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May 9, 2025 53 mins
An exclusive chat with celeb journalist Madison Brodsky as she recounts going viral after taking a foul ball to the face at a Dodgers game! From sports mishaps to Hollywood headlines, don’t miss this fun, unfiltered interview. #MadisonBrodsky #Dodgers #ViralTikTok #K4HD #CelebrityInterview

Behind The Scenes is broadcast live Fridays at Noon PT on K4HD Radio - Hollywood Talk Radio (www.k4hd.com) part of Talk 4 Radio (www.talk4radio.com) on the Talk 4 Media Network (www.talk4media.com). Behind The Scenes TV Show is viewed on Talk 4 TV (www.talk4tv.com).

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
This program is designed to provide general information with regards
to the subject matters covered. This information is given with
the understanding that neither the hosts, guests, sponsors or station
are engaged in rendering any specific and personal medical, financial, legal, counseling,
professional service, or any advice.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
You should seek the services.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
Of competent professionals before applying or trying any suggested ideas.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
Welcome to Behind the Scenes for you're half asked entertainment
news with no bullshit with our hosts, The Baroness and
Bear Fjorda, only on Talk four Media.

Speaker 4 (00:39):
Good day, gooday, Welcome to Behind the Scenes. I'm your host,
Summa Helene and we are on with my co host,
the Baddest Bear in the Cage, Bearfjorda.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
You got my.

Speaker 4 (00:50):
Title correct, so I'm happy to give you yours.

Speaker 2 (00:52):
That's right, I did, thank you, but in a different show,
What sure are we you on? Today?

Speaker 5 (00:57):
I was on a show that features entrepreneurs and basically
highlights strategic strategies for getting ahead in your industry or
in my case, discussing social media and building a nonprofit.

Speaker 2 (01:07):
So it was a wonderful time.

Speaker 4 (01:09):
Why didn't you bring legs with you? She knows more
about building a nonprofit than you do. She built your nonprofit.

Speaker 6 (01:14):
Well.

Speaker 5 (01:14):
I definitely highlighted her and actually you and my mother
of course, because those are people who know way more
than me about doing that part. It was the social
media and like promoting it. I think I have the
biggest ability to speak on at the time.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
I completely agree, that's amazing. How did you learn about
social media?

Speaker 2 (01:30):
I did highlight you as well in that interview.

Speaker 5 (01:32):
That was the U partner and then just the biggest
thing I learned always, and this is totally irrelevant probably
what we're discussed, but it's always make sure you're not
the smartest person in the room.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
There's a time and place for it.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
I make sure I'm the dumbest I am if but
I think that goes with anything. If you're a fighter,
if you're the best fighter in the room, you're not
going to learn anything. If you're the smartest person in
the room, you're not going to learn anything. I'm always
the dumbest person in the room. And the people I
listen to most actually my uncle and my aunt. They've
built an incredible business and my aunt didn't murder my

(02:06):
uncle while doing it, which is that's more incredible, which
is unbelievable. I truly truly admire my aunt, I think.
Don't get me wrong, my uncle has a brilliant mind.
He does, but he has a brilliant and disorganized mind.
So the combination of him and my aunt, I think
create a situation where there is success because she goes

(02:27):
through and takes his ideas and makes them profitable.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
She organizes, she organizes.

Speaker 4 (02:32):
The thoughts and it's really clever. And then of course
because of her, they invested in We're going to State
and all of that. I mean, really brilliant, brilliant couple,
and I think they bring out the best in each other.
And again, the fact that she hasn't murdered him, I
consider a when.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
A lot of patients, a lot of patients and compassion.

Speaker 4 (02:49):
I see the same thing with my brother and my
sister in law. No, really, she hasn't murdered him. Really
is the starting line. My brother has an amazing eye.
One of the rings he brought over yes today is
a cavesh On emerald that's like a little Lome emerald
with ombre tiny emeralds going into diamonds. I mean, really,
it's incredible. Ring it's gorgeous. I love it. I want

(03:09):
it desperately, but I'm not you know, I I'm not
paying that much. It's a Columbian emerald.

Speaker 2 (03:17):
So I don't harder to get emeralds out of Columbia.

Speaker 4 (03:21):
You'd think it depends how much cocaine do you know?

Speaker 2 (03:24):
No, I'm kidding drugs like a blood emerald.

Speaker 4 (03:29):
No, there's nothing called a blood emerald. You're thinking of
blood diamond I am, and blood diamonds come out of Africa,
and actually most diamonds in circulation would be classified blood
diamonds unless you're looking at something that is lab created.
But realistically, without my sister in law, I don't think
my brother would be doing as well. She handles, you know,

(03:50):
like my aunt does for my uncle, the day to
day operations and the day to day functionality. And my
aunt and my sister in law get along so well.
Is they're really brilliant speaking. And my uncle's business is
actually one of the ones that, for you guys, does
the giveaways. We you know, we have paid sponsorships, but
my uncle very kindly gives away an ATV ride every

(04:11):
single week. So if you go and watch Bear's stint
on what channel was.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
It and when it gets to me be able to
push it out? Excellent?

Speaker 4 (04:18):
Okay, So instead we will talk about well we'll save
I'll give away for when gets on. Yes, I want
to know how her face is doing.

Speaker 2 (04:28):
What happened to her face?

Speaker 4 (04:29):
I will let you know when she gets on.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
Okay, is it still a face?

Speaker 4 (04:32):
It's still a face.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
That's always the worst case. Her face turns into a hand.
It gets really muddy.

Speaker 5 (04:36):
At that point, I wanted to make it a joke.
I didn't know where I was going to go. Stop
looking at the camera with your what shape eyes do
you have?

Speaker 6 (04:44):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (04:45):
I have very very round eyes.

Speaker 2 (04:46):
With your round eyes and stuff judging me with your
round eyes like dull eyes.

Speaker 4 (04:51):
Actually yeah, very very very dull eyes.

Speaker 2 (04:55):
That's okay though, Actually you look beautiful today. You know
every day.

Speaker 4 (04:59):
He's really trying to hang a left away from his
not funny jokes.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
Then you hang the left. I'll let you drive.

Speaker 4 (05:05):
That's all right, we'll just sit here and talk about
your joke.

Speaker 2 (05:07):
I don't want to sit here talk about my joke.
That's a bad idea of everyone involved. Why, because I'm
going to keep trying to save it.

Speaker 5 (05:14):
It's just it's like one disaster a disaster after another,
and then I'm gonna start stuttering and they'm gonna cry
and walk away, and then you don't have a co host.

Speaker 4 (05:22):
No, it's fine. I can do this so that a
co host did for years. If you'd like to cry,
we could make that our thumbnail.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
That's where here are right now.

Speaker 4 (05:33):
So we had a lot.

Speaker 5 (05:34):
Thank you first sound engineer, good joke, high five, bam,
appreciate you.

Speaker 6 (05:38):
I love it.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
Oh, he's the best.

Speaker 4 (05:40):
So essentially we've had a lot going on in the
world today. We've had a lot going on in Hollywood today.
You're going to start a little bit with royalty. We
have V Day in Europe, which is Victory Day, and
the last survivors of you know, are around for World
War two, and we're really getting to the end.

Speaker 2 (05:57):
I know.

Speaker 4 (05:57):
So I you know, it's funny you don't think about.
I go to INSEC Day in Australia and you see
the fellows are getting fewer and fewer.

Speaker 5 (06:05):
That's okay, they've already started teaching history improperly. Anyways, we're
going to World War two and.

Speaker 4 (06:09):
Mary started teaching everything improperly. Don't get me wrong. This
is my country by choice. But you guys don't learn history.
You learn about history, and frankly, now even what you're
learning about is wrong.

Speaker 5 (06:21):
No, I mean, that's that's the problem is history. History
books change so much. And while we get new information,
that's great that they re edit those and put it
out to the masses. However, a lot of times they
get re edited for sake what makes people more comfortable,
or what they're getting.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Paid to put in there.

Speaker 5 (06:35):
Everything is a financial industry, so it's anything that's even
government run these days, is probably going to be lobbied
to be in someone's favor in one way or now we.

Speaker 4 (06:44):
Call lobbying where I come from, bribery, Yeah, bribery.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Which is not allowed and any it's not allowed anywhere.

Speaker 5 (06:49):
By the way, you're not allowed to bribe anyone in
the United States Congress. We can lobby for certain things
to happen, which is it's love. We live in a democracy. No,
you don't know, you're a republic.

Speaker 4 (07:02):
Yeah, you're in a republic. And I'd like to point
out every great republic fell for exactly the same reason.
You guys are suffering from late stage capitalism.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
Late stage capitals are on capitalism I think, I.

Speaker 4 (07:13):
Don't know, nothing's wrong with capitalism, but when you get
to late stage capitalism, which is what happened is happening
here in the United States, which is where the money
takes over. People miss the point, like they look at
the fifties as if it was the greatest time in
American history, and for some people it was just not.
For women or people of color or minorities in any.

Speaker 6 (07:31):
Way, it was fine.

Speaker 4 (07:33):
Fine, But if you want to go back to that time,
that means you need to have more union intervention, more
government spending, more government projects. The reason it was a
great time in history is because the government gave more
to its people and more heavily taxed the rich. Now
that being said, I don't mind you not taxing the rich.
Some of us like to keep our money.

Speaker 5 (07:54):
I don't think there's anything wrong with living in the
time you're at. There's no better time to exist in
the world than there is in this moment where you
are right now.

Speaker 4 (08:01):
I agree.

Speaker 2 (08:02):
You don't medicine exactly.

Speaker 5 (08:04):
Why do you want to be born back in a
time where polio was so prevalent that they didn't have
a way to stop it.

Speaker 4 (08:08):
Don't forget people don't believe in pol anymore.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
Do they not believe in people? Do they not believe
in vaccines?

Speaker 5 (08:14):
Because I can't understand people being afraid of putting a
foreign substance in their body.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
But to disregard people living in the iron you.

Speaker 4 (08:20):
Literally had every well the last man living in a
lung just died.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
Actually, well, okay, maybe that's why.

Speaker 4 (08:26):
And you've had every possible vaccine.

Speaker 2 (08:27):
I'm okay any vaccination that doesn't bother me.

Speaker 5 (08:30):
I'm saying I can get why other people may be like,
I don't want that in my body or whatnot. But
to disregard the does this disregard something that killed that
probably millions, Yeah, maybe not millions of people, at least
hundreds of thousands people.

Speaker 4 (08:43):
I would like you to go back.

Speaker 5 (08:45):
Five years, okay, five years it is now twenty twenty.

Speaker 4 (08:48):
Yep, and people disregarded It's.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
Amaze they're all locked down right now.

Speaker 4 (08:53):
Yeah, and people disregarded things that killed millions of people.

Speaker 2 (08:57):
The government has elected to send me first mean checked
by this point, A.

Speaker 4 (09:01):
Lack of a lack of education is really what's killing
this country. Yeah, anyway, in my country by choice. But
I'm not in a position where any of it affects me.
If I you know, I can afford private education, I
can afford to do what I please.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
You know, your baroness is really showing right now, just
putting that out.

Speaker 4 (09:24):
But now that being said, that's earned. I was not
born wealthy. I was born title not wealthy, and put
in a lot of work. But that's the difference is
there's no such thing as truly self made. I had
a lot of help.

Speaker 5 (09:38):
No, I think everyone to be successful requires help, and
at that you require helping people who've done it longer
than you, multiple people, lots of years of wisdom behind
what they're telling you, and probably even in some cases
you get like a helping hand. You know, what was
Donald Trump's first thing? You got like a million dollar
loan or something from.

Speaker 4 (09:55):
A Yeah, he brought it a smaller and not a smaller. Unfortunately,
he's the we're not going to talk about politics, especially
because financially he has made terrible million He's made terrible
financial decisions in his lifetime.

Speaker 2 (10:09):
The good financial decisions, right, Oh.

Speaker 4 (10:12):
I judged them all the time. I never mind, I
judged them all the time. You have far more money
if he just hadn't invested in Trump's stakes and.

Speaker 5 (10:19):
Aged did a mast on that or whatever. Where if
he just kept all the money he was ever given
by his family or by investors or investors people who
didn't have to pay back, and he would.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
Have made more.

Speaker 4 (10:30):
Okay, that's not what it is.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
Okay, then you explain.

Speaker 4 (10:33):
Essentially what he had inherited from his father. If people
way would have accrued so much interest, he would be
one of the wealthiest men in the world currently. And
he's lost more than he's ever made. He just had
so much that it didn't matter. The big thing was, though,
when the producers and this is jumping back into film,

(10:54):
the producers of his Boardroom show came.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
In, You're fired. I love that show.

Speaker 4 (11:04):
When they come in, Trump Tower was in such disrepair
and so in sight, and he was so broke. You know,
he himself told the story of walking down the street
with his daughter explaining the homeless man had more money
than he did.

Speaker 2 (11:17):
The homeless man had was four billion dollars at the time.

Speaker 4 (11:22):
Well, essentially, the apprentice told everyone and tricked everyone into
saying this man was a money genius. But he made
his money off the apprentice. So that's kind of the catch,
is they leaned into his branding because he had that branding,
but he'd actually already lost more than most people will
ever see.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
That kind of reminds me a lot of the people
like the social media and this.

Speaker 4 (11:44):
Is not yeah, this is not about politics. This is
simply about this is entertainment, entertainment, and essentially it's very
much like the gurus online. This is how you make this.
Do you have any money? The person I listen to
most about money is is my aunt and my uncle
because I think they're brilliant and they've done an amazing job.

(12:05):
I have friends that have made, you know, millions and
millions and millions of dollars. Those are the people you
should listen to. Do not take advice from anyone who
leads a life you don't want to live.

Speaker 5 (12:16):
Ever, I will argue that for Andrew Tate, because people
want the life you lead.

Speaker 4 (12:25):
He has been arrested for trafficking women who are that they.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
Don't believe that. They believe it was a sham, a sham.

Speaker 4 (12:32):
They do not take advice from anyone whose life you
don't want to live. And if you are dumb enough
to believe that Andrew Tate is intelligent or capable or
not a career criminal, then please, I encourage you to
follow him, follow his courses. And when you go to prison,

(12:53):
don't say you weren't surprised.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
At least you'll be giving money to do's defense attorney
for you.

Speaker 4 (13:00):
No, at least you'll get three hots and a cot.

Speaker 2 (13:02):
What the hell's that?

Speaker 4 (13:03):
Three hot meals and a bed to sleep in when
you're in tailor essentially used.

Speaker 6 (13:08):
For the military.

Speaker 5 (13:08):
But whatever, prison's fine, prison works, depending where you go.
You might didn't get a TV in your prison. There
you go, you're feeling, you give be TV in yourself.

Speaker 4 (13:17):
Because they believe in reappilitation. America, though, has the largest
prison industrial complex in the world. You guys actually implemented
it when you stopped having slavery. You replace slaves with
convicts and war criminals, and that's how you replaced it.
And that's why you have the largest prison industrial complex
in the world. And the reason it's called the prison
industrial complex is because so many goods and services are

(13:38):
made with prison labor.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
Well, do you know why they do that?

Speaker 4 (13:41):
Because America was built on a slave economy and they
didn't know how to replace it, so they replaced it
with prisoners, to which taught that in history, it makes money. Yes,
that's that's it.

Speaker 5 (13:49):
Even if that didn't make most say that wasn't profitable
for some reason, they wouldn't do it. It's just the
fact that money exist.

Speaker 4 (13:54):
Actually, your economy would have collapsed without it, so literally
collapsed because the South was the most profitable but the
least industrious. And so when you after your civil war,
you had to do something to move back to productivity.
And that's what they come up with, making prisoners do
the work pretty much enough, so your entire economy would

(14:16):
collapse without prisoners. That's why you have the largest number
of incarcerated persons in the world.

Speaker 5 (14:24):
Well that said, now what I mean not percally switched
to anything else. Let's say we don't have prisons anymore.
What will we do to make it.

Speaker 2 (14:33):
Would know?

Speaker 4 (14:34):
It would actually rehold. You'd have to rehold your entire
system because you never rebuilt your slave economy.

Speaker 2 (14:41):
We're not going to rebuild our slave economy.

Speaker 4 (14:43):
No, meaning you didn't rebuild after you replaced your slaves
with prisoners. Essentially you are on the same system you've
always been on. It's actually really ingenious. I mean, it's inhumane.
I'm not saying it's not, but it's really ingenious. The
way you guys did it, it was brilliant.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Oh, you rest assure we were not taught that in school.

Speaker 4 (15:03):
Really we were.

Speaker 2 (15:05):
Were you taught that in your Australian school.

Speaker 4 (15:09):
Because it's considered world knowledge? Oh my god, we are taught.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
Well, you guys, you decide what to write.

Speaker 4 (15:16):
We were on your side.

Speaker 6 (15:17):
Dear.

Speaker 4 (15:17):
We wont World War two, two of them realistically though,
That's that's what we're taught. And you know we're taught.
When I came here and I've taken history exams and
university exams here, I learned more about American history outside
of America than I did inside.

Speaker 5 (15:38):
Wow, this is a bizarre Well, I don't know how
long the concept has been going around, but I know
that we don't really share history of the world.

Speaker 2 (15:46):
We shared the America's history of the world.

Speaker 4 (15:48):
Well, America is very large, so if you look at it,
I mean, your states are essentially your Europe.

Speaker 2 (15:54):
That's why they.

Speaker 4 (15:55):
Don't think within one hundred years America as we know
it will exist. They do believe it will rebreak along
them and Dixon line. But that being said, we have
a very very special guest today. Do we have medisinal?

Speaker 2 (16:08):
All right?

Speaker 4 (16:09):
I've got my assistant in the background yelling she is.
I'm like she is. I'm like, yeah, I'm talking to
our sound engineer, Lex, not you. He's cute. On I'd
like to welcome Medison to the show. Hello, Darling, how
are you? I'm well, how are you lovely? I heard
you were horribly attacked. Would you like to tell us
what happened?

Speaker 2 (16:30):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (16:31):
I went to the Dodgers game last week, and thankfully
I have healed quite well. But bring you back to
last week. I used to date somebody that was on
the Dodgers. He's no longer on the Dodgers, but I'm
still friends with the team. So they were like, oh
my god, Madison, you're finally free for a day. You're
off of work. Why don't you come down to the

(16:51):
game and like have a day out with your girls?
And I was like, okay, great. So I was sitting
in the family in front section. My phone starts ringing.
I look down to see who's calling, and it was
Shock and I go to answer the call, and then
I heard the whole stadium go oh And I was like,
oh no, did someone get hit? And then my friend Scarlett,

(17:14):
who was sitting next to me, was like, oh my god,
don't touch your face. And I was like why because
immediately when someone says don't do something, you do want
to do, right, So I go to touch my face.
I blood all over my hands and that's when I
realized I got hit. And then I was like, where
did I get hit? Did I break my nose, my cheekbone?
Did I knock my teeth out? Like what's the situation here?

(17:34):
And so I'm like touch it all over the place,
and turns out I split my lip open. I got
hit right here, and this whole area was very black
and blue. Under my lip was destroyed. I can show
you videos so that you guys can see the damage
that was done. But we're a week later. Thankfully, a

(17:55):
mouth heels very well, and the only things that I'm
really dealing with now are these two teeth are very sensitive,
so it's very hard to like bite into a sandwich
right now, and the dentist are keeping a close look
to make sure that the teeth don't die because the
nerves are so sensitive. And then my jaw was popped

(18:15):
out of place, and the whiplash. So there's a few things.

Speaker 2 (18:20):
Have you thought about competition fighting? Ever?

Speaker 5 (18:23):
Maybe now because you're telling me you got to hit
with the ball, like whatever, they hit hell or fast,
they hit it in no reaction.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
You're like, oh, just I faced this, some roll on
my face, not even pain. That's fantastic, That's that's shock.

Speaker 6 (18:35):
I think my body went into shock.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
Yeah, well it's fair.

Speaker 6 (18:40):
I mean, maybe that's why I should go into fighting,
because my body can handle it.

Speaker 5 (18:44):
Evidently your hair, body, you had a lot of damage.
But no, you look fine.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
You look great.

Speaker 5 (18:48):
Actually, I'm really happy didn't have any impact on you.

Speaker 6 (18:51):
Where can everyone have a many had to show you? Well?

Speaker 4 (18:54):
Where can everyone go to your social media to get
a look at.

Speaker 6 (18:57):
The Yes, if you go to Madison Brotsky b R O. D. Sky,
you can see the video of the aftermath when they
required me to be carried out the stadium on a stretcher.
You can see my lip busted open. You can see
all the drama, all the dramatics of it all. But
I'm going to show you guys, since you're right here,

(19:17):
just so you can see the inside of my days later.
Ready for this? Yeah, So here, let's supposed to play
nice christ so once a few days later when it

(19:37):
started healing finally and the stitches were healed. So yeah,
it's been a journey. It got a lot of media attention.

Speaker 4 (19:45):
On the plus side for hear me out for them.
At least it was somebody who's gifted tickets, so you're
less luckily to sue, I'm just signed.

Speaker 6 (19:53):
You actually can't stew because you take the risk by
attending a game. It's in your like terms and conditions
when you pay for your ticket.

Speaker 4 (20:02):
That's never never stopped anyone from doing.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
Did you catch the ball.

Speaker 6 (20:16):
Behind me? Stole the ball and then pretend like he
didn't even though he did, and refuse to give it back,
which is very disappointing. I also don't know why you
want that ball because it has my blood all over it,
So like, hand back my DNA.

Speaker 2 (20:30):
Please got a story to tell you.

Speaker 4 (20:33):
I like I'd be on TikTok and be like I
got hit in the face of the ball and then
this dude stolen.

Speaker 6 (20:38):
It's already all over TikTok like people are okay, say
it again.

Speaker 4 (20:45):
The needs the handle, give her back her ball.

Speaker 6 (20:49):
I need summer. Do you want to start it?

Speaker 5 (20:51):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (20:52):
I kind of.

Speaker 4 (20:55):
He's got a couple of mill have him started, you started.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
Something about it.

Speaker 5 (21:00):
There our wonderful sound engineers chiming in. The Only way
to make right is to keep the ball and have
it signed by everyone on the team.

Speaker 6 (21:07):
Yeah, yeah, I did hear that there was a gift
package of some sort in the works. That's being said
to me, So we'll see what's okay.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
So you know what they're making amends for.

Speaker 4 (21:20):
Yeah, no, not really. It's like when you go to
a MMA match. There was a lady who got hit
in the eye with a tooth and she tried to
sue the ufcoth that one guy punched another guy. Tooth
went flying, hit lady in the eye. Happened.

Speaker 6 (21:35):
I think the most what's the.

Speaker 2 (21:42):
How unhygienic it is.

Speaker 4 (21:44):
I'm kind of with medicine. That's all I could think
of is I have somebody else's spit and blood in
my eye. I'm going to die of HIV.

Speaker 2 (21:50):
Could have gone in your mouth.

Speaker 6 (21:52):
I think it's worse than eye.

Speaker 2 (21:55):
It might be worse than the eye, actually, yeah, because
you can't do anything.

Speaker 4 (21:58):
Yeah, it's a close to like that's.

Speaker 6 (22:03):
Like your cordia can get scratched by that. Keep sharp.

Speaker 4 (22:08):
Yeah, and your immune system, so your whole immune system
doesn't even know that your eyes exist. Your eyes are
an enclosed system, so if a virus gets in there
or an infection gets in there, it does not affect
the rest of your body, but you cannot get it
out of the eye, which means you can't really take
any biotics for it. You can't do any of that
because if your body knew your eyes were there, it
would actually attack your eyes. So you learn this in

(22:29):
you know, basic biology again.

Speaker 6 (22:31):
American eye drops. What's the solution to them?

Speaker 2 (22:33):
Eye drops?

Speaker 4 (22:34):
Yeah, it's medicine directly in the eye, or a fun fact,
if it gets bad enough, injections directly into the eye.

Speaker 6 (22:40):
I don't know if I like this conversation.

Speaker 4 (22:44):
So I'm like, yeah, yeah, I'll do that.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
Just give me eye drop. I'd rather get an eyepatch
or something at that point. Don't stick a need on.

Speaker 4 (22:52):
My when your eye falls out.

Speaker 5 (22:53):
Yeah, that's okay, I'll take Aye, I'll take a pirate aesthetic.

Speaker 2 (22:57):
I'll put a glass.

Speaker 4 (22:58):
But yeah, but when you're putting the glass on you
still you're shoving something in the eye socket.

Speaker 5 (23:02):
Well, I mean it has it's it's not like it's
without protection. It does have its own immune system. As
pointed out by our sound engineer. Again, you would just
lose the eye. Potentially, that could be okay, okay.

Speaker 4 (23:10):
So I have to leave you because you're gonna end
up looking like what's his face?

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Like what? Because I have an eyepatch?

Speaker 4 (23:15):
No, who's the guy that lost his eyes.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
Out there?

Speaker 5 (23:19):
She leaves me because I now have one one less
I of interesting pirates.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
I'll be on the.

Speaker 4 (23:24):
Market bisbeing Bisbee lost his eye, Yes he did.

Speaker 5 (23:28):
And if he's a glass eye and he's he's a
true warrior for it, just like Madison here is a
true warrior. I'm still just in shock that it didn't
the impact itself didn't register at all.

Speaker 4 (23:37):
How did you now, you said it did your jaw?
Did it pop out? What happened?

Speaker 6 (23:42):
Yeah? My jaw like clicks. Now it has that like yeah,
I don't know if you guys could hear it over
the computer, but it has that like crazy sound whenever
I move it. That's just something that like they can
put back into place. I could get a mouth guard
there for a few months and it will go back
into place. But it's just the baby steps, and like

(24:03):
so many people have been so kind, like the whole
Dodgers team, but I feel like they're like, as soon
as we're back on Sunday from our away games, we're
taking you to dinner as like a huge apology. You
pick a place and then there's like a few spas
that have reached out that have been like, let's help
in your recovery. We'll do massages, facial So very thankful

(24:24):
for that.

Speaker 2 (24:25):
No, that's really kind of them. You know, I'm curious
to know is.

Speaker 6 (24:31):
No, that's my phone.

Speaker 4 (24:31):
I'm sorry. It's fun as long as everyone.

Speaker 2 (24:39):
I was curious. What did the shot have to say
about it?

Speaker 6 (24:44):
Yeah, good catch. I was like, this is your fault
and he's like, no, it's not. But you're literally so strong.
You're such a badass to power through it. And as
soon as the NBA Finals are over, he's gonna come
on out and take care of me. So in La too.

Speaker 5 (25:01):
That's awesome, you know, very it's very nice to have
such good friends also, people who really could help you,
Like they say, this was far more detrimental than what
it was.

Speaker 2 (25:09):
Thankfully it wasn't up. You have a great supports listening.

Speaker 5 (25:11):
We had a lot of good connections out there that
could provide you with real assistance.

Speaker 6 (25:15):
Yeah, I think that I got insanely lucky. I mean, like,
there have been people who have died from the exact
same thing that I experienced. They just got hit like
in the head or something like that. I don't know,
but I'm very thankful that it wasn't as bad as
it could have been. But it was still number one
really thing painful. And number two because I couldn't bite

(25:36):
down for like about a week, I was just on
a soup diet, so it was literally just drinking like
broth every day, so I was starving. A few days ago,
I got to have a salad for the first time,
and it was the best thing ever. I was so
excited that I could just like munch on something I
could bite down.

Speaker 2 (25:54):
That makes sense.

Speaker 4 (25:55):
I go to tell you one of the things i'd
written you and for had you written written on. I
do not write for those out there. I am not
a creative, but I had my right to do. We
got green lit for a stage play where you know,
speaking with Jack Black and Tenaciousity and all that to
do the music in this and it's a poultry nice
out of the Living Chicken. And I've actually had you
written in as a reporter to report on all that's

(26:16):
going on. And this is going it's being simulcast with
you know Netflix. It's a traveling stage play, the whole thing,
and it's full of celebrities and it's it's just everyone's
doing as this favorite Lloyd And I was like, I've
got the perfect person to play like the April O'Neil character,
which was you. And so I put this in. I
was like, now I just wanted to get hit with
a chicken drumstick or a ball or something in the face. Yes,

(26:37):
we've got to.

Speaker 6 (26:38):
Add I know how to act now, I know how
it feels to know how to recreate it.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
The baseball will make a cameo, got a little bit
of blood trickling down.

Speaker 4 (26:48):
Well, I'm I'm just astounded. I mean that's of anyone.
I mean you're talking about how many people are there,
ten thousand and you got hit in the face.

Speaker 6 (26:58):
Yeah, but all people. It had to me. I don't
know who has my voodoo all, but if they could
just leave me alone, that would be fantastictatastic. Yeah, did
you guys see what happened four months prior when I
was at Super Bowl. No, what happened?

Speaker 2 (27:12):
God, not another one.

Speaker 6 (27:14):
I got stuck at the elevator for forty five minutes,
and the elevator is going up and down and up
and down the whole time, but it never opened.

Speaker 4 (27:21):
Have you considered quitting sports events?

Speaker 2 (27:24):
No?

Speaker 6 (27:25):
Never. I go to a sporting event like at least
twice a week every week. So like the fact that
it's only been two this year.

Speaker 2 (27:34):
Yeah, uh this year. That's a great ratio what this.

Speaker 4 (27:39):
Show was doing when we were We've got Royalty, and
she was one of the people I wanted to send
on one of the dates with the princess. I'm not
sending them to a sports.

Speaker 6 (27:46):
Game bonding experience. Let's see how they take care of me.

Speaker 4 (27:52):
I'm like the bubble RP, bubble wrap. I'm getting you
bubble wrap.

Speaker 5 (27:56):
Someone tried to stuff hit you in an elevator and
then they tried to directly take you out.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
I'm the public eye.

Speaker 6 (28:02):
Yeah, can we, like or so figure out who this
person is you pished me and putin in any way,
I've never met that man. Oh No, I am very
creative with the baseball What a time it's just so wild,

(28:23):
Like I keep looking back at it being like how
did that happen? And how did I survive it? And
then there's all these people that are like blowing up
the comments, either on Instagram or on TikTok, and they're like,
I know so many people, not so many. I know
people who have been like hit in the face by
a baseball at a game and they died three days later.
And I'm sitting there reading that like, uh huh.

Speaker 2 (28:46):
You're like, thank you for sharing that read like day
one or day two.

Speaker 6 (28:50):
Yeah, Like, I'm not going to sleep tonight. Everyone on
my phone book, please come over and watch me. I
live alone. I don't want to job.

Speaker 2 (29:00):
Make sure I'm still alone.

Speaker 4 (29:01):
Make Trump breathing. Oh that's terrible.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
You know you said you mentioned that you actually go
to sports events twice a week, if you can, like
very frequently. Evidently why we got you into sports games
to begin with?

Speaker 6 (29:14):
I love sports. I grew up in a sports family.
Both my dad and my brother played at the collegiate level.
My brother was gonna go on to the MLB, but
unfortunately he was a COVID year and drafting got a
little weird that year, so it just didn't work out
for him. But grew up in Tampa, Florida, where we
have the best sports, I like to say, and so

(29:36):
I went to every Bucks game, every Tampa Bay Lightning game,
every Yankee spring training. Not as much with the Rays
because they're all the way in Saint Pete's. It's a
little bit of a drive. But just grew up in
a sports family. I actually do know the game. I
know what's happening in all the sports except for rugby.

(29:58):
I don't really understand rugby.

Speaker 4 (30:00):
Explain rugby to you.

Speaker 6 (30:01):
Okay, great, well we'll change. I'll teach you football. You
can teach me rugby.

Speaker 4 (30:05):
It's off the cheerleaded. I know football quite well. What
you don't tell anyone well done. I know. I don't
understand baseball at all. It looks like easiest for it
perfect cricket. I don't understand baseball. I don't know what
you guys are doing. It just looks like an odd
version of cricket with the wrong pants.

Speaker 6 (30:26):
So this is this is about rugby rugby.

Speaker 4 (30:29):
That's how you feel about rugby. Like in defense, rugby
started before grid Iron, so OL's els did.

Speaker 6 (30:37):
But you guys, they're like cheerleaders all of a sudden
they're doing like a stunt.

Speaker 2 (30:43):
No, you know what, here's rugby for here's rugby.

Speaker 5 (30:46):
You just you catch the ball and you run the
opposite side of the field, and someone gets in your way,
you hit them with an elbow.

Speaker 2 (30:51):
You just dog dropping whatever you can.

Speaker 4 (30:54):
That is technically if you take football and you mix
it with M M A. But you cannot throw the
boll full which you can only pass behind you. That's rugby.

Speaker 6 (31:03):
That's so confusing.

Speaker 2 (31:05):
And then.

Speaker 5 (31:07):
Baseball is when someone does a ball you you hit
it with a stick as hard as you can, and
if it goes any distance at all without someone's catching it,
you run like your legs will fall off if you
don't to three separate sections. And if someone is about
to stop you in that section they're in your way,
you just bulldoze them so hard.

Speaker 6 (31:26):
I know. No, like you know the bases right, like
we use baseballs and analogy all the time in life.

Speaker 3 (31:33):
So like.

Speaker 6 (31:34):
Trolling out right, as you run the bases, it gets better.
It's the same thing. That's why we have that analogy.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
I got the opposite I did after second base. Isn't
the point? And anything.

Speaker 6 (31:48):
You know I really actually wait, how much money double?
And that's it. You're just sitting there the summer.

Speaker 5 (31:55):
Now that we're in the topic, I actually want to know,
since you're very familiar with it, what is the When
are you allowed to showlder check somebody?

Speaker 2 (32:02):
What? What does that come into play?

Speaker 4 (32:04):
He just cares about fighting.

Speaker 6 (32:06):
What sport are we talking about.

Speaker 5 (32:08):
Hopefully they're running for the base, someones in the way
and they just hit him, they knock them out of
the way.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
I wanted to.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
Apologize twelve you be doesn't understand anything but punching.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
This is true.

Speaker 6 (32:21):
It's very rare that a guy on the other team
will get in the way as you're running. They're more
focused on catching the ball and hitting the base, because
if they hit the base, then you're out right priorities.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
Just keep the bat in your hand as you run.

Speaker 4 (32:40):
The filmost they dropped the bat and then they run.
We'll not take the bat.

Speaker 6 (32:43):
We see the Now, it might be very entertaining to
put Bear into the MLB All Star Game as one
of the celebrities and like, let's just see you deck
somebody for no reason.

Speaker 4 (32:54):
Please please do if you want to watch somebody that
can't catch conu.

Speaker 2 (32:59):
The base fall that in my hand.

Speaker 6 (33:00):
Actually, there's and a bad guy for a reason.

Speaker 4 (33:06):
No, that would be brilliant. I'm in we have this
is July.

Speaker 5 (33:12):
This July, you should consider I Actually, if I'm pitching,
I won't even throw the ball. I'm just gonna run.
I'm gonna run at the batter and try and get
it to touch the glove the guy behind him.

Speaker 6 (33:24):
Actually that like one of the funniest tiktoks. Like a
guy who knows nothing about baseball and the MLB All
Star Game. Look at all the things he does that
he thinks is right.

Speaker 2 (33:35):
Is exactly.

Speaker 5 (33:35):
I'll play it the way I think it should be played.
That's what's gonna happen.

Speaker 4 (33:38):
You watched someone and go to jail.

Speaker 6 (33:40):
I don't know about going to jail. But the last
All Star Game I went to, which is sad, I
think it was like three years ago. I should be
everything one I'll be at this one was in l
a and Oh, I'm forgetting names. Breaking bad guy.

Speaker 2 (33:58):
Oh was the father Cranston.

Speaker 6 (34:02):
Brian Cranston. Yes, Brian Cranston was just warming up in
the ball pin, which is where you go to like practice.
The picture of practice is throwing the batter practice is
hitting and he was warming up with Anthony Rabos, and
Anthony threw the ball and it hit him right in
the chest, and I watched Brian go straight down and

(34:25):
was like gasping for air. It was quite a scene.
He was okay, he still played in the game, but
it was quite a scene. So I just pictured that
being you bear unfortunately.

Speaker 5 (34:35):
Probably Yeah, no, I listen, you're hand at me. I'll
catch you so an inanimate object at me. I'm hoping
to God and she doesn't hit me in the face,
I will just probably block my face in the face.

Speaker 4 (34:47):
So you were looking at your phone like legitimately, I
think if you want, and Shaquille O'Neill, you are fully
responsible for this. If she has not been paying attention
to your gogous SELFI never would have happened. I'm just
saying we got chat.

Speaker 6 (35:03):
But I actually do want to thank him because I
think in the media or the moment, by me looking
down at my phone, I think that saved me because
I went like that. So it hit me here if
right here in the throat and a ball going like
one hundred miles per hour, well it got hit. It
was thrown at a one hundred miles power and he

(35:24):
hit it as a foul, so it's probably going like
seventy to eighty miles per hour. If that hit me
right here, that could have been my life.

Speaker 4 (35:32):
Yeah, that's a valid, valid point.

Speaker 6 (35:35):
So I think that actually saved me by like looking
down into the side. Okay, if I just down straight,
that would have hit me here or in the nose.
That would have been bad.

Speaker 5 (35:44):
You know, we're doubting your own skills. You would have
caught it out of the air, no doubt. And then that.

Speaker 4 (35:51):
Straight And I'm going to put this as nicely as
I can. She's athletic, she's gorgeous, she's talented. Them was
one hundred miles an hour. She's sitting there not expecting
it to come at her face. The chances of catching
a surprise bowl like that's that's not high.

Speaker 6 (36:10):
The amount of people that were in my DMS being
like I bet she wasn't even paying attention to the game,
Like this is a reminder pay attention to the game,
Like I was paying attention. I got down for a second.
But tell me one person who has gone to a
game and didn't look down at their phone for one second.
One time. Never once I was fully paying attention.

Speaker 4 (36:32):
You think I'm catching that. No, it's that's when you
lost a tooth and you busted joe nose. I'm really
it sounds terrible to say, I'm really glad on the
side of the jawl, but at least Joe Joel is clunched.
If it had gone here, you'd been missing the rabbit
teeth and have a busted nose.

Speaker 6 (36:45):
So lucky. The fact that I still have all of
my teeth in a wild I heard through a little
bird is that the filler in my lip was like
an air bag to my teeth, and that's actually what
protected my tea.

Speaker 4 (37:00):
I need to get some.

Speaker 6 (37:03):
O the pro I was like, okay, great, you.

Speaker 2 (37:07):
Know what I'm gonna this is going to deviate real quick.

Speaker 5 (37:10):
I actually love the you said that in that way,
because I think it's too weird people to talk about
fillers and injections or cosmics they've done to themselves in
the confidence someone come out with and you talk about
it and say it actually helped a little bit potentially
in this uh what could have been a worse injury
in this instance.

Speaker 2 (37:26):
Yeah, that's fantastic. I love that it's great.

Speaker 6 (37:28):
Yeah, thank you, I have nothing to hide. I think
that when it comes to botox, fillers, plastic surgery in general,
like do you but make it look natural, like everybody
is so beautiful, just enhance your beauty rather than change
your face. And I think if you do that, then
it is beautiful and amazing. But like it gets a
little too much when you start changing your actual look

(37:53):
with fillers, because that's when you're like, I can tell
you a filler, but if you can't tell then it's beautiful.

Speaker 4 (38:00):
Well, yeah, I agree with you there, I've got more
botox face and blood. But I don'tkay the U. It's
funny you're saying that they're saying, oh, you should have
catched it, or you weren't watching. I do find it
interesting the way that people react to women in sports.
So women that like video games, first, it's always the

(38:22):
they'll challenge you in question. Then it's you must be
here for the men. You can't just enjoy sports, and
so I find that double standard ridiculous. And I think
it's awful that now that you know you've kind of
gotten injured there, this is now coming out like it's
somehow your fault or problem.

Speaker 6 (38:39):
Yeah, there is. I love to go back at trolls sometimes,
especially when I'm bored in bed, because I have very
thick skin. You can't hurt me. So I was like,
this is gonna be fun. So I was like going
back at trolls to the point that multiple of them
were like, sorry, I was just being a troll. I
really hope you feel better. But like the lot of

(39:00):
times that I was like, I really like somebody who
was saying something about like maybe having a busted lift
will fix that smile of her, so that busted smile
of hers or something like that. So I was like,
I am so or what was my response? It's something
really good though. It was something along the lines of
like I really hope that my pain and recovery is

(39:26):
helping you smile today. I hope that once I recover,
I can smile just the same as you. It's like
that kill them with kindness kind of thing, where then
all of a sudden they're like, no, I feel bad,
and now they have to apologize. But there you would
be shocked how many people thought they were original but
said the exact same thing, and are you ready for it?

(39:49):
This goes to what you were saying somewhere this definitely
isn't the first time she took an athlete's ball to
the face.

Speaker 2 (39:57):
Oh well, I mean, how many times are gonna hear it?

Speaker 5 (40:00):
I hear that all the time from then, honestly, so
I can't imagine, like for you guys, No.

Speaker 4 (40:04):
That's that's one of those. The only reasons she'd be
there is if she's screwing somebody not liking.

Speaker 5 (40:09):
The first moment for whatever happened. Anyways, it's almost like
a standard.

Speaker 2 (40:15):
Now.

Speaker 4 (40:16):
Yeah, we're working with Kasius marsh for one of the
TV shows we're doing for ESPN, and and he is
it's funny his female fans always seem to know more
about sports than the male fans, and they get questioned more.

Speaker 2 (40:30):
It's just assumed. Fortunately, we just.

Speaker 6 (40:32):
Kind of flip the switch on that. And I really
think that we're really in a time right now where
women in sports are starting to thrive, and it's baby
steps there, but the women who are at the top
of their game, from Aaron Andrews to uh, why can't
I remember anyone's name today? She's literally the quarterback on.

Speaker 4 (40:56):
Let's see Meditated, got hid in the face with the
ball and you probably got to concut one. I can't
remember anyone's name.

Speaker 6 (41:04):
Carissa, she's on Fox Sports. She's like the quarterback of
the whole table, but yet who that is her? But
her Aaron Andrews like they're killing into the game. And
I think that right now is this time for a
lot of women like myself to break through and really

(41:26):
create some waves within sports and create new avenues, which
for example, with me, I don't want to be a
girl on the sidelines. I think I would be very
good at that, but I really want to be breaking
new grounds where I'm the intersection between entertainment and sports.
I have this passion for sports since I was a kid,

(41:46):
but I have twelve years of experience working for the
biggest outlets within entertainment news. So to put those together
and get the fun personal interviews from the biggest athletes
in the world, which leads into my podcast is literally
the goal. So I think I'm kind of breaking my
own path that doesn't really exist right now.

Speaker 4 (42:08):
I have maybe next week with ESPN. One of the
things they're looking for is female driven shows. Come up
with an idea for sure.

Speaker 6 (42:15):
Oh, I already have two.

Speaker 4 (42:17):
Send them my wife.

Speaker 6 (42:18):
I will so we're coming right after this.

Speaker 4 (42:20):
They want, they want, they want to segue for women
in sports.

Speaker 6 (42:23):
I'm just sayent, but though it is what is trending
right now. There's a lot of places like ESPN that
have reached out and they're even looking for female content
creators who can go to stuff like the sb's and
stuff like that and bring their audiences to start caring.
I think Taylor Swift gets a lot of recognition, if

(42:46):
you will, and praise for making women care about specifically
football because she's dating Travis Kelce. I think that that
started way before Taylor Swift setting her flowers. But like
I think that women have always been interested in sports
and it's finally starting to break open that door for

(43:08):
the women to really showcase their knowledge.

Speaker 4 (43:10):
The joke of it is, apparently, and this is a
if you guys look back, Taylor Swift was going to
games before she was dating Travis Kelsey. No one cared
until she started dating one of the players she but
she apparently is a football fan, had been going for
years these games and nobody paid any attention until she
started dating the player. So that also shows you where

(43:31):
the interest is. It's not in the fact that Taylor
Swift is there. It's in the fact that she is
dating the football player.

Speaker 6 (43:37):
Which goes back to the comments that I'm getting on TikTok,
the comments I'm getting on Instagram, your original point summerre
and it's I don't know, I feel like we're in
this stage where, like, you know, that feeling that they
must have felt back in the day, right before women
got the right to vote. I feel like we're kind
of re experiencing that, but with the women's right to

(43:59):
have for sports, which is.

Speaker 4 (44:02):
Well, it's across the board. We have a resurgence right
now of where they're calling like the tradwife aesthetic and
all of this traditional stuff coming up, and that never
bodes well for women. You've got the loss of reproductive rights,
You've got the loss of that. There's even a movement
right now to provoke a woman's right to vote. Genuinely,
if you guys google it, it's a whole thing right now.
So women, you know, not wanting to be in sports

(44:25):
or not wanting to them. People not recognize that women
could have any interest in sports is just another way
to other.

Speaker 6 (44:32):
Just one day, people realize that women are so much
smarter and like when you mix their knowledge with a
passion like sports, there could be some amazing thing that
you men would benefit from immensely, like the ideas that
we could create around your passion, your passion for sports.

Speaker 4 (44:54):
The fun of He is one of the only female
managers in MMA. He on his nonprofit with women. Everyone
he works with this female and something has found is
a great deal of success with that.

Speaker 6 (45:08):
What what have you found by working with women?

Speaker 2 (45:11):
I've lost my fucking keys in front of my eyes before. Okay,
I don't think i'd find my ass but I didn't
have one in my life.

Speaker 5 (45:17):
So there's just if people have different experiences everywhere. You
don't have a skill set. It doesn't matter what the
other person's gender is. If they have that skill set
utilize it doesn't affect me one way or another. What's
between your legs? I care if you have the knowledge
I'm seeking at the time. That's what is most important
to me. I just wish that more people took that
concept instead of diminishing the value people have to bring
buck because of how they were born.

Speaker 4 (45:39):
But that also is part of the reason you've grown
more successful than most people more quickly, because you don't
care where it's coming from you see that Sam Alvi
is one of the first female corners in the UFC,
and that was his wife, and she won America's Next
Top Model and she but she you know, she corners
and she fights.

Speaker 2 (45:57):
But that's just it.

Speaker 5 (45:58):
It's I was raised by the same mother too for
most of my life anyway, So it's not like I'm
going to grow up to hate women.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
I think less of time I watch one, that'd be
really fucking stupid.

Speaker 4 (46:06):
By the way, that intermind if and every time we
use that language week if money was just Club of America,
the Humane Society of America and free Mma we swear
because we can ot caare.

Speaker 5 (46:14):
But no, I'm just saying that it wouldn't make any
sense for me at that point to devalue what a woman.

Speaker 2 (46:20):
Has not who cares.

Speaker 5 (46:21):
That's true, I will probably I am more likely I
find more men who know absolutely nothing about what they're
talking about that I do women, because typically the desire
to bolster and seem better than who you are, I
think is a more of a male trait. I think
women can be a lot more honest with what they
can and cannot do, and maybe that's part of the
whole much easmo thing. You shouldn't admit when you're wrong
or can't do something, but to be honest, if you

(46:43):
can't do it, get someone who can, regardless.

Speaker 2 (46:44):
Of what their gender is.

Speaker 6 (46:46):
I like that talent is talent at the end of
the day.

Speaker 5 (46:49):
Yes it is, Yes it is, and it doesn't matter
where it comes from or to what degree, as long
as they have more than you and you need it.

Speaker 2 (46:54):
There they are. What does it matter who they are
unless they're Hitler. I don't care what skilled Hitler has.
I don't want to thing from him.

Speaker 6 (47:01):
That just took really unexpected to you.

Speaker 4 (47:10):
May you make my brain hurt through this. That is
that is a really good point. Good job, and then
you just drive.

Speaker 5 (47:19):
Every man listening to this right now exactly understood where
I was coming from, where I made that point.

Speaker 2 (47:23):
That sounded.

Speaker 6 (47:24):
That's why we need women in the world, so.

Speaker 4 (47:29):
We get Let's talk about the Austrian painter.

Speaker 2 (47:31):
Yes that's how you want to remember him, Okay.

Speaker 4 (47:34):
Yes, that is how I would like history to remember him.
I'd like to history to remember him as the man
that sexually assaulted his niece, that was a ruthless and
mentally ill drug addict, yes, I would like to remember
everyone because right now, especially with the surgeon, resurgence of

(47:55):
white supremacy, with the devaluation of women, with the anti
Semitism coming out, I would like people to remember that
he was a drug addict that sexually assaulted he is
underage niece four years and years and news until she
killed herself.

Speaker 6 (48:09):
It was just Holocausts. Remember in Stay just a few
days ago, so we can take a moment for that.
On that note, I don't know if y'all know, but
I'm Jewish, and with the rise of anti Semitism, especially
after October seventh, I was very lucky. But I got

(48:30):
to interview some of the hostages, and those stories have
yet to be released, but I still haven't heard the
details that they shared within those interviews out loud and
fare in summer. I know that you got to visit
and meet with Oh Fear as well, so I think
that I just I have no words from it. It's

(48:52):
one of those experiences that just leaves you completely speechless.
But I know that we'll all work together and find
a really special thing. For the interviews we released.

Speaker 4 (49:01):
I was so angry at the I'm not going to
say which sports team, but one of the sports teams,
because he just wanted to go meet this celebrity and
it wasn't the celebrity. Celebrity was all for. The sports
team was worried that it would be taking a political
stance to introduce him, and that pissed me off.

Speaker 6 (49:19):
Yea, I think what I found. I actually was talking
to an entertainment lawyer about this recently, my entertainment lawyer.
Not that I was going to sue anybody, just we're
just having a conversation as we were going to a game.
But we found it very interesting how the NBA has,
in our opinions, disassociated itself from its fan base, and

(49:40):
that's why they are in the position that they're in
right now. And by disassociating themselves for their fan base,
they're being so overly cautious that they won't let themselves
or any of their players take a stance on anything,
and because of that, they're creating even more distance between
themselves and a fan base. So it's going to be
really interesting in the next few years if the NBA

(50:01):
doesn't change anything to see what ends up happening to
the sport.

Speaker 4 (50:05):
Well, you're seeing a diminishing return on people going. You're
seeing the costs rise, You're seeing people just aren't having
that return. You see it a lot in football, you
see it in boxing. MMA has really taken over for boxing.
You're seeing it in a lot of sports. And it
seems since Kaepernick, since people started complaining about Kaepernick taking
a knee, which, for those that don't know, Kaepernick took

(50:27):
a knee because he wasn't happy with the treatment of
Black Americans, which one, he's not wrong there. So a
friend of his that was in the Army Special Forces
told him what we would do in solidarity was taken knee.
And so he was told by this military veteran, if
you want to be respectful but protest, take a knee.

(50:47):
And that's where this come from. And then it led
to this where everyone's like, well, how dare you take
an ee? But it was a military vet that told
him this is a respectful way to protest. And since then,
less and less organizations and sports teams have allowed individual
fullton opinion from their players or individual action or risk,

(51:08):
and it's backfiring tremendously on them. I think you really
hit the nan on the head there.

Speaker 6 (51:13):
Yeah. I think that he is struggling with that. The
NFL has been super open, at least in my eyes
from the things that I've seen ever since the Colin
Kaepernick situation. I think the reason Colin Kaepernick situation went
so extreme as it did is because our president got
involved and had comments, and that's why it blew up

(51:35):
to the extreme that it did. But like, my friends
right now are getting very politically involved even though they're
in the NFL. Like, for example, one of my friends,
Bobby Okak, who's the captain of the New York Giants,
he just hosted an entire event at his own home
for Corey Booker, And so they're like, they're really getting

(51:57):
involved even though they're still in the league. They're still
at the top of their game and their prime. They're
getting involved in the things that they're passionate about. That's
making a stance.

Speaker 4 (52:07):
So I'm going to say the basketball take take a
note from football. We are at the end of the show.
We got caught up talking and actually missed ninety of
the questions I was supposed to ask you. I'd love
to have you on again and talk a little bit
more about this. I love your insight. I got to
tell you we have a mostly male audience. They love
you and they love hearing about this from you, So
I think this is you talking to these young men

(52:30):
in a great way. They mostly come because He's here
in a great way, and I'd love to have you,
and I'll have a busted face for you perfect well,
actually we wanted to see the bustard face, but don't
tell anyone.

Speaker 6 (52:43):
Maxims on my Instagram. It's still there. I will never
take it down, and you guys can see how disgusting
I look.

Speaker 4 (52:50):
Make sure you go follow Madison please. She also has
a podcast, and she's got a couple of shows with
us coming out that I haven't even told her about
yet that have been greenlit. So we're rolling there. I'd
like to remind everyone please tune in, make sure you're
following us. Make sure you're following Madison. And I know
you usually come here for Bear, so he's got some
fights coming up. We'll give you all of that information.

(53:10):
I'm the Baroness, Ro'm with my co host Bearfjorda, and
of course our special guest, Madison. Make sure you're following her.
I'm going to put up her social media. Thank you
for joining us. We'll join it. We'll see you next week.

Speaker 2 (53:20):
Good night.

Speaker 3 (53:22):
This has been behind the scenes with the Baroness and
Bear Fjorda, only on Talk four Media
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