Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 2 (02:00):
When your old career gives you lemons. Throwing some ice
mix in some vodka colored a podcast from the Mac
of All Trade Studio in Fairport and driven by Victor
Chrysler Dots jeem Ram. It's Billified the Bill Moran Podcast.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Well, Hello and welcome. Thanks for getting your pot on.
Thanks for telling a friend. That's how we spread the
word about the Pirate Ship. Pirate Ship is growing. We've
got new new wings, there's new sweets in the Pirate Ship.
There's the two Fit Chicks podcast that you can go
check out on any platform and coming soon, our friends
(02:53):
at MJ Dispensary are doing a potcast. Did some stuff
with them on that today, So all that to look
forward to as we grow the Pirate Ship. If you
were around last night, things got a little funky in here.
I don't know something else got put out on purpose,
but you got a nice look into the personal life
(03:17):
that I live. Not always you know, it's just it's
it's real. I would have put all the stuff out there,
but out of respect to others, I thought that that
wouldn't be good because even my mother's upset with me
that I said on a podcast when I was talking
about my dad and going up to help move that
she's like a one like a duck, And so she
(03:39):
texted me last night about the one like a duck comment.
So there's always somebody in my life. I just want
you to know that is not usually happy with the
way things get described. But I have just I say
to everybody, this is all I've ever done. I've talked
about everything forever, so I'm not changing now. You're not
putting that GD back in the bottle here. However, there
(03:59):
are other people whose lives do get affected in my family,
namely like my kids, so I try to be a
little more careful with that sort of thing. My dad
apparently made it through the surgery, but then has aspiration pneumonia,
UTI doesn't really know where he is. There's all kinds
of fun with that. We don't want to dwell on
those sorts of things. Tonight, everybody seemed to abandon me
(04:22):
for the podcast, but I went back and I got
our friend Alex, a reality TV producer, creator, content creator,
does all kinds of wonderful things and knows a lot
of the celebrity gossip stuff. So I was very excited
that she would agree to come on. And a little
later we're gonna have another friend of the show, Deputy Hurley,
join us. Not that that's anything that you need to
(04:43):
be around for. But they found a big there's a
big Now, I gotta play this for you, Alex, just
to get your They found like a mountain lion or
something wandering through the streets of Rochester. Okay, do you
like pet? Okay, so immediately I owe this is somebody's
pet that got out or it's an the legal pet
(05:06):
that somebody has because it didn't escape from the zoo.
It's not there. And somebody had ring cam footage of
it walking by, and then they interviewed this dude who
said he came in contact with it.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
I was just walking to the store, you know, an
out here people running and coming back this way.
Speaker 4 (05:22):
Like oh oh. I'm like, what the hell?
Speaker 3 (05:25):
So I just kept walking, mind of my business, and
I keep coming down the street and I just see
some big shs keeping the lud.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
I'm like, oh, I just kept im am, I just left.
I'm gone.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
I don't play them type games. I don't play with dogs, snakes,
I don't do the rattles. I don't do none of
that type of wildlife stuff, understand.
Speaker 4 (05:43):
I don't do that.
Speaker 3 (05:44):
I just let it go, kepting finding my business. But
that thing like this, damn, I'm so no police came,
they squatted everything or got this thing cleared up all that.
They just got it blocked off, and I'm just around here.
I'm trying to see what it is. See if I
can get up there, give me a line, as we
should tend to meet. I never had a line.
Speaker 1 (06:03):
Wow, you gotta admit that some people just have a
great attitude no matter what. But that's the We'll have
deputy early. That maybe shed a little more light even
though it's a city related thing. But Alex did a
lot of reality TV stuff. I think there's shows that
are on streaming services now that we can watch that
(06:25):
you produced.
Speaker 5 (06:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (06:27):
Absolutely, all the Project Runways I did are on Netflix now.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
Okay.
Speaker 6 (06:32):
I did the later seasons when it went back to
Bravo after leaving Lifetime from the Weinstein scandal, so that's
like season seventeen, eighteen and nineteen. I also got the
privilege of producing the Project Runaway After Show, which was
a really fun talk show. You can go to Bravo
dot com and watch those episodes. We played like talk
show games with the contestants and you know, made them
(06:53):
fun drinks and it was just kind of a fun
way of like interacting after the fact and extending the
content and taking some brand money.
Speaker 5 (07:02):
And Miss Dev's House you can find that, ye, Miss
TeX's House coming out pretty soon.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
The what season.
Speaker 5 (07:09):
The second season's coming out pretty soon.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
I think August I saw Okay and you did that?
That was That's a pretty good show. That's fun. Yeah,
that was. I didn't know anything about her, but man,
that ladies on on, I mean, she knows her stuff.
Speaker 6 (07:24):
She sure doesn't don't play with miss Devs.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
You know. But when you do these reality TV shows,
has there been anything that was like, was really truly
shocking to you? You know, you get to be behind
the scenes of things. Did you ever see anything that
was like a.
Speaker 5 (07:40):
Boy, Yeah, I mean there was.
Speaker 6 (07:43):
I did a lot of shows on VH one for
a while, so I did a lot of like The
Love and Hip Hops and The Black Inks, and there's
a lot of fighting on that stuff. And I think
like the first time I ever saw two people like
start physically fighting in an enclosed space like for camera purposes,
not that we made them do it, just clarity, But
that was a little jarring because it was like, oh, man,
(08:05):
like this is some physical violence. And I do remember
that during the like the later end of season three
of Black Ink, there was some tension between two of
the main characters, like real life tension. Some things happened
off camera that ended up on World Star Hip Hop
and all this stuff, like a huge, huge altercation things
(08:26):
like that. So there was some really bad blood and
there were quite a few times when things got like
really tense between them or like you know, and it
just was like wow, you know, you see it on
TV and it feels so sensationalized. It was even more
so like in the moment. And then you know, being
on the first forty eight when I left the break
room and I did the First forty eight and I
(08:46):
was on the scene of live homicides, like in the
field with detectives.
Speaker 1 (08:51):
That was I mean, yeah, that's not too intense for me.
Speaker 5 (08:57):
It was.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
It was.
Speaker 5 (08:58):
I was so not for pard. I had come from
TV news, you know what I mean.
Speaker 6 (09:02):
I was like, I was in I was a producer
and producer stuff onto the field really like I had
never I was like, yes, I'm absolutely qualified to be
on the first forty eight.
Speaker 5 (09:12):
Yes, hire me.
Speaker 6 (09:13):
And then I was just like wow, Wow, what a
what a job. So I really have a lot of
respect for those guys that do it well.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
I don't have I don't think in anything you've got
to jump in, like there's for some jobs, for some things,
And I think for almost any job, yes you can
get trained, Yes you can learn about if you're selling
a product, I got it. But you either you either
got it or you don't. In life, and I think
you know well, being able to carry a conversation actually
(09:45):
truly listen to somebody so you're hearing what they're saying
and you can come back with things. And uh, sometimes
you got to jump into sort of the deep end
to learn, and you got to learn to swim quickly.
And it sounds like the first forty eight man. After that,
maybe things were a lot easier. I don't know.
Speaker 6 (10:03):
I remember right after that, I went and interviewed for
Morgan Spurlock, who did that documentary Mansom, and he did
that Supersize Me where he ate all the McDonald's.
Speaker 5 (10:14):
So I interviewed for a.
Speaker 6 (10:15):
Job at his company and I ended up getting the job,
which was so fun. It was like one of the
first web series ever.
Speaker 5 (10:22):
It was on Yahoo.
Speaker 6 (10:23):
It was a spin off of the documentary Mansom, and
we basically did these like little vignettes for men, like
how to sharpen a steak knife, how to get a
proper shave.
Speaker 5 (10:32):
It was fun, It was really really fun.
Speaker 6 (10:34):
But I went in for the interview and the woman
was like, you know, tell me a little bit about
your experience. What have you been doing. I said, I
have been doing homicides. I've been following live homicides as
they happen and dealing with.
Speaker 5 (10:48):
A lot of death.
Speaker 6 (10:49):
So could you please like let me dress up some
animals and some costumes or something like, I just can't.
It was so because my job on the show was
too essentially convince like next of kin family members and
friends to do interviews on behalf of the deceased person,
to build their story right so that the cops are investigating.
(11:11):
It's like, this is this person, here's all about him,
you know, here's why it's so tragic. Here's his sister,
here's his mom, here's his cousin. And you're in the
city of Rochester, which at the time was the violence
was very territorial. I don't know if it's still that way,
but there were certain neighborhood lines that you just did
(11:32):
not cross. And as a result of that, not a
lot of people wanted to talk to the cops.
Speaker 5 (11:39):
They were going to talk to me.
Speaker 6 (11:40):
I was coming with the cops, you know, So it
was very very challenging, and you catch somebody on their
worst day. They just lost a sibling, a brother, a
best friend. It was you know, it gave me a
lot of respect for the people that do this job.
And I think initially like the show's intention was to
tell the stories of these tragedies, like it's so sad,
(12:02):
we have to do something about the violence.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
Yeah. Alex also is getting into more of the creative
work of things like writing and stuff like that, because,
I mean, why not after being Jason tied tid Hey,
hey got a minute, can you tell me about your brother?
Speaker 4 (12:20):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (12:21):
Oh no, you didn't know. They just shot him down
in the corner. We're just trying to build a story
about him. What you have hobbies? Did he do things?
I mean like that, that's what I'm picturing of my head.
Speaker 5 (12:31):
Do you want to know the worst part about it?
Speaker 1 (12:33):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (12:33):
Like so when I when I got they send you
a field kit because you're in the field, So they
sent the production company sends you a big kit and
it has everything you're going to need for your work.
So there was like laptops and certain finders that they
keep certain documents in and stuff like you have to
keep you all organized for the production side of things.
Speaker 5 (12:50):
Also in that.
Speaker 6 (12:51):
Box is a cell phone called a murder phone, and
because it's hooked up to the police station, so you
have a second cell phone. So when a murder called
what a call comes in to the homicide department at
the police station.
Speaker 5 (13:02):
Your phone also ranks, so you know.
Speaker 6 (13:05):
That a call has come in and somebody's dead and
they have to go investigate it, and then you go,
you go and meet them. They also give you a
box of swag like key chains, water bottles, t shirts,
foam fingers.
Speaker 5 (13:18):
I was like, what is this swag?
Speaker 6 (13:20):
Like do they do events were like, do I give
this to the police office?
Speaker 1 (13:23):
No shots? Keys to give to the people that did
the interview. It was' finger number one. Your brother was
number one number one. He was, yeah, hey, you know
what if you turn it this way, it looks like
what took your brother's life?
Speaker 5 (13:38):
I mean, my job.
Speaker 6 (13:43):
There were so many moments during that show. I remember
we went into the police station with the heads of
the production company on the first day of shooting and
in the police station in downtown Rochester, they have a
big or they had at the time, a big whiteboard
in the office with all of the homicides for the
year on it, and they're color coded. This color means solved,
(14:04):
This colored means still in progress. This color means it's
a wrap. You know, it's closed, or it's just happened
or something. I don't exactly remember, but I do remember
that there was four There was a list of four names.
They were all the same name, and they were like
up on the bulletin board.
Speaker 5 (14:21):
And the executive.
Speaker 6 (14:22):
Producer said, oh, what's what's this? What are these four names?
And the officer was like, it was, it's it's it's
really terrible. It was a domestic violence incident. A girl
and her boyfriend got into an argument. She started burning
his stuff in the house, burned the house down, killed
herself and her four children. The executive producer says, oh,
(14:47):
that would have been a great episode.
Speaker 1 (14:53):
Well, if the old saying is if it leads, it
leads right from.
Speaker 5 (14:59):
The break room. I was used to doing like jokes.
Speaker 1 (15:03):
Yeah, jokes did that was our show? My god? Well
that's uh, it's quite the quite the step up. Uh
when you're writing shows now, would you ever write something
based on that experience? Could you do like a even
a comedy of some sort, like you know, a fish
out of water, so to speak, Well, you a funny show, absolutely.
Speaker 6 (15:26):
I do, and I and it does have like the
crime element that actually never thought about it.
Speaker 5 (15:30):
Until just now, the idea we should put that on
the list.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
I was doing the podcast today, the podcast, and they
said they come up with ideas because they're ideas. I
call it's very very funny. Now, that was not a
high da I just shared. But maybe who knows. I mean,
I just maybe eternally high in my own little weird world.
(15:55):
I know that.
Speaker 5 (15:56):
You.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Yeah, when you're writing these things though, and building out
characters and stuff, there's a whole method. It's not like
just sitting down and writing a story. It's it's writing
a screenplay basically correct.
Speaker 5 (16:08):
Yeah, I mean.
Speaker 6 (16:10):
There's really no like I've been doing a lot of writing.
I'm writing a script actually now. The last script I
wrote was for college. I wrote for a screenwriting class,
and I just remember like really loving the exercise of
it and have always wanted to get back into it.
But there's always been an excuse. And I think the
biggest thing is like I'm just afraid. I'm afraid of
doing it. I'm afraid it's not going to be good enough.
(16:31):
I'm afraid, you know what I mean, I have imposter syndrome,
and you think.
Speaker 5 (16:35):
You are a type of thing. Yeah, And then when I.
Speaker 6 (16:38):
Do write something for somebody that isn't you know, it's
not based on reality TV characters, and I get positive feedback,
Like you know, it's just reinforcement.
Speaker 5 (16:48):
That like you just have to go out there and
do it.
Speaker 6 (16:50):
So what I typically do is I start with the
show Bible, which is basically like a glossary for the
entire show, every person, place, and thing that you're.
Speaker 5 (17:03):
Going to come across.
Speaker 6 (17:04):
Like they have a really comprehensive one for the office,
and that's just kind of where you go in and
you're like, all right, I'm gonna write a show about
Bill Moran, and you you write Bill Moran, and then
you just make up. You know, Bill Moran is a
thirty five year old accountant and he hates his life,
so he's going to become a superhero and you know
what I mean.
Speaker 5 (17:21):
And that's where.
Speaker 6 (17:21):
You and then as you develop the character, like when
you finally get into the actual like scripting phase, you
can go back in and be like, and then he
moved to Cincinnati, and you know what I mean, and
then you really have like these two kind of companion pieces.
So I like to build my show bible first, so
I know what world I'm living in, and then you
can kind of go in and like structure the conversations
(17:43):
and stuff. That's the hardest part for me because how
you write is not how you talk.
Speaker 5 (17:49):
So it's writing conversationally.
Speaker 6 (17:51):
Is writing this dialogue that we're having now When I
sometimes when I write dialogue, I read it back, I'm.
Speaker 5 (17:57):
Like, that's it feels very people use more slang.
Speaker 6 (18:01):
People don't, you know, right right right, They don't say
the whole word, you know, so when you read it back,
you're like, I'm thinking of in an actor's voice, like no,
I would want them to say that with more you know.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
Yeah, so okaye and right again. It's one of these
things to me that sure, you can go take a
screenwriting script class maybe to give you the structure of it. Right,
you know, it's like framing a wall, But what's that
wall going to look like? It's how I decorated after that,
(18:35):
you know, the structure behind it is. You know, everything's
got to be you know, sixteen on center and you
two by four and I got okay, I got that,
but when you finish it up, it's gonna be different
from somebody else. I like that, but it it's interesting
because I'm thinking of, like, you know, Sylvester Stallone wrote
and just wrote and wrote and wrote, and you see
(18:58):
other people, but I I don't know that you can learn.
You got to do it by doing reps. That's always
my thing, and I always think the more you do something,
the better you're going to get at it, and you'll
learn more and more. It was funny not to keep
referencing this podcast that'll be out in a little bit.
But one of the guys was like, yeah, I loved
(19:20):
Felling in Love with Weed at thirteen, started selling it
fifteen and then became such a supporter of legacy growers,
people who went and grew. And I said, do they
teach any classes anywhere now, like a Cornell Cooperative extension
where you're learning to grow weed, right and what goes
on with it? And he's like, I never dine any
(19:40):
of that, he said, but there's one community college in
the area that's starting to do stuff. And he goes,
I went in and sat in on a class, and
I go, they don't know what they're talking about. And
I go, right, because you've been doing it. You're at
the ground level, and it's all about just doing it
and fucking up and coming back and fucking up and
coming back. And I think that's the part that most
(20:02):
people don't want to do, you know what I mean.
I think that's the part. And when you said the
fear thing, that's a huge thing. Like when you go
sometimes you got to really drill down on yourself to go, well,
where is this coming from? And it's actually bullshit? You
know what I mean, It's actually bullshit somewhere, and so
(20:23):
you got to push through to do that. And my
big thing now is after watching my old man and
knowing the age I am, and it's not thirty five,
thank you, though I would love to be a thirty
five year old. Maybe not an accountant, but but I
would say, like, you know, if the average person lives
to seventy eight years old in the United States, that's average.
You could go longer. There's no guarantee you might end
(20:44):
up shorter. I got it. But what are you doing
because there's only what for me, less than a quarter
century of summer's left, you know what I mean? And
that's it's just a different way, and it kind of
puts a shot clock over your head times you need
for a little motivation.
Speaker 5 (21:02):
For sure. I've been thinking about that too.
Speaker 6 (21:04):
You know.
Speaker 5 (21:04):
I'm also not you know, thirty five, and you know.
Speaker 6 (21:10):
The industry is changing so much. It is getting younger
and younger and younger. It is hard for people my
age and older to They're not making TV the way
they used to make it, so people aren't working the
way they used to work, and the you have to
adapt or die. So why like why not?
Speaker 5 (21:29):
Now?
Speaker 6 (21:29):
I look at all these things and I don't know
if maybe it's my algorithm or something, but I've been
seeing all these things on social media, like now's the
time and Samuel L. Jackson started at forty five and
this one started at you know, this company at fifty
and it's never too late, and it's just like, no,
it isn't you do have to start, And it's feared
it's ego.
Speaker 5 (21:48):
I want somebody to tell me.
Speaker 6 (21:49):
I'm not good if I if I put all this
passion into it and I'm so proud of it, and
then someone's like, this is a piece of shit, you
know what I mean.
Speaker 5 (21:57):
It's it's really hard.
Speaker 6 (21:58):
I have been in pitch meetings before, where you know,
you've you've taken months to develop this thing, and you've
gotten all this positive feedback and then you take it
to the big guy with the paycheck and you present
it and it's like, you're cute, but.
Speaker 5 (22:11):
No, you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
Well, it's better than Harvey Weinstein. He might have, well
he might have. I'll take another look at this if
you get under the table. I uh, not exactly sure. Uh,
let's go to something lighter. In the rumors, I see
that former Buffalo Bill Stephan Diggs who is now going
to their AFC East rival, the New England Patriots. Uh,
(22:36):
he has, and there was a controversial video I believe
he was with Cardi b and it where pink cocaine
was out.
Speaker 7 (22:42):
There was he wasn't he cut for the two c
and the video in the from the no because I
had seen I obviously saw the video as I follow
Carti on Instagram.
Speaker 5 (22:56):
She's my girl.
Speaker 6 (23:00):
I saw the video and then I was like, there's
just no way that the NFL is not going to
do something. It's the Patriots, right he was playing for,
so I just thought that they have to do something,
and then I saw I thought I saw they were
in talks or whatever. And then I thought I saw
he was released, But I guess not.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
Yeah, I don't think so, because I just well, I
went today digging through and I saw some things because
somebody sent me an article that Cardi b and Stephan
Dicks had broken up and part of the reason was
that her BBL which I did not know what BBL
(23:39):
stood for. I could come up with many things. They
wouldn't be accurate, but they may be fun. But the
BBL is Brazilian butt lift? Is that what that is?
Speaker 5 (23:49):
It? Sure is?
Speaker 6 (23:50):
I saw one done live Ooo? Really yeah, doctor Miami,
how bad?
Speaker 5 (23:58):
It's gross?
Speaker 1 (24:00):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (24:01):
At the time was he was gaining notoriety on Snapchat.
This is how long ago this was because he does
his bbl's, but he does it to a hip hop track,
so he's like in the background like Kanye like sucking
the fat out of here.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
It is, So, what is a BBLT? That was so
a Brazilian button? If it gives you more of a butt,
that's like I don't know, like a shell basically.
Speaker 6 (24:24):
Like they do liposuction around all of your like your
fat parts, like around your your under boob and stuff
like that on your back fat, and then they inject
it into your butt and your hips. If you are
somebody who doesn't have much of a booty, you could
just like re you know, harvest your fat, your use
your own fat and put in there rather than doing
(24:45):
like injections which could be poisonous and kill people, and
like or silicone, which is like a whole implant, which
can make you sick. This is essentially your own fat,
but it's still like not an ideal procedure. Because I
saw this article about Cardi B's butt lift, and then
(25:06):
I saw a woman on Instagram doing a whole video
about how her BBL stinks.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
Yeah, yeah, okay, so he broke up with her because
her big, her Brazilian butt lifts stinks like trash, like garbage.
Speaker 5 (25:23):
Yeah, he said, it's not like a garbage can or something.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
I saw that, But you're saying that he didn't say that.
He's denying it and they're allegedly still together. However, you're
saying this woman said her BBL stinks like what like
ronnigh flesh.
Speaker 6 (25:38):
Yes, Because so then videos later like once you get
into the algorithm, like Instagram serves. So I saw the
Cardi b thing and I was like, what are you
talking about? And then the next video was this woman
explaining and she kept calling it her sit down air,
which I was like, what are you?
Speaker 5 (25:55):
What do you mean.
Speaker 6 (25:59):
Like she would sit down. A few videos later there
was a stitch with a surgeon and he was saying
that if you don't properly take care of your incisions afterwards,
if you happen to now have a much larger backside
than you once did, it would be hard for you
(26:20):
to clean.
Speaker 1 (26:21):
Proper And I am fucking smart when it comes to
the ass.
Speaker 6 (26:26):
Also had like fat and necrosis, which is like the
fat cells they put too many in so the fat
cells die, so essentially your butt inside is rotting. You're
basically decomposing, so you smell decomposition.
Speaker 5 (26:44):
It's disgusting.
Speaker 1 (26:45):
Wow, that is oh my god, And you think that's
why she got divorced from the game offset offset thank you,
thank you. I don't know what I'm talking about. Wow,
So it's god damn. Now the thing is like horribly horribly.
(27:06):
Men have four years talked about women and smells and
different things, and I just think that I go let
me say this as a man, I wouldn't want to
smell my balls. I wouldn't want to go down. I mean,
come on, man, let's be an honest, you know. But
the but we're not talking about a shit smell necessarily
(27:27):
or a stinky fit. You're talking about rotting flesh.
Speaker 5 (27:31):
Yeah, and like.
Speaker 6 (27:34):
Yeah, And for somebody like Carti, who has had butt
injections and had them removed because they were problematic, and
has had several procedures, she probably could be in the
position where I don't know that she isn't cleaning herself properly.
She'd probably pay somebody to do it. I think she
has more like if it's true, if the rumors are
true that offset left because of stinky butt, like she
(27:56):
could have that in necrosis problem, because if you look at.
Speaker 5 (27:59):
Her, like.
Speaker 6 (28:01):
Just it just is so it's so round, you know
what I mean, There's so much back there. And every
time she has a baby, she goes and gets another
procedure and just keeps filling it up. And it's like,
I can see where you might run into a problem, man,
you know, overfilling the tank.
Speaker 1 (28:20):
I don't know. I think you signed a sixty three
and a half million dollars deal with the Patriots. So
that's maybe you could use that to clean up the smell.
Speaker 4 (28:27):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (28:30):
And air fresheners maybe, I don't know, charcoal underwear, there's options.
I would think in this some way. But boy, that
is just you know, you smell an animal that dies
and decomposes and no one moves it. Yeah, now that
you're walking around with it, and every time you sit down,
it's like, god damn man, it's like a total wave
of stinks, like a hot boat full of garbage.
Speaker 5 (28:53):
Floating up from first forty eight.
Speaker 6 (28:56):
Yeah, that's what you're walking.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
Yeah. And then oh, I did off Air say to
you that I see that Tom Brady is saying that
Sophia Viagara is not too old for him, which she's
fifty something in early fifties and he's in his late forties.
But you made an interesting point with Tom Brady.
Speaker 6 (29:17):
I think it's so funny because Tom Brady can't be
photographed like near a woman. He can't even be photographed
like in the same room as a woman without the
headline being Tom Brady at a party like the Bezos
wedding and Venice. All of the New York post articles
were like tom Brady scene chatting with Sydney Sweeney on
a yacht, and then a week later it was like
(29:38):
tom Brady chets up Dakota Johnson on a yacht and
a beata.
Speaker 5 (29:41):
Tom Brady, you know, tom Brady said hi to the
girl with the ice cream carts? Are fine like that guy,
They are just waiting for him. Tom Brady talks to
Kim Kardashian. Could they be you know, could that be
her secret band? Like, I can't go anywhere.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
That's a's that's a tough thing with the with tom
Brady doing his Somebody just opened the door to the studio.
Everybody tells me and I am alone here, I should
be locking the door, but does some lady's like all
confused and she just opened the door and I'm talking
and she just looked at me. I apologize for the
(30:18):
interruption there. Yeah, it is weird. But Tom Brady is
he's a beautiful human being.
Speaker 5 (30:25):
He is a beautiful man.
Speaker 6 (30:26):
I mean, I would wouldn't mind being on a yacht
and a beata.
Speaker 1 (30:30):
Yeah, he's kept himself in shape and he's done a
nice thing and he's kept that, you know, kept it
going well and certainly proved that you can play to
forty five years old at a high level. I think
there were other guys that played, but they certainly weren't
at that level of play.
Speaker 6 (30:49):
I also didn't hate his like I think like when
he started his broadcasting in the very beginning of the
season last year was a little but I feel like
he found his footing towards.
Speaker 5 (30:58):
The end and he's doing a really nice job.
Speaker 1 (31:00):
I think he did too. But now he's part owner
of the Raiders, and then they don't want him at
pre show meetings, and who knows how that'll all play out.
But you know what, when he got millions and millions
of dollars cribing a river, you know exactly. It's so hard.
It's so hard. I mean, you're photographed everywhere with every
hot chick on the planet, you know what I mean.
Oh my god, the the Brazilian butt lifts that man
(31:24):
could smell, It's unreal.
Speaker 6 (31:30):
I wonder, I wonder how many Brazilian butt lifts he's
paid for.
Speaker 1 (31:35):
Well, that's a good question. I don't. I don't see
Brady as a as a big butt guy. I mean,
you know, and I always got mocked because while certainly striking.
I never saw his his wife Giselle as as like
the most beautiful. No she didn't. I mean she had
(31:56):
some manly features. In my opinion, I do. I think
that when you find women like women that are some
people say are very good looking, seem to have some
more manly features, and guys who are considered really good
looking have some more feminine features, like a little softer areas.
You ever notice that, not always, but to some degree,
(32:19):
think about that. Maybe I'm wrong, it could be another idea.
I'm not sure.
Speaker 5 (32:24):
Did you do a little sampling at your podcast?
Speaker 1 (32:27):
No, I did not. I did not. I had a
very late night last night and a whole lot of fun.
I mean, you talk about reality TV. Shit went I'm
in this studio last night could have been the oh
so oh.
Speaker 6 (32:38):
Yeah, I'm telling you, we got to turn the cameras on.
You often have some things going on over there.
Speaker 1 (32:44):
I've had a well, yes, I think that my life
in general has just been that way. And I've tried
to figure out why what am I doing that's just
attracting all this chaos on a pretty consistent level, you know,
And I see people and I go I'll always warn
somebody I go, man, you don't want to hang around.
I'm mean, I know I'm fun today, but good damn
(33:08):
all right, Alex, I really appreciate you taking the time
to come on. It's it's it's nice to see you.
Hang on for one one second. I'll take a quick
break here, but I do want to talk to you
off air about that other thing. Nice the other thing,
and I will lots of lots of things to talk about. Well, well,
(33:29):
get into Uh Deputy Hurley will be joining us, and
uh he's got big news and uh we're in the
one hundred most Deadly Days. We'll explain why. And the
the cats, the big pussy in town and that's not
a Brazilian butt lift. I don't know. We get to
all that right after this bTB wood Fire, Pizza and
grill in the mall at Grease Ridge. You know on
(33:50):
Thursdays it's Plate Thursday over there. You got to get
a bTB plate because they have the bTB meat hot sauce.
It's a war winning it's delicious, longest happy hour in town.
Somebody sent me a message the other day and said
kid had a soccer tournament in Greece. Went to BETB
(34:13):
ordered four drinks and said, no, you undercharged me. It's
the longest happy ar I'm telling you. Starts at like
at eleven o'clock in the morning, goes to six o'clock.
It's Monday through Thursday. Get out there, check it out.
Come for brunch. The brunch is amazing. We're gonna do
a brunch cast there later in this month, in like
(34:34):
two weeks, we're gonna go and just I think, just
have a great time. I know we're gonna have a
great time. But the food is phenomenal. You've heard us
talk about it on Monday nights when Matt Reese comes
in and I gotta tell you, we had the pickle
pizza this past week. It is delicious. I would never
(34:55):
have thought of this combination, but it is just perfect,
absolutely perfect, and of course great summer cocktails. Be sure
to follow them on Facebook because that's where you're gonna
find most of this stuff. It's a bTB Facebook dot com,
slash BTV, Wood Fired Pizza And if you're looking to
make reservations for anything, maybere gonna have, you know, even
just a lunch beating or something, and they have some
(35:17):
space for you. Why don't you go to btbroc dot com.
That's btv roc dot com and they'll get you there.
Of course, there's the concert coming up. Silent Disco will
be Saturday, July twenty sixth. It's from eight to eleven
ten dollars. I think you can't beat it. It's gonna
be a lot of fun with our friend Alfie out there.
(35:37):
That's the weekend. We're gonna be doing the brunchcast on Sunday,
so hopefully we'll see you at BTV wood Fire Pizza
and Grill in the Mall at Grease Ridge. Got a
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a legend. I know it's kind of hack and we
(38:13):
bring on Deputy Hurley from the Monroe County Police Department,
but I mean it just fits, and it's inner circle
and we like inner circle, and so so there you go,
bringing him on from his home and looking as handsome
as ever. Actually, you know, I know you said to
me before we came on. Uh, the camera on my
computer is not working. In the phone, the lighting looks better.
(38:36):
You're you're very homie. You got your the nice pillow
there and the together is our family sign that I
made you you you took down and probably got in
trouble for by your by your wife in the in
the in the past. There hanging one second. I think
we have a volume issue and I will fix that.
There we go. How are you, sir?
Speaker 4 (38:56):
I'm great? How are you?
Speaker 1 (38:57):
I'm I'm doing okay. It's uh uh been a weird summer.
This is my summer of no plans really, because I
got a my old man isn't doing great, and uh
so we're yeah, you're kind of on that, you know,
you know, wait and see, yeah, I don't want to commit,
but uh yeah. So he thought he was dying and
(39:19):
called a bunch of people and said I'm dying tomorrow.
And as I said to my brother, I go, you know,
the the Grim Reaper doesn't answer Kylender invice. He comes
by surprise, I think. So we know he's still here
and that's that's a wonderful thing. But you've got some
cool news. Are you allowed to say?
Speaker 4 (39:37):
Oh? Yeah, it's a fine cool now? Okay, So on
July nineteenth, I'm getting promoted and it will be sergeant
early so.
Speaker 8 (39:46):
Right, no more deputy, that's right, moving on up. But yeah,
so the plan, right, Now, last I was told, you know,
was I'll train my replacement and then we will be
back on the road helping some of our young deputies.
Speaker 1 (40:01):
So that means we don't get to see you anymore.
We don't have you on anymore.
Speaker 4 (40:05):
Yeah, I mean I'm still around.
Speaker 1 (40:07):
But yeah, well are you allowed? Would you be allowed
to talk to us? Or is this like we got
to go through the police information desk or whatever.
Speaker 4 (40:15):
That's a good no. I think we could probably still talk.
Speaker 1 (40:18):
Yeah, buddy, yes, I love it. Let's be a little rebellious.
It's just a slight bit. I mean, and you know
the stuff. Well, now you're gonna see you may be
on some of the calls that we that are are
news or go as a support right, Oh?
Speaker 4 (40:34):
Absolutely, yeah?
Speaker 1 (40:35):
The charge Tell me what is a sergeant versus you
know kind of what you what you do?
Speaker 4 (40:39):
Now?
Speaker 1 (40:40):
Because I did have a friend who was a Monroe
County sergeant Jimmy Carroll. Yeah, and I don't know what
the different rankings. I would assume there's probably more paperwork.
Speaker 4 (40:53):
I yep, that's more of a it's more of an
administrative role, not as much as say like lieutenant. Right,
the higher up the ranking you go the more administrative
and paperwork stuff like that. So you're a frontline supervisor.
You're you're leading from the front. You're you're leading the deputies.
You're approving their time off and making sure that their
(41:14):
payroll is all done correctly. And then you know all
the all the videos and stuff that you see online.
As I want to talk to your supervisor, well that'll
that'll be me.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
Well, welcome to Karen. Hell, let me talk to your supervisor, sir. Ah,
my god, don't speak to me that way. We are
in what I believe is referred to as the one
hundred Deadliest days. Is that accurate?
Speaker 4 (41:39):
So the one hundred deadliest days that I know of
is for driving and for teens because it's the time
between Labor Day and was it Memorial Day or Memorial Day?
Speaker 1 (41:56):
In Labor Day? Right?
Speaker 4 (41:57):
Memorial Day and Labor Day. Right, it's essentially school when
school's out, so you know there's no school, kids are
out and about, they're looking for things to do.
Speaker 1 (42:06):
Just hey, watch this, right, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (42:08):
So that's that's why it's one hundred deadliest days. And
it's just warmer. People are outside, you know, cabin fever's over.
We're cooped up for what nine months a year, so
everybody wants to be out and about doing things. Motorcycles
are out, you know, all those things that just contribute
to disaster.
Speaker 1 (42:26):
Did you as a as a young person, and feel
free to plete the fifth, but did you ever car surf? Sir?
Speaker 4 (42:37):
Allegedly?
Speaker 1 (42:37):
Yeah, where you stand not on the hood, but the
roof of the car while somebody drives. Was that? That's
how we did it, That's how I did it.
Speaker 4 (42:46):
So I never did that one.
Speaker 1 (42:47):
Oh I didn't do that. Yeah, I think we got
up to like thirty five.
Speaker 4 (42:53):
Oh really Yeah?
Speaker 1 (42:54):
Yeah, I have good balance, you know what I mean?
You had a good balance and a hard roof like
you couldn't have one that Sometimes you got those roofs
that could give you go. Like my fat buddy got
up there and put some fucking dents in the roof,
but it actually helped. Excuse me, but it did help
a little bit because now you had some places that
you could put your feet or around. It almost gave
you a little more surface area.
Speaker 4 (43:15):
Yeah it sounds weird, pre made dun Yeah.
Speaker 1 (43:17):
Yeah, yeah, there you got it.
Speaker 4 (43:20):
So now when you look back on that, what do
you think.
Speaker 1 (43:23):
I think that I am lucky to be alive. And
if I ever saw my kids doing it, I would
want to we always say I want to kill them.
I would want to have a discussion, like, let's go
to a head trauma center and just see how this
turns out. Possibly. Uh, you know, my mom was a
speech pathologist, and I got my motorcycle permit behind their back,
and some of the guys on the street had an
(43:45):
extra motorcycle. So I went and rode with one of them,
and she came home and I think I had a
I did have a helmet on, but man, I got
the you don't understand head trauma victim, bah bah bah.
So I never rode a motorcycle ever again, never ever
did it. And I don't regret that that. I don't
(44:07):
regret especially now. I mean, hurlely, God, you look around.
I First of all, the technology in cars is fantastic.
I have a car now that practically, if you are
on the highway or something, you can set cruise control
and driver assist and it drives itself. It slows down
(44:27):
for cars in front of it. It does all kinds
of stuff you need to be there. It will warn
you to keep your hands on the wheel because I
didn't want to see, like, hey, what happens if I
just you know, but it is limits. Well, I'll just
see in what I got here. I need to know.
But but the point is everybody's looking at their phone.
And I know we have the no touch rule in
New York State, but there's a whole lot of touching
(44:50):
going on.
Speaker 4 (44:51):
Oh absolutely. And I remember when I first started twenty
years ago, it was a fifty dollars fine your a
cell phone and no points. Right now you're what like
five points and over three hundred dollars and just the fines,
not the search charges and everything else. But that all
stems from the danger that cell phones are. And we
(45:11):
all have done it. We all know. There's nobody who
can argue that a cell phone isn't a distraction. I mean,
we've all done it, you know it. I mean, how
many mailboxes have you almost taken out because you were
answering a text or whatever.
Speaker 7 (45:24):
No.
Speaker 1 (45:24):
I see people often, and I'm amazed at the number
of near misses, Like you see somebody, especially if you're
on one of the expressways, kind of they're touching each line, right,
they're going back and forth. That used to be hey,
they're drinking anymore. It's like yeah, and it really feels
(45:46):
like while driving, what's the activity? It's now what we
do while we check our email and find our favorite
playlist and possibly watch Netflix. I don't know, I'm just
you know, those things happen.
Speaker 4 (45:59):
People are snapped adding and tiktoking while they're used to
be eating and you know, putting on makeup or things
like that're shaving, you know, with an electric razor, and
now they're they're watching you know, minute and a half
two minute videos on their phone while they're going down
the road.
Speaker 1 (46:13):
I will never forget as a young guy, my mother
coming home. She had like a fat lip, like you know,
those big like you know you can see boxers and
stuff have. And what happens putting on makeup going down
the Taconic State Parkway and lost it with raised to
like a light pole. Yeah, like dead center. I mean
(46:34):
she hit this thing dead center. So now you got
a horseshoe and you know what I mean, that horseshoe
dead and uh and she's not makeup. I go, I'd
like to see the after result, like the cop that
came up with that hat to go, oh my god,
what happened like your makeup saw speared all over your
face and everything. So I'm thinking I.
Speaker 4 (46:55):
Sometimes sometimes you get there and you just look and go.
I think you've learned your lesson.
Speaker 1 (46:59):
Yeah, you know. One of the things is where you're
mentioned one hundred deadly states and it's really based on
let's say, team driving and more free time. I do
wonder have you noticed and I don't. I don't know
how you you would or wouldn't, but I would think
there's some statistic less teens driving? Is there less driving?
(47:21):
Because it used to be like your car was sort
of your status symbol, and I think now it's your phone.
I really do. And I hear of kids who don't
want to drive and are afraid to drive. And what's
the point I got, I'll just grab an uber or
I don't know if this is true, right, You hear
a lot of things I'm asking you.
Speaker 4 (47:41):
Yeah, it's hard to quantify, but I will tell you that,
you know, having kids around that age and whatnot, they
always have a plan, right, all the education, all those
talks that we had for years and years about go
to the bar, have fun, but have a plan, Like, yeah,
you're right, it's it's lyft, it's it's ride shares that
(48:02):
they just.
Speaker 1 (48:03):
But I'm even saying, at like sixteen, where you can't
even get into the bars, I feel like there's less
people aren't as excited to get their license.
Speaker 4 (48:13):
To leave their house.
Speaker 1 (48:14):
Yeah, well it's just talk with their friends.
Speaker 4 (48:17):
They can go online, play video games or what you know. Again,
they're on Snapchat and whatnot talking to each other.
Speaker 1 (48:22):
I'm telling you right now, you want the kids out
of the house. Turn off the air conditioning, turn off
the Wi Fi.
Speaker 4 (48:30):
You know, you will know like an old man. But
it was like when we were that age, it was
get out of the house all the time.
Speaker 1 (48:36):
Yeah I don't want to see you. My father used
to scream, I want some day without the kids. Get out,
get out, get out. So we were gone. But yeah,
it is interesting. I always say, like now, it's the
greatest time to be poor in the world because flat
screen TVs cost nothing and air conditionings everywhere, right, and
I think those are the that's what's made us lazy.
(48:57):
I got Wi Fi, I got this. I'm fucked and fine,
I'll go. I'll scrounge up five dollars and get a
biggie bag. From Wendy's and I'm that's my afternoon, and
I go, oh my god, we're the laziest. But that's
that's what it is.
Speaker 4 (49:10):
Well, and you don't even have to leave you got
you blows my mind. You have people delivering fast food.
That's the whole point. You just go through the drive
through and you're done.
Speaker 1 (49:22):
No, not anymore.
Speaker 4 (49:23):
We can't do that. We pay someone to do that
for us.
Speaker 1 (49:25):
That's right. It's like a butler service. I would love
to have a butler. As I get older, I go,
I love a butler.
Speaker 4 (49:30):
But then the argument I hear too is well, there's
just no, we don't have money.
Speaker 1 (49:34):
I can't.
Speaker 4 (49:35):
But you just paid twenty dollars for someone to bring
you a five dollars biggie bag. Make it make sense
until I've had this conversation before.
Speaker 1 (49:46):
Yes, I actually, I actually can. One of the things
that is beautiful about our area is that everything seems
to come to life in the summertime. And some of
that come to life is also wildlife. I remember many
years ago being on the radio and a bear had
climbed a tree in the city and they were trying
(50:06):
to get the bear out, and they kept I kept
wondering where did the Tranquilizer dart that missed land? I
was just always waiting for someone to go fuck it
never never happened. But I remember, like they shot, we
were getting a live play by play from a guy
who it was his house and the bear was industry
(50:26):
and then the poor bear's next snapped when it fell.
I think on that one, on that one, but you know,
are you seeing? Of course, we've got this bizarre story
out of the city of Rochester night and you and
I will have a nice moment to listen to the
person who observed this cat. But it sounds to me
like it was somebody's pet that got out, not necessarily right, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (50:52):
You probably shouldn't have had it.
Speaker 1 (50:53):
Yeah, yeah, the legal pet, I would say.
Speaker 4 (50:56):
Yeah, and I'm sorry, but he said the Tranquilizer darted
made me think of like Naked Gun. Yes, seen out
of that movie, right, and they're.
Speaker 1 (51:04):
Remaking that by the way, with Liam Neeson. I know,
I'm not sure how I feel about these remakes. The
classics were classics. What are we doing? But yeah, that
tranquilideser de Heart was like I always wonder where did
that go? And you know that was the scene that
I thought of, where it like hits you in the day.
Speaker 4 (51:20):
Yeah, it's a good question.
Speaker 1 (51:23):
But the cat story, I would assume that the agencies
talk to each other. What is what is the scuttle
butt from the Rochester Police on this?
Speaker 4 (51:33):
So my very limited understanding on this because, like you said,
I've been off. You know, somebody said they saw a
large cat, you know, called the police, The police showed up.
I believe they said that one of the RPD officers
saw something. Okay, again, what exactly they saw because originally
the story was it was a large bobcat. But again,
(51:55):
I'm an expert on animals. I didn't think bobcats got
that big.
Speaker 1 (51:59):
But I saw I'm sorry interrupt, I saw ring doorbell footage.
Speaker 4 (52:06):
Yeah. Yeah, and with AI now we're trying to figure.
Speaker 1 (52:10):
Out, Oh, okay, okay, good oil is it not? You know,
because this had a long tail, like a tiger or something,
not a bobcat. Bobcat's tails are stubby.
Speaker 4 (52:23):
So this also happened in twenty twenty during COVID. I
don't know if you remember, but somehow it got out
that animals were escaping from the zoo and running through
the streets. And it ended up being totally false. But
so this happens every now and then, but it could
(52:43):
be true. You know, they're not ruling anything out, and
obviously from what RPD put out there, taking it serious.
They said that they can't quantify it yet. But if
anybody sees it, you know, to be careful, make sure
you call nine one one, back away slowly, all those things.
Speaker 1 (52:57):
Yeah, here is a person who said they did see it.
Speaker 3 (53:00):
I was just walking to the store and all I
hear is people running and coming back this way.
Speaker 4 (53:05):
Like oh oh.
Speaker 2 (53:07):
I'm like, what the hell?
Speaker 3 (53:08):
So I just kept walking, mind of my business, and
I keep coming down the street and I just see
some big shits keeping the woud Oh.
Speaker 2 (53:17):
I just kept im home. I just left. I'm gone.
Speaker 3 (53:19):
I don't play them type games. I don't play with dogs, snakes,
I don't do the rattles. I don't do none of
that type of wildlife stuff.
Speaker 2 (53:25):
You understand. I don't do that.
Speaker 3 (53:27):
I just let it go, kepting finding my business. But
that thing like this, damn, I'm so no police came,
they squatted everything or got this thing cleared up all that.
They just got it blocked off, and I'm just around here.
I'm trying to see what it is. See if I
can get up the head. Give me a lion or something,
Give me some tender meat. I ain't never had no lion.
Speaker 1 (53:46):
Wow, can you find anybody better? There was nobody better
to describe that whole thing. It doesn't It does sound
a little crazy, but if you do see wildlife, you know,
I'm always amazed. It happens more in the Rockies and things.
But they warn you about Yellowstone, stay away from the bison,
stay away from this. And every year you'll hear about
(54:08):
some yahoo got out, goes hey, give them a picture,
and then the next thing they know, they're thirty feet
in the air, ass over teakettle because they got a
bull's horn up their ass. And that that's literally, I mean,
these these animals are, they're wild beast. You're in their neighborhood,
you know, and they're just doing what they do.
Speaker 4 (54:29):
Yeah, And if it's a mountain lion or a cougar,
whatever you want to call it, it's not well.
Speaker 1 (54:34):
If it's a cougar, was going for a drink at Montconnery's.
I wasn't worried.
Speaker 4 (54:39):
They're dangerous too, Oh god, are they ever?
Speaker 1 (54:41):
Who look out. Oh god, you don't want to get
bit by one of those. No, throw you in the
back of the car and just take advantage. Nothing else yet.
Speaker 4 (54:58):
But if it is, like if it's some you know,
exotic drug dealer or some crazy, you know, exotic animal owner,
you know, it could be extremely dangerous. If this thing
is just running around scared, it's not it's not supposed
to be here, and you know, people certainly aren't prepared
for that kind of a thing. I would hate, you know,
(55:19):
it's not the animal's fault. I would hate for somebody
to shoot it. But what else would do?
Speaker 1 (55:24):
I don't know what else you would do either. I mean,
are are exotic pets in a way ticking time bomb
for people?
Speaker 4 (55:31):
I would think so. I mean it's hard to tell.
We don't deal with it a lot, but you see
the stories on the news, like there was the alligator
that was taken from the house in Buffalo. These things
aren't supposed to be pets, right. I love animals, And
it's not that it's just the thing's a dinosaur. Alligators
have been around for millions of years, and it's it's
not supposed to be a pet. And everybody's like Oh
(55:54):
that's great. Yeah, until it goes bad. Literally, all it
takes is one mistake and you're you're gone. I mean
a cat scratches you, it hurts enough to kill you.
Speaker 1 (56:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (56:06):
So I don't know what people are thinking.
Speaker 1 (56:09):
What else is happening in the in the wide world
of Monroe County.
Speaker 4 (56:16):
So in fun news, we started. This is the first week,
first of two weeks in our teen academy that we do,
So we have a bunch of teens going through kind
of seeing what it's like to be a police officer.
At the academy, they're Pee team. Today they did the
spec Ops day, so special Operations. They came out and
saw all the specialized teams, Scuba swat, the bomb team,
(56:39):
all that stuff. And I was actually pleasantly surprised to learn.
And I know you'll appreciate this. There's a young man
who's on the spectrum and he's going through everything. And
what the great part about this is, you know, our
people are doing everything and being very kind and helping him.
(56:59):
But I would expect that they're adults, right, but the
kids that the kids are really rallying around and just
being very inclusive and you know, including him and everything,
and it was just really nice to see them kind of,
you know, rally around him today.
Speaker 1 (57:13):
Yeah, that's that's amazing. I didn't know there was the
teen Academy yep.
Speaker 4 (57:17):
So they've been doing it for a long time and
it's neat right. It's it's a week. They bring in
a group for a week, and then in two weeks
I think they bring in the second group and the
kids are there Monday through Friday, and they, like I said,
they put them through physical training, They put them through
a little bit of the defensive training, just give them
a little taste of what police work is and what
they would experience if they decided to go into law enforcement.
Speaker 1 (57:39):
Yeah, what a great you know, opportunity to get a
look at it firsthand and see if this is something
that you would like to pursue. Absolutely, yeah, because it's certainly,
you know, we need officers. And I always thought, and
I know it's a controversial thing, but I always thought
the term defund the police was bad phrasing. That was
(58:01):
a bad pr move. Whoever did that, you really kind
of I understood the concept behind it. I think there
were some things I think if you talk to us,
but that was just a terrible thing, and I didn't
like that police were sort of made the enemy in
some situations. In some situations, it seemed that way, and
(58:23):
I think that we need to, you know, you build
a better community, and we do need to be safe,
and we have laws and whether it's you know, we
all hate getting the speeding ticket, but they are the
law and it is a reason, right, you.
Speaker 4 (58:35):
Know, yeah, absolutely, And you know I think, but you could.
Speaker 1 (58:38):
Turn right on red assholes. What's that I said, you
can turn right on red assholes?
Speaker 4 (58:44):
Oh right, God? Absolutely. Sitting there, you don't know how
bad traffic is until you're in the police car and
everybody's doing twenty miles an hour under the speed limit
and not doing anything because they're just afraid. So it
gets frustrating. But yeah, I mean that that whole thing
I understand, And most police officers would tell you that,
(59:07):
you know, the system isn't perfect, and they're they're asking
us to do a lot of things that aren't specifically
in our wheelhouse. But you know, now we're big game
hunters and yeah, kind of everything.
Speaker 1 (59:20):
Parents I mean, to a certain extent, is it really
does feel that way?
Speaker 4 (59:25):
Oh, absolutely, Mediation all that stuff, So we do the
best we can and essentially try to de escalate situations
and contain situations so that we can get other people
involved who can really help out. But so, I mean
we agree. But yeah, the whole defund thing is is
is just silly.
Speaker 1 (59:43):
It is silly.
Speaker 4 (59:44):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (59:45):
I did see, going back to the cat story, that
there was a lot of fake or false nine to
one one calls as a result. Do you see an
uptick in that sort of thing around this time of
year because kids are home, people have more leisure time.
I don't know, may be ridiculous, but no.
Speaker 4 (01:00:06):
No, not really because, uh you know nine one one
does a great job of tracking all those and you know,
even if you hang up by mistake, you know, you
go to dial nine one four or some Florida area
code and you'd hit nine and one by mistake and
you hang up, they will call you back to make
sure there's not an actual emergency. If you don't answer,
you get a knock on the door from US.
Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
So I had like that years ago. Many years.
Speaker 4 (01:00:30):
You'll get a Yeah, you'll get a fake call or
a crank call every now and then, but usually it's
it's stopped real quick. When you talk to the parents.
Speaker 1 (01:00:38):
I was drunk, and I don't I had a phone.
There was still the phone on the wall. I had
a visitor, and I went and hit like the ABC
that was at the top, and one of them called
nine one one. So I hear nine one one and
I hung up and then the phone rang and they said,
(01:01:00):
you just called that one and I said, everything's fine.
I made a mistake. I did not know no one
needed nine one. Are you alone? No, I'm not alone.
And then like fifteen, well, okay, this is where I'm
going towards a cougar in my house, And like fifteen
twenty minutes later, all of a sudden, they're pounding on
the door and now I have just happened to be naked,
(01:01:24):
and I'm running out trying to find a robe and
things are pointing in different directions and cover up and
I'm like, hello, go yeah, So so you know, I
think that there's got to be I mean, we've talked
about this before, but I wonder if it'll happen again.
Now you'll get more stories that book. That book, I mean,
(01:01:46):
it's got to be written about just oh yeah, you see.
If I hope every day police officers do find some
humor in what it is, because a lot of it
is we're not calling the police to say, hey, I
baked brownies, or hey you got a picture of Margarita's
in the pools open. It's usually uh, we had a
(01:02:08):
picture of Margaritas and now soon next door the cougar
is at the bottom of the pool. You send somebody,
you know what I mean. That's that's what it is. Yeah,
so it's it's always a little dangerous. I have a
son who wants to get into law enforcement, actually have two.
I think one of them is interviewing with the Corrections
(01:02:30):
Department to be an investigator, and then the other guys
down in New York City and is trying to get
into NYPD.
Speaker 4 (01:02:41):
Oh wow, yeah, yeah, NYPD's it's it's interesting. So like
everybody who does anything there is a police officer, is
my understanding. So like the guys who move the furniture,
the guys who cleaned the floors, the bee keepers, right,
they're all cops. And a lot of that stems from
(01:03:03):
nine to eleven because if something massive happens, they're all.
Speaker 1 (01:03:07):
Right, oh that's interesting. I did not know. All right,
well good, I wouldn't mind him moving furniture over being
on the streets me. You know, just sometimes you get
a little nervous. I gotta think, uh, Deputy Hurley, congratulations
again on Sergeant Hurley.
Speaker 4 (01:03:21):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:03:22):
Yeah, a name plate's been changed and everything.
Speaker 4 (01:03:24):
Now not yet un till July nineteenth.
Speaker 1 (01:03:28):
I mean, can't we get like a little preview, a
little something you know coming soon, Sergeant Hurley, there you go. Yeah,
I don't think on it. Well. I would love to
talk to you again, and I will always try to
shoot a text and never want to catch you off guard.
But you've been really, really really wonderful to us and
we appreciate it. Even the drinking show we did, Kevin's
Garage and all that stuff. You were just amazing. So
(01:03:51):
thank you and a well deserved promotion. Congratulations, and I
hope you have a great rest of your summer, sir
you too, all right bye byee? There he goes Deputy Hurley.
I think we should just wrap it up here for
Alex who gave us some good insight and you learned
about the BBL and why it may stink for Deputy
(01:04:16):
Hurley in the one hundred Most Dangerous Days and the
potential cougar in downtown Rochester. I'm Bill Moran. We'll see
you on Monday. I woke up in hotail, didn't know
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(01:04:36):
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