Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's Tuesday, so just truck it through this this week
and just updates on just about everything we talked about yesterday,
with the exception of what the heck happened up in Providence.
Now we just got like a super grainy photo, no
real description, trying to figure out who killed those two students.
(00:22):
Gazillion cameras, I thought on most college campuses these days,
let alone Providence, Rhode Island, which has a huge, huge
amount of cameras all over the place. Nothing. Okay, well,
that's one side of it. Over on the other side,
we've got I don't know that it's surprising information, but
(00:46):
we have more information on down there in Bondi Beach.
I will say this, and I think it's probably due
to the fact that they literally had ISIS flags in
their car. The Australian government is acknowledging, they are acknowledging
that the gunmen were quote motivated by ISIS. See this
(01:07):
is this is that middle that middle thing. And we've
seen it play out in the US. We've seen it
in attacks they're in like Paris and Nice. I think
they did this in Nice too, where they're like, well,
they're not officially connected, they're just motivated by it, So
you know that's that's that's different, is it though? And
(01:35):
what constitutes what constitutes being directed by them? If inherently
what what people are being told and they're being told
on the regular through this Islamist view of you know,
the world where the jihad is ongoing, you got to
you gotta smite your enemy, and whatever you can do
(01:56):
to advance the cause, you will be rewarded should you
martyr yourself. So if that's if that's the standing order,
it's connected, right, because it's the totality of the thing.
Even if somebody didn't get a text message saying all right,
today's go time. The expectation is that real believers and
(02:19):
those who really would who would martyr themselves, don't necessarily
need to be coordinated the need to go out and
find things to do, find things to do. Like let
me give you an example. Let's say let's say that
you were This is going to irritate some people, but
we're going to stick with the religious side of this.
(02:41):
What if you, as part of your your your Christian
your Christian worldview, okay, what if you feel that you
have an obligation to help those less fortunate than you
if you can when you can, and that God will
present the opportunities where you can do this. And yes,
inherently this is part of your Christian worldview, but also
(03:05):
if you want to look at it purely from a
forward planning standpoint, availing yourself believing in Jesus and the
Resurrection and all the tenets of traditional Christian faith as
well as trying to be a good person sets you
up for you know, the everlasting presence of God. Do
(03:28):
you need the Pope to tell you it's go time
to go? Do the thing you think is going to
help get you in there, which in this case is
maybe you took it upon yourself to go and buy
a bunch of food for people that you know are
less fortunate could really use it because you have room
in your budget for it. And this is what your
faith instructs you to do. Now, I'm not implying the
(03:50):
one is a net positive and one is a net
negative and that somehow that they are the same, But
I just want you to understand that why you didn't
You didn't get that trigger. You got that message your
whole life. So this whole game of playing like wow,
they're inspired by but it's you know, there's nobody. There's
nobody who's in charge. Is kind of the same thing
that they're doing with Antifa. Am I wrong here? This
(04:16):
is I'm sorry, this is as I was just sitting
there thinking about it while I was reading these details,
I'm like, yeah, this really has kind of those vibes,
really has those vibes. There's there's no leader, there's They're
just doing their things, which is why we can get
this absurd story. Not absurd in what it sounds like
they wish to uh carry out, but this this thwarted
(04:38):
attack New Year's Eve attack by these black block Antifa
style people. It's just it's just crazy when you when
you start going down and by the way, when they're
explaining like the their thing to you, like what they
(04:59):
were planning on doing, Yeah, here we here we go.
And by the way, they all live. They're all all
of them, with the exception of one. They don't think
they've identified their upbringing. These are all rich LA kids
from the valley. I want to repeat that these are
all like well, I mean maybe they're not rich rich
in the La sense, so the one of them seems
(05:19):
to be, but they're all living comfortably. Oh yeah, look
uh the one, what are the kind of the the
oldest of the four who were arrested, she's from She
lives in Arcadia, which you might have learned a little
about Arcadia when they were having the fires, because it
did get a piece of it. You can't walk into
(05:41):
a home for less than two mil in Arcadia. Let's
see here. Just yeah, so you have these four individuals
who are arrested, and of course they got a little
cute names and passwords and and it's all like he
hold on, what are they call themselves? Just you get
(06:01):
a sense of the stupid before I get into all
of it. The Order of the Black Lotus, it's it's just, dude,
it's cosplay, but for real, for real? Do you know
what I'm saying? Like, like they finally they took the
cosplay to a level where they're like, we gotta do
this thing. Or the Order of the Black Lotus. You
know what you sound like? You sound like my my
(06:23):
buddy's six year old twin boys who are just riddled
with ad D explaining the Ninja of their plane. They
love playing ninja like kind of stuff and if they
ask them to, oh well, I'm from the Order of
the Black Lotus and he is my sworn enemy from
the Turtle Island Liberation Front. Like that's what you see.
You sound like six year old's playing pretend. The problem
(06:47):
is we're past to pretend. And four suspects are now
under arrest after authorities say that they were planning a
series of bombings on New Year's even the Los Angeles
area to fight back against all the things they hate.
As the Order of the Black Lotus is Liam Neeson
in charge? Who's running things over there? I'm very, very
(07:07):
interested in fact, why don't we do this. We'll go
to break, we'll come back, We'll learn about the Order
of the Black I'm gonna have to get the pan
flute out. It's happening. It's happening. Next hang on, I
can't find the pan flute. And I looked on Ross's
button bar because he kind of key. He cleaned his
(07:28):
up because obviously he's got jade filling in so I
wanted there. So I don't know what he's got it
labeled in the system. And if I'm going to talk
about these absolute cause plane but still very dangerous, spoiled,
eat the rich, lose your la kids, and their order
(07:48):
of the Black Lotus shenanigans. I may I just feel
like I gotta have the pan flute. I mean, I
do have some other stuff, you know, just.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
Like we have this.
Speaker 1 (07:59):
Well, hold on, need the button bar? Here we go,
we have this. Nope, all right, we'll give Jade a
second to turn that on there? All right? So nope,
well is going on with the button bar today?
Speaker 2 (08:16):
Jay?
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Did I break my button bar? Already? It must have
broke my button bar? Go ahead, okay, let's try it now.
There we go. So we got that athough, But then
sometimes you need to make more of a point than
just a gong. So right, order of the Black Lotus.
(08:37):
And then this is just his Chinese sting. I don't
know what this is. Same thing. Okay, all right, that'll
have to do for our journey into this stupidity. Here
we go. Despite the extremist anti capitalist ideology, the suspects
(08:58):
who have been arrested for allegedly plotting a bombing campaign
in and around La on New Year's Eve all appear
to hail from upscale areas. That's the angle the New
York Post has gone on this. And then they go
through and yeah, they're from some pretty nice place. I
will say this, you know, nine hundred thousand on this
(09:19):
one house. They're in Ventura, so that's a little better.
But LA's so expensive. That being said, they weren't starving
through nice places. Here pictures of them. Let's see. You
have four arrested. Thirty year old Audrey Carroll, thirty two
year old Zachary Page, twenty four year old Dante Gaffield,
(09:39):
and forty one year old what is her name, Tina Lao?
I don't know. Were you trying to cougar Tina? What's
going on there? Huh? I commit a little civil terrorism,
but domestic terrorism. But also get me a cub I
see you anyway to what they what they alleged, and
(10:02):
again I'm gonna explain all this, all the things they
think they are, and I just the similarities to your toddlers,
explaining to you the type of pretend that they're playing
cannot be overlooked. Okay, this is this is me and
my buddies in like kindergarten at recess, like all right,
I'm the good ninja, you're the bad ninja. Or we
(10:22):
used to play cowboys and Indians. I know, I know
that'll come into play here as well the four who
are self described members of the Order of the Black Lotus,
the splinter group from the American hating extremist Turtle Island
Liberation Front. All right, if you don't know about these cats,
(10:43):
these are these are like we're getting into I don't
know how I described this is like, this is high
end niche domestic terrorism. Right, these are this is this
is not your every day So if you go with
the Y'll tell you the thing that irritates me in
the most about the Turtle Island Liberation Front is so
(11:06):
the organization gets its name from the belief that, somehow,
some way, only Native American Native North American tribes had
a concept of deifying in some way, shape or form turtles. Okay,
because one of the one of this, and this is true,
(11:27):
by the way, one of the creation myths, or at
least the world myth that permeates certain portions of Native
American tribes is the concept that the North American continent,
if you will, or at least the continent or within
the Americans where they lived, somehow exists on the back
of a giant turtle. Right, Which is interesting because if
(11:49):
there are societally and civilizationally, many many other groups and
backgrounds of people all over the world who have some
segment of either a creation myth or you know, one
of the explainer myths for how did we get here?
What's going on? That actually involved turtles that have nothing
(12:09):
to do with any of the tribes that were part
of North America, the land Bridge, any of the rest.
And I mean clearly there's within Chinese culture, there's lots
of this stuff, Japanese culture, there's lots of this from
pretty much anywhere. You had islands, you had this within
the Hindu religion. One of the gods portrayed as an elephant.
(12:30):
The name escapes me is standing on four turtles. Okay,
tribes within Africa have turtle based things, and yes, even
within culture you know, European culture, and from there, the
Irish have this, the British have this. Christopher Columbus, in fact,
was very fond of naming islands, you know, Tortugas or
(12:53):
East of Tortugas, and other variations thereof. And I know
I'm mispronouncing it, but you have to understand that the
idea that somebody who's searching for an explanation or searching
to name something visually, right, the visual if you stop
and think, most things are named front visually, lakes, creeks,
(13:17):
geographical features right where we then try to we try
to label them something else so that we can catalog
it with the things that we do understand. The old
Man of the Mountain, right, I know that fell down
up there in New Hampshire, but that's a good example,
and there's tons of this. And so the idea that
societies saw mounds coming out of the water that you know,
(13:42):
had that shape to them and decided to name them
after turtles. Apparently they were unaware that like everybody with
eyes was doing that and knowledge what a turtle was,
which is most of the world, by the way, since
you're dealing with a creature that is also ocean worthy.
So anyway, you read into all that all you want.
(14:06):
So these these spoiled rich kids hate capitalism. They are
pro Palestine, all right, so they're not a fan of
the Jews, and according to FBI, gathered together to purchase
thirteen PVC pipes, two five pound bags of potassium nitrate,
and there's various other items to go ahead and make
(14:29):
themselves some pipe bombs. There you go, yeah, and Also recently,
the group whose chats apparently are part of this indictment
had also mused about after they got done with this
and trying to sew I guess this is the anti
capitalism part. I wonder if there wouldn't have been some
Jewish sites that were bombed as well. Considering that's another
(14:53):
plank of this group, let alone this offshoot, they decided
that they were going to use this as a bit
of a test run too. They could start running a
a terror plot against Ice, because you know, that's the
trendy thing now. The Radical Umbrella group linked to the
(15:13):
Order of the Black Lotus. Oh yeah, it is better
when I say it with that. Do we like that
one or this one? Right here? One's got a little
more ting on the front. It's a technical music term.
I think. I don't know. I'm not music musically inclined.
I like to listen to it, all right. This is
a slightly different version of it, but really the same
(15:35):
thing applies. And this is driverless ubers, weaymos lifts what
you know, whatever it whatever, it turns out to be okay,
And I'm sorry I've given this some thinking. Yeah, I
know there's a lot of people are gonna be nervous
by the you know, the part where there's no puman
there and you're at the mercy of a machine. And
we have seen some incidents, although mostly with the weaimos.
(15:58):
They just get all dumb when they get on each
other and then it you know, creates traffic gridlock. But
it's like people are getting ejection seated out of them.
But there have been some other stuff, and yes, that
is a concern that's out there, but I'm gonna go
a little closer to home here. People are gonna do
stuff in there, know what I mean, right, And I
(16:25):
don't want to I don't want to be next. You
know what I'm saying. I don't wanna I don't want
to be Like all right, we finally finally kick that,
you know, public exhibition, tick that box on our bucket
list because we got all hammered at the bar and
there was nobody in there and one thing led to
it not I don't want to be in there next.
(16:49):
Plus there's just the you know, the traditional vomit comet stuff,
because it's like people are gonna self report if they
think they're getting away with that. That's not cheap. That's
a if you do that in an uber with a
human driver paying a whole lot of money, I don't
want to be next. San Francisco woman called a Waymo
taxi to take her to the hospital. She was going
(17:11):
into labor. I think you know where we're going. Next
Waymo report the car detected quote unusual activity. What is
all right?
Speaker 3 (17:19):
So?
Speaker 1 (17:19):
What is the what prompts it? Is it that she's
screaming because she's hitting contractions? And what? How's what happens
if you're just in a car with your your girl?
Can you stared at the bikini model and now she's
giving you the what in there? Does the car gonna
think she's going into? Wait? Wait? Will it? Will it
(17:40):
tranquilize her? Hold on? Let me do some research here.
I'm kidding, like I don't know, but I get so.
The way that I guess it works is if the
car detects unusual activity. Uh, some pervs sitting somewhere watching
camera feeds will then eyeball it from a human perspective,
and it was like figured out what was going on? Uh?
(18:02):
This sport team alerted nine to one to one, but
the woman gave birth on her own before EMS arrived. Yep,
right there in the way.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Moo.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
I don't want to be next. Sorry, I'm glad. I'm
glad that mom and the baby are doing okay. But
I don't wanna. I don't wanna. I don't need to
go from my hotel to the airport in that thing
sloshing around. No, thank you, I'm out. So there you go.
(18:31):
There's another thing that I predicted would come true. That
kind of came true, But you know the other stuff,
I'm predicting this will come much truer, and I'm sure
it has. I'm sure this is a problem already. They're
not gonna highlight it. There's just too many people who
would be way too comfortable. One am going home from
the bar. Maybe you just met this person, like I
(18:52):
just met this person and we're in love love, right,
and you can't keep your hands off each other because
you're a couple of rutting animals. And then you get
in there, you're like, all right, nobody's around, let's do this,
and then I'm next. I want zero part of next.
So I'm just taking a wait and see approach on
this stuff, all right. Eight eight eight nine three four
(19:14):
seven eight seven four. Well, I was not trying to
be too overly detailed, but I think it's really important
we understand what being next might be in some of
these instances. I mean clearly just giving birth there. I
feel like that one's probably not gonna slip under the guardrails.
But some of that other stuff, yeah, gross, No, I
(19:38):
don't want any I don't want to be I don't
want to be recreating there's something about Mary scene. Does
that make sense to people? I think it'll make sense
to people in my age bracket, probably on the fringes
around there, Like you don't there's certain scenes in movies,
especially that movie, you just don't want to recreate that one,
(19:59):
and the one with the little dog and the crotch thing.
You don't want that. That's probably bad. Although there is
a happy ending there, well you get the gist of it.
So just know that if you ever go to San
Francisco and you're getting a waimo, because they're not going
to get rid of the thing, right, they're not taking
that out of there, there's a possibility you get into
(20:21):
the baby weimo right there, like maybe if the seat
looks too new. I've never been in a weamo, so
I don't know what the aposio the upholstery looks like
in there, like if there's part of it that the
seat just looks way too new compared to the other seats.
We're hey, that's right. Sometimes on this show we brainstorm.
(20:43):
Don't worry, I don't lose the plot, but I just
from a from this story standpoint, you got to try
to peel the onion. You gotta you gotta think this
thing out. There's a chance if you get into a
Weaimo in San Francisco, somebody had a baby right there.
And while yes, I understand and that's great, have all
your baby, you don't want to be right where you
just got done having a baby. I don't care how
(21:04):
much of a baby fan you are. Plus just all
the people riding that thing home from the bar, somebody's
gonna write a book. Somebody's gonna get fired from Waimo.
They're gonna be all cheese, they're gonna be all bitter,
and they're gonna be like, hey, remember all those stories
we used to on Mondays talk to each other with
(21:25):
horrified faces, knowing that we ourselves would never get into WAMO,
knowing what we know. I'm gonna put that in a
book and it'll end up like Boordain with Kitchen Confidential. Man,
people want to read that. Then you'll know. Then you'll know,
all right, six forty one here on the KCO day
(21:46):
Radio program, Happy Breakfast. Everybody, hope that's going well. Coming
up on the show, Wait till you hear what China's
up to. I'm not Nothing even surprises me anymore. Nothing
even surprised. This one actually is you haven't explained to
you because what we've seen was some of the vacation
(22:07):
version of this will not be surprising. The thing that
is surprising, though, and we have to get into this,
is this woman who was found dead in a Dollar
Tree freezer, because I'll bet there's some people listening who
have some insider Dollar Tree knowledge from, you know, either
(22:29):
having worked there or just spent way too much time there.
Because I have questions and hopefully we can get those
questions answered coming up. Has anybody ever written in a
way moo? Did it have a funny smell to it?
I'm just wondering because one day I will be in
a situation. I haven't been to San Francisco since they
launched these things, because yeah, I like walking around looking
(22:52):
at poop. But like one day the urge will be
there and then I'll be with some group and they're like,
what don't we take one? Don't we take the murder?
I mean the weaymo. And I'd rather ride a Boston Dynamics,
you know, a fire dog with the oozies. But you know,
I may have had a few, and I'm like, all right,
let's get into it. I just want to know what
to expect. And how does one get caught in a
(23:14):
big walk and freezer at a dollar store. That's the
part that doesn't make sense. I'll give you the details
of the story coming up. Also, are we fans or
not fans or even understand the political motivation? I guess
understand the political motivation of Trump having a way in
(23:35):
on the Rob Reiner story. I don't know who that
helped yesterday, but maybe somebody can explain it to me
and call me a coward or whatever. That's fine. Six
forty three hang on here on the CaCO Day radio program.
All right, so two things, and I'll get to the
(23:57):
thing of the dollar tree here in just a moment.
But I want to get I want to get some
phones on the Trump tweet truth, whatever they want to
call it. Following the Rob Reiner story, one of the
things that I think I try to do a good
job of, and I would encourage you as well. When
you see something everyone wants to instant react, you should
(24:17):
also try to understand why they did it. Is it
doesn't necessarily mean it justifies it, right, you know, the
there's a lot of there's a lot of things you
try to understand of why people do really evil things
is not to justifyment, so that you can understand them,
all right, So especially with political strategy, because sometimes at
(24:40):
first blush you may not understand why, and then it
kind of comes together. At least what they were going for.
I can't fathom that here. So it's no secret that
Donald Trump and Rob Reiner were not friends. And the
Rob Reiner basically on the weekly would go off on
social media was a you know, big, big like, hey,
(25:03):
you want to see an example of TDS. They'd hold
up a Rob Reiner tweet. It's just insane. But you
have to understand too that Rob Reiner was very very
very involved and very effectively involved and being a mass
fundraiser and motivator for leftist politics. Right, So there's the
(25:23):
what you saw, the attack dog that you saw. But
Reiner was very, very involved in, like he was almost
always attached to those big fundraisers, ironically, including the one
where Clooney did the fundraiser which Reiner was a part of,
where Joe Biden showed up and Clooney actually said something
like that I don't recognize that man, and actually caused
(25:46):
a bunch of big fight between Reiner and Clooney. So
but with that in mind, I don't understand why Trump
felt it this was the way to go. I think
if Trump should have just ignored it, if he wanted
to send him a message like could he could have
done the you know, the very oh it's gone too soon,
right quick tweet with a very disingenuous one that I
(26:09):
think people who don't like Rob Reiner, but also I
want to, even if it's whether it's true or not,
portray that they're they're human go in that direction. But
that's not that's not what Trump did. He said a
very sad thing happened. I'm not going to read this
whole thing either, because honestly, I don't like it at all.
I don't like this one bit. I think by the way.
(26:30):
I think you yield a well earned ground here too,
with the Charlie Kirk reaction and all of this stuff,
like we don't need to be any part of this
at all at all, And yet like if because of
(26:52):
like the backstory there too, I know people are wanting
to pick that apart. Where you have behind the scenes,
you have this family member who seems to be absolutely
absolutely crippled with narcotic addiction, seventeen stints in rehab, painkillers
and heroin. There's probably a fetanyl component here. And the irony,
(27:14):
of course is Rob Reiner should be the last one
having a problem with them blowing narco boats up. But
also you're dealing with a family member. I've dealt with
a family member, maybe not to this extent clearly, but
everything is just so ugly, And yes, yes you can
try to find the political angles where like maybe Reiner
took it personally when he saw him attacking Biden's kid
(27:36):
because he knew he was dealing with that at home.
There'll be analysis for all this stuff. But Trump saying
a once very talented movie director and comedy star has
passed away for him is tortured and struggling, and his wife,
reportedly due to the angry caused others through his massive,
unyielding and incurable affliction of the mind crippling disease known
(27:57):
as TDS. And I'll just leave it there. It's it's
not a good look at all. And I don't understand
the strategy. All right, explain it to me, Jamal, what's up?
Speaker 4 (28:08):
I totally disagree with you, KC because of this. You
brought up Charlie Kirk, but you didn't tell what people
were saying after Charlie Kirk. Everybody will say, oh, we're
sorry about Charlie Kirk being assassinated, but he was a racist,
big at homophone. Donald Trump did did that same thing
people did when Charlie Kirk was assassinated and when he
(28:30):
was shot, Oh, we apologized that.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
What is what is you win? What's his what's his prize?
Speaker 4 (28:41):
Casey, you have to understand this. This the people who
like myself, who are President Trump supporters, Trump diehard supporters
like this. This is why I voted for him. I
got sick and tired of every time Democrats are tackle
in liples at tackle then with what something happened to him?
(29:02):
We got to be all nice to them.
Speaker 1 (29:05):
No, no, no, no, no, no, let's be very clear.
Let's be very clear. If you could explain to me
what is hoping to be gained here, I have if
you could. But the only thing, well, let me just
let me say this. The only thing that you're telling
me is he did it because if he didn't do it,
people like you would be mad at him. I don't
(29:25):
believe that. I don't think it would have.
Speaker 4 (29:30):
No, I wouldn't have been mad at him. But I'm
glad he did it because when Charlie Kirk passed, every
last one of them Democrats include and Rob Wanner, because
I saw.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
The clipp everybody, I saw a stuff and.
Speaker 4 (29:43):
Whole the thing where he was on Piers Morgan. And
what did he say right after he said nobody should
be assassinated? Oh, even though Charlie Kirk was big ated,
his his views was raped then a point.
Speaker 1 (29:56):
So yeah, reprehensively, okay, sa.
Speaker 4 (30:00):
Donald Trump did the exact same thing. He said, he
that Rob Wise should not have been murdered. This he
is a it's a tragedy and the n be it. Well,
he's his beliefs and what he's still for was burn.
So he did the exact same thing that Democrats doomed
(30:23):
to us the exact thing.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
What did he gain versus what did he lose? Like
they do calculations about this stuff. The percentage more happy
that the percentage happier that it may have made people
who just you, who want to see this. I don't
think overrides the percentage of people who it may turn off.
So I want to hear from here's the problem, the strategy, standpoint.
Speaker 4 (30:51):
The strategy, the strategy somethings. The strategy is Republicans, you
have to fight back Democrats. If you don't like this,
don't do it to us. It's like when you're fighting
a bully. It's right, when you're fighting a bully. Casey,
the kid who gets bullied by the bully and he
goes to tell the teacher and the bully gets in trouble,
(31:13):
but the kid don't. Yeah that's okay. But the kid
stands up punched the bully.
Speaker 3 (31:19):
In the mouth.
Speaker 4 (31:19):
Yeah, he may get suspended, but you know what, the
bully knows somebody is fighting back against him, and the
bully won't bother him. So that's the point. It's not.
Speaker 1 (31:30):
Okay, all right, all right, but who's the bully? Very
scared what leftist, what leftist piece of garbage who celebrated
the death of Charlie Kirk is going to pause their
life and go, you know what after what happened with
rob and Trump there. I don't think I have to
change my ways. I don't think that's gonna happen.
Speaker 4 (31:48):
It's not okay. It's not about them stocking because of
what President Trump did. It's about Republicans standing up doing
the same thing back. And if the Democrats don't like it,
then the then don't do it to Republicans. Then it's
the Democrats gonna do it. Then it's going to encourage
(32:09):
Republicans to fight back, because that's the thing Republicans and
Republican voters don't write. We're tired of being checking around,
pushing around, being Charlie Brown.
Speaker 1 (32:20):
Well, you know the ball. Here's the thing. I love
being Devil's advocate on this because I thought this is
an interesting discussion. So we'll see what everyone else thinks.
And but I gotta go to break, So thank you
very much. We'll get your calls on this my before
the shooting Nick reineril it is the case of day
radio program. Oh you know what, there's nothing I can do.
(32:45):
There's nothing I can do if you can't. All right,
So when you know Disney Movie's Disney movie or kids movies,
kids movie.
Speaker 3 (32:56):
And.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
It's just not even that. Sometimes it's adult stuff. But
a lot of times you get an upward interest in
the characters if they're animals, like one hundred and one Dominations.
When that came out, that's good news for dumbation breeders,
right because kids want them. This is right around Easter
where you get the rabbit thing, which isn't a good idea.
(33:20):
But they have another problem. Apparently there is an issue
based on the brand new Zutopia two hitting theaters. This
is in China, so hopefully this isn't a problem over
here when it gets here. When did it so? Z
Utopia two opened November twenty six. I did very very well.
(33:42):
And the problem is is there is now a spiked
interest in one of the characters, Gary, and I don't know,
if you've never seen it, I'll tell you what Gary is.
Gary's a snake. Gary's not just any snake. Gary is
a pit Yes, And according to authorities, this is now
(34:08):
turned into a surge in demand for the real species
as pets and Indonesian pit viper. All right, first and foremost,
I'm gonna assume every parents that this is a big
old no. Right. At some point you gotta be like,
like with a lion KINGK can we have a lion? No,
you can't have a lion like because that's not how
(34:29):
it works. At some point you gotta make that. You
got to make that very clear with your kids. So anyway,
we'll see. All right, let's get to some phone calls.
But I guess maybe your kid's gonna be asking for
an Indonesian pit viper. Um. Okay, yeah, lots of calls.
Let's start with Larry. Larry, you're up first, go right ahead.
Speaker 5 (34:53):
Good morning, Katy, good morning.
Speaker 4 (34:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (34:57):
I just wanted to say, I'm gonna have to go
with Trump on this one. He's he's allowed to tell
the truth, you know, and Rob Reiner was a horrible person.
A moment of silence probably would have been in order,
you know, like they say, if you don't have anything
good to say, then probably don't say anything. But uh,
you know that's not how who Trump is. And he's
(35:19):
going to speak his mind. And I mean he's allowed
to tell the truth.
Speaker 1 (35:22):
Yeah, no, no, no, no, look, here's the deal, one hundred percent.
But there's a cost with everything, right, especially in the
world of politics, there's a cost. And I think my
argument would just be, I wonder if the cost in
this case is is more is higher than he the
price that he was willing to pay the grand scheme
of things. It's not the biggest story of the year,
but I just found it unusual because I don't understand
(35:44):
the upside.
Speaker 5 (35:46):
Yeah, exactly, Yeah, there's not much of an upside, you know,
But however, I mean, he's allowed to tell the truth
and sometimes it hurts, all right.
Speaker 1 (35:56):
So but what about all the what about that college
professors like yay dead Charlie Kirkya, did you think those
people should be fired?
Speaker 5 (36:05):
Absolutely?
Speaker 4 (36:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (36:07):
You shouldn't celebrate the assassination of someone, you know, no
matter what sild wrong.
Speaker 1 (36:13):
Yeah, that brings up This brings up another important component.
What we're talking about with Rob Reiner is his tragic
and crazy all at the same time. But it's not
a political assassination. It sounds like they were going to
cut him off. So it's I think that Thanks for
the call. I think it's important that people recognize that
as well.
Speaker 6 (36:31):
Uh, your text.
Speaker 7 (36:33):
Right head, Yeah, I kind of agree with the previous caller.
I mean, Rob Reiner was a great director, but the
last years of his lives have not been defined by
the movies he's produced. They've been defined by the division
that he created. And I think Trump deserved that funds
and he took it.
Speaker 4 (36:53):
And what is the cost?
Speaker 7 (36:54):
I mean, he can't run for office again. I mean
what is front for you, mayor of New York or
whatever he wants.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
To But I don't know the three gazillion, the three
gazillion down ballot races, many of which are going to
be in you know, one to two point windows, you.
Speaker 7 (37:11):
Know, whissed off the people that aren't going to vote
for him anyway?
Speaker 1 (37:14):
No, but no, no, this is this is where you hemorrhage,
not with the people weren't going to vote with them anyway.
And I agree with you. But for the people who
sit there and aren't going to vote, you understand what
I'm saying.
Speaker 7 (37:27):
Any are there any elections in the next three weeks,
because the next news ile kick in, we'll be talking
about Venezuela voting.
Speaker 1 (37:36):
I don't know, I don't gone. I don't disagree with that.
We I mean we have primaries not before too long,
and they might put some of that in an ad.
I look, I agree with you one hundred percent. So
if the mitigating factor is yeah, it's not great, but
they from a time frame standpoint, no one will remember
by the time we vote, then make that argument. I
don't you know that's but you're probably accurate just because
(37:59):
you know we got the tensions fans of NATS. Casey,
what's up?
Speaker 2 (38:05):
Hey, I just wanted to call in and commend you
because I agree with you. I don't think there was
any benefit to him putting this out. I worry that
we're continuing this cycle of just vitriol. And to the
two commoners before me, the hypocrisy is crazy. Yes, there
are people that said hooray Charlie Kirk and it was condemned,
(38:27):
and people also their jobs. Then the president doesn't. They're like,
it's cold, that's just who he is. I we have
got to get back to civility. This is insane to me.
Nobody should be celebrating someone's death for any reason, regardless
of how you feel about their political views or their
life views. He could have said we didn't agree with
(38:50):
each other, we don't align politically, but nobody should be
murdered in their own home.
Speaker 1 (39:00):
Have also freaked out because I can't believe he didn't
say anything that would stick in their craw more than this. Probably.
Speaker 2 (39:06):
Yeah, but I commend to you for actually taking that stance,
because I think we're getting to a point where people
are putting absolute blinders on as long as it have
the lines with their side, and it's insane to me.
Speaker 1 (39:17):
Yeah, thanks for the call there, sir. You know with
did you guys see what Newsom's people said about Elon
W was mocking Elon's relationship with his trans kid? No,
because oh it was three days ago. Nobody cares, all right,
I mean this is where we are, man, It's just crazy,
just crazy. Uh what is this? Oh? Okay, No, no,
(39:44):
I got I got that in my stack. Don't worry.
I don't know that I'll get to it. I'm better try.
I will try to get to it today, all right.
Oh the amount of people pitching me on interviews. Yeah,
if if you're out there and you're pitching me on
interviews and you realize we're not even interviewing any of
your people you're running against, maybe we're just not doing
interviews right now. So it's nothing personal. We just don't
(40:07):
do a lot of interviews on this show. So but anyway,
one's hammered away on the email there. Now it's much
more fun if I cause it's really hard to play
my little gong sound effects when you have somebody running
for office doesn't want to be associated with that. So
that's it. That's the hypocrisy here. I just want to
(40:28):
do this all right. Yeah, so don't let your kids
buy an Indonesian pit viper. I guess it was my
other takeaway. Let me give you that, just real quickly
the details on this, because I don't understand how this
works for a big company. It's my understanding that on
walking freezers they have that emergency thing. I miss everyone
that I've ever been in, right, it's usually got to
(40:48):
like an emergency plunger. It's red, it's right there. It
says emergency release. For the same reason we had to
put them into trunks, because you know, a couple of
kids baked in the sun or something during a hide
and seek and so like that exists. So I don't
understand how a mother of two was found dead in
(41:10):
a dollar tree in Miami. The mother too, who by
the way, she's an anesthesiologist too. This so late, she
knows some stuff. The mother of two, an accomplished anesthesiologists,
was on dead inside a walk in freezer of a
Dollar Tree store in Florida, according to authorities. Lae responded
(41:32):
to the Dollar Tree in Miami around eight a m.
Let's be Saturday, Sunday, which day in a New York post.
It's just horrible how they write staff the time they leave,
so I think it's bots writing it. Anyway, this just
happened in the last few days. But here's where it
(41:54):
gets crazy, all right. So the thirty two year old
woman name is Helen Sanchez was identified as the woman.
Authority found in the Dollar Trees walking freeze around eight am.
So in the morning. The employee told police that Sanchez
was found naked. And before you go, oh, well, like
maybe you know some murder or something. No, no, foul
(42:15):
play is suspected, and surveillance footage hasn't raised any alarm bells.
But the death remains under investigation and there is nothing
in here. Sanchez, who is a doctor, worked primarily in Nicaragua.
I don't know if this is doctors without borders or
what or is she from Nicaragua? She I mean, she
(42:35):
clearly looks Hispanic. She might be, but I don't know.
Really she's working with some extent in the US here
because like everything's on the up and up. Yeah, she
dedicated her life to medicine, but there's there's no she
got drunk at a bar, they went to go hook up.
There's not if from a suicide pursue. So my question is,
(42:56):
can you get I can't. I can't fathom that if
there's a walk in freezer for you know, for a
big company like this, that they would have her have
freezers that don't have emergency releases, just through the liability
of it. It wouldn't make sense to me. And then we
had that story here a few months ago where a worker,
(43:16):
a Walmart worker got went into a full industrial sized oven. Again,
do these things not have emergency or at lease? Are
people just committing suicide? A really weird? I like, I
don't know, but the whole thing is weird. So maybe
somebody who works at a Dollar Tree can help me out.
I understand you may not know her motivation, but can
(43:37):
you literally go into the Dollar Tree freezer and not
get out? Oh? And I should point out that just
because she's naked, you don't don't necessarily read anything into that.
There have been people who've pulled their clothes off during
hypothermic death. That is the thing. In fact, uh, the
(43:57):
did lock pass incident, they think that's what happened. If
you're plugged in any of the the monster Russian monster lore,
that most likely was just some really bad decision making.
All right, eight eight eight ninety three four seven eight
seven four, let's grab Jim, Jim, what's.
Speaker 6 (44:12):
Up Corning Casey.
Speaker 8 (44:16):
Yeah, I think there's trump thing.
Speaker 4 (44:18):
I'm sorry to get off topic and revert back, but
I think he.
Speaker 8 (44:22):
Uh really the tech bro that he hangs out with
provided him with an algorithm that and he just, you
know it, decided that he would save more supporters by
taking this stance than by swaying you know, haters. So
I think he just took a calculated risk.
Speaker 1 (44:40):
So you think, to be clear, you think that had
he not had he not written what he wrote, that
people would have stopped supporting him. That's the part I
can't wrap my head around. I don't think people would
have noticed.
Speaker 8 (44:53):
I think, you know, everybody says though teflon Don and
he could you know, shoot someone on square Nobody would
convict him. But I think the one thing that will lose.
Speaker 2 (45:05):
Them support is if he loses.
Speaker 4 (45:06):
Any of the fact done.
Speaker 1 (45:09):
Okay, all right, I disagree with I disagree with the
way it happened, but I mean, I don't even understand
how it's flexing a backbone like that's that. But that's fine.
I appreciate the call here, Jim, and I haven't seen
anyone or heard anyone convince me how that that that
aspect works. I'm not trying to be all, you know,
one hundred percent argumentative here, but like that, I still
(45:30):
do not have an answer to that. By not saying anything,
are you did somebody go all right, well, if you
don't say anything, if you don't, if you don't, crap
all over rob Ryan or you're gonna lose one hundred
and fifty thousand people, we estimate. But if you do,
we're only gonna lose one hundred and ten. Like who
did that? Math that doesn't exist. That's not math that exists.
(45:53):
And I understand a lot of what Trump does is instinctual,
but usually you can kind of see why he's doing it.
Here not so much, but that's just me, all right,
seven nineteen. Hang on, let's grab another phone call or two. Terry,
are you there? Good morning morning?
Speaker 9 (46:11):
Get them here? Can hear it?
Speaker 1 (46:13):
Yeah, yeah, I can hear you.
Speaker 9 (46:14):
Good morning. I really think my take on Donald Trump's tweet,
I think at some point, the frustration of everybody piling
on him all the time just gets to him. I mean,
I don't condone what he tweeted, but at his age,
you know, things that were said back fifty sixty years
(46:35):
ago were acceptable. Not saying that this is acceptable by
any stretch, but I really think that the frustration of
the constant criticism of the West and just some people,
it'll wear on anybody, and any one of us would
lash out. I mean at some point, and like I
said about that it is good and not.
Speaker 1 (46:57):
That I can if it's honestly a better explanation than
I think a lot of them are out there, Because
you know, Reiner was, I think there's something to be
said for you know, living well is the best revenge too,
and you know that's that's the one thing that you
know had to stick. And Rosie O'Donnell and all their
clocks because he was president twice, oh and that's every day.
(47:21):
They got to sit up, you know, and think about that.
And it probably fuels a lot of the tds with
So let's grab shani. Thanks for calling back. What's up?
Speaker 2 (47:33):
Oh?
Speaker 10 (47:33):
Thanks for taking my college See, I hope you can
hear me now.
Speaker 1 (47:37):
Yep, I can hear you. Just fine, Okay, go ahead.
Speaker 10 (47:40):
I just wanted to say that I was very disappointed
in our president. I supported him as a Democrat in
twenty sixteen and voted for him and supported the Republican
Party and now a Republican and I'm a still supporter
of President Trump, but I think he's lost a great
opportunity to win people over that were like me. When
(48:04):
he says something like that, he hasn't doesn't seem to
learn very well about, you know, his base. We have
a higher standard than that.
Speaker 1 (48:13):
What do you what do you think of the previous callers?
More direct that, because I saw I saw the litany
of things that Rob Reiner has said about Trump over
the years, and it's not just political disagreement. There's a
deep seething hatred there. And so when you had and
and Trump is privy to what Reiner does behind the scenes,
which I think a lot of people. Aren't the amount
(48:34):
of money and effort that Reiner has put in, in
many cases funding some of these attack dog groups that
that tell wholesale lies about the president or at least
nothing supported with evidence. Do you think it's just one
of these where this was kind of the amalgamation of
all of that, and Rob Reiner was the face of it.
So he just vented his anger because of everything he's
(48:55):
been through.
Speaker 10 (48:56):
Well, everything said is true, right, but at the same time,
there's a thing called self control and leadership at a
moment when there's pain, and he's our president if you're
a Democrat or a leftist or not, and whether we
agree with him or not, and he had an opportunity
to be a leader and he chose to have poor judgment.
(49:17):
I think at that point, at this point, you don't
stop on somebody that didn't deserve.
Speaker 5 (49:23):
To die like that, regardless.
Speaker 10 (49:24):
Of what the man did.
Speaker 1 (49:27):
Yeah, and the whole thing with his kid and the
drug addiction and all of that. I mean again, I
think I think Trump. I know this would have irritated
some people, but I think Trump, after a certain amount
of time, it would not be inappropriate because like, this
isn't adult this is a person in their thirties, Reiner's son, who,
(49:47):
from everything I read, had a wicked drug addiction. A
lot of it was opioid spent and all kinds of
stuff heroin, I mean, really really really addictive stuff. And
it culminated in some blowout of to O'Brien's Christmas party,
and then days later this a lot of people don't
know that the Rhiners were supposed to meet with the
Obamas later that day, right, A.
Speaker 10 (50:09):
More accurate and that's that's neither here nor there. That's
all very very said.
Speaker 5 (50:14):
There's a lot of.
Speaker 1 (50:15):
Families point no, no, no, I understand that. But here's my point.
My point is that one of Trump's passion projects right now,
from everything that I've heard, is stopping the inflow of
dangerous drugs, exactly like the drugs that Reiner's kid is
reportedly addicted to. And you have to wonder, with less access,
would Reiner's kid, maybe you know, not have allegedly committed
(50:37):
these crimes. I mean, there's a chance to make lemonade,
is the point that I'm making.
Speaker 10 (50:43):
I don't know, you don't know what somebody goes through.
I worked in alcohol and substance abuse, for over ten years,
and so it hits people in different ways, families in
different ways, and you can say what it could have,
should is, or guess, but it ultimately Rob Reiner's son
had a very series problem. Rob Reiner tried to deal
with that problem, most likely as a loving father. For
(51:06):
for Trump to even make comments like he did was
just very poor judgment and it hurt our image.
Speaker 1 (51:13):
Okay, appreciate its wrong. I appreciate the call very much
this morning. Okay, thank you. Yep, all right, have a
good one there. Yeah, Like we don't know the whole
backstory there. There's also there's also the part and this
is a perfectly I think important part of all of this.
(51:34):
It's you know, it's being being the being the child
of a Hollywood star, even if you yourself don't partake
in it where it's not even one of these where
although Reiner did a movie that was kind of about
his son's struggle, I saw a video of them doing
promotion for it, and it was still awkward in that room.
But you know, being the uh, the son or daughter
(51:57):
of a Hollywood star comes with its own stuff, and
that's just a Hollywood star. Anyone who is of you
know has significant notoriety. It's weird because those are your parents,
and yet if you go out in public with your parents,
they get bum rushed by people looking for autographs. Then
there's the part where you start assessing yourself as your accomplishments,
and some people, especially those who really truly want to
(52:20):
live up to what their parents have done. That's such
a high bar you're going through, even if they can't
help you along the way. Like so, no, we don't
know everything that's tied up in there, but just awful,
awful all around. Okay eight eight eight nine three four
seven eight seven four. Yeah, that's more on the Rhiners stuff.
(52:44):
Oh do you see this guy over in Australia. I
don't think they've arrested him yet, so I don't know.
Maybe he's going to get a freebie just on behalf
of the country. Angry ausse is stomped on Bondi beach
gunman's head said he did something quote every Australian one
to do. All right, So he was one of the
other He was not the guy on video wrapping the
(53:05):
dude up. But he's like one of the other dudes
who's with him. So when they get this guy down
on the ground. He's straight up stomps on the dude's head.
I don't know how much contact he made, but it
wasn't enough that it made the police jump. Yeah, people
were just here we go. Jacob Barnfield, who went viral
after stomping in one of the suspects heads during the arrest,
(53:27):
and the kick was something quote every Australian wanted to do.
I got a pretty good shot in on his head,
but I feel like it was pretty well deserved considering
the circumstances. I had so much anger built up just
to kick up, just to kick them, because you've just
seen all the dead bodies. You've seen the family screaming
(53:48):
and crying. You know, this is the other side of
this too. We talk about vigilanti justice. What are people
going to do when they don't feel that the people
who are supposed to be in charge of making sure
the subway is in sight? You know, some woman just
got some teacher just got her face beat in on
the subway in New York yesterday by a guy who
(54:10):
is referred to as a maniacal man spreader, which what
the hell is even that, but basically a guy who
would go through and just kind of he would sit.
He'd find like a middle of three subway seat, and
he'd stick his knees out as far as possible, and
if anyone even hinted that they might share one of
those seats, he'd get physically violent. So this guy's a
(54:31):
known commodity. So people see this stuff, and like the
next time somebody drops one of these dudes on the ground,
like sweeps the leg or something like. The concept that
you could see just ten random New Yorkers start kicking
this dude in the head is almost reverting to every
(54:53):
you ever see a video where an armed robber goes
into like a grocery store in Brazil, and let's say
they don't shoot him within the first five set, because
that's how most of those go. Like the whole store
start just kicking this guy's teeth in, Or some guy
in a motorcycle tries to grab a woman's purse and
you know, gets knocked off the motorcycle. There's ten dudes
(55:13):
taking turns tap dancing on that guy. And that's what
happens in society when people feel that they're overrun with
violence and that law enforcement isn't doing enough, and there's
a lot of people in Australia who feel that the government,
even though they're willing to acknowledge that this was quote
ISIS inspired, are failing to recognize that there's a whole
(55:35):
lot of people they probably let in their country that
now you can't even ask questions about for fear of
going to jail or getting arrested, and the government doesn't
seem to care. You think a bunch of a bunch
of Australian people just watched you know, ten fifteen, however
many bodies they saw murdered in front of them. Well,
(55:57):
some guys are running around with ISIS flags in their cars,
screaming whatever they're screaming. You either get some point two
or three people go, you know what, maybe we just
should just make sure and break his neck for the
police get here. Nobody's saying nothing. I think that's how
you walk yourself into those types of situations. All right,
(56:17):
we got Ray yet, if we do, we'll do some
stagic action there, No, not yet. I wonder if we're
gonna be doing phones again, Very excited for that. All right,
we give Ray just one quick shot to call in
before I grab a call and then well, actually I
(56:38):
guess we'll just grab a call and that's right when
Ray will call Mark, go.
Speaker 3 (56:41):
Right ahead, good morning, How are you, Casey. I'm good, sir,
I'd good to talk with you. Listen, anybody that studies history,
you know, especially when you read about Hamilton and Alexander
Hamilton and Aaron Burr where they actually had a duel
of rewards that were extra changed.
Speaker 1 (57:00):
Now I want to make it clear. I'm say hang on,
hang on to say Jaye, can you grab Ray? He
looks like he's calling in on ten. All right, go
right ahead, go ahead.
Speaker 3 (57:10):
Any which way, any which way. I'm I'm I'm just
trying to make a case that at one particular point
in time in this nation's history, when somebody said something
that that you know, was was off the wall, or
you know, might have been slanderous, men took their honor.
I mean they really, really they were sensitive about their honor. Yes, absolutely,
(57:34):
And here we are and and buddy, here we are
in this time now where people just drop all kinds
of stuff off. And you know, when you've got somebody
that's dedicated. How I'm saying that I don't believe what Trump.
I don't I think maybe Trump Trump shouldn't have said
what he said. But at the same time, I don't
(57:56):
want to be a Monday morning quarterback because listen, fire
and trump shoes. And I was accused of being a rapist,
if I was accused of being a murderer, if I
was accused of or whatever. Right, I mean, I could
not handle it like he has. I can tell you
that nobody in this world life because.
Speaker 2 (58:16):
So pretty much.
Speaker 3 (58:18):
Well, but when you've had somebody with money and influence
and they have dedicated a portion of their life to
destroying yours because they disagree with you politically, you know,
And that's that's all I had to say. That's just
my opinion of things.
Speaker 1 (58:33):
I appreciate it, man, that everybody's got to take on this.
And the good news for you is it's Tuesday, not Monday,
so you're not Monday morning quarterbacking. So you got that
going for you, all right, Race Stagic, he's the quarterback
of Team Leather for Chief or whatever they call it
over there. He's here with us and another day another phones.
(58:53):
I guess we're doing this on the phones today.
Speaker 2 (58:55):
So yeah, it's better than nothing, I guess, right.
Speaker 1 (59:00):
Yeah, that's okay, Yeah, all right, So one'll be on
the phone. Next one will be on the phone. Everybody's
on the phone. Go ahead, Oh.
Speaker 2 (59:06):
Call engineering, put a ticket in. We'll see what we
can fix it. What good news is is that start
to see temperatures come up a little bit from where
we were yesterday. This morning we're there. This afternoon we're
in the Midvember forties and lots of sunshine, seeing a
few clouds. Other than that in good shape, covering right
around thirty tonight Tomorrow, increasing clouds load to mid fifties.
We'll get some rain Thursday afternoon. That's our next cold
(59:27):
fund coming in. Probably going to be right around sixty
degrees on Thursday. But don't get too afraid of the
cold front. I mean, it does take temperatures down after
the rain ends Thursday night, but Friday will end up
again with sunshine and hies back to the low to
mid fifties into the fifties. Saturday and Sunday, the first
day of winter. Some spots we could actually be near
(59:48):
sixty degrees casey, So that's a cold snap. Yeah, it's
going away. And my other days I had a little
bit of rain Thursday afternoon at a Thursday night done
looking pretty good right through the first day of winter,
which comes in on Sunday.
Speaker 1 (01:00:00):
Okay, all right, thank you sir, appreciate it. We'll talk
on your phone in the next hour. Oh man, all right,
I'm gonahit some equipment with a wrench and we what
I mean. We will be right back with more calls,
more stories here on the CaCO Day radio program. Every
time the McRib comes back. What's the series of stories
(01:00:21):
that follows. You're not gonna believe how it's made, right,
whether it was the pink sludge or goo or whatever
thing or the more regular version where they just show
it basically in process getting made in a McDonald's kitchen.
(01:00:41):
And then some reporters like, ah, change in the world here.
People are gonna see this and they're not gonna order
the McRib. Let me help you on something here, What
is your name, sweetheart? Who wrote this story? Here? O?
There's two there's I guess there's a social media guy
whose name is Antonio Bell, and then a reporter for
(01:01:05):
Dick Sardo. I don't see what her first name is,
doesn't matter. Here's the deal. There's not a person. There's
at no point is somebody gonna see your video or
read your storing. Oh it's not wagoo what I have
been tricked. Nobody's eating the McRib because they think that
it's just literally part of a rib cage that they
(01:01:26):
then cooked. We know it ate what it seems. That's
why they have to put the little scorchy mark thing
in it so that it basically resembles what they claim
it is. Is it pork, Yeah, it's pork. Is it
just pork? Probably not. What's up with that sauce? I
(01:01:48):
don't know. There's probably a lot of sugar in it.
Nobody's eating the McRib feeling like they've done something good
that day. From a health perspective, maybe from a taste perspective,
if you really like mcribs, I get bike rib if
I don't get too much sauce on it, and I
maybe could eat one or two a year. But when
I was younger, oh love me some m ribs being said,
(01:02:11):
even as a kid, I was never fooled. Oh in
the Wall Street journ Oh, they wrote a Wall Street
Journal article too, of course they did. They also talked
about what you know, speculations to why sometimes they have
it and sometimes they don't. There's a lot of theories.
One fluctuating pork prices. I don't know if that tracks
if you do it adjacent to holiday, but whatever. But
(01:02:33):
also that it's not as popular unless you do it
where they withhold it a lot and then you rush
to get it, you know, like you've ever been a
listless marriage. So ye, yes, I don't know. Uh, all right,
let me grab this call. Hey Jim, you got about
a minute and a half. Go ahead, Hey Jim, Yeah,
(01:02:58):
go ahead, go ahead.
Speaker 9 (01:03:00):
Okay.
Speaker 11 (01:03:02):
I've defended Trump with basically the same argument the Gentleman
a couple of three calls ago did where he said,
you know, Roner just has said so much hateful stuff
for him that things came to a head. And also
definitely and with the woman that has came over to
the conservative side, Trump just can't hold his mouth. And
(01:03:26):
I understand that back in twenty sixteen when Trump was
elected and all my Democrat friends were just talking about
the way he communicated and the way he talked and
the supposed locker room banter he had forty years ago
and stuff. I said, Well, we didn't elect to polish
political puppet like Obama. We didn't elect somebody who's been
(01:03:50):
groomed to be president. He chose to do this job
because he loves America, and he's doing it the best
he can. That's about all I got to say about that.
Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
All right, Look, I get people all over the board here.
You should read some of them. Thanks for the call.
You should read some of my emails. I knew inevitably
even bringing it up, that some people were just gonna
flip their crap. So we get into our final hour.
Glad to have you long eight eight eight nine three
four seven eight seven four. Okay, I was just going
through my email on the Rob Reiner and the Trump stuff.
(01:04:26):
Let me just give you a little flavor of I
don't know what we got in here. Let's see here,
as far as from comments go, the fight is for
the small number of people in the middle. Trump did
himself no favors yesterday. Another email says Jamal was right.
(01:04:46):
All the libs followed the same format, except their methods
were uglier. When the outright celebrated Charlie's death. Yeah, I also,
and again, I also want to be I want to
be clear that it's not exactly apples and apples with
Reiner's death and Charlie's because with Reiners, this doesn't it
doesn't have a political attachment to it. It appears the narrative,
(01:05:09):
as it appears, is family disagreement. Maybe Rhiner was going
to cut him off drug addictions a hell of a thing.
I don't know, who knows what's going to come out
of there. Whereas with Charlie Kirk, we were talking not
just about the murder of Charlie Kirk, but you're talking
about the the finality of assassinating one's political opponents to
shut him up. So there's other there's there's a lot
(01:05:30):
more at play there. So to arguably reject or or
react to the way that people who ended up losing
their jobs did, people attached a lot more gravity to
that because you weren't just celebrating the death of somebody specifically,
you were celebrating a a a not a new way,
(01:05:50):
but a new acceptable way of doing debate, and that
was that's just simply something we can't we can't do.
So I feel where you're coming from there. Let me
finish the one email where the guy said we aren't
just glad, we aren't glad he's dead, we just don't care.
I think that that's a popular one he wrote, the
(01:06:12):
guy had TDS and put Trump in our country in
the crosshairs every single day with his rhetoric. We're safer
now that he's gone. Maybe. I mean, look, I have
a visceral reaction to watching people like Chris Murphy and
other elected affairs who would just blatantly lie.
Speaker 2 (01:06:31):
Man.
Speaker 1 (01:06:32):
That's why bring it up on the show. Just the audacity.
That's why it's so crazy now when they actually get
called out on it, because there is a little bit
of correction that people are trying. I don't get me wrong.
It's members of the media wanting to save their own
but they're like, oh, yeah, I didn't I didn't recognize
the Biden stuff. I'm writing a book now, you know,
the Jake Tapper insanity, and yeah, that's it. That's extremely frustrating.
(01:06:56):
Uh oh. And then one more it says, who gives
a you know what? I guess these people have never
been to a funeral to make sure someone is dead.
I can't say that I have ever attended a funeral
to quote make sure that the person is dead. Is
that a thing? Is that? Is that an older tradition
(01:07:23):
that has gone by the wayside. If I don't like
the person whose funeral is I just don't go to
the funeral. I've never been like, I hate that son
of a you know what so much I want to
lay eyes on their corpse. That's like old West stuff.
What a fascinating line to write in an email. I
guess these people have never been to a funeral to
(01:07:45):
make sure someone was dead. All right, let me throw
this out. Has anyone ever gone to a funeral just
to make sure the son of a gun is dead?
Is that a thing? I don't know that that reflects well. Man,
he didn't say anything bad. The snowflakes are just feeding
the Trump haiti machine. Oh I'm so confused, man, Uh okay,
(01:08:12):
all right, So I don't want to go see if
they're dead. Eight eight eight nine three four seven eight
seven four? Who done that? Maybe your mother in law?
I what, It's fine, We'll let you can even use
a fake name. I don't care. Maybe your ex. Right,
(01:08:33):
we had a blowout fifteen years ago, and now you know,
somebody wasn't eating right here where you are, and you're
just still holding on to the anger because they were,
you know, screwing around with their secretary. You know, whatever
motivated it showing up to a funeral just to make
sure the person's dead is some like og stuff, or
maybe I'm just babe in the woods and have never
(01:08:55):
felt that that was a good reason to attend a funeral.
So you can let me know eight eight eight nine
three four seven eight seventy four you wish to be
on the show, and you wish to tell us about
attending a funeral just to see the person dead. We'll
get some calls lined up on that. Well, things being
a little wacky this morning, all right, Well, get it
(01:09:16):
figured out. We'll get it figured out. Oh this right here,
this doesn't surprise me at all. Chinese billionaires are hiring
women to have dozens of their babies so they can
have access to American citizenship. Tourism by Chinese Chinese a
birthing tourism is a real thing, and it is a
(01:09:38):
real thing that not just Trump cracked down on. I
even remember under under Barack Obama, this was an issue
that we talked about. Right, people women would come over,
they might overstay, a visitors thing. They come over, and
essentially they had people who ran these these bed and
breakfast for all practical purposes where the women could just
(01:09:59):
check and wait until they went into labor. Boom, you
got the baby. You have no intention of staying in
the US. So they then take their baby and go.
But as soon as the baby gets old enough where
they want to put it excuse me cough right in
the mic there, they want to put him in the
right you know, college or some sort. Well he's got citizenship,
or if they want him to work over there, or
(01:10:20):
and this is the other problem, if the Chinese government
wants to bring him into the fold to do intelligence work.
So the motive while the motivation here isn't necessarily to
create an anchor baby situation there, it is a bit
of a backup thing. Man, It's a bit of a
backup thing. What is this? Oh? No, wow, A bunch
(01:10:48):
of people, A bunch of you go to funerals for
the wrong reasons. Oh there's some Yeah, some of these
are pretty dark. I don't know if I want to
explore them. That's why I went to my father's funeral,
All right, sir, I mean, yeah, I'm not here to
go side is a doctor fill with you? So it
(01:11:10):
sounds like you had something going on. If that makes
you feel better, Okay, I don't know. But uh, most
of these are not warm fuzzies, like there's some deep
seated family stuff that. Look, if you had somebody who
said that's gonna give you closure and it helped, then
more power to you. You know. There's been a few
(01:11:32):
people in my life I know, I just chose to
not have anything to do with and I found that
it's easiest just to not remember them, never let them
cross your mind. Clean out what you got to clean out,
figure it out. And I just feel like going to
their funeral, even if you thought that would make you
feel better, would just be I don't know, not the clothes,
(01:11:52):
is it not the closure you're looking for? But now
I'm guessing it's a little more popular than I thought.
All right, going back to this Chinese billionaires having dozens
of you the US. That's the other thing too. Uh,
they're you know, they're taking the the the shotgun approach here, right,
They're not just having one baby hauling the baby over.
They're like they got a harem of uh, you know,
(01:12:16):
illegit I guess, you know, illegitimate sons primarily sons they're
going for here. I know you're shocked. And they give
some examples video game executive. Jubo is said to have
more than one hundred children, and other elites build mega
families testing citizenship laws. I'm telling you, man, when it
comes to you know, the Chinese and Chinese business and
(01:12:39):
Chinese up rechelant, there is not a single thing that
they won't attempt to exploit shamelessly. This just being another
one of them. And it's not just in the US too.
Even though the US has the unique circumstance and birthright citizenship,
there are other countries where perhaps there could be a
benefit if cash is attached to it. So they're also
(01:13:00):
exploiting those loopholes. But to say that it's surprising to
anybody would be a lie, just because of everything we've seen.
All Right, So when he wasn't getting people all riled
up over his comments on the Rob Reiner murder, there
was another little little sum that Trump dropped, you say,
(01:13:21):
to the tune of a ten billion dollar lawsuit. We'll
give you the details on that coming up next. Let
me just let me just clarify something on the Chinese
billionaires and business people and the surrogates. It's not necessarily
it was in the past. It was in the past
that you had this birth tourism. It didn't necessarily need
(01:13:42):
to be a billionaire's kid. It was just well to do.
Chinese that were able to travel to the US might
be not as forthcoming on how pregnant they are, and
we're able to get into the country. And then they
found these and these were resorts like these fansies would
pay tens of thousands of dollars where you have this
(01:14:04):
basically bundled living arrangement with some you know, healthcare attached
to it, right on site physicians. In some case. Everyone
knew what was up and it just got less pressed
because they weren't staying with the babies. They were taking
the babies home. So what you have here, though is
something different because they did actually start cracking down on that.
(01:14:25):
But arguably this is even crazier. You have a lot
of this that has done through surrogacy. So these Chinese
billionaires may have never stepped foot in the United States.
That's what That's the part that you have to understand.
So they have a couple options. The women who are
paid very very well can travel to China and they
(01:14:52):
can be impregnated. However, these are these are business people,
right and they're doing this for business reasons. So in
a large largely what would happen is you're dealing with,
you know, test tube babies. So they get the billionaire
the client's stuff, they find surrogates in the US, they
ship it, or the billionaire may come to the US
(01:15:12):
and have stuff stored. But again, in some instances, they've
never entered the United States. And then the women get pregnant.
And I'm sorry, there is not I don't care how
dishonest a lawyer you are at all of this stuff.
There is zero ways you can convince me that the line,
subject to the jurisdiction thereof was ever meant to impart
(01:15:37):
that one of the parents could have never entered the US. Now,
people will give you this example. They'll say, all right, well,
what about a woman who was on a boat from
you know, around nineteen hundred, who happened to be pregnant
during the journey of the United States, had the baby
on US soil. They you know, that father died, right,
(01:15:57):
Maybe it was at the end of some sort of war,
you know, having to do with the Prussian War, whatever
it was, right, But that's not what's happening here. The
persons still very much alive, they're intentionally trying to manipulate
and I would say illegally so our immigration system as
part of you know, dynasty planning, which is what's going
(01:16:19):
on here. So no, you don't necessarily just have to be,
you know, a pregnant woman where you could kind of
try to eyeball that out. There's a lot of other
stuff going on, and a lot of it's due to surrogacy,
and it's a big, big, big business. So hopefully that
clarifies a little of that. All right, let me flip
(01:16:40):
over to something else, Yeah, because I had to laugh
a little. So I don't think it's anyone surprised that
Trump issuing the BBC. If you remember, the BBC took
two snippets of Trump's speech on January sixth, and they
(01:17:00):
happened I think fifty five minutes apart or something they're thereabouts,
and made it sound like Trump was telling everyone to
go loot the capital. The problem was he did not
say the two things next to each other. They were
spliced and arguably in most people's minds, had changed the meaning.
BBC chairman at the time, Samir Shaw, when his issue
(01:17:22):
was first raised here not that long ago, called it
quote an error of judgment. The speech, which took place
before people stormed the US capital, was poised to was
poised to certify President elect Joe Biden's victory that Trump
falsely alleged stolen from him. This is the statement from
the BBC. So the BBC broadcast a documentary called Trump
(01:17:45):
a Second Chance, and this happened just before the twenty
twenty four election. I mean the timing clearly right right there,
let's get it everyone on everyone's mind, and said they
spliced together the part where Trump said fight like hell,
but also I'll you know, I'll lead you over there
and and uh, we're you know, we're going to They
(01:18:09):
put the words that he said and cure two clear
distinctions together. And I'm sorry, I don't care what anyone says.
It was absolutely to either sell a narrative or change
a meeting, more specifically to sell said narrative. So the
idea that he's going to assume him for this much
money raises a lot of questions. Like in the UK,
(01:18:32):
for the purpose of defamation, it's not like it is
in the United States. So how does this get adjudicated?
Does it get adjudicated here and there? Just over there
just over here, there's a lot of questions here in
the UK, the famousness of somebody is not necessarily a
defense on your ability to defame or slander them. It's
(01:18:54):
actually a lower standard in the UK, which is why
you have thousands of arrests every year for people who
got their feelings hurt on social media and then the
person who wrote it has their door kicked in. The
BBC has loved this lower standard, and now it may
very well come back to bite them in the behind
because in the US, the more famous you are, the
(01:19:16):
harder it is, the higher standard it is for defamation.
That's just how it is, especially when you get into
top politics and entertainment, and clearly the president of the
United States is going to be right at the top
of the food chain. Now their argument is also going
to be, well, you have to show how he was,
how was how was he hurt? How is he wronged? Well,
(01:19:38):
they broadcast in the they broadcast this stuff in the
United States, BBC's on cable packages and if you have
any of the BBC streaming stuff, which is which is
one of the more popular ones that a lot of
people don't have. But here on the KCO Day radio
program phone number eight eight eight nine three four seven
eight seven four. This is nice, you know, honestly, at
(01:20:03):
this point, I think you just they have no they
should have no power to do anything, all right, So
what is this guy say? Eighty five? No, he's eighty six.
All right, So you're an eighty six year old man.
You're walking around it's you know, it's got that kind
of cooler weather. The leaves are down and the wind's
(01:20:26):
are blowing, and all of a sudden, as you're talking
to somebody, your mouth is slightly open. Boom, here comes
here comes leaf gets you in the face, or goes
in the mouth, or maybe get a bug in the mouth.
That's the worst, right, what do you do? Well? You
kind of look like a lunatic to people across the
street of maybe don't know what's going on right the
(01:20:46):
whole you trying to fight a bee but they can't
see the bee, or in this case, just trying to
get a leaf out of your mouth. Oh, I could
just feel it right now, some dry, crinkly fall winter
ish kind of leaf just blowing gets in the back
of your rode a little dusty. Oh, I just need
to drink of water, just thinking about it. So he
does the normal human thing, which is almost really against
(01:21:07):
your control. He just real quick just spits it out
like gives it a cough, and that should be the
end of it.
Speaker 2 (01:21:13):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:21:14):
Nope, not going to be the end of it, that's right.
Roy Marsh eighty six said, he spit out the leaf
that blew into his mouth, and he said, as I
was sitting there, the wind blew a big well you
described it as a read. I guess into my mouth
and he goes, I spat it out, and just as
I got up to walk away, two police officers came
(01:21:37):
up to me. Marsh said he remembered the conversation because
at one point he even called one of the officers
silly for attempting to enforce a littering law on a
man who had just spit out a leaf that had
blown into his mouth. He was then handed a fine
for three hundred and thirty four dollars and fifty cents
(01:22:00):
though the court when he did tell the court what happened,
as you can imagine what's supposed to be kind of
the check and balance on this, the magistrate dropped it
to two hundred dollars instead of dismissing it. Yes, that's right,
a three hundred and fifty dollars initial fine, and nobody
(01:22:20):
disagrees with what he did except one of the officers
who referred to all right, I know, I'm sorry. No,
it was the court that said they would drop it
to two hundred because they understood that it was a
leaf that had blown there. However, according to the reports
by the police, he said that the man quote coughed
and spat it out quote excessively. Nobody there should have
(01:22:45):
any power over anybody's life anymore. There needs to be
some sort of litmus test for this. Again, nobody disagrees
what it was. Different sets of eyes, you know, from
the police who I guess watched him do this horrible thing,
to the judge who understand who understood based on testimony
(01:23:06):
that the guy is telling the truth about what he did.
And they all still felt that they had to squeeze
a couple hundred more dollars out of this poor guy.
This this Yeah, he's a eighty s he's a retired
guy too. I don't know, I don't know how well
he did in life, but two hundred dollars or three
hundred and fifty for that matter, could be devastating for
(01:23:26):
somebody on a fixed income who just doesn't want to
swallow nature as it's forced into his face.
Speaker 3 (01:23:32):
There.
Speaker 1 (01:23:33):
So what's going to come of it, I don't know,
Probably nothing other than people arguing. Here's another interesting little
legal thing. I think this guy's probably screwed though, because like, yeah,
it's so, it's a double edged stored when you look
at when you look at how how Vegas like it's
(01:23:55):
really if you want to pick a five with a
Vegas can see it because you know you're gonna lose,
probably up to not that long ago, where you may
physically lose just due to the you know, the organized
crime that was tied up into all of that, and
just kind of you know, kind of the way they
treated stuff where if a guy was cheating, you could
take him in the back and show him a band
saw on, you probably wouldn't get in trouble for it.
(01:24:18):
And while those days have been taken over by corporate interests,
which a lot of people argue have absolutely ruined Vegas
for the normal person, the fact remains you're still gonna
have a tough go of it against casinos, and I
understand in part why Because there's a lot of scam
artists out there, and when they're not scamming taxpayers in
(01:24:39):
the federal government, like in Minnesota, they're gonna go and
they're gonna try to scam where there's a lot of money.
And casinos are a very very desirable thing because the
deepest of deep pockets and the money's like readily there.
They do things that are a lot different where you know,
it's where people are handling that money or in proximity
(01:25:01):
to it, Whereas if you go to a store you
got time drop safe. You know, it's a little more difficult.
So people see that, they get greedy and they're going
to want to figure out ways to extract money. Casinos
are going to be clear with this. That being said,
they wheeld an enormous amount of power. So here's the headline.
Mansue's casino, after waking up in handcuffs, was seventy five
(01:25:24):
thousand in debt. He doesn't remember. Apparently. Markers markers markers
for I guess for you don't know is essentially credit lines.
If you know nothing about gambling, you can you can
get a marker with a casino and you can arrive
at it a lot of different ways. But yeah, it
just says, all right, I agree to pay this and
recognize and then we'll get it. We'll get it all
(01:25:44):
sorted out. So this guy apparently had seventy five k
in markers. Now he's a lawyer. He's a sixty four
year old licensed attorney and a longtime player at ARIA, which,
by the way, I have stated Aria. I enjoyed the hotel.
I'm not a huge, you know, like gambler in a casino,
(01:26:05):
Like I'll go find like a maybe a poker match
to play. I love if there's like a little mini
tournament because you can really milk that because a lot
of people are really bad at it if you're just
playing one of the more moderate ones, and so you know,
you at least get to feast on those folks. And
who knows. So yeah, but he says he doesn't remember
(01:26:27):
any of this. He says he was leaving the high
limit blackjack room with a few thousand and chips, and
he says he next woke up the following morning at
a Las Vegas casino security holding pen in handcuffs. Oh
if I had a nickel, So leaving the blackjack room,
(01:26:47):
next thing you know, you're essentially in a cage, handcuffed,
and U seventy five thousand. He said he did not
remember signing any of them. He also claims that while
he may have signed some, most of the signatures don't
look like his and he has no recollection of it.
And this is where the casino's gonna fight you. He
claims there's discrepancies between the amounts borrowed and recorded wins
(01:27:10):
losses Ari is not being very helpful and letting him
match it to the camera to the extent that they could.
But it comes down to a bigger thing in a
consent based society, which I always thought was interesting because,
like you know, there's a lot of people who think
that if you have a drink and a woman has
a drink. Let's say you're a guy and then a
woman has a drink and if you go and you
(01:27:33):
hook up, just the mere fact that she had a
drink doesn't allow doesn't put her in a position. And yes,
I understand that it's super double standard on this, but
she's not a position to consent. Well, that's absurd, that's
absolutely absurd. There is a there is a direct line.
Like we've seen people who you look at me. You're like,
there's that person. Is that person shouldn't be allowed to
(01:27:56):
not be laying down? It would go so horribly for him.
So what obligation does a casino have if you're upright
but clearly in that position, Because I think most of
us have seen somebody who's blackout drunk, and it's pretty apparent,
even if some people are calmer about it, and they
can legally make marker decisions for seventy five. K don't know,
(01:28:21):
but he's found a lawsuit one that he'll probably lose,
I guess if we're being honest with this. The suit
argues that the markers should be considered invalid and unenforceable
due to his condition at the time, and like and alternately,
the sub signatures were forged. Yeah, I don't know. And
I want to pair the society too. You guys saw
(01:28:43):
the Carnival cruise story where the guy died. So according
to the story, and I don't know that I've seen
Carnival pushback on this. He was served thirty three drinks
in you know, in one day, thirty three drinks, which
just now here's the thing, just because he was served
thirty three drinks, I don't know if he consumed all
(01:29:06):
thirty three drinks. I don't know if you I don't
know if you've noticed the propensity of people who get
on one of those old booze included things and then
we'll get a drink and then just leave it everywhere,
which I noticed was is kind of a hallmark when
you are having to pay for it. It's just another
lesson for a lot of the things that we talk about.
But then they gave him some sort of tranquilizer to
(01:29:29):
calm him down. And now they're claiming that a combination
of both of those decisions by the cruise ship led
to his death. So that's going to be a big
lawsuit there, and I don't know the answer to it.
All right, let's get rased agic from the Weather Channel.
He is here. You see that guy drink thirty three
drinks on the Carnival cruise ship and died in one day.
(01:29:49):
A lot hearing that it is, I'm hearing that it is.
Speaker 2 (01:29:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:29:55):
And then some guy I paired with this story, some
guy in Vegas said he was in the high stakes blackjack.
Last thing he remembers and then the next thing you
remembers is the next day, he's handcuffed in a cage
and Mario once they're seventy five K and markers and
some people are like you consent if he's that drunk,
And the difference is Vegas will probably win that.
Speaker 2 (01:30:16):
Yeah, they're probably gonna win that one. Oh gosh, what's
the underlying theme here? Right?
Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
I don't know. I don't know. What if you called
your wife and honey, I'm in a cage, handcuffed and
we're down seventy five K, are you more start of
her or the security at Aria?
Speaker 2 (01:30:33):
Yeah, let's sweet know the answer to that question.
Speaker 1 (01:30:36):
Yeah, you take me to the table side.
Speaker 2 (01:30:38):
Yeah, all right, so yeah, just leave me here. I'm good,
I'm good. Thanks, Yeah, all right. Let's see next couple
of days, the warming trend continues. Might see some sixty
degree temperatures by a Thursday, So the news all good.
It's a little bit milder this morning, but still kind
of cold out the fatter they had mid up her forty,
(01:30:59):
so good day. Lots of sunshine tonight will be on
either side of thirty, depending on where you are upper twenties.
Probably tryad near thirty or just above triangle. Tomorrow, the
little mid fifties. Clouds are going on the increase out
ahead of the next cold front, but this one not
packing the wallet that this one that we're currently getting
out of does. Is just brings some rain in the
afternoon and at night on Thursday, near sixty Thursday, and
(01:31:23):
then load to mid fifties back Friday, but sunshine so
really not terrible with loads in the mid upper twenties
by Saturday morning, so just briefly a little bit chillier,
but not as cold as we've been. Sunshine Saturday near
just above fifty. And then on Sunday, first day of
the winter, upper fifties, low sixties, mostly sunny, going to
(01:31:43):
beautiful and right now right up through Christmas, I don't
see any big Arctic outbreaks, and if you want to
stretch the boundary of anything, I'm comfortable with maybe even
on into the new year. It looks like we're done
temporarily from any wintery presep and or any Arctic outbreaks.
But hey, it's early. We've got early shots are off
the far this December, but it looks like things are
(01:32:03):
going to be okay for the next stuff several days.
Speaker 1 (01:32:05):
So I screw your right your white Christmas is what
he's saying. So all right, right on that note, On
that note, I got a roll, But thank you very
much for talk tomorrow. There you go, Race Agic from
the Weather Channel back with Bloomberg News. Next, Denise PELLEGREENI
what's happened in Denise.
Speaker 6 (01:32:22):
Yeah, we just got a lot going on, particularly with
the jobs report that just came out stronger than expected
job creation, but not by a lot in November, the
payroll gaining a little bit.
Speaker 1 (01:32:34):
Okay, all right, sorry about that.
Speaker 6 (01:32:37):
I like that music effect, because the November payroll gain
was a little bit bigger than expected, but just like
the music, it kind of petered out a little bit
after that drop of one hundred and five thousand in October,
and the unemployment rate, well, that was unexpectedly higher than expected,
so investors might kind of think that inflation isn't a
(01:32:59):
big risk that they thought it was. Stock features are
off sessionless, but still got kind of a downward tone,
fitting Dow futures down fifty three, SMT futures down fourteen,
NESDAK features down ninety three. Also looking at NIMES creude
tumbling under fifty six bucks a barrel on indication that
supply is outpacing demand, and that could mean you could
(01:33:20):
see more price cuts at the pump going forward. PayPal
is applying to become a bank. That's as the US
loosens regulations forward, taking a nearly twenty billion dollar charge.
It's canceling a planned electric F series truck, shifting production
toward gas and hybrid vehicles, and also converting its electric
F one fifty lightning pickup into an extended range hybrid vehicle.
(01:33:44):
If you think you're seeing more ads on television this
holiday season, you're right. Holiday adds up thirteen percent from
a year ago, according to the Wall Street Journal, a
decade after its debut. The Cookie Dough Oreo is coming back.
The new one has chocolate chip cookie dough cream filling.
It come out next Monday. And Casey, be careful if
you're doing those DNA tests. And I don't mean that
(01:34:07):
specifically for you, but surprise airs are apparently showing up
all over the place and asking for their cut of
family fortunes. As people discover that they're actually related to
somebody else, lawyers are recommending not using the words for
my children in your trust or in your wills, use
(01:34:27):
their name specifically instead. Unless you I shouldn't say you
unless one thinks that they have other children that they
don't know about or that they haven't owned up to,
and they want to give them something. But apparently as
more people do twenty three in me and ancestry dot com,
this is just causing a huge problem in families with
the air showing up all over the place.
Speaker 1 (01:34:49):
And then I love chaos. I might do the words
just to do it. See, the trick is the hack
is to not have a family fortune.
Speaker 6 (01:34:56):
Well yeah, you know, but that's the thing. People can
get so possessive. Someone might have just one little thing
and people could end up arguing over that because people
are going to people and you know.
Speaker 2 (01:35:12):
How that is.
Speaker 1 (01:35:13):
It did just went through it a couple of years ago. Yeah,
you don't recognize some people. So but yeah, that's gonna
be my trick. I'm gonna spend it all.
Speaker 6 (01:35:21):
So I know someone who sold everything and divided it equally,
sold everything, got cash, divided it equally between his four children,
and then told them that he didn't want to hear
anything more about it.
Speaker 1 (01:35:36):
Yeah, that's probably the way to go.
Speaker 6 (01:35:37):
So all right, Well, yeah, there a little dark there,
but kind of interesting.
Speaker 1 (01:35:43):
Absolutely appreciate it, so we'll chat tomorrow. And anyway, there
we go to Nise Pelligreety from Bloomberg News. Yeah yeah, yeah,
all right, engineer says they're working on it, so we'll see.
It's not like they can't do the report there, but it
doesn't sound as crisp and clean and we like that.
(01:36:04):
All right, quick, quick thing here, real quick, just because
and I opened the show with this, and I want
to end the show with this if if you want
a good chuckle, even though look, these are serious people
in the sense that they're seriously deranged and are are
fed the constant narrative of you know what we see
with the just you know, the media and the language
(01:36:29):
and the words are violence, and so you can go
ahead and do things this New Year's eve La terror
plot that they apparently have just thwarted. These are all
like these are all kids from the valley, grew up
in nice homes, and they hate capitalism, and they hate Jews,
and they hate pretty much anything. So that they have
to they got to get their little altra identity here
(01:36:52):
and partner with some really kind of obscure but notably
dangerous groups like the Turtle Island Liberal Front, which I
understand sounds like a bad guy from a he Man episode.
But no, it's a real thing.