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November 14, 2025 47 mins
A fan jumps over a barrier and runs at Ariana Grande. People complain about the Housekeeping Olympics. JLR cleaned planes before Sky Chefs. Lady Gaga opens up about her struggles after filming 'A Star is Born." Delta airlines had to apologize to a double amputee veteran after he was removed from his exit row seat. 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Forget about quitty, smoking, working out, eating ripe.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Make your new habits something you'll actually stick with.

Speaker 3 (00:08):
Listen to Rovers Morning Glory.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Now back to the show.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
The Shizzies is coming up here in just a moment.
What do you have on the way?

Speaker 4 (00:25):
Dog?

Speaker 5 (00:26):
The lead singer of a very iconic rock band, has said,
that's it's all, she wrote.

Speaker 6 (00:32):
We're done.

Speaker 5 (00:32):
I'll tell you who it is and what band next.

Speaker 7 (00:35):
All right, we'll get to that in just a moment.
Eight sixty six, Yo, Rovery. Event I think is how
you say the name?

Speaker 3 (00:43):
Good morning? How are you?

Speaker 4 (00:46):
Good morning, Rover?

Speaker 7 (00:48):
How are you?

Speaker 3 (00:49):
I'm doing all right? What's happening?

Speaker 7 (00:52):
Okay, So I'm gonna be honest with you.

Speaker 6 (00:55):
I love your show, but.

Speaker 7 (00:58):
Dude, you need to trim your beard off.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
Okay, all this stuff on your neck needs to be
cleaned up, doesn't.

Speaker 7 (01:04):
I'm driving me crazy. It's driving you crazy in a
good way, like it can't get enough of it.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
You're getting morty.

Speaker 7 (01:11):
I'll horned up and you go. I don't want to
be so intranted to you, Rover. It's going to cause
problems in my relationship.

Speaker 3 (01:19):
I see.

Speaker 7 (01:20):
Okay, Oh yeah, yeah, dude, I can't believe B two.

Speaker 4 (01:24):
Is like I'm putting up with that.

Speaker 3 (01:26):
She must like it because.

Speaker 4 (01:27):
It needs to be cleaned up, etc.

Speaker 3 (01:30):
You beer down, dude, now, evet it is.

Speaker 7 (01:34):
There's a reason for this is that it is no
shave November or whatever, and for some stupid reason, I
agreed to do this. Therefore, that's why it's all. Oh,
it's all on the neck and I look so unkempt.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
Normally cannot wait until this month is over so I
can shave all this off.

Speaker 4 (01:57):
Oh my goodness, you know what?

Speaker 6 (01:59):
See you look this, Jeffrey?

Speaker 7 (02:04):
Now okay, so yeah, no, I'm sorry, Yep, I got
it now. But if you tune in next month, you're
gonna see me, you know, as beautiful as I am
with this mug right here, you know, all lined up
and everything. I mean, you're gonna panty facial hair, you're right? Yeah,

(02:25):
Well how long do I have to keep that facial hair?
If I?

Speaker 3 (02:29):
If? I?

Speaker 7 (02:29):
So, we're gonna spin a wheel and figure out what
kind of facial hair extravaganza each person has after they
don't shave for the entire month. You know, could you
end up with that monkey tale coming around and wrapping
around your head?

Speaker 3 (02:42):
Whatever.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
Uh Now, I if I get stuck with that, I
just say that.

Speaker 3 (02:47):
Off on a heartbeat.

Speaker 7 (02:48):
I don't know if it's allowed, Jeffrey, you might have
to bug around for a week with that. I don't
know what the actual rules are yet, but I'll make
them up on the fly. All right, Evett, thank you.
I appreciate it. Diamond in West Palm Beach, Florida, Rover's Morning.
We'll get to the shoosy. Hey, go ahead, Diamond.

Speaker 4 (03:08):
Hey, how you doing? Love your show? First and foremost,
I was just wondering if you had seen the new
recent email from Epstein or one of them that was released.
And this basically has Epstein's asking I believe Steve Bannon
if he's asked Putin if he's seen the pictures of Donald. Yes,

(03:34):
it's all over the internet today.

Speaker 7 (03:38):
Now, okay, Now, is this something photo shopped that somebody
made an Epstein email saying that that Trump.

Speaker 4 (03:51):
You can go check the link and it takes you
directly to the database and site.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
So I do not believe so.

Speaker 4 (03:58):
And it's blowing up all over it today.

Speaker 3 (04:01):
Interesting.

Speaker 7 (04:01):
All right, I'm gonna yeah, I'm gonna have to all right, Diamond,
I'm gonna go check that out.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
You know.

Speaker 7 (04:07):
I look the the Epstein stuff is, you know, it's
it is interesting and how deep these tentacles run and
how I mean it's interesting in that sense. But I
just am not like spending a lot of time looking
into this, Like a lot of people are, like they

(04:29):
think they're gonna crack whatever case or you know, like
I just I got it. There's some creepy dudes. That's enough. Like,
I don't know how much more I need to know
about exactly.

Speaker 2 (04:41):
New lady I just got elected from Arizona. She just
she was the two hundred and eighteen signature for a
discharged position for the to force Congress to vote on
the release of the entire Epstein file. And Mike Johnson
came out and said that do it now, because now,
because there now, because some Republicans are breaking from Trump

(05:05):
because they want transparency, they want to know what, Okay, what's.

Speaker 3 (05:09):
Really going on here. There's a lot of uh tentacles.

Speaker 7 (05:12):
There's something weird going on, something something weird is going
on of why they do not want this release. And
I don't know if it's anything. I guess Trump is
named in the Epstein files. We know that, but to
what extent. I'm guessing there's no earth shattering bombshells in there.

Speaker 3 (05:28):
But my gut feeling.

Speaker 7 (05:31):
Would be more that there is there are other people,
perhaps friends.

Speaker 3 (05:36):
Of Trump's, that want to uh, you.

Speaker 7 (05:39):
Know, that want to be remain under they wanted their
names under wraps or whatever, would be my guess, But
I don't.

Speaker 3 (05:46):
I don't know for sure, and they really can't.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
They really can't impeach Trump because this is all be
all this occurred, if he's even any I know he's
they're saying he's in the Epstein files, but occurred before
he became the president of United States, so I don't
think they could really eat him on that alone.

Speaker 7 (06:01):
They're trying to get rid of that FED woman claiming
that she committed mortgage fraud, but that happened before she
was appointed to the Fed.

Speaker 3 (06:09):
Well, you can get to get rid of.

Speaker 2 (06:10):
Her, didn't you see a lot of hypocrisy in politics
these days?

Speaker 3 (06:14):
Pro I'm sorry to say that.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
Remember Trump is on his campaign of retribution against his
political lenines. At least he'sa James and James Comy were
two of them, and the district attorney in down in
Virginia the one that resigned resigned because he knew there
was not enough evidence or resist sub vision evidence even
bringing an indictment. So he said, if you I'm leaving

(06:36):
because I'm not gonna, you know, do something that would viole.
You know, that's where there's not enough evidence. Because it
is interesting take conviction out of it.

Speaker 7 (06:47):
It is interesting that there seems to be one particular
group of people that keep getting charged with these mortgage
uh fraud claims. And the interest question isn't what group
that is. But I'll tell you Democrats. The interesting question
is where are these records being accessed and by who?

Speaker 3 (07:09):
And it's pretty apparent.

Speaker 7 (07:11):
It's this pooltie guy or whatever, and he's just going
through every I think Swallwall may be the next guy
to be charged.

Speaker 3 (07:19):
But you know, this is this supposed mortgage thing.

Speaker 7 (07:23):
I mean, I don't even know what they're it's such
a minuscule nobody I read like two or three years
like nobody two or three years ago there was a
grand total of I think thirty two people charged with
us and no one convicted or something like that, something
along those lines. I mean, that's in the entire nation.
Now we've had like thirty two Democrats charged just you know,

(07:45):
they're going through people's records to try to find anything.
Oh you don't like truma, Okay, well we'll try and
find something in your past.

Speaker 3 (07:51):
We can nail you with.

Speaker 7 (07:54):
Dougie. Are you ready for the shizzy? Yeah, here we go.

Speaker 6 (08:00):
It's dizzy on rovers morning.

Speaker 3 (08:02):
Glory.

Speaker 5 (08:03):
Well, the government is reopening its agencies after the record
forty three days shutdown ended earlier this week.

Speaker 6 (08:11):
It ended on Wednesday.

Speaker 5 (08:13):
Roughly one point four million federal workers who haven't received
a paycheck in over a month. They are still waiting
for back pay, and many of these employees across the
US said that they're contending with more than six weeks
of backlogs and thinner staff. For example, the IRS backlogs
and tax filings from those who filed for extensions will

(08:34):
take two to three months just to catch up. So
they've got to get everything back running. But at least
there is a little light at the end of the tunnel. Meanwhile,
for flights, the flight delays and cancelations across the US
could continue for up to another week. Even though the
President signed the bill ending the shutdown, more than one
thousand flights were canceled yesterday with an additional almost twenty

(08:58):
five hundred flights delayed four thirty pm Eastern time last night.
I know a few different people that have flown days Friday,
Wednesday night they flew, and then I know somebody else
that flew yesterday Thursday.

Speaker 6 (09:11):
They were totally fine.

Speaker 7 (09:13):
Okay, Well, I'm I'm coming home tomorrow, so I'm hoping
that everything is all right.

Speaker 6 (09:19):
Good good guy.

Speaker 5 (09:21):
Meanwhile, Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman, he's in the news. He's
in a Pittsburgh hospital after suffering a fall during an
early morning walk near his home. They say it was
a cardiac event that happened, and so he is he
was hospitalized and he fell, and his office says that
he has a history of health problems. Obviously, he suffered

(09:42):
a stroke back in twenty twenty two. So he experienced
this kind of sudden flare up of ventricular fib relation
that caused.

Speaker 6 (09:50):
Him to get lightheaded.

Speaker 5 (09:51):
Then he fell and he suffered minor injuries to his face,
and he was taken to the hospital for evaluations.

Speaker 7 (09:57):
So he said, if you know, it's interesting with this guy.
Do you remember after he had this stroke. I mean,
the guy can't speak. It's ridiculous that he was elected,
utterly ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
But there was such a.

Speaker 7 (10:11):
You know, it's the Democrat versus Republican thing, and people
they go, we don't like, we're going to vote for
this guy. I don't care if he's a vegetable, I
don't care. I'm voting for him anyways. So they vote
for him. He ends up winning even though he can't speak.
And uh, and and and now look what they have
gotten is a completely different guy than they elected because

(10:36):
and I don't know if it was because of the
stroke or maybe it's falling and hitting his head one
too many times, but he has completely he's gone. I'm
not saying he's gone Mega budd he's he's he's he's
gone in that farther in that direction than anyone anticipated.
And so, uh, you a vote for vote for who

(10:58):
you think is going to do a good job, not
a guy that I mean, the guy. I don't know
how you can feel good about voting for this guy
when he literally could not speak.

Speaker 3 (11:06):
It's utterly ridiculous.

Speaker 5 (11:08):
Go on, there's home foreclosures in the United States jumped
up last month with just over thirty six thousand seven
hundred and sixty properties getting some type of foreclosure filing
like default notices or scheduled auctions or even bank repossessions.

Speaker 6 (11:25):
So that's a little bit higher.

Speaker 5 (11:26):
It's three percent higher than September and nineteen percent higher
than October of last year. We're marking the eight straight
month of yearly increases. Foreclosure starts, which are the first
step in the process, rose six percent for the month,
and we're twenty percent higher than a year ago. So
while the numbers are still small and well below historic highs,

(11:48):
the steady rise might be a sign of problems in
the housing market.

Speaker 7 (11:52):
Yeah, I tell Honia, this is We're going to be
in for a rough patch and people are going to
lose their jobs due to AI. And then you're going
to go, how are you going to pay for this stuff?
How are you going to pay for your home? How
are you going to do? I just saw Verizon is
laying off I think something like fifteen thousand people or something,
you know, and this is and their stock goes up.

(12:14):
And speaking of stocks, people who keep buying these stocks, Oh,
I'm buying the dip. Oh I'm making you are going
to be left holding the bag here because all of
these institutional investors have figured out time to take a profit,
time to get out, because this whole thing's going to
come crashing down. But who keeps keeps the stock market going?

(12:36):
Are these retail investors, people with robinhood or whatever the
hell whatever app who are unsophisticated investors And you're going
to be left holding the bag?

Speaker 3 (12:47):
Mark my words on this. Go Ondush.

Speaker 5 (12:50):
Jim Abila a long time senior correspondent for ABC News
whose career span landmark trials and International Diploma Diplo diplomas.

Speaker 6 (13:01):
He has passed away. He died yesterday.

Speaker 5 (13:03):
He was seventy years old after a long illness, and
he's we used to be based out of LA He
covered topics including justice and law enforcement, consumer investigations, and
from twenty twelve to twenty sixteen he served as ABC's
White House correspondent, where he broke the news that the
US was re establishing diplomatic ties with Cuba. So he

(13:26):
has passed away, seventy years old. Entertainment news for you,
This is a pre I watched this a couple of times.
Pretty interesting video. So the whole Wicked movie that you
have not seen, Wizard of.

Speaker 3 (13:40):
Oscar now, no interest. I do not want to see that.
Not interested.

Speaker 6 (13:44):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (13:45):
So Wicked was massive success, that was with Ariana Grande.
Obviously that now they have a second movie that comes out.

Speaker 6 (13:52):
Wicked for Good.

Speaker 5 (13:53):
So they were in Singapore, the stars of the shows,
and they were on the red carpet during the premier
for the second movie, Wicked for Good. And there's a
fan who jumps the fence and charges Ariana Grande, and
it's pretty crazy.

Speaker 6 (14:11):
Why are you making a face?

Speaker 7 (14:14):
Well, because they made a much bigger deal about this
than it actually is. I mean, the guy did jump
the thing and he ran, but he went and put
his arm around her to try to get a photo
with her. It wasn't like he was trying to attack
her or anything. I mean, it's still a breach of security,
no doubt about that.

Speaker 6 (14:31):
But you don't know that. I think Snitz has the video.

Speaker 3 (14:35):
No, I put it in Daily.

Speaker 7 (14:36):
Oh Snitz can't play video from back there there.

Speaker 3 (14:39):
You're the video player today.

Speaker 5 (14:41):
Okay, So you told me you were going to play stuff,
So will you on the Friday Leftovers?

Speaker 7 (14:48):
Oh okay, I can I can play stuff. Let me
let me try and log in here and let me see.

Speaker 5 (14:53):
I already logged in, okay, and then so we'll get
that video for you.

Speaker 6 (14:57):
And then finally, do you remember the band Whiteses.

Speaker 3 (15:01):
Sure? Yeah, oh yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (15:03):
My two favorite songs by them, Here I Go Again
and is this Love?

Speaker 5 (15:08):
No? I love those songs. Great, he's they're a great band.
We're older, so we remember these guys. White Snake the
lead singer David Coverdale, who is seventy four years old.
He announced yesterday that he is hanging up his platform
shoes and skin tight jeans following his legendary fifty plus
year Hall of Fame career. He is hanging it up,

(15:30):
saying that they are done. So I think that's pretty cool.
They were a great.

Speaker 7 (15:35):
Band well before my time. But like all that hair
metal stuff, yeah, oh.

Speaker 3 (15:41):
That was I was. I was a teenager in that era.

Speaker 2 (15:43):
That was like the most of the eighties was all
was the hair metal band era. I remember bands like
us Aid, Poison, Motley Crue, def Leppard, Docin, Anthrax, Metallica.

Speaker 3 (15:58):
Going on and on and on and on. Okay, all
of them, yes.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
Go on, But I'm just say, like, to me, the
major bands of that era, like even Aerosmith, they were
they were they were legendary in the seventies and then
rock down through the nineties.

Speaker 5 (16:12):
Okay, there you go. That's the Schizzy on Rovers Morning Glory.

Speaker 3 (16:17):
When the yit goes down, you better be watching.

Speaker 8 (16:23):
R MG TV.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
Watch it live at Roverradio dot com.

Speaker 3 (16:38):
Spence, are you able to see this Ariana Grande thing here? Yeah?
All right, Douche. I don't know if Douche has the audio.
I don't know if she knows how to do this.

Speaker 6 (16:46):
You know what that comes up on Pewter and video.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
That's right, yes, here it is.

Speaker 7 (16:51):
Here is Ariana Grande walking the red carpet or whatever.
This guy jumps over and angles and puts his arm
around her and then jumps up. He's trying to get
a picture. He's trying, you know, he's with somebody there.
I play it again.

Speaker 6 (17:07):
You can't do that.

Speaker 7 (17:08):
No, you can't do that. But that's not an attack.
It's most definitely is not an attack obviously. Now, I
mean they're making a much bigger deal. I don't know
what this if this is a different angle.

Speaker 6 (17:21):
It shows the co star.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
Oh she looks bad, as you know.

Speaker 6 (17:26):
Yeah, so that's Cynthia and Revo and she yeah, she.

Speaker 5 (17:31):
Goes in and protects her friend Arianna, both of them do.

Speaker 6 (17:36):
He's around her almost.

Speaker 9 (17:39):
Oh yeah, wow, that is tought.

Speaker 5 (17:42):
Oh yeah, she immediately, Oh yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (17:46):
I don't want to mess with her. Look at her cool.

Speaker 7 (17:48):
She looks like they going to give her a role
in some sort of action movie or whatever. She's a
badass there. Yeah this movie.

Speaker 5 (17:57):
Ye.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
Speaking of.

Speaker 7 (18:02):
Things that were made a big deal, I do want
to there was something that I heard about Lady Gaga.

Speaker 3 (18:08):
I have to tell you about because I just don't
buy this.

Speaker 7 (18:11):
But I'll explain that to you in just a few minutes,
and kind of like they made that into a bigger deal.
To Ariana Grandi, yeah, it's a security lapse, but it's
not like it's not.

Speaker 3 (18:22):
The end of the world.

Speaker 5 (18:22):
There.

Speaker 7 (18:25):
People are upset over this thing in Las Vegas, the
housekeeping Olympics. Now, this has been going on for thirty
five years. I remember this. I don't know if it
was going on when I lived there. I mean I
guess I guess it was. But this is you probably
have seen this on the news. It's not like some
sort of secret event. They've been doing this for thirty
five years in a big arena in Las Vegas, and

(18:48):
this is where they have teams from the different hotel
casino groups and they compete in what they call the
housekeeping Olympics.

Speaker 3 (18:58):
It's how fast can you make a bed?

Speaker 7 (19:00):
How fast can you push a vacuum through a little
obstacle course, vacuum things up or whatever have you mop
through the little obstacle course. You throw toilet paper rolls
and see how many you can make into a trash can,
things like that. And so they held this recently and

(19:22):
they posted some videos. So here they are people making
the bed. I mean, if you watch the people make
the bed, it is incredible how fast they can just
they throw like a sheet and it just it just
miraculously goes where it's supposed to go.

Speaker 3 (19:34):
They're good. You wait too tight though, hotel beds. You
need it untucked. D that's crazy. I can put my
feet in that.

Speaker 7 (19:43):
So the they post a video of this, and now
people are up in arms over this, claiming that this
is such a horrible event and oh it's so bad.
Look at how these people are being taken advantage of,
and look at how I mean, there's just all sorts
of different things people are complaining about.

Speaker 5 (20:04):
I did think with this event. It was mocking them.
When I saw it, I felt kind of bad.

Speaker 7 (20:10):
No, someone says, this is a humiliation ritual, And someone says,
this is what's wrong with capitalism. What are you talking about?
What does this have to do with capitalism? These people
are making a living. Most of them are are union workers,
probably in these hotels, and so they're making a good

(20:32):
wage doing honest work. They are cleaning hotel rooms and
hallways and things like that, and they this is like
to them, to the people participating in this, this is
not like some sort of thing.

Speaker 3 (20:48):
Where they should feel humiliated.

Speaker 7 (20:53):
This is them showing off their actual legitimate skills that
they have acquired over years of doing this and showing
it off in a fun way for a competition. Who
would have a problem with that? What the hell is
your problem? If you if you had a way over, it's.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Kind of like putting fun into your work, showing off.
You know what these people have to do, because you
got to remember, my hat's off to anybody that works
in that works in that area, because they have to
go put up with a lot of crap, I mean,
especially cleaning up sometimes.

Speaker 7 (21:27):
Quite literally, like when you guys were in that hotel
room in Miami Beach.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
Do you remember that.

Speaker 2 (21:32):
Yeah, someone had blocked out of my memory because I
had to dispose of the evidence.

Speaker 3 (21:40):
That took place there.

Speaker 7 (21:41):
If you're here's somebody that is explaining it's turning how
fast you do a low wage job into a competition,
trying to push the narrative that faster is better in
these kinds of jobs and squeezing more out of an
employee for the same pay. Yeah, I will. I'm gonna
be honest. Faster is better if you're if you run

(22:03):
a hotel and you can have employee, you have an
employee who can do.

Speaker 3 (22:08):
Uh six hotel six rooms.

Speaker 7 (22:12):
Per hour, clean them, and then you have one that
can do ten rooms per hour.

Speaker 3 (22:17):
Who do you think? Who would you hire? Who would
you want?

Speaker 7 (22:20):
You'd want the people who are faster and more efficient. Obviously,
there's nothing wrong with that. That's the name of the game.
This is this is a people Jesus Christ.

Speaker 3 (22:28):
They well just complain about anything these days. Shut your
pie hole.

Speaker 2 (22:31):
My cat, Robert, I did similar work, but instead of
hotel rooms, I was cleaning air One of my first
jobs at the airport, I used clean airplanes and uh
we had to be fast because the plane is only
on the ground for a set period of time. We
only have like three to five minutes to get that
plane clean.

Speaker 3 (22:47):
Before you know, get all the people off.

Speaker 2 (22:49):
And depending on the side of the aircraft was, depending
on how long it would take for us, say like
a team of three to for narrowbody plates, we can
do We can do a play with a good team
of three, we could probably do a clean on airplane
five minutes.

Speaker 7 (23:00):
Because you know how that quiver I was on a
I was on a flight a few weeks ago, and
normally I try and sit as close to the front
of the plane as possible because I don't like once
I land, I don't like sitting in the back waiting
for row after row after row of people, and I

(23:22):
it always just watching them try to get their luggage down.

Speaker 3 (23:26):
And I go there. They are so slow.

Speaker 7 (23:30):
It's like they get up and it's like they haven't
thought about what they're gonna do. You've been sitting there
waiting for you know, taxing to the gate for ten minutes.
The thought hasn't crossed your mind, like I'm gonna what
am I gonna do? It's like they and then they're
putting their jackets on, and it's like Jesus christy give
everybody behind you was waiting for you, get a move on,
let's go. So I tried to sit as close to

(23:52):
the front of the plane as possible. But I took
a flight a while ago, maybe I don't know, three
four weeks ago, and the only seats available were at
the hairy back of the plane. And uh, I guess
I had never realized that when I'm waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting,
and while people are exiting, they they have like they

(24:13):
had six people on that plane while everyone is still
getting off.

Speaker 3 (24:17):
But they're in each little uh, each little.

Speaker 7 (24:21):
Row there cleaning, cleaning the plane and cleaning out the
little pocket like they're already working while people are still
deplanning because they're trying to turn it over that fast.
How many people will get on the plane and clean
with you, Jeffrey, was it you? And how many other people?

Speaker 3 (24:32):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (24:33):
Uh for a narrowbody playing like I said at that time,
continent because we were for we were a subky, we
were contracted clean company for a con Everyone's when you
were when he had the big hub here back in
the day. Uh, it's usually you seven thirty seven, seven
twenty sevens MD eighties DC dines whether they're the types
of plays they flew a narrowbody plane, a chem of three,
A good team of three people could get a plane

(24:54):
cleaned out in about five minutes.

Speaker 7 (24:56):
Oh, they had diffin cask, so three they had LEAs
woud say, they probably had six people on the plane
to get it clean.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
Sometimes it depends, and it depends on passenger load.

Speaker 3 (25:08):
If if the load is like less than fifty.

Speaker 2 (25:09):
People, we could three people could go in and clean
that plane in five minutes. Usually if it's a full plane,
they usually have five. But like the only time a
wide body plan would come in we had we had
an Airbus three hundred come in every day and it
would take the almost the entire shift to do that plane,
especially if they need to.

Speaker 3 (25:26):
Do a quick turn. Ryan and Medna, you're Ron Rover's
Morning Glory. Good morning, Brian, Good morning, Sir a Man.

Speaker 8 (25:38):
I just wanted to comment on the house keeping Olympics. Yes,
it's just showcasing your skills. You know, employers can look
at that and go give you a job offer and
you could triple your income if you're the best housekeeper
in the world. You could be working in Vegas, you
could be working in Dubai.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
You never know.

Speaker 8 (25:58):
When I was in high school, we had a thing
called the Skills Competition, and all the trades would go
and compete against.

Speaker 3 (26:05):
Each other and whoever was the best got job offer.

Speaker 8 (26:08):
It's not exploiting anyone, it's not doing anything negative.

Speaker 3 (26:11):
You're just showcasing yourself. These people sign up for this,
they want to do this.

Speaker 7 (26:16):
It's not like, you know, like we're forcing the employees
to go participate in the house keeping Olympics and we're
all pointing and laughing at them. They are showing off
their skills, and frankly, you know, whatever job you work in,
I give these guys and ladies credit for the for

(26:36):
the pride that they are show in their work and
the you know, this takes some practice and some dedication
and some skills. So I wish every worker in the
world would have this.

Speaker 3 (26:50):
Level of pride.

Speaker 7 (26:52):
There's nothing wrong with this, Brian, Thank you, I appreciate it.

Speaker 3 (26:55):
Excuse me, I've got to take a break. We'll be
right back. Hang out. Glove Way's Morning.

Speaker 2 (27:00):
Glories your one stop shop for news, pop culture, insanity.

Speaker 3 (27:06):
And poop lots and lots of poop. Garbage man access.
My co workers and.

Speaker 7 (27:22):
I talk constantly about having the Garbageman Olympics, a contest
of all the things we do five days a week, every.

Speaker 3 (27:31):
Week, no matter what.

Speaker 7 (27:33):
And Matt and Fort Laudersdale says, I'm an OTR truck driver.
There's a driver rodeo once a year in Iowa at
the world's largest truck Stopware drivers compete in different driving
skill events.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
Yeah, none of those are any different.

Speaker 7 (27:51):
People have are People take pride in their work and
they want to show off their abilities.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
There's nothing wrong with that.

Speaker 5 (28:00):
It's fine, but it's almost like the you're waiting on people,
so that kind of service. I don't know, just it
just seems like you're now everyone's talking about it.

Speaker 6 (28:10):
It's just mocking the industry too.

Speaker 7 (28:14):
Wait, is that you were a server, Dougie? Is that
a Is that mocking the servers? If you participate in
the Server Olympics, what are you carrying a tray of
plates or something?

Speaker 3 (28:24):
Plates? Can you stack? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (28:26):
I don't think they need to do that because I'm waiting.
If you see your.

Speaker 5 (28:30):
Electing away from everybody, Okay, I'm good.

Speaker 7 (28:39):
Here's somebody that says where did this one go?

Speaker 3 (28:42):
Stand by?

Speaker 7 (28:43):
Oh uh, PF says, please check on Snitzer, make sure
he's okay. Bitcoin is down to ninety five thousand, breaking
all support levels.

Speaker 3 (28:54):
Yeah, I don't know what that means.

Speaker 7 (28:56):
Next stop looks like seventy seven k going to fix it?
Breaks it's fifty five k? What does this mean? What
are these support levels?

Speaker 3 (29:05):
What does that even?

Speaker 4 (29:06):
What is that?

Speaker 3 (29:07):
I mean, this is all made up nonsense in the
stock market kind of stuff.

Speaker 9 (29:11):
It's it's the support level where it's there's a bunch
of people at this certain level that have it, they're
in at a certain price whatever, and it hits that
and normally bounces off. Sometimes it doesn't. If it breaks through,
it goes lower. But like the stock market, you'd think
it was I don't.

Speaker 3 (29:28):
Know, a merit of the company.

Speaker 7 (29:29):
Yeah, yes, yes, the bitcoin Like I love all these
supposed experts and I've seen like these long articles on
bitcoin could reach X amount of dollars in the next
six months or what?

Speaker 5 (29:40):
What?

Speaker 7 (29:40):
Are you just pulling that right out of your rass.
Nobody has any idea. It's just complete, completely made up.

Speaker 6 (29:46):
Are you going to buy it?

Speaker 5 (29:47):
So?

Speaker 3 (29:47):
Are you doing? Okay? Snits are you buying the dip
or you taking profits? I don't see profits.

Speaker 9 (29:53):
I'm alway, I'm always buying my bigcoin just is for
the future, so and I'm always kind of putting a
little bit in there, kind of like with DCA dollar
cross averaging.

Speaker 3 (30:03):
So you that's down. Yeah, sure, you never take.

Speaker 7 (30:08):
So no matter what happened, you never will take profits.

Speaker 3 (30:11):
Not a bitcoin. So what all right? That's my retirement stuff? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (30:17):
Okay, sorry? Are you buying now with it being this low?
Are you gonna wait for it to keep going lower?

Speaker 9 (30:25):
It's I kind of like always put a little bit in.
So that's what that is. The kind of averages out.

Speaker 3 (30:32):
Now is bitcoin?

Speaker 7 (30:34):
Are you counting on bitcoin as your retirement fund?

Speaker 3 (30:37):
Is that is that? Yeah? I don't hit you say,
what's that?

Speaker 9 (30:41):
It'll hit a million eventually per bitcoin, is what you're trying,
and then you will be rich at that point.

Speaker 3 (30:48):
Is that accurate?

Speaker 5 (30:49):
No?

Speaker 7 (30:50):
No, I thought you're putting a little bit in all
the time.

Speaker 3 (30:53):
Matter what you call rich. But you know it is
a million dollars rich, don't I don't know? Yeah? Nowadays
I keeps going being on the on the welfare roles
with a million dollars.

Speaker 7 (31:10):
But all right, well Snitz is doing okay, he says,
So don't worry about him.

Speaker 9 (31:18):
I have stuff and other things. It's not just big
one bioin just you know, that's just fun.

Speaker 7 (31:22):
What's your hottest investment right now? If you were to
give a tip, what is it?

Speaker 4 (31:26):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (31:26):
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (31:28):
I know I play really safe, so my investments are
in like blue chip stuff.

Speaker 3 (31:32):
It's just you know, just building.

Speaker 7 (31:35):
Okay, Hopefully somebody wants to here's someone Nvidia is dropping
as well.

Speaker 3 (31:42):
Yes, yes, because look, I'm not going to go into this.

Speaker 7 (31:46):
We've already talked about it, but yeah, I think everyone
knows my feeling on it. Someone wants Douge to participate
in a newscaster Olympics so you can see how she
would stack up against other other newscasters.

Speaker 3 (32:00):
Yep, for that.

Speaker 7 (32:03):
The thing I was going to tell you about Lady Gaga,
I don't know. Does she have a new She must
have a new project out right. Why don't know why
this article is out now? But I saw this article
and I read the headline. I go, that didn't happen,
that's that's bs. Does she have a new project out?

Speaker 3 (32:23):
Does she say that album that kind of failed. But
I'm not sure anything new.

Speaker 5 (32:27):
I you know, I purposely saw this story and I
didn't give it to you because I knew that you
would pooh poo this story. Oh, and it's so upsetting
that you're about to even talk about this, and I wish.

Speaker 7 (32:42):
You wouldn't because it's just what's upsetting. What's upsetting is
that it's a celebrity just lying. You know, this, this
whatever she's claiming happened, didn't happen, at least the way
that she's you know, saying that it happened. It makes
for a headline, It gets you in the news and
maybe gives you some sympathy. But the first line of

(33:04):
the article is Lady Gaga says she's lucky to be alive.

Speaker 3 (33:09):
Okay, so what happened to Lady Gaga?

Speaker 7 (33:11):
She says that while she was filming A Star Is
Born in twenty seventeen, that she was taking lithium as
a mood stabilizer.

Speaker 3 (33:20):
Then she immediately gets done filming that.

Speaker 7 (33:23):
Then she does a Super Bowl performance that she kicks
off the Joanne World Tour, whatever the hell that is
a world tour that she did in twenty seventeen, in
twenty eighteen. At that point, she suffered what she says
was a psychotic breakdown and she had to be checked
into a mental hospital. Now, when I got to that

(33:47):
point in the article, I said, this didn't happen. That
absolutely did not happen. Because you're telling me that at
that point, you have to go back to twenty seventeen,
twenty eighteen. Lady Gaga, I would say, at that point,
the biggest star pop singer star in the world.

Speaker 3 (34:08):
I would say at that point, would would fair statement.

Speaker 7 (34:11):
Yeah, okay, she checks into a mental hospital and nobody
reports on that. They were, They're able to keep that
under wraps. Somehow, there's nobody leaking this information.

Speaker 3 (34:23):
It's I mean, this is this, this is this is
just over dramatic.

Speaker 7 (34:29):
Headlining, you know, like trying it's it's clickbait stuff. This
absolutely is not how things went down. I don't I
don't believe this for a second. She had a psychotic
break and was a the beat check, they to a
mental hospital. I believe that if you told me that
about Britney Spears. But Lady Gaga, they keep this under wraps.

Speaker 3 (34:48):
No, it didn't happen.

Speaker 5 (34:49):
So I think that she has been very vocal with
her mental health through the years, Right, So, and you
can roll your eyes and make faces, all that's fine, Yes, Okay,
it was constant. It was there was so much going
on in her life at that moment that she just said,
I can't, I can't go on.

Speaker 6 (35:11):
I'm in trouble. I need help.

Speaker 5 (35:12):
Her sister made a comment and said something like, I
don't I don't know where Stephanie is or whatever her
real name is anymore, and she's like, I turned into
something that I just.

Speaker 6 (35:23):
Can't keep going. So I don't know if it was.

Speaker 5 (35:25):
Like a mental hospital where you worked when you were
eighteen or whatever. I think it's one of those places
that you check in and just kind of decompress and
you go away for a little bit. I think it's
where they have their shrinks and they have all that,
where they have a.

Speaker 6 (35:42):
Lot of people. I mean, that's what I took from it.

Speaker 5 (35:45):
That she was on drugs to help her with her biler.

Speaker 7 (35:50):
She went to the hospital for psychiatric is what she.

Speaker 5 (35:56):
Okay, but I think that there's nothing wrong with seeking help.
And you seeing all of this like, I don't buy it.

Speaker 6 (36:03):
I don't buy it.

Speaker 3 (36:04):
There's nothing wrong with seeking help.

Speaker 6 (36:07):
That's what she did.

Speaker 7 (36:08):
I think there's something wrong with making a story up
to say, I don't think to try and get free
publicity and headlines and sympathy and to make something seem
much worse than it really is. We see celebrities do
this sometimes with their you know, not all but you know,
I'll see a headline that oh, so and so almost
died while filming whatever. No they didn't, that's a that's

(36:30):
a total lie. That didn't happen. They didn't almost die.
They slipped, big deal.

Speaker 3 (36:35):
Uh.

Speaker 7 (36:36):
Or they'll talk about, oh, I was such an addict
and I was this and that and blah blah blah.
It makes a dramatic story. It's it's not true. So
I'm supposed to believe this is true?

Speaker 3 (36:47):
Is that right? Yes?

Speaker 7 (36:48):
And if so, I have to wait, hold on, I
have to take Lady Gaga her word.

Speaker 3 (36:52):
Is that right?

Speaker 9 (36:53):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (36:54):
Okay?

Speaker 7 (36:54):
So she had to cancel her tour, this Joanne World
Tour because she checked into a mental hospital because she
needed a break, she had a psychiatric break. And I
take her at her I just one last time. I'm
supposed to take her at her word, Okay, So why
don't I take her at her word. When she canceled
this tour and she said that she had to cancel

(37:16):
this because her medical team is supporting the decision for
her to recover at home due to her severe pain
related to fibromyalgia. Now that's in her own words. When
she canceled the tour and her team said this, she
said this, She posted this. Live Nation posted this. The

(37:39):
concert promoter that because of her severe pain, she was
unable to continue. Live Nation says, unfortunately lateat Lady Gaga
is suffering from severe pain that has impacted her ability
to perform live it.

Speaker 3 (37:52):
Is so I don't, okay, but hold on.

Speaker 7 (37:56):
So the idea that she's suffering from severe pain due
to her fibromyalge at what she said at the time.
I'm not supposed to believe that anymore. I'm supposed to
believe what she says now is that.

Speaker 3 (38:07):
It's not right.

Speaker 6 (38:08):
So it's all of it.

Speaker 5 (38:09):
She was in horrible pain, she has health issues, she
has mental health issues, she has PTSD. All of it
was crashing, she has obligations, she couldn't keep up with.

Speaker 6 (38:18):
It was all too much.

Speaker 5 (38:19):
All of that piled on and that's when she had
this episode. And said I'm done, I'm checking out. I'm
going to get help. And if it made her a
better person, and this story can help anyone else out there,
who are you to say, I'm not buying it's.

Speaker 3 (38:34):
I just don't buy it.

Speaker 6 (38:35):
It just makes you sound like an ass.

Speaker 3 (38:37):
I I just don't buy it. I'm skeptical.

Speaker 7 (38:39):
Big E says, why does Rover find it hard to
believe that a bipolar checked into a mental hospital. Maybe
it wasn't leaked because that would be a clear violation
of HIPPA And maybe it's not worth someone risking their
job to leak it. Have you ever checked out TMZ before?
Have you ever seen that? Yeah, people are leaking stuff
all the time. The biggest pop star in the world

(39:01):
checks into your mental hospital, we're just going to get around.
Do you think she's going to get What about other
patients that are in the mental hospital when they get
out or they tell they tell somebody that's not a
hip of violation for a patient to go. You know
who's here, Lady Gagat. They tell that to their brother,
who then goes to TMZ goes Lady.

Speaker 3 (39:18):
Gag got checked into the same mental hospital as my brother.
So it's ridiculous to think that that happened.

Speaker 6 (39:24):
You're so annoying.

Speaker 5 (39:25):
I'm sure that there are special treatments that these people get.

Speaker 9 (39:29):
Yeah, she's going to a ritzy, fancy place where everybody's fancy.

Speaker 6 (39:33):
Yeah, this isn't.

Speaker 3 (39:34):
So she's like, no big.

Speaker 5 (39:35):
Deal there in it's not. Maybe I think I don't
live a life that you'll never ever even get a
glimpse of. And they have things, protocols put into place
where they can have this mental breakdown and no one.

Speaker 6 (39:55):
Knows about it.

Speaker 1 (39:56):
Mmmm.

Speaker 7 (39:58):
Okay the top secret mental official where everyone's lips are
sealed and if they leak, they're killed.

Speaker 3 (40:03):
Okay, all right.

Speaker 7 (40:08):
I saw we were talking about we were talking about
flying recently, and I saw a story that Delta Airlines
had to apologize to somebody. Somebody was sitting in an
emergency exit row. And you know how, like, you guys
ever sit in the emergency exit row? Do you try

(40:28):
emergency exit row? You've never sent in the emergency exit row? Jeffrey, Well, no,
people do it because it has more leg room, significantly
more leg room than the other seats back there. And
when you sit in the emergency exit row, they ask
they make a whole show of it. They ask are
you able and willing to assist in case of an emergency?

(40:52):
And then they point at you and you have to
verbally say yes, And then they point to the person
next to you and they have to say yes. And
they go to everybody sitting in the emergency exit row
that they are willing and able to assist the crew
in the case of an emergency. Well, Delta Airlines had
to apologize to somebody who was sitting in an emergency

(41:15):
exit row. This is a former marine who has two
prosthetic legs. He stepped on an ied back in I
don't know if it is Afghanistan, al Ireq or whatever,
but he stepped on an ied and it blew off
his legs. So now he has here's a picture of
him as a young man when this probably shortly after

(41:38):
this happened, he now has like those It's not like
that's not a blade runner thing, but it is sort
of like, I don't know, he's got a thing that
attaches to like the knee, and then below there he
has I don't know what the foot area looks like exactly,
but yeah, if it's a blade or whatever.

Speaker 3 (41:57):
But so he was sitting in the emergency exit row there.

Speaker 7 (42:02):
And they came to him, and the flight attennat goes, now,
you have to move, and then the captain he's like,
what do you mean I have to move? And the
captain came out and he goes, yep, you gotta move.
Can't be sitting in this emergency exit row with those
two with those two prosthetic legs. So he got up,
he moved to a different seat, uneventfully, he didn't put

(42:26):
up a big stink about it or anything.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
A few days later, Delta apologized.

Speaker 7 (42:31):
I don't know, maybe he tweeted, who knows, he probably
tweeted about it or something, but whatever, Delta reached out
to him and they apologized and they go, you know what,
that's wrong. That's not our policy. You should have been
allowed to sit in the emergency exit row. There's nothing
that prohibits people with prosthetic legs from sitting in.

Speaker 3 (42:47):
The emergency exit row.

Speaker 7 (42:49):
So they refunded his ticket and they gave him an
additional credit on Delta, but that didn't stop him from suing.
So he's now suing Delta Airlines for the you know,
the pain, the humiliation or whatever that he claims was
caused by this. Do you think that it's first of all,
even going through look around in the emergency exit row.

(43:11):
If you ever sit there on a plane, none of
those people, including me, and when I sit in an
emergency exit row, none of us are doing anything.

Speaker 3 (43:18):
Nobody we're not springing into action. Now.

Speaker 7 (43:21):
You could say whatever you want, but that plane goes down,
I'm crapping my pants just like everybody else, and I'm
pushing people out of the way to try and get
off the plane.

Speaker 3 (43:30):
And frankly, you would have it.

Speaker 7 (43:31):
You know, you could look at it as many times
you look at that airplane door and they're like, oh,
pop this handle off, pull this down, do this, do that.
You can look at it as much, but you've never
done it. And then you're to just do that out
of the blue and figure out how to get that
door off and throw that door out and the slide
comes down.

Speaker 3 (43:50):
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (43:50):
Anything's possible. I suppose, but I won't count on it.
So I think they should get rid of that requirement.
I think it's sort of a ridiculous requirement. Maybe they
should require if somebody is like a big lump and
they're going to block the emergency exit you know, like
a four hundred pound guy sitting there. Yeah, maybe you're
not allowed to sit in the emergency exit row. But

(44:11):
this whole thing about being able bodied and you have
to be with you knows, It's just when has that
ever happened, that the history of plane crashes, that it
really became a factor.

Speaker 3 (44:23):
I don't know. Maybe it has, but I don't.

Speaker 7 (44:26):
Do you think that they should have allowed this guy
to sit in the emergency exit row or kicked him out?

Speaker 3 (44:30):
What do you think?

Speaker 5 (44:31):
I don't think they should have kicked him out. I
think he's well more able bodied than me. Like I
got kicked out because I couldn't lift my suitcase up
above and somebody had to help me and they saw
that and they're like, you're out, So that should I
sue them because I'm not strong? They because I'm a woman.

(44:53):
I mean, I don't know why. Because I couldn't lift
a thing doesn't mean I couldn't help in a time
of crisis.

Speaker 3 (44:59):
Well, yeah, does What are you going to do in
a time of crisis?

Speaker 7 (45:02):
If you're not strong enough to lift your little carry
on bag into the overhead bin?

Speaker 3 (45:06):
What do you? How are you?

Speaker 7 (45:08):
What are you going to do in a time of crisis,
You're going to be impeded, not help.

Speaker 5 (45:11):
No, I had a lot of snacks in that thing,
so that's why so heavy.

Speaker 6 (45:14):
I just tell the guy next.

Speaker 3 (45:15):
Are you loading up?

Speaker 7 (45:16):
What are you loading into your carry on bag that
you can't lift it up?

Speaker 5 (45:21):
I packed everything in there, so I mean, that's neither
here nor there, my man. I'm just saying no, it
just I put everything in there. But you shouldn't kick
me out because I can't lift that up.

Speaker 3 (45:35):
That is a rule. I've seen them do that before.

Speaker 7 (45:37):
I saw a little old lady who had to really
struggle because she asked, She's like, oh, can you help
me put this bag up? And the flight attendant was like, no,
you have to put that up there yourself. I mean,
this little old lady had the really struggle. Her husband
was not allowed to help her. What and yeah, and
otherwise she would have had to move seats, so she

(45:58):
had to. I mean it took her like thirty seconds
to get this thing up and over her head and
into that overhead been And she was not happy with
that flight attendant, but he said it's a requirement otherwise
otherwise you have to sit somewhere else.

Speaker 2 (46:12):
I will sometimes underestimate the weight of those overwing hatchet
escape hatches too, that are on the.

Speaker 3 (46:17):
Side of the fi's lodge that or over the wing.

Speaker 2 (46:19):
Yeah, some people, Yeah, they have to be able to
lift those damn things to the underestimate their weight.

Speaker 7 (46:24):
You have to figure out how to get it off
in the first place, right, And nobody's ever done that.

Speaker 3 (46:29):
Like I think, and yet it rose.

Speaker 2 (46:30):
There's an additional instruction card how to operate that particular
type of exit. I took the regular you know, safety card.
There's an additional safety card for the for those overwing
exit hatches.

Speaker 5 (46:44):
It.

Speaker 7 (46:44):
I took an uber a few weeks ago, and I'm
in the backseat of this uber. I forget what kind
of car it was, and we pull up to where
I'm getting out, and I I go, how do I
even open this door?

Speaker 5 (46:55):
Like?

Speaker 7 (46:56):
Where is it? Where's the handle to even pull? I
think it was like a button. Maybe it was like
a Tesla or something, but I mean it took me
ten seconds to figure out how to open up the
door to get out of that.

Speaker 3 (47:06):
And that's a car. Imagine on a plane or are
you gonna say schnitz Oh?

Speaker 9 (47:09):
I said, in all honesty, this guy got kicked off,
didn't really need the extra leg room.

Speaker 7 (47:13):
So but I'm really so you're saying he could just
take his legs off, put those in the overhead been anyway. See, Yeah,
I'll come out, yeah, economy basic or whatever.

Speaker 3 (47:26):
Okay, uh, I've got to take a break.

Speaker 7 (47:28):
Eight sixty six yo ro over eight six six nine
six seven six eighty three seven will be right back
with the shoozy the news next.

Speaker 3 (47:34):
Hang on
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Ruthie's Table 4

Ruthie's Table 4

For more than 30 years The River Cafe in London, has been the home-from-home of artists, architects, designers, actors, collectors, writers, activists, and politicians. Michael Caine, Glenn Close, JJ Abrams, Steve McQueen, Victoria and David Beckham, and Lily Allen, are just some of the people who love to call The River Cafe home. On River Cafe Table 4, Rogers sits down with her customers—who have become friends—to talk about food memories. Table 4 explores how food impacts every aspect of our lives. “Foods is politics, food is cultural, food is how you express love, food is about your heritage, it defines who you and who you want to be,” says Rogers. Each week, Rogers invites her guest to reminisce about family suppers and first dates, what they cook, how they eat when performing, the restaurants they choose, and what food they seek when they need comfort. And to punctuate each episode of Table 4, guests such as Ralph Fiennes, Emily Blunt, and Alfonso Cuarón, read their favourite recipe from one of the best-selling River Cafe cookbooks. Table 4 itself, is situated near The River Cafe’s open kitchen, close to the bright pink wood-fired oven and next to the glossy yellow pass, where Ruthie oversees the restaurant. You are invited to take a seat at this intimate table and join the conversation. For more information, recipes, and ingredients, go to https://shoptherivercafe.co.uk/ Web: https://rivercafe.co.uk/ Instagram: www.instagram.com/therivercafelondon/ Facebook: https://en-gb.facebook.com/therivercafelondon/ For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iheartradio app, apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

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