Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Oh yeah. There are two types of people.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Those who lick shoes and those who do not lick you.
Speaker 3 (00:09):
That, but there are Skyline Chili people in there are
not skylight Like there's a line drawn in the sand.
And you either are a Skyline Chili person or not.
And I'm trying to find out right now if Ram
Paul which side of the fence is.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
Ran paul in.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
And I don't need to know politician hemming and Holland
and dancing around the damn question.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
Are you a Skyline Chili guy or not?
Speaker 4 (00:39):
Well, this is easy. I'm a Kelly Paul chili kind
of guy.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
She makes the best. What is that?
Speaker 3 (00:46):
I'm sorry I didn't know if that was a branded
chili answer, but thank thank you for not answering the questions.
Speaker 4 (00:54):
And beef and also sausage. It's a good chili and
it's really healthy. On the on the meat asked, not
just a bunch of runny chili with no meat. This
is meat with a little bit of sauce. I mean,
it's this is something that real men would eat.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
See, this is it's like being on face the press
or press no press the meat. Yeah, let's get to
it though, since you.
Speaker 1 (01:18):
Really diverted the question though it was he was very
very yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:21):
He did.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
He didn't say yes or no on skyline.
Speaker 4 (01:25):
He said yes, Kelly, I said no on Scott.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
All right, hold it all right, Senator ran Paul. Look,
lots going on, lots to get to One of the
things I think is interesting is an audit of the
Fort Knox gold. Now, you know you always hear I've
always heard that there wasn't much gold in Fort Knox.
It was just a decoy. Is there going to be
an audit on Fort Knox? And what do you think
(01:52):
if if there is one, the results.
Speaker 4 (01:54):
Will be Well, you've heard my story about trying to
go down there. I asked for years and years, and
then finally when Trump was elected, Manuchin finally answered my letters,
and to go down there, you need the permission of
the Secretary of Treasury. I think he's even got to
go with you supposedly. Wow. So he said, he said, yes,
I can go down there. We scheduled it. This took
(02:15):
me years. I scheduled it eight months in advance. We
had a time in August when we were supposed to
be in Kentucky.
Speaker 5 (02:22):
I have it.
Speaker 4 (02:22):
Scheduled and two weeks before that, he says, well, you know,
my wife and I we want to go see the
eclipse in western Kentucky, and that's on a different day.
We're changing the day that we're going down and he
changed it to a date that I had a long
standing trip out of the country and I couldn't go.
So he and McConnell went down there and they showed
him some gold painted I mean, they showed them the
(02:43):
gold bars and said, but nobody really did an audit.
So I've sent a letter to President Trump saying, you know,
do a random essay test on just a I think
the gold probably is there.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
If I had to bet it's all.
Speaker 4 (02:55):
Yeah, we should count the bars and do a random
essay assay. There's a way to, you know, put a
drop or two on the gold to tell if it's
gold or not. I'm certain a chemist could figure this out.
You don't have to test all the gold bars, just
to a random sampling of each room and count all
the bars and give us the inventory. I think there
hasn't really been a good counting of it since the seventies,
(03:19):
and I'm not sure if it was an assay, but
I think in nineteen seventy four, there was some kind
of reckoninging of how much gold was in there.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
Why, well, why is it important? And we were not
on the gold standard anymore. Why do we still have
a bunch of bars of gold in Fort Knox.
Speaker 4 (03:32):
Well, you know, there's not an explicit tide to gold,
but there is still some implicit in the sense that
money has value because you think it has value, and
you think it has value historically because once upon a
time it did have a link to something of real value,
like gold. And so the reason they don't sell the gold,
and the reason they don't just unload the gold. You know,
IMF holds gold, World Bank holds gold, the Federal Reserve
(03:53):
holds gold. It's because they actually secretly know the worth.
The money is worth nothing if it's just paper, and
so they keep it for the psychological benefit to the
market and the psychological benefit to Americas. And so I
think that there is an implicit value to the gold.
I also think that there are some of us who
think we should be constrained by the amount of gold.
(04:16):
Even if you linked it at ten thousand dollars an
ounce is probably what you'd have to do because there's
so many dollars out there now that it would limit
how much money is being printed and limit the amount
of inflation. But to do that you'd have to run
a balanced budget. And you saw the House yesterday pass
a budget that's going to increase the debt by four trillion.
So it increases the debt, sealing by four trillion this
(04:37):
year will add two trillion in debt. Not we Congress,
because I'm not voting for any of this craziness. But
realize that we have a Republican majority. We hear every
day about Doze, We hear about Elon Musk and all
this great stuff happening, and all this waste being cold,
and so why do you see Congress then in the
midst of this voting to increase the debt by four trillion?
Speaker 2 (04:57):
Something's not right?
Speaker 1 (04:58):
Right, Amen, long.
Speaker 5 (05:00):
As you brought up Doje, I agree with all the
cuts that are happening, but not to get too technical,
but they seem a little seat of the pansy, a
little unorganized, if you know what I'm saying. I'm for it,
but it's like, what are you doing Elon from day
to day?
Speaker 6 (05:12):
I'm not sure.
Speaker 4 (05:14):
Well, you could use big words like sea to the
pantsy or you could say that. You could also say
you could also say they're ephemeral in the sense that
they're maybe floating in the ether but not yet really
concrete or real, and they are somewhat haphazard. The way
to make them real and for the public to believe
that this money's actually been cut, is to send the
(05:35):
money back to Congress and we vote on something called
a recision package. It's a privileged vote, which means nobody
can stop it. It's a simple majority vote, meaning only Republicans.
Speaker 2 (05:45):
Need to show up and vote to cut the spending.
Speaker 4 (05:48):
But if they sent us five hundred billion dollars back
when we voted to cut it, then you can believe
it it's really happened. If they tell you they've cut
some contracts and this, and that it's all sort of
tied up in court, we don't know where the money is,
what they're doing with the money now. People are saying,
give it.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
Back to the people.
Speaker 4 (06:04):
Well, if you're two trillion dollars short paying for what
you are giving the people, my guess is you shouldn't
give it back to people until you've paid off the
two trillion dollars. That's a non starter kind of makes
no sense to me to do that, but no, there
are some real questions and to make that spending real
and concrete and believable, it needs to come back to Congress,
and Congress needs to do its duty and vote to
(06:26):
cut that spending.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
From what I understand, Cenator is that the bird flu
is dangerous to birds, But in reality, I think there's
been less than a dozen Americans diagnosed with bird flu.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
You can confirm that or not. I don't know if
you know that or not. But humans, it's a very
small percentage of chance that we get sick. Is that correct?
Speaker 3 (06:46):
And then b how long will this drive the price
of eggs up and in the price of chicken? Where
we at with the bird flu? I don't know what
deafcom three we're on with the bird flu.
Speaker 4 (06:58):
Well, the bird flu, like other animalimal flus, is mostly
contagious among animals, so it's adapted to try to infect animals,
not adapted for humans. So it's what they call, how
to use another big word, clunky, and it's not very
good at infecting humans.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
It can.
Speaker 4 (07:16):
When it does, it's pretty deadly. Fortunately, because it's adapted
for birds, it doesn't go human to human Now there
is a fear that it could accidentally mutate or overtime
mutate such that it could be transmitted among humans. And
this gets you back to the gain of function research.
Back in twenty ten, some researchers in the Netherlands said, hey, guys,
(07:37):
wouldn't it be cool to do gain function research and
take the avian flu, the bird flu, and mutate it
to make it pass through the air between mammals.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
And they did it.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
They did it. They did it. They did it on purpose,
and it scared the crap out of most normal people.
But Fauci said, now, this is the greatest thing since
life bread. We should keep doing it. And that debate
started in twenty ten, years before you had COVID, you
had a debate about the avian flu. Now, I did
see something interesting the other day. I'm not against vaccinating
(08:07):
the birds if it comes to that, but this, this
person the other day mentioned what about taking when you
have a million birds with a bird flu, the ones
that survive it, why don't we breed them. Why don't
we see if we can select for birds that actually
have a natural resistance, even things like AIDS. It doesn't
really work for humans. But there are a few humans
(08:28):
that are immune to AIDS and don't get AIDS for
some reason. But with so many millions of birds, there
are willing to be some birds that naturally have immunity.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
They have an ability to fight this.
Speaker 4 (08:37):
Off or to get it and reject the bird flu.
I think I think that aught. I'm not against pursuing
a vaccine for the birds, but I think we should
also be pursuing an immune model where we have birds
that are resistant to it. Because yeah, you're right, it's
gone the price of eggs have gone crazy, but you know,
it's just incredibly cost costly to kill all those birds.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
I wish that they would just have common sense and
have little bird mask put them on it. It would
solve everything. But Senator ran Paul one last question. There's
a lot of money being uncovered that's gone to frivolous
it's just blowing the taxpayers hard earned money for nothing.
(09:21):
And I'm suspicious, as a lot of Americans are, that
there's kickbacks on this is it too would be optimistic
to think we'll get any kind of prosecution under you know,
for example, the Social Security checks all the people that
are one hundred and fifty three hundred years old, those
were cashed by somebody. Is it naive of me to
(09:44):
think that there might be prosecutions for those involved.
Speaker 4 (09:48):
I think that when someone gets one hundred and thirty
years old, we should investigate. Don't you think at least
by one hundred and thirty we should. You know, it
should raise a little bit of suspicion, you know, when
you get to one hundred and thirty, if you're still
cashing checks, you know.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
I think that there are some examples of this, and some.
Speaker 4 (10:05):
Of that I think was computer computer glitz, that there
really aren't as many as they thought there were, but
there are going to be some. I introduced legislation during COVID.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
Quit paying dead people these PPP checks.
Speaker 4 (10:17):
You know, they set up this kocamany thing to just
print checks and print money and send it to everybody
that wasn't working. A lot of those people were dead.
I think it was one thousand dead people got over
a billion dollars, and I wanted to clawg back as well.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
You should.
Speaker 4 (10:32):
You should prosecute people. If people are cashing their dead
parents checks or grandparents checks, they ought to go to jail.
They ought to be made to repay this, so yeah,
I'm all for that, and uh, you know, but it's
like everything else, the left is squawking. But you said, well,
you know you should ask them the question, well, you
think dead people should receive checks? No, they're squawking.
Speaker 2 (10:52):
We we hate Elon.
Speaker 4 (10:54):
We might look at our data. And what I tell
them is, look Elon subject to the same rules as
everybody else. If he's releasing somebody's tax returns, he goes
to jail, kind of like the leftist that released Trump's
tax turn tax return. They did find that person. That
person's in jail and that they should rightly be so.
(11:15):
But he's not immune to all the rules. And I
don't think anybody thinks Elon is looking up your sub
security number and trying to expose something about your subsecurity.
It's people using algorithms to try to figure figure out,
you know, huge abuses of the system. The child tax credit.
You know, you don't have to put a sub security
number down to get it. So some people claim six
(11:36):
kids and they may or may not have six kids,
so they may not or may not even be in
the country legally, but they're getting this tax credit. And
people say it's twenty five percent fraud rate. You know,
shouldn't we shouldn't we try to eliminate that marketing.
Speaker 5 (11:50):
One thing Senator that is not seen of the Pansy,
it seems, is President Trump's handling of Ukraine, trying to
get a peace deal done. Talking to Putin, We're hearing
about mineral rights and security guarantees. Are you optimistic where
this is heading? Do you support where it's heading? And
where are we going to end up?
Speaker 4 (12:07):
From the very beginning, one of the main causes of
the war was pressure from the West to put Ukraine
into NATO. So I'm very pleased that Trump is saying, look,
the end of the road is not putting Ukraine in NATO.
Ukraine's best hope really is to be a neutral nation
between the East and West, and if they would have
done that, there's a reasonable chance the war wouldn't have started.
(12:30):
Russia had a long standing base in Crimea, and Russia
wanted access to that warmwater port. There were a lot
of things that Ukraine could have dealt with better. In
the end, though Russia was the aggressor. Russia did invade Ukraine.
We can't deny that, but I think it takes a
leader with some good SPA takes a leader like Trump
(12:51):
that's willing to break some China, and I think he
is going to find peace. Now, the piece isn't going
to be what everybody wants or loves. I mean, the
piece is probably going to involve part of the Dawn
Bass that Russians occupy is probably going to remain that way.
It's gonna be probably a piece with troops in place.
But piece is better than another million people dying. And
(13:11):
maybe they could have pre afections in those areas and
see who the people actually want to represent them in
that area.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
He Senator Ram Paul working hard for Kentucky, working hard
for our nation, Senator Paul, good to hear from you
and me, going and look forward to the next time,
my friend.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
Yes, good luck.
Speaker 4 (13:27):
Thanks guys, keep flying by the seat of your pants.
I love it.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
That's the day, you know, all right?
Speaker 3 (13:38):
Uh yeah, hopefully the Ukraine's great question to wrap things up, Dave,
because it is the most thank you question, because it
is it's it's that people realize, like even my wife's industry,
a lot of the stuff that they had was made
in Ukraine, and but when it was like double fold
the COVID happened, and then the war broke out, so
(14:00):
she they just couldn't get anything out.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
So hopefully they can get an answer there. The bird
flu is again. They're going to blow it up out
of proportion. It's more of a bird thing. And then
of course you know what did you say, see the
seat of the pants.
Speaker 5 (14:14):
Yeah, they all the cuts and Elon with the chainsaw
seems kind of seated the pantsy and that pantsy that
kind of particularly organized but effective.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Ukraine's biggest exports wheat, corn, sunflower oil, and soybeans. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (14:28):
Well they have a lot of manufacturing over there. It's
a lot like China. So you send it there. They
put it together right, so it's cheaper to have it
put it together in U crane. But all that ended
when the war broke out and all these poor people
that have died. I mean, you saw the video everything.
It's so horrible, it's so awful what's happening over there
for very little territorial gains or lost. It's just going
back and forth ten feet this way, ten feet that way.
(14:50):
And these poor guys and girls that are in there
fighting getting their faces blown off for this stupid situation's.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
Gone on so long with us said hundreds and hundreds
of billions.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
It is crazy. It's crazy, and it has to end.
I tell you, a lot of people make.
Speaker 6 (15:06):
Money when there's a war going on, but there are.
Speaker 3 (15:08):
Let me tell you, I'm not joking there. There was
a lot of people that disappeared. Kids and women that disappeared, yes, okay,
into Russia. And you're never going to get those kids
and women back.
Speaker 1 (15:19):
It's sad.
Speaker 3 (15:20):
It makes my stomach sick to my stomach to think
about all that stuff and the video of all those
special needs folks.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
That they just left behind.
Speaker 3 (15:28):
The Ukrainians are not off the hook on some of
this stuff. I mean they left those special needs kids
and adults, adults with special needs behind for the Russians
to deal with.
Speaker 5 (15:38):
Ukraine was not a shining beacon of democracy when I started.
It was very mafia cor very mafia driven oil right stuff.
I mean it's all some some some dicey, dicey stuff.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
But.
Speaker 2 (15:51):
Didn't make it, were supposed to do.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
Not a chance that it was used. It's just like
anywhere else.
Speaker 3 (15:55):
I mean, if you just send a hundred billion dollars
and I know it came in the form of bullets,
and and whatever, but it also came in the form
of cash. And then even if it was humanitarian aid,
you know, they take the aid and then sell it. Ye,
So you know that's the reality of it.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
We we do our best as we can as a country,
but then the other people have to do their you know,
their moral best, so sometimes it's not not as much.
And I got to tell you, so, somebody brought Penn Station.
Speaker 3 (16:25):
Sandwiches and Skyline chili, and then I walked down and
someone says, did you see the skyline?
Speaker 1 (16:30):
I'm like, what are you talking about?
Speaker 3 (16:31):
There is a bucketline. There's a bucket of chili, Skyline Chili.
I almost drank from it.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
Shannon. The dude was like, who wha Whoao stop stop,
And I was like, no one was gonna notice. Go
back to your studio.
Speaker 6 (16:45):
You know what that is.
Speaker 5 (16:45):
It's like Heaven's punch bowl. Yes, oh yeah, and there's
a guitar on the chair there too, So good.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
Angels. All right.
Speaker 3 (16:54):
A lot of people are hitting these potholes and then
wrecking and having accidents and fenders.
Speaker 2 (17:01):
What should I do, Dave?
Speaker 1 (17:02):
If I have a little thunder bender, who want to
get it feet?
Speaker 5 (17:05):
Yeah, Dave well, you could call your insurance company and
then they'll hook you up with the body shop and
it'll take eight days, and they may give you a
loaner car like a pt Cruiser that happened to me.
Speaker 6 (17:16):
Believe me, you don't want that. You don't want that.
Speaker 5 (17:19):
What you can do is go to thesimplebodyshop dot com.
They can fix your car same day, some jobs two
hours or less, no insurance company, no deductible, no rates
going up, and you get your car back. So go
to thesimplebodyshop dot com, click on choose a service, and
then all the services pop up with no mystery the prices.
(17:41):
If your trunk or your tail gets somebody backed into you,
or you backed into somebody else and it's all mangled up,
for four hundred and fifty dollars, they'll repair it and
paint it four point fifty, not fourteen fifty. How about
your door right next to that quarter panel right four
hundred dollars to paint and repair the front or rear door.
So you can get two things done for less than
one thousand dollars and same day, Or you can call
(18:05):
your insurance company Part one thousands of dollars in the
You can do that if you want, but I would
do the simplebody shop dot com. They're out in Jaytown,
Jeene Snyder Freeway and Taylorsville Road, and somewhere in the
state too is Pellow Windows.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
Dwight.
Speaker 6 (18:20):
Oh do it's not here anymore? Oki, okie.
Speaker 5 (18:23):
We'll talk about Pello windows in a little bit. They're
made right here in the big old Khy close it
up with some van Hey be back in a minute.
News Radio eight forty wa chance.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
I want to have a rock and roll party in
the streets. Yeah, this is me on guitar.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
Life was simple. All he's got to do is get
Jeff the guy with the mustache, to get down there
and buy.
Speaker 2 (18:51):
The Keke Scream with Johnny Hawkins has a new band out,
Do they really?
Speaker 4 (18:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (18:55):
And I can't wait to see him.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
Does he just play the guitar as he sing?
Speaker 2 (18:59):
Don't don't know? I do want to say, meet me
at the Golden Nugget this Saturday around six o'clock. Joe's
okay by you if you remember the best damn cage
of food in the world. It's coming back for one
night only and it's free.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
I might come by there later. I'm going to the
Policeman's Ball.
Speaker 2 (19:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (19:16):
St.
Speaker 1 (19:16):
Matthew's Policeman's Ball Saturday night.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
So it's free Joe's okay, by you, Gumbo. We're gonna
have Heightsman's Kingcake and we're gonna be drinking some Dakila,
some number one tequila.
Speaker 1 (19:28):
And I've never been to the Policeman's Ball in Saint Matthew,
so I hope it's fun. I did. I did them
see the Fireman's.
Speaker 2 (19:33):
The Your wife has always been a big fan of balls.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
So they say it's classy.
Speaker 2 (19:40):
They are classy.
Speaker 3 (19:41):
Look when you go to category, when you go to
a category of a dance versus a ball, you got
go ball.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
The ball is is more like princesses and some of them.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
But when they get when they grow and they get
the big balls, I don't like because they're just too
too many people, too many people.
Speaker 6 (19:58):
I found it interesting, that's kind of Harry.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
I did think the Saint Matthew's Fire Department retirement last year,
and it was funny because all the refirement were like
the thought of the feeling in the room was like, yeah,
we don't really just run through this as fast as
you can.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
Like, they don't. They're ready to retire, right, They're like,
I don't really need another dinner.
Speaker 3 (20:20):
Like they got a cool axe that was like gold
framed and it was like gold axe and it was
really cool. But all the feeling in the room was
like every one of them was like, dude, run through
my bio as fast as possible.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
We're ready to retire. I really don't need another damn dinner.
Speaker 2 (20:36):
Did you get to present them with the acts when
they came?
Speaker 6 (20:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (20:39):
Sure, yeah, Then did you get to do this before
I talk about your history? Let me ask you a question.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
You hand it to them because I'm not lame.
Speaker 3 (20:50):
So but I didn't in that interesting know that all
of them were like, this wasn't their big retirement, the
big moment for dad and all this their mom and
they were all just like.
Speaker 6 (21:01):
Of all the balls you've seen in experience, what's your
favorite ball?
Speaker 2 (21:04):
Great question, man, that is a good question. That's a
really good question.
Speaker 6 (21:10):
There's a lot of the balls. Balls are kind of
the same.
Speaker 2 (21:13):
No, no, no, no, they're unique. It depends on you know,
doctor Whitney Jones is having his colon cancer.
Speaker 6 (21:20):
Ball, that's right, that's a different kind of ball that's
next Friday.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
What makes a dance a ball? Hmmm, the cost of
the ticket. I think that's something to do with it. Yeah,
if you say ball, it's fancy.
Speaker 6 (21:35):
Dances like after school in the gym. Ball is at
an expensive hotel with tuxes.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
It's fancy.
Speaker 3 (21:43):
Kylie Kelsey that is the wife of the offensive lineman
Jason Kelsey.
Speaker 6 (21:48):
Now we got to deal with more Kelsey.
Speaker 3 (21:49):
But she is.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
But I like her the most.
Speaker 3 (21:51):
I like Kelsey Grammar because she was She's the down
to earth I like Pat Kelsey. They don't spend money
like she's the gatekeeper of the money and they're like,
we're not ending money.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
She's gozer like she she is gozer over money.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
Like she was like, we're not I'm not taking my
small kids to because dad was playing in the Super
Bowl a couple of years ago, and she was like,
I'm not paying four thousand dollars for a two year old.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
We're not doing it.
Speaker 1 (22:14):
So the other day she came out on her podcast.
Speaker 6 (22:16):
And she goes, what do you think about that?
Speaker 1 (22:19):
It's so stupid, stupid, so stupid.
Speaker 6 (22:26):
He buried the lead.
Speaker 3 (22:28):
So there's a new trend with birthday parties. Apparently. She says,
I'm not doing this. If your kid has a birthday,
you're supposed to get the siblings now birthday present on
the other kid's birthday.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
That's stupid, she goes, that's what she says. Stupid.
Speaker 1 (22:49):
She goes, that's stupid.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
I'm not doing that.
Speaker 3 (22:52):
That's not It's supposed to be special day for the
kid that has the birthday. Of course, why am I
getting this the and the brothers don't get a present too?
Speaker 1 (23:02):
That makes no sense? What is what is wrong with parents?
Speaker 3 (23:07):
This started a couple of years ago when you had
to have a gift bag for everybody that came to.
Speaker 5 (23:11):
The party, and you had to invite everyone in your
class because it wouldn't be fair even though you're not
friends with some of those kids.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
And our kids, yeah, our kids school. You could not
It was a violation if you talked about birthday parties
at school. Yeah, at school.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
It's so weird.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
Steve to every party like no, because you couldn't talk
about it, Like if you brought it up, if somebody
had a birthday party, you got in trouble.
Speaker 5 (23:31):
My parents got to say, if you weren't such a jerk,
you'd have more friends and he'd be going to that party.
Speaker 2 (23:35):
Why I think they call you weird Steve, Weird Steve,
change your behavior.
Speaker 3 (23:41):
Weird Steve, fat Steve, weird Steve. That could be a
band named four Eyes Steve.
Speaker 2 (23:48):
Yeah, they still call children eyes.
Speaker 1 (23:51):
No because most of the kids.
Speaker 5 (23:53):
Most of the kids get to contact or were glasses
that are fake just because they like to look at
the glasses.
Speaker 2 (23:59):
Right. Delta Airlines reportingly giving thirty thousand dollars to every
passenger that was on board the Toronto flight a couple
of weeks ago that flipped upside down. The Delta team
is telling the passengers this is a gesture and it
has no strings attached to it. Awesome, It does not
affect the rights the passengers have it any way. After
the incident, twenty one passengers were rushed to the local hospital.
(24:23):
Twenty of those passengers were released almost immediately. Another fly.
Let's keep it on airplanes.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
Wait a minute, time out. Yeah, I think that's fair.
Speaker 2 (24:33):
Thirty grand I think that's fair.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
You lived, you had dounbuckle. You probably took a shot
to the forehead or.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
The knees because you landed on the glad we finally
paid attention when the lady explained how the buckle works.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
Well, guess what did you see the dam plane yesterday? Yes,
that was close. That was close.
Speaker 3 (24:51):
Oh my gosh, Like what is going on with these airports?
But up, My question is you're blowing past the story.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
Bloway.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
You're not a saucepan. You're got to be deep. You're deep, baby,
Am I deep dive into a Dutch oven?
Speaker 2 (25:06):
I'm a Dutch oven? Thank you?
Speaker 3 (25:08):
Okay, it is a gesture they say, look, no strings attached.
If you still want to get you know, sewers or whatever,
you can do that, but this is we just want
to give it to you. So you walk with probably
twenty grand of that. I think that's fair.
Speaker 6 (25:20):
One thing that was weird.
Speaker 5 (25:21):
They did a story about these people that were getting
off the plane and they're like, get off now, because
you never know if it's going to catch fire.
Speaker 1 (25:27):
Right.
Speaker 5 (25:27):
Sure, they're stopping to get their phones and their carry ons,
are trying to get their stuff.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
Because people are idiots. Touch geez, I don't care what's
in my overnight bag.
Speaker 5 (25:35):
People could die behind you because you had to have
your phone or your laptop.
Speaker 1 (25:39):
No, I'm sorry, get another laptop or if your work's like,
what happened to these documents? It was on the plane
that caught on fire. Sorry, I can't, but it's fair,
or do you, Sue?
Speaker 2 (25:49):
I do both. I take the thirty grand, and I
take that thirty grand to hire the best damn attorney
thirty grand.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
And I just don't cost anything until you get paid. Dummy.
Speaker 6 (25:57):
Accidents happen.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
In you lived. No, some of them charged. You're like
a really good you know, like a so you're Johnny Cochran.
Speaker 1 (26:08):
You're just you're a sue, Sue, Sue.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
Yes, this is studio. Let keep it on airplanes. There
was a bit of a drama in a recent flight
between Douseel Dwarf and Madrid.
Speaker 6 (26:24):
I like Dousel Dwarf, not as good as stud.
Speaker 2 (26:27):
The pilot of the Airbus A three twenty was bitten
mid flight by a tarantula. What it managed to uh
onto the plane? Tarantula? Yeah, yeah, man should make his
way onto the plane what's now believed a flight in
Morocco when it stopped earlier that week.
Speaker 1 (26:49):
We're on the road to Morocco.
Speaker 4 (26:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (26:53):
Did they not check his ticket.
Speaker 4 (26:56):
There?
Speaker 1 (26:57):
Tantula?
Speaker 2 (26:57):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (26:59):
No, I got someone service tarantula.
Speaker 6 (27:01):
I got a little Hawaiian shirt on I want to
be had like.
Speaker 2 (27:03):
A sunglass that had eight limbses on them.
Speaker 6 (27:06):
Probably you know what.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
I hope we're at the end of this uh service cockatoo.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
Meanwhile, passengers on the next flight were forced to wait
hours because they had to fumigate the entire plane. What
they had to fumigate the entire plane because they found
the tarantula on it. I bet it was one of them,
damn dee tarantulasm, don't you think?
Speaker 3 (27:33):
Or it came out of the basket of bananas that
was shipped from the Congo and no one saw the
deadly tarantula crawl out of the.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
Wooden crate and onto Peter Brady and and he crawled
up the cloud, up the leg of his pens, bit
him on.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
The I'm scared to death of spiders. That's common knowledge. Spiders, shark.
Speaker 6 (27:57):
I'm not a fan, but I don't mind spiders.
Speaker 2 (28:00):
I'm also a sucker for a Hey, I bet you
won't do this. I remember when Feeder's pet supply came in.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
I remember you were so brave they put a arm Dave.
This tarantula was the size of your cell phone and
it crawled. He stood there and it crawled up his
hands slowly, not this wasn't quick and.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
It was all like all the way up his arm.
I was like, Dwight, I can't believe you're doing that.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
And you know how, you know how my arms are
super hairy.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
Yeah, it was confused. I started trying to make love
to your arm.
Speaker 2 (28:28):
Did I thought it was another tranchel And that started
to make sweet sweet Tarantela love to it.
Speaker 1 (28:32):
He's got she said, Robin Williams. Hairy arms?
Speaker 2 (28:36):
What do I need a wax?
Speaker 4 (28:37):
These?
Speaker 3 (28:37):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (28:38):
Please do? I don't even know how Susan gets by
all that.
Speaker 6 (28:42):
It's like a look at this, let's start to get
by on the arm though.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
I mean, what are they doing?
Speaker 6 (28:46):
It's so hairy?
Speaker 2 (28:47):
Well, but sometimes when we're making sweet sweet love, Susan's
a generous lover.
Speaker 1 (28:52):
Well he gum in there.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
Yeah, yeah, this man, it's gross. Do I get him wax?
Is that what I would do?
Speaker 1 (28:59):
Shaven? Wa We need to get somebody to We need
to get somebody to wax it on the air for
you and I want to hear you scream.
Speaker 6 (29:05):
Isn't the old theory is once you shave it, that's
going to grow back.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
No, if that's false, that's false, is false news.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
Look at like right here and that it ends.
Speaker 1 (29:14):
You shave your chest right, yeah, yeah, you need time
to do the arms subsquatch the other day. Some of
your arms sasquatch the other day I did too.
Speaker 2 (29:23):
It sucks and no way you turn around, the hot
water hits it out.
Speaker 1 (29:28):
See the pain is an immediate it's it's like you
and you know it's like, oh no.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
I wonder if people ever turn this show on by
accident and go hey listeners. Walter Cronkite sa nipples. He
never cut his nipple. No, well he was he precision.
Speaker 3 (29:44):
He probably couldn't sell us house for one percent back
in that day either, And I can't imagine that when
he bearing nose piaches. You can buy if you sold
your house with Etlin and the Eland and It's one
percent commission rate. Half of all the one percent commission
deals in Louisville were done by Eatlin in Eedland last year.
What does that tell you? That tells you they do
it the best and better than anybody else. Edland and
(30:05):
Eland one percent commission rate five twenty eight hundred. If
you have a real estate agent call them and say sorry,
I'm switching. If especially if it's your cousin or something
and they're wanting to charge you whatever, don't haggle with
your real estate agent. It's simple Elan and Edland one
percent chief the equity in your home five nine twenty
eight hundred or go to Edland dot com. They have
(30:27):
a sliding scale and you just slide it to the
number of the price of the house and you'll find
out what you're gonna.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
Caep to lift.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
Oh.
Speaker 5 (30:34):
Yesterday, I'm at the traffic light and I looked to
my left and there was the new Baronos downtown.
Speaker 6 (30:40):
I'm like, that's nice, man.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
Oh the one on Third Tree.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
Yeah, the bars third in Market is beautiful as gorgeous.
If you haven't been there, go there today for lunch,
or by the way, go there before any concert at
the Young Center. Uh. I'm thinking about going to see
Moulin Rouge at the Center for the Arts and craffic
like this. Oh beautiful. And before I do that, I'm
(31:02):
gonna have dinner at Barono's Pizza. It's a perfect place
when you're dining to go to any event downtown. Plus
it's where the witings kick off every single weekend. Mama
Baronos is my choice, but they all have. They also
have sandwiches like Stromboli's, they have pastas, they have salads.
You go to the love the extensive menu at Baronol's
(31:24):
Pizza Dining and carry out the delivery. Yeah, it's that
good Barono's Pizza. Stick around back to wrap it up
in just a minute. News Radio eight forty wha.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
S damn ul game started at nine to twenty Ugh,
well the game before at Georgia Tech.
Speaker 5 (31:41):
Please separate the games college basketball, every stupid game.
Speaker 6 (31:45):
Now.
Speaker 3 (31:46):
I'm sitting there watching it and it's got five minutes
to go, and I'm like, you know, the last five
minutes is foul free throws.
Speaker 1 (31:53):
Timeout, foul free throws, ten out. I was like, we're
never gonna get to it.
Speaker 3 (31:58):
I can't stay up for the tip to be at
nine twenty five at least split screen it come on, not.
Speaker 2 (32:03):
What time do you like to tip? Earlier the better?
Speaker 1 (32:08):
Yeah, earlier, it's good.
Speaker 3 (32:10):
Oh okay, So no evacuation today for the gas stinky
gas smell.
Speaker 1 (32:18):
Yesterday, LG and E took care of the business because
they were.
Speaker 6 (32:22):
So what and we support the LG and e community.
Speaker 2 (32:25):
Very always have supported the LGN.
Speaker 6 (32:29):
I don't support the last bill we just got.
Speaker 3 (32:31):
But other than that, gosh, oh my gosh, I know
mine was so in the last three months really has
been crazy. Tests showed that l e L levels that's
lower explosive explosion limit.
Speaker 2 (32:43):
Who you telling?
Speaker 1 (32:44):
Oh you knew that already.
Speaker 5 (32:45):
I knew that.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
The l e ls were low yesterday, Tony, it was,
but they.
Speaker 3 (32:51):
Were above ten percent. Lower explosive limit was above ten
percent and it was very stinky.
Speaker 2 (32:59):
Yeah, got you the best way to to fault, that's
with you a couple of ttmys and if you ownpgs'll
bring that down to a more manageable level.
Speaker 1 (33:10):
Well, thank you. I'm so glad that we have a
gas leak expert like you on the show.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
It will help mitigate the situation.
Speaker 1 (33:17):
If you will, Thank you Rand Paul for coming on
today and clearing up some of the issues, including the
bird flu.
Speaker 2 (33:24):
Does it make me sound smarter when I say if
you will, I think so join a clan buck later,
if you will.
Speaker 5 (33:34):
If you have an electrical issue called Allen Electrical.
Speaker 3 (33:37):
Six three six help, is the phone number not gas
Electric even though the gas line that runs to the
GENERAK generator that runs your entire house. That price hasn't
really changed in the last couple of years. So when
you call and go, well, how much is that GENERAC
generator that will power my entire house? They'll tell you
the number and you go, oh, I could do that,
and they'll finance it, by the way, so you can
(33:59):
help it.
Speaker 2 (33:59):
Find out.
Speaker 3 (34:00):
It's in just a price per month until it's paid off.
The gas line runs to it to the second your
house goes down with electricity, that thing powers up automatically.
You can't even hear it. It's on the side of
your house and it just powers the entire house.
Speaker 1 (34:12):
You'll be the only.
Speaker 3 (34:13):
House on the block with electric, So you gotta love it.
Call out an electric to get that thing serviced and installed.
Six 't three six Help is to phone number. The
boys aren't coming up next. If you will, I love
you ma.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
If you