Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Morning, Ryan and Dragon. Yeah, I'm not to worry about
giving away where I'm watching fireworks. How many people in
the greater Denver area would know had even heard of Pavilion, Wyoming,
let alone be able to find how to get there.
Have a great day.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
That is a great point. Yeah, give people a challenge.
Pavilion Wyoming. Find it on a map, and where is
he watching the fireworks?
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Good luck?
Speaker 2 (00:26):
I do understand the previous Talkbacker about she told us
and why would I give that away?
Speaker 3 (00:32):
It's like giving away a good fishing spot, right.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
You don't want to tell people where they can catch
the fish. You want to catch the fish. You want
to watch the fireworks. I understand that. But to me,
in many ways, the more the merrier, at to a degree,
but I like going somewhere there's a lot of people
around watching the ooze and the eyes and the reaction.
The worst though, are those people. And this is more
prominent back in the day. Dragon was a little dragon
(00:56):
at that point, you know, people had those shoulder mounted
the VHS cams, cam quarters and they're taking videos of
the fireworks and you go back. Who's gonna go back
and actually watch that?
Speaker 4 (01:08):
Has anybody ever ever well, and if.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
You did, it's it's just not the same.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
You can't recreate that experience, even if it's I don't know,
HD a full surround sound.
Speaker 4 (01:19):
You can't quite feel the boom coming through your TV
or they're sitting right under.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
It, the warm humidity of the night air at least
where you might be. And yeah, it's just never gonna
recreate very well. People do that too, and I do.
I'm guilty of this. So I'm not just casting aspersions
here like concerts. It takes like video of a song. Well,
some phones are pretty good though. They're picking up video
(01:45):
and audio with that. And I've had that experience a
little bit recently at Red Rocks.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
But again, you know, back and watch that. No, probably not.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
What are you doing it for? Why enjoy the show?
I need to enjoy the show more. I hope you're
enjoying this. If you're not, well, my apologies, but you
get the substitute teacher. And that's what you get. We
roll in the the av a stand. You know, I
put a movie on you watch, like a Civil war documentary.
Speaker 3 (02:12):
That's what happens.
Speaker 2 (02:13):
Great day, We're gonna watch Glory today, kids. Benzel Washington
Morgan mulgan Freeman. I can't say his name without saying
it like that, right, you have Mugan Freeman. Let's get
to the text thirty three one oh three. I'm just
gonna make sure I had just that number Ryan concentration
(02:35):
camps with Ac I roll and then Dragon, you responded
to that one.
Speaker 4 (02:39):
I did, and I wanted to make sure I clarified
in the text that it's a joke. So I'll clarify
this as well. It's a joke. But I bet the
showers are better.
Speaker 3 (02:47):
Joke.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
Hello, joke, and that you got a response to that
from this exert Dragon. Yes, shower too. And I think
he means or she three hots in a cod. It
says three horses in a cod. I don't think very artless.
Speaker 4 (03:02):
Just look at the I of eoples. They're just as delicious.
Speaker 3 (03:04):
Okay, three hots and a yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
No, they're getting Listen Tom Holm and we heard him
talk about it. Donald Trump toured the joint. It's air conditioned,
it's enclosed. They are getting fed. They are getting their
so called due process. That really grinds my gears too
when they talk about the well they even have their
due process. And I'm Starry going to call it out
by name, and he's not here to defend himself, and
(03:27):
he's in trial doing whatever. But damn Caplis has some
kind of soft spot here, and I don't understand it.
Speaker 3 (03:32):
I don't understand it.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
If you come to this country illegally, to me, you
forfeit any right of expectation to be here. You don't
get to be here, You don't have a right to
be here. And in fact, you violated the very process
by which you could have been here legally.
Speaker 3 (03:49):
He made a choice. You made a You might.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
See the person was coursed in the choice, or they
had no other choice. They have a choice. That's why
I remain in Mexico. Such a enius policy. President Trump
forty five implemented it. Joe Biden in the process of
unsecuring our border, the only president ever to intentionally do that.
And you get into the reasons why, you can look
another hood, you can figure it out.
Speaker 3 (04:13):
It's for the census.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
It's so states like California, sanctuary states that are blue
like Colorado, will harbor these illegal aliens, have them count
toward the census, therefore count toward how many members of
the House of representatives that state gets and electoral votes
in the presidential election.
Speaker 3 (04:30):
People.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
That's the sum total of it. It's not some better
angels bull crap. This is politically motivated. This isn't goodness
of our hearts stuff. Because illegals come here at the
expense of the American taxpayer, They undermine the wages of
the American worker. They take advantage of programs that should
(04:55):
be benefiting those Americans who are struggling, who have paid
into the the system, be that Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security.
No illegal alien who is not a citizen of this
country should have any right or expectation of those programs
or access to them. That is madness, as it would
(05:16):
be if any of us went to any other country
and then just decided we get to collect on whatever
this country's government diame is. Taxpayers, feed me, give me things,
I get things. Everybody's got a sob story. Yours isn't
more important. Sorry to say, sorry to be the bearer
of bad news. But my sympathy level for people who
(05:36):
are here illegally ends at the border. They crossed illegally,
could have come here legally. Didn't do it. Why didn't
you do it? What do you have to hide? Why
aren't you vetted? Why don't you want to be vetted?
This is just it's circuitous and curious and insane to me.
(05:58):
This is another thing that really and I got to
talk more with George Brockler about this one because I've
heard this too.
Speaker 3 (06:04):
I can't figure out doug Co.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
This Textter says, Ryan, we have very liberal judges in
doug Co who have unchecked power.
Speaker 3 (06:11):
I wish people understood this. What is doug Co. I
look at it and electorally.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
It seems to be read seems to lean Republican, at
least lean Republican. It's one of the last bastions in
the state that hasn't gone full blue madness. Like my
county where I live, a Rapahole County that's a lost cause,
or obviously Denver County or Larimer Boulder.
Speaker 3 (06:38):
But doug Co.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
Is this like a false sense of security that I have?
What's going on there with like the school board, the
judges a four year sentence, a four year sentence for
two hundred thousand images of child pornography. That's insulting, that
is insulting to the victims. Then you let that clown,
that monster that creep out after like a year and
(07:02):
a half of a four year sentence on probation for
what for good behavior? Oh, I swear I won't do
it again. Newsflash again. Not a psychiatrist. But talk to
anyone that you know, talk to one that knows this field.
One offender that is incapable of being reformed are those
(07:22):
who are child predators that are sexually attracted to minors.
Don't call them maps. That's what they want you to do.
Minor attracted persons. They're pedophiles. It's virtually impossible to unwire
or rewire a pedophile that's wired that way.
Speaker 3 (07:41):
Dragon called for.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
Little electric shock therapy to the extreme execution. I can't
say I'm against that. In fact, I can say very
firmly I would be in favor of that. You abuse
a child to that degree, you steal their innocence, You
rob them of any sense of safety insecurity.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
You ruin their lives for the rest of their lives.
Speaker 4 (08:03):
You not pasco, do not collect two hundred dollars, go
straight to the chair.
Speaker 2 (08:07):
I don't see the problem that logic. Dragon, I'm right
there with you. It drives me nuts. So somebody explained
Doug cot to maybe that text, or if you also
live in doug Co, perhaps you can illuminate myself and
the rest of the audience. Dragon you should play Crocodile
Rock coming back from the break.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
Guess what he did?
Speaker 4 (08:25):
Yeah, I don't think about it, he already did.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
Oh you did? Do not remember what just happened?
Speaker 2 (08:31):
Are you like in shock or what's going on over there?
This is an important topic and I'm glad it was
brought up. Can you make people aware of how detrimental
fireworks are to Vietnam vets, animals, and birds. Fireworks should
be banned. I had this conversation with my sister Lizzie.
We have she has two dogs. One was my mom's.
Of course, my mom passed away a couple of years ago,
(08:52):
so we reunited Maggie with her sister Bella, and they
get along like peas and carrots those two.
Speaker 3 (08:59):
But Bella, for whatever reason, well, she can't do thunder.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
She can't do fireworks for sure, And Lizzie hates these
people that live around her. She calls Jackson County rednecks
like they're fire off fireworks, like now like July one,
July two, like he can't even wait to July fourth,
we've got to fire them off. Now, I got some
black cats cherry bombs, and yeah, it really drives Bella nuts.
(09:23):
And the animals are one thing, and that is a
sensitive area. But for the veterans out there, I can
only imagine. I can only imagine that's that's a tough time,
and I feel terribly for those that are affected in
that way. Ryan Republicans always compromise in favor of more
spending for things they say they don't believe in and
will hurt the nation. Really, just like Lisa Murkowski, who
(09:44):
you criticized, All of them except one or two in
the Senate sad. The problem is, Yeah, how do you
campaign on less government by saying I want to be
part of the government to provide less government. Well, that's
the traditional conservative Republican libertarian stance.
Speaker 3 (10:02):
I want to go to government so that we limit
what we.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
Do there, we minimize spending, we cut taxes, smaller, leaner,
meaner government.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
Well the Democrats will hone in on the meaner part.
They're so mean. Why don't you give illegal aliens MEDICAI
because they don't deserve it.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
I don't call me some kind of bad guy because
I'm pointing out the obvious here.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
You're in the country illegally, you have a right to nothing. Goodbye.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
Well, there are asylum seekers. You know, I'm seeking a
pot of gold in Ireland. I'm gonna go over there
and dragon was just there and I'm gonna.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
See if I can find it. I'm seeking a pot
of gold. It doesn't mean gonna find it.
Speaker 2 (10:41):
And asylums, are they really to the literal definition of
that term seeking asylum? Asylum from what can they prove that?
Did they have their hearing? A lot of these cases
of illegal aliens who remain the overstay of visa or
they've gone to their court up here parance, they were
rejected their claim for asylum, and they just figured they're
(11:04):
going to stay anyway because under Biden that was all
free and Clare that was fine. It's that fine. You
don't have a right to be here. You don't have
a right really to be anywhere. I mean, you're born
in this country, any country that you're born, and you
would be asson that you're a citizen, natural born citizen
in that country.
Speaker 3 (11:20):
But when you become an immigrant.
Speaker 2 (11:21):
This is why I try to explain, and people go
nuts on the left, and I maybe I'll take up
this sound again too. Arnold Swarzenegger articulated this perfectly on
the view a couple of weeks ago. He is an immigrant,
He is a proud American citizen. He came here legally.
He built a life for himself. He came here with nothing,
(11:42):
and he, through his own gumption, his own guts and guile,
his own work, ethic, and determination, became a cultural icon,
a political icon. Arnold Schwarzenegger. Now, if he can do it,
anyone can do it. But to come here with your
hand out and be like I don't really want to
do anything. I don't want to contribute anything. I just
(12:04):
want to kind of hang out. No, No, that's not
the deal we're making here. We're making a deal here.
You come here, you contribute something to our society. You
do it out in the open, you do it in daylight.
You come here legally. There is a process. It's not great.
Should it be reformed, Sure, let's make that process more expedited.
But in so doing, as they're doing with Alligator Alcatraz,
(12:26):
here's your due process. You don't have a right to
be here. You don't have a right to an asylum
claim that's been denied. That's a phony, false claim that
you just use to get your foot in the door.
Speaker 3 (12:36):
Goodbye.
Speaker 2 (12:38):
I don't really see the problem in enforcing our borders
and our immigration laws.
Speaker 3 (12:43):
That should be done, Brian.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
A great album for Independence Day is American Spirit by
Manheim Steamroller and CW.
Speaker 3 (12:51):
McCall.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
And we'll be watching the fireworks tomorrow at Is this
the same Talkbacker in the tiny town of Pavilion, Wyoming.
A second mention to our great neighbors to the north.
Speaker 3 (13:02):
I love Wyoming. It's amazing up there.
Speaker 4 (13:04):
Both the citizens of that town are going to show.
Speaker 2 (13:06):
Up, all two of them, Ryan, Fourth of July movie
Independence Day. Yeah, well that's more of a sci fi
type thing though, right Will Smith.
Speaker 4 (13:16):
Yeah, but it happens on the fourth of July, So
there's the correlation. Like a Diehards a Christmas movie? Oh boy,
it was because it happens at Christmas.
Speaker 3 (13:28):
It does.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
It makes it Christmas movie, not a Tony Plaza. One
more from Alexa here. MDB's comment on the plea guilty
in life in Prison was that we would not have
the option for that plea in Colorado since we did
away with the death penalty. Ooh, let's get into that
a little bit, shall we. Brian Coberger's decision to accept
plea deal came after efforts to strike death penalty failed.
(13:52):
So think about the logic there. I'm sure Michael Brown
applied yesterday because Idaho had the death penalty as a cudgel,
as a potential outcome that was obviously highly detrimental to
this defendant. He had the impetus the reason to negotiate
(14:13):
a deal down from.
Speaker 3 (14:14):
That to plead guilty to the four murders.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
If it happened here in Colorado, he could have just
wrote out the trial, perhaps especially here in Colorado, because
we're nots I'm thinking collectively, not you or me and
the no, not in the audience, not Dragon, no, no, no,
not even Michael. Well maybe a little bit. There is
a propensity here to go soft on crime, and it's
all crime.
Speaker 3 (14:38):
We just talked about it. Child prodoga four years, four.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Years, Stude's got to be locked away, the key thrown away,
you know whatever.
Speaker 4 (14:46):
After the text means to you, guy says Ryan should
be four years per image.
Speaker 3 (14:52):
That sounds about right.
Speaker 2 (14:55):
Eight hundred thousand years is great though, And I'm a
big fan of truth and sentencing. So after the inmate dies, well,
he's got a service time. He hasn't served his time
out yet. I'd served eight hundred thousand years. You let
him sit and rot and decay in the cell until
that time is accrued.
Speaker 4 (15:11):
We don't bury you until you're well done.
Speaker 2 (15:14):
Hey, you gotta have to courn it off because of
smell and all that. But you know, put some line
out let that sentence be served. So Coberger's attorney's made
multiple attempts to prevent prosecutors from seeking the death penalty
ahead of his trial that was set to begin next month.
Speaker 3 (15:29):
But they failed.
Speaker 2 (15:30):
And because they failed, they saw no other option rather
than Coburger pleading pleading guilty, And there was all this
talk about oh he really didn't do it, and the
cops planet evidence, you know, all this OJ crap.
Speaker 3 (15:44):
Did you see this. I've been following this.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
Megan Kelly is probably doing the best job of anybody
in a podcast format. She's got a legal background and
covering legal issues in this case.
Speaker 3 (15:54):
She's been all over it.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
And they didn't like their chances, apparently, comuters of going
through a trial and not getting the death penalty. Yeah,
they were going to use autism diagnosis. Come on, there's
a lot of people with autism that good. Don't get
all stabby with four college students in a house in
the middle of the night.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
Okay, that's not an excuse.
Speaker 2 (16:18):
Yeah, they were challenge there's a they challenged the legitimacy
of DNA evidence. Dana Carvey did a stand up in
the nineties, you know, when the OJ trial is hot,
and he was impersonating Johnny Cochrane. He goes, DNA probably
stands for did not attack, We don't fit. You must
have quit, good lord, trying to suggest, you know what
(16:39):
they got to come up with? Are these alternate theories,
like if it wasn't Brian Koberger, who does it, well,
it could have been somebody else, could have been the boogeyman,
could have been Jack the Ripper. Well Coberger is Jack
the Ripper and he's due to appear eleven a m
today for to enter that play. Now, the victims families,
(16:59):
they have mixed reactions to this.
Speaker 3 (17:01):
I get that.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
I understand that what seems to be at issue here too,
is that the prosecutors probably dropped the ball in communicating
with the families, which should have been first and foremost
on their agenda, meaning they go to the families, Look,
we can get a guilty plea, he'll go away four
life sentences the rest of his life.
Speaker 3 (17:20):
We think it's a good deal.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
But I'm trying to look at it too, not only
from the family's perspective, but if I wonder how George
Brockler would charge this case. Going back to him, you know,
do you like your odds based on the evidence, taking
your chances in front of a jury, getting that guilty
verdict and the death penalty, or even if you don't
get the death penalty to get the convictions.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
Maybe they felt like the juice wasn't worth the squeeze.
Speaker 2 (17:41):
They're getting the guilty please, they're getting the four life sentences.
They only added benefit to going to trial to get
the death penalty. And you add the risk that by
some miracle for Coburger he is found not guilty orund
some kind of diminished charge. So how you feel about
that one want to hear from you as well. On
the text line. You can send those in at thirty
(18:03):
three to one to oh three a timeout plenty more
to get two on this Wednesday edition of the Situation
without Michael Brown, Ryan Schuling filling in.
Speaker 5 (18:13):
Make adult decisions. That's what we say in this well.
We pass bills. You can't drink alcohol until twenty one,
you can on a gun until twenty one, you need
a three day waiting period. We pass those bills because
we think it protects children. But this is a green
light to not protect children. I don't understand the hypocrisy.
(18:33):
You can't even go into Petco and get a beta
fish until you're eighteen, but an eight year old can
decide to cut off healthy body parts and go on
lifelong sterility drugs that are non FDA approved.
Speaker 6 (18:44):
What are we doing?
Speaker 4 (18:46):
What are we saying to the children of.
Speaker 5 (18:48):
Colorado and to their parents that deserve informed consent. After
they have informed consent, that is their right to choose.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
Representative Brandy Bradley, you heard right there, Republican thirty ninth
district on the House floor speaking out against House Bill
twenty five thirteen twelve, which would eventually be passed and
signed into law, an extreme law by Governor Jared Poulish.
She joins us, Now, Brandy, thank you for the time,
appreciate it very much, and just get us caught up
on your observations. What has happened in the meantime between
(19:18):
you making that speech. We've had a ruling by the
Supreme Court of the United States as it pertains to
Tennessee's state law on transing the kids.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Are we building in the right direction? Do we have
the momentum?
Speaker 6 (19:29):
Well, hello, my friend, thanks so much for having me on. Yes,
we definitely have the momentum. They can't stop us. I mean,
parents in the state will not stand down to gender
mutilation and lack of informed consent when it comes to
their children. I'm Aaron Lee, my good friend from Protectives
Colorado so has a lawsuit out there. Jennifer Say, my
other good friend from xx xy Athletics has a lawsuitit
(19:51):
Adaahadgee just settled out of court. We're here to say
the line in the sands been drawn. Ryan, I've got
four kids series in the state. I'm not going.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
Anywhere further to that point, Representative Brandy Bradley has thrown
her hat in the ring when it comes to the
minority whip position within the Republican Party and the House.
As Ryan Armagoss is leaving for greener pastors, at least
for himself professionally, in Arizonas. So Representative Bradley, just take
us through what led to that decision, why you feel
you're the right person for the job.
Speaker 6 (20:19):
You know, I think we need a conservative in leadership.
I think that we've been making too many deals with
the people that are train wrecking our state where the
second lea safe state, where the fourth highest in rate
tempius and trafficking of children. And it's kind of stop
making deals with the people that have a one party
rule that are ruining our state. And I'm ready to
step up to the plate and be part of leadership
(20:41):
and make it known that we're not making deals with them.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
She's a fierce voice and a leader out there already,
and you've seen her, no doubt, featured in the clips
that I have there, and certainly in the battle against
a lot of these awful bills that the Democrats have
pushed through the General Assembly and onto Jared Pulis's desk,
including the gun bill. Representative Brandy Bradley our guest. So
I'm a big team player, team guy here, Brandy, and
(21:06):
I'm looking at kind of the outlook of what is
going to happen with the Power Center. Let's say that
you are successful in this quest, and your relationship with
Rose Paglici and Tye Winner leadership already established there in
the House. How you might be similar to Ryan Armagos,
how you might be different, and where you think it
goes from here.
Speaker 6 (21:27):
Well, I give everyone the benefit of the adult. I
think I'm a proven leader. I think I'm a proven
spokesperson for the people in my district, not only for them,
but the people in Colorado. And I think that leadership
demands respect. I've gotten several text messages from Democrats saying
please run, actually, please run for minority leader. You aren't
bought out by lobbyists. You are transparent, You are clear
(21:50):
with what your decisions are and how you stand. And
people like that want people in leadership, no matter whether
you like them or not. Leaders demand a certain amount of.
Speaker 2 (21:58):
Respects Representative brand Bradley in the thirty ninth district, a
candidate to be the next House Minority Whip. Now, Brandy,
the big beautiful bill just pass the Senate. It's going
back to the House, hopefully to President Trump's desk, and
we hope by July fourth. How you think that impacts
Colorado and where that leaves us as a state.
Speaker 6 (22:17):
Well, the Democrats will tell you the Big Beautiful Bill
is going to be the demise of Colorado. But for
the last two decades they have had almost one party
rule and they've spent five hundred and fifty million dollars
funding a legal immigrant. So tell me what that's gotten us.
Forty third worst and road safety. Kids can't read and
write at grade level. You're going to blame you Congress
(22:38):
for a one bill when you have been amising our
state for the last ten or so years. No, we
can't blame the Big Beautiful.
Speaker 4 (22:46):
Bill for that.
Speaker 6 (22:47):
We have got to clean up Colorado. We got to
get our streets safer, and we've got to quit funding
the legal immigrants when seniors can't even afford their property
taxes and prescription drugs and helplessness veterans are getting nights
out on our streets. That's not how we rule war
the people, the good men and women that it's served contrue.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
This has been such a battle in the General Assembly
in the mighty nineteen and then adding to that number,
and hopefully it'll get better in the next election cycle.
But it's tough slooting out there for Republicans in this state.
Yourself included Representative Bradley. But we've seen what's happened, what's
come down the pike, the gun grab bill, which we
hope ultimately is overturned by the Supreme Court. I believe
it will be the infringements on free speech when it
(23:28):
comes to religious exemptions. We just saw camp Idra Hodgie
settle their lawsuit, but that is not a done deal.
And then obviously transing the kids. We've talked about that
as well. Just the horrors of thirteen twelve and that
being signed into law. I mean, what's next. What is
the biggest battle that you see on the horizon coming
into the next session.
Speaker 6 (23:48):
Oh, I think that we still battle primal rights. But
I think the Democrats are going to self implode because
they all want their pet projects to go through. You've
got a governor that wants to build a bridge to nowhere,
a governor that wants to build this rail system that
no one's going to ride. And I think that I
saw it last session, the Democrats going ask their governor.
I think as they try to fuel their pet projects,
(24:10):
they're going to completely disassemble is what I think is
going to happen. They're going to be fighting each other.
I've already seen it. I've already been contact over session.
It's amazing when Democrats reach out to a conservative Christian
to ask for help.
Speaker 2 (24:23):
Finally, Representative Bradley, where can people go to find out
more about your campaign for minority whip and just have
a conversation with you?
Speaker 6 (24:29):
Bradley frco is my Twitter. I'm pretty responsive on that,
but if you want to reach out to me, Brandy
Bradley FRHD thirty nine dot com.
Speaker 3 (24:38):
There it is.
Speaker 2 (24:38):
Representative Brandy Bradley could be the next minority Whip in
the Colorado General Assembly House.
Speaker 3 (24:43):
Always appreciate your time, Brandy. Go back and enjoy your summer.
Speaker 6 (24:46):
Thanks Ryan, thanks for having me on. I appreciate you.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
Always enjoy our conversations, your responses. And when we come back,
we have another installment of hot takes from President Donald
Trump at Alligator Alcatraz.
Speaker 3 (24:57):
What a trip that was.
Speaker 6 (24:58):
Back with more after the schooling again for all the
good substitutes, substitute hosts on vacation this week.
Speaker 2 (25:08):
Yep, you get what you're left with, the leftovers, that's me.
Don't worry, Jimmy, You'll be in tomorrow. There you go see,
you know, be careful what you wish for, because you're
getting Jimmy Sangenberger, a full dose of four hours of
all Jimmy Sangenberger energy.
Speaker 3 (25:24):
And I've got to predict.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
Harmonica play most definitely, and band promotion probably and William
Shatner talk.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
But like I said, I have a Jimmy Sangenberger preview
coming up in the next hour. You won't want to
miss it.
Speaker 2 (25:40):
It's his interview with the legendary William Shatner at the
spry young age of ninety four. Folks, when you hear
William Shatner at ninety four, you're going to be in awe.
I have never heard or seen a person of that age,
ninety four as sharp, as funny, as witty as he
(26:01):
still is. His brain is active. It is truly a
modern medical miracle. He was on with Jesse Waters Waters
World not long ago, Jesse Waters Prime Time, and he
was good, giving, as good as he got. They were
joking about Canada becoming the fifty first state, and then
he turned that around.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
I mean, just the way that he talks.
Speaker 2 (26:23):
You just listen for little indicators, and I think I've
become a pretty good student of this over the last
several years analyzing Joe Biden, who again twelve years younger
than William Shatner. Think about that, so that'll be coming
up straight away. Appreciate your text as always coming in
hot and already like Little Caesar's Pizza thirty three one
(26:46):
to oh three, Ryan or Dragon. I remember the Chris
Watts case right here in Welld County. Oh yeah, there
was a documentary about that right when that happened. Colorado
did still have the death penalty when they did a
plea agreement with him, insulted with the family first. I
think they should have done that in Idaho as well.
With coburger. Yeah, I agree with that. Ryan, Oh my god,
(27:08):
so true about my dog and fireworks, especially this time
of year. If I take her out at night for
her final p of the evening and suddenly a firework
boom goes off, good luck on getting her to pee
that until the next morning she bolts right back home.
Speaker 3 (27:21):
M We just feel sad for the animals.
Speaker 2 (27:24):
This from ABC News, another edition of you don't hate
the media enough, So ratchet up that hatred and I
know I apologize. We have ABC News updates on this
very station. Let me explain why it'll only take a moment.
Speaker 3 (27:40):
So we have the.
Speaker 2 (27:41):
Licensing rights to two radio news outlets, Fox News and
ABC News. But by process of elimination, I guess I
think this is a decision that predates Dave Tepper, our
program director. It may need to be revisited, but I
don't know. Let's walk through this over on Free the
ninety three point seven. They have all the national shows
(28:03):
like clan Buck and Hannity, et cetera. And the Fox
News radio feed is used for over there on Freedom.
So by virtue of just getting stuck with it, we
get ABC News and then constantly, it never fails.
Speaker 3 (28:20):
There'll be some kind of crazy whack a.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
Doodle thing that comes across one of the top of
the bottom of the hour news reports on Dan Kaplis's show,
and Dan, we'll comment coming out of it. Now, this
is no comment on our KOA newsroom. They do great work.
But ABC News, Wow, Wow, Ryan.
Speaker 4 (28:39):
That happens quite often here too.
Speaker 3 (28:41):
Oh does Michael gill nuts on some of that.
Speaker 4 (28:44):
We typically don't pay attention to it because it's top
of the RP break for us, but we'll get either
talkback or text messages complaining about the ABC news, and
we're like, Okay, now we're gonna go back and listen
to see.
Speaker 3 (28:54):
How horrible it was.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Oh well, let's see how horrible their x feed is
formally known as Twitter, and see which word stands out
in this headline to the story that is linked. The
leader of an MS thirteen click in the suburbs of
New York City faces sentencing Wednesday in a federal racketeering
case involving eight murders, including the twenty sixteen killings of
two high school girls, that focus the nation's attention on
(29:19):
the violent gang.
Speaker 3 (29:21):
What word stood out to you there? Sorry?
Speaker 2 (29:24):
Toward the beginning, the leader of an MS thirteen click
a click like these are mean girls that all sit
at the same lunch table in high school. And I
responded to that, you can follow me by the way
an X and please do follow me to freedom at
Ryan Shuling s c h U, I l I ng.
Speaker 3 (29:45):
It's Dutch. It's weird.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
I know I have too many vowels. If you want
to buy a vow I have one for sale. I
have like an extra eye. I don't need it, you
want it. You got a Polish name that's got a
lot of conson incidence I'm then you can you can
have my eye, not out of my skull, one of
my two eyes, but one of the eyes of my name.
So I respond by saying click as in an exclusive
(30:07):
social group, and then I had the meme I'm very
proud of this Bender, John Bender from the Breakfast club,
who's making fun of Brian while he's trying to get
to talk to Claire. Claire, it's a fat girl's name, anyway,
Like what social clubs was she in?
Speaker 3 (30:23):
And Brian rattles, well, you know, I'm in math club
and physical club and chess club, and you see Brian's
in several clubs.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
And the line is it's so it's sort of social
demented and sad but social right, and Brian's kind of
like trying to play along and to no avail MS
thirteen click, I'm gonna be in the MS thirteen click?
Speaker 4 (30:48):
Are they trying to be youthful and young by using that?
I don't even know. It's been twenty or thirty years
since either of us have been in a high school.
But is that still used?
Speaker 2 (30:56):
Well?
Speaker 4 (30:56):
Click?
Speaker 3 (30:56):
Who writes their posts?
Speaker 2 (30:58):
Because at the beginning it says the leader of an
MS thirteen click and then later at the end it
says the nation's attention on the violent gang.
Speaker 4 (31:06):
Yeah, proper use there.
Speaker 3 (31:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (31:08):
So are they just like, well, I don't want to
say gang twice and they thought click was interchangeable for gang.
Speaker 3 (31:14):
I don't think so. Maybe maybe not? Okay?
Speaker 2 (31:19):
In three three one three is where you can send
those texts along and your criticisms of ABC notwithstanding, maybe
you can just commiserate on that because we have to
endure it here now. Not enough time to get into
this right now, or is it? Did you see this
story Snake on a plane delays a flight in Australia.
(31:40):
This made national news and it made me think about
the line from the movie Snakes on a plane on
this Monday to Friday plane. It doesn't fly on weekends,
and that's what he's upset about. I think is the
flight schedule, not necessarily the snakes which they fight monkeys.
Apparently that could be a good thing. Monkeys can get
(32:00):
out of hand. I just thought it was time for that.
Snakes on a plane delaying of flight in Australia, and
it turned out to be a harmless green tree snake. No, no,
it was some of the world's most venomous snakes that
are native to Australia. Scary stuff. I'm afraid of snakes.
Now I'm not afraid of snakes. Just in Congress