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May 22, 2025 48 mins
We hear from Joey, who went on a date with someone who blurted something rude, a brand new War of the Roses, and more!
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It is Thursday. The sun is out for the first
time since February. It's kind of nice, kind of like that.
It is still chilly. Today's high only like sixty three. Yeah,
I in there better than forty four when it was
yesterday something like that. Yeah. I rode the motorcycle into
work today because Carson Carshon is home when you needed
my car, So I was like, okay, forty two degrees.

(00:23):
Rode the motorcycle in coldest ride ever, had to pull
over by the general store on Highway seven and blow
on my hands to warm a mup. Oh buddy, Yeah,
thanks for too, Thanks for your fake sympathy. I appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
Yeah, I don't really care. You're an idiot. Don't ride
a motorcycle. Make Carson get his ass up work. Then
you could have had your car. I was shocked to
see that. Also, because we all talked about riding together
to a big meeting we have this afternoon, and then
you rolled it into your motorcycle.

Speaker 3 (00:48):
So now one of us has to drive.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
Yeah, why would I be the assumed driver if we're
going on a little the meeting today you offered, you
said let's all drive together. I did not say red
ride with me. I said, let's all ride together. Every
one of y'all's got a four seat.

Speaker 4 (01:03):
Carn't that'll make sense if I said let's have a barbecue.
Are we just gonna assume? Well, I'm not hosting it.
I'm just saying, let's do it.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
I said, let's ride together. You've got four seats in
your car, Bailey.

Speaker 5 (01:13):
The entire back seat is full of stuff you can't
kind of stuff like a bin full of bras that
I have that I'm meaning to give away.

Speaker 1 (01:21):
You didn't learn anything.

Speaker 5 (01:22):
And I have another bin full of other stuff, and
then like a bag, and then I have these like
big flags that I have in my mind.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
Your candidate, what what are retaining your car?

Speaker 2 (01:32):
Well, my car has gym shoes in it, so it
smells like, okay, sweaty locker room.

Speaker 3 (01:38):
So option with mine.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
Mon's driving? Huh okay driving sounds good to me? All right?
We h. I get a text message from this is
such a cool. It's a cool that Joey. Joey is
a woman's name. I didn't know Joey's a woman's name. Joey,
good morning, thanks for agreeing to be on the radio.
How are you.

Speaker 6 (01:54):
Joey, good morning. I'm good.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
How are you tell me what happened on this date?
And what just kind of made you go? I got
to call the Dave Ryan Show and tell about this
what happened?

Speaker 7 (02:03):
Okay, So this is like a first date and we
meet up. We're just having normal conversation, and then I
noticed that he's like staring at my face, like, not
my eyes, but he's staring at my face because I
have a mole on my face.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
Okay, where and how big is this mole?

Speaker 7 (02:21):
It's like a havench made from the corner of my mouth.
It's not it's that big, but I mean it's like,
I guess it's big enough to be noticeable for like
this you know, adult, to not be able to take
his eyes off it.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
Yeah. Yeah, staring at the male.

Speaker 6 (02:35):
Yeah yeah, yeah. He definitely wasn't looking into my eyes.
He's definitely staring down.

Speaker 7 (02:41):
So, like we're like twenty minutes into the date, I'd say,
and there's a pause in conversation and he just looked
at me.

Speaker 6 (02:48):
And he's like, why have you never had that mole removed?

Speaker 1 (02:51):
Jesus? Oh oh no, come on, just s out like that.

Speaker 6 (02:58):
Okay, I know, I kind of. I mean, whatever, it
got uncomfortable. So I decided I was going to make
a little joke and I.

Speaker 7 (03:05):
Was like, oh, like I was going to get it removed,
but then it's whispering stock tips to me, so I
keep it.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
You thought of that like off the top of your head?

Speaker 6 (03:16):
What else to say?

Speaker 7 (03:17):
It was like stupid awkward pause after he could ask
me why I didn't get it removed, But he obviously didn't
get the joke because he was totally silent after that.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
Really, oh, I guess it talks to her. It's funny
because he didn't know what to say back to you,
But what did he expect?

Speaker 7 (03:33):
A few more minutes and then the date pretty much ended.

Speaker 4 (03:36):
So he didn't know what to say back after your
stock tips joke, but you he expected you.

Speaker 1 (03:41):
To know what to say back after That's stupid? What funny?
But then at that point.

Speaker 6 (03:46):
Why I got it removed? That was why I haven't
gotten it removed.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
I was like, you know, this is this is one
of these things that you probably would think. But and
I I look at people with moles, and I sometimes
wonder why don't they have them removed? But I've no
had a big mole on my face. I'm going to
guess it's just it's just part of who you are. Yeah,
it's just, you know, it's like that's just part of
who you are, and it's like it's there and if
you don't like it, then then that screw you. I mean,

(04:10):
this is a first date.

Speaker 4 (04:12):
Even the average person that you see on a day
to day that has a mole, you're not gonna say, have.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
You ever thought of having that thing removed? You might
think it, you just wouldn't say's exactly right. Yeah, you think.

Speaker 5 (04:21):
I know a girl from college who has a massive
mole on the side of her face.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
It's like her most of her cheek is this mole.

Speaker 5 (04:28):
Okay, And people would ask her all the time, why
haven't you gotten that mole removed? And she said, well,
it's a part of my face and everybody knows me
as this girl with this giant mole, so I can't
get rid of it, Okay, right, I was like, Okay,
valid ballad.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
So maybe so do you think that I'm gonna guess,
do you give him a little grace because he was
just nervous and like, you know, yeah, it was stupid,
But do you give him a little grace because he's there.
It is like an awkward conversation. He doesn't really know
what to say, and maybe he's not that socially graceful
to begin with. Did you give him a break on that, Joey?

Speaker 7 (05:02):
I mean I wasn't because I thought, I mean, I
knew it was going nowhere anyhow. Yeah, this was like
icing on the cake. But like, like is it a
red flag though? Like is it just him being nervous
or is it just him being rude?

Speaker 1 (05:17):
Are you thinking about giving him another chance?

Speaker 7 (05:19):
No?

Speaker 6 (05:20):
I'm okay, all right, okay, but I think I just.

Speaker 7 (05:25):
Feel like I need to know because like I don't
know where he was coming from.

Speaker 1 (05:28):
Or what his you know, you'll you may never know,
but he could have walked out to his car afterward
and go, God, why do you say that He's so stupid? God,
I was so nervous. Maybe he hasn't been on a
date in a long time. Maybe he's just socially awkward.
Maybe he's I don't know, just one of those people
that blurts out what they are thinking and can't help.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
But that thing you learn as a child, though, you
learn and not say every thought that comes into your brain.

Speaker 1 (05:54):
Yeah, but don't we all know some adult that just
blurts out the thoughts that come into their brain.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Really, besides you part of my charm, So why don't
you get that Moleward?

Speaker 1 (06:05):
No, I'm kidding. I'm kidding. Hey, Joey, love your name,
love your mole, Love you. Thanks for listening to the show.

Speaker 6 (06:13):
Thank you. Guys.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
If you have a bizarre date, we would love to
hear about a bizarre job interview, bizarre story, bizarre encounter
in the line at Byerley's. Let us know. I hope
that we come to bund when something bizarre happens and
you tell us all about it. We'll be back in
a second. On Katie W. Be with with a claim
that everybody does this, everybody does this. I don't think

(06:37):
it's true. I've never done it before. Was it you,
Jenny that said everybody does this? Or was it Bailey
said everybody does this? You do you do it? Bailey?

Speaker 5 (06:47):
No?

Speaker 3 (06:48):
Never to an extent.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
Okay, I've never done it because I don't have to
such a lie. I don't have to bet you everyone
has done it. Okay, what is it? We'll do it next.
On Katie W. B Hank now live on streaming video.
Kd WB's Dave Ryan Show is now on YouTube every
morning starting at seven am. Just search Dave Ryan TV.

(07:11):
Timber Wolves are on the road, Okac tonight, you know,
I mean, go Wolves. They didn't have a good game
the other night, so but go Wolves. Always there for
your Frost are doing the Frost plane.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
Yes, playing, they play, and they're doing very well. I
have to look up the details of their games.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
I wish I like hockey better. I just don't. I
can't follow the pucks, like, where's the puck? Where happening?
He was just right over there? What's going on? Why
is she over there? Why are they hitting?

Speaker 8 (07:39):
Now?

Speaker 1 (07:39):
They're fighting now there's a bloody tooth on the ice.

Speaker 5 (07:43):
By bloody tooth on the ice from the cross loss.

Speaker 3 (07:49):
Last night by the way to Ottawa, but not tonight.

Speaker 4 (07:53):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
If they played to well, then.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
They're not gonna lose the next one. Vont made a
claim earlier and we're like wait wait, wait, wait, wait
wait wait, save this for the radio. So Vought was
put on pause until just now.

Speaker 4 (08:04):
I didn't think about this until I saw people doing it,
because you know, people are graduating everybody's applying for jobs.
Everybody lies on their resume, like one thousand percent. Whether
it's a little white lie or just something grandiose.

Speaker 8 (08:18):
Everyone lies on the resume. You're a liar if you don't, Dave,
I've never had to I'll be honest with you. My
career is a list of accomplishment after accomplishment. I've never had,
never had to lie on a resume as a proud
graduate Pike's Peak Community College, the Harvard of the Rockies,
and then I get a job, and I get another job.

(08:39):
I never had to lie about it was. I didn't
lie that I was an Eagle Scout because I wasn't
an I didn't put that on there.

Speaker 1 (08:45):
I didn't put I just said, you know, have you.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
Even ever had to have a physical paper resume? Because
you work in radio, so usually you have just somehow
show your radio voice. So a lot of radio jobs
they don't even care about your resume.

Speaker 1 (08:57):
No, they want to know where you work. They want
to know that you've had some experience, then you know
what you're doing and you've had some success or whatever.
So but I mean, okay, so I've never had to
lie on my resume because I'm an exemplary person.

Speaker 5 (09:08):
Oh please, what when was the last time you updated
your resume?

Speaker 1 (09:13):
Well, I don't I don't think I've sent a resume
in a very long time. Was it when Nixon was
in office? I think Nixon was I think it was
probably when I moved here.

Speaker 4 (09:27):
I saw this guy that I went to school with
on LinkedIn, and he just lied about all these jobs
and stuff he did, like he said he was like
the program assistant at our radio station, which would have
meant he was my assistant.

Speaker 1 (09:38):
Not true.

Speaker 4 (09:39):
But then I sat back and I was like, you
know what, sometimes you got to hustle and do what
you gotta do to get a job, whether it's like
I said, lying about a position or something as small
as your GPA.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
Because he was going to check your GPA. Who's going
to fact check that?

Speaker 2 (09:50):
I feel like you do get that checked when you're
in kind of like entry level jobs, and you definitely
have to check that for jobs like engineering and.

Speaker 3 (09:58):
Hangs like that.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
You do have to have a high GPA for certain
kinds of jobs.

Speaker 1 (10:02):
Yeah, did you lie on your resume when you got
an iHeartRadio job?

Speaker 4 (10:06):
About maybe something small like about like I'm proficient at
Microsoft XIL maybe something like that, because people love seeing stuff.

Speaker 1 (10:12):
Like that little buzzwory. Okay, but something.

Speaker 4 (10:15):
You do at a job or your GPA or Some
people lie about degrees because who's gonna go and check it?

Speaker 1 (10:20):
But sometimes they do. I mean, you're right, you're right.
Who's I could say I've got a law degree from
William Mitchell and they'd be like, oh damn, I didn't
know Dave had a law degree. That's pretty cool. When'd
you graduate ninety six? So people would be like, they
believe it. Did you lie on your resume?

Speaker 5 (10:35):
Bailey? No, like for positions and everything. No, everything is
exactly what it's meant to say. It's all of the
positions I've had, all of the work I've done.

Speaker 1 (10:43):
The only thing that it's not.

Speaker 5 (10:44):
That I've lied, I just don't include it is the
date for my master's degree. Because full transparency, I have
half of a master's degree.

Speaker 1 (10:53):
And this was when I worked for Disney.

Speaker 5 (10:54):
They were funding it, and then they closed all of
the Disney stores and took away my funding and they
were like, Okay, you can finish your masters for thirteen
thousand dollars, and I said no, this was meant to
be free, and so I never finished my master's program,
but I still want it on my resume because I
how do you word it?

Speaker 1 (11:12):
So I just have a master's degree, right, because that
doesn't sound good.

Speaker 5 (11:16):
It just I say that I have MFA and Arts
and Cultural management and that when it says for education,
like when I graduated, I just say present as in like,
I'm still working on it, even though I'm.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
Not a little misleading, but I haven't.

Speaker 5 (11:31):
How else are you supposed to write that, right, other
than like, yeah, I'm still working on it.

Speaker 1 (11:35):
I mean, it'd be great if I got funding for it.
Did you lie in your resume?

Speaker 2 (11:39):
I'm looking at mine and I actually apparently have updated
it in the last year.

Speaker 3 (11:42):
I don't know why, but.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
There I do feel like I am exaggerated in a
sense because I did put that I am a guest
in arena host for the Minnesota Timberwolves, which is a
little bit of a lie because I did audition to
be the in arena host last season and then they
did have me guest host once. So okay, I'm saying,
but to be fair, I still did do that. I

(12:05):
just think it makes me seem a little bit cooler
than what I am and have more experience.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
It's a little misleading, but it's not an outright line lie.

Speaker 6 (12:13):
No.

Speaker 4 (12:13):
But both of those are great examples, even if it's
not a straight up lie because people are texting. I
would never lie. Sometimes you just stretch the truth a
little bit. You just exaggerate to make yourself seem more
applicable for the job.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
I wonder. I wonder how carefully HR and hiring people
check on the back It probably depends on where you work.
And I guess if you are at Medtronic, they do
a deep dive on your background to make sure you
really did go to you know, the U of M. Yeah,
and you really did graduate and you really did get

(12:44):
this certain GPA. Somebody says via text as HR, we
do a full background check, so please don't lie. But
what's on your background check?

Speaker 5 (12:54):
Like, that's what I'd actually love to know, what's on
a background check, because I just thought of question, if
you get like a parking ticket that's shows.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
Up on your background check.

Speaker 4 (13:01):
Yeah, it's not going to say like, wasn't the manager
at bubble Gumps It was just like a regular employee.

Speaker 1 (13:07):
It's not going to say that.

Speaker 4 (13:08):
So I could say I owned bubble gumps for all
you know, now I wouldn't. But LinkedIn that's another place
it's very easy to lie. Not encouraging it, but LinkedIn
you can pretty much say you did anything.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
I guess, I mean you can, and why would you
not believe it? But I would if I ever hired
anybody and I found out. Let's say that I hared
Bailey and Bailey said, yeah, she got a master's degree
or whatever, I would suspect that everything Bailey has told
me is a lie, and I would and I would
just not trust that person. You know what I mean?
I don't know. Bought says that everybody lies on the resume.

(13:39):
Happy birthday, Happy twelve birthday to Sullivan. Somebody who's been
asking over and over for that birthday shout out, so
if you better get it in, maybe it's urgent. So
Happy birthday, Sullivan.

Speaker 3 (13:49):
I like this.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
Texas says jobs do the same thing on job post.
Since they lie's what do they lie about? They probably
lie about what your responsibilities are going to be. They say, like,
this is what your responsibility is, and then you come
in and you have twenty more responsibilities than what you're expecting. Yes,
or you end up doing. I don't know the manager's job.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
We've got to fake name Natalie on the phone. Okay,
he has a claim in response to me saying everybody
lies on the resumes. Okay, let's see what Natalie has
to say. Natalie, what's up? What do you want to
say about lying on your resume?

Speaker 9 (14:20):
So I have a line on my resme per se.
I have changed titles to reflect what I've actually done,
which I think is appropriate. But I have light about
every interview about what I've actually made in order to
be paid fairly as a woman.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
Oh you're smart. Ooh did it turn out good for you?

Speaker 9 (14:39):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (14:40):
How much did you?

Speaker 5 (14:41):
What? Did you?

Speaker 1 (14:41):
What? Did you lie? Can you be specific?

Speaker 9 (14:44):
I've always bumped it up about twenty grands because if
a man was in my role as what he would
be making. And so I'm paid very well now due
to the fact that I've progressively given myself twenty thousand
dollars raises every job change.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
What do you do?

Speaker 9 (15:00):
I can't sure?

Speaker 1 (15:02):
Yeah, okay, so you when you do what you're talking
about your salary history, you lie about your salary history
so you'll get paid better. Yes, okay, gotcha? See I
I've never I've just wanted the job. I've never like,
you know, like worried too much about salary. I just

(15:22):
wanted the job.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
So all some people don't get paid as good of
a wage, though, so they have to lie to try
to get the wage that they deserve.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
I guess, So, all right, does everybody lie on their resume?
This is said Tex says, I am hr and I've
lied on my resume. Some entities don't check the cost.
The cost way too much for every applicant, so they
can't check on every single one of them. What driving
issues only flag for sales or driving positions, definitely don't lie.

(15:54):
Corporate companies check work history, education, but can't check pay anymore.
It's illegal. So if you lie and say yeah, I
make one hundred and twenty eight thousand dollars here at KATWB,
they can't go and check yeah.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
I think that that's something actually easy that has been
changed in the last handful of years, because I mean,
we all have contracts here.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
That's like how radio works.

Speaker 2 (16:14):
You have a contract, So I think that that verbage
has changed in our contracts.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
We had one more phone call than we got to
move on to Dave Sturt and then we've got War
the Roses. You're going to talk about War the Roses
when you get into work today, or you're gonna call
your sister and say, oh my god, did you hear
today's War of the Roses? You're gonna love it's coming
up on KTWB. Wrap it up. Last phone call on
this one. We've got Kelly. Kelly, you work in HR.
What about lying on your resume? What do you want

(16:40):
to share?

Speaker 10 (16:41):
Mostly like, do not lie on your resume when it
comes to things like degrees and job titles, and then
you can strust the truth on like your responsibilities. But
we do check those things. And I've had to pull
employment offers because people have.

Speaker 7 (16:57):
Lied on their resumes.

Speaker 1 (16:58):
What did they lie about that got it pulled?

Speaker 10 (17:01):
Just like their position title where they would say that
they've been a manager for you know, five years, and
we pulled employment records and they were only a manager
for a year. Really okay, and so they're not qualified
to at least with our job posting, they weren't qualified

(17:23):
to be in that position.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
And I think that's the main thing. You could lie
about your GPA. You can lie about the school or
whether you graduated. But you can't lie about whether you're
qualified because they're going to find out pretty quickly that
you're not qualified. So I'll give you one more tip
about like resumes and references. Never give a reference to
somebody that you really don't believe in. Because somebody got

(17:44):
a job on my show, and I'm not going to
say who, you could probably guess because they came with
a great recommendation. When this person got hired two weeks in,
I knew that they were not good for this job
because the person that commended them lied about how wonderful
they were.

Speaker 5 (18:03):
I once had somebody call me for a recommendation for
someone that I worked with on the speech team who
was a coach, and they were like, hey, you know
this guy right, And I was like, yeah, oh, we're
he's he put in your name for putting as a reference.
And I was like, why he did, because, like we
weren't he like coached for me for like one year.
And I was honest, honest to this person. I was like, well,

(18:23):
I guess like he did his job. I wouldn't necessarily
say it was like sparkling. I don't understand why he
put my name down. He never told me and so
I don't know if you got that job, but I
felt like I had to be honest. You was kind
of dishonest when he put me down. It is like, oh,
this woman will put in a sparkling review for me.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
M M. Good for you. Absolutely all right, thanks for that.
We appreciate all the comments and called Dave Ryan Show
one on one point three kd WB brought to you
by six one two Injured Heimer and Lammer's Injury lod
Jessica Biel's four year old This says, mom is so lame.
I remember the kid is four years old.

Speaker 11 (19:00):
After an extra day off.

Speaker 4 (19:02):
You know, we were supposed to have a show last night,
but we didn't because my daughter had a baby last night.

Speaker 1 (19:09):
Great wrong clip, sorry, wrong clip. Here we go.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
The new phrase for my four year old is, mom,
you have the worst ideas.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
Oh, I have to watch it, buddy, idea. Michael, We're
already there.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
And Silas is like, don't engage, mom, stay back up
off the field like he's playing baseball now.

Speaker 1 (19:24):
He's like, don't say anything.

Speaker 3 (19:25):
Back up. I'm like, I just said, good job.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
It's a lamest story. I apologize for the last fifteen
seconds of your life, let me do better. A couple
of days of wild testimony in the Ditty sex trafficking case,
Wednesday was relatively quiet in the courtroom. A homeless security
agent was back on the stand spent more time describing
some of the stuff he found in Diddy's Miami mansion,
including weapons, drug residue, and cell phones hidden inside of

(19:51):
a boot, not to mention lube, baby oil, adult toys,
and lingerie. Then they brought in a forensic psychologist. She
was brought in to specifically address why Cassie stayed with
Diddy despite the abuse that she insists that she was
a victim of. Basically, she said domestic violence victims fall

(20:13):
prey to psychological, sexual, and emotional abuse and experience financial dependence.
She says that victims focus on how to stay safe
in the moment, which could explain why Cassie appeared to
be a willing participant in the freak offs at times.
And I think that's it. They are afraid to leave
because they know that things can get really bad if

(20:35):
they leave, so they try to stay safe in the
moment to placate their abuser so he won't beat her
up in that Moment's just terrible, just terrible, scary, and
there's more, but we won't will skip that. She this
is kind of a weird one from Courtney Kardashian. She
says she doesn't really think her kids need to go
to school. She said, why do kids blanking go to school? Truly,

(20:58):
it's so dated. She added that her kids will send
her videos of successful people who didn't go to school,
and then I'm like, well, what's the goal here. You
want a homeschool, let's do it.

Speaker 5 (21:09):
See, I don't trust Courtney Kardashian to homeschool me because
is she a teacher? Does she have an education degree?
Does she know how to teach a child?

Speaker 1 (21:19):
No? I think she lives in a very insulated world
where everything is wonderful, paid for, affordable, and not out
of reach. And I think that when you live in
a world like that, especially, you could say that she's
worked really hard. But come on, has she worked really hard?
I mean, has she done like graveyard shifts at Perkins?
I don't think she's worked really hard. She has lived

(21:41):
in a very insulated, privileged life. So she thinks that
the world is just you wish it into being right.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
Why didn't you also say that going to school is
about socialization. Yeah, well, I think that that it becomes
very different between Yeah, if you're capable of being taught
at home, sure that's an option, but like you don't
get the social skills that you build, which you could
argue are just as important as an education level that's
high enough when you go out into the world start.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
Get a job. Yeah, very true. I mean think about
all the socializing that you know that you learned who
to hang around with and who not to hang around with.
You learn how to feel when you were left out
of things, You learn how to be inclusive. Yeah, you
learn all the socialization skills.

Speaker 5 (22:24):
You learn how to work with like different kinds of people,
like not just your peers, but like teachers have different
like ways of teaching.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
You know what you learn better like at school. So
I don't think it's dated at all.

Speaker 3 (22:35):
Corny.

Speaker 4 (22:36):
I have a family friend who put her to Her
two daughters started in homeschool, and then when they transition
to elementary, one of them got in trouble and the
teacher said, you going on time out, and she just
the kid couldn't grasp what time out was or why
she was getting a consequence.

Speaker 9 (22:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
Absolutely, all right, that is the dirt, brought to you
by six one two Injured Heimer and Lammer's Injury Law.
Do not leave your radio at this point. You gotta
hear this War of the Roses because I really think
I think it'll be in the top five memorable War
of the Roses along with Nicholas Nicholas Nick, the Stoner,

(23:09):
the sprite Bottle.

Speaker 3 (23:10):
Alien abduction.

Speaker 1 (23:12):
Who was the guy that was the rapper? All right,
we'll do it right now. War of the Roses brought
to you by Ovo Lacy can Lens on kd wu B.

Speaker 10 (23:24):
He loves me.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
He loves me not only one way to find out more.

Speaker 12 (23:28):
Of the Roses on kd w B.

Speaker 1 (23:33):
Good morning, Emily, Good morning, tell me your story. What's
going on?

Speaker 6 (23:39):
Honestly, this might be the.

Speaker 9 (23:41):
Weirdness four of the.

Speaker 6 (23:43):
Roses Yet I don't I don't honestly know if you
guys can use it or not. But yeah, okay, so
my boyfriend Ryan, I was just on his phone recently.
I was just wanting to forward a picture of us
together outside to my phone. Yeah, we trust each other. Yeah,
it's no video. So anyway, I was on his phone

(24:03):
and I'm going to the videos and pictures, and I
land on like a video that's a picture of a boob. Okay, okay,
what's this? So I play it and it's his coworker
like breast like like pressing breast milk out of a boob.
I don't even know how to say it because I've
never had a kid in like squirting it and she

(24:25):
was coffee.

Speaker 1 (24:26):
And he's like, okay, wait, wait, okay, So I know, okay, now,
so can we use this one because this is a
little bit dicey. I don't know if we can actually
use this one or not.

Speaker 2 (24:38):
You're telling me this is more dicey than certain things
we've done well, And.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
There's nothing bad or dirty, just a little it erases
rises rate, arouses some questions. So so back up for second.
So you open this up and there's a boob and
it's his coworker, and you know, his co worker. She
is expressing squirting breast milk into coffee. Go on, continue

(25:07):
pick up the story from there.

Speaker 6 (25:09):
Yeah, so obviously I confronted my boyfriend and I was like,
what is this video? What is this about? And he
like laughed about it. He was so light and like
not a sense of at all. He said they had
gone to get coffee at Caribou and his worker mentioned
that she'd start using her own breast milk and her
coffee and they joked and he was like, oh my god,

(25:31):
do it for me, And then he took a video
of it. He thought it was such a funny thing,
and he was like he told me, he was like,
it's not being sexual, you guys. All I'm thinking is like,
not only is this weird, but like that is really intimate,
Like you've got to be intimate to see like your
coworker's boob.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
Well, then I was gonna say, not only to to
drink the breast milk, to assume the breast milk, that's intimate,
but also if it was totally innocent and normal ish,
you'd be like, okay, look the other way, or I'm
gonna go in the bathroom and do this or whatever.
But you wouldn't pull out the booby. Am I right now?

Speaker 3 (26:08):
You don't just whip out a boob for your coworker.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
Nonetheless, whip out your phone to record it. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 6 (26:15):
And I even said to him, I was like, listen,
like the third thing is on top of all of that,
if that weren't enough.

Speaker 9 (26:20):
I was like, Yo, if.

Speaker 6 (26:22):
It was such a funny story, how did you not
tell it to me? Like that was almost the biggest
red flag in that moment. I was like, I mean
that is a unique thing to come from work and
just be like, how is your day and you're like, oh,
it's fine, Like you would remember that.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
You would remember that, and if it was really innocent,
you would be like, Okay, you don't Carla down at work?
You know what she did?

Speaker 11 (26:41):
Correct?

Speaker 1 (26:41):
You would Okay, So you're jumping a little bit to conclusions,
but with validity, there might be something going on here.

Speaker 6 (26:50):
Yeah. So I just like that's why I'm calling you guys,
because I'm just like, this is weird, this isn't normal.
What's going on? What is Ryan doing?

Speaker 1 (26:58):
Let's see if we can justify this? Can you just
this in any way? Let's say okay, let's say Bailey,
Let's say you and one of the women from sales, Yeah,
you're on a Cariboo run and she's like, I put
breast milk in my coffee? Do you want to try it?
It'd be different because I'm a woman, but would it's
still be very intimate? Don't you think well, yeah, you're
drinking a bodily fluid.

Speaker 5 (27:17):
I'm just thinking, like, if it was Jenny and Jenny's's
Bailey Watch, I'm gonna put breast milk into this coffee,
I'd be like.

Speaker 1 (27:24):
Oh, heck, yeah, it's definitely different.

Speaker 5 (27:29):
It's just different because it's a man and he kept
a video of it.

Speaker 1 (27:33):
On his phone and didn't say anything. That's what makes
it weird. Okay. So so okay, and so he is
sticking to his guns, like, oh my god, you're you're
I mean, he's got to admit that you're not really
overreacting because that if I came home with that, Susan
would be like, what the app is this? Okay? So yeah,

(27:55):
and you know her name clearly, yes, I do. Okay,
So we will wait for the name Emily on War
of the Roses. So we'll call and Jenny will trap
him into sending roses to somebody, and then he should
definitely say Emily, nobody else and especially not the.

Speaker 6 (28:15):
Cowork Yes, yes, you're a crop guy.

Speaker 1 (28:19):
All right, we'll find out what he does on probably
the weirdest War of the Roses in a long time
coming up. And now the dramatic conclusion of War of
the Roses. Well under can help one kd w B
all right, if you'd missed this one. It was a

(28:41):
head turner, a headshaker, jaw ropper, that's a good one. Basically,
she is seeing a guy and she picks up his
phone because there's a picture on his phone that she
wants to send to herself. Now, there is ample evidence
that he's not guilty, but the fact that he doesn't
put a lock coat on his phone, yeah, or she

(29:02):
knows it. Yeah, So she opens his phone. She scrolling
through for this picture, sees a picture of a boob.
It's a video of a boob. So she plays it
and it is a his coworker. There in the car.
She is expressing breast milk into his coffee. God, and
she's like, what is this. He's like, oh, yeah, that's

(29:23):
kind of funny. Yeah, I forgot to tell you about
that one. So she puts breast milk in her coffee
and she said, do you want to try it? So
we're at Cariboo and so she takes the cap off,
pulls the boob out, puts the breast milk in there.
That's kind of funny, ha ha. And she's like, no,
it's weird, and it is weird. It is weird because
it's a coworker. If it was her, that'd be a

(29:45):
different story. And then the fact that he didn't say
anything about.

Speaker 5 (29:49):
It, yeah, like it didn't think to be like, ah,
this was a funny thing that happened.

Speaker 2 (29:53):
People on texting, and I are just like, what the heck?
I would murder my boyfriend if he did something like that.

Speaker 5 (30:00):
On texted and saying who's the father of the baby?
I can't imagine he would find.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
A fa Yeah, that's a good point. I hadn't even
thought about that one. So we're gonna make the phone
call and see who he sends the roses to on
War of the Roses on Katie WB.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Ok, that's all the time I needed from you today, Ryan,
Like I said, I do have a dozen romantic roses
to send out for taking the time to do the survey.
So what I'll need from you next is who do
you want to send the roses to?

Speaker 11 (30:36):
Oh?

Speaker 12 (30:36):
Sure, you send me to Emily.

Speaker 3 (30:41):
Got it perfect?

Speaker 1 (30:44):
Okay, are you ready for some interesting information? Ryan?

Speaker 12 (30:50):
Okay?

Speaker 3 (30:51):
Yeah right, my supervisor.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
Yeah, Well, this whole thing is just a it's a trap.
It's a fake. It's a trick. It is not a survey.
There's no roses, but we really wanted to find out.
Let me explain who I am. So we're on the radio,
we're over at Katie WB, and we wanted to see
Ryan who you would send roses to. That's kind of
a funny bit, right, Oh okay, yeah, and you did

(31:16):
choose Emily. And the funny thing is Emily is listening
right now because Emily wanted you to choose. Say hi, Emily, Hi, Ron, Hi, Yes, Pries.
So it's all been a trap, but Emily was a
little bit weirded out. She just told us what we'll
call the breast milk story.

Speaker 6 (31:40):
Yeah, oh yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (31:44):
So after hearing about this, Emily tell Ryan kind of
what you had told us.

Speaker 6 (31:53):
I mean, Ryan gave me be it. I mean, there's
I told them about the video and there's no way
you should be drinking another one's breast knock or have
a view of it. And I'm just like, why, you know,
I'm telling them, like, why would you keep a video
that feels so intimate? Why would you not tell me
about it? Why would you sit there with her view
belt and and keep a video, Like if you did,

(32:16):
why wouldn't you come home and just tell me, like
so you know, like casually, like you never believe what
Catherine did today. It's crazy.

Speaker 1 (32:24):
All good questions, Ryan, I mean, what it's none of
my business, but I mean we're all here. What is
your response to that?

Speaker 6 (32:32):
I mean I thought it was funny. Uh, I don't
I think it was a big enough thing to bring home.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
Did you did you drink the coffee?

Speaker 12 (32:44):
Yeah? I mean that's that's like the punchline, sorry, punchline.

Speaker 6 (32:50):
Yeah. Yeah, Like I this is this is so too
weird for me. I just like I can't get over
the fact that you just drink nxpress Melton and the
video and I'm gonna I's gonna take all time for
me and like being with the weirdness of what happened.
And I just think we need a break right now
so I can get clear on all of the above

(33:11):
and feel too strange.

Speaker 1 (33:13):
I think that's valid.

Speaker 6 (33:14):
Yeah, okay for saying that.

Speaker 1 (33:16):
Yeah, how do you feel about that? Ryan? Do you
are you still sticking to your guns like she's overreacting.

Speaker 12 (33:23):
Yeah, I don't think it's that big of a deal.

Speaker 6 (33:29):
Okay, Well, I think in the fact you don't think
it's a big deal. It's a good, good enough reason
for me to take a little space, I think right now, Okay.

Speaker 1 (33:39):
What do you think about this one?

Speaker 5 (33:41):
Is it?

Speaker 1 (33:41):
Okay? We getting a lot of responses on this one.
So he was basically his co worker put breast belk
into his coffee. She thought, well, there must be a
more intimate relationship, and he's like, no, it's gay. You're
really overreacting to this whole thing. So there's a lot
of responses from people who are saying I would never.

Speaker 5 (34:03):
Well, somebody did text it and I read it earlier
that said who is the father of this baby?

Speaker 1 (34:06):
I can't imagine he would find it funny.

Speaker 5 (34:08):
And then someone else texted and saying, maybe he is
the father of the baby.

Speaker 3 (34:14):
Cody's on the phone.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
Cody, what about the breast milk and the coffee and
the co worker? What do you think, Cody?

Speaker 11 (34:21):
Oh?

Speaker 12 (34:21):
Gosh, So I work at let's just say a sports
bar downtown, and you know, they're long shifts, a lot
of things going on. One of my coworkers, who recently
had a baby's pumping and begging and saving her milk,
and one day she was like, I feel like I

(34:42):
pumped more milk than this, and we were like what,
and she's like, no, this was definitely like full. And
so we watched the cameras and one of the other
bartenders was caught going in there and pouring it into
a glass and like chugging her breast milk.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
Wow, chugging just like you know, just glass full of
breast milk, and I can see it like pouring down
the corners of his mouth. What happened to this coworker anyway, Well.

Speaker 12 (35:17):
He doesn't work there anymore, but it's not why he
was still there for a while. And the craziest thing
is after this incident, she would like give him breast
milk to drink and he would make like chocolate milk
at work. And it was just the weird like okay,
married and every it's like it was just this whole thing.
I was like, what is happening?

Speaker 1 (35:36):
I wonder to me, as an ignorant male, I think
I think of breast milk as such a personal intimate
thing that but I know that women will sell their
breast milk to other women. To me, again, ignorant male,
to me, that's like just weird. It's your giving your
baby somebody else's breast milk, and trust me, I know

(35:57):
it's done and I know it's a good thing. Yeah,
but I am an immature twelve year old at heart,
and to me it's icky.

Speaker 5 (36:03):
Well, sometimes they need it, like if you don't express
enough yourself understand, Yeah, for sure.

Speaker 12 (36:07):
But then to my husband and I actually adopted twins,
and I've been on the show a couple of times,
but we adopted twins and we've had donated breast milk before,
and even that, I'm just like, this is just like
so personally, like thank you so much for giving us
something like, yeah, it's very personal. I don't know, it's
just it was just like the weirdest thing I think
I've ever experienced that work.

Speaker 1 (36:29):
Yeah, you and I are. It is definitely because to me,
it said to personal, bodily fluid, and I know it's
breast milk and it's not sexual, but it's still personal.
But then again, we'll take a stranger's blood. If you
are in a car accident and you get your femur
lopped off and now you're spurting blood everywhere, you're gonna

(36:51):
put You're gonna give you a bud.

Speaker 2 (36:54):
And there's so many different levels of weird. Like it's
the number one rule that you don't eat or drink
someone else's food drinks in the fridge, and this guy
is not only doing that but also taking prized breast milk.

Speaker 1 (37:06):
But then she would make some form and then he
would make a milkshake out of it. Yeah, well, hey
is it Cody?

Speaker 3 (37:14):
Cody?

Speaker 1 (37:14):
Yeah, Cody, we love you, thanks for being on the show.
Text messages Jim bros By breast milk for the games,
so women will sell their breast milk to bodybuilders to
bulk up because it's pro it's all protein.

Speaker 3 (37:34):
I mean, right, yeah, I mean don't ask me. I
don't breakdown of breast milk.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
Jinny, you're a Jim bro tell us about.

Speaker 3 (37:45):
Okay, Yeah, I am a Jim Brow. Here, I get
my proaching and every day, let me go get my
smoother right now.

Speaker 2 (37:52):
They're made of carb, carbs, proteins, and fast, which are
the three macros that you do want to focus on.

Speaker 3 (37:56):
So that would make a lot of sense.

Speaker 1 (37:59):
Here's what it says, y'all are overreacting. Humans are raised
in other species breast milk, so we do drink cow
and goat milk or whatever. It's weird how human breast
milk thing is weird? Okay, if I was the only
one that thought it was weird, then I would be
the weird one. But I'm not the only one, and
it's not weird. It's just strange. Strange. I think would

(38:22):
not want Susan like pumping breast milk when she had
babies and like giving it to the guys down at
the office and going, oh, it's natural. You know we
drink cow's milk, Why not susan milk?

Speaker 11 (38:33):
Right?

Speaker 5 (38:33):
Well, with the thing with this is that if I'm
not going to go on a coffee run with a
cow sitting in my passenger seat and the cow goes, hey,
you want to know what's funny here, Let me put
some of my milk into your coffee. And I'll be like, oh, yeah,
That's what's weird is that it's a person that I'm
having a conversation, right, and they whip out their boob,
which usually is covered up. A cow's boob is never

(38:54):
covered up, so it's not weird. And the English and
they can't sea.

Speaker 1 (38:57):
Cows can't fit in the car either, and they can't
fit the car. Hey, Alissa.

Speaker 11 (39:02):
Yeah, if you just.

Speaker 1 (39:04):
Turned the radio on A. Lissa's calling because on War
of the Roses she busted her boyfriend basically drinking her
his coworker's breast milk out of his coffee. They were
both complicit in this. When she's like, do you want
me to sport it in your coffee, he's like, you
old Troy. So there's a video. She found the video
and she's like, why are you and your coworker sharing
her breast milk? Oh, it's funny, just tru what's funny?

(39:26):
What a big deal? What did you want to say
about it?

Speaker 11 (39:29):
Alyssa, I just wanted to say, like, as a breastfeeding
mom and pumping a lot, I think it's kind of
funny if somebody would have taken a shot. I mean
not like straight out of the boom, but if somebody
was like, I dare you to take a shot and
they were like, all right, I would have thrown it
kind of funny.

Speaker 1 (39:47):
So let's say you're working down at X y Z
Auto and there you are, You're in the breakroom and
you're like, oh, you know what'd be funny is for
you Troy, to try a shot on my breast milk
and Troy's like, boo, all right, I'm game. You think
that it's funny, Yeah, it would be kind Okay, Now
isn't that interesting how people have different attitudes.

Speaker 2 (40:05):
You know, it's fine, but Alissa, are you letting Troy
take a video of you doing it?

Speaker 11 (40:11):
I mean, not coming out of the boob, but like
if there was like just like a little thing already
pumped like a shot, yeah, like a bear. Yeah, yeah,
that would be funny.

Speaker 1 (40:21):
But that's a funny bit.

Speaker 11 (40:23):
But like drinking breast milk is kind of weird. But
like if somebody just wanted to take a sipper or
try it, I don't know, it's natural.

Speaker 5 (40:33):
It was all natural, right out of the boob, like
it's right out of the tap.

Speaker 1 (40:37):
Yeah yeah, just give me, I'll take the breast cloth,
the spout. Yeah, thank you. Alyssa, there's another text. We're
going to wrap this up pretty soon here and move
on with our lives. I don't think that human breast
milk is the weird part the weird party. He saw
his coworker's nurple, he filmed and yeah, he filmed it
and never said anything. I think that's a weird part.
You could put some in a cup in the bathroom,

(40:59):
come back and stick it into coffee. The fact that
he wanted to do the whole thing and with somebody
there is that's what's intimate. Yeah, but then again, some
people don't see boobs as intimate, so what about that argument.
Boobs are not intimate. They are just boobs, so stop
making them intimate.

Speaker 5 (41:13):
Someone Texas saying it's weird he recorded it. That's the
weird part. But also, I mean there's a lot of
weirdness about it. I think it just depends on what
you think is weird and how many aspects of this
story is weird. So I definitely see where Emily is
coming from. Where she's like, you know what, I'm good.
I think I'm going to take a break makes sense.
She can go and think about.

Speaker 1 (41:33):
It to kind of figure the whole thing out. All right,
I told you this War of the Roses would spark
some conversation. Talk about it with your coworkers at work
and say, did you hear War of the Roses today?
What did you think of that? There's your conversation starter
when you start your big meeting around the conference room
table today. All right, it is Katie WV on the

(41:54):
day ran in the morning show go Wolves, Wolves in
Game two Oklahoma City tonight. You know the Wolves, they
have a chance. They have a chance if the team,
if the Oklahoma City team bus won't start and they
can't make it to the arena, the Wolves have a chance.

Speaker 2 (42:08):
Yeah, So well gloss at them and hopefully, you know,
somebody makes their bus breakdown.

Speaker 1 (42:14):
Yeah, I hope. So we were at CUB the other day.
It's really interesting. We met so many fun people out
of CUB and I remember one in particular. I remember all,
I remember every single one of them, but there was
one in particular that said something that Jenny and I
were like, really.

Speaker 2 (42:27):
She said, don't ever room with your best friend in college.
And so she went on to go and tell us
how she went to Saint Thomas and by like the
second month, then best friends like their whole life, hated
each other, oh each other, not friends anymore.

Speaker 3 (42:45):
Like to this day.

Speaker 2 (42:47):
I mean, you learn a lot about people when you
have to share a ten by ten foot cube, which
is what dorms are.

Speaker 3 (42:52):
They're tiny.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
And honestly, I agree with her because I made that
mistake of not she wasn't my best best friend but
she was one of my very close friends and then.

Speaker 4 (43:01):
Excited, like, oh, hey, so excited I got to be
my friend is gonna be awesome.

Speaker 2 (43:05):
And then you learn that, like if someone is super
neurotic about certain things and then suddenly you can't find
something because they put it away and they didn't tell you,
and you're not even that messy, all of a sudden,
there's a lot of tension. And then there's just the
fact that, like you don't know each other's lifestyles and
you're a dorm room is so tiny to share that
with someone who you're close with, it's like someone you're

(43:27):
not close with who's a stranger. You can kind of
just like ignore each other and leave each other alone,
which sounds weird because you're sharing a room, but like
to go from best friends to then like hating each other.
I wish I wouldn't have roomed with my friend.

Speaker 3 (43:39):
We we were not friends for a couple of years.

Speaker 2 (43:42):
By like senior year of college, we mended that relationship
back around, yes, and.

Speaker 3 (43:47):
I mean we chat every once a while. We're not
really friends anymore.

Speaker 2 (43:50):
But uh, I wish I would have roomed with a
random person myself, because I do not think rooming with
your best friend in college is good. And also like
college is where you start meeting new p and I
think you get in a little bit of a crutch
when you have your friend right there.

Speaker 1 (44:04):
Yeah, that's a good point. You don't have to go out.
You can stay there in your room or go with
your friends somewhere.

Speaker 5 (44:08):
I think even I mean even beyond college. Like I
moved in with friends from college right out of college,
and so we had like a three bedroom apartment, and
one of them we were I was still really close
with her, she was great, loved her. The other one,
I was like, I don't understand how I was ever
friends with you, because living with her like ruined that
friendship entirely. The second we moved out, like the last

(44:29):
day we moved out, I never saw her again.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
So I've still never seen her again. But you were
friends when you moved in.

Speaker 5 (44:34):
We were friends when we moved in, and then we
were no longer. What broke you to apart? I think
it's it turns into because I ended up living with
the other one for like six more years, so it
turns into like a pick your battle situation.

Speaker 1 (44:47):
And one of them I.

Speaker 5 (44:48):
Could like forgive a lot of the annoying things that
she did to me, because I'm sure I annoyed her
as well. But the other one, it was like everything
she did was so abnot anxious or disrespectful or just
like clueless, and I couldn't forgive it. So I was like,
I don't like this person. An example just that she would, like,
you know, leave dishes everywhere, and she was like, you guys,

(45:12):
I'm going to need the big bedroom because I need
that space.

Speaker 1 (45:15):
And we're like why over everybody else ran.

Speaker 5 (45:19):
Exactly, and she just it made it seem like it
was her apartment that we were living in all the
time and it was not fun to live with her.
So yeah, the second like we moved out and she
moved out early because she's like, you guys, I need
to leave, Like I need to leave so I can't
do any of the cleaning, Like are you kidding me?
So I never saw her again, and I still have
never seen her.

Speaker 1 (45:39):
No loss.

Speaker 5 (45:40):
So but yeah, I mean it's it really is like
which ones can you forgive?

Speaker 1 (45:45):
Like the quirks can you forgive? I had a different experience.

Speaker 4 (45:48):
I did room with the friend, and I'm a person
that just I like my own space. But I would
rather room with somebody that I know as opposed to
don't know. Because even though yes, after time, this friend
that I room with had you know, bad habits that
had it like or slept till noon, or always had
people in the dorm smoking weed, at least it's easier
for me to have a conversation with my friend than
it is a stranger, because that's stranger can be like, no,

(46:10):
screw you, like I don't know you, I don't care
about you, and this is weirder, or it's harder to
get used to somebody that you don't know, is weirder habits.

Speaker 1 (46:16):
Having never had a college You guys all had a
college roommate, So I never went to a college where
you had a roommate. But don't people usually when they
have a roommate, they don't know. They'll be like, yeah,
we've been best friends since we were roommates in college.
So a lot of the time a stranger will become
your best friend.

Speaker 7 (46:34):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (46:35):
Is that only in the movies?

Speaker 7 (46:36):
No?

Speaker 3 (46:36):
I No, I think that that's very true.

Speaker 2 (46:38):
I mean I lived with seven girls in college, and
two of the girls had lived together ever since their
freshman year because they were random roommates, and then they
remain friends and were roommates all four years of college
and stuff too. So I do think that some people, Yeah,
you get a random roommate and then you become best
friends or you just lived with them for a year
and then you move on with your life.

Speaker 1 (46:56):
Yeah that was me. I lived with mine for a
year and I moved on with my life. And then
I was an RA so I had my own room,
so I only had a random roommate. Ever. Yeah, I
remember my daughter Beth, she was at the U and
she got a roommate that she didn't know. And I
remember I went to visit Beth in a room or
whatever it was, and there were dirty dishes in the

(47:17):
sink that wasn't meant to wash dishes in. It was
a wash your face, wash your hands kind of a sink,
and there was like old noodles and dirty dishes in
the sink. And She's like, Yep, that's her, that's what
she does. Carson worked a room with three other guys
at Berkeley in Boston, and he's still best friends with
one of the guys, lost touch with the other two.

Speaker 3 (47:38):
Were they all random?

Speaker 5 (47:39):
Me?

Speaker 1 (47:39):
Bor did he know that random totally.

Speaker 5 (47:41):
Yeah, I think that's a recommendation if like you're going
into college to leave the comfort of having a friend,
Like if you have a friend who's going to the
same college, like, yeah, you could room with that person,
but like try to room with somebody else, because then
both of you will have a new person and you'll
be four instead of two.

Speaker 3 (47:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (48:00):
Cool, but I'm still against it. I just I don't
like random people that I don't know. There was me,
it was me and my friend that we roomed with,
and then two other people because we did like a suite,
and there was one guy that we didn't know from
a can of paint and he.

Speaker 1 (48:12):
Such an old people saying.

Speaker 4 (48:14):
He used to leave like raw onions just all around
the refrigerator, like would take a bite of a whole apple.
Yeah it's like an apple, then just throw it in
the refrigerator and with dirty all the pots and pants
and I'd be like, no, this guy has.

Speaker 3 (48:28):
To go Wow, it's crazy.

Speaker 2 (48:31):
I mean, once my roommate and I started having issues,
I just started rooming with a uf M football team,
so it worked out.

Speaker 1 (48:36):
Because I can't tell if that was a jok or not.
I don't think it was. It could have been so
rare
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