Episode Transcript
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Gus terrible person, he's the worst.
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Speaker 2 (02:16):
Yeah, We're three fun.
Speaker 4 (02:18):
Fun fact The term bug for something mucking up your
computer comes from a literal translation. Admiral Grace Hubbah, an
American computer scientist and developer of the first compiler, is
credited for having first used the term bugs in computing
(02:40):
after a dead moth was found shorting a relay in
Harvard University's Harvard Mark two computer September nineteen forty seven.
Why did the computer crash? It had a bug?
Speaker 3 (02:56):
Yeah? From there that I mean, that's literal bug.
Speaker 2 (03:01):
A literal bug.
Speaker 3 (03:02):
Time of the word of the day, ting me with
his words the word of the day. Today's word of
the day is British News for PMS, British News, United Kingdom,
English News. It's time for British News. Cheerio, straight get out,
(03:24):
you know. Matt At a church in England, Saint Andrew's
in Holborn, which is a nice church in London somewhere,
there was a concert like a choir singing, the City
Academy Voices choir, and it was a big performance for
(03:44):
them because it was like the last performance for their
conductor or whatever. And the concert was going on and
suddenly the bishop of the church came out in his
gown like wee Willie Winki and said you're in my house.
(04:05):
It's gone past ten pm and this is a terrible racket.
Good night, you are in my house. Can you leave
it now?
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Please?
Speaker 3 (04:14):
Thank you, it's over, and that a church employee asked
the crowd to leave quietly and for the musicians to
step down from the stage. The audience started booing, so
the choir went on to perform an a cappella version
of Abbas Dancing Queen.
Speaker 4 (04:33):
Okay, seems like the appropriate response. Good day to you, surfer.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
Uh people very upset, a spokesperson for the Diocese of
London did because The Guardian picked up on this, and
a spokesperson said that Bishop Jonathan reached out to the
organizers on Saturday to apologize for his late night appearance
at the concert, which he now understands had overrun due
(05:02):
to technical difficulties, but one of the people involved with
the choir told Sky News that he felt this statement
was mealy mouthed. I hope the bishop is well and okay,
it's possibly just had a bad day. An unambiguous US
apology would help one that recognizes why his behavior was
(05:22):
not acceptable. Now that you know the situation and what happened.
Would you like to hear the sound?
Speaker 2 (05:28):
Of course she have sound.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
Come on, as this church spokesperson is his horse brown.
(06:04):
This is horse brown. Here we go. Take that Bishop
suck on Wonner, Henry. The eight's very close pains.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
Be appropriate response.
Speaker 4 (06:26):
Big story in this is your time, This is my house.
A terrible rocket fair though ten pm. You know, if
you're someone that that that rises early, I think ten
should be the cutoff.
Speaker 3 (06:38):
It's just great that he was wearing his dressing.
Speaker 4 (06:41):
His sleeping down. Hey it's ten pm. This is my house.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
Thank you go quietly. It is time for the number
of the day.
Speaker 5 (06:51):
Here's my number, number of the day.
Speaker 4 (06:55):
Very excited about this number of the day because I
did not anticipate finding it yet somehow I stumbled upon
it and felt like like I had found an immense
amount of booty, a real pirate's treasure from the depths
below that no one had ever discovered before. Sixty is
your number of the day. There is a video that
I'm guessing everybody has seen by now. It's a couple
(07:17):
days old, making the rounds of Aaron Rodgers and a
little kid at the American Century Tournament up there in
Lake Tahoe. Yes, Kates and Tony Bruno used to go
and get all the interviews.
Speaker 3 (07:30):
Great celebrity fast.
Speaker 4 (07:31):
Yeah. In the video, little kid throws the ball onto
the green at the seventeenth. The seventeenth is the party
hole where all of the boats are parked and the
drunks and the basketball hoops and all that sort of stuff. Right,
it's a par three right there on the water of
Lake Tahoe. So kid tosses a kid's football and it's
(07:52):
not a you know, official Wilson that like some guy
gave to him to get autographed that he's going to
go throw up on eBay. It's like black, it's got
camouflage on it or something like that. All football Rogers
sees the football, he sees the kid, and then he
turns his back to the child and chucks the ball
the other direction, like the a hole. He is, right, yes,
(08:12):
I saw it, and so I'm like, well, I'm gonna
do some digging into this. Was he in contention for
the championship. It's the first round, but it's the seventeenth pole,
and yeah, he's putting for Birdie, So maybe he wants
to concentrate and the football upset him while he was
getting to read on his pot or something. But you know, karma,
(08:32):
he ends up doubling the eighteenth and so I see
if it like derailed his entire round. Right as I
checked the scores, I come to find that he lost
the tourney by thirty points. And for those that follow
golf and are like, what the hell does that mean,
you get it's the Stableford method of scoring. So it's
not below par that you're shooting for. You want a
(08:52):
big number above zero. You get one point for a par,
you get three points for a birdie, zero points for
a bow, and you lose two points for a double
bogie or worse, and you just get that same negative
two whether you had a double bogie or an eight
or a fifteen. On the whole, it's just negative two points.
And that's what they show it as on the scorecard.
(09:13):
But here's the best part of me looking this up.
So Joe Pavelski, the hockey player, wins this thing going
away with a plus seventy three ton of birdies. Guy
played his ass off right. Second place is John Smoltz.
Rogers ends up finishing fifteenth. There are ninety celebrities in
(09:33):
this tournament. Okay ninety. Now, when you think of the
Tahoe Tournament and you think about who finishes dead last,
I think there's one name that comes to mind, right,
Charles Barkley. Yes, thought to be the worst golfer out there. Well,
Charles finished in sixty ninth place at minus seventeen okay,
(09:57):
minus seventeen. Remember you lose two points for a double
boge or worse. Minus seventeen is where Charles Berkley is
long thought to be the worst golfer every single year
annually at the American Century Tournament. Ninetieth place is a
(10:17):
woman named Dylan Dreyer. She is a forty three year
old meteorologist on the Today Show who co hosts the
Third Hour. She's dead last at minus sixty three points.
She played three rounds of golf fifty four holes, and
in fifty four holes she managed to get three pars,
(10:42):
so three points in the positive side. Everything else was
at least a zero for the bogies or minus two
for all of the doubles are worse. So she has
one hundred to thirty points worse than the winner one
hundred and twenty seven points. It's worse than the winner
in eighty ninth place, damn near dead last, just three
(11:05):
points better than Dylan Dryer, who finished dead last at
ninetieth eighty ninth place.
Speaker 3 (11:13):
Rich Eisen, Oh chricking.
Speaker 4 (11:15):
Rich Eisen his final round five pars, five bogies and
double or worse on eleven of the eighteen holes.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
Why are you there? What are you doing?
Speaker 3 (11:27):
He's a big star.
Speaker 4 (11:29):
You want to be considered a celebrity that bad? You
want to make the cut even though you are that is,
that is not You're not a golfer like you have
no business being. You're a charade. You're a charlatan to
walk out there in a fancy outfit to humiliate yourself.
Speaker 2 (11:49):
What the hell are you thinking?
Speaker 3 (11:51):
Could he say, like I got drunk?
Speaker 2 (11:54):
No, I mean you're That's not what this is.
Speaker 4 (11:57):
This isn't a place to go and get All of
these celebrity's are competing against each other at some level,
whether in their.
Speaker 3 (12:03):
Owner somebody, somebody would be to blame.
Speaker 4 (12:07):
I would assume his ego, his hubris, that he wanted
to be included with the likes of Travis Kelcey and
Aaron Rodgers and Stephen Curry. And that's why only Dylan Dreyer. Oh,
I said that he was eighty ninth. I'm sorry he
was eighty eighth. He was tied with Catherine Tappan, who
is a forty four year old sideline reporter for the
(12:28):
Notre Dame Game. She does a great job at minus.
So he's tied for eighty eight minus sixty sixty with
the winner at a plus seventy three. He is one
hundred and fifty seven poor, one hundred and twenty seven
points worse. Rich, eyes, ladies and gentlemen. You know, guys,
(12:50):
I'm going up to the American Century Tournament up in Tahoe.
I've been invited.
Speaker 3 (12:54):
Well, at least he's the kind of guy who will
come back and make fun of himself for not playing well.
Speaker 4 (12:58):
Well, yeah, I'm sure this thing got zero mention whatsoever
on his show about him finishing in a tie for
eighty eight out of ninety golfers, eighty eighth place between
Dylan Dreyer and Catherine Tappan.
Speaker 3 (13:15):
So here you go, rich, if you're Aaron Rodgers, are
you there to interact with people? Are you there to
play golf? Are you there to be a like an
a hole? What do you use it?
Speaker 2 (13:24):
It was a kid with the just a camouflage football.
Speaker 3 (13:28):
Poor guy, Yeah, poor Aaron Rodgers. He had his secret wife, Ronnie.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
This is the song of the day.
Speaker 6 (13:42):
The Reds is the title of our song of the day.
Speaker 3 (13:46):
A funky tune from.
Speaker 6 (13:47):
The Ohio Players on an early Tuesday afternoon super Flex
alert right here on the Petros and Money Show where
the Dodgers are getting ready to play Game two with
the Reds, a great American ballpark in Zinzinetti. That'll begin
with our friend Tim Kats, who will warm you up
with that Morongo casino Dodgers on deck show that begins
(14:10):
in about forty five minutes or so, maybe less.
Speaker 4 (14:15):
Thank you, Ronie, are going to the top of the hour.
And Daniel Jeremiah, who is out here at the Bolt
here during training camp, Well, we'll check in with us next.
And I heard he is well, I heard he'scot some
I don't know if you want to strife.
Speaker 3 (14:31):
Potential opinions about Dodger talk.
Speaker 4 (14:34):
Yeah, he said something's going on on Dodger Talk that
he wants to share with us.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
We've made it even easier to take LA sports with
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Trip all summer with LA Sports Petro some money, remember
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Speaker 3 (15:39):
Right now live from the Bolt is Daniel Jeremiah, friend
of the show. Yes Chargers Color analyst, NFL Network senior
super figurehead draft expert, and of course the jere Messiah
of Wake Forest Fame excuse me and uh uh Appy
(16:02):
State fame, a hero of the show, and our resident
Padres fan on your Southern California Toyota Dealer celebrity hotline.
What's cracking, Danielle? How are you?
Speaker 5 (16:12):
I'm a great pee. I wish if the pots has
just been.
Speaker 7 (16:15):
Playing a little more consistent, I probably would have, you know,
joined the chat a little earlier. But you know, the
Dodgers struggling Patrey's haven't been able to take advantage of it.
So I was kind of laying low until until I
stumbled into this whole dynamic of Dodger talk that I
did not know existed.
Speaker 4 (16:30):
Man, there's you were chatting about that before we uh
before we got you on. Share with us your observations
of what you think is going on on the Dodger
postgame show.
Speaker 7 (16:40):
Well, I'm I'm a religious listener only after Dodger losses.
I had never listened after Dodger wins, but after Dodger
losses I listened to postgame.
Speaker 3 (16:48):
There can be some fire after a win too. I
would amend that if I but go ahead.
Speaker 7 (16:52):
Okay, yeah, Well that's a whole new world that could
open up to me, so I'll chick in on that.
But you know, look, it's it's a great show. You
got two great hosts who I thought, you know, it
seemed to be friends, I thought until the other night
when I listened and there was a caller and don't remember,
but was Izzy was someone else?
Speaker 2 (17:10):
Is he very easy to distinguish?
Speaker 7 (17:12):
Yeah, he was not happy though with the loss, just
very frustrated. But man, I think that I think the
term whiner was used to describe Dave, and this caller
was very excited Kate's was hosting, and it wasn't Dave.
And I'm just waiting for Kate's, you know, as a
god ferring man. And I thought a good teammate to
defend Dave And uh, two days later, still waiting, hadn't
(17:32):
hear any of that defense. He just said I appreciate
the call, and then got into his answer.
Speaker 3 (17:36):
Thank you for your opinion. I'm not gonna say whether
I share it or not. Uh, yeah, Daniel, I don't
know how long it's been like this. Maybe it's because
of the grind of the baseball season.
Speaker 2 (17:47):
And lost.
Speaker 3 (17:49):
Yeah. I mean, but Dodger Talk is not a friendly
place and it hasn't been in a long time. Am
I wrong to say No?
Speaker 2 (17:57):
I think you're right. I think Uh.
Speaker 4 (17:59):
It was to the point too where I think Dave
and Tim, if they were to have a microphone, they
would acknowledge they kind of like the losses. They like
the strife like engagement goes way up, and so I
think each of them stoke that fire to uh, to
keep the engagement level up and the intensity high.
Speaker 5 (18:17):
That's great, That's a great listen. I I enjoy the
heck out of it.
Speaker 7 (18:21):
And the best thing about it is there's two different
ways of doing it. It is Vassay is just just
a bludgeing you with the hammer, right. He is just gonna,
you know.
Speaker 3 (18:32):
Opinion above his he's with the team on the plane.
Speaker 7 (18:36):
Y got stinks and I told him to his face
in the batting practice that he STINKD like that. That's
that's kind of the vast list. Whereas whereas you get Kate's,
Kates is like the velvet hammer. He'll be Here's here's
a classic Kates. He does every single episode. It is well, look,
the outfield defense has not been good, but I won't
say a name. I'm not gonna mention who it is.
But there's potentially someone in the infield who could potentially
(18:58):
maybe possibly move to the outfield, and that could potentially
maybe solve the outfield problem.
Speaker 5 (19:04):
And then Dave's like Mookie's selfish. Why isn't he playing
right field?
Speaker 3 (19:08):
He's much more to the point, I suppose.
Speaker 5 (19:14):
I'm down here for four minutes. I've actually had enough
of this.
Speaker 4 (19:18):
I want to play the caller for you guys, so
you can actually hear what the caller had to say
on post came on, Steve.
Speaker 8 (19:26):
I'm doing fantastic, and I'll tell you why. I'm first
off better hearing you. Then the cry baby Dave say,
but with all that moving next pitchings right on with that, I've.
Speaker 5 (19:39):
What am I supposed to say? Hey, Hey, Dave does
a great job, all right, what do you mean?
Speaker 3 (19:47):
I haven't seen Dave cry in years?
Speaker 5 (19:49):
Anyway, cry it is the birth of his children.
Speaker 8 (19:51):
We're doing fantastic, and I'll tell you why. I'm first
off better hearing you.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Then the cry baby Dave say, Kate says nothing. He
just lets that fly.
Speaker 5 (20:04):
I think if you'll let it list let that play out.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
You'll hear what.
Speaker 5 (20:06):
I appreciate the call. I believe that's what it was said.
Speaker 3 (20:10):
I gotta get that hold on. Remember, I remember a
long time ago I went on outside the Lines and
it was Bob Lee on ESPN, and I was like, hey, Bob,
I appreciate you a lot more than that. Uh that
Jeremy shapp And He's like, hey, hey, we're all pulling
the same oars here. Bob Lee stepped up in a
(20:31):
way that Tim Kats would not.
Speaker 8 (20:33):
St you can do that.
Speaker 5 (20:35):
Yeah, I think that's what we're seeing.
Speaker 4 (20:37):
Steve and I appreciate and Alex VESSI is.
Speaker 3 (20:41):
I appreciate great call.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
This is so much better than football.
Speaker 7 (20:44):
And I mean if Kates would go to the gym
room call to day, I think that would have been
his call of.
Speaker 3 (20:48):
The day, racking the hell of a call. Let me
ask you this before you bump, before you discovered the
diamond of Dodger talk and the granite, Uh Daniel, what
would you say your primary motivation for getting after the
Dodgers was his? I mean, if you had to rate
how personal the Dodger padre rivalry is between you and
(21:10):
your play by play partner on the Chargers games. What
would you like on a scale of one to ten,
you know, ten being like those two Detroit Tigers announcers
choking each other over a chain, and one, you know,
being like just all in good fun, like like I
(21:31):
an eagle and going back and forth with the czar,
like what are we talking about?
Speaker 7 (21:38):
Well, I know Money's playbook. He takes my playbook that
I used to get Kate's, which used to get him
every single time. Now Kates has kind of come hip
to my game a little bit. Money incorporates a very
similar playbook that I employ against me, which you know,
and to be honest with is probably more successful than
mine is with Kate's presently.
Speaker 3 (21:57):
And what is that playbook?
Speaker 2 (21:58):
Little red meat in the water.
Speaker 7 (22:00):
Yeah, it's a little yeah, very yeah, speak very sob yeah,
speaking absolutes a little bit, you know like this, it's
a foregone conclusion.
Speaker 4 (22:07):
Yeah, you know how this goes for the Padres every year.
Speaker 8 (22:10):
You're you're well fantastic, and I'll tell you why I'm
first off, then you're hearing you then the cry baby
David West saying no interjection.
Speaker 7 (22:20):
I think that that could be the little fissure that
that that keeps this team from winning a World Series.
I really think it is. That's I think it's a
postgame issue that has to be resolved at the deadline,
and that's.
Speaker 3 (22:29):
Maybe we could get those big boxing gloves.
Speaker 4 (22:33):
Oh yeah, on like the log, big boxing gloves on
a balance beam, and that's how they'll settle it. We
have to get him out of here because he's live
on NFL network. Or do you want to answer? Do you
want to give us a ten second answer to a
football question? You got one?
Speaker 3 (22:47):
What are you talking about?
Speaker 2 (22:49):
One?
Speaker 3 (22:51):
There we go, I got one for you, DJ.
Speaker 7 (22:52):
Have you ever seen an offensive lineman signed the most
lucrative deal in the history of the NFL after he
divorced his wife?
Speaker 2 (22:58):
Oh that's not cool? How dare you?
Speaker 7 (23:02):
It's just that is a raider question.
Speaker 3 (23:05):
Not unlike uh not unlike pat Riley signing waiting to
sign Spolstra to his big attention finalized.
Speaker 7 (23:13):
You know, asked a question like that, pee a guy
who doesn't want to talk about Christian Wilks kissing his
teammate on the go.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
It's a question like that.
Speaker 4 (23:20):
There you go. And with that, he's taking his headset
off and he is walking up to.
Speaker 7 (23:24):
Hey, I just got a text from passing. It says Dalton,
rushing in vast say to the twins for their closer.
Speaker 3 (23:29):
Oh, I like that. Salaries matchup, beautiful salaries matchup. There,
he goes, all right, we'll be back with more Petros
and money. That's the great Daniel Jeremiah. You can hear
on Chargers with Matt and of course on the NFL network.
Matt and Daniel will be calling the Hall of Fame
(23:51):
game on Thursday at five. Right here on the station,
we're running that game on the stage.
Speaker 1 (24:01):
Hello, PMS listener. Did you know Am five seventy LA
Sports has a wide range of LA Sports podcasts. There's
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with David Vasse, the Dodger Podcast of Record, Clipper Talk
Without a Musk, follow us all and many more. Just
go to AM five to seventy LA Sports on the
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Speaker 3 (24:24):
Craig and everybody, and welcome back. It's the Petro san
Money Show. The Dodgers are in Cincinnati, yes, very true,
and they will not be back for quite some time.
It's the longest road trip of the year. At East
Coast swing Flex alerts, all food alert, all day, every day,
(24:51):
Flex alerts on the Petrosen Money Show. Stay tuned to
our social media feeds acts in particular that will tell
you this showtime when I around to it every single day.
Don't forget to podcast the show on the iHeartRadio app
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enjoy it like it's supposed to be crystal clear Joy
(25:14):
the Dodger Games like that too, if you're in the
geo fence and I know somebody that doesn't have control
over the map like a kid playing risk anymore. But
right now it is time for the dead Guy Birthday
of the Day.
Speaker 4 (25:30):
This one, the opening line got my attention of the
Wikipedia page. Henry Clues, friend to Honest Abe and Secretary
of the Treasury for Grant, wrote this of today's dead
Guy Birthday of the Day on auree quote. Of all
the great operators of Wall Street, Daniel Drew furnished the
most remarkable instance of immense and long continued success followed
(25:55):
by utter failure and hopeless bankruptcy. Born in Carmel, New York,
grew up no education. His father owned a small cattle farm.
Died when Daniel was fifteen, so young, Drew enlists in
the US Army.
Speaker 3 (26:10):
Look not from the gunner. I know that I've got
no education.
Speaker 4 (26:14):
No education, but he could fight, and he fought in
the War of eighteen twelve. After the war, from scratch,
he built a successful cattle droving business. Cash in his pocket,
he takes off for the big time. In eighteen twenty.
He runs the bulls Head Tavern in the Bowery section
of New York City, and you hear it's all about connections.
While connections while running the tavern helped him form a
(26:36):
partnership with two other drovers buying cattle from neighboring counties,
bringing him to New York for sale. Made some serious
scratch on that which led to his purchasing a share
of a boat operating on the Hudson River. Competing directly
with Cornelius Vanderbilt against the Hudson River Steamboat Association. He
(26:56):
was able to win and started a bunch of profitable
lines out there side of New York City. Not satisfied,
starts to speculate in stocks and he founds the brokerage
firm of Drew Robinson and Company. Becomes a member of
the board of directors of the Erie Railroad and used
his position to manipulate the railroad's stock price, earning him
a small fortune. He, along with his former foe Vanderbilt,
(27:20):
joined forces to rescue the Eerie from bankruptcy. Drew then
became director of the New York and Harlem Railroads, collaborating
with Vanderbilt to falsely prop up the company's finances and
cash in on stock speculation. But it would last their friendship.
Drew tried to get the jump on Corny, selling the
(27:42):
stock short, so Vanderbilt and his associates bought every share
he sold, ultimately causing the stock price to rise from
ninety to two hundred and eighty five bucks in five months.
Drew would lose five hundred grand about twenty one million
dollars in today's money. So a financial war escalated between
the two. They even had a title for it, the
(28:02):
Eerie War. It was his revenge. Vanderbilt took serious losses
in the Eerie Railroad, had to sell his entire stake
to Drew and two partners, and then Drew's two partners
played him out, manipulating the stock price, causing Drew to
lose one and a half million dollars about sixty million
(28:23):
bucks in today's money. And the dude that pulled it off,
this guy Fisk, gets killed by a jealous rival over
a mistress, so they say. The other guy goouled, loses
a million dollars worth of stock and disappears, so they say,
and Drew was left holding the bag for all of it.
(28:45):
By eighteen seventy six, filed for bankruptcy debt succeeding a
million dollars no viable assets. He would die three years
later penniless, depending on his son William for support. His
legacy peak wealth of thirteen million bucks half a billion
dollars in twenty twenty five. He was known as Uncle
Daniel on Wall Street Flip side of that hated for
(29:08):
introducing watered stock, as they called it, to Wall Street
Company shares that were issued on BS news that diluted
the shares. They were called watered stocks because of our
guy Drew, because that's what he used to do to
his cattle. He would get them all fat on salt
and drinking water to increase their weight before selling. So
there you go the legacy of Daniel Drew.
Speaker 3 (29:29):
Yes, even a more volatile economy in the nineteen hundreds
than we could imagine, you know, and even you know,
into the stock market crash in the early twentieth century,
you know, with a lot of financial suicides, like literal
suicides because of finances, A lot of that back in
the day, which is interesting. Okay, beating out Geddy Lee
(29:52):
is Jenny Holzer. Jenny Holzer is seventy five years old
today and an American neo conceptual artist from Ohio who
grew up wanting to be an abstract painter, went to
Duke then the University of Chicago. Neo conceptual art means
(30:15):
most of the stuff is in public spaces, involving words
or phrases or ideas, projections on buildings and other structures,
usually led lights, capital letters. You get the drift, Matt
(30:36):
now big well, I mean, who doesn't want to see
giant capital letters preaching to you? And under the guise
of art brick tweet, would you like, uh, permanent displays
that we can go over or some of the selected
works that that have come and gone.
Speaker 2 (31:00):
Let's go selected works.
Speaker 3 (31:02):
Okay, there's Under a Rock from nineteen eighty six, a
series of juxtaposing electronic messages with poetic phrases etched on
stone benches in some town that I cannot pronounce.
Speaker 4 (31:18):
I can get behind that. I like seeing a nice
message on a bench. You know, you're casually walking and
you're like, oh, this is an interesting Who is this
bench dedicated to? Or what is the uplifting quote that's
going to make my day here on this park bench?
Speaker 3 (31:30):
Here's one that says it takes a while before you
can step over inert bodies and go ahead with what
you were trying to do. Twenty eight white granite benches
with inscriptions part of the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden.
Speaker 4 (31:45):
Now, was that what you read one of the supposed
to be inspiring quotes, well, morbid.
Speaker 3 (31:53):
What those can inspire? Morbidity? Green table not your Burger place,
green cheek, but a large granite picnic table with inscriptions.
That's at the University of California, San Diego. Go right
over there and check it out. Installation for the Guggenheim
(32:15):
Museum Bill Boo permanent installation located off the main room
of the Guggenheim. Tall led columns texts in English, The
Ceiling Snake one and thirty eight series of electronic LED
signs with red diodes over forty seven point six meters
(32:40):
permanently installed at the Hamburger in Kunstall.
Speaker 4 (32:48):
That would be I'm guessing Spain sounds Spanish.
Speaker 3 (32:57):
Black last nineteen ninety nine permanent installation imposed of ten
stone benches within great quotes from the Hollywood ten located
at the University of Southern California's Fisher Museum of Art.
We can go over to us. You look at it
right now.
Speaker 4 (33:10):
Wow, They've welcome you with open arms. Whenever you step
on campus. I'm sure they take you right to it.
Speaker 3 (33:16):
There's one in Osaka called Serpentine.
Speaker 2 (33:20):
I've been there.
Speaker 3 (33:23):
Did you drink an asahi out of a midi keg
in nineteen twenty eight? There I did.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
I woe it like a backpack.
Speaker 3 (33:32):
The New York City Aids memorial granite pavers with lines
from Walt Whitman's song of Myself. She also does let
Me tell you something about myself, About me? She does dancing,
(33:54):
interpretive dance choreography, and she's published like.
Speaker 4 (34:01):
Nine books, a real uh renaissance in the category of
art renaissance.
Speaker 3 (34:10):
Yeah, she works out of She works out of New York.
Oh yeah, so there you go. Jenny Holzer seventy five
years old today. If you want giant script right in
your face in a public space, neo class neo conceptual
artist Jenny Holzer is for you.
Speaker 2 (34:32):
Little art and commerce for your dead and alive guy birthday. Today.
Speaker 4 (34:35):
We do it all on the Petros Money Show.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
Yes and Daniel Jeremiah and David Vasse and we'll be
back on tomorrow one o'clock. Have a great day, everybody,
stay cool and enjoy Dodgers in Cincinnati. We're t be
backmorrow