a girl that we were talking about tattoos,
and she said, I've got three, really, and she showed me.
One of them was like on the it's like just
above her ankle. It was a rose, and she said,
I got two more roses.
Speaker 2 (04:34):
Try to find them.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
Hey, I didn't ask, she didn't offer to tell me
where they were, and I wasn't asking.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
This one on the bottom of your feet? Is that
why I can't see it? No, it's not there. You
alluded to the moral dilemma. Monday, and we've got a
morning rushier regular who is asking is this is this
the reason to call off the wedding. I'll just real
(05:02):
I'm very stressed out. I have a fun fiance, We're
supposed to be married in two months. Everything was going
well until he's apparently lost his mind. Okay, he spent
a large chunk of the money that we had set
aside for our wedding on his bachelor party. I'm in
absolute shock. This is a breach of trust. I contributed
(05:23):
to that, he contributed to that. We both said what
it was for, and now it's almost completely gone. Wow.
Now I'm doubting everything he's ever told me.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
Wow, see they already ear marked that for the honeymoon. Otherwise,
this is for the wedding. For the wedding. Oh sorry,
ear marked that money for the wedding. Otherwise you could
have said, look, this is my last hoorah as a
independent person. It's my money. I can do what I
want to with him, spend it all on my bachelor
party weekend.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
But he spent her money. She's the one been putting
in hundreds of month towards her wedding and now that's gone.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
Yeah, that would seem like a reason to sit down
and re examined.
Speaker 2 (06:08):
And she says, I brought you know, we had a
long talk and he seemed very dismissive about the whole thing.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
No, no, brother, it was her money.
Speaker 2 (06:22):
Well it's his too. I mean they both contributed. They
started this account in order to pay for their wedding,
got it, and he quote unquote dipped into it and
almost emptied it two months before the wedding in order
to pay for his hell of a weekend. Oh hell
of a weekend.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
Yeah, I'm got to figure out a whey over the
weekend to defend this guy.
Speaker 2 (06:43):
Well, and I mean, is that enough to call off
the wedding? I mean, it's obviously a reason for concern. Sure,
And I don't know. This seems to me I'd have
to know more about these people. But I mean, if
it's just an isolated incident, then it's a it's a
(07:05):
horrible isolated incident. But it could be just an isolated incident.
If this is a pattern of deception and or just
financial disregard.
Speaker 1 (07:14):
Yeah, I know both their names have to be on
the marriage license, but I'm not sure his name at
this point is going to be on the checking account
signature card.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
Good point. Oh yeah, we might have to. This might
be one of those marriages where you have to have
separate checking accounts. I mean, we don't recommend that yees
have guardrail. She's gonna need to build walls. You're not
financially capable, mature enough.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
And then if that's the case, if he's not financially
mature enough, is he mature? Oh see, we got to
get into all that. Well, Okay, that's the that's a dilemma.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
That is the moral dilemma. And now this is this
is apparently not a dilemma for people who are dating.
I am not in the dating pool. Haven't been for
many years. You haven't been for many years. But according
to this new survey from dating dot com, it seems
as if Americans are more politically divided than ever. According
(08:08):
to their survey, they've never seen numbers like this. Sixty
five percent of respondents say they would have quote no
interest in dating someone from the other party, whatever the
other party is. If you're a Democrat, you wouldn't date
a Republican. If you're a Republican, you wouldn't date a Democrat.
It's usually in the thirties.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
Did they both agree on libertarians?
Speaker 2 (08:29):
Seventy two percent of respondents say they've also been in
politically charged conversations with a match. So they met somebody
and they had a politically charged conversation since the June
debate between President Biden and Donald Trump, So that seems
to be the point right there. That was the moment
(08:51):
when it all fell apart. There's been a fifteen percent
increase in daters adding their political parties to their dating
profiles since that of well, so people are just putting
it out there now, I am a Republican, I am
a Democrat, and by the way if you say, look,
I'm going to be what is it Sweden on that
one Sweden, I'm not going to No, no, I'm going
(09:12):
to have to make a choice. Because sixty eight percent
say they would not be interested in dating somebody who
doesn't identify with a party.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
Oh wow, wow.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
They want you on their team. By the way, Democrats
say that they're looking for people who would they would
describe as quote, open minded, global citizens and well traveled.
Republicans say they looking for someone who is hard working, traditional,
and family oriented.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
I do. I was kind of part of this conversation.
It was one of my son's friends. But he was
on a first date and something was said early in
the cocktail hour. Okay, as they were going to they
have a an event and then dinner, and something was
(10:04):
said early in the cocktail hour, and he just flat
out came out and said, look, I'm all about having
a great time tonight. I'm telling you right now, this
will be our only date, so let's live it up.
So I can't deal with your attitude about politics. And
we can go to dinner if you would like, but
we can't talk about politics. We talk about anything else.
(10:25):
I'll talk about anything else other than politics, because you
and I are on polar opposite ends. Yeah, and she said, okay,
then never mind and turn around walked off. Yeah, and
he said, she probably saved me up, you know, one
hundred and fifty bucks on dinner. So I was glad
to see she told me early.
Speaker 2 (10:41):
And for longtime listeners of this show, you might remember
I was married once before I got married to Angela,
and that woman married me. This is so ironic. We
started dating after I took out a personal ad. This
would have been around two two thousand and two. I
took out a personal ad when I was living in
(11:03):
Manhattan in the New Yorker magazine, and the headline of
my ad was Republicans are fun too, because at that
time that was the big thing about Republicans, at least
in the New York dating scene, is they're all killed joys.
They don't want to have fun, they don't want to drink,
they don't want to go out with anybody, They just
(11:24):
want to be whatever. And so I was like, in
a sea of liberals, I was the only Republican I knew,
and I said, Republicans are fun too, and she dated me.
She's the one who contacted me. We went out on
multiple dates, and then one day we were talking about
something and she goes, hold up, you're really a Republican ah,
(11:48):
And I said, yes, you said I thought that was
a joke. I can't believe you're a Republican. Yeah. So
the rest of our marriage was basically me tricking or politically.
And what I would do is I would take a
liberal point and I would argue it as if it
was a Republican point, just to make her angry, because
(12:11):
then when she would say, see, that's the insanity that
you Republicans are pushing for whatever, I'd go, but that's
your side. You're the one who don't want school.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
You don't even know what they you're up for.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
You don't even want school choice or whatever it was.
You know, you know all of us.
Speaker 1 (12:24):
I think have friends who are politically opposite. Possibly I
know I have more than a couple, and I don't
talk to them about If they start talking about politics,
I'll drift to the other side of the room. Just
I'm not even gonna hear it.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
How could you marry somebody who is telling you opposite.
Speaker 1 (12:38):
We're talking about dating for marriage here. How do you
even conceive that.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
And how it's like. You know, sometimes we talk about
could you date somebody? And we have a lot more
people who do this, who get married to somebody who
is a fan of your arch rival. Oh yeah, Carolina
Clemson fans house divided. Yeah, could be slaves, Phillies fans stuff.
Speaker 1 (13:02):
I wouldn't even want to walk in the closet and
see all that Clempson gear.
Speaker 2 (13:06):
Yes, Johnson Rush is the one who famously said years ago,
when the tree turns orange, I'll chop the damn thing down.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
Now I have to temper that because I have a
son that graduated from Clemson.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
He just did that to spite you.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
He did. I'm sure that that's well. No, his girlfriend
was going.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
Wasn't he a Gamecock fan when he was a little kid?
He was?
Speaker 1 (13:26):
Yeah, he got and then he went to Clemson he
became a Clemson fan.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
He wasn't drafted by Clempson, was he?
Speaker 1 (13:31):
No, he was.
Speaker 2 (13:32):
We had another friend of ours who was drafted by
Clempson to play baseball.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
I think the only person I ever knew it was
drafted to play college. But how good he was? Very
So anyway, okay, we could do it with.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
Maybe we'll hear from somebody like what's his name? James
Carvill and Mary Matlin. Mary Mattlin worked for every Republican president,
and James Carvill was obviously Bill Clinton's guy and very
heavily involved in the Democrats. They've married now for like
forty years.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
Maybe they're both the LSU fans. Is that how I
think I know about him anymore? Every time I see
him raving over something, he's always wearing an LSU shirt, sweatshirt,
yeap something. But I don't know how it's got to
be some commonality.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
Because they're both calling the other side of the aisle
like evil morons or something, and yet they somehow made.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
Their work and they've been married forever.
Speaker 2 (14:26):
Like since the nineties, early nineties.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
I think, okay, all right, we can talk about that. Hey,
what's going on in your neighborhood we should be talking
about Let us know. When you reach out to us
on social media, you could also email us directly. I
am Rush at ninety seven five w COS dot com.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
And I'm Nash at ninety seven five WUS dot com.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
And we start talking. You start talking, dial it up
and share it with us at NATO three nine seven
eight ninet two six seven at three nine seven eight
w COS Monday on the morning rush