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March 27, 2025 • 24 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly Nash. Hey there it's tomorrow show today, Thank god,
tomorrow's Friday, and we get a chance. You're to win
a six thirty. We've played what you're talking about, last
chance of the week, last chance period to win Old
Dominion tickets. To my knowledge, we might have some more
come up later, but certainly don't want to miss your
opportunity tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Yeah, that's one of those things where you know, could
be like the week of the show or something that
we end up with a couple pairs of tickets to
give away. But as you said, this is our final
opportunity that we're aware of to win Old Dominion tickets
for their June fifth show. This is the actual kickoff
of their tour, The How Good Is That World Tour
launches in Charleston. You'll be there with Ernest and Red Farren.

(00:43):
I have not gone and heard our friend yet, Julian
who does the pronunciation guide, So I'm taking a shot
at it. Bilocallist filocallist is my It could be philocaalist,
that's probably more likely philocalius, philoicaalist fellow.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
I'm drawing a complete blank.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
Someone who finds and appreciates beauty, in all things. Oh
what a great word. Yes is that you, Jonathan? Are
you that guy who can find beauty?

Speaker 1 (01:15):
And many people would argue no, I argue, yes, you.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
Do, argue I'm a philoicaist. I'll just get a T
shirt for you that says that I am a philic cast.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
It was like Sally said, these bugs are going nuts.
I said, well, it's springtime. Look at the pollen. The
bees are flying. They're going crazy over here. They're all
sexually turned on. It's the beads of the birds and
the bees. The birds are doing it with the bees.

Speaker 2 (01:43):
What is happening in your yard?

Speaker 1 (01:45):
See, I'm looking for the beautiful part and the fact
that it's pollen field. The springtime's coming. That's the sign.
We got to get through the pollen.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
You know, are there any bees that have any pollen allergies?

Speaker 1 (01:57):
That's a great quest. I've never seen a bee sneeze.
I've heard about the bee's knees. Have you ever seen
a bee sneeze? What a great children's book, what a
great idea.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
Well the bee who had a story.

Speaker 1 (02:10):
About a bee with a pollen analogy? I know I'll
share it with a little Sarah and see what County response.

Speaker 2 (02:14):
I get it's like a Rootolph the Red Nose Reindeer
type of moment.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
All right, well maybe we're what a great idea. Look, Kelly,
you see you're you're actually become a microcosm of your
own word and your own complaint. But you found a
beautiful part in it. It's a children's book. That's great.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Let's see, are we going to be playing an interview
back here in just a second or are we going
to go a little bit longer with this one? And
they do a separate interview podcast.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
We'll put that up separately because for you people who
support animals, here's an opportunity for you to support a
lot of animals. Uh, well dogs in particular. The Bark
at the Park is coming. We be talking to Jack
Slan about that. We'll put that up as a separate podcast.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
Well, I wanted to let you know that there's a
special going on. I know so many people love taking
their kids to Disney, and if you go to the
Morning Rush blog at ninety seventy five to BCOs dot com,
I've put it up on the Morning Rush Blog, Disney
is going to be doing a special And let me
just read this fifty percent off on three day or

(03:17):
longer kids tickets, and this is for kids age three
to nine. Also discounted three park passes hotel packages that
come with free Disney dining plans. All of those are
going to kick in for visits that begin in late May.
So I've got the link on the Morning Rush blog

(03:37):
if you want to save some money and go to
Disney World this year. I don't Disney might be trying
to figure out a way to recoup some of the
money off snow White. My gosh, I was somebody went
to was it Groc? Is that the name of the
thing on X Groc is the AI thing And apparently
Groc is now replacing Google as far as like the
hottest search engine out there. And they asked Groc how

(04:00):
much money did Disney spend on the on snow White. Well,
that the stated production value was like two hundred and
sixty eight million dollars, But then they talked about it
was two hundred million dollars in advertising, and there was
another one hundred and seventy five million dollars in reshoots.
So the whole thing comes to over six hundred million dollars.

(04:22):
And usually if you're going to have a if you're
going to recoup the money. Yeah, well, let me put
it to you this way. You usually get about fifty
percent of what the movie's gonna make the first weekend.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
Right.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
That's so the total run, it could be out for
three months, you're going to get fifty percent of it
that first weekend. They brought in I think thirty million
dollars the first weekend. They need to get to six
hundred million to break even.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
And the problem is it's gotten such bad publicity on
its opening weekend. Yes, it's going to be like Horizon
was for Kevin co Oh, it's it opened week and
the second week was like Tumbleweeds. Yes, I mean there
was nobody in the theater because it got such a
bad rap.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
I had forgotten about that. Kevin Costner he was gonna.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
Make two more, right, Yes, I think he still. He's
already shot them. They're doing they're doing the direct to
pay per view type of thing that's going to go.
I'm sure it is going to go straight to Paramount
or whoever will pick it up. Please end up on
Fox Nation where he saved the world.

Speaker 2 (05:26):
I didn't plan. I didn't plan to save the world.
I just ended up doing now I have.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
I listened to that promotional advertisement as it were, for
the Fox Nation Yosemite special that Kevin Costner did, and
at some point he's talking about Roosevelt and how the
park was established and whatever, and I want to believe
in my heart of hearts that he said they didn't
set out to change the world. But apparently that's what happened.

(05:53):
But for the life of me, the harder I listened
to it, the more I hear him say I didn't
set out a change the world or change America. I
didn't set out a change America, but apparently that's what's happened.
You were part of a documentary who if we're going
to salute anybody should be the camera guys.

Speaker 2 (06:14):
Maybe it was water World he was talking about.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
That's just America where he had the gils behind his ears.
If I ever had an opportunity to meet Kevin Costner, no, no,
I love his movies, but I wouldn't walk across the
street to meet the dude. The thing I would insist
on is can I pull your ear back and see
if I can see those gills.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
He probably wouldn't enjoy meeting you either.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
I would guarantee he wouldn't enjoy meeting me.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
Whenever I think of Kevin Costner, I think about that scene.
And you probably didn't watch the movie Truth or Dare
the Madonna documentary.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
No, I did not. I miss that it was I
mean there's some really it's on my list of things
to watch in my retirement years.

Speaker 2 (06:54):
There's some really funny moments in there, Like this was
before social media was a thing, because that movie was
shot I want to say in the mid nineties. She
was dating Warren Batty at the time, and she was
like in her dressing room or something, and Warren walked
in and he saw the camera crew and he's like,

(07:15):
all right, I'll just talk to you later. And she's like, oh,
Warren hates the camera crew. And she was like kind
of getting him on him about the fact that he
didn't want to be on camera, and he goes, yeah,
I guess I'm the exact opposite of you. For you
if it doesn't happen on camera, did we even live?
Did it even happen? You need a camera with you
when you go to the bathroom. So he was all

(07:37):
about and then there was there was a backstage scene
where Kevin Costner I don't know the name of his
wife at the time, but him and their two kids
come backstage and they're like, Kevin Costner wants to come
in and meet you, and she's like, all right, yeah,
I guess we can do that. So they open up
the dressing room door. In comes Kevin and his wife

(07:57):
and the two kids. And the two kids are I
mean really excited to meet Madonna because they're like eight
and ten and she's at the prime and Kevin said
something like he's just kind of awkwardly standing there, and
he said, oh, yeah, we had a great time. Everybody
thought that the concert was neat.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
And then when he walked.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
Out, and she was like, did that loser say neat?
Oh we're neat. Oh kids, we're the neatest concert out there.
How old is that guy? So she's just mocking him.
But anyway, moving on, Jonathan, I don't know if you're
in this category.

Speaker 1 (08:35):
I got to quote Rosie o' donald again. This is
two days in a row from a league of their own.
I guess because it's Major League Baseball Opening Day. I
got baseball on my mind. I don't know why you
get dressed at all. That's a funny line.

Speaker 2 (08:49):
I don't know if you're in this group at all, Jonathan.
You might be, but we have now hit an all
time high. In twenty twenty three, it was forty five percent.
In twenty twenty four, it was forty in twenty twenty five.
It's now fifty percent of adults are paying for their
adult children to live in some way. So that your

(09:13):
kid is twenty two or older, fifty percent of parents
are now contributing to their kid's lifestyles now. The number
one thing they're paying for groceries, number two, cell phones,
health insurance, rent, or mortgage mortgage. Forty six percent even

(09:36):
pay in part for vacations for the kids to go on.
These are adults now. The average monthly cost per adult
child of those who are paying into their kids is
one four hundred and seventy four dollars a month.

Speaker 1 (09:52):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (09:53):
And according to them right now, sixty seven percent give
me seventy seven percent say this is actually putting my
own financial health at risk, So they don't have money
for retirement themselves, the only propping up their twenty and

(10:13):
thirty year old kids.

Speaker 1 (10:15):
The only thing that I'm still attached to is Lee's
automobile insurance. When Lee got out of school, he did
not have a credit reference that would allow him to
buy an audibobil, So he bought an automobile and I
co signed for it. So he makes the payments, and
to my knowledge, I would have got I've never gotten

(10:37):
to notice. Yeah, I made a payment, so he's making
the payments. But the car is partly in my name,
so I just attached it to my insurance, which I
got to tell something. Maybe that's a whole different conversation.
Audible bill insurance is like a roller freaking coaster, and
I'm finding now every time they do one of the

(10:58):
reviews that they like to do, they just jerk your
rate up for no apparent reason. If you just go
online and shop around, guaranteed you're going to cut your
automobile insurance cost automatically.

Speaker 2 (11:10):
This feels like we should be going into a commercial.
That's why we suggest no.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
I've actually told the sales staff here, you need to
get one of these independent auto insurance guys or house
probably the same thing with houses. I need to take
my house insurance. You need to get one of those guys.
To be a sponsor of the Morning Rush because I'm
telling you I was set up. I won't name the companies,
but these are companies you would know if I was
set up. And like six months later, they literally doubled

(11:38):
it and I'm like, wait minute, what And it went
through the EFT like three times, and like the third
month I saw I got through and I'm like, damn,
I forgot to go back and check that. I ended
up cutting it in half. Now I'm kicking myself and
the ass because for three months I paid, I just
threw money out the window. And then it was going
to go up again with a new insurance, so I
went and shopped it again, cut it again. So he's

(12:00):
not like costing me a lot of money, but he's
that's the only thing he is attached to at this point,
he's the only one attached to anything. Well, he will be.
He's the most expensive.

Speaker 2 (12:09):
Thing on your auto insurance because he's under twenty six.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
That's true. So twenty six they usually got a speeding ticket,
so they didn't help.

Speaker 2 (12:15):
They usually cut it about half once you hit twenty
six when I was a kid.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
Now he buys his own car, and I keep thinking,
because he's in I think I'm going to trade in
my car, and I'm like, good, yeah, you're going to
have your own assurance.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
Right when I was a kid, I got my license,
and this was back in the days when insurance people
went door to door and like, so we would meet
the insurance agent. He would come to the house, sure,
and he had already taken care of my parents on
numerous things, and they were like, well, Kelly is you know,
going to be coming of age here and blah blah blah,

(12:48):
and so he needs to get auto insurance. And so
I think I might be wrong on this one. If
my mom's listening, she would probably correct me if I'm misremembering,
But I think that the deal was I had to
pay my insurance portioned to them, and so I got
the insurance at sixteen. But then at seventeen, when they

(13:08):
were reviewing it, we got a letter that said we've
just discovered that Kelly is actually a male and so
we're now doubling it.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
Oh my gosh, they had you. That's right, yeah, because
it's much more expensive for young man automobile insurance.

Speaker 2 (13:26):
Yeah, so that was crazy, and I was like, what
can they do that.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
They can do whatever they want.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
They're an insurance company.

Speaker 1 (13:32):
That's great anyway. I mean, times is tough, brother, Times
has always been tough. That rent is way too damn high.
Whatever happened to that guy?

Speaker 2 (13:41):
If you all remember that, there was a presidential campaign
several years ago New York, right, he got on he
was on stage with the Republicans, the Rent's too damn
High party. That was his party. He didn't get much
traction with that. But anyway, fifty percent of the people

(14:02):
who are paying into their kids right now, their adult kids,
say that they feel obligated to help. Most of them
say they expect to cut it off within the next
two years. I don't know what they think is going
to magically happen in the next two years, but eighteen
percent said they expect these financial contributions will go on

(14:22):
the rest of their lives.

Speaker 1 (14:24):
So you're gonna so you're gonna be eighteen the rest
of your life. Yeah to your fifty year old kid. Yeah, interesting,
my gosh, what are we doing now? Maybe these are
rich people. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (14:40):
Maybe they're rich people and it's not a big deal
to them, right, and the kids are spoiled and that
because we always see those like I don't really know
any rich people like that. But like when I was,
when you watch movies or something, you'll see there's like
the trust fund. Baby, Mommy and daddy have a billion dollars.
And so he's thirty. Remember we had a story about

(15:01):
Gosh I want to say about two years ago in
New York. The guy was not like a billionaire, but
he was very wealthy, lived on like Madison Avenue, had
like a twenty eight, twenty nine year old son who
had become a good for nothing bum, and the dad
kept threatening to cut him off. You got to get
a job, you gotta do something, and the kid would

(15:23):
refuse to do it, and the dad finally pulled the
plug on it. The kid walked to the parents' apartment
like on Madison Avenue or wherever it was, went upstairs,
stabbed his father in the heart and turned around and
walked out. And and they said, you know, to him,
do you have any remorse? He said, for what, I'm

(15:45):
going to spend the rest of my life in prison.
I'd rather do that than be broke. So yeah, that
was his mindset at twenty eight, twenty nine years old.
I wonder, I wonder if it's changed now that he's
been in prison for a couple of years. If he's thinking, gosh,
if I'd only gotten a job, stop trying to make
the old man happy.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
Interesting. Yeah, so beware if you cut it off, it'll come.
Tell you in your sleep, what's more painful than fourteen
hundred dollars a month or a knife in your heart?
Get back to me. Oh as thinking about Lee because
he is. He's really racked up a lot of miles

(16:26):
of that car, and he's about to drive to Florida.
He's got a big wedding coming up this weekend, so
it's interesting. I hope he decides to buy a new
car soon. You're right, it's the most expensive part of
my car insurance. But right now my car insurance is
lower than I anticipated, so I'm not complaining.

Speaker 2 (16:45):
Well, once you get Lee off, you'll get even more
money back. And he likes his money.

Speaker 1 (16:51):
All right. Hey, what's going on in your neighborhood? We
should be talking about what you paying for for your
adult kids. Are they doing anything for it? Well? Are
they still coming over to cut the grass? Oh?

Speaker 2 (17:08):
You know what, I forgot to bring up that other
story that we wanted to talk about. We've got the
guy who's he paid because his brother didn't have enough money.
They were going to get married in Las Vegas. So
his brother was like, dude, I can't afford it. I
just can't get out there. So he paid to have
his brother come to his own wedding out here in Vegas. Well,
while the brother was there, he hits it big. He

(17:30):
hits like ten thousand dollars on like you know, some
roulette table or something. Now the question is, do I
ask my brother to reimburse me the thousand dollars I
paid for you to come to Vegas?

Speaker 1 (17:42):
You know, I think this is actually playing out in
real life with Lee. What. Yeah, I think that Lee,
because he's got to travel to Florida this weekend to
a wedding. Then I believe, like two weeks from now,
he and David and John are supposed to go to
Cherokee with a friend of theirs who is doing his

(18:04):
bachelorette party in Cherokee at the casino. And I think that.
I know they're all split in the cost of their
Airbnb or whatever. They don't have to pay for part
of Lee's I think Lee was saying, I don't know
if I gotta do the Farida trip. How much money
Owen left, but that would be a great thing if

(18:24):
they actually end up having to cover at Lee's part
portion of his airbnb and he hits it at the casino.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
I just found out it's a lady who sent us
that email, and it's her brother, and her brother won
five grand. And I'm very happy for him, and I
was really happy that he was our wedding. But now
I'm wondering, is it cool if I ask him for
my money back?

Speaker 1 (18:43):
That's a great question. Why not? Easy companiasy? Go? Brother?
This is a whim fall, and you're still walking even
be here. If it weren't for me, you wouldn't even
be here. She's making a great argument. I'm all about
this girls. Now I'm saying yes.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
The fact that he hasn't even offered it, that's weird,
like you would think.

Speaker 1 (19:03):
Remind me again how she's related to this guy. It's
her brother, it's her brother. Oh yeah, he's not going
to offer No. He wouldn't even give you a lego
for breakfast when you were a kid. He kept your lego.
He wouldn't let go of your lego. He ain't gonna
give you money. Oh, absolutely, sticking with the bill for
that one totally.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
I want my money back. I want my money back,
money back?

Speaker 1 (19:26):
Then, how would you handle that? All? Right, So we
can talk about all that tomorrow and we kick off
the weekend and get ready for and we'll find out
how my bracket is holding up.

Speaker 2 (19:34):
Yeah, there's a bunch of games tonight, right.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
I think I don't know now, I didn't look at
the schedule. I mentioned the start of this afternoon, and
that's gonna be Major League Baseball starts this afternoon. But
we're down to the sweet sixteenth. So when we got
eight games? So we're gonna do well? Is it probably
two games today, two games Friday, two games Saturday.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
I'm trying to look at my h trying to go
to my app because.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
Then after that we're going to be down to the
final four.

Speaker 2 (19:57):
Let's see, So there's Major League Baseball games.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
Well, would be down to eight? I guess they would
play twice this weekend, wouldn't because then we got to
get down to the final four. Let's see.

Speaker 2 (20:06):
So NCAA basketball, we got Alabama versus Brigham Young tonight
at seven oh nine, seven thirty nine. Florida is playing
Maryland tonight at nine thirty nine, you got Duke versus Arizona,
and then at ten oh nine it's Texas Texas versus Arkansas.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
And then they take Saturday off.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
Let me go to tomorrow. Go tomorrow is because they'll be
at the same venue. Let's see, do we have any
that's women's basketball tomorrow men's basketball? Ole Miss plays Michigan
State at seven oh nine, Kentucky and Tennessee play at
seven thirty nine, a game Michigan versus Auburn Friday night
at nine thirty nine, and Houston plays Perdue at ten

(20:47):
oh nine tomorrow night. That's right, so they probably do
they play on Saday and then they go to uh
then they go to a new venue. Right, That's what
I was thinking, that they take the rest of the
weekend off weekend just to make sure the I'm not
lying to you. I got NCAA women's basketball on Saturday.

Speaker 1 (21:04):
That's right. The BAM is all excited.

Speaker 2 (21:10):
Yeah, there's a lot to be excited about. You got
an opportunity to be the national champions again.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
And I don't even know who the game coach played
this week in a we at home baseball.

Speaker 2 (21:19):
Oh, I kind.

Speaker 1 (21:20):
Of hadn't even been watching it. It's kind of been
not going so well right now, Yeah, David tells me
it's over, it would appear.

Speaker 2 (21:27):
So.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
I actually had a friend to send over some stuff
that he was going to throw away, and it's all
sc baseball logo. It's like really, it's like yes, like
two quarter zips and a and like a sweater kind
of thing.

Speaker 2 (21:42):
I'm trying to remember which football game we lost. But
when we lost the game, the guy who I've been
sitting next to for like a decade, uh, he said,
that's it.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
I'm done it.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
It's like when we lost to like I don't know,
Coastal or somebody like that. And he wasn't lying. His
daughter confirmed that he went home, dug a hole in
the backyard. He took every piece of gamecock clothing that
he had. No, he threw it in the hole and
he set it on fire. No, yeah, she's.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
A game cup fans. You're getting frustrated. Remember we've got
a burn band in place until the governor lifts it.
Don't get arrested because you burned your gamecock stuff because
you're frustrated about baseball. So just go buy a FAM shirt.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
We just lost to North Carolina. He's hit the schedule
and see what the next game is.

Speaker 1 (22:32):
Mominary.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
Oh, they're home March twenty eighth, that's tomorrow night. That's
the good news. The bad news is they're playing the
number one team in America, Tennessee.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
That means we're going to hear Rednecks playing Rocky Top
up and down La Vista. That's what it says. That's
where I draw the damn line right there. Goodness gracious,
I can't handle that song anymore.

Speaker 2 (22:56):
And the orange is just not even a right orange.
It's something's wrong with it. So they'll put in there.
They'll wrap that series up. They got Saturday at four,
Sunday at five, and then.

Speaker 1 (23:07):
They get post. Sally was asking me when can we
go to a game, and she's very particular about her seats. Okay,
so this could be a great weekend for us to
go to a game.

Speaker 2 (23:17):
Well, you know, you might want to go. You might
want to go. Tuesday April first, they're going to be
at home against Presbyterian.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, Run, Hose Run.

Speaker 2 (23:28):
Then the Tuesday, April eighth, they got USC Upstate at
Founders Park. Next weekend they're on the road at Mississippi State.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
The weekend.

Speaker 2 (23:37):
After that, they're on the road at Texas A and
m oh They're home for the Citadel on April fifteenth.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
And the Citadel just beat College at Charleston.

Speaker 2 (23:46):
So the next time that they're home will be for
a series is against Old Miss, which is April seventeenth
through the nineteenth. And I'm thinking that Ole Miss is
pretty good at baseball. I know Kentucky, he's very good
at baseball. Now that's in a way series Florida. Oh
my god, you'll be home for Florida.

Speaker 1 (24:06):
The SEC is just on fire. We've still got seven
teams in this Sweet sixteen.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
Auburn and LSU are the last two. I mean, it's
just murderer's row out there.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
It's a tough life in the SEC.

Speaker 2 (24:19):
Yeah, no easy wins.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
We can be challenging when the Bulldogs come to town.
There's no easy wins, right Why I brought that up?
Spirits again. By tomorrow morning, we'll get a winner. You
could be a winner. You could be a winner tomorrow morning.
Get six thirty what you're talking about. Be sure and
get the answer again on the morning, Rushball. We gonna
do it again. Reach out to us on social media.
You can also email us I am rushing ninety seven

(24:42):
five to when.

Speaker 2 (24:43):
You see US dot com Nation ninety seven five to
b CUS dot com and.

Speaker 1 (24:46):
We start talking. You start talking, same number you want
to start winning the SA three ninety seven eight w
COS
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Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

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