Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
This is Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Rover, there are laws against.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
This, ugly Charlie.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
I'm smarter than you, for sure, Man Jeffrey, please.
Speaker 4 (00:22):
Screaming on Roverradio dot com rovers Morning Glory, dis now.
Speaker 5 (00:53):
Good morning, what's happening? It is Friday, October.
Speaker 6 (00:58):
Third, twenty twenty five. Warning against Rover's moorn of Glory.
I'm Roverdugey is here.
Speaker 7 (01:02):
Good morning, sir.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
Charlie is here. Hi, Crystal is here.
Speaker 6 (01:07):
Hello, Snitzer is here, Amen, And mister Jeffrey Allen LaRoe
is in the fart box. Yo, Yo, you're with us
as well. Eight sixty six Yo, Rover is the number
eight sixty six, nine sixty seven six eighty three seven.
That's how you reach the show. Give us a call
at that number. You get text us at that number
that comes into the studio in real time. But the
(01:30):
best way give us a call eight sixty six nine
six seven six eighty three seven.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
We'll get to your email here in just a moment.
We have a lot to discuss today.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
I'm sad theirs but the Guardians got knocked out of
the playoffs.
Speaker 7 (01:46):
Yeah, I felt so bad.
Speaker 8 (01:48):
I was talking with Rachel on the way in this
morning and like really bummed that they didn't make it.
But I my heart broke when I saw the players
watching the Tiger players celebrate on our field, like they're
just standing there watching, and I just.
Speaker 7 (02:05):
Like, he was so sad.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Yeah, there was.
Speaker 7 (02:10):
It was awful.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
I don't know if it would have changed anything.
Speaker 6 (02:12):
But in the I don't know what inning it was,
was it the seventh in England? Ramirez hit and he
was going to be thrown out at first base to
in the inning, and then they they they threw it
past first base, so he was he was safe, two
runners score, and but then he runs to second and
(02:33):
he just sort of like jogged down there and he.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
Got thrown out.
Speaker 6 (02:38):
So that would have put a man on second, and
it would have been I don't know what the score
would have been at that point, six three, six three,
it would have been at that point. So I'm not
saying that would have made any difference, because then you still,
I mean, the inning is still alive.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
You have a man in scoring position.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
But there's still there's two outs of.
Speaker 6 (03:00):
I probably wouldn't have made a difference.
Speaker 1 (03:03):
But I don't know a little exactly.
Speaker 6 (03:06):
And then they lose that momentum h once once he
gets thrown out, but I think he just believe like, oh,
that got past him.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
But really it just sort of bounced off of the.
Speaker 6 (03:21):
Dugout wall thing there and then came right back, picks
it up, throws them out a second by like two feet.
Speaker 2 (03:28):
It was.
Speaker 6 (03:30):
It was a very strange play. Well, anyhow, let me
look over here for your email.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
STAMPI.
Speaker 6 (03:45):
By the way, it's Friday today, which means the Friday
Leftovers on RMG plus. If you are not an RMG
plus subscriber, sign up at roverradio dot com so you
can watch your listen live. Is we all stick around
through the Friday Leftovers play a bunch of videos. You
can watch that or listen to that on RMG plus
Friday Leftovers, you probably.
Speaker 2 (04:04):
Won't watch because there's a lot of videos.
Speaker 6 (04:06):
Whereas during the week when The Aftermath is on Charlie
Snitzer Jeffrey the you can listen to that more if
you want to listen only, but regardless, you have to
have r MG plus. Sign up for that at roverradio
dot com and then you can watch or listen live.
Speaker 2 (04:24):
As we get.
Speaker 6 (04:25):
Started with that a little bit after the main show today,
on the Friday leftovers.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
Let's see your duff rights, your rover.
Speaker 6 (04:36):
I figured out why you are going to La. You're
buying another condo that you can have remodeled so you
can have a place to stay in the winter months
while this place in Miami gets finished.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
Up over the next few years.
Speaker 7 (04:49):
Yeah that makes sense.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Yeah, oh my god.
Speaker 6 (04:54):
I have a voicemail. It's not even a voicemail. Let's
say voice message. For some reason, that's a different. This
is a you know, like instead of just sending a
text message, to recording a two minute voice message and
sending it via text or in this case, what'sapp.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
I don't understand it. I don't like it. I don't
know why they do it.
Speaker 6 (05:15):
But anyways, I've had that sitting in my WhatsApp for
like two days. I haven't even listened to whatever the
contractor has going on.
Speaker 9 (05:23):
This would be good news, now you'd say, listen. I
flew down there and I put the internet cords away, So.
Speaker 6 (05:29):
I think I gave you an update on that. Well
maybe I didn't give you an update on that. He
I send him a picture. I go here you go,
and he goes, Oh, no, he goes. I told him
I got the only thing that's not connected to anything
is speaker wire. There are some in ceiling speakers. He goes, No,
(05:50):
those have to be connected.
Speaker 7 (05:51):
Why would you even tell him that? Why would you
tell him that?
Speaker 1 (05:55):
Because it's so nonsensical. This is for an inspection.
Speaker 6 (05:58):
By the way, there's no there's no thing that says
you have to have it connected to I mean, it's
just it's so, why isn't he connected them? Yeah, there's
nothing to connect. It's going to be connected to an amplifier.
So there's no amplifier in there. Why isn't there an amplifier? Because,
believe it or not, as they're doing what all these
(06:19):
inspections are still in the middle of like there's dust
and I.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Mean it's a mess. You can't start putting electronic equipment
in there. It's it's just really it.
Speaker 9 (06:27):
So what was also, what's the You're going to flay
down there and put a temporary speaker in?
Speaker 2 (06:33):
Well, the speakers are in there.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
Oh, just it needs to go.
Speaker 9 (06:36):
Oh so you're saying where everything ends in the closet.
Speaker 1 (06:40):
Are right right?
Speaker 6 (06:40):
Just a wire But it's not like an electrical wire
like that's gonna a.
Speaker 1 (06:45):
Little bit just put so the inspectors and see it.
Speaker 7 (06:49):
How do you even know that it's going to be there?
Speaker 6 (06:51):
Well, you see it coming down and you can't really
push it into the wall, otherwise I would have. But yeah,
and that those go by the way. You guys will
like this. Those go to the speakerless speakers.
Speaker 7 (07:06):
What's that?
Speaker 6 (07:07):
Well, those are speakers that are in the ceiling, but
you can't see them because they're behind the drywall. No,
they're designed to do this, speakerless speakers.
Speaker 9 (07:18):
That sounds very cool, but also sounds that could be
extremely annoying for anybody who lives around you.
Speaker 6 (07:25):
Speakers in the walls now because they above that. So
it's you have in the ceiling. The speakers are behind
the drywall, but then you have about a foot cavity
up up above that and then it's concrete. Oh okay,
oh let's see ours is concrete too.
Speaker 10 (07:47):
I uh, I went to put I'm trying to put
a a chandelier, but a light in our dining room.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
My wife picked out.
Speaker 10 (07:55):
I've had it for I sweart of got over a
year just sitting there in a box because she wants
it really bad. We have like a like a lamp
that hangs from a god. He has one of those chains,
one of old fashioned things. I don't like that at all.
She doesn't look it either, uh huh. Anyway, so I
try to. I have like two drills. I can't drill
into it because it's cement in the in the ceiling,
(08:18):
you know, because it's their floor or whatever.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
It's like, well, I gotta get a different drill.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
I guess.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
Well.
Speaker 6 (08:23):
You also have to be careful when you drill in there.
I mean, I don't know what year that was. I
don't know how they did it back then, but they
have cables, steel cables that run through that cement, and
if you drill into those, you're in big trouble because
the steel cables go all the way across the rebar.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
It's not rebar.
Speaker 6 (08:43):
It's actually it's called post tension something something.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
I forget what it's called.
Speaker 6 (08:51):
Maybe I don't know how deep in the concrete they are,
but that basically.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
Don't I don't even know what it does.
Speaker 6 (08:58):
It goes from one side to the other, and that
sort of reinforces or does something.
Speaker 2 (09:04):
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (09:05):
I don't know, but you don't want to You don't
want to hit one of those you're in big trouble
if you hit one of those.
Speaker 2 (09:13):
Let's see.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
But most people, I don't know.
Speaker 6 (09:15):
Maybe you know a lot of if you have that,
if you have concrete above you, A lot of people
put drop not drop ceiling, but I guess it is
a drop, but not like this kind of office drop
ceiling where it's the squares. You build dry wall a
little bit down. Then you can get in there and
do whatever you need to do up above that. But
if your ceilings aren't high enough, hey, what do I know?
(09:36):
I don't know, dittley squad, they're only eight feet. I
don't want it lower than that. You just have to
crouch out. You guys are both getting older. You'll be
hunched in Luke Rights. A little while ago, Rover was
bragging about cutting a tree with his new electric chainsaw.
(09:59):
He said the process took all day. That is what
caused his shoulder issue. I think I had the shoulder
issue before.
Speaker 8 (10:09):
That was there trauma Like my trauma was when my
daughter and I would play the punching game when you
see a slug bug. So that was my trauma and
that's what caused my frozen shoulder.
Speaker 6 (10:26):
Called frozen shoulder, No I think what if I were
to pinpoint. There are two things that happened, see A.
I don't think it's my Maybe it is my shoulder.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
But two things.
Speaker 6 (10:42):
One I was down at bankruptcy box and for a
week I was doing stuff with my I know it
doesn't sound like much, but try it sometime with my
arms above my head for like hours at a time.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
And then you don't realize.
Speaker 6 (11:00):
You go Jesus christ Man that that whole that's no good.
Speaker 1 (11:06):
It is not it's it's not good.
Speaker 6 (11:08):
And I was really pushing things and pounding things, and
it was a it was a mess. But anyway, And
I also picked up like a not a it's kind
of like a cinder block, but not really a cinder block.
They're like way bigger than a cinder block. I picked
one of those up. Why just working out? Working out
(11:31):
snitz yep, I don't want to go to the gym.
So you know I'm junkyard. Yeah, I'm I'm flipping tractor
tires and things like that, you know, CrossFit over at
my father in laws. No, I I picked something up
in his yard and I I don't, I don't, I
don't know if I you ever picked something up, but
(11:52):
it's either way lighter or way heavier than you than
you anticipate. Like you ever pick up a glass and
you think that it's going to be like even you
think it's full, but it's completely empty. So your brain goes, Okay,
I know how much force I need to lift this up,
and then it's empty.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
You go, WHOA, that was that was easy?
Speaker 6 (12:08):
Well it was might have been the opposite of that,
where I go, Okay, I'm gonna pick this thing up.
But anyways, that that that's about when the pain started
and I did feel a little just something a little
wasn't like pain, but something was a little bit off
when I did that and lifted that thing up. But anyway,
so I don't know if that's what the issue was.
(12:30):
But I did go in for an MRI yesterday, which
is going to be a complete waste of time.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
I could tell because I was arguing with them.
Speaker 8 (12:37):
Why why would you act like Charlie going into a
doctor's office like me, I'm sorry I forgot.
Speaker 6 (12:44):
You there, Well because I went, you know, I went
to physical therapy for two months, yeah, for this supposed
frozen shoulder. Now maybe I have frozen shoulder. I don't know,
but the physical therapy. Then the owner of the place
even came in and saw me a couple of times
because she was like, I don't know if I believe
(13:06):
what my person is writing about his notes. And then
she's like, no, he was completely right about the past
two months. And what they were saying is that when
they were trying to you know, if you have frozen shoulder,
you get to a point where they can grab your
arm and manually move it, and then it gets to
a point where it tightens up in the shoulder, and
(13:27):
they go, that doesn't you won't move anymore, and that
can cause pain or whatever. But we don't get to
that point with me. We don't get to my shoulder
actually being frozen. We don't get to a point where
my shoulder offers any resistance. Why because well, before that,
if that even exists, the pain in my bicep is
(13:50):
excruciating and you can't move my arm anymore or my
bicep is going to explode. So they recommend it, and
they said, when you go in for this MRI, before this,
even before its ordered, they said, we've tried everything here,
everything you need to get the MRI and make sure
(14:10):
it's not just of the shoulder. You get it neck, shoulder,
bicep so that they can So when I talked to
the doctor about this, I even did it in my chart.
I said, make sure that it's neck, shoulder, and bicep.
And here's why. Blah blah blah. Okay, I've ordered the MRI.
(14:31):
I get there yesterday. They go, oh, so we're doing
an MRI today.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
I go yep.
Speaker 6 (14:35):
They go, okay, and it's of your left shoulder. I said, yeah,
it is, but it's also some you know, my bicep
pains in my bicep, and and then they also were
saying that the neck could be a pinched nerve or
something you know in there.
Speaker 1 (14:53):
Who knows.
Speaker 6 (14:55):
So it's supposed to be all of that area because apparently,
and I'm o eyes of a very limited area. I
guess I don't know how it all works. They're put
you in that big tube and who knows what happens
after that. They go, hmm, I don't know about that.
That's not the way it's ordered. It's the way it's
(15:16):
supposed to be ordered. So then it was a big
back and forth and they basically just go and now
it's just just off the shoulder. And I texted this
to Beats. She goes, just leave, walk out. He said, well,
I'm already here. I'm already in a gown, I have
the grippy socks on. What am I gonna do?
Speaker 8 (15:36):
Well?
Speaker 6 (15:36):
Then I did it. It's going to be a tremendous
waste of money and time.
Speaker 1 (15:40):
It's gonna go.
Speaker 7 (15:40):
No, we don't just do the biceps.
Speaker 1 (15:42):
Then it's not how it works. Is not how it works.
Speaker 8 (15:47):
I think I think if Charlie said that this happened,
you'd be like, oh, you must have given an attitude.
Speaker 7 (15:53):
You must have had a bad.
Speaker 2 (15:54):
Attitude ode to people.
Speaker 9 (15:56):
Just people off when they talk to me.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
Now, see I was.
Speaker 6 (16:01):
I was attempting to be very nice, hoping that they
would help me fix this issue.
Speaker 2 (16:07):
I had something similar happened.
Speaker 9 (16:08):
I once I couldn't burp for a long time, just
ever my whole life, I couldn't bump, and so I
wanted to go get fixed. And I went to one
doctor and he's like, all you gotta go get an
upper gi and they make you drink a milkshake of
metal liquid metal, liquid metal. Yeah, you got drink that.
So they could see your inside. So then I go
to that. I go there, I go and I get
the upper gi and I'm watching all my body works
(16:29):
and then I said, I goes, oh, everything looks fine.
I go, yeah, but why can't I burp? He goes, well,
I don't know, And I'm like, well, that's the whole reason.
He goes, Oh, they didn't tell me that. They just
want to see if there's anything wrong with you. And no, no,
you're supposed to be searching for a very certain thing
that yes, oh no, I was just doing thought.
Speaker 1 (16:49):
You were just went in there like if I just wanted,
you know, just general. I thought we're just doing like
a general thing.
Speaker 9 (16:53):
I didn't I was, And this is this is all
this conversations happening after and I go, oh, let's go
back in. I mean, because what is this? What was
the point of then? And that's how it ends. So, yes,
you're screwed. They didn't look at the right thing, and
at least you'd knew before.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (17:08):
I did consider walking out, But then I'm like, well,
what is that? And I've waited like a month. It
took a month to actually get me in for this thing.
Oh yeah, I'll just go through with it topico. Yeah,
but the problem is with the weird insurance that we
have the cost of out of pocket for doing this MRI. Now,
in the end, I think it's better the way I
(17:29):
have this insurance. I used to have this insurance that
would just pay for everything. Literally, you're just twenty dollars
is all you'd ever have to pay for anything.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
But it was very expensive for me and my wife.
Speaker 6 (17:40):
I mean, we were paying it's got to be seven
hundred and eight hundred dollars a month or something, I
don't remember what it was, and we don't really use it.
So this year I said, Okay, here's what we're gonna do.
We're gonna get that one where it's like the weird
thing where it's the high deductible this or that and
you essentially just pay for everything out of your pocket
till you hit like five grand or something and then
(18:02):
they start paying. So it's actually a much cheaper and
it's the right way to do it, at least for
me at this point. But that means that I have
to pay more out of pocket for this MRI. And
they send you now, now they send you this particular
place that they before you even can walk in for
your appointment. You have to pay for everything in advance
(18:25):
and then just hope that it's right, because who knows.
The billing practices are completely out of control. And so
I think that I had to pay eight hundred dollars
out of pocket or something nice, speaking.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
Of our insurance.
Speaker 6 (18:38):
So if I go, I have to go back again,
then it's gonna be another eight hundred. They don't go, oh, yeah,
we didn't do it the way that you were supposed
to see that you thought.
Speaker 9 (18:46):
So we're three more months to get as much as
you can, right, use as much insurance as you can.
Speaker 2 (18:51):
No free, I have to your free number.
Speaker 1 (18:53):
No, I have to. I have to get to that
number before they start paying.
Speaker 6 (18:57):
So yeah, run out of time, start racking up bill
or I just comes out of my pocket though.
Speaker 9 (19:04):
Yeah, but once you get five grand then it's free
after that, but I have to pay more.
Speaker 6 (19:09):
I'm not at the five grand. I need to get
to it. Start doing a bunch of other things. What
are you gonna say, Charlie, just speak update on my insurance.
Remember I said it went was a dentist and they
don't have a dental card. That day I found on
the website where to mail me a dental card. It's
been two weeks now, I still have not got it.
And that cool concierge, the guy that's in between, At
(19:31):
one point earlier this week he calls me and he goes, hey,
I just want to follow up.
Speaker 9 (19:35):
Did you ever get that dental card? And I go nope,
and he goes, I'm on it. I'm going to make
sure you get it. That was probably Monday, So I
still don't have that. I have no proof that I
have dental insurance and they just won't fix it.
Speaker 6 (19:49):
Yeah, I saw that on the website where it's just
send me that card. I think I did that months
ago and never came. Doesn't the point I put it
up there?
Speaker 2 (19:56):
Why not tell all?
Speaker 1 (19:58):
You have to really haunt a round for that. It's
not an easy thing to find. It's really it's apparently
the sixth sense that costs to print that card or
whatever is.
Speaker 9 (20:09):
You could also do bach show it to me online
and I could agree that's true. That's something I would
be willing to do. I'll print it. I'll go to
Kinko's or wherever I'll print that. I'll print that sucker.
Speaker 7 (20:19):
Operation.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Well, there were the other place stop FedEx store.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
Whatever.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
Yeah, story is, I'll find it, I'll print it, I'll
go through all that. Just want the card. Here's someone
who writes, you're over.
Speaker 6 (20:32):
I really hope you don't have to get rotator cuff
surgery because if you do, that's going to be the
most painful experience of your entire life.
Speaker 1 (20:38):
Good luck.
Speaker 2 (20:39):
Well me too.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
I hope I don't need any surgery. Whatever it is,
I don't want it.
Speaker 6 (20:43):
Nolan says, I saw a lego concord at the store.
If I send one in, would you allow JLR to
build it while he does nothing else in the fart box.
Speaker 2 (20:51):
I like that idea.
Speaker 6 (20:52):
That sucker would be built in about two hours because
he's just literally.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
Twiddling his thumbs. Two three, that's awesome.
Speaker 2 (21:02):
Could he put it together the coach with a details
set of instructions, Yeah, well looks for babies.
Speaker 10 (21:07):
Yeah they don't those no instructions, the just kind of
willing Yeah, I figured it out.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
Okay, sure, absolutely, you can do that all day long.
Speaker 6 (21:15):
It would stop him playing wooden block and Solitaire.
Speaker 9 (21:19):
I did do a sign and literally twiddling his thumbs.
There is a major Solitaire update in this room.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
Uh huh.
Speaker 9 (21:25):
Remember he's been playing single card draw for a long time,
he did.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
He finally move to three cards.
Speaker 9 (21:31):
Well, he went to three card, he said, because he
got so good at it. Well, it's impossible to loose.
He keeps going, I'm so good since I should just
kill myself. And I don't know what that means. But
he's reached the ape, the top of the top dogs.
He's the a peck solitaire player. There's nowhere else to go.
So he finally said, you know what, I'm gonna try
three card. He made it through one game and immediately
(21:51):
quit and went back to single card.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
No, you have to stay at three card.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
That's the point.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
Because Rover I was like two tears in a bucket,
because when I play the one card draw, I, let's
put this way, I still get the same results. I
don't win every single hand. It's impossible to lose that.
Speaker 1 (22:12):
Now, you don't win often.
Speaker 3 (22:13):
If he sits here in the break, he'll say three
out of three. So he's winning all the time. On
single card. He maybe played maybe played two games the
day he did three card. It was like done with
this and I was like, already I would have to
go back to three cards. Maybe it was forty five seconds.
That's how fast he was.
Speaker 1 (22:33):
Like, maybe try to do some work or something.
Speaker 2 (22:36):
The thing of it is that if I get lucky,
I could probably win three hands, you know, three straight hands.
But a lot of times I don't get that lucky
because it's the way the cards fall when they're dealt.
So regardless of which draw I'm using, I'm not gonna
win them all. As my grandmother used to tell me.
Speaker 7 (22:53):
So then why not still try the three.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
Card because I'm still used to one card?
Speaker 6 (22:59):
So Dan Wright, so he wherever you spoke about how
high prices are now, most of the spike and pricing
is gouging. Most companies to this day are using the
fake pandemic to increase pricing. When one does it, the
other does it. I think it's all part of a
bigger plan to wipe out the middle class.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Think about it today.
Speaker 6 (23:18):
Why is a meal at McDonald's damn near double the
price it was three years ago? Do you really think
it costs them double to buy the same product. It's gouging,
plain and simple. Yeah, that plan to wipe What would
the who would have that plan? And why would they
implement said plan? What would the end result be wiping
(23:39):
out the middle class. That's just conspiracy theory stuff. I
don't what would the point of that be. What do
you mean, wipe out the middle class, physically wipe them out,
get rid of them.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
They're too poor to eat. I don't know.
Speaker 9 (23:50):
I think what he means is move the middle class
to the lower class, and the next the elites. All
that X not mora elites, the elite, the pure elites,
more elite elites. Yeah, the clent elites get more money.
I think that's what I think.
Speaker 6 (24:04):
The elites already have way more money than us, So
I don't think. I mean, I did see Elon Musk
is now worth five hundred billion dollars for the first
time somebody's been worth a half trillion dollars, five hundred
billion dollars. Yeah, I think I think the elites are
doing okay. Joe writes, good morning. Yesterday somebody called in
(24:27):
about how their dad walked into a place at eighteen
and landed a great job and today you can't do that. Well,
you were right to say that you can get a
job in the trades, because that's exactly what I did
and it's working out great. I'm thirty. I own a home,
it's paid off. I own a card, it's paid off.
All I have or minor bills. People today are lazy.
They choose lazy, dead end jobs because they don't want
to work hard or get their hands dirty. That's the
(24:48):
real problem today with the young generation, according to Joe Well,
I mean, we talked about this a lot yesterday about
people claiming, oh, I can't get at home and the
older people at it easier, and the facts don't really
(25:10):
back that up. Also, another thing is that there is
most certainly a conscious effort that people have. They go
that working hard thing that's just not for me, that
doesn't fit in with my mental well being, and I
have to take you know, like six vacations a month
where I fly to Bali with my best friends. So
(25:31):
I much rather work at home because I don't want
to go to an office because that's icky and somebody might,
you know, look at me the wrong way, cost me trauma, trauma.
So they take jobs to pay less that give them
more freedom to f around, right, not more money to around,
but more freedom that around.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
And then I don't have any money.
Speaker 6 (25:52):
Well, okay, okay, Anonymous right, Hello Rover on Thursday Show,
the topic of money and spending savings came up secifically.
Crystal says she needs to tighten up her budget since
she needs to purchase a new roof. I'm wondering does
this mean she will spending she will be spending less
gas money given she drives many many miles every day
(26:14):
to and from Skinny's house. Or is this not something
she's willing to change? If I had to guess, she
may be in close competition with JLR for the most
miles driven in a seven day period. That would be bad.
If she were out driving Jeffrey in a week.
Speaker 7 (26:32):
Nobody could do that.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
She might be that dude lives far away, is she? Oh? Yeah,
she's desperate for the d she'll go far. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
So are you for the Are you driving?
Speaker 5 (26:49):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (26:50):
Are you willing to cut back on your gas money
for this new roof?
Speaker 11 (26:53):
No?
Speaker 3 (26:54):
Yeah, that's a priority. You have to have gas in
the tank. And I'm not going there every single day,
maybe two times a week, so I don't think that's crazy.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
At many miles a week, do you think you're driving.
Speaker 7 (27:07):
Just specifically to his time? I mean to work.
Speaker 3 (27:10):
I only live like nine miles away from work, and
I mainly come here and go home, so I'm really
not away.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
Does he live from here? Oh?
Speaker 12 (27:21):
Maybe like fifty miles siven Okay, so nine times two
times five plus fifty there, fifty back, fifty there, fifty back.
Speaker 1 (27:32):
That's two hundred plus. You have to run some errands
and whatnot.
Speaker 6 (27:36):
Right, let's just add let's just add another twenty miles obviously.
Speaker 7 (27:40):
Close to Walmart.
Speaker 6 (27:41):
So three hundred and ten miles a week is what
you are. Well, her daughter is the farm, sixteen one
hundred and twenty miles a year minimum that she's drived.
Speaker 3 (27:52):
Yeah, every two weeks I go and pick her up,
my daughter, and she lives about the same amount, like
forty miles away or something.
Speaker 1 (27:59):
So all right, so she probably up close to twenty
thousand miles a year. That's a lot of mileage. Jeffrey,
what do you do? Do you have any idea?
Speaker 2 (28:08):
Definitely more No, because I mainly drive tune from work,
run errands around town. That's pretty much it.
Speaker 7 (28:16):
Why are you making that face? Charlie?
Speaker 2 (28:18):
Know what you do? You drive?
Speaker 1 (28:20):
Yeah? Oh yeah, you'll try to Cincinnati.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (28:23):
Just oh, let's go to hot talk. Have a new
kind of doctor Pepper down there or something. We haven't
done that in a while. Okay, yeah, I think Crystal
I would like to see if we hit the trip
odometer on their car. Yeah, I can't do that on Monday,
but maybe the week after. We'll start on like or
maybe on Friday, right after the end of the show.
(28:45):
Not this Friday, but next Friday, and we'll go for
a whole week and we'll see who how much has
everyone driven in that week.
Speaker 7 (28:52):
We could do it all everybody.
Speaker 1 (28:53):
It might be a time between Crystal and Jeff.
Speaker 8 (28:55):
I think Crystal is completely I bet you he's double her.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
Oh, I don't know.
Speaker 8 (29:01):
Oh yeah, but now that we're saying this, he's gonna
mentally stop driving. Yeah, he's not going to go to
Pennsylvania for toilet paper.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
Scott writes.
Speaker 6 (29:11):
My fiance pointed out Nicole Kidman's ear lobes a few
years ago, and I've never found her attractive since. I
think Keith Urban finally saw what they look like and
I had to break up with her.
Speaker 2 (29:23):
Let me see, do we have a.
Speaker 7 (29:26):
What's wrong with her ear lobs?
Speaker 1 (29:27):
Oh? Come on, an idiot.
Speaker 8 (29:30):
Dude, The bottom part are big Looh yeah.
Speaker 6 (29:33):
That looks like a nutseg hanging off the bottom of
her ear, doesn't it.
Speaker 7 (29:36):
She has enough money she can fix that.
Speaker 2 (29:38):
That's insane.
Speaker 1 (29:40):
It's like unless people have those gages in their ear.
Speaker 7 (29:43):
Oh, oh my god.
Speaker 8 (29:44):
As you get older, they get gravity takes them down.
Speaker 7 (29:48):
Heavy earrings takes them down.
Speaker 3 (29:50):
Your ears and your nose continue to grow. I thought,
as you age now, I would like to see her ears,
like twenty years ago. Let's see what her ear lobes
look like. And I wonder she just has she has
deformed ear lobes.
Speaker 7 (30:03):
She doesn't, Yeah, just gravity.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
No, you say it's from past surgery.
Speaker 10 (30:11):
What do you mean why would that be for I
know on the rest of her face it's doing something
to her ears.
Speaker 1 (30:16):
Who knows. I just looked it up.
Speaker 6 (30:18):
Hmm, Well that'd be pretty crazy plastic surgery to mess
with your ears.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
I don't know about that. I think she just has
weird ears. Can you find a picture from twenty years
here's a young picture.
Speaker 8 (30:28):
Now, see that's gravity also the way normal?
Speaker 1 (30:31):
Can you can you zoom in? I don't think they're normal.
Speaker 7 (30:33):
Yeah they are, They're more.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
Normal than the other one. More normal.
Speaker 8 (30:36):
But of ear rings, some of these women wear really
heavy earrings and it just kind of weighs them down.
Speaker 6 (30:41):
I think she's changed a lot. She might have had Okay,
so yes, what I don't know what's going on with
her ear lobes there. But if you go back to
that older picture she's got she's very gummy in this
smile see this.
Speaker 13 (30:53):
Oh she had her lips done. Forget the lips, what
about the gums? Well, look at her very gummy when
you present an upper lip. She doesn't have an upper
lip that covers the gum.
Speaker 1 (31:04):
Yeah, so she maybe she has had am, but I
don't know how that would affect you.
Speaker 8 (31:09):
Wait back real quick, go back to the new picture.
Then let's see if she has a lip in the
the new picture.
Speaker 10 (31:15):
Yeah, she has an open her mouth anymore, she still
has more of a lip. Yeah, you're right, every picture
of her, she's just with her lips. Kind of pursed.
Shit about my ear lows.
Speaker 6 (31:32):
RJ writes Rover, You guys missed a crucial comment Jeffrey
made about his house and keeping it clean. He said
he does the laundry and comes back home. It separates
his clothes, his son's clothes, and his wife's clothes.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
What does his family do? Does anyone really believe Mary
Elizabeth is cleaning the house on a daily basis.
Speaker 6 (31:47):
No way, Jeffrey. You need the man up and grows
the ball. Stop being a beta male. So Jeffrey's doing
all the laundry. So he goes to work as two jobs.
Then he takes the stuff to the laundermat, does all
the laundry, separates everything thing it does, I mean does
everything now because his wife goes man and he has
to wash his wife's clothes separately then his because she
(32:12):
doesn't want to want him to be mixed up, And
he just happily says, sure, we'll double our laundry budget
and use two washing machines instead of one.
Speaker 1 (32:22):
Can you You can't even dry him together either.
Speaker 2 (32:24):
Can you? No? But it's the way we've You can't
argue with her on that one. But I only use
two machines.
Speaker 1 (32:31):
Can you can argue?
Speaker 6 (32:32):
I know you only use two machines, but think about this,
if you only used one machine, all that stuff still
fits in there.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
How much do you pay uh a media machine? I
pay about five dollars.
Speaker 2 (32:44):
I was using media machine to be about five dollars.
Speaker 6 (32:47):
And okay, right now, you use two machines, right one
medium one small So what is that that's told us
about say eight dollars plus and then four dollars because
I try our stuff in one dryer and her stuff
and another dryer. Right, so if you were to do
it all together, what would cost you half the price?
Speaker 2 (33:09):
Roughly? I would give you a minute. I would say,
I don't even need to take a minute. I'm not ten dollars,
tell fourteen dollars together? This is saving you. Uh, this
is saving you. You're spending double what you need.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
To on your laundry bills.
Speaker 2 (33:26):
I try to I try to tell her that I
want I want to just put everything in one machine
and wash it and it just separate it. Nobody just
do it.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
He's not there. Yeah, she's too busy watching Netflix or
something at home.
Speaker 10 (33:36):
You know.
Speaker 2 (33:36):
It's also busy TV the house clean as well, because.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
Okay, so she's at home cleaning.
Speaker 2 (33:41):
She's done with that, and then she'll go, you know,
and she'll watch a little TV here there after she
cleaning everything.
Speaker 6 (33:47):
So why don't you just tell her you're doing the
laundry separately and just throw it all in the one
thing and then before you get home you take it
out of the one dryer that you've dried everything in,
and you take her, you separate it, you put her
crap on a basket.
Speaker 1 (34:00):
You're crap on a basket. You get homeie go.
Speaker 6 (34:02):
That's right, honey, I needlessly spent money on two washers
and two dryers.
Speaker 2 (34:07):
Here you go. I'll keep that in mind. Okay, not
going to do it. Patch is right, You're over.
Speaker 6 (34:19):
I was curious if you've seen the message that is
on all of the National Forest website pages. It blames
the radical left Democrats for closing of the government attached
as a picture of this politics aside.
Speaker 2 (34:31):
This is embarrassing and yes they have.
Speaker 6 (34:34):
The radical left Democrats shut down the government. This government
website will be updated periodically during the funding lapse for
mission critical functions. President Donald Trump, the best looking man
in the world who has the lowest golf scorer ever
shot by man, made it clear he wants to keep
the government open and support those who feed fuel and
clothed the American people.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
Yeah, well, of course, nobody. This is the first time
anything like this is Hey, there's a lot of first
for things.
Speaker 2 (35:01):
They are happening right now.
Speaker 1 (35:03):
My son is not getting paid. I'm sorry, when was
he supposed to be paid.
Speaker 10 (35:09):
He gets I think he's getting one more checked because
this is already in the hot the way it was there.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
He goes, if it goes past the fifteenth whatever it is, well,
hopefully they don't take around too long.
Speaker 9 (35:20):
And they well they got memes to make putting some
burrows on Kim Jeffreys and stuff instead of working on that.
Speaker 6 (35:27):
Okay, Well, I hope that it's resolved because it's just
it's a it's a needless exercise of you know, showmanship
or whatever between the two sides.
Speaker 1 (35:39):
So is the Trump's response last night, because we're just
supped to see.
Speaker 2 (35:48):
He's the grim Ray.
Speaker 1 (35:48):
Part timing.
Speaker 2 (35:52):
Jesus Christ sending over him.
Speaker 1 (36:03):
He's the Nancy Pelosi grim Raper artic Jadie Vance and drum.
Speaker 2 (36:12):
Rocked the bar is the Project twenty five guys, we've
got nothing to do with.
Speaker 1 (36:28):
Yeah, and this is not.
Speaker 8 (36:31):
Now.
Speaker 6 (36:31):
I don't know who actually made this, but this is uh,
I don't have Trump made No, no, he didn't. But
just the fact that the President's Postings Office always a
little bit We're living in weird times, man, very very
very weird times, to say the least. I mean, we've
now declared war on Well, we didn't declare war. I
(36:53):
take that back. President Trump has just told h he said,
we're at war with U Narco Caribbean, Narco Caribbean Narco terrorists,
in other words, drug runners. And we're just blowing up
any boat in the Caribbean, whether they're headed. They're not
even even headed to the United States. And do you
(37:18):
know where the drugs come from?
Speaker 1 (37:20):
They don't.
Speaker 6 (37:20):
They keep blowing up boats that are leaving Venezuela. Only
about eight or ten percent of the drugs that enter
the United States come from Venezuela. You got a lot
of other places you could start first. So don't always
believe that that's why you know what's going on there,
that's why we're doing it. Anyways, I've got to take
a break. Our number is eight sixty six Yo Rover
(37:42):
eight sixty six nine sixty seven six eight three seven.
Mechanical Nuts says military pay is guaranteed.
Speaker 2 (37:51):
Don't lie, Snitz.
Speaker 1 (37:53):
I just talked to them.
Speaker 7 (37:55):
Oh they lie.
Speaker 6 (37:58):
I'm just I don't know. I'm just is he so, wait,
is your son what does he do exactly?
Speaker 1 (38:04):
He's in cyber crime? Is he in the military or
air force?
Speaker 6 (38:08):
I see, Well, mechanical nuts says military pay is guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (38:12):
Schnit's his line. Oh, this guy's general. I guess.
Speaker 6 (38:18):
All right, I've got to take a break. We will
be right back on Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 2 (38:22):
Hang on, if no.
Speaker 9 (38:24):
One else in the car wants to listen to RMG,
kick him.
Speaker 2 (38:28):
Out and make them freaking walk.
Speaker 1 (38:30):
Go on, get out.
Speaker 2 (38:32):
Good luck getting the school, you little chirps.
Speaker 6 (38:35):
Now back to rovers Morning Glory. Steven says the military
will get back paid. Only special forces get paid right now.
Speaker 1 (38:50):
Yeah, he'll get paid when it's over. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (38:52):
An anonymous says, Rovert is here a grass eating video
guy realize that his son and every government employee will
get back paid.
Speaker 1 (39:00):
Yeah, okay, Hey, well let's push your pay off for
a month a job? Yeah, are you what? An idiot?
Speaker 7 (39:05):
Not going to be easy? And I don't think he
said anything about back paid. Of course they're going to
get back paid.
Speaker 8 (39:09):
Now, if you don't get paid for a month, you
still have to have money in your account to survive.
Speaker 7 (39:13):
That's hard.
Speaker 6 (39:13):
Yeah, I guess you just you don't pay your bills, right,
you just go I can't pay my bills.
Speaker 2 (39:19):
Everyone.
Speaker 1 (39:19):
It's sort of a trickle down effect. You don't get paid,
no one else gets paid.
Speaker 6 (39:28):
There's a very serious thing happening in North Korea right now.
Speaker 1 (39:36):
You know, there's a lot of stuff going on in
the world.
Speaker 6 (39:38):
I mentioned the Venezuela and Narco trafficking boat blow ups.
We know what's happening in Russia and Ukraine. Russia allegedly
sending more drones through like through other countries airspace. I mean,
things are heating up around the world, but it's nothing
compared to what's going on in North Korea. The most
(40:01):
serious news of the week is that North Korea has
ordered an emergency crackdown on anti socialist breast augmentation. That's right,
If you are getting boob implants in North Korea, you
could be sent to a prison labor camp. North Korean
dictator Kim Jong un has ordered this emergency crackdown on
(40:25):
boob jobs, saying that they are anti socialists and that
these are rotten capitalist implants where you could be sentenced
to a prison camp. Women or private doctors caught could
face this punishment. You could, like I mentioned, you could
be sent to the labor camp. You could be disappeared,
(40:48):
you could be you know who knows what could end
up happening to you? Who's getting boob jobs in North Korea?
Aren't they like they can barely eat? That's a great question.
But they say that what's the like just the hospitals
like over there? Yeah, who knows if they're being done
in a hospital. They might be done in a hut
(41:09):
somewhere or something. Now they say that the Ministry of
Public Safety says that these are rotten capitalists implants. They
say that they've deployed strike teams to central areas, including
pyeong Gangong, the capital city, over the summer. Yang is
(41:29):
how you preducting them? Well, you wouldn't know, Kim Jong Eu.
Speaker 2 (41:34):
Uh No, it's because I've I've seen several documentaries about
life in North Korea.
Speaker 8 (41:40):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (41:40):
It's the most close off country in the world. And
they literally tell it, do you literally? They say it's
a dictatorship rate. That's exactly what they do, dictate every
aspect of your life. Oh, they didn't everything down to
like what here do they think as a program premtted women, Well,
you have to send in your poop quota. You know
poop quota.
Speaker 1 (41:59):
I don't remember what they do it. They use it
for fuel or something.
Speaker 9 (42:03):
But every yuri of your poop text you gotta you
gotta get the villages dung together.
Speaker 6 (42:10):
You have to send it in the government. No, this
is that's made up. I don't believe that. What do
you mean they send in their factor. How would you
mail in?
Speaker 1 (42:18):
You mailed in his poop when he did that?
Speaker 9 (42:22):
Just put a turn in the envelope and you send it.
You look at it, and then you send it off to him.
They use it for fuel. All turds. I don't know
remember why they're sending Is it the animal turds? Maybe
it's the animals turds they use. But then when you
run out of animal turds, you have to then start
producing your own.
Speaker 6 (42:39):
So in the wintertime, when somebody says, hey, throw a
log on the fire, you don't know what they might
be throwing on there, A big turd log.
Speaker 2 (42:47):
Okay.
Speaker 9 (42:48):
North Korea poop quota quotas looks human ways for uses fertilizer.
Speaker 1 (42:52):
Fertilizer, Well, I want your hole.
Speaker 6 (42:59):
In this case, the right teams were deployed and federal agents,
who were dressed as civilians so they could go under cover,
scanned the cities for women with unnaturally large breasts. You
would then be subjected to physical examination by these public
(43:19):
health inspectors FBI female body.
Speaker 1 (43:23):
Is at the T shirt at Spenser's. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (43:26):
Now, they were also looking for private doctors who were
conducting these surgeries, who were doing these surgeries, and if
they were caught, the women and the doctors faced criminal punishment.
They say that the increased demand in these plastic surgeries
there including boob jobs, eyelid surgeries, and eyebrow tattoos. That
(43:51):
is that micro what is that microfthing or I don't
know something whatever that's called. They say that this is
the result of North Korean women in their twin thirties
soaking in bourgeois ideology.
Speaker 2 (44:03):
The North government.
Speaker 6 (44:04):
The North Korean government says, now, last month, just a
few weeks ago, a private doctor was put on trial
alongside two women who were in their twenties who both
had breast implants. They all had to stand there on
trial with their heads hanging low as the North Korean
(44:26):
prosecutor really went after them, saying that women living in
a socialist system have been corrupted by bourgeois customs. They've
committed rotten capitalists x. They said that, yes, these two
women were in fact subject to subjected to physical examination
(44:47):
by their boob inspectors. They displayed illegal contraband, including silicone,
medical tools and bundles of cash that were seized by
the North Wangwai Province Security Bureau. So don't don't fall
(45:09):
into that, they say, do not get hooked on plastic
surgery and breast augmentation.
Speaker 1 (45:18):
Jeffrey, what do you think about this? They're doing this?
Do you think this is something that perhaps we might
have to implement here in the United States of America?
Speaker 2 (45:26):
No, because did you read about that just to hear
me out before you said no? But think about this.
Speaker 1 (45:34):
You could apply for a sweet sweet government job. Sure
you you would you know, have to get back paid
since the government is shut down, But uh, you could
get a sweet sweet government job in inspecting women's boobs.
Speaker 2 (45:52):
You have to understand something or over. We live in
a capulist in a capitalist economy where people can do
where they can they can to make, you know, make
a living North Korea that is more of a communist dictatorship. Okay, So,
(46:12):
and with the government current goverment shut down, and it
might not be a wise idea. Yeah here, uh with
the what I mean here? If a woman wants a
boop job, hey, let her have had it. In North Korea,
they they're say no because again they're a dictatorship. Like
you had no rights to under a dictatorship.
Speaker 6 (46:29):
Oh you know, the left always says Trump is a dictator.
Now I'm hearing rumblings from my sources that you know,
sure they're banning this in North Korea. I'm hearing rumblings
that Trump may actually mandate women to get breast in
plants here in the United States of America, plus lip
filler and all those sorts of surgeries. We've all seen
(46:52):
mar A Lago face that is celebrated, So we may
actually make all women go through that at the age
of ten, and everyone has to go through.
Speaker 1 (47:01):
Their mar A Lago face surgeries as young women. What
do you think, right.
Speaker 2 (47:08):
Because like, women should have the right to do to
take care of themselves and if they that's something you
want to do, that should be their option, all right,
So that wouldn't do that kind of surge that you
a ten year old child to begin with.
Speaker 9 (47:21):
Here is a quick video rum for you. This is
about this is just breaking it down. I'll have other
videos proven because you're gonna go. This doesn't seem real. Still,
this is the poop quota. This but in North Korea,
poop is attacks.
Speaker 4 (47:34):
Since China cut fertilizer exports in twenty seventeen, the country
has faced massive fertilizer shortages, forcing citizens to collect, dry
and submit human feces even in scorching heat. The military
enforces quotas and state propaganda portraits it as a patriotic duty.
Each person must deliver one hundred and fifty kilograms per year.
Speaker 1 (47:56):
But the three hundred and thirty pounds.
Speaker 4 (47:58):
Only one hundred twenty eight grams daily, amounting to just
forty seven kilograms annually, making it impossible to meet the targets.
Families pool waste, trade it on the black market. We
see some public toilets.
Speaker 10 (48:11):
This is made up, have you this is This is
not tro because join the country doesn't yes to five
dollars per month.
Speaker 2 (48:21):
North Korea don't believe this.
Speaker 1 (48:22):
This is just a video that somebody made TikTok.
Speaker 6 (48:25):
Charlie fell for it, just like people fall for things
on TikTok all the time.
Speaker 7 (48:31):
I'm in North Korea. We can't throughout the.
Speaker 13 (48:39):
What is this?
Speaker 7 (48:41):
There's no fertilized system in.
Speaker 11 (48:43):
North Korea, So you have to keep the cover or on.
Speaker 8 (48:47):
Foot mostly during the family or was this pool.
Speaker 7 (48:51):
Every winter just like ice They are preparing.
Speaker 1 (48:54):
For scream in North Korea.
Speaker 11 (48:56):
The comment twit is made with wood like a small grass, and.
Speaker 7 (49:01):
There's a whole need to spend on me.
Speaker 11 (49:05):
I don't know, you know, you know, squat and under
is the shoes rude bucket to say.
Speaker 7 (49:11):
For all the poose.
Speaker 2 (49:12):
If we save all the posts.
Speaker 7 (49:14):
We will have problems.
Speaker 11 (49:16):
So sometimes people are stealing each other's pose, but no
matter what, everyone had to distribute to the government.
Speaker 2 (49:22):
Now I don't know.
Speaker 6 (49:25):
I'm also skeptical of it. These guys carrying we don't
know what they're carrying there. This is just looks like
rain or something that's not big canvas banks.
Speaker 11 (49:35):
Of the super and the company people give them to.
Speaker 1 (49:38):
A grain of fight a lot of corner that.
Speaker 11 (49:39):
People are coming from the country side to.
Speaker 2 (49:41):
This pose for the farmerly.
Speaker 6 (49:44):
This could also be anti communist propaganda by the live
in the country where I got to send my poop
into the government. Spitzer does that willingly, he said through
the mail, what is that, Collo guard I had no
idea that that's what was going on. I thought, and
we played the video a long time ago of what
(50:04):
they do, and I thought you'd take your in our
soundproofed iHeart studios. I'm hearing a someone's car alarm go
off right now. I don't think that's being picked up
by the mics, but that is happening right this minute. Anyway,
I thought that you took like a little a little
like a like a little pin prick sample of it. No,
(50:25):
you send in your whole turn. Yeah, it's so gross.
Speaker 10 (50:30):
Give you the little it's funny, the little little vio whatever,
but you send the rest of it.
Speaker 9 (50:36):
The whole lot of extra, like when you get a
milkshake and they give you the rest of the cupper.
Speaker 1 (50:40):
Why do they put on market for it.
Speaker 6 (50:44):
They're selling it to North Korea to use this fertilizer.
Speaker 1 (50:47):
We'll be right back on Rovery's Morning Glory.
Speaker 13 (50:50):
Haang