Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:23):
Hey, yeah, they think she should calm down.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
The show is about to style radio. Turn it up,
turn it up low, turn it.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
Upround douse like a dream come true.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
Due to the nature of this program, discretion does not exist.
It's Race on the radio right now on w t
I S News Talk ten eighties.
Speaker 4 (00:54):
YEA, let's go on, you scouty wags, nutmegas, voters, patriots,
get on out there.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
What you're doing in the house, get your car. It's
rees Under Radio on WTIC News Talk ten eight And look,
I was gonna do the opening monologue to talk about
the passing of the vice president that it will have
to wait.
Speaker 5 (01:27):
It'll have to wait because.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
I'm going to when I talk about Dick Cheney, I
want to do it in a way that is more
about you than it is about me. I'll explain. Give
it a minute. It is election day, and in Connecticut
there are elections everywhere. Fairfield County, Hartford County, Litchfield County,
(01:51):
Middlesex County, New Haven County, Big new Haven mayoral race
between Orosco and Eleaker. A lot of good stuff going
on as far as elections are concerned. Most of us
who are walks on this or watching it intently every
(02:12):
single race, paying attention to it, looking at it, dissecting it.
Who's showing up left handed lesbians who drive blue super rus, What.
Speaker 5 (02:23):
Was the turnout?
Speaker 2 (02:26):
That's the way that we are. That's us, that's not you,
that's just us. And I get it. I love it.
It's one of my favorite things to do as sort
of like this commentator and talk show. I want to
know who's voting and why. And sometimes it seems silly
to a lot of you. That's kind of the reason
(02:47):
why I mock it. But to us, we love it.
We just do. And I applaud all of you out
there who endure our nonsense.
Speaker 5 (02:59):
On the daily, if not yearly basis.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
I have a great time doing this job. But I
want to say something to Republicans. And I remember when
I first got here at wt I C there was
this very you know, said Trombone from The Price is
right about elections? Why bother? Why do we bother? And
(03:31):
I wrote something down real quick, and I thought about it.
Speaker 5 (03:40):
In a way that I think can be helpful.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
It's not advice, even though it's probably gonna sound like it.
I want the hell we'll call it advice. We have
to lose to learn, not learn to lose. That's what
this has got to be about. In Connecticut. We have
(04:06):
to be able to lose to learn, not learn to lose.
That's what the whole analysis thing is about. That's why
the rest of us, who you know, a lot of
people tell me us like, oh, good luck, reas trying
to turn the state red. It's not so much about
(04:27):
you being a debbie downer. I don't criticize you for that.
You've dealt with this enough times to give up, and
I understand it. It's not good. Don't get me wrong.
I am never going to encourage or enable you to
give up. If I have to keep pushing you to
give yourself a sense of hope when it seems insurmountable,
(04:51):
I'm gonna still do it.
Speaker 5 (04:52):
Because the objective is to win.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
What kind of coach would I be? Yes, I consider
myself one. What kind of coach would I be? I
don't want to be here every day saying to you
shish boom bah, we're gonna win.
Speaker 6 (05:05):
No.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
I told you when I got here, I was gonna
get the get on the ground and I was gonna run.
I was gonna do the things that I want you
to do is to get active. If you see me
out there in the cold holding your politicians to account,
if you see me out there doing it, you might
want to do it. You might say what the hell
ain't even from here, and you might be inspired to
(05:28):
fight back. But the only way you can fight back
is at the ballot box. So I am telling all
of you that they ain't over yet. It ain't over yet.
If you haven't voted, go, If you're indifferent about voting
(05:48):
because you sent up, that goes I want to go. Anyway,
you gotta go. It's never gonna change, and you're only
gonna be left to complain about it unless you go.
But when you lose, you have to learn from it.
(06:09):
Not learn to lose. You have to learn from losing.
You have to find out if the fact that all
of you, if more of you got out there and
you voted, and you see the numbers being different than
what they were the last time around, you'll say, whoa,
that's weird. You know, last time the Republican lost by
(06:30):
twenty percent. This time, when I went out and other
people went out, it was only five.
Speaker 7 (06:36):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (06:36):
There are more people out here who are seeing this
for what it truly is there are a lot more
of us that aren't participating. Why sit idly by? Why
learn to lose? Nothing changes? If nothing changes, you've got
(06:58):
to get off your butt, or you've got to get
out of your own way and be a part of
the change that you want. It starts with you. So
I'm asking you, you've got four hours, Well you got
more than that. Some of you have even find Just go.
(07:19):
If you haven't, go wait online. If you can, please go.
It's not so much about making a difference. It's knowing
that you got skin in the game. When you see
the numbers when they come back, you'll look at them
and you'll go, like me, how many blue haired lesbians
(07:43):
driving blue subarus showed up? You'll find yourself interested in
a way that you never were before. And again, it's
not like you have to be out at every you know,
city hall meeting. It's not like you have to show
up at every rally. It's one thing. Go out and
vote your values. That's how that works. That's the job
(08:10):
that you have. That's the responsibility that you have. You
can be mad at the results afterwards, it's good and
it's good to be upset about them, but I'm sure
many of you have played sports before. I'm sure many
of you have participated in some competitiveness in your life
(08:32):
and have lost.
Speaker 5 (08:35):
And if you're a true competitor, you know what the
loss felt like.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
You know how upsetting it was, how angry you got
at times, and what you decided to do afterwards. Work harder,
learn more, fix where your mistakes are and make sure
that you don't do that again, or if you have
(09:01):
a habit of making them, don't make them again. Losing
to learn, That's what all of these elections are about.
I'll never forget Man twenty sixteen. I really really was afraid.
(09:22):
I kept saying to myself, there's no way this guy's
gonna win. It was insurmountable in my view. When Donald
Trump won in twenty sixteen, I said to myself, Wow,
what do you do with that? I celebrated profusely, I
(09:42):
will say that, but nonetheless I didn't know what to
do with that win because I was so used to.
Speaker 5 (09:46):
Losing the Obama era.
Speaker 2 (09:49):
Just everything about the Obama campaign from two thousand and
eight and twenty twelve, even when it looked like Mitt
Romney may have had a shot, and I couldn't even
support that man losing both times, seeing Beyonce put out
tweets mocking people the people who lost, I was angry,
(10:17):
but not angry enough to give up. I never got
angry enough to give up. And I see you guys
out there. I talk to you every day. People send
me messages all the time. Reason why why would you
come here? You could have just stayed there. You didn't
have to come here and deal with this. I even
(10:40):
hear it in people's voices when they talk to me.
It's like, I wish I could leave, but I can't.
They feel trapped. I've never felt that. I mean, I've
been through some times, but I've never felt trapped. Once
(11:01):
you get there, the despair hits and you are there.
Speaker 5 (11:05):
You never leave.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
Once you become trapped, you have to actually acclimate to
being trapped, and then you've become comfortable in your confinement,
and then you accept everything that's a part of it.
Don't be that person, that man, that woman, that child.
(11:31):
I was joking with the boy when he came up
to visit us in Texas, and I mean we were
going out to get ice cream or something like that,
and we were laughing about people who come from small
towns and make it big. And we were joking to
each other or saying our own scenarios about how the
(11:54):
story is always about the young kid who's an outcast
in his own neighborhood and he knows that everybody's lived
there their entire life. But there's that one kid who says,
I'm gonna make it out of this po dunk town.
I'm gonna make it big, and I'll show you that's
the way you gotta look at Connecticut. Maybe you know
(12:15):
a lot of people tell me my naivete is gonna
get the best of me. That I come into Connecticut
with this gung host spirit, we can change it. And
people sit idly byas especially my seniors out there, they
sit back and they love. Look at a young whipper
snapper foolish years he'll learn, he'll put all of that
(12:39):
energy in it. Give him a year, he'll lose that inspiration.
Let me be the first to tell you that's going nowhere.
Speaker 5 (12:51):
I'm fifty six.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
I still have the same energy I had when I
was twenty five. I've still got that go get them.
I don't believe in the status quo. I know you
can fight city Hall, and I know that no man
is above me and no challenge is beneath me. I
(13:21):
believe in fighting tooth and nail, and I believe that
we can actually get something done in the state.
Speaker 5 (13:29):
Wouldn't you rather.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
Feel hopeful than hopeless? Wouldn't you wouldn't you like to
get out of that malaise? Imagine how much sweeter life
could be if you could just feel inspired to even
want to change it. You could wake up every morning
(13:55):
with a renewed spirit. I'm gonna make it happen today. Well,
today's your day. You don't have to get immediate results.
Life never worked that fast. We talked yesterday with Courtney,
(14:19):
and I heard a lot of you talk about how
rewarding it is to go through the hard work every
day to make ends me, to provide for your family,
to get ahead, to save some money so you can
go on vacation, or buy the engagement ring, or to
go on the lavish you know, trip around the world.
(14:40):
You're always wanted, but the effort that you put in
was always worth it. In the end, I got to
go to Europe, I got to go to istan Bull
because I worked hard and I put in the long
hours and I was rewarded. Well, you got to apply
it to everything in your life. And today is election day,
and that that's what it's about, losing to learn instead
(15:07):
of learning to lose. If you haven't gotten out there
to vote.
Speaker 5 (15:13):
Please do.
Speaker 2 (15:14):
If you can hear my voice and you want to
contribute to making a change, please go out and vote.
That's yours. No one has taking it away from you.
Go exercise it. Man, that's your voice. Go find out
(15:35):
exactly how much your voice played a role. Even if
you lose, go find out what difference your voice made.
Know that you had an impact. Your voice is like
a three point shot in the finals. Sure you only
scored that three, but boy was it pretty. It made
(15:59):
the highlight reel. That's the way you gotta look at this.
That's the way I do. Get out there. Please.
Speaker 5 (16:09):
And I know there's some people who already have.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
But those of you who know who I'm talking to,
those of you who did not do it, who thought,
ah should I bother? Yes, you should get it done.
You gotta. It's not enough to complain anymore. People say
that politics is the fabric of our life. Right now, Oh,
(16:34):
if you really believe that it is, go out there
and show them. That's all I'm asking. That's all I'm asking.
Join the rest of us. It's one day, in a
couple of hours. I hope that. I hope that worked.
(16:57):
Only I can only hope when we come back, I'll
address the Cheney thing because I'm gonna need your help.
I'm a little confused about how I'm supposed to mourn
the life of Dick Cheney.
Speaker 5 (17:15):
So when we come back, we'll do that.
Speaker 2 (17:17):
Plus your phone calls, It's Reese on the radio on
WTIC News Talk ten.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
Eighty fam of wt I see, then do us a favorite,
download the Free Honesty and favorite wt I c.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
Thank you to Satan for giving me inspiration on how
to play this role. That was Christian Bale, you might
remember from The Golden Globes many years back when he
played the screen version of Dick Cheney, the former Vice
President of the United States.
Speaker 5 (17:52):
And I I'm.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
I'm gonna need some help on this, and I saw
someone in the chat room just said, you know, just
more is passing it and move on. But he was
a part of my everyday life as someone in radio,
and I don't want to ignore because I know someone's
gonna say, hey, you didn't mention anything about Dick Cheney today.
(18:20):
As a talk show hopes, it's my job to I
can't ignore it. In some ways, I wish I could,
but I can't because I'm a little convicted. I'm confused
about how I'm supposed to address this. Let me put
it this way. When I say confused, I know what
(18:42):
I feel or what I think even better, because it
doesn't matter what I feel. I know what I think,
and if I am going to express what I think,
I have to be honest. But I feel like I
might be unfair, So I'm just gonna say it if
you have an issue with it. That's what the telephone
(19:03):
numbers here for eight six zero five two two WTIC
eight six zero five two two nine to eight four
to two. Or you could join us in a chatroom
at resenterradio dot com. You can join us on all
of the social media from Facebook to x if you
want to critique what I'm thinking, so hear me out.
(19:24):
During the Bush administration, there were so many people who
demonized Dick Cheney.
Speaker 5 (19:33):
Many people believed that George W.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
Bush was too dumb to be the President of the
United States, with his CE average in college that Dick
Cheney had to be the brains before the institution of
Donald Trump into politics. Cheney was trump the most reviled
(19:58):
individual in politics ever. He was called Darth Vader. I
guess Hitler wasn't available at the time, but he was
the most hated man in politics.
Speaker 5 (20:14):
He was a war criminal.
Speaker 2 (20:17):
Many of you wouldn't know the word or name Halliburton
if not for Dick Cheney. I never had an opinion
about the guy. I'll be honest with you. In my career,
when people mentioned Dick Cheney, I ignored them because Dick
Cheney was the vice president. I never saw him as
(20:38):
an issue. But the hell of people didn't make him
that people in the news media, and I don't care
who you are or where you are, Dick Cheney was
on the tips of your lips and tongues throughout the
entire eight years of the Bush administration. Hell, you almost
gave George W. Bush a pass because you pretty much
(20:58):
said he's only acting to be hest of Dick Cheney.
He's the real president. They told us. I don't remember
a time in history where a vice president was that consequential.
Maybe somebody else can tell me. With the exception of
Andrew Johnson. I don't think there ever was. So I
(21:25):
looked at Dick Cheney as a Republican. Yes, the architect
of the War on Terror, sure, but I considered him
loyal to George W. Bush, and that was the most
of the opinion that I had of him. I never
called him a war criminal. I never thought of him
as some sort of figure that we had to demonize
(21:48):
or to weaponize in any way. I don't believe he
played a role in George W. Bush's re election. I
believe the War and Terrorism did. The only time I
cared about Dick Cheney as an individual, as a politician,
(22:14):
as a Republican was the way in which he went
after Donald Trump, when he broke the cardinal rule of
people running in the Democrat Party, the Eleventh Commandment.
Speaker 5 (22:31):
The part about it that drove me crazy was that I.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
Could only equate it to the one thing that angers
me every time is that when Republicans who have been
demonized by the media capitulate to them and go after
the media's favorite target to curry favor. And I don't
(22:56):
know if that was Dick Cheney's m oh for going
after Donald Trump, but it never made sense that he
voted for Kamala Harris. It never did and it never will.
(23:18):
I don't like Mitt Romney for that reason. I don't
like any Republican who appears to curry favor and show
up on MSNBC when it is beneficial to them. And
(23:38):
it's as many people say, it's like, well, so rees,
you think it's politics over you know, party over politics
or party over integrity. What was Dick Cheney's reasons for
going after Donald Trump? What because of Donald Trump's criticism
of the Iraq War? Who didn't criticize Dick Cheney over
(24:04):
the Iraq War? Or George W.
Speaker 5 (24:06):
Bush for that matter, who didn't.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
Donald Trump is more aligned with the mainstream news media
as it pertains to the Iraq War than anybody. He
thought it was a foolish war. Why because we didn't
take any of the oil. Oh and by the way,
does anybody remember when Donald Trump said that we lost
(24:31):
blood and treasure in the Iraq War because we didn't
take the oil. But I remember quite vividly in two
thousand and four people protesting outside of Madison Square Garden
because I do believe that the Republican Convention was in
New York where protesters were screaming, no blood for oil.
Speaker 5 (24:53):
Many people told us that.
Speaker 2 (24:55):
That was the reason we went to war in Iraq
in the first place, was for oil. And Donald Trump
comes along many moons later saying that when we went
to the Iraq war, we cost more than we got.
Nobody mentioned it but Dick Cheney criticizing Donald Trump. Remember
(25:16):
the war criminal Dick Cheney left stream media. The war
criminal Darth Vader Christian Bale Satan himself as soon as
he started criticizing Trump, all was forgive, forgiven. With Dick Cheney,
(25:38):
all was forgiven. Debbie Dingle was on MSNBC. Can't believe
that I'm actually agreeing with Dick Cheney. The January sixth memorial.
Who was there with Liz Cheney none other than Dick Cheney.
(26:01):
He was one of the only Republicans who showed up there.
I'm sorry, folks, I am not in a position to
say that Dick Cheney died as he lived. I cannot.
(26:23):
I can't. It's the same way I feel about Mitt Romney.
They went after Mitt Romney, they criticized Mitt Romney. They
pulled everything, I mean, they pulled every stunt to ridicule
that man. And his family. They disrespected his grandchildren for
crying out loud. His family adopts a black child, and
(26:47):
they mock him on MSNBC for it, with a little
bit called one of these things is not like the
other because they adopted a black child and it was
a black host on MSNBC who made fun of them,
a woman who was promoting abortions in the black community.
(27:08):
Mitt Romney adopts a black baby and puts it in
a wealthy family, and this black woman mocked him.
Speaker 5 (27:18):
And what did he do.
Speaker 2 (27:21):
After all of that, after all of those embarrassing and
demeaning things they did to him, he joined them, as
did Dick Cheney, as did Liz Cheney. These were people
back in the days we used to consider strong conservative Republicans.
(27:46):
How does Dick Cheney leave us? Has Dick Cheney died
in your views as the elder statesman of the Republican
Party today? Is that the legacy he'll left? I personally
don't believe so. So when I heard of his passing
(28:08):
this morning, I felt indifferent. I didn't know how to react.
I knew I had to say something. It's huge news politically,
he is a giant, But I kind of feel like
he went out with a whimper.
Speaker 7 (28:29):
That's just me.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
The numbers eight six zero five two two w T.
I see eight to zero five two two nine eight
four two. We'll be back. It's Reese on the radio.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
It's Reese on the radio, News Talk tenay, w T,
I see, I see.
Speaker 2 (28:44):
I don't even understand this question or this statement. But
someone asked, do I think Charlie Kirk did more than
Dick Cheney? I even mentioned Charlie. You can't, that's he's
such a strong man. Question.
Speaker 5 (29:03):
Do you think Charlie Kirk did more for Dick Cheney.
Speaker 2 (29:08):
No, Charlie Kirk was thirty one years old. Dick Cheney
died at eighty four. It's a ridiculous question. And why
even bring up Charlie Kirk. No one ever compared them,
whoever would I think the two of them. Charlie Kirk
was no politician at all, who was elected to no
(29:32):
office at all. Charlie Kirk had a role, Dick Cheney
had a role. Dick Cheney was a public servant. Charlie
Kirk started TPUs. I'm not maybe I'm not understanding what
the point is. I don't think one has to do
with the other. But whatever anyway, many people, Okay, first
(30:00):
of all, many of you are too damn cruel.
Speaker 5 (30:05):
I don't know whether or not.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
Cheney is going to be looking down on us or
looking up at us. But those of you who are
saying those mean things, stop it. Let me see Rama says.
It would be something very basic like jealousy. Trump comes
out of nowhere as an upstart and was more effective
(30:27):
than any of the swamp rats. But who does he
think he is mentally?
Speaker 6 (30:33):
You know?
Speaker 2 (30:34):
And this is you know, I remember Rush talking about
this about where Donald Trump comes from, like who he
is versus Washington elite. You know, if you really look
at these politicians, to them, it is the closest thing
to royalty, because they were in essence anointed by the people. Right,
(31:00):
So there's a I mean, that's the reason why they
call the White House, you know stuff palace intrigue. Because
you are elected by the people and you are you know,
it changes its role. You are supposed to be their
humble servant, but you become their subjects, and there is
(31:22):
that royalty to it. So a guy like Donald Trump
is a businessman, he is a worker bee they are
the anointed one, the fact that he can come in
and have people, you know, in their view bow to him.
Because you ever noticed the way they talk about maga folks. Right,
(31:43):
you're loyal to him. You do what he says, whatever
he says, you agree with. By the way, the thing
that always annoys me about that is is like that,
That's exactly what these guys did with Obama, Like the
guy could never do anything wrong. Obama talked about something
and that was more effective than actually doing things right.
(32:04):
It's like Barack Obama would come out and say poverty
is bad, and they go say, he's talking about it,
that's a good president. Donald Trump actually tries to do
something about poverty. What's he doing? Why is he trying
to do that? Remember Leroy yesterday? Right? He would complain
every day that the government's responsible for flooding the communities
(32:25):
with drugs. Donald Trump kills drug dealers on the boat
coming in from Venezuela. Why was he doing that? I
don't get it. I just don't get it. I was
in a text exchange with my usual suspect making the
same ridiculous claims. Barack Obama last year told black men
(32:51):
you have to support Kamala Harris because she talks like you,
she's from your neighborhood, She's just like you. And then
goes on the stump this year with an actual black
woman from Jamaica, and he stumps for the white blonde
woman and thinks nobody would notice. It's actually kind of funny.
(33:16):
Ridiculous but funny. I have a little bit of time.
Let's take Joe in Chester.
Speaker 8 (33:22):
Hello, Joe, I just think you're the greatest. I still
remember how you analyze the bud Light and the Chick
fil A so perfectly. I just have I have a
such a quick comment. Yeah, the most unifying thing at
all you can do, which the Democrats are doing, is
tell for us. That's the most unifying thinging message of all.
Speaker 2 (33:45):
Well, mean you got why hold on, hold on, Joe,
you got for some odd reason, you faded out exactly
at the point where you were making you said. The
one thing they could the one thing they can do,
is what.
Speaker 8 (33:55):
The most unifying thing they can do is tell us
all who to hate that that's the message.
Speaker 2 (34:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (34:00):
And by the by the way, Resa, I wanted to
know how that worked out on Good Friday? Did that
Did that have a good ending?
Speaker 9 (34:06):
On Good Friday for.
Speaker 8 (34:07):
The uh you know, uh, as a Christian, I kind
of wonder what that happened to our Savior on that day.
But anyway, I crap. And I also want to say
I also want to say to people like Senator Blumenthal.
Hate always destroys the person carrying it.
Speaker 2 (34:25):
That's right, always does, sir. But you know what I think.
You know, somebody asked me about bluementhal today. I'm actually
gonna give my answer in a little bit. Thank you
so much, sir. Yeah, somebody asked me. He's like, well,
after meeting Dick Blumenthal, what did you think of him?
Speaker 7 (34:42):
I have an.
Speaker 5 (34:43):
Interesting take on him.
Speaker 2 (34:45):
I do, and I've been thinking about it for a
little while, uh, in listening to his speeches and his
press conferences and then having spoken to him, I have
a I have an interesting take on on Dick Bloomenthal.
And yeah, yeah, I think you'll like it. By the way,
when we come back, we got headlines to talk about.
One of the headlines is the story no one's.
Speaker 5 (35:06):
Talking about, and I find it odd.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
Something else that liberals care about is being pushed to
the wayside, and on Halloween there may be evidence of it.
We'll talk about that. Let's get to the newsroom. John
Silva is on deck right after this. It's recent on
a radio on wt I see news Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 1 (35:30):
Geese on the radio making sense of the news, if
even when it makes no sense at all at all.
Now on w t I see news Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 2 (35:40):
All right, let's get this on headlines. I am stunned
that no one has asked whatever happened to the plot
in Dearborn, Michigan? Did we all forget? Under normal circumstances,
a terrorist plot to go after Americans that involved Muslims
(36:04):
inspired by ISIS would lead every headline. What's even crazier
is that a terrorist plot on Halloween by Muslim extremists
inspired by ISIS to kill people in the lgbt QIA
plus community is nowhere, don't you find out? Odd no one,
(36:32):
and I mean no one is covering it outside of
online news media. This is a terrorist plot against a
what many would call a protected community. But come on,
(36:54):
you know why because the people who planned the attack
on the protective community happened to be a part of
a protected community.
Speaker 5 (37:08):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 2 (37:12):
Muslim extremists inspired by ISIS to kill gay folks in
dearborn Michigan. Nowhere. It's stunning. I know it is. I
know you're saying to yourself, cap really yes, yes, but
it's nowhere. Also speaking, no, I won't say that. Maybe
(37:38):
we'll get into more. I'll tell you the details about
this thing later. This story blew my mind because it's
crazy and in some ways it's kind of elitist. Greenwich
County's Day School last weekend they had so many people
from New York City show up to an order to
(38:01):
about entering that school. The group that showed up was
so large they had to open another auditorium to simulcast
the event. And people are now calling this mom, Donnie Flight.
This comes from the school. In this Greenwich Day School
(38:24):
had alumni like the aforementioned President, George H. W. Well,
It's hw Bush, former White House Press Secretary Jen Saki,
Tech Bros. Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, Bryce Dallas Howard, the
daughter of Ron Howard, and ww E Sean Sion, Stephanie McMahon,
(38:46):
also NBA star Donovan Mitchell, who donated twelve million dollars
to the school back in twenty twenty. They're saying that
all of these people are trying to get into this
school in Greenwich because of the very inevitable election of
Zoron Mamdani in New York City. They're not bringing their
businesses to Connecticut, but they wish to move to get
(39:11):
away from it, to get away from New York. That
is so the Post has been talking to real estate brokers.
We talked about this story a couple of months ago
that real estate brokers are saying they're getting more and
more people or on the high end, who are looking
for homes in Greenwich and Darien and other places so
they can move north to get the hell out of
(39:32):
New York City because they anticipate they're going to be
taxed to the I mean, Zoran says two percent. I
expect more than that, even though Kathy Hochel says she's
not going to but I think that more and more
New Yorkers are concerned because she capitulated to Zoron and
(39:53):
endorsed him when she was usually pretty you know, reticent
to give that endorsement. And now that she has, I
think she sees the writing on the wall that her
political future may may be on the chopping block if
she does not endorse them. Because other progressives may sit
it out when she decides to run. University of Connecticut
is putting a required course on anti black racism on
(40:16):
hold for undergrads instead of forming instead forming a task
force to explore safer options.
Speaker 5 (40:25):
In simple terms, Back in.
Speaker 2 (40:27):
Twenty twenty, after the Black Lives Matter protests, students pushed
Yukon to teach about systemic racism and black resilience.
Speaker 5 (40:35):
But in twenty twenty three, it.
Speaker 2 (40:38):
Became mandatory for you to learn that class in order
to graduate. But now since the Trump administration has taken hold,
they say that, you know, with the memo that they
put out that said that if they don't like it,
that they would actually penalize the college for doing so.
So now they're putting it on hold, so you may
(40:58):
not have to take an anti racism or black racism
class in order to graduate. So that's actually pretty good news.
And now for the stupidest thing I read today. Okay, yeah, yeah,
(41:19):
I'm trying to figure out why it's so low.
Speaker 5 (41:24):
But some odd reason it is really low.
Speaker 2 (41:27):
It shouldn't be that low. I think somebody was messing
around with my machine here, That's what I think happened.
Let me see if I can. Yeah, somebody was messing
with that. I think somebody was really messing with that.
That was weird. Yeah, yeah, that's better I thought so. Anyway,
stupidest thing I read today. I don't go to this
restaurant anymore, not that I have anything against it, but
(41:51):
I'm a little concerned going the way of cracker Barrel.
Hooters is deciding to make a change. Did you hear
about this Roland? Do you even go to Hooters? When's
the last time you've been to Hooters?
Speaker 10 (42:08):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (42:08):
Probably like a decade ago.
Speaker 2 (42:10):
Damn has it been that long?
Speaker 3 (42:11):
Yeah, I don't.
Speaker 2 (42:11):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (42:12):
I tried them one time because I thought, you know,
it was everybody talk about how cool is Yeah, but
I didn't have that same.
Speaker 2 (42:22):
You didn't have the same experience. No, I did not.
I've got my critiques. I'll share them later. But but
you remember the big cracker barrel tobacco, right, Yeah? Remember
they were gonna change the whole thing up. Well, it
looks like, uh, the Florida businessman who created Hooters more
than four decades ago, he's taking back full control of
the chain. He's planning on restoring it back to its
(42:44):
eighties beach bar vibe to replace the current revealing waitress outfits.
In essence, he says, we're no longer going to have
butts sticking out of their uniforms. He said that was
his exact prop. Wow. So he says that he's going
to make sure that the outfits of the women are
(43:05):
going to be modest instead of sexualized. I guess his
word's not mine. So he's gonna sort of tone it down.
There used to be a time. I didn't know this
because I didn't go to Hooters that you know, back
in the days. But apparently the waitresses used to wear
boxer shorts and not the jogger shorts, so like biker
shorts come all the way down to part of the thigh. Yeah,
(43:26):
and now they wear a sort of the short high
cut with a little bit of the rear end, extra
tips and whatnot.
Speaker 3 (43:35):
I believe they close. There's still one Hooters here. I
believe they closed.
Speaker 2 (43:40):
They down.
Speaker 5 (43:40):
They have closed a lot of them.
Speaker 2 (43:42):
But the reason why I'm calling it the stupidest thing is, Look,
you're already teetering on bankruptcy right. If you're going to
do anything, it's obviously not the waitresses.
Speaker 5 (43:55):
I do have a couple of ideas.
Speaker 2 (43:57):
Though. I don't know if you've experienced this, but this
has been my experience rolling and I gotta be honest
with you. It drives me crazy. Okay, you gotta let
the pregnant waitresses say you got it to me. I know,
I know, I know, I know, but the attire doesn't fit.
(44:19):
It just doesn't. I'm sorry, ladies, I know I'm gonna
get crap for this. If you worked at a Hooters
and you know a girl who works there and she
is expecting, this isn't about you being pregnant. God bless you.
You know what. You are creating another taxpayer for me
when I get old. I love it.
Speaker 5 (44:36):
I get my Social Security.
Speaker 2 (44:38):
But ladies, come on, let's be honest here, fellas too.
If you've been every Hooters I've ever been in in
my entire life, and I didn't go to a lot,
but everyone I've ever been in, there is always a
girl that is pregnant there. And it's not the look.
It's just not a look.
Speaker 3 (44:57):
Let me ask you something, Okay, When the conception of
Hooters was created for the restaurant, yeah, it was based
upon owls, correct.
Speaker 2 (45:07):
I would assume, So, yes, you know, Hooters is, you know,
a euphemism for breasts. Yeah, yeah, yeah, well I understand.
I understand that part.
Speaker 3 (45:14):
But when they made the name of the restaurant runt,
were they doing it because of that or did al
Bundy have something to do with I don't think so.
Speaker 2 (45:26):
I don't think so. I really do believe that Hooters
was supposed to sort of give a cheerleader vibe. Okay, right,
like you go there and like the girl that you
see also hooting and hollering. Now, so yeah, gotcha. So
it's like it was sort of a cheerleader vibe pretty
girls showing up. You know, it really is supposed to
(45:47):
appeal to men, okay, sophomoric, oogling, oggling men to see
the pretty waitress come in and deliver the food. And
it was the draw men sometimes sometimes teenage boys. I'm
not gonna lie, but you know, Father's used to as
a rite of passage to go out to Hooters to
(46:07):
watch a ball game and to see pretty girls. It
used to be okay for that, as long as the
guy wasn't rude and disruptive. That used to be okay.
But now, for some odd reason, it just became this.
I don't know it lost its purpose. As the kids say,
it's missing the plot. Pretty girls serving you curly fries
(46:30):
is a cool thing, and that's what the restaurant should
establish itself. But then again I started to see things
that I shouldn't see.
Speaker 3 (46:40):
An Yeah, but you can't think that every hooter is
just gonna have a restaurant full of pretty waitresses. It's
just why it because first of all, you gotta be
able to pay those pretty waitresses. And nowadays they don't
want those They don't want that job.
Speaker 2 (47:01):
Okay, I understand that that's true, that a lot of
them don't want their job, but somebody does.
Speaker 5 (47:05):
And not only that if it's great tips.
Speaker 2 (47:07):
Because look, this is gonna sound God, this is gonna
sound so crass. I don't mean it to be. This
is this is a family show. I'm going listening. This
is like, this is like going to a gentleman's club
without all the solutions it is. I'm sorry, it just is.
Come on, we're adults here. We have to tell the
(47:28):
gentlemen's club. Okay, but I'm just saying that that's what
this place is supposed to represent. Pretty girls, hot food,
and sports. That's what it is. It just is, and
you have to be able to accept that without being
(47:48):
some form of shame behind it. But for some reason
it got culturally corrupted into a whole bunch of other nonsense.
And I'm telling you, the first thing that I noticed
when I knew it was going downhill is that you're
sitting at the bar.
Speaker 5 (48:01):
You're watching the game.
Speaker 2 (48:03):
You know, maybe on your lunch break, which you shouldn't
be drinking, but even if you have an iced tea,
you're going there. And then from behind the counter, I
got a girl who's like eight months pregnant serving me beer. Buzzkill, buzzkill.
It just came nothing against a pregnant woman. And I
know it sounds I hope. I'm praying that women do
(48:24):
not find this offensive. I'm not trying to be that's
too lad. Right, I'm going to the phones. Bill Bill
helped me bail me out. Am I in trouble here?
Speaker 11 (48:36):
You're somewhat on the right traf.
Speaker 2 (48:39):
Okay.
Speaker 11 (48:39):
My daughter was a manager of the area Massachusetts and
Connecticut for Hooters.
Speaker 12 (48:45):
Okay, she left, and.
Speaker 11 (48:48):
One of the things that she saw was they were
definitely getting away from the wholesome, cheerleader type of girl Okay,
what girls wanted to work there because you were the
Hooters girl. You were pretty, you were you know that
type of image.
Speaker 2 (49:05):
Right.
Speaker 11 (49:06):
Then they started, you know, with the short shorts and
the butt she hanging out. They started allowing tattoos, which
they never allowed.
Speaker 13 (49:16):
Really.
Speaker 11 (49:17):
Yeah, they totally went away from their the wholesome look basic. Yes,
exactly right, because you can have a pretty girl with
the like the top.
Speaker 2 (49:27):
I understand the top is supposed to accentuate the Hooters aspect, right,
she doesn't have to have the butt cheeks out. I
agree with you there, But the pretty girl next door
serving your hot wings while you watch the game, or
a beer or a cold beer, that couldn't be wholesome.
Speaker 5 (49:44):
But you're right.
Speaker 2 (49:45):
Allowing the tattoos take something away from it's a little
it misses the all American part of it.
Speaker 11 (49:51):
Yeah, they trashed it up. And she was like wings, like,
how can that go wrong? Exactly so that you know
that that it's just a perfect you know, we're gonna
we're gonna let this slide, We're gonna let that slide,
and next thing you know, you got a mess. Yeah there,
and that's what happened.
Speaker 14 (50:11):
Girls.
Speaker 11 (50:12):
Then the pretty girls don't want to work there because
you trashed it up.
Speaker 2 (50:16):
Yeah you know what, because then there's that that level
of like that becomes like jealous and envy, right, because
imagine you have right, I don't mean this to be bad,
I mean mean ladies, but you have like a real
pretty girl who's probably dominating the tips. Everybody wants to
work their tables. And then you got the girl who's
got the tattoo and the blue hair that no one
wants to sit at her table. And one girl's dominating
(50:37):
the tips, and it makes for a hostile work environment.
Speaker 11 (50:40):
Exactly exactly who Because I'll tell you what they made
killer tips exactly crazy tips.
Speaker 2 (50:48):
That's right. See I knew, I knew it wasn't maybe
maybe maybe, Thank you? I appreciate right. Let's go to
Mike real quick. Hello, sir, Hey, Rees, what's up?
Speaker 7 (51:07):
So do you remember that cartoon character baby Hueye?
Speaker 2 (51:11):
Oh yeah, sure like that.
Speaker 11 (51:14):
That's what I imagine a pregnant Hooters girl.
Speaker 12 (51:16):
Would look like.
Speaker 2 (51:20):
I've seen. Now, don't get me wrong. Here's the crazy part, right,
Imagine you see the girl working behind the bar because
and the reason why she's worked behind the bar is
because they don't want her out on the floor because
she's gonna be on her feet a lot.
Speaker 5 (51:35):
And the bar is a very you know, you know,
small area that she.
Speaker 2 (51:39):
Can only go back and forth, so she's not actually
working the floor, which is much more arduous on a
waitress's feet, you know, as as an employee. But behind
the bar, you see her come out there, and she's pretty,
an beautiful young lady. I mean, it's obvious that you know,
it's on her that she wouldn't be pregnant. It's just
(52:02):
not the right atmosphere where she I'm sorry, I said
where she belongs. I'm sorry. I just have to say
when I see that, I go that young lady would
be perfect at a bid bath, and beyond that woman
would be perfect as somebody who was working at a
place where you know, babies are us, not at a Hooters.
Speaker 5 (52:25):
It just completely defeats the purpose.
Speaker 2 (52:28):
It just does.
Speaker 14 (52:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (52:30):
Yeah, and I I really.
Speaker 12 (52:33):
I wouldn't, baby Huie.
Speaker 11 (52:38):
You know that the manager, the manager is failing right
there exactly.
Speaker 2 (52:43):
And I know why he's doing it. I know exactly
why he's doing it because one she's probably worked there
for a long time. He's probably someone said he's probably
the one that got her pregnant. That's not the pointy.
Speaker 9 (52:58):
Hey, you never know, ever know.
Speaker 7 (53:01):
Just like in racing, my pool game isn't that strong.
Speaker 2 (53:04):
I got listen, I've got one minute to get to Wendy.
What do you got, Wendy?
Speaker 15 (53:10):
Listen?
Speaker 8 (53:13):
This is this is.
Speaker 2 (53:16):
Go ahead.
Speaker 16 (53:17):
What is wrong with tattoos and girls with tattoos.
Speaker 2 (53:20):
It's not anything wrong with girls in tattoos. It's about
girls with tattoos at Hooters or working in a restaurant.
That's all it is. I'm saying that there are some places,
like if you have tattoos and you work at a Spencer's,
that's fine, okay, but.
Speaker 16 (53:38):
That's the whole point of Yeah, but to look at
girls that are hot with tattoos and makes it even
more hotter.
Speaker 2 (53:48):
A lot of guys, wholes guys don't like tattoos. I'm
not gonna lie. It took me a long time to
get used to tattoos, and I'm.
Speaker 16 (53:56):
Telling you, maybe you're not seeing the right girls with tattoos.
Speaker 2 (53:59):
This is true. Some girls have tattoos in the weirdest
of places and the weirdest of things. So that's all
I'm saying. I gotta take a Wendy break. Wendy, I'm
not saying that tattoos aren't attractive. I'm just saying at
a place like Hooters, sometimes it's a lot of tattoos,
Like a girl with the sleeve of tattoos, and Hooters
is a bit much because then I've got I've got
(54:20):
reading material, conversation starters. Yeah, if that was the appropriate
place to be honest with you, I just want chicken
wings and Hooters.
Speaker 16 (54:32):
That's it you want.
Speaker 2 (54:38):
Thanks, Wendy, I love you too. Let's take a break.
We'll be back. More news, more views. When we returned
to three CI Radio on w t I see News
Stuck ten eight.
Speaker 1 (54:47):
W t I Seen News Talk ten eighty is celebrating
one hundred years on the air.
Speaker 2 (54:53):
Before I get into uh, the next subject about the
crazy story that hap been in Hartford last night, which
also pertains to the guests we're gonna have on tomorrow,
let me go to David, who's calling for vernon. I
didn't want to. I didn't want to miss an opportunity. David,
how are you.
Speaker 12 (55:12):
I'm doing well?
Speaker 9 (55:13):
Probably real quickly.
Speaker 17 (55:16):
When Hooters first became an entity, if you will, back
in the eighties. Yeah, you weren't allowed to have tattoos.
Speaker 2 (55:23):
See, yes, that's what we were trying. I was trying
to explain that to Wendy, but I had such a
short time. It's not even about whether or not you
like tattoos or not. It is there's a degree of
where again, this is where you're gonna get touchy. It
was supposed to be about girl like a girl next door.
Look in the restaurant, pretty girls serving you chicken wings
(55:47):
while you watched the game, and they had to look
a certain way. But then when everything became permissible or discrimination,
you had to sort of let you know, you could
have a piercing in where then just anything was allowed.
Anything goes. And once you destroyed the fabric of the
thing that brought you there, the major popular people saying, no,
(56:08):
if it's not going to be what you originally were,
I gotta go.
Speaker 17 (56:13):
Now, if you wanted to see chattoos, you had to
go to the Tilted Kilt.
Speaker 2 (56:17):
Yes, now, okay, I know the Tilted Kilt is the
other one, but there's another one that's in Tampa, Florida
that was owned by a football player that was sort
of like the Ratchet Sister of Hooters. The girls, someone's
gotta remember it. But when I was in Tampa, I
actually went there and I kind.
Speaker 5 (56:38):
Of got the impression.
Speaker 2 (56:38):
I was like, these girls look like the like the
neglected sisters of Hooter girls, because they were all wearing
black tops, like the Hooter tops, you know that was
kind of low cut, but they didn't have on the
short orange shorts. They had on the short jean shorts
that were cut with the with the sort of frame
(57:00):
flails or whatever.
Speaker 5 (57:01):
That is, the strings coming out of them.
Speaker 2 (57:03):
Like they looked like the the you know, the the ratty,
sort of angry sisters Hooter girls. They were attractive, but
they were allowed to wear piercings, to have tattoos. They
wore black lipstick. It was a complete like departure. It
meant like the Adams family of Hooters.
Speaker 18 (57:22):
With that.
Speaker 5 (57:22):
Yeah, I gotta find out the name of it.
Speaker 2 (57:24):
But somebody somebody's gonna know they've been to them before,
thank you, man. Uh let me get to Yeah, they
were daisy dukes, but these things were a little rattier Richard.
The the shorts were like cut with scissors and then
you take a fork and you scrape them so that
(57:44):
they can you know it was? I don't know.
Speaker 5 (57:46):
They were just weird. They weren't like every other parajees.
Speaker 2 (57:50):
But they were short. They were short short, and they
were cut where, you know, kind of like the ol
get you know what. Somebody's on the line, who's got
to know who this is. Let me go to him
real quick. Rudy is on the line, Rudio. Do you
know what I'm talking about? No, it's not Twin Peaks. Rudy.
Are you on the line. Yeah, I'm okay, Rudy. Do
(58:13):
you know the restaurant I'm talking about. It's owned by
a former NFL football player.
Speaker 7 (58:16):
I can't remember. It's not Twin Peaks. I know what
you're talking about.
Speaker 2 (58:20):
Yeah, and he was a Dallas cowboy.
Speaker 8 (58:23):
Right.
Speaker 7 (58:24):
Yeah, here's my theory on this. Okay, why would you
put a bumpet sticker out of Ferrari? Yes, tattoos on women.
I had dated beautiful, educated women and they have a tattoo.
When I was still in the Army, I dated an LPN.
(58:44):
I was an LPN and she won Miss Miller Like
Bikini contest. She was five eight, one hundred and thirty
pounds d cupped. She could have been in the house
or playboy, anything she wanted, and she got it with
those winnings. She got a pair key tattooed across her chest,
with the tail curving through her cleavage and under around
(59:07):
her left breast wine above her heart, and I would
not let her take her shirt off ever again. We
broke up. We broke up within two weeks. Tattoos are trash.
Speaker 2 (59:19):
Oh for that, listen, I don't really care.
Speaker 7 (59:24):
Like I said, here, here's my theory. You you women
are born as long as they stay in shape. And
I'm not saying anyone's perfect, but you have the curves,
the little, the little, the little uniqueness to women.
Speaker 2 (59:41):
You know, they know exactly stick out on their rudy.
Let me say, let me say what you're trying to say.
A woman already is a work of art. It's redundant
to put a tattoo on her.
Speaker 7 (59:53):
No, it's putting a bumper sticker out a ferrari. It's stupid.
Speaker 2 (59:58):
Well, I'm just I'm trying to put it. I'm trying
to articulated delicately for you. Let me know.
Speaker 7 (01:00:03):
But that's hey, hey, the other thing, I just want
a friendly reminder, yes, sir, because it's not looking good.
Speaker 2 (01:00:11):
What's that look?
Speaker 7 (01:00:12):
We have poised We have poisonous snails, crocodiles grabbing kids, alligators,
we have pythons, we have bugs. You have to run
your air conditioning a year round on here. Please, if
you're not a conservative, when this clown wins New York
City tonight, please please move to Connecticut. I have a
part of New York. Because Frank lives in New York.
(01:00:34):
He can hear this. I know. We just want conservatives, Reie.
We were just talking about this at work. I have
two beautiful women that come into my restaurant two to
three times a week. One's a lawyer, she's forty two,
no tattoos, and she wants to get her first one
because her daughter got one. And I'm like, you have
a beautiful body, you're five 't seven, one hundred and
(01:00:56):
twenty five pounds, and you make a one hundred and fifty
grand a year. I want you. They don't need to
see that test. That tattoo would make me have to
take viagra. And the other one, the other one is
thirty one years old, and I swear to God she
should be a model instead of a real estate agent.
She is Oh, who who is the owner of the
(01:01:19):
Miami Sharks in any given Sunday, Cameron Actor. Yes, she
looks like she could be Cameron Diaz's thirty year old daughter.
Speaker 2 (01:01:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:01:29):
And her husband has a sleeve and he's an ex
marine and that's fine because that makes him look tougher. Yeah,
but woman, he wants to buy her a tattoo for
her thirty first birthday. I'm like, no, no, no, And
he's looking at me and he's like, I'm six too.
He's six two, but he's like to forty at shape
and I'm like two thirty nine at shape. And I'm like,
(01:01:50):
I'm like, she's beautiful. What can you possibly add? What
does a tattoo enhance? What do you mean my wife's beautiful?
She's like he's like, honey, he's speaking the truth.
Speaker 2 (01:02:03):
Yeah, he's complimenting me. Yeah, exactly right.
Speaker 12 (01:02:07):
Yeah, I tell you why.
Speaker 7 (01:02:08):
I know I won't even put a bumper sticker on
the outback super room.
Speaker 2 (01:02:14):
Look, I get what you're saying. I'm with you. I'm
with you.
Speaker 5 (01:02:17):
I totally understand where you're coming from.
Speaker 2 (01:02:19):
Trust me, I know where you're coming from. But women,
first of all, they're all in the chat room screaming
at you right now. Just let you know that.
Speaker 7 (01:02:25):
But I hear because they're all insecure. They're like me,
I got a tattoo. They all have mental insecurity.
Speaker 8 (01:02:31):
I am.
Speaker 2 (01:02:33):
I am trying to bail you out here. You won't
let me.
Speaker 7 (01:02:36):
You don't have to bail me out.
Speaker 2 (01:02:37):
I'm not wrong.
Speaker 19 (01:02:39):
I'm not wrong.
Speaker 7 (01:02:40):
I got you.
Speaker 2 (01:02:41):
I knew that. I knew that this was going to
be a hairy conversation.
Speaker 7 (01:02:47):
They want attention and it deflects from their deficiencies.
Speaker 2 (01:02:52):
You know what, you know that may be true. That's
why I'm good. I'll talk to you. I got Oh, Wendy,
you gotta stop calling that number. I'm not going to
pick it up again. Let me go to Laurie. Hello, Laurie, Lauria,
are you there? Oh no, wait a minute, hold on,
I aint that wrong. Hey, Lauria, are you there?
Speaker 19 (01:03:15):
Yes?
Speaker 7 (01:03:16):
Hi?
Speaker 2 (01:03:16):
How are you good?
Speaker 1 (01:03:19):
Good?
Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
What the hell did I start?
Speaker 16 (01:03:23):
I remember the days. I'm old enough that I remember
the days. The only people who had tattoos were military guys.
Speaker 8 (01:03:30):
Right.
Speaker 16 (01:03:31):
I can't stand them. I just I can't stand the
way you don't like them. I do not like them.
And my brother actually told my two daughters.
Speaker 12 (01:03:40):
In their thirties.
Speaker 16 (01:03:41):
Well, he told them when they were in their twenties, right,
he said, if you ever get a tattoo, I will
cut you out of my will. Actually, actually one of
them still did anyway, because she doesn't need the money attorneys,
and she's brilliant, gorgeous, and she's got in a place
where you can't see it when you got clothes on. Right,
I mean, if she had a babysuit on, you good.
(01:04:03):
But I don't understand any attraction of it. But but
two things I've been reading recently that they're really bad
for your lymphatic system that under the dermis. And there
is actually some health risks to getting these tattoos that
I don't think people are aware of.
Speaker 20 (01:04:24):
Yes, yes, yes.
Speaker 16 (01:04:29):
And the other thing I can't stand is when you
look at people's bridal photo albums and you've got this
beautiful girl with an off the you know, off the shoulder,
gorgeous gown and then.
Speaker 3 (01:04:43):
You see.
Speaker 2 (01:04:46):
And it's not the tattoos do not compliment the beautiful dress.
It's almost you just you look.
Speaker 16 (01:04:54):
At the picture and your brain just goes to.
Speaker 19 (01:04:57):
Tell like this, wow. But anyway that.
Speaker 2 (01:05:04):
I totally appreciate you dear and thank you. I know
that this is touchy, but thank you. Let me tell
you something. I'm gonna I'm I'm just gonna do it.
I'm going to do it. My wife has tattoos. She
convinced me to get one, all right, So I don't.
I don't want to think that I'm coming from some
hypocrite like a point of view. I'm not. Wendy stopped calling.
I'm not picking up the line. She's all defensive. Now
(01:05:28):
listen to what I'm saying. Okay, just hear me out, ladies.
I have no criticism of your tattoos. I don't. I
used to look at them and go, okay, it used
to be kind of like it used to be off
(01:05:51):
putting because I didn't understand the culture. And I do
know that there's a culture of people getting tattoos. Rudy
is only part right. He says that there's a degree
of insecurity. If you're insecure, you know what he's talking about.
If you're not and you love body art, don't worry
about it. If it don't apply, let it fly, Wendy.
(01:06:15):
It isn't about that. But there are some people, I'll
go this far. There are some people who are less
interesting than drying paint, who need something interesting for people
to notice to make them interesting. Okay, there are those two,
(01:06:37):
and I think that's what Rudy is trying to convey here.
All right, well we come back. I guess we'll finish
with this and then I've got so much stuff to
move on too, because I've got a great, huge scandal
going on in Hartford, Connecticut, in the trafficking realm.
Speaker 5 (01:06:53):
So I'm gonna address that in a little bit.
Speaker 2 (01:06:54):
So stand by, more news, more views, and your phone
calls eight sec zero five two two WTIC It's Resa
and the radio.
Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
It's Reese on the radio onst.
Speaker 2 (01:07:04):
I see. I knew you guys would figure it out.
The place that I was looking for is called wing House.
That's what it was in Tampa. Wing House is the name.
And I don't know why because I only went there once,
but I thought it was odd because since I looked
at the place I went, this is like a darker
(01:07:24):
version of Hooters. And I just went to their website
and sure enough, every one of the girls that are
featured on on its website, girls got shoulder tattoo, they're
wearing black. It's like you know, black leotard tops. Uh,
that doesn't appear.
Speaker 5 (01:07:39):
That these women wear are wearing jean shorts. They're all wearing, yes, very.
Speaker 2 (01:07:44):
Short shorts well with the with the rear ends popping out.
So again I'm just saying, I'm I want Hooters to
be Hooters.
Speaker 5 (01:07:55):
You know, just you know, be what brought you here.
Let's go to the Louise.
Speaker 2 (01:08:00):
I'm only doing this because the ladies are calling in
and Rudy just went on a tear about tattoos. Hello, Louise. Hi.
Speaker 18 (01:08:08):
Okay, tattoos No matter if what how beautiful the design
is or what the message is. From the distance, it
just looks dirty. And the more there are more of
them they are the worse it is.
Speaker 2 (01:08:21):
Okay.
Speaker 18 (01:08:21):
The other thing is fella before mentioned the celebrity. I
had a celebrity.
Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
It was beautiful.
Speaker 18 (01:08:26):
I love driving it. I would not what's wrong with
a bumper? That's where you should have the bumper, Sire said,
life against a conception or pray and abortion. I wouldn't
be afraid of messing up a new car, even if
it was a new car, which it wasn't.
Speaker 2 (01:08:41):
But anyway, but no, you you know what you said,
the word that is so controversial. But the only reason
why I want to address it is because before I
became comfortable with seeing women with tattoos, that was kind
of my view. It's like it seemed because I associated
(01:09:04):
them with biker chicks if they and I know that's
inappropriate today not all. You know, it's not just one
sect of people who have tattoos. Every facet of life
walks around with a tattoo, be they discreet or in
full view. But I think that you are on point
there with some people view them as like associating them
(01:09:25):
with uncleanliness. Is that fair?
Speaker 18 (01:09:28):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (01:09:29):
Okay, all right, well, thank you, Louise, I appreciate you.
Thank you again. I'm not I'm not here to criticize them.
You know, Roseanne has okay, she has a tattoo that
I'm not really fond of. She has another tattoo that's okay,
just one. I think it's gorgeous that I you know,
(01:09:52):
it's really it's beautiful. If when I think of our
I think of that tattoo. But I understand people are
coming from I'm like Rudy. Rudy's a little more I
don't want to use word crass. He's probably a little
more brunt or blunt about it than I am, because
you know, I do.
Speaker 5 (01:10:12):
Believe that a woman is a work of art.
Speaker 2 (01:10:16):
You know, It's like, why would I know, why would
I desecrate what I already believe is a beautiful work
of art. It's like, you know, graffiti on a bridge.
I'm a big fan of bridges. Maybe that didn't do
that well. It Sometimes it just doesn't work. And Wendy
(01:10:42):
is in the mad about this. Wendy, I don't mean you,
I mean sen your tattoos. It's not a personal thing.
Some women do it very discreetly. Let please, I need
to go to my other segment. Thank you saved by
the traffic report. Let's get to it. Mark Christopher's in
(01:11:04):
the BPS trapping story. Mark, do you have any tattoos?
Speaker 7 (01:11:08):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:11:09):
Okay, yeah, Mark, you don't seem like a town No.
Speaker 21 (01:11:11):
No, you know what, Everything's gonna get wrinkling, it's gonna
start drooping in the fact that already has.
Speaker 2 (01:11:23):
Soon, it's gonna look like a Salvador Dolly paint exactly.
Speaker 21 (01:11:27):
So there's no sense at this point for me to
get any tattoos. I hear you, but I ain't gonna
it ain't gonna look good on me.
Speaker 1 (01:11:33):
I can tell you that it's Reese on the radio.
Brind don't say we didn't mourn you on News Talk.
Speaker 2 (01:11:41):
Tenad w T.
Speaker 1 (01:11:43):
I see yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:11:53):
And a congratulations today goes to the person who I
don't have their name in front of me real quick,
and I had Benjamin A in Burlington. He is the
recipient of between rounds dozen bagels a month for six
months courtesy Between Rounds, the Bagel Bakery and Sandwich Cafe located.
Speaker 5 (01:12:13):
In South Windsor, Vernon and Manchester.
Speaker 2 (01:12:16):
We're working on a final deats on the in house
broadcast at Between Rounds. We don't know where it's gonna be,
but it's probably gonna be Vernon, maybe even South Windsor
at least one of those two places. And we're working
on trying to get that done really really soon, where
myself Recenter Radio will be broadcasting live. We'll have details
(01:12:36):
for that real soon. Also on the twenty second of
November this month, I'll actually be doing an event coming
up real soon. I'll tell you about that in the
coming week, so standby for that coming up. We have
some very very crazy news from you know what. I'm
referring to as Mark Wallas reports. Mark from West Hartford
(01:12:58):
has some details in a story that you may have
on w FSB. We'll play that for you when we return.
What FSB has reported about seven men who have been
arrested in trafficking. Mark Walsh will be here to give
us some details that he was able to find out
from an inside source on that story that isn't being reported.
That's what We'll get that to you in a moment,
(01:13:19):
So stand by for that. And here's another check of
your weather in traffic. Mark Mark Christopher is in a
BPS striverg Center.
Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
Hey Martin, it's Rees on the radio on news t
W T. I see, I see.
Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
All right, we're back. This story is somewhat disturbing, but
then again it should be. Uh they say seven maybe
eight now men have been arrested in Hartford.
Speaker 5 (01:13:47):
What they were arrested for.
Speaker 2 (01:13:49):
The details are a little sketchy, but we do know,
and we do have high authority that this was an
elaborate ring and it should worry the mayor of Hartford.
Aside from the fact that we have rats in the city,
we now have something far worse.
Speaker 10 (01:14:06):
Amongst long investigation has come to an end. Hartford Police
say these seven men, who were all said to be
from Hartford, we're rested in connection with the human trafficking investigation.
The investigation started in May, and Hartford Police worked with
the Regionalized Human Trafficking Recovery Task Force. The suspects are
facing felony charges ranging from sexual assault to kidnapping. No one,
(01:14:28):
especially a child, should ever be subjected to such Trota
Thomas says she's noticed a drastic increase in online trafficking,
but there are some red flags parents should be on
the lookout for. In May of twenty twenty five, the
state's Regionalized Human Trafficking Recovery Task Force found the number
of trafficking investigations in the state from twenty twenty two
(01:14:48):
to twenty twenty four increased by two hundred percent, a
number Sheila Hair with the Connecticut Bar Association Committee on
Human Trafficking says is actually low due to underreporting.
Speaker 22 (01:14:59):
What we need need to be working with our advocates
on the ground at NGOs, at shelters, at churches, because
that's in my experience, the first folks that trafficking victims
will approach something and they already trust.
Speaker 5 (01:15:14):
So I've been looking into this story. It was forwarded to.
Speaker 2 (01:15:17):
Me today from City Hall Adam, and we started looking
into it. I got in touch with Nadine Thomas, which
was the first woman you heard featured there. She'll be
on the program tomorrow at four o'clock. She's with Underground
New England. She helps trafficking victims in around New England.
They primarily work in the state of Connecticut, but they
(01:15:40):
are growing and they are trying to help many trafficking
victims in the New England area. Again, she'll be on
tomorrow at four o'clock. We'll talk to her about this,
about this story and so much more that they're doing to.
Speaker 5 (01:15:53):
Help these folks out.
Speaker 2 (01:15:56):
While we were waiting to report on this story because
we got sidelined by tattoos Okay, Mark in West Hartford,
as you all know, Mark Walsh called me up and said, hey, listen,
I've got new details. So for this week's edition of
Mark Walsh Reports, we have them on the line. Now, Mark,
what's up, buddy?
Speaker 19 (01:16:16):
So well, you and I talked briefly and you had
brought up like I wonder what the demographics are, right.
Speaker 2 (01:16:24):
And primarily because when we're dealing with trafficking. It usually
starts in one demographic and bleeds into American citizens because
the trafficking is usually set and it's not about being prejudiced.
It's about where it happens because of how trafficking works,
because it comes from the southern border, it usually originates there.
(01:16:46):
When we're dealing with trafficking today, it has something to
do with some sort of cartels, some sort of illegal activity,
some sort of illegal alien of a status. In this case,
we were trying to find out who was either responsible
or who the victims were.
Speaker 19 (01:17:02):
You have details, Yeah, So the one thing WFSB probably
unintentionally did because they didn't really break it down for us.
If you saw Nadine said that they had twenty four
trafficking victims from twenty different communities right related to this,
but in the beginning of the story they tell you
(01:17:25):
that three of these victory age girls were brought back
safely to their families. Now, my question was when I
reached out to a source, was like, well, wait a second,
what about the other twenty one that we know of? Now?
So then we started talking about like, well, you know
what is it? Is it both genders? Is addition that well, right,
(01:17:48):
now eleven of them. And you know, it's hard because
you know these a lot of things are sealed. So
the only thing we could find out was like eleven
that we know of had this spanic names. Can I
tell you for sure exactly where they were born? I can't,
but I will say this that eleven of them so far,
(01:18:10):
and these are the only eleven that we know looking
into what the information was available to My source back
to me was that they had they were all.
Speaker 7 (01:18:21):
Of Hispanic org or James.
Speaker 2 (01:18:25):
So we know and from what we can greet, we
can at least glean from that info because look, I look,
and folks say what you want. You can say that
we're over our skis on this one. But let's let's
be honest. Okay, let's be truthful here. We haven't established
Puerto Rican community in Hartford, without a doubt, we have
(01:18:46):
an established Hispanic community in Hartford. If we are to
say that there's trafficking going on in established Puerto Rican communities,
name a time when it was happening anyone, anyone, you know,
it didn't. If it's trafficking in this regard, you know,
damn well, those people, those individuals, those victims are usually
(01:19:11):
and in most cases can it never ever turns out
that way that these boat folks are natural born citizens
to the area or to the country without a doubt,
because I mean, say, what did you want about Like
Mimi Torres is a perfect example as a counter to
what I'm talking about here, Right, you can say, well,
(01:19:32):
what about Mimi? Well, Mimi's an isolated incident with a
biological mother who neglected her child to the point that
she did not feed her and a zip tied her
to the floor in the basement of their apartment. Right,
She didn't traffic her eleven year old daughter. According to
her own testimony in the affidavit that we had with
(01:19:54):
the warrant that was unsealed, she had a child who
was out on the streets.
Speaker 5 (01:19:59):
This is her words, the mother's words, not mine.
Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
She had a child who was out in the streets,
getting into trouble, being caught around or seen with boys,
allegedly her mother's state states. And to keep her, in
her words, wild child from acting up, she kept her
shackled in the basement, punishing her. She didn't have her
out in the streets. So when we look at this
trafficking thing, who do we know to be involved in
(01:20:25):
trafficking in this regard, especially with that of children. We
told you before, we said it again, and it always
turns out to be what we said. It was immigrant
children being used and abused because again, as Justin Eliker
said on this program a year ago, we don't keep
track of them because we don't ask them, we.
Speaker 19 (01:20:44):
Don't tell Now tell me about demographics and me being me,
And of course I chew something up on my ex account,
go on Mark from West Harford, and this always cracks
me up, like it's so funny if thanks to the media,
I'm always in tune with rage. Now, probably I always
was to some extent, right not to where I am now.
(01:21:05):
So I threw up. I threw up on here, and
you know no one will respond. I go another case
of racial disparity in Connecticut, black human traffickers are being profiled,
and Connecticut Dens and John Larson and Murphy and all
the rest, they're silent. So imagine now I saw that
lineup there, the six guys, and they were obviously black males. Yeah,
(01:21:27):
but look how stupid that sounds, right right, because we're
gonna we're gonna play that game all day long. But
nobody believe me. Nobody in Connecticut's media is gonna mention
that I'd get a story.
Speaker 2 (01:21:38):
I'll go one step further. I got I'll go one
step further. It wouldn't be far fetched. I have to
ask the question to anyone who's related to this in
the police department. I'll put this on you. You don't have
to give me any of the details. But let me
just ask you a simple question. What's the likelihood that
these seven maybe eight men, because I understand there was
another arrest, what is the likelihod that these seven black
(01:22:01):
men were trafficking in their own black children and we're
talking about black kids in the community. And I'll tell
you what you know was the one thing that led
me to the fact that I know that these are
immigrant kids.
Speaker 23 (01:22:13):
Mark.
Speaker 2 (01:22:13):
You want to know why I knew it. Here's why.
Because if they weren't, they'd have told us. Oh, they
would have told us. They would have told us that
there were mothers.
Speaker 19 (01:22:24):
And I should tell you, I just I just looked.
Speaker 12 (01:22:27):
Down because I circled it.
Speaker 19 (01:22:29):
The average the majority of them were around the age
of fourteen. Whatever why that came now, they weren't all fourteen.
Speaker 2 (01:22:40):
But let's take into consideration if these were fourteen year
old black kids who were involved in this trafficking ring.
Speaker 5 (01:22:48):
It would be everywhere.
Speaker 2 (01:22:51):
Do you understand that we have black Now remember the
demonization of black men in this country when it comes
to mothers and children. If these black men were involved
in trafficking black kids and you don't report that, and
you keep that because again, how are parents supposed to
keep their children safe? How are they supposed to You're
(01:23:11):
supposed to let people know. Everybody's talking about this is sealed,
this is under wraps. That is it. I'm telling you
as a news guy and a person who follows this,
especially how the police responds to this. This is something
that you make available or aware to the public.
Speaker 5 (01:23:25):
Hey watch your kids. Hey, these kids are runaways.
Speaker 2 (01:23:28):
You know, if your kid is a runaway, if your
kid's being despondent, this is what you need to do,
especially if it's runaways within the black community, because you would.
Speaker 5 (01:23:36):
Associate just like you would on black on black crime.
Speaker 2 (01:23:38):
Right, you got a black gang banger shooting another black
gang banger, you would be able to say, Okay, then
that's obviously a it's not racially motivated, it's gang related
or it's drug related. This being under wraps about who
the victims are. Only it smells of immigration, so loose state.
Speaker 19 (01:24:00):
I'm hoping just one liberal who would foo foo the
thought of oh, all these you know, when numbers come
out of unaccounted the immigrants illegal whatever you want to
call them, children coming over the border, they're unaccounted for.
Oh come on, you really think so? You really think that? Well, now,
what what do they say when they when they see this,
(01:24:22):
They going like, well, we got to wait and see,
because here's the here's the problem, and they just mentioned
it today my sources. Unfortunately, this case, as much as
me and you are talking about it now, we're not
going to be able to talk too much money. It's
not like we're going to be able to get little
snippets of details because because of the ages and because
(01:24:42):
of the ceiling of documents like this will go on
for they actually said it could go on for decades.
Speaker 2 (01:24:50):
We have to be in you know what, this is
the thing in order for us to get any details
of this, we're going to have to be in the courtroom.
That's what we're gonna have to do your room.
Speaker 19 (01:24:58):
And the other thing is we got to get some
you know what, see something, say something, You're gonna tell
me these community leaders, I know, I always pick on
Cornell Lewis walking down the street. You know they're walking
down the street. They know where the drug dealer lives.
They know where the prostitute lives. Guess what, they know
where these pimps live. That's what they are.
Speaker 2 (01:25:17):
That's right, that's right.
Speaker 19 (01:25:19):
You don't think those people they and whether it was
just in Hartford or Waterbury, because that's the other thing
they were doing. They were they knew enough to like, hey,
move them around to say what they were doing is
rotating is what I heard. They're going rotating or gridsport.
Speaker 2 (01:25:34):
When you have that many kids involved in this kids
and again, we don't even know the scope of how
many children are involved. And again, by the way, I
shouldn't even say that we don't know the scope of
how many individual victims are involved, because they can range
in areas from fourteen to even some in their twenties.
Because from what I understand in this ring and from
what I heard from Nadine, they are adults as well
(01:25:56):
as children who are trafficked in this case because a
lot of them have debts to pay.
Speaker 19 (01:26:04):
And don't forget, Pince didn't always use like underage kids.
There were grown women that.
Speaker 2 (01:26:11):
Were under exactly.
Speaker 19 (01:26:12):
I mean, these are bad. Pimps are bad. I can't
even tell you. Unfortunately, I was exposed to a couple
of victims of pimps. They're pretty vicious, yeah, I mean vicious.
Speaker 2 (01:26:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 19 (01:26:22):
And imagine you think they do what they do for
somebody else.
Speaker 2 (01:26:25):
But that's what I'm saying. It's like, this is not
look this this particular band of individuals, right, if you're
looking at this from the alleged crimes by these individuals,
and I'm saying this on this level. If you have
a trafficking ring that involves fourteen year olds, that in
and of itself is heinous alone, no matter what the
(01:26:47):
victims are, be the American citizens or not. But the
question becomes your accessibility to that individual, right, because if
it's a runaway, that person has someone to locate to
get out of dodge. But if they don't, get my meaning,
they don't because that individual's family is living in another country,
(01:27:11):
it's a completely different ballgame.
Speaker 7 (01:27:13):
So let me ask you this.
Speaker 19 (01:27:14):
Well, we see outrage within the different Hispanic communities across Connecticut.
Speaker 2 (01:27:21):
This no, I don't, to be honest with I know.
That's why I said this case has got to be covered.
Because that's why I'm bringing Nadine on tomorrow. Because the
growing number of kids who are being trafficked like this
is only happening because of the influx of illegals into
the state and everywhere else. Because again, these folks do
(01:27:41):
not get in for free. They all come here with
a marker. They just do. And people have to acknowledge
that they come here with a debt to pay in
order to get into the country. And it is the
new form of indentured servitude. And if it's not labor trafficking,
it's sex trafficking.
Speaker 19 (01:28:00):
I can't wait for a visit because I'll be honest
with you.
Speaker 20 (01:28:02):
You know what, what do I know about this stuff?
I know nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:28:05):
We're learning as we go.
Speaker 19 (01:28:06):
Maybe we're gonna learn.
Speaker 20 (01:28:07):
We're gonna learn it.
Speaker 19 (01:28:08):
But you know what, when you bring somebody in that's
on the inside and knows, I'm waiting to hear her
shit some light on this.
Speaker 2 (01:28:15):
But you know, yeah, I'm gonna Nadia actually certain when yeah,
when she calls in, I'm gonna talk to her at
length about this and give and get all the information
that can. She's the executive director of Underground New England
and she has so many details that she wants to
share and she's really excited to be on. So we'll
talk to her tomorrow.
Speaker 19 (01:28:34):
For those of us that believe, you know, say a
little prayer.
Speaker 2 (01:28:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 19 (01:28:37):
Anyway, thanks hey Man, thank you for breaking it.
Speaker 2 (01:28:40):
I appreciate you, buddy, Thanks man, Mark wallsh of course,
Mark and West Hartford, make sure you follow him on X.
You know, his errand Stewart video is well over two
hundred and fifty thousand views. It's gonna officially viral. When
she was at that press conference a couple of weeks
ago when Mimi Torres, his body was was was found
(01:29:03):
and Aaron Stewart was looking a little confused to say
the least. Uh, Mark reposted it. It's already got two
hundred and fifty thousand views. Go check them out. Mark
at West Hartford on X. We'll come back more news
and more views than you can shake a stick at.
Speaker 24 (01:29:19):
When we can return, Uh, we'll talk about the Virginia
races and the New Jersey race and Donald Trump and
how he plays a role in that.
Speaker 2 (01:29:31):
Mark Christopher, He's in the BPS traffic center. Hey, sorry,
stayed locked in.
Speaker 1 (01:29:37):
Race on the radio is on w T I see
news to Tannady.
Speaker 2 (01:29:43):
Yeah we are back. I forgot to say all that clip. Anyway,
don't forget go to res on Radio dot com. That's
our E E S E on the Radio dot com.
We've got plenty of content there for you. Of course,
we have the rebroadcast of the show that's there commercial free.
Other than you know, some other stuff that's on there.
(01:30:03):
And if you, you know, you help out. I'm going
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So if you're bored and it's the weekend, you want
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from time to time when he's out of the country,
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go there to check out my substack. A new one
(01:30:24):
is there today. It's called food Stamps or Freedom. That's
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(01:30:45):
it's a thoughtful article. I'm thinking about you when I
write it, and I try to keep it to the
subject that subjects that we talk about here on the
program when we come back. I'm asking the question, should
Donald Trump have been on the stump for Winso Seers
(01:31:05):
and Frank Chicarella or Chicaerella in New Jersey like Barack
Obama was on the stump for Abigail Spamberger and Mikey
Charell And I have some thoughts as to why he didn't.
Someone sent me a text message saying, did you notice
(01:31:27):
that the President didn't support wins Seers the Jamaican immigrant starters.
She's not an immigrant, her father and mother were immigrants
into the country. And wins is I guess, by all
(01:31:48):
intents and purposes, a black woman who Barack Obama did
not support. He supported the blonde woman and making this
stupid argument that she's a Democrat that's why he supported her,
flies in the face of the nonsense that he was
spewing about Kamala Harris during the presidential election. Right you
(01:32:11):
do understand it. What you're establishing here is that it
isn't always about race. If the race, if the whole
thing about race is subjective, it isn't about race in
the first place. Right, If Barack Obama's chastising black men
for not supporting Kamala Harris, then Barack Obama should be
(01:32:35):
chastised for not supporting win some seers. It's not one
or the other. It's not one in the same. It's hypocrisy.
Speaker 5 (01:32:45):
It's just simple, is that.
Speaker 2 (01:32:46):
That's all. And just embrace it. Don't make excuses for it.
We know the dude is phony, we know he's cheap,
that's all.
Speaker 23 (01:32:54):
I mean.
Speaker 2 (01:32:54):
I don't care. I was never fascinated by Barack Obama. Ever,
I don't know about you guys. I mean, you guys
seem to be mesmerized by chocolate. Well, he's black. See
black folks every day. What makes this guy so magical?
(01:33:18):
I remember when people got mad at me about that,
just like you do you support that song Barack the
Magic Negro? Un Like a black man wrote it is
an LA Times article the black man talking about Barack
Obama called him the Magic Negro. Nobody I was there,
whatever let's get to check on those roads.
Speaker 5 (01:33:39):
Because of course Mark Christopher.
Speaker 2 (01:33:41):
Oddly enough, on election day, Mark, it's it's busy out
there in the VPS traffic center.
Speaker 1 (01:33:47):
I don't think I'm it's Reese on the radio. Let's
just say some people are not fans news talky w T.
Speaker 2 (01:33:56):
I see. I'm a little ashamed of myself because you
can see my trash sitting behind me on the camera.
Don't don't look at that. Don't look at that. That
is me indulging on mister goodbars. Don't tell the wife,
she'll be mad at me.
Speaker 5 (01:34:10):
Let's get to the phones. Eighteen zero five two two
w T.
Speaker 2 (01:34:13):
I see. When we've done here, we'll talk about the
elections happening all across the country, and of course we'll
talk about Mom Donnie in New York.
Speaker 5 (01:34:22):
Let's go to Everett in East Hartford.
Speaker 6 (01:34:24):
Hello, sir, Hello, Hello, Yeah, I just got finished voting.
That it just got finished voting. So I'm gonna remind everybody.
Speaker 2 (01:34:32):
Go vote yes please at eight o'clock.
Speaker 6 (01:34:35):
So show up and remember always your never a Democrat,
anybody but a.
Speaker 2 (01:34:40):
Democrat, absolutely, sir, Absolutely, How you been Everett? I haven't
heard of him in a.
Speaker 6 (01:34:46):
While Yeah, no, I've tried to get in a couple
of times, but just timing just never worked out.
Speaker 5 (01:34:52):
Not a problem, sir. I appreciate you here. What's going
on with you?
Speaker 6 (01:34:56):
So hey, I'll give you a tip driving here in Connecticut,
those dark roads at night.
Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
Yes from yesterday's show, I was talking about all the
high beams in my face.
Speaker 6 (01:35:06):
Watch the right hand side of the road. Dart your
eyes to the right front hand corner and watch that
line because if you look to that side, you're not
going to be as blinded, and you'll be able to
keep track of where you are on the road and
not have to worry about going off the road into
the ditch.
Speaker 5 (01:35:21):
Now you're one hundred percent right on that. You know
what I'm concerned about.
Speaker 2 (01:35:25):
When I first learned to drive, I had what was
referred to as tunnel vision. It was one of the
biggest problems I had, probably because I was nervous. Well,
I can honestly say it was because I was nervous.
If a lot of you might remember this, but when
you first learn to drive, someone is always trying to
(01:35:46):
tell you you have to look at all the mirrors right,
make sure you look at your rear view mirror your
left and you're right.
Speaker 5 (01:35:50):
Just periodically look in those directions.
Speaker 2 (01:35:52):
Of course, look at them when you're merging or if
you're turning, but always sort of keep like a clock
of check it out those mirrors to make sure that
you are defensive driving. Somebody may be speeding up on you.
Somebody maybe isn't stepping on the brake so you can
see what they're doing. Maybe somebody on the right is
veering towards you or merging towards you, so sort to
keep an eye on that. My biggest problem was tunnel vision.
(01:36:15):
I was afraid to look away from the front like
the windshield. I would like dart to the left, dart
to the right, because I was so afraid to keep
my eyes off the road. So that's the one thing
I'm concerned about is that if I'm driving at night,
I get fixated on that one side because I'm looking
for either deer or some rodent or something that comes
(01:36:36):
out and I forget what I'm doing. That's why my
concern is, Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:36:40):
No, when I'm driving, I get in my head's always moving,
I'm looking in my mirrors, all my mirrors checks who's
coming up behind me. I'm looking as far as my
vision can see off ahead, not like from the nose
of my car to as far as I can see,
and I'm watching all that traffic. Is something happens two
three cars ahead of time?
Speaker 2 (01:37:01):
Yeah, you know what I mean.
Speaker 12 (01:37:02):
I'm watching.
Speaker 6 (01:37:02):
I'm watching two or three cars behind you. I'm watching
three or four cars ahead of me.
Speaker 7 (01:37:07):
Yeah. You gotta.
Speaker 6 (01:37:09):
You have to be on guard every minute.
Speaker 7 (01:37:11):
Yeah, I know.
Speaker 8 (01:37:12):
I know.
Speaker 2 (01:37:13):
It's like I can control the fool behind my wheel,
I can't control every other fool. I've gotta keep that
in mind every time.
Speaker 6 (01:37:22):
I gotta watch out for the nuff behind the wheel. Ass.
Speaker 2 (01:37:25):
That's right, Thank Garrett Man. Good to hear from you.
Let's go to Dave and Windsor Hello, Dave, Hey.
Speaker 9 (01:37:32):
Reece, how you doing all right?
Speaker 12 (01:37:33):
So what's up?
Speaker 18 (01:37:35):
Well?
Speaker 9 (01:37:35):
Listen, Uh he's talking about human trafficking and the punishment
they can give those people. Can never be severe enough.
But taking a comment here about about Laurel o'donald's interview
with Trump and his partning of this guy zoh is
crypto guy. Okay, well this guy went to Uh. First
(01:37:58):
of all, Trump's saying the who he was, which I
got a hard time believe him.
Speaker 2 (01:38:02):
You doubt that short of.
Speaker 7 (01:38:03):
The stuff he says.
Speaker 9 (01:38:05):
And on top of that, this guy was wandering money
with crypto for not only drug traffickers, but human traffickers
to make matters worse. So, you know, nobody seems to
be upset about this. I don't hear the mag of
people going nuts about this. Nobody's saying anything. It's like, oh,
(01:38:28):
I don't know the guy. Johnson goes, oh, I haven't
heard about this really, you know. And it's kind of
ironic that this guy got to parton following this promotion
of Trump's cryptocurrency.
Speaker 5 (01:38:45):
So you believe that there's a conflict of interest in
this in that pardon.
Speaker 9 (01:38:51):
I believe there's a contract. First of all, the guys
should never have been part of The guy should have
been in jail for more. We've had some questionable it's
just the skin discuss me the double standards that exists,
but they've existed forever. I just want to point it out.
Speaker 2 (01:39:08):
I don't know, I know, but I'll go this far.
As far as the outrage goes, it hasn't gone untested
that much. I will tell you. People have been a
little squirmish and squeamy about uh that particular pardon. But
it's funny because the people who I would expect to
(01:39:28):
be screaming.
Speaker 5 (01:39:29):
About it aren't. Which I'll give you a perfect example.
Speaker 2 (01:39:33):
Who's the one person on the Democrat side who's the
loudest voice, who's always in front of every camera berating
every decision by the Trump, by the Trump administration or
Trump himself. Who's the one guy?
Speaker 9 (01:39:44):
Well, I'm sure you're gonna say, Murphy.
Speaker 2 (01:39:46):
That's right. Notice he said nothing about it.
Speaker 9 (01:39:50):
Uh, you know what, I don't know, probably.
Speaker 2 (01:39:53):
Not exactly, which I find, which I find incredibly odd.
Speaker 9 (01:39:59):
Well, I I find it odd that a lot of
people aren't saying anything about it, not only him. You
and I have to tell you. I don't know if
you watched, if you watch Bill Maher or not.
Speaker 2 (01:40:09):
I do sometimes.
Speaker 9 (01:40:11):
But Marjorie Taylor Green, Yeah, seems to have the most
sense out of anybody in the Republican Party right now.
Speaker 2 (01:40:19):
Well, that is saying a mouthful. But what part of
me that is saying a mouthful?
Speaker 9 (01:40:26):
You better believe it, especially coming from me so mouthful.
I never thought I would ever say it. He's making
more sense, She's making more sense than the rest of
the Republican Party, who just Kyle calls.
Speaker 2 (01:40:39):
The Trump That's an interesting point of view. But you
know what I've been I know that she was on
the View yesterday. I'm going to have a little dissertation
on the Marjorie Taylor Green issue as of late, because
I've been thinking about it for a long time and
I usually don't respond like I don't kneed jerk. But
it's an interesting point that you brought him, because I
know she was on a view. I haven't seen the
(01:41:00):
whole interview, but I'm going to watch it because I
watched the bill Marwin. I'm going to see what direction
this is going in, and then i'll opine about it tomorrow.
Speaker 9 (01:41:09):
Well, I think the direction that's going in is the
direction she should be going in, which is protecting her
constituents and being in Washington and their best interest. That's
the direction it's going in.
Speaker 2 (01:41:21):
Yeah, if that was a winning argument, that would be.
But I think that there's something that people are missing,
and maybe Marjorie Taylor Green is missing because I'll put
it to you this way. There should not be a
television campaign for what she's doing, and there is, and
that I'm call I consider that, suspect.
Speaker 9 (01:41:41):
There's a television campaign for everything. So okay, you can
think that with a grain of salt.
Speaker 18 (01:41:47):
I hear that.
Speaker 9 (01:41:47):
But anyway, hey, you have a good thank you.
Speaker 2 (01:41:50):
Man, you too. Fred is in Middletown. How are we, sir?
Speaker 23 (01:41:54):
Hey, Hey, I'm good. Just the quickest of segues. Gil
Scott Heron was wrong. The revolution has been televised, so yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:42:04):
And sponsored by PEPSI yeah, he's going.
Speaker 23 (01:42:09):
I love Marjorie Tellergreen. I loved her when she was
Trump's attack dog. I wrote a poem about her, so
did I. Mm hmmm. Uh so just a quick shot.
I heard Mark and I want to drop a quick
say his name Cornell lewis right. In other words, this
is what's going on that this guy is like blowing
smoke because he's walking around with a gun doing absolutely nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:42:35):
Okay, So just that you know you And again I'm
finding I always find it interesting that when the when
it's out of season, these guys are out of sight. Nice,
but we'll be we'll be actually meeting a.
Speaker 5 (01:42:53):
Bunch of those guys in the coming weeks.
Speaker 1 (01:42:56):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:42:56):
Like I said, I'm going to do a very broad
inventory of all of these civil rights organizations, and we're
gonna make them come to the table and we're gonna
actually have them do some things that are for the
good of the folks and.
Speaker 5 (01:43:08):
Stop grant standing because all of that stuff is nonsense.
Speaker 2 (01:43:11):
I'm sick and tired of you guys getting ink and
getting no play, like doing nothing but getting all the ink.
I'm done with that.
Speaker 23 (01:43:18):
So you know, when all said and done, there's a
lot more said than done.
Speaker 2 (01:43:22):
That's right.
Speaker 23 (01:43:23):
And they finally let Dick Cheney into.
Speaker 2 (01:43:27):
Hell was he trying to get in and they were
refusing him.
Speaker 23 (01:43:34):
Yeah, they didn't want him.
Speaker 7 (01:43:35):
That's why he was here so long.
Speaker 23 (01:43:36):
And just a quick shot. You know, I love White
Mike White Mike, Yes, But him calling Pastor Dell cowardly
on that was.
Speaker 2 (01:43:45):
Just there was no listen And that was the reason
why I got on his case because saying that Pastor
Dell can't walk into chew gum. It was a conversation
about Halloween, like we weren't having a conversation about the
Nigerian issue and what's Pastor Dell going to do about that?
Speaker 6 (01:44:00):
Right?
Speaker 23 (01:44:01):
And not only that, like Passerdelle's whole congregation may have
been listening to the people who keep him in the
game doing his good work, talking and face, and they might.
Speaker 12 (01:44:11):
Not wanted to hear about it, so he doesn't work
for White Mike.
Speaker 2 (01:44:14):
Yeah, exactly, thank you, man, I got that. Let's go
to Johnny. He's in the Hartford How are you, sir?
Speaker 7 (01:44:22):
How are you?
Speaker 2 (01:44:23):
I'm good? What's up?
Speaker 12 (01:44:24):
Oh John I'm some sons you knew my name.
Speaker 25 (01:44:28):
I apologize that an I'm running for town counselor West Hartford,
and I just got to ask you if favor Reese,
enjoy your work, just want you to help drive that vote.
We got two and a half three more hours of voting,
and we need West Hartford to turn out. We need
the West Hartford Republicans to turn out and vote, wrote
b I know I can count count on you to
do it, and I just want to give you a call.
(01:44:48):
And also if you have any questions for me, you
know well.
Speaker 2 (01:44:51):
I'm going to say that. Look I've been I've been
touting it since the beginning of the show. I told
everyone this is not an opportunity to shrug your shoulders.
They what for or why should I? You got to
get in the game. And my opening monologue the headline was,
you know, learn from your loss, don't learn to lose.
And in order to learn from your loss, you got
(01:45:13):
to get in the game and then find out one
what you need to do the next time around. But
getting yourself involved. I told everybody beginning of the show,
get out of your house. If you haven't voted, get
out and do it. I don't care, get out and
do it. Don't go don't don't just leave everything by
chance or say what my what's my vote going to count?
Your vote matters. This is the opportunity for you to
throw hail Mary. This is an opportunity for you to
(01:45:36):
throw them, you know, the wild pitch if you will.
You've gotta go out there, and you gotta do it.
So thank you for calling. And uh yeah, absolutely, let's
turn you know, turn The only way we turn the
town red is by trying to turn the town red.
It's not gonna happen on its own.
Speaker 7 (01:45:51):
We need we need to turn out.
Speaker 23 (01:45:53):
We need to turn out.
Speaker 2 (01:45:54):
Thank you, my pleasure, sir. Thank you have a good one. Yes,
and he is one hundred percent right. You gotta get
out there and vote. You gotta do it. You just
gotta do it. Don't sit idly by, you know, And
if you worried about missing the show, just go to
WTIC dot com right now and click on there and
just listen to me in your earbuds while you stand online.
Speaker 8 (01:46:16):
Just do that.
Speaker 2 (01:46:16):
Hey, do I have time to do this? Let me
do this because we can. And then we'll get into
all the election stuff in the sound bites because we
got so distracted by tattoos. It's too much. I laugh sometimes.
So if you're watching online, as many of you do,
and thank you so much. If I haven't applauded you,
(01:46:37):
let me applaud you now. Thank you guys for showing
the program online so much love. But if you do
watch the show online, what I'd like to do is
to offer this. So I'm wearing a T shirt from
Ac Peterson, which is one of the oldest ice cream
shops around, and I their T shirt the minute that
(01:47:01):
I saw it, and I asked them if I could
get one, and they said, no, you have to work here,
and I said that is unacceptable, and sure enough, the
folks there got me a shirt. I wear a large,
by the way, a large. So if you've got a
company and you've got a T shirt that promotes it
(01:47:23):
give it to me locally. I want to wear your
T shirt. That's a I mean, it's a fabric of
this show, the online show for those of you who
are listening in radio land, the online show has a
couple of elements that are are cool. It's aide. Aside
from seeing me, you get to see the T shirts
that I'm wearing. And the T shirts usually have a
(01:47:43):
message on it. You know, maybe one day it'll say freedom,
another time it'll say the Alamo, another time it says
you know, you know, get rich or die trying. It
doesn't matter. Whatever it stuff, don't tread on me. It's
always something that I sort of appreciate or I support,
and I support local businesses as a local businessman myself
(01:48:06):
owning my own business, I know what it's like to
own a business. So if you know somebody who owns
a small business and has a T shirt, you know
in the outer of their business, I wear a large
and get them to me, send them to the station,
or get in touch of me at Resenterradio dot com.
I'll even come by and get a shirt. If you
(01:48:27):
have one, I want to wear it on the program.
I on' a whare to wear it online. So just
like Ac Peterson here who jumped at the chance. Yeah,
get them a shirt. What are you doing? You get
me a shirt as well? Again, I wear a size large,
and you know what, I'll do one better. Roland? What
size do you wear? What size T shirt do you wear? Okay?
(01:48:55):
So if you can get Roland the rapper size T
shirt two x, that guy I weigh more than him
and I'm taller than him, and he needs a two
X T shirt because for some odd reason, Roland has
a rap video to shoot. Come on, do you that
have to be two x? That's too big? I got
the guns man.
Speaker 3 (01:49:16):
Yeah, ladies, love the guns man.
Speaker 2 (01:49:21):
I'm in the gym man. Fine, if you have a
two X for Roland, send that as well. Go to
res Onradio dot com or send one right here to
the station in Farmington. Again, send us a shirt. Mark Christopher.
He's got traffic and it's busy out there on election day.
He's in the BPS traffic center.
Speaker 1 (01:49:42):
Hey, mark the hour. The bag's a punch punch. It's
Reese on the radio on wti SE News Talk eight.
Speaker 2 (01:49:51):
I know that I haven't had any real Hollywood news
for you guys in the last couple of days. It's
just that, you know, it's when it isn't there, It
isn't there. I'm not gonna force it. We'll do Hollywood
news when it is appropriate. In a wintertime movie news
is just so lame. It's just so lame. So those
of you are wondering about it, it's just like I
got to do Hollywood news you haven't done in a while.
(01:50:12):
Don't worry. We haven't forgotten. It's just that I don't
want to bore you with stuff that even I don't
find interesting. We will, however, get into the elections that
are happening. I want to talk about a couple of
things with the elections, zor on Mom Donnie and now
things getting down to.
Speaker 5 (01:50:25):
The wire h and why that's important.
Speaker 2 (01:50:28):
There's a report out there that says that Donald Trump's
endorsement of Andrew Cuomo may very well be the kiss
of death for New York City, that in Trump endorsing
Cuomo will make New Yorkers seethe and only run to
Mom Donnie anyway, or for that matter, Curtis Sleewa. There
(01:50:52):
are other people who are asking, Yeah, why didn't he
endorse endorse Curtis sliwa. I've got a theory. I've got
out a theory as to why, and I think Donald
Trump is thinking like I am. I think Donald Trump
has got my I think Donald Trump is playing five
D chess on this one. I really do believe it.
(01:51:17):
And I think that Donald Trump is begging for New
Yorkers to get what they asked for. I'm not gonna listen.
I'll say this real quick before we get the weather
in traffic, because you guys need that traffic report. It's
windy outside and everything's closed. So I'm gonna get that
to you in a second. Why won't you look at
(01:51:39):
about this. Imagine losing a popularity contest in your own home.
What would you do if that city embraced someone who
was absolutely the antithesis of who you are, if they
overwhelmingly supported that person, would you not want them to
(01:52:03):
know and see the era of their ways? I would,
I definitely would. We'll explain standby. Plus we'll take your
phone calls at aight Tex zero five two two WT.
I see Mark, Christopher, He's got all of the latest
traffic for you to get home in the BPS traffic center. Hey, Mark,
it's race on the radio. On news w T. I see,
(01:52:26):
I see, yeah, I mean this, uh, this election season
is great. It's sort of like, you know, it's a
test run, if you will. Everything always ends up being
a referendum on President Trump. I know the drill. Oh,
is there new information on Mimi's murder. Yeah, I'm looking
at Connecticut NBC Connecticut see if there's any anything I
(01:52:51):
can check out online on that. Anyway, But back to
my point, Mom, Donnie is the most important race. It's
the one everyone's talking about. New Jersey. Yes, kind of
a big deal because you know, is it possible that
this state could go into the hands of a Republican.
Speaker 5 (01:53:07):
Yes, it's quite possible.
Speaker 2 (01:53:10):
Many people are talking about the fact that Chris Christie
was not consulted by the Cidarelli campaign or Chicarelli campaign
because he, you know, managed to run New Jersey as
a Republican and then of course destroyed his career by
hugging Barack Obama during Hurricane Sandy.
Speaker 5 (01:53:29):
You know, you know, the drill, the Virginia case.
Speaker 2 (01:53:35):
Many people are saying that Donald Trump didn't come outright
and support wins some seers, but he did support Jason Maarez,
who is the Cuban attorney General of the state. But
he says he likes win some seers, but he didn't
really go like a full throated endorsement, whatever that means.
(01:53:57):
That's been interesting. Barack Obama was on the stump for
Abigail Spamberger in Virginia and for Mickey Cheryl in New Jersey,
and many people ask the question, why wasn't Donald Trump
out there for those races. I don't think he's supposed
to be in a sense of not that it's illegal,
but I don't think that he's supposed to be.
Speaker 5 (01:54:17):
I don't think he's supposed to be there for those
kinds of races.
Speaker 2 (01:54:20):
I think those are you know, you say you give
your endorsement from AFAR because you've got other stuff to do.
It's usually unheard of, like unless you're desperate. And I
don't think he's desperate for either of those races. But
to get to the Mom Donnie thing and endorsing Cuomo
(01:54:40):
but not Sleiwah one, I do believe that Trump has
it on good sense to not endorse Sliwa because he's
got no real shot. There are no numbers that help him.
Many people have suggested that Sleiwa shouldn't get out, Cuomo
should so that sli What and Mom Donnie could go
(01:55:03):
at it one on one. I think that's misguided, and
I don't say that to be disrespectful of the people
who believe that Fred in Middletown is one of the
guys who really really he says, you know, Cuomo's gotta
go give Sliwa a real shot. Sliwa had his real shot,
and let me explain to you what I mean by that.
He ran against Eric Adams. Guys, did you forget that?
(01:55:25):
And Eric Adams is again an unproven politician? Why did
Eric Adams win? Why did Eric Adams win? Every borough accepts,
accept state Nyland. Why didn't Curtis Sliwa at least fight
Eric Adams? Did he really have?
Speaker 7 (01:55:46):
Come on?
Speaker 5 (01:55:46):
Come on, guys, it's Eric Adams. Was he a political powerhouse?
Speaker 2 (01:55:50):
No, he wasn't. In order for him to be remotely considered,
he had to be in a three way race with
Andrew Cuomo. I believe that the outcome if it had
been if Cuomo would have never run as an independent
and it was between Mam Donnie and Sliwa, Sleewood would
be a non starter. We wouldn't even be talking about him,
(01:56:12):
Mam Donnie would be on the stage unopposed. Come on,
let's be honest. Sorry, guys, I have nothing personal against
Curtis Leeway. I just don't I don't believe he's a politician.
You know, he can run for borough president of Staten Island,
but he's got no shot at being mayor. This is
(01:56:33):
a pipe dream. The only thing this does for Curtis
Slee what is raise his popularity in his notoriety. That's it.
Two time candidate, you know he's an also ran. Sorry,
but Donald Trump endorsing Cuomo and now people saying that
Cuomo's got a fighting chance.
Speaker 5 (01:56:53):
Don't believe the hype. Donald Trump is.
Speaker 2 (01:56:56):
Doing exactly what he's supposed to do here. He's teaching lessons.
Cuomo and Donald Trump don't get along.
Speaker 5 (01:57:05):
They hate each other.
Speaker 2 (01:57:07):
Donald Trump knows that, throwing his endorsement to Andrew Clmo, saying, hey,
you gotta vote for him. Otherwh is it the country?
The city's just going to turn into a communist city.
Donald Trump knows exactly what he's doing. He's cooking up stew.
He knows he's going to enrage New York as he said,
Donald Trump is supporting Andrew Cmo get away. All he
(01:57:33):
did was wrap kryptonite right around Andrew Cuomo, and now
they're going to run towards Mom Donnie, and Donald Trump
wants him there. Donald Trump wants him to be the
mayor of New York. Donald Trump has to make a
case in a year that the Democrat Party is as
far less left as it could possibly go, that it
(01:57:56):
is indeed a socialist, if not communist party. And the
only way the American people are going to see it
in real time is if the financial capital of the country,
if not the world as a socialist may be Communists
running it and watch him fumble the bag. As the
(01:58:18):
kids say, they have to see it to believe it.
Even those who really believe in the ideas of Mom Donnie,
even if they believe that these things, that these pipe
dreams are possible, they must have it. Donald Trump, you
must see it. I can't convince them, Donald Trump can say.
I can say it till their ears bleed. They're never
(01:58:39):
gonna listen to me, So how can I convince them?
Give them what they want? How many times has your
mom done it to you? How many times has your
dad done it to you. Hey boy, stop jumping on
that bed. Stop. Okay, I'm not gonna say it anymore.
Go ahead, keep jumping. Oh did I tell you stop? Yes,
(01:59:06):
that's all this is. Come on, let's be honest. I mean,
I'm sorry. I've got to put this in the most
simple terms I possibly can. These people are children in
New York infants, I tell you, toddlers. They're not gonna
listen to anybody. They hate the way the world. You know,
they're hating they're hating the game, and they're hating the players.
(01:59:33):
That's what they're doing. And they're acting out like children do.
We don't want to play your way. We're gonna do
it ourselves. We're gonna do it our way, and our
way is gonna work. You watch, and after a while,
you just have to be you have to be a
grown up. Okay, silly, go ahead, you think you can
do this better than the adults, Go right ahead. And
(01:59:55):
when they burn themselves and they tear it up and
it looks like a man, yes, they'll come home Mom, Mom,
help mate, Dad, They'll sheepishly come back. We know what
we were doing. Can we go back to your old weekend?
(02:00:16):
Are we trying again. I'm sorry waiting for it, but
you got it. And I know that people sayings like
Reece like we can't mess with New York like that.
Don't worry, don't worry. This guy's going to run that
city with training wheels. He is not going to be
(02:00:36):
given a ten speed on this. He's gonna get there.
He's gonna realize, holy crap, governing is hard. It looks
great on TikTok and Instagram, but when he's got to
sit down and when he's got people calling him and
screaming at him, and he's got to do deal with
threat assessments and problems and issues and complaints and people
shouting at him, going Mom, doney, Yo, what are you doing?
Speaker 8 (02:00:59):
Yo?
Speaker 2 (02:01:00):
I thought you said you were going to handle this.
Speaker 7 (02:01:02):
Yo.
Speaker 2 (02:01:02):
We were supposed to be better. There's dirt everywhere, there's
crime everywhere. People are dying in the streets, people are protesting,
they're striking. I can't get basic services, Yo. Where's the
grocery stores?
Speaker 5 (02:01:18):
When he starts failing and everything.
Speaker 2 (02:01:22):
And I'm to be honest with you, if I were
to have my dream, you know what I would hope
for that Mom, Donnie would go stomping off like a
petulant child, stomping off. I don't want to do this anymore, man, Tord, Tord,
I don't want do this anymore. Going back to your
(02:01:42):
gundo safe, don't do this, you guys, don't You don't
respect me. And he'll go home. He'll take his ball
and go home, and he'll realize that governing is hard.
Speaker 16 (02:01:57):
You know.
Speaker 2 (02:01:58):
It isn't making a rap song. Their real lives at stake.
There's real governing, there's real negotiations that you have to
stop telling people stupid things like I'm going to make
a government grocery store to bring down prices. When people
start dying on his watch, because that's a real thing, folks,
(02:02:21):
ask Andrew Cuomo when people start dying on your watch.
If you're not ready for that, you'll crumble and mom
Donnie will crumble. And I know people are saying, it's like,
why would you, you know, why would you ever risk that.
I don't have the power. Donald said it in the
(02:02:43):
chat room the other day. He says, rees, you don't
have any power to tell New Yorkers what to do.
You're damn right.
Speaker 5 (02:02:49):
And I've never once told them. I said, the only thing.
Speaker 2 (02:02:52):
I said.
Speaker 5 (02:02:52):
What did I say, Donald, I'll tell you what I said.
I said, please do it, do it?
Speaker 2 (02:03:00):
Elect him. I was the only one. Everybody else who's
on the conservative side, everybody on magaside, everyoney's going no,
we can't let that happen.
Speaker 8 (02:03:08):
No, me do it.
Speaker 2 (02:03:11):
You gotta elect this guy. I understand what that's all about.
Those of you who want to see him succeed. God
bless you. Those of you who don't want him to succeed,
because you're worried about how much of a failure is
going to be. How else do you expect to convince them.
(02:03:32):
You can't keep giving them the idea that they could
possibly have this utopia and then never allow them to
actually live it. They must in order for these children
to learn, they must exist. Exist in the world they
think is so I don't know, prosperous, they think is
so real, They think that they can manage.
Speaker 5 (02:03:52):
You must give these children.
Speaker 2 (02:03:54):
What they want, and when they fail at it, when
they realize that, yeah, they're gonna get angry. Sure, they're
going to realize that.
Speaker 5 (02:04:03):
We didn't know what we were doing.
Speaker 2 (02:04:08):
That's why it's gonna happen. Let me take my good
friend doctor Steve in the house. What's going on, doc?
Speaker 20 (02:04:15):
Hey re, Yeah, it's been a long time, been a
busy couple of weeks. So I just voted, and it
just got me thinking about, you know, four or five
years ago and a question or a topic that I
don't think you and I had talked about. And so
I'll ask you point blank, do you think that the
Trump election was rigged in twenty twenty or the Trump election?
(02:04:38):
Do you think the election was rigged in twenty twenty? Yes,
tell me your tell me, give me your give me
your explanation, give me your help me to understand why
you believe that.
Speaker 2 (02:04:49):
Okay, Uh, where did sixteen million votes go in twenty
twenty four? That's what?
Speaker 20 (02:04:57):
Uh slesh that out for me.
Speaker 2 (02:04:58):
Okay, I'll put it to you this way. So Barack
Cosein Obama beats John McCain, right, and then he beats
Mitt Romney. Right that Donald Trump becomes president in two
thousand and sorry twenty sixteen, right, he wins with sixty
three million vote versus Hillary Clinton's sixty five million votes.
The next election comes out, Donald Trump gets seventy five
(02:05:21):
million votes. Again from sixty three. We're talking about a
president who was under duress his four years gains gains
almost thirteen million votes. But Joe Biden gets more votes
than that of Barack Husein Obama, and more Black votes
than Barack Hussein Obama, the same guy who's responsible for
(02:05:44):
the Crime Bill of nineteen ninety four. Absolutely unorthodox, it's
completely insane. But this is the one thing that makes
me very very curious about that election, and that's this.
We were told that this was the existential threat of
(02:06:04):
our times, the most important election of our lifetime, the
re election of Donald J. Trump, And they knew that
his momentum was growing. In fact, we know it was
growing because again, like I said, in twenty sixteen, sixty
three million, in twenty twenty he gets seventy five million.
(02:06:25):
So we obviously know that even with the duress that
he had to endure in those four years, he gained
more votes. So my question to you is this, if
it's that important, you're gonna tell me that nobody cheated
at all.
Speaker 20 (02:06:43):
Well, like, the question isn't whether or not a few
hundred people cheated, The question is whether or not enough
people cheated and there was enough evidence of fraud over.
Speaker 2 (02:06:54):
Over, Well, we're finding that now we're finding that now, Doc,
we're finding that in Georgia, in Decalb County right now,
we're finding that. We're finding hundreds of thousands of signatures
that we cannot align with votes in the Calb County alone. Yeah. Yeah,
it hasn't been talked about in mainstream media because of
(02:07:14):
the fact that they're fearful that it would actually interrupt
or it would it would undo the integrity of that election.
That's why it hasn't. But if you've been watching other
you know, media outlets, not that that's your job because
you're not a wonk like me. Yeah, there's a huge
story about it happening in the calv Georgia all last year.
Speaker 20 (02:07:34):
So, I mean, it's been five years since the election.
There were innumerable lawsuits brought the president, the Republican Party
currently has the presidency, the how the Supreme Court, and
yet in five years nothing has come to light to undermine.
Speaker 2 (02:07:51):
That's not that's not a definition, that's that that in
no way, I'm gonna put it to you this way.
Now I'm gonna go to a traffic but in fact,
I'm probably gonna hold you over for this. But I
want to I want to put it to you this way.
You know, it's almost like arguing because it didn't you
know what. Hold on, I'm gonna put you on hold.
Let me put you on hold because we've got so
much stuff to talk about. Stand by real quick for me, buddy. Uh,
(02:08:12):
how do I do this? I gotta do that right there. Okay,
we'll keep doctor Steve on hold. Let's get another check
of trafficking. Whether Mark Christopher's in the BPS traffic center ANYMOK.
Speaker 1 (02:08:20):
The Honyssey app. Let's you jump back to the moments
you missed from wt I see News Talk tennady. Download
the free Odyssey app search wt I see News Talk
tennaighty and tap earlier today to get started.
Speaker 2 (02:08:32):
We'll do what had happened was in a second. Let
me get back to doctor Steve real quick. He was
asking the question about whether or not I believe the
twenty twenty election was rigged. Look I got Look this
is and this is the part that I think that
many people can just surmise by the twenty twenty election
versus the twenty twenty four election. If you know that
(02:08:55):
it is dire that Donald Trump not get reelected and
Joe Biden, a guy who couldn't pull in nineteen thousand
votes at the height of his popularity in two thousand
and eight. Nineteen thousand, that was it in his primary debut,
not even prime. Yeah, his primary debut against Hillary Clinton
(02:09:17):
and Barack Obama. He's out and becomes vice president. He
becomes vice president, He has no signature legislation at all.
He then runs in twenty twenty. He gets eighty one
million votes again. Donald Trump runs again, and Kamala Harris,
again running against the existential threat of Donald Trump, not
(02:09:39):
only loses, but loses the popular vote. What happened to all?
And oh, by the way, gets seventy what how many?
Seventy three million votes? She doesn't get anywhere near what
Joe Biden got, and an election that got Joe Biden
again far more competent than Joe Biden, Kamala Harris doesn't
get remote close to what Joe Biden got.
Speaker 20 (02:10:04):
I mean, I guess the things that you're invoking are
sort of surprised at how many people showed up to
vote during particular years, acknowledging there's so many different factors
at play. I mean, there's COVID happening during one year,
there's such frank disappointment and disillusionment across the Democratic Party
and the transition from Biden to Kamala Harris and a
(02:10:24):
lot of people were completely But.
Speaker 2 (02:10:26):
Trump is still Trump, Doc, Trump is still Trump, and
he's still an existential threat. He's the same threat he
was in twenty twenty, according to Democrats.
Speaker 20 (02:10:36):
Sure, I'm just saying that we can talk about how
different how motivated people were to vote, but if we
look at the actual process of the voting in twenty twenty,
and we look at there was even you know, there
was a whole special grand jury in Georgia that unanimously
concluded there was no widespread fraud, widespread fraud when they
(02:10:58):
released that report in twenty twenty three. If you have
so many investigations across the board happening and no evidence
of significant fraud, when people that even Trump put in office,
even his uh what's his name, his own attorney general,
all said there was no evidence of fraud, at some
(02:11:18):
point you have to say, you know what, the world
is not flat?
Speaker 2 (02:11:21):
Okay, well, okay, doctor, I'll ask you this right, yes, please,
Let's take everything you just said into consideration, and let's
say that you're one hundred percent accurate in all of it,
and there's no other question. Right where are we today
(02:11:42):
when it comes to things that we called settled science,
if you will, when it comes to political scandals, when
we dig in deep, we find out there are things
that have always been hidden from us, certain investigations didn't
turn out to be what they were. If I may
stay on hold, I'm going to throw you a curveball
(02:12:05):
in all of this that shows what we are told
is in always what's the truth, and it's scary sometimes.
I'm gonna give you a small little example in a minute,
because it's a story I was gonna get into later,
but I'm going to give you an example. I don't
trust anything much less William Barr when he says that
(02:12:26):
there was no widespread I have absolutely no faith in
William Barr when it comes to this. But I'm going
to give you an example of it when we get back.
So stand by, hold on for me. We got more
traffic get into and it's crazy out there. Mark Christopher's
in the BPS traffic center. Hey, Mark, what's up? Everybody?
Speaker 8 (02:12:43):
You know who it is?
Speaker 7 (02:12:44):
Who is you know?
Speaker 5 (02:12:46):
It's on the radio.
Speaker 2 (02:12:47):
Frederick Douglas of the twenty first century. It's w t
C News Talk ten eighty. All right, we're back. Let's
get doctor Steve back on here. So you know, Craig
in the chat room has also brought up a good point.
The term widespread fraud is a non starter because that
wasn't how this election was won. It's piecemeal. It's here,
(02:13:11):
it's there, it's everywhere. A lot of these votes were
separated by just thousands of votes. And the idea that
you know, it was something that you could find sort
of like you know, you would find a piece of
evidence in a crime scene, is much far reaching than that.
But I want to I want to throw something at you,
(02:13:32):
and just because I just I just want to know
when the government tells you something, you're a skeptic, right,
doctor Steve, Sir?
Speaker 20 (02:13:45):
Hello, Doc, I'm here.
Speaker 2 (02:13:50):
Yeah. I said, when when the government throws something at you,
you are a skeptic.
Speaker 20 (02:13:54):
Right, I would say a lot of the time, but
not all the time, not all the time.
Speaker 2 (02:14:00):
Okay, So you have you have a Okay, I'll put
it to you this way. If you were to say
that your faith in the government when they tell you something,
what would you scale it at? Fifty percent? Sixty percent,
seventy percent. Where would you scale it?
Speaker 20 (02:14:13):
H fair, Yeah, I'd say sixty five percent.
Speaker 2 (02:14:15):
Okay, Okay, so sixty five percent you believe in the government. Okay, fine,
Let's take the news media for instance. Right, I'm going
to go to Nora O'Donnell on sixty minutes. She talked
to the President of the United States this weekend, and
in her conversation with the President, she asked the question
(02:14:37):
that many people in the news media were talking about
when it came to the arrest or the indictment of
people like James Comy, Leticia James, and John Bolton.
Speaker 22 (02:14:48):
James Comy, John Bolton, Letitia James were all recently indicted.
Speaker 2 (02:14:53):
There's a pattern to these names.
Speaker 22 (02:14:55):
They're all public figures who have publicly denounced you.
Speaker 2 (02:14:59):
Is it political?
Speaker 13 (02:15:00):
You know who got indicted? The man you're looking at.
I got indicted and I was innocent. And here I
am because I was able to beat all of the
nonsense that was thrown at me. And yet when you
go after a dirty cup like call me or a
guy like Bolton, who I hear has I don't know
anything about it.
Speaker 14 (02:15:18):
I hear he took records all over the place.
Speaker 13 (02:15:19):
Who knows Letitia James is a terrible, dishonest person.
Speaker 2 (02:15:23):
In my opinion, did you instruct the Department of Justice
to them, Not in any way, shape or form.
Speaker 13 (02:15:28):
Now, you don't have to instruct him, because they were
so dirty, they were so crooked, they were so corrupt
that the honest people we have, Pam Bondi's doing a
very good job. Cash Mattel's doing a very good job.
Speaker 2 (02:15:39):
The honest people that we have go after him automatically.
Now that was, of course, Donald Trump saying that honest
people have gone after real criminals in his view. Now,
I'm going to test your sixty five percent, you know,
approval rating of the government when they tell you something
is true. But if you went to the new media
(02:16:00):
as it pertained to James Comy, they told you that
what Donald Trump and what Pam Bondi or Cassptteller doing
to James Comy is retribution. And they will even go
so far as to tell you that he's done nothing wrong.
James Comy even went to court and said he had
done nothing wrong. What he's being accused of is false,
(02:16:21):
but he is not saying it today. Doctor Steve, you
want to know why because of this report by John
Solomon and Just the News.
Speaker 14 (02:16:31):
We've been following the story of James Comy. He's indicted
for lying to Congress saying he never authorized any of
his staff to lead to the medium, and late last week,
as we told you, he played the victim card, I'm
being maliciously prosecuted because Donald Trump hates me. Well, today
the cast Bartel FBI and the lead attorney prosecuting his case,
Lindsay Halligan, Well, they responded, and they responded with a
(02:16:53):
lot of evidence. What did they respond with James Comy's
own emails and his own handwritten how.
Speaker 6 (02:17:00):
Do they show? They show that James Comy was clearly aware.
Speaker 14 (02:17:03):
That his top aid was providing information anonymously to the
news media. Not only was he aware of it, he
wrote in a private email, good job, my friend, actually
congratulating him when Dan Richmond, is one of his top lieutenants,
told him what he had just done with The New
York Times. Yes, just like the indictment said, the story
is about Hillary Clinton's email, So it backs up the
(02:17:25):
government's case that Camy was authorizing leaks through his staff
to reporters concerning a Hillary Clinton case.
Speaker 6 (02:17:35):
Just like they argued, but they went a little bit further.
Speaker 5 (02:17:38):
They went a little bit further, Doctor Steve, it gets crazier.
Speaker 2 (02:17:42):
But again, I never trust the government, and I damn
should don't trust the government when it comes to Donald Trump.
And here's the scary part. Why did James Comy lie?
Why did he leak all of that information to the
news media to undermine the Trump administration? Oh that part
of the story that's even better, stand by.
Speaker 14 (02:18:01):
It turns out that when Cash Mattel found those burned
bags in that secret room where a whole bunch of
FBI evidence was sitting, they found something special, some handwritten
notes by James Company. One of those handwritten's notes show
he appeared to be aware in September twenty sixteen of
the US intelligence intercept that Hillary Clinton had approved a
(02:18:22):
plan to hang a fake Russian shingle on Donald Trump's
house campaign house. Now that's important because the handwritten notes
don't match with James Commey's testiment. James Comby told Congress
that I don't the guy ever knew about that. He
wrote about it in his hand notes. And finally, one
will ask, well, why would James Comy do this?
Speaker 8 (02:18:42):
What was the motive.
Speaker 14 (02:18:43):
Today's emails that were just released into court trialing gave
us one other answer. He wrote to Dan Richmond, his lieutenant,
that he fully expected soon to be working for President
elect Hillary Clinton. That's right for the emails. So he
was waiting to work for Hillary Clinton, and he thought
that Hillary Colton would be grateful for the way he
did things in handling her email case.
Speaker 2 (02:19:05):
Oh now I'll ask you again, doctor Steve. Do you
think that they're capable of cheating? Hold on, I'm losing you.
I don't want to lose your answer.
Speaker 20 (02:19:21):
I didn't.
Speaker 11 (02:19:21):
I'm here. I'm here, okay.
Speaker 12 (02:19:23):
You know, as you know.
Speaker 20 (02:19:24):
I didn't call to defend.
Speaker 2 (02:19:27):
No, no, no, I don't want you to do that.
I just want you to You asked me a question,
so I'm asking it back to you. You asked me,
do I think they cheated? Now I'm giving you evidence
that they were cheating in twenty sixteen, and I'm telling
you they cheated in twenty twenty. You asked me if
they cheated in twenty twenty. I'm giving you evidence from
twenty sixteen that James Coy, the current FBI director, was
assistant Hillary Clinton and cheating in September of the twenty
(02:19:50):
sixteen campaign to hang Russian collusion on Donald Trump so
he can lose. And you asked me, if do I
think they cheated? I have my evidence there. That's why
I believe it.
Speaker 20 (02:20:01):
I believe that cheating occurs on both sides. Oh come on, doc, no,
gree you got let me finish one hundred percent. Believe
that people are culpable on both sides. My argument is
that we had a free and fair election and Donald
Trump was incapable of accepting that. And in five years
there's been no uh no legitimate evidence to suggest widespread
(02:20:25):
fraud from a single party.
Speaker 2 (02:20:28):
But again that listen, what I'm arguing here, doctor Steve. Wait, wait,
what I'm arguing here is is that I don't trust
the people who have been investigating it.
Speaker 5 (02:20:38):
What I'm saying here is again.
Speaker 20 (02:20:39):
Many of them were Trump appointees. No, no, them are Republicans.
Speaker 2 (02:20:42):
That doesn't mean anything. That means nothing.
Speaker 20 (02:20:45):
That means you're saying that Republican appointed committees in every
state that investigated the election and found that it was
perfectly a valid election with high intentions.
Speaker 2 (02:20:57):
So are you're using buzzwords? You're saying perfectly you're saying,
first of all, you're throwing a lot of weight about
things that are investigated that we don't know to be true.
Yet you're just accepting them as fact. Doctor, You're accepting
them as factor. And that's cool, that's okay. But you
asked me a legitimate question. I'm answering it legitimate. Legitimately,
you're asking, do I believe that it was rigged? I'm
(02:21:20):
telling you that there is hardcore evidence that people knew
that Donald Trump had momentum to win, and they were
throwing dirt in the game, and they were trying to
handicap him. And we know that it was being done
inside the White House. We know that it was being
done inside the Department of Justice, and we have evidence
to back it up, and people are being charged for it.
And just because five years we didn't find anything doesn't
(02:21:42):
mean that investigation is over if we get hardcore evidence,
in fact, I'm willing to bet you right now, doctor Steve,
that in the coming years, and I'll even give it
a year, that we will find out evidence that indeed
it was rigged, and you'll be coming here to say, hey,
you know what, you got me dead to rights.
Speaker 20 (02:21:57):
I look forward to that conversation.
Speaker 2 (02:22:01):
And I love you for calling man, I missed you.
You got it, man. Let's go to Chris in West Hartford.
I haven't heard from him. What's going on, sir?
Speaker 15 (02:22:10):
Hey, how's it going.
Speaker 2 (02:22:11):
What's up? Man?
Speaker 23 (02:22:12):
Okay?
Speaker 9 (02:22:13):
Uh, yeah, you're You've got it right.
Speaker 15 (02:22:17):
It's one hundred percent.
Speaker 19 (02:22:18):
Uh.
Speaker 15 (02:22:19):
They cheated their butts in twenty twenty. I mean, there's
video evidence that was on YouTube for about four days
until they took it down. But there's video from a
vote counting center and I think it was Cobb County
of Democrats coming in late at night and how they
determined they were vent Democrats because one of the women
(02:22:41):
had she hit long blonde dreadlocks. Yes, we say, we
know exactly who she is. And they came in and
they lifted up these black things that were covering these tables.
Speaker 5 (02:22:54):
And yeah, they were underneath the tables exactly.
Speaker 15 (02:22:57):
They pulled out the suitcases and and they went over
and there are four Democrats, four suitcases for voting machines
right over in the shelf in the back room. What
they didn't realize when they went in the back room,
they turned the lights went on automatically, and they didn't
realize there was a video of security camera in the
(02:23:17):
back room.
Speaker 5 (02:23:18):
Now that the whole thing, and that was at the stadium.
That's that's absolutely great.
Speaker 2 (02:23:22):
That's the only reason why we got it because it
was inside the stadium and those cameras, those cameras aren't
controlled by any of the staffers. There's really that's the
reason why we found out. Look, like I said, I
know that the investigation is going to be fruitful because, look,
the investigation is ongoing. This is not something that you look,
(02:23:44):
if I know Cashptel, if I know Pam Bondi, it's
not going to be enough to say that we have
suspicion that something would went wrong. They are going to
have to come with hard core, irrefutable evidence. And that's
why this James Comy thing that I played was important
because when you got the guy's own handwriting, you can't
say anything about that.
Speaker 15 (02:24:05):
Yeah, and you got John Solomon, who is incredibly good investigator.
He's like Hannity's he's Hannity's.
Speaker 2 (02:24:13):
Go to guy. Yes, I love John Solomon. He's one
of my favorite journalists, favorite favorite investigative reporters out there.
That's why I always go to him. He's one of
my sources.
Speaker 7 (02:24:22):
Yep, justinnews dot com.
Speaker 2 (02:24:24):
I think that's that's exactly right. Thank you, sir, much
appreciate you. You got it. Jeff is in Marlborough. He's
my last, but not least. What's going on, Jeff?
Speaker 12 (02:24:34):
Hey, how you doing? Buddy?
Speaker 2 (02:24:35):
What's up?
Speaker 6 (02:24:36):
Man?
Speaker 12 (02:24:37):
He and I hope we can still say buddies.
Speaker 25 (02:24:39):
After this call.
Speaker 12 (02:24:40):
But I gotta I gotta ask you one of two questions,
and you can choose the question. Okay, okay, one question
about Sliwa or one question about you.
Speaker 2 (02:24:50):
Okay, both of them are going to be was going
to ruin our friendship?
Speaker 20 (02:24:56):
Uh No, I hope not.
Speaker 2 (02:24:59):
Okay. I don't know which one is more important to you.
Speaker 12 (02:25:03):
We're reasonable people. The second one, the one about you.
Speaker 2 (02:25:06):
Okay, what's the question?
Speaker 12 (02:25:08):
Okay? So let's just say, you know, like I gotta
start with like a like a what if you know
a man goes to Congress, a man, you know, like
the Congress, he goes, you know, he takes uh say,
he takes one hundred thousand dollars whatever you know, bribe
and he goes. I can give jobs to my community.
(02:25:32):
I can give jobs to people I know. I can
help out my town whatever. Right now, this may sound petty. Okay, Okay,
this T shirt you keep talking about?
Speaker 2 (02:25:46):
Which T shirt?
Speaker 12 (02:25:49):
I believe it's from an ice cream place?
Speaker 2 (02:25:51):
Oh? No, yeah, I asked him to Actually, yeah, I
asked them to to save me a T shirt because
I thought I love the way it looks.
Speaker 12 (02:25:57):
But you ask them to break the rules and make
a special.
Speaker 2 (02:26:02):
Fair, fair fair. I didn't ask them to break the rules.
I said, how can I get a T shirt? I
was actually going to buy it, and they were like, no,
it's only for employees. And I went, oh, he said,
I'll give you an application.
Speaker 12 (02:26:18):
Exactly. And then you also mentioned their name on the air.
Speaker 2 (02:26:24):
Yeah, everybody knows them. Everybody, everybody knows who they are.
Speaker 12 (02:26:27):
Okay, but they don't give everybody a free T shirt
maybe Reese.
Speaker 2 (02:26:32):
Well, look again, I was giving them props because they
were kind enough to call me and say, hey, come
on buy, we have a T shirt for you. Are
you asking me? Are you asking me an integrity question?
Speaker 12 (02:26:46):
Yes, because you're a man of honor. I like your word.
I love listening to you. Of course you do, and
it seems outside the box for you.
Speaker 2 (02:26:55):
No, No, to be honest, with you. I saw the shirt,
and if you've ever watched this, I don't even know
if you watch it online.
Speaker 5 (02:27:02):
T shirts are a huge part of what it is.
Speaker 2 (02:27:04):
I'm a big T shirt fan, so that's why I said,
to anybody who has a T shirt that's on you know,
their company, that are cool.
Speaker 18 (02:27:10):
Let me know.
Speaker 2 (02:27:11):
I love wearing T shirts. That's just my thing. But
it has nothing to do with like like personal favors.
I didn't get a free ice cream. I went to
the store and I actually we shared a apple pie
with ice cream yesterday, but we we buy.
Speaker 5 (02:27:25):
We don't go there and get anything for free.
Speaker 19 (02:27:28):
I know.
Speaker 12 (02:27:28):
I just seemed outside the box for you, and you
want to You always say, you know you want to
everybody be in line, and I don't know, it seemed
a little outside of the box.
Speaker 2 (02:27:40):
Well, no, hey, I appreciate the question. If you you
had an inquiry, I don't take any offense through it.
I can defend it because if I had something to hide,
then it would be something different. But I appreciate the question.
Speaker 12 (02:27:51):
Well, I don't think you're getting five million dollars free.
Speaker 2 (02:27:57):
That would be way too much and my wife would
definitely thank you. Jeff I appreciate you man. As I
always say, radio was free, so we thank you for
paying attention. Remember to keep JC in your hearts and
then your mind. Show Patrick Yould love you have me
this issue. Remember that panic is not planning, so plan
your work and work You're planned me On reset of radio.
You have a good night, pleasant tomorrow. Mark, Christopher is
(02:28:17):
getting your home. Traffick is crazy out there. Mark, what
do you got