Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
This is Rover's Morning Glory. Rover, there are laws against us, Charlie.
I'm warned at you for sure. Band Jeffrey, please screaming
on Roverradio dot Com Rovers Morning Glory Stars Now.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
Good morning, what's happening?
Speaker 3 (00:56):
It is Thursday, October second, twenty twenty five. Good morning,
gets Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 4 (01:02):
I'm Rover.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
Dougie is here, Good morning, sir, Charlie is here. Hi,
Sitser is here. Hey man Crystal is here. Hello. And
mister Jeffrey Allen Laroque 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 six seven six
(01:24):
eight three seven. That's how you reach the show. Give
us a call at that number. You can text us
at that number that comes into the studio in real time.
What's the best way to give us a call? Eight
sixty six nine six seven six eight three seven. Well,
it's your email here in just a moment, we have
a lot to discuss this morning. Starting to get a
little bit cooler out there, isn't it? No? No, it
(01:48):
is eighty uh at night, it's getting cold. I was
out last night walking the cat around. It was a little,
a little cold this morning. You don't think it's colder
in the morning.
Speaker 5 (01:59):
Fifty Yeah, it was sixty four when I checked the
temperature when I got up this morning, it was twenty
four degrees. So I figure i'd had to break out
the the jeans in the long sleeve this morning.
Speaker 6 (02:09):
My car, uh a newer car, least, Yes, when I
turn it on, Yes, if it's a certain temperature, whatever
this threshold is, I think under sixty heated steering wheel. Oh,
that's how I know that it's cold. Bourgeois, I go there.
I didn't even know. I didn't know what it even
came with that. So that's how I know that it's chili.
(02:32):
So your chauffeur.
Speaker 3 (02:33):
Has warm hands as he drives you around there, fancy.
Speaker 6 (02:37):
Pins, sandpain's got to stay on ice.
Speaker 3 (02:40):
On the back, of course, that's nice. That's how I
know that it is cold. I'll tell you it is cold, man.
I always have the heated seat on and the heated
steering wheel on. I don't care if it's summertime. Man,
I'm driving around with that on. Oh yeah, I turn
I turn it off immediately. I go, this sucks. I
just feel definitely on the ass. I don't want to
(03:02):
heat it seat ever, I haven't tried my ar menu
truck yet. The I don't like the I know, I'm
sure a lot of people do like it. The I
have a cooling seat as well. It has little vented
seats that it blows cool air right through there, and
I don't like that. I don't like that feeling. It's
just too too cold on my ass.
Speaker 7 (03:24):
I just I didn't even know that was a feature. Yeah,
I don't, And I don't know how well.
Speaker 3 (03:29):
I mean, it works to some extent, it doesn't just
I guess if it was like really really hot, but
you kind of already have the air conditioning on already,
so you know, if you were driving around with no
air conditioning, maybe you have that cooling seat on. Other
than that, I don't really see much of a point
for it.
Speaker 5 (03:45):
But now I know my car is old because my
car has neither of those features.
Speaker 3 (03:50):
But at least it has a good heater though, and
tire pressure sensors. Don't forget about that. You have those, Yeah, well,
at least my car runs. So yeah, about the a
five hundred dollars radio right whatever, And it has character.
You want to know why? Why does it have character?
(04:12):
Because it has a busted windshield? Yeah, so look, it's
a win win, win, triple win for you. Let's see
currently forty degrees in Rochester, New York according to skimmity JLR,
but Zig is down at West Palm Beach currently seventy
four there. It is six oh six here on rovers morning, glory.
(04:34):
That's the time in TEMP. Let me get to some
email real quick. Is that still a number you can call?
Time and temp?
Speaker 8 (04:43):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (04:43):
Wow?
Speaker 3 (04:44):
Do you know what was the number for time in TEMP? Here?
Speaker 8 (04:46):
Right?
Speaker 4 (04:48):
One?
Speaker 3 (04:49):
That's that's info. You're right, it was one of those things,
though mine. I think in Las Vegas I think it
was one one eight. I think is that? I think
I could be completely making that up. I don't know.
It's something obviously, but I don't I don't think so.
I who would ever use that right exactly as we
(05:15):
used to? That's the key term, who would ever use
that as in today? I don't know if it's because
if you're going to call that number, what are you
likely to call it? On your phone? Most people are
using a cell phone which has a clock built into it,
and the weather's using a landline. Do she's frantically searching
(05:36):
AI for the time intent number. Ohiolands are still dialing
up the weather. Yeah, yeah, this is last year. So
I guess if you're a thousand years old, you're still
on a phone. Yea, on a regular phone. Yeah, it's
still the same people who are using AOL dial up,
which I think she probably has in the shoosy. I
think they just ended that yesterday or the day before.
(05:57):
It's done. No more AOL. Let's see here, Roy rights Charlie. Oh,
this one's just for Charlie and he's going to be
so thankful Roy that you sent this in Stream sports
for free at the TV app dot t o. Oh. Yeah,
(06:19):
don't click on subscribe though, Don't do that.
Speaker 6 (06:21):
Don't fifty pop ups to the anime, porn or anything.
Speaker 3 (06:25):
Don't actually click that. Watch it on your phone or
cast to your TV. Sometimes it gets busy and it
says it's for subscribers only. That's the draw.
Speaker 6 (06:36):
So you just got to click at a bunch of times.
That sounds fun. That's a good experience.
Speaker 3 (06:39):
Thank you. Ryan says, I have discovered an amazing JLR lie.
I was listening to the after aftermath replay today, JLR
was discussing mules that says MAM's I don't know. I
think this guy maybe means mam is a caller. Oh
(07:01):
ma'am's dry spell and when she mentioned hers, JLR quickly
rebuttled with my dry spell has been since Germany. He
screws that light up all the time. When JLR is
not given enough time to remember how Tammy Snake controlled
his brain and told him to say he banged Mary
(07:23):
Elizabeth at her house, clearly he states the truth. Evidence
can be found at twenty six thirteen on Today's Aftermath.
If you'd like to hear that yourself, going twenty six
minutes thirteen seconds into yesterday's aftermath. If you're an RMG
plus subscriber, and if you're not an RMG plus subscriber,
sign up at roverradio dot com so you can go
(07:43):
back into the aftermath archives, Friday Leftover Archives, RMG TV archives.
How do you explain that, Jeffrey, I don't know. Well,
I think if you screwed your wife at Tammy Snake's
house like you claimed, which was very obviously made up,
(08:06):
lie whatever, somehow, I'm not I don't even why did
you even come up with that lie, like, I don't
even understand that.
Speaker 5 (08:14):
Why would because I forgot to bring that up that yes,
it actually have been to try to help break my
dry spell. But since then I'm still on a dry spell.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
So but if you just had sex with your wife
a year or two ago, you wouldn't you wouldn't forget
about that and go back to twenty nineteen.
Speaker 5 (08:34):
Maybe I know it might be come down with some
kind of version of dementia or the onset of Alzheimer's
disease rover.
Speaker 3 (08:40):
Because I am getting old?
Speaker 4 (08:41):
Uh is Vergin version a version.
Speaker 3 (08:45):
In Oldheimer's disease?
Speaker 8 (08:46):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (08:47):
Yeah, So okay, I'm I'm quickly approached.
Speaker 5 (08:49):
I'm not too far behind you, my friend old, So
not too far behind yourself.
Speaker 3 (08:57):
Kirk rights first, this is about Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman. First,
Nicole Kidman, at fifty eight is still smoking hot. He says,
Tell Dougie, you don't grow apart when you've been together
twenty years, you choose to part ways. I'm going on
thirty seven years of marriage. It's imperfect, like every marriage,
(09:20):
but you both have to choose commitment over self. That's
why she will always be single. She's way past the
bang the barn doors off age. Unlike Crystal, I wouldn't
want to be with a chronic complainer like Dougie. Awesome yesterday,
she basically said Rover's morning glory is made by her.
(09:43):
She should know the grass is not always greener on
the other side of the fence by now. Oh, I
don't know what all that means to.
Speaker 8 (09:51):
Greener?
Speaker 3 (09:53):
Uh huh. Now, speaking of Dougie, and remember, I thought
that I saw something in her phone that said something
main man a context, you're showing me something on her
phone and it was a text message being sent to
her by somebody, and it said something. I Maybe I
was wrong about that, but that's what I thought that
(10:15):
it said something main Man. Now I don't have the
email here because they asked not for it to be
read publicly. Oh yeah, but I have a spy, and
this spy claims it's a woman, claims that they drive
by Dougie's house every day every day, and that they've
(10:38):
noticed a suspicious vehicle in front of Doujie's house every day.
Very smart spy, and that they have considered that Dougie
might have some a boyfriend there, and that they have
been always looking and trying to see if they can
(10:59):
catch a glance gimps of the person who comes in
or out. It's always the same vehicle in or out
of that vehicle. And so, Dougie, we have we have
spies all over keeping tabs on you. Now I think there, now,
there's there's an interesting theory here. Dougie is going to say,
(11:22):
that's not my main man, I said a few weeks ago,
and I think maybe our spy might have missed this show. Uh.
She said something about her neighbors parking in front of
her house over and over and over again, and it
was driving her crazy. Now do you think, Charlie, that
(11:46):
that could have been a subtle roof roofs? Is that
how you say, Jeffrey, that's correct? Two drum up doubts
about this that she realized, Uh huh, ma, man is
coming here and parking every day. Somebody's going to pick
up on this sometime in the future. Let me get
(12:08):
out ahead of that and concoct a story that my
neighbor is inexplicably parking in front of my household. I'm
long about the psycho driving back and forth in front
of she's house. I'm more concerned about that. You know
the psycho, Charlie. I do, Yes, you do. Who is it?
I'm not going to tell you. They asked to remain anonymous.
(12:31):
How do I know them? I I'm assuming through the
show that you've known them for many years. You know
this spy as well? A girl? That's correct, and I
(12:52):
I mean she's not off the main streets. This person's
taking an extra turn to toe now you can see
right off the main street. I don't think she's taking
an I sound like she's taking an actually taken observe
this from it a little weird from the main store.
Or maybe maybe she is driving by every day. Perhaps
I don't know. So do you think Dougie is smart
enough to know?
Speaker 6 (13:13):
I think the listener probably is stupid and missed that
Tugi got a free rubicon.
Speaker 3 (13:17):
Oh she's gonna be I don't know who is this first? Wellhy,
I think that this spy is very smart and keep
up the legwork on the ground. Your are eyes and
ears in Ducie's neighborhood. So who's a track car? Is
it in Doc's driveway?
Speaker 9 (13:39):
No?
Speaker 3 (13:39):
I think it's in front. I don't know. I'd have
to go back. They didn't want me to read to
forward the email or read the email publicly. They want
to remain anonymous because they know how vindictive Doo she
can be. You know, they don't want to They don't
want to get on her bad side. Joe says, Charlie
is being hippocrat. Doesn't he use AI to redecorate and
(14:03):
get ideas for his house and rooms? Where is the
fun and that creative process? Why not hire an interior
designer if you're worried about people losing their jobs to
AI total hypocrite.
Speaker 6 (14:18):
Well, mine's different because I already know what I wanted
to look like. I said, I say, hey, what would
it looked like with butcher block? Before I do all
the work of physically me putting butcher block countertops in,
which is going to be not AI doing it, I
just want to get a visual representation of it, So
I don't see anything wrong with that.
Speaker 3 (14:36):
Oh, you could have hired a graphic designer or an
artist or something to sketch that up for you, so
you could say, but it's not how you put them
out of But I wasn't ever going to put them
in the unemployment line with your AI use. I guess
so did you put the butcher block countertops in yet? No?
Why not? Too much? You got too many other things
(14:57):
on your plate. So the treble my work. It took offensive,
is it? Yeah? You gotta start. I gotta do the
floor too, So this is just like you doing a
whole kitchen remodel.
Speaker 6 (15:07):
Eventually, Yeah, I want to, but it's gonna be a
lot of work, and so I have to just visually
before I start. I want to go to, oh, what
would this look like if my cabinets were green? Or
what would they look like if they're a cream? And
I was never going to hire a graphic designer anyways.
It's not like I'm not choosing one over the other.
(15:27):
I was literally never going to do that. If anything,
I was going to go in a photoshop and sit
there and do it. But it's easier. I don't see anything.
It's not general.
Speaker 3 (15:36):
I don't think it's I'm not saying create me a
room and then I just walk into the room. It's
me doing the work. Terrible example. Off right, Rover. I
just wanted to clear up the name discussion between Junior
and the second Oh, I guess we were talking about
(15:57):
this yesterday. What makes somebody a junior, what makes them
the second. I have the same name as my father,
and I am the second. That's the way it is
on my birth certificate. My parents did this so I
wasn't called junior. I have no kids. It's up to
the parents. There is no rule, except I think there
is a rule. I read the rule yesterday. Kelly writes,
(16:23):
good morning, Rover. I never knew the thing about the
second or the third. But my ex named our second
son after his brother, and his name is Jack Stanley,
so there's no second or anything. But now would he
be the second? Also sorry about the sloppy writing. I'm
at work listening to you. Well, Kelly, no no problem
(16:43):
with that. If it was the same first, middle, and
last name, then sure they would be the second if
they're not named after the father. If they're named after
the father with the same first, middle, last name, then
they would be junior. Jody writes, oh Lazer said email
(17:04):
Dougie about your main man. You guys are always giving
Dougie a hard time about being dumb, but this week
I think you all are the dumb ones. She said
she got a message from her main man. My first
reaction is that it's an abbreviation her main tenants man.
Speaker 10 (17:23):
Duh hmmm, he's doing maintenance. Uh huh pipefitter tell me huh.
Speaker 3 (17:40):
Yeah, I could have misread that. I don't think so
it really bothers you, though it does doesn't bother me.
You always say I have nothing to hide. Look at
my phone.
Speaker 8 (17:53):
I don't have anything to hide.
Speaker 3 (17:58):
It is getting the name I'm right or wrong. It
must mean I'm getting it right. Otherwise she would say, no,
I actually don't think there's take any opportunity to tell
me that I'm wrong. Well, I don't think there is
the main man.
Speaker 6 (18:11):
I think that she thinks it's upsetting you, so now
she's not going to tell you.
Speaker 3 (18:18):
Is that true? I don't know. Yeah, maybe it's her hairdresser.
Speaker 8 (18:25):
Oh may my hairdressing Candy.
Speaker 3 (18:32):
I would like to know that. Okay, candies, nuts fit
in your mouth? No, nuts can't fit in my mouth.
Sarah Rights, Hello, crew, I've been meaning to email for
a few weeks, but I keep forgetting to do it
when I have time. I went to Octoberfest to meet Dougie,
and I have to say she is so nice. She
(18:56):
came out and she took pictures and she was so friendly.
I'm attaching a photo and my sweatshirt will give you
an indication of how long I've been listening. Well, let's see.
Let me look here. Oh, yes, there is do she
wearing an october Fest kind of looking hat, I guess.
And then this woman in an RMG sweatshirt from many,
(19:20):
many years ago. I'm writing today to suggest myself as
a contestant for the are you Dumber than Dougie contest?
I really think I can make her feel good about herself.
I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm a smart person.
But I'll give you an example. When I was at Oktoberfest,
the guy that guided me to a parking space said
(19:42):
you must really like pink. As I pulled away with
my pink fuzzied ice steering wheel and seat covers, I
looked at my husband and said, this isn't pink. It's
Olivia Rodrigo. Anyways, I love you all, and keep me
in mind for the contest. Okay, so she missed an
obvious for difference to a color. She thought that the
guy was talking about the song that was on her radio.
(20:04):
So she might be just as stupid as Doude. Oh
she's sweet. Tom Dumb Dumb. Jessica says, I just wanted
to say I had the pleasure of meeting Doogey at
my job on Wednesday yesterday.
Speaker 8 (20:21):
I matter.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
Looked like a meeting, so I didn't want to disturb her.
But when when she left, I said I was a
big fan and that I watched and listened daily. She
was so kind, Thank you for being you. I love
the show. What kind of what did you have? What
kind of meeting did you have yesterday? Dude?
Speaker 8 (20:40):
Here?
Speaker 3 (20:41):
Oh a job interview? Oh blaz okay, so see you
think there was He's nice, yess I gay she's gonna
end up taking your job though. I take you right
to the curb I met her.
Speaker 8 (20:51):
It's a restaurant that you've been to, kind of think
Jake Jake's on the Lake, Jake on the Lake. Jake's
on the Lake's restaurant out where I live. And uh,
it's a really cool place. It's a house right on
the road, turned it into a restaurant. Anyway, she works out,
she's a What.
Speaker 3 (21:11):
Kind of meeting were you having? Was your main man there?
Speaker 8 (21:14):
Yes, my two main men from avon Lake Chrysler dodged
Scott and Elliott.
Speaker 3 (21:22):
Oh my two made men. She emailed this in herself.
Speaker 8 (21:26):
To a Scott and Elliott just to.
Speaker 3 (21:30):
Be a talks talk slot and Rachel in sales talk slot.
Think a talk slot. Worse meeting to be And how
many people must have walked try that restaurant, I know yep,
and the cackling energy and Rachel and.
Speaker 8 (21:48):
Sales they were eating, they were talking writing notes.
Speaker 3 (21:51):
Car listened. No, no, I still have my car? What car?
I still have.
Speaker 8 (21:56):
My my cheap sport, cheap sport? Yeah, I treated did
the rubicon?
Speaker 3 (22:01):
Now I have this sport. I did see Dougie, I believe.
I parked next to Dougie today and I was looking like,
what is this on her car? Is just like a
like a white sort of like flower or leaf or
something on the on the car there, and I think
it was your car. Maybe it wasn't. It looks like
(22:22):
a big thing of paint is scraped off the side
of your car. There is that? Is that yours? Or
to your left? That's correct?
Speaker 8 (22:30):
Yeah, the grand cherokey. That's right, my paint. Did bird
crap on a passenger?
Speaker 3 (22:37):
It's not because I touched it, Because I'm like, is
that a leaf or what is then I touched to
touch it.
Speaker 8 (22:41):
Don't touch it.
Speaker 3 (22:42):
Because I wanted to see if it rubbed off. But
it didn't rub off. Its looks like the pink got
something happened there. I don't know. I can't explain it.
I didn't spend a lot of time looking at it,
so maybe I'm wrong. Why don't you smell my finger?
Speaker 8 (22:58):
Lick it?
Speaker 3 (22:59):
Pull all right, knock it off? What do you think? Jeffrey?
Speaker 8 (23:05):
Oh, I know.
Speaker 5 (23:06):
This is that I came in like Dougi had already parked.
I was coming around, and I said, and I looked
at the way she park and I'm like, oh my god,
she actually parked normal.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
Oh okay, I mean.
Speaker 5 (23:18):
That's a that's the first long time I've seen her
actually parked normal. Who pays more attention to what Doogi's
up to?
Speaker 3 (23:25):
The spy that is giving me updates is to the
vehicles outside Doosy's house or Jeffrey paying attention to the
way she parks every day? Well, people pay attention to
the way I park. Always cares how you park. Never
never I knew a car you have. Yeah, I could.
Speaker 8 (23:42):
I only hear a car coming down the street, and.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
Otherwise I don't. It's your thing. Your thing, Yeah, talent rights,
you're over. Jeffrey now says that his current apartment is
bed bug free. The apartment is clean, the family's closed
is in tots. They have enough closet space for Jeffrey
to hang up his shirts. The bedrooms are all the
right size. Jeffrey can afford the rent. The apartment is
(24:07):
in Lakewood, where he wants to live. And therefore, if
all of that is true, why should Jeffrey move. All
he has to do is keep the apartment clean like
it is now? All right? Why the rush to move?
Speaker 5 (24:23):
You guys were kind of like rushing bean move, but
we no. I'm just saying, you guys were made a suggestion.
Speaker 3 (24:31):
I didn't somebody did. I'm not gonna throw anybody under
the bus. You can't. It was me. I'm telling you
to move. I don't. Yes, guy, that's helping you the most.
You're not throwing me under the bus. I don't. He
just forget. You need to get out of that place.
It was a former meth lab. There's a million reasons
to not live there. It is covered in bed bugs frequently,
(24:51):
So I think you need to move.
Speaker 5 (24:55):
Yeah, well that's that's still that's still a work in progress.
But but in the meantime, I'm doing word, my wife
and I we're all doing our best to keep the
place clean. So wait, when we do our laundry, we
come home, I sort it between his laundry my laundry,
and we fold.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
It and put the stuff in dressers. Does he move
by the end of the year. No, No, such little
effort as being put in to find a place in.
Speaker 11 (25:20):
The place that we've looked at didn't exactly, you know,
That's what that's That's why I've said the book like
I don't know, call like ten places, ten places, just one,
and then you bang them all out, boom boom, boom boom.
Speaker 6 (25:31):
Just one a week, and then the week of he
shows up and goes, oh, there's this place as carpet.
What you can tell from the pictures if we look
at the picture and be able to know. So then
we got to wait a week and I'll call another place.
They got to wait for them, then schedule the appointment.
So there's generally go about what two weeks ten days
to two weeks between each apartment viewing.
Speaker 3 (25:52):
So at this way, you're right, it might be like.
Speaker 5 (25:56):
If I if I really do like to place, then
then they say there's an application, there's a background check
fee and that kind of stuff.
Speaker 3 (26:03):
So that is nothing. Yeah, but you have not gotten
to that. Haven't gotten to that point though, Why don't you? So?
How many how many appointments do you have coming up
at the moment? None. I have made two phone calls.
I was trying to see.
Speaker 5 (26:14):
I made two phone calls the other night, thinking I
was gonna get her like a return call.
Speaker 4 (26:19):
They never got nos yet, so.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
I wonder why you would think that. So then you
call another one. Yeah, that's why you called ten, not two.
And I got and I gotta be carried. I got
to make sure I can afford the rent. That's another thing.
Before you call, look at the rent. Well remember the
last one you just looked at. But they raised the
rent when he got there. Oh, they said nine in
the ad he got there, they said eleven hundred. No, seriously,
(26:42):
so they took a look at him and perhaps a
housing discrimination. No, they said, this guy's got money.
Speaker 5 (26:48):
Ah, they probably see they think they're seeing dollar signs
and they're really and I really don't have dollars signs.
If you will, I have a strict budget for what
I could what I can actually afford for rent and
make sure that all my other expenses are can be
addressed as well.
Speaker 3 (27:03):
I was selling myself short. Danny says, thank you. We
just sent a text message. She says, thank you for
being on an HD two station in Louisville, Kentucky. I
listen every day. He's the only guy, I believe, the
only person that actually listens on one of those HD
(27:23):
side channels. Well, Danny, congratulations, I'm being the one and
only person listening on an HD channel. And most of
the stations were on our just regular radio stations. But
for some reason, and I don't think I've ever quite
understood it. We were on the radio in Louisville, Kentucky,
(27:47):
many years ago, and we were on there for I
don't know, a few years. I guess two years, three years,
I don't recall how long. And we start out. You
start out at the bottom of the barrel. Right when
you come on a new station, nobody knows who you
are in the city. They go, who Doogie, Jeffrey, who
are these idiots? What's going on here? And it takes
(28:09):
people a little while to get up to speed and
to figure out what's going on and to eventually hopefully
enjoy the show. And so that took us a while,
and in Louisville, the ratings kept going up and up
and up. Eventually we tied for number one. Number one
(28:32):
doesn't get any higher than that, does it, Jeffrey, Yeah,
you have to. Well, if you're a tie, you have
to go above. Okay, I guess well it can be.
Speaker 5 (28:43):
So you could you alone and half a soul stand
alone number one?
Speaker 3 (28:47):
Technically all right, maybe there is better than a tie
for number one. But we we craw our way all
the way to number one, at which point iHeart calls
me and says, you know how you're number one? Forget
about that. We're gonna flip this station to a wrap
station or something. Sure, you're doing great, but the rest
(29:08):
of the station is in the toilet. I go, wait
a second, number one, Do you know how goddamn hard
that is to do? They don't care, They go, don't worry,
We're gonna put you on an HD forty two channel. Okay, Well,
we found finally, after all these years, we found the
one guy that listens on the HD. Most people in
(29:32):
Louisville who listened to the show immediately started using the
Rover Radio app or the iHeartRadio app to listen to
the shows to stream it. I applaud this guy for
listening on the HD two station. We're number one on
the HD two station. Oh hold on, Michelle says me too.
(29:52):
I listened to ninety six point five HD two the Fox.
This is low on my mind, blowing my mind. Because
Poppy Chulo says, here in Louisville, we listen to you
on the iHeartRadio app. We're still here over Well, there
(30:13):
are a couple of people there. Huh, why wouldn't they
put you? I mean, I don't know. I don't get it.
I don't understand it. I've never you know, I have looked.
I've thought about that. It's because the people who run
radio stations, not only this company, but all radio stations
are losers. They really aren't. They're losers. This is not
(30:33):
the industry you go into if you're a smart, successful person.
This is an industry you go into when you go
I'm I'm a loser. But I have one thing going
for me. I actually show up to work reliably. That's
good enough. In this industry. You can become the top dog.
If you just show up, you might have to put
(30:55):
some time in over a couple of years, few years, whatever,
but eventually they're going to go. I can't believe this
guy's actually showed up every day when he's supposed to
come into work. That's better than most of the drug
adduled idiots that we have. And you will become a boss.
Are you smart?
Speaker 8 (31:10):
No?
Speaker 4 (31:15):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (31:16):
Peachey Page says, I'm still very salty about them taking
you off the radio in Louisville. I listened every single
morning and then bam, one morning I turn it on
and it's rap music. So Peachy Page, well listen on
that HP two channel if you t bone, says Rover,
it's six thirty three am. Oh my god, I didn't realize.
(31:39):
I'm only surrounded by clocks in here. Ryan says, there
at least twenty people at my job listening to you
right now. I guess in Louisville or wherever. Thank you.
Let me see where was I? Bryan says Rover. Can
you name a job that pays twenty three thousand dollars
(32:01):
per hour? I don't know. I mean there must be something,
some athlete, ceo, somebody, I don't know. I guess in
regards to the Live Nation CEO that wants seventy thousand
dollars for a concert seat. Let's break this down because
I always look at the cost per hour of ski resorts,
(32:21):
and snowboarding is my major hobby. But I spent one
hundred and fifty dollars last months to see Lincoln Park
in Newark and the concert was total ass. Sorry Cory
the board up, but it sucked. Courtside basketball or a
big concert. If we averaged three hours for the event,
that comes out to twenty three thousand dollars an hour,
(32:43):
and the major bands only play for three hours at
their peak, and tickets are usually affordable. The Live Nation
CEO should be Trump's bodyguard, always standing in front of them.
If you catch my drift, the whole stadium has their
phones out posting it on social media. Anyways, there's no
reason why the best seat in the house should cost
any more than six hundred if you want a splurge.
Most people don't make fifty dollars an hour, but let's
(33:04):
assume they did and then double it for a three
hour splurge. I don't understand why these people are paying
these prices to sit there. On their phones. If everybody
stopped handing the guy forty dollars to park in a
gated lot and just park their cars and left the
event after, there'd be nothing they can do. Well, somebody
always wants to you know, Look, it's it's here's my
(33:27):
view on it. Charge what you think people are willing
to pay? If live nation, If that's eeo. We played
a little clip of him yesterday saying that concerts are
wildly underpriced. He says, and then he pointed out to
somebody paying seventy thousand dollars for a courtside seat to
an NBA game, maybe like the NBA Finals or something.
(33:48):
If you want, if you believe you could tree seventy
thousand dollars for a concert ticket, do it. If people
are willing to pay it, that's capitalism, go for it.
Good luck. I've got to take a break. Oh my god,
did you see what time it is?
Speaker 8 (34:04):
Do she?
Speaker 3 (34:04):
I didn't even Oh man, I didn't realize she's in
a shower. Why are you in such a sour mood today?
I'm not, yes, you are?
Speaker 8 (34:12):
What?
Speaker 3 (34:13):
Why are you in a solar mood?
Speaker 8 (34:15):
Nothing?
Speaker 3 (34:15):
What does she shower? Do you guys have any ideas.
Speaker 8 (34:18):
Jesus Christ.
Speaker 12 (34:19):
Nothing, No, I'm God damn it, I'm not sour, Jesus Christ.
Speaker 3 (34:24):
Asking me, see she's sour. I've got to take a break.
We will be right back on Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 13 (34:31):
Hang Ah, somebody at your work complains about our show.
Please relay this message to your HR department. Go self
and your pie, and.
Speaker 3 (34:44):
Also go your mom.
Speaker 13 (34:45):
Now back to Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 3 (35:00):
A lot of Let me just go to one last
female here, because a lot of people actually sent me
emails last night, maybe sent to other people on the show.
But Charlie and I had a very eventful night last
night because we went out to New York to see
(35:21):
the Yankees take on the Red Sox, and we tried
to be incognito, but unfortunately they handed the camera to
the crowd and they caught us Charlie in Yankee Stadium.
Speaker 9 (35:38):
Here.
Speaker 3 (35:40):
Now, I've been taking ozempics, so you'll see I'm a
little bit skinny on this. Charlie though. You know this
smoker that he has, he just can't stop shoving meat
in his face. So and you know, the camera adds
twenty pounds. They say, so, okay, here is the there
(36:03):
it is. There's fat Charlie and ozempic Rover.
Speaker 8 (36:06):
Right, that's awful.
Speaker 5 (36:11):
He speaking of Baseball Guardians one yesterday I was listening
to part of that game at work, and now it's
do or die.
Speaker 3 (36:19):
The series is tied at one apiece. Wasn't it do
or die yesterday as well?
Speaker 5 (36:23):
Yep, yeah, if Detroit was, it was do or die
either way.
Speaker 3 (36:27):
You spin it's.
Speaker 5 (36:29):
It's really now it's do It was do or die
for just for the Guardians. Yes, now it's to die
for both teams.
Speaker 3 (36:35):
That's correct, that's right. This will be the deciding game
Game three today, best of three series. I wass versus Tigers.
Speaker 8 (36:46):
I was driving yesterday listening to the game on the radio.
There was a big play that happened in the guy
in front of me. He starts freaking out in his car.
The windows were down and he was listening to the
same It was cool watching one's like all tuned in
listening to the radio.
Speaker 3 (37:02):
I'm trying to figure out the traffic patterns that they
have here because I had a meeting at the radio
station yesterday. So the game started at one yesterday, is
that right? So I probably got out of here at
about twelve thirty I guess roughly give or take twelve forty.
I don't know exactly. They had so many streets shut down.
(37:25):
There was not a lot of traffic on the streets
because they had it shut down. And what I realized
is once I got on the freeway going south, they
had the freeway shut down, basically down to like one
lane maybe or something. I don't know what they were doing.
They wouldn't maybe they wouldn't let people take that exit
to get down town. I don't know. I couldn't figure
(37:47):
out what they were doing. I have no idea, But
as I was going through all this stuff, I said,
there's got to be a better way, maybe, or maybe
there is some sort of read Maybe there's some sort
of method to the madness. I guess.
Speaker 6 (38:03):
I was down here a couple of days ago, five
and there was willy nilly, no sense was being made.
Speaker 3 (38:09):
Now you're telling me that the traffic plan that they
have doesn't make sense. There was no no, There was
no plan.
Speaker 6 (38:16):
It was just we'll throw a cop into the middle
of the intersection. He will make it up as he
goes along, right, just because it doesn't make sense. What
does one guy want me to do. It's gonna be
too complicated explain. But he basically wanted me to go
through the intersection twice, which would mean I wanted to
take a left turn, and he said no, And he's like,
(38:37):
go up around, take a right, take another right, come
back around, and then come and then basically come back
through that same intersection.
Speaker 3 (38:44):
So you take three right, so you go straight through
the intersection, take it right, right, right, and then another right,
and then you'll come through the intersection going straight. In
my thought process would be, wouldn't you want less people
going through this intersection?
Speaker 6 (38:58):
That's what I personally would think. He did not want.
He did not agree with my thinking there.
Speaker 3 (39:03):
Well, would you have had to try to cut through
traffic because I had to make a left hand turn,
I understand today. And it took me forever because I
had to wait until the traffic so many cars were
coming down. I had to wait and wait and wait
until eventually he got so backed up that then I
could snake my way through and give that hey thanks
as everyone you know, as way after because they're already stopped. Anyways,
(39:25):
I get that no, and he told me I couldn't
do it to traffic. He was standing in front of
the oncoming traffic that would have to turn against Uh,
there's no cars coming.
Speaker 6 (39:33):
Just like I'm saying, I gotta go right there. I'm
saying I gotta go right there, and he goes no,
And I said, why.
Speaker 3 (39:41):
Up straight right on euclid, right on the street, right
on the street, and I just go.
Speaker 6 (39:47):
But it's right there, it's just right. I could just
go right there. And then he just kept screaming that
at me.
Speaker 3 (39:51):
So I see. I think, I said, Charlie has something
about him, his attitude or his look that when a
police officer see you, they just whatever you want, they
want to do the opposite. They want to screw you
over there, and they want to teach this guy a lesson.
It wasn't a lesson. I just I'm gonna you're gonna
see me again.
Speaker 6 (40:11):
It's all the problem is, I'm going to be another
car in this intersection now a second time, just coming
from a different way. And if I would think that,
the plan, in my thought, would be let's get as
many cars out of this intersection as possible instead of
re routing them to come back another time.
Speaker 3 (40:28):
But hey, I'm not I'm not a traffic pattern expert.
I just know that I could have easily made my
left turn, and he wanted nothing to do with that.
He was also mad because he claimed he didn't wave
me forward even though I did. That's that's what really
set him off, as he he did one of these
to me coming for and then uh, then you started
pulling forward and he goes, WHOA, what are you doing?
Speaker 6 (40:51):
And I said, you told me to come forward. No
I didn't, and I was like, you did though, and
then uh, then I tried to make my left turn.
So we were off to a bad start.
Speaker 3 (41:01):
Do you think that if do you think that it's
a look or a vibe that Charlie gives off or
do you think that when he goes, what are you doing?
And Charlie says, you told me to pull forward and
the guy says, no, I didn't, and then Charlie says,
yes he did. Do you think that that's what is
the issue with him? And cops should should you just say, oh,
(41:21):
I'm sorry, my bad, I must have been mistaken. I might.
Speaker 6 (41:25):
I'd have to go back on my dash cam to see.
I'd like to know exactly what I said, because I don't.
I don't know exactly what I said. It's because said,
oh sorry, could we get the him telling you to
come from that? Would that be I'll have to go
to the car to go down and stuff. But uh,
I might have said, oh, sorry about that, and then
(41:47):
he just started yelling.
Speaker 3 (41:50):
Does your dash cam have records? Audio? You have like
a third party dash came.
Speaker 8 (41:54):
Or is it?
Speaker 3 (41:55):
Yeah? The car.
Speaker 6 (41:57):
I'm not sure if it's working though, because I just
was working that day. For sure, I know I saw
it because I said, maybe I'll rewatch this later. But
on the way in today, the screen every time I drive,
the screen is always on, like showing me what it's showing.
Speaker 3 (42:12):
And then today the screen wasn't on.
Speaker 6 (42:14):
Maybe it's it doesn't seem like it needs to be on,
but I like having it on so I can tell
that it's on Verify.
Speaker 3 (42:20):
So I don't know.
Speaker 6 (42:22):
I just got it well two weeks ago, so I
haven't really played around with them much.
Speaker 3 (42:27):
I saw that the Browns have decided that they are
going to bench Joe Flacco and they're putting in Dylan Gabriel,
who they've had in at least two games that I
know of. I'm trying to think of. He's come in
in any of the others, but in at least two
games this season, he's come in at the end because
they were losing so badly that they go, let's why not,
(42:48):
let's get this guy in there for a few reps.
And he is now the he's going to start on
a Sunday against the Vikings. They're going to be in London.
Now the Vikings played. I could be getting this rung,
but I think the Vikings just played in Dublin, Ireland,
(43:09):
and then they're going to stay over there. They're going
to stay in Europe. So they probably left Dublin and
went right to London, get settled in, get used to
the five hour time difference or whatever it is. And
I think that's a real advantage for Minnesota as opposed
to the Browns who have to then fly to London
(43:32):
get you know, it's a long flight. Then you have
to get somewhat acclimated to the time change. I guess
to whatever extent you need to. So I think that
Minnesota has a real advantage here. And we'll see how
this plays out. But they're going to be starting Dylan
Gabriel as the starting quarterback and then Shadure Sanders, who
(43:56):
is not this guy. Remember Deon sanders Son. He was
supposed to be a high first round draft pick. In fact,
some people thought he was going to be the number
one overall pick or you know that was probably unlikely,
maybe like a top five. But he kept dropping and
(44:19):
dropping and dropping. What did he end up going in?
Was it the what round was it? Do you guys
recall I don't even remember fourth or fifth? And everybody
said there was a collusion, right, that was on purpose.
They weren't drafting.
Speaker 6 (44:36):
Who would collude to do that and why would they collude?
I thought that was the accusation. I don't understand it enough,
but that's everybody's saying. This is all the owners getting
together saying we're not going to draft this guy for
some reason.
Speaker 3 (44:46):
No, no, owners. Look, if they believe that a guy
could help them win, they're going to You don't remember
people saying this, I know, but people are stupid. Oh okay,
if a team owner thinks that some nobody is a
good option and can help them win, they're gonna They're
gonna do it. They're gonna take it. They want to win.
It makes them more money in the long run. So
(45:08):
I don't think there was any collusion. I think that
there were for all of these teams that were considering him.
Now I'm not a football expert, but you know, maybe
they had some questions about his his playing ability. But
on top and I don't know whether that's valid or not,
but on top of that, I think that there was
a an impression that he was very flippant and arrogant
(45:32):
when he would come in and do these interviews with
the teams as part of the draft process. You know,
before the draft, that he was very full of himself,
too cocky. Now, maybe maybe that's accurate, maybe it's not.
I don't know if that's a valid opinion. I also
think that part of it is his father is a
(45:54):
very outspoken guy, polarizing figure, and I think that team
considered that they weighed that they go do we want this?
This surely is going to be a distraction and a
thorn in our side oftentimes? Do we want to put
(46:14):
up with this hassle? I think that factored into it.
But anyways, so he was Shadoor Sanders has been the
third string quarterback for the Browns. Now, I guess he's well,
I don't know what happens if Dylan Gabriel goes sideways
on Sunday. They put Sanders in there at that point,
(46:35):
or they put Joe Flacco in. Oh, if they put
Joe in, I have no idea. I don't know.
Speaker 8 (46:39):
That'd be depressing for Sanders, don't you think?
Speaker 3 (46:44):
Yeah? I look, and I think that he has been
I don't know his ability. I don't know anything about
this guy. I know he's been popped for a few
speeding tickets since he got here, but that seems to
I guess everybody on the team has. But you know,
I'm talking like super going super fast? Was he popped
for going over one hundred miles an hour? Or am
I making that up? Who's standers? Yeah? But I do
(47:09):
think that he's sort of been you know, I don't
want to say he's been mistreated. I don't think he's
been mistreated. But one hundred and one miles per hour twice?
I mean, you got one for ninety June fifth, ninety
one miles an hour in a sixty five zone, okay,
and June seventeenth one hundred and one and a sixteen
mile per hour zone.
Speaker 6 (47:28):
What did you get after the first one? Once you
go okay, let me, oh, do you have enough money.
That's the problem with speeding tickets. When you have unlimited
money get a speeding ticket every day, who can?
Speaker 3 (47:37):
Yeah, but it also affects you have a job that
pays you a bunch of money, and it potentially affects
your standing with that team.
Speaker 5 (47:46):
And now that also with multiple Yeah, Charlie did make
the point. Yeah, if you have a lot of money,
he's being to get no problem. But what Charlie has
to remember and I would have to remember as well
as anyone else, that adds points to your license.
Speaker 6 (48:00):
What get somebody to drive you eventually drive as fast
as you want. I mean the problem, that's the problem
with the speeding ticket was if you have enough money,
you just pay it off.
Speaker 3 (48:07):
Who cares? And then you say, oh, it's bad standing
for the Browns. The Browns care about crimes while Miles
keeping and accusation's feeding every you know, month or whatever.
But about Deshaun Watson's stuff, they didn't. They didn't care
about what an incredible waste, what a stupid decision that was,
and an incredible waste of money, and that that what
(48:30):
a debacle that whole thing was. But anyway, so Shader
Sanders got in trouble because maybe a week ago or something,
he said that he was ready to play and start
right now, sort of insinuating like, come on, what's going
on here? And he said that he's capable of doing
(48:50):
better than several current NFL starting quarterbacks, probably meaning Joe
Flacco sort of I mean insinuating that. So I'm sure
they had, uh you know, those comments last week got
some attention for Shador Sanders, not probably in a great way,
(49:12):
and I don't think the Browns were probably too happy
about that. So here's what happened when they asked him.
This is strange. This is what happened when they asked
him about Joe Flackell being bumped down to the number
two spot and Dylan Gabriel becoming the starting quarterback. Here
is they're they're asking it like in the locker room
or wherever this is. Reporters, you can see h Shuld.
(49:36):
If you're watching our MG TV, you'll be able to
see his reaction. If you're listening on the radio, I
don't think you're going to be able to hear his reaction.
And I'll explain that why here in just a second. Now,
they ask a question, let me go back here. What's
(49:57):
doing vocally? They asked question too, he's moving his mouth.
What do you think you got to show show to
the coaches?
Speaker 4 (50:14):
Done can please you that you can?
Speaker 3 (50:19):
So he is basically pretending to speak, but no words
are coming out of his mouth. He's silently speaking, moving
his mouth down. I don't know if lip readers have
been able to decipher what he is saying here, but
that is a strange move, isn't it. Obviously he goes,
I don't want to say any you know, he's thinking,
(50:39):
I don't want to say anything that's going to get
me in trouble here. But just sports reporting is so
dumb by the way, I mean, just a man, what
do you what do you have to do to show
the coaches that you can play? I mean, what, Wow, man,
that's a really great question. I'm glad that. I'm glad
that you really crafted that, really puts time into thinking
(51:01):
that through, and just really really deep thoughtful questions that
they're asking.
Speaker 8 (51:06):
If you're not smart enough to figure out what to
say without getting yourself in trouble, I mean, is there
is he okay mentally?
Speaker 3 (51:16):
You mean it's he okay mentally? What do you mean
by that well.
Speaker 8 (51:19):
I mean, you just saw him whisper and you can't
hear anything he's saying.
Speaker 3 (51:23):
He was just miming, like, mentally is he all there?
I think, yes, yes, I think he's mentally There's not
he said that he is still the third string quarterback
and hasn't been bumped up to the two position.
Speaker 8 (51:39):
Okay, actions speak louder than words like let's go, this
is the time to stop hang around.
Speaker 3 (51:46):
How is he supposed to say let's go? What is
Look he is goofing around here. He's got a big
smile on his face as he does this. Not funny,
but he has obviously been gagged. Nobody would like that,
not being able to speak their mind, I suppose, And
this is a way for him to kind of you know,
I don't want to get in trouble. I guess, so, No,
he's mentally there. It is a weird thing to do. Obviously,
(52:09):
you know, he gets attention. This guy gets a lot
more attention than any third string quarterback in the NFL,
that's for sure. But I guess I just yes, of
course he is what mentally there? Yes, he's mentally there.
It's hilarious. You think it's hilarious.
Speaker 7 (52:29):
Yeah, that's amazing because you know he can't say what
he truly wants to say. I love that he's pretending
and going along with a big smile on his face.
Speaker 3 (52:39):
Bob says he's going to enjoy starting in the Canadian
Football League probably, and Beach says, you're missing a part
of the story where Rex Ryan blasted him last week
for running his mouth and not working hard well.
Speaker 8 (52:53):
And that's the thing is actions you don't need to
run your mouths. It's you're making a mockery of what
the coach is are telling you to do to keep it.
Of course he is, so keep trying to be all
funny and see how that gets you.
Speaker 3 (53:07):
I think that he is frustrated. And look, you know what,
probably when you are when you are playing at this level,
you have to have the belief that you are the
(53:28):
man for the job, that you're the best you have
to You really have to believe that mentally, whether it's
true or not. A big part of it is having
that belief in yourself that winning attitude. I can do
this better than anybody else can, because you can almost
obviously you have to have skill, but the mental component
of it is a big thing, and I would say that,
(53:54):
you know, I don't have any issue with it, And
you know Rex Ryan is not his co so I
don't know what that has to do with anything. But
I think also the coach has probably told him keep
your Yeah, I'm guessing they probably said, hey, listen, you know,
maybe you don't think file back these things that says
you're better than the starting quarterback. You know, maybe maybe
(54:15):
that's not such a great thing called. Then a week
later the starting quarterback is bench. So hey, maybe he's right.
I've got to take a break. Our number is eight
sixty six. You're over eight six six nine sixty seven
six eight three seven. We do have these shizzy coming
up the news. What do you have on the way, Dougie.
Speaker 8 (54:35):
There's some breaking news that happened that we're gonna report about.
And this was overseas outside the UK synagogue something happened.
Speaker 3 (54:44):
Also another that's not going to be a good.
Speaker 8 (54:46):
Thing, another collision to planes collide.
Speaker 3 (54:50):
I'll tell you the story next. We'll be right back
on Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 8 (54:53):
Hang.
Speaker 1 (54:54):
Uh.
Speaker 13 (54:55):
You know when you're driving and you see the person
laughing then screaming in their call, you can bet.
Speaker 3 (55:01):
Your sweet ass.
Speaker 13 (55:02):
They're listening into rovers Morning Glory.
Speaker 3 (55:07):
The Shizzy is coming up in just a moment the news.
What do you have on the way to here?
Speaker 8 (55:11):
Was some breaking news that just happened a couple hours
ago in the UK. I'll tell you what happened and
involved a synagogue, and I'll tell you that story. Also
in the news, we have another incident where jet's collide.
I'll tell you that story as well.
Speaker 3 (55:29):
I'm going to guess that outside of a synagogue a
in the United Kingdom. I don't know the story. I
haven't seen the story. A radical Islamist took a knife
and went on a stabbing spree is going to be
my guest, and I could be entirely wrong, but that's
(55:51):
that's I mean, what else could it possibly be? All Right,
we'll get to that in just a moment. Rich Bitch says,
you don't have to cocky to be a great athlete. Well,
you have to be very sure of yourself, you have
to have the you have to believe it. Yeah, but that's.
Speaker 8 (56:13):
The definition of a great athlete is somebody that does
have the ego and the confidence, yet they don't show
it to everybody. They handle that within and they are like, Okay,
I know I'm great and I'm gonna show you what.
Speaker 3 (56:26):
I'm made of.
Speaker 8 (56:26):
I don't have to be a dick to people and
talk smack about people like a little ribbing whatever, but
you got to be able to keep it all together.
Speaker 3 (56:35):
Well here's I mean. A better way for schud or
Sanders to handle the situation would be to say, look,
I'm ready to play. I'm going to do anything that
the team needs me to do in order for us
to win games, and I'm going to be as supportive
as possible and whatever role they decide. Obviously, of course
I want to be playing. I want to be the
(56:57):
starting quarterback, but every quarterback in this league it's to
be the starting quarterback for their team that includes me.
But I until if and until that time comes, I'm
going to do everything in my power to help this
team win, because that's what the main goal is. See
that would be Wow, you should start writing the speeches
(57:17):
for him.
Speaker 8 (57:17):
Well he just cha, yeah, I'm reading off. I know youkay,
you're not that smart.
Speaker 3 (57:24):
Bob says Shdor. Sanders didn't actually say any words, and
he still said a lot more than Jeffrey has today
and James says, of course Crystal likes that immature behavior.
Why not just say he's ready when the time comes,
be done with him. I wonder why he why this guy?
You think so Crystal enjoys immature behavior? Is that what
(57:47):
this guy is alleging you? You might work on this show? Okay, Yeah,
that's okay, that that does make sense, Dougie, are you
used to say that?
Speaker 5 (57:58):
Yes, Rover, I've said more words than shuldar Standers. Okay,
I don't know if this guy's a ludging and I'm
trying not to talk over Pete here.
Speaker 3 (58:06):
Good stuff. So yep, trying not to talk over to anybody. Yes,
Shadour Standers has not interrupted me today, so that is
another difference between the two of them. All Right, there's you.
Are you ready for the shoes?
Speaker 8 (58:21):
Yes, here we go, Jishozy On Rovers Morning Glory, there
was a major incident that's been declared in Manchester in
the UK after a stabbing and car ramming at a
synagogue with two people dead, had a suspect shot by police. Now,
today is a very holy day for the Jewish community.
(58:42):
It is Yam Kapoor.
Speaker 3 (58:44):
Oh, I know it was just rash Hashana last week.
I don't know what any of the Jewish holidays mean.
I don't know what they are. I've heard of Yam Kapor,
I know a lot of Jewish people. I'm just not
sure what the holidays all mean. But anyhow, Okay, So
this happened in Manchester, England, which is up north. And
(59:08):
so this is the same city where if you'll recall
the bombing at the Ariana Grande concert years ago. Yeah,
so they have certainly, for whatever reason, they've seen their
their fair share of terrorism there in Manchester. So what
happened somebody? Was it more than one guy? Was it
(59:29):
one guy?
Speaker 8 (59:30):
Well, they believe it was one person. Again, this just
happened a couple hours ago, so they're still assessing everything,
but they do confirm police confirm two people were killed
in the attack. They've confirmed two people or the third
person thought to be the offender, is dead. And there
was this stabbing that also happened. They said that that
(59:52):
somebody said there was a bomb, but they did not
find a bomb. Please have not given an update on
what had happened. There was a bomb squad that had
been dispersed, of course, and they said that no explosives
were confirmed on site, and there was a bunch of
video that was being shared on social media showing onlookers
(01:00:12):
claiming he has a bomb. Look, he's got a bomb.
He's going to blow himself up. And they said that
he was trying to press a button. So then there's
a sound of a gunshot and the person falls to
the ground.
Speaker 3 (01:00:24):
One how long it took the cops to get there,
because the cops normally don't carry guns over there, there's
only some cops carry guns, and which is sort of
a weird thing. It's almost it's really hard to even
imagine here in the United States. Imagine if a cop
mentioned a cop trying to tell Charlie to do anything,
(01:00:45):
and the cop doesn't have a gun, Charlie would just
laugh at him.
Speaker 8 (01:00:49):
Well, they said that the mayor of the Greater Manchester area,
Andy Burnham, that they had firearms officers deployed. So they
must have certain office theres that are carrying for your
arms that go assist the other opposit. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
so and that not because I thought they didn't have
guns either, but they said that.
Speaker 3 (01:01:09):
I mean, they do have guns, but they they're not
carrying them. I mean they do they like deploy those guys.
That's what I'm saying. In an incident like this here,
any cop that shows up on scene is immediately going
to take the suspect out there. You have to wait
for the guys to show up. Not that being said,
Maybe this was like right down, maybe it didn't take
(01:01:30):
long to get there or whatever. I don't know, but
all right, go on elsewhere.
Speaker 8 (01:01:35):
Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vatt told House
Republicans yesterday that the Trump administration will start firing federal
employees in the next one to two days because of
the government shutdown. The Senate fails to pass the bill
to fund the government, so we are still shut down.
Speaker 3 (01:01:53):
So this is not furloughing federal employees, which is what
they always do, and a government shut down and then
they say, Okay, we're not going to pay you, but
we'll pay you the bag pay once we get the
government going once again. This is just straight up firing people. Yeah,
and then do they not bring those people back, because
I mean, just a rit to rehire somebody. That's a
(01:02:15):
whole process. It's not a very efficient process, obviously, and
you'll recall that they fired a lot of people dose
went in and fired a lot of people, and then
afterwards they go, oh, wait a second, these people are
in charge of a nuclear safety. Oh yeah, maybe we
need to hire those people back. So I would tread
lightly when it comes to this if I were them.
Speaker 8 (01:02:37):
Go on. There's a New York City Housing Authority building
in the Bronx collapsed yesterday, partially collapsed after an explosion
in the boiler room. There were videos that shows massive
holes in the site of the twenty story building. This
was that two zero five Alexander Avenue in the Mott
Haven section with an entire corner gone. There's a picture.
Speaker 3 (01:02:59):
Oh you can see it from the above that I
thought it was just like some little holes there, but
it's actually an entire Like you said, an entire corner
of the building is gone. Yes, they said.
Speaker 8 (01:03:12):
Up this particular building, the Mitchell Houses complex. It has
about thirty five hundred residents in seventeen over seventeen hundred
units across ten buildings, and it was completed in nineteen
sixty six. And amazingly no injuries or deaths have been report.
Speaker 3 (01:03:29):
So whatever fell there, it wasn't part of like a
somebody's It wasn't like a bedroom or something. It must
have been some sort of mechanical pipes or something going
through the chase.
Speaker 5 (01:03:42):
Something right, because it's amazingly that building is still standing.
Speaker 8 (01:03:46):
Yeah, two Delta jets collided at New York's LaGuardia Airport.
Air Traffic Control says the regional jets, one coming from
Charlotte and the other headed to Richmond, were on a
taxiway yesterday when the right wing one plane collided with
the nose of the other plane. Dozens of people were
on board both planes, but no passengers were injured. Delta
(01:04:07):
says a flight attendant is being treated for a minor injury.
They said in a statement, Delta will work with all
relevant authorities to review what occurred, as safety of our
customers and people comes before all else. They also apologized
to the customers for the experience. AOL has pulled the
(01:04:27):
plug on dial up Internet after decades of service now.
AOL previously confirmed that they would be pulling the plug
yesterday or actually Tuesday, September thirtieth was the official date,
and they said that the routinely they routinely evaluate the
offerings and they had decided to discontinue dial up as
(01:04:50):
well as associated software with the older operating systems from
their plans.
Speaker 3 (01:04:56):
I didn't believe anybody was actually still using AOL dial up.
That blows my mind. And the number I know when
you had done this a few months ago when they
announced that they were going to shut it down, and
the number of people I don't remember what it was,
but it was even higher than I you know, hundreds
of thousands of people or whatever it was it was.
It was way more than I thought. Or maybe it
(01:05:16):
was in the millions, I don't remember, but it was
way more than I had thought that it was going
to be. But oh, what a miserable experience that was
dial up Internet. And I can just remember you'd have
you dial up with your motive and then you'd want
to start downloading something, a piece of software or whatever
(01:05:38):
it was. I'm talking a long time ago, and you're
doing it on dial up, and sometimes it would say
you want to download this thing, It's four megabytes, that's
going to take three days. So then you do. And
what would happen about two days into that, Your mom
would pick up the phone, Hello, Hello, and then the
thing would drop. You didn't have downloads that would resume
(01:06:01):
at the time of the Oh my god, it was
a miserable experience.
Speaker 5 (01:06:05):
In the US the days before broadband rea can use
the Internet and use the phone at the same time.
Speaker 8 (01:06:10):
In the US, according to Census Bureau data, and estimated,
one hundred and sixty three thousand, four hundred and one
households were using dial up alone to get online in
twenty twenty three.
Speaker 3 (01:06:21):
I mean they must have lived in the middle of
nowhere where they didn't have the broadband. Wow. But they
have stuff like Starlink and whatnot now that is available
more in rural areas, but it's probably more expensive.
Speaker 8 (01:06:34):
Entertainment news for you. A thirtieth anniversary Everybody Loves Raymond
special will air on CBS on November twenty fourth. You'll
have Ray Romano, Patricia Heaton, Brad Garrett as well as
the kids appear. One of the boys that was on
the show they were twins, and one of the boys
(01:06:55):
committed suicide back in twenty fifteen.
Speaker 3 (01:06:58):
Oh really with Sawyer.
Speaker 8 (01:06:59):
Yeah, and he obviously won't be on the show. But
obviously the mom Doris Roberts and dad Peter Boyle, they
have passed since all of this. But thirty thirtieth anniversary
special will air, and then we'll end with some sports.
The twenty twenty five Major League Baseball playoffs obviously currently
in the Wildcard Series round, and we have the Dodgers
(01:07:21):
advancing to the National League Division Series. They swept the
Reds two games, so they're going to face the Phillies
for the National League Series. So in the other games,
the other three wild Card series, they're all tied one
to one. So you're going to have a day full
of baseball today. The Tigers versus the Guardians, this will
be Game three, threeh eight pm Eastern. The Padres versus
(01:07:44):
the Cubs, Game three, that's gonna be at five oh
eight Eastern. And then the Red Sox and the Yankees,
it's going to be their Game three, eight oh eight
pm tonight Eastern. So the winners of these matchups will
face the Mariners, Brewers, and Blue Jays prospectively. That begins
on Saturday. Here you go, that's the Hizzy on Rover's
(01:08:05):
Morning Glory. All right, I'm gonna get caught up. We
got a little bit high. I wasn't paying attention to
the clock. We'll be right back.
Speaker 3 (01:08:11):
Hang on. Dougey coughs the mic and average of one
million times a show.
Speaker 13 (01:08:15):
Take advantage of any coffee fit from douchey.
Speaker 3 (01:08:18):
Sometimes a coffee. It's the only break you'll get from here.
Speaker 8 (01:08:21):
In her speech, I'm not speaking correctly.
Speaker 3 (01:08:24):
Welcome back to rovers money glory. Do you know did
you suckle the teeth as a baby, Charlie? Do you
have any idea? Did your mother breastfeed you?
Speaker 6 (01:08:47):
That's no idea. I'm leaning towards yes. How can I
think people that are like smarter breast fight.
Speaker 3 (01:08:54):
Yeah, well I must be stupid then, because I was
not breastfat that makes sense. I was born in the
mid seventies, and at that time I think it was very,
very common to just use formula. Oh really convenience and
oh okay, I don't know much about it. It might
be better for you, I think, to just naturally breastfeed.
(01:09:17):
But you know, back then, they're like, oh, hey, this
is just the newer technology, must be better for babies.
Forget thousands, hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of years that
babies have been suckling on teats. Jeffrey, what about you?
Did you? Oh? He left? Oh did he even say goodbye?
I don't know to us. He did say goodbye to me,
(01:09:40):
he does. He definitely walked towards there. Tru did Crystal,
did you suckle the teat?
Speaker 7 (01:09:50):
I think my mom tried, yes, but I was I
was a very hungry baby and I ate a lot,
so I think she moved me to bottles.
Speaker 3 (01:09:59):
Well, there's a story about a man who is thirty
two years old. His name is Michael Jones. I know
that sounds like a fake name, but his name is
Michael Jones and he Mike Jones. In Mike Jones. He
had been banned from seeing a woman. He had a
(01:10:21):
restraining order placed against him. He was banned from seeing
a sixty year old woman. Now it's interesting because this
article doesn't exactly go into why he was banned from
seeing this sixty year old woman, but it does go
on that in the summer, when this restraining order was
(01:10:42):
in place, he saw this sixty year old woman three
times throughout the summer. I guess he had assaulted her
in the past and was prohibited from seeing her. A
judge or somebody said, don't you know, not allowed to
see this person, so he was. I think it was
in June where he was given this restraining order. Don't
(01:11:05):
see this sixty year old woman anymore. And then the
following month, he's sitting on a bicycle path and he
looks very tired. He's there, and this sixty year old
woman saw him, remember the one who he had the
restraining order against him. The sixty year old woman saw
(01:11:25):
him and said, oh, he looks looks very tired. So
I'm going to give him a bottle of water. Weird, right,
just I mean, and again, I'm just reading the details
that are available to me. But that's weird. Like if
for some reason somebody has a restraining order, they're not
allowed to see you because they've allegedly assaulted you, why
(01:11:46):
would you give that person a bottle of Oh he
looks tired, let me give him a bottle of water.
So then away. So then they started messaging each other
on Facebook after that, and then and later in July
they met in a part. The sixty year old woman
said that she wanted to tell this much younger man
(01:12:07):
that their relationship was over and stop contacting me. However,
the man said, you know, look, I hate my mother.
You know that I hate my mother, and blah blah
blah blah blah, And I guess as a hatred towards women.
He really hates his mother. So while they were in
(01:12:29):
this park, they kissed consensually. The woman, the sixty year
old woman kissed his thirty two year old guy. She says, yeah,
it was a consensual kiss, even though I went there
to say that our relationship was over. But we kissed
and then I allowed him to breastfeed for ten minutes
(01:12:49):
a sixty year old woman. That's right. And so this
lady told the court that he spoke to women her
age and breastfed as a way of getting back at
his mother because he hated his mother so much. The
woman said that she knew it was strange behavior, but
it had just become a part of their relationship. Well,
(01:13:12):
he was like, breastfeeds some random lady. Then he'd what
call his mom and go check out these checkout. I
just said, mom, you couldn't even breastfeed me, So I
have to breastfeed off of other old ladies or something.
You know, I don't know if that came up at all.
I couldn't exactly tell you. He did. Eventually, so he
(01:13:36):
breastfed from this woman three times down. When they say breastfed,
I don't think she's producing milk at the age of sixty, right,
I mean this is just simulated breastfeeding, right, Yeah, it's
just breast sucking. But just say that the fact they
saying breastfeeding that seems that seems like he was getting
some stuff. So for some reason, this thirty two year
old guy at the end of July admitted to his
(01:13:59):
probation all that he was having these secret meetings with
the sixty year old woman, who then turned him in.
And then the woman said, you know, I've been stressed
out by this. Seeing this guy is stressing me. I
know he's obsessed with me, and I know that it
could be dangerous and blah blah blah blah blah. And
(01:14:20):
so now they've put the guy in jail because he
broke that restraining her. But his judge says, hey, listen,
it's pretty obvious she was a willing participant in this.
She gave him the bottle of water when she saw
him out in public, she continued the conversation with him,
she allowed him, She conessentially kissed this guy, and she
allowed him to breastfeed. Now the guy's an odd ball,
he's a weirdough. Maybe he needs to be locked up.
(01:14:43):
I don't know, but she seems to be a part
of this. But I guess my I guess my question
is this guy says that he has attachment problems, whatever
that means. How weird is this that this guy at
the age of thirty would want to suckle the breast
(01:15:03):
of a sixty year old woman.
Speaker 8 (01:15:05):
I mean it's an emotional meaning. There's something behind it
for him.
Speaker 3 (01:15:10):
Yeah, but to get this guy off the streets, right,
I agree it like there might be something for whatever reason,
you have this deep seated hatred for your mother. Okay,
fair enough, and maybe you know they say that, you know,
like I'm just thinking of a cat for instance. I
(01:15:30):
don't even know if this is true or if this
is an old wives tale, but you know, a kitten
will be carried around by the scruff of its neck,
like the back of its neck. The mother will pick
it up in its teeth and carry that cat around.
So if you need to get a cat to submit
and relax, you can grab the scruff on the back
(01:15:54):
of the cat's neck. And they claim I've read I
don't know if this is true. Again, it could be
an old wife stel that that is, and it it
sort of triggers a response from when it was a
kitten and it would just be carried around all limp
like by the by the mother cat, by the scruff
of its neck. Now, maybe if you're suckling on a
(01:16:17):
lady's breast, maybe there is some sort of mental throwback
or something to being a baby. I don't know, but
Jesus man, it's weird. How long is too long?
Speaker 7 (01:16:28):
Because I'm sure you've suckled as an adult, well by
a lady, right well.
Speaker 3 (01:16:33):
And how long is too long in a sexual manner?
Not like I'm suckling like more of a yeah stimulady, Yeah, yeah,
not like I'm getting anything, like I'm gonna suckle here,
and like, no, I've never you're gonna I'm not just
some Yeah, you're gonna be doing something else. Yeah, the
main point of I'm not I'm not like, oh God,
(01:16:55):
I want to go out with his chick, so maybe
I can suckle her breast for twenty minutes. Like No,
that's it. It's to me, it's that's just a speed
bump on the way down south. If you know what
I mean, speed speed bumps, speed bump you think.
Speaker 7 (01:17:09):
Yeah, depending on the size of the girl, right speed
bumps are bigger than others.
Speaker 3 (01:17:15):
I just want to go right to right south. I
want to Yeah, I'm not, no, I'm not really, you know,
it's it's okay. I mean, it's better than nothing. But
IRY had my choice between it's not for him up
top and down below.
Speaker 7 (01:17:33):
Space you run right to home plate exact, Yeah, yeah, because.
Speaker 8 (01:17:37):
That pleasures you. And it's usually, as we know, it's
all a.
Speaker 3 (01:17:43):
Me.
Speaker 7 (01:17:46):
Yeah, honestly too. I breastfed for a little while, like
maybe about five weeks or so.
Speaker 3 (01:17:51):
I breastfed your dog. I did, yes, and not a
not an adult man.
Speaker 11 (01:17:56):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:17:56):
And I end up switching to pumping because I hated it.
It makes your toes curl.
Speaker 7 (01:18:01):
It's the most awful feeling to have them latched on.
And some women enjoy it, and some women will do
that for I just could not hate. It was just
too too sensitive to me and just too much. And
even if a gentleman were to do that too for
too long, I would also be like, get off, Yeah,
I get off right already?
Speaker 3 (01:18:22):
Oh yeah, all right, to lock the guy up, you say, Charlie, Yeah,
this is the word freaking What if what if you?
What if you started dating somebody let's say you and
Kristo weren't tonight and you start dating a woman and
she encouraged you to suckle. I'd be all for like
fifteen minutes, like she wants you to to uh cradle you. Yeah,
(01:18:43):
she wants to cradle you. You put put the head
in the leck or whatever she puts or you know
your uh, you're the back of your head is like
right where her elbow is and she's cradling you and
you just that sounds pretty awesome. No, No, that guy
wants to do it and he's doing it. You know
how hypocritical are you not? Because I would hope that
(01:19:05):
it would lead to something with me, and if it didn't,
then I wouldn't be interested.
Speaker 8 (01:19:09):
Who knows what she wanted or he wanted, Like maybe
that was just something desponding. Okay, it could mean something
to both of them.
Speaker 3 (01:19:18):
They're both there like it and called the police and
said this guy is he's a suckler.
Speaker 8 (01:19:23):
That's not what I got from that starting The.
Speaker 3 (01:19:25):
Lady did call the police. This guy for some inexplicable reason,
told his probation officer, I'm seeing that find did he
commit well, he had he broke his restraining order he
was not supposed to see her because he had supposedly
assaulted her in the past time. I don't know what
that means. I don't he loves him. These are both freaks. Yeah, okay,
(01:19:46):
lock them both up. Yeah, both the old lady and
the younger man him. Just yeah, yeah, absolutely, all right, Dougie,
what do you think about this? I just said it.
Speaker 8 (01:19:58):
I just think that if there's a bond between the
two of them, and that means something, and he's obviously
traumatized with his mother, and and if that, if that
makes him feel better, and she's willing to allow him
and take him to where he needs to go, I
think that's great for them. She probably if he did
attack her, I don't know what happened, and she probably
(01:20:20):
has regrets of calling the cops because she obviously couldn't
stay away from him. But that was that, that was
their way of bonding. And however people bond, I think
is their prerogative and their journey. I don't think there's anything.
Speaker 3 (01:20:33):
Weird lived experience. You uh, you suckled your wife's breast,
you told us in the past when she was or
I don't know if she was pregnant or if she
Oh no, no, yeah, well could have given birth. I
wouldn't that time yet. Okay, it wasn't like a normal time.
So then how did you how did you do this?
(01:20:54):
You decided you tasted it? Did she squirt it in
or did you latch on and start it? Went in?
Went in for it right out of the tat curious man?
And is it like a just one little squirt or
did you latch on for like a couple of minutes. No,
just a little taste, just a just a quick taste.
(01:21:15):
It was really sweet. What did it taste like? Like
you know the milk after you have frosted flakes? The
milk is really sweet? Is that what it tastes like?
Like cereal milk? Exactly?
Speaker 9 (01:21:27):
Like that?
Speaker 3 (01:21:28):
Is it really a little thicker? That's not a bad taste.
Maybe there's a dolt. Maybe adult breastfeeding isn't so bad.
Maybe I like this? Huh? So uh? You didn't get
any sexual satisfaction out of this, did you? Or did you?
Was it a was involved in there somewhere? But no,
that was just I wanted to taste. I wanted to
(01:21:48):
say this all about what is it a bonding moment?
Would you say no, okay, so douche, it's not a
bonding moment for that. Yeah, but these weirdos in the street, Yeah.
Speaker 8 (01:21:58):
Maybe maybe it's everyone's different.
Speaker 3 (01:22:02):
Well anyways, so they've got this, they've got this breast
sucker off the streets there, and I don't know how
long he's going to be locked up. But there's a
video that's been going around and people are debating who's
in the wrong here, and I don't have all of
(01:22:24):
the details. I will kind of jump forward and tell
you this is I think in Maryland somewhere. I don't
know if it's Baltimore area or whatever, but I'll jump
ahead and say that the bouncer in the story who's
working outside of a bar or a club, he has
now turned himself in and been charged with aggravated assault.
(01:22:46):
I'll play you the video here in just a minute.
You can fire up RMGTV at roverradio dot com or
with the Rover Radio app on your phone, your tablet,
or your TV, and you can always watch RMGTV for
free while the show is on live, and then we
replay it on a twenty four hour loop until the
next show starts. But they're outside of a bar or
a club and there's a larger gentleman, I would say,
(01:23:10):
this bouncer, and then there's a guy that is up
in his like they're chest to chest basically, and they're
obviously arguing about something. I don't know what it is,
but the bouncer seems to be I've only watched the
video once, but the bouncer seems to be like, hey,
get out of here, leave, leave, leave, And you know
(01:23:31):
how you know how people are outside of a bar,
like a closing time or something, or if they get
kicked out before closing time. You know, most most people
just go, oh, I got kicked out, and they leave right.
Some people they're drunk so they're not thinking straight. They
start talking back. They feel slighted and they feel emasculated
(01:23:54):
and they have to put up an argument or whatever.
So I don't know exactly what was going on in
this video, but the bouncer grabs the guy as you'll
see and puts him in a headlock, trying to choke
the guy out, trying to like put him in like
some sort of sleeper hole or something. And he's not
(01:24:17):
doing a great job because the guy never, as far
as I can tell, he never loses consciousness, I don't think.
But then what he does to the guy as he
has him in a headlock is well, here watch this here,
it is so sure, so you can see they're arguing.
(01:24:38):
He grabs. Now they sort of chest bump each other.
Then the bouncer grabs him from from behind, grabs his neck.
The guy is now tapping out the customer out on
the street. He's like trying to tap this guy's arm, saying,
I'm gonna you know your I'm submitting like he would
in a mixed martial arts fight. Now he's twisted him
(01:25:01):
around and then did you see that? Let me just
go back here. Yeah. Well not only that, but there's
a car parked on the street right here outside of
this bar, and he knowingly or unknowingly, I don't know
if he did this on purpose. I think it's probably
an accident. But the bouncer spins the kid around and
(01:25:22):
rams him head first through the side window of the car.
Speaker 12 (01:25:27):
Did it crash, Oh, listen, ship out shattered the window.
Speaker 3 (01:25:43):
Eventually another security guy comes and grabs the the guy
from from the other bouncer. It was shame on what
ball guy.
Speaker 8 (01:25:54):
That guy didn't help the other security guard. Yeah, Wow,
he just let him do that. Well, the kid kept
tapping out out.
Speaker 3 (01:26:06):
Yeah, yeah, but everybody's going to do that. Everyone's everyone's
going to tap out after you.
Speaker 6 (01:26:11):
And then they'll go right back to loosen up slightly,
and he starts freaking out retightened.
Speaker 3 (01:26:17):
So I don't know exactly what happened, and I'll have
to rewatch the video at the beginning here, but it
looks like the guys the bouncer saying leave, then leave,
then leave, and the boxers. Then the bouncer is a
big guy. Uh, I mean, you can tell he towers
over the other I didn't realize the other bald headed
security guard is actually there this entire time. Oh, I
(01:26:39):
didn't realize that. Okay, so he's there the entire time,
and you can tell how much bigger the bouncer is.
He's a big, tall guy. And then the younger kid
is arguing with him about leaving. He must have been
kicked out or something. So then it looks like whoo,
(01:27:03):
who initiates the contact here? It looks like the bouncer
takes a step forward.
Speaker 8 (01:27:09):
The kids takes a step back.
Speaker 14 (01:27:11):
Who said there sizing you up? Is that the kid
sizing you up. He says, no, I think that's just
a bystander.
Speaker 3 (01:27:27):
And so then does the bouncer initiate contact and push
him forward?
Speaker 7 (01:27:31):
Here the kids stepping back and standing his ground. He's
like stepping back and making himself solid.
Speaker 3 (01:27:40):
Okay, So he takes a step back and then and
then does he does he bump? Does he shoulder bump
the bouncer? It looks like he does, doesn't he? Oh? Yeah,
he gets in bouncer's face. If bouncer wasn't the wrong
at all at first. No, bouncer's totally right. The guy's
bounce to swing on him or something. All right, now
I've got him in the in the lock the sleeperhold, uh,
(01:28:01):
we're naked, choke. And then at some point the kid goes,
all right, I can't breathe that you're really twisting my
neck around and everything. He taps out, So push him away.
Is this the guy's girlfriend right here with her hands
over her face, she should do something, step in, say something,
start screaming, do something that adds to it. Yeah, right, escalated,
(01:28:25):
I'm good at The girlfriend is probably stunned. Probably is
just I can't believe what's happening here. So maybe you
don't react right away, but let him right here, let
(01:28:46):
him go. Did he mean to do that? Did he
kind of just fall into the car like that, FeTNA,
if you're gonna fall to stop holding the kid. I
don't think that he did that on purpose from the
kid the patron. Nobody's debating this that the bouncer isn't
the complete wrong. Well, yeah he did the kid did
(01:29:09):
The kid did touch him first. That is true, that
he might have chest bumped him first. Yeah, the bouncer, No,
I don't think the bouncer did. It looked like it
just took a step forward and like the kid's shoulder.
The bouncer's a psycho and can't. Yeah, that's obvious.
Speaker 6 (01:29:27):
He can't hold his emotions. He's he's worked up. He's
obviously pissed off that this kid did death and he
can't let it go for some reason.
Speaker 3 (01:29:34):
Now, the other security guy is not really stepping in here,
not offering any sort of guidance, assistance, nothing, Oh jeez,
puts the head. You know it's out. I think I go.
By the way, if you've ever tried to actually break
a car window, it's much harder than you think it is. Yes,
(01:29:56):
So I'm surprised that this broke that easily with the
top of that kid's head. Now, some people are saying
that the kid is fully at fault, that he was.
You know, obviously, according to all they can go is
by this video must have been drunken, belligerent. We probably
didn't see what happened right before this. The kid is
in this bouncer's face being a douche, okay, and he
(01:30:17):
got what he deserved, is what some people are saying. See,
people don't get to do street justice like that.
Speaker 6 (01:30:22):
So whatever that kid did, he could have been the
world's most annoying kid in the world. But you can't
slam people's heads through car windows when they're not doing
anything against you.
Speaker 3 (01:30:33):
You can't do that.
Speaker 8 (01:30:34):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:30:35):
And it looks like did the Oh I'm looking. Oh wait,
I see what's going on here. So the kid grabs
the bouncer's leg here with both arms. Do you see this, oh,
right around his knee right here? Yeah, because he's trying
to get it, and then tries to do a single
leg takedown on the bouncer. That's what led see. He
(01:30:58):
wandes forward trying to lift the bouncer up. I think
he's just trying to get his head out. Yeah, I
don't think, and he well, sure doing what everybody. Somebody's
attacking you. It's like a single leg takedown here, and
he's the one who lunges forward and then the his
head goes right into that the weight off, the momentum
carries them into the gidar. Yeah, oh, I don't know.
(01:31:22):
I wish I would have seen the beginning of this.
I change anything to this doesn't matter unless what if
the kid had already pushed this bouncer, slapped the bouncer,
by the bouncer or whatever, and the guy eventually goes
this is this is too much. I've had enough. You
don't get to then dole out street justice. You get
(01:31:43):
to that kid's annoying, he's touching, you call the police,
get him arrested. Yeah, you don't get to just start
slamming people's heads in the windshield.
Speaker 7 (01:31:51):
He's already out on the sidewalk. The boun could go
back into the club or the bar, whatever it is.
He doesn't have to stand on the sidewalk.
Speaker 3 (01:31:59):
That might be where he's posted that. He could be
a door guy. There seems like he's loitering you're going
to get him for trespassing, blocking a public sidewalk, disorderly conduct.
Kevin we Weaver is the bouncer's name. He's forty one
years old. He was charged with first degree aggravated assault
for this incident that took place on Saturday, and the man,
(01:32:25):
the younger guy, is apparently a student from Loyola University Maryland.
It says the two were in an argument outside of
the bar. The bar says that he was not one
of their employers, one of their employees, and that it
will no longer be working with the security company that
(01:32:45):
employed him, So they're kind of like, whoa, it wasn't us. Well, yeah,
you didn't actually directly employ that guy, but you employed
the security company that provided that guy. So they'll probably
end up getting sued. But I don't know. There might
be more to the story that we that happened before
this video, so I think it's sort of hard to tell.
We'll have to wait get a security video and more
(01:33:06):
of the story being the guy might have pushed this
bouncer might have, but once once you've got him in
the head, let him go. Just because somebody taps doesn't
mean you have to let them go, Charlie, this is
not an MMA fight, and you don't know what the
guy did beforehand. Maybe he had the head he had
this guy in that sure, you get to defend yourself.
Maybe he had this guy in a in a headlock,
(01:33:26):
and he wasn't wasn't trying to actually choke him out
and make him unconsciously. He's just trying to He's trying
to get the guy to submit and give up and
waiting for the It's no longer defending yourself at that point. Yeah,
but you can tap and then you let go, and
then the guy immediately starts fighting you again and punches
(01:33:46):
he in the face and deal with it then. So,
I don't know. I'm a little more up in the
air on this that you guys are. You guys seem
to really be blaming I give up. Nah, I'm not
done yet. I don't believe you. I could still I
could still keep doing bad things to you. But if
the bouncer was defending himself, he clearly wasn't.
Speaker 8 (01:34:06):
He was.
Speaker 3 (01:34:06):
He got shoulder blasted by the by the kid. Yeah,
put him off, you hold him and then he tapped
out and he'd throw him on the ground and.
Speaker 15 (01:34:12):
He said he towered over the other kid. What kind
of shoulder blast is that? Well, the kid was trying
to prove that he has big balls, making up a
lot of things that could have happened.
Speaker 3 (01:34:23):
I'm gonna go off of the thing that I saw
and that I witnessed, and that was the kid was
trying to be like, yeah, he's a dick. The kid
sucked ye and should have put in a head locked.
Sure that none of nobody's debating that. It's the part
where the kid he doesn't let go of the kid
and throws his head into a car. I've got to
take a break. We do have these shizzy coming up
(01:34:44):
in just a moment the news. What do you have
on the way? Do there's a resolution to the lawsuit?
Speaker 8 (01:34:49):
Remember the kid that was on the cover of the
Nevermind album from Nirvana?
Speaker 3 (01:34:56):
Yeah, oh yeah, yeah, the naked kid? Yeah yeah, he's
what did he?
Speaker 9 (01:34:59):
He?
Speaker 3 (01:35:00):
And Anna?
Speaker 8 (01:35:01):
Yeah, so there's a lawsuit that happened. We reported on it.
I'm going to remind you what that was and I'll
tell you what the judge said next.
Speaker 3 (01:35:08):
All right, we'll get to that in just a moment.
Forty six says Charlie, and Sninzer have obviously never been
in a bar fight. One punch could literally kill you.
You don't take chances with people like that. So they're
saying that this bouncer was completely in the right. I
don't what are you saying? Does make that little guy
(01:35:29):
was a foighting master? Bob says, you're effing dumb. Tapping
out is submitting stop talking out of both sides of
your mouth. No, I'm not. I'm saying, how many times
have you seen something where somebody this is again, this
is not a UFC fight where you tap out and
(01:35:50):
it's over. This is just out on the street. So
you've seen people say okay, okay, okay, I give up,
I give up, and then what happens They let go
and then they continue fighting the person.
Speaker 7 (01:35:58):
So I do want to make one quick comment before
we go, is that your comment about the girlfriend and
her not stepping in or doing anything reminds me of
when you were attacked at that sushi restaurant and your
response was why did.
Speaker 3 (01:36:12):
Be to not do anything? I don't understand why.
Speaker 7 (01:36:16):
You would want the women to jump in on a
man on man fight where they are bigger than you.
Speaker 3 (01:36:20):
Twenty first century Equal rights come on. Yeah, no, I
if you are a woman and your man is getting
beat up or whatever the case might be, I would
assume the woman first of all, probably just start screaming stop, stop,
stop at the very least, right. I'm not saying they
(01:36:42):
have to break it up, but you know something, no,
I give her the bet for the doubt she was.
I'm sure in shock. And it's easy to sit here
and watch when you're not involved and say should have whatever.
But you know, if, yes, if your boyfriend or husband
is getting beat up out on the street, wouldn't you
expect Charlie, if you're if you were getting beat up
(01:37:03):
out on the street, would your girlfriend start screaming stop, stop, stop,
or try to grab the guy's arm or something? Hope.
So yeah, I mean you would do that for her
if she was if if somebody were beating her up,
had her in a choke clock, you would put it
to step in at the very least a scream. Obviously,
(01:37:25):
you think I'll do more than the screams. Yeah, you
staying on business exactly, got to take a break. We'll
be right back on Rover's Morning Glory. Hang on, there's
one way to.
Speaker 4 (01:37:35):
Tell if Jeffrey is lying.
Speaker 3 (01:37:37):
No, it's little smooth.
Speaker 13 (01:37:40):
Out back to Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 3 (01:37:52):
She's coming up in just a moment. What do you
have on the way?
Speaker 8 (01:37:54):
Do she date to a story we did a while
ago about the Nirvana baby that was naked swimming in
the pool. Yes, there was a lawsuit brought by that man.
Speaker 3 (01:38:06):
And I'll give you an update. Navana album had the
little baby chasing a dollar bill or something and never mind.
Speaker 5 (01:38:13):
Yeah, and.
Speaker 3 (01:38:16):
The original album cover there was a baby with a
little baby pecker on there, and then they airbrushed the
baby pecker out on some like like Walmart I think
refused to sell that with a bit which you know,
of course, right, more weird thing to put on the
cover of an album. And uh, anyway, so they had
(01:38:38):
to airbrush that little baby pecker out. Here is some
Well you can see how people are divided over everything.
Dude says. It's really sad and horrifying to listen to
the Week and police reliant group of ignorant people that
(01:39:00):
you work with the people I think the bouncer and
the wrong are just astoundingly stupid. However, Sam Magma rights,
obviously the bouncer is not in the right, he lost
his job, he got arrested over and twenty says if
(01:39:23):
Charlie had his head put through a window as a kid,
he would have more respect for authority. Now, so that's said,
that's that would have been the answer to all of
Charlie's Issuesbring put his head through a window, deuji, Are
you ready for the shizzy?
Speaker 8 (01:39:42):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:39:43):
Here we go, isy, I'll rolls morning Glory.
Speaker 8 (01:39:47):
The UK is on alert after a possible terror attack
against Jewish people on the high holy day of Yam Kapor.
Witnesses Sam and rove a vehicle at a crowd outside
of a Manchester synagogue, then got out and stabbed some people.
Police say one person, actually two people have been fatally shot,
believed to be the third person the attacker.
Speaker 3 (01:40:08):
It was gunfire exchange.
Speaker 8 (01:40:10):
Four were injured by the vehicle collision and established authorities
have declared a Plato incident, which means they're treating it
like a potential marauding terrorist attack.
Speaker 3 (01:40:21):
A Plato incident, that's not a very good. That's not
a good name. If that's p l a t O potential,
that's not a good.
Speaker 8 (01:40:29):
Marauding terrorist attack not a good, not.
Speaker 3 (01:40:33):
A good name for that, like, you can't be the
prime minute, prime minister, please describe. You need to call
a Plato incident? What hunt? That's not? Oh, you can't
do that. Can I have a better name for a
disaster like that? All right?
Speaker 8 (01:40:50):
Go on, Jane Goodall, I'm saying that, right, goodall, goodall.
Jane Goodall, a renowned researcher who documented the behavior and
social lives of chimpanzees and later became a leader of
the animal conservation movement, has died. She died yesterday natural causes.
(01:41:12):
They say she was ninety one years old. She was
in California and she was there for a part of
a speaking tour. According to the statement that.
Speaker 3 (01:41:20):
Was Oh so she didn't even die at home or whatever.
She was going. These are photos of her as an
old I mean, she's been doing this. I think, like
the first she kind of came onto the scene and
maybe the early sixties or something as a young woman
who basically is just out there interacting and living with
these chimpanzees out there. Get where is this in Africa
(01:41:43):
or whatever? I guess and unia, Yeah, it's just crazy
that I guess she really was the Maybe I don't
know if the first, but one of the first fossa
that really sort of, you know, sort of documented all
(01:42:03):
of the human like behavior I suppose of chimpanzees and
gave us a better understanding of what they were really
doing out there. Go on.
Speaker 8 (01:42:12):
Walmart will remove artificial dyes and other additives from its
private brand food and bread, food and beverage products by
twenty twenty seven. The move reflects a growing trend among
companies to adapt to shifting consumer preferences and heightened the
scrutiny of food additives. According to Walmart, they say, our
customers have told us that they want products made with simpler,
(01:42:32):
more familiar ingredients, and we've listened. That's the statement from
the president and CEO, John Ferner. Major food companies, including Kraft, Heines,
General Mills, Kellogg Company, The Campbell's Company, Pepsi Co, and
Utts They have similarly pledged to remove artificial dies by
(01:42:52):
twenty twenty seven. A household name in the coffee industry
that many have grown up with, but it is changing
that name, at least temporarily. Maxwell House a coffee brand
that sits in a lot of people's pantries. They're going
to rebrand for the first time at one hundred and
thirty three years to Maxwell Apartment.
Speaker 3 (01:43:13):
Oh, come on, it'll be.
Speaker 8 (01:43:14):
A limited time to meet the needs of consumers. In
twenty twenty five, Press rely said, in a time where
value matters now more than ever, Americans seek value in
areas of their everyday, including where they live, with nearly
a third opting to rent versus purchase a home. So
to celebrate the name change, Maxwell Apartment is offering a
(01:43:35):
twelve month lease of their coffee as a way for
consumers to stock up on coffee.
Speaker 3 (01:43:40):
For the entire year. Dou She falls for every one
of these stories where people go, let's just get in
the news. I like it. Let's get some free publicity
by doing something really, really dumb. I forget the last
name change one that there was a one that everyone
I can't believe. Now they're just doing it for a week,
all right, go on be available for a limited time only.
Speaker 8 (01:44:04):
Thursday Night Football eight fifteen pm tonight on Amazon. The
Rams will be hosting the forty nine Ers.
Speaker 3 (01:44:13):
I never remember to watch football on Thursday. I it's
not part of my routine. I never have done it.
I've never done it. It's just not I don't know,
and I like al Michaels is the guy who does
Thursday night football right now on Amazon Prime. I like him,
although I did see when he started doing it people
(01:44:33):
are like, dude, this guy's like a thousand years old.
He's too old, and he's not on top of his game.
But I think maybe he's having some sort of issue
or something, because I think he's been doing just fine
since then.
Speaker 8 (01:44:46):
And then finally, a lawsuit over Nirvana's nineteen ninety one
album cover for Nevermind has been dismissed. Spencer Eldon, who
was photographed as the Naked Baby on the album's cover,
file the lawsuit claim that the image was child kinography
and his guardians didn't consent to the photo being used.
A federal judge ruled that neither the pose, focal point setting,
(01:45:07):
nor overall context just the album cover features sexually explicit conduct.
He also pointed out that Elden has embraced and profited
off the images by signing memorabilia and referring to himself
as quote the Nirvana Baby. Elden's attorneys are allowed to
appeal the ruling.
Speaker 3 (01:45:24):
Can you imagine being a judge and you're like the
way you were describing that, where he's like, oh, the
angle and the focal length of the lens and all this,
it doesn't amount to kitty part. Imagine having to be
a judge or whoever that has to review this. Look,
probably you wouldn't do that today, put a naked baby
(01:45:44):
in the cover of an album. But no, you know,
this guy's lawsuit I think was just a money grab,
and he was he was very proud to be the
Nirvana baby. Yeah, until he figured out I don't actually
have a real job. I could probably get some free
money from this, so it really was more of a
money grab.
Speaker 8 (01:46:04):
I think he is thirty four years old. Now that's
Cisy and Rose Leonncroy.
Speaker 3 (01:46:16):
Big Al wants to know whatever happened with the medical
crew that gave the guy the anti venom. Yeah, there
was a guy in Nyes who who got bit by
a very very poisonous snake. The ambulance workers gave him
this anti venom and saved his life, but they weren't
Wilderness EMSs, so they had to have a disciplinary hearing.
(01:46:41):
I think it was yesterday or the day before day
before yesterday, I think it is, and the complaint was
dropped at the hearing, so they did not lose their
paramedics license. Speaking of Jews, four says, did you hear
your girl, Greta Tuneberg was just captured by Israel? Well,
(01:47:05):
I don't know. I can't think of too many people
that are more annoying than Gretta Tomberg. But she's been
up I da, yeah, just over dramatic. I can't believe
she got to be such a big thing either, Like
people were taking this push she like fifteen year old
(01:47:26):
fifteen year old girl, seriously, like she's some sort of expert.
Wasn't isn't herbe captured? That sounds that's something. Well, she
wasn't really captured. What she's been trying to do and
she's done this multiple times Apparently she loves the spotlight
any for whatever reason. If she can get in the spotlight,
(01:47:47):
she's gonna take it. So maybe she's done saving the planet,
but now she wants to save Palestinians. So she's been
trying to get in a flotilla of like fifty boats
and take some supplies to Gaza. Now she's been stopped
(01:48:12):
numerous times in the past by the Israeli Armed Forces, Navy,
whatever the hell they have there. They don't have a
whole lot of supplies. It's more a symbolic sort of thing.
And they keep saying, no, you're not allowed in, you're
not allowed get out of here. Essentially a war zone
and we have a blockade and blah blah blah blah blah.
(01:48:34):
And I know they intercepted Greta Tuneberg yesterday and Zero
Loves says, you guys are getting screwed in Allentown. They
go to commercial break and then advertise somebody else's podcast.
Then they play a song before coming back to the show.
(01:48:54):
Makes me not want to listen. Well, I guess you
just got to wait through that until they come back
to the show. Now, they wouldn't get back to the
show any sooner. They're not delaying the return to the show.
Our commercial breaks are certain. I've always been the same amount,
exact length. Every commercial break is the same length. We've
(01:49:15):
played the same number of commercials every day. So what's
happening is, for whatever reason at the moment, they're filling
some of this time there in Allentown. They moved to
a new computer system that runs the station, and they're
filling it with short songs for some reason, that's fine,
you know, nothing wrong with that, I guess, just be
(01:49:35):
aware that that's what's going on. And what else would
you prefer?
Speaker 4 (01:49:40):
Zero Love?
Speaker 3 (01:49:41):
Do you want them to just play.
Speaker 8 (01:49:45):
I do? It?
Speaker 3 (01:49:46):
Does annoy me about the advertising? You never hear rovers
Morning Glory advertise anywhere else on any of the other
iHeart stuff, the iHeart app radio station. You never hear
any ever man, oh man, do they use my show
to advertise every other stupid ass thing they have going
on every dumb podcast, every other radio show? Oh Man?
(01:50:12):
So I would like them to reciprocate every now and then.
But so Zero Love, what would you prefer? I'll throw
a suggestion out. Would do you just want to hear
more commercials? Do you want to hear public service announcements?
Do you want to hear our music bed that plays
during the commercial break, which you can hear on r
(01:50:33):
MGTV when we go on commercial break. If they're not
playing commercials on RMGTV, which is totally an individualized experience,
we don't run the commercials here. If you see, occasionally
commercials will run, but that's all done on the fly
through third party, and you're not seeing the same stuff
that other people are seen, but that music that plays
in the background. Do you want to hear that? I
(01:50:55):
don't know, Jimmy, says Rover. It's a venomous steak, not
a poisonous steak. Snakes aren't poisonous. They're venomous. E've been Actually, Actually,
isn't venom poisonous?
Speaker 8 (01:51:15):
Though?
Speaker 4 (01:51:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:51:18):
Isn't that a poison in my body? Yeah? What's the difference?
I mean, you're really splitting hairs here. I think the
ads play, then the song plays when the app comes
back a disaster, says the rock station in Binghamton KGB.
(01:51:42):
They do advertise your show throughout the day. Yes, I
know a lot, Yes, yes, I grant you that. Sometimes
they play our recycler promos and stuff on other stations,
but they never do like what they do here, where
they play commercials for our show during other morning shows
on their other radio stations. They do that during this
show on a lot of our stations. All right, I've
(01:52:04):
got to take a break. Our number is eight sixty
six year over eight six six nine six seven six
eight three seven. I saw an astonishing figure. Fact. I
guess if you buy Charlie, you're a homeowner almost What
(01:52:26):
do you mean allmo, I mean, I guess I'm buying
a home. You will, and you have to pay property taxes,
which means you never really truly own your home. You're
always your government boot liquor, always until always paying them
off until I go off grid and I'm a what
are the uh A citizen on my own?
Speaker 6 (01:52:47):
What do they call those guys? Sovereign sobert citizen? Until then,
you never really own anything.
Speaker 3 (01:52:55):
So you've owned a home for well at least been
in the process of owner home for years. If you
were to buy a million dollar home a million bucks,
you'd consider that a luxury home, wouldn't you. It would
be an awesome Yeah, of course, Well something might change
your mind about that. Let me explain it to you
in just a minute. We'll be right back on Rover's
(01:53:17):
Morning Glory. Hang uh, ladies and.
Speaker 13 (01:53:21):
Gentlemen, Father of the Year nominee Jeffrey Laroque.
Speaker 4 (01:53:25):
Prior to my head, you have my kids, and my
wife and I were really happy. We did a lot
of stuff together.
Speaker 3 (01:53:29):
So that means that you would go back and not
have kids. Yeah, this is Rover's Morning Glory. There's a
battle of a disease happening. Not to these nuts on
(01:53:51):
your mama's chin. It's the battle of the disasters. I
had read a text message earlier from disaster. However, that
prompted a response from thisz Asderer, who says, why is
there another disaster that's not me? What the f I
am the one and only disaster. They need to change
(01:54:14):
their name, he says, is true. Please let these ass
crumbs know not to use my name as the original
never left ass crumbs, and Jay rum Kid says Rover,
I have to say, you're one of my favorite people,
and so is the crew. But to smack talk a
(01:54:36):
fifteen year old girl who has the balls to actually
get out there and risk her life is pretty rich.
She probably is talking about Greta Tumbert. She probably has
twice the IQ you have. What do you do? You
sit around on your ass and make your commentary how
dumb your co hos are for four hours a day.
See these are this guy. Actually I'm one of his
favorite people. Who look at the way that he speaks
(01:54:58):
with me. Greta Tumberg is not fifteen anymore, by the way.
I think she's I don't know, twenty two, twenty three
something Somewhere along those lines. And she's just annoying, that's
all I have to say. I mean, she was annoying.
She was annoying as a kid, and she would get
up there and she would make those speeches about how
(01:55:18):
we're all going to drop that. And remember I think
that she had said we were going to drop that
by now, because that's how little she knew about it.
But she's just annoying. And now she's moved on from
her climate activism to her pro Palestinian activism, and she
(01:55:39):
keeps pulling the same stunt, trying to get on a
boat and go to Gaza. I say, let her go
to Hey, you want to go to Gaza. Sure, here's
the deal we'll make with you. You get to take
your boat and go to Gaza. But you don't get
to get back on the boat and leave. You have
to stay there once you get there. And I think
(01:56:00):
she'd be singing a different town. Now. Nobody likes what's
going on in Gaza in Palestine whatever I don't, I
don't like. You know, I hope that a resolution is
is coming. I know that the President, I didn't read
exactly what it was, but I believe he's what's going
on with this, I think they have somebody is going
to be a peace governor. They're going to be in
(01:56:22):
charge of Gaza or something. I forget who it is Cutter. No, No,
like a person. Oh what's just a single person. That's right,
But there is still going to answer to Donald Trump,
who's like has the title of like peace master or something.
And then I yeah, I forget who it is Cutter.
(01:56:43):
Now we're defending Cutter. Now, sure, they're you know, have
given money to terrorists, harboring Hamas all the leaders there.
But you know, now we just signed an agreement that
says that we are going any any attack on Cutter
is like an attack on the United States. It's okay,
(01:57:04):
let's see here. Oh I was going to tell you, So,
if you bought a million dollar home, you're living in
the lap of luxury, right.
Speaker 6 (01:57:11):
I mean that's going to be pretty much anything every
feature you'd want, I would think. I mean, obviously, if
it's in New York City, probably not so. But most places,
I think a million dollars is going to get you
a pretty nice everything you want, everything you want.
Speaker 3 (01:57:29):
A house, yes, yes, Now they say that because of
rising home prices and inflation and so on, and so forth.
That a million dollars. It used to be enough money
to get you into what they consider the top end
of homes in the United States of America, luxury homes,
meaning the top ten percent of home listings. So if
(01:57:53):
you were to spend a million dollars just let's say
ten years ago, you are buying a home that is
more expensive than ninety percent of the rest of the
homes in the United States of America, or more top
ten percent, not top ten percent, that's way. However, that
has now changed. In order to get into the top
(01:58:14):
ten percent of homes in the United States of America,
a million bucks doesn't do it anymore. We are now
at one point three million dollars to get to the
top ten percent. Back in twenty sixteen, it was only
eight hundred thousand dollars actually to get into into the
top ten percent, and a million at the time would
to put you in the top five percent. Now, just
(01:58:36):
to get into the top ten percent of homes in
the United States, it's going to cost you one point
three million dollars to get in the top ten You
want to be top five percent, two million bucks to
get to that level. I don't need a two million
dollar home. Oh my gosh. I mean, hey, look, everybody
wants nice things. You spend money whatever you can. But
(01:58:59):
it really it does seem like it has gotten outrageously
expensive to get a home for anything. Oh yeah, I agree.
Oh and try to buy what did? I most recently
interest tried it by and I was like, I'm not
even gonna buy this ground beef twice as much as it.
I don't get to the grocery store, so like B
two handles that stuff, so I'm not really aware of
(01:59:22):
like pricing changes. But I've read stuff that ground beef
is super expensive, right, what are we talking about? I
think it was twenty bucks for a pound, and now
way that's and I ended up buying whatever it was.
It was twice as much as what I was used
to paying.
Speaker 6 (01:59:38):
I don't think it was even really that greatest stuff
that eighty I don't know because I looked at the
price and I quit looking at her immediately, and I
was able to get for some reason.
Speaker 3 (01:59:49):
And maybe it's not even cow meat. At this point,
they had pre I wanted to make burgers, so that's
what I want. I wanted ground meat to make burgers,
and I was like, I want eighty twenty pound and
a half. It was like twenty bucks. I went, well,
I'm not buying that, And then they had pre formed patties.
What are you finding. I'm just looking at Walmart right
now because it's my go to for me, you know.
Speaker 7 (02:00:08):
And I could get five pounds of seventy three twenty
seven ground beef for twenty two dollars, brown chuck for
twenty three seventy three for five pounds.
Speaker 3 (02:00:20):
I wasn't at it.
Speaker 6 (02:00:20):
I wasn't in a fancy grocery stores, but the middle
of the road grocery store, just normal, and for some reason,
their ground beef was so expensive.
Speaker 3 (02:00:28):
I just said no. And it said they pre formed
patties of wag you beef. Oh uh huh, but it
was way less, and I was like, that's possible, So
I don't know what I was eating. It was also wrong,
it mixed with a little soy in there something. The
color was also wag you, very very very different color
than normal beef. And I said, I don't know why
(02:00:50):
that's cheaper. So uh yeah, everything just everything's more expensive,
any little thing, it's just so much more.
Speaker 8 (02:00:57):
Oh.
Speaker 7 (02:00:57):
I just got a couple quotes to get my roof done.
Just blew me out of the water how much it's
going to cost me. And I knew it'd be expensive
because my homeowner's insurance won't cover my roof. We've tried
multiple times, and it's I mean thousands upon thousands of dollars.
Speaker 3 (02:01:16):
What are we talking? How much? The few quotes I've
gotten twelve grand. Twelve grand, Yeah, on the low end
or the mid range, high end, that's that pretty much.
Speaker 7 (02:01:26):
What everybody has come back with is around twelve thousand dollars,
which makes my butthole clench up because I definitely then
have to tighten everything that I do. I cannot spend
any money because I do need a roof, so I'm
going to divert Any extra spending like on fast food
(02:01:46):
will no longer happen.
Speaker 3 (02:01:48):
It will all go towards a new roof. Makes your
butthole clench and you have to tighten everything. Do you
think her boyfriend Charlie brings that up in the middle
of backdoor action. Yeah, he just falls out, makes your
butthole just tighten, and he's like, oh.
Speaker 11 (02:02:04):
I love it.
Speaker 6 (02:02:05):
I'm looking at I'm on Zillow now looking at million
dollar homes for sale. They're nice, but it's not.
Speaker 3 (02:02:10):
But it doesn't blow you away, Like here's a regular
million dollar home evon, Like it's really nice. It's a
really nice nice but it's like, yeah, got a million dollars.
Speaker 7 (02:02:22):
That's probably in a housing development. That looks like one
of those housing development homes. Like that's to me, that's
is that a million dollars to you? Yeah, she doesn't
look like a million dollar home to me. To me,
but it looks like five hundred thousand dollars house. But
I guess that's what prices are now. I mean, it
looks like it's got pretty decently nice.
Speaker 3 (02:02:41):
Yeah it'square footage, not saying it's not nice, but it's
a lot different than what you think. When I think
million dollar home, I'm thinking there's gonna be a pool,
maybe an indoor pool, even a basketball court.
Speaker 6 (02:02:54):
There's gonna be a small half a half court basketball
and access access to the tennis courts too.
Speaker 3 (02:03:00):
But this is not, this is not Things have changed.
Like when I was a little kid, the idea of
being a millionaire, and look, being a millionaire is still
obviously a nice place to be, right, everyone can agree,
But being a millionaire is not what being a millionaire
was when I was a kid, Like when you were
(02:03:21):
a millionaire, is that you're you're like, you have a butler.
I don't have to ever worry. You have like a
helicopter or something that were flying it to work. I mean,
it was just at least that's the way you thought
of it when I was a little kid, Like, Oh,
a millionaire, You're gonna have maids and butlers and you
name it. Now that's just a family of four. Now
(02:03:42):
that being said, would you say, Charlie that it is
easier or harder for people to afford a home and
a car and things like this. Does this generation have
it harder or easier than past generations? Harder much harder?
Speaker 6 (02:03:57):
Would you say, yeah, because like a lot of people
will never own a home now ever, they don't even
look at it. We're just what we're just talking about
that we're looking at people now buying homes together, friends
having to buy homes together, sharing bank accounts, all the stuff.
Because there's plenty of people right now that are looking
at a home and go I will never own one, ever,
(02:04:19):
It's not even in the realm of possibility for me
to ever own a home.
Speaker 3 (02:04:23):
And that's a lot more than there were. Beck.
Speaker 6 (02:04:27):
I don't know how long ago, thirty years ago, I
think it was a possibility that, you know, you have
the American dream, you're going to eventually own the home.
Speaker 3 (02:04:34):
There's so many people. If you go talk to young
people now, they go, I'll never I don't even I
came before my health in church. There's no way I'm
ever gonna be able to afford a home. Now there might.
I don't know if this will change your mind. I
haven't watched this entire thing. It's like a five minute
video from John Stossel. Do you remember any of it?
Used to be on twenty twenty. He was always the
(02:04:57):
give me a break guy. He would do us I
don't know, government waste or some sort of garbage, some
sort of nonsense, and it was always give me a break.
That was his home. Yeah, he's also the guy that
we just played him a few weeks ago. He's the
guy that was doing a story I think it was
(02:05:18):
for twenty twenty, or at least ABC News. He's doing
a story on professional wrestling. Back in the day when
professional wrestlers used to be like this is real and
people were like you know, would believe it. Some people
still do, still real to me. And so he was
backstage at some WWE event or some sort of professional
wrestling event and the wrestler just you think this is
(02:05:39):
fake and they bam, just blast John Stossel right upside
the head, knocks him down. So that's the same guy.
But he has I don't know what s foscile TV is.
It must be his. I don't know if it's actually
on TV or if this is on his if he
has some sort of service website, social media. I don't know,
(02:06:00):
but he has. He has a different take on this,
and I'm wondering if it will change your mind. Listen
to this, and I'm not going to play you the
whole thing, but just listen to some of the points
he makes. Or you can watch along on RMGTV at
roverradio dot com or with the Rover Radio app on
your phone, your tablet, or your TV. Listen to this.
Speaker 4 (02:06:22):
If you heard how young people suffered today.
Speaker 8 (02:06:25):
Nay stream out the top of my lines.
Speaker 4 (02:06:30):
Social media is filled with videos that say younger generations
are finding it hotter and horder to get reliable jobs,
afford comfortable times. Stot a family. We baby boomers had
things so much easier. Your father could somehow afford a house,
a car, and also put multiple kids through college.
Speaker 3 (02:06:48):
But and now steemed near possible for normal people to
get ahead financially or shoot, even own a home.
Speaker 4 (02:06:54):
This meme gets millions of views. Once upon a time,
meaning when I was a kid, family could own a home,
a car, and send their kids to college all on
one income. This meme is all over the internet. People
believe it, and that's really a fantasy. Economist Norbert Michelle,
it's not true.
Speaker 16 (02:07:14):
No, it seems really great to think that everything was
so awesome back then, but it wasn't. Materially, we are
so much better off now than we were in the
sixties and seventies.
Speaker 4 (02:07:25):
Well, young people get clicks asking what's the point of working.
Speaker 3 (02:07:29):
You can't even live in a house. Most people don't
live in houses because it's too expensive. That's just the
factual mistake.
Speaker 4 (02:07:36):
Since the data show more Americans own homes today than
did when I was a kid. People, so they show
the statistic here. In nineteen fifty, fifty five percent of
people owned homes. In twenty twenty five, sixty five percent
of people own homes. What age that's gone, well all age?
Oh oh okay, yeah, just have all of American's. That's
(02:07:59):
that's the surprising set, all right. Then there's a couple
other surprises in here.
Speaker 8 (02:08:04):
And I know this.
Speaker 3 (02:08:06):
I know that this is not like you know, Yes,
I'd like to be talking about Crystal's butthole puckering up too,
but we can't always talk about that, right, So I
know it's not the most exciting thing. But he does
make some good points.
Speaker 16 (02:08:18):
Listen, when I was a kid, people are still buying homes,
but it's just far more expensive for them to be
buying homes.
Speaker 4 (02:08:24):
Progressives like Columbia professor Jeremy Nay, you're giving out ted
talk about how inequality is a matter of life and death. Say,
the meme is right on this is correct, that is correct,
but it's misleading. Hows this are more expensive today, but
they're bigger and nicer.
Speaker 16 (02:08:42):
The homes that we're buying now are not the homes
that people were buying in the fifties, sixties and seventies.
Speaker 3 (02:08:48):
Four bed, three bath with a two car garage. We
have bigger homes, better equipped homes.
Speaker 4 (02:08:54):
Modern homes are much bigger than homes were when.
Speaker 3 (02:08:57):
I was a kid. So in sixty three, the medium
home size was thirteen hundred square feet. Now it's almost
twenty three hundred.
Speaker 6 (02:09:06):
And maybe the problem is that builders aren't incentivized to
build those smaller homes anymore. Maybe they're not building those so, yes,
the homes are bigger. But if you if you're just
starting out, that all doesn't exist.
Speaker 3 (02:09:17):
The builders, I think would be when you say they're
not incentivized, they're going to build what is going to
sell and make that money. So if they thought they
could sell, if small homes were the thing and everybody
they go, oh, only I could find a thirteen hundred
square foot home, they would build it so that some
people would buy it. Well, maybe they're not for some reason,
but they are. Tiny homes exist for that reason, right,
(02:09:39):
nobody extually uses it's not a real thing. Now there's
a real statistic in hear that I want to that
I think is probably the best point that they make. Well,
they'll get to it.
Speaker 4 (02:09:46):
On a sad twice as likely to have central air, dishwashers,
garbage disposals.
Speaker 3 (02:09:52):
Almost all homes now have washers and dryers. They didn't
used to.
Speaker 4 (02:09:57):
The popular meme doesn't mention that homes were cheaper than
because they're what people today call lovesy homes. The costs
are still ten twenty times higher. No, they're not not
if you adjust for inflation.
Speaker 16 (02:10:11):
Plus, we spend a smaller share of our income on food,
clothing and housing than we did.
Speaker 4 (02:10:19):
Here's the data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Americans
now spend less of our money on food, clothing, and shelter.
I think that this here is an incredible statistic. Here
and you'll see now nobody remembers nineteen oh one, none
of us were alive. But at the time in nineteen
oh one, if you were to spend you know how
(02:10:42):
much of your income went to food, clothing, and shelter.
Those are your three main things main Those are your
basic necessities. And in nineteen oh one, about eighty it
looks like about eighty two eighty three percent of your
income was spent on food, clothing, and shelter. In nineteen fifty,
(02:11:03):
when Fossel was a kid or born or whatever, it
looks about maybe sixty two percent of your income was
spent on food, clothing, and shelter.
Speaker 3 (02:11:15):
And now if you'd say the same since the seventies.
If you bring this down here, Snitz, I can't see here.
In twenty twenty three, it looks like approximately thirty seven percent,
roughly thirty seven percent of your income is spent on food, clothing,
(02:11:37):
and shelter. It has gone down significantly. If you look here,
in nineteen eighty five, it's almost fifty percent of your
income was spent on food, clothing, and shelter, and now
we're at the lowest it's ever been, only about thirty
seven percent of your income is spent on that. So
pretty much since the same since the seventies, pretty much
Now in the seventies, it looks to be over over
(02:11:58):
forty percent, forty three percent. Sixty one, it was fifty
two percent. Eighty five it was forty eight. It's gone.
In ninety seven it looks about forty five percent. Two
thousand and three we're down to about forty one percent.
Ten years later we're down to about thirty nine percent,
And now in twenty twenty three we're at the lowest
it's ever been, down to about thirty seven percent. You
(02:12:21):
go back one hundred years, a little more than one
hundred years, about one hundred years when eighty percent or
more of your income was spent on all those things.
So if you wanted to spend eighty percent of your
income on food, clothing, and shelter more even more people
would it would have When do baby boomers, like, I
don't what is the age of baby boomer? What year
would have been?
Speaker 8 (02:12:41):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (02:12:41):
Age year range of when they would be buying a home? Oh,
when they would be buying a home. Well, they were
born right after World War two, right, it probably would
baby boom, so they'd probably be no, not the sixties.
Oh you're saying what they be born and were up
to the six you know, I don't, I don't know.
(02:13:02):
I would say baby boomers would be from about forty
five to nineteen forty five to what Uh, I don't know,
but yeah, they're buying they're probably buying homes when they
are in their thirty years old when they're buying homes.
So in about nineteen eighty to eighty five, that's when
(02:13:24):
they're buying homes. Yeah, seventy three right there now by
eighty five, forty six baby boomers forty six, forty six too,
are both forty six to what you said? Sixteen four? Oh, yeah,
from nineteen forty six to nineteen sixty four. So baby boomers,
the bulk of baby boomers are buying right here in
(02:13:45):
nineteen eighty five, and it's about forty eight percent. So
what do we spend off? You're in dead.
Speaker 16 (02:13:50):
Well, here we have a lot more things and we
don't have to work as hard to get them. When
I was a kid, few people lived like people do now.
Now is the norm go out for lunch. It's the
norm to go out for dinner, or to order in
or to get uber eats.
Speaker 4 (02:14:04):
My family never went out to eat. People didn't have
enough money. Also, back then, families didn't fly places for
vacation because flying costs so much more. Adjusted for inflation,
across country flight costs more than one thousand dollars now
it's about three hundred dollars.
Speaker 16 (02:14:21):
People did not just go on vacation. People did not
fly all across the country. But TikTokers say, we young
people have it so much tougher. Anyways, they go on
and on.
Speaker 3 (02:14:30):
I'm not going to play this whole thing, but I
think that's interesting points to be made. I'm not an economist.
I don't know, I don't know if but things are different.
There's no doubt about it. So people who complain, oh,
it was so much easier, Well, actually, in a lot
of ways it was harder back then. And they're right.
We have a lot more luxuries that I think we
(02:14:53):
take for granted. I take for granted, you take for granted,
we all take for granted. Charlie. Think of all the
countries you've been to in the world. World in nineteen fifty,
nineteen sixty, nineteen seventies, people weren't doing that.
Speaker 6 (02:15:06):
Oh, I'm not saying I have it that bad. I'm
saying people my age, people younger have it. I'm personally
doing pretty good.
Speaker 3 (02:15:14):
So no, I'm not saying, but I think if you
according to this, they're saying people who are complaining you
really don't have it bad. In fact, you have more
money and things are easier than it was back in
the fifties, Like people claim all the you know, I
have to be a trend life or whatever. There's bills
now that we've never had back then. You need a
(02:15:36):
cell phone, that's one hundred dollars, that's a that's a
good chunk of change you have to have that. You
could say, but you used to have a landline back then,
and adjusted for inflation, your landline was one hundred dollars
a month back between the whole family. I guess.
Speaker 4 (02:15:51):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (02:15:52):
And so there are things, I'm sure, I don't know
what else, but there are I'm sure there were things
that you used to pay for back then that you
certainly don't need to, that's for sure. But I'm just
just giving you a different perspective there. I don't know
if they're right or wrong. Joe in Rochester, you're Ron
(02:16:12):
rovers Morning the Morning.
Speaker 8 (02:16:13):
Joe.
Speaker 9 (02:16:15):
Hey, roer hey, time caller listening since day one of Rochester.
Speaker 3 (02:16:20):
Thank you. I appreciate that.
Speaker 9 (02:16:22):
Yeah, no problem. So I think he's got some amazing
points about we do spend a lot more money on
certain things we don't need these days. But the main
thing he's leaving now is the cost of homes versus
the wage is not the same. If you look at
any type of graph that shows the average income versus
(02:16:45):
what the average houses, it's been going down and down
every year the wage now.
Speaker 3 (02:16:52):
But I think that's that's I think that's covered in
the chart that they showed, which is people now are
spending thirty seven percent of their income on food, clothing,
and shelter. It used to be you go back one
hundred years is eighty percent, but you go back more recently,
it was you know, sixty percent or something. So we're
paying less. So that's the argument that he's making. If
(02:17:17):
you wanted to pay fifty sixty percent of your income
on food, clothing, and shelter, way more people would have
a home. But people have deprioritized that in order to
go out and get a seven dollars Starbucks and go
on four vacations a year with all their girlfriends. So
I think that's that's the point that they're trying to
(02:17:38):
make everything is. You know, for instance, people let's make
America great again. Well, it's like dating a girlfriend. You
look back and you go you forget about oh yeah,
that part of her sucked, No wonder I broke up
with her, But you you sort of forget about the
negative things that have happened in the past. So that's
(02:18:00):
the point that he's trying.
Speaker 9 (02:18:01):
Can I give you some anecdotal evidence.
Speaker 3 (02:18:03):
I know this isn't sure.
Speaker 9 (02:18:05):
So my father in nineteen seventy two, I had this
conversation with a recently moved actually went through it, so
I was curious. He walked into a place at eighteen
years old, high school education, no college, no skill, got
a job thirty two dollars an hour for today's twenty
twenty five equivalent. Nobody could do that today. Not only
did he get thirty two dollars per hour, he got
(02:18:27):
full medical, full four to oh one k match pension.
I mean yearly Raises worked there for thirty five years
before retiring. Nobody could do that today. And because he
was able to do that at eighteen, at twenty two,
he bought a house. At twenty four, he got married
at twenty six, he had a kid. At thirty, he
had another kid, stay at home, wife, two cars. Nobody
(02:18:48):
could do that today's. They'd be unheard of for an
eighteen year old to do that today.
Speaker 3 (02:18:54):
Look, I don't know. I think some eighteen year olds
you can leave and go into the trades. They make
an incredible amount of money in the trades, And do
you do it right out of the gate. No, But
machine shop people, I know they're making pretty good dough.
So I don't know if that's entirely true. But again,
(02:19:17):
your father was spending seventy percent of his income on
those things, as opposed to thirty seven percent of his
income on those things. So the eighteen year olds or
the twenty five year olds could do that, they just
have to spend money on that kind of stuff instead
of video games and things like that. So I think
(02:19:38):
that's the difference. Joe, thank you, I appreciate it. Day
one listener there, Joe is, I've got to take a break, Dougie,
what do you have coming up in the shizzy?
Speaker 8 (02:19:50):
Coming up in the news, we have a little bit
of insight into Keith Urvin and what he does on
stage that has people talking about the divorce.
Speaker 3 (02:20:01):
Oh yeah, this is the Kman divorce with Nicole Kidman. Yeah,
that's pretty interesting. How come the guy is always want
to play? He he's cheating. He must be cheating on her.
Those are the rumors that are started immediately, probably buying
Nicole Kidman's people. Pr people take a look and decide, Uh,
how do we know that she's not the one that's
running around on him, the poor guy. We'll be right back.
(02:20:23):
Hang on, Gugi is so dumb.
Speaker 4 (02:20:27):
She got great nuts was an std.
Speaker 3 (02:20:31):
It's so stupid. This is rovers morning Glory. Jusy coming
up in just a moment.
Speaker 8 (02:20:48):
What do you have on the way Dougi, a teenager
gets busted by the help of Chad GPT. I'll tell
you the story next.
Speaker 3 (02:20:55):
All right, we'll get to that in just a moment.
Johnny Ringo, you're on rovers, weren't gloring? Good morning, Johnny Ringo?
So one of my friends are we doing? Hey, what's happening?
Speaker 8 (02:21:12):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (02:21:12):
Just question?
Speaker 9 (02:21:13):
So the stats that you guys were.
Speaker 17 (02:21:14):
Talking about earlier regarding the difference between like, you know, seventies,
eighties and then now, is anybody else is.
Speaker 3 (02:21:22):
My curious ads to like the population in them stats?
Speaker 17 (02:21:25):
Like how't considered we've grown in population compared to then?
Speaker 3 (02:21:29):
Well, population has indeed grown, There's no doubt about it.
We have what three hundred and fifty some million people
in the United States of America. Now, when I was
a kid, I want to say, we might have had
two hundred million, maybe two twenty five, somewhere around in
that range. I think, Uh so population has grown, But
(02:21:50):
what does that have to do with anything? Well, it's
just the factor of how they were comparing what it
was then for jobs and housing and you know, like the.
Speaker 17 (02:22:00):
Food, shelter, clothing statistics compared to now as far as
necessities and the way that the world has evolved and
the population has grown.
Speaker 9 (02:22:09):
Like I guess what tipped me off was the guy
who brought.
Speaker 3 (02:22:11):
On and said at eighteen it was unheard of for
a guy.
Speaker 9 (02:22:14):
To have two kids, two cars in a house.
Speaker 3 (02:22:16):
That would be like unimaginable. But I mean at what age.
I mean, I think it wasn't like in the seventies.
Speaker 17 (02:22:22):
I think it was twenty seven was the average age
for a man to get married and have a kid
and try to get a house by twenty seven, so
compared to now, I just the comparison scale was kind
of thrown me off.
Speaker 3 (02:22:32):
I suppose, yeah, I look, it certainly seems, but we
are also reinforced like oh, everything is much more expensive
and unaffordable and you can't get ahead. It seems that way,
but I don't know if it really is or not.
I don't know the answer to that. So, uh, Johnny, yeah, picking.
Speaker 9 (02:22:50):
The brain this morning.
Speaker 3 (02:22:51):
I love this show.
Speaker 9 (02:22:51):
Guys keeper gooing we.
Speaker 3 (02:22:52):
Love you too, thank you sounds like he could be
And uh, he's got to be in like a band, right,
some sort of cover band. He's playing a bar saturdays, right,
Johnny Ringo, right, has to something exactly the beatles sounds
like a loungeack. No, no, no, I don't see them. No. Also,
(02:23:14):
don't forget when I was and I don't know what
was going on exactly, but I remember when I was
a little kid. Again, I was born at seventy five,
and so when the earliest that I can remember, you
would start talking about homes or whatever, buying a home,
so on and so forth, and you start asking your parents,
(02:23:35):
your mom in my case, and grandparents like you ask
questions about how things work, and how do credit cards work,
how do you know? How do you go home? Loan work?
All this stuff. At the time in the eighties, if
you wanted to get a mortgage, like we complained about
mortgage rates now being what six seven it was six
(02:23:55):
percent or whatever it is. In the eighties it was
like eighteen percent. It was insane. I mean, I could
you imagine if you were if you had, if you
had an eighteen percent mortgage on your home, you wouldn't
be able to afford anything. Perhaps a shack, That's about it.
Speaker 8 (02:24:18):
I just looked up my old childhood home when my
parents got a divorce and they sold the house for
eighty eight thousand dollars and it was fourteen hundred square feet.
Uh huh, I saw pictures of it. It was pretty
much the exact same. The deck or everything was the
exact same. I think they bought it for seventy one
(02:24:43):
seventy two thousand back.
Speaker 3 (02:24:45):
Then, so they who bought it, my mom and dad.
They bought it for seventy one thousand, and they sold
it for eighty eight thousand. What's it worth today?
Speaker 8 (02:24:52):
Two hundred and sixty thousand, two one hundred and sixty thousand,
looking exactly the same as it did. It's not on
the market. But the value they say.
Speaker 3 (02:25:00):
And I don't know what that means, but adjusted for inflation.
So people are paid more now, you know. But we
had a nice home back then.
Speaker 8 (02:25:08):
Yeah, like it was a really for us fifteen hundred
square feet finished basement like my dad did all that.
Speaker 3 (02:25:15):
You think about that? Yeah, it's crazy. Let's see here,
Tuji are you oh by? Let me see here? What else?
There was another one? I wanted to get to what
I forgot? Scrolled down? Are you ready for these shoes? A? Yeah,
here we go, kit is shizzy, I'll rollers morning glorious.
Speaker 8 (02:25:35):
There's a skydiver who plummeted eleven thousand feet to the
ground after both of his parachutes failed, fracturing his pelvis,
but by some chance he survived.
Speaker 3 (02:25:46):
Wow miracle. When the parachute so they didn't deploy, they
must have come out or something though, and slowed him
down a little bit.
Speaker 8 (02:25:53):
Mitchell Deacon is his name. Twenty five years old. He
had flown from the UK to take part in the stunt.
Was carrying out a tandem jump longside instructor when his
main parachute and emergency chute didn't open, sending both men
burtling to earth. The pair spun out of control, hitting
the ground about thirty five to forty five miles per hour.
Both men were airlifted to a hospital. So crazy, how
(02:26:19):
you survived that? Does he have a helmet?
Speaker 18 (02:26:21):
Came on?
Speaker 3 (02:26:21):
I'd like to see that. Most a lot of times
people will have a GoPro or something.
Speaker 8 (02:26:25):
On the instructor. It remains in critical condition. Elsewhere in
the news, we have a Springfield teenager accused of vandalizing
seventeen cars in a Missouri State University freshman parking lot
with CHATCHPT plus his cell phone data busting him. His
(02:26:46):
name is Ryan Shafer. He's now charged with felony first
degree property damage. His phone was placed in the parking
lot at the time of the crime, and he also
talked to chat Gpt after the alleged crime. Investigator investigatives
say they found a conversation with chat chebt in which
she for described damaging vehicles and asked if he could
go to jail.
Speaker 3 (02:27:06):
Oh my god, so he the phone is pane there, Yeah,
and then he talks.
Speaker 8 (02:27:13):
To chat chept to see if he'll get any jail time.
An annual drive through report found America's drive through has
got nine seconds slower this year, despite AI's help. The
average is now five minutes thirty five seconds. Taco Bell
is the fastest with four minutes.
Speaker 9 (02:27:31):
Why do that?
Speaker 6 (02:27:34):
When I used to work there, that would never fly?
Not Taco Bell McDonald's. I don't remember what her times were.
I feel like it was one hundred and twenty seconds.
Speaker 3 (02:27:42):
No, but that's probably You're calculating the time the only
way you can, which is from the time that they
placed the order until the time you hand them the order. Well,
this I'm assuming is calculated from the time you get
in line waiting. Uncle. Hell, we didn't have a line,
I think, and I know we didn't have a line,
Jake fil A. They might have to call you back,
(02:28:02):
bring me, bring you out of retirement, whip that place
into ship. It was so much yelling going on to
make sure, and that's what it would always boggle. That's
when I remember when I started working there, when they
started telling people to pull off to the side for
the first times, and we'd be like, you got to
pull up, and the guy would be like, there's nobody
behind me, and go, you have to pull up though,
(02:28:23):
and he goes, there's nobody behind me. He goes. My times,
I gotta I gotta address my I don't like that.
I don't like I don't when they pull up, I go,
I don't want to pull up, And especially if you're
looking at him, they're gonna they're gonna work faster to
get you out of there.
Speaker 6 (02:28:40):
And when you pull up and then they forget something,
not what. I'm not at the window anymore. I have
nuggets now and I don't have sauces.
Speaker 3 (02:28:48):
Sometimes I've pulled forward and I swear to God, I
think they actually have forgotten me that I've pulled forward.
It's like I've just dropped off the screen. I don't
know what happens.
Speaker 8 (02:28:57):
Kick fil A had the slowest drive through time this
year at seven.
Speaker 3 (02:29:00):
Minutes six seconds.
Speaker 8 (02:29:02):
Yeah, A bear's surprise shoppers at a grocery store in
southern Arizona when it just walked through the front door
and ran around inside for a few minutes.
Speaker 3 (02:29:10):
And then exited the building.
Speaker 8 (02:29:13):
The bear was seen in the store and then again
Monday behind the store before entering it.
Speaker 3 (02:29:20):
There it is. I saw it on a news video.
The bear. I don't know where it's there. It is
running through the store. So cute would they do with it?
What did they get it? Did they kill it? I
hope not?
Speaker 8 (02:29:33):
Well, it didn't take anything. The officer who was nearby,
they got people out of the building. They lost track
of the bear after it left the store. All right, okay,
we have what else going on baseball all day today?
The twenty twenty five Major League Baseball playoffs. They are
currently in the Wildcard series round. So we have the Dodgers.
(02:29:54):
They've advanced to the National League Division Series. They swept
the Reds in two games, going to face the Phillies.
The other three wild card series are tied one to one,
so we have the Guardians winning yesterday, so Detroit and
the Guardians they are tied, series tied one to one.
The Cubs and the Padres series tied one to one,
(02:30:15):
and then the Red Sox and the Yankees tied one
to one.
Speaker 3 (02:30:18):
What times the Guardians game today?
Speaker 8 (02:30:20):
Guardians game three? We played at three eight pm?
Speaker 3 (02:30:23):
Did they change this? Well, it's gonna I don't every day,
but that's what somebody told me. But it was I
swear to God, because even when I was looking up tickets,
I was like, let me see a ticket. Sometimes it
said one o'clock. Other times I said three o'clock. So
it was it one o'clock or three o'clock.
Speaker 8 (02:30:38):
Well, for me, I'm guessing you maybe they change. We're televised.
Speaker 3 (02:30:43):
Maybe they changed when somebody like one you told I
think one of the other games. I think they were
done in the National League, So maybe they had it's three,
they had more slots available to put games later.
Speaker 8 (02:30:55):
If that Guardians three, eight pm, and then the Padres
Cubs that's five away pm, and then you have the
Red Sox and Yankees primetime, all right, eight to oh eight.
I'm sure the last time I said this people would
have corrected me.
Speaker 3 (02:31:12):
Right. Oh No, I believe you. I feel like I
was just wondering if I'd making that up in my
mind or not that have changed. No, this one says
to be away.
Speaker 8 (02:31:20):
The author with the most banned books in the United
States is Stephen King.
Speaker 3 (02:31:25):
Banned the books. Where would you banish Stephen King?
Speaker 8 (02:31:28):
There's a nonprofit pen America. They recorded nearly seven thousand
instances last school year of books being banned across almost
half of the country, with the vast majority in Florida, Texas,
and Tennessee. It found the most banned books were by
best selling scary movie author book writer Stephen King, whose
books were banned over two hundred times last year. King
(02:31:49):
blasted the bands on social media and suggested people read
his books to see what all the moaning is about.
Speaker 3 (02:31:55):
In Drow, security says that they worked security at the
game and the game is three to eight. First pitch
it was one to eight, but because these series with
the Reds is over, they moved it to three eight.
So if that answers the question there, Charlie go on, dude.
Speaker 8 (02:32:09):
And finally, there are rumors that Keith Irvin and rising
country star Maggie Baugh. I'm saying that correctly. There's sparking
Major buzz amid his divorce from Nicole Kidman thanks to
not only him changing the recent lyrics of one of
his songs, but a past collaboration from a clip. People
(02:32:32):
are looking at this clip from Vegas's Mandalay Bay during
their April first performance of The Fighter, So Keith joins
Maggie on stage and points at her just before singing
I was Born to Love you.
Speaker 3 (02:32:54):
Stand stretch. That is a real stretch. I mean he's
just he just kind of like threw his arm up,
sort of pointing in her direction. But I think that's
more like she's gonna start singing the next line, right.
Speaker 6 (02:33:16):
So I went to I was like, who's this lady,
Let's go. He must be a smoke show. Let's get
her Instagram. I'm not saying she's that or not. I'm
just saying I want to say I want to I
have some. But the comments, this is who he chose
over Nicole Headman. Maggie, what have you done to Keith
Urban You're kidding me. That's what people want, wasn't it?
(02:33:36):
Hillbilly hound Dog? Is this home rerecord with a cowboy hat?
Oh that's really sad.
Speaker 9 (02:33:40):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:33:41):
Do you love the commenting something leisure that they have
no idea whether that's true or not. So hard, too hard,
trying too hard.
Speaker 17 (02:33:50):
Dog.
Speaker 3 (02:33:50):
He remained at the bottom of the barrel. And then
they're just going through all of her stuff. This is
in your life. What do you care? Yeah? I agree,
what do you care?
Speaker 8 (02:33:59):
Now?
Speaker 3 (02:34:00):
Here's maybe it's something to do with the name. Rachel says,
it might be the name Keith. My boyfriend was cheating
on me and he's named Keith as well, just like
Keith Urban. So her name's Maxe. No, her name is Rachel.
So if you are dating somebody named Keith, be a
(02:34:20):
little bit skeptical of them. Okay, a word to the wise,
go on, boogie.
Speaker 8 (02:34:30):
That's the sizy young Rover's morning Cory.
Speaker 3 (02:34:39):
Maybe I need to get into the country with Yeah,
drunk a little bit too much. I think that's what
she said. Oh, let's see here. Stephen King. Stephen King's
(02:35:05):
books are banned where in schools or public libraries at
what level of school? A lot of his books can
kind of be filthy sexually, So I don't yeah, I
don't know. Well, they said certain states and stuff like Florida,
and I see yeah, uh, Columbust. Jim says, Nicole Kidman's
face looks fake. What do you mean, like plastic surgery
(02:35:29):
or something, or a lot of.
Speaker 19 (02:35:32):
Botox and filler and all that fun stuff. Would you
will go overboard with that? Like, especially just from spending
so much time in Miami Beach. Like, I don't know
exactly what happens.
Speaker 3 (02:35:45):
I guess maybe you do it and you start and
you like the look of that, and then you just
you go overboard and before you know it, you look
like an alien chick. The chicks look completely insane down there.
But I'm fifty years old now, I might I might
start needing to you know, I might need to go
for some procedures or something. Let's go. I might overdo
(02:36:07):
it for bowt. I need a little uh, I don't know,
some botox maybe uh, maybe I got to get a
face lift or something. Or your eyes are a little droopy.
Maybe you could your boobs are droopy, but I don't
bring that up.
Speaker 8 (02:36:21):
My boobs are perfect. Doctor Goldschmith did them? Can you
just do a little It'll just open up your face.
Speaker 3 (02:36:27):
Do you think you're fighting? We need I need, no,
you need to do something here with this.
Speaker 9 (02:36:33):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (02:36:34):
And then and then I need some sort of upper bleff.
I've been told by.
Speaker 8 (02:36:40):
Your eyelids are yeah, they go, you look like I
just said that.
Speaker 3 (02:36:43):
And now you're it's not botox, that's a different that's
like a surgery thing. So maybe maybe what will happen.
Maybe maybe I'll go on our Christmas vacation and I'll
come back and you'll go, who is that? Oh my god,
they got rid of Rover. It would just be the
new rope, new face. Yeah, and it'll look like one
of these because not only the women are doing that Miami.
(02:37:04):
I was just there last weekend. Dudes are doing this too,
man Like they're crazy looking, like their faces are so
pulled back and so tight and just like like it's
it's really really insane. Well, we're obsessed with looking young.
Speaker 7 (02:37:23):
That is the biggest obsession I would say Americans have
is wanting to look young. And guys are obviously going
after younger, hotter ladies.
Speaker 3 (02:37:33):
They don't want these old women. It's not like something new,
like you know, like we were just talking about homes
and what could you afford back in the day, and
how were things different. It wasn't like back in the
in the seventies and eighties, dudes were like, man, you
know I wanted old bitch. No, no, they were You're
always looking for a younger, hotter woman.
Speaker 7 (02:37:53):
That's that's just, that's just so we like that young,
fresh look, and we've just become more and more obsessed
with obtaining that live forever and that young look.
Speaker 3 (02:38:04):
I honestly, I'd rather live forever. I don't care what
I look like. I would rather have a longer life
than be worried about what I look like in that life. Now,
obviously I don't want to look like a gargoyle. But now,
what do you do to maintain your youthful appearance? Do
you guys spend a lot of you get botox, stougie?
(02:38:27):
What else do you do? You dye your hair?
Speaker 8 (02:38:29):
I have to dye my hair. What if I don't
dye my hair like I'm going in a couple of days?
Speaker 19 (02:38:34):
Uh huh.
Speaker 8 (02:38:35):
I if I could afford it, I would have to
dye my hair every ten days.
Speaker 3 (02:38:41):
Oh my god? Really, Now have you considered cutting your hair?
I know you I something. No, No, I understand that, But.
Speaker 8 (02:38:50):
No, I'm not cutting my hair.
Speaker 3 (02:38:53):
Why not?
Speaker 8 (02:38:53):
Because I don't want to.
Speaker 3 (02:38:54):
I don't I'm not ready to talk. Yeah, it's over. Yeah,
you're officially an old lady that point. Yeah, you don't
want to give it to that. No, I'm not going.
Why do you want her to do it?
Speaker 8 (02:39:03):
He really does, because he doesn't want me to have
sex with anyone.
Speaker 3 (02:39:07):
It is over.
Speaker 8 (02:39:08):
If I chop all my hair off and go old lady.
Speaker 3 (02:39:11):
My wife wants to cut her hair, does that. There's
no way she would ever want She doesn't like apparently,
I obviously I don't have any hair at all, but
according to her, it's hot. She claims that her hair
chokes her. Now, I don't know how that's possible, but
she it comes down and it's so thick, and it
(02:39:32):
comes around her neck, and she claims that it chokes her.
Speaker 8 (02:39:35):
Sleep at night when she's sleep.
Speaker 3 (02:39:37):
I don't know, or maybe it's all the time. I
don't know.
Speaker 17 (02:39:40):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (02:39:41):
And so she she's like, I just want to chop
all my hair off.
Speaker 8 (02:39:45):
Now.
Speaker 3 (02:39:45):
I I don't care if she gets shorter hair, but
she said it wouldn't make that wouldn't help if she
cut her hair shorter. And I'm like, yeah, she wants
to shave her head. I go, no, that's it's like
Britney spears once she went crazy, So don't do that. Okay,
So I don't doe. I just think Douche could perhaps
(02:40:05):
maybe it would be less to manage if she had
shorter That's what you're saying to an old lady. No,
this is going through the dementia. You go, hey, this
is less. You don't have to worry about it anymore.
You just wake up, get up and go, uh, why
do you want her to cut her hair? Okay, don't
cut your hair. Not going to cut my hair. Why
do you want her to do you think she looked better?
(02:40:28):
He hates my hair with I don't think you don't
know what I don't know how short are we talking?
We're going like the John and Kate like like I've
I've actually tried to figure out, like what would my
wife look like if she got her hair like cut,
like shoulder length or something. That'd be a huge difference,
(02:40:48):
And I'm like, I don't know if that would look
good or not. Yeah, we should cut your hair, Duji.
No a dry run with her before it, just a
trial run, just to see what it looked like, see
if it for you? And what do you spend do
you have any sort of things. You try to appear
more youthful with crystal, like you spend money on. Do
(02:41:10):
you have any like? My wife has a bunch of potions.
I don't even know what the hell these things do.
She's putting all sorts of stuff all over her face,
though she claims she's not. I only have two or
three things I put on my face, tides and retting on. Yeah, yeah,
whatever that stuff is, I don't know, But I don't
put anything on my face. Maybe I need to start.
But do you put stuff on your face too? I
(02:41:33):
did more when I was single.
Speaker 7 (02:41:35):
I was like, okay, I got a certain layer and
all this stuff on toner and all the things, but
I just washed my face. I wear makeup every single day.
I'm lucky to be blessed with not a lot of acne.
You know, on occasion, I'll get a little pimple here
or there, but maybe I'll throw on an acne patch
for that pimple.
Speaker 3 (02:41:52):
Are you okay? So you get a boyfriend, and when
you get said boyfriend, you are at You're putting the
most amount of effort into your appearance.
Speaker 7 (02:42:01):
Oh yeah, physical appearance. I'm working out every day. I am, Yes,
I was definitely.
Speaker 3 (02:42:08):
A little bit. I'm going for your boyfriend here. Okay,
he probably hasn't brought it up, and I don't notice this.
I see you every day. I'm not sleeping with you,
so I don't know, you know, like you know, I
can't compare Crystal's body today to what it was two
years ago, or her face or whatever, or hair or
anything like that. I don't. I'm not paying enough attention
(02:42:30):
to that. But I'm just telling you. What it sounds
like you're saying is that you are letting yourself go.
Speaker 7 (02:42:36):
I did a little Yeah, I did a problem with
the guest, and really physical wise, I was trying to
trade out time at the gym for time with my boyfriend.
Instead the time that I was spending at the gym,
I was focusing on spending time with him, and he smiling.
Speaker 3 (02:42:51):
Why are you smiling?
Speaker 8 (02:42:54):
Off?
Speaker 3 (02:42:55):
I'm actually getting a lot of shape because of you,
not because of me. It's not because I'm lazy and
I'm sacrificing. This is how much I care about Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 7 (02:43:09):
I see he's been wanting to get on He's been
wanting to get on the gym train as he wants
to get back into the gym, and he's like, you know,
we we should we should be healthy.
Speaker 3 (02:43:19):
Okay, so let me tell you that's his way of saying,
you're letting yourself go. He doesn't want to go to
the gym, he doesn't care, but he's he's like, you know,
how can I diplomatically put this to her without offunding her?
Oh wow, planet whatever plant fits two for one special
plan tim whenever you want.
Speaker 7 (02:43:41):
So, I actually have been trying to get up off
the couch, be a little bit more active than I
have been, And what.
Speaker 3 (02:43:47):
About all these potions for your facis well, also trying
to not eat as much.
Speaker 7 (02:43:51):
Look, let's limit how much food I'm intaking, which marijuana
obviously helps increase that. So let's limit that and start
being more again. In this way, I'll feel better about myself,
which in turn makes our relationship more passionate, because I
feel good about.
Speaker 3 (02:44:06):
What I look like.
Speaker 7 (02:44:07):
So I do want to start getting back into feeling
and looking better because I think when I look better,
I feel better on the inside. So and right now,
I don't feel as good when I look in the
mirror and I walk past. I walk around naked a
lot too, and I walk past mirrors and I see
what I look like on occasion and go, I don't
like what I see, so I do try to counteract.
And I think a lot of women do that with
(02:44:28):
these creams and things. They don't like what they're seeing.
You want to prevent maybe seeing stuff in the future,
like wrinkles. My mom always told me when I was young,
start moisturizing. Now the wrinkles are, they're gonna happen, so
if you could try to prevent them as much as possible.
Speaker 3 (02:44:43):
Moisturizing stop wrinkles. This is how dumb dudes are. I
don't know.
Speaker 7 (02:44:46):
And don't forget about your neck. You know, your neck
in your hands. Women forget. They do all this stuff
on their face and their face looks great, but then
they still have turkey neck. They still have old lady hands.
So you know, focus on those areas too. You could
get filler there. You can do other things, but maintain
all of it, not just one part of it. Now
you walk around naked. I walk around naked all the time.
Speaker 3 (02:45:10):
I walk around naked so much that a couple of
days ago, I was standing in the kitchen. It's about
two o'clock in the afternoon and I'm talking with B
two and she said something about going out to get
the mail or outside, something I was going to do outside,
and I said, I can't. I Oh, I can't do
(02:45:30):
that right now. Obviously, she goes, why not? And I go,
I have no pants on. I'm literally naked long out
and she's like, oh, I didn't even notice. Now, I
don't know if that's like a really bad thing. Like
I'm so tiny down there, so minuscule. I'm such a
like it's almost like a mental block. She's like, it's
(02:45:52):
like a traumatic event. You know, people who have been
abused in the past, like they don't remember it. They
blocked it out. My wife may be blocking out my
naked goodness out of her brain.
Speaker 8 (02:46:01):
But uh.
Speaker 3 (02:46:03):
She she quickly recovered though, and was like, oh, you
do that so you I'm just so used to you
walking around. I actually had a shirt on and no
pants on. Donald Duck. Yeah, why would you do that?
That's dumb? If you really want to know, do yes,
(02:46:23):
it's because I normally I would sleep completely naked. I
don't know why I didn't have pants on the other day,
but at night when I sleep, I don't know why.
Two o'clock in the afternoon. Why I was like this
the other day. But I've had a T shirt on
a lot for months now because I can't move my
left arm, and so when I sleep what happens. Normally
(02:46:46):
I would sleep and I put my arm up and
sleep like this, my right arm up and then you
turn over on the side and then you raise your
other arm up. Well, my arm is like paralyzed. My
left arm is paralyzed. I can't move it really, and
it's causing me to my my pit is just constantly
my arm is right next to my body and it's
(02:47:08):
getting Yeah, it's getting disgusting in my left arm pit.
It's nasty and so I need a tight T shirt
to provide uh buffer, but it still gets nasty. But
it's not skin on skin nastiness, which was like giving
me like a I don't know, like uh right, like
(02:47:28):
rubbing me yeah, yeah, basically, yeah, like rubbing me raw,
like like chafing or something. On top of it. It's
on top of that because this arm isn't moving and
you're just it's just up against your body. You wake
up in the morning after sleeping all night, and whatever
position I'm in, my left arm is right up next
(02:47:50):
to my body. Dude, that left arm, the pit, the stink.
It's like, b oh, it's so so nasty. I smelled
my right arm. I go, it's like, I don't sweat
in the middle, and I just totally fine. You smell
this left arm, you go, ooh, man, why are you shaking?
Your Head's a hot mess. I am going in for
(02:48:12):
my MRI today though, Oh today, that's right. I'm exciting.
In fact, I need to end a little bit early
because I have an appointment time for my MRI. But
they called yesterday and they go. My wife always handles
everything for me in advance. She fills out all that paperwork,
you know, does the pre check in online. It's really
(02:48:35):
it's really fantastic, I have to admit. But they call
yesterday and they go, we need them to come in
thirty minutes early. She goes, why is that. I mean,
all the pre checking stuff has been done. Yeah, yeah,
but there's some paperwork. She's like, yeah, but the paperwork's
already signed online. If we still need them to come
in thirty minutes early, so I have to leave a
(02:48:56):
like pronto. Okay, Teresa says, lady parts are more attractive, man,
parts not so much, and Westlake Rich says, if I
walk around naked like that, my wife can't resist jumping
on me.
Speaker 7 (02:49:13):
And that's after twenty years. Well, now we are the
opposite naked. I just want to say my boyfriend definitely
notices that I'm naked all the time because I go
to walk past the front door or a window or something,
and he'll be.
Speaker 3 (02:49:32):
Like, what are you doing? You're naked? Oh, somebody might
see you. I'm not even care.
Speaker 8 (02:49:37):
No open.
Speaker 3 (02:49:38):
See, that's the one thing about getting older, you care
so much less about everything. So what if? So what
if the ups guy comes and I'm naked from the
waist down and I walk past the door and he
looks in he sees me through the glass. What do
I care?
Speaker 7 (02:49:53):
So your boyfriend gets really I don't think he cares
too much, but he does like to be like, do
you remember your naked? The door is wide open and
it's glass. People if they're standing right can see you
perfectly if you walk past there. And I'm like, hey,
I'm going fast. Nobody's really looking that hard anyways, who cares.
Speaker 3 (02:50:14):
I've got to take a quick break. When we come back,
we'll wrap everything up. I do have kg the Elephant
tickets to give away here. Uh in just a few
minutes where we come back, so stand by for that.
We'll be right back on Rover's Morning Glory. Hang uh
these Grover's Morning Glory. All right, we're gonna rap things
up here in just a moment. I'm going in for that.
Speaker 5 (02:50:37):
MRI.
Speaker 17 (02:50:38):
I am.
Speaker 3 (02:50:40):
I'm not worried about it. It's not a big deal
of MRIs in the past. But what I am worried
about is what is the next step if they if
they do this and they go map nothing. We don't
see anything wrong.
Speaker 8 (02:50:51):
With it time, that's all. No, this is Oh it's
not getting more dude, Then it's frozen shoulder and you
just have to wait. You have to work through all
of it comes in.
Speaker 3 (02:51:01):
The sasial therapy didn't do any good for me. You
have to keep doing it. I'm just telling you. Then
it'll take it serio about two years.
Speaker 8 (02:51:08):
Yes, I didn't do any physical therapy because my doctor
was hot, so I didn't go back to him.
Speaker 3 (02:51:14):
Oh, you're in this for a while. I mean you're
probably you're already what a you're in so you're halfway through. No,
I don't know when This started at the beginning of
this year. We were halfway through. Dan says, why am
I getting so much dead air on my local radio
station KGB and Bingham to New York. I saw somebody
(02:51:36):
else send this. Uh, I think, Charlie, maybe you'll have
to send an email to Eager Beaver and have him
look into this for us. I don't know if that's
actually occurring. Is it on the radio, is it on
their stream? I don't know. It sounds like he's talking
about on the radio. UM let me up there, very
(02:52:00):
very angry email being fired off by Charlie right now.
Okayps Oh no, he's just typing in the address I
love twinks dot com. Sorry my mistake. I have a
(02:52:20):
pair of tickets to see Cage the Elephant on Wednesday
the twenty second at the Agora. If you call her
thirty right now eight six six year rover eight six
six nine six seven six eight three seven, good luck
to you. You get tickets at info at Axs dot com,
or you can win them if you caller thirty right
now eight sixty six yo, Rover. Look, what is this song?
Speaker 20 (02:52:45):
What's this song called cigarette Daydreams? Okay, I don't know
if I know this. Yesterday I like Cage the Olfer.
Speaker 6 (02:53:00):
According to my streaming thing, this is the second one's
popular was played song.
Speaker 3 (02:53:05):
All right, Hi, row in LA thinks I have a
torn rotator cuff. You've already known that, right, Well, isn't
that what the MRI will tell We're gonna find out. Hiro.
I'm going to be in Los Angeles this weekend. What
(02:53:30):
are you doing there? Just hanging out? Yeah? And building anything? Event? Surfing?
An event? Oh? Yeah, I'm in a surf competition. That's right, yep, sir.
Actually it's kind of like an Ironman competition, but it's
it's for skateboarding and surfing. Nice and then shark wrestling.
(02:53:53):
Oh okay, wow, so impressive. Yeah yeah, I'm just doing
all those.
Speaker 19 (02:53:57):
You know.
Speaker 3 (02:53:57):
It's like a twenty miles skateboard ride straight down the coast, big.
Speaker 8 (02:54:04):
Hill, you know, hang Tim bra Yeah, where are you staying?
What part of l A are you staying? Beverly Hills? No?
Speaker 3 (02:54:15):
Where do you stay when you go?
Speaker 8 (02:54:16):
No?
Speaker 3 (02:54:18):
I have to know. Honestly, I don't How do you
feel to be on the other side of this? I
don't like it. I haven't booked a hotel yet. I'm
last minute, Monica. I will let you know when I
get back erk just week.
Speaker 18 (02:54:39):
Eric Bron, it's so important that we may not even
we may not even be here at the beginning of
next week.
Speaker 3 (02:54:53):
What did you get?
Speaker 8 (02:54:58):
You are such a loser.
Speaker 3 (02:55:00):
Threesome with dual Lepa. Well you'll find out, so high Row,
I'll see you. Maybe i'll see you high Row. Maybe
i'll see you. I don't know, Maybe I'll meet up
with some people. You're right, because when's du A Lipa?
Speaker 8 (02:55:16):
Is that Sunday, Saturday, Saturday, Sunday, Tuesday?
Speaker 3 (02:55:20):
Oh, she's doing a whole bunch of shows.
Speaker 8 (02:55:22):
You're probably going Sunday, m hm, which is why you
wouldn't do Monday.
Speaker 3 (02:55:27):
You're such a lose you think you a lie? Right now?
Speaker 8 (02:55:31):
Do you have good seats?
Speaker 3 (02:55:33):
Turnstile, it's backstage? Are you kidding me? I'm here, I'm
on stage with Dualipa. She got to say, I'm bringing
out this guy.
Speaker 8 (02:55:41):
They can't move his arm.
Speaker 3 (02:55:42):
He is the sexiest man alive.
Speaker 4 (02:55:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:55:46):
Sure, I'm getting married or isn't she engaged or something?
But he, my my fiance, is my second choice because
this guy, he was already married, but here he is
Rover come out of three hands in the ear? Oh man,
he cannot wave him like. He just doesn't care. He
isn't she coming closer? She's going to Chicago in September.
Speaker 8 (02:56:10):
That's way closer than l A.
Speaker 3 (02:56:13):
Well, Boston. How many times are gonna here? I don't
get You're gonna see her twice Saturday and Sunday. Where
are the shelves at l A? But where the forum for?
If he wasn't going he is now? Where gars Miami?
Speaker 4 (02:56:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (02:56:38):
Maybe you have a place to stay in Miami. I don't.
Let's look the thing. But you're not gonna hear Monday,
he said to l A. Just a, we're not here Monday,
okay for sure? All right, yeah, that's correct. We'll be
(02:56:58):
here tomorrow and then we'll be back sometime next week.
Oh my god, depends how I hit it off with
a look. One thing leads to another. Oh she's doing one, two, three,
four shows in l A. Wow, okay, anyway, so hi roll,
(02:57:21):
maybe I'll see u. I don't know you're gonna get
Saturday night, Sunday night, Monday.
Speaker 8 (02:57:26):
We missed all such okay, you missed all the Chicago shows.
So this is October.
Speaker 3 (02:57:31):
Wow. All right, m R. We'll stop dancing and the show.
I can't When when is that?
Speaker 1 (02:57:45):
Laura?
Speaker 3 (02:57:48):
I'm according to Doogi's last night. I'm meeting the international
hooker there too. It's gonna be a giant origin. Nice
all right, I'll be back live tomorrow morning. I have
a great day. It's Rover's Morning. Glory Die pla