Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
From the city that changes the world.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Peers Rose with three things you need to.
Speaker 3 (00:06):
Know for your Tuesday, Rose, what you have for us?
Speaker 2 (00:09):
So it was announced yesterday by the Treasury Secretary that
the US and Chinese negotiators have agreed to a framework
for resolving the TikTok ownership dispute. I feel like this
has been two years in the making, and the deadline
was supposed to be on Wednesday before they were potentially
going to ban it again. Now President Trump is said
to speak with the with the Chinese president on Friday
(00:29):
to complete the deal. But this agreement is between private
parties and commercial terms have been agreed upon. This is
what they're saying. Congress passed the law, as we all know,
requiring Chinese TikTok's Chinese parent company, by Dance, to divest
or face a US ban, but that's been repeatedly delayed,
and I think anyways, it looks like TikTok is not
going anywhere. So the travel agent who scammed the George
(00:52):
Mason University men's hoops team has been sentenced. So last year,
the forty four year old from Atlanta was arrested after
walking off with the money that the school had prepaid
in case you need a refresher. They had prepaid for
a five day, all inclusive trip to the Bahamas and
supposed to be like a tournament, I guess, and this
was for the basketball team. The guy never booked anything
(01:14):
and spend the money on himself. So while this man
plied guilty to wire fraud charges and has agreed to
repay more than two hundred thousand dollars in restitution and
has been sentenced to thirteen months in prison. That's the
update to that story. Crazy And starting today, for the
first time, the entire US Constitution is going to be
a display at the National Archives Museum. I told you
(01:36):
about this before, but it is a historic opportunity. You
can see all four pages of the Constitution, all twenty
seven amendments, and the rarely seen fifth page that's signed
by George Washington. So it's going to be on display
through October first, and the exhibit coincides with Constitution Day,
which is on September twenty seventh, and that leads up
to America's two hundred and fiftieth anniversary. So if you
want to check that out, I'm around. Those are the
(01:58):
three things you need to know for the today.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
Thank you, ros I do want to mention this. So
yesterday we had a median after the show, and usually
meetings suck. I'mnna be honest with you. You get it. However,
this one was regards to our DC jingle Ball presented
by Kapta one at capt One Arena in December, and
the lineup, like we they put the lineup on the screen,
It's like, oh my god, that's a lot of artists. Yea,
and in my times were like, oh my god, they're playing.
(02:19):
Oh they're gonna do it too. You can win the
very first set of jingle Ball tickets. This Thursday will
be at Hide Social and Clarendon for a happy hour
five to seven pm jingle Ball tickets every thirty minutes.
There's parking. There's like a little parking garage underneath Hide Social.
So Hide Social this Thursday five to seven pm, we
(02:39):
got jingle ball tickets every thirty Man, it's gonna be
a lot of fun. I saw this this morning and
our show does not have great vision. I have Lasik
Sauce is blind. Roses blind. Yeah, I was saying, like,
but we're all blind, though, like ye we all did
get great but we all had glasses and lasik at
some point, you know what I mean. There's a new
study that I guess doctors have developed a special eye
(03:02):
drop for people that can replace the need for reading
glasses or surgery.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
Cool.
Speaker 3 (03:09):
So it's interesting. I would say it's in the very
very early stages. So my first thought was, like, how
often do you gotta do it? Yeah, I'm saying so
they're staying the solution. You do it right before reading.
So for you sauce like that you wear glasses though
when you read your name. They say it could be
as simple to use them twice a day. So the
idea is more convenient than can around reading glasses. Fair,
(03:32):
and a lot less invasive than surgery. Also fair. So
the I'm not even gonna read the drugs I listen.
I can barely read words. I know. So the jobs
containing this drug that constricts the peoples and contracts the muscle,
the controls the shape of the eye's lens and able
focus on objects at different distances. It's pretty cool. It's
no non steroid, non inflammatory drug that reduces the information
(03:54):
I guess to make it easier to see. It's interesting.
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
I know they work with astigmatism because that's one of
the problems that I have.
Speaker 3 (04:01):
They don't stay for this. This is just for the
reading stuff. It doesn't okay, they don't get that far
in what they say. In twenty twenty three, researchers at
Ohio State University worked on special eye jobs that could
prevent or delay near sighted this so kids might have
to get corrective lenses so early. That's cool. That's also. Yeah,
I mean I.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
Would love that. Oh yeah, my mom has like her readers. Well,
my brother had glasses growing up as a kid. I'm
sure he went through like five hundred pairs just because
being a boy and then breaking them. And I've gone
through a lot of pairs of glasses because I only
use mine to drive. I use them in college too.
Speaker 3 (04:31):
Yeah, but they say they could take fifteen minutes to work,
but they will sharpen your precision. Nothing word. They wake
up from like a nap or something. Your vision is
just off a little bit, and you know, this is it.
I've lost my vision. Yeah, this is it. Like you
just keep rubbing your eyes and be like, okay, something
in it. Yeah, this is how I go. This is
how I go. Listen we're finally getting like cool inventions. Yeah,
(04:52):
in twenty five, it's an intern, John your morn show.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
Intern John in your Morning show.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
True at iHeartRadio,