Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Mark Simone.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Hey, we'll get to Israel, we'll get to California, we'll
get to the UN and a lot more coming up.
Jimmy Falo will be with us later this hour. This
is actually it's Thursday. This is actually the first real
actual autumn day, fall day. I mean not on the calendar,
but it actually, for the first time, actually feels like fall.
It's nippy outside, it's chili. It's fifty three degrees right now.
(00:31):
Look at that temperature right now, fifty three. Let me see,
we'll go up to sixty degrees. That's it. It'll hit
sixty at three o'clock. Then it's right back into the fifties.
First actual fall like day to day in New York City.
So that was good news. We just heard on the
newscast about the United Nations getting rid of a quarter
(00:53):
twenty five percent of their forces. They call them UN
peacekeeping force. They've never kept any peace anywhere where. They're
those idiots with the blue helmets. They're the most useless
people in the world. They're blaming the US cutting funding
to the UN. Well, if you're going to defund something,
it's not the police. Defund the UN. There's nothing more
deserving of defunding than the United Nations. They are the
(01:17):
most useless, anti Semitic VIP lounge for dictators. Just close
the whole thing, get it out of New York. Yankees
lost last night heartbreaking. Well, you know what, it wasn't heartbreaking.
You could see it coming, couldn't you. You didn't really
think they were going to pull this off. It's not
just the same. It's not the same Yankees from years ago.
(01:38):
Outside of a couple of players, it's not Yankee quality now.
Bad Bunny was at the game three rows back behind
home plate and at one point when they all when
they sang God Bless America, and the whole audience stood.
Pictures show Bad Bunny did not stand during God Bless America.
(02:00):
I don't know what's wrong with this guy. He's not
He's a great musically, he's great, and if you saw
him host Saturday Night Live, it's quite a charming guy.
He's good. He was great as a host of Saturday
Night Live. But he's a crazy left wing guy and
he's got that deep hatred of ice. He doesn't want
he doesn't want the laws enforced. You know, basically, ice
(02:21):
is just law enforcement throwing illegals out of the country
that are here illegally. That's the law. He's supposed to
do that. But you know, the left wing nuts, the
bad Bunny, I guess is now one of them. They
decide what laws they want enforced, what laws they don't
want enforced, and illegals running all over the place. They
(02:42):
love that for whatever reasons. But he apparently caused now.
I don't know what he's up to. You know, sometimes
sometimes they're just left wing cooks, and sometimes especially when
they're in the entertainment world, sometimes they're just calculating the
whole thing. They got spreadsheets. They're calculating if I appeal
more to the left wing wackos, will I be more popular,
(03:04):
will I sell more songs? Well, it could be a
little calculation on this part.
Speaker 3 (03:10):
Hey.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
The New Jersey debate was last night. It's very, very
very close. Chittarelly's not the greatest candidate in the world.
He should win, he'd be the better governor. But something
about him, he's not the best candidate. Something a little
off putting about him. But he took on Mikey Cheryl.
It was rough debate. They really went after each other.
(03:32):
It was civil, but it was tough. They were both
tough on each other. She had a big lead over him.
She's lost the lead in the most recent polls. Chitarelly
is caught up to her. And again, those poles are
generally slanted and rigged against Republicans, so if he's tied
in the polls, he's probably ahead. So she's a little nervous.
(03:53):
She was changing her tone on a lot of issues.
Here's some of the last night's debate.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
Then he was paid to develop an app so that
people who are addicted could more easily get access.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
He worked for a drug company for a while. When
he went back to the private sex, something with a
drug company was putting some drug out there. She kept
going after him for that.
Speaker 4 (04:10):
Then he was paid to develop an app so that
people who were addicted could more easily get access to opioids.
And so as he made millions, as these opioid companies
made billions, tens of thousands of New Jersey ands.
Speaker 5 (04:25):
Died, mister Chilly.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
First of all, shame on you. Second of all, shame
on you, sir, Shame on you.
Speaker 6 (04:34):
During the Bidy administration, she had no problem whatsoever with
tens of thousands of people crashing our border each and
every day, not knowing.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
What impact they had in our communities.
Speaker 6 (04:42):
With regard to fentanyl crisis, fetanyl abuse, fetanyl distribution, vaccination rates,
and alike, talk to your local police, talk to your
county prosecutes. In New Jersey, since the border has been secured,
fetanyl crisis has decreased significantly.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
Yeah, I can't say he won that round. I mean,
she's wrong on the fentanyl, but he's wrong on the opiate.
She kind of got him on that one. That round
I don't think helped him. Here's more.
Speaker 6 (05:07):
With regard to everything she just said about my professional career,
which provided my family, it's a lie.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
I'm proud of my career.
Speaker 4 (05:13):
You get thirty second, I'm happy to publish the information.
And here's the fact I work because I think our
kids deserve better. I think the people you got addicted
and died deserve better than you. Then I'll tell you, yeah,
tens of thousands here, as you published misinformation, as you've
got more people addicted, as you've worked to develop, got
paid to develop an app so that more people could
(05:35):
get more opioids and die. But here's the fact college, I,
even during even.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
I got the walk at my college, and I'm.
Speaker 4 (05:42):
So glad that you then went on to kill tens
of thousands of people in New Jersey, including chi as
they got just wrote the law. In fact, your campaign
right now is under federal investigation for how you illegally
got access to my records, so to say that right now,
and I think you're trying to divert from the fact
that you killed tens of thousands of people, broke the wall.
Speaker 2 (06:02):
She kind of got him on that one. You know,
he said, you didn't walk in your graduation. There was
a cheating scandal at the Naval Academy, and she refused
to name whoever she knew was cheating, and as a result,
she could not walk in the graduation. But I mean,
that's pretty bad, but it's not as bad as selling opioid,
going to work for an opioid company, putting on an
(06:22):
app that leads people to hope. She kind of got
him on that one. The other thing he's referring to
of the stock trades, she's very sleazy on that. As
a member of Congress, she was engaged in all kinds
of insider trading, which is legal. They're allowed to do
insider trading. In Congress, they get word ahead of everybody
else about test results of who's going to get a contract,
who's going to get a ruling, and you can make
(06:44):
you can make a fortune trading stock. So she made
seven million trading stocks and then tried to deny it.
But as sleazy as that is, it's typical. Everybody in
Congress is doing it. So but the opioid thing, that
doesn't sound good. Now, then she tried to connect him
to Trump. You know you're a Trump supporter. Will you
denounced Trump? Will you do this because she thinks that's
(07:06):
going to win over votes for her. But here's a
bit of that.
Speaker 6 (07:09):
I disagree with the president on the Empire wind farm
or for Long Island. We hope that that doesn't mean
there'll be wind farms off our Jersey shore.
Speaker 1 (07:17):
He's put a temporary halt on that. I will make
it permanent when I'm governor.
Speaker 6 (07:20):
But let me be clear, no matter who is it's
in the White House, my job is to stand up
with a nine point three million citizens of the state,
and I weir I will I will fiercely advocate for
them at all times.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
All right, But she kept going after.
Speaker 4 (07:33):
Mon Trump he's shown zero science was standing up to
this president. In fact, the President himself called Jack one
hundred percent mega, and he's shown every side sign of
being that. He said it's his job to support the
President of the United States.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
See that's good talk for Democrats. He's this guy, this
guy's mega. Oh god, he wants to make America great. WHOA,
that's just awful. He won't stand up to the president
on what and what fighting crime? Ending the war is?
What are you supposed to stand up to them? Here's Chidarelli,
you speaking of crime.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
And we're going to be in law and order state again.
Speaker 6 (08:08):
We do that by not having sanctuary cities, and we
do that by reforming bail reform Bill cash list bail
has created a professional criminal in New Jersey who's learned
how to gain the system. Talk to your local police
about arrest release repeal. My opponent has not said a
word about getting rid of sanctuary cities, the Immigrant Trust Directive.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
She's not set a word about reforming bail reform.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
Yeah, that no bail note jail that Cuomo gave us.
That is the worst thing in the world, and they
do have it in New Jersey.
Speaker 4 (08:36):
I'm the only one who's actually worked closely with law
enforcement prosecuting cases to keep dangerous people off the streets.
I'm very proud of my record there, and I continue
to push forward in that work. So I've worked with
all of the police chiefs in my district on our
auto thefts to make sure we had license plate readers
federally funded so we could drive down the rash of
(08:56):
auto thefts. So again and again and again, I've worked
on public.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
Say yeah, but doesn't mean you were any good at it.
That doesn't mean you did the right thing when it
comes to that. That's the problem. You know that no bail,
no jail. That was the worst thing ever. Let the
criminals out. No bail, no jail. It was Cuomo that
pushed it. It's Cuomo back then. He didn't just sign it.
(09:19):
He pushed for no bail, no jail. Take a listen
to Cuomo as governor. It's just the worst thing in
the world. He's pushing this, no bail, not jail.
Speaker 7 (09:28):
You're black or white, that's whether you're richer or We're
gonna end the cast bail system.
Speaker 8 (09:34):
Once and for all.
Speaker 7 (09:35):
We're going to do it in New York, and we're
gonna do it this year. We have to have moral
alternatives to incarceration, strength timelines on court dates, and we
have to eliminate the racial bias that is pervasive in
our criminal justice system. As governor of the State of
(09:57):
New York, I can't tell you how proud I am
to have closed more prisons than any governor in the
history of the state. And I'm not done yet.
Speaker 2 (10:10):
Yeah, he's just an absolute left wing kook. As governor, hiss,
no bail, no jail. Now, he's the guy that caused
the crime wave in a number of ways. Of the
no bail, no jail, the closing prisons, letting the prisoners loose,
taken away, the qualified immunity from cops. That means they
can be personally sued by anybody they approach, so they
(10:31):
have to approach less people. Now no bail, no jail
that Cuomo gave us. Look at this case. Here's a
perfect result. This happened this week. He got a maniac
on the subway with a big sword. He's wielding a
huge sword. He's a guy with twenty three priors. Oh
(10:51):
excuse me, thirty three priors. Thirty three priors. But it's
no bail, no jail, He's free to roam the streets.
He's deranged. He's got a rap sheet a mile long.
He's on the subway. He takes out his sword. He
beats a guy to a pulp. An older man savagely
beats Some sources said he attacked the sixty four year
(11:13):
old victim in the subway station. He said it was
a shockingly brutal attack, pummeling his face, stomping on his
head fifteen times. The beating lasted ten minutes, and at
the end of ten minutes, he took the victim's wallet
and ID, which delayed the identification by the police. Left
him unconscious, battered. The man died roughly an hour later.
(11:35):
Now this is the guy that got out on no bail,
note jail, despite thirty three prior arrests. Why did he
beat the guy so much? What started this? He said,
I don't like the way he looked at me. A
witnesses say he held the door open for this guy
to come in. The old man held the door open
for this guy to come in, but the guy didn't
(11:57):
like the way he looked at him. So, but this
is the result of this no bail, no jail. Unbelievable
that Cuomo pushed this on us. Now he's trying to
defend the no bail, no Jail. You've seen him do
interviews this week. There was one yesterday, Good Day in
New York and he said, well, though lots of states
have the no bail, no jail, yeah, there are a
lot of other states that haven't, and in every single
(12:19):
one it caused a massive crime wave. It was a
disaster everywhere. And that's the thing with Mam Donnie. You know,
like most Champagne socialists, they're pushing ideas and plans that
have failed everywhere in the world every time they've been tried. Now,
Hokeel's got a real problem here. Hochel's in big trouble.
She's dropping in the polls as a result of her
(12:40):
support for Mom Donnie. Now there's other things besides Endorsingum.
He's got this crazy idea of taking control away from
the police commissioner for disciplinary actions. He wants to hand
it to the what do you call that, the criminal
citizen criminal citizen review Board. Well as may you can
(13:00):
stack that with the most left wing communists or anybody
you want, and that way, no cop is protected So
if a cop has nobody to watch his back, nobody
to protect him, he's not going to do anything. He's
not going to approach any crime. He's just going to
run and hide the whole time. Who can blame him?
But will Hokeel step in on that? She says, well,
(13:23):
we'll talk about it. I'll talk about it, Hokeel said
on MSNBC. Listen, nothing's going to happen in this city
without me being aware of it and involved. Hokeel did
say she's firmly pushing Mom Donnie to keep the current
NYPD commissioner, Jessica Tish when he wins. Now, everybody likes
(13:44):
Jessica Tish good police commissioner. So she says she's pushing
him to keep. Now we know we've seen it already
in a couple of cases. Mom Donnie never listens to Hokeel.
He totally dismisses her and doesn't care what she has
to say. So, how do you stop this guy? Well,
a week from tonight. One week from tonight is the
mayoral debate. If Curtis can be amazing in that debate,
(14:06):
or something bad happens with Mam Donni in the debate,
that could turn it all around. That could change things.
The other thing is they're still working in Washington looking
into Mam Donnie's money. Tens and tens and millions of
dollars have flown in to his campaign. A lot of
it they think has come from foreign sources. If they
(14:27):
can trace foreign money directly into Mam Donnie's campaign, they
can take him out of the race. They can eliminate
him from the race. The other thing going on, and
I've heard this now from a Justice Department official, if
Mom Donnie does anything anti semitic as mayor anything anti semitic,
(14:47):
they can come in and remove him, or arrest him
or charge him with hate crime. The Department of Justice
is looking at that. There's all kinds of laws against
discrimination and hate crime, friese. Anything anti semitic, they will
do everything they can to block them. Hey, Bill Belichick,
looks like they're trying to get rid of him at that.
(15:09):
That college doesn't want him anymore. The school has had,
they say, preliminary conversations about firing Belichick. They can't stand
the twenty four year old girlfriend who's bossing everybody around.
Jordan Hudson. The complication is if you get rid of Belichick.
There's a twenty million dollar buyout. They are looking at
alleged rules violations. If they can prove violations of their rules,
(15:33):
that will get rid of the twenty million dollars half buyout.
They can get rid of that. There's all kinds of
rules they could look for. Things have gotten so bad.
You know. Hulu was doing a documentary on the school
and Belichick. The school canceled it. They don't want anything
to do with it. His record is the coach there?
Not good at all? They're two and three. Listen, he
(15:54):
was only great because Brady was there. I mean, it
was pretty obvious. Who is the real spark behind the Patriots?
Was it Brady? Was it Belichick? Well, Brady left and
he goes to Tampa, nothing team, and he wins the
Super Bowl with them. Belichick without Brady doesn't win a
damn thing anywhere. He goes. Hey, we'll take some calls. Next.
(16:15):
Eight hundred three two one zero seven ten is the number.
Eight hundred three two one zero seven ten gets.
Speaker 6 (16:24):
In access to Mark by setting a free set in
the iHeartRadio app for his live show and his podcast.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
Now back to the Mark Zimone Show on wor.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
Hey, let's take some calls. Eight hundred three two one
zero seven ten is the number. Let's go to Dennis
in Huntington. Dennis, how you doing him?
Speaker 8 (16:46):
Mark Kelly, you good show. Thanks for having me a call.
So I'm going to put something out there in your opinion.
This great article today in the will Street channel about
the subsidies Obamacare, and it will give you examples of
people who need to pay nothing and they're making a
lot of money too. Just won't business just you know,
a lot of people pay monthly premiums for health insurance
(17:08):
and I'm looking at these numbers. I'm woud these numbers
are pretty well for people making.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
Yeah, but I know Obamacare, a lot of people are
paying very high amounts, ridiculous amounts. They called it the
Affordable Care Act, but it turned out not to be
so affordable. One of the things that Republicans want to
do is clean up the roles of who's on it.
You got a lot of dead people on it. Apparently
when somebody dies, somebody else can take their zip code
and continue the not the social Security number, and continue
(17:36):
the coverage that stuff like that. You got a lot
of illegals on there. I know Democrats will say no, illegals,
they're not allowed on it. Well, there's many ways around that,
and that's one of the things Republicans want to want
to clean up. Let's go to Lauren in New Jersey. Lauren,
how you doing? Yeah?
Speaker 9 (17:53):
Hey, Mark, Hey, you know. Yeah, no amount of healthcare
is going to help a deceased individual. But in case
anyone needs any more evidence about Trump arrangements syndrome being
a real thing. Yeah, well, okay. So Trump has been
able to orchestrate a peace deal with the Middle East,
and yet the Democrats, the progressive Democrats, are unwilling to
(18:17):
negotiate for this country and do the right thing for
this country.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
Yeah, well, all that I do is just sign that
seven week extension, then go back to work. Where are
you in New Jersey? Where do you live in New Jersey?
Speaker 9 (18:30):
I'm out past Morris County.
Speaker 2 (18:32):
Oh, a little vague there. You don't want to say
exactly where. Wait, I'm out past this county? Are you
Are you on the lamb or something?
Speaker 9 (18:41):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (18:43):
Okay, Well you don't have to answer to answer.
Speaker 9 (18:48):
I'm in a beautiful air in a beautiful area of
New Jersey and watching the leaves change.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
I got it. You're somewhere you're not supposed to be
right now. All right, that's okay, good luck to you.
Let's go to a veto in Staten Island. Veto. How
you doing? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (19:02):
Hi, Mark, does I want to comment about Cuomo?
Speaker 3 (19:06):
We don't lose.
Speaker 8 (19:07):
He gets to keep all the funds that were contributed
to him by the high end.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Yeah, you get to.
Speaker 2 (19:13):
Keep the millions. That's every candidate though, you know, that's
that's everybody.
Speaker 9 (19:17):
That's why he's not Yeah, I feel that's why he's
not spending his money on campaigning.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Well, he is spending some money. He's running a lot
of commercials.
Speaker 3 (19:26):
Now.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
The reason he doesn't campaign the problem with Cuomo. He's
the world's worst debater. He stinks in debates. He's not
much of a speaker. He still hasn't opened a campaign
office anywhere. Have you ever heard of such a thing?
The last final weeks the election, still hasn't open a
campaign office. He doesn't really have much of a schedule.
(19:50):
You know, if you look at Curtis's schedule, you'd faints
just looking at the schedule. He does like four hundred
appearances today a day. He goes to every borough. He's
running around doing radio shows, TV shows. He's Cuomo does nothing.
He picks and chooses. Now, in Cuomo's defense, he's extremely unpopular.
He's got so much baggage and scandal in his past
(20:11):
that he can't go do any interview he wants because
he can't face questions. He doesn't want to be grilled
about all the awful things he did as governor. The
nursing homes, the no bail, no jail, the closing our
nuclear plant, all the stuff he screwed up. He doesn't
want to be asked about that. And I guess the
reason he doesn't do any rallies or anything like that.
(20:32):
He's worried about protesters because he killed ten thousand people
in our nursing homes and they all have kids and
families and relatives that are trying to protest him. But
he deliberately doesn't do rallies so they can't show up
to protest. And that's probably the reason he doesn't have
a campaign headquarters, because he knows the protesters will be
out in front of it all day and night. Hey,
when we come back, the Great Jimmy Fayla, very funny
(20:54):
Jimmy Fala, He's on every night now in WR nine o'clock,
also of course on Fox News, but he'll be with
us next on seven to ten WR.
Speaker 5 (21:04):
It's The Mark Simon Show on sevent TENR.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
Well the Great talk show host comedian Jimmy Fayla. He
does a great show. It's on WR now every night
nine to midnight, every weeknight nine to midnight. Check it
out tonight. He also does the best late night show
on TV Saturday nights ten o'clock on the Fox News Channel.
Jimmy Fayla, How you doing?
Speaker 3 (21:29):
I'm doing good. Mark.
Speaker 5 (21:30):
I was thrilled to hear Trump make a deal with Hamas.
Did you hear how he got it done?
Speaker 3 (21:35):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (21:35):
No? How did you get here?
Speaker 5 (21:36):
Yeah? Well, you know, obviously Netanyahu had been attacking the
bombing him quitty aggressively, but Trump said if they didn't sign,
he was going to send over Katie Porter and they
didn't want to tangle with her. If you saw that interview,
she's a fierce fighting force.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
Yeah, she's also the one who's doing a podcast and
somebody was in the way. Get that out of my
FN shot. But to be fair, you work on TV.
How many times through the years have you heard a
host yell at somebody like that, although she oh, I.
Speaker 5 (22:07):
Got to tell you. Yeah, the thing is that the
thing is, I know it goes on. But what you
see on her is that is just her vibe. Like
she wasn't yelling because someone was in her shot. She
was yelling because she yells.
Speaker 3 (22:21):
I know, the.
Speaker 5 (22:21):
Difference between a person who's like not happy with the
way things are going and a person who is just
not happy.
Speaker 3 (22:29):
She kind of has that energy.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
Yeah, and she's a Democrat. Will she get out of
the race? I guess she has to now.
Speaker 3 (22:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (22:38):
The other guy didn't drop out for saying he wants
to kill his opponent. I don't know what Barr is
actually probably not. I mean, I guess her biggest crime
is she didn't say it in the text message.
Speaker 3 (22:49):
No, I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
That could be. Hey, Jimmy Fayler, were you at the
Yankee game last night?
Speaker 1 (22:56):
You better believe it.
Speaker 3 (22:58):
And you know what I noticed.
Speaker 5 (23:00):
It's Yankee Stadium obviously, Uh, you know, tough loss. We
wanted to win that game. And I have formerly called
now that Toronto beat US. I have called Trump and
demanded that he invade Canada, which I think should happen
two hundred percent tariffs whatever we got.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
Uh but but you kind of could see that coming,
couldn't you. The law?
Speaker 5 (23:20):
Yeah, I mean this, this, this team has been pretty
inconsistent all year. I mean, but what do you want
for three hundred and twenty million dollars? You know, it's
like maybe if we were giving these guys some money.
You know, it's like these guys got enough stress from
trying to live on those forty million dollars salaries. It's like,
you know, when when's there said one of the salad days,
(23:41):
going to come in for the for Anthony Fulty and
that supermodel girlfriend is you.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
Know, hey, I was the game was over, but I
didn't know it was over. Like he struck out the
guys is that two outset? The crowd was just silent,
There was no What was it like in the stadium?
Did everybody just silently file out?
Speaker 1 (23:59):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (23:59):
Well, in my section, I was in right field, and
I don't know, I don't know if you know this,
but everyone in right field drinks like they're pledging a fraternity. Okay,
So in my section, the rest of the stadium was,
as you just said, it was like a seance, okay,
but my section continued to hurl profanities at the other
(24:20):
players even after they have left. Like if you ever
you ever walk down the street and see a guy
arguing with a parking meter, This guy's.
Speaker 3 (24:28):
Out to lunch.
Speaker 5 (24:29):
That was Section one oh five and Yankee Stadium last night.
They were lunatics crazy. But the one nice thing is
on the way out, you know, everybody was in a
bad enough mood that I didn't have to stop and
take a bunch of you know, like fifty pictures. There's
a lot of Fox fans at Yankee Stadium, and everybody
is I'm very friendly. I love, genuinely love meeting people,
(24:51):
but I'm bad at unmeeting them. Meaning if someone comes
up to me and says, well they watch the show.
I talked to them for thirteen minutes and I get
home at two in the morning and my wife.
Speaker 3 (24:58):
Thinks I was in a gentleman club or something.
Speaker 5 (25:01):
And I'm like, no, I was actually hanging out with
a fifty year old man who was wearing a baseball myth.
The complete opposite of getting women.
Speaker 7 (25:08):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
You know, when those fans come up to you, you can't stop.
I mean, you can talk and say nice things, but
you got to keep moving. You can't stop or your corner.
Speaker 3 (25:16):
Yeah, I know you got to. You gotta learn that.
But listen, I been. I haven't been.
Speaker 5 (25:20):
I haven't been like a public figure for as long
as you've been a famous person.
Speaker 3 (25:24):
Like I watched.
Speaker 5 (25:25):
I've watched you get in and out of Fox a
few times. Now, you're good at it. I'm learning and
it helped. I was on the road with Hannity.
Speaker 3 (25:30):
It helped too.
Speaker 5 (25:31):
I think that's why he learned karate, because you know,
I'm so tired of getting groped by these old ladies
at the book signings. He just busts out around out.
Speaker 2 (25:38):
Hannity's the best at getting out, you know, through the
service entrance, out the the loading dock. He was perfect.
So you got to do that. But well, when you're
that big, you got to do that kind of stuff. Hey,
uh uh what AOC? I love that fight AOC had
with Stephen Miller and she said, well, he's only four
foot eleven.
Speaker 1 (25:56):
What the hell is she talking about?
Speaker 5 (25:58):
You know, I laughed about that groom. I tweeted this too,
forgive me, but you know, she said he was four
foot ten. He's five foot ten, so I said, this
is actually progress. She was only off by a foot
on his height, where she was off by forty miles
when she said.
Speaker 3 (26:13):
She grew up in the Bronx. That was really think
about that.
Speaker 2 (26:17):
That's a pretty big lie about a tough kid from
the Bronx. Turns out to she's from Yorktown Heights, which
is a beautiful overb.
Speaker 5 (26:23):
A one, a gorgeous suburb. A one hundred and fifty
five dollars cab ride from the Bronx.
Speaker 3 (26:30):
If you were to leave.
Speaker 5 (26:31):
The Bronx like one hundred and sixty second in River
Avenue by Yankee Stadium and drive to Yorktown Heights, you're
going to pay one hundred and fifty five dollars. Now,
if there's if it's if you know surge pricing, Uber's
going to charge your.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
Four thy three hundred and twelve dollars. But uh, a
taxi a taxi one fifty five.
Speaker 5 (26:47):
So yeah, the enormity of that front, Like, you know,
it's bad when Elizabeth Warren's calling you a fraud in
her teepee, that's not good.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
Hey, speaking of cab rights, you know this new lift
what it's a new policy where you know the driver
can see your rating. Now the driver can see your
tipping history to see how you tip.
Speaker 3 (27:05):
Is that right?
Speaker 2 (27:05):
Is that fair?
Speaker 5 (27:07):
That's well, I could tell you this. I think it's
not accurate because I don't tip on the app. I
give them cash. So it's really interesting. My passenger rating
is five stars because I tip these guys. Like I said,
I have survivors guilt from being a cab driver, so
I tip. I tip cab drivers to the point that
they think I'm romantically interested in them.
Speaker 3 (27:28):
They're like, wow, this is wow. I must have really
hit it off with their Scott. I'm giving them.
Speaker 5 (27:32):
Everything I have though I have a five star uber rating,
but what you just said had never dawned on me.
I've never tipped on the app once.
Speaker 3 (27:39):
Oh but they give you.
Speaker 5 (27:40):
A good rating just because you've tipped cash just the same.
So I don't know if they can accurately do it
unless the guys have to enter, which they probably don't
want to enter, that you might have gave them forty
or fifty bucks because that's more income they got to claim.
Speaker 2 (27:53):
Yeah, well, a lot of passengers want this thing overturned.
They don't want this thing to exist. But if it sticks.
You got to your uber will do it next too, So.
Speaker 5 (28:02):
Oh yeah, that's it's the copycat medium just the same.
Speaker 2 (28:05):
Hey, you got to listen to Jimmy Failey does a
great show every night nine to midnight on w o R.
It's excellent what he got on tonight.
Speaker 5 (28:13):
So it says a loco. And I was supposed to
have Ted NuGen on the MotorCity mad Man. He's fired up.
He usually plays his guitar and screams at me about America.
It's always fun. We subtitled it in English at the
end of the interview it's Ted's rowdy. I love to
talk to He's rowdy. And we've got a couple of
couple of Fox girls are coming by to have a
conversation about this. Some feminist site is out. They say
(28:36):
Taylor Swift is secretly maga, which I think is fascinating.
But I don't know because she owns a private jet,
which is usually what the climate change people do.
Speaker 3 (28:47):
You know, So she's got mega. She's more John Kerry
than anything.
Speaker 5 (28:51):
She's got a private jet, So I don't know if
she's maga, but I'm excited to have the talk.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Well, there are a lot of closet Republicans in music,
and there were even a couple of MSNBC hosts who
were secretly Republicans. It was all in act, but.
Speaker 3 (29:05):
I believe that.
Speaker 2 (29:07):
And then Saturday Night you do It's I love that
Saturday night show. It's every Saturday night at ten o'clock
and it's too early to say what you got this
Saturday night?
Speaker 5 (29:15):
Right Ronda Rowsey. Ronda Rowsey, famous WWE legend and MMA fighter.
And it's funny because our publicist said, don't make fun
of her, she'll hit you, and I said, no, it's okay.
Speaker 3 (29:26):
I'm into that.
Speaker 5 (29:27):
So hopefully I'm like, I get Ronda to rough me
up on the air.
Speaker 3 (29:31):
He does.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
It's the best late night show. It's Saturday nights at
ten o'clock on the Fox News channel, and then you
can hear him tonight every weeknight on wo R nine
to midnight. And well, you haven't you're adjusting that at
doing radio. It's fun, isn't it?
Speaker 3 (29:46):
Oh? I love it.
Speaker 5 (29:46):
It's a good hang because we have more time to
have this conversation. You know, TV is an assembly line. Well,
I'm talking on TV. There's a picture of a guy
coming up next with a story underneath me that has
nothing to do with either of us. There's some promotion
on the right side of the screen. TV is just
you know, it's a it's a Jackson Pollock painting. These
(30:06):
days it's so busy, whereas radio we just got to
talk like we probably covered seven subjects.
Speaker 3 (30:11):
Yeah, you get one and you're out.
Speaker 5 (30:14):
They fire you out with like a water canon so
the next guy can come in.
Speaker 2 (30:17):
Yeah, and you start your answer. That guy in your
ears going.
Speaker 3 (30:19):
Rap rap up.
Speaker 9 (30:22):
It's so true, man, I haven't said anything yet.
Speaker 3 (30:25):
They're like Jimmy Phyler joins us.
Speaker 5 (30:27):
Now rap.
Speaker 3 (30:29):
Does he mean rap? Should? I'd like beatbox?
Speaker 5 (30:31):
What does he mean by that? I haven't spoken?
Speaker 2 (30:34):
Well, everybody listen. You gotta listen tonight. He does a
great show. Its every night nine to midnight. You can
hear it tonight nine to midnight on seven ten w
O or Jimmy Phyla, thanks for being with us. You're
the man Marks dude, take care. Hey, don't forget Buck
and Clay. They'll be here at noon. They do an
excellent show every day right after right after us, right
after the news at noon on seven ten wo R.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
On seven ten. He's more of the marks Emosha.
Speaker 2 (31:05):
Hey, so it's like the first day of fall. I
mean it was technically a couple of weeks ago, but
this is the first chilly day out there. It's a
nippy out there in the fifties today. Hey, good for
Joe Kiernan CNBC. Boy, they got some horrible people that
work on that CNBC. But Joe Kernan, Hakeem Jeffries comes
(31:25):
on this morning, you know it's CNBC. Figures this will
be easy, but Kernin starts giving him a hard time
about you know, all you gotta do is sign the
seven week extension. Government reopens. You got seven weeks to negotiate,
plenty of time. Won't you just do that? It's just
common sense. And it says Jeffries set their stone faced.
Well he always does that. I'm really seriously wonder he's
(31:46):
this guy like a robot or something, just very robotic,
stone faced all the time. Hey, we're out of time,
don't go away. Buck and Clay coming up next. They'll
be here right after the news. I'll be back tomorrow
every weekday ten to noon, or you could listen anytime
you want. Dare night just get the podcast. Then you
can listen to whatever you want, but I'll see you
tomorrow at ten, right here on seven ten Woir