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December 9, 2025 • 50 mins
Rover brought hoodies for the show. Parallel parking. Rover's father-in-law doesn't like how he drives. Duji could not get Gia's temps yesterday. Unopened mail. Are you allowed to laminate your social security card?

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Jeffrey Laroque questions for Jeffrey if he's married, why is
he out trying to hit on chicks all the time?

Speaker 2 (00:07):
And what's he going to do when he brings from
Donner Rihea to his wave.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
I'm just curious who Donna Reed? Welcome back to Rover's
Morning Glory. She is he coming up in just a moment.
What do you have on the way? Dog?

Speaker 4 (00:24):
There's a funny video of somebody very famous trying to
parallel park.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
The video has gone.

Speaker 4 (00:29):
Viral because the person's really struggling and can't get it right.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
I'll tell you who it is.

Speaker 5 (00:33):
We'll get to that in just a moment. Our number
is eight six six year old Rover. The twenty twenty
six RMG hoodie is available at roverradio dot com.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
I told you earlier this morning.

Speaker 5 (00:43):
We are down to just two sizes, Medium and Large
remain they say it. All other sizes are sold out,
so grab one while you can. And here's somebody who
where did this go?

Speaker 3 (01:00):
Stand by? I don't know what happened to it.

Speaker 5 (01:06):
Oh, here it is Todd Rides Hubba Hubba.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
Dougie is looking good with.

Speaker 5 (01:15):
That form fitting sweater this morning.

Speaker 3 (01:19):
Let me see.

Speaker 5 (01:19):
Can you back out a little bit, snitch and see
what this form fitting sweater.

Speaker 3 (01:24):
That she has on. I've worn a set up straight.
Have us some nice costure? Put that chest out? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:30):
Okay, yeah, sit up, take a peek. Jeffrey.

Speaker 6 (01:33):
Jeffrey mentioned this Sinity Storry today. Nice, he said, nice, real.

Speaker 7 (01:38):
Nice outfit, though, I'm giving her a compliment. Very nice
outfit you very form fitting to.

Speaker 4 (01:42):
Try to wear a different Christmas themed shirt or sweater
every day.

Speaker 5 (01:48):
Well to Hubb, she says, Now, I did bring in,
speaking of the twenty twenty six Rovery's Morning Glory hoodie,
I did bring in a hoodie for everyone. Nice?

Speaker 2 (01:59):
Oh you did you?

Speaker 3 (02:01):
Did?

Speaker 8 (02:01):
You?

Speaker 2 (02:01):
Really? What's wrong with you?

Speaker 3 (02:03):
And I you know what I did there? I said,
she's all got on the wrong size side. She doesn't want.

Speaker 5 (02:08):
I got her a medium, That's what I said for her.
So I think that's the size that you need.

Speaker 4 (02:15):
No, but I want to wear when you wear a hoodie,
I want it to be comfortable.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
No, we wanted to be form fitting. Show that off
there and want what you want?

Speaker 2 (02:23):
I want what I want?

Speaker 5 (02:25):
So large I think I have, I don't know I
have largest and I have mediums back there, and I
had a small for one person who's been begging for
a hoodie. She did me a favor. I said, okay, nice,
So Rachel and sales, she gets one. We still don't

(02:46):
get the jacket from last year. You're giving her a hoodie.
She she was very uh, he gets one, and very insistent.
You know, she's very talkative. Your brings it up like
fifty times. Okay, so just order to shut up.

Speaker 2 (03:04):
No, she deserves one.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
So I saw that are well.

Speaker 5 (03:08):
I got a text message yesterday from somebody and they said, oh, hey,
I put the wrong address in. Can you change the address?
I need to change my shipping address on the hoodie.
This person texted me directly. Our program director in Florida, Jason,

(03:29):
went on and purchased a hoodie and had it chipped.
The wrong address, didn't he read?

Speaker 3 (03:35):
He says, make sure double check.

Speaker 5 (03:38):
He blamed it on auto filling the wrong city and
there he blamed it on Google pay or something like that,
or Apple pay or whatever.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
Anyway.

Speaker 5 (03:47):
I said, we probably could have gotten you a free one,
but but you gave it to Rachel. Yeah that's right.
We're about the same size. Yeah, which because small, I
didn't look at the order. But he's a he's a
smaller guy. So uh anyway, So dude, you don't think

(04:07):
a medium will fail you? You think you need a large?

Speaker 2 (04:10):
No, large is just more comfortable.

Speaker 3 (04:13):
Maybe try the medium.

Speaker 5 (04:15):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
I appreciate you thinking of us.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
You do anything nice for her with that?

Speaker 4 (04:21):
You know what, you started the whole conversation.

Speaker 2 (04:24):
I did it just a pestougie off so you can't
sit down.

Speaker 5 (04:28):
I grabbed him last night and I said, all right,
let me think what side, because I didn't ask everybody
what size. But I got a large for Charlie perfect.
I got a large for snits nice. I get an
XL probably for him, but I guess that might work
bigger than me. I got a large for Jeffrey's choice.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
Medium.

Speaker 3 (04:51):
He's a medium guy. Yeah, I've always everybody ever had
was a.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
Medium five foot four. Yes, he's never done a large.
I'll take as large. He can have my medium.

Speaker 5 (05:00):
Yeah, he was a medium at one point in his wife.

Speaker 2 (05:05):
Twenty years ago.

Speaker 8 (05:06):
Am I right?

Speaker 3 (05:07):
No, who do you have right now? Is medium? He's
a medium. I've read a medium. Yeah, are you guys sure? Yeah?
All right, Well do.

Speaker 5 (05:16):
You want to swap. Then you can take his large, Jeffry.
And actually I don't know. I have Jeffrey try on.

Speaker 3 (05:22):
Both and then give him.

Speaker 5 (05:25):
Now that I think about it, I don't know if
I got him a medium or a large.

Speaker 3 (05:29):
That's a good question. You have to go go in
there and look.

Speaker 4 (05:31):
But all right, Doug, are you and have you noticed
the dedication of someone here?

Speaker 3 (05:36):
Today's medication of someone who?

Speaker 2 (05:40):
What's today? Tuesday? What time is it?

Speaker 5 (05:44):
Oh, mister Jeffrey al larc is still here at eight
o'clock this morning.

Speaker 7 (05:47):
Yes, because I checked in with my fence company yesterday
because they I told him that Wednesday was going to
I believe it's going to be the last show that
we do for a year. And I asked him, if
you guys don't have if you guys don't have any
deliveries from me scheduled, it'd be permissible for me to
work to you know, work today showed in coming at
nude and he said, no, they have no delivery scheduled,
so that they would allow me to work todays show.

Speaker 3 (06:10):
This way, I get all.

Speaker 7 (06:10):
It's just about all my hours in with you guys,
So that was very nice of them.

Speaker 5 (06:15):
Mm hmm all right, nice Charlie. What are you doing?
You're rubbing your army? Are you bleeding over there? Oh? Yeah,
just bleeding a little bit from what this Christmas tree Christmas.

Speaker 3 (06:27):
Scabbed, gave me a bunch of scabs.

Speaker 6 (06:29):
And then I I didn't notice you guys didn't notice
I'm scratching it.

Speaker 3 (06:32):
And then Crystal said, you're bleeding something. Well kind of tree?

Speaker 7 (06:35):
I hate to say it, Charlie, and I'm being I'm
not being fine little serious that the trust you're doing.

Speaker 3 (06:41):
Christmas tree doesn't scratch you like a cat.

Speaker 6 (06:43):
Well, it's not really scratching, it's so much as the breakout.

Speaker 3 (06:48):
And then you you're scratching. Then I'm scratching itched. What
kind of tree? Did you get? Scotch pine?

Speaker 5 (06:54):
Somebody texted yesterday that a Scotch pine. And I find
this a little bit hard to bloy that they die
Scotch pines and that's what you are allergic to, the
claim that the Christmas trees maybe maybe it's maybe it's
not green and they add a dye to a Scotch pine.
I find that a little bit hard because I did

(07:15):
a Google search and I saw.

Speaker 3 (07:16):
Him growing, and I go that looks pretty green to me,
like a flower.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
How they dye flowers, You put them in die and
they soak it up.

Speaker 3 (07:25):
And I saw scotch pine.

Speaker 6 (07:27):
I mean I googled Scotch pine and allergy and people
people are sometimes allergic to it. I don't see anything
something to do with the terpenes and the VOCs uh,
it just got bad terpenes. It says, my body doesn't
like it for some reason, and I didn't. He's just
all these scabs.

Speaker 5 (07:44):
I mean, he's just bleeding and he don't stop either.

Speaker 3 (07:46):
It just won't stop.

Speaker 5 (07:47):
It just was a big bubble, like a homeless person.
You see.

Speaker 3 (07:51):
You walk by and you see, like a homeless person,
all these bleeding scabs just wal.

Speaker 5 (07:58):
He's dabbing him with a Kleenex in there, all right,
know way I got it because the looks like the
Latin name for it is Penis silvestres.

Speaker 6 (08:10):
That's what I went in and asked for the biggest
Penis sylvestres.

Speaker 3 (08:14):
You have banked.

Speaker 5 (08:16):
Jake says, Jeffrey is a medium body with an X
L gut. That's his problem. So you think you need
a medium Jeffrey hoodie size.

Speaker 7 (08:26):
I can still fit in the medium, because, like I said,
the hoodie I have on right now for my fence
company is a medium.

Speaker 5 (08:31):
I've always been able to fit in a medium. All right, Douji,
are you ready for the shizzy? Yes, here we go,
Jitu Hizzy on Rolls Morning, Glori.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
The Supreme Court appears ready to back the president's argument
that he should have the authority to fire members of
independent government agencies. For nearly a century, federal law has
shielded those entities from direct White House control. Well, the
Court's liberal justices yesterday warned that Trump's push could dramatically
expand his presidential power, and it could up end the

(09:02):
structure of the modern federal government.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
So we'll see what happens with this.

Speaker 4 (09:06):
The ruling in the cases expected by the end of June.
I started hearing arguments yesterday.

Speaker 3 (09:13):
Did you see that?

Speaker 5 (09:14):
Do you remember at the time I told you that
this is a while ago. I said, there's really you
don't want to talk about witch hunts. They keep going
after people for alleged mortgage fraud.

Speaker 6 (09:26):
Have you seen this? You know, Charlie, they went after
but I didn't really understand it, and I didn't I
wasn't pay attention to it.

Speaker 5 (09:31):
They they've gone after a few different people, and the
guy who was in charge of the I don't know
what organization it is, this Polty guy who is I
guess related to the Poulty Homes people.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
I think, yeah.

Speaker 5 (09:47):
Anyway, So what he's doing is he's going through all
mortgage records trying to look at Democrats and trying to
find anything. And they've gone after some people for what
they claim as mortgage fraud. I believe it's this Latitia James, yeah,
the Attorney General.

Speaker 7 (10:05):
Of New York, because they're saying because she's got a
home in Virginia, and I think what happened was that
she mistakenly put that down as her primary residence and
she admitted that was a mistake and had that corrected,
and then she felt that the charges are baseless. And
Abby Lowell, who's her attorney, believes that she could prevail

(10:25):
in court on this. That it does it's just a
witch hunt because remember President Trump is out of retaliation,
is trying to retaliate against her because.

Speaker 3 (10:34):
He's the one.

Speaker 7 (10:35):
She's the one that brought the lawsuit against now over
his business.

Speaker 5 (10:38):
Ross has said that that is deceitful and criminal to
have that on your mortgage to say that you have
a primary residence when it's not going to be your
primary residence. I guess they give you a better rate
or something on a mortgage if you say it's your
primary a place of residence.

Speaker 3 (10:59):
I don't know. Well, well, who do you think.

Speaker 5 (11:07):
Who do you think signed a mortgage on a home
in Palm Beach in December of nineteen ninety three and
listed as his primary residence. I don't know when his
primary residence might have been Trump Tower in New York.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
City, but hold on, who do you think put that.

Speaker 5 (11:26):
As his primary residence in December of nineteen ninety three
when he took out a mortgage.

Speaker 3 (11:33):
Mister Donald J.

Speaker 5 (11:34):
Trump now hold on seven weeks later on a neighboring property.
What happened? He took out another mortgage and said that
that was his primary residence. So now he has three
primary residents all at.

Speaker 3 (11:52):
The same time.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
How does that work?

Speaker 5 (11:54):
Well, it works when he takes out the mortgage and
he immediately just puts the homes up for rent. He
got these as rental properties, took out mortgages, got them
as rental properties, and so he.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
He himself did this.

Speaker 5 (12:10):
This deceitful, criminal mortgage fraud. He himself did it now,
of course his answer, I can tell you what it
will be.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
Well, I don't know. I had nothing to do with that.
I don't. I have a lot of money. I don't.
I have people that do this for me. I have
no I don't even remember this house, never even been there.
That's what That's what I'll say.

Speaker 7 (12:33):
And what's the worst part is is that you can't
prosecute a sitting in a US president either.

Speaker 5 (12:37):
Now, he did sign this mortgage himself, both of them,
saying that both of these homes were his primary residence.
Just when is that primary residence was actually in New
York City, So he has three primaries.

Speaker 3 (12:49):
He signed it his signature, but it doesn't know anything
about it.

Speaker 4 (12:55):
Go on do Lawmakers from both parties are urging the
administration to release you of the US military's controversial double
tap strike on an alleged drug vote. Now, both Republicans
and Democrats, they say that they want to review the
unedited footage of the deadly follow up strike back in
September that killed two survivors after nine others died in

(13:15):
the initial attack. The president now says he'll let Defense
Secretary Pete Hegseth decide whether to release the footage. So
that marks a little bit of a shift from his
stance last week.

Speaker 5 (13:27):
Maybe they'll release it like the Epstein footage where a
little bit is missing.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
Yeah, uh oh a loo oops.

Speaker 4 (13:33):
Hegseth is obviously under mounting pressures. Congress is preparing to
vote on restricting his travel budget unless he releases the video.

Speaker 3 (13:43):
That's weird.

Speaker 5 (13:44):
Well, listen, I've said all along and I don't have
any sympathy for drug runners drug dealers, but this is
this is just wrong, period.

Speaker 3 (13:53):
It's wrong. It's unlawful.

Speaker 5 (13:57):
These are not imminent threats to the United States of America.
And I had people try to send me emails arguing
with me about this last time I talked about this.

Speaker 3 (14:08):
But the fact of the.

Speaker 5 (14:09):
Matter is this, this one that they're talking about here,
This is the first boat that they blew up. They
blow it up, two guys survived. They're clinging to the
side of this boat for an hour, and then they
blow it up again.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
To kill them.

Speaker 5 (14:24):
And they go, well, we wanted to sink the boat
so that you know it wasn't a potential hazard to
other boats.

Speaker 3 (14:29):
It's in the middle of the ocean. No other.

Speaker 5 (14:31):
It's a tiny boat, no other, It's not a hazard.
It's utterly ridiculous. And if this would have happened to Americans,
imagine if this would have happened to American soldiers or
something like that, we'd be oh, we'd be crying about it.
And this is not the way that we operate, let
alone just the the strike itself. It turns out that

(14:58):
this boat wasn't even headed to the United States of America.
They had to admit that wasn't even headed to the US.
Where is it going, don't know, probably some other island,
Turks and Caicos or something. But it's it's it's really
a I was talking to my father in law about
this over the weekend. You know, I had a lot

(15:19):
of time to spend with him over the weekend when
we went on to Miami to see the soccer game,
and he is he watches Fox News twenty four hours
a day, seven days with he's.

Speaker 3 (15:32):
Oh, he's deep, he's deep in it.

Speaker 5 (15:36):
And he says that he likes this and Trump is
really cracking down on crime.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
And you know, he's all about this.

Speaker 5 (15:44):
I go, really, you know that our drugs don't come
from Venezuela. Where did the drugs come from? Mexico is
where all of the drugs come from. Venezuela is about
eight percent of the drugs coming into the United States.
Mexico is where all the drugs come from. Why aren't

(16:04):
we bombing them and blowing up their boats? But so
there's a reason. It has more to do with Venezuela
and there oil. And he goes, yeah, But and I said,
and it's illegal.

Speaker 3 (16:14):
He goes, yeah.

Speaker 5 (16:15):
But these people they know what they're getting into. They
sign up for that when they take that risk. I
knew people that would run drugs. They would fly out
to California, get a bunch of drugs, and fly back
to Cleveland with a bunch of drugs.

Speaker 3 (16:28):
I know, you know. And he's always he.

Speaker 5 (16:31):
Knows every everybody with an Italian last name, he knows,
you know.

Speaker 3 (16:37):
So it'll be like, I'm just making up a name.
Oh yeah, you.

Speaker 5 (16:41):
Know Niki de Martini, he did seven years in the
slammer And I go, yeah, But when Nicki de Martini
landed at the airport and they arrested.

Speaker 3 (16:53):
Him, they didn't just shoot him in the head.

Speaker 5 (16:55):
Yeah, he goes well, yeah, I guess you have a point,
so it's it's a yeah.

Speaker 3 (17:01):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (17:01):
This is one of the most shameful things that we're
that we're up to. I think, go on, douche.

Speaker 2 (17:06):
Winter weather continues to affect millions.

Speaker 4 (17:08):
Across the country, with temperatures dipping below freezing throughout parts
of the Midwest and northeast. There are over twelve million
people from eastern Kentucky all the way to North Carolina.
They're all under various weather alerts, with some areas forecasts
to receive up to five inches of snow. We have
more areas of snow and cold air that it's approaching.
I did warn Rover, and I'm warning you guys snowstorm coming,

(17:30):
so that when for tomorrow, make sure that you're careful
driving into work.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
Rover, get your right. When is your car coming back
with your tires?

Speaker 3 (17:41):
I think today, I believe I'm not.

Speaker 2 (17:43):
She'll be ready for tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (17:44):
All right, it's been a week.

Speaker 2 (17:46):
It's a long time.

Speaker 3 (17:47):
I like, no, they just picked it up yesterday.

Speaker 2 (17:49):
Actually, I think I thought you said it was the
day before.

Speaker 3 (17:51):
Yea, what day is it today?

Speaker 2 (17:52):
Or maybe it's two things they were supposed.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
To come out Friday, but they came yesterday. Well that's
this is my point of why. It's a massive pain
in the air. So you're gonna have to do this
in the spring again.

Speaker 6 (18:02):
They're going to take your car for a week to
change your tires, and they're gonna have to do it
another time.

Speaker 3 (18:07):
It's two weeks out of the year. You don't have
your car.

Speaker 5 (18:09):
No, it's usually it's they can do it in the
same day or return it the next day.

Speaker 3 (18:13):
So can you got the weeks without the car? Even
had a car a week? They picked it, They picked
it up yesterday.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
He was gone too.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
They picked it up yesterday and they're returning it today.
It sounds like a big pain. And they gave me
a longer car.

Speaker 2 (18:27):
Oh, you have a loaner car, so you can drive
that in tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (18:30):
I drove it in today.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
Okay.

Speaker 3 (18:31):
Good tires, great tires. Okay.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
I saw him getting out of the car and I
was just mean mugging whoever was in this vehicle parking spot.
And I was about to say, you're not allot a
park there, and it's.

Speaker 3 (18:45):
Him, I can tell you.

Speaker 5 (18:47):
And I popped my head out of this girly loaner
car that they gave me.

Speaker 3 (18:51):
It's just me.

Speaker 4 (18:53):
Paramount is making a surprise move to attempt to buy
Warner Brothers Discovery, just days after Netflix announced eighty three
billion dollar deal to purchase To purchase much of the company,
Paramount is offering thirty dollars per share in cash, which
is higher than Netflix's offer of twenty seven dollars and
seventy five.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
Cents per share.

Speaker 4 (19:12):
The Paramount bid includes HBO, Max, the Warner brother Film Studio,
and cable channels like.

Speaker 5 (19:17):
CNN and guess where they're getting all their money from?

Speaker 3 (19:20):
Where? Saudi Arabia? Perfect, Yeah, that's what we need.

Speaker 4 (19:24):
And finally, you know who Joe Jonas is from the
Jonas Brothers.

Speaker 5 (19:30):
Sure, I guess I don't think I'd be able to
pick him out of a lineup, but okay.

Speaker 4 (19:34):
Okay, that's weird. A TikToker? Is that weird Joe Jonas?

Speaker 5 (19:40):
Then?

Speaker 3 (19:40):
Right now? Would you know who that is?

Speaker 9 (19:42):
Now?

Speaker 3 (19:42):
Because I that a desk out there, I go, who's that?

Speaker 2 (19:45):
He's the taller one, the skinnier one.

Speaker 4 (19:47):
Well, there's a TikToker that captured Joe struggling to parallel
park in New York City.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
Wrong video up wrong radio stand by, Okay, here it.

Speaker 4 (19:58):
Is, yes, and there's a person in inside a wagon.

Speaker 2 (20:06):
I can't watch this.

Speaker 3 (20:11):
He's already getting it wrong.

Speaker 5 (20:12):
Why doesn't the person get closer to the window so
I can see what's going on?

Speaker 10 (20:16):
I want him to see it, says I love New
York because I've been watching Joe Jonahs parallel Park for
the last seven minutes.

Speaker 3 (20:28):
All right, dog's falling for this fake story.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
Why is it fake?

Speaker 5 (20:32):
Because Joe Jonas has a new Christmas movie out I
believe maybe on.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
The Hallmark channel or something like that. Somebody said and
that this is just setup.

Speaker 2 (20:42):
Oh it's brilliant.

Speaker 4 (20:44):
It actually is brilliant because there was over nine million views.

Speaker 6 (20:49):
Yeah, but it would be funny if we watched the
parallel Park for eight going back and forth like Austin,
I don't even think this is fake.

Speaker 3 (20:56):
I don't even think this is fake. Do you think
that's real?

Speaker 5 (21:00):
He just was like pulling into a parking spot. The
video itself is twenty one seconds. I mean, how do
you know that it was? Yeah, this seven minutes? How
do you know he's been there for seven minutes?

Speaker 4 (21:11):
Because she said she was watching it, drive like try
to get in there.

Speaker 3 (21:17):
She says that, but okay, all right, you.

Speaker 2 (21:21):
Just took some fun out of it.

Speaker 4 (21:24):
That's I know Jonas Brothers songs.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
This is great.

Speaker 2 (21:34):
Yes, one of my favorite.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
Doesn't like this song? You like this song?

Speaker 2 (21:38):
Jefferson, you have to love this song.

Speaker 3 (21:41):
I don't think you know.

Speaker 5 (21:42):
I'm okay there, I heard it.

Speaker 3 (21:50):
Right, Jeffers.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
I've gotten to eat two out of the three Jonas brothers.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
Oh yeah, Nick was so short?

Speaker 3 (22:03):
How was there parking?

Speaker 7 (22:06):
I've heard of the Jonas brothers, but it never really
hurt and you never really got into their music.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
I'm a sucker for you. Yeah, complicated, Alicia says.

Speaker 5 (22:18):
The Jonas Brothers Christmas movie has been out since November.
Joe Jonas also commented on that video.

Speaker 3 (22:26):
She says, what do you say? I don't know, Probably fake.
I don't know what he said.

Speaker 2 (22:34):
It's not it's not easy parking in New York City.

Speaker 5 (22:38):
Do you guys get if if you're navigating into a
parking spot or a tight area or something like that
and there's somebody behind you or a line of people
behind you, does it add the pressure to you and you,
like you start like trying to do it more haphazardly.

Speaker 3 (22:59):
Of course, you just don't care. I don't care.

Speaker 2 (23:02):
I lived downtown Chicago.

Speaker 4 (23:04):
I had to park, didn't give a reds ask what
people thought.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
I just did it.

Speaker 3 (23:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
Probably the more often you do it, the more you
don't care if people are.

Speaker 2 (23:12):
Watching you, if somebody's watching me, I am.

Speaker 1 (23:15):
I am concerned with how many times I've had to readjust.

Speaker 4 (23:18):
But that person watching you has been in the exact situation, sweating,
trying to parallel park.

Speaker 2 (23:24):
So they can suck it.

Speaker 4 (23:25):
If they're going to judge anyone, they've they've been in
your shoes.

Speaker 5 (23:28):
You guys, ever, get out and you look at your
parking job, and then.

Speaker 3 (23:32):
You go back in. You go, I don't like the
way I'm parked here, rarely to get back in. Sometimes
I get back in. They have to be really bad,
really bad.

Speaker 5 (23:41):
I tried to plan my parking based on I want
to be on the side I issue. Well, I put it. Wait,
maybe I think about parking too much. I try to
be closer to the passenger side of a via go
and allow more space between my vehicle and the driver's

(24:05):
side of another vehicle, because the driver's going to be
getting in and out. Likely most people get in and
out just by themselves. You know, it's one person, So
you can be closer to the passenger side, depending on
where you are. If it's someplace where there may be
a bunch of kids getting in and out, now you
have to do it the opposite way, because kids, what

(24:27):
do they do? They throw They fling the car door
open right into yours and they get in on the
passenger side. So I spent a lot of time thinking
about that. I only check here because we got a
nark in the building.

Speaker 6 (24:39):
Yes, there's a guy that's there's a person that wanders
around taking pictures of people's parking, that Jeffrey Laroque.

Speaker 3 (24:47):
I have done that and quite some time.

Speaker 7 (24:49):
And actually I have to say that I'm proud of
Giugi because she actually parked right and she's on the scene.

Speaker 3 (24:55):
Not yesterday. She was all over the line yesterday, Yes you.

Speaker 7 (24:59):
Were, Yeah, I saw that she was all over the
line yesterday. Pictures today, but yeah, well I forgot to
take a picture, so I just wasn't wasting my phone space.
On the eighty I got no picture of Doug's back
parking as it is.

Speaker 5 (25:12):
Speaking of parking, I spent again, I spent more time
with my father in law than I've ever spent in
my entire life. He's a vaccinat driver. He does not
like the way I drive, the way I park like
we were driving, and he would, why why did you?

Speaker 3 (25:26):
Why'd you get in this lane?

Speaker 2 (25:28):
I love I love it.

Speaker 5 (25:31):
Because this is an exit only lane and we have
to you know, merge, I get over so that I'm
not in an exit only lane. Yeah, but it doesn't.
You don't exit for for another quarter of a mile.
And then and then we go into a parking lot.
He go, and I find a spot, is starting to
pull in.

Speaker 6 (25:49):
He goes, you want to back in? This is driving
with you. I think you got to experience what it's
like being with you.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
No, I just know. I silently judge. I don't. I
just I think you say to your wife though.

Speaker 8 (26:02):
No.

Speaker 5 (26:04):
Ever, Yeah, he does everything the opposite of the way
that I would do. He's a cruise control guy. Loves
that cruise control that drives me crazy. See I keep
my mouth shut.

Speaker 3 (26:15):
I go.

Speaker 5 (26:15):
I don't ever say, how come you're using this cruise control?
This is this is crazy. This cruise control. Wait, adaptive cruiso,
it's adaptive cruise. And yes, it's the greatest. Oh, he's
still fiddling with it though. There's a lot of fiddle cruises,
the adaptive cruise. And then I was really thinking about
this as we because I go, he pressured me basically

(26:38):
into backing into a parking spot. I go, okay, all right,
I'll appease them well, back into this parking spot we
parked at the soccer game. He's like, you want to
back in? Be easier to get out now? And then
I got to thinking about this. I go, why what
difference does it make to me? And he backs into
spots all the time. Isn't it easier you have to

(27:02):
back in, right if you're gonna you you're backing up
at some point at a soccer game, maybe you can
inch out forward if there's a big, long line of traffic,
maybe that's a little bit easier perhaps, But if you're
just in a regular parking spot, you have to you
have to back into the spot or back out of
the spot.

Speaker 3 (27:21):
The spot is small.

Speaker 5 (27:23):
Isn't it easier to back out of the spot into
a wide open parking lot as opposed to backing into
a teeny tiny parking spot.

Speaker 6 (27:32):
I usually I'm against backing in, but I think he's
making the right call here because when it's time to go,
you're if it's packed parking lot, you might nope, you
might not have the space to back out.

Speaker 5 (27:42):
Somebody might go because you're gonna have to do a
three point turnof that's why you make him get out,
do that arm stop fake yellow vest on like he's
directing traffic for the.

Speaker 3 (27:53):
For the stadium.

Speaker 7 (27:55):
What's funny is that? Or old study, I used to
back you in all the time. Uh huh, I can't
do that here because it's the spaces are angle and
it was.

Speaker 6 (28:02):
It was the dumbest thing I've ever seen a person
who could back in and an empty parking lot. It's empty,
so you could pull in to a spot and still
get the same effect of backing in without having to
back in, because you can just pull forward and get in.

Speaker 3 (28:16):
He wouldn't do it, he needs to back in.

Speaker 7 (28:18):
The reason why I like backing in is because once
as the day we're on the parking lot on fuller
and fuller with more traffic, it was just easier for
me to just pull pull forward out.

Speaker 6 (28:27):
But you could in an empty parking lot pull in
as if you were back in going in the spot,
and then when the car's filling it will appear as
though you've backed in, but you did not back in.
You get all the benefits of not but not actually
having to do the work well. I mean, I was
so good at that though. See, it was more of

(28:48):
a everybody that backs in, it's usually a show off
thing they want to be.

Speaker 3 (28:52):
They want to be known as a great driver.

Speaker 6 (28:56):
That's something they take pride in, and that's what everybody
the backs end does.

Speaker 3 (29:00):
The other thing that.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
The whole family, my in laws, they all park really
far away from everybody, like they want to have their
car off on a on an island. I'm too lazy
for that.

Speaker 3 (29:15):
I go extra.

Speaker 5 (29:16):
It's going to take like an extra twenty seconds. Hung
in a park as close as possible. It's got to
be a really tight fit for me to go. Eh,
I'm not going to park there. I don't want to
do that. I've got to take a break. Our number
is eight sixty six. You're over eight sixty six nine
sixty seven six eight three seven. Adrian says you're actually incorrect, Rover. Statistically,

(29:39):
you're more likely to get into an accident backing out
of a spot, which is why all valet companies back
their cars in spots. Where did these statistics come from?
I don't believe this. Secondly, were these statistics done before?
Everybody has backup cameras and parking says since like the beeps.

(30:03):
So if so, then those statistics are meaningless.

Speaker 3 (30:06):
Today. I've got to take a break. We'll be right back.

Speaker 4 (30:10):
Hang my god, what kind of the sun person would
do this?

Speaker 5 (30:16):
Welcome back to rovers morning glory.

Speaker 3 (30:22):
See, yesterday was a big day for Tucci's daughter.

Speaker 2 (30:26):
Oh huge day.

Speaker 5 (30:28):
She passed her Is it an online thing that she
had to do to get her driver's permit or a
learner's permit whatever they call it here? She did that
online over the weekend.

Speaker 4 (30:40):
Yes Sunday was the exact six months until her birthday.
So you're allowed them to take your driver's permit, and
then we had to wait till yesterday to.

Speaker 3 (30:48):
Go in there and get the piece of paper.

Speaker 4 (30:50):
Division and get the the certificate where.

Speaker 2 (30:54):
She can drive with me?

Speaker 3 (30:55):
All right? You wanted to drive immediately?

Speaker 6 (30:59):
Yes, the rules rule, I'm trying to remember the rules highway.

Speaker 5 (31:04):
I don't know what the rules are. An adult has
to be with you. I know that can no driving
at night? What are the rules.

Speaker 2 (31:10):
I didn't know there are rules.

Speaker 4 (31:11):
To be honest, there's a bunch of how do you
know that?

Speaker 6 (31:16):
From when I was fifteen, I remember there were certain rules,
and I remember I might be I might have them wrong,
but some of those are the rules.

Speaker 3 (31:23):
Yeah, I got my temporary permit.

Speaker 7 (31:25):
The main rule was you had, regardless of the time
of day or whether you always had to have a
having having a license driver with you because my dad
would take me out driving, and my dad would actually,
you don't take me out driving, even in bad weather,
to show me the ins and outs of driving in
bad weather.

Speaker 3 (31:42):
Maybe they are, maybe they're No, there are rules.

Speaker 6 (31:44):
I know there are, but I might be confusing with
the motorcycle tempts, which now a bunch of those were.

Speaker 5 (31:50):
Something you also can't have. You can't drive between nine
cents or something like that. Yeah, yeah, it has to
be an adult over the age of something or whatever.

Speaker 3 (31:59):
I don't know. There are definitely rules.

Speaker 6 (32:00):
One Okay, I don't think that this would apply to you, becaupt.

Speaker 3 (32:07):
I feel like you'd always.

Speaker 6 (32:08):
Drive with her, but she could also drive with somebody
else that's a licensed driver.

Speaker 3 (32:12):
But she can only drive with one non family passenger.
I'm not doing that.

Speaker 4 (32:16):
I might know what those rules are had they given
me a piece of paper.

Speaker 3 (32:21):
What do you mean?

Speaker 4 (32:22):
Well, I didn't actually get the temp paper today?

Speaker 3 (32:27):
Why not?

Speaker 2 (32:29):
I can't find her.

Speaker 3 (32:32):
Oh my god? How mad is she? Oh? I'd be furious.
You guys used to certificates. You know, she does the
same thing. She has all the paper.

Speaker 2 (32:45):
I put this on pace that.

Speaker 3 (32:47):
Was bringing the papers. What papers papers? I don't know
what papers he's talking about. I don't know, Thank you' all.
Something Dougie's bag.

Speaker 4 (33:02):
Turn I must be in there, I put Actually I
might have it at home.

Speaker 3 (33:11):
Oh wait, no, never mind.

Speaker 4 (33:12):
I put her birth certificate someplace where I wouldn't lose it,
and now I don't know where I plan it.

Speaker 10 (33:19):
Yeah, so I just pushed back get her license, yeah,
oh no, not the day she can get her.

Speaker 3 (33:26):
But she can get this permit for six You have
to have the temporary one. Oh my goday.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
Listen, her birthday is going to be. She turned sixteen
on Sunday. With what I was supposed to do yesterday,
she would have gotten her driver's license on Monday, which would.

Speaker 2 (33:43):
Have been June eighth.

Speaker 4 (33:44):
But now she can't get it until Tuesday, June night.

Speaker 3 (33:48):
That's assuming you get the I will because the.

Speaker 4 (33:50):
Guy I went up there and the guys he goes,
you can do it online, but it takes a couple days.
I go, no, you don't understand. I have to get
this right now. I don't know where it is. And
he's like, okay, gave me this little slip. He goes,
go out here to the department out in someplace out
in the rain.

Speaker 2 (34:05):
She was born in the state of Ohio.

Speaker 4 (34:07):
They will print out a birth certificate copy for you.

Speaker 3 (34:12):
Angry was your daughter?

Speaker 2 (34:14):
She wasn't happy.

Speaker 6 (34:21):
Just watch you just go what well you know you
have because you keep so many pieces of paper that
are worthless.

Speaker 3 (34:28):
I did. And then the important thing you have no
idea where that is.

Speaker 4 (34:31):
I have an envelope that says Gianna and mom's birth certificate,
social Security everything.

Speaker 2 (34:38):
And I'm like, oh, sweet, look at that. Here it is.
I open it up.

Speaker 3 (34:40):
Nothing. And then and then.

Speaker 4 (34:44):
Because I took a napp because I was so tired
and I knew I I'm like, I start an immediate
sweat because I'm like, oh my god, I got to be.

Speaker 2 (34:51):
Up with the school to pick them up. And then
she's going to.

Speaker 4 (34:53):
Want to come home, and then we got to go
to the BMB and so I was like, I'm up.

Speaker 3 (34:58):
Agains made up and ready for her picture.

Speaker 2 (35:01):
No, because it's not.

Speaker 4 (35:02):
The driver's license. Okay, So she I'm like, I can't
find it. So she had to be a dance at five,
so that was even more you can't miss dance. She
was even, yeah, up against the clock.

Speaker 5 (35:18):
What was her reaction when she found out that you
did not have this birth certificate? Does she yell at you?

Speaker 4 (35:27):
No?

Speaker 2 (35:28):
Wait, what what do you mean you can't find it?

Speaker 3 (35:30):
Did she think you were joking? Now she aware? Now
she's not going to get her license on her birthday?

Speaker 2 (35:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (35:37):
She actually was okay with it. She wasn't angry, she
wasn't happy.

Speaker 2 (35:41):
She was okay with that.

Speaker 3 (35:42):
Man, girls must be there. This is maybe I was
just a dick.

Speaker 5 (35:45):
I know Charlie and I probably would have This would have.

Speaker 3 (35:49):
Been a huge blow. I'd been ripping the house apart.
I would have been ripping the house apart. I would
have been so betrayed streaming at my mother.

Speaker 4 (36:00):
One job is to make sure I get my license, you.

Speaker 3 (36:04):
Idiot, That's exactly.

Speaker 2 (36:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (36:10):
I would have been yelling and screaming. Now, obviously, in hindsight,
I go, I had no father ron that would have,
you know, backhanded me or something. But that's what, you know,
what should have happened if you yell at your mom
like that. My mom put up with a lot of
crap from a teenage boy. I have a lot of
sympathy for these these single mothers. They have to put
up with crap from boys like me.

Speaker 4 (36:30):
But I so, I know, I don't know where it is,
and I've made the decision overbreak I have to declutter
my house.

Speaker 2 (36:39):
Oh wow, I have to go through my mail. I
have piles of.

Speaker 3 (36:44):
Mail, piles of mail. Wait a second, I thought you
made fun of Charlie.

Speaker 4 (36:51):
I'm always with Charlie. Yeah I was. I never judged
it silently. I am a piler.

Speaker 6 (36:58):
So I just went through my mail recently. I was
looking for something because I still won't send it to me,
my dental card. They just won't send it as many
times as I call them and no, but I know
because they're like, oh, we mailed it. Well, you're talking
to the guy that's kept every piece of mail for
the last two years.

Speaker 3 (37:14):
So I can find out.

Speaker 6 (37:15):
I can go through every single letter, sat down, went
through every letter that was never sent complete liars anyways,
I just did go through it and threw it.

Speaker 4 (37:25):
All the way you threw it away or do you
shut just throw it away?

Speaker 3 (37:31):
I won't.

Speaker 4 (37:33):
It's all like gold crap and like what old bills
and just crap.

Speaker 2 (37:37):
I just read everything.

Speaker 3 (37:39):
Somebody's gonna pay my gas bill for me. I don't care.
What is okay?

Speaker 5 (37:42):
So if you have a gas bill and you say
it's an old guess, why are you even holding on
to that in the first place.

Speaker 8 (37:48):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (37:49):
Did you ever open it?

Speaker 2 (37:50):
A lot of them I don't open. I just pay online.

Speaker 3 (37:53):
Yeah, I don't open them at all. I don't open
the mail opensh bill.

Speaker 5 (37:57):
Okay, if you never opened the bill, why don't you
go for paperless and then they don't mail you the bill.
That's what I've tried to do on everything paperless. Everything's
paid online too. Yeah, they just send it to stop.
All you have to do is go online. You say,
stop sending me these problem. I don't know your problem.

(38:21):
Then whatever, But then you have so much mail. I've
gotten it down to. I mean I only get a
few other than junk mail. I get just a couple
maybe two things a month.

Speaker 6 (38:35):
Where the secret is it's all junk mail. That's the
secret to the mail. It is literally all junk. So
just throw it right away. You really could, and you
will never. I have not opened mail for years unless
I'm looking for something specific, and usually that doesn't exist
because it's all junk.

Speaker 5 (38:54):
Maybe I need that guy. Do you remember the guy?
I forget his name. He's on YouTube, but he makes
all of the elaborate things. She's the guy that did
the glitter the porch pirate glitter bomb and he makes
Mark Robert or maybe I need him to make me
a mailbox. And the mailman opens the mail puts it in.
There's a built in paper shredder right there. Then it's

(39:17):
it right out into a trash can to the trash.

Speaker 6 (39:20):
People that do that easily, and your life will not
change because if they want to find you, if it's
something important, the mailman will come and knock.

Speaker 3 (39:28):
On the door and hate you. The important stuff other that.

Speaker 7 (39:31):
Yeah, it's called certified mail. Yeah, I actually have to
sign for it. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (39:35):
Everything, there's always always getting nervous. There's something that I get.
The only time you get certified mail, somebody suing you. Yes,
that's when you get certified mail. And I always get
nervous because they'll knock on the knock on the door.
They go, you have to sign for this, like, oh
my god, what's going There's one insurance policy that I
have that expires every year. They send a certified letter

(39:58):
telling me that this policy is going to a expire
in thirty days, and it makes me nervous every time
I get it, every single time.

Speaker 2 (40:03):
Can you tell me stop? Knock it off? Knock it off.

Speaker 3 (40:06):
I don't know why they send that. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (40:09):
Huh.

Speaker 5 (40:09):
Angela, you're on Rovery's Morning Glory. Good morning Angela. Pray Rubber, Hi, everybody,
hy what's happening?

Speaker 8 (40:17):
Just a quick thing with Dougie. It doesn't matter just
because your daughter doesn't get her terms exactly the day
after she turns fifteen.

Speaker 6 (40:27):
And a half.

Speaker 8 (40:28):
As long as she has her hours in whenever she
turns sixteen, that's when she should get her license. It
has nothing to do with when you get your terms.

Speaker 4 (40:37):
Oh really, I thought it was six months.

Speaker 8 (40:39):
No, it lasts. No, the it expires after six months.

Speaker 3 (40:47):
But if she's.

Speaker 8 (40:48):
Taken her class, and if she's taken her hours. She
should be able to get her license when she turns sixteen.
Oh how the web day it is?

Speaker 3 (40:56):
The hours she's driving?

Speaker 4 (40:57):
Yeah, she has a log how many hours? So that
she gets all of that under her bell.

Speaker 3 (41:02):
Fake that.

Speaker 2 (41:04):
Any parents won't say.

Speaker 4 (41:05):
It because you want them to get as much experience driving.

Speaker 3 (41:08):
And you can easily get the hours.

Speaker 6 (41:10):
Oh yeah, I mean because you're going to want to
drive every time they get in the car.

Speaker 2 (41:13):
We're going to go driving today.

Speaker 6 (41:15):
But does you have to go to a driving I
remember we had to do that and then the driving
school kind of thing where you drive with a stranger.

Speaker 2 (41:21):
And it's like four hundred bucks or something. It's pretty expensive.
She's got it, but the.

Speaker 6 (41:26):
Every time and they don't get you any sandwiches and
you got to order it for this lady and just
sit she sits there and eat sandwiches while you drive
her around.

Speaker 2 (41:33):
Well, yeah, I've got to do all of that.

Speaker 4 (41:35):
And the problem is trying to get the availability of logging,
of getting in with the driver and all of that.

Speaker 3 (41:41):
So I got lucky with Delle because I took drivers
when I was in high school. Was in school.

Speaker 2 (41:45):
Yeah, yeah, they don't do that anymore.

Speaker 3 (41:47):
They don't do that anymore. Really too.

Speaker 4 (41:49):
There's a place where I live, and then there's a
place a little bit closer to where we're at now
that does it.

Speaker 3 (41:54):
So why don't Why don't they do that? In school?

Speaker 5 (41:56):
It was one of the few things that actually tease you,
you real life practical skills. There's something like that. Very
little at school. Would it applies to real life? I
would say, oh, meck was good. Yeah, I don't even
remember taking that. Maybe I did, I don't think so.

Speaker 3 (42:13):
Any fun. Yeah, typing was good. Was home neck and
shop or five was great because you weren't do it.

Speaker 6 (42:20):
You didn't have to sit there and just listen to
something talk. They're like, here's how you make cookies or
whatever for the day. Like, okay, cool. Here's somebody that
sent a picture. It says snintz. Did you just get this?

Speaker 5 (42:31):
It says Gea's dad has their birth certificate. Here it is,
and there's others she has dad holding the birth certificate.
Oh that's a low blow. I do just picture of
a Turkey based or holding a birth certificate.

Speaker 2 (42:44):
I do disagree with you.

Speaker 4 (42:45):
That what they learned in high school has.

Speaker 2 (42:49):
No significance, doesn't teach.

Speaker 4 (42:50):
Them anything, and what I see, zero, zilch, nothing I see.
I've watched it was pretty interesting to watch from sixth
grade to junior high, the seventh and eighth grade, and
how they prepared him for high school and now in
high school, like I have.

Speaker 2 (43:07):
Zero interaction with anything.

Speaker 4 (43:09):
It's teaching them to be responsible for themselves. It's teaching
them how to manage their time assignments, how to, how
to work ahead, how to.

Speaker 5 (43:18):
But the actual work that they're doing, how does that
prepare them for that?

Speaker 4 (43:22):
I will say that Gianna is reading the Scarlet Letter
and she has she has no idea what's going on.
It doesn't make sense. The teacher even said, it's not
going to make any sense. Well why are we reading it?

Speaker 3 (43:36):
Then?

Speaker 2 (43:36):
You know, like why do you.

Speaker 4 (43:37):
Have all these kids read it? She got I think
a D on one quiz. She got a D on
the quiz yesterday.

Speaker 3 (43:44):
She's like, you put them on her mom's chin.

Speaker 2 (43:48):
I don't get it. You get it, Jeffy, you're smiling.

Speaker 3 (43:56):
Yeah, nuts on your chin.

Speaker 4 (43:57):
There you go. So yeah, So that kind of stuff,
like who cares about the Scarlet Letter?

Speaker 5 (44:02):
But eighty seven IQ says, this lady is wrong. You
have to have them for six months before you could
take the driving test. That's in addition to the hours.
A caller said the same thing.

Speaker 1 (44:12):
That's a new law in Ohio that it is six
months to the day.

Speaker 6 (44:17):
So you are pushing her back, do you so you
don't have it yet, the birth certificate.

Speaker 2 (44:22):
No, I'm going today right when I leave here.

Speaker 3 (44:23):
And you think they're going to give it to you
the same.

Speaker 2 (44:25):
Day the bm B gave me the they're.

Speaker 3 (44:28):
Going to give it to you the same day.

Speaker 2 (44:29):
Just come back to myth.

Speaker 1 (44:30):
Really, yeah, they printed When I had to get my
passport for our London competition, I went with and they
printed it for me and then that way I could
go get my pass with.

Speaker 3 (44:41):
That stamp on there. And I didn't know you could
get it long.

Speaker 2 (44:44):
As you're born in the state of Ohio, you still
get it.

Speaker 9 (44:46):
I still have my original persertificate, do you really? Yeah,
it's like falling apart. It's paid out of the pirates.
I have my original Social Security card me to my originals.

Speaker 5 (44:53):
Thingkming sure when I was that sucker is just I
don't have I mean, it's just it's like tissue paper.

Speaker 2 (44:59):
Now I have Gianna's and I wanted to laminate it.

Speaker 5 (45:02):
I have to pull it out. If I ever have
to show my Social Security card. It's like I'm an
auction house. I have to put on white gloves. I
have those little tweets there's I used to show it
to them like it's some sort of relic. Wait, I
don't glamate. Put it in a sleeve. But don't know
laminate Nope, cannot says do not laminate right there on the.

Speaker 6 (45:18):
Car where you're giving that card you're supposed to keep
for the next eighty years or whatever.

Speaker 2 (45:22):
And you can't laminate it.

Speaker 3 (45:23):
I can't do anything. You put it in. And they
also don't make it plastic. Just make it plastic. You
can get you just write in a Bible paper.

Speaker 1 (45:30):
Yeah, I sire, mine still connected to I have one
that's still connected to the card, like with that whole
entire piece of paper comes on like my daughters, Oh.

Speaker 5 (45:39):
That's something that must have been a later thing, because mine,
I don't think, came with a piece of paper.

Speaker 1 (45:44):
It wasn't like perfect created. And then you you can
remove it from that information. You don't really don't need that,
I don't think, but it is nice when you go.

Speaker 3 (45:52):
To look for it.

Speaker 1 (45:53):
Inside one of those file folders that you can find
it easily.

Speaker 3 (45:59):
All right, Well, Dougie, you've put a little that's bad, bad.
She was so excited.

Speaker 5 (46:07):
Do you remember how excited you were to drive for
the first time?

Speaker 3 (46:10):
And the greatest that's all you look forward. I mean
you really counted it down. That was the last thing.

Speaker 5 (46:15):
He thinks, driving and getting laid that's all you cared about,
is a young boy, like, when is this going to happen?

Speaker 3 (46:21):
Probably the last thing I've ever looked forward to, That's
what I'm talking about.

Speaker 4 (46:25):
Yeah, it's two pieces of paper I'm showing. It's like
one card, but like this is that's security original social security.
So I have that in her passport together in my passport,
but no birth certificates for either worth certificate.

Speaker 5 (46:44):
All right, I've got to take a break. Here's somebody
who says The Scarlet Letter is a very easy read.
Kids are just dumb. I never read that because I
didn't do homework. I probably faked it. Guest, listen, paid
attention and put the answers down or what. I never

(47:04):
read that book, didn't do any homework assignment whatsoever.

Speaker 9 (47:07):
I think Balo Wolf was the worst I couldn't even imagine.
It was just offul what I don't know what's going on.

Speaker 2 (47:13):
Well, it's funny because I have a girl that works
for me.

Speaker 4 (47:17):
She's a junior in high school and she's always doing homework.
I'm like, how do you have that much homework? She's like, well,
I don't have homework. I'm studying for this or that.
And when I talked to my kid, do you have
any homework?

Speaker 3 (47:27):
No?

Speaker 4 (47:28):
No, no, Then she has a test. Well that's considered homework.
She's like, no, it's not. That's not homework, that's studying.
And she thinks it's two different things, which I think
sucks as an attitude. And she's just been lucky because
she's kind of smart where she gets away with she's
just smart. But now with this stupid scarlet letter, she can't.

(47:48):
It's really hard for her to understand that.

Speaker 7 (47:50):
So you guys, in high school, we read the play
Bale Wolf.

Speaker 3 (47:55):
Yeah, we read that. I can't forget I can't remember
what it was, but.

Speaker 7 (47:58):
Yeah, we also read the play Caesar because when I
was in tenth grade, we were doing English more the
literature side of English, and we had the really we
had to look at textbook almost almost half the size
of the Holy Bible. It was like the bulkiest textbook. Guy,
I read a carry and so yeah, and then so yeah.
I just that's that's stuff that really interested me.

Speaker 5 (48:20):
You know, here's somebody that says you can order a
replacement social Security card in about ten minutes and it's free.

Speaker 3 (48:27):
And Tony says, Charlie, you're a moron.

Speaker 5 (48:29):
You're allowed to pul social Security cards in your lifetime.

Speaker 6 (48:33):
I don't have to go and get it, yeah, I kept.

Speaker 5 (48:36):
I would be shocked if it only took you ten
minutes to get a replacement social Security card.

Speaker 3 (48:42):
I have to go somewhere to go through that, Yeah,
I don't.

Speaker 6 (48:44):
I guess if you're an idiot and you lose yours,
whoever this person, you live in California and you're an
illegal alien, you probably get.

Speaker 3 (48:51):
A Social Security card. There's give them away up there.

Speaker 5 (48:53):
John says, my social Security card is laminated and has
been for a long time. Not one person has ever
said anything about it. Says right there on the card,
doesn't I say on that card?

Speaker 7 (49:02):
You know, it does say yes, do not laminate this card.

Speaker 3 (49:06):
I know, But who's ever asked ever to see it.

Speaker 1 (49:10):
Well, one of those required documents. You could pull that out.
Usually it says you can use your birth certificate, your
Social Security card, whatever.

Speaker 3 (49:20):
Yeah, I did, I did. I think I did pull
this thing out. And do you think that person would go, WHOA,
I can't take that laminated?

Speaker 5 (49:26):
Yeah, it does, yes, because it's a little old lady
somewhere and you know their sticking.

Speaker 4 (49:31):
Adults, sign the card and ink immediately. If you're a child,
do not sign until age eighteen or your first job,
whichever is earlier. Keep your card in a safe place
to prevent loss or theft. Do not carry this card.
Do not carry this card with you. I don't think
that I had never carry with you.

Speaker 2 (49:49):
Do not, laminate? Why not? Why don't you care?

Speaker 3 (49:50):
Give it home? Why do you take it with me? Spost?

Speaker 5 (49:53):
Well, you have to get it somewhere. If they ever
have to show it, you gotta. You have to travel
with it, you have to carry it.

Speaker 3 (49:59):
Well, you should not.

Speaker 6 (50:00):
I'll take it with you because it's made of paper
and nobody ever wants to see it, so there's no
point nobody's asking for it ever.

Speaker 2 (50:07):
Okay, But why wouldn't they give me?

Speaker 4 (50:08):
Why couldn't I use her birth or her passport as
a form of did you ask I have her Social Security?

Speaker 2 (50:16):
Yeah, it's not you.

Speaker 5 (50:19):
Yeah, I don't know anyways. Um, all right, let me
take a break. Eight sixty six yo ro over eight
sixty six, nine sixty seven, six eighty three seven will
be right back, hanging on
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