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December 9, 2024 • 27 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Killy Nash, Hello Jonathan Rush.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
It's tomorrow show Today. Tomorrow, we can officially say because
we had a surprise. We had a Christmas gift winter
this morning. We gave away a peer of tickets for
the show. We couldn't announce until eight thirty. But now
the cat's out of the bag. And Keith Urban, what
was the line about, leave your cat?

Speaker 1 (00:20):
Yeah, leave your.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Take your sweater, take your sweater or leave your hat.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
I think it was hat or cap or something like that, yap,
but we always thought it was cats. It was fine,
leave your cat and take my sweater, leave the gun,
take the canoy.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
Hate the canoe. All right, So tomorrow morning at six thirty,
you'll have a chance to win on what you're talking about.
And yes, we're going to continue with the holiday lights
on the river, but we're gonna have a little bonus
if you want to go see Keith Urban kick off
a long hot summer. Because it's Memorial Day weekend at Charleston.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
Right, Yes, it's the Saturday of Memorial Day weekend. Down
it's actually Daniel Island. I don't know is that technically Charleston.
I guess it's sort.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
Of the Charleston metropolitan area. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (00:58):
When I lived on Daniel Island, I used to have
to write Daniel Island, South Carol.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
So anyway, it's the Credit One Tennis Stadium, which is
really trying to get into the country and Western music industry.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
They got a lot of country shows, don't leave off
the western.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
Uh Keith Urban is the latest and that show again Saturday,
May twenty fourth. Tickets go on sale this Friday at Ticketmaster,
but we are giving them away along with So we're
kicking off your Christmas with the Holiday lights on the
river here at Saluta Shoals Park, and then we're kicking
off your summer with Keith Urban concert tickets. And the
answer to what you're talking about, Well, first off, I

(01:36):
should try to look up the pronunciation on this word.
The word I'm going to take a shot at it here. Uh,
acer sir comic, acercircomic maybe acer cir comic acee r
se c O m I c so comedicy a sir
a comic, Yes, very popular in the seventeen hundreds. I'm

(02:01):
told we were not around for most of that.

Speaker 2 (02:06):
Okay, what do you think a comic comic? I'm drawing
a Blanco's a comic.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
It's a now Originally the original definition before it became
sarcastically used. The original definition is a person who has
never had their haircut. So you usually used to describe
young children just before their first haircut. Okay, but then
it became an insult, all right, as you're an acercircomic,

(02:33):
meaning you just look like someone who's never had their haircut.
You look like a long haired freak, hippie freak.

Speaker 2 (02:39):
You're long haired hippie, mid sixties hippie freek.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
Yeah, sign signs everywhere, they're signs. But anyway, the answer
a person who's never had a haircut. The word acercircomic.
That's on the Morning Rest blog. You don't even have
to remember it right now. Just remember to go to
ninety seven to five to BCS dot com again. We
call it clicks for ticks for a reason. We want
the clicks, You want the ticks. We've got the tickets
to the Saluta Shoals and to the Keith Urban Concert.

Speaker 2 (03:04):
I know Little Sarah's a cir comic.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
At this moment.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
Yeah, still never had a haircut.

Speaker 1 (03:10):
She could be Hercules, Hercules.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
Constantly having to put that hairbo to get the hair
out of her eyes.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
Oh really, yes, Jonathan, there's a story coming out of
New Jersey that I'm not. You're more plugged into the
news than I am.

Speaker 2 (03:24):
I don't know about that, but this is Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
You live for the news.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
I live for the news.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
But this story. Have you heard anything about the New
Jersey I guess we're going to call them UFO sightings? Yes, okay,
so I've not heard about.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
This been going on now for about a month, and
nobody's got answers.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
A group of New Jersey mayors is now come in
demanded answers. I guess they did this Friday, the group
send a letter to the FAA, the Department of Homeland Security,
and the New Jersey State Police saying you are now
having a reactive rather than a proactive approach to the site.
And the sightings begin in Morris County just before Thanksgiving.

(04:05):
They're now reported in Sussex, Somerset, Warren Counties, most of
the Jersey Sore South Jersey, over Philadelphia. Basically every part
of New Jersey is now getting dozens of phone calls
a night talking about these either drones or UFOs or
what phil Murphy is the governor, and he's now convened

(04:29):
a series of meetings with federal officials and he's calling
it a very serious situation.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
Yeah, I mean some of the reports from persons on
the ground say that some of these drones are the
size of automobiles.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
Yeah, that's not a drone. No, he's not a drone
that we're aware of. No, that's not. Maybe maybe Elon's
behind it.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
He might.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
I saw him post a video over the weekend. Elon
Musk said that in the not too distant future, there
will be millions of Tesla's that are what are they called, yes, Tesla's,
like they won't even have a steering wheel in there. No,
and he got into one, they videotaped him and just

(05:08):
driving through city traffic.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
And the other thing he's talking about is that in
the future our military will not be F sixties. It'll
be smaller craft and they'll all be drones or drone like.
And I guess drones are kind of large, because we
have large military drones now that look like small planes,
So that would be more than the length of an automobile,
certainly because they carry munitions. But the strange thing is

(05:35):
is that you're not hearing about this anywhere else, just
in New Jersey. I don't know what the hell's going on,
but it does look like when you see the military's
projection of what their air Force fleet will look like,
it looks like that old Asteroids game we used to
play with kids. Pretty trigger and scary. I mean it's
hundreds of them.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
How old do you have to be to remember Asteroids?

Speaker 2 (05:56):
I don't know that that.

Speaker 1 (05:57):
I mean we used to play in arcades. Do they
ever like a TV version? I'm sure they did, and
it was basically just like lights like that made like
three lines or whatever. That would be the triangle, that
would be your gun.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
That's right. God, I used to love ass That was
a great game.

Speaker 1 (06:11):
Man, oh man, it was so much fun. I probably
spent well, it doesn't sound like much now, but I bitch,
I spent one hundred plus dollars in my lifetime playing
Asteroids because there was a quarter a game quarter. I
probably would spend about a dollar fifty every time I played,
because that's all the money I had.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
Yeah, by the way, pretty scary. The dramatization of what
he's talking about, it's pretty frightening, and I'm sure you
see that. You live in New Jersey and you see
this and you go, wait a minute, these are the Russians.
What have we got going on?

Speaker 1 (06:39):
We under attack? Two more quick stories for you, one
pretty in depth if you want to read it on
the morning rest plug At ninety seven to five to
b sos dot com. I went, well, first off, there's
a company called Sportco, and Sportico breaks down public university
spending on athletics. Okay, so I just did more of

(07:02):
a deep dive on what they had provided regarding Clemson
and South Carolina. So obviously the biggest budgets are football,
but I was shocked to see how much more money
they spent at Clemson than South Carolina on football. So
Clemson's football budget comes in as number eight in the country,

(07:24):
South Carolina's number twenty nine.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
Clemson was at sixty seven million dollars they spent. South
Carolina spent forty three million.

Speaker 2 (07:34):
They spent another twenty million dollars.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
Yeah, forty well even more than what just I guess
really cool uniform. I don't know that's what their annual
budget is. So but now interesting, I don't know if
this is interestingly enough or not, but both teams I
think brought in about the same amount of money. Let
me see, South Carolina football brought in sixty nine million,
so we had a profit at twenty six million, which

(07:59):
basically meant that South Carolina football funded everything else, although
men's basketball did make a slight profit. Men they spent
eight million on the men's basketball team and it brought
in eleven and a half million dollars, So we made
a four and a half million dollars on basketball. They
don't break down baseball here, but I've looked it up
in the past, and basically baseball at both universities breaks even.

(08:23):
Like whatever they spend on it is what they actually
get back in ticket sales, TV rights, merch and so on.
The biggest loss leader for both schools is the women's
basketball teams. Now they barely spend anything at Clemson on
the basketball. The women's basketball team, the way do they
spend They spent four million. Excuse me, they spent one

(08:47):
point six million dollars and they lost one point six
million dollars. Ok so said they didn't make a nickel
on basketball. They actually lost everything. The women's team for
South Carolina, they spent ten point one million on that team,
and they brought in five point six million, so they
lost four million.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
Salary.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
I don't know what Dawn makes. I could look it up,
but I know that that's probably.

Speaker 2 (09:14):
To your point of being big. It's like three point
five if you just.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
Look at women's basketball. By the way, the the game
Cocks are the number one spender on women's basketball, but
they're not by much because again they're in the I
think ten point seven is what I said. There's four
other teams that spend over ten million a year for
women's basketball teams. Obviously Yukon is one of them, LSU, Texas,

(09:39):
they're all up in that ten million plus range. But anyway,
I don't want to break it all the way down
for you, but you can go like look at like conferences.
I broke that down for you. So SEC spends the
most on football at fifty three million dollars per team,
So we're actually below the SEC average at forty six
million fifty three millions. The average Big ten spends fifty
one million. ACC spends forty four million per team, PAC

(10:02):
twelve forty one, and Big twelve thirty eight million. I
was just gonna say women's basketball a lot less. SEC
is the number one conference for women's basketball at six
point nine million. They're spending per team Big ten at
six point two, Big twelve five point eight ACC. I'm
surprised for basketball. I thought they would have been higher,
but it's five point five million, and then the Pac

(10:23):
twelve at five point two. When it looks at men's
basketball teams, the biggest by a lot is Kentucky for
men's basketball, they spend twenty three point six million per
year on their team. Number two is a distant second
Louisville at nineteen million, Michigan State, Texas Tech, Indiana, Texas, Tennessee,

(10:44):
and Arizona Ole Miss in Kansas. Run out your top ten.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
I didn't realize until someone told me this yesterday, that
the money like when the game cops are going to
go to the Citrus Bowl. Yeah, and they're going to
get paid. What is it eight?

Speaker 1 (10:58):
Oh, I didn't look it up.

Speaker 2 (10:59):
What they're going to It's like twenty. Let's look it up,
not twenty. Get so many numbers voting around with sports,
it's hard to keep them straight, and no number anymore
is shocking. So you don't get to the shocking level
unless you start talking about Brazilians.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
But each team gets eight point five to five million.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
I didn't realize that. And they were saying that the
money did not go to the team, It goes to
the conference. Maybe that's just where the college playoffs. So
the money goes to the conference and then the conference
divides the money amongst the teams. Is that true or
was somebody telling me a bunch of crap? Oh? I
don't know, because they were talking about how when you

(11:41):
got down to the close to the bubble there at
ten eleven twelve, you were looking at guys who are
in are on the CFP committee, who are also athletic
directors at some of these schools, and they're pushing their
teams naturally so their conference can get this money. Scene.
Now that's a well in the world.

Speaker 1 (12:02):
No, that wouldn't be true because when you're looking at
like the Citrus Bowl, the Citrus Bowl is gonna it's
just they get to they get their first pick of
the SEC who they want from the SEC and the
Big Ten if they're not playing for a championship, if
they're not going for i should say, the College Football champion, the.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
Free agents as it were.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
Yeah, so that's why we know that South Carolina was
picked over Alabama and ole Miss this year because it
was their choice. Citrus Bowl goes first, then what's the
other one that goes next? It's the outback Bowle or whatever,
and so South Carolina was considered the best football team
in the SEC amongst those who are not competing for

(12:45):
the championship. So what would that be? Georgia, Tennessee, and
Texas are the three that are going for the championship.
I believe there might be another one in there, and
I'm not thinking of it right now, but because then
I think the other the three that were out were
ole Miss, South Carolina, and Alabama. Florida had a horrible year,
LSU had a bad year, ole Miss, excuse me, Mississippi State, Vanderbilt, Kentucky.

(13:09):
None of those would be competing for the championship. So yeah,
South Carolina was considered the best I guess the number
four best team in the SEC this year because they
were picked first. By the way, I did retweet a
video I thought it was interesting on the SEC network
they were they asked their three analysts on the SEC network,
which player are you most excited to see of any

(13:31):
SEC team in the bowl season?

Speaker 2 (13:33):
This year.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
Yeah, the first two said Leonoris Sellers, and the third
and final guy said, I'll go with the Leonoris's teammate,
Dylan Stewart. So all three SEC analysts said that the
most exciting game to see this year and the Bowl
season will be what South Carolina is playing in just
because of those two players.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
It is a ton of freaking money that's being generated,
unbelievable amount of money. And I can harken back to
the conversation where you shared with me that like local
television and stuff. They said, if it weren't for sporting events,
they'd be out of business.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
Oh, clearly, I mean, why does anybody watch television? To
watch live television is an insane endeavor at this point.
There's literally no reason to watch anything live. I haven't
watched live television in probably four years. There's nothing there.
The news is already outdated by the time it gets

(14:31):
to the news.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
Yeah, the breaking news is not breaking, and they'll break,
they'll introduce breaking news on top of breaking news.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
Every one of the shows that we live the same
thing you've heard for the past two days. Every one
of the shows that we like is streamed, so I
don't have to be there Tuesday night at eight or
whenever it is. I watch it Saturday morning at nine
with my wife while we're cleaning the house or something.
So there's no reason to watch live television, and so
the only thing to watch live is a sporting event, because,

(15:02):
as you know, if you try to tape it and
watch it when you get home from church or whatever,
now somebody's going to tell.

Speaker 2 (15:07):
You or anymore, you're gonna get up. You're going to
get some kind of pop up on your phone.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
Yes, breaking news, Clemson wins the ACC title and you're like,
damn it, I was at a party. I wanted to
get home and watch that game.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
You can't. You got to leave your phone locked up.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
Yep, yep. So there's no reason to watch live television anymore.
They need to figure that out. I guess maybe they're
not going to figure it out. Maybe it's just going
to be a move to streaming everything and trying to
figure out a better way to monetize streaming. Right now,
the commercials are horrific in streaming. If you're a I mean,

(15:44):
I'm trying to figure out remembering what the show was
that we were watching, and I don't know how this
information got interpreted or misinterpreted. But we saw my wife
and I saw the same commercial in a I want
to say it was during a movie, so there might
have been like four commercial breaks in the movie. We

(16:05):
saw the same commercial once or twice in every stop
set that they had.

Speaker 2 (16:11):
In the SEC network is the same commercials over and over.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
But the commercial is for an HIV drug. But the
commercial is done in Spanish, So why are they marketing
that time name?

Speaker 2 (16:23):
Somebody get it coded?

Speaker 1 (16:25):
Yeah, exactly, And it's like some transsexuals getting married to
a man you.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
Don't even live in a fingerprint of a hot zip
for a Hispanic viewership.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Exactly, I got. And there's nothing about my buying purchases
in the past that would say he's into the gay lifestyle.
Nothing would say I had HIV, nothing would say I
speak Spanish.

Speaker 2 (16:51):
Somebody coded that wrong and they ran it all the time.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
And so and that's the other problem with streaming is
I mean not that it's a problem, because I really
don't care, but the commercial just run over and over
and over and over again because they haven't figured out
a way to sell that yet properly. So somebody will
figure that out and you'll get better advertisements on streaming
in the future, but for right now, it's slim pickens.
There's probably I'm gonna guess twenty twenty major clients that

(17:18):
are using streaming, Yes.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
And they are saturated with their message. Yeah, although I
have heard, well, I'm listening on my phone, if I'm
listening to Fox or I think it happens more on MSNBC.
I heard for the first time about two weeks ago,
and now I hear it kind of on the regular
a total commercial in Spanish.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
Yeah, it doesn't make any sense. It does not make
any sense because.

Speaker 2 (17:43):
I remember when I was like sixteen, I drove across
the country and I was listening on AM in the
middle of Texas because that's the only thing you listened
to because AM travels further than FM. Sure, but I
was listening to a Top forty station. It was a
Hopey Indian station. Oh, it was a top They were
playing Top forty music. But the commercial sets were twice

(18:05):
as long because they would play when it comes to
mind was J. C. Penny. They will play a J. C.
Penny English commercial and then they would immediately follow it
with another commercial spoken in Hopie. The same commercial you
would only know because every now there would say jac
Penny because you're like, this is this, And then you
started noticing every commercial was duplicated.

Speaker 1 (18:27):
Well, the thing about streaming that is amazing or could
be amazing. And that's why I'm saying, I'm shocked that
I keep getting this HIV and Spanish commercial. Is like
one of our guys, the vice president of sales here,
was showing me how because iHeart sells television streaming. So
like our salespeople have that ability if you're a radio client,

(18:49):
even if you're not a radio client, they can then
put together a package for you on streaming. But on
television streaming, like the same movie doesn't show this same
spots to the same households. So what Jonathan Rush sees
in his house while watching the same movie, maybe even
at the same time as me, could be different because

(19:10):
they would say, well, Jonathan's past buying history shows that
him and Sally like to do whatever. I can't think
of what you like that you go to the upstate lot.
Kelly and his wife they like to go to Florida
a lot, So they'll show me commercials for Florida.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
You know, go Scarry.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
Yeah, they can get very specific with your purchase history,
and the clients then know, Okay, well, I'm trying to
reach thirty four to forty eight year olds who have
two children or less, and they're looking for family friendly vacations. Okay,
Myrtle Beach is gonna pop up. Someone's gonna pop up,

(19:49):
and they're gonna just start running that ad to you.
At the same time, they might say, somebody else says, well,
we're looking for fifty to seventy year olds who like
collecting stamps. Yes, something, Yeah, it's like, boy, have you
seen the new stamp collection from the US Postal Office?
And it's really so That's why I'm saying, it's so
bizarre that I keep getting this that is bizarre Spanish

(20:11):
HIV commercial.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
But it's good news for local advertisers because if you're
like trying to think of a smaller store than I
the Christmas Place or Boca Burrita on Forest Drive. I
don't know them, so if you're oh, they're great. So
if you go to Boca and Boca, you got to
figure with all the taco places or all the Mexican restaurants,

(20:32):
you would be really spending a lot of money to
cover the entire city of Columbia, so you could just
buy a geo fenced as they called it. So if
you were streaming inside the Forest Acres area that they selected,
then you would get the Boca Burrito commercial, but Kelly
would get another whatever local commercial in the northeast.

Speaker 1 (20:51):
Well, and you know, with iHeartRadio app, that's freaky because
with that, with that, it can tell where you are
at that time. Yes, so if if I'm from your
hometown of Saluta, I'm hearing commercials all the time for Saluta,
Salutas or the area of Newberry, all that sort of stuff.

(21:12):
But you happen to come into a game Cock game
and if you're listening to the iHeartRadio app as you're
driving in the next commercial stop set has this Boca
thing that you're talking about the burrito play and they're like, oh,
I've never heard of Boca Burrito. Oh oh it's right here.
It's only a couple of miles from the stadium. We
might as well check it out while we're here.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
It's amazing. It is freaky, And they track your purchasing
habits and they know where you are. It is because
they don't want to wait. And I mean I understand
both sides of that argument.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
That one side says it's creepy they have all this
information on me, and they do, and it's already been
out there for years.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
Sure.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
At the same time, it also does enhance the commercial
marketing experience because they're not hopefully sending you HIV ads Spanish.
You're going to get something that is actually interesting to
you that you might find useful.

Speaker 2 (22:03):
I get the commercial for Tasa, Well, I may be
thinking about where am I going to go to dinner
tonight and now from Greenville, Well, Tasa what is that? Click?

Speaker 1 (22:11):
Yeah, you check it out, so it helps those people out.
And the final story I wanted to get to real quickly, Jonathan.
Did you see this story that came out over the
weekend about the most dangerous Christmas song to listen to
while driving?

Speaker 2 (22:21):
I did not.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
It was one of those things that Sunday just seemed
to sweep the news. Everybody was talking about this thing.
And it's a study done by China South China University
of Technology is warning that the most dangerous Christmas song
that you can listen to is Frosty the Snowman. And
why is that dangerous? Well, according to the study, authors.

(22:46):
They analyzed people's reaction to music, and when you start
upping the beats per minute on a song, if you
get to one hundred and twenty beats per minute or more,
that's when you've crossed into the danger zone because the
people are losing focus on their driving. They're now focusing
more on the feel good experience of the music. Right

(23:10):
and Frosty the Snowman comes in at one hundred and
seventy two beats per minute. Wow, this thing is thumping.
Number two all I want for Christmas Mariah Carey. How
many accidents I wonder have been caused by singing along
with Mariah?

Speaker 2 (23:25):
Un didn't have a beat out like that.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
That's what they said. The second most dangerous, Third is
Valise Navidad. Fourth Sand the Closes Coming to Town. So
these songs, apparently just in the Christmas spirit, are the
most dangerous. But I was thinking, what song is dangerous?
When you hear it? When Jonathan Rush is driving.

Speaker 2 (23:46):
Along flirting with disaster, that song, Molly hats it. That
song automatically you get a downshift and push that right
foot down. I don't care where you are.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
I'm a big drummer when I'm singing.

Speaker 2 (24:00):
In a funeral procession. You're down shifting and kicking it,
scream right past the hearse.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
How about some zz top for you?

Speaker 2 (24:07):
Absolutely give me? Oh you loving?

Speaker 1 (24:11):
I mean it's it's there are songs out there that
will strike you in a way that it becomes dangerous
to other drivers. Rush any song by rush, any song
by rush, because you want to do the drum solo.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
Absolutely, you gotta play alone with Neil Perk. I gotta
be doing ninety five my hair on fire to even
get the right sound. And my tweeters are screaming.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
Oh yeah, you got them all cranked up the blow punk.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. You gotta have the
piazzo tweeters, You blow out a piazzo tweeter, you cranking it,
and I'm blown out several.

Speaker 1 (24:46):
So we'll fight out what songs are the most dangerous
when you hear them, and maybe you just like put
a warning. Heads up, I'm cranking Van Hallen, heads up.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
I got kill the YMCA now because you start doing
the Trump dang. You can't help it to take your
hands off the wheel, do the Trump dance.

Speaker 1 (25:02):
It's funny because I for years as a Yankees fan
if you've never been to a Yankees game, seventh inning stretch,
they do the YMCA dance. The Browns crew does. So
the grounds crew is pulling out the the stuff or whatever,
and then when they get to the hook, they drop
their brooms and their hoses and all that they and
they put up the Y, the M, the C, and

(25:24):
then the A, and the crowd does it back with
her right so ever since I guess I don't know
when they started that, maybe in the late eighties. But
because I'm I'm I'm conditioned that when I hear YMCA,
I'm transported to the Yankee Stadium and I'm doing the Y, M,
C A. But now with Trump doing it, now there's

(25:44):
this other You bend your elbows and you just kind
of go up and down. Yeah, it's like nobody. There
is literally no skill required. You don't even have to
be on the you don't have to be on rhythm.
There's nothing to it. Some of the NFL players I
see doing it, they're more like in the locomotion kind of.

Speaker 2 (26:04):
Yeah, this is a little they can't even do it
because they're not white. That's a white man dance. That
is the most awkward thing it's like me dancing Suddenly
I can dance better than somebody I know.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
Just play Village People all night, Jonathan'll neln do it.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
And if you get tired of me, just tell me
to go put on.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
Some rush song.

Speaker 2 (26:26):
Yeah, I'll rushed in.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
He'll be in the He'll be in the back doing
his drum solos.

Speaker 2 (26:32):
All right. Now, Hey, what's going on in your neighborhood.
We should be talking about, you know, how to reach
out to us on social media. Maybe got something going
up at Christmas display. Somebody was talking about that the
other day. Getting out of control in some areas. Or
you want to win tomorrow the number is the same.
We start talking, you start talking, you can start winning.
The six thirty. The number to uses ato three ninety seven,
eight ninet two six seven eighth three ninety seven, eight

(26:53):
ninet two six seven. Tomorrow morning, it's six thirty. You
get a double prizes. I think I'm recording toy story
when I say that double prizes. You get double prizes.
Holiday Lights of the River and that little concert coming
up with a little man named Keith Urban. Yeah, we
did not supply multi colored kids kids shoes for you.
You'll have got to get your own or tied ee

(27:15):
them that.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
Maybe maybe get a red ked shoe, a white head
shoe and blue laces for both.

Speaker 2 (27:22):
Now we're talking weekend, weekend, kicking it off tomorrow morning
on the Morning Watch
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