Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's going to be a I guess, a more exciting
(00:02):
Wednesday than I think a lot of people predicted Trump's.
Trump's given a primetime speech tonight. There are a lot
of theories as to what it is, you know, but
I don't know that you need to theorize much. It's
a Trump speech, so it's going to be it'll be
a little bit of everything, but it looks like the
(00:23):
focus is probably going to be and this is from Levitt.
President Trump is going to be giving an address to
the nation tomorrow night. It's going to be a really
good speech. He's going to talk a lot about the
accomplishments over the past eleven months. So this is part
of a speech he gave in Pennsylvania, and then he's
(00:48):
got a couple more scheduled where there they're having to
bridge the gap. I think they saw that they were
soft during the less you know election that we had,
albeit off your elections, but bridge the gap on messaging
surrounding affordability. So because I don't think Trump's done a
(01:11):
very good job of that, He's been very dismissive in
some instances. It's kind of like when with the Epstein files,
where he's just like this is stupid and if you
want to see it, you're dumb kind of attitude. Those
weren't his exact words, but you guys, you guys know
what I'm talking about. And then they kind of they
softened where they were on that, and I think that
probably served him well. And of course then they just
(01:34):
you know, have to sit there and wait for the
Democrats to prove his point by blocking and retacting faces
of models who were literally paid to be in the
very same photo right, probably counted it in their portfolio. Yeah,
I was a model for Hawaiian Tropic. We had these events,
(01:54):
like these famous people we saw, and they're putting it
out so that it looks like underage victims, I mean,
just crazy stuff. So is he gonna get into that,
I don't know. Is he gonna say something about Rob Reiner?
I don't know, so I think, but I think it'll
be a potpoury. But yeah, it's pretty standard. I don't know.
(02:18):
Maybe he'll solve the shooting up there at Brown somebody
needs to, because it doesn't sound like the the Keystone
cops in charge up there have a frigging clue what
they're doing, man, And and luckily they have, you know,
idiot media to help them out as well. So we
(02:40):
have somebody in custody, then somebody not in custody. Then
we have a bunch of like really blurry photos. Then
we have a photo of another person that's less blurry,
but they're wearing a face mask and you can't even
tell if that's a man or a woman. But the
fact that they're wearing a face mask did did amuse
the the liberal leanings of the reporters at the press conference. So,
(03:05):
by the way, so the press conference includes the Chief
of Police for Providence, Rhode Island, and the Attorney General
for the State of Rhode Island, and I like, it's
so this they're so unprepared, Okay, all right, so let's well,
(03:26):
let's start right here. So they're just trying to like,
here's here's some video, and then they're trying to tell
the media where the video is from. They don't even
know he one of them thinks, and that you'll hear
the chief he thinks it's from the inside or outside,
And then the Rhode Island AG has to step forward
and he still is like, I mean, just listen to him, bumble,
this really easy.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Thing outside.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
Outside so what are we doing? That was the outside
of the building we were released that clarified.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
Okay, so there is you know, if those of you
been with us before, and I understand not all of
you have been, there is video inside the building. There
are cameras inside the building.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
What we have released to you are videos from outside.
Uh is uh yeah, but he was going to say
there so like they clearly don't have their crap together
and it's showing. So now the media is like, well,
wait a second, what do you mean is you got
cameras inside, but you're not releasing any of the inside
which might have a clear you know, you're asking the
(04:41):
public's help to catch this person. You know, there's all
sorts of names being theorized. None of that's you know,
none of that's been locked down. There's you know, testimony
as to what might have been said. There's testimonies saying
that they did not say uh you know, the a
la akbar. But but we don't know. And now they
(05:02):
can't even figure out where the cameras, what's going on
with the cameras. The whole thing is weird. And then
listen to this, because this is the reporter asks you
a very fair question here. Why are you guys bumbling
this camera thing? Like Brown University is like, this is
a this is a multi billion dollar, you know, annual operation.
(05:25):
This is one of the top schools. Man, How are
we to believe that the security is so laxed? This
is the best you can do from a security camera standpoint.
Explain it to us.
Speaker 4 (05:36):
The suspect of Brown's not releasing them or you're not
releasing them. Luck, how are the multi leaders dollar school?
Speaker 3 (05:42):
I have a bunch of cameras in the halways, so
so let me let me try to explain that. So,
as President Patson knows, there was a major addition put
on that building within the last five years or so,
that that is a modern building attached to a much
older one in the back. So it doesn't come as
a surprise to me at least that there are cameras
(06:04):
and the newer part of the building and there is
video footage. Okay, so there's the back part of the building,
old part and front part, new part. The shooting occurs
in the old part towards the back up towards Hope Street,
and that older part of the building. There are fewer,
if any cameras in that location.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
Well, none of this, literally, none of this makes any sense.
So you had all this money to put on this
edition that all has modern cameras, and not only did
you not upgrade the cameras in the old part of
which I don't believe that by the way, I'm just
think of all. Think of it like Duke Chapel has
(06:44):
cameras around it and in it. So like, and that
when was that built nineteen thirties? Do they build the
current iteration of the nineteen thirties, right, so as you
know they've had the innovations, you're able to put cameras
in old buildings. It was it was just an absolute
(07:06):
dumpster fire and so like, rather than just you know,
the media just taking this gift from God dropped in
their laps by this horrible press conference, which should, in
you know, proper journalistic, I guess, in the perfect execution
of journalism, would raise a lot of questions about the
(07:28):
effectiveness of the people who are supposed to be in charge,
who are just bumbling this thing. Man, just there was
a couple of there's one other I'm gonna play you,
but that like I could have I could have pulled
ten cuts from this thing of just how badly it
was going. But I wanted to give you an example of
even though this gift was just bestowed upon you as
(07:50):
a member of the media of this rank and competence,
where you have video and audio to play as part
of your report, one of the reporters wants the virtue signal,
because of course they do. And so they're gonna ask
this question. You're gonna kind of click, and then they're
gonna ask a follow up. But listen to what they're asking.
(08:11):
And you have to have seen the photo of this
person overweight, wearing you know, wearing a jacket because it's
cold out pants, but they're wearing a face mask and
kind of a more winterish cap. All right, that's what
you see. So with that in mind, as I just
described it, listen to this stupidity.
Speaker 5 (08:32):
If I were if someone were Province, rather than were
to see someone mass description of the person in the
how would they be sure that they were with the Federals?
Speaker 1 (08:43):
Okay, all right, So if if Providence, you know, people
around Providence, were to see this person who has a
face mask over what is a very traditional kind of
way that you address in cooler weather, how do we
know that that's not an ICE agent. That is the
question being asked here by this friggin reporter. Man, does
(09:07):
now anyone who wears a mask ice agent? What if
it's a scarf ice agent? Clearly an ICE agent. And
so now the idiots who just put that horrible press
conference on like now they have to figure out how
to feel this and then the reporter is not going
to be done.
Speaker 6 (09:25):
The tip line that we've been providing throughout the last
several of days four zero one two seven two three
one two one, that call comes in here and uh
and is answered in this building with Province police professionals
and our partners at the FBI. That is, that is
(09:47):
who's manning the phones, that is who's processing the tips.
And we are encouraging anybody who has relevant information to
please use that tip line, and they should know that
that's who's on the other end.
Speaker 1 (09:58):
Of the phone.
Speaker 6 (09:59):
And and again, if you have relevant information or information
that you think might help us with this investigation, we
encourage you to call it.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
All right, So even that that's the age right there,
even they're not taking the bait on what a stupid question,
because this guy just wants to make the point. This
is what happens when we have Ice agents running around
wearing masks. Because he's got a mask on, he must
be an ICE agent. And so the reporter gets kind
(10:27):
of steered off this and if he was smarty, just
keep his mouth shut. But he's not smart, as evidence
by asking the question, you know, in the first place, the.
Speaker 5 (10:37):
Dispurbment and an ICE agent who would be asked to
walking through and not be a pro but police in
the same way as this personal one.
Speaker 6 (10:46):
Again, we've worked really hard to build the trust of
our community here in Providence, and I'm telling you that
that phone number for.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Zero one, all right, He's just going to reiterate the
answer if you had a hard time hearing the question.
He's just like, well, you know, so if they get
a tip or ath already see this and they have
to approach that, they're going to approach that person like
you'd approach an Ice agent. That individual has nothing else
other than that looks like that might be a brown jacket.
(11:15):
There's some brown there. There is literally nothing else there
that would make you think that's an ICE agent. But
I've realized in this society we do not have the
ability to correctly tell what an ice agent looks like.
I know, should be pretty easy. It's just three letters.
Sometimes they'll have the Customs and Border Protection thing, but
(11:36):
you know, those two get kind of lumped into each other,
and that's you know, when you're a lunatic in a
dinosaur costume and just wants to scream at somebody. I
guess close enough for government work. But there was another
incident down in New Orleans, and this one's a doozy,
so we'll get into that. Also, we got to check
(11:56):
in with the idiot chief of police up in Minnesota,
in Minneapolis specifically because I would say that annually somebody
makes this argument whenever immigration comes up, and I guess
it's our job annually to shoot it down with the
greatest of ease. So lots to get into six eighteen.
(12:17):
Back in just a few here on the cac O
Dave radio program, So a reporter in Providence wants people
to know and wanted to bring up in the middle
of just a doomsday press or yesterday that since the
suspect they're looking for is wearing a mask, people are
unable to tell the difference between I guess that and
(12:39):
an ice agent, which sounds dumb until you hear these
these idiots. All right, So this happened at what's it
called Bromart brow Mart. See it's in New Orleans, so
they have to put a word with an ex at
the end. So br e aux. I think it's a
(13:03):
play on brew. It's actually a restaurant slash bar. Yeah,
it was a sports bar, I guess AnyWho. And you
go look at their menu and it's just it's pretty
standard stuff. Okay, all right, So all this is important
because you have some agents, some government agents, and they
(13:24):
were they were apparently nearby. They were in the parking lot.
So some of the employees took it upon themselves to
go out and start screaming at him. Why is their
twenty something virtue signals just want to make sure they
don't shut off the body count Spiggott with their Septim
Pierce little party crew there. So they're going to go
out and make their lives miserable. Oh you guys are ice,
(13:50):
blah blah blah. They're screaming at him. It's the audio
is not great, So I'm just going to talk you
through it. And the agents actually correct these idiots very
specifically because they're wearing. They are wearing some identifiable gear,
most of them aren't. They also don't have their they
(14:11):
don't really have their faces covered. They're not wearing the problem,
you know, the standard. Uh uh. They're not kitted out,
I would say as much as an ICE agent. But
they do have they do have some labeling. It actually
says ie cac ic ac. And that's important because that's
(14:31):
not how you spell ice. It's two of the letters,
but it's not the three, although it is one of
the two twice. So there's that. And so these officers
even tell them that they are internet crimes against children.
That's right. These these law enforcement officers, their job is
(14:55):
to go after online predators, are not immigrations and customs enforcement.
They tell them this, they show them that, and so
at that point, right the employees probably probably are like,
oh are bad, we suck? No, they start calling them
pedophiles and losers. They're calling they're screaming now louder at
(15:22):
the ICE that they excuse me, the ie CAC agents
do they say it as zycac. I don't know, internet
crimes against children? The pedophile catchers. A woman in where
is this? It's a Los Angeles suburb Lakewood. Is that
(15:42):
means anything to anybody is claiming that an Amazon driver
stole her cat? Kind of hard to tell. In the video,
clearly the driver is interacting with her cat. But now
is she happy that he did her?
Speaker 7 (16:00):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (16:00):
No, she wants the cat back. Okay kind of cat
wasn't should that matter? I don't know. I'm not a
cat person. Let's see here quote. I thought he was
just patting her for a second. But yeah, I had
to rewatch it a couple times. It's a dark ring
camera video. He doesn't carry her very nicely. I do
(16:22):
see her little tail, and I was like, oh my gosh.
I couldn't believe what I was seeing. Amazon has identified
the driver, but has n't been able to reach him.
According to this report, Piper's owner said she contacted the
sheriff station and they told her it'll be months. Yeah. Yeah,
welcome to Los Angeles. Can you buy another cat on Amazon? Though?
(16:46):
Is that a thing? Hold on, cause that might solve
your problem? Man, and he could get him when he
brings the cat. That'll be guilty or he didn't steal
your cat? He just because it's I'm undecided on the video.
He clearly pets your cat? Oh boo? What are you
(17:09):
guys sitting down? Do you want to learn something that
I just learned? Apparently is the thing? Okay? Ah, this
is very very sad. Where is my breaking news thing
that doesn't matter? Hmm okay, well for tend Fox news sweep.
Are you ready? You can't buy cats on Amazon? I know, yeah,
(17:35):
apparently Amazon doesn't handle live animals, with the exception of
let's see insects and shellfish for pets or bait. Okay,
can you buy a taxi dermied cat? What I'm trying
to help this one? You? Okay? All right? Let me
hold on, dude. If you start, if you type b
(18:00):
you y space a space tax it will auto fill.
Buy a taxi dermy cat. I'm not kidding. All right,
looks like you're probably gonna have to dip into eBay
for it. But they have some They have all sorts.
(18:22):
I mean, I understand, like a game cat, like, all right,
you're buying a mountain lion, but somebody else got it
because you want your man cave to butcher up. But
like some of these are house cats? Why does this
seller have so many ready to go? Oh? See see?
I told you, I fell down a rabbit hole. You're
(18:42):
all coming with me, and now we're all sad. Well, anyway,
I don't know what's gonna come of it, but she
she claims Amazon why and also what would he do
with the cat? The guys out running around having to
deliver stuff. He's got it. He's got a cat whipping
uh you know, three hundred miles an hour case of
the Zuomi's inside of his Amazon van. That would be incredibly,
(19:05):
incredibly distracting unless he just happened to know it's one
of those rare cats who's not going to act like
an insane asylum escapee in a moving vehicle. No, No,
you have to assume that the cat's going to go berserk,
because that's what cats more often than not do. I said,
(19:26):
I may not have cats, but we grew up with cats,
and I've watched what happens when one of those cats
got put in the vehicle to go, you know, go
to the cat doctor. They were never a fan ever.
I think I have scarves from my mom's cat just
trying to get it in its little holder. And she
was the sweetest little thing until that carrier came out.
(19:46):
Then it was blood sport man. All right, so what
did we learned this morning? Amazon driver Maystal only cat.
You cannot buy live cats on Amazon, much to my surprise,
but you can buy taxidermy cats really easily. Here's one
going for just forty five bucks. That's a steal. I'd
(20:13):
get the dimensions of that, because you know that's one
of the ways they trick you on there. All right,
let me flip over this first of all. Eight eight
eight nine three four seven eight seven four you want
to weigh in on I don't know taxidermy cats or
what you think Trump's gonna talk about tonight. He's got
a speech that'll be taking place at nine pm Eastern.
(20:38):
It sounds like the way that they're describing it is
just kind of like, hey, here's all the stuff we've
accomplished this year, but it's Trump. So is he gonna
stay right on that or is he gonna do what
he does? So he just kind of wonders sometimes and
then maybe we get into some stuff about Venezuela, some
of those conversations God help us, Rob Reiner stuff please
(21:01):
don't or you know, just the all the ice stuff
that's going on with like these nitwits out there screaming
at people who catch pedophiles, uh, and then calling them pedophiles,
and just the sheer lunacy and insanity of the of
the resist folks out there. Or maybe he could just
(21:22):
correct Minneapolis's chief of police. Every year we got to
do one of these and uh, it's just it's so tiring.
So what you have is you got the Minneapolis chief
of police. His last name is oh hair, oh hair
or hair uh uh oh. We got a story out
(21:48):
of Asheville too. We're gonna be getting touch. Let's I
forgot to tease that. Why don't you be shocked? All right?
Where did I here? It is? Okay, all right, So
Brian O'Hara, yeah, that's right. Right, And so he's up
there and they're wanting to talk about the impact of
some of the ICE stuff having to do with the
uh you know, the fraud being found in a lot
(22:11):
of these community organizations among the Somali community, and how
ICE is also part of that, right, because you know,
they're busting fraudsters within there. It suspected fraudsters who also
probably committed immigration fraud. So it's you know, they're they're
they're really attacking from all sides. So the chief of police,
he's got to get up there and rather than you know,
(22:34):
actually answering questions about how much cooperation there's going to be, No, no, no,
he has to say this. It's especially.
Speaker 8 (22:44):
Personal to me, having been raised a Catholic, to be
in a Christian church this morning as we are approaching Christmas.
All right, okay, and I cannot help but think of
what is happening day and how that echoes with how
outsiders have been treated for thousands of years. How Mary
(23:08):
and Joseph themselves, you're doing it. We're considered outsiders. You
did it and forced to stay in a barn.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Okay, oh, oh, where do I even start? Why do
I have to correct this every year? All right? Raise
your hand if you think that Joseph, Joseph and Mary
were quote unquote outsiders in the sense that he's trying
to make this comparison. Joseph and Mary were living in
and we're traveling within the country. They were citizens of
(23:43):
I know, crazy times here, so to be more specific,
and then there's there's a thousand reasons why this is
this is really dumb. Uh. So they lived in Judea. Okay,
if you go by the Roman provincial name quality Israel,
primarily in Nazareth and then went to Bethland. You know
(24:08):
why they went to Bethlehem. Well, there was a couple
of reasons. They moved around a bit, but first and
foremost they were having to travel to where Joseph was
from so that they could do they could be part
of this procedure to do a census, but also to
pay taxes. So this was a thing that you would
(24:28):
do as a citizen of Judea. And here's the other thing.
Even if you think, okay, well technically they were citizens,
you have to understand that Joseph's family is Davidic lineage.
So this is like, you know, this is Joseph. He
(24:51):
was a descendant of King David. That's like, how would
I describe this? That's like being a Mayflower family. You
get what I'm driving at. There's a little little flex there.
And no, don't gonna be wrong. Lineages were much tighter
back then. That means said, like to sit here and
(25:12):
pretend like they they were somehow like boat people in
into the country, it's just none of that's true. The
part where they were they were in this uh, this
this corral, this However, you know, however you want to
describe where the animals slept had more to do with
the fact that I don't know, Joseph is for his
(25:35):
forgetful husband and get on ex speedy or whatever. Now
all the rooms are sold out, right, but none of
that attaches it's it's literally one hundred percent wrong in
trying to make that comparison. And you're the chief of
police for a major US city, Dude, that is embarrassing.
And yet every year I'll hear someone say this a
(25:57):
lot of these stupid uh, you're wrong. They were outsiders.
They were standing outside the end wanting to become insiders.
That is fair, yes, all right, in that one example,
which is more play on words, and that one example,
I'll give it to you. But like, no, no, no,
(26:18):
none of those things you just said is true. And
yet we have all these crazy Nativity scenes like oh,
there's one with the baby Jesus with his hands zip Tide,
and they're all born of this narrative. Or there's just
one where the baby's gone right, there's just that it's
born of this narrative. For people who didn't even bother
to check any of this stuff. They were It's like,
(26:41):
if you live in Raleigh, you went to Greensboro to
do something, but all the rooms were booked because I
don't know, something's going on at the Corey Convention Center
and you should have checked. I don't know. But like
you're still in North Carolinian if you live there. But yeah,
leave it up to somebody high profile to do it
(27:03):
each and every darn year for political purposes, all right,
six forty seven phone number eight eight eight nine three
four seven eight seven four. We got us a little
issue in Ashville in this in this case by the
vice mayor there, and it looks like an investigation is
firing up. We'll give you the details on that coming
(27:24):
up CaCO Day Radio program. Here on the CaCO Day
Radio program, there is a really, really really long article.
I'm going to tweet it out. It's called the Lost Generation.
The author in this case is Compact Magazine. Yeah, here
(27:48):
we go. Let me just give you the let me
give you the overview on this new report. Companies did
everything they could to avoid hiring white millennial men over
the last decade. And when I say that this thing
is comper core hintsive they go by industry, you know,
they have academia, they have a journalism right then you
(28:09):
know finance tech, you name it. They go through each
and everyone and by yeah yeah, like let me get
let me just give you some examples. In twenty eleven,
the last year I moved to Los Angeles, white men
were forty eight percent of lower level TV writers. By
(28:32):
twenty twenty four, they accounted for just eleven point nine percent.
Staff at the Atlantic went from fifty three percent men,
eighty nine percent white to thirty six percent male, sixty
six percent white. And they go through and again, the
takeaway there is is if you look at the shifting
of hiring for you know, paid positions in turns, peoples
(28:58):
whose manuscripts were accepted by publishers, you name it. Because
again they're covering everything. And you look at which group
had the largest negative fluctuation from right around the time
they started integrating DEI into business and academia and all
of this the shift. The group most impacted were white
(29:22):
millennial men. And it is dramatic. Now some people would say, well,
that's who was hogging all the stuff, and that's what
these programs were about rectifying. And so what you've just
indicated is, in fact that it worked, which is one
of the arguments made in the article or made within
(29:44):
the article, not by the author, but by people they're interviewing.
Speaker 2 (29:48):
Umm.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
Yeah, So starting twenty fourteen, that was the primary hinge
the year DEI became institutionalized across American life. MM let
me give you some other examples outside of just those
holy crap, some of these like vox Vox went from
eighty two percent male, eighty eight percent white to just
(30:09):
thirty seven percent male. Yeah, all right, here we go.
White men may still be fifty five percent of Harvard's
arts and science And now we're getting into the academia.
But this is as a legacy of Boomer and jed
ACX employment patterns for tenure track positions, the pipeline for
(30:32):
future faculty. So now you're going to be touching into
the younger millennials. Here. Basically, your ability is a white
male to advance in Harvard if you are an outside
of this So millennial or younger generation went from forty
nine percent to just twenty seven percent. This isn't get hired,
by the way. Are These are people who in their
(30:55):
current positions would be expected to advance, So they have
already been deemed worthy of being hired by Harvard, and
yet they're just they're just swimming. They're just floating, man,
They're just swimming blind. There's just kind of way and
nothing's going to happen for most of them. And they
(31:15):
go to school by school and just just just through
everything here breaking down, the IVY League breaking down, even
has it's impacted into the community college system. Then they
get into industry. It's really long. Like I said, I
will tweet a link out here during the news if
(31:35):
you want to drill down into this thing. It's not
super great radio fodder because it's just a bunch of numbers,
but it is super eye opening because then you got
to then you got to start asking yourselves questions like
you know, how many how how would things be different
if it was all based on merit is? What what
(31:58):
one question or one side of the question is towards
the end of this article, like you know, And then
I think an example somebody uses is if you've suddenly
changed the dynamic of writers in Hollywood, has that been
partially to blame for Hollywood being on the decline or
is that all technology? I know, you could probably make
(32:20):
an argument there because like people complaining about woke stuff
and media. That's pretty standard fair now, And we have
up in Ashville the vice mayor actually under investigation. Antinette
I think that's how it's pronounced. Antonette Mosley, who had
(32:41):
just filed for reelection, is alleged to have cast ballots
in two thousand and eight, twenty twelve, in twenty fourteen
in both North Carolina and Georgia, which is weird because
I thought Georgia was well anyway, you know. Yeah, let's see.
(33:04):
She also claimed a homestead tax exemption in Georgia, which
is interesting because that is one of those things where
you're supposed to that's your residency and so not being
a residence even in North Carolin, I don't know how
it works. And can you be can you be on
the city council and the mayor even if you don't
(33:25):
live in the state or in this case vice mayor,
I don't know. And the you know, homestead tax exemption
in Georgia that is only for permanent residences. So m
State Board of Elections is apparently looking into it. But yeah, man,
(33:45):
just the stones to do that if in fact that's true.
All right, here's from the Ashville watchdog. The North Carolina
State Board of Elections is investigating Vice Mayor Antonette Mosley,
who has claimed a primary resident's tax break in Atlanta
while serving on Asheville City Council and has a history
(34:05):
of voting in both Georgia and North Carolina. We have
logged an incident regarding miss Moseley's residency or looking into it,
said Jason Tyson, the Board's director of External Affairs, can
confirm we're investigating. It won't be able to comment further
on the investigation, all right, that's pretty standard. The board
investigates potential election law violations and refers cases to prosecutors
(34:30):
when warranted based on the findings. Yeah, that'll be interesting too,
because do you make recommendations then to prosecutors in Georgia
as the North Carolina State Board, Because now you're getting in, Dude,
am I the only one who's not taking advantage of
mortgage fraud? Because like there's this pattern that keeps repeating
(34:51):
and I almost understand the math there. Right, she's probably
got this property in Atlanta. I don't know where it
is in Atlanta, but you know whether it was a
primary residence at one time or not. I would say
maybe it's more expensive, though Ashville is pretty expensive, but
maybe the tax breaks are greater, or these are investment properties,
(35:14):
and then you're just kind of lying about them, which
is what a lot of these allegations were with Shift
and with the the ag up there in New York.
Is basically these people picking and choosing to identify what
is their primary for the so that it's the most
financially because like people are like, why would they do this,
(35:37):
They're doing this because they're probably saving a bunch of money.
You have to look into each individual incident, but that's
why people do it. You've got to if you know,
if you've got a home and you live in you know,
an affordable place, but you have an investment property in
a place where the taxes can get really crazy, depending
on whether it's an investment property or a you know,
(36:01):
a primary residence. Yeah, because a lot of cities to
kind of push back on speculative property buyers, especially when
you got in like California and stuff, they've made it,
they've made that very punishing in some instances. So people
are more inclined than to lie and say no, no, no,
(36:21):
that's my permanent residence. The one that sits in this
jurisdiction where it could mean a you know, thousands and
thousands of dollars a year in differences with property taxes
or fees that go along with it. So, uh, we'll see.
But color me uh suspicious that anything's going to be
(36:43):
moving too quick or that show, or that she'll admit it,
I guess, or that you won't even be re elected.
Let's just be honest. There are no boundaries man to
be re elected for anything or elected for anything, you know,
up there in up there in Virginia with their attorney general.
Good lord. After that came out, I'm starting to think
(37:06):
it's more more normal though, because one of the when
do they call them up what do they what do
you guys call your your represented delegates or something up
there Virginia? Yeah, delegate. So there is a delegate up there.
Her name is Deborah Gardner, uh, and her daughter is
(37:26):
making social media videos who's clearly an adult. And in
the video you see this woman on there who is
now identified as a kadiac katiya Katia I guess Gardner,
who is talking about how she she wants if a
(37:48):
if a if a white Maga family goes into a
soul food place, she wants to be there to poison
them for for eating there, and and it kind of
goes from there, but you get the general gist of it.
She said, if I owned a soul food place and
a white Maga family showed up my restaurant, there's a
(38:08):
high chance that I'm gonna put wind decks in their food,
toilet cleaner, saliva feces, there would be wind decks in
all of your food. Now, does she own a soul
food place. No, she doesn't. And you know whether she'd
actually do something like that, But that's not the point.
You're the daughter of one of the representatives up in Virginia,
and you guys have had this whole storyline where now
(38:31):
a member of your mom's party was just elected to
a g even though he talked about murdering his opponents
and watching their kids die, killing them so that they
could watch their kids die. And now you're like, yeah,
if you go into a if I feel you're you're
not in the right restaurant based on you know, your ethnicity,
(38:52):
then I want to poison you. Is probably not a
good look, but is clearly much more socially acceptable in
Virginia following what happened with the Attorney general up there,
So like, well, our voters are done at this point
in punishing people, especially I think within the Democrat Party.
So I have every reason to believe that unless she's
(39:13):
literally in jail and unable to serve, that not a
lot's gonna come with this Antinette Mosley up there in
in Ashville, because who's gonna hold her responsible? Maybe they'll
be upset because like maybe she is living down in
Georgia and just pops up for meetings. I don't know,
(39:33):
we'll find out, but yeah, yeah, not a good look,
but also probably not gonna have anything happen if we're
just being honest. All right, So we got an update
on the the the Nick Reiner, you know Rob Reiner's
kid who was taken into Cussie for the murder. Apparently
he was tangling with a bunch of people at this
Conan O'Brien party, including Bill Hayter, the SNL dude who's
(39:59):
looking pretty nervous on a series of phone calls yesterday.
I'll tell you what happened in there. And also it
kind of explains too why they haven't processed this dude.
It sounds like he's on a medical hold, So who
knows what's going on there and how we feeling about
the US men's soccer teams new campaign slogan. Even if
(40:22):
you're not into soccer, it's still fun to, you know,
go and kick the rest of the world's behind in
a sport that they you know, we don't even really
care about that much. It makes it extra delicious, as
we've talked about here on the show. But I don't
know if this slogan is exuding toughness. I'll explain coming
up next here on the CaCO Day radio program. All right,
(40:44):
where this is down in Bluxi, Mississippi, a handful of
customers at a Walmart say they've discovered razor blades hidden
inside loaves of bread. In case you need something else
to worry about, right, store management. Now, when I first
saw this, I didn't realize it was multiple customers. I'd
(41:05):
be interested to see if they know each other, because
like one of the things Walmart's going to be thinking
is who ever bought it did it and was trying
you know, I was trying to squeeze some money out
of because you know, it happens. It happens. I'm sure
they're investigating that, but or could see just be some lunatic.
Lord knows, we got enough of them in this world
(41:26):
who's bored and it's like this will get them kind
of doesn't say what? Kay I suppose it doesn't matter.
I'm sure if you're going to do this, you just
want to find maybe you go for it. Now, I
shouldn't think this out on the air. You probably want
to go for a rye or somewhere it blends in.
(41:49):
But also you could do that if you wanted to
stereotype based on people's bread that they buy. You know
what I'm saying. So that you're like, ah, they did
it as a crime, yeah, oh yeah it or it's
just some crazy person. So anyway, police confirmed the reporters
(42:10):
that as of what was this late Tuesday and no arrested,
no immediate reports of related incidents at other locations. All right,
so I think it happened there. Well, it's Walmart. Don't
they have like a gazillion cameras or they're going to
let the people running the University of the Brown University
Investigation handle it, who clearly don't know how cameras work.
(42:32):
It was If you guys didn't see the press conference yesterday,
it was an absolute embarrassment. You have the chief of
police for Providence, you have the attorney general for the
the entire state of Rhode Island sitting there, and they're
so disorganized they can't even figure out, like where the
footage that they're attempting to show them.
Speaker 9 (42:53):
Is from camera. So you have outside, I'm talking that's
what we have outside at all. I'm sorry that was
(43:13):
the outside of the building.
Speaker 1 (43:14):
Okay, I can't It's it's straight up who's on first?
And then the reporters actually do ask one logical question.
They're like, all right, So after they got done figuring
out inside outside, where there's cameras, where there it's not,
the reporters realize that they haven't been released anything from
the interior cameras of this part of that building, and
(43:35):
they're just wondering, like, what's up. Is there not cameras there?
Did you not give it to us? Like we're already
confused by all that other stuff that just happened. What's
going on? And then this is the explanation from one
of the richest schools in the nation. This is Ivy
League baby and so this really doesn't track the.
Speaker 4 (43:57):
Suspect of Brown's you're not releasing how does the multi
leagory of Dollar School will not have a bunch of
cameras in the haulways.
Speaker 3 (44:04):
So so let me let me try to explain that. So,
as President Patson knows, there was a major addition put
on that building within the last five years or so.
That is a modern building attached to a much older
one in the back. So it doesn't come as a
surprise to me at least that there are cameras and
(44:24):
the newer part of the building and there is video footage. Okay,
so there's the back part of the building, old part
and front part, new part. The shooting occurs in the
old part towards the back up towards Oak Street, and
that older part of the building, there are fewer, if
any cameras in that location.
Speaker 1 (44:42):
What the heck are you talking about? So you're telling
me that because it's the older part of the building
that there's no cameras. That doesn't make any sense because
that doesn't track on any college campus where you have
pick any of the universities in North Carolina, UNC, Duke,
NC State, Wake Forest, whatever, but pick whatever one you want.
(45:05):
They got old buildings, they got new buildings, they got
cameras in the old buildings, Like this is what would
the oldest what would the oldest building be at NC State.
I'm just trying to think, well, the main building, right,
isn't that the oldest? What do they call it? The holiday?
(45:28):
My point is, I bet there's cameras in there. I'm
almost sure of it. So and remember you had a mayor,
or excuse me, you had the president of the school.
When she was when she was interviewed the day before,
she's like, it was six hours after and she's like,
I don't know nothing. I don't know nothing. And then
they asked why didn't Because they have an alarm system
(45:49):
for an active shooter, like a lot of universities have.
They asked, why didn't the alarm go off to notify
students that there's an active shooter. And then they're like, well,
that's not for active shoot And then literally a reporter
showed them the website where it says this alarm is
for active shooters. It said some on their own website.
And then when it couldn't get any dumber in the
(46:11):
midst of everything, there one of the reporters decided that
he wanted to make a political point by asking a
this question about because the suspects photo has them wearing
a face mask, though dressed in a very standard kind
of cooler weather get up. But because they have that
(46:32):
face mask, is there a possibility that people might might
think that I don't know what they're asking whether they
think an ICE agent did it, or they'll confuse an
ICE agent with this person. It's the dumbest stuff.
Speaker 5 (46:44):
If were I a little were problems residents were to
see someone mass description of the personage of how would
they be sure that they were regulated with a federal
Ice sag.
Speaker 1 (46:56):
Yeah, and he'll give a pretty static you know, Pat
answered it, says, go ahead and call the hotline. They'll
sort it out. What a stupid question. He just wanted
to make the point. See how confusing it is when
the ICE agents wear masks. They might think that they're
a double hobicide suspect walking around the streets of Providence.
(47:18):
They must stop, now, I am I am fully aware
that people are floating a name around. I've got it,
but there's no confirmation on any of that, so we'll
go ahead and wait and see. But also I haven't
(47:40):
seen one person with two brain cells to rub together
up there during the course of this investigation. Every single
time they hold a press conference, it's the disaster that
I just played for you, all right. I don't want
to make anyone nervous. But a hacking group what do
(48:01):
they call themselves, the Shiny Hunters. Oh yeah, I don't
know if it's an anonymous thing or what, but they are.
Well clearly there's a financial motive. So apparently this hacker
group claims to have stolen personal identifiable information, including viewing
records of members of the adult website porn Hub. Yeah, so, yeah,
(48:32):
I think it. According to the story here is it
affects premium. You is her premium. There's a prem Sure,
there's a premium. So maybe if you're just you know,
stopped by once in a while person, you wouldn't be
in here because they wouldn't have any information to tag
it to. But yeah, yeah, if you if you paid
(48:53):
them any money and had an account, it looks like
not just your email address, location, but also videos and
channels watched, including video name, web addresses, keywords, and the
exact date and time the event was recorded. Oh yeah,
that's doomsday for them. Man, that's what that's what. What
(49:13):
was the Remember that the I'm never gonna use the
term dating website a fair website, right, wouldn't that what
happened with the Ashley Ashley Madison. That is what happened
with Ashley Madison. Basically, they some hacker groups said we
got everyone's details. Who's on there. The premise of that
website was to go and have an affair, or find
(49:37):
people who want to have an affair, and I guess
you're going to help them have their affair, which is
dangerous business in North Carolina, considering the alienation of affection
lawsuits that we have here. But with that in mind,
that was it. That because nobody's going to touch you
with a ten foot poll, especially considering this wasn't just
somebody watching a dirty video. The guy that worked forwarded
(49:59):
to him. This was people who were getting ready or
in some cases had already violated their marriages. So that
was it. I have to think that this would do
a big website like this in too. At the very least,
you're never going to get any info from anybody ever. Again, Uh,
let's see here. I think they claim to have other
(50:20):
websites too, so and again I don't know, these are
just claims, but now tech Crunch and others are writing articles,
so there's something fun to freak out about. Maybe, Yeah,
spokesperson for Shiny Hunters this is the hackers tells tech Crunch,
this is the crazy is the crazy thing too, because like, yeah,
you may be happy about this because you're like, good,
(50:42):
that's what you get for, you know, having that addiction
and looking at this filthiness and what would you know?
What would your mother think? And all that you could
think that, But at the end of the day, the
hackers are still criminals. They want money from these outlets,
and if they don't get the money, they're going to
go and they're going to data dump and even if
(51:03):
and even if it's not embarrassment over what you looked at,
they also have billing stuff. So yeah, but they also
have spokespeople and that's just so weird to me. Did
the mafia ever have a spokesperson? Really? Not really? A
spokesperson for the Shiny Hunters gang tells tech Crunch that
(51:25):
the hackers have sent an extortion email only to porn
hubs so far, and declined to say how many other
companies were part of the incident. So the incident actually
happened with a secondary I guess a secondary software that
porn Hub but also a lot of other sites use
(51:45):
called mixed panel. And now we're outside of my comfort
level as far as understanding what all this stuff does.
But this company revealed the breach it happened back on
November eighth and said that is affected corporate customers and
one of their big corporate customers for this particular company
(52:07):
have to do with adult sites. They kind of they
kind of deal with I don't want to say fringier stuff,
but they were always like this was these are the
people that were handling a lot of stuff for cryptocurrency, right,
so like cointracker, I think is one of their corporate sites,
and that's pretty popular if you've got any crypto All told,
(52:30):
they have eight thousand, oh jeez, eight thousand corporate customers.
And again I don't know what all the mixed panel stuff. Okay,
here's what they do. Companies use mixed panel to track
what their users do on their site or app, similar
to an app developer. Okay, so they can either monetize
it but also use it to make improvements yeah, okay,
all right, well then i'd see how they'd get all
(52:52):
this information. Eh. So I guess I guess if over
Christmas you see somebody burning their computer and the I'm kidding,
I'm not trying to ruin your Christmas, but yeah, some
people are gonna be like, you know what, we don't
need a computer in the house anymore. No, No, the
(53:13):
kids just they spend too much time. Let's go ahead,
let's go ahead and burn it in the fire pit.
I don't know that that's going to I'm not super
tech savvy, but I don't think that's gonna work. All right.
Just a quick follow up here. So the the whole
thing with Rob Riiner and his wife being murdered, now
their son under arrest under some sort of medical evaluation.
(53:37):
They were talking about the They were talking about how
there was a pretty high profile incident at a Christmas party.
It was Conan O'Brien's, which that sucked. I love me
some Conan O'Brien. Man. There was a video floating around
with Conan if you're on Twitter over the last like
two weeks of him talking about, you know how he
(53:59):
and some of his can medium buddies dealt with Conan's
father and then mother dying like one this was the
other thing too, Like his father died, they saw that
coming and then just like I think it was days later,
his mom died, and like as the way that they're
getting through it is like, I'm not a professional comedian,
(54:21):
but I try to use humor to kind of deal
with stuff I don't want to deal with. These guys
are top tier comedians, and it's hilarious. It's because then
Conan basically accuses one of the other ones of assassinating
his parents, and I don't want to ruin it for you.
I'll find it. I think I did retweet it actually,
but it's very very funny. But that's floating around out there,
(54:42):
so I'll hunt that up. But there were actually two
incidents with Reiner's kids, so not just where Rob Reiner,
the kid Nick Reiner is his name, reportedly got into
a very visual and very loud argument with his parents,
but also earlier he had gotten into some sort of altercation,
(55:03):
non physical, with Bill Hater from SNL and it basically
it's described as Hater's sitting there and he's talking to
somebody and all of a sudden, Nick comes up and
just like injects himself into the conversation, at which point
Hater just stopped talking and stared at him. And then
eventually Reiner, you know, either got frustrated or embarrassed. It's
(55:28):
kind of stormed off, which you know, kind of tracks
with I think some of the theories there where you're
you know, you're Rob Reiner's kid, your Carl Reiner's grandkid,
and basically you haven't done anything you were the only
reason you were a part or attached to a project
that your father was doing is because he did a
project talking about having to deal with you know, basically
(55:52):
a kid who's an addict and steals everything and has
mental health issues. Like that's why you got included. So
to then go around this party and you know, be
socially awkward or intentionally awkward, and then have you know,
actual Hollywood stars people of note basically look at you
(56:12):
like you don't belong there. I wonder if some of
this played into it, but they're calling it a tiff.
I don't know. He just kind of stormed off when
Hater didn't engage him, because sounds like the dude was weird.
Witnesses say the awkward running with the SNL Alum wasn't
the only outburst of the night. Rein are also seen
in a very loud argument with his parents over I
(56:35):
don't know, God knows what let's see here. Oh okay,
wait comment on the investigation of the brown shooting. This
is the way the way this is being handled is
how we get conspiracy. Yeah. Absolutely, the way the press
conferences are going, one could assume it's a hit organized
by the school against the Republican leader. Yeah. I don't
(56:57):
know that you're claiming that, but oh and tell until
things change, I think that's legitios you are claiming that,
I don't know. I'm gonna go I I would have
a hard time with that because there's so many people
would have to be involved to have the and do
they do it at like a dean's meeting. I don't
know how it works, but I will say that there's
(57:20):
nothing in this press conference that gives me the confidence
that they know what they're doing, unless that's the rope
of dope, like all right, we'll just play dumb and
then they won't hide what they've done is hard, and
then we'll get them. Yeah. I suspect it's not that
all right, So our engineers have come in beatn equipment
(57:42):
with bats and now we believe that the comrades will work.
So we can talk to mister Ray stage if he's there.
If he's there yet, Are you there, mister Ray? Yeah, hello,
I'm here, I think.
Speaker 10 (57:53):
Hey, yeah, like that, okay, good morning, Yeah wow, I
love that blind squirrels and acorns right.
Speaker 1 (58:01):
Telling you he's got a big pipe. The engineered you
just comes in, just whack stuff with it and then
it starts. Hey, whatever it takes, right, that's whatever it takes. Yeah.
Speaker 10 (58:10):
Yeah, Well, I think you're gonna like the message. Close
to sixty next couple of days, probably stay mid upper fifties.
Try it in points west, but pretty decent day today,
some milky sunshine with a high cloud around and a
little bit of a breeze. And then tomorrow though it'll
be close to sixty again, we'll get a little rain
in the afternoon. In the evening hours gonna come in
(58:31):
west to east, so may try to sneak in late morning.
The Triad and the triangle coming in in the afternoon,
so you wake up and be like, ah, that's okay,
and then the afternoon you can be like that I
don't need this, and I rain will continue. There might
even be a rumble of thunder in some spots across
central parts of the state and western parts of the states.
We go through tomorrow night, so a little bit of
a spring sound and feel before the rain ends. As
(58:54):
we go through the morning on Friday, a little breezy
and still mid upper fifties to maybe sixty on Friday,
and then we'll take it down but only a little
bit for Saturday, mostly sunny, real nice start to the weekend,
a little bit fifties on Sunday, upper fifties to low sixties,
and sunshine returns. I don't see a lot of change
Monday Tuesday, as again at the Christmas week with temperatures
(59:16):
on either side of fifty during the day and the
thirties at night. Got a real nice stretch of weather
coming up. After a little bit of rain tomorrow afternoon
and through early Friday, then I think we're really going
to get into a nice stretch. Arctic are for now
stays tucked up well to our north.
Speaker 1 (59:31):
Okay, all right, well we'll chat in an hour, sir,
talk to you then. Okay, there you go. Rased aging
from the Weather Channel we got a couple of dumb criminals.
Are they both Florida? No, only ones Florida. Can we
then play a Florida man? I think we can because
the other one, while it is Denver, is equally as stupid.
(59:52):
So we'll get to all that much more coming up
eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four.
You want to be on the show and we will
be right back our long running feature here on this
show called Boston Gross and uh, I think you'll agree here.
(01:00:13):
So this woman, her name is Katie Colton, decided that
her and her her girly friends are going to take
a girls trip to Boston. I want a little you know,
check out some restaurants, probably get cat called, but you
won't understand it AnyWho, you know, the good stuff. So
(01:00:35):
they head up there, they go out, they hit some restaurants,
and according to Katie, about midway through their trips, she
starts feeling really sick. They really sick, but she just
chalks it up to you know flu who knows, just
some just some like significant stomach trouble. So she she
(01:00:57):
goes home or on the way to the airport, she's
got that. And then she gets home and she says
it's not getting any better, and after a few days,
finally goes to the hospital. They get it, They get
all the samples from her, and then all of a sudden,
a representative from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(01:01:19):
shows up to the where the hospital where she's at.
And now they're like, how you know, what were you eating?
Where were you traveling? They thought she had just come
back from overseas. Why because according to the CDC, she
got cholera. Yes, the bane of the organ trail. She
(01:01:40):
got it in modern day Boston. Man, Now how do
they think she contracted it? Well, it looks like the
restaurants that they went to in Boston were primarily seafood restaurants.
And they think that she attainted oysters, which sucks. I
like oysters, but at a friend of a really sick
(01:02:01):
on oysters one time, and now I won't touch them.
But I hope that doesn't happen to me, because I
do enjoy them. But yeah, imagine that you go to
a modern day US city and all of a sudden
you died of dysentery, or in this case Colerain, she
didn't die, but you know how the organ trail thing
would go. So I guess, you know, avoid Boston, I
(01:02:22):
think would be the recommendation from the CDC that I
just made up because they didn't say that. But that's
because they're uh, that's because they're cowards. In this case,
Florida woman and that's where we'll start thirty nine year
old LaToya Clark. Now, LaToya has a couple legal issues.
Brilliant first and foremost. She is currently facing a twenty
(01:02:44):
nine million dollar conspiracy fraud charge based on COVID relief
loans and grant programs. Right, so they you know she's
she's literally on trial for it. In fact, she was
driving two of the courthouse in Fort Pierce and was
blocks away when she was stopped by law enforce. But
(01:03:05):
why because, according to police, she was driving a stolen van.
This is the thing people, you don't like if you're
running drugs or you're going to your fraud trial, you
got you can't you can have to take the public transit.
I don't know, man like the sheer stupidity. You know
they got license plate readers, right, which is how she
(01:03:27):
got popped after exiting the vehicle, which was described as
a twenty twenty five ram Pro Master cargo van. She
did tell police, oh, I know why you're pulling me over,
but then they had to book her and she missed
her fraud trial, which of course the judge and you
know everyone's going to figure that out, and so that
just got remarkably worse for and Secondly, police in Denver
(01:03:50):
say that a man crashed his car into the gate
of one of their where they keep their vehicles, and
was able to steal a squad car and then go
on a little drive around, little joy ride there. It
didn't last long. Police caught up with him, but when
they stopped the vehicle and he got out, the dude
(01:04:11):
was naked. It is eight oh six as we get
things rolling our number three this morning, I was just
watching the Attorney General of Minnesota, former Congressman Keith Ellison,
who is doing a victory lap here. He's he's like
(01:04:32):
our own Jeff Jackson there just you know, just getsider
of those lawsuits that look like we're doing stuff and
then the rest of the time we'll just sue our
political opponents. But anyway, he's doing a victory lap over
a settlement with Kia and Hyundai. There was a bunch
of states that have sued and basically you probably have
(01:04:53):
saw this where for whatever reason, and I don't know
all the model years or which of the specific Kias
or Hyundai as they were, but people were able to
essentially get like a USB thing and then start the cars,
and it led to whole gangs specifically targeting these cars.
(01:05:15):
And then not only then do you have a stolen
car and the person who owns it's probably freaking out, clearly,
but law enforcement has an obligation to at least attempt
to investigate those but you also have a lot of
times they would steal these cars, so they could be
the cars that were utilized to commit other crimes. Well
(01:05:36):
you know which makes sense. Then your name isn't attached
to it and you just you got it, you used
it to rob the whatever, and then you lit it
on fire, you ditched it somewhere and then boom, they
can't connect it to a license plate or a vehicle
you may own, all right, So that's what they suit
over because Keith Ellison, just track this with me, because
it's it's actually hysterical when you think about it. So
(01:05:59):
this is a lawsuit that is based on him feeling
that Kia and Hyundai made irresponsible decisions that led to
increased crime, which of course then led to increase victims
and of course increased cost of law enforcement having to
actually investigate and do some about this crime. Because the
(01:06:22):
crime it could be a financial crime, it could be
a robbery, could be you know, violent crime. They could
they could carjack, they could go do a drive by.
That drive by we talked about where kid got hit.
That was a stolen vehicle they used down in Charlotte.
So like the examples exist, and that I just think
(01:06:43):
that's hilarious because by that standard, you as the Attorney General,
Tim Walls is the governor, and any members of Congress
who participated in creating this scenario were such fraud and
such criminal activity was allowed to fester in the Twins Cities,
your Kia, your Kia and Hyundai in this So like
(01:07:06):
like feasibly we should get some lawyers to bankrupt you
because you did the thing. You're now holding a cheeta pay.
Look look on a great ag, I am. That's your policy.
That's what you fought for your that's what your whole
party has been pushing for up there, and specifically, really
this core group of the governor, the age, the elon
(01:07:28):
Omars of the world. Couther's a couple other members of
Congress that are on board with this and in Minnesota.
But the thing you just sued for, you know, being
irresponsible making decisions that led to you know, upticks and crime.
Don't get me wrong, Kei and Hyundai have liability. That
liability should in fact be to the people who trusted
(01:07:49):
them to buy those cars. And if they want to
file a class action lawsuit, then do what a you're
gonna do, right, You'll find a lawyer to do it
for you. But for Keith Ellison and part of the
apparatus that allowed who made all these decisions that clearly
looked to of at the very least ignored. So a
dereliction of duty, but being derelict can still be something
(01:08:13):
that you where you have liability. So that's why that's
why I was kind of chuckling watching it, not because
it's a good situation, but because just the audacity, like
this is, this is why I could never be a politician,
not not you know, one of these swamp creatures inside
er once, because I just I would shrink away in
(01:08:35):
my own hypocrisy. There I'd be like, nah, this is
this thing might blow up in my face. This is
just two on the nose. I can't now I see
that you hold a whole press conference. Oh, we're helping,
we're helping for people make bad decisions to lead to
more crime, to be held accountable. But a jerk man.
All right, let's get to this call, David, Thanks for
(01:08:57):
hanging on. Just had to ramp there. What's up, Okasey?
Speaker 11 (01:09:01):
Yeah, I got a two part question about the Brown
University shooter. The first part is the do you think
that the Providence PD and the FEDS are stalling because
they have no idea where this guy is? And then
the second part is do you think this guy has
escaped the country already and he's back, he's on his
(01:09:22):
way back to the Middle East?
Speaker 1 (01:09:25):
Well, I don't. Well again, I don't know that that
makes the assumption that that name that's floating around out
there is in fact the person who did it. So
I haven't seen that confirm. But the idea that they
wouldn't throw a name out because they don't want to
spook a suspect, that's a possibility, but like they don't
look buttoned up enough to try that as a possibility.
(01:09:48):
I don't I don't give him credit for even thinking
of something like that. They're so inept, there's so yeah,
so it seems.
Speaker 11 (01:09:56):
It seems so obvious, like who the suspect is based
on his like appearance and his like walk and everything
like that, that they shouldn't be hard to locate.
Speaker 1 (01:10:06):
Yeah, but let's not. Let's not throw everything under gate analysis.
So that's why, that's why I hope that that's that.
That's why I hope that there's somebody in there who's
got it, got a sense of what's going on, and
then maybe some of it will make more sense in retrospect.
But every day that ticks by, the possibility that a
suspect could leave the jurisdiction or even the country. Yeah,
(01:10:27):
that's the thing, but it doesn't mean you always get away.
Remember that's how they they the people rob the louver,
They had no names, and then all of a sudden
they had him in custody and they knew that they
were trying to leave the country. So clearly the police
work in there, and it all came together in one day.
So at this point I'll take a wait and see,
but I'll also not shy away from playing the cuts
(01:10:49):
from these press conferences would make, which make them look
absolutely incompetent. Well does that answer for you? That's right?
Speaker 11 (01:10:57):
Yeah, Yeah, that answered it. Yeah, I agree what you
just said.
Speaker 1 (01:11:01):
Good. You know again, I hope I'm in Thanks for
the call, David. I hope. I'm surprised. I want that.
I want that for the people up there in Providence right,
probably too, you know, probably still a lot of Patriots
fans there, But you know, I want that. I want
that for you because like not, no one's worse man.
(01:11:25):
But again, I you know, with the with the Louver thing,
all there was no suspects and then all of a
sudden boom, we got them all and they were trying
to leave. So clearly there was some sort of intelligence
that was utilized there. But longer it takes the less
confidence people are going to have. All right, eight thirteen
phone number eight eight eight nine three four seven eight
(01:11:48):
seven four if you want to want to opine on
any of this. Steven Spielberg's I'm actually I'm actually kind
of excited about this. Steven Steelberg just announced the trailers
drop for his new project. And I think if you
especially within my childhood and probably many of yours. This
(01:12:09):
is a direction where I've always enjoyed Steven Spielberg going.
So I'll explain what's coming up with that. We'll speculate
about what Trump's gonna talk about. He's gotten a He's
gonna give a speech tonight. And I saw this Raleigh
man sentenced to fifty years in prison after convincing coach
to transport cocaine. This is in Raleigh. I don't know.
(01:12:32):
There's this sound that seems really now that clearly the
coach would have had to agree, I guess, but I
don't know. It just seems super wrong. Oh and what
is the US men's soccer campaign slogan? People are making
fun of it. I'll give it to you and we
can judge, because that's what we do. We judge. It's
a show of judging. This is not a judgment free zone,
but it is in fact the Cacoday radio program, and
(01:12:54):
we'll be right back. That I think is the attitude
that is drive from a consumer standpoint, it just drives
me nuts. And that is where somebody has a business,
they may clear the terms of their business. They you know,
make the terms of pricing, the terms of how it's
going to work return policy, like because there's just some
(01:13:18):
stuff you just can't you know, it doesn't return the same.
And when you get into the world of contracting rights,
very easy to understand contracts with people to do manual
labor and or provide manual labor as well as items
that you will eventually pay for, either to buy or
(01:13:40):
to lease. And yet when somebody then tries to enforce it,
like sometimes it's a landlord, how dare the landlord it's Christmas?
Doesn't the landlord know that they yes, they haven't paid
rent in five months, but you can't can't do anything
around Christmas. Well, now, what if the landlord now had
their Christmas ruin because they have to carry the note
(01:14:01):
on the home that you're renting from them, you haven't
paid him in five months, they got to offset that
with the money they would have used for their own family. Like,
we just don't get that. So we just get this attitude.
But I saw this story, and they hate this dude,
and I'm going to defend him, all right. So this
guy he figured out, he figured out, And I've seen
(01:14:21):
more and more of these How many of you have
seen those signs driving around that says we hang Christmas lights.
They got him shoved all over the median on the highway.
I saw a bunch on Capitol Boulevard basically going into
downtown Raleigh the other day. I think they're yellow signs,
and I'm like, oh, it's a good idea. A lot
of people don't want to get up there and do
it themselves. And if people are going to do it,
(01:14:42):
but I didn't realize how professional some of this had gotten.
And so they focus on this guy from Seattle. His
name is Dylan Thornsberry, who said that he started a
business few years ago. The younger dude is a handyman
by trade, but he realized that there was there was
a lot of money to be made on the Christmas tree,
(01:15:03):
the Christmas lights, Christmas decorations, all of that, especially in
the wealthy, enclaved communities surrounding Seattle, and so that's who
generally hires him. But actually he also has expanded where
you don't. He doesn't just hang your lights for you.
People want to go so big and so bold with
Christmas decorations. He realized there was a market to lease
(01:15:25):
those for him to carry the cost and then lease one.
So if somebody wants some giant, crazy thing, and Dylan
thinks that he can get ten years out of this thing,
then he can put together a lease that had come
you know, makes him, however, much back over those years.
He keeps the maintenance up. He puts it in the
(01:15:46):
customer's yard or on their house, and they pulls it out.
And people were willing to pay him for that. They
just want to they want to go big, but they
don't have any place to store it. They don't want
to own it. So that's one element. But also if
you're just a big house and you want this all
done for you, he's got a team that will come
and design it. He can do all the things where
it's sync to music, but all the inflatables you could
(01:16:08):
ever want. Like he's blowing it, he's blown it up.
But the problem is when you're running an operation like that,
you're going to have people who don't pay and you
might have to go get your stuff. So what they're
mad at him over is he's repoing Christmas decorations just
(01:16:29):
before Christmas. Oh yeah, they're so mad at this guy,
and I get it here, Like his point is his point,
he's like the impact of people who have not paid
even though we have a contract. Who are just hoping
to get it to the twenty fourth of and or
the twenty fifth of December, and then we repo the
day after. Then they have less incentive to pay for this.
(01:16:52):
So yeah, as grinchy as it sounds, I'm gonna go
to their house and I'm gonna repo their stuff. And
he does it in a couple of ways. So if
you have the big light thing, he has a way
to go and make it so that the lights won't
work unless you're an actual electrician or you pay him.
So he'll go disconnect that and he goes that's one way.
(01:17:14):
But also he said he just had to repo the
whole setup from a two and a half million dollar home,
and everyone's mad at him for being the big grinch
in ruin Christmas. This guy didn't do anything wrong, and
then you know this dumb argument. We're like, well, it's
not like he's probably going to resell those lights this year.
Probably not at Christmas. It's Christmas. Even a week one
(01:17:39):
week from today is Christmas Eve. Let that settle in.
But they signed a deal, and the look the idea
that you would lease Christmas decorations at a home. I
guess I could understand if you had like a big
one off Christmas party, right, and you need something. Maybe
it's a corporate event, so yeah, but on your home
(01:18:01):
and then you lease him, I guess you're doing it's
just because you want the service package for every year,
so I'm not gonna judge too much. But you also
got to pay your bill. So no, this guy's done
nothing wrong. All of you people are like, oh, he's
a horrible person, screw you. It's a guy who went
into business for himself, has a pretty easy to understand situation. Right,
(01:18:24):
I put up lights for you, if I have carried
the costs whatever. At the end, you pay me for
my labor in that and we're good to go. And
then another annual thing where people lease it. He puts
them up, there's payments that have to be made, then
he takes them down and you don't have to do
squat a lot of people may find that very appealing,
but you don't get to screw the guy out of it.
(01:18:45):
And I'm sorry, I'm not feeling bad for the dude
in the two and a half million dollar house who
wanted the super innate display and then didn't want to
pay this guy, and I do like that he he
kind of revels in it. Yeah, I'm the grinch that
stole Christmas whatever, So he's got a pretty good attitude
about it. Or I don't know, maybe he should not
(01:19:06):
be the grinch. Maybe that's what you think. And then
my question you would be, well, then what should he do?
Watch his product get used? He's only got he only
has a certain window for his product. That's the That's
the other thing too, like this is uh, this is
this is part of what he does. It's I'm sure
he's got other stuff throughout the year to make it work.
(01:19:29):
But good on him figuring out this niche and being
very successful. And he doesn't know an explanation to any
of you kind of jealous. Is somebody making bank doing
this for you, handyman out there? Is this a side
hustle for you? I gotta think there's good money in this.
Thirty five here on the CaCO Day radio program. We're
(01:19:50):
gonna get your phone calls here in just a moment. Unfortunately,
we have some bad news.
Speaker 4 (01:19:58):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:20:00):
McK foley says he's done with w W E. Dunzo.
McK foley mankind cactus Jack one of my oh dude,
love for all things he went by, but he also
hates him some Trump and according to reporting yesterday, following
(01:20:26):
Trump's comments about Rob Reiner, Mick Foley decided he would
part ways with WWE due to the company's relationship. Yeah,
I mean, clearly, you know Trump, well, Trump is he's
on trading cards for WWFWWE. Right, there's been that association,
clearly McMahon family association there and Triple h I think
(01:20:52):
is the on the President's Fitness Council thing they just did.
So yeah, there's a lot of tie ins. Not to
mention Hogan clearly with going back to the r NC.
But Foley is not. He's not a fan of Trump,
so's it's important that there's context there. He's had a
problem with Trump for a very long time. So this
(01:21:15):
this was kind of the straw camel's back all that stuff.
All right, let me get to the phones and we'll
start with Sherry goret Ahead, what's up.
Speaker 7 (01:21:25):
How about this Brown's college thing. I think it's really
kind of stupid the way they did. They amb you
because I mean, it's embarrassing that our justice system is
the way it is, because I'm totally blind, But how
could people do such a thing like that.
Speaker 1 (01:21:45):
Oh, I mean they got up there, they weren't prepared.
It's they probably I know they were dealing with media.
They were outside of Providence, who tend to be. If
you've ever been in a press conference, it's got local media,
regional and national. Usually the national media is a lot
more aggressive, so it could be one hundred things. But
they clearly weren't prepared. And yeah, the whole thing to
(01:22:07):
just take it in is is it is striking. Is
the polite way to say it. So all righty, Sherry,
thank you much for the call. I do appreciate it.
Yourself A good day, Okay, all right, Yeah, I mean
I don't know what went wrong, but there you go.
(01:22:27):
Hold on, what is this? O? Hey, Boston, Paul? Thank you?
You know that people just went to Boston and got colera. Right,
you should probably have yourself checked. Weren't you just up
up in New England or something? I can't remember, but yeah,
(01:22:48):
I don't think Dan Marino's coming out of retirement. But
that is a fun joke with this Philip Rivers thing, which,
which by the way, my favorite angle on that. Well,
I guess'll hold on if you don't. If you don't
know what was going on here with Philip Rivers, me
just fill you in. So Philip Rivers, who has been
retired for five years, five years and by the way,
(01:23:09):
still is probably not slept much considering he had even
and his wife have like what ten kids. They were Yeah, yeah,
it was always funny every time when you get toward
the end of the game and they do that thing
where like our less pad over the winning quarterbacks family,
it's like a whole section. But hey, they seem happy,
love what they're doing there. But he came out of
(01:23:30):
retirement and some people were pointing out that he isn't
Is he in his peak NFL shape? No, but he's
been a dad to ten for the last five years
doing whatever he's doing. It looks like a happy guy
every time I've seen him interviewed. So he's yeah, he's
got well. But you know what, I don't think he
played that bad. He played a hell of a lot
better than any dad bod deserves to. And so that's
(01:23:53):
just because he has he has an emits about of
innate talon, as he demonstrated during his time both well,
both at the NFL, but also in college. Right, so
he returned to the field. But this is the theory
I saw. The only reason he did it is because
of a loophole in how the NFL health insurance works.
(01:24:15):
So if you have played a consecutive three years at
any point in your career, you are entitled upon retirement
to five years of fully paid health insurance. I know
what you're thinking, like, well, Philip Rivers made you know
what did they say? He had contracts worth a couple
one hundred million. I don't know how much he retained,
(01:24:36):
how much of that he actually got paid out, but yeah,
he made a bunch of money. But when you got
how many of you have health insurance for four kids
and it's killing you. Top tier health insurance for ten kids,
what does that even cost? So by coming back, because
the way the rule works, you can retire and then
(01:24:58):
re retire as many times as you want if rosters
and teams will have you. So what he actually did
is he just triggered what was set to run out
here at the end of the year, another five years
of health insurance paid for by the NFL for his family.
I don't know that that's the motivation but I think
it's a fun theory and that guy's business savvy. Good
(01:25:21):
for him. Yeah, let's see here, during those five years,
retired players can obtain health and dental insurance for two
adults and any qualifying children. And if you're Philip Rivers,
that's a lot of them. However, that coverage four Rivers
was only extended. I was only extended through the end
of this year. But now that will cover four and
(01:25:43):
I don't know, we'll cover for five because hey, how
long are they gonna Could he pop back and do that?
I don't know, But you know, the reason the Colts
brought him in is they had, you know, his significant
injury issues they're dealing with their now now two through Yes,
so here we go. Philip and his wife Tiffany have
ten children, ranging from age twenty three to two. His
(01:26:07):
oldest is still eligible for the health insurance. Yeah, because
that's up to twenty six now right, Yeah, so she
gets for another three years. So, yes, Rivers for a
family of twelve, and I don't know if they have
any health issues or anything got serious. Cadillac Interess is
good insurance. The NFL's insurance is what I've had a
(01:26:27):
couple now retired players talk about it because you know,
I worked with them when they worked on the sports
talk station in Minneapolis, and they didn't take the iHeart insurance.
They were doing okay well for five years and then
I guess maybe you take the iHeart insurance. But yeah,
(01:26:47):
good on him, no judgment. And again he looked a lot.
They were all knocking on the way he looks, and
he's just like, all right, I'm gonna go out and
do this. And you know, even though they didn't, they
they lost and was kind of depressing the way that
the game panned out there. I don't know, you look bad,
(01:27:08):
So good on him. Okay, let me uh oh look
at that. All right, I can fill one more story
in here. It's before we jump over and chit chat
with Ray. Where did I put this? All? Right? Here? So,
Stephen Spielberg has a new trailer out and it's called
Disclosure Day. It looks like Emily Blunt is the big
(01:27:31):
star here. Here's what I like, Here's what I'm talking
about this. Yeah. So it's got Josh O'Connor, Colin Firth,
Emily Blunt and the premise is, well, let me let
me get to what the overall genre is. Then we'll
get to the premise. So the movie is from Steven Spielberg.
It is a sci fi movie. It is a movie
(01:27:52):
that Spielberg is an original movie. And let's just let's
just face it. So Spielberg with original ideas and original
movies is basically, I Don't Know my childhood from Indiana
Jones right to et to Close Encounters the Third Kind
(01:28:16):
to Jurassic Park. Now I know that wasn't necessarily an
original idea, it was a Michael Crichton novel. But Spielberg
very you know, taking the reins there and just building
out the world. I ready Player one was a really
good movie. I love when Spielberg is trying to do
something in the sci fi genre and going for the
blockbustery side of it, because he's made some stuff that's
(01:28:39):
not really it wasn't intended to be blockbustering, and so
I am really looking forward to this. And basically the
premise is, if you found out you weren't alone, if
someone showed you proved it to you, would that frighten you?
This summer, the truth belongs to seven billion people. We
are coming closer to disclosure day, so take that for
(01:29:00):
what it's worth. But yeah, I'll take a I'll take
a Spielberg original sci fi Passion Project meant to be
a blockbuster all day and twice on Sunday. Oh, all right,
is raced agic there? Maybe he's got intrigued race stage.
So Spielberg's going for a new sci fi blockbuster, got
(01:29:20):
and stuff? Really, I don't know, man, I'll always give
Spielberg the benefit of the doubt on sci fi. Sure, Yeah,
what's the theme? It's full Disclosure Day and the theme
is we're getting ready for some aliens to show up,
I guess. And yeah, yeah, they're throwing gazillion dollars at this,
so it looks like it looks like it could be good. Yeah,
(01:29:41):
it was the other alien movie. It was Spielberg with
the kids. That was good too. Well, if those super
eat that one doesn't get enough credit that one. Yes, yes,
that's a that was a while ago. I remember that. Yeah,
so that one was signing up for this. So alrighty,
my man, we have we have no snow. Chance people
(01:30:01):
are putting out fake maps little things. Is no snow
here also no snow that's so yeah, yeah, that's silly.
I mean I'm sorry it's Christmas miracle could still happen
one week Christmas Eve.
Speaker 10 (01:30:15):
Well so, of course of us yead is, but it'd
be tough. It's really gonna be tough when you're talking
fifties and sixties, maybe sixty today, might see some sunshine,
but now starting to see the clouds kind of taken
over here this morning, mid upper fifties.
Speaker 1 (01:30:28):
Tonight we'll drop.
Speaker 10 (01:30:29):
Into the thirties, and it is rain as we get
into tomorrow afternoon from west to east, and maybe even
a rumble of thunder mixed in there. So uh, no
hope for anything frozen. With near sixty degree tempts tomorrow,
only dropping to near fifty at night the range and
taper off on Friday in the morning and then sunshine
in the afternoon. It's still close to sixty degrees, only
(01:30:50):
down a little Saturday, a little bit fifties and sunny,
and we're back up Sunday, close to sixty again, and
then Monday we're back down into the fifties, probably low fifties.
Same thing on Tuesday and probably Wednesday.
Speaker 1 (01:31:02):
I gotta give me.
Speaker 10 (01:31:04):
A second, I gotta lean over here. Looking ahead. Christmas
Eve looks dry Christmas Day looks mild. There might be
some spotty light rain showers round, but the Arctic care
for now stays well north back up through the northern
Tier and up near the Canadian border in the northeast
New England.
Speaker 1 (01:31:21):
Okay, how are you feeling about them charges? O poor
to very poor?
Speaker 10 (01:31:26):
It's you know, it's it's sad that you can say
there's still a one percent chance.
Speaker 1 (01:31:31):
But I don't care. I just don't. I just don't.
I mean, I watch tell you. What I'm cheesed about
is that we have to play Sunday and then get
again another Thursday. In this case, because you guys play
Christmas as.
Speaker 10 (01:31:44):
Well, Yes, Christmas on Netflix.
Speaker 1 (01:31:47):
Yeah yeah, so yeah.
Speaker 10 (01:31:50):
But at this point, I don't you want them to
get in because they're gonna get spanked, probably in the
first round.
Speaker 1 (01:31:55):
So okay, well let me make some money off that greed,
all right, Tank, you don't come back with Bloomberg next,
Hang on in your Bloomberg update now with Denise Pellegrini. Denise,
what's happening?
Speaker 12 (01:32:07):
Hey, I want to start with tech Casey because sources
are telling us Open Ai is in talks to raise
at least ten billion dollars from Amazon and use its chips.
Thisn'd be a potential win for Amazon's efforts to broaden
its AI industry presence, and the deal could value OpenAI
north of five hundred billion dollars and see it adopt
(01:32:28):
Amazon's Trainium chip. That's, according to sources, would just be
a huge win for Amazon's semiconductor division, and of course
complement that cloud division. It has Amazon Web Services that's
the world's largest seller of rented computing power and data storage,
so they're moving deeper into that business. In entertainment, Warner
Brothers Discovery is now advising shareholders to reject that hostile
(01:32:52):
takeover bid by Paramount Skydance and favor its original agreement
with Netflix instead. Warner Brothers board of directors worried about
the Paramount offer, including the uncertain financing, they say, and
the risk Paramount could terminate that deal offer at any time.
Sources say Spirit Airline desying a merger with Frontier again
(01:33:13):
amid a restructuring. Some good news for hopeful home buyers,
economists tel Bloomberg housing could get a bit more affordable
next year. That is, not as prices fall. Prices forecast
to rise just a little bit next year, but wages
could get a big boost next year, and that'll make
combining more affordable, they say. Growing number of high schools
are having their football players use fortified helmets in an
(01:33:35):
effort to protect kids' brains and really save football from
eventual oblivion. Guardian Caps that's a unit of a Georgia
based material signs firm, Hansen Group. They make this special
helmet with an extra layer of padding. It's designed actually
to slide around on contact, reducing the rotational force that
can cause the brain to whip around inside the skull
(01:33:56):
when it's impacted. A growing number of high schools are
buying these special things for their kids to protect them.
Speaker 1 (01:34:03):
Looks like we've got.
Speaker 12 (01:34:04):
A higher open for stocks this morning. Dow futures up
one of sixs, and P futures up fifteen, Nasdaq futures
gaining seventy and casey apparently. Well, let me just put
it this way, how'd you like to have your mom
or dad run your dating app to help you pick
an appropriate mate whilst you child says. Some singles frustrated
with their dating searches are letting their parents and other
(01:34:25):
family members control their dating profiles. The reports as having
parents involved in the process can be entertaining and also
take the pressure off it. In some cases. According to
this report, it it's actually even leading to successful relationships,
with the parents picking the child's mate and the child
liking it.
Speaker 1 (01:34:47):
It's so creepy. It's it's like it's an arranged marriage.
Speaker 12 (01:34:51):
Well, I was thinking about it.
Speaker 11 (01:34:53):
You know.
Speaker 12 (01:34:53):
The thing is dating apps is sort of like an
arranged marriage too, but sort of impersonal, right, so.
Speaker 1 (01:35:00):
Right, But you who have to do it, you're not
farming it out, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 12 (01:35:05):
No, But but you're bringing them choices from those that
seem appropriate on the dating app. But if you've only
been trying to pick people on dating apps and you're
not having any success, think of it. Mom and dad,
they actually met each other and got married.
Speaker 1 (01:35:20):
They're experienced, right, right, So, but you need to emotionally
get there with them. This is the fantasize of society.
Oh right, they shouldn't do it for you. But it's
like people who call it. It's just like parents who
call their kids college professors and yell at them. That's
(01:35:41):
a thing. Yeah, that's right out there.
Speaker 12 (01:35:44):
I remember when my kids were in high school, they
had these moms who would get involved in their fights
and they'd be like, oh, you know, Julie's mom says,
I'm a blahvable And I was like, why is Julie's
mom even involved in this ridiculous I'm.
Speaker 1 (01:35:59):
Telling you, first time I saw parents show up to
fight students, I'm like that we're going in the wrong direction.
Speaker 12 (01:36:06):
In the parent the bombs fight each other too, because
they you know, I'll compete for you can volunteer to
bring the brownies on the site.
Speaker 1 (01:36:13):
Okay, yeah, that's fine. Yeah, but hold on as long
as it's you know, you're in your weight class and
you're in your age class and you know whatever. Yeah,
just your world started. It'll get up there. All right.
On that note, I got a rule. But h thank
you very much. There you go. Denise Pelagrenee joining us
from Bloomberg News. There. Oh, I guess I could have
asked her this thing. But it's okay. Remember I mentioned
(01:36:34):
that the US men's World Cup team has unveiled their
new campaign or slogan or whatever. All Right, you ready
for what it is? Never chase reality? You like that,
never chase reality? What is the reality? The reality is
that you're not good