Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Aerosmith, Louisville's rock station. Hey forty w h A s Hey,
Dwight Whitning. That's to tell you today. That's John william
On the third, the Jim Swartz Killer.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
You're wearing that in the show as we welcome to
the show.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
A dear friend of mine, different of everybody's for that matter,
Mark Maxwell, Mark, how you doing?
Speaker 3 (00:20):
Man?
Speaker 4 (00:21):
Oh? I am wonderful this morning. How are you?
Speaker 2 (00:23):
I'm doing great?
Speaker 1 (00:23):
Crashers going out and get ready to go out in Vegas,
do a runout in Vegae weet, all kinds.
Speaker 4 (00:28):
Of stuff going on with that.
Speaker 5 (00:29):
But that's not what I'm here about today at all.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
Right, I am freaking out, But we'll.
Speaker 6 (00:34):
Get to that, Okay, totally. I have a feeling we'll
get to that. We're we're doing something good for the neighborhood.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Yeah, we are.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
And And to tell you the truth, Mark Maxwell is
always there looking for a positive angle, looking to help
out the community. I saw what you were doing, and
so I reached out over the weekend. I said, we
come on the show. You agree to this idea where
you have is it the well? Yes, I love the concept.
Talk about what's going on, talk about the why and
(01:02):
what it is.
Speaker 5 (01:03):
Okay, so yes, So beginning this month we're opening a
new place. So I have Maxwell's House of Music, which
is a music store over in Jeffersonville.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
It's got a great little venue.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
It's incredible.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
I mean it's it's amazing.
Speaker 5 (01:18):
Well there's something to come and look at for sure,
So if you haven't walked through the place.
Speaker 4 (01:21):
It is, it's pretty amazable.
Speaker 5 (01:24):
So it's a cool music store and it has a
great venue. But so we kind of my brother Max,
who plays drums with the Crashers too. Uh, he he
wanted to open a drum store in Jeffersonville next to me,
so literally he is right next to me and Jeff right,
and so we kind of.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
Got rid of you know, we're in a four plex theater.
In one of the theaters.
Speaker 5 (01:46):
We took it and redesigned because I went to the
staff and I went to all the people that work
with me, and I said, what would you do with
this room if you had this room? And all the
young people were very much, Hey, let's let's design something
that's that's for the community, that's for us, because you know,
there should be three places for us, but all we
have is home and work right, and we need another
(02:07):
place for us to go and hang out as musicians, writers, artists,
to hang out and become, you know, have a community.
Speaker 4 (02:14):
So we started building this room.
Speaker 5 (02:16):
But only that only happened because the whole thing only
happened because we started this foundation last year called the
Max Music Well Foundation, and it is made to get
people to be able to take free music lessons. So
if you want to learn to play guitar, call me
at Maxwell's House of Music. I'll get you to take guitar, bass, drums,
(02:37):
or keyboards, any one of those for free to see
if it's something you just want to do now. I
don't care how you are, I don't care what it is.
We are going after the you know, underserved more than anything.
But I just want everybody in the whole wide world
to play music. I think it's good for your soul.
I think it's good for your kids. I think it's
good for your brain.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
Okay, that's where I want to pall should for just
a second because my mother's in her eighties and Tony
no puns on this. My mother plays the organ.
Speaker 6 (03:06):
Okay, I'll be his stepdad.
Speaker 1 (03:09):
No, no, my mother plays the organ. It keeps her sharp.
I play guitar very poorly, but yet I play guitar.
But it works your brain. It's hand eye coordination. The
benefits for people getting up in their years and people
in their years. As a matter of fact, this'd be
a great trade, Noe Towers. There's benefits for the young andios.
That's all I want to know.
Speaker 5 (03:29):
That that big time, and we proved it by last year.
We actually ran two classes of people from sixty to
one hundred years of age to see how it would work.
And it blew our minds. And so so we have
this room. We've got this big room that used to
be a theater and now it's chopped up in a
really cool way with a whole music lab in there,
(03:51):
which means you can come in and eight people at
a time can sit down together and learn to play drums, guitar, bass, keyboard.
So I believe everyone should learn to do this. This
is my This is in my my. This is where
I land is that I do believe everyone should learn
to play music.
Speaker 6 (04:07):
Right well, people are begging to find their tribe, They're
begging to find other people that are like them. What
I'm thinking is that like this is a version of
Greenwich Village nineteen sixty one, and that whole, the whole
Greenwich Village was people in every bar and every little place.
All these guys were those folks singers and they all
done on hundred percent right. So that's the community you
gave before you came on the air. You don't I
(04:29):
don't want to say it's a warning, but you scared
the crap out of us. You're doing this parsonally because
younger folks are not getting involved in music, and you
have a stat that's kind of shocking.
Speaker 5 (04:44):
I'll let you say, I'll be honest with you. I
think adults and kids are just two into their phones.
So there's there's your number one thing. The second thing
is is that and video games for the younger folks, well,
even adults, video games are killing us. And and I'm
freaking out because Okay, so I started this thing called
(05:05):
if You're in a Band last year. That's great, it's
an online seen a bunch of those. Yeah, yeah, it's
just me talking about, Hey, if you want to be
successful and you're in a band. What freaked me out
is a year and a half into it. I just
said to everybody, Hey, tell me where you're from, tell
me what it's from of you play? How old are you?
And so it was people from Canada and New Zealand
(05:26):
and Australia everywhere, right, and they would say, Hey, I'm
from Hawaii, I'm seventy.
Speaker 4 (05:32):
Two years old and I play the drums. It's like okay.
Speaker 5 (05:35):
So it started getting all this data and there were
some young people in there too, right, playing in bands.
But it blew my mind that the average person age
of a person who's playing music in a band, oh boy,
is fifty eight years wow.
Speaker 6 (05:52):
Wow wow.
Speaker 4 (05:54):
So here's the thing which means this.
Speaker 5 (05:56):
If that's the average age, we're not going to have
music around and and and the problem is, and here's
what we're gonna have. We're gonna have AI. And that's
the second scariest thing to me in the whole wide world.
If people don't start playing music, all art being painting drawings,
music as itself is gonna be something. You know, as
(06:18):
you know that, my wife is gonna turn to me
going down the road one day and say, man, I
love this song, and I'm gonna have to turn to
her and say, honey, no one is singing this song,
No one wrote this song. This is a computer generated
song that scares to a certain extent. Somebody would not
need a band because they would sing a song they
would push into AI. Create a guitar riff for this, yes,
(06:42):
and then he would say create after that, create a
drum a percussion for this. Sure, So the singer can
just get AI to be the band they can't.
Speaker 4 (06:52):
And you don't even have to do that. You can
literally just put.
Speaker 5 (06:55):
In hey, I want a song written about my T shirt,
right and the words that whatever's on it, and it
will automatically pop up and have a three minute song
for you that sounds like a real human, sounds like
a real recording.
Speaker 4 (07:08):
It is the scariest thing I've ever seen.
Speaker 5 (07:10):
So I can't from this point out in my life
even listen to a song without going, man, I guess
I have to research this thing because it's got I
need a human behind it.
Speaker 6 (07:19):
Right, Well, look at the average age, look at our market.
Well it's juicebox, heroes, radiotronic, right, you guys, sure those
all the.
Speaker 2 (07:32):
Years ago.
Speaker 1 (07:33):
And that's my point because my wife and all we
love love live music, love live music, and we go
out there so I see it in person, and so
that's statistic. I know it rings to be true because
I still go see the Crashers, I still go see Caribou,
I still go see Juicebox Heroes. And you know there's
some younger bands out there. You know you got the
Rocking Cowboys, Lampis, but that's about it.
Speaker 4 (07:55):
There's not many.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
There's not like when we were young. No, no, not
at all. And you know this AI, I wondered. I
pose the question last week on WQMF. Kiss is doing
a They're working on avatars, so Kiss can live forever
and tour in avatars.
Speaker 6 (08:13):
Of course they are.
Speaker 2 (08:14):
Are we gonna see it?
Speaker 1 (08:15):
Are we gonna see a model like that where the
Rolling Stones will perform at the YOUM Center forever, where
they'll bring the Beatles back or Jimmy Hendrix.
Speaker 4 (08:22):
One we will.
Speaker 5 (08:23):
There's no if and or butts. That's gonna happen, just
like they did with Bruce Willis right now. They've taken
his whole likeness everything. There will be Bruce Willis movies.
Speaker 4 (08:31):
Coming in the future. I am not against all of this.
Like I went and saw.
Speaker 5 (08:36):
I don't know if you watched the uh the Indiana Jones,
the last one, so the newest last one. For the
first thirty minutes of the show, it's him at thirty
five years old. Really and then and then he turns
eighty all of a sudden, Yeah really yeah. So it's
like this AI thing is gonna kill it. But and
that brings me back to this. It is gonna it is,
It's I don't it's gonna help us too.
Speaker 4 (08:59):
There's a lot of good that a I is gonna do.
Speaker 5 (09:01):
I just don't want to forget the fact that we
can learn to play a guitar or a bass, a
keyboards and drums and play together in community together, right,
And this is where I'm back to. And so we
started this five OHO one C three to try to
get this thing to happen, and now I'm trying to
find money to actually make it happen. I have called
(09:21):
as much as I can into it myself, and now
I've got to open it up to the public. Now
here's the thing being a part of this thing, supporting
what we're gonna do.
Speaker 4 (09:31):
I believe, in the long run of life is gonna
help us.
Speaker 5 (09:33):
I would love to be you know how Nashville is
considered the you know, music city, and so is at
Austin or La or New York. Wouldn't it be great
if we were the first community.
Speaker 4 (09:45):
That everybody played music? Yeah, everybody did.
Speaker 5 (09:49):
And so the idea is that the only excuse they've
ever had has been money that they couldn't afford to
take a music lesson. Well, come and take a music lesson,
and if you don't have an instrument, I'll give you something.
I'll do anything I can to make this thing go away.
But it's not going to no.
Speaker 6 (10:07):
Well, two things. One, So if you go to La
Lapalooza today. My son went a couple of years ago,
and he said, one of the greatest performances he's ever seen.
A lot of the artists were just one person on
stage with a mic and the music is playing and
the video screens are behind them, and that's the eye candy.
(10:27):
It's not a band anymore. It's one person singing to me.
Speaker 4 (10:31):
I can't, I don't. I can't tell you why that is.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Though.
Speaker 5 (10:34):
It's hard to be in a band. I mean, it's
hard to be anything in a relationship at all. And
you have four or five six guys in a band
or girls in a band, right, that's hard to do.
And it is it used to be when I grew up.
I'm fifty nine years old and not holding back on
that one, but I literally the Beatles were there, the
Stones were there, the Eagles were their kiss was there.
(10:54):
Then Van Halen was there, and Molly Crue was in
all these bands, bands, guys and girls who played in
a band again, and now we have the Bens Boons
of the world, right, and these individual artists because it's
a lot easier you can make one decision, right, I'm
just making it for myself as opposed to you know.
Speaker 6 (11:12):
And the other thing. Some of the greatest artists of
all time, especially American artists, they always tell the same story.
Speaker 5 (11:20):
I was.
Speaker 6 (11:21):
I was ten eleven years old, and my dad was
never home. But he one day he came home and
he bought me a guitar. He went to the pawn
shop and bought a cheap guitar because there was you know,
you had Saturday morning cartoons and then that was pretty
much it for things to do for a kid on
a Saturday. And my dad bought me a guitar. And
there it is. I mean, how many super artists now
(11:43):
that's their story. They It started with a fifty dollars guitar. Sure,
you know, I believe me.
Speaker 4 (11:48):
I know. Heck, I'll give you a guitar if you
don't have one. I'm being serious.
Speaker 5 (11:52):
I am not at all holding back on this situation.
We have to make a move as a community, and
this town should do it. This should be the place
that's known that we saved live music right, that bands
actually come out of this town and are still together again.
You brought it up right before we went on air
(12:13):
about the show that there was just announced that's coming
next year.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
Say it.
Speaker 6 (12:19):
Iron Maiden was named as a headliner of the largest
rock concert in North America. They were big fifty years ago.
Speaker 2 (12:27):
You're a liar.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
You're a liar, and it's only forty years you bring
it back.
Speaker 6 (12:37):
If you play that out from when we were going
doing this thing in the eighties, that that's like pulling
a big band from the nineteen thirties as a headliner
of an eighties band. It doesn't make sense now. There's
a ton of reasons why. But we've got to figure out.
I love Iron Maiden. That's great, me too.
Speaker 4 (12:53):
I know.
Speaker 6 (12:53):
I mean, it's got where are the bands so again?
And you're right, it is hard. But the kids now
you have to explain to them. You understand the bass
player of the drummer, the guitar player and the singer
all have played the same song at the same time live,
and they're like at the same time live. It's like yes,
and you look.
Speaker 4 (13:12):
And it's true.
Speaker 2 (13:14):
No, it is.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
And you look at some of the complexity of the
music from the seventies and the eighties when you know,
you get on an emotional rescue in the eighties or
oh dad, god, excel on main sure you know, so
stuff like that. When you're getting horns with the crashers,
do horn section, the whole bit and back then you
plug a less Paul into the Fender amp whatever it
(13:35):
might be, and that's that.
Speaker 3 (13:36):
Man.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
You just had to have skills. And what you heard
was your mind, your fingers, your body or soul, your
spirit articulating through that instrument.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (13:47):
Okay, So so if you fail at this mark, yes,
if you fail with this initiative, it.
Speaker 4 (13:53):
Won't matter.
Speaker 6 (13:57):
All right.
Speaker 5 (13:57):
If I fail, my kids and my grandkids.
Speaker 4 (14:01):
Will be that's why.
Speaker 6 (14:02):
That's where that's it. They'll just know if this, if this,
if this initiative works, it's great. But if not, like
I said, I just mentioned a half a dozen bands
and everybody's our age. If you're six fifty five or older,
is there an expiration date for local bands to play?
Will there be a juice box hero or or a
radiotronic that fantastic?
Speaker 2 (14:24):
Great's great?
Speaker 6 (14:25):
So will there when you guys are done?
Speaker 3 (14:29):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (14:29):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (14:30):
I mean I I don't want that to happen, and
I guess that's where I'm at. I just have to
make some kind of action to this is what we're doing.
We're we're making an action that instead. I can't say
insures it because I don't know. All I can say
is that if you have if you don't play an instrument,
come over. Take four weeks your life, one hour on
(14:50):
a Saturday, take the class right, try it for four
weeks and if it doesn't work, great you tried right.
Speaker 6 (14:59):
Hey, ups, you could do it with your child. You could.
Speaker 5 (15:03):
You could absolutely take your kid and say I want
to go over and take these music and let's go
do this.
Speaker 1 (15:09):
And by the way, again, there's benefits if you're older
because you got hand eye coordination, keeps your mind sharp,
keep it, stave off dementia. And if you're younger, I
can promise you, if they're dedicated, it's going to lead
to improved grades. It's going to keep them out of
trouble because once you get up and running and you
could start making that guitar talk or the bass or
making rhythm section with the drums, you get inspired and
(15:32):
you actually like playing, it's going to keep them out.
Speaker 6 (15:34):
I'm glad you care. You don't have to.
Speaker 2 (15:39):
I don't have to.
Speaker 4 (15:39):
I don't have to go.
Speaker 5 (15:40):
I'm pretty set. I'm sad I got this, but I'm
worried for this town.
Speaker 4 (15:45):
Again. I think about my kids.
Speaker 5 (15:46):
I think about my grandkids, and I think, what are
they going into?
Speaker 2 (15:49):
Right?
Speaker 5 (15:49):
Are they actually going to ever watch anybody play an instrument?
Speaker 1 (15:52):
Ever?
Speaker 4 (15:53):
Again?
Speaker 2 (15:53):
Literally? Right?
Speaker 6 (15:55):
And and well? In your family, look in your family.
Look the Broms are the first family of football. All
the Demlans are the first family of golf. You guys
are the first family of music.
Speaker 5 (16:07):
Is what the reason I am here talking about this
is because my dad, he was always in the musician's corner.
He started Murph Whi's helped musician in town. And and
so I can't It's just part of me that I
am like my dad and so in that regard. I
am for the musician, I am for live music. I
am for this community. I want to if I have
(16:29):
to give it away, I will, like we offer private lessons,
you can come over and take private lessons and pay
for them.
Speaker 4 (16:35):
But if I have to give it away, I don't
know what else to do with this.
Speaker 5 (16:40):
I feel like I'm teetering on that edge of it's
gonna all collapse and now we don't watch it happen
if I don't get proactive. So that's where the Max
Music Well has taken off. That's where it's gonna be
our our music lab. I think it's going to change
some things, and I'm praying for that.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
So how do people get more information? Do they go
to Maxwell's House and music on Facebook?
Speaker 5 (17:03):
It's at Maxwell's House and music dot Com. You can
go there, you can, it will show you will lead
your right to it.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
I promise you know you're not leaving out of here
until we play really well.
Speaker 6 (17:14):
Wait a minute, and UH is part of this discussion
that UH schools have eliminated the music programs.
Speaker 5 (17:22):
I won't even go down there. That's that's so heavy. Yes,
I I can't. I cannot depend on them anymore. I
cannot depend on us, and I mean us, because we
are the people that can either make programs happen in
these schools are not. I cannot depend on us to
change that because we haven't.
Speaker 4 (17:40):
I don't know what else to do.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
Real quick before we go to break is part of
the problem. Do you think, and this is opinion only,
that we're a microwave society. Everybody wants instant gratification, in
instant instant results and picking up a guitar, bass, learning percussion.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
It takes some time.
Speaker 4 (17:58):
It takes time.
Speaker 5 (17:59):
It takes time, and it just takes Yeah, but it
means you put your phone in the other room.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
It's worth it. It is worth It's good for your
mental health.
Speaker 4 (18:07):
It is turn off the TV. You know, it's.
Speaker 6 (18:11):
Shock the first time you picked up a guitar, Boy,
did he everybody picked up a guitar, Jimmy Hendrix or
you anybody?
Speaker 3 (18:18):
Anybody?
Speaker 6 (18:18):
The first time you pick up on instrument, you're going
to be terrible. It's all about working towards that.
Speaker 4 (18:23):
It is and I'm hoping that we can.
Speaker 5 (18:24):
Like the thing is about giving these classes away. It's
really about can we spark something? Do you if you
don't believe you have it. I believe you do right,
and so I'm just trying to spark something that goes.
Speaker 4 (18:38):
I can actually do this. I can do something.
Speaker 5 (18:41):
I can you know, it's not watching it on the
phone or on my TV. I can actually be the
person that drums at quarter, plays the drum beat.
Speaker 4 (18:49):
I can do that.
Speaker 6 (18:50):
But we could do this topic for three hours.
Speaker 5 (18:53):
I can go so deep with this thing. But I
was trying to stay his best.
Speaker 6 (18:56):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
Maxwell's House of music getting touched loved ones. If you're elderly,
if you're my age, well that is what my point is.
There's a benefit for you to play music. Mentally, I
promise you that Maxwell's House and music Mark Maxwell, stick around.
Speaker 2 (19:17):
Because you're way late. Let's Radio.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
Craigs Best Cars dot Com. Why would you buy new
when you get the exact same thing, whether you save
thousands of dollars. I got a twenty nineteen Jeep Wrangler
in twenty nineteen, had that new car look, that new
car smell, even that factory covet a new car warranty.
What it didn't have was the depreciation. You're gonna love
that dream in your driveway. Let Craig and Landers put
(19:44):
it there. Go to Craigsbest Cars dot Com.
Speaker 2 (19:49):
Nine sixty seven.
Speaker 4 (19:51):
Wow seven. I think that might be my biggest win.
Speaker 2 (19:55):
I told it's gonna be album. I want to see
what album.
Speaker 6 (19:58):
Met was off Neil I was sixty seven.
Speaker 2 (20:01):
I guess so on doors.
Speaker 6 (20:03):
He did so much in that five or ten period,
ten year period. Man, it's hard to keep out. The
Diamond song was the lowest charting song that I picked.
Speaker 2 (20:11):
So suck it. Suck it.
Speaker 6 (20:14):
That what an attitude from our producer, I mean, really
really all right, since uh, I do want to mention
before we talk about Bruce Springsteen that Elementair elementairco dot
(20:35):
com is the website sign up for the Mad Comfort Club.
It's like, takes five seconds to sign up is click
click click address yad Well, at that point when you're
a part of the Mad Comfort Club, doesn't cost anything.
You get to the head of the So if you
have an HVAC problem, you go to the head of
the list, you get same day service, they take care
of you. Elementairco dot Com sign up Now they're the best.
(20:56):
Anthony's the He's the best and nay right, uh he's
the he fat guy. Now the contest is pretty much
over because or maybe one or two days left. If
you have a spooky furnace, you could send that picture
to elementairco dot com and get in tank care of.
But any h fact situation, you can pay him now
for a cleaning or pay him later with a new
(21:17):
with a whole new system. That's the smart thing I
would say, is at least schedule the spring and winter
cleanings for your h fact and to last a lot longer.
All right, elementair element aircode dot com to join the
man Comfort Clothes. The biopic is out last Friday. Will
(21:40):
you please? Because you used to do this and you
don't do this anymore. This came out in theaters right
or is extremeing?
Speaker 2 (21:46):
Okay?
Speaker 5 (21:47):
Well?
Speaker 6 (21:47):
How much money did it make? Oh?
Speaker 2 (21:49):
I forgot to look up the box office receipts.
Speaker 6 (21:53):
The movie is about this album Nebraska.
Speaker 1 (21:56):
Yeah, it's about the making of Nebraska, which I bet.
Speaker 2 (22:00):
So I said that's something the suits and the other
He had.
Speaker 6 (22:01):
Two failed albums, right, I.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
Would call him failed albums. But this didn't have a
lot of commercial success. And this is why I wanted
to do a strip down. Dylan is type.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
It's about Nebraska. This you know, the making of this record.
It's such a good record.
Speaker 6 (22:20):
It's so darks Nebraska. If I heard Nebraska from your cubicle,
I knew what kind of day it was.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
It was a bad day. Before you throw that switch
on that electric chair, make sure she's sitting right there
on my lap, boss dark.
Speaker 1 (22:38):
But my point is, if I were to say, hey,
name me a song off Nebraska, most people couldn't with
a gun to their head, right, I mean I can't.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
It's one of my favorite albums.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
But I just don't understand why they would make the
movie about this.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
I thought it was gonna be a biopic of him
getting born. Then all the way through, you know.
Speaker 6 (22:59):
You don't have interested in seeing it.
Speaker 2 (23:01):
No, almost see it when it comes out on TVs.
Speaker 6 (23:04):
Springsteen, think about it.
Speaker 3 (23:07):
See this, see this movie that made it? Boba the
near part of the predecessory. Predecessories tories that man and
mankind's uniqueness to each other. Can the predecessorize any kind
of uniqueness towards mankind? And if you see what this album,
Nebraska is pretty much a men's inhumanity man what?
Speaker 2 (23:33):
No?
Speaker 1 (23:33):
I just want enough if you wanted a team, mister Springsteen.
Speaker 6 (23:36):
I think seeing him in high school, then through you know,
through him becoming and then again his mentor was Dylan, Right.
Speaker 2 (23:43):
That's how he looked up to well, some of the pictures.
Speaker 6 (23:46):
Of him at the time were he ripped off Dylan's
look and.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
What he got through the Yeah, all right, let me
see box office receipts.
Speaker 2 (23:55):
That's a good thing.
Speaker 6 (23:57):
Yes, So what's the name of the biopic.
Speaker 2 (23:59):
It's called Deliver Me from Nowhere.
Speaker 6 (24:02):
All right, let's see you won a little hooray for
Hollywood or are you just doing that for that specific movie.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
No, let's go ahead. Okay, I got a brand new Sputnick.
We love Sputnick.
Speaker 6 (24:13):
I took him forever and then he finally got it
and now he's in love with it.
Speaker 1 (24:16):
I love this thing hair. All right, let's do the
top five TRON grossed.
Speaker 6 (24:30):
I want to see that.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
One million, three hundred foulans.
Speaker 6 (24:33):
No, how much?
Speaker 2 (24:34):
One million, one million, three hundred one million dollars one million,
that's it. Yeah, did you say they were going to cancel? Wait?
Speaker 6 (24:44):
Wait a minute, there's no way was one million.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
Oh that was the first. All right, here we go,
let's do this again. Take two. Tron so far has
brought in sixty three million, three.
Speaker 2 (24:59):
That's about right.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
Yeah, three hundred and sixty seven thousand. That comes in
at number five.
Speaker 6 (25:05):
I bet you it costs about one hundred, one hundred
and fifty million to make. Though.
Speaker 2 (25:09):
Deliver Me from Nowhere's it's a song, it's a story.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
It's a testament about how men's testament to a Predecesses'
area lifestyle.
Speaker 6 (25:19):
When it was cold? What did your dad used to
do to keep you all warm?
Speaker 3 (25:22):
I remember what was cold. We would burn all the
cold and we've been to the firewood as long as
it would have last. But then one night Dad came
and he said, Uh, the river has washed out to
the bridge and we can't get to the firewood. We
need to chop up your mother and burn it for firewood.
And I remember toasting marshmallows over my mother and making
(25:43):
s'mores and I said, Mom, this moores for you. Here's
a song called Stinky smore stinky.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
Deliver Me from Nowhere comes in number four, nine million,
one hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (25:59):
Not bad, right that it is terrible.
Speaker 2 (26:02):
I don't know what regretting you is.
Speaker 6 (26:04):
Because deal in a biopic did like one hundred million
in its first weekend Springsteen apparently doesn't match up or
they did the wrong subject.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
I think a little bit of both.
Speaker 6 (26:17):
It must not be very good because word of mouth
would have would have changed that.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
Regretting you, John Auden, any idea, And that's me coming
into the studio every day.
Speaker 6 (26:28):
Very good, my friend, take a dollar out.
Speaker 1 (26:32):
Twelve million, eight hundred and fifty thousand over the weekend.
Speaker 2 (26:35):
Oh good.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
There's another Texas chainsaw massacre. Really no, it's not either.
It's just called chainsaw Man.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
Oh brand first, what's that about? I don't know?
Speaker 6 (26:47):
As he sold chainsaws.
Speaker 2 (26:48):
I guess.
Speaker 1 (26:48):
So Chainsaw Man comes in at number two, seventeen million,
two hundred and fifty thousand and the number one number
one movie. And I want to see this because I
like the original black flo Oh yes, or as I
like to call it phone because I don't see color.
Uh forty nine million?
Speaker 6 (27:07):
Wow? Good good for them, million dollars good for him? Yeah,
scary movies is that time of year, so that's cool.
And last night on Netflix nine pm, so it was
way too late. Plus the Steelers are playing, so I
watched them a little bit. But the it the series,
it's it goes back in time to show you how
(27:27):
I guess how it all originated and whatever, because it's
every twenty seven years or thirty seven years something like
that that he comes around. So penny Wise back in action.
Speaker 2 (27:35):
I can't wait to see can't wait.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
And we were talking about before we went on the
air because we both got excited. And this might because
usually Susan, this is how Susan and I watch shows.
We wait until the entire series runs out and then
we watch it.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
Yeah, and we just binge.
Speaker 6 (27:50):
Yeah, because you have no patience.
Speaker 2 (27:51):
I might have to watch this. I'm so curious.
Speaker 6 (27:54):
I'm watching it tonight. We're also watching watching task. I
want to wait on that FBI and it's a byker.
It's FBI versus bikers and drugs and all that stuff.
But there's it's very dark. It's very dark and it's
hard for us. That's the last thing we watch, right,
So it's very dark, and it does not paint a
(28:14):
picture of Middle America. You know, these folks do not
live in a great environment. Yeah, he's and his life
is is pretty. He is an FBI agent that started
out as a priest and he left the priesthood because
he worked with the FBI on like the Oklahoma bombing
and all that stuff to help people. And then he
became an FBI agent, adopted a couple of kids, but
(28:38):
his adopted son killed him.
Speaker 1 (28:42):
How long after he left being a priest and became
an FBI agent did it take to get his first caller?
Speaker 6 (28:49):
You know what, Take two dollars out of the bad
Take two dollars out of the bad joke.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
Dr whit, there's more.
Speaker 6 (28:57):
You know, all right?
Speaker 2 (28:58):
That's two Okay.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
Then they said a detective father Roberts, great job on
that first callar, but you did a few things wrong.
Speaker 2 (29:05):
Let's not make a habit out of it.
Speaker 6 (29:06):
Okay, take another dollar out of the bad joke, jars,
Take another dollar out of the bad joke.
Speaker 3 (29:10):
Jack.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
We're on a roll today, So one more, just one more.
He has the he has the bank robber dead to rights. Well,
that's one right there too, and he's got him with
the gunpoint of him.
Speaker 2 (29:21):
He goes, don't you dare cross me?
Speaker 6 (29:26):
Thank you out of the bad joke jar. That's it stopped,
because we're running out of money. Yeah, but he is,
and he's it's the old story. He drinks vodka every
single night. He starts every morning hungover and uh, because
he's his son is in prison because his son had
mental issues and killed his wife, killed his ruffalo's wife.
(29:47):
So he's got an adopted us daughter and a real
daughter and they're trying to navigate that. But it's the
life of the folks that live in this show is
it's it's awful.
Speaker 1 (29:58):
As soon as every episode's out, I can't wait to
watch it.
Speaker 6 (30:01):
It's good getting very dark, but again, Jackie and I
cannot watch that stuff, and then that's what we go
to bed too. It's just it's too dark.
Speaker 1 (30:07):
Had a listener send me a WDRB article and it
was horrible. Some families fireplace started a fire in their
attic and it burned the house down. Thank God the
family was okay. But fire safety one O one. Did
you know that you're supposed to have your fireplace inspected
every single year? And this is why because a fireplace,
(30:30):
if obstructive has built up in it, it can cause
your addict to catch on fire, even spread down the walls,
and until you're alerted on it, and then it's just
too late. Don't let that happen when your family. There's
also carbon monoxide poisoning could happen. It's a simple call
to the fireplace. That's what they do. Simple call, simple
visit will come out, They inspect it, and you'll know
(30:52):
if your fireplace is safe for you and your family.
Don't risk the guys and gals. Get your fireplace inspected
by the fireplace. Make that call right.
Speaker 6 (30:59):
Now, short break, come back after this. Lots of pasta, Yeah,
lots of pasta. Louisville dot com. I love the place
and I hope you used them a lot. Louisville had
two events going on this past weekend. Kentucky, of course,
had a home game where they lost miserably, and I'm
not sure Stoops makes it through the week. It is
the week of firing for college head football coaches. There're
(31:21):
gonna be plenty of jobs available at the end of
the year. But when you're talking about tailgating, grab and go.
High school playoffs are starting this weekend, I know you are.
You're going to try to pick the game that you
want to go to game.
Speaker 1 (31:35):
I try my best to do one quarter at four
different schools because I love you.
Speaker 6 (31:40):
Don't like it, I don't like it.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
I all love it.
Speaker 6 (31:44):
Lots of pasta grabbing go from the deli. Man, it
is the best. The deli is the best in the city.
Check out the grocery store and the coffee shop open
right now. Go work at the coffee shop. Had the
best cup of coffee you've ever had. And they've got
the big screen TV with the news on it. You
can sit your laptop up and work. Thirty seven seventeen
Lexington Road in the heart of said Matthews back after
this on news radio eight forty wh S