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December 8, 2025 • 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Good morning. Everybody, be careful coming in today. It was
coming down pretty good this morning. I think they thought
it would be a little bit less than what we're
getting right now. But it's all seems to be fine.
But it's sticking to the sides of the roads. And
if you're like us, like Austin and im Alston Montgomery
with me today.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Howdy, how you doing? That's soon to be Austin Katina Montgomery.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
Yeah, we're not going to talk about that, dude. Yeah, yeah,
you heard me. So, Yeah, it's fine. Just slow down
out there as you make your way in this morning.
Dwight's still out. He'll be out till Thursday.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
This is his Is he still out of the country.
Is this his rest week?

Speaker 1 (00:38):
No, he comes back Tuesday, I think, but he needs
a decompression day from his decompression vacation.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
I kind of understand him on that.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
Okay, whatever, So we have so much to get to today.
Today I got a treat. I got the actors theater
folks coming in. They brought back a Christmas Carol after
a six year hiatus, so they're going to come in
the two direct of the play. I went to it
last week for the final dress rehearsal, so there was
you know, some things were a little different, but it's

(01:09):
as close to the text as you can get to
the traditional Christmas carol, and it put the Venettes into
right into the Christmas mode. So we'll talk about them
why they brought it back, and what plans they have
for actors. Theater, which is a gym for Louisville, always
has been all right, So sports is going to dominate
on Monday because locally there is so much stuff going on,

(01:33):
and here in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, we really put
a lot into our emotional well being and sports either
celebrating or the other way. Indiana, my friend Marty Brook
from Earl Books Carriage Forward, went up two days early
to Indianapolis. He attended the basketball game, which they lost

(01:54):
to Louisville pretty handedly, and then of course were these
single biggest great this game in Indiana football history, which
is not really saying it much, but it was pretty big,
number one versus Number two, Big tim championship in a
sold out Lucas Oil Stadium in the Indianapolis and pulled

(02:15):
off the upset of Ohio State. I watched every down
of that game and for a little while there. I
thought the fix was in the refs were not calling
any of the holding against Ohio State. Ohio State was
lining up in the zone on defense, not calling that.

(02:35):
There were so many plays directly at the point of
attack on holding that you that Ohio State was getting
you know, third and long. There's a hole right at
the quarterback and they completed. They complete it down and
continued the drive. Was frustrating to me, but in the
end didn't matter. Indiana's defense, Hello, that did what did

(02:57):
they end up with five sacks? They do not care.
Indiana football Signetti sounds like Venetti is getting it done.
They are now the number one seed in the college
football playoffs. The other story was, at least the committee
got one thing right. Miami should have gotten in before

(03:20):
Notre Dame. But then Notre Dame is having a little
bit of a pity party. I'm sure they went to
confession and they said, okay, we're not going to play
in the bowl game, which is weird. Teams have done
it before where they said we're not going to play
in the bowl game, but this one is you're not
ranked in the top fifteen and not go to a
bowl game. Situation they're not in a conference, so they

(03:41):
don't have to share the money, so that's not an issue.
And Notre Dame's got enough money for everybody. So it's people.
They're getting attacked pretty consistently now online. But football this
weekend unbelievable. And Louis's got a bowl. They're going down
to book Artone. That's Miami, right, Miami is a huge town.

(04:01):
People don't realize.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
But is that Miami?

Speaker 1 (04:04):
Yeah, it is right. It's just north of Miami, correct,
Poco ratone.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
I don't know Florida all that well.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
I think it's north of Miami and Fau. That's where
Schnellenberger went down there. They did not have a football
program and he started it with them together. So he's
you know, he's done several things. He did several things
in his career and that's was one of them. Jeff
was an offensive coordinator, I believe for him there years

(04:31):
and years and years ago.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
You are right, it's just a little bit north of Miami.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
There we go, Hey, hey, come on, so they are
going to go for that. I think it's the twenty
second or twenty third. It's a it's a nice little
it's a twenty third, twenty third, Yes, it's I will
tell you this. Nothing is cheap in Florida during the
Christmas Week. Okay, we did that a couple of years

(04:55):
ago when the kids were small. We literally just looked
at each other and packed up the car and left,
went down to Florida and one hundred and twenty five dollars.
Hotels were four hundred and twenty five dollars on Christmas Week,
So just be prepared for that. But it is a vacation.
Who cares who they're playing, who cares what the situation is.
It's a bowl game, It's time to go to the beach.

(05:15):
There was a lot worse bowl games that they could
have gone to. So Boca ratone, I'll take it. I'll
take it, all right. And of course UK sitting at
home because they didn't win enough games and that's why
they got a new coach. All right, So UK basketball, Like,
I don't even know what to say. If this wasn't

(05:41):
everything changes because of the nil money. When I did
a sports show, did it for about fifteen years. I
tried not to crush student athletes, you know, you know,
let's talk about the coaching unless it was something crazy,
unless the kid did something crazy and then you have
to talk about it. But for the most part, you
stay away from the student athletes. Well, now, when they're

(06:03):
making thirty thousand dollars a month to play basketball, they're
making a million bucks a year, what do you do.
I think they're fair game, Austin Montgomery. If the salaries
of this team, if the rumors are correct, and twenty
two million dollars was spent on this roster, then your

(06:26):
fair game.

Speaker 2 (06:26):
Right, Absolutely, it's not acceptable in the age of in
the age of nil. This is now a job, okay,
So like you're not just showing up for school pride anymore.
You're not just showing up for the name on the
front of the jersey. As much as Mark Pope likes
a preacher, showing up to do your job. And when
you get paid like that, you're supposed to be at

(06:48):
the top of the line at what you do.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
You can fix a lot of things throughout the year.
So can he sorry to borrow a calipery thing, tweak
the team and start to make a run to the
sea see conference play. Sure, yeah, that can happen. But
the thing you can't fix, Austin is when you can't shoot.
You can't shoot, dude. If you're not a good shooter,
that's I'm sorry. If you don't have kids that can
bury it, you can't coach that. You got guys that

(07:15):
can't hit a shot. And that's what I see here
is that they're all good players. You've got a couple
of them that are consistent from outside. But I don't
see a good shooter that can create off you know,
create his own shot, right.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
Yeah, No, they don't. They don't have that. They have
they kind of have a version of that. Chandler can
kind of be that O Way was their guy last year,
and he's more or less just like disappeared for him
this year. He makes flashes in games, but he's not
he's not owning it. It seems like, you know, trying
to test out the draft. Waters really really got to him.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
I don't watch enough of Kentucky basketball. Watched all of
that game, which was hard to watch, but to know
that the criticism is most of the UK people that
I asked that they don't have a point guard or
a good point guard or a backup.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
Right.

Speaker 1 (08:04):
So I'm like, how do you spend twenty two million
dollars and forget the guard part. I don't know. I'm
gonna try to pull in Paron Johnson a little bit
later in the show, just try to dive into what
the hell is wrong with Kentucky. But here's you know,
we talk about the great thing about coaching at Kentucky.
They love you, They buy tickets, they'll travel. If there

(08:25):
was a game on the moon, Kentucky fans would outnumber
everyone else on the moon to watch the game. Doesn't matter.
They are crazy, crazy about what they do. But the
other side of that is when it becomes the big
Blue mist, when they're pissed and they come after you.

(08:48):
So Pope and his family really happy up until about
three weeks ago. I keep seeing this online, Austin, you
tell me whether these are all lies or whatever. I
can't figure out online stuff on my Facebook feet or not.
But is there a health issue or something with Pope?
Or am I reading that health issue? Yes?

Speaker 2 (09:11):
Like he's like he's sick.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
I saw twice where the wife had put something on online.
Maybe I'm assuming this is all fake, but who knows
that that there were some issues with the family. Please
be respectful, So I'm gonna assume that that's all fake.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
It's flu season.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
You can see in his face. He cannot hide his
emotional state.

Speaker 2 (09:36):
He's an emotional guy. He is, he's it's a it's
a complete switch up from the the energetic, boisterousig zuberant
what's another word. I'm trying to precocious coach cow and
a much more laid back like chill Mark Pope's chill guy,
you know. But he also wears his emotions on a sleeve.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
Too, there's no question, and he can't hide it. He
looks depressed. He tried to not look like it, but
he looks like someone that's like overcompensating not to look depressed,
and looks depressed. So I don't know where they go
from here. The problem with them is, if you had

(10:15):
a season like this, the SEC basketball used to suck.
It does not suck anymore. They started to use some
of that football money for basketball coaches. Some of the
best coaches in the country are in the SEC now
for basketball, not just football. So that's a gauntlet. So
at this point they've already got five losses or four.

Speaker 2 (10:40):
They are at four. They lost to Louisville, lost to
Michigan State, lost in North Carolina, and Daga.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
It's hard to think that they're gonna that they're gonna
lose less than at this point, seven or eight games
in the SEC and then at that point you added
all together even going to make the tournament. Yes, it's
very very early, I get it, But at this point

(11:07):
you got to start thinking about that and calling for
a new coach already. That's just stupid. He's not Kenny Payne,
Kentucky fan. You don't know what Louisville fans went through.
It was Pope is infinitely better than Kenny Payne. Kenny Payne.
I can't even describe Kenny Payne as a coach. But

(11:30):
I did listen to the other day when they were
playing Arkansas and Calipery just has Louisville's number. He sees
a Louisville jersey and says, that's it. I listened to
the last press conference after the last game with Kenny Payne,
and it's worse than I remembered. It's ten minutes of
him blaming everyone else except for him, and he literally

(11:52):
says twice, don't blame me. It is worse than what
I remembered. So no, you don't have a Ken pain
on your hands. Trust me on that Pope is going
to be fine. I think, well, he's going to have
to get some talent evaluators on that staff to help
him say no, we don't want this player or this kid.
And plus, when you're talking about a forty point blowout,

(12:14):
thirty five point blowout, Gonzaga was blown out the week
before by thirty five. I think in this not new era.
It is the era of the AAU players on all levels,
great school, high school, college, and the NBA. Is that
they play so many games in a row, they play
in the offseason, they play so many games that they

(12:37):
don't mean as much to them. So when a game
is lost, they really shut it down because they're like
they're mentally subconsciously they're like, oh, I got another game.
If you've ever been to those tournaments where the coaches
go and they're supposed to showcase these basketball players, they
play like twenty minute games and then they go to

(12:58):
another court and play another game, in another game, another game,
So mentally they're always like, well, there's another game. It's
not like the old days when you just played in
high school. You had twenty something games in high school.
You had to abide by the rules of the high school,
whatever state you were living in, and every game mattered.

(13:19):
So now these thirty five point blowouts, I don't know, man,
it's hard to gauge how that's how bad they are
because they just shut down. Their brain shut down. Reminds
me a lot of that generation, not all of them,
but a portion of them will just shut down on you.
So I'm not buying into their thirty five points. Obviously

(13:42):
lesser than Gonzaga because Gonzaga got run the week before. Hell,
I saw Yu Khan get run by Louisville by almost
forty points. In the final game on Senior Day at
the Young Center. U Khan got beat by Louisville by
fourty points and they went on and won the national title.

Speaker 2 (14:03):
I remember that that was actually the first week I
moved down here. When I first moved down here, I'm like,
I gotta go to a game. I gotta I gotta
see this game. It's Russ Smith, Luke Hancock, Montrez, Harraldz,
their last game. I sat all the way up in
the top and I remember walking away from it like
a like a thirty five to forty point win, and
the few Yukon fans that were there. I'm looking around.

(14:24):
I'm like, man, I can't believe they made this trip.
But I'm sitting there thinking that must be tough to
be a Yukon fan right now.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
They made the run, yeah, and then the three weeks later,
I'm pretty sure they had to play the playing game
like the first four and then they.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
Like seed eight or nine because that's what Kentucky made
because it was yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:44):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, you're right. Uh so I've seen
it before. I mean, who knows. It's basketball. But I
feel sorry for Pope, I do. I know some Louisville
fans are chuckling and laughing a little bit, but man,
that's tough if you're living in Lexington, because that's all

(15:04):
no offense to the UK fans, but they live for it, man,
and when you live for it, these are tough times.
Football sucked and now basketball's turning out to be the same.
You can't have that in the same year when you're
talking about UK athletics, because it's the whole state. It's
a little crazy. Okay. So we are going to have

(15:26):
the folks from Actors Theater come in. I believe the
two directors are going to come in and join us. Plus,
I think lmpd's going to come in. I contacted Sanders
before the weekend and he was headed to Gatlinburg, So
I don't know if he forgot with all the bourbon
and bears in Gatlinburg, whether he's coming in today or not,

(15:46):
but I will text him here in a little bit
to make sure that is happening. I got a lot
of stories to get to, of course. The seventh, which
was yesterday, was Pearl Harbor, and I watched a story
on CBS Sunday morning of this family that she found out,
the granddaughter found out someone dropped a letter off asking

(16:09):
for information because someone was going to write a story
about her grandfather, which was the only person convicted in
the attack of Pearl Harbor. They were German. They are German,
and her grandfather and his sister were German spies for
the Japanese Wow and the sister, her aunt or great

(16:32):
aunt or whatever, was the mistress to Gebels, one of
the most evil individuals in world history. And when he
was done with her, he sent them to Hawaii to
spy on American the American Navy for the Japanese. It's

(16:52):
a fascinating story. And she had to come to grips
with it because her father lied to her her entire life.
Don't worry about it. Those are YadA, YadA. And then
finally the family came to grips with it. Now her
father ended up joining the service and serving in World
War Two and was a hero. Actually, so it's ends
up being a good story. But can you imagine finding

(17:15):
out in your thirties, You're in your mid thirties, you're marriage,
you have kids, and you find out your grandfather was
the spy that informed the Japanese Navy how many ships
were there, they were signaling the submarines that were offshore,
and that your great aunt slept with Gerbels. All right,

(17:38):
short break, we'll come back again, Dwight. We'll be back
on Thursday, and actually I'll be out Edlin and Edlin
five nine eight hundred. That's the owner's cell phone if
you want to give them a call and sell your
home for one percent commission rate. I did a story
last week from Louisville Business First on the prices of
houses in Louisville, which have gone up by average of

(18:00):
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it's ever been. So you're going to sell your home,
You're going to keep the equity. You're going to move on.
So go with Edland and Eland and no surprise charges
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percent commission rate. Keep your money in your pocket. Go
with Eedland and Eedland. Five nine hundred is the phone number.

(18:24):
Back after this news Radio eight forty whas Welcome back
news Radio in forty whas Tony Venetti and Dwight is out.
Aulston Montgomery is producing a quarter of US workers prefer
a root canal to an office holiday party. Buddy hades

(19:00):
office parties. I'm sorry, there's nobody. We all want to
do them because we want to camaraderie, we want to
get the team together. We're so busy, we're chasing numbers,
we're trying to achieve. But in the end, getting dressed
up dragging your spouse to a Christmas party isn't what
people want to do. Austin, you are in what camp?

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Conversely, I want some office parties. I've been getting jealous.
I texted Nick coffee. I've been seeing everybody at their
company Christmas parties, and I'm like, man, I remember when
we did that.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
Well, the office party has changed a little bit because
of you know, they used to be pretty wild. That's
all I'm saying. Okay, there's been in my lifetime. There
have been broken chandeliers. There's been nudity at some of
the Christmas parties.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
See I want this back.

Speaker 1 (19:50):
Yeah, it's a little crazy. One year, Dwight and I
did a play that we wrote ourselves, That's so and
it was named in a law shoot from somebody that
quit the company. What Yeah, yeah, the inappropriate Christmas play.

(20:11):
So yes, those were the old days. And then it
got to be let's all really dress up and it's
gonna be nice. And we've done that too, but we
haven't had one in a couple of years because I
think the last one, the Big Boss got a little
mad because the second people could leave, like the whole
party cleared out, like the guy was gonna play music
for another three hours or two hours, and everyone was

(20:33):
grabbing coats and he was like, where's everybody going. They're like,
it's a Thursday night, dude, We're going home.

Speaker 2 (20:39):
I guess our version of the opt I should say
that because we still like we have like the potlucks
and stuff, and everybody gets off and not gets off,
but like gets to kind of step out of their
stations for a second and mingle with everybody and have
some of the potluck.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
This survey says a third would rather go to the
dentist than the annual event. They would rather have a
root canial canal than to go to the company office
holiday party. I think we're having ours, even though it
is the eighth and we still haven't had.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Now.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
I like going to the ones that are playing from clients.
I'm going to Genesis because there's a lot of giveaways
and the food is great. So I'm going to that
on Thursday. All right, man, short break, we will come back.
I will talk about Traiton no Towers right now or
right after the break, So stick around News Radio eight
forty wha, Oh thank you. It's not heavy metal.

Speaker 2 (21:32):
I could give you some of them.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
No, I'm good, I'm good. I'm good. John's been doing
a pretty good job at it. He's still feeling under
the weather. Nick is also, so he'll be back. He's
got something that is just like radio stations can't get,
so he needs to stay away as long as possible.
All right, So I got actors theater coming in about

(21:53):
twenty minutes. They brought back a Christmas Carol. It was
fantastic assault last week took my mom and my wife
down there. We were in the Christmas spirit. Now it's
we're all in. But on that ilk of actresses and actors,
do you know who Tillie Norwood is?

Speaker 2 (22:09):
No?

Speaker 1 (22:11):
All right, Tilly Norwood is an AI actress.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
Oh okay, yeah, I've heard of this.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
It is really when you say, I really can't believe
what I'm watching, that's what people. That's everyone's reaction. I
don't care who they are when they see her acting
in a commercial or in a small film. Okay, she
is an AI actor, and she is she looks real.

(22:39):
She's again she's not perfect like she I mean they
get they put, you know, human imperfections in with these
these things. What now, I don't know how good of
an actress she is, right, uh, but they had a
whole story on her and how the actor's guild in
Hollywood and all that now have to deal with this

(23:02):
because it is literally they can have a movie because
they have it. They've had computer generated films before. I
watch a Christmas Carol ronically, the one that Jim Carrey
did in two thousand and nine. It's I mean, it's
a digital cartoon, but it's actually real actors that they
I guess they put those little dots on their face

(23:23):
and they do the acting and it becomes you know,
their computer makes the digital video of it. But this
is completely AI and the AI answers your questions. They
interviewed her like as an actress. It's creepy as hell.
And I don't know where the hell this all is going, dude,

(23:45):
And we've talked about these stories. I tried to warn
everybody for AI. I did a story a day or
a story a week at least on here. You know,
here's the new nightmare scenario. But this one really is
weird because people are falling in love with their AI person.
They're trying to marry their AI person too. I mean,

(24:05):
these are not obviously stable individuals, or are they. I
don't know. We all could be living in a simulation.
I don't know, but Tilly Norwood just look her up.
If you're at work or you're at home. At work,
you're not paying attention to the boss's zoom meeting right now,
and you have me in one ear and him and

(24:26):
the other. Just look up Tilly Norwood and watch her
because it's insane. The interviewer on the story that I
watched took the reporter and said, can we mind your
social media and get pictures and stuff? She was like,
okay for the story. Okay. So they created an entire
coffee commercial for this girl, the interviewer the journalist, and

(24:51):
she was in the video, and she was all of
the actresses in the video, and created an entire marketing
plan for this fake coffe the shop. And it was insane.
It was insane. The journalist was like, what am what
is happening? So in reality you can now go back,

(25:13):
I guess and get John Wayne or Carrie Grant or
some of these great actors or huge stars and recreate
a Carrie Grant in a new movie, a ron com
with Carrie Grant Austin.

Speaker 2 (25:36):
I'm looking. I'm looking up Tilly Norwood till and I like,
I don't know, it's fifty foot like it looks real,
but at the same time it doesn't, and like, look
it's ai actress. Tillan nor would explain what she is,
how she was built and why Hollywood is alarmed. She's

(25:57):
already got her own Wikipedia page, her own her own
Tillie Norwood dot com, her own website Tony, So this
is yeah. I mean she's attractive.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
Yeah, And I would say in that Dwight and I
have done several versions of this show. One of them
was the Morning Show when you had a third person,
and we always wanted we always wanted a female voice
to sort of counteract our idiocy, and we had one
in the early two thousand. Haley kind of took that
place when we were in the old building on the

(26:28):
six to eight show. She was a newsperson and she
was really funny, so we started to add her. I'm
thinking Greg Getcher and I we're very good friends, and
I just saw him last night at Saint Matthew City
Christmas party. He has a person that does this this
AI people thing, So Austin, I don't want to scare anybody,

(26:49):
but I want to kind of have this person create
the third person on the show to see how it goes,
because you interact with it live and they get into
the conversation with you, and I would assume we would
set it. I don't know how you do the settings

(27:10):
for you know, humor, serious, political, whatever the categories are.
But I want to go. I think we're going to
get with this person and create the third character on
the show. Do you think we should not do that?

Speaker 2 (27:25):
Have it an AI character?

Speaker 1 (27:27):
Yeah? Yeah, why not, just to see how it goes.

Speaker 2 (27:31):
What would we name it?

Speaker 1 (27:32):
Well, that's the thing.

Speaker 2 (27:34):
Would it be a boy or girl?

Speaker 1 (27:38):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (27:39):
Girl?

Speaker 1 (27:39):
We need a girl voice. Okay, we need a female
on the show. It's too much of us, too much
testosterone going on on this show.

Speaker 2 (27:46):
I like it.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
I had to name our rumba. We got a rumba.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
Oh nice. I've always wanted one of those, and.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
You have to name it. Seriously, you cannot go on,
you cannot finish setting it up if you don't name it.
So we named it Clean Elizabeth.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
Clean Elizabeth. I like that, right, I like that.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
But the setup is pretty complicated because it has to
map your entire main floor. It's not simple. I think
it's one of those things. Once we get it finished,
it'll be worth it. But right now I stopped doing
it because I was watching football and my wife was like,
have you set that up yet? I'm like no, I'm
right in the middle of it. But this is not easy.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
So we are. You have to map out your home.

Speaker 1 (28:27):
The damn thing has to map up the map out
the floor, and then you have to sort of tell
it where sometimes your shoes are going to be. I
don't know, man, It's not as simple as turn it
on and it figures it out, which is what I
thought it would do. But the damn thing mops and vacuums.

Speaker 2 (28:46):
Bro oh what mops too? Yeah, okay, that's pretty clutch.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
Yeah, dude, And we got hardwood floors all on the
main floor. So this is gonna be This is gonna
save us huge. But you know me, I have attention
deficit disorder. I cannot I can't watch football. I got
to set this thing up. And then, if you know,
it's asking important questions and I'm like, okay, I'm not
doing this right now. It was not easy though, and

(29:14):
it's not easy. But I think once it gets finished,
we'll we'll figure it out. Tillie nor would So you
don't think it looks real?

Speaker 2 (29:22):
I mean she looked, she looked it looks like a
real person. But obviously once you dive into it, all
the pictures are in AI pictures.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (29:30):
So that's her able to tell. So she like looks
real until you kind of start diving into it.

Speaker 1 (29:35):
Yeah. Yeah, it's strange, and I don't know where it's
all going. And I really think I've been pretty good
at predicting where everything is going. I didn't really pay attention.
And we used to have in high school. They had
coding class to where we had to not the coding now,
but literally so simple things that we were writing code.

(29:55):
And it was just like turn the screen green or blue. Right,
that's the line of code you were writing. And I said,
I'm not doing this, and the teacher was like, no,
you have to do. This is the class. And I'm like, look,
I'm going to be able to talk to my computer
and tell it to turn the screen green or blue.
I'm not going to be able to, you know, have
to do this. So I've tried to. I've been on
top of it. I think this will be I think

(30:16):
we're all going to a virtual There's going to be
so many people that live and work. They live in
Louis of Kentucky, but they exist in Paris, France. They're
going to be three D. The glasses and their entire existence.
They'll work from home. They'll work from there from their
condo that's downtown Paris instead of Fern Creek. Watch it's coming.

(30:44):
So what's going to happen? Why would I move to
Paris when I can live in Fern Creek and my
reality is a cafe in Paris.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
You have an option to where whether to wear a
beret or not, but that's up to you, or a scarf,
or have one of those really tiny mustaches and your
cigarette is attached to some long black thing that you know,
that's your option, but it's the brain is so that

(31:17):
human brain is so easily fooled. You can make yourself
believe that you were wherever you want.

Speaker 2 (31:23):
Now.

Speaker 1 (31:23):
I think with people in retirement homes, that's not a
bad idea. Like people are really getting older. You know,
they're like, hey, let's go to Italy, but I can't
because of health. Put these glasses on. Wat's this? So
I don't know man Tillie, nor would watch out for her.
I can't remember where I saw the story, but it

(31:43):
is she's And now they look they interviewed the folks
at the Actors Guild. They're like, dude, they can't be
doing this. They knew to a certain extent that they've
already used it. You can't watch those some of those
movies like Star Wars or Lord of the Ring where
half the characters are digital characters, right, but don't we

(32:05):
already have it. They're just gonna look more real. The
last Jurassic Park.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
Was awful, the one that literally just came out like
a month or two ago.

Speaker 1 (32:18):
There's like five things you have to put in a
Jurassic Park movie. They put all five in like three times.
It's just an excuse to can make a million bucks.
And the story was just awful. It was the same
damn story over again. But the difference was in this
Jurassic Park, the dinosaurs literally look real, like you're like, okay,

(32:41):
we've made a leap here in technology. The dinosaurs that's
what you end up watching. That's why I think Avatar
originally made all that money in the first one. Wasn't
because of the fantastic storytelling. It was because the damn
tall blue people look so everything. The whole world was fake.

(33:02):
It was a different planet with different animals, but it
looked you're watching it, going, what am I watching? I'm
telling you. The brain easily fooled, but that stuff is
amazing to me. It's not cheap either. Gonna make those
kind of films, it costs money. All right, Actors Theater,
they haven't had a Christmas Carol for six years. They

(33:23):
brought it back this year. I'm going to talk to
you to the co directors coming up here, and then
what they have planned. Maybe the big question I got
when I posted something on Facebook was Dracula. Are they
going to bring back the original Dracula? Which is what
everybody wants to see. So I'll ask that question also,
so stick around for that. Meanwhile, unlimited landscapes. If you're
looking for a pool this spring, now design it, unveil

(33:46):
it at Christmas. That's my idea. So you call them, say, look, dude,
design the pool. Here's what I want. Swum up bar,
I want the led lights, I want a cabana, YadA YadA.
They could do it all and then they'll have a
rendering for you in your backyard and then you can
unvailiday Christmas and say, look what Dad did. We're getting
this this spring. And if you have a problem getting

(34:07):
your kids and or grandkids to come back to the house,
this is a great way to do it, get a
pool with Unlimited Landscapes. Go to Unlimited landscapes dot com.
Back after this on NewsRadio eight forty whas
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