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November 13, 2025 24 mins

We talk magic, getting frauded, psychics, and Juanita has a rant about fancy cars.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I posted a picture of me doing magic for a
little girl at ukulele Club last night. She's like five
years old, and I sat next to her mom, and
the little girl came and she had a little pink
ukulele and she's five, so she quickly lost interest, but
her mom was playing and it was fun. We were
talking and she goes, she loves magic, and I said, oh, really,
and so I do magic. So I was doing the

(00:21):
disappearing ring trick and I made the ring disappear and
I'm like, oh, it's not in my hand, where is it?
And I pointed to her mom and as I'm pointing
to her mom because it the ring reappeared behind her
mother's ear. Classic and I'm pointing to her mom and
she's got the biggest smile on her face, and somebody
took a picture and she was so delighted and full

(00:44):
of wonder. And a friend of mine, Scott, who's in
ukulele club, said, I love that picture. He said, now
I can kind of see why you do magic. I said,
it's the wonder even in people like adults' faces, like
when I do something in Bailey or Jenny is like,
wait a second. That was really good wonder and so
much of our lives are they don't have wonder anymore.
So she said, what magic trick can I buy her

(01:08):
that she can do at five years old? They said,
no question, Ball and Vase. It is a very simple,
self working magic trick where you have a little cup,
you put a lid on it, and when you take
it off, a ball appears, and you put the lid
back on and you take the lid off and the
ball is gone. And it's called ball and vase. Any
kid can do it if you are a grandparent or

(01:29):
a big sister or whatever and you want to get
your little brother something. Ball and vase. Got it? Ball
and vase.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
Ball. And I don't want to explain because I think
I could figure out how to do it, but I, oh,
you totally.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
Got to be. You would watch it one time and
you'd be like, oh, well, it's clear how it's done.
But when you're five, it's full of wonder m hm.
And they'll show it to you over and over and
you have to each time go, that was really good.

Speaker 3 (01:57):
Have you figured out the anymore? With the id? I
with your magic tricks? And you do like a magic
trick exchange.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
No I really like that. I think I need to
get a hold of it. I think I need to
get a hold of Fat Pants Brewing, Yeah, and set
up a table in the back and maybe sell different
tables or let like the first ten magicians that want
to trade their shit, because it's kind of like it's
like sports cards. Yeah, maybe you've got two Michael Jordan's
and you want to get rid of them, or maybe
you've want a Michael Jordan and you're willing to trade

(02:25):
a couple of you know, Daryl Strawberries for it.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
I've been a handful of those like things where you're
just trading at like drag shows, and they're just like, hey,
I have these costumes and I'm not going to use
them anymore. Who wants them?

Speaker 1 (02:35):
Where did they do it? Brewery? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (02:37):
The one that I went to was at Lush, which
is like a club sort of restaurant kind of thing. Yeah,
and they just give you a big room and then
everybody sets up their own stuff. It's it would take
a little bit of like planning. You can't just like
show up. Yeah, well, you'd have to like coordinate a
little bit.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
I'm sure it would, And I have no idea how
to do that because they thought about it. But I
think it's a really good idea to find something where
you go to a and there's a bunch of people
that have all their used secondhand magic tricks out and
then people can walk around and buy them or trade
or whatever or barter. I think it'd be kind of cool. Yeah,

(03:14):
up for me, Jenny, write that down.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
No, she's back out too many other things.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
Wanita is gonna rant for us. And here's Wanita.

Speaker 4 (03:22):
He So this week's rant is about all the extra
ship that they're putting in these vehicles nowadays. So trust me,
I'm not complaining about the seat warmer. I love my
seat warmer. My seat warmer and my steering wheel warmer.
That one I won agree with.

Speaker 3 (03:39):
But all this.

Speaker 4 (03:39):
Other extra shit they could they could have got rid
of it. So in my Yukon, if you get out
of your lane, the seat vibrates. I remember when I
first bought the truck and my husband drove it and
he kind of got out of the lane a little bit,
and then he then the seat started to vibrate. He's
I got a freaking shit you got going on in here.
I'm like, I don't know how to turn it off.
But it does that when you get out of your life,

(04:00):
or like when I'm driving. A lot of the times,
I'll drive with one hand in the corner of the
of the steering wheel. But if the steering wheel doesn't
sense that my hand is on it, there's this big
ass message that will come up on the dashboard. Put
your hands on on the steering wheel.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
This's got to fuck you.

Speaker 4 (04:16):
I could drive away the hell got But the one
that really pisses me the fuck off is I if
I go to the store and I buy some shit
and I put it in the back of my truck,
on the back seat. But when I turn my truck off,
because of the fact that the seat senses that there's
something sitting in the back when I turn it off,
there's this big ass message that will flash on Look

(04:36):
look in your back seat. It's like, what kind of
scary movie type shit is?

Speaker 1 (04:39):
This?

Speaker 4 (04:40):
Just scare the fuck out of me. I'm not looking
in the back seat. What is Freddy Freddy Krueger back there?
God damn it. That shit pisses me the fuck off.
Well that's my rent for this week. I love you guys, bye,
uh love you back.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
That is so funny. I didn't know there was a
put your hands on the wheel feature. Yeah, but I
guess it kind of makes sense. It's like if you're
driving and you're eating a cold butterburger, it's difficult to
do with one hand, so you take the hand off,
and then your car will be like, I need to
put your hand back on the wheel. Wow. I don't
know that feature.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
I don't have any of that fancy stuff. The only
fancy thing that I have in my car that I
do really love is my backup camera.

Speaker 1 (05:14):
If I the best.

Speaker 2 (05:15):
If I drive a car that doesn't have one, I'll
start backing up and look at the radio on the
dash and I'll be like, what the hell?

Speaker 1 (05:21):
Same, but it is such a great invention. The car
that I drive now I got about five years ago,
and it has the departure lane departure correction, so if
you start to drift out of your lane a little bit,
it'll kind of somewhat aggressively pull you back into your lane.
I don't know if it looks at the lines on

(05:43):
the road. I don't know if it uses momentum inertia whatever,
But the first couple of times I was driving it,
I'm like, oh man, the wheels are out of balance.
The wheels need alignment, because it felt like the wheels
were like whatever. I probably drove it for one hundred
miles before I realized it's laying departure correction. Yeah. I

(06:04):
don't mind that one, because I'm texting and driving and
eating and a lot of the time. There's last week,
I couldn't find my my chewing tobacco. Yeah, so I
crawled into the back seat while I'm driving cruiser. Real question. Yeah,
I'm driving down four ninety four and I'm in the
back seat looking for my chewing tobacco. And it corrected
several times. Thank god.

Speaker 3 (06:22):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Good.

Speaker 3 (06:22):
Well.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
My sister has the one that where you're on cruise
control and you set it and then it tracks how
close the car is in front of you and it
adjusts for you.

Speaker 1 (06:30):
Oh really, that is dope if.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
You're driving like a long distance okay, because then you're
you're like, oh, I'm set at you know, sixty five
miles an hour, but then the car in front of
you starts to slow down, so then it slows you
down slowly to like sixty. You don't actually have to
think about it.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Nice, Mine doesn't do that that I know of, But
it does do the sudden stop. If there's like traffic
that stops in front of you, it'll go bbbep, slam
on the brakes and everything turns red.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Oh my gosh. The cars don't trust us. The cars
don't trust us.

Speaker 1 (06:58):
And I'm glad because there's been plenty of times I've
been in the back seat looking for my lube. Yeah,
and I couldn't find it. And as I'm back there
and it's like earth bepepepeeper, wait till you're parked for that.
You know a lot of people listen to podcasts while
they're driving. Yeah, I don't.

Speaker 3 (07:15):
Yeah, you watch things.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
Let's just put it that way.

Speaker 2 (07:18):
You're so dumb.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
You're so dumb. So he's definitely not watching the row.
All right, next one, Thank you, one Ada, We love
you over here, Brayden writes in when does one oh
seven point nine start playing Christmas music? I don't know?
Oh hey, Alexa, when does cool one O eight start
playing Christmas music? In Minneapolis.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
One hundred and eight point nine.

Speaker 5 (07:44):
The cool FM typically starts playing Christmas music in early November,
while they've started as late as November twenty second In
the past recent years have seen them switch to holiday
tunes around mid November. Would you like to know about
other holiday traditions in Minneapolis?

Speaker 1 (07:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (07:59):
No, Oh, that's confusing.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
Okay, there's really no answer. She called it cool one
O eight point nine. I think so, I'm not really
sure we will learn anything. Jenny Bailey, Dave, this is
Dan from Apple Valley, thanking you three for being my
friend in my radio. And I would love to thank
all the people in my life who are directly and
indirectly helping me out and for inspiring me to an
amazingly wonderful and awesome life I have. That is from Dan.

(08:24):
You might recognize Dan from He usually is on the
Minnesota Goodbye and I love Dan. I met him a
couple of years ago. I believe he lives there, works
in a group home, and he's just everything was going
along typically in life, and he was out on a
four wheeler and he lost control and he wrapped the
four wheeler around a tree so hard that the two
front tires of the fur wheeler wrapped around the tree

(08:46):
and touched. And he has a traumatic brain injury, but
he's still got a personality and he is funny and
he is, you know, he has a little trouble with
speech sometimes, but he's a smart ass. He'll call in
on the Minnesota Goodbye. We have something hanging in the
studio that he gave me, a boo bash and it's
a KATIWB. It's a Minnesota license plate frame that he
cut up and he made out of it, made it

(09:07):
into art and it says boo bash and it says
KATIEWB that he cut out little letters. Then it says
one oh one to three nineteen or twenty twenty five,
and we just love Dan.

Speaker 3 (09:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Yeah, So that was very and what a positive guy,
because there's two ways you could handle something like that,
probably a lot of ways you can handle something like that,
and he's just positive.

Speaker 3 (09:27):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
Next one, this one says Rebecca. I'm a realtor. I
was in training yesterday, And they usually throw in a
couple of real life examples as we learn about different topics.
Yesterday's real life example was a news story out of Arizona,
and the news story featured Dave's son Chase as the reporter.

(09:49):
And she takes a picture of my son Chase reporting
this scam and there he is on the screen. I'll
spin this around for you guys to see, and you
can because.

Speaker 3 (09:59):
I'm times when you do that, it stops the recording.

Speaker 1 (10:02):
Oh yeah, yah, take a look, take a look, take
a look. Yeah, Okay, that's him.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
I think that's so cool that people recognize Chase because
we've talked about him here. So thank you, Rebecca. She
goes on to Shay, it was the greatest report I've
ever seen. Right. The story was about two women who
were using fraudulent deeds to sell houses to people. Have
any of you guys ever been a victim of fraud
or a scam? Yes, I've told the story. We lost
about one hundred and seventy thousand dollars because Susan was

(10:31):
convinced that this real estate investment in Tampa in a
shitthole business building was a great investment, and we lost everything.
She won't even talk about it. So that's a lot
of money. That's one hundred and seventy thousand dollars. We
lost every fucking penny of it. And I am so

(10:54):
skeptical about investing, Like, like, if some he's your financial planner,
I'm so skeptical about that. I just like, yeah, because
I've known you hear news stories. There was a guy
who was a DJ in Denver back in the eighties.
His name was Stephen B. And he made a lot

(11:15):
of money in radio. And he had his friend who
was an investor. And his investor friend said, oh, yeah,
we're gonna make you rich, rich rich. Well, can I
get some of this money? Oh? Man, I just can't
not today. Maybe next week. Can I get some money?
It's my money? Can I get some today? The guy
was lying. The guy, the investor guy killed Stephen B.

(11:36):
He killed him because he was about to reveal that
the investor was a scammer. Now, I'm going to tell you,
if anybody ever tries to scam me again, they're gonna hurt.
They are going to fucking hurt.

Speaker 2 (11:47):
You're going to kill that.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
I don't think I'm gonna kill them, but I will
key their car, Yeah, I will. I will poop on
their launch. I will. I will call their their cell
phone and breathe into it. Ooh uh. That's the fucking worst.
Just whenever you hear about somebody scamming some old bag
out of her money, I hate that kind of thing.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
That's sad.

Speaker 2 (12:10):
I have not been a frauded I think I was
attempted at one point and then I don't know, I
knew better as a seventeen year old that they were
doing it too, and I was just like, Dad, can
you and he's like, don't worry.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
About it, go to bed. And I'm like, Okay, what happened.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
I had somebody like hack into my email account and
then when I tried to change my password, like something
on Google was like, we're having trouble. You have to
call this number. So I called the number and I
guess somehow it was like rerouted to somebody. Okay, some
random ass guy, and he's like, oh, yeah, you have

(12:45):
this like virus on your computer and that's what got
because you were hacked and so they put this virus
on your computer. I can get the virus out of
the computer for you if you pay me like one
hundred and sixty dollars. And I was like oh, and
I was seventeen or something, so I was like, oh,
I got I got to ask my dad, like I
don't know, and it was I know, it was like
eleven PM at night, so it's dark, it's late. I'm terrified.

(13:08):
I'm like, oh God, I got this virus on my
dad's computer, and I woke up my dad and I
was like, oh, I'm so sorry.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
I don't know what I did.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
He's like, it's probably nothing.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
Just go to bed, Go to bed, And it was fine.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
It was fine because I said I'll call you back
because I need to talk to my dad. And then
that guy ended up calling me and I just ignored it.
Then nothing happened.

Speaker 1 (13:27):
Nothing. Do you ever get an email notice, and it's
usually email that says something like, we noticed a log
into your Instagram from a device we don't recognize. This
device is located in you know, Chaipung, China or Kung Poo,
Egypt or whatever, and you're like, oh fuck, I just
ignore him because I'm worried that if I say, it

(13:49):
says if it was you click here. Yeah, no, if
it wasn't, you click here, something like that. I don't
do anything with Oh see, I.

Speaker 3 (13:57):
Do if I see something, because well, I look at
the email first and I can tell that it's legitimately
from Instagram at that moment, so I look to see
where it comes from, and if it does happen, I
do do that. But I got my TikTok hacked and
have never gotten it back. And I had like ten
thousand followers on there, so I'm pretty salty about that.
And it's all because I fucking clicked on the stupid

(14:19):
ass text that I was getting insane I owed tolls,
and I clicked out one of those things, and I
thought I genuinely owed tolls because we had gone to
the Smoky Mountains like a month before. There's so many
fucking tolls going down that way, and so I did
click on it, and I'm pretty sure that's how they
got my information. And I've never been able to get
my TikTok back since then. So I was salty about that.

(14:40):
And I did also on like a funnier side, maybe
I feel like Bailey probably has never gotten these emails.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
Maybe Dave has.

Speaker 3 (14:47):
Probably seven issh years ago, I got an email that
was like, hey, Jenny, I noticed you were on so
and so website. I see what you like on there,
and so and So's website was a porn su Yeah, that.

Speaker 2 (14:57):
They mentioned I've gotten those emails.

Speaker 3 (14:59):
And they go, well, they basically told me that they
could log into my webcam and record what I was
doing was on that website and if I didn't want
that footage really to everyone in my contet send them
like eighty thousand bitcoin.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
And when I tell you, I was.

Speaker 3 (15:16):
Shitting my pants because they gave me like forty eight
hours to give them whatever they were asking for. I
literally was like, oh my god, my boss Rich is
gonna like see some weird fucking webcam. And I was like,
I know it's a scam. I know it's a scam,
but it isn't like that was like scared. So I
waited forty eight hours and I was like, Okay, nothing
to happen from it. But let me tell you, I

(15:37):
that gave me peer anxiety.

Speaker 2 (15:38):
I started putting tape over my webcam because I was
so nervous people were watching me on it.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
That is the premise of an episode of Black Mirror.
One of the first episodes of Black Mirror is a
kid who is you know, he's on his computer and
he's doing his thing, watching porn, and then he gets
a message that says, yeah, we got video of you
watching porn and doing what you're doing, and if you
don't go do this, then we will reveal this video
to all of your classmates. Well the kid is mortified.

(16:04):
He's like sixteen years old, so he goes on a
mission to try to deliver whatever this people, these people
are asking for, And there's a twist at the end
because Black Mirr is so so good. Yeah, but yeah,
I don't know what episode that is, but it's said
there's an episode based on that one.

Speaker 2 (16:21):
Even if they had access to your webcam, all they're
going to see is like the upshot of your chin.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
Right, It's not like they're.

Speaker 3 (16:25):
Going to get anything great out of it. I was
sitting far away, but then it was like, I was like,
but what if they can dial into the audio of
like whatever I was watching? Like, I don't know anyways,
nothing happened, Okay.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
Good, all right, next one, please no name. I just
got done listening to Monday's Minnesota Goodbye talking about Gary Spivey,
and my jaw dropped when I heard Gary charge five
hundred dollars for a half an hour. Dave, I said,
you know, I know, you said you chat with Gary
for free, but let's say that conversation was just six minutes.
You would owe Gary eighty three dollars for his time. Now.

(16:57):
I agree with what y'all said about believe, and I
do find it hard to judge people who willingly pay
their own money to talk to Gary, especially when they
believe and have faith in what Gary is telling them.
The issue I have is whether Gary and other psychics
really believe themselves. To me, Gary is no better than

(17:18):
someone who gives very good advice and guidance. But masking
yourself under the guise of a psychic, where you are
charging or scamming people who have a belief they are
hearing from angel spirits or the dead loved ones, is
so wrong. Either Gary knows he actually does not speak
to dead relatives, or he's so far lost in his

(17:39):
own reality that he actually believes he can now. I
wasn't going to read this because I don't want to
slam Gary because he's kind of our partner, but I
also wanted to give people a voice that feel that way,
because I know that not everybody believes in psychics. I
am very skeptical myself. I would not have Gary on
if I thought that he was anything more than just
an out and out fake fraud. He's done a few

(18:02):
things where people are like, wow, Gary told me this,
that was amazing. I won't cite the personal examples, but
definitely some hardcore personal examples. But I think the thing
is if a psychic told me good news, I'd be like, oh,
that's good, but I wouldn't take it one hundred percent

(18:24):
as facts. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (18:25):
Now I feel the same way where I think, like
I personally don't really believe in it unless somebody told
me something that no one would ever know, and that
hasn't happened yet. But I one hundred percent think that
Gary is entertaining and I want to listen to on
one he talks because I think it's fascinating and cool,
like a cool niche that like I would not be

(18:47):
privy to on a regular basis. So even if like
whatever I believe doesn't matter, because I still think it's
cool and entertaining to let.

Speaker 1 (18:55):
You know what, I kind of agree. It's kind of like,
you know, having a magician at a party. Do you
really believe their magic? No, it's just kind of a
fun thing to do. Having a psychic to your bachelorette
party or your corporate event or whatever? Is it? Is
it real? I don't know, Are you a.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
Hypnotist or something?

Speaker 3 (19:11):
Like?

Speaker 2 (19:11):
Even if you don't believe in a hypnotist, can't you
tell me that that's not entertaining?

Speaker 1 (19:15):
Like, No, that's so entertaining. Yeah, and I think that
hypnotism is fake. I don't think that people really can
be hypnotized like that. But I've been to a couple
of hypnotism shows and they're you know, they're they're interesting.
So let's see we get another email here. It looks
like we got some time. Click click, click, and thank
you by the way for that last email. Sidney writes

(19:37):
in Dave Jenny Bailey, I know on Tuesday you said
you needed emails, and I had a response to Dave's
comment about Susan leaving her contacts every everywhere, but the
trash this jed made me think. In Dave's mcmanson, he
shares a bathroom, I would one hundred percent not share
a bathroom with my spouse if it made sense. I
think this should become the Norman building houses and having

(19:59):
a bathroom in the mad bedroom. My husband can live
in his diurly toilet and hair filled sink after shaving,
while I enjoy my clean space and my long hair
shedding whenever I want to. Also, my husband wishes I
didn't fart in front of him, but he has watched
me give birth to two children and shit all over
in the process, so probably time for him to get
over my farting in my own home. I hope that

(20:20):
helped me with some talking points. Cheers staff writers Sydney
helped with talking points. Yes, absolutely appreciate it. We share
a bathroom, but we don't share a sink, so she's
got her sink over here, I've got mine over here.
We share a shower, but we're equally clean. Me what
you share a shower? Gross? We share, but neither of

(20:43):
us are so dirty, you know what I mean? Neither
of us are like, oh god, gross hair. And she's
just the contact thing is a pet peeve of mine.
And I cannot explain or understand why she doesn't hit
the fucking trash can with her used.

Speaker 3 (20:58):
Contact and see what she's doing. She's taken a.

Speaker 1 (21:01):
While, Okay, that's what she says. But if you know
that you have a habit of missing, you can bend down,
make an extra effort, to make an extra effort. It's
kind of like if I was pissing all over the
toilet seat and she said, wow, you know what you
can Can you not do that? Well, I can't see it.
I don't have my glosses on. I'll just make an
extra effort. Yeah, because I know it bothers her.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
Tuck your little weenie right on the on the bowl
so that you don't miss put.

Speaker 1 (21:26):
It right on the bowl. That sounds. Yeah, you're ever
going to sit down on the toilet the seat's not down.
That is the shock of the day. Yeah. Yeah, you're like, oh,
especially if you're in a hurry and you're like, oh
god hah and.

Speaker 2 (21:38):
You start to fall in, You're like, but then you
always say the joke like did you fall in?

Speaker 1 (21:42):
When they take too long? I love that. Dajo uh,
it never gets old. Let's see, here's an interesting one.
And I appreciate these random emails. These are these make
my day. I'm curious what is the average split between
radio and app listeners these days? It's a little more
half on the app.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
I think, oh, yeah, I don't know the for sure
numbers on that, but yeah, a lot of people listen
on the app now.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
And a fun question, can you remember a time you
laughed at the worst possible moment? My coworkers and I
always have side messages going during our Zoom meetings, and
I can never keep a straight face. Staff writer Taylor,
I don't have a story about that. Anybody think about
a worst possible laugh?

Speaker 2 (22:21):
I mean, I laugh a lot at theater that's supposed
to be earnest and dramatic but is cringy and awkward.
And if I go with my friend Madeline, we just
sit and quietly laugh, Like in the corner in the
Prince musical that I saw last week, when Prince, the
character Prince like sleeps with this girl. They sing a

(22:42):
song and these dancers come out and do like a
weird sex dance behind them. So they're all like wearing
bras and underwear and no shirt guys, and then they're
just like doing lifts and kicks and whatever, and it's
all contemporary movement and it was so hilarious and.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
It wasn't meant to be though.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
Nope, not meant to be to be very serious, very artsy,
and I was laughing.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
I'm glad that you are not so pretentious that you
pretend something that is pretentious is wonderful. I know, yeah,
And I think that some people will pretend that something
pretentious is wonderful just so they will also appear wonderful.

Speaker 3 (23:20):
Ya.

Speaker 2 (23:20):
It makes it funnier when they're doing it and they're
taking it so seriously, but it's so laughable.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
I love it. Okay, I respect that about you. All right. Uh,
there is one more and we have a little bit
more time, which is rare. I listen to your podcast,
says Crystal about a listener worried about where their dog poops.
I would never mind if the owner cleans up after him.
If they poop in my yard. Dogs are just doing
what dogs do. But I do have an issue where

(23:47):
my neighbor's huge cane corso. I don't know what that
breed is, but it sounds giant. Huge yea comes into
my yard every single morning to do it's business, and
my neighbor doesn't watch him or clean up after. I
usually end up shoveling it. I've been tossing it back
into their yard. Is that the right thing to do
after I've politely asked them to keep their dog in
their yard. I am sick and tired of huge piles

(24:08):
of poop in my yard. Thanks for all the entertainment.
I'd love a staff rider sticker. If the offer still stands, Yes,
it is on its way, so that will be coming.
I think you're doing the right thing that that would
piss me off if they were so careless, especially after
I asked them to please not.

Speaker 3 (24:26):
I'd probably start like stockpiling it and like just put
it in one big bag and then load it off
on their front porch or something eventually, if they still
weren't changing their ways after you've said it like a
couple times like that does not fly with me. I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
All right, That is it for the Minnesota Goodbye. Send
your emails in to Ryan's show at KDWB dot com.
Love to hear what you have to say.
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