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June 24, 2025 • 28 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Uh, we were going over my numbers from my new
smart scale.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
I about the about the.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Better one, about the better one. I couldn't help it.
I was like, I got to have a better one
than Dwight.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Well, let's talk about the scale.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
So Manamie Jones, Manama Jones, she told me this, and
basically this is not endorsement or anything like that. It's
called I'll post a picture of it. Yeah, it's called
the r E N p h O Smart Scale. And
what it does you step on it and you link
it to your phone and it gives your weight, of course,
and it logs it. But then it also gives you

(00:38):
I can't because I've got a cast on wood.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
You can't do it.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
Yeah, I'll get my weight because you need to have
one foot on one set of sensors and the other
on the other set of sensors.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
This thing was only like twenty bucks.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
So it gives you BMI body fat, skeletal muscle fat
free mass, waterway, cutaneous fat, yes, visceral.

Speaker 2 (00:59):
Fat, dangerous fat.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
Which I need to measure is that visceral visceral is
the dangerous subcutaneous is the one outside.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Okay, body subcutaneous or viscerals.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
What that in the muscle, No visceral is under it.

Speaker 3 (01:11):
So you got a fat layer on your skin, right,
that's your subcutaneous fat.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
Man, You've got like your abdom of muscles.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
Yeah, but low your abdom the muscles is something called
visceral fat surround your organs, and that's the most dangerous
in a man.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
This measure is that the dun lap dun lapped over
your belt.

Speaker 3 (01:28):
I would think that would be the more Yeah, that
probably pushes it out.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
Also does body water. Yeah, muscle mass, bone mass, proteins BMR,
and metabolic age. My metabolic age is fifty five.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
I'll last.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
But see, you can't get an accurate I can't get.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
An accurate measurement. But mine was fifty nine. I'm two
years older than I'm.

Speaker 4 (01:52):
Supposed to be.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
When Susan got one and she loves it, I'll tell
you what. I'll post it on my face.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Yeah, Jackie got Jackie's into it now too. I showed
her how to use it. Yeah. So I'm slightly high
in two things. Your body fat is fitness level.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
It's great, it's fit.

Speaker 1 (02:09):
What is like sixteen?

Speaker 2 (02:11):
That's incredible.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Yeah, I was shocked by that to tell you the truth.
But it's how do they do the body water? Which
I think is interesting, especially for women that say I
hold they hold water. That that is good. I love
the scale and it's it's I actually, I got to
be honest and I'm trying not to be gross. But
I weighed myself and then I went to the bathroom, John,

(02:32):
and then I weighed myself again, a little obsessive. I
lost one point two pounds.

Speaker 4 (02:37):
Congratulations in the bathroom.

Speaker 2 (02:40):
I always told you you were full of Well, yeah,
there you go again.

Speaker 1 (02:44):
He cease fire, by the way, is now is now
on between Israel and Iran.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
They took a couple of last jabs at them, at
themselves the last night, and then this morning they said, okay,
it's official, we're done here. So President Trump had some
announcements on the White House long this morning and use
some color coful language. I always say, don't say the
F word, but there are times you can drop it

(03:11):
in and it fits.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
Nothing, just punctuates sometimes.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
But if you use it too much. I'm Italian, so
it's people think we have Tourett's.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
I'm all the way over here. I don't know how
that happened. I'm all the way over here.

Speaker 1 (03:25):
His crutches fall every show.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
These damn crutches. Hang on, let me take a drink
of this water. Wink wink.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
Uh. Do you want to know the one thing that
your relationship needs to last a lifetime? It's one thing, John.

Speaker 4 (03:42):
The answer is not love, right, No, it's lies.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
It's lies.

Speaker 3 (03:45):
The cornerstone of every good relationship is lies.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
You need to learn that.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
And Dwight and I might for post radio show career,
might become a couple's counseling.

Speaker 4 (04:00):
Would I would be your first customer?

Speaker 3 (04:02):
Okay, first of all your sex life. We need to
see what you are doing.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
No, that's not stopping. We need to see you always
gotta go won Bridge too far? Here we go, Soarbert,
Doctor Albert Brooks, which is actually Albert, one of my
favorite actors of all time. A Harvard professor who studied
love for over two decades, is revealing the secret to
long lasting relationships. What do you think it is?

Speaker 2 (04:28):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (04:28):
Actually, you and you and Susan have this. You've always
said it.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
Best friends?

Speaker 1 (04:36):
Bingo ah, really yeah, yeah, we are best friends. One
of the greatest predictors of divorces partners who lonely, who
are lonely while living together. Having a partner who's actually
your friend, ideally your best friend is the secret to
staying together forever. I think that makes a lot of sense, John,
your thoughts.

Speaker 4 (04:56):
Yeah, I would say my wife and I would we
would say we're best friends.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Yes, if you enjoy sitting with her having a glass
of wine, or on vacation when if you are to me,
Jack and I are never better than we were on vacation.

Speaker 4 (05:09):
Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (05:10):
Right, the second we get out of the circle, we
are a different couple.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
We just do.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
We have crazy jobs. I have this crazy job and
she's her job is nuts. So the second we get
out of the circle, we're different couples. I think that's
the indicator.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
I think it's pretty smart.

Speaker 3 (05:29):
I mean, it makes sense, right because everything falls away
at some point and you're left with the friendship.

Speaker 1 (05:35):
We have friends with your wife before you started dating.

Speaker 4 (05:37):
Yeah, well, and actually that's not true. We knew somebody,
we had a mutual friend, I guess, and we were
introduced that way, but we kind of had this talking phase.
I guess. If that makes sense. We've been together for
ten years, we've been married for five. We got together
in twenty fifteen, and so over time before we got married,

(05:58):
I feel like we hashed out a lot of our
nonsensical issues before we reached that marriage point. On a
lot of older you know, people in their twenties and thirties,
they're not going to wait that long to get married nowadays,
we go back to being in high school whenever we
got together, and so we kind of Once you hash
out all the nonsense, it's a lot easier to be
friends in your relationship.

Speaker 3 (06:18):
I feel like, see Susan and I, we got married
well into our forties, and had I not waited till
I was in my forties, there's no way. I went.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
Oh, there's no way. You were a horrible, horrible, horrible person.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
I was a terrible person, terrible person, horrible person.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
So had we not waited and it was her first
marriage too.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
No, let's be honest, she's a saint. And she waited. Okay,
she waited. She waited until he got it together and
then went back to him.

Speaker 2 (06:48):
No, she did not. She didn't want anything to do
with me.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
No, she was smart.

Speaker 2 (06:52):
She wanted nothing to do with me, and I had
to win her back.

Speaker 1 (06:55):
Yes, you did, and you did it.

Speaker 2 (06:57):
I did it with white castles and other milwauke.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
Remember she was walking away in the hallway. Oh yeah,
she was walking away in the hallway. John, I said,
look at you. Now, look at her, Look at you, now,
look at her.

Speaker 4 (07:12):
Did you get married in a white castle? I know
people do that.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
No, no, no, I performed a marriage in a white castle.
I married a couple.

Speaker 3 (07:19):
He had the hay Jude of mayor of Oh my gosh,
we had like young baseball game.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
Three three three three preacher.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
I'm serious.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
So you know how you know on baseball games they
go with dugout John Auden. Yeah, we had three preachers.
So one would get up and he would do his
forty minutes and then it was awful.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
And then I would look over the bullpen.

Speaker 3 (07:42):
I would tap my arm in would run Mike Caphammer
the second preacher and three preachers.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
But he asked me in a good way, because he
goes You could absolutely say no, because I know you
want to say no. But do you want to be
in my wedding? Now? On his wedding day, I couldn't
find him.

Speaker 2 (08:02):
Nobody.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
I said, where's where? Where's everybody's looking for Dwight, and
I go, I look down this long hallway in all
these classrooms, because it was a school church, these long classrooms,
and they were all dark. I went, hmm. So I
swandered down and I started looking in classrooms, and sure
enough I find him in the back of a dark
classroom with a Pepsi bottle and he's dipping and Daniels

(08:26):
and I said, and I said, oh, so I got
some I got some reinforcements. And we went back in
and his buddy is a is a preacher.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Yeah, one of the preachers that married us.

Speaker 1 (08:38):
I said, right now, he goes. I said, good news
is we're a couple of minutes away. Bad news is
there's not an empty seat out there. It's a full house.
So I said, let's take a tim tebow, take a knee,
and let's do a prayer. And you got up and
you got married.

Speaker 3 (08:54):
Two things. Two things. It was really really Number one.
Everybody I asked to be in my wedding. Yeah, I
did that with I said, look, if I were you,
I would say no. And don't take this as me
not wanting you to be in my wedding, but stuff
like this is a pain in the butt. You got
to rind a tuxt the whole bit. If you don't
want to be in my wedding, you don't have to be.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
And then with a thirteen year old niece, Oh yeah,
head on your hitting on me. She was like, can
I get your digits? I was like, no, it was
thirteen years old, my digits.

Speaker 2 (09:27):
And she she wouldn't wait until like the reception.

Speaker 3 (09:29):
We were in line, you know what I mean, in
line to go out and do the wedding stuff.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
You know she's in the runner her mouth. Come on,
give me your digits, my niece.

Speaker 4 (09:39):
You know what's funny is once you've had your own wedding,
every other wedding after that becomes a nuisance to you.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
Know, they always were.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
That's the thing I tell everybody, it's getting married. I go.
You know, no one wants to go to your wedding.

Speaker 2 (09:49):
I wish there were Listen, you know how.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
You got it? That's a totally even any thing. I'm
I can't help.

Speaker 4 (09:55):
I used to love going to weddings with my wife,
but since we had hours and ours was a weird
circumstance we got. We had a very tiny wedding during
because it was during COVID, we had to put some
stuff around not going to get into it, and then
we had like a ceremony like a reception or whatever
back when things opened up, And so we had to
do all this planning twice. So it was a bigger
house we wanted to And so after that, I was like,
I don't want to have anything to do with weddings

(10:17):
ever again, and that includes going to them. I still
make them, of course, but they're not fun to go
to the way that some people like to go to.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
No, I wass cry at weddings because I hate being there.

Speaker 3 (10:26):
I wish I wish that you know how they do
that check Chicken or Fitch there was a buyout. Hey,
we'd love to see it for our special days that
now and blah blah blah, or here's the buyout for
two hundred bucks. Every time it'd be two hundred bucks.
But getting back to my wedding, not only was it long,
not only was it the hay Jude of weddings that

(10:47):
went on and on, but it was quite awkward because
we decided, when we got engaged and we got back together,
we're not going to have sex until we getting married.

Speaker 2 (11:01):
We're gonna honor God in our marriage. The preacher finds
out about it. In the middle of the wedding, he
starts talking about our sex life. Do you remember that.

Speaker 1 (11:12):
He started talking about their sex life in detail.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
And everybody's looking at me.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
I'm like, I go, okay, too far, dude, get this out,
get this do I do? I do.

Speaker 2 (11:21):
Let's go, hey preacher, man, get back on script. What
are you doing, dude?

Speaker 4 (11:25):
Could you feel the tension in the room at that
point when he was talking about all that stuff, people
getting uncomfortable?

Speaker 2 (11:31):
Well, I was okay.

Speaker 3 (11:32):
Two things I was worried about because the wedding get
it did go on and on, and I hate long weddings.

Speaker 5 (11:38):
Man.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
I kept looking over. He looked over at me, and
he was like whispering. I'm sorry, I was. I mean,
I was doing the look like.

Speaker 3 (11:46):
So I was scared of two things. They said, don't
walk your knees because you'll pass out. Now it's in
my head that I'm going to pass out in front
of a church full of people.

Speaker 1 (11:58):
So fat was it's so fat he was sweating.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
It was the listen. December third is the date.

Speaker 3 (12:04):
It's freezing cold outside and I'm sweating like a prostituting church.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Go into the bathroom on the main floor and get
the picture of you on your wedding and bring it
and show it to John, and John will go, that's
not you. No, John, You'll go, that's not you.

Speaker 3 (12:19):
You would say, I never knew that Susan was married
before was married to John.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
He must have died of a heart attack.

Speaker 3 (12:25):
I look like John Goodman during the John Goodman Roseanne days.
So but second of all, I was worried that when
I saw her, I was gonna cry. Yeah, because I
hadn't seen her.

Speaker 1 (12:36):
Yeah, probably went a little bit when I saw Jackie,
just because I was drunk. But he says that the
key isn't romantic passion. So many people get divorced now
because well the passion's gone. Well he's saying, that's not
the most important factor. It is being best friends with
your with your wife or with your husband. Either way.

Speaker 2 (12:55):
Well there are other ways.

Speaker 3 (12:57):
Because I know a dentist of a friend of amount,
a dentist he's been married for thirty years, still just
in love. They're not necessarily best friends, but he has
deep feelings feelings for his wife because he's a dentist.

Speaker 1 (13:13):
Deep feelings does it get on your nerves either one
of you? Does it get on your nerves when you
hear the couples that are like, we've been married for
twenty two years and we've never had a fire, I.

Speaker 4 (13:22):
Don't think always huh I.

Speaker 1 (13:26):
No, I know some couples that they claim that it's
just like it's annoying.

Speaker 4 (13:30):
I well, know somebody and live with somebody for twenty
two years and never have an argument.

Speaker 3 (13:36):
I could count, probably on one hand, how many times
we've had cross words.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
But Susan and I we've been through a lot, and
it's mostly all been her fault. This cost is to
go through. So I'm kind of like the uh I
steer the witt and marriage.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
Who would marry either one of us? Who will? I'm
always going to question you your ability to make decisions
because you married me.

Speaker 4 (14:04):
No, I know.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
I'm sitting at I'm sitting at our island this morning
show prep and having my coffee. She's got to be
in Frankfurt. She comes down to this dress. She looks
hotter than blank. Yeah, yeah, I look at her.

Speaker 2 (14:15):
If she knocked on the head as a kid, what's
the matter with her? Why would she seriously, why would
she be really something.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
I'll tell you when worse, when you look at the
picture when she married me, it's not daddy issues.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
She amazing father.

Speaker 3 (14:28):
Thank god for super hot blonde with low self esteem.
I guess I don't know.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
And thank God for bargain supply in Jefferson Street. Go
say hi to Todd Hester. He's my buddy. He runs that.
There's a couple of them that run the appliance area there.
Half of the warehouse is stuff you need like wheelbarrels
and stuff like that, and cheap extension cords and all that.
You get to the back and that's where the gems are.
It is Uh. You can't get the diversity of appliances

(14:56):
anywhere else in Kentucky. That's a fact. I mean they
have so many. We just bought all new appliances there,
and the price was so because the more you buy,
the less you're gonna pay. It's unbelievable. We bought an
Italian stove. We bought a ge refrigerator. We bought it
from all over the world. We bought the best one
that we could find in each one of them. And
that's what they do. And they know everything about appliances,

(15:19):
you know, Do you want that thing that goes under
the refrigerator makes it taller? Do you want the cabinets
to build in? When you open the door? Does it
go flush with the wall. These are questions I would
never ask. Will it fit? Yeah, all right, we'll buy it.
But that's why you got to take the boss, your wife.
Go to bargain Supply. East Jefferson Street, New lou Area.

Speaker 3 (15:36):
Cellar covered hot tub is where I to go with
my best friend Susan. And here's how it goes. We'll
sit there in a vacation in our own backyard and
I'll look across the hot tub and I'll say I
love you, and she'll say I love you more. And
I'll say, no, I love you more. And then she'll say, no,
I love you more. And I'll say I love you
to Okay, and then she'll say I love you to Jupiter.
Then I'll say I love you to your anus. My

(15:57):
point is you're gonna fall in love refall in love
with your spouse, your loved ones, and your Southern covered
hot tub. Folks, it's the summer set rolling back the
prices all the way back to the nineties. You haven't
seen prices this low since the nineteen nineties, hot tubs
as low as three thousand, nine hundred and ninety nine dollars.
Hot tubs is old sixty five dollars a month. Now

(16:19):
is the time to upgrade your family's life and get
a vacation in your own backyard. Southern covered hot Tub
seventy five oh one Preston Highway.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
Realion in the years is next on news radio eight
forty whas.

Speaker 3 (16:34):
John, you are the magnet and I'm the steel, and
together we're magnet and steel.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
That sounds like a uugh. He's freight magnet, She's Karen Steel,
and together they're magnet and steel. Seventies cop.

Speaker 1 (16:51):
Uh. How hard is it to do business in California?
I'll tell you. Even though all the big, huge businesses
are there and they have the third largest ecommune the world,
they have two large California oil refineries are shutting down,
which is now their fear that gas in California will
cost eight dollars a gallon after this happens.

Speaker 2 (17:14):
Mike Gibson.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
Mike Gibson described it with some concern at a recent
Sacramento hearing, said this is a tremendous loss, referring to
the looming closure of Phillip's sixty six plant near La
the job that it holds, the individuals working each and
every day, those individuals live in my district, They shop
in my district. This is bad. How do you well,

(17:39):
because isn't that like it's like running. It's like if
you don't have a casino that doesn't make money.

Speaker 3 (17:46):
Oil refinery, well, when you put so many regulations and
taxes on them, as California does, you could see that
the movie industry for decades has been slowly moving out
of Hollywood, which is.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
Known for making movies. That's all they do. You know.

Speaker 3 (18:02):
Even Bill Maher was talking about Adam Crawl the same thing.
Wanted to build an edition on his house three years,
with permits three years and couldn't even do anything.

Speaker 2 (18:12):
It's over regulated, it's over taxed.

Speaker 5 (18:14):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
I don't know why any business would do business there.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
If I had to live in California and it was
eight dollars a gallon. It's not there yet, but that's
where they're saying these If these two refineries go down,
that would encourage me to buy an electric electric guitar,
electric car. At that point, if it's eight dollars a gallon.
I'm buying something I can plug in.

Speaker 3 (18:33):
Would you ever buy an electric guitar from Quitar? It'd
be a guitar guitar here there the best they are.
A Quitar guitar is really good guitar. We are one
and zero for the week. We nailed it yesterday nineteen
eighty four. We will continue with reeling in the years next.
Don't forget to go to Eatland and Eatland to sell

(18:53):
your house. One percent commission rate, that's it, one percent.
Keep the equity in your home. It's silly to give
it to somebody else. You earned that money with the
equity in your home. Five nined nine twenty eight hundred
and five to nine nine. Give them a call or
go to Elin dot com. Hey, before I forget, join
us this Friday, Baby Market put it in an ing.
It's a free lunch Friday at grill Masters Supply.

Speaker 2 (19:16):
I talked to Mau from the hog Father this morning.

Speaker 3 (19:19):
Chopped beef and pull pork sliders, pickled onions, the hog
Father mustard, which is amazing. They're cooking up a twenty
three pound chuck row that they're gonna be smoking for
sixteen hours. Competition style pulled pork. You're gonna love free
lunch Friday. This Friday, grill Master, supply stick around see

(19:39):
him Johnny with News and then really in the years
with John Alden. It's on the way news ready to
eight forty wh as this week, John I sent you had.

Speaker 4 (19:51):
A couple of bad weeks and now you're getting your footing.

Speaker 3 (19:53):
Back like three bad weeks. Hey, I sent you a
memo saying no more sixties. Did you get that Memoi?

Speaker 4 (19:59):
This's got one right? So I think you're not in
the sixties in.

Speaker 3 (20:01):
Play Uh, well way, Joey Strader, don't you ever murp
me about kiss again? Big rolling stones, nerd and then
all capitals, MRP.

Speaker 4 (20:12):
I think we should throw the two thousands in this.

Speaker 2 (20:14):
No, we have a chance. Are you kidding me?

Speaker 1 (20:18):
That's my jo I'm gonna put some boots on with skulls,
make myself seventy to.

Speaker 2 (20:24):
My name's Joey Straighter, Joey straight.

Speaker 1 (20:29):
I'm gonna put makeup on for three hour do a show.

Speaker 2 (20:33):
My name is Jerry Strader.

Speaker 5 (20:35):
And when I go to bed, my pajamas look like
Gene Simmons costume and my house shoes look like skulls.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
That was real blood. He would spit up, he would
bite his tongue and bleed very night.

Speaker 5 (20:49):
Sometimes I have my wife dress up as share and
we do Gene Simmons and share romance.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
All Right, here's some models of cars that people say
they've done their time, they need to move on. No
forger on this. But your jeep wrangler is no. It
says it's one of the most useless pickups available.

Speaker 2 (21:12):
It's not a pickup.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
I think maybe they're talking about the one that's a
half a pickup.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
In half a Well, that's that's not a right.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
Jeep wrangler.

Speaker 2 (21:20):
That's a gladiator. And I kind of agree with him
on the gladiator. Who needs a three foot truck bed?

Speaker 3 (21:26):
Okay, remember well, re'mb when the Ford Explorers had that,
it's as.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
They were weird looking Grandpa, it was it was it
was a truck. Trans Yeah, it was a transit. It
was a trans truck or its.

Speaker 3 (21:41):
Pronouns I identify as a pickup, a pickup, n an suv.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
At the same time, Listen.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
A jeep wrangler is not a pickup truck, and jeep
wranglers are classic and jeep wranglers never go out. You
know what, you two you'll never understand, you know why,
because it's a jeep thing.

Speaker 1 (22:01):
The next thing on this list is Chevy Balibu.

Speaker 4 (22:04):
Ooh, my mom drove a Chevy Malady.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
The only people buying Chevy Malibu's are rental car companies.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
I gotta look back.

Speaker 1 (22:10):
Isn't that weird? That is true when you rent a car,
you're like, what was the car you're rented? I think
it was a Malibu.

Speaker 3 (22:15):
Well, were a lot of cars like that in the eighties,
like the christ of New York. Nobody really bought them.
They were just rent a car, right.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
You know.

Speaker 1 (22:23):
BMW's Grand Coops is what is the coop? That's the
four door? No coops are small cars. Oh they're smaller. Yeah,
that I agree with that. I don't get those little
tiny cars the BMW's I don't get those tiny cars.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
The Chevy Malibu. It doesn't look too bad. Here's the
twenty twenty five brand. Oh no it's not.

Speaker 3 (22:42):
She's twenty twenty five though, twenty twenty four thousand bucks.
That's not bad.

Speaker 1 (22:48):
Tesla cyber truck. It overstated it's welcome on day one.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
No, it didn't.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
It's a weird looking truck.

Speaker 3 (22:54):
Well, okay, at first I thought they all looked like
a truck, like remember the movie Tron.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
Yes, it looked like something. It looked like something.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
It looks like a space age movie made in the eighties.
And they said the year is twenty twenty five and
all the vehicles are real stupid looking.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
Yeah, but now I kind of like them.

Speaker 4 (23:11):
The only thing that would make a cyber truck cool
is if you were able to like turn it into
flight mode and you can, you know, just fly it,
get some wings to grow out of it and start flying.

Speaker 6 (23:20):
The only thing that we're going to make the receptables
if you could have a flight mode everybody's Today. I
was nursing my baby Daisy, and I came up with this,
what if just perhaps suspend reality, if you will per
se that a cyber truck could take flight?

Speaker 4 (23:39):
She didn't the idea.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Actually, And by the way, murp is a it's a
it's a ride to pass. Should we trade what I had?
An old teacher, coach Ellen Brown, who used to have
had it. He had a stick. It used to beat
us with it. We weren't paying attention, and that means
it hurt worse because you weren't expecting it, of course,
but at some point it became a ride of passage.
It was like you didn't get hit by ellen Brand's
stick And they're like no, and I'm like, I feel

(24:02):
sorry for you, dude. The Nissan Ultima.

Speaker 4 (24:07):
And yeah, whatever the handa version is, I can't think
of that.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
It's cords.

Speaker 4 (24:12):
Those are like the same thing.

Speaker 2 (24:13):
Is Altima is a a L T.

Speaker 1 (24:15):
I M a Ultima?

Speaker 2 (24:17):
Yeah, okay, that doesn't look bad, a little midsize car.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
The two seas are boring cars that have stayed their time.
Suit on this one is just not even a maker.
It's just Sedan's which I think when I was growing up.
When I was growing up, the Corvette Stingray was was
my dream car. Mine was the UH And then it
moved to I wanted a four door UH driving Sedan

(24:46):
from Mercedes, navy blue with tan interior. And I don't
even know if they make those anymore, like the big ones,
the big four door Sedan touring driving Mercedes.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
What was your dream car?

Speaker 1 (24:59):
That was it?

Speaker 5 (24:59):
Well?

Speaker 2 (25:00):
Now out the yeah, what's your what's your dream card?

Speaker 3 (25:03):
Now?

Speaker 1 (25:03):
Yeah, to tell you the truth, it's an F one fifty,
like a fully loaded f one fifty, They're like eighty grand.

Speaker 4 (25:08):
That all right?

Speaker 2 (25:09):
Just for a minute, so spend reality. Imagine it could
take flight and it's not legit. You imagine that.

Speaker 4 (25:18):
You know what, John, I'm gonna get my own flying car.

Speaker 3 (25:23):
I Well, you know what, that's a good point, man.
What year was the Jetsons set in? Because I've been
waiting on, hang on?

Speaker 1 (25:31):
Do they still make the Miadas, the Mazda Miatas, the
ones that look like THEI It looks like a tic tack.

Speaker 4 (25:37):
Yeah, the smart car type thing. They make smart cars anymore?
What you know, the little smart cars. Oh yeah, Anybody's like,
oh yeah, almost. Okay, Well, okay, I was wrong. We
still got some time.

Speaker 3 (25:52):
Uh the Jetsons actually lived in twenty sixty two, so
we still got a little bit of time for flying cars.

Speaker 2 (25:58):
But well, the thing about this.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
Though, they still make the Maza Miata and they and
Mercedes still does make the Mercedes Benz S class. That's
if I could get f one fifty fully loaded, or
that Mercedes four door Navy with tan interior.

Speaker 3 (26:15):
Let me chase a squirrel. Okay, I said the Jetsons.
I was promised flying cars. The Jetsons took place in
the year twenty sixty two. You know, that's thirty seven
years from now. I bet you we have flying cars
in thirty seven years. But you'll only talk about how
art life imitates art. You know, look Star Trek with

(26:39):
the little flip phones and stuff.

Speaker 1 (26:41):
Well, I will tell you this if you not the
Tesla's because they don't make any noise, which is dangerous,
I think. But the other electric cars, like from Ford
and Chevy, they make that humming sound and it sounds
like the cars when we were in the eighties and
we saw future movies, and that's what the cars sounded like.
It's that hm is that hum When you listen to it,

(27:02):
it's it's weird. That's another one. The Mitsubishi Outlander Sport
starts at twenty five to five. That's a pretty good,
pretty good deal deal. I used to have a Mitsubishi Eclipse.

Speaker 4 (27:16):
I got a joke, but I can't tell it.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
Okay, all right, don't do it.

Speaker 2 (27:19):
Oh, I wish I could tell this.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
You're growing up, you're maturing.

Speaker 2 (27:23):
It's a definite FCC valuation. But it rhymes with miss
Abishi and it's hilarious.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Tell me in the break, I can't clean it up.

Speaker 2 (27:31):
There's no way I can.

Speaker 1 (27:32):
Okay, Okay, Well, if you want to clean up your business,
it's Clime Brothers. They are They have these commercial doors
and whether you need a one hundred of them or one,
they got you covered. It's Climb Brothers locksmith and commercial doors.
They also do those keyless access and the closed circuit
tech where it's all the cameras in its closed circuit
so you can monitor everything going on. Look, they've been
around since nineteen fourteen. They know what they're doing. They

(27:55):
custom make these doors for you, commercial doors, and they
have somebody that can build the fire doors and okay
it get the contractor, okay, because I think there's two
people that can do that for you. In Louisville. Clinlock
dot com free estimates, twenty four hour service.

Speaker 3 (28:10):
Tony's Break in Alignment was there yesterday. Much more than
just breaks in alignment. They do just about anything that
just about any type of vehicle. I had some prevented maintenance.
It's all change air filter and a couple.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
Other things done. I was in and out in a jiffy.

Speaker 3 (28:23):
You're gonna love Tony's Break and Alignment. Family owned and
operated and that's important because they just care more. They
care more about their customer, name of their customers, the
name on the building, and the service they provide. You're
gonna know that because they back up every single job.
Do you hear me, every single job with a three year,

(28:43):
thirty six thousand mile warranty. That's notheard of, folks. Put
your mind at rest. Go with Louisville's best. It's about
dear friends at Tony's break in Alignment's stick around eleven
o'clock hour right above us, right now on news radio
eight forty WHS
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