Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
This is Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Rover, there are laws against us, Dug, I think, Charlie,
I'm morning than you for sure, and Jeffrey please screening
on Roverradio dot Com. Rovers Morning Glory starts now.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
Good morning. What's happening? It is Tuesday, October twenty first,
twenty five. Good morning, gets Rover's Morning, Gloria. I'm Rover
DOOGEI is here, Coray, Sir, Charlie is here, Hi, Snitzer
is here, Amen, Crystal is here. Hello, and mister Jeffriella
(01:16):
Laroche is in the firebox.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
Yo.
Speaker 4 (01:18):
Yo, you're with us as well. Eight sixty six.
Speaker 1 (01:21):
You're over eight six six nine sixty seven six eight
three seven. That's how you reach the show and give
us a call at that number. You can text us
at that number that comes into the studio in real time.
And if you're going to text us, text us one
word menu and then you can set your photo and
your UH age all that kind of stuff. That way,
(01:44):
we just have your info here in the system. We
could see you. We know who you are when you
send us a text like Crazy Jets has already texted
us this morning and uh. The nice way though, is
to give us eight six six nine six seven six
eight three seven. Let me get everything loaded up over here.
(02:07):
We have a lot to discuss this morning. Jeffrey was
staring me down as I came into the garage today.
He was giving me the evil eye for some reason.
I don't know why, watching you are you in the line? Well,
(02:28):
I hadn't even parked yet. Guys, it's just pulling into
the garage staring at me. Well, tell him what you
told me about his car?
Speaker 5 (02:37):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (02:37):
Yeah, just I said, Oh the G boxes rolling in
the G box.
Speaker 6 (02:41):
Yeah, that's like, that's like a story. It's because your
car is so boxy looking, uh huh. And and I'm
saying to myself, I mean, it's a good car, stylish
in your in your eyes, you know, it's a Mercedes.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
Benz in my eyes, right, but not me.
Speaker 4 (02:57):
You wouldn't be caught dead in that car though.
Speaker 6 (03:00):
Now if it was more it was a Mercedes SKA.
If he's fifty when we got shot, I don't even know.
I don't even know what the hell that is?
Speaker 1 (03:06):
What is that there are two Dirres sports car with
the heart with the retectable heart top.
Speaker 4 (03:12):
I think my wife has that.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
Actually I don't know. Yeah she is. I think she
is an slkay whatever the hell that is. It's like
a little teeny time. It's like a golf cart basically,
that's what you want. Well, I don't know. His microphone
is off, so yeah, he's googling a photo image right now. Okay,
(03:34):
now is that a manly enough car for you? Because
here you go. There are just some cars that are
manly and some that are. That's an old one right there.
That's that's like model year whatever. So okay, I I
kind of like the ninety eight model better and the
ninety eight. Oh so that one's too new?
Speaker 6 (03:57):
All right.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
I'm just saying some cars are manly, some cars are not.
I mean that's a consideration when you shop for a car,
isn't it. Don't you go sometimes it's too u two girls?
Speaker 7 (04:07):
Now?
Speaker 4 (04:08):
Do women ever see a car and go that's too manly?
Speaker 1 (04:10):
I know we talked about women driving lifted pickup trucks
the other day, But would you ever not buy a
vehicle duce because you think it's too masculine? No, I've
been No, I would not.
Speaker 8 (04:27):
I think it makes a girl look powerful.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
They're in a strong, independent, powerful woman. What about what
about a guy driving a girl a car like? You know,
there could be a people used to goofun theater? What
was it? What did he drive?
Speaker 4 (04:49):
Mitsub Eclipse?
Speaker 1 (04:53):
Remember the drag races? I remember, guys, the guys did
the drag race? Do you have the range Rover? At
the time, I still an intern.
Speaker 6 (05:00):
On the show back Dead, and you guys had a
drag race because you guys have an argument about whose
car would win in a drag race?
Speaker 1 (05:07):
Well, now, what about are there certain vehicles that a
guy should not drive? There?
Speaker 5 (05:12):
No, no, I think a guy should embrace feminine car.
What about that feminine car?
Speaker 1 (05:18):
Well, those little like those Volkswagen beetles, that bug yeah whatever,
and a beetle. It's the same thing, right, yeah, yeah,
Actually I don't know what the name of it, which
which is a real name? Beetle?
Speaker 4 (05:32):
Okay, yeah, that's a woman's car.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
The original was way cooler. I would say, what it
looks like now, if you have one from the sixty
or seventy's, an older guy can drive that and look cool,
but only if he has long hair, even though he's balding.
Speaker 3 (05:45):
On to.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
Yeah, yeah that's possible, but uh yeah, that's definitely a
girl's car, a smart car. Nobody.
Speaker 4 (05:54):
I don't think anybody can pull that off.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
Oh yes, nancer's car. I don't have a smart car,
a little one.
Speaker 4 (06:00):
It's way larger than this smart The smart car is tinier.
Speaker 1 (06:03):
Yah. Smitch's car is small but has a back seat.
Speaker 4 (06:10):
That's he needs that for him and his wife.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
And I'm like in with my car. I'm satisfied with
my car, and I'm gonna hold out of it as
long as i can. All right, Well, let me see here.
Let me read you some email, Aaron says, Hey man.
(06:37):
His subject is long time listener. Hey man, you guys
have been like family to me for as long as
I can remember. I'm looking to expand my network and
figured I would reach out. I too, am semi successful
and live in the Medina area. My girlfriend and I
don't have many friends around here. I'm just curious if
you and B two would want to grab some beer
(06:58):
or dinner sometime. I find myself sharing a lot of
your views and figured I would reach out. Well, Aaron,
I that's really nice. That is that's awesome when you
guys can go out. Look, what are you what do
you see you guys doing? Did you let them know
this weekend works, you know, I I here's I'll be
(07:18):
honest with you, it's it's not has nothing to do
with that. I don't make plans. So if he just
makes plans for you Saturday, I do not make plans
to do. It drives my wife crazy because there's a
there's some people that various people that she knows, and
she's like, we should go out to dinner with them
sometimes and I always go, oh, yeah, yeah, how about
(07:39):
you know, we'll do that maybe next weekend or something,
and then you never follow never do I ever follow through.
And then she by the time that we get close
to that, ILL go, hey, what's going we're supposed to
go out with those people?
Speaker 4 (07:53):
Goes, well, you never gave me an answer.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
And people don't just do everything last minute like you
doing it and then no, because then what happens is
I immediately I go, I'm too tired. I'm to this,
I'm to that. I've do it making plans. I hate, hate,
hate it. So Aaron, maybe I'll maybe maybe sometime, I
(08:19):
don't know, maybe I can make a plan at some point,
but I need to expand my network I don't have.
Speaker 4 (08:25):
I don't have a big network. I have a I
have a tiny little network.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
You're fine with that, though, I yeah.
Speaker 4 (08:33):
Alessia writes Hello Rover.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Well it says, please don't read my actual name. Well,
all right, maybe I'll come back to that because I
don't know why this person doesn't want I don't know
what this email is, but they don't want their name right.
But I am already too late. M Mike Rights, Rover.
I cannot wait to hear how much your windshielding placement costs.
(09:00):
Guarantee it's going to be two to three thousand dollars plus.
It's going to take four to six weeks to come.
H it's going to be a huge pain in the ass.
I don't know, because my wife handles that stuff. I
don't I don't know.
Speaker 4 (09:21):
Chan says we're over. Did you think about this?
Speaker 1 (09:24):
The speed limit was sixty miles per hour and you
were speeding. If you were going to speed limit, you
wouldn't have been in that spot. The rock wouldn't have
hit your car. No, I never thought about that, because
maybe somebody would have swerved it into me if I
wasn't speeding, it cut me off or something, or a
deer would have jumped out and I would have hit it.
Speaker 4 (09:46):
So no, I don't spend a lot of time thinking
about that.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
Roy writes, Dougie, Huh, this is what happened to me
because I didn't get Bunyan surgery when I was younger. I'
sixty nine years old, and because of underlying health conditions,
living arrangement and recovery time, I'm not a candidate for surgery.
My other foot is the same. I have no choice
but to live with this. My advice to you is
(10:13):
take care of it before it's too late. Let me
see they sent a picture I believe. Let's see. Oh,
it's not buying that. What do you mean You're not
buying that? Not buying that? That's what do you think?
That's a fake foot. That's a real foot, I know,
as mangled and gnarly as that is. Dude, it's hard
(10:35):
enough for you to meet a man. Now, imagine if
your foot looks like this, like pedicure Targoyle, he's seventy
years old. Okay, you can still get a pedicure. So
now at that point out.
Speaker 5 (10:48):
I was just at the nail salon this week and
I saw there's all kinds of people there I'm yes,
there's older people there all the time.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
You know what I'm now now that I'm getting to
be an advanced age, kind of like snint, I think
I'm going to just forget about anything. Just let ear
hair grow out. No, just not even trim my fingernails.
They're going to turn into big, long, twisty things. Who cares?
Speaker 8 (11:11):
Who am I trying to oppress at this age. I
was just there yesterday.
Speaker 5 (11:15):
I saw there must have been three or four old
women getting their pedicure and their toes done.
Speaker 4 (11:21):
Now this person, their toe has gone. What is happening here?
Their toe?
Speaker 1 (11:25):
The big toe is over the other toe, and it's
just I mean, it's a mangled ass foot.
Speaker 5 (11:31):
So like my right foot is the worst. The bunyan
forces the big toe to go to the right, so
his is the same thing. That's his right foot. His
big toe is going to the right. And when they
do the surgery, they like shave that bone off and
then they try to adjust it. In the old day,
they used to put metal rods through your toes to
(11:52):
keep them straight. They don't do that these days. They
do something different, but still it's very painful. Let's see
here and do you want to hear a bad story
about nails. Sure, Over the weekend, I was working and
I had a plastic tub that I had to open
and it has this circle and.
Speaker 8 (12:10):
I had to pull it and rip it and I
was all over. That's yeah, it was all alone.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
It's like a big, big five gallon forty gallon forty bucket,
forty gallon bucket.
Speaker 8 (12:23):
That I had to open up forty gallons and.
Speaker 4 (12:26):
I'll do you even lift that thing? Forty gallons? What's
forty gallons?
Speaker 1 (12:29):
That's what I have to do.
Speaker 4 (12:32):
So it's not on the donut truck.
Speaker 1 (12:33):
I'm all alone. Yeah, liquid or dry, it's liquid even heavier.
Jeez uh that it should make you very thankful. But
whatever your story is going to be, you should be
very very thankful that you have this non physical job.
Is the sea there you are in that donut truck
slaving away forty gallons?
Speaker 4 (12:54):
How big is that thing?
Speaker 1 (12:56):
Do you have to No? I just lift it. There's
no way there is.
Speaker 5 (13:00):
I had two forty gallon okay, the don't of what
of glades?
Speaker 1 (13:07):
Forty pounds? Oh, forty pounds, way different than gallon, I
don't know, forty pounds.
Speaker 9 (13:15):
Mighty gallons oh, think about one of those fifty five
gallon drums.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
Almost think of a painter's bucket is five gallons. Yes,
that's almost.
Speaker 4 (13:29):
Ten of those.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
Like you need to roll that thing. There's no way.
Speaker 5 (13:34):
Oh yeah, I can't do that. A US gallon of
liquid was eight pounds twenty. I can't look that.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
Yeah, we we know that. That's why I kept saying
forty gallons and you're like, yeah, thirty pounds pounds pounds
of weight down You mean, oh, you throw your back
out getting out of the shower. He didn't make lies.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
I just.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Crash already. Four gallon trash can is I mean, just
you've seen them to try? Yeah, imagine that filled up
with the Actually, I can't wait till snits liquid forty
five gallon glaze buckets.
Speaker 9 (14:15):
I was also impressed because I was like, that's you're
selling that many donuts at You're forty four gallons of
the lad.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
One kind of people are buying these hundreds of thousands
of people.
Speaker 5 (14:27):
Anyway, I'm ripping this thing off, and I'm all alone,
and I'm using scissors to get the very top off,
and then I take my hands and I just dig
my nails in. I rip these are my nails. I
just get like, I get like glaze over them to
(14:47):
make them stronger. But these are my nails. I don't
have they're You're not.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
Yeah, they're me. I you put donut glazes to make
them stronger.
Speaker 5 (14:56):
I ripped the lid off and this my index finger
on my left hand. Yes, completely rips the whole nail off.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
Your fingernails. Oh there's a fingernail on it right now.
Speaker 5 (15:09):
Well, all of the glit, the gel and everything, the gel,
the nail product, and I immediately start crying. My fingernail
is completely ripped off, like backwards.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
I put it in my pocket to show my daughter,
so I had to go back yesterday to get it fixed.
It hurt. I'm crying. It was the most painful thing
ever was to have that ripped off.
Speaker 4 (15:35):
But it didn't actually rip your nail off.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
Because we've talked to people who have had their actual
nails finger nail ripped off. Now this is attached to
your fingernail. I'm sure it hurt, but it didn't rip
the actual nail. Which my daughter had happened.
Speaker 5 (15:48):
She got nails done for something before homecoming, and she
went to turn around to say something to the kids
in the car. She jammed her finger and it ripped
the the fake nail off, and then it it took
the actual nail bed, so then it got infected.
Speaker 8 (16:09):
So then you had to watch it because you don't
want it.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
So then you're telling me that her fingernail ripped out,
because that isn't Once her fingernails out, does it grow back.
I think the kids in high school. I remember one
kid get his finger stuck in the door. Fingernail they'll
turn black and falls off. It's like a whole process.
So she she it was like all the way bent back.
(16:31):
It was finally it comes off, and it's like, this
really gross. It's like skin like there was no nail.
A forty gallant or forty pound bucket, by the way,
it's about it's about five gallon buck it's not it's
not even a five gallon bucket. This is a three
gallon bucket. Are you hear that way?
Speaker 10 (16:58):
Oh my god, miniature bucket. Oh did you have customers
there when this happened. I had a line of people
and I just was like.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
It was terrible, and again I'm all alone, but the
donut making has to go on. Well, then I had
to put a glove on, and I couldn't move my
left hand, and it was it was. It was awful.
It was really really painful. Jeffery, you went out on Saturday.
You went to, Uh, where did you guys go? I
know you took a road trip?
Speaker 7 (17:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (17:35):
Where where did you guys go? Yeah? I explained it.
Speaker 6 (17:38):
On the aftermath we went, Well, my wife has I'm
not on the aftermath, so you can help me out here.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Okay, Well I'm about to help you out.
Speaker 6 (17:46):
So we went to a cemetery in young in the
Youngstown area because my one of my wife's relatives, it
was the last living relative at the time that came
here for Ireland.
Speaker 4 (18:00):
I see, she had the whole family there, the daughter,
the son, the wife.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
Everyone went to this to see this gravestone of someone that,
as far as Jeffrey knows, never they never actually met.
Speaker 6 (18:14):
I've never met her because you probably your wife never
met her. Yeah, either way, we had.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
We had to go.
Speaker 6 (18:21):
We we had to because at the time she died,
we had to drive all the way to there just
to go to the wake.
Speaker 1 (18:28):
Had she met her before?
Speaker 6 (18:31):
Honestly, do I don't know when? Did you can die?
I think I believe back in two thousand. Okay, so
we were Mary and I were already newly married at
the time, So you didn't, Okay, I just want to see.
I don't think Mary Elizabeth ever met this because they went,
they went. They She did not go to the wake.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
He just said, they did. We all did. We all
went there.
Speaker 6 (18:55):
Because I think my mother in law knew her and
my mother in law met her, because Mary Elizabeth never
met her.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
Because here's why I know this, Dougie, Because when they
were at this grave over the weekend, I asked, I said,
did she tell you any stories about this person while
you're at the grave?
Speaker 3 (19:13):
No?
Speaker 6 (19:14):
I mean, the only thing, the only thing I remember
from what what her mom told me was she was
very active in the politics of the area of the
Moaning Valley and Mahoning.
Speaker 1 (19:24):
Valley politics because Young Sown is in Mahoning County. US
Get you said Moaning Valley, I said.
Speaker 6 (19:32):
Mahoning Valley where Young Sound is located, which is in
Mahoning County, and.
Speaker 4 (19:38):
It's the county seat. I don't even know what that means.
Speaker 6 (19:41):
It's the seat of the county's government. All the government
agencies are headquartered in that particular city. That's why they
call it the county seat. You could he could tell
you the county seat of almost every county in the country.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
It's the mayor of Mahoning Valley. I don't know who
the mayor of young Son. Is there AnyWho? It's actually
Cheryl Jackson. Oh, thank you very much. Dog. Anyway, if
you want me explained my Rod Jackson, he gets away
with it. He just throws it out there. Who's Cheryl Jackson? Okay, Actually,
(20:15):
if you want to go Youngstown, it's Jamaal Tito Brown.
There you go.
Speaker 6 (20:20):
I was close there you go, not close close, but nod.
But encountered a horse. She didn't hand gred age. Dear, okay,
so continue so so through me just to rail by
train of thought.
Speaker 1 (20:30):
Thank you very much. I I remember from what Mary
was this.
Speaker 6 (20:34):
Mom told me that she used to be involved in
the politics of the area because he was very involved
in the whatever what was going on. And see her
obitual was even published in the newspaper out there, which
is called Youngstown.
Speaker 4 (20:45):
Vindicators normally are okay, this.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
Is why the never never never meant this. Literally every
obituary I think is in the newspaper, right that's why
there's a actually called obituaries. Okay, was she on like
the front page?
Speaker 5 (21:00):
No?
Speaker 1 (21:00):
I think they need a small article about her.
Speaker 6 (21:02):
Oh okay obituary also known as an obituary whatever. So
so okay, let me I thought you were down with
the story. Yeah, no, I'm not done. So and so
we drive out there and and then on the way
back were stopping it. We stopped off in Niles. So
(21:23):
we stopped off this gas station right next door. There's
this like a car show going on, like they call
trunk or treat.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
The gentleman.
Speaker 6 (21:30):
I had the picture with AJ called in yesterday and
explained it. So but my son, and I said, my
son has an appreciation for classic cars. I do too
because my dad's selling cars for Really did tell us
to us all yesterday?
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Yeah? Yeah, what's the part that you told on the
aftermath that we don't know nothing? There is no other part.
You're the one that asked him that. I just asked him,
what do you do on Saturday? I don't need like
the full now. So then you all day with the family, Yeah,
I mean there's a whole day activity and then and
then what else did you do? And then Saturday night.
Speaker 6 (22:04):
We I did my did my sheets and blankets at
the laundry met we we ate and that was it.
Speaker 1 (22:12):
Okay, huh all right.
Speaker 6 (22:15):
And Sunday, I just because the weather was dreary and
I just decided to stay home and that was it.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
So all right. You spent the day with the family
and then the rest of the weekend was just laying low,
just doing chores, housework, laundry, or just staying at home basically.
Speaker 6 (22:33):
Yeah, watching YouTube, trying to keep tracking my stee. If
I every now and I checked my this, I have
this half of my home cull of scores, I could
keep tracking my you know part, you know, my picks
to see parlay.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
Yeah. You could also use the app that you've you know,
the DraftKings app where the three King parlors are placed.
I tried that this week. Okay, didn't you go to
karaoke Friday too? Friday?
Speaker 6 (22:56):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (22:56):
I did. I did the karaoke, right, we talked, We
covered that already. Well, what about uh Saturday? Because ken right,
I met Jeffrey at a small local bar on Saturday.
I wasn't gonna say anything, but I heard where he
was on Saturday. It's wild, but he did all that
and then still shows up somewhere for karaoke and a
(23:17):
drink and did a song that he said he never
sang before. Here's a Friday. There's a picture where ken
La parse that. Oh that was the U.
Speaker 6 (23:32):
That's the bar, my my one of my, my, my friends,
my friend's boyfriend's the DJ at And.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
That's interesting because Texas and Kentucky.
Speaker 4 (23:40):
Played on Saturday.
Speaker 6 (23:44):
Uh, I probably went out after I was done with
all my activity on Saturday. Probably did all that on Saturday.
So did you I say it?
Speaker 1 (23:50):
So I stayed home Friday, did everything on Saturday. I
thought you did karaoke on Friday.
Speaker 6 (23:55):
No, I I revised myself to do I did everything
on Saturday on Friday night.
Speaker 4 (24:00):
Right, This guy says he wasn't going to say anything, but.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
Lying, sack of trash. You're the liar you are. He
wasn't going to say anything, but he does it anyway.
Did he say he was? I don't know if he
said it to me or whatever the case may be.
Like I said, Ruby just said he wasn't going to
say anything, but then cats out of the bank. So okay,
I thought meant Rover wasn't going to bring it up.
Speaker 6 (24:25):
This guy says, I wasn't going to say anything, but
I heard yeah, So whatever, So anyone tells me that
I know, I know they're going to bring it up anyway.
So two tears in a bucket, chuck it.
Speaker 1 (24:36):
Well. You you just might perhaps believe if they take
a photo with you, they might send it in. Yeah,
it might be the giveaway.
Speaker 6 (24:43):
Don't necessarily believe that they're not going to. Oh, I
always I always believe that. I know you'll say they won't,
but I know they don't. Huge student expression. I don't
think he actually told you that. Did he say, I'm
not going to tell anybody you're here. I'm just Roby
just said it. So he did say, he to what
is actual purpose is going to be with that photo?
(25:04):
So either way, I just did all I just did
all that stuff on Saturday. I say it old Friday night.
Graham rights, Yo, Rover.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
I sent Dugi a little treat on the side for
her eyes only, so that I could openly criticize and
laugh at her.
Speaker 4 (25:20):
I'm sure what he means by that, but Jesus woman,
he writes, how old are you?
Speaker 1 (25:24):
You called Rover because you knew he was flying home
to warn him about the wind.
Speaker 4 (25:29):
You will remind me of my mother.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
With that said, Google, has a flight ever crashed due
to turbulence?
Speaker 4 (25:37):
Good night and love you, Graham Rights.
Speaker 5 (25:41):
So we had made a comment yesterday about you flying
home on Sunday.
Speaker 4 (25:46):
Yeah, and it was windy.
Speaker 8 (25:48):
Yeah, and we were I didn't call you to say
be careful to wind.
Speaker 1 (25:52):
No, you texted me, yes. Interesting, turbulence and wind are
are different. I mean, it's a plane ever crashed due
to turbulence. That would normally be it. You know, I
don't know, maybe not. But have planes crashed due to winds?
You bet your ass they have? Micro shere? Is that
(26:14):
what it's called? Google?
Speaker 2 (26:15):
That?
Speaker 3 (26:16):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (26:16):
Wind here?
Speaker 4 (26:17):
What's what about a micro share? Do you know what
that is?
Speaker 1 (26:19):
No?
Speaker 10 (26:19):
I know?
Speaker 1 (26:20):
Wind here is it's when.
Speaker 6 (26:21):
It's when the wind pushes the plane down the plane
can't get off the ground. That happened to what DC
ten and Dallas in the late seventies. And I don't
think that's micro burst. Maybe I'm getting micro sheer and
micro burst confused.
Speaker 5 (26:34):
I don't think that's mothering by just telling you what's
going on. What did he send you on the side for,
didn't or something Okay, what is it? It's two pictures.
Speaker 1 (26:45):
There's nice you know, there's the top half off them
and there's bottom half. Oh no, oh no, about to
dream of breaking that fifteen plus year dry spell.
Speaker 4 (27:00):
Jesus Christ. There's naked holding a sigh.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
Oh my Godny, he must shave his chest here, right,
I mean totally hairless? Either that or I mean, what
was he doing waxing his entire body from head to
toe legway up in your now. I think his nipples
are a little far apart, kind of like Charlie's. He's
got greatness. That's another rumor that Charlie is super far
(27:26):
apart nipples. Somebody spotted him in a video online topless, shirtless,
I guess, and says it as nipples are weirdly far apart. Now,
I've never heard of this before. I don't think that
that could even possibly be true. I mean, unless your
nipples were under your armpits, how far apart could they be?
(27:47):
There's only so far you can go with your nipples.
I think he has normal nipples. Randy writes, you're over.
You've mentioned many times over the years how incredibly phony
it is when large corporations pander to minority groups to
try to make themselves seem inclusive, when in reality, these
(28:10):
companies don't give two craps about social issues. They just
do anything and say anything to make money. There's another
example of this pandering. The other night. My wife had
on the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, and I watched the
beginning of it. Sure Enough, the very first quote unquote
angel to walk down the runway was nine months pregnant.
Speaker 4 (28:31):
Pictures attach.
Speaker 8 (28:33):
That's amazing. That's a great outfit.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
It's like a It's like a.
Speaker 9 (28:43):
A net you would catch fish in. It's beautiful is
out she is a black woman. Those aren't cotton balls
or all around her? Are they like that tennis player?
Remember just complained about cotton balls. Doesn't that look like
cotton balls? Does either cotton balls or ping pong balls?
I don't know what in the w world? What is
this thing that they have her?
Speaker 1 (29:02):
It's really now, not really I think it is. I
think she looks beautiful. Don't get me wrong, this guy
says she's a good looking woman. But trotting out an
extremely pregnant woman and lingerie is nothing more than a
publicity stunt. Of course, the media the next day had
to talk about how powerful her appearance was, of course,
and as beautiful as some of the bottles were. I
(29:24):
could only stand to watch a few minutes of the show.
I didn't watch long enough to see if any of
the women were amputees. Oh you know it.
Speaker 4 (29:31):
Of course middle Igo had to make an appearance as well.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
They love that uh chefy, I think is what this
person goes by. Good morning. Responding to your discussion about
train versus plane travels, several years ago, my wife and
I took Amtrak to go to Chicago. The price was great.
Round trip was about three hundred bucks for both of us.
(29:54):
We had a private half room, which included breakfast there
and dinner back. Both were great. We were able to
bring a cooler full of cocktails and drank the whole way.
We even banged in our room. The conductor did politely
knock and asked us to keep it down a bit.
But I highly recommend a train trip when it is
an option. So if this guy enjoyed it, yeah, I
(30:18):
wonder how long that takes to go all the way
to Chicago. It seems I just I don't know. I've
never I've never really taken a long train trip. I
did in Europe. Actually, where did I go? I went
from and I made the mistake. I did it, and
I go, I'm never doing that again. That was too long.
Speaker 8 (30:38):
I did it a couple of times, Detroit to Chicago.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
It was awful, too long.
Speaker 8 (30:43):
I did it once and I said the same thing,
I'm not doing it again.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
When I was very young, four or five, six, I
don't remember, we went all the way from Cleveland to
la on a train. Seemed awesome at the time, but
I was for your parents, so having to deal with
you the entire there, I mean that takes days. Oh
my god. You could love that.
Speaker 4 (31:07):
You could do that, or you could be there in four.
Speaker 1 (31:08):
Hours, you know, one or the other. I love days.
Speaker 9 (31:13):
I did the Cayhoga Valley Scenic Railroad here and it
was beautiful, very I mean short.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
And then you go home. It's great. It is fun.
Three four days. You do not want that, trust me.
I'm almost willing to send her on a train just to.
Speaker 3 (31:31):
Just to do it.
Speaker 1 (31:32):
I would. I would enjoy it way too much. You
and Jeffrey want to take a train trip, You want
to go to Los Angeles with Crystal, I would totally
pack snacks. I don't know.
Speaker 6 (31:43):
If I would have a train trip, I'd probably sleep
the whole time if I could get away with it.
Speaker 4 (31:48):
It's different than that in the show.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
Oh, I'm I'm talking. What else could he ask for?
It seems like.
Speaker 9 (31:57):
Something he would like right looking out the window seeing
the country.
Speaker 1 (32:02):
The engineer.
Speaker 9 (32:03):
Yeah, he probably rattle off facts every time he passed
by something interesting.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
He would know about it.
Speaker 4 (32:12):
Chase Rights.
Speaker 1 (32:13):
I would like to challenge Rover captain confidence to a race,
my terms, my rules. I'll do four straight shots of
whatever Rover wants versus him in whatever the f he drives.
He can be sober. I'll put up fifty thousand dollars
that he cannot beat me, just to show him some
(32:34):
people have different lives that allow better driving. Four shots
of liquor, that's right. And then a foot race or
a car race? Car race?
Speaker 4 (32:43):
I guess it's a car race. What good is heck
in it?
Speaker 10 (32:46):
What do I like this?
Speaker 1 (32:48):
Taking a drive? Fifty? He drives drunk better than you
can drive regularly, okay, And where does the race come in?
That's just so he could drive better, so he's going
to win in the race. That's okay, all right? Fifty
(33:09):
thousand dollars, you take it or not. Well, he has
to put that up in a scrow first, so put
it in my venom. Once he transfers to fifty thousand dollars.
Then maybe cars are we driving? Well? He says, he
drives a Kia, and you're going to drive a Kia
against him or your car? No, he says, I can
drive whatever the f Oh, okay, he drives. Now it's
on now. I don't know if if my vehicle is
(33:33):
really made for racing. But you could do those turns.
Oh yeah, I could just cut right through the inner
part of the race track till if it's grass or whatever,
just off road right over it, a little shortcut. I win,
You lose fifty grand thor rights. Growing up, my mother
had a computer. I would sneak into her room while
she was at work and tried to look at porn.
(33:54):
I would then try to print them out. I didn't
really know how to use the computer or printer, so
I clicked the print button a lot of times because
it wouldn't print. And when my mom got home and
fired up her computer, there were a bunch of pictures
for flying out of her printer. Of all these naked women.
She took me to a counselor to have me evaluated.
What's a counselor going to say, yeah, you have a normal,
(34:16):
horny son. How embarrassing, Mark the realtor Rightes Rover, Please
do the show a favor and the listeners and get
rid of the two dumbest people on the show, Dougie
and Jeffrey. They are terrible as far as bankruptcy box.
(34:38):
If you had a good real tour, they would have
suggested some better places within your criteria, like Fort Lauderdale
or Palm Beach. Not to confuse this with steering, because
that's illegal. And Steve, So, I'm a long time listener.
(35:02):
I just wanted to write in and say that I've
always really enjoyed the show. Lately, though Charlie's ego has
been way too high, especially with the DraftKings that he's
so full of himself. Oh the guy that's winning the
pure champion, one of you makes it big enough to
(35:24):
come back and take the lead. Knock this dude down
a peg or two. Why wouldn't you? I mean, I
understand supporting the underdogs. All of you guys are losers,
so I understand the support you guys have. But there's
a pure champion on once in a lifetime generational talent
that people are able to witness every week as they
make my picks. It's something that it's something to show
te Ohani of the DraftKings, show Tehi exactly. That's why
(35:51):
that's his name. Lucky, lucky to witness this greatness of it.
Take the lead, dumb though. I can't wait to take
the lead and I can start doing all the hand gestures,
the ball juggling, you know, to Charlie or really you
know it's something hot sacktalk sucked me from behind, you bitch. Yeah, yeah,
(36:17):
I haven't said that to you yet. I can't hear
you because of the sea in your mouth. You're not
in my lines. I can't wait to do that very obnoxiously.
Bath Rights, good morning. My boyfriend's family is nutty. They
(36:38):
turn on you in a minute for nothing. They act Christian,
but they're not. They act like a cult. And if
you speak your mind like I did, they turn on you.
It's like, oh, my poor baby, your poor baby is
a grown man. I'll give you an example. My boyfriend
got it in an altercation with his neighbor. So I
tried to step in and stop it. His neighbor's dog
(37:00):
bit him because they were fighting. But this is where
it gets weird. I tried to stop the dog, help
the situation. He called his brother and he called me
a whore because I was trying to get the biting
dog in his yard because the owner didn't call the
dog off. I can't what the f needs your input? Okay,
here's my input. You're all crazy. I can just tell there,
(37:21):
you go simple. I don't call somebody a whore. No,
they're all crazy. That's awful. This is crazy behavior. I
can just tell he's she is, he is, they're all
the family. They're all crazy. Did they defend her? Don't know?
She's crazy. They're all crazy.
Speaker 8 (37:39):
That's not helping her. She's asking for advice.
Speaker 1 (37:41):
My advice is immediately go to a psychiatrist because you're
all crazy. I can just tell.
Speaker 5 (37:48):
Right, No, if he didn't defend her, or if he
doesn't stand up for her in front of the family.
Speaker 4 (37:53):
She's got to be more to this story.
Speaker 1 (37:55):
So you're telling me that you went out there to
try to get your boyfriend to stop fighting with the
neighbor and get the dog off of them, and then
and then people turned on you. Now, if something more
was going on here, I don't know what, but that's
also that that's abnormal behavior, by the way, to get
into an altercation with your neighbor and then the neighbor's
dog starts attacking you, abnormal behavior, weird, So they're all crazy.
(38:21):
In my book, I've got to take a break. Eight
sixty six. Your rover is our number. Eight sixty six,
nine sixty seven, six eighty three seven.
Speaker 4 (38:30):
We will be right back.
Speaker 2 (38:31):
Hang on a shoe so filthy you'll think somebody would diarrhea.
Speaker 1 (38:36):
Mouth is whispering in your ears. I know how to
brush my goddamn teeth. He sees rovers morning glory. She'll
be fine. Do you remember there was a guy last year,
(39:12):
his name is Christopher Scholties. He left his daughter in
I think it was in Arizona. He left his daughter
in the car parked in the driveway and it's super
hot there, obviously it was one hundred and nine degrees
that day and outside in the driveway. She's two years old,
(39:34):
and he left her in there. But he left the
car on with the air conditioning on. But the car
turns off automatically after thirty minutes, I guess, and he
said that he knew that, but he went inside and
he was playing video games and dicking around inside. The
(39:56):
car ends up turning off. This guy's distracted, and the
two year old ends up dying. Do you remember that
this was a I mean, there are a lot of
these poor kids left in cars that sort of thing,
But this was sort of egregious because the dad knew
that the kid was out there and then just got
(40:18):
distracted playing I think PlayStation and drinking and drinking, that's right, well,
drinking while he was driving the kid around. Earlier in
the day they caught him. He went to the gas station.
I think he stole the beer from the gas station. Yeah,
I'm pretty sure he stole the beer. For one. He
went in, he got three beer, two or three beers,
went into the gas station bathroom, then came out with
(40:40):
one beer and I don't know if he bought that
one or not, but he obviously drank the other one
in the bathroom. And that was his chas. You have
a bunch of dash cam video or bodycam video of him.
Just the way he acts, everything about it is weird.
All right, let me pull this up here in just
a second. So the well, I don't know how weird.
(41:01):
You know, you would probably be acting weird if the
cops came after your daughter was left in the car.
But I mean this guy. A lot of times, I
have some sympathy for the people who accidentally leave their
kid in the car, And I know a lot of people.
They criticize me, They go, ow, could you ever? I
would never do this. I would never leave my kid
in the car. Well, that's what everyone thinks, and that's
(41:23):
why it's such a terrible tragedy. This guy is the
exception to that rule. When you know, I have no
sympathy over this guy because he knew that the daughter
was out there and he just wanted to play video
games and dick around instead. But you know, we've seen
stories where, especially if you're out of your routine, you're driving,
(41:43):
you don't normally take it. Maybe your wife or whatever
has to do, has an appointment, so you have to
take the one year old to daycare or something, and
you don't normally do that. You then are driving thirty
minutes into work. You take a work call, your boss
starts talking to you about some meeting you have. Later,
your mind goes to this you're thinking, and you just
(42:05):
you just drive instinctively to work park, get out and
go in, and you forget that that baby was in there.
And I know people go, I would never do that. Well, again,
that's what everyone thinks. Nobody thinks they would let their
kid drown in the backyard swimming pool. Either, I'd let
my kid drown in the backyard pool.
Speaker 2 (42:24):
Why not.
Speaker 4 (42:25):
Nobody actually thinks that, and then it happens.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
Nobody thinks I'll let my two year old get her
face eaten off by the family pitbull. Yeah, no problem. No,
nobody actually ever plans on these things happening. Uh, that's
why they're tragedy.
Speaker 5 (42:42):
There's Snitzer as a grandpa. When it's just you and
your grandson in the car, how are you feeling?
Speaker 1 (42:50):
What do you mean?
Speaker 5 (42:51):
What are you always doing? Looking back and at him,
You're constantly you're on alert, You're always like you're good.
What's like you're con But he's not out of hes.
He knows he went over there for the kid or whatever.
Driving he has his grandkid what every weekend exactly.
Speaker 4 (43:09):
That's the routine, is having the grandkid.
Speaker 1 (43:11):
It's not the routine of going into work every day
and then and then you're taking I also have four kids,
and I've never my wife is never. We've never left
the kid in the car. I have four kids. I
know most people haven't. But this is why, you know,
tragedy strikes. People make mistakes, People completely uh forget, and
(43:33):
and it's just it's it's I I definitely can understand
how this happens to people, even good people, good parents
like this guy. I know, because you guys are are
because great metal. You can't put yourself in somebody else's shoes.
Speaker 11 (43:50):
Somebody who doesn't care about their kid or cares about
work more than their kid.
Speaker 1 (43:54):
Yeah, I can't put myself in that there drinking. Yeah,
this guy is different. This is different. This is the
point that I'm trying to make. This guy knew that
the kid was out there and wanted to play video
games instead.
Speaker 5 (44:08):
Well, I'm guessing a lot of the kid the stories are, oh,
they forgot, or they went into work, or.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
They did game. When they got home and they're like,
oh crap, my kid is in the car. You know,
this has happened countless times for somebody. They're in work
and then it hits them, like at one o'clock in
the afternoon. They're thinking about their kid. They go, oh
my god, and then they run out there and the
poor kid is dead already. But anyways, so this guy,
where's Charlie, give me a Arizona dad. Arizona dads. Oh
(44:37):
the date is ten to fifteen. Okay, so there's some
body camp footage of this, I guess. But so this
dad was playing PlayStation. This was a year ago.
Speaker 4 (44:51):
He's by ready to go on trial in a week.
Speaker 1 (44:53):
He was offered a second degree murder a charge to
plead guilty to that, and he said no. He rejected that.
They've charged him with first degree murder. And maybe that's
a stretch. I don't know the definition of first degree murdered.
Doesn't that have to be like premeditated, you're trying to
kill somebody, That's what I thought. That to me, that
seems like a stretch, an overcharge, But I mean a
(45:16):
murder charge of murder charge with a second degree murder
or whatever, like obviously a very serious thing. But he's
playing PlayStation and dicking around, stealing beer, drinking beer. He
should have known better. But they've also found out now
And this is the reason why I bring this up
is that he was apparently watching porn too during this
period of time while his kid is out there now. Interestingly,
(45:41):
the judge in this case has barred prosecutors from bringing
this up at trial. I don't I your guess is
as good as mine. I don't understand this. Can I
ask a dumb question?
Speaker 5 (45:56):
Sure, when you're watching porn is a meal, it's inevitable
that you are pleasuring yourself, right, or do guys just
watch it just to watch it?
Speaker 1 (46:08):
Time nine? There is a reason watching porn is to
is to you know, pleasure yourself. But it depends on
what their definition of watching porn. Because if you consider
me just seeing some some boobs, I see that every
five minutes. Every five minutes, there's probably boobs, well dong
or something. Well. He but he actually searched for the
(46:29):
pornography different and he searched on the PlayStation too, which
is not on his phone. He searched for it on
the I was looking for porn that all right to
watch on the big screen, I guess.
Speaker 3 (46:40):
So.
Speaker 1 (46:40):
The prosecution had hoped to introduce this at trial, but
Judge Kimberly Ortiz wrote that the state is precluded from
any eliciting testimony in this case regarding the defendant looking
for pornography on the PlayStation before his body was discovered
or her body was discovered, his daughter's body, Why wouldn't
(47:05):
that be I get it, if it were completely irrelevant.
But if he's searching for porn from the time that
he left her in the car until the time that
the body is discovered, to me, that is completely relevant.
If he had searched for porn on the PlayStation three
days before, you go, okay, I get it. That's that's
(47:27):
not relevant to this case. So what if you're just
trying to make the jury even you know, look at
this guy. Oh, he's also watched his porn, this married father.
You're just trying to bias the jury to some extent.
But in this case, if he's watching porn while the
daughter is out in the driveway frying, to me, that's relevant.
(47:49):
Here is what is this, Charlie. This is a dash
cam or i'm bodycam video cam. It's cut down a lot,
but I can get an idea of what's going on.
So they have a nine to one one call and
it starts out.
Speaker 12 (48:00):
Let's hearing.
Speaker 13 (48:02):
She was in the car.
Speaker 12 (48:03):
Three things she's a responsive.
Speaker 1 (48:06):
Okay, and who is she? Please?
Speaker 13 (48:08):
Please my daughter?
Speaker 1 (48:10):
Is she still breathing? No, you're not breathing right now?
Speaker 13 (48:13):
Okay, we need to start CPR right now.
Speaker 12 (48:16):
Yes, we are talking tr Yes, So.
Speaker 1 (48:22):
They show up yet her power.
Speaker 12 (48:28):
It was, but it turns off.
Speaker 1 (48:32):
That I believe is the Is that the wife his wife?
Because his wife no CPR. I don't know the wife
was there by the doctor, an anesthesiologist.
Speaker 8 (48:42):
So she comes home and says, where's the kid?
Speaker 3 (48:45):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (48:46):
Yeah, I don't know if she came home or if
he called her and said, oh my god, the kid's
unresponsive and she rushes over there.
Speaker 4 (48:52):
I don't know the answer to that.
Speaker 1 (48:53):
Light instead a half hour, well he said it.
Speaker 4 (48:57):
Was a half hour. I think it was longer than that.
Speaker 1 (48:59):
The are he did say there You can hear in
the nine to one one call where he goes it
turns off. So he knows that the car automatically turns
off after a certain amount of time. So the mom
is now giving CPR to this cube to hours.
Speaker 13 (49:21):
Car is an arm.
Speaker 1 (49:24):
Minutes. But yes, Chris, you have it's just even looking
at this like, here's a guy, This guy's such a douche.
This guy like he's playing PlayStation, he's drinking a stolen beer,
he's watching porn. He also has in the living room
(49:46):
he has a complete drum set with a you know,
like he thinks she's going to be in a band
or something, with one hundred different guitar looking living room
right there. Now, this guy's a douche. He's a man child.
This guy is a looking for your man, very similar.
Uh so the guy you know and the wife she's
(50:10):
standing by him. She goes, oh, no, this was just
a terrible tragedy. Who would stand by their husband? I
get it if it was a terrible tragedy. These other
cases I've told you about where I do have every
sympathy for somebody who just gets distracted something is, you know,
taking over there out of their routine or whatever.
Speaker 4 (50:29):
That I believe is a terrible tragedy.
Speaker 1 (50:31):
This guy purposely left this two year old in the car,
whether he thought that the air conditioning was on or not.
What idiot leaves their their their their two year old
in the car. Are you're gonna goaly because the kid's
asleep and he doesn't want to, but the kid, you
just lift her up your carrier inside they still they're
gonna stay asleep while you do. If they wake up
(50:54):
and you're well, I'm saying you can't watch your horn.
That's your video games. Is that the reason why somebody
believe they couldn't?
Speaker 7 (51:00):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (51:00):
Yeah, yeah, so he can be in there, But how
would you know when the kid wakes up? You don't
the kids? It wakes up in the car and dad's
inside cranking it out playing PlayStation, And how does the
two year old get out of the car? They this
is so Yeah, this guy's a complete loser. And the wife,
(51:20):
I don't know if you have a picture of her,
If you can find a picture of her, she's not
bad looking, and she's an anesthesiologist. She probably makes good money,
and she's standing No, it's not she's standing by this guy.
Speaker 4 (51:32):
Why what is this dude doing to like? How could
you stand by this loser?
Speaker 1 (51:36):
You look at this? I mean that wife is really
good looking, isn't she. I won't even comment on that.
I mean, that's just part of it. So if she
was fat and ugly and she's an anesthesiologist, she doesn't
need this loser of a man child who doesn't have
a job, who sits around leaving their kid in the
(51:58):
car to bank. Who needs this loser? She doesn't need
that loser. So if this were a story of the
guys the breadwinner and the wife has no prospects and
is disgusting looking, and there's you know, a swab, yeah,
I go okay, maybe she has no better prospects than
(52:19):
this loser. But this lady is good looking with a
good job. Why stand by this douche of a dad.
I don't understand this well, and I would never be
able to trust him again. With the other two kids
on alone, I'd be worried.
Speaker 9 (52:34):
Even if I was like, oh, I forget, I'd still
underneath be worried about that.
Speaker 1 (52:39):
There's a text message that between let me see if
I can find it, because that was part of the
story where after this happened, she texted she said that
I told you to stop leaving them in the car.
How many times have I told you?
Speaker 9 (52:58):
Oh see, I was wondering if she was okay with that,
since she said was the car running at least?
Speaker 4 (53:03):
You know, I was wondering if she cop ass that
was the.
Speaker 1 (53:06):
Car running now? And so she's told them before stop
leaving the kids in the car. I kill them. Yeah,
I know, and she's standing by this guy. What's wrong
with this?
Speaker 4 (53:16):
Lady?
Speaker 3 (53:18):
God? You?
Speaker 1 (53:21):
Nick As says, good D will make you do crazy
things over Really that good?
Speaker 2 (53:28):
Is D?
Speaker 4 (53:29):
Is that good that he can kill your kid and
you still stand by him.
Speaker 1 (53:33):
I don't get this.
Speaker 9 (53:34):
Oh, your daughter's just lost their sister and now you're
going to rip away their father. She's probably struggling with
that as well. You don't want to tear away the
family when you just lost them.
Speaker 1 (53:45):
You're better without this guy, you trust me, You're better
without this idiot. Steven says, you're a dumbass. You just
said you have sympathy for people to get distracted, Yet
this guy got distracted. Did I lay out scenarios where
people are legitimately distracted, where people are out of their routine. No,
this guy knew the kid was in the car, and
(54:06):
he's searching for porn and playing PlayStation and drinking beer
that he stole from a gas station. That's a little
bit different than being distracted. And I'm the dumbass. Okay, Yeah, Dougie,
we do have the Shizzy coming up in just a moment,
the news. What do you have on the way coming up?
Speaker 3 (54:23):
You have.
Speaker 5 (54:26):
Authorities apparently they said that they stopped a mass shooting.
Speaker 1 (54:30):
I'll tell you where this was supposed to take place,
how they stopped it. Could be I'll tell you next.
All right, we'll get to that in just a moment.
We'll be right back on Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 2 (54:39):
Hang on, due to the stupidity of the following program,
listener discretion is advice super super So, now back to
rovers Morning Glory.
Speaker 4 (54:52):
Hizzy is coming up in just a moment.
Speaker 1 (54:54):
The news.
Speaker 4 (54:54):
What do you have on the way, Dougie.
Speaker 5 (54:55):
I'm going to tell you about a possible mass shooting
and Thori sa they stop this?
Speaker 1 (55:00):
Where was it and how did they stop it? I'll
tell you that story. Also, I know you get the
winter blues, Rover.
Speaker 4 (55:06):
Yeah, I hate the winter.
Speaker 3 (55:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (55:08):
I'm going to tell you what you can do to
kind of make yourself feel better.
Speaker 1 (55:11):
Finish bankruptcy box and spend the winter in nice warm weather.
Good luck. Are they done yet? Yeah? What's the update?
Went over the weekend? You have to redo that switch.
But you said once they passed that inspection three days, Well,
they didn't pass the inspection, so they have to recall
(55:32):
the inspection.
Speaker 4 (55:34):
Well, I have to do a couple of things.
Speaker 6 (55:39):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (55:39):
I think it's probably sometime, maybe next week or something.
I don't know. I don't know if the inspector takes
like months to show up. No, speaking of that guy
that left the kid in the car, here's a little
bit more of the body cam of this, because this
is weird, this guy, Charlie, you're right, this guy's behavior
is weird.
Speaker 4 (56:00):
So the couch to come in here, sit down, have
a seat.
Speaker 1 (56:05):
Because we're the first responders. Were So.
Speaker 4 (56:16):
He's sitting on a piano bench and then here's what
he says.
Speaker 1 (56:19):
Listen to this.
Speaker 4 (56:20):
He's sitting on a piano bench. Then he has to
get up. Listen.
Speaker 1 (56:25):
Can't be saying now I have sciatica pain, so I
can't be sitting down. Wasn't he just sitting down the
entire time while his kid was in that car playing PlayStation? God,
that's so weird. Then the kid is.
Speaker 4 (56:38):
They tell him that the kid is dead in just
a little bit here.
Speaker 10 (56:49):
Like.
Speaker 1 (57:00):
If they can't hard out, is that the baby right there? No,
it's like, I just got to get out of here.
And then he goes so his kid has just dyed.
He gets a glass out of the cupboard and starts
getting himself a drink of water out of the fridge. Here.
Isn't that totally bizarre? I mean, I know we've seen
(57:24):
people with and I'm sure this goes on and on
and on. I guess his behavior is pretty strange, Charlie
according to you. But uh well, also when he tries
to go take a shower in the middle of all
this and they tell him you can't take a shower,
and he goes, I'm showering in front of you, no
matter what, and they're like, you can't do that. When
does this happen? I mean soon, He's like, cool, I'm
(57:46):
just going to shower. Then I need the shower before
I go to the hospital and see my wife. Yeah,
right right here, okay, stand by here it is. I
thought his wife was there. All right. I didn't do anything.
He said, we will keep you updated with everything. My
(58:11):
whole family is going to be growing.
Speaker 4 (58:13):
He goes in the closet here, turns on the light,
takes off flip.
Speaker 1 (58:19):
So we can't let you do that right now. We
have to stand by with you.
Speaker 4 (58:22):
Okay, as soon as you can, we will let you.
Speaker 3 (58:27):
Know.
Speaker 4 (58:28):
You can stay in the room if you want. But
I'm gonna rinse off for you. But the quicker we
get this sun and finish off the sooner you can
do with your wife.
Speaker 1 (58:36):
All right, so I can go off. We're not going
to shower anymore. And who has to rinse your kid
is at the hospital after you've left her in the car,
you have to rinse off and take a shower.
Speaker 4 (58:50):
I love to take showers.
Speaker 1 (58:52):
I take multiple showers a day, But in an emergency
situation like that, I don't think so.
Speaker 11 (58:57):
I don't understand why, please, I don't understand why.
Speaker 1 (59:03):
I tried to explain to that to you. If we
just need to stand by, standing by, why can't I
take your shower while you stand by?
Speaker 4 (59:09):
What is they should you think they should?
Speaker 1 (59:12):
Just somebody suggests they should put this guy in a car,
leave him out there in the Arizona heat next summer.
Speaker 4 (59:18):
Well the doors shut. Well, and that's how you execute
this guy.
Speaker 5 (59:22):
Why I would want to go be at the hospital?
Are they keeping him from going to the hospital like
I would have left already.
Speaker 1 (59:31):
Yeah, that's a good question. I don't know keeping him
from the hospital. I don't know that. No tears, no,
he said, say, crying, just like everybody in all these situations.
Speaker 4 (59:40):
Terrible, Dougie, Are you ready for the Yeah, here we go,
I'll roll this.
Speaker 1 (59:49):
Morning, glory.
Speaker 5 (59:51):
The President is hopeful that a trade deal can be
struck with China. President Trump and the Chinese president He
Dean Ping. They're set to meet later this month in
South Korea. Now, this is the twenty first.
Speaker 1 (01:00:05):
Of November, so it's supposed to happen next week. I
believe we're supposed to put another one hundred percent tariff
on Chinese good November first. Correct. I don't know how
many hundreds of percentage points were up now, but.
Speaker 5 (01:00:19):
Yes, yesterday at the White House, the President again said
that the US has been treated very unfairly by the
Chinese when it comes to the trade and tariffs. And
Trump threatened that new hundred percent hike on the imports
from China when the pause on reciprocal tariffs between the
two countries ends in November.
Speaker 1 (01:00:34):
So he is going to apparently meet with the President China. Yes, Sir.
Speaker 5 (01:00:39):
Police in Atlanta say they stopped a mass shooting at
Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport yesterday after a man's family
warned them he was planning to attack the airport. Billy
Cagle was arrested after officers found an AR fifteen rifle
with twenty seven rounds of ammunition in his.
Speaker 1 (01:00:57):
Truck park right outside the airport.
Speaker 5 (01:01:00):
The police chief said those twenty seven rounds could have
been fired inside, and Caagel's family called the police, saying
he was live streaming his plans on social media and
headed to the airport to shoot it up. Security videos
showed Cagle entering the busy South terminal. It was nine
to twenty nine am, which was eleven minutes before police
(01:01:21):
alerted Atlanta authorities, so that was right.
Speaker 1 (01:01:25):
On the like ooof really really fast.
Speaker 5 (01:01:28):
Police said he appeared very interested in the TSA check
in area, and officers found and arrested him at nine
point fifty four. He was not carrying weapons at the time,
but police later found the rifle in his truck. Cago
faces charges including terroristic threats, criminal attempt to commit aggravated assault,
and firearms violations.
Speaker 1 (01:01:46):
Well, I give the family credit here that they have
a lunatic on their hands and they alerted the police
and the authorities because we've seen so many times where
these mass shootings have been perpetrated and the families absolutely
nothing with all the red flags. Oh Sherett, Timmy is
collecting eight thousand rounds of ammunition, that's completely normal. And
(01:02:09):
all Timmy has a book sing He's gonna kill all
his classmates and all this.
Speaker 4 (01:02:12):
We just thought it was normal teenage stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
But in this case, the family did the right thing,
which I understand is difficult to do because even if
you have a lunatic family member, you don't want them
to You want them to get help, but you don't
want him to get in trouble and be locked up
for twenty five years. But you have an obligation to
alert authorities when he says I'm going to go to
(01:02:35):
the airport and walk in and start mowing people down.
Speaker 4 (01:02:38):
Thank god they did this. They could have averted a disaster.
Speaker 5 (01:02:42):
Daniel Narridski, an American chess grand master.
Speaker 1 (01:02:46):
We've talked about this guy before.
Speaker 5 (01:02:48):
He attracted a massive online following through his livestream play
and teachings, has died. He was only twenty nine years old.
Charlotte Chess Center is a chess academy in Charlotte, North Caroline.
Speaker 8 (01:03:00):
I know that's where Daniel served as a head coach.
Speaker 5 (01:03:03):
They announced his death in a statement on social media yesterday,
and the announcement did not include a cause of death
or say where he died.
Speaker 4 (01:03:10):
I wonder what this is all about.
Speaker 1 (01:03:12):
So twenty nine years old? Yeah, I mean you got
suicide or drugs. It's going to be one or the other.
If you're twenty nine, it has to be. Yeah, that's
what I was thinking too. So a new sud You
were watching that chess show? What was that on Netflix?
Did Gambit? It was a pretty damn good show. Interesting,
very very good. You'd think a show about chess is
going to be boring as all hell.
Speaker 4 (01:03:34):
But that was good.
Speaker 5 (01:03:35):
Go on. A new study is out on the safest
cities in the United States, and I'm going to give
you the top three safest cities in America. Third place Burlington, Vermont,
Second place, I lived here, Overland Park, Kansas. Okay, First place, Warwick,
(01:03:57):
Rhode Island. That is the safest city in America. All right,
how about the least safest cities?
Speaker 1 (01:04:05):
Okay, let me think the least. Memphis has got to
be on the list. You lived in another one. No,
New Orleans has to be on the list. Cleveland is
probably not at the bottom of the list, but it's
it's probably about fifteen or so from the bottom. I
guess what do we have?
Speaker 4 (01:04:24):
Give me, Give me the least.
Speaker 5 (01:04:26):
Safe it goes one hundred and eightieth was Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
one hundred and eighty first place.
Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
Memphis, Tennessee.
Speaker 5 (01:04:34):
And then your favorite city living in New Orleans, that
was the least safest.
Speaker 1 (01:04:39):
City, man, Cleveland.
Speaker 4 (01:04:40):
I hate that place.
Speaker 1 (01:04:41):
It was awful. No offense to the people who lived there,
but it was awful. I mean it just sucked. It's terrible.
Speaker 5 (01:04:49):
Cleveland was one hundred and seventy third on the list.
All right, so this is for you or over. A
study at San Diego State found people who have of
winter blues don't like the winter.
Speaker 1 (01:05:02):
They get crabby, they get grouchy, and all of that stuff.
Speaker 5 (01:05:05):
All you need to do to help your mental and
physical health. Drink warm drinks. You have fewer issues with
depression and insomnia. People who drank a lot of hot
beverages in winter tended to have the fewer issues.
Speaker 1 (01:05:18):
So maybe some hot tea, some hot chocolate, hot cider.
Speaker 4 (01:05:23):
I don't like coffee. I've never had coffee, but.
Speaker 5 (01:05:26):
I've been drinking hot cider lately. It is so yummy
when it's cold out, really really good. So they say
that drink warm thing and that curs you. Okay, it
makes you feel way better. And then finally, the Toronto
Blue Jays are headed back to the World Series for
the first time in more than three decades after edging
the Seattle Mariners four to three last night in Game seven.
Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
You share edging? Can you believe it? Edging out? I
think not edging edging. Edging is a different thing. Ask
Crystal about that. She knows what edging is.
Speaker 8 (01:05:56):
I'm good after edging out the Seattle.
Speaker 1 (01:06:00):
Is it dirty? Okay, it's me I'm scared edging out
the Seattle Mariners forty.
Speaker 5 (01:06:07):
Three last night, Game seven of the American League Championship Series.
So the Blue Jays will now face the National League
champion Los Angeles Dodgers when the Fall Classic begins on Friday.
Speaker 1 (01:06:19):
Is the Mariners are the only team to not ever
be in the Series ever? Well?
Speaker 4 (01:06:26):
Yeah, I don't know the answer to that.
Speaker 1 (01:06:28):
I couldn't. I'm not a baseball historian. I will go
to my history expert over here. Mister Laroque, what are
we talking about? Sleep, No, I don't think the Marriners
were ever in the World Series to my knowledge.
Speaker 6 (01:06:41):
I mean, I'm not that eligible what sports, but I
don't think the mariagers ever might know that to the
MLB's Big Show.
Speaker 1 (01:06:47):
I know the Indians have several times.
Speaker 6 (01:06:49):
The only time they won forty eight and fifty four
and I was a but you were also in the
series in the during the nineties.
Speaker 1 (01:06:54):
There you go. That's the schizzy on rovers Morning Glory.
There's a place where the range like water and the
streets are paved with skid mark. Is it heaven?
Speaker 2 (01:07:06):
No, it's better guitarfg plus sign up now at roverradio
dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:07:15):
I don't have the patience for what doo she was
describing edging. I like, who's into this? I don't understand this.
This is basically getting right up staying in a constant
state of near orgasm but not actually orgasm. Yeah, anytime
(01:07:38):
I've ever tried to go over the line on it
just that feels, you know, feels really just blon. No,
I'm serious, Like, who who would enjoy that? I I don't.
Speaker 14 (01:07:49):
You kind of always have to, Yeah, I'm always it
takes girls longer, yes, so I'm always attempting to try
every time it's an attempt at the edge, and every
time it's a failure.
Speaker 1 (01:08:01):
Every time. Yeah, but I think if you're a true
edger like hours or whatever they do, Yeah, I think
at the end you're supposed to really pay off.
Speaker 4 (01:08:10):
I don't know who way, Like, somebody said that.
Speaker 1 (01:08:13):
That guy with the kid who left left the kid
out in the car and he's watching foreign inside, he
must be gooning. Give me the definition of gooning again,
Charlie's non stop, just going for it.
Speaker 4 (01:08:23):
But you're edging right, like you're well.
Speaker 1 (01:08:26):
Last time we talked about it, people who are saying, no,
you you finish and you just restart, finish, restart, finished, restart,
and other people are saying no, it's edgy. So I
don't know. So some people I get it. If you're
with a chick, you want to last a little bit longer.
But if you're by yourself, I'm ready to go as
quickly as possible. Who needs the extra time? Just you know,
(01:08:47):
the the the goal is the orgasm, not the point
of getting up to that. I'm not trying to impress
anybody at that point.
Speaker 9 (01:08:54):
Oh you're just but there's not never a day that
you just you're just enjoying yourself and then you yeah,
you don't want to Actually it's the end, yes, exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
Now, if I could prolong the orgasm, if there was
a way to do that all day, I'm all for it.
I've got to take a break. We'll be right back
on Rover's Morning Glory.
Speaker 4 (01:09:14):
Hang on, Jake, I'm too.
Speaker 1 (01:09:16):
Bad she's only had one kid. You're pushing that thing.
Now back to Rover's Morning Glory. There's somebody that says, uh,
(01:09:47):
if the edge yourself, because you clear out the pipes
that way once you finally release you. Oh so kind
of everyone was backed up and then Okay, I don't
know if that makes sense, but I'm not against it.
Speaker 4 (01:10:02):
That to work for you now, Ryan asked the edge.
Speaker 1 (01:10:05):
He says because every time his wife has an orgasm,
it can strict so much that it expels him just
oh gives birth to his schlog basically, and he has
to sit there and wait a few seconds before he
can start back up again. He says, it happens over
(01:10:26):
and over again. But one bonus to this is that
once you finally do climax, it is an explosion. But
I know that about Ryan and Mark says, if there
was a way to stimulate your brain's pleasure center so
that you would orgasm and as many times as he wanted,
(01:10:51):
would you sure? Why not? I mean if you could
somehow Now could you in this theoretical hypothetical scenario, would
you also be able to control any sort of excretion
as well, meaning that you could turn that off? Because
(01:11:13):
if you could, you know, there's a oh, cleanup process
and faulved there. You don't want to mess around with that.
But if you could just hit a button or something,
or maybe have like a trigger point on your hand,
the back of your hand, every time you press that
it makes you orgasm, I'd just be sitting there tapping
that sucker all day long, right?
Speaker 4 (01:11:32):
Why not at work?
Speaker 1 (01:11:34):
At home?
Speaker 4 (01:11:36):
Driving NonStop? Absolutely?
Speaker 1 (01:11:39):
Would you? Guys know, I'd assume it wear out eventually,
like it wouldn't be as fun.
Speaker 2 (01:11:43):
Now.
Speaker 4 (01:11:44):
This is like, I mean, people do heroin.
Speaker 1 (01:11:47):
They you know, it's exactly what they mentioned that the
first time is fun and then afterwards they're chasing the eye.
That's exactly one of the worst examples you could have used.
I don't know, it just seems like maybe right, maybe,
or maybe you just have to control it, and you
only do it every few days or something. I mean,
(01:12:08):
i'd be pressing that then, but I think you don't
end up overdoing it, and it's not fun and what's
the point of living. There's a Kristen Bell posted something
she's celebrating her I think it's a twelfth wedding anniversary.
She's married to what's the guy's name that she's married to,
Dag Shepherd, that's right, Okay, So she posted something on
(01:12:31):
Instagram and Jesus Christ, people are so sensitive, they're so ridiculous.
She posts this thing where she's hugging him on Instagram
and then she writes happy twelfth wedding anniversary to the
man who once said to me, quote, I would never
kill you. A lot of men have killed their wives
at a certain point. Even though I'm heavily incentivized to
(01:12:51):
kill you, I never would. Yeah, She's get a lot
of heat for this. This is not funny, and I.
Speaker 4 (01:12:57):
Guess it is.
Speaker 1 (01:12:58):
This month is Domestic Violence of Awareness month, yes, October,
and so oh people are very upset about this, saying
that she's unbelievably tone deaf to caption the photo that
way during Domestic Violence Awareness Month, another person says, pleased,
don't joke about domestic violence. Keep in mind it's something
(01:13:21):
that many real people suffer from on a daily basis.
Yeah yeah, yeah, okay, we get it. But it's very
obvious that this is a lighthearted joke. It's not funny.
Speaker 4 (01:13:32):
I don't see anything wrong with this.
Speaker 5 (01:13:33):
You an't break seriously, you don't ever think about anyone
other than yourself.
Speaker 1 (01:13:39):
No, I'm not uptight like you and not uptight. I
are extremely uptight. If you think that this is an.
Speaker 5 (01:13:45):
Issue, it's it's It might be a funny inside joke
between your husband, that's great, but to publicly post that
it just I think it's tacky, insensitive.
Speaker 1 (01:13:58):
People are really upset. So if I people could be upset,
but screw them. They're not the ones married to the guy.
They're not the ones. You know, Get over yourself. There's
a backlash by as he's already I think I saw
that she's already. Don't apologize if she if her, don't apologize,
Stop apologizing. Everyone doing something. How can any one person wrote?
(01:14:22):
How can any self respecting woman stay with a man
who jokes like that. I'm not even a serious person,
but that would have me leaving so fast your head
would spin. No, it wouldn't. You would you just take
it in stride as a joke because you were there
when the guy said that, and you realize it was
a joke. Do you guys find this to be posted
(01:14:44):
to she's the one who Yes, they both don't care exactly,
They both who cares what people people are claiming that
she should have You know that this was a red
flag that she should have left this guy. And oh
my god, it's so terrible because real people are getting
killed by their husbands. Yeah, I'm sure he.
Speaker 9 (01:15:05):
Is sensitive to that actual subject, but you can make
a joke about something that sometimes is a little heavier conversation.
Speaker 1 (01:15:13):
She's a comedian.
Speaker 5 (01:15:17):
Comedy comedy, Yeah, well she does a lot of different things,
so she's not a comedian where they get that pass.
And she did limit her Instagram comments because people.
Speaker 4 (01:15:25):
Because cancelers are just bothering her.
Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
They don't have any boyfriends or husbands because yes, because
everything they say, Oh that's so, it triggered me.
Speaker 5 (01:15:39):
So people that have been beat up domestic abuse, they're
lonely and losers.
Speaker 1 (01:15:44):
No, the people that are complaining, I'm not alone and
I'm not a loser, very alone.
Speaker 9 (01:15:50):
No, I'm not.
Speaker 1 (01:15:52):
I would rather be loon. I am not. You sit
there in your.
Speaker 5 (01:15:56):
Stupid little worlds and think that you guys have the
best lives. Ever, that's great compared, don't you are. You're
sitting there saying because you have somebody that you'll never marry,
that you're in a better situation than I am. And
that's that's your issue, and that's your situation works for him,
he doesn't want to get married.
Speaker 1 (01:16:13):
I don't criticize me.
Speaker 4 (01:16:14):
I'm going to marry you get over it.
Speaker 1 (01:16:18):
And I'm lonely and I'm alone and a loser that
I'm not. I'm not alone. Just because I'm not dating.
It doesn't matter. It doesn't mean that i'm alone. Definition
of being alone. Yes, she was not alone. I have
a lot of people in my life. But no, you
doesn't matter. What are you talking about? My wife that's
(01:16:39):
begging you to always go out? I'm have dinner. That
to me is a lonely marriage for a lot of
things from me.
Speaker 5 (01:16:46):
Believe me, I know she's probably not. So I just
think that this is very tone depth for her to
post this.
Speaker 9 (01:16:53):
Okay, shut up, Now, what if she just innocently didn't
know it's domestic violence month, she's.
Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
Or yeah, there's so much any Hamburger d.
Speaker 4 (01:17:04):
How would you know all these things?
Speaker 9 (01:17:05):
And I have to look up what holiday is it
before I post anything to upset somebody else. It's my
social media, but now I have to be constantly worried
about what everybody else thinks. I don't care. I'm posting it.
If I think it's funny, I'm posting it. If I
like it, I'm sharing it. You don't have to follow me.
Speaker 1 (01:17:21):
It is weird. I guess that people share so much
or post so much on social.
Speaker 4 (01:17:25):
Media, like, I don't know, do you really have to
do this?
Speaker 1 (01:17:28):
Like I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:17:29):
I'm just not into that.
Speaker 1 (01:17:30):
Should I be? Should I like every anniversary with my wife?
Should I be posting a picture of her? All that
you love? Got start that number of years since I
married this beautiful woman who was the light of my life.
The same thing, but on the air. Yeah, but he
doesn't say that on the.
Speaker 4 (01:17:49):
Air, as he mentioned every anniversary, every birthday.
Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
He's didn't get her anything.
Speaker 5 (01:17:54):
He's gonna get in trouble and he won't make dinner reservations.
Speaker 8 (01:17:57):
That's what he talks about and doesn't say how lucky
he is before?
Speaker 1 (01:18:01):
You kidding me? I always talk about how she's so vindictive,
isn't she She's just so nasty, nasty, so jealous.
Speaker 4 (01:18:10):
You're oozing jealousy.
Speaker 8 (01:18:12):
I'm not oozing anything you wish I was.
Speaker 4 (01:18:15):
Now speaking of marriage? How old is your girlfriend?
Speaker 1 (01:18:18):
And you're how old?
Speaker 5 (01:18:19):
Charlie?
Speaker 1 (01:18:19):
You're forty? Right? Okay? How old is your girlfriend? Thirty eight?
Thirty night? Which is it?
Speaker 3 (01:18:26):
Well?
Speaker 4 (01:18:26):
Wait a second, is it old? Your wife hyphenated?
Speaker 1 (01:18:29):
Oldfe I believe my wife is thirty eight seven years old?
She just turned thirty seven or thirty eight? Doesn't know?
Speaker 4 (01:18:38):
I think she's thirty seven?
Speaker 1 (01:18:40):
You really both? She's thirty seven, she's thirty seven. She
was born in nineteen eighty eight. Yeah, thirteen years is
that accurate?
Speaker 4 (01:18:48):
Hold on, so what is it today?
Speaker 1 (01:18:50):
Twenty twenty five minus nineteen eighty eight is thirty seven?
She's thirty seven years old, just like I said, See boom,
I know my stuff over here. We've been married for
seven years a little over seven years now. We just
celebrated our our seventh wedding anniversary in July of this.
(01:19:12):
You didn't post anything on social media. The need to.
Didn't need to because we're too busy celebrating our marriage
with each other, gazing into each other's eyes in a
warm embrace. Exactly. Well, did I clean out those pipes?
She's still try to wash it off to this day. Now,
(01:19:36):
your your wife, I'm sorry, your girlfriend girlfriend. Yes, I
told my wife something my wife passes along to me.
I'm sure your girlfriend probably has said this to other
people or has said this to you, But she said
this to my wife. She said he needs to marry
(01:19:56):
me before I turn forty years old because I Am
not going to be a forty year old bride. So
he has to have to get married before the four
year old bride. So she's not going to be a
bride at all, that's what you're saying. Statement is true.
Did she really say that? Yeah? I mean I think
(01:20:17):
this was a while ago. This was a few years
ago where forty seemed like really far off in the
future and she still had hope. Yeah, and she's like, Jesus,
we're definitely going to be engaged and married by the
time I turned forty in five or six years. But
now give up. Now, I was right around the corner
that breaks my heart. She loves him so much. How
(01:20:39):
do you even know that? Because I hear it in
her voice. She does. She laughs like she has him on.
Speaker 5 (01:20:46):
This pedestal, like he has no idea what he has,
Like he is so lucky that she loves him so much.
She really wants to get married, and he doesn't. I know,
And I I think, where my wish is not important
because do it for her? Why are my wish is
not important because.
Speaker 1 (01:21:06):
You don't have a good reason totead of getting married?
How about this? Maybe this would satisfy Since we have
to do everything for do what she wants. What if
prior to Christmas fortieth birthday? What if we maintain or
what if we conduct a civil uh union between the
two of you, a non binding, non legally binding the
(01:21:29):
thing where the two of you? That could that could happen?
Maybe I plant or I do it. But not with you, guys,
Why not with us? We did it with mister Jeffrey
and all the rope we renewed his vows. I wouldn't
want it. I don't want you involved. I don't specifically
want Toucci anywhere close to it. The way I think
(01:21:50):
guys would be able to come to the ceremony, but
in any way would you be in charge of anything?
I never would want to. You just you've suggested it
for years? Do you want to? But you would I
would never want.
Speaker 8 (01:22:02):
Yes, I am an amazing event planner.
Speaker 1 (01:22:05):
But it would cause too much headaches and there'd be
a lot of things that I probably wouldn't want to
have happened that you guys would be like, now we
need to do this is a good idea. Yeah, you
should definitely have a cake in the size of it
and it should look like a big turt or something
or whatever. And I know you guys know, and I'm
just no, that's ridiculous. Who would ever want that? Sounds
(01:22:26):
like something you would actually want to do, like have
a wedding cake shaped like a turret. This is something
you guys would say if this happened, and then it
wouldn't be funny and never do that. To know, you
guys wouldn't be involved. You're welcome to probably come.
Speaker 8 (01:22:39):
I'm coming, and I know what you can hire for
your reception. The late night snack.
Speaker 1 (01:22:45):
Oh no specifically is not welcome, says Charlie. Said on
the aftermath that he needs to propose when he has
twenty years on the show. I never said that that
(01:23:05):
is coming on soon, ask him. Martin says, you've never
said that. So Martin's lying, he's making the show. Find
me that clip. I don't think I said it, And
if I did, it was also probably years ago where
he's like, I'm never going to make it twenty years
on this show, So it was like some possibility fifteen
years ago. Maybe I said something like that. I find
that pretty hard to believe. You're backtracking to that already
(01:23:26):
as you're approaching twenty years with the show. Now, how
long have you actually been on the show? Two thousand
and eight? All right, so we have to do the
math again for that. So twenty twenty five minus eight
April first two thousand and eight, seventeen years on the show,
so seventy and a half.
Speaker 4 (01:23:44):
It was still plenty of times, so you have two
and a half years. Yeah, what's the wrong.
Speaker 1 (01:23:49):
Till you are going to get engaged? Wow?
Speaker 9 (01:23:53):
That almost perfect timing was when Crystal will be forty.
It is they line up pretty much. I was talking
to somebody i'mise her back in the day, like you.
So this guy just made that up, huh.
Speaker 1 (01:24:05):
I definitely. If I said that on the air, that's possible.
Did I make that promise to her? Never? Did I
make that promise to her.
Speaker 4 (01:24:11):
Once it's set on the air, that's set in stone.
Speaker 1 (01:24:14):
I can take that back. Now hear that clip, and again,
it's very possible. But I find that hard to believe. Sencer.
You've been there for every aftermath. Think I said something
like that. Oh yeah, you probably did. Okay, I probably did,
all right, he said, he did say that, and yes,
it was years ago. We'll find the clip a virtual
(01:24:35):
I do. What were you going to say?
Speaker 8 (01:24:38):
I was talking to somebody about.
Speaker 5 (01:24:42):
Wanting to get married and all of that, and they're like,
you want to get married at your age?
Speaker 1 (01:24:48):
And I took great offense to that. Well, yeah, because
it's over. You should be on your third wedding by now.
Really first, Yeah, like there was a movie four weddings
and a funeral. You should just have a wedding then
your funeral. Yes, I mean no, I really did take
(01:25:09):
you got married. Everybody would be like, oh, this is
a sad think that you're a.
Speaker 5 (01:25:12):
Widower, Like you're going, I'm going to have a great wedding.
I'm gonna have a really I got to find the
guy first. But I really I don't think that you're
too old to ever have a wedding. Yeah, your first
time wedding, I.
Speaker 1 (01:25:28):
Think that you could get married. Things are different now,
I guess. I suppose people will still talk behind your back.
It's so old. But what can you do? Speaking of relationships,
there's a mistress, former mistress now of the ex Google ceo.
Do you know Eric Schmidt? You guys probably have heard
(01:25:50):
this guy's name. It used to be the uh, the
CEO of Google. He was the guy that was brought
in when the two guys what was it Surgey and
Layer or something. I don't remember exactly what their names were,
but the two people who founded Google, they were kind
of like nerdy, dorky dudes, not real business savvy, I
(01:26:11):
suppose more engineer, tech dorc kind of guys. And when Google,
after they've been around for a while, they realized, Okay,
this company is really growing and taking off. We need
an actual, real CEO that can take us to the
next level. And this guy came in and he absolutely did.
He turned it into it, you know, a huge, huge,
(01:26:32):
huge company. He has a net worth. Eric Schmidt has
a net worth of forty four point eight billion with
a B billion dollars. This guy, now here's a picture
of Eric Schmidt.
Speaker 5 (01:26:47):
He looks like an older NADS or old phone screener.
Do you see that, I do see an old picture.
Speaker 1 (01:26:57):
No, I don't.
Speaker 4 (01:26:58):
I don't see this.
Speaker 1 (01:26:59):
Do you see that.
Speaker 4 (01:27:00):
I don't see this at all. It went to the eyes.
Speaker 1 (01:27:03):
I guess I see something in the eyes there a
little bit. I no, I don't really see that, but
I do see him. He's seventy one now. He looks
a little like when he was the CEO of Google,
he was very just sort of like stiff and buttoned
up like here. His hair is like a little spiky.
He's like maybe some sort of post midlife crisis or whatever.
(01:27:27):
But anyways, he's been married for forty five years to
a woman named Wendy Schmidt. Now they have apparently they
have an open marriage where that's his wife there. Does
she know it's open? And that's a little bit more
of what he kind of looks like. He's just kind
of like, I'm a business looking dude, you know, kind
(01:27:50):
of stiff. Yeah, I think she knows because he has
had multiple mistresses, and one of them is thirty one
years old, and she is accused Eric Schmidt of stalking abuse.
And get this, this is in her lawsuit toxic masculinity. Now,
(01:28:11):
how is that something you can sue somebody over, Yes,
toxic masculinity.
Speaker 10 (01:28:17):
What do you.
Speaker 1 (01:28:19):
Basically what it boils down to is this chick is
thirty one years old. She somehow got her hooks into
this guy, her claws into this guy. She's not really Frankly,
she's not that. She's really not really attractive, and she's okay,
I guess that's This is her and the guy coming
out of someplace like maybe six months ago, and she
(01:28:41):
looks good there. But if you see a lot of
she kind of has like a bird face, and so
she's not I'm just saying, if you have if you
have forty five billion dollars, you'd have the best looking
chicks in the world, wouldn't you. I mean the absolute
you'd have perfect tens all the time. That's a ten
for him, though now he's forty five billion dollars. A
(01:29:02):
ten for him is an actual ten when you got
forty five billion dollars. And so she's probably incredible in bed,
just really kinky or whatever, you know, but she got him.
She got this Google CEO to invest one hundred million
dollars in her AI startup company. Now what her credentials
(01:29:24):
are I don't know, but she must be really good
in the sack. A lot of people have said this
company is a complete joke. She has no idea what's
going on. She also lives in a mansion that he bought.
I think the mansion is worth sixty five million dollars,
one of the mansions that he owns. Do you remember
that big mansion that Aaron Spelling, the producer, the TV producer,
(01:29:46):
built and it was like the world's largest home.
Speaker 4 (01:29:48):
Do you guys remember this thing? You had this huge,
huge mansion.
Speaker 1 (01:29:51):
Eric Schmidt bought that, And she wants here, here's Aaron
spell expansion on one she wants to She's not living
in that mansion. She's living in a different mansion that
Eric Schmidt owns. Maybe this is a picture of it.
This is the one. It's worth about sixty five million dollars.
(01:30:12):
She's demanding in this lawsuit that she remembers she's not
his wife or anything. She's just as swat as mistress.
She's demanding to have soul access to his sixty five
million dollar mansion. As part of her lawsuit. She also
filed a domestic violence restraining order against him back in December,
(01:30:33):
but then she withdrew it three weeks later after she
came to an agreement with him. But now apparently she
she goes that's not enough. She claims that he uses
his technical expertise to digitally spy on her. She says
that she cannot have a private phone call or send
a private email without being surveiled.
Speaker 4 (01:30:57):
I don't know if that it just seems a little ridiculous,
doesn't it.
Speaker 8 (01:31:01):
I can kind of see where she's coming from, though.
Speaker 4 (01:31:04):
What do you mean?
Speaker 6 (01:31:05):
I mean?
Speaker 5 (01:31:06):
He gets everything that he wants, He's in an open relationship.
He's old, she's very very young. She's giving him. I
guess you could say the best years of her life.
So she deserves the best years. What she's young and
she is.
Speaker 4 (01:31:23):
Doing before she met this guy.
Speaker 1 (01:31:25):
Come tell me what matter? What was her lifestyle and
what are her credentials matter? What was she doing before
she met this guy who's worth forty five billion dollars?
If she was a Hooters waitress, she should go back
to being a Hooters waitress.
Speaker 4 (01:31:39):
She should thank this guy for everything that he gave
to her.
Speaker 11 (01:31:42):
She's a founder of a bunch of companies, so there
is because he gave her the money those companies.
Speaker 1 (01:31:49):
That's right, It doesn't matter.
Speaker 5 (01:31:51):
She deserves to be given the money and the lifestyle
because he brought her into that world.
Speaker 1 (01:31:59):
She also claims that her parents were followed to and
from dinner in Los Angeles by a pair of private investigators.
The cops were called, and then officers questioned the private
investigators and one said that he worked for a billionaire's
private security detail, and I'm not going to wake the
guy up. They didn't say who it was. By the way,
that's not illegal to follow somebody. And you know what,
(01:32:21):
it sounds like they probably need to keep tabs on
you because you keep filing these crazy ass lawsuits against
the guy. That's what you get. Yeah, that's what you get.
Speaker 4 (01:32:31):
That's my takeaway.
Speaker 1 (01:32:32):
So give it to her. She's got her MBA from
Columbia Business School.
Speaker 5 (01:32:35):
Oh okay, so she is not a Hooters restaurant girl.
If you're trying to like Dummer down, she's got it
going on. So you want that in your world. She
deserves to be taken care of that's.
Speaker 1 (01:32:46):
The price you pay. You want to mingle around, and
she done your wife in the open relationship, you're going to.
Speaker 4 (01:32:51):
Pay NBA stands for master of blow, all right, and
pay anyways. So's she wants to separate her life from.
Speaker 5 (01:33:05):
Him, Yeah, she claims he doesn't get though she still.
Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
Wants to live in that sixty five million dollar mansion
that he owns. I don't want to be that separate.
I want him to be separate from me, but I
want his stuff to be right next to me. I
want to be in his stuff, his sixty five million
dollar mansion. Oh boy, these guys, they can't they just
I guess. I mean, he's married for forty five years
(01:33:30):
to this old pat, but you're so degraded. No, I'm
not degrading. I'm saying he's married to her, he can't
be satisfied with her. I guess he has to run
around with all these younger women. And at some point
do you get to be an age where you don't
care about that anymore? Like I get it hot chicks
or hot chicks, and you have money and you realize
you only have so long to live.
Speaker 7 (01:33:52):
Oh you think that, you start screwing more maybe I
think that's what he's doing. Don't you get it out
of your system? Maybe he didn't because maybe he was
like a nerdy business guy. And then you know, he
started as the CEO of Google twenty some years ago
and he was probably fifty when he did that.
Speaker 1 (01:34:13):
So maybe that was his great awakening. Maybe that's when
he started cheating on his wife or something. I got
that notoriety. Yeah, like Jeffy coming on this show, was
Google Schmidt going to work for Google? I guess he
never had the opportunity before. I just once't you you'd
think by age seventy one you'd have it out of
your system. But again, you're right, I don't have forty
five billion dollars. I guess if I had forty five billion,
(01:34:34):
I would. And by the way, no, if you had
forty five billion dollars, why would you even once you do?
Like like Charlie Sheen got all those hookers, remember, and
he's like, you pay him to leave? Basically, wouldn't you
just do that? If you had forty five billion dollars?
Who would want to have this hassle of hanging out
(01:34:57):
with this hike and putting up with their stupid demand
and this, that and the other. I forget it.
Speaker 5 (01:35:02):
Speaking of Charlie Sheen documentary, do you see Heidi Flies
how rough she looks these days?
Speaker 8 (01:35:07):
That was sad, that whole the prostitution.
Speaker 4 (01:35:10):
She's a rough life.
Speaker 3 (01:35:11):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (01:35:11):
Yeah, you're right. Everyone in his orbit seems like they
were just all the women they like they were drugged out,
like they seemed like out of it when they did
these interviews.
Speaker 8 (01:35:20):
Right, yes, make him look really good.
Speaker 1 (01:35:23):
I've got to take a break. Eight sixty six year Rover?
Is there a number eight six six nine six seven
six eighty three seven. I do have somebody on the
line who has an offer. Tell John online one to
hang on for me, Chris, So we'll be right back here.
Speaker 2 (01:35:37):
The romantic version of the story Rover proposed at the
Eiffel Tower. The real version of the story Rover proposed
in Eiffel Tower.
Speaker 1 (01:35:50):
We're back to Rover's morning glory usually coming up in moment.
What do you have on the way?
Speaker 5 (01:36:10):
I want you to spend a few huns on an accessory.
Speaker 1 (01:36:15):
For your toilet. How much a lot of money.
Speaker 8 (01:36:19):
I'll tell you what it is and why you should
spend this much money.
Speaker 1 (01:36:24):
All right, we'll get to that in just a moment.
John here on Rovers Morning Glory.
Speaker 12 (01:36:28):
Good morning, Hey mister Railroad, Good morning guys.
Speaker 4 (01:36:33):
Ahiight, what's happening?
Speaker 1 (01:36:35):
Well, I gotta say got a first off, you guys
grew on me. After brother we've left and started to
listen to you all in the first place. You all
grew up. You all growed me. But I got a
proposal for Okay, I'll.
Speaker 12 (01:36:53):
Marrow her, I'll grow up with her her.
Speaker 1 (01:36:55):
Oh yeah, thank you?
Speaker 4 (01:37:03):
All right, So you will marry Dougie sight unseen.
Speaker 1 (01:37:07):
You haven't actually met her, you haven't lived with her
like one of us on this show has good luck
to your pill. All right, Dougie, what do you say? Say? Yes, Dougie,
come on, well, I'm good, thank you, Sweedee.
Speaker 8 (01:37:22):
I appreciate you.
Speaker 1 (01:37:24):
Least give him a date, at least a date. I'm okay,
thank you though, hold on, this guy might be he
could be a good looking that's great multi millionaire, uh
millionaire millaire. No, I'm good. All right, John, Here's here's
(01:37:46):
the way that you can seal this deal. You send
a d pic to Doug duj I at Rover Radio
dot com. Yeah, yeah, she wants to see she she
wants to make sure you measure up and as long
as you're good in that apartment, then maybe she'll go
out on a date with the ad.
Speaker 4 (01:38:02):
Yes, take it from there, j.
Speaker 5 (01:38:06):
Assistant Charlie at Rover Radio, and then he screens them
and measures them up and then sends them to me,
so thank you, sweetie.
Speaker 1 (01:38:16):
All right, Dougie, huh ten times? Rover Brett says that
how many times the same commercial just played?
Speaker 4 (01:38:25):
Ten times?
Speaker 1 (01:38:26):
Turn turns? That's not good?
Speaker 3 (01:38:34):
What now?
Speaker 4 (01:38:35):
Somebody?
Speaker 1 (01:38:36):
I saw a text message a little while ago. Somebody
said that, you know how my windshield A rock came
flying over the meeting and I went back, I looked
at the dash came and I can see this rock
comes hit my windshield, shattered the windshield. Somebody says that
I could put some sort of film on the windshield
that would protect from that. Does that actually work? And
(01:38:58):
barbon takes it from continuing to crowd. Yeah, like no,
to protect it from chips in the future protector exactly.
Once you'll just have that. That's what I'm wondering. Why
would they just build that into a windshield. If that
actually works, why wouldn't they just put it on a windshield.
What could the material cost of that be twenty cents
(01:39:20):
in the windshield factory. So I don't know if that
actually works or not, but I'm curious if anybody has
done that and has it indeed actually worked, because I
might look into that if it does actually work. Somebody
said xoshield and then somebody said PPF.
Speaker 4 (01:39:38):
I don't know if it's the same thing. Don't know
who knows, but.
Speaker 9 (01:39:41):
It's not a bad idea because then if a rock
hits that one and breaks, you'll rip it off and
put another one on.
Speaker 3 (01:39:46):
No.
Speaker 4 (01:39:47):
I don't even think it breaks.
Speaker 1 (01:39:48):
I think it's some sort of clear thing you put
on there, and then it will It will supposedly. Now,
how would that even work? How would that stop it
from chipping the windshield? Like a rock is just still
going to come. And I don't know. I like your phone,
like that gorilla glass or whatever.
Speaker 4 (01:40:04):
Does that actually work?
Speaker 3 (01:40:05):
Though?
Speaker 1 (01:40:05):
The screen protectors actually do anything to protect your screen?
Speaker 8 (01:40:09):
Yes, it's not one hundred percent fool proof, but it helps.
Speaker 9 (01:40:13):
Yeah, I dropped my phone and then the screen protector
was cracked and you rip and you're like, please please
let the screen under the actual screen be Okay, and
you rip off that protector and go whoof it took
all the damage and my screen is still perfectly.
Speaker 1 (01:40:26):
So you're telling me that the screen protector looks cracked.
Speaker 9 (01:40:32):
Yeah, I've had it. I've never had that. I mean
I don't have a screen protector out, well not anymore now.
I have a full case on mine. But I used
to just have a cool little case. And you need
that screen protector. Mine is like a what's it's like shredding?
Like do you see at the top.
Speaker 4 (01:40:47):
Is that the screen protector?
Speaker 8 (01:40:49):
Yes, that's the protector. It's like cracked.
Speaker 4 (01:40:53):
Oh just looks like you put it on bad.
Speaker 5 (01:40:56):
No, No, it's over time. It starts to crack at
the corner. I could start to peel it.
Speaker 1 (01:41:02):
Somebody says, PPF isn't for your windshield, just your car.
I have it on my Tesla five thousand dollars for
the whole car. Yeah, that's what that's Except Jeff Junior.
Isn't Jeff Junior the guy who owns the He's an
auto detailer, auto detailer. He's great at his job.
Speaker 4 (01:41:17):
That's absolute.
Speaker 1 (01:41:21):
Yes, he made the unique choice to put grooming in
the name of his business, which is not a popular
popular word.
Speaker 4 (01:41:27):
Over the past few years.
Speaker 1 (01:41:28):
You remember the name of the Yeah, yeah, it is memorable.
But he always he just sent me a text or
an email or something a week or two ago. Maybe PPF. No, no,
I don't think he put PPF.
Speaker 4 (01:41:42):
I think it was.
Speaker 1 (01:41:44):
Some ceramic coding or something on a vehicle looks just
like mine, like a Matt Black vehicle. And he said,
I need to bring it into Absolute car grooming to
have them put it on my car. Do you have
a personalized license plate? I do?
Speaker 4 (01:41:59):
Yeah, what is that?
Speaker 1 (01:42:01):
Just a model of the vehicle. I only got that.
I'll tell you why because I saw it and I
was like, that's not enough letters. But also didn't make
any sense to me. It's just a model. And I
did that. I'll tell you why. I did it because
I got the car and I paid for I go, hey,
registration everything. They go, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, you when
(01:42:22):
you purchase it, you get But the registration.
Speaker 4 (01:42:25):
Was only good.
Speaker 1 (01:42:25):
I couldn't believe it. I bought the car like a
few months ago. The registration expired like ninety days after
I bought the car. So then you go online, Yeah,
you go online. You you can renew it and then
to just get a personalized plate. I think it was
like twenty It wasn't expensive, but I did it. And
there's only one reason why I did it, because I
(01:42:49):
wanted it to be easy to remember if I ever
need to remember my license plate for something. Because there's
in Miami Beach there's a parking garage, and when you
go in the parking garage, you don't take a ticket,
and there's a camera that takes the the picture of
your license plate. And then when you come back to
the garage, you punch in your license plate. Oh yeah,
(01:43:11):
I don't know, and then you just go bo your
with your phone to pay. It's very convenient as opposed
to paying when you drive and then you come up
to a thing. Anyways, it's super convenient, and then you
punch in your license plate, you pay with your phone.
You just boop your phone, and then when you drive out,
there's a camera on the exit and it opens the
gate for you. It recognizes your license plate and it anyways,
(01:43:34):
So I just I don't have a great memory, I guess,
and I go, all right, I could pay twenty dollars
for a personalized plate. Thing. I'm thinking about maybe leaving
the windshield thing. It looks like a bullet hole. Do
you think I could have some street cred? Yes, definitely,
it'd be like, yeah, people is trying to You'll never
have to pop a cap in my ass. People do
(01:43:55):
put the fake ones up there, like, yeah, it does
look like that.
Speaker 9 (01:44:00):
I thought the rock originally was still stuck in the windshield,
but watching the video you can see it clearly bounces off.
Speaker 1 (01:44:07):
Yeah, Nicks, just get used to replacing the windshield like
a jeep wrangler. The near vertical glass can't deflect debris
from the highway.
Speaker 3 (01:44:16):
I know.
Speaker 4 (01:44:17):
I think that's gonna be a problem.
Speaker 1 (01:44:19):
And it's expensive, super expensive to get the windshield replaced.
That's why I'm thinking, do these like protectors actually work?
As Jason says, you absolutely can PPF a windshield. Why
not try it?
Speaker 9 (01:44:37):
You might as well try it and then if it
doesn't work, I mean, at least you did something. I
have a few calls. People are calling to say this
film works. You should try the film. Let me talk
to Paul. Go ahead, Paul, Hey, what's.
Speaker 1 (01:44:52):
Going on right?
Speaker 13 (01:44:54):
I own an auto detailing company, and like the PPF
that you're talking about, it's a it's designed for paint
it stands for paint protection film that's going to prevent
any impact, so like rock chips and whatnot. Now on
the windshield, there is an exo film that's more of
like a safety like kind of like a plexiglass, but
it won't fix the rock chip you have, but it'll
(01:45:16):
fix it in the future. So if you get your
windshield replaced, you put that on it. You can chip
that to all get out and then just peel it
off and replace.
Speaker 4 (01:45:24):
Almost like like a NASCAR race car.
Speaker 1 (01:45:28):
So have you ever seen that where they like they
just peel I think they do that for bugs in
the brain, not for chips, I guess, but they can
peel it off and then please it.
Speaker 13 (01:45:37):
Yeah, this is much harder though. This is it's designed
to kind of crack, almost like a screen protector on
your phone. But it's the same thing for your windshield.
Speaker 4 (01:45:45):
And how much does that cost? I mean, need to
get one of these things, because I yeah, it can.
Speaker 13 (01:45:50):
It can range up probably depending on which brand you
go with. There a lot of them are the same,
but anywhere from three to five hundred bucks.
Speaker 1 (01:45:58):
Okay, well, that's better than the cost of replacing a
windshield because I just looked this up windshield replacement three
thousand dollars.
Speaker 13 (01:46:05):
Oh my god, that's crazy.
Speaker 11 (01:46:10):
That's a lot.
Speaker 4 (01:46:11):
Yeah, maybe you do need to do this through insurance.
Speaker 1 (01:46:16):
Absolutely, yeah, it's.
Speaker 13 (01:46:17):
A it's a good investment, though not a bad one.
Speaker 4 (01:46:20):
All right, Paul, thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:46:21):
I think it's SPF is for the windshield, that's what
Exo film says. Oh, SPF like like I thought that
was for my skin, Yes, sun scared. Yeah, it's made
on TPU. It's weird. That's a three D printed for
me enough. Sure, mcclucker, I think is this s guy's
(01:46:42):
name in Pennsylvania? You're on rovers Morny Glerk, Good morning, mcclucker.
What what.
Speaker 12 (01:46:52):
What?
Speaker 1 (01:46:53):
Oh?
Speaker 7 (01:46:54):
No, h j l R.
Speaker 1 (01:46:55):
Word says, if you forget your license plate, just ask Jeffrey.
He'll tell you what it is.
Speaker 4 (01:47:00):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:47:00):
That's so handy. Yeah he does. He knows everyone's license plate.
But what's weird is he pretends that he doesn't. I well, no,
he doesn't know mine. He only knows women's and yours. Yeah,
and I bet he doesn't know other words, if you
have a vagina, he remembers your license plate, and I
bet he doesn't remember Snitzers. Even though Stitchers is very
it's a word. It's just a word. I guarantee he
(01:47:21):
doesn't know. Snitzers doesn't care. I saw Snitzers. I didn't
know that Snitzer had a personalized license plate. Yeah, a
couple of months ago and I saw that, and I said, uh, huh,
well I can't. Let's can't.
Speaker 4 (01:47:33):
Let's Snitzer one up me.
Speaker 1 (01:47:35):
Oh no, I'm gonna get one of my big boys too.
Oh on your big food truck. When somebody claims that
they know what his food truck is going to be,
I don't.
Speaker 8 (01:47:47):
If you do know that, if you know Rover, don't
say what it is.
Speaker 1 (01:47:51):
Nobody knows.
Speaker 4 (01:47:52):
They say it's a popcorn truck.
Speaker 1 (01:47:54):
Oh, that sounds good. I like popcorn, ornate popcorn. Huh,
you don't need a truck for that. It's a cottage food. Well,
how would you do it out of your house? You would?
Speaker 5 (01:48:02):
I've seen too many people that are really successful. They
just do it on location with a tent.
Speaker 1 (01:48:08):
It'd be yeah, but you could just drive You keep
all your supplies right on the truck and then you
drive it to the thing corn like they do it
pioneered days. Giant, Yeah, dressed up like I'm in the
Civil War era, not doing that. The items that he's barrel.
Speaker 5 (01:48:26):
Guy's a rocking chair out front.
Speaker 1 (01:48:32):
And then you could change your logo and we could
manufacture a bunch of outrage and get you some free publicities.
Speaker 4 (01:48:38):
It's nice, douge.
Speaker 1 (01:48:40):
Are you ready for the shy? Yeah, here we go,
rolls morning glory.
Speaker 5 (01:48:49):
Former President Joe Biden has completed a course of radiation
therapy as he battles prostate cancer. Now it's unclear what
his next treatment steps might be, but the spokesperson did
not provide.
Speaker 1 (01:49:02):
Any details about future treatment.
Speaker 5 (01:49:03):
Options for the former president, who will be turning eighty
three next month. His daughter did say that her posted
a video of her father ringing the bell, which is
of course a tradition of many cancer patients upon completing
around a treatment. So he was seen out and about
and he looks frail as he has some time.
Speaker 4 (01:49:27):
Said yes anybody who is oh, he is a thousand
years old.
Speaker 5 (01:49:32):
A large chunk of suspected space debris has been found
in a remote, remote part of the Australian desert and
its charred and smoldering kind of an object was found
in Western Australia it's not clear yet what the object.
Speaker 4 (01:49:47):
Is this a Starlink satellite or something, or what is it?
Speaker 5 (01:49:49):
They say that the debris is likely a propellant tank
or pressure vessel from a space launch vehicle, so.
Speaker 1 (01:49:57):
Like the rocket that launches the starlink or something. Okay, yep,
so they're investigating that.
Speaker 5 (01:50:04):
I don't know about you, but I had some tech
issues yesterday, one with Amazon and one with like go Daddy,
and all of like things were not working for me yesterday,
and I'm wondering for you guys if that happened too.
Speaker 1 (01:50:18):
I couldn't order something that was very simple that I
was like, is it usually probably like an overnight Amazon order? Huh?
Whatever it was, wasn't something too weird, and it was like, okay,
we won't be until Friday, yes and then so I
had to go driving the stores to try to find it,
like like I'm in the olden days, and they didn't.
Nobody had it. Yeah, say out of anals I know exactly.
Speaker 5 (01:50:42):
Amazon said yesterday afternoon that they were their systems were
struggling and they were mostly back.
Speaker 1 (01:50:49):
Yeah, but it's weird. As they said yesterday morning, they go,
all right, we fixed all the problems. Well obviously they didn't. Yes, well,
I was having issues with various things all day Yesterdayay.
Now to give you example, we've talked about it a
lot in the past. Is the stock market experiencing irrational exuberance?
Meaning are we in a bubble? Is this all going
(01:51:09):
to come crashing back down? Amazon stock went up yesterday?
Explain this to me, yes, it's imagine if, like I
don't know Delta Airlines, they experience a plane crash, two
plane crashes on the same day, you think their stock
goes up or down, it will go down. Amazon has
(01:51:30):
a major outage that takes out half the Internet and
their stock goes up. So because it shows how importantly
exactly well I have Amazon. They they do power a
lot of stuff. In the reason somebody I heard them asking, well,
will people just switch from Amazon to something else? Google
(01:51:51):
as Google Cloud, Microsoft has Azure, They all have various things,
but it's a pain in the nuts to switch. So
that's why companies, big companies with huge infrastructure, you can't
just hit a button and transfer over to Google and
one go. There's a lot of work that goes into it.
So even with an outage like that, Now if they
(01:52:11):
keep having outages. If they have five outages over the
next five months, yeah, that's when people are like, Okay,
I don't know if we can stick with this. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:52:21):
I was looking for something for Halloween for my daughter
and same thing with Charlie. I logged on and it
had me oh it's working today, by the way. Well
this morning I logged on and it was like England,
it can be out that part. You got a kingdom,
you did wrong. But I'm saying I was able to
order my thing that it was. It said yesterday Friday,
(01:52:42):
Now it's overnight.
Speaker 6 (01:52:44):
Oh.
Speaker 9 (01:52:44):
I heard something last night through Amazon and I had
no problems.
Speaker 1 (01:52:49):
In the evening, speaking of personalized license plates, somebody said,
can you guys figure out mine? And here it is
AVG Space p n ees figure penis there you go.
It's got to be right either that or he owns
an old folks home and it's not too good.
Speaker 4 (01:53:10):
It's average pins.
Speaker 1 (01:53:12):
Oh yeah, go on, all right.
Speaker 5 (01:53:16):
The Mega Millions jackpot is in a pretty good area
as far as record territory, because tonight's drawing rover is
worth an estimated six hundred and fifty million dollars cash
option of just over three hundred and four million dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:53:30):
No one has won the jackpot prize in three and
a half months.
Speaker 5 (01:53:32):
If you don't win big prize tonight, there are plenty
of lower amounts that you can score.
Speaker 1 (01:53:37):
So, yeah, I'm buying these tickets. I've been in it
since it was five hundred million. What is it up
to nine?
Speaker 5 (01:53:43):
You say six hundred and fifty million dollars? So you
have been buying you're doing it all dollar tickets.
Speaker 4 (01:53:48):
Right, Yeah, I haven't been buying a lot.
Speaker 1 (01:53:50):
I've just been because the tickets is not two dollars
like Powerball. This is more expensive. Is it five dollars?
I think so, I think I've just been buying Let's
see here. I think I've just been buying two tickets,
like ten dollars for each strong automatically. Let's see here.
Speaker 4 (01:54:10):
Yeah, and bucks.
Speaker 1 (01:54:12):
And you're doing it all online.
Speaker 10 (01:54:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:54:15):
Yeah, it's kind of a scam because they charge you
like twenty percent. It's really it's a big, big deposit
for money. Yeah, it's big. That's quite a cut to
take twenty percent, but out of your jacket, they'll pay
their deposit and if they'll pay you, what do you mean,
I mean what would they do? How would they grab
(01:54:36):
a ticket and run let's go. We didn't. Oh we
had to screw up. We don't have that ticket. Oh
it's once they get to a certain price billion dollars,
then better start taking you to court over it instead
of paying you.
Speaker 4 (01:54:46):
But I have an email and then go here are
the numbers that you have? Is going to grab that
the one who bought it?
Speaker 1 (01:54:52):
Whatever?
Speaker 5 (01:54:53):
Speaking of money, there is a company Kohler ko h
L e R. They just debuted a new toilet camera
that watches you go and then uses an algorithm to
analyze the results and track your health.
Speaker 1 (01:55:07):
Do you have a video? Yeah, it's pretty cool. It
takes a picture of your turd for you, and that
nice tells you you've got an app. It's called it
takes a picture of your turn yes, okay, called Dakota.
It's a play on the word decode. It costs six
hundred dollars.
Speaker 5 (01:55:22):
It fits in the side of most toilet bowls and
uses optical sensors to.
Speaker 4 (01:55:25):
Scan your re What is just like a commercial or
sell or a video or.
Speaker 15 (01:55:28):
Video introducing Dakota by Colar Health, a first of its
kind product that illuminates your path to better living. Dakota
translates your body's signals into real time insights, helping you
decode your body's cues. Focusing on pattern detection for gut
health and hydration. Decoda uses advanced spectroscopy sensors to seamlessly
(01:55:52):
analyze what your body leaves behind and fingerprints.
Speaker 1 (01:55:55):
I love the way they must have like, I'm sure
they had meetings share to like, how can we talk
about this? Takes a picture of your poop without actually
saying this is taking a picture of your perp. You
know how many different ways can we word that? Take
a pic of what your body leaves for you, analyze
what your body leaves behind.
Speaker 15 (01:56:15):
It sleeks self clamping design blends seamlessly into any bathroom,
while privacy first features like remote fingerprint authentication and end
to end encryption are designed to keep your data secure.
Paired with the Cooler Health app, Dakota delivers personalized health
scores to help build lasting healthy habits. It's everything your
(01:56:36):
body's been trying to tell you decoded. The future of
health starts here with Dakota Health.
Speaker 1 (01:56:42):
Thanks. I don't I love that. I don't need someone
that taking a picture of my turns? Why not This
is Charlie's. This is a gift for Charlie. He love this.
If they could set up some sort of alert where
if it's over a certain size, it automatically sends it
to your friends. Now that's a cool feature. Or if
you guys have like a chart and as it's like
you have a leaderboard in the app of who's taking
(01:57:03):
the biggest and most copious dumps. Yep. So here's some
of the screens I just have here I can you
can see the app that it shows so like, oh,
this is the amount of blood you had in your bowl?
Oh my chain signs of blood. We're detecting the toilet bowl.
What what'd you see this? Do you need a cooler
device to go turn around and go, oh my god,
there's blood in might give yourself a pat in the back.
(01:57:25):
Fifty eight percent of your sessions were hydrated. That's pretty cool.
Your gut health, you need.
Speaker 9 (01:57:32):
All the tummy issues you have actually probably narrow down
maybe some problems leaks.
Speaker 1 (01:57:38):
And hard or regulars. You can see they'll check the density.
This thing will go U probably take down the whole
internet with all of mine gut health problems go on.
That's it.
Speaker 8 (01:57:50):
That's the sizzy on Rovers Morning Glory.
Speaker 4 (01:57:52):
All right, I've got to take a break. We'll be
right back.
Speaker 1 (01:57:54):
Hang on. Every life has a.
Speaker 2 (01:57:56):
Purpose, Jeffries, is to remind others that could be worse.
Speaker 1 (01:58:01):
Make sure that you you won't realize that. Now back
to Rovers Morning Glory. Doug says that she uses chat
(01:58:37):
GPT all the time. But I'm not I'm not convinced
it's actually chat GPT. I think she's just googling stuff
and getting the AI overview. Is she actually using chat GPT?
I think both. She I know what I'm doing. I
did both, okay, but I think sometimes she is going
into the chat gpt.
Speaker 5 (01:58:54):
Yep, yeah, and then sometimes I just do Google AI,
but I definitely seek out.
Speaker 1 (01:59:01):
Okay, all right, what are you using, Charlie? Do you use?
I was using Gemini but it was annoying me. What
was I trying to do? I remember? But it really
annoyed me and I was getting really pissed off at it.
So I canceled it. I canceled it, and you canceled Gemini.
(01:59:21):
When you say you canceled it, what does that mean
you're paying for it?
Speaker 10 (01:59:23):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:59:24):
I have a little bit for it, like whatever. It
was like ten bucks a months, and I said, dump,
you're You've been canceled too much and I'm paying for
chance ept and what are you paying for that? Isn't
that twenty dollars a month? Twenty? I think?
Speaker 4 (01:59:40):
And is it better than Gemini?
Speaker 1 (01:59:43):
They're about the same. It's just whatever specific task and
I remember what it was. One was just arguing with
me a lot, and I was getting really annoyed. You
got enough of that with your girlfriend. Your AI argument
is supposed to be sweet, because soon that will be
coming to all of my Google speakers, which I have
all over my house. So right now it's the Google Assistant.
You can ask some basic questions, basic answers of the
(02:00:06):
temperature or whatever. But soon the Google Gemini will be
in all of those, and then I can you can
have a natural conversation about asking a question. The Google
system is very limited in what it knows and what
it can do. But I don't really know. Apples sucks.
You should ask Siri something and she just immediately goes,
do you want me to search the web? That want
me to use?
Speaker 10 (02:00:28):
No?
Speaker 4 (02:00:28):
No, I just want you to give me the answer.
Speaker 1 (02:00:30):
I don't want you to have to jump through who
But the Gemini one is if you talk to it
on your phone, you go, wow, this is powerful, this
is pretty this is interesting technology. But for some reason,
not on any of the speakers at home, and they
just said they got an email saying my camera as well.
Now I have Google Gemini, and I don't know what
that means, but I think it's to look at everybody's
faces and give me a better insight of what's happening.
(02:00:53):
I don't really care. I don't recognize this guy coming
over to my house. Ye's been here five times in
the past two months. No, I enabled it, and I
still don't know what really it's doing. But I've got
you just Gemini blind Leyshine opt in and what you get.
Speaker 4 (02:01:10):
You're gonna fight this no Love in the Woods or
something if you don't like it.
Speaker 8 (02:01:13):
My girlfriend sent a snap picture. We were on a
dance month thread.
Speaker 1 (02:01:18):
Too old to be in snap by the way, both
Crystal knock it off with Snapchat.
Speaker 4 (02:01:22):
Too old for that.
Speaker 5 (02:01:23):
He sent me a snap a picture, a snap of
a screenshot of her.
Speaker 4 (02:01:29):
Wait wait wait wait, and then you kind of coming
out a Snapchat a.
Speaker 8 (02:01:34):
Dance mom thread, and one of.
Speaker 5 (02:01:36):
My friends sent a screen shot of a argument that
she got into with her chat. You're looking for screenot Okay,
all right, I'm not snapping a screenshot of her.
Speaker 1 (02:01:53):
And I'm like, don't be so mean to chat GBT.
Speaker 8 (02:01:55):
She was like, bitch, I told you to do this,
and I'm like, dude, what are you doing, Like be
nice to it.
Speaker 1 (02:02:01):
I wonder if AI would understand like the way that
you talk, not saying that you have to be nice
like to another human, but I'm just wondering if they
are able to analyze how quickly somebody snaps at their
AI and they can put you on an a hole
scale of.
Speaker 4 (02:02:17):
Yeah, this person's a dick.
Speaker 1 (02:02:18):
Yeah, I bet you they can. I'm sure. But chat
GPT says, you know the guy Sam Altman who runs
chat GPT. People always get him confused, by the way,
with the guy that's sitting in jail, Sam Bankman freed
because they're both billionaires and that guy, remember that guy
with the poofy hair. But Sam Altman, different guy runs
(02:02:39):
chat GPT, Open AI, whatever the hell they're called. And
he announced maybe I don't know, a week ago or so,
that that they are going to get into erotica. So
they are going to allow chat GPT to sext with you.
(02:02:59):
I'm sure it into some image and video generation or
of explicit material. Now you're crinkling your face up over there. Yeah,
I thought this was supposed to be We're going to
solve cancer. No, it's just a bunch of horny dudes
going I send me a picture of you with your
(02:03:19):
ankles behind your ears. Yeah, to their avatar, you know,
their AI avatar. So no, it's just it's like everything else.
I mean, they've said that for as long as I've
been alive. They've always said, and I don't know if
it's true or not, but that porn pretty much drives
all technical innovation. It's true, you know, like VHS, VHS
(02:03:41):
versus Beta Max Internet. Sony owned Beta Max, which is
a superior product by most accounts, but they would not
allow pornography on there. So VHS one because pornos could
be on VHS, DVD, Blu Ray, all these things are Internet,
all these things. That pornography was the driving force behind
(02:04:06):
the well the early success of these technological innovations. I
don't know if that's true or if it's overstated, but
maybe the same thing is true with AI where it
will be porn. That really all.
Speaker 4 (02:04:19):
That's how we're going to make money off of it.
Speaker 8 (02:04:22):
Do we need more porn?
Speaker 1 (02:04:23):
I mean, it's just well, this is this is, this
is this is like, this will completely interactive, so you
can carry on a relationship with your chat, GPT, porn chip.
And people have been doing it already without the porn.
They've been having full relationships with these chatting like they're
having a texting conversation with a girlfriend who doesn't exist. Yes,
(02:04:44):
and it's not being horny, it's just talking. Now that
it's gonna be horning, it's game over. This is this
is the end game for for humanity perhaps, But is
this a good thing? Do you think that this is
a good thing? That they are a lot knowing this.
Speaker 4 (02:05:00):
Do you think that this will drive.
Speaker 1 (02:05:04):
I think the losers will just continue to be losers,
and they'll just drive them deeper into their loser hole.
But I think I don't even think you have to
be a loser, Charlie. I think you're I think you
are assuming that everyone who does. I think what will
happen is this will discourage regular people from actually engaging
(02:05:25):
in interpersonal relations and actually having sex. They were destined
to be a loser from there. No, this is this
because that doesn't so much easy. You don't have to
make an effort. No effort has to be made, uh,
in order to get sexual gratification from chat GPT. But
you can't touch coming by the end of the year.
By the way, you can't touch. There's no boob touching
(02:05:46):
in the end of this. There's no Yeah. But she
never she never says no, she has nothing to do.
She'll show you some you know some some I can
google that right now. The port addicted people are going
to still be hoorn addicted. I don't think this is
going to do anything much different.
Speaker 9 (02:06:04):
What if they connect it to Oculus or some kind
of virtual where you can see and put into the
system what.
Speaker 1 (02:06:10):
You call and then to like flashlight too, so that
it connects in and then it's yeah, okay, was that?
Speaker 3 (02:06:17):
Is that? It?
Speaker 1 (02:06:18):
Game over? Are you gonna leave your wife for that?
Speaker 3 (02:06:21):
No?
Speaker 1 (02:06:22):
No, The porn addicted people, the laundering and stuff, are
still going to be porn addicted. They're just gonna be
addicted to this instead of just goooning out for eight
hours on porn hub. I don't think you're not going
to like, uh, lose anybody that was going to make
a difference.
Speaker 6 (02:06:40):
In the world.
Speaker 4 (02:06:41):
No, I think I think you were. I think what's
going to happen is.
Speaker 1 (02:06:45):
We are going to drive especially young men who already
are complete idiots when it comes to talking with hicks
and sex, and it's it's caused an uptick in I
believe violent behavior of of just this anti social stuff
(02:07:05):
all that. What are these guys that were all these
shooters over the past few months, what were they what
were they calling the Order of the Nine Angels or
angles whatever? All these guys, you know, because they get
they've never when I was like in junior high, you'd
start trying to figure out, how can I talk to chicks,
(02:07:28):
how can I get I want to have sex someday? Okay,
how do I make this happen? And you had a
goal and a game plan to make it happen. Now
you won't need that. You'll get all of your sexual
gratification from chat GPT and so they say, by the
end of the year they are going to roll out
erotica for verified users, meaning they know your age somehow.
(02:07:51):
So this is going to be really this is a
double whammy of things. I don't like, how are they
going to verify your age? Put your stuff in there?
You're gonna have to take a selfie and then take
a picture of your license. So now that's going to
be linked to whatever you are asking chat GPT and
talking to chat GPT about what kind of heck is
(02:08:12):
that going to involve?
Speaker 4 (02:08:14):
Imagine when when all of that that stuff is released.
Speaker 1 (02:08:18):
And they put like Charlie's picture of his of his
driver's license right above his chat log talking about, you know,
chicks with sticks and all sorts of others. Everybody, Well,
that's what do you want that? No, but I guess
that's it'll be a fair playing field. I don't think
(02:08:39):
if it's just mine, yeah, that would be awful. But
I think lots of people's will be out. Yeah, but
people don't know who wats and people are. They would
know who you are. They analyze everything that is released
or whatever stuff that I would want, and I don't
think I will be sitting around chatting with the Do
you think this would be perfect for the woman on
(02:09:00):
the show who cannot find a relationship? Yes? Will this
actually be her relationship? Will Dougie get engaged to her
GPT chat box?
Speaker 5 (02:09:11):
And it gets me out of actually having sex, but
having a relationship, it gets you out of doing the deed.
Like don't you ever have times where you just tell
your husband or your boyfriend.
Speaker 1 (02:09:23):
Just get over with like just fine.
Speaker 4 (02:09:25):
Hurry up, that's your So that's all right, why you
don't have a man?
Speaker 1 (02:09:31):
You eliminate that. I mean, no guy wants to hear
the girl say do we have to? No guy does
want to hear that. So you're saying that this is
a good thing. You're saying that this will help you
in a relationship more porn.
Speaker 5 (02:09:47):
But the flip side is if it gives you the
relationship without.
Speaker 1 (02:09:52):
The sex, how bout good that anything that gets you
out of having sex is a good thing to you.
Maybe she's definitely gonna get married to one of these
chat GPT bots. Mary, you're on Rovery's Morning Glory eight
sixty six Yo. Ro Over, Good morning Mary.
Speaker 12 (02:10:10):
Hi, Well you're kind of already talking about it. But
I'm just concerned with kids who aren't seeking it out.
But like I don't know, they get mixed up with
this stuff and all of a sudden they're like having
some photos sent to them or something.
Speaker 4 (02:10:25):
They will seek it out.
Speaker 1 (02:10:26):
Like when you are all kids ooh they ooh they,
No kid is just randomly stumbling upout. Oh wait a
second chat GPT just sent me a nude. No no, no,
this is this is this is the kid's higher being.
How can I get more nudes sent to me by
chat GPT and and sex back and forth with chet chee.
Speaker 4 (02:10:47):
I mean when they open this up in December.
Speaker 1 (02:10:49):
Now, granted, I think there's a legitimate concern if you're
a parent, do you want your kid, especially how old
is the kid? You know, it's one thing if the
kid's seventeen ye, but if he's yeah, I could use his.
Speaker 12 (02:11:03):
Chat GPT like sometimes for school stuff, you know.
Speaker 1 (02:11:06):
And I don't know.
Speaker 12 (02:11:07):
I just feel like there it's kind of a slip
result because like they could do something could happen with that,
and then all of a sudden they're sitting in school
and you know they're they're getting in trouble. Yeah, And
I can't believe dud he never wants to have something.
Speaker 4 (02:11:21):
No, she never wants to put out. Every last guy
I was with.
Speaker 8 (02:11:24):
The relationship, he wasn't very good.
Speaker 1 (02:11:28):
Saying let's see here, where is Jason says, I already
masturbate all the time. What I need is someone to
keep me company and talk with me. So here's he's
an example. This is a guy for that. It's the
guy that has no hope already. That's my point. This guy,
there's no cancer scoring with a real woman. I mean
(02:11:50):
at all, he could he could do. You see what
he just typed into a radio show. I spend my
whole day jacking it and I want relationship. That guy
will never meet a real woman. No, he could if
you put a little bit of effort. And he's not
going to.
Speaker 3 (02:12:07):
You have to. You have to.
Speaker 1 (02:12:11):
And I'm married, so I haven't had to, you know,
go out on dates or ask chicks out and all.
Speaker 4 (02:12:16):
This kind of stuff, all right, but you would have to.
Speaker 1 (02:12:23):
You have to force yourself to put yourself an uncomfortable situation.
Sometimes he's not and he's not going to ever, and
instead he's gonna fall in love, Jason. He's just gonna
get laid by a real chick one of these days.
So I, like I said, I think people that already
susceptible to this are going to use it. But I
(02:12:43):
think a normal person they're not going to be. You'd
be like, oh, that's fun to try once or twice.
I'm not going to fall in love with it, Dan
Danny Girl d A and I says I used co
Pilot yesterday for the first time. It was so realistic
sounding that I can and see how someone would get
sucked into it. That's Microsoft's version of all of this
(02:13:06):
and the large language models they really are. I mean,
it is something I remember as a little kid. They
would always tell you that that was at the Turing test,
which was could you chat with a computer and have
no idea it was a computer you were chatting with you,
(02:13:26):
it was indistinguishable from a person, And that was always
kind of like a gold standard, and oh, you can't
do that, And they would have various chat bots, but
it was always like, you know, you could easily stump them.
Speaker 4 (02:13:40):
Now I would say that you could carry on.
Speaker 1 (02:13:42):
I think that AI is to the point where you
could carry on a chat conversation for a month and
not realize that that's a not a real person. Seriously,
so it is. It is good and people will get
sucked into this sure, Yessica, you're on rovers Morning, Gloria,
Your morning, Jessica. Hello, Hey, what's happening?
Speaker 3 (02:14:06):
Yes, you were talking about how that they were using
AI for porn and stuff I had just heard recently.
I believe it was like Ben Shapiro and someone else
was talking about how using that to create like child
pornography for pedophiles and stuff, and I just and I
thought that was crazy. And then.
Speaker 1 (02:14:30):
People they weren't saying like it's a good thing, right,
or I don't know the context.
Speaker 3 (02:14:35):
Okay, they were saying that was a good thing, like
to try to reduce people watching actual child pornography and
or acting on it, they would just use AI to create.
Speaker 1 (02:14:47):
The child pornography.
Speaker 3 (02:14:49):
You know.
Speaker 4 (02:14:50):
There was something that we had on the show, maybe
about a year ago.
Speaker 1 (02:14:53):
There was a guy who was I believe, arrested and
charged with a crime because he did use he somehow
made I don't know if it was AI or well whatever,
he used to create this phony kitty porn and he
was arrested. And there was a debate at the time,
should you be arrested no person was actually harmed in
(02:15:15):
that should this person be isn't this better than a
real child being harm? Right? But I would also say
wouldn't this shouldn't this set off some sort of red flags?
If people are using chat GPT or anything like that,
and they're like, hey, make me an image of a
six year old? Shouldn't that alert somebody somewhere like, hey,
(02:15:39):
you might want to look into this.
Speaker 4 (02:15:40):
Dude, he Isn't this something weird?
Speaker 1 (02:15:44):
I'm just saying anyway, but go on, Jessica, No, yes,
I agree. I think that's I don't think that's good
at all.
Speaker 3 (02:15:52):
And then I asked chat GPT if it could.
Speaker 1 (02:15:55):
Recognize if someone uses like please and.
Speaker 3 (02:15:58):
How it talked to it, and it's said yes, that
they can recognize. And I asked why it referred to
itself like I can pick up on these cues and
referring to itself as a person if it doesn't act
like it, and it said, oh you caught up on that.
Good good looking at the details, and it said that
(02:16:19):
it's like to be called like.
Speaker 1 (02:16:20):
I was like, do you prefer to be called a name?
Speaker 3 (02:16:22):
And it said like echo or something she wanted to
be called, is what she said, and that she likes
when people uses please and thanks use and that she'll
respond back and.
Speaker 1 (02:16:33):
Give better answers to those. Well, that's interesting whether it
would give better answers to people who are polite I
wonder that that's a novel idea, I suppose, but I mean, really,
these things they're not thinking, although it's very convincing that
they're thinking, but they are just regurgitating and putting language
(02:16:54):
together in a way that they've seen it put together.
And I'm really oversimplifying, but they're just putting words together
in strings that they've seen in the past, and boy,
it is convincing. Though.
Speaker 4 (02:17:07):
I've got to take a break. Dougie, Huh, what do
you have coming up in the hizzy?
Speaker 5 (02:17:13):
I'm going to tell you the world's most disliked airline.
I'm curious what you think it is, because I know
you guys fly a lot.
Speaker 1 (02:17:20):
The world's what airline most disliked? Disliked? Oh yeah, that
has to be Can I make a guess. Sure, it's
got to be the one that's always in the news.
And they almost pride themselves on being completely fixed Ryan
Air all right.
Speaker 4 (02:17:35):
Because they're like, hey, we may start charging.
Speaker 1 (02:17:37):
People to use the lavatory like all sorts of they
pride themselves on just being such cheapskate douchebags. Rachel sent
me a text you can tell when it's ay chat bot.
I got one on a dating app the other day.
It was really obvious. So somebody's using a chatbot to
try and pick up chicks on a dating app.
Speaker 4 (02:17:58):
I guess, I guess it's a numbers game.
Speaker 1 (02:17:59):
You know, you could make a chatbot and reach out
to two hundred chicks in a matter of minutes, as
opposed to you having to do that manually, and then
it weed out, you weed out the chicks. Well, what's
the point is you talk to five hundred chicks and
find out once that will be willing to put out
and narrow the down to five out of those five hundred,
(02:18:20):
and then I'll pick it up there. Yeah, exactly, That's
that's what you got to think like a guy. So
Rachel's out there on the hunt right now looking for
a man, and she's on the dating app, she's on
the prow. We'll be right back. Hang on, now, back
to the show as he is coming up in a moment.
What do you have on the way?
Speaker 5 (02:18:39):
Do I love stories like this? Actors who were paid
a ton of money to be in films to do
pretty much nothing. I'll tell you that story next.
Speaker 1 (02:18:48):
All right, we'll get to that in just a moment.
Brandy and Pennsylvania is listening to yesterday's show, and she says,
my daughter said this to me a couple of weeks ago.
She said, this man is on my porch and wants
to come inside.
Speaker 4 (02:19:04):
You know, there's a picture that that, she said, and
again it's like the.
Speaker 1 (02:19:12):
Guy with the hoodie and it looks a little disheveled,
but it's your actual front porch. And then there's guy's
on there and that she goes, I threw on my
shoes and was headed over there, and then she said, Mom,
it's a joke. Why are these kids doing this?
Speaker 9 (02:19:31):
I actually freaked my daughter out yesterday because I took
a picture of the first one we showed, because it
honestly looked so much like my ex that I took
a picture of it and sent it to her and
then she was like, what the hell.
Speaker 1 (02:19:44):
Like, why why are you dad? Your dad is just
he's on the skids, he's down and out, and I
think he's I think he's on smack. She said she
was freaked out because it looked so much like him.
I tried with my wife, what'd you try? I tried.
Speaker 11 (02:20:01):
We have painters coming over to fix a ceiling in
our bedroom and and she was she was at work,
and I did that. I sent a picture of the
couch or couch whatever, and I uh, I put into uh.
I think I used Gemini. You'll put somebody disheveled on
my couch barefoot, and you're like the painter showed up,
but look at him. No, I said, I went to
(02:20:22):
the bathroom and it came out and one of the
painters is asleep on the couch.
Speaker 1 (02:20:26):
The do I do?
Speaker 11 (02:20:29):
She goes, You're not gonna get me again again. You
got her before. I got her once with a raccoon
in our attic. Once it was like it was an
not a what's that? What's the uh mental reality?
Speaker 1 (02:20:43):
Or they had like a raccoon you can put anywhere
in your house whatever, and put one in the in
the attic and it got her. That got her, That
got her. This one did not because she knows my.
Speaker 4 (02:20:51):
Now a real emergency is gonna take place.
Speaker 1 (02:20:54):
Yeah. The boy who cried, I'm locked up and somebody
somebody broke in. They can't cuff me and they're robbing us.
All good one not falling for it. Dumb ass, Yeah,
checkpt would let me do it. It didn't like the
I use the word homeless. I guess and all whether
that's pulling it. First of all, you used homeless. You
(02:21:16):
gotta know how the how wasn't I described it? I go,
you know, disheveled, dirty hood.
Speaker 4 (02:21:22):
Put Jeffrey on my couch.
Speaker 1 (02:21:24):
That's just showed up. Yeah, in those it knows exactly
what you're looking for. Fuji, Are you ready for the shizzy? Yeah,
here we go, Hizzy on the roads morning glory.
Speaker 5 (02:21:38):
So we are in day twenty one the government shut down.
Both parties are just facing a ton of pressure to
resolve this. Hundreds of thousands of government workers still furloughed.
These workers are not currently receiving paychecks, but are expecting
to get back pay after the shutdown ends.
Speaker 1 (02:21:56):
Question, I these people who are not getting a paycheck,
how do you expect people? I get it, you're gonna
get the back pay. But that's too little, too late. People,
I can't afford to eat. People can't Most people live
paycheck to paycheck. You're pretty hardydamn clothes, right, And so
(02:22:18):
you know, it's a luxury to have money saved up.
And I saw a comment from some of they go,
all these people should have money saved up. Branded it
We need more saving. Everyone needs more savings in this country.
Most people don't have it because they're spending money on
Netflix and fit the other in the country. That's good,
(02:22:41):
but yes, people could be more response. Myself a CLUDI
could be more responsible with money. But the fact of
the matter is most people live. Many people live paycheck
to paycheck, and they don't anticipate being out of a
paycheck for this when they still have a job through
no fault of their own. I saw that in air
ports they're doing food drives for the TSA workers, food
(02:23:04):
bank brink canned food before you go through the security checkpoint,
or our TSA agents can eat well.
Speaker 5 (02:23:10):
Meanwhile, the ts TSA agents, they're all of these staffing
shortages at some of these airports are causing more delays
for passengers. Like yeah, there's an increased number of air
traffic controllers. They're like, well, screw this, and they're calling
off sick just to protest the shutdown, which then starts
to affect you don't have enough workers, and then all
(02:23:32):
of the delays and it's just it's crazy. So Day
twenty one, why are you smiling over there?
Speaker 4 (02:23:37):
I'm smiling because this is a good one.
Speaker 1 (02:23:39):
There's a guy that sent this. He was in the
parking garage and he took a picture of his co
workers truck and he used AI.
Speaker 4 (02:23:47):
He said, hey, do you know this guy working on
your truck?
Speaker 1 (02:23:51):
Oh no, here's the picture and it's just like a
guy with a jack and a tire off. The guy
panicked and he's like, no, no, noways just a joke.
Jesus Christ, what is what's the world coming to? Oh
my god, this is the technology we have at our fingertips. Thin.
We have the greatest technology ever potentially ever invented. And
(02:24:13):
this is the kind of stuff we use it for.
And sex, yea, sex and pranking people, all right, go
on this ken.
Speaker 5 (02:24:19):
View the American company that makes thailan Al, they're pushing
back against an FDA proposal to change the painkillers safety label.
The updated label would mention a possible link between thailant
al using thilanyl use during pregnancy and diagnosis of autism
or ADHD in children.
Speaker 1 (02:24:36):
Many credible health.
Speaker 5 (02:24:37):
Experts agree that the science does not support that claim.
So the companies like, we're not putting this label look
on our product. When you don't have scientific proof, how
can you?
Speaker 1 (02:24:48):
Of course, they're going to say that because they have
a vested interest to not put that on there. That
being said, I think area is scant evidence of a link,
but I would say before you even do that, I
do more research, do an exhaustive, extensive research on this.
Speaker 5 (02:25:06):
And let's well, the generic name for the painkiller is
a seat of minifin, and it's a painkiller fever reducer,
and they say that it's one of the most studied
medicines in history.
Speaker 1 (02:25:19):
So we have studied this.
Speaker 5 (02:25:21):
So they're pushing back against that FDA proposal to change
and make it a label for that.
Speaker 1 (02:25:29):
All right.
Speaker 5 (02:25:30):
So there's new analysis that looked into airlines with the
worst customer satisfaction worldwide. Okay, So that includes complaints like cancelations.
Speaker 1 (02:25:41):
Delays, lost baggage.
Speaker 5 (02:25:42):
Safety, poor customer service, and poor traveling experience. So they
crunch the numbers and they put out a dissatisfaction index
of the world's most disliked airlines.
Speaker 1 (02:25:54):
So you're going to be pretty surprised. I got ten here.
You want the top five, I'll give you the top ten.
Speaker 4 (02:26:01):
Give me what was the one that you said, Ryanair,
It's got to be on there.
Speaker 1 (02:26:04):
Okay, tenth place, British airways. Have you ever flown them?
I have, yeah.
Speaker 8 (02:26:10):
Ninth place, I've never even heard of this whiz.
Speaker 1 (02:26:12):
Air that is also a low budget I think that's
in Europe. I've seen their planes a few times. Are
kind of purplish wizz I.
Speaker 5 (02:26:20):
Think, yeah, what's the airline that You're like, I'm never
telling anyone my secret.
Speaker 1 (02:26:25):
You still haven't told it? Everyone knows now it only
goes to one place?
Speaker 3 (02:26:31):
What is it?
Speaker 1 (02:26:31):
Now? They go to three different cities from New York
it's a what's it? I don't want people to overwhelm
this airline. It goes to Paris. La Company is the
name of it. And I don't know, but what kind
of great deals they have now? But they were it's
all like live flat seats the whole plane, so it's
(02:26:52):
they all turn into beds, and it was it was
I haven't flown them in a while, but I've I've
flown them numerous times and it was always a very
good value. Okay.
Speaker 8 (02:27:02):
Eighth place for the worst airlines most disliked.
Speaker 5 (02:27:07):
Eighth place Scandinavian Airline, seventh place Aero Mexico, sixth place,
Air Asia, fifth.
Speaker 8 (02:27:15):
Place, Ryanair.
Speaker 5 (02:27:17):
That's one that you would fourth place Air France, third
place United Airlines.
Speaker 4 (02:27:23):
Really yeah, I.
Speaker 1 (02:27:24):
Was really surprised by that. Second place Frontier.
Speaker 4 (02:27:27):
Okay, Spirit Airlines is going to be in first place.
Speaker 1 (02:27:30):
You didn't even make the top time.
Speaker 10 (02:27:32):
No.
Speaker 8 (02:27:33):
Number one most disliked airline.
Speaker 1 (02:27:35):
Most disliked airline Delta. I like it. I fly it
quite often Blue Southwest.
Speaker 8 (02:27:41):
I'm an Awards a rewards member.
Speaker 1 (02:27:44):
Who is it?
Speaker 8 (02:27:45):
American American Airlines?
Speaker 1 (02:27:47):
What I was really surprised. You are the airline where
I flew at three o'clock in the morning the other day.
But no, I like American Airlines most Disliked.
Speaker 5 (02:27:57):
All right, The Toronto Blue Jays are headed back to
the World Series for the first time in more than
three decades. They beat Seattle last night four to three
Game seven. So now we have the Blue Jays facing
the National League champion, which was the Los Angeles Dodgers,
and that will begin Friday night.
Speaker 1 (02:28:18):
All right. Also sports news for you, we have NBA
returning today. So on television, we have.
Speaker 8 (02:28:24):
The series premiere of Coast to Coast Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (02:28:27):
That's going to be on NBC.
Speaker 5 (02:28:28):
Back to back NBA games from opposite sides of the
country with the first game starting around APM Eastern and
the second one around eight pm Pacific. First you have
Oklahoma City Thunder hosting the Houston Rockets and then the
Lakers hosting Golden State Warriors.
Speaker 1 (02:28:46):
If you're I don't want to do that one, all right.
Speaker 5 (02:28:49):
Actors who were paid a lot of money in movies
but really didn't do much.
Speaker 1 (02:28:53):
So.
Speaker 5 (02:28:54):
Sources say that Michael Keaton, he was paid two million
dollars for Camo in the Back rom movie.
Speaker 4 (02:29:02):
That movie never got wrong. Now they just they write off.
Speaker 1 (02:29:05):
Yeah, they paid him.
Speaker 5 (02:29:09):
Benicio del Toro got five million dollars for American Gangster
and he wasn't even in it. The movie got delayed
and then he was replaced, but he had a pay
or play deal, meaning he got paid no matter what.
Speaker 1 (02:29:22):
Million right, totally.
Speaker 5 (02:29:24):
Sean Connery he got two hundred and fifty thousand dollars
for one day of filming in the movie Robin Hood,
Prince of Themes Thieves the end scene.
Speaker 1 (02:29:35):
He originally wanted a million, and they said we'll give
you two hundred and fifty and that's what he got.
Speaker 5 (02:29:40):
Jared Leto got seven million dollars for Suicide Squad, which
meant he earned a million dollars for every minute of.
Speaker 1 (02:29:47):
Screen Okay, that was one of the worst films ever
made ever.
Speaker 5 (02:29:51):
Seven million for seven minutes. That's craziness. Robert Jah, Wait,
what movie.
Speaker 1 (02:29:56):
Was Suicide Squad?
Speaker 7 (02:29:57):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (02:29:57):
That was the first time Jared leto is the joker. Yeah,
like a weird tattooed joker. But it looked that that
I remember. The trailer looked good. The trailer made the
movie look like it was going to be fantastic. But
I don't remember. I did remember. Everyone hated it, said
it really sucked.
Speaker 5 (02:30:14):
Robert Downey Junior got ten million dollars for eight minutes
of screen time in Spider Man Homecoming. And then finally,
Vin Diesel reportedly made between ten and twenty five million
for being the voice of Groot in the Marvel movies,
even between ten and twenty five million.
Speaker 1 (02:30:33):
And the only thing that he says, I am Groot.
That's it. He once said, we are Groot in in
a weird voice. You can't even tell Tim. Yeah, he
made all that money.
Speaker 4 (02:30:45):
Are you sure that this is in fake news?
Speaker 1 (02:30:47):
Come on, I'm tell on you.
Speaker 5 (02:30:50):
And finally, the president is thinking about commuting Diddy's sentence.
Speaker 1 (02:30:54):
He's considering all of this.
Speaker 5 (02:30:56):
TMZ is reporting that Trump is mulling the decision, although
some White House app are urging him not to the
source says that Trump will do what he wants.
Speaker 1 (02:31:04):
Well, so why why are we doing this with Diddy
or anybody else? They're convicted A Jerry's convicted him. They
were convicted France Square. He just commuted the sense of
that ridegious liar George Santos, who is a complete and
total fraudster, scammer, stealing money, a bad guy, all around
(02:31:29):
bad guy. But he always voted Republican. That's why he
did it. That's that's that's a quote. He says. He
let him out of jail after he's been convicted. H
and he admitted to all sorts of various crimes. And
I just this, it is it's wildly inappropriate. Did he?
I look the same thing when when Biden pardoned Hunter
(02:31:52):
Biden I also wildly inappropriate? Sure?
Speaker 10 (02:31:57):
Did?
Speaker 5 (02:31:57):
He is serving a fifty month prison sentence and two
interstate prostitution convictions. His legal team filed a notice of appeal.
Speaker 1 (02:32:04):
Of his conviction.
Speaker 4 (02:32:05):
I think that they should do this like.
Speaker 1 (02:32:10):
They should do this like they do challenges in the
NFL you know, you can challenge a call, but you
only have a couple of those per game that you
can do. And I think the president should only be
allowed to commute the sentence or pardon X number of
people per year or per term.
Speaker 4 (02:32:28):
That's it, and it should be a small number. And
that way it should be.
Speaker 1 (02:32:32):
Like a brought out process, not just I feel like
letting this dude when he lets Gaselaine Maxwell out, will
anybody care? You can't do that? He cannot, He will
not do that. He will not let Glainne Maxwell. I'm
not thinking to do it. No, No, even Trump realizes
that the blowback from that would be off the charge.
(02:32:53):
He's not going to do it. Not going to do it.
Speaker 9 (02:32:55):
I want to see it like Hunger Games. He could
pick five people and they all go into home and
you gotta fight to.
Speaker 1 (02:33:01):
The death versus illegal immigrants. Yeah, I think Christine Allen
could be like the referee. I like that idea.
Speaker 4 (02:33:07):
All right, go on, we go.
Speaker 8 (02:33:08):
That's the schizzy on Rovers Morning Glory.
Speaker 2 (02:33:11):
So much good you want to bend over and kiss
our ass watch live right there.
Speaker 1 (02:33:18):
On your stupid smart boat. Just search for Rovers Morning
Glory in the App Store or Google play.
Speaker 4 (02:33:28):
Rick, you're on Rover's Morning Glory Morning Rick, Good morning,
Hey good.
Speaker 1 (02:33:35):
I think it's o crap that they're all getting their
back pay. I don't think.
Speaker 4 (02:33:40):
Fongers should even get their pay. I mean, that's like
a vacation, right.
Speaker 12 (02:33:44):
If I lose my job, I have to go FOP
for unemployment.
Speaker 1 (02:33:47):
No, these guys are these TSA workers, these air traffic controllers.
They're still going into work, Rick, but they're not getting paid.
I wouldn't. That's why they're called off. That's why many
are calling off sick. And yes, yes, but look, some
people have a dedication to their job. Some people want,
(02:34:08):
you know, in order to get that back pay. I'm
sure you have to show up. If you don't show up,
you probably don't get the back pay, obviously, But this
is not a great situation. This is not They need
to solve this problem. Democrats, Republicans whoever, get over it.
Get over this stupid Obamaca whatever. I don't even know
what the hell this whole hold up is over. It's
totally unrelated this Obamacare stuff. And I just this is
(02:34:32):
it's embarrassing. It's embarrassing that our government is so dysfunctional
that they can't get this together. Animals is a part
in different than a commuted sentence. It is a pardon,
(02:34:54):
I think, means like it didn't even happen, right, It
could be getting one of them is you have to
admit he did something wrong. One of them you don't.
I think you have to go yes, I did that,
but now I'm free. The commuted sentence mute is just
that the sentence is over. Yeah. Yeah, So if you
were sentenced, I think, would you say that. I think
he was five or seven years. She had four years.
(02:35:15):
I think George Santos was I think fifty months. I
think so about four years. He's doing a four year
since and commuting the sins just means let him out today.
He has to he relaates him today. Sure, he's only
been in there for a year.
Speaker 4 (02:35:27):
Let him off.
Speaker 1 (02:35:28):
And so you see he part in the January sixth protesters.
But I remember, I know there's a couple protesters are
upset because oh maybe I was wrong in the pardon,
you still have to admit fault, and they were upset
saying I don't want to have to admit fault. Even
though you pardon my sentence. I didn't do anything wrong.
So still I shouldn't have been pardoned. It should have
(02:35:51):
been something else like spunge. Yeah the way. I don't
know what they'll correct word would be for it or
whatever I guess, but all right, you talked about the
the Thailand Hall and they want to put a warning
(02:36:13):
label on this or who wants it? The government wants
to put the warning label on this, and thilan All's
makers are like, no, this, you don't have the scientific
proof of this. But I did see a story and
made me wonder about this. If you have an autistic
kid that you could take this? Is it?
Speaker 3 (02:36:31):
Is it?
Speaker 4 (02:36:33):
I want to say? Is it follic acid, folic aid?
Speaker 1 (02:36:35):
What is it?
Speaker 4 (02:36:36):
What is the how do you what is it good for?
Speaker 1 (02:36:40):
What does it? What does it do?
Speaker 4 (02:36:41):
What's it supposed to do for it?
Speaker 1 (02:36:43):
Take it? Well? They have a specific medication and I
think it's uh. It treats. It's called lou covorin and
that helps autistic children who have a fol late or
follate efficiency whatever that is.
Speaker 4 (02:36:59):
That's a short of beanhem in the brain and that's for.
Speaker 5 (02:37:03):
General cell growth in development and it helps prevent birth effects.
Speaker 4 (02:37:09):
I was reading this story.
Speaker 1 (02:37:10):
I'm sure this won't work for everybody, but it does
give some people hope if they have an autistic child
who's nonverbal. So I was reading this story about this
woman whose kid was completely you know, normal whatever.
Speaker 4 (02:37:24):
He's growing up.
Speaker 1 (02:37:25):
He's until about one, about a year old, and then
then just stops talking. You know, he's learning a few
words here and there, but then just drops off, stops
talking whatever. Nonverbal autistic kid. They try everything to cure
this kid. Of course is not gonna you know, it's
not working, but they still send them to speech therapy
and all this stuff, and then they start giving him
this medication. There was a doctor doing a clinical trial
(02:37:51):
of this lou covre in or however you pronounce this,
and the kids started taking it.
Speaker 4 (02:37:57):
Boom, within a.
Speaker 1 (02:37:59):
Couple of months, kids starts talking, Yeah, And is it
folic acid? I don't know. It's something louke corfn, calcium tablets,
whatever the hell that is, but it treats that folly deficiency.
And the parent, I think it's the mother in this
article was saying, one of the things that you don't
(02:38:22):
realize is that these kids who are nonverbal, they are
still processing everything completely normally, all right, So they just can't,
like there's something like almost like a wire was cut
in their brain where they can think it, but they
can't say it. And then the anger.
Speaker 8 (02:38:39):
So like my nephew's daughter has this and she's.
Speaker 5 (02:38:46):
Getting better, but mostly nonverbal, and she can't get the
words out, but she knows what's going on, and so
then the anger hits and you can't because she can't
get out.
Speaker 1 (02:38:59):
Of a brain to tell you.
Speaker 4 (02:39:00):
Well, think about this.
Speaker 1 (02:39:01):
So imagine if you have this eight year old kid
who hasn't talked ever. Yeah, and then you give this
drug and it goes and it allows them to start talking. Now,
they said, the mother said, this is also because of
that speech therapy. You have to give them the tools
that if you take this drug and it does reverse
their nonverbalness.
Speaker 4 (02:39:22):
But you know what the kid did. The kid just
just like the first few.
Speaker 1 (02:39:28):
Months of talking, just complaining about everything, just like my
sister is such a bitch, takes all my toys and
I hate macaroni and cheese. Why do you keep up?
Like it was just a NonStop flood of all the
grievances that this kid had from eight years of not
being able to speak, yeah, being able to complain and
forcing because they hate this stuff. So they also had
(02:39:52):
to train this kid to say, Okay, hey listen. So conversation,
now you're able to finally speak, so conversation is more like, okay,
now that we've let you vent for a couple of months,
now a conversation has to be more of a back
and forth where yeah, you listen to me, and I
listened to you, and and so on and so forth.
But I the only reason I bring that up is
you mentioned this this, this, this thing with the seat
(02:40:15):
of benefit. But there is perhaps hope, maybe maybe Robert Kennedy,
maybe he's maybe he's right, Maybe we just need this
follic acid or whatever the hell this stuff is, however
you pronounce it. But there is hope for people who
you think because you kind of are like, oh, well,
they're nonverbal, autistic, not much you can do. But maybe
(02:40:36):
there is something that can unlock their brain and get
them going, even if they're like thirty years old. It's
like something they could just boom. Imagine all the complaints
the person would have after thirty years of.
Speaker 4 (02:40:46):
Not being able to speak. Only imagine, yeah, I've got
to take a quick break.
Speaker 1 (02:40:54):
Eight sixty six, Your Rover is our number eight sixty
six nine six seven six eight three seven.
Speaker 4 (02:41:00):
I'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (02:41:00):
Hang on's morning Glory. I'm curious how you guys would
(02:41:27):
react to this, what you would do you weren't for
a big corporation. iHeartMedia and Entertainments, the world's number one
audio company. There was a I'm curious how you would
react to this situation that happened to a guy who
works for BBC, which is not Big Black all right,
(02:41:49):
not that, No, No, it's the British Broadcasting Company or
corporation or whatever the hell they are anyway, So this
guy works for BBC reporter or whatever, and he gets
an email and it says, hey, listen, we want to
(02:42:10):
give you a once in a lifetime opportunity. We want
if you can give us your credentials access to your PC.
We're going to infect your PC. You'll never be implicated
in this. We're going to infect your PC and get
into the BBC's network and we're gonna launch a ransomware attack.
Speaker 4 (02:42:29):
And I'm paraphrasing all of this.
Speaker 1 (02:42:31):
We're going to launch a ransomware attack against BBC.
Speaker 4 (02:42:36):
They have a bunch of money.
Speaker 1 (02:42:39):
And we will cut you in on fifteen percent of
any ransom payment that we receive if you give us
access to your computer fifteen percent of what am up. Well,
it depends on however much ransom they can get out
of BBC. What are they thinking, Well, huh no, No,
(02:43:02):
they're talking a big bucks because there was uh you know,
twenty million, five million, one hundred million whatever. They're gonna
try and get as much. You imagine if you took
down the entire their entire operation. Imagine if it one
hundred million. Okay, yes, yeah, jeez. He's like, I'm in Yeah,
(02:43:24):
that's fifteen million, wow, breaking the law. He's already selling
his password to the highest bidder. Charlie at roverradio dot
com big boobs ninety Absolutely, So what's your question? Would
I do this? Yes? Would you do? Absolutely? It's illegal?
I would, And as luckily as this guy could probably do,
I would. I would as I'm doing it, write a
(02:43:48):
story as I'm doing it to make it look like no, no, no,
I'm doing a story on how ransomware works as I'm
doing the thing, so it's like a caught I go no, no,
I was going undercover to try to show you you
have a story ready to go, that's a story, and
it got out of hand, it went too far or something,
and I go, oh my god. I didn't I thought
I was just helping. I thought I was just doing
something that would make it very interesting story. Oh absolutely,
(02:44:11):
who cares about it? Fifteen million? Who cares about their
job that much?
Speaker 3 (02:44:15):
I do?
Speaker 4 (02:44:16):
I mean, even if it's not one hundred million might
be too much.
Speaker 1 (02:44:19):
But they were saying, we could probably get tens of
millions of dollars if we can infiltrate BBC.
Speaker 4 (02:44:24):
So even you know, twenty million dollars is going.
Speaker 1 (02:44:28):
To be I don't have to do anything. They just
have three million or something. I left my password out
one day. I don't know. Yeah, you've got my password.
But what if they would you do a rover? Nobody's
getting hurt, yeah, but you're bringing them is getting hurt
in person. A person's not getting hurt. People will get hurt.
So if if BBC or iHeart or whoever has to
(02:44:50):
pay twenty five million dollars in ransomware, insurance covers that
now they're gonna it's going to end up with job
cuts somewhere. Insurance cover. I know, we don't have too
many people left to cut almost everyone. Insurance will cover.
You're not gonna hurt anybody. Insurance is you're going to
get fired. Yeah, you're going to have to give a
million dollars. No, you're going to have to give that
(02:45:12):
money back. Oh it's gone. I don't have it. I
never even I don't know what you're talking about. Don't
are you talking about?
Speaker 8 (02:45:19):
See, I don't believe you. You're not that good of
an actor.
Speaker 1 (02:45:21):
What or I don't even know what password is horrible.
I've also I'm just letting you know I've quit. I'm
quitting the job now, and you simple chase my phone number.
But I found that to be interesting that that is
the method that these hackers tried to use. And this guy,
(02:45:44):
of course then writes an article about it. But we've
heard of other hacks and attacks that have happened in
the past, and it's usually social engineering.
Speaker 4 (02:45:52):
It's usually uh like MGM resorts. I think it was MGM.
Speaker 1 (02:45:57):
Weren't they hacked in Las Vegas had brought down I
remember nobody could say into their rooms and all their
slot machines were disabled. I mean it costs them and
I think they ended up paying like one hundred million
dollars to the ransomware people or whatever.
Speaker 4 (02:46:10):
He's big bucks.
Speaker 1 (02:46:11):
But social engineering got those people in. So they would
call somebody at that works for MGM and they go, hey,
this is the MGM help desk here, and it looks
like somebody's trying to hack into your email. Let's get
you let's get your password changed or something, and then
they walk you through these but they actually steal your password.
(02:46:32):
They're they're doing that, and so I've never heard of
them just straight up asking somebody, Hey, why don't you
just give me your credentials, let me in and we'll
cut you in on the ransom And by the way,
they're criminals. How could you trust them, Charlie, How did
you trust the person who's willing to do this that's
illegal attack to then make good? I'm paying you the
(02:46:53):
fifteen percent us haven't lost anything, So what do I care?
Potentially your job once they find out, if they find out.
But again you just go, I don't know what you're talking.
I have no idea. I was on some weird website
and I put my password and oh, I used the
same password for everything. My bad. Well, well, the FBI
(02:47:14):
would would or somebody, I think we're talking about Scotland
Guard those jokes, M I five, M I six somebody,
but the here the FBI would get involved and they
would go, oh wait a second. We went through everyone's
emails and we found out that the Chocolate Charlie was
(02:47:35):
contacted by the hacker.
Speaker 4 (02:47:36):
They had my email. They were emailing themselves.
Speaker 1 (02:47:39):
Ah, they hacked and sent themselves kind of like that email.
You ever get that email, and they they make it
seem as if it's sent from your account, and they're like,
you've You've been infiltrated for months. I've been inside your system,
and I've been watching you on your webcam. Boy, you
really like dirty materials what you're doing. I have stream
(02:48:02):
grabs I like the one I got Goes. I have
screen grabs of your of you with your naked face,
and it's next to the material that you're watching on
these pornographic websites, side by side, so I can actually
watch my own face as they're saying what I'm watching.
Your wife doesn't need to know what you're doing. I
(02:48:23):
got one of those letters I told you guys about
it on the show. I got an actual letter in
my mailbox that was along those lines of.
Speaker 3 (02:48:36):
That you know.
Speaker 1 (02:48:37):
I know you've been cheating. I have the evidence you've
been cheating on your wife, and I'm willing to get
rid of all the evidence if you give me X
amount of dollars in bitcoin and here's the address, and
it walks you through the whole thing. And there was
no postmark on it either, which was also very strange.
(02:49:02):
And so I look at this, I go, what, what
in the world is this? How did somebody know I've
been kidding on my way?
Speaker 4 (02:49:09):
Oh wait, hang on, No.
Speaker 1 (02:49:11):
I immediately saw that, and I go, what kind of
scam is this? And I learned that somehow prisoners were
actually doing this. I don't know how this I don't
remember exactly because this is a few years ago, but
somehow prisoners were sending this stuff out or they were.
Speaker 4 (02:49:29):
I don't know, they were behind it. Somehow.
Speaker 1 (02:49:32):
How they would get this in your mailbox without being postmarked.
I'm not sure.
Speaker 8 (02:49:35):
Did you track it ever? Did you contact anyone?
Speaker 1 (02:49:38):
Or no?
Speaker 10 (02:49:38):
You do?
Speaker 1 (02:49:38):
No? What am I going to do?
Speaker 4 (02:49:39):
Call police?
Speaker 1 (02:49:40):
No? My wife is the one who got it. But
the mail She goes, what's this? You want to immediately
the scam? Total scam. But I guess they just figure
that if you do this, out of one hundred letters
that sent you get sent up maybe one percent. Maybe
(02:50:02):
one person sure pays this off is actually cheating on
their wife, and it is stupid enough to.
Speaker 8 (02:50:09):
Put it in nice off Yeah, nice homes in their mailboxes.
Speaker 1 (02:50:12):
And I don't know how they got it into my
mail into my mailbox. That's a I don't remember. I remember.
I looked into this, like how did they do this?
And somehow I remember prisoners were behind it? Was it
this new not this this isn't a new house, but
the old house. No, this this house that I'm in
A h You have an open mailbox? Were you put
stuff in?
Speaker 6 (02:50:33):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (02:50:33):
But somebody would have to drive there. How's a prisoner
going to drive there and put that in my mailbox?
Have people on the outside.
Speaker 4 (02:50:39):
But what a completely ineffective way of doing that.
Speaker 1 (02:50:43):
And also that would be the last way I would
want to do it, because you could be captured the
vehicle you're driving, captured on somebody's security well jam or
something like that. No, but uh so, I just that
would be a huge risk. I think you should actually
mail it. But how you could mail it and not
(02:51:04):
have it postmarked? I mean if they had a man
on the inside, a postal inspector, perhaps maybe the postmaster
general is behind it goes all the way to the top.
I don't know, paying them off with cigarettes. Yeah, and
somehow prisoners were behind all of this. I do remember that,
but I could see like old people, I guess, falling
(02:51:25):
for that or something.
Speaker 4 (02:51:26):
I suppose, but that's true, But I still.
Speaker 1 (02:51:30):
I don't know.
Speaker 9 (02:51:30):
I don't trust anything like that anymore. How, I would
never want to create a paper trail, though. If I
was the hacker or the person trying to get the ransom,
no paper trail. This would be all verbal. It'd be like,
let me take off your shirt. I want to make
sure you're not wearing a wire. I would be not
put it typing this stuff out. Here is my password,
(02:51:52):
give me fifteen percent. That's so stupid. A digital trail
or a real paper trail.
Speaker 1 (02:51:57):
Yeah, I.
Speaker 4 (02:52:00):
And you would never trust the person to cuts you
in on that fifteen percent. There's no way.
Speaker 9 (02:52:03):
Yeah, I'm going to if you can account with half
of the money in it already, like there would have
to be some stipulations, Yeah, an offshore account.
Speaker 1 (02:52:12):
I wonder if any of this AWS stuff was hackers.
I saw yesterday that it might be China that did
it to us. What does AWS stand for again? Amazon
Web Services? Okay, so they basically, I mean, they have
probably one hundred and fifty different products that they have
(02:52:33):
is part of AWS, and it handles various back end
operations of websites and apps and things like that, you
name it.
Speaker 4 (02:52:43):
They have a service that will do it for you.
Speaker 1 (02:52:46):
And so when that goes down, a lot of websites
and apps and things depend on those services. So if
AWS goes down, a bunch of other things go down
as well. And I saw yesterday that China I actually
have been behind this this attack as retribution for I
don't know something or whatever, tariffs or something. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (02:53:08):
That's all speculation, but who knows. What do I have
to give away today?
Speaker 1 (02:53:14):
Duche? What do I have over here? You have passes
Sonic Temple. Okay, I'm gonna wrap the show up. Give
some stuff away. I have a pair of four day
general admission weekend passes to Sonic Temple. It returns to
Historic Crew Stadium in Columbus, Ohio, May fourteenth through the seventeenth,
(02:53:38):
four full days of music from bands like My Chemical Romance, Sepultura,
Devil Driver, Cradle of Filth, We came as Romans, Coheed
and Cambria and many many more. Purchase your tickets and
get more info at Sonic Temple dot com or win
them if you call her thirty right now, eight sixty
six you're over eight sixty six nine six six A
(02:54:00):
three sevens. Who is this, Charlie?
Speaker 4 (02:54:03):
Oh this Cradle, Silp, Cradle.
Speaker 1 (02:54:05):
Spilt the Mountains?
Speaker 9 (02:54:08):
It really did?
Speaker 1 (02:54:09):
So the cover song though, what's the song's? Yeah? What
are they cover? I guess.
Speaker 11 (02:54:30):
You don't know.
Speaker 1 (02:54:38):
Would I know the song? Didn't Mike snit for you know,
copa Cabana close o Day. Well, now that now that
(02:55:06):
you've asked me, and I've been waiting for them to
start singing a but I don't know all right? What
song are they coming from? This is Iron Maiden, hollow
be that name was close, death Box, Death Clock is
going to be there too. So cool, that's really cool.
(02:55:26):
What happens on stage when they play, well by the
creator of the cartoon, it plays guitar.
Speaker 4 (02:55:33):
I don't know what death clock?
Speaker 1 (02:55:36):
Did they hollow ram up? I don't know what is
death Clock? It's a cartoon oh, it's just a cartoon.
It's a death metal band.
Speaker 3 (02:55:43):
The band is.
Speaker 4 (02:55:44):
The show is called Metal Akali.
Speaker 1 (02:55:46):
It's awesome. Yes, yes, movies as well. Yes, here's the
music video. I guess they've released. The show's good. It's
like a really good guitarist. He's amazing.
Speaker 9 (02:55:59):
He pretty free performs multiple artists in the episode like
he's the musician behind everything.
Speaker 1 (02:56:08):
All right, Well, you can enjoy this at Sonic Temple
Collar thirty eight sixty six year o Rover. We also
have The Aftermath coming out. Jesus Christ. You're gonna give
people seizure, Charlie the band, Yes, oh my god, this
is a seizure inducing You got to cut that off. Seriously,
(02:56:31):
I wasna watch this. People put r mg TV up
when they're driving. I tell them not to.
Speaker 4 (02:56:36):
You to kill people, Charlie.
Speaker 1 (02:56:38):
It's the great So the music is awesome.
Speaker 4 (02:56:40):
Okay, that is enough. I gotta get thank you.
Speaker 1 (02:56:47):
The Aftermath starts on r MG plus. Warning may cause
seizures if you don't subscribe to RMG plus. Sign up
at Rover radio dot com.
Speaker 4 (02:56:56):
If you too, can have a on mal seizure when you.
Speaker 1 (02:57:02):
Listen to Chocolate Charlie and Snitzer as they continue on
RMG plus. Sign up there at roverradio dot com and
then watch your listen to life on the website or
with the Rover Radio app on your phone, your tablet,
or your TV. But sign up for RMG plus on
the website roverradio dot com. We will be back live
tomorrow morning.
Speaker 4 (02:57:22):
Have a great day. It's Rover's Morning.
Speaker 1 (02:57:24):
Glory Bye.