Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
It is seven o'clock, seven o five actually on KTWGB,
time for Katie Perry tickets. We're gonna play a little
game called Connections. Here's the way the game works. I
will give you four words. You tell me what they
have in common. Okay, what is the commonality of these
four words? Do you want to start you off with
an easy one?
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Kay?
Speaker 1 (00:19):
All right, here we go, white out card, key. You
can write them down if you want to think that'll help.
This is not the actual one. This is a practice round.
White out card and key Bailey's writing them down. Scritch
(00:40):
gritch critch, scritch critch. Any luck. I want to guess anybody,
it's one of those things. When you hear the answer,
you'll go like, oh, that was pretty easy. By the way,
while you're st while you're working on that, out stall
for you and say the Wolves are playing tonight. They're
at home Golden State Warriors. I think tip off is
seven and thirty, but I'm not positive about that. But
(01:00):
tickets are still available. Any luck, you're puzzling, puzzling, puzzling.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
My only thought is that they each go with each
other like key card and white out those they do.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
Yeah, you're right, Yeah, that's guess. That's it. No, it's
not the right answer. Okay, I'll give you a clue.
I'm looking at one of them right now.
Speaker 4 (01:21):
Uh oh, I got it.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
I got it.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Whiteboard, I don't know out cardboard, keyboard.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
Board, outboard. It's a motor outboard. They all can end
in board, white board, out board, cardboard, keyboard.
Speaker 5 (01:44):
I like that one.
Speaker 4 (01:44):
Wasn't as easy as you thought it was.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
Okay, it was easy because I knew the answer. I
wrote this myself, by the way, I created this myself. Okay,
here we go with the next one. You're ready, Yes, shower,
this is the real thing. By the way, for King
for Katie Perry tickets. When is the show a week
from tonight? Yes, we've got tickets for you right now.
(02:09):
Here are the words shower poop puddle shoes again, shower
poop puddle shoes. Any idea? Now, your strategies are different.
Jenny just sits and thinks about it.
Speaker 6 (02:30):
No, I think I have an answer, but then I
got thrown off five shoes.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
Okay, Bailey is writing them down? Vauant? Do you write
them down?
Speaker 5 (02:37):
Do you do it?
Speaker 7 (02:38):
Is?
Speaker 1 (02:38):
Okay, I'll give it to you one more time, shower, poop,
puddle and shoes vont We're gonna text you the answer
because you actually don't know the answer, right, I'm a dummy, Okay,
when you're not dummy, it's try a tough one. Okay,
I think you have it. Actually, yeah, you want to
write it down and show me.
Speaker 4 (02:55):
Yeah, well, I'm writing in town.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
But it's sloppy, so it can't be too terribly difficult
because I'm not too smart.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
No, you're smart, but it's it's like, if you can
get it, that's good. So you call and you win
tickets to go see Katy Perry a week from tomorrow night.
And by the way, if you play the Connections New
York Times game along with Wordle and Strands and some
(03:30):
of the other games, I just want to tell you
I got Connections in four in one guest today, so
I had no wrong answers, and I got Wordle in
five today. In case you're woke up.
Speaker 8 (03:42):
And going it not really no, not really that good
job on the connection to you.
Speaker 1 (03:48):
Thank you very much. Okay, we do have some answers
on the phone.
Speaker 2 (03:51):
Here.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
Let's see what we got, Okay, Michael, good morning, good morning.
We're calling from Michael, Okay, here are your words. Shower, poop, puddle, shoes.
What's the connection?
Speaker 9 (04:07):
I was thinking, like your dog or a dog.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
I mean, it's a good guess. It's a good gas.
Speaker 7 (04:14):
Yeah, but something that a dog would like.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
It's something that involves dogs. Something that involves dogs. Shower, poop, puddle,
and shoes. Good guess, Michael, But I'm sorry, not correct.
Thanks for trying. Okay, have a good day. Close kind
of uh Onnica? Hi Onnica, Hi, where are you calling from? Okay?
(04:40):
Love it out there? What's the connection?
Speaker 2 (04:43):
Is it?
Speaker 7 (04:43):
Baby?
Speaker 10 (04:44):
They all something to do with baby, like baby, shower, baby.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
Shoes, baby, puddle, bay puddle, a baby. It's a it's
a good it's a good guess, Anica. But thanks for trying. Okay,
have a good day. Let's talk to Macie.
Speaker 11 (04:59):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Macy, Hi, where are you this morning?
Speaker 9 (05:03):
I am in my home in Gulden Valley.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
Okay, give me the connection. Shower, poop, puddle, and shoes.
Speaker 9 (05:12):
Okay, so all of those are things that.
Speaker 11 (05:16):
You step in, Jenny, is she right?
Speaker 1 (05:23):
Step in the shower, step in, poop, step and the puddle,
step in your shoes. Macy. Congratulations Katy Perry tickets.
Speaker 9 (05:28):
Good job, Thank you.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
You're welcome. We got more coming up next hour on
Katie w to be at eighth five. Do we We're
running a little bit short on time, but I think
we got to work this in here because Bailey, would
you get a text message?
Speaker 5 (05:40):
Yes, I got.
Speaker 11 (05:41):
I got a text message and Instagram message and I
think we got an email as well from different people. Yeah,
I think it was from maybe it might have been
some of the same people, but.
Speaker 5 (05:51):
Somebody really wants me to know.
Speaker 11 (05:52):
Yes, that I look like a very specific celebrity, yes,
and kind of like how you look like Lady Elaine.
Speaker 5 (05:59):
I'm not thrilled. I'm not thrilled about this comparison.
Speaker 11 (06:01):
Yeah, I've been compared to Ruth Buzzy, who just died.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
H We looked up a picture of Ruth Buzzy, and
there is some resemblance. There there is, there is, there is.
I will tell you this, You're way hotter than Ruth Buzzy.
Speaker 11 (06:17):
You appreciate that, Yes, because if you don't know what
Ruth Buzzy looks like, you should look up Ruth Buzzy.
Speaker 5 (06:21):
I am easy eye, eazyzy eye.
Speaker 11 (06:23):
I even tried to look up Ruth Buzzy young to
maybe make myself feel a little bit better. If you're
on the YouTube live, put a picture of Ruth Buzzy.
Speaker 5 (06:34):
Right there, and so.
Speaker 11 (06:36):
I don't necessarily think it's I don't want to say
that she's like not a pretty woman, but she's got
a very big chin.
Speaker 5 (06:43):
She's got a very big.
Speaker 11 (06:44):
Nose and very big mouth, big mouth. She's got big teeth,
which I have tiny little teeth. So at least that
isn't a thing.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
I'm looking at the picture of Ruth Buzzy, probably taking
it about nineteen sixty five or so. She was a
comic actress. She did like a couple of different bits
back in the day, and Bailey purposely did her hair
to look like Ruth Buzzy. Today, it does, go on
the YouTube's and look and see whether Bailey looks like
Ruth Buzzy.
Speaker 6 (07:12):
Did it hurt your heart a little bit, Bailey when
you started seeing these texts and stuff come in saying, oh,
this is what Bailey looks like.
Speaker 4 (07:19):
And then you looked at a picture and.
Speaker 5 (07:20):
You're like, I was like, ooh, look alike. I never
get a doppel gang.
Speaker 4 (07:24):
Oh oh, okay.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
Okay, cool text and let us know, or go on
YouTube and then just start commenting whether Bailey looks like
Ruth Buzzy. I'm gonna make a.
Speaker 11 (07:36):
Comment right if I look more like Ruth Buzzy than
Dave looks like Lady Elaine Fairchild.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
I do look a lot like. You can put a
picture of Lady Elaine Fairchild up next to me, too, vaunt.
Speaker 5 (07:45):
It's like, oh shoot, I don't have that rooty.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
Don't we have a real day.
Speaker 11 (07:49):
Oh yeah, we do have a reel of Dave being
compared to Lady Elaine.
Speaker 4 (07:53):
We should share that again.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
Yeah, yeah, we really should go check that out. We'll
be right back on kd WB. We're doing talkback Tuesday.
Here's my talkback idea. Here's what we want to do.
Yesterday was Sinko to Mayo, and then I think somebody
wrote in and said, I hate Sinco to Mayo. I'm
a server at a Mexican restaurant. It is our what they.
Speaker 12 (08:13):
Call it, their doomsdack dooms day, because you get all
these drunken people coming in getting Margarita's shots at tequila,
wanting more chips and Salsaid's crowded.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
It's busy and they're drunk. So what is your doom's day?
Use the talkback feature and tell us like, if you're
a teacher, maybe it's the first day of school, maybe
it's the last day of school. If you are a
doctor or a nurse, or if you are a tax
preparer or lawyer, what is your doomsday? Let us know that.
Just open up the iHeart radio app and then use
(08:43):
the talkback feature the red microphone to let us know.
We'll play it. Good morning. So it turns out it's
not weird to ask your neighbor if you can bar
their dog to go for a walk, because I asked
the neighbors across the street. I texted last night and
I said, hey, can I take Zoe for a walk?
And they're like, yeah, that's fine, please do, please do.
And so they even gave me their garage code and
(09:03):
they put a leash in a poop bag on the
inside the door, took her out for a little walk.
We had a nice time.
Speaker 11 (09:10):
Did they leave you a little snack too or something? Yeah,
like thanks buddy?
Speaker 1 (09:14):
Here, yeah I should I should have brought that up.
Here's like a little put cracker footing cup would be better.
Yeah yeah, yeah, time next time. Anyway. So if you
ever get lonely for a dog, then ask the neighbor, thinking,
then you know what friends of mine to reachhougging you
take all of her for a dog walk anytime you
want to. I'm like, well, bring all of her over.
Speaker 11 (09:33):
You turn into like a dog walker. You have like
six dogs and you're just like hustling.
Speaker 5 (09:37):
Oh, here's me with.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
All my dog I would love that.
Speaker 6 (09:41):
There's a guy that I follow on Instagram because I
saw him around Lake of the Aisles once years ago
and he had no life, twenty dogs and they he
was posing them for a picture. They were all sitting
and I was like, I don't know what job this is,
but I want it. Yeah, And I had posted it
on my Instagram. And then randomly my friend's like, oh, yeah,
he walks our dogs. So he goes around to apartments.
He like specifically focuses on apartment dogs and gets them
(10:04):
and then takes them for walks around the lakes and uptown.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
And I think, you know, a dog in an apartment's
got to be kind of a challenge because you can't
just like let them outside. You got to take them
out for a walk. Yeah, and you just get home
and you sit down and you got your pizza, you
just ordered your door dash and you want to watch
something on Netflix, and then the dog is scratching into
the door, waggoner tail.
Speaker 5 (10:29):
You can't just open the door and let it out.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
We it was Sinco to Mayo yesterday. I know vant
went out and got a couple of surveyces with Alyssa.
But somebody's texted and said that that they're a server
at a Mexican restaurant and Sinko to Miyo's their doomsday
because everybody comes in, it's crowded, there's a wait out
the door. Everybody's doing tequila Margarita's. People are getting the
(10:57):
free chips and salsa.
Speaker 5 (10:59):
Flo mm hmmmm.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
They said that's our doomsday. So here is. We asked
other people what is your doomsday? On the talk bag
feature on the iHeartRadio app or Talkback Tuesday, what is
your doomsday? What do you do and what is your doomsday?
Speaker 10 (11:14):
I'm a collector, so every day is doomsday. No, I'm
just kidding, but so I guess doomsday for us would
be having to call people on holidays when we're open.
So sometimes we're open, like Christmas Day for a couple hours.
That was my favorite, having a call people on Christmas
tease ye.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
I wonder what that call sounds like?
Speaker 13 (11:37):
Hi?
Speaker 1 (11:37):
Is this Bailey has?
Speaker 2 (11:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (11:39):
Bailey, do you realize the UO media com four thousand dollars?
Speaker 5 (11:43):
When are you gonna pay this?
Speaker 1 (11:45):
Yeah? Oh I plan on paying it. Yeah, I'm gonna
pay it next week? Yeah, sure, okay, next one.
Speaker 8 (11:50):
I'm a nurse, and I would say doomsday or a dooms.
Speaker 13 (11:53):
Season would be right after everyone comes home from traveling
through winter break. Everyone has the flu, an auro virus,
all sorts of illnesses. It's not a good time.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
Okay, what about you?
Speaker 14 (12:08):
So I haul your guys's trash with a semi tractor trailer,
and our doomsday is anytime it basically downpours, because when
a downpours, it turns the landfill into a sludge pit.
You're talking like basically a swamp. I'm wearing waiters, I'm
wearing all this productive gear because there's diapers floating around,
(12:29):
there's everything floating around. So if you ever wondered where
your trash goes, I'm the one taking it.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
Isn't funny. We just throw it away. We don't really
think of what it becomes Yeah, that's a profession that
should have their own day. Jenny is trash collectors, Because
you talk about a profession we take for granted. We
roll our little dumpster out to the end of the
driveway and it come we come home from work and
it's empty. We roll it back into the garage and
(12:57):
we don't even think about it. Thanks for all you do,
all right, another.
Speaker 5 (13:00):
One, good morning.
Speaker 15 (13:02):
I work at a fire sprinkler fabrication shop, and twice
a year we have to do a physical inventory of
every fitting, every piece of pipe, every little tool, every
little at, everything that's in our entire warehouse. We have
to colle it multiple times throughout the day.
Speaker 5 (13:22):
That's my doomsday.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
What is your profession? What is your doomsday?
Speaker 2 (13:26):
So I work in a kitchen as a chef.
Speaker 10 (13:30):
My doomsday is any day it is.
Speaker 4 (13:33):
Sunny and above sixty five.
Speaker 5 (13:36):
Everyone comes out to enjoy their day.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
Okay, right right us? An one.
Speaker 16 (13:42):
I work in a dental office and our doomsday is
December thirty first.
Speaker 7 (13:47):
It's the last day of.
Speaker 16 (13:48):
The year and most people lose their benefits if they
haven't used them. And that is where everybody comes out
of the woodwork wanting to have services done that particular
day that they haven't done and don't about for the
last ten plus years.
Speaker 11 (14:11):
That's going to be the DMV on on tomorrow when
you're supposed to get the real ID.
Speaker 5 (14:14):
I'm sure day tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
Real ID is that tomorrow tomorrow? What I know, I'm
basically not like, fill me in, I don't know about this.
Speaker 11 (14:21):
Oh, well, the real You're supposed to get the real
ID by tomorrow, by tomorrow so that you can do
domestic travel. And if you don't have a real ID,
you have to have a passport.
Speaker 1 (14:31):
What Yeah, I didn't know this.
Speaker 5 (14:34):
Well, now you know. I don't give you details. I'm
talking about it.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
Okay, wait wait, wait, wait, So if I don't have
a real ID by tomorrow, if I'm flying to Colorado,
I could bring my passport.
Speaker 5 (14:44):
Yes, your passport?
Speaker 1 (14:46):
God, you told me how many how many people are
head of the airport tomorrow didn't know this?
Speaker 11 (14:50):
Well that's they They had like the news there yesterday
just to like talk to people and say like, hey,
did you know about the real ID, And the amount
of people who didn't know about it were stagged apparently
stackering no idea. So I think tomorrow will be doomsday
at the DMV.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
Oh man, that is something I'd put off forever. Nobody
likes to go to the DMV.
Speaker 5 (15:11):
Well, I think I'm just going to renew my passport
and call it good. I don't have anywhere to fly.
Speaker 6 (15:15):
Okay, you know you don't have a real one, a
real idea, No, do you?
Speaker 2 (15:19):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (15:19):
Yeah, I got it. I had to get a new
idea a few years ago. So I got it a
while ago, and it was supposed to come into place
like four years ago already. So I did it early,
like thinking I had to.
Speaker 11 (15:32):
I was going to and then I said, oh, I'll
just get the real idea while I'm here renewing my license.
And they were like, well, do you have all of
these documents because you need like any time you've changed
your name, you need those. You need like your social
Security card. You need everything to like prove it's you all.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
You know. I was going to impress you guys with
an update that I knew. The Target is doing away
with self checkout. Oh they're doing a way to self checkout.
I think you can still do it if you've got
ten items or less. Don't quote me on that problem
is shoplifting because people will bring up a big cart
full of stuff and then put things in their pocket
or their pants or whatever.
Speaker 5 (16:09):
So don't bring it up.
Speaker 1 (16:10):
Yeah, and so then people are going, wow, they I
wouldn't go to shelf check out. They had more than
three of the twenty registers open. Well, I think they
will now they have to. They're going to have to.
So there was my news. I didn't know about real idea. Well,
you know, I got stuff to do. All right. Here's
another one. What is your doomsday where you work?
Speaker 16 (16:26):
So I managed two busy emergency rooms and the fourth
July is our doomsday.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
People all over saying watch.
Speaker 6 (16:35):
My beard, blowing their figures off.
Speaker 4 (16:37):
You know, busy day. Last time I was at the
ear was because of the fourth of July.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
Also, that was your gashing your foot.
Speaker 4 (16:45):
Yeah, when I slice my photo open.
Speaker 1 (16:47):
On another A couple of worthy is really interesting. What
is your doomsday? I work in a there's a text message.
I work in an animal rescue. Doomsday is right after Christmas,
when everybody surrenders animals they got as gifts and don't
don't want. And then people are getting after me saying,
VANT told you about real I d months ago. How
(17:07):
could you forget. They've been telling us about this for years,
but to me a deadline was like, it's like it's
always it's always way up there.
Speaker 11 (17:15):
Well, they have been pushing it back like constantly because
apparently I also learned that this was put into effect
during George W. Bush, Like two thousand and four is
when they said, hey, really in twenty years, everybody needs
a real ID to travel.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
Question, why, what's the difference between my driver's license and
a real ID.
Speaker 17 (17:35):
The license, Well, the real ID has a star on
your license or just the ID card, there's like a
little star, and it's like, this is more valid.
Speaker 5 (17:43):
It means you can travel domestically.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
I can already travel.
Speaker 5 (17:46):
Domestic, not anymore, buddy, not what.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Are they trying to prevent?
Speaker 5 (17:51):
I don't know, Tom Foolery, Tom, Probably.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Everybody's coming after me saying, Dave, how did you not
know about real idea? Yeah, I even know about it.
I've watched it. I don't even watch the news. Wow,
how do you where do you get a real ID?
Speaker 3 (18:07):
You's got to like go to the DMV the same
way you would know your license. You need an appointment,
I would assume, so actually to go to the DMV.
Speaker 6 (18:14):
You don't know, you don't need an appointment. You definitely
just show up, but be prepared to wait.
Speaker 11 (18:19):
This text message says you can get a real ID,
go online, upload all your papers, make an appointment at
the DMV, bring all your original papers with you. It's
so much easier than trying to do it in person.
And also you can get what they call a passport card,
so you can get your passport with the passport card.
Speaker 5 (18:33):
And it's like an ID and.
Speaker 6 (18:35):
You can use it to travel in these I don't
think you can make an appointment at any dm DMV.
I think there's specific ones you can actually make an
appointment at. But you can do a lot of online
stuff ahead of time, because that's what I did the
last time I had to get a new idea.
Speaker 1 (18:47):
To go to real ID dot gov.
Speaker 3 (18:49):
Yeah, honestly, I got the real life I just got
it because for like the first year I lived out here,
I still had my Jersey license, but then like last October,
me and Alyssa went and got Minnesota licenses with the
real ID.
Speaker 17 (19:01):
But I also have my passport, so that counts as
a substitute.
Speaker 11 (19:04):
Your passports for international travel or the passport card for
international travel.
Speaker 5 (19:08):
Real idea is just for domestic travel.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Okay, yeah, I'm locked and loaded. How did I miss?
How did I miss that?
Speaker 5 (19:14):
I don't know?
Speaker 17 (19:15):
Have told me somebody, somebody should have brought it up.
Speaker 1 (19:19):
Dave Ryan Show one on one point three kd w B.
A lot of dirt going on today, brought to you
by six one two Injured Heimer and Lammer's Injury Lock.
Kind of a funny little story, kind of a full
circle moment. Ashley Tisdale just watched her niece play Sharpei
in her school musical. Here's a clip of Ashley singing
(19:42):
from the original way back in two thousand. You want
to guess two thousand, two thousand six, Yes, exactly right.
Speaker 5 (19:53):
Good to be seen.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
So what is Ashley Tisdale doing now? Does anybody know?
Speaker 5 (20:02):
Not much?
Speaker 1 (20:03):
Probably going to her niece's playing.
Speaker 5 (20:04):
Yeah, going to her niece's playing.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
Rihanna and Asap Rocky have baby number three on the way.
She debuted the baby bump right before the met Gala, Yeah,
which was last night. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (20:13):
A ton of people obviously attended the met Gala. They
raised thirty one million dollars. Bailey liked the fashion. I
personally thought it was boring, but it went with the theme,
which is like tailored suits and jackets and stuff to
raise money for the Costume Institute or something.
Speaker 4 (20:29):
I forget exactly what it is.
Speaker 6 (20:31):
But I will say that people were speculating online about
Haley Bieber because she showed up by herself, Oh no, Justin.
And she also loved her hotel with a martini in
her hand, and like showed up with like a martini,
And I just feel like it's not like a great
sign that you can't leave your drink in your.
Speaker 4 (20:48):
Hotel room as you're leading.
Speaker 6 (20:50):
Yeah, and Justin had a quote scheduling conflict apparently, But
also there were pictures floating around of him smoking from
a huge bomb recently, which whatever, we just legal in
a lot of states now, so like he can do that.
But it's just like probably not the best look being
a newer dad. And also that him and Haley haven't
seemed to be doing a whole ton together lately.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
It's got to be rough. I feel bad for Justin
because I think he was a very sweet little kid
that just grew up and just got ripped apart by
the industry. Just really a tough life. I mean tough,
but also not tough. When Larry David met Paul McCartney
earlier this year, he didn't want to ask him the
same questions like what's your favorite Beatles song? Or do
(21:32):
you how did you right let it be? Things like that,
so he come up and came up with another question.
Speaker 18 (21:37):
At the fiftieth I was introduced to Paul McCartney and
I said to him, has anyone ever punched you.
Speaker 1 (21:43):
In the mouth?
Speaker 6 (21:45):
There was an incident in his youth when he was
like thirteen or fourteen and somebody head better?
Speaker 1 (21:50):
And he told me somebody head butter.
Speaker 6 (21:52):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
Okay, all right, sounds rough? Probably not lately. A final destination,
Bloodlines comes up later on this month, and there is
something very interesting during the opening sequence that you should
watch for. A woman gets burned to death during the
opening sequence. Here's what's interesting about it. It is a
seventy one year old stunt woman. She set a world
(22:16):
record for the oldest person ever on fire on camera.
Seventy one year old the stunt woman.
Speaker 5 (22:24):
I mean good for her, Yeah, that she's still making
it happen.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
There's a job I would not want. Okay, date, listen,
we're gonna put you in this flame proof suit. Is
it really flameproof? Well it is for about five seconds. Yeah,
after that, you gotta get out of it. Really, I mean,
it's okay, ready, we're gonna light you on fire. Three
two just kidding. Here we go. No, would not want
that job.
Speaker 5 (22:45):
Now do a backflip.
Speaker 1 (22:46):
No. A guy crashed his car through the gates of
Jennifer Anderson's house yesterday. She was home. There's no word why,
whether it was an accident or not. He was arrested
and charged with felony vandalism. So I guess the update
makes it sound like it was on purpose that he
did that. Let's See a Dolly, an original musical, just
(23:09):
announced that they have cast three women to play Dolly
and the show will make its world premiere in Nashville
on July eighteen.
Speaker 11 (23:16):
I have something to say about that, because that is
there's drama with that whole thing. Tell because the people
that they cast are three like famous people. But they
had this huge, like casting.
Speaker 4 (23:28):
Call, like a social media country, huge.
Speaker 11 (23:30):
Casting call on social media that's like, hey, if you
want to be Dolly, send us a video, and then
they it was just for publicity.
Speaker 5 (23:37):
It was just like a marketing show.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
That wasn't really a real audition.
Speaker 11 (23:41):
No, I think they had all those people cast already,
and because they were, they said that they were going
to cast an unknown. So they had all of these
women audition over like social media and get like super
viral and just to create buzz for the musical. But
they already had these people cast, and these people are
all famous.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
Isn't that who full cour.
Speaker 6 (24:01):
Wasn't wasn't one of the women that people were saying
should definitely get it. She was already kind of a
dolly in person there, so was she not eligible?
Speaker 1 (24:09):
Well?
Speaker 11 (24:09):
Shed nobody who auditioned for it, like on social media
got it?
Speaker 1 (24:13):
Wow, shady now that you bring that up. I remember
there was a radio station, I think it was here
in town, and this was years ago. They did a Hey,
we got an opening on the morning show and we're
gonna do an open casting call. And they had people
send in pictures and videos and audio clips of them
and like, Hi, my name is Stacy and I'm from
glen Coe and I'd love to be on the morning
(24:34):
show and I loved and they had people come in
and audition and they already had somebody chosen.
Speaker 5 (24:41):
Yeah, isn't that bonkers.
Speaker 19 (24:43):
It is.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
It's bull corn an. We are going to do uh,
I think we're gonna do guess the TV mom first, Jenny,
or we're gonna do about group therapy first.
Speaker 4 (24:55):
No, we're going to do guess the TV mom.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Okay, so we're gonna play a little clip of a
TV mom. Because Mother's Day, I forget, is coming up
this Sunday. Flowers are going to be more expensive because
most flowers are imported. I learned this on the news
this morning. Flowers are imported and there's the tariffs, so
you will be paying more for flowers for mom. Makes
sense for this Mother's Day, but you still can't forget her.
(25:18):
And Mother's Day is Sunday. So we're gonna do name
that TV mom right now. All you got to do
is tell us who the TV mom is and you win.
Check this out. It's not flowers, it's better. It's a
two hundred and fifty dollars Metropolitan gift card. What can
you get over at Metropolitan, Jenny?
Speaker 4 (25:36):
So many different things.
Speaker 6 (25:37):
You can get botox, you can get laser treatments, you
can get laser hair removal, you can get juveiderm so
which is JUBIDERM and filler the same.
Speaker 1 (25:47):
It is a filler, I believe that.
Speaker 6 (25:48):
Yeah, yeah, so pretty much the same thing, but just
a ton of different stuff. And the Metropolitan's great. I've
gone there myself and love them.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
Okay, if you want to go name this TV?
Speaker 2 (25:59):
Mom?
Speaker 1 (25:59):
Are you ready? Here we go.
Speaker 18 (26:03):
I've been got it, John, I've been stripped of that
morsel of pleasure, right Hur.
Speaker 5 (26:09):
That's live.
Speaker 1 (26:11):
You know what gives it away from me? The music
in the back ground.
Speaker 4 (26:14):
That's what I gonna say too.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
Okay, if you got it, you got it, then you
can call in to win sixty five one nine eight
nine k d W B will get away. It won't
take long to get a winter on this one. It's
pretty easy.
Speaker 18 (26:28):
I've been got it, John, I've been stripped of that
morsel of pleasure.
Speaker 16 (26:33):
Right Hur.
Speaker 18 (26:34):
That's live?
Speaker 1 (26:35):
Great TV character.
Speaker 6 (26:37):
You know what it kind of sounds like now because
you watched the last season the White Lotus, the family
with the three kids and then the mom and the dad.
That mom is so over exaggerated. She kind of sounds like,
oh ma, here's what I will say. French toast sandwich.
Speaker 5 (26:57):
You ever heard of one?
Speaker 6 (26:58):
Well, if you haven't go to Holiday Station in stores
and get one today because it's delicious.
Speaker 1 (27:02):
It's a French toast sandwich.
Speaker 6 (27:03):
Yes, basically two slices of French star in the middle.
You get a sausage patty.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
And sausage with egg and cheese.
Speaker 6 (27:11):
Yeah, boom, breakfast sandwich. Start your day off at Holiday
station stores.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
That sounds delightful. Thank you, Jenny. Okay, who is the
TV mom? It's taking a second. Is we're scrolling through
the phones right now because here's what happens. I would
do the same thing. Whenever we announce a contest on
Katie WODB, people grab their phone before they even know
what the question is. Then we answered the phone to
say do you know what the answer is? And they go,
I didn't hear the question. So that's what Vaunt is
(27:35):
going through right now. But I think he has finally
found somebody. And here is Rachel. Good morning, Rachel, Hi,
good morning. Are you a mom yourself?
Speaker 5 (27:43):
Rachel?
Speaker 1 (27:44):
I am. Here's the dilemma. Does your mom or mother
in law live here in town? Okay, so you're free
and clear. Mother's Day is going to be all about you? Right, yeah,
Because there's a lot of moms that live here in town.
Their mom lives here and the mother in law lives here.
They're like, oh my god, who do I spend Mother's
Day with? So then they divide it up like Christmas
(28:04):
with a divorced family. Yes, you go to mother in
law's on Monday, you go to your mom's house on Saturday,
and then you get Mother's Day to yourself. What are
you doing?
Speaker 5 (28:13):
What am I doing? I'm going to Murray's with my
mom for steak?
Speaker 1 (28:16):
I all right, Rachel? Who is that TV mom.
Speaker 7 (28:22):
From s pre Y?
Speaker 1 (28:23):
Yes, you're a winner. You are going to pamper yourself
with a two hundred and fifty dollars Metropolitan gift card.
Happy Mother's Day, Rachel, Thank you so much. You are welcome.
We'll do it again tomorrow. Named that TV mom on
KATIEWB Right now, though, I think we're gonna get right
into group therapy.
Speaker 4 (28:43):
At one point three Katwa.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
Ryan Shall, Tracy is on the phone for a group therapy.
Good morning, Tracy, Hi, good morning, Hey, good morning, thanks
for calling. Thanks for being on. Tell us what you
wanted to get advice for, because this is what group
therapy is all about. There's somebody listening who's got the
(29:06):
same problem or been through the same problem, and they
will be able to help you out. So what's going on?
Speaker 9 (29:11):
Yeah, so I have a nine year old daughter, Jenny,
and I don't have that much money, and my ex
and I got divorced when she was one. He gets
some child support, but he also really doesn't have.
Speaker 7 (29:24):
That much money.
Speaker 1 (29:25):
Okay.
Speaker 9 (29:25):
So yeah, And when she was little, like three or four,
she didn't really want anything. She was super happy with
a balloon.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
Kids are having when they're three or four years old.
You give them a balloon or McDonald's hampy meal toy
and they're like, oh cool, box GI him a box.
A box is a great toy. Okay.
Speaker 9 (29:43):
So donald is a classic of y.
Speaker 1 (29:45):
Yeah, so things have changed. What's going on.
Speaker 9 (29:50):
Well, she's nine, and now she wants bigger things that
I can't really afford. We live in this really small,
like a thousand square foot apartment. It's got too bad rooms,
and you know, she hangs out with her other friends
and they're big houses and not in our apartment. I'm
just really embarrassed to have her her friends over.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
Okay. So she goes over to like Jessica's house and
Jessica's got like a game room and there's like a
big basketball hoop in the driveway, and maybe they got
like above ground pool or whatever. So they come to
your house and you live in a small, affordable home
and she doesn't have a lot to show off or
(30:29):
to play with. Yeah.
Speaker 9 (30:30):
No, there's always the comparison of, well, she has this,
why don't we have it? So I don't really want
them to see the comparison. I see embarrassed about it.
And you know, as a single mom, and her school
is going on the skiing trip this and I can't
afford it, and the other kids couldn't go either, So
(30:53):
I'm not like the only poor parent that couldn't really
afford the skiing trip. It was like last winter. And
they also had a bowling trip that I had to
put money together for, but that was expensive. And now
they're going to go to a valley fair at the
end of the school year.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
Well that's like a tradition. Yeah, so like so many schools.
Speaker 9 (31:14):
Yeah, but e's expensive.
Speaker 1 (31:16):
But you're not going to send her along on the
end of the year valley fair field trip because it's
too expensive.
Speaker 9 (31:22):
Exactly right, And I feel bad, but I worked this
full time job, right, and I work a part time
job on the weekend, and I just I don't really
want to work more than that because I want to
spend time with her. Yeah, and it's not that I
really need money save and tips. I'm fine with that,
and I know how to get a side hustle. I
(31:42):
just want to know if anyone who grew up like this,
how it affects them. Now.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
I do feel when you were talking about how you
live in a little thousand square foot apartment, which I
guess with two bedrooms is pretty small. Yeah, it's definitely
not giant. And so when her friends come over, kind
of embarrassed. And she's nine, so she you're worried that
she'll feel embarrassed because like her friend, you know, Jessica
or whatever's got a bigger house with a big basement
(32:09):
or whatever. So your question is not how do I
save money? How should I get another job? It's like
your question is, basically if I got your email, right,
it's how does this affect you if you grow up
like this? Was this painful? Growing up like this?
Speaker 11 (32:26):
I well, I mean Jenny and I are both not
necessarily the richest per people.
Speaker 6 (32:30):
Yeah, so my thing was I did hang out with
a lot of people who had money. Every single one
of my friends pretty much was very wealthy and they
had big houses, and I think like, because of my
personality type, I was very jealous of that lifestyle. And
I also went through things where like I was on
a soccer team and we had a tournament up in
(32:51):
the Twin Cities and my mom was like, I can't
afford to send you. But then she was able to
work something out where I went with one of my
friends on the team, and then she just had to
contribute a little bit for the hotel, so she made
it happen. But I think the big thing with me
is now as an adult, even though I am very
financially responsible and I have enough money to afford the
lifestyle that I want, I'm always stressed about money, always
(33:16):
stressed about it. Like I went to Costco last night
and spend one hundred and sixty dollars and I was
stressed about it. And I don't know why because I
have it now. But it's like this weird relationship I
have with money because I grew up around, you know,
not being able to do a lot because we didn't
have money and being scared to ask my parents for money,
and I really couldn't, Like I started working jobs when
(33:37):
I was like twelve to be able to do the
things that I did. You're like, once you're poor, you're
poor all the time. Yes, you have your mindset a lot,
and I'm trying.
Speaker 5 (33:45):
To get out of that. Well.
Speaker 1 (33:46):
I think I kind of did the same thing because
we just do we save safe, save safe safe. We've
always saved. We just don't spend, and as you get older,
you go, what am I saving it for?
Speaker 11 (33:56):
You know?
Speaker 1 (33:57):
So that's why we've bought an RV, and that's why
we bought a jacuzzi. But let's go back to your question.
How did it affect you? Were you embarrassed? Did you
feel bad? Jenny? Yes, that your friends could come what
you would go to your friend's house and they'd have
a Super Nintendo or they had a Nintendo sixty four
and you had nothing. You had a TV with a
coat hanger sticking out of the top.
Speaker 4 (34:19):
I did, yeah?
Speaker 1 (34:20):
And did Were you embarrassed that your friends might look
down on this?
Speaker 6 (34:23):
I don't ever want to say I didn't have I
didn't have anything, because I did still have a good lifestyle.
I just didn't have the mansions that my friends had
and stuff. So but I was very embarrassed just because
our house wasn't as nice as my friends. And one
day my high school best friend threw a surprise party
and had it at my house. And I show up
and it's all these like girls that I'm not even
(34:44):
that close with that were like the really rich jocks.
And I was so embarrassed because our basement has the
most hideous carpet that still exists there at my mom's house.
And I was I was very embarrassed by it, just
because I had seen their houses and I was like, oh, like, yeah,
this is where I I live.
Speaker 1 (35:01):
I get that. Yeah, And you're not aware of that
when you're like six or seven years old. But now
your daughter, Tracy is nine years old and then and
entertainment used to be cheap is like okay, here's a
coloring book and you know, a happy meal toy from McDonald's.
But now your daughter's nine. So basically we're talking to Tracy.
If you just missed this, Tracy's a mom, doesn't have
a lot of money. You get child support, but he
(35:22):
doesn't have a lot of money either, So your daughter
doesn't get to go on the Valley Fair end of
the year's school trips. She didn't get to go skiing
this past year with school, but you did scrape together
money for the bowling field trip. But you're just The
question is does this mess with you? Does it make
you look back and go man? I did not have
a good childhood because my friend was embarrassed that I
(35:45):
couldn't go to all these things text messages. For me,
it wasn't a struggle for money, but I grew up
with a very strict mom that didn't let me do
a lot. I was often the only friend in the
group that didn't get to go. In my case, it
made me very respondible and independent, and it did affect
my future relationship with my mom. There's a lot of
(36:05):
people who say, if you don't have the money for
a field trip, Tracy, you can ask the school because
a lot of the time they'll have a program that's
like okay scholars the kids that can't afford the Valley
Fair field trip, because that's going to be the admission price,
is going to be spending money and money for dippin'
dots because you can go to Valley Fair without dipping dots. Yeah, yeah,
(36:26):
Do you have some people on the phone here, well,
absolutely yes. Don't deprive your child, Brianna, help her out.
Did you grow up without a lot and you turned
out good or what happened?
Speaker 9 (36:37):
Well, I mean i'd like to think so, yeah, yeah,
I grew up with little to nothing. I mean I
had a roof, and I had closed and I had
sort of fabulous However, in my.
Speaker 7 (36:47):
Adult life I thought that that would carry on with
me more, but it hasn't, which is nice.
Speaker 9 (36:52):
It just made me appreciate the little things more now
in my adult life.
Speaker 7 (36:57):
Compare to you, that's the comp.
Speaker 9 (37:01):
I don't choose to be in that anymore.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
You're not. You don't compare yourself anymore. It's really interesting.
Have you ever known anybody who grew up poor and
now they've got some money and all they can do
is show it off and spend is like, oh, look,
we went to so and so, here's a picture of
us in and it's like okay. But I think Jenny
and I, both growing up without a lot of money,
were both very frugal. Susan spends two hundred and fifty
(37:27):
dollars on like a new recliner I'm.
Speaker 6 (37:28):
Like, probably, Yeah, how about I'm all about secondhand. I
went to a garage sales past week and got six
things for a dollar total. I was hyped, like, you
really do appreciate it. Yeah, you really do appreciate the
little things when you grew up like that.
Speaker 11 (37:44):
Yes, if I didn't get it on sale or thrifted,
then I didn't buy it period.
Speaker 1 (37:48):
Now here's an interesting take you guys. It says I
was the kid with the big house. I honestly didn't
think twice when I went to my friend's houses that
weren't as nice, they might not be judging like you
think they are. I think that's probably true, because you know,
I wasn't not the poorest kid in Black Forest, Colorado.
There were some other poor kids and we went to
their house and we didn't go, God, this is a dump.
(38:10):
We were like, Oh, this is cool. We're gonna go
have fun. We're gonna go out and find frogs in
the pond out that I don't dare.
Speaker 11 (38:15):
Maybe that's different for like boys versus girls. Maybe definitely,
Like I never had my friends over at my house
because my house was smaller than my friends, but also
just kind of like messier than my friends, and so
I would be embarrassed to have people over, so I
wouldn't have them over, and then I would go to
their fancy mansions. But I also remember going to a
friend's house and she lived in a trailer, and like
(38:37):
I think, because I'm a girl, I'm innately like, oh
my gosh, a trailer. Wow, Like, oh wow, I have
so much. I should be thankful, even though I thought
I was also poor. So it's just it's like a
I think it's more of a girl thing versus like,
let's go look for frogs.
Speaker 1 (38:52):
You know, I like, Okay. Basically, Tracy's on the phone.
Tracy's had a nine year old daughter, and she's getting
to the age where she wants more things and she
can't afford them. And she's not looking for financial tips,
although some people have said go to the school and say, hey,
we can't afford the Valley fair Field trip. Can you
help out of the school? Sometimes?
Speaker 2 (39:11):
Can?
Speaker 1 (39:11):
She's asking will this affect her daughter when she gets older?
And will this make her daughter go God? I had
a miserable childhood because mom didn't have any money. Lindsey,
you didn't have any money when you're growing up? Did you.
Speaker 7 (39:23):
Oh gosh, no, I was the white, trashed.
Speaker 5 (39:26):
Poor kid.
Speaker 1 (39:26):
That's my girl, that's my girl. How did you turn
out though? Everything? Tell me your experience and what did
you feel about that?
Speaker 7 (39:32):
Yeah, So I grew up in and out of foster
care up until I was like sixteen, and so I
was the very aware or very obviously the government assisted child,
or came to school reaking, like cigarette smoked, my mom
smoked in the house and all those kind of things,
and so I definitely was embarrassed. But thankfully I didn't
(39:55):
get bullied or anything like other people have experienced. And
I would say now that I am an adult, you know,
thirty thirty five years old and actually have money, I
don't have to worry about paying my bills and I
don't think twice about running my cards for groceries and stuff.
So I'm just very fortunate, yeah, that I've been able
to have those opportunities to work hard and get where
I am. But I think because I grew up so poor,
(40:19):
I am modest. It's not something I you know, you
don't wave it in people's faces or break about it
or anything like that. And I think that where hopefully
this daughter will gain out of it as well. You
learn to be honest with what you have because you
know what you came from or what you didn't have.
And I think that hopefully that makes her a you know,
(40:40):
have kids, her a lot of character.
Speaker 1 (40:42):
You know, I kind of agree with that. I mean,
look at Jenny. Jenny is a very very humble person.
She grew up without a lot of money. I'm very arrogant, Yeah,
but so I don't know where that was. When did
I get arrogant the last thirty years? In the last
thirty years, Yeah, since you've got this morning show, when
I became a mega superstar. No, you know what, I
(41:02):
think that that's you got a really good point. And
that's like, I don't really I don't feel like I
have to spend money to be happy. You know, a
ukulele is forty bucks. Yeah, and you know, so I
think you definitely I feel embarrassed. I talked to Jenny
and I said, I don't want to talk about my
new RV on the radio because I don't want to
sound like I'm bragging.
Speaker 5 (41:23):
You know you're not.
Speaker 6 (41:24):
And I made sure to clarify that Davis worked so
hard his entire life. It's not like you're twenty two
years old and you're like, well, look at this big
rvy I money on, Like you've worked your whole life
to do something that you've been dreaming of.
Speaker 1 (41:38):
I guess you got to treat us up, girl. Thank you.
Speaker 11 (41:41):
I like this text message that says I was that
kid as a parent and in my thirties. Now I
look back and see how hard my parents worked. I
was very taken care of, but we had a double
wide than nice kind and I'm so proud of my
parents and how I grew up. I couldn't afford sports
or a lot of other things. But love doesn't just
grow in bigger houses.
Speaker 7 (42:00):
I like, you.
Speaker 1 (42:02):
Know, I think the idea that you're concerned and worried
about your daughter and doing the best that you can
is enough, and she might go, you know what we
kind of did without We did not have a PlayStation five,
and we did not have a seventy eight inch flat
screen TV. But mom really loved me and made me
feel loved. So and check into the school helping you
out with the Valley Fair, because if you can make
(42:23):
that happen, that will I mean, that's not going to
make her childhood, but she'll you know, she'll remember things
like you remember it. I think the bottom line answer
is like you're doing fine and she's doing fine.
Speaker 9 (42:36):
No, I'll definitely ask the school to see what they
can do. I appreciate it.
Speaker 7 (42:39):
That's a good idea.
Speaker 1 (42:40):
Thank you, Tracy. If you want to get to do
a group therapy, send an email into Ryan Show at
katiewb dot com or Katie Perry. Tickets coming up in
ten minutes on katiewb. We discovered this over the weekend
the AI song Generator, so we said, every single day
we are going to do another AI generated song. So
(43:02):
yesterday we came up with a song called Don't Poop
in the RV and we wrote the lyrics on the air.
It took it about maybe three minutes to generate the song,
and here's what the song sounded like. Bailey and vont
and I and Jenny all put these lyrics together on
like live on the radio, and we said, okay, what
do you want to sound like? Well, I want to
be hip hop kind of rap. I wanted to be
(43:23):
playing like the lyrics are understandable, so it's not too fast.
So we wrote it and five minutes later, here's what
AI generated for don't poop in the RV.
Speaker 20 (43:35):
I'm on the road, road, road, and I gotta go,
go go, I know for show, show, show, I'm going
to Boogooo. We're coming in hot, hot, hot, can't get
to the pott, squeeze them. Whether it's day or night,
night night, whatever you do, do doo, you can't poop,
(44:00):
don't poop avy, I'm on the.
Speaker 1 (44:10):
Okay, it repeats itself because we didn't write a whole
lot of lyrics, so now we came up with yesterday.
Some people tanks it in and said, here's the song title.
What's the song title that we liked?
Speaker 6 (44:19):
We had, Oh, it's you again, for when Dave gets
home and opens the garage door and sees that Susan is.
Speaker 4 (44:25):
Still holding.
Speaker 6 (44:27):
I like that one. Bailey had a date over the weekends,
so we had talked about that, and so Bailey's date
with Bradley was an option co worker with the Fish Breath,
because that was a conversation that was had as well.
I caught him cheating because someone said I've been listening
to War the Roses too much lately, so they want
a song based on I caught him cheating and then
(44:49):
can't fart in the library.
Speaker 1 (44:50):
Okay, I I really am leaning toward topic.
Speaker 7 (44:53):
Hole.
Speaker 1 (44:53):
Bailey had a date, so I liked, Oh it's you again. Okay,
well maybe tomorrow. Okay, So what's the MU style we
want to use because you can enter on this date.
Speaker 6 (45:02):
Again broad Yeah, okay, I think it's got to be
smooth a little yeah, smooth R and B smooth R
and in B.
Speaker 17 (45:16):
You think like nineties.
Speaker 11 (45:20):
Nice?
Speaker 1 (45:20):
Yeah, okay, we love so Okay. Now I need some lyrics. Okay,
I thought it would never happen.
Speaker 17 (45:28):
You got to throw in there for the first time.
It's the Clinton administration.
Speaker 1 (45:32):
Oh yeah, time since good Time was in awe, yes, Okay,
Now we got to rhyme stuff. I thought it would
never happen, first time since Clinton was in office?
Speaker 5 (45:46):
Happen?
Speaker 11 (45:47):
Are we rhyming everything? Because then what rhymes would happen?
I think we got to do A, A, B, B
so happen. Thought it would never happen. Boy, this is
really something. This is It is real and something.
Speaker 3 (46:02):
First time since Clinton was in office, Bailey something something
kiss office.
Speaker 1 (46:08):
You guys are terrible.
Speaker 6 (46:09):
Song right, I don't have it in front of me.
I need the words in front of me.
Speaker 5 (46:12):
What rhymes.
Speaker 11 (46:14):
Tis By went out her first kiss, or don't you
dare write or I will come over there and punch
you in the gullet.
Speaker 17 (46:22):
In the gullet, Bailey went out and got a kiss.
Speaker 1 (46:25):
I made it, I made it orifice first number two,
they went to We went to a distillery.
Speaker 8 (46:33):
They went to rhyme with distillery, ever distilly.
Speaker 1 (46:40):
To get more action than Hillary.
Speaker 8 (46:41):
They got a little Hillery, They got it a little sillery, sillery.
Silly Hillary, he wants to fillery.
Speaker 5 (46:51):
Stop it.
Speaker 19 (46:55):
I'm no Hillary, No, watch the Jack and Jellery, David.
I'm gonna bomb.
Speaker 5 (47:07):
I want to go home.
Speaker 4 (47:10):
I'm gonna be This could be the next song of
the summer date.
Speaker 1 (47:16):
It was her fate. She said it was so great.
Speaker 5 (47:22):
She's going back home to her cat.
Speaker 4 (47:24):
He doesn't listen to the show, right, I don't think so.
Speaker 11 (47:26):
I hope no, I hope not by someone. Someone texted
in just now what happened with Bailey and Trip Trip
ghosted me?
Speaker 5 (47:35):
Old news?
Speaker 1 (47:35):
So yeah, and you need one more words that rhymes
with eight eight.
Speaker 19 (47:39):
Graham did an Jennifer Jennifer whatever happened to women supporting women?
Speaker 1 (47:54):
So it's gonna take a second for it to generate
eight eight eight eight, so we'll probably have to do
it's gonna take a second. We can play a song
and then come back after DOCI or Morgan Wallen, we
your choice, whatever, and then we'll play Bailey's new song,
(48:15):
Bailey Headed Date, I.
Speaker 4 (48:16):
Have aut post molon Morgan Wallin.
Speaker 1 (48:17):
Okay, let's do it on katiewb hang on. It's generating
right now, let's find out what it comes up with.
It's next on KATWB