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October 3, 2025 • 97 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It is the CaCO Day Radio program phone number eight
eight eight nine three four seven eight seventy four. To
get things kicked off here. Oh look at this. Oh
there is a very very finally, somebody put it all
in one place, a very instructive article on this this

(00:25):
former I guess former now because he technically resigned Iowa
Des Moines Public School superintendent. And what a crazy story
this dude's life is. What's even crazier Ross is remember
how he had all these accomplishments and then they're like,
and he was an Olympian. That actually is true. That's

(00:45):
like the only true thing going on here. The dude
was actually an Olympian. And it's that's what makes it
so crazy. It's like, you know, that's that's a pretty
that's a pretty impressive accomplishment to go to the go
compete in the Olympics. Think you around the eight hundred
meters or something. But it's like, then you had to
make all the other stuff up. Most people. If so,

(01:06):
if somebody told you that they competed in one of
the Olympics, that that would be pretty impressive, right, I
don't care who you are, that's an impressive accomplishment. You know,
especially now he competed for his home his home country,
which we now know to be his home country, because
his lawyer didn't even claim that this is inaccurate at

(01:28):
their pressers. So I'm going to assume they've acquiesced to
this of Guyana and he that's what he competed for,
not the United States, because some people were kind of
confused by that. So but yeah, man, that's that's impressive.
But then you, by the way, for because I don't know,

(01:52):
why are there why how are there major reporters that
don't know where Guyana is? Do you know how many
do you know how many articles I've seen where they
referenced Guyana is being in Africa? Johnna is in South America.
It's not the one where the Jim Jones thing happened.

(02:13):
It's the one next door. Okay, all right, they make maps,
they have them online. Yeah, there's probably one on your phone,
just saying an embarrassing mistake some people on Twitter who
should know better. Anyway, back to this, so, yeah, the

(02:34):
guy actually was a he did compete in the Sydney Olympics.
But once you get past that and like maybe just
a handful of other things, the rest of it is
apparently all bs. And he was snowing districts from New
York to DC to Oakland to like eerie Pennsylvania and

(02:56):
then Iowa man in a wide rity of Fatlet we'll
go over all this stuff because it's truly it's not
impressive in a good way. It's just impressive. How how
do I say this? How bamboozled? Somebody can can allow
themselves to be over the DEI stuff, because that's what

(03:19):
this comes down to. You know, he's claiming with the
degrees he's claiming, he's claiming the you know, the box checkers.
He he is a man of color. But more importantly
he he does like DEI training and speeches and stuff
is like a side hustle, which was actually a complaint
some of the districts had because he seemed to only
want to do that and not what they were paying

(03:40):
him for. And his degrees were you know, of that varietal.
So these districts are like, this is perfect and and
it's clear that everyone's due diligence was just not done
even when some major red flags were poking out. They're
just that's that show. I mean that it's an indictment

(04:01):
of that whole mentality and you see it, you know,
we see it everywhere. You see it everywhere. This is
what would they talk about. Why when you have DEI
or affirmative action, how it can it lea It can
leave people questioning how somebody acquired that job. That's the took.

(04:23):
I'm not black, but if I was, and I and
I worked my butt off up to a very powerful position.
You know, people coming around going, I wonder why he's there. Oh,
that would bother me, that would bother me. This guy
is like, now I'm gonna feast on it. And that's

(04:44):
what that's that's what he did. Well, I'll go, I
will go city by city just to educate you coming up,
because it is a it is a crazy ride. All
of the lies he was telling, all the stuff that
he was doing, and uh he liked the ladies too,
and the ladies liked him. I guess not all of

(05:04):
them though, because he also was costing districts hundreds of
thousands of dollars to uh set a lawsuits and these
and then he kept getting jobs after them. Because again,
I mean, once you think you're getting the DEI connect,
you're very happy.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
I mean the whole thing is a scam. Though it's
been a scam, and they've been celebrating it, right, like
the sixteen nineteen project completely false. It's a scam. It's
not real, right, celebrated, let's live, let's give her a
position at UNC or whatever. Uh, you know. Critical race
theory all a scam, it all is.

Speaker 1 (05:39):
And that's what all this guy had to do was exist, Yeah,
and and and tell the correct lies and then they're
just and yess it turned the key.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
That's the entire industry.

Speaker 1 (05:50):
Yeah, that's it. And whenever stuff would come up, like
in Pennsylvania, it sounds like there was there were some
staff there, like something's off with this dude because he
was like he was. He would tell lies about stupid
stuff like you know where you like, how many kids
he had. He couldn't keep it straight with different people.

(06:12):
He he would he would tell lies about a bunch
of really like there was no point, there was no
win there he was. He he told one of the
districts he was married, and then nobody ever saw his wife.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
It's crazy. You all know the meme of the morbidly
obese woman sitting in front of the chalkboard, right and
it says like, you know, all white people are racist,
and it says some sort of like you know, uh presentation,
and then underneath that it has her PayPal address. The
whole thing is a scam. It's so he's bad, and.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
She's wearing like a one piece yeah pink, what a
stretch he think. I don't know what that is. Oh man,
now I got that vision in my head. Thanks for
that ross.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
You're welcome.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
Oh oh oh, I gotta go to break six thirteen.
Hang on, do do do do? Do? Do do do do? Haines? Oh,
they did the thing or they wrote her last name
but not her first name. Whatever, No, yeah, Haines, all right, whatever.
So this woman in Kentucky, she went to the Little
Caesars and she wanted, you know, she wanted to get

(07:14):
whatever she's getting. She wanted a side of sauce I'm sure,
you know, for crust dipping or whatever. And that's you know,
that's an up charge, especially at Little Caesars, where everything
is the lowest price point, lowest margin you can imagine.
And so she did what I think most of us
would do when presented with that request to pay an

(07:35):
extra dollar for a big old you know, the ramikin
full of sauce. She destroyed the entire store, trashing two registers,
a drink thing, throwing chairs, breaking a bunch of stuff
because she was not going to pay that dollar. And
then now she's under arrest. Oh no, look at this. Okay,

(07:59):
so dude, there, we're so screwed because this is in
Saint Louis, so you have the non prosecutors, prosecutors and
all this stuff. I think it's I thought I said
it was in Kentucky. Maybe she's from Kentucky. I don't
know what's good. No, Louisville. Okay, that's Louisville. I thought
I said Saint Louis and the teas. But Louisville here.

(08:21):
Because even though that she she trashed the store, it's
all on video. She did not get her sauce, by
the way. She did take her pizza though. Hey, I
just tried the start and you said it's hot and ready,
so let's have that. Police did locate her, but she's uh.
I guess they gave her a citation and just left

(08:44):
her floating around. And now she's got to go and
appear in September. So Laurie, excuse me, appear in November
for this and something else she had hanging over her
head from September. All right, Ross, if asked for an
extra dollar because you know, I mean, I mean, I
think it's a slippery slope.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
I mean, they start charging you for this, They're gonna
start charging you for other things. You got a certain
your dominance and destroy the store. You have to right
next thing, you know, they're gonna be charging you five
bucks for this, three dollars for that.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
Large, five bucks for a pizza.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
Right.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
Oh man, I'm not having that buttore.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
Okay, what happens if they started uh what if they
started charging for extra breadsticks?

Speaker 2 (09:31):
Going up the flames? That's arson?

Speaker 1 (09:32):
Oh wow, Yeah, I hope the one doesn't burn down
near you.

Speaker 2 (09:37):
I mean, I think we've all been annoyed by this
kind of stuff before in the past, where where it's like,
you know, they used to do it with the stupid
dipping barbecue nuggets, you know at the McDonald's where they
those used to be free, and then they're like, ah,
well now we're charge Strange.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
It's strange. Do you remember do you remember one of
the big outrages that that that actually some college students
somewhere on the East coast somewhere. They went to McDonald's
in like the suburbs, McDonald's in the bad part of town,
McDonald's in like the business part of town, and they
found that that was not consistent. So they decided that

(10:10):
it must be racist because they went to a nice
suburb and the McDonald's wasn't charging extra. But then they
went to the you know, the minority side of town,
and they were charging extra. And then they never disclosed
that literally they're owned by different people.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
I was going to say there was a price is
probably because it's a franchise, and oh, correct, right, And
had they gone to the other McDonald's in the kind
of bad part of town, they would find that they
were not charging for extras there because it was owned
by the same person who made the But I just
remember that was like a big, big outrage.

Speaker 1 (10:42):
One day they're like, ah, look what they're trying to do.

Speaker 2 (10:45):
Yeah, yeah, but you know that's twenty five cents or
whatever it is, and you probably shouldn't trash the store,
you know, if I was to give you any advice,
but don't trash the store.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
Over over a dollar or twenty five cents. Yeah, No,
that's that's probably good, but man it look, I get
the nickel and diamond is annoying. And here's the thing too,
I understand if you're going to look, this is not
me picking on Little Caesars, but let's face it. If
you want pizza, you want I guess a cook you know,
restaurant pizza, not necessarily a frozen one, which you could

(11:16):
go acquire, but you want to get one from a
place that's gonna make it for you, and you have
a very limited amount of money to spend. You know,
Little Caesars is probably gonna be that option because they
have the you know, the five dollars hot and ready
or whatever it is. And I know, look, we you
know how many times Little Caesars ended up in the
break room over at the old radio station. We must

(11:38):
have had to get zillion dollars in trade for a
few years there. And you know, you know what you're getting.
You're gonna get a pizza that's got a lot of bread.
It's gonna be somewhat minimal under the other toppings, but
it's still you know, it still pizza whatever. And and
so you go in there. Now they're asking for a
twenty percent up charge to get a side of sauce,

(11:59):
which are not entire But if you only got five
dollars and some coins in your pocket, man, you're gonna
feel the defeat. But again, you don't get to trash
the store. So so there's that. But uh, what is
the what's the worst up charge you've been presented with?
Because businesses have been doing them, and I think they
have to battle with do we raise prices or do

(12:21):
we we start cleaning up around the edges, you know,
not throwing three thousand napkins like the chicken McDonald's did
for me over the weekend. What what do I am?
I building a house out of napkins and straw? I mean,
what what is that? Or you know, limiting sauces or
any of the up charges man, because there's a lot
out there, and then people get mad at them, and

(12:41):
it's like, well, if if their products are more expensive
and they did this instead of raising prices, it's a
use tax, do you know what I'm saying? It becomes
a user tax at that point, which I'm not necessarily
opposed to in most aspects. So or we're waxing philosophical
for a chick who crashed out and destroyed at Little Caesars.

(13:04):
But my point takes it can get frustrating, absolutely, and
you know if you go you can always push back.
And I'm not paying that. I'm a good customer and
I don't know, maybe they give it to you or
you could arsenate or whatever this chick was fixing to
do before they ran or out. All right, coming up
on the show, Oh, race stage is gonna be in
a good mood. The nerdiest. I saw the nerdiest weather

(13:27):
story this morning that apparently is like geeking out the
weather community.

Speaker 3 (13:34):
Ross.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
Do you know that the Imelda and Umberto and Berto,
the two hurricanes set a record. It's the closest two
hurricanes have ever come to each other when they're both hurricanes.
Look at that, he's speechless. That's impressive. Yeah, five hundred

(13:58):
miles or something there. There must be this thing. If
I was a cut and paste this nerdy, the nerdiest
story I've ever seen, it would be like nine pages
in the packet.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
You know what that is? Chem trails? You think?

Speaker 1 (14:12):
Oh, I was gonna ask you, do you think it's
kem trails or or uh there's also because I read
on Twitter, I was reliably informed on Twitter that the
hurricanes were being produced and steered by Israel.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
Yes, oh I haven't heard that one.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
You've never heard the juice I told the weather people.
Oh yeah, okay, yeah, sure, okay, And uh so maybe
if those very well researched people on Twitter are correct,
they were distracted by the seizing of Greta's flotilla and
the torturing of her that took place yesterday.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
They're like, oh, we're going to control the storm, but
is this in the flotilla Greta.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
Yeah, got off, and yet here you are. We forgot
about the hurricane. Oh no, we steered it into the
other hurricane. Is this harp or is that different, like
the Jews control the weather? Is it the same as harp?
Or is this a separate thing? Like do the globalist
control harp? Oh well, I don't. I you know, I'm
not up on my you know, ever since and this

(15:14):
is YouTube's fault, you know. Back in the day, you
used to go be able to you know, learn about
all this with the crazy people's videos. And then they
started taking the crazy people's videos down, so now you
can't track what is the what is fashionable among the
crazy lunatic community. So there's no way to roll it
back like that stupid cat, that stupid cat video, the

(15:36):
meme the Democrats put out the other day that we
were making fun of just so weird. So they came
up with another brilliant plan and they it was all
hands on deck, man. So the Democrats just got done
doing a twenty four hour live stream and it's you know,

(15:56):
it's just them grumbling and grousing about how much Trump sucks,
how evil the Republicans are, how virtuous they all are,
and uh, it had you know, they just rotate in
members of Congress. They had a bunch of other high
profile like some union people, and then they blasted out

(16:16):
to all of their members, the union members, to you know,
to come to follow along, you know, to get this
thing up there. They wanted to get it into what's
it called where a stream gets recommended by the uh
the streaming platform ross when you land on the not
the for you page. That's a TikTok thing. But what

(16:38):
is it on Twitch? When you you get you get
a push from the front page of Twitch.

Speaker 2 (16:43):
I gotta know, maybe just the home scream home.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
Scream or something like that. This is what they were
going for so they and so they also enlisted all
of their leftist influencers and so and so they got
the mightiest touch people who are just scum. Jack Charello
or whatever, he's one of the the YouTubers that you had,
the TikTok influencers, and these guys have like thirteen fourteen

(17:07):
million followers some of them. So they blasted out to
get everybody on there. So I decided that I would
after the show yesterday, when I became aware this thing
was happening, I would go I would go dip in
and see how many they had who were watching this
thing live, and then just to see what some of

(17:28):
the insanity was so ross. Here's my question to you.
After just explaining all of the things that they did
to promote this, all the different call to arms by
various nonprofits, unions, and of course you know the email
lists of all of these Democrat members of Congress, what
do you think the live streaming number was around ten

(17:51):
am the other day? At ten am live stream, you know,
people are people are aware. A lot of government workers
were also tasked because they're not at work, they were
asked to tune in how many people watching at that moment,
and then I'll get you some other numbers. Would you
have seen at around ten a m.

Speaker 2 (18:10):
For this particular street twenty thousand?

Speaker 1 (18:14):
No, nope, give me a little.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
Lower nine, fifteen thousand, Bud.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
No, I mean it's ten am. People are earlier.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
Eight thousand, Bob.

Speaker 1 (18:22):
You know the thousands might be a problem.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
About a thousand, Bob?

Speaker 1 (18:28):
No, No, no said a thousand, eight hundred voter. No
lower five hundred. Oh you had one of the numbers right,
the five, and then after it would be a six.
So close. Twenty thousand is close to fifty six.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
No, my last one was pretty close. Oh yeah, yeah,
I was better.

Speaker 1 (18:49):
Yeah yeah, just only twenty multiples, twenty times a month.

Speaker 2 (18:53):
They'll still need to spin the wheel, right, Bob.

Speaker 1 (18:55):
No, no, there's no there's no price for you. No,
I'm sorry, no, but the losers get to spin the wheelbox.
I know that was so bad. Oh new rule, Yeah,
no will fear. Yeah, we just assume at that point
you would get it around anyway twice and then the
walk of shame fifty six. Now, to be fair, I
guess at their peak streaming they had four hundred help ross,

(19:18):
Can you help me put this in a context, is
fifty six bad to have simultaneously streaming? You know a
lot more about this the live streaming than clearly I do.
Is fifty six a good number a bad number?

Speaker 2 (19:31):
I mean it depends, like you know, if you're like
an independent small streamer, you'll be happy with like twenty
five individual ones. But if you're like a big sort
of you know, you would you would.

Speaker 1 (19:41):
Hire democratic yeah, radis Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:43):
If you're right that sort of thing, you should have
probably a bit more than you know.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
Have you ever had fifty six?

Speaker 2 (19:49):
Yes? Yeah, I think my highest on like a weekend was,
like ever recorded was like ninety eight. So you're super excited.

Speaker 1 (19:58):
About that little old you not not to knock on what.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
You do, no it is, it's just a hobby on
the weekend, completely.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
Yet you with virtually no I guess maybe you have
a slight tick up in promotion just because there's a
lot of people who follow follow you, and I know
that you tweet out who listened to the show, so
a little there so you and sometimes you don't tell
people you're gonna do it because I see your tweets
and you're like, I think I'm gonna stream in an hour.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
Right, No, yeah, no, it's literally just my hobby for fun.
You doubled up with the Democrats were able to achieve
that's the Democratic Party. See, that's what happened there.

Speaker 1 (20:35):
I guess they had a peak of four hundred.

Speaker 2 (20:38):
That is sad though, man. Yeah, I'm not sure exactly
when they hit four hundred. You might never win in
another election again. It might be over for y'all. You
might be the Party of the weeks at this point.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
Well, you know what, the more you see this, the
more suss you should be of all of the shenanigans
with the illegal immigration and not wanting to purge voter rolls, right,
like the superintendent is that? And all superintendent and Iowa
was registered to vote in Maryland?

Speaker 2 (21:08):
Yeah, all that and all the USA you know aid stuff. Yeah,
like how many? How much of it it was actually
real and organic? You're starting like none of it?

Speaker 1 (21:16):
Yeah? No you and and uh dare I say eighty
one million votes? Are we allowed to utter that?

Speaker 3 (21:28):
Like?

Speaker 1 (21:28):
The more you see how bad they are at this
thing unless they have gobs of money to throw at it,
the more you gotta wonder. Don't get me wrong, you
had gobs of money you know, remember Harris basically blew
through all the money. It still owes money. I believe.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
So.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
But yeah, dude, that was so almost sent the little
screenshot to you. Then I got distracted, all right, So
there you go. That did not go well. I guess
we have two our celebrity death thing because you know
that it happens in threes, and I have to. I'm
gonna apologize to one of the people in here. I
feel very bad for her, but we'll share those stories

(22:09):
with you. You guys want to hear Elizabeth Warren's screechy
voice with that. Maybe you're sitting in bed right now
hitting the snooze, which don't do that because then you
can't hear me for nine minutes. If I play some
Elizabeth Warren audio, you think that'll get you up and going.
We'll motivate it this morning. Okay, well we'll do that
coming up next here on the CaCO Day radio program,

(22:32):
they had the chat turned off. They had the so
they're doing the stream, they're trying to rally the troops,
but they turned the chat off.

Speaker 2 (22:43):
Yeah that's bad.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
Who I shouldn't say, who does that? The amount of
people on Twitter now that especially the you know, the
blue sky Adjason Dems who will post. Hillary does this
stuff too, where half the time or stuff isn't turned on.
I have I have zero.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
Respect for you know, if you're like a public figure
and you're posting, you know, in the virtual town square
and then you don't allow people to comment on it,
it's a really bad look.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
Yeah, so they did the whole stream with that off.
And also, did you know that King Jefferies was a rapper?
I'm not making that up. Apparently he was, you know,
he was when he was younger. He was a rapper.
And then he went, you know, in a different direction,
clearly because now he's in Congress, but he's he started

(23:32):
like inserting rap lyrics into when he's talking. He said, y'all,
I ain't scared him from Brooklyn. We get down like
Shirley chisholm unbought and unbossed at all times. And then
he said, so, mister President allowed me to reintroduce myself.
And he's doing this in like a beat pace, and
so yeah, so mister President allowed me to reintroduce myself.

(23:53):
So then he's quoting that's the jay Z from from
like twenty years ago. Yeah, dude, anything to get the
numbers movie. It's just so there's a ton of embarrassing clips.
I'm not gonna We're not gonna play them all. But
if you want to entertain yourself, just type dem live
stream on Twitter and just start watching Man and have

(24:16):
fun with that. Okay, all right, So I mentioned we
had a couple of celebrity deaths. First, Jane Goodall. Remember
Jane Goodall? What was the What was the movie that
they did back in the day that was basically about
Jane Goodall but it wasn't It was a Gorilla's in

(24:38):
the mist right, I see you to remember that was
a pretty good movie. But of course Goodall was she
was the she was the monkey Lady. She was the
she was the go to for years and years and
years and years. She's passed away at ninety one. So
that's it. Nothing, nothing bad to say. I don't I

(24:58):
don't remember there being any Jane good All controversies. I
just want to apologize this poor woman because unfortunately, then,
you know, if a celebrity dies, I'm like, what other
celebrities have just died? And there's only one I could find.
And admittedly I'm not I'm not super familiar with the

(25:23):
Chicago rap scene. So I don't know, but uh, Ross,
are you sitting down buddy? Yeah, I want to make
sure you're you're fully seated there because this one, this
one could. Chicago rapper Glizzy the Tweaker was shot and

(25:44):
killed by a construction worker after he tried to rob
him of his tools and his truck. So yeah, gone
too soon. Nineteen year old Chicago rapper Glizzy the Tweaker.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Aaron, where are you? Were you a fan?

Speaker 1 (26:02):
Died doing what he loved, committing car jackings? What were
you a fan? Oh? Yeah, I don't know any of
this stuff.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
I mean, what did you thought? What a dumb move
to go up and try to rob a like a
construction like go up to his truck and be like,
give me your truck and your tools. Yeah, are you nuts?

Speaker 1 (26:20):
Yeah, construction workers there's one thing they don't do. It's
carry protection in Chicago probably greater Chicago area. So big
things were going for Glizzy the Tweaker. Here's what said.
This is what's so funny about the way that they
worded the the thing, the the tweets, right, it says

(26:42):
Chicago rapper Glizzy the Tweaker all the words are spelled correct.
Was s h asterisk t and k asterisk ll e
ed after he tried to r asterik B. So all
the bad words like killed and shot and robbed now
people don't write them out because the algorithm, I guess,

(27:03):
but tweaker is spelled and apparently it's not problematic. So
I I don't know what to tell you there. But
who will be the third? Probably nobody wants to be.
And I mean, they's a problem with Jane, but Glizzie
the tweaker And before you're like, oh, you know how
you know he's die? He died, Have some respect. He

(27:24):
died trying to carjack somebody. There's the honestly, up until
I saw the video of the dude shaking the Antifa ross.
Did you see the video of the guy in the intake,
the brave, the brave Antifa dude who threw all the
red paint and had like the he was like screaming

(27:45):
in the streets. He had the almost looked like a
brave heart. But with red on the Federal building and
he's leading the march, he looks so ferocious. Did you
see what happened to him? And they arrested him and
they have video bodycam of him in there getting booked.
It's amazing. I gotta send this to you. Hang on,
do do do do? I tweeted it out so if

(28:06):
you guys want to see what I'm because I forgot
to bring this to because I sent it out yesterday
during the day. Um, here we go. This is so
incredibly satisfying right here in fact, Yeah, what is going on? There?
We go?

Speaker 3 (28:27):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (28:28):
Uh boom, all right, I just want to hear Ross's
ractional he's watching this on the air. All right, I
sent you a tweet. In the tweet if you have
to go to it, there are four actual pieces of media.
It's tweet by Bill Malusian or Malugan or whatever his
name is, from Fox News. And so you see the
first video, you see all the people there at the

(28:50):
uh you know, at the protest, and then you see
the guy in the photo in the streets. He's got
red pain on his hands and his face and he's
just ridiculous looking. And then the fourth thing.

Speaker 2 (29:04):
Ah, yeah, I know I saw that yesterday, but I
didn't I didn't have the context for it. I just
saw him sitting there in the chair crying to himself.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
And is shaking. Yeah, that's the that's the badass, super
tough Antifa dude who was kill all the police. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
I was just scrolling and I said, who is this
big cry baby sitting there in the chair, you know,
asking for his mama. That's dude.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
And he's shaking. He's literally shaking. That's uh, that is
that's the Antifa dude.

Speaker 2 (29:32):
That's a shame. That is a shame.

Speaker 1 (29:35):
Dude. If f O was a movie, that's it.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
No, you're seeing this sort of thing more and more.
It's what we've said it many times. It's the you know,
tolerant majority no longer being very tolerant. And you know,
we've seen these these punks for a while now. I've
seen more and more videos where they just walk up
to people and their hands are in their pockets, they
got their black hoodies on, you know, their their colored
hair is poking out of the hoodie and you can
tell they're reaching or something and they're or they're about to

(30:02):
throw their concrete milkshake or whatever it is, and the
person just punches them square in the face and they
fall down. Every single time.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
There was another interaction with some some guy was out
there here, and he wasn't he wasn't even asking him
aggressive questions. It was his mere presence there. Because if
you're around there and they don't know who you are,
that come over and they will literally try to intimidate
you off the street up. So that's what That's what
was happening in Portland there in front of that place,
and all of a sudden, the dude who's the Antifa

(30:29):
dude who's coming out screwing with like the twenty year
old streamer, The twenty year old streamer who was getting
ready to leave, goes, you know, you have a sniper
dot on you right now?

Speaker 2 (30:37):
Yeah, I saw that, and you see the red dot
in the dude's chest.

Speaker 1 (30:40):
And the guy's like, uh, he goes, all right, I
told you get out of here, and then he disengages.
Antifa guy goes back, because then it becomes real for
ninety nine point nine percent of these people, which is
why I was happy to mock that stupid unc professor
with his LARP photo with all his buddies there with
their ars trying to look trying to badass, right that

(31:04):
that that bravado quickly folds when up against you know,
actual consequences, whether it's this guy, and I just retweeted it.
So it's at the top the Bill Malogan thing. Check
out the fourth or the fourth piece of piece of
media there the video and watch this dude, because this dude,
hours before that was blood on the streets, kill all

(31:25):
the pigs. Cover the federal building. We'll do whatever we want.
And he's sitting there inside, you know, chair in the
booking area there, you know, getting ready to process. He's
got his hands up around, he's been crying, he's shaking
because now consequences are happening, and so like it's it's

(31:48):
just such a wild transition, man, just a wild transition.
And it also and it also shows how easy it
should be.

Speaker 4 (31:59):
It.

Speaker 1 (31:59):
Look, here's the thing I don't understand. And I know
there's some who share this, uh this this thought process,
and I'd be curious why. But like, I don't understand
how they're not arresting people for obstruction because that that
they're clearly obstructing federal officers. Boss is a huge Panthers fan.
This week we were just talking off the air. So

(32:22):
that's not just because they're playing the Dolphins, is it.

Speaker 2 (32:24):
I mean, I might have something to do with it.
But now a big, big Panther fan, keep pounding this weekend,
pound them a lot. Are they playing in Miami or Poundtown?

Speaker 1 (32:35):
What is Poundtown?

Speaker 2 (32:36):
Isn't that where they Charlotte?

Speaker 3 (32:38):
Right?

Speaker 1 (32:38):
And though they call it the game is in Charlotte, Yes,
but I don't think they call it Poundtown.

Speaker 2 (32:43):
Anyway, I hope they win. Don't don't let me down.

Speaker 1 (32:49):
Do you wanted to pound? And by the way, Ross
also was telling me that he thought it was keep
pouncing before? So why why.

Speaker 2 (32:59):
Fold this disclosure? You know? Not not a big Panthers fan,
obviously Bills fan, but I mean they're playing Miami and
that's in the conference. So I hope they win. Yeah,
they have my full support this weekend.

Speaker 1 (33:09):
You would you prefer the pound or pounce?

Speaker 2 (33:12):
I want them to win?

Speaker 1 (33:13):
Okay, just win? Keep winning.

Speaker 2 (33:17):
Well, they blew out the Falcons, right, I want them
to be like more when they played the Falcons, unless
when they played last week.

Speaker 1 (33:23):
Okay, all right, that's fair.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
So if they could take that into consideration, I would.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
I would.

Speaker 2 (33:28):
I would appreciate it if they would score more points
than Miami.

Speaker 1 (33:32):
Well, luckily, I'll get to see my team lose first
because they've been in Europe for two weeks and now
they're going to play in England. Super excited about that,
where by the way, they just had a somebody just attack.
Speaking of England, h don't worry, I'm a torture. With
the Elizabeth Warren audio coming up, I just give any

(33:52):
I just want to give you time to be ready
for that shrill of voice.

Speaker 3 (33:57):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
So, we're the Minnesota Vikings and the Cleveland they had
a they had themselves a terrorist attack Thursday. A synagogue
was targeted. Obviously we're into, you know, hi holies here
within the Jewish religious calendar, so that gets the jihads
all whipped up. And then I saw the dude's name

(34:18):
who's accused of attacking the synagogue. And his name literally
is Jihad. Is that a real name or like a nickname?
Jihad al Shamy?

Speaker 2 (34:28):
They named him Jihad.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
I guess I don't know, because you know, when you
get into the terrorist world, there's a lot of duality
of names there. But that's what they're reporting his name as. So, like,
is this a situation where he had no choice for
what his career was gonna be. We've talked about this
on the show, right where the dude. The one guy's

(34:53):
name is driver who works for a car dealership. I
mean that makes sense. The lady you got arrested for
Crystal meth her name was Methany down of Florida. Like,
she didn't stand a chance. So if your parents name
you Jihad, you just have to holy war. I guess.

Speaker 5 (35:08):
Ah.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
Well, anyway, al Shamy, Jihad al Shamy allegedly rammed his
car into the the synagogue and began stabbing people. He
killed two people and then was shot dead by police.
Where he's figuring out that there are no virgins and
it's hot, probably so police, dude, police, I cannot believe

(35:33):
this quote was given. During the press conference, Police reported
that they are still seeking to determine a motive for
the attack. Why do we have to keep doing this?

(35:53):
All right? Ross? Puts your detective hat on, all right, yeah, yeah, okay,
all right. So a synagogue during a series of very
important Jewish holidays and the lead up to it, was
attacked by a guy who wanted to murder everybody inside,

(36:14):
whose name is Jihad al Shamy. What do you do
you have any at least theories? What the motivation may
be is.

Speaker 2 (36:24):
Probably like some sort of like love triangle thing or something.

Speaker 1 (36:26):
Oh up in Danville. Yep, anything else, because the police
are clearly baffled over in the UK.

Speaker 2 (36:35):
It is a mystery.

Speaker 1 (36:36):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (36:40):
Why does it always seem when we have something like
this and it's on like a specific side of the
aisle with a specific ideology, they never know. It's always
a mystery.

Speaker 1 (36:48):
Yeah, yeah, we still don't know why that guy shot
up the Dalla the ice office, right or killed Charlie Kirk.
Still working on those two in some people's minds. Just embarrassing,
all right, Well, since we're you know, people are not
committing acts of terrorism. I got one watching. I had

(37:09):
to watch the whole Elizabeth Warren getting actually questioned by
CBS reporters, and I have a theory as to why
they actually went after her, because this is not normal. Normally,
they can come on say whatever they want, the water
carrying interviewer will just nod politely and steer them into
further softball questions. But honestly, I think, and I'm going

(37:31):
to couple it with a report that came out yesterday
about people's trusts in the media, which shockingly has somehow
gone lower. I think that I think people who work
in the industry are now figuring out that they have
to do something, They have to pretend to look something
in some way actually like they're actual journalists because it's

(37:54):
so damn bad for them. It is so damn bad
for them, as you'll find from this this gallop thing
we'll talk about. But so here's Elizabeth Warren who then
doesn't really know how to deal with it. That's the
other crazy thing. So when you actually get some of
the pushbacks because they wall themselves off. Elizabeth Warren isn't
doing interviews with you know, Fox News, with Fox News people,

(38:18):
she's she's going they go to safe spaces.

Speaker 3 (38:20):
Man.

Speaker 1 (38:20):
So when your safe space feels unsafe and you've never
had to deal with that, then you turn into this.

Speaker 6 (38:25):
You know, Republicans say, what you're really fighting for is
taxpayer dollars for, as they put it, illegal aliens.

Speaker 2 (38:32):
I know that's not strictly true, but there is a provision.

Speaker 7 (38:34):
Excuse me, not strictly, its outlye It is a flat
out lie.

Speaker 5 (38:42):
The way that they see in medicaid.

Speaker 7 (38:45):
There is nothing in medicare that permits one undocumented immigrant
to get one dollar of assistance.

Speaker 2 (38:54):
Let me finish the Russian of course.

Speaker 1 (38:57):
Sorry.

Speaker 6 (38:57):
In the in the Democratic counter offer, the proposal for funding,
there is a restoration of Medicaid benefits for certain non
citizens that it had been taken away in the Big
Beautiful Bill. As the Republicans put it, Republicans don't think
those people should be getting healthcare on the taxpayer dime.
I'm not asking on the merits. Politically. Putting that in
there exposes you to this talking point does lie as

(39:20):
you put it.

Speaker 2 (39:21):
Why put it in there? Why is it worth it?

Speaker 3 (39:23):
No?

Speaker 7 (39:24):
What's happened is that what we're saying is that whenever
hospitals give care, what is going to be the level
of reimbursement. And the Republicans said it's going to be
a low level. The Democrats said, we just want to
go back to the level it was before, because you're
going to bankrupt hospitals. You're going to put rural hospitals
out of business. The Republicans and the Democrats plan, nothing

(39:48):
changes the number of undocumented immigrants who still get care
if they show up bleeding and unconscious at an emergency room.
There is absolutely zero difference. The difference is whether or
not hospitals who under laws that date back to Ronald
Reagan may provide emergency care to anyone who's unconscious, will

(40:13):
actually get reimbursed at a very low level that will
put the hospital ultimately out of business potentially, or at
a higher level, the Republicans, there is no change, no
change in the number of undocumented immigrants who get any
help under what the Democrats want. What we're looking for

(40:34):
is help for people who are going to get pushed
out of nursing homes, help for people who are at
home and relying on home image.

Speaker 1 (40:42):
That's what this means. But he pointed she he pointed
to the actual language and the actual proposal that she
herself was actually promoting and so that she would vote for.
And we know that Elizabeth Warren has no problem with this,
because I'm sure you saw the cliff floating around going
back to the presidential primaries from a couple cycles ago. Bry,

(41:03):
you have like sixteen Democrats on there, and the moderator says,
raise your hand if you think that we should provide
free healthcare for people in the country illegally, And every
single one except one, I think, raised their hand, and
I can't remember who it was who didn't. But the
stage was all of the people who are the senators

(41:27):
now for the most part, right, Bernie Sanders was up there,
Elizabeth Warren was up there, Corey Booker was up there.
It's all the people who are literally in charge now
and who are the highest profile people who said that
they wanted to do it, and then the thing they
wanted them to vote on literally had the language and

(41:47):
it was so obvious that the CBS reporter had to
bring it up and then she gets rankled, denies it
and then explains it, explains why it's true it's and
so my theory is with the media is they have
to have seen this report that came out and this

(42:09):
is a running annual thing that is done on what
are America's trust levels as it pertains to the media,
and you will be shocked to learn that it is
now hit the lowest level that it has ever seen
since Gallups started doing this. Are you ready in the
nineteen seventies. This is an annual thing going back to

(42:31):
the mid seventies that they do and it's all apples
to apples year after year, and it is abysmal. We'll
go over those numbers coming up next. Hang on, you know,
it's the whole lick your finger sticking in the air
and check the direction the winds going as they watch
some of their how you say, more TDS inflicted or

(42:54):
affected brethren, you know, lose their gigs here over the
last couple of years, CNN cut to a few of
their crazies. MSNBC got rid of Joy Reid, who was
the ABC News reporter, just got himself fired Terry Moran,
And I think they look at it and they realize,

(43:14):
especially with these numbers I'm about to tell you, that
they're gonna have to pretend to be a little more moderate.
I don't expect them to change fundamentally, but I expect
they go into protection mode. And you saw a version
of it following the debate with Biden. Right, Remember we
talked about on the show, Remember how amazing that was

(43:36):
ross to watch journalism actually journalism for about two weeks.
It was crazy. Oh and it was because they got
caught and you know, then they kind of went back
to their old ways, especially when Trump started making memes
and doing tariff stuff. But like these numbers I'm about

(43:56):
to tell you that are part of this annual polling
that Gallup's done since the mid seventies are absolutely embarrassing.
All right, So here we go. America's confidence in the
mass media has edged to a new low, with just
twenty eight percent expressing positive trust. So you know, because

(44:18):
it goes great deal, fair amount or some in newspapers,
television and radio. By the way, radio did better than
newspapers and television. And I think that that is because
of us. What I can't hold that opinion. I do
or people like us. But when you start breaking the

(44:39):
numbers down, it gets bonkers. And here's the first number
that you need to know. So when Gallups started doing
this thing, this annual polling, it was nineteen seventy six
or seventy seven at mid to late seventies. Do you
know what the trust in the news media in the
mid to late seventies was about seventy That's crazy. Get

(45:05):
changed or do you think the world changed?

Speaker 2 (45:07):
I yeah, I think it was before the internet. There
were before differing opinions, and I mean that's all you had,
and you had people that were like, oh, well, they're
in the media, they have to be understand the responsibility
of their position, and they're fair and balanced and.

Speaker 1 (45:20):
Yeah, in which we and I see them every night. Yeah,
I have limited channel options, and yeah, that's probably probably
a lot to that. And like at your house, if
they were talking about a subject that went past the
letter H, you couldn't even look it up. Is that
where your encyclopedia stopped each that's right, yes, yeah, So
if they're taught, you're like, okay, they're talking about you know, listen, man,

(45:42):
we couldn't afford the entire encyclopedia said it was expensive.
But look, okay, so they're talking about apartheid, you're good, right, right,
but you know, if they're talking about murder, what do
you know?

Speaker 2 (45:52):
No idea?

Speaker 1 (45:53):
Yeah, so that's uh, yeah, yeah, it's probably a little
bit of both. It's a little bit of both. But
now we get down to this twenty eight percent. But
when you break it down, when you break it down
by political party, gets much more interesting. So for Democrats
this is I think this is more interesting than the
Republican one. Democrats are at fifty one percent. Half of

(46:16):
Democrats don't trust the mainstream media. I'm sure it's for
different reasons in a lot of instances, but those are
going to be the people who are most positive on you.
At fifty one percent, independence twenty seven percent, so right
around that average, which you would expect for independence, right
if you really are the middle. But Republicans eight percent.

(46:39):
Eight oh, Joe percentage points. I just want to drive
that home. Eight percent.

Speaker 2 (46:48):
Those conservatives are people on the right, have to be.
There's a sort of caller that'll call in and they'll
preface everything by saying, first off, I want to say
I'm a conservative.

Speaker 1 (46:59):
Say used to call them seminar callers or something, Yeah,
and then they'll perceive they'll say something that's like not
conservative for ten straight minutes.

Speaker 2 (47:06):
So they'll they'll call up and'll be like, hey, my
name it's Joe, and I'm a been a conservative my
entire life, and I believe that everyone should have an
abortion at the age of five. And you're like, wait,
wait what, wait what did you just say?

Speaker 1 (47:15):
What?

Speaker 2 (47:15):
And it makes sense at all. It's obvious they're not conservatives. Yeah,
just a plant, Yeah it is. It is that I'm
not racist, but of talk radio, yes, yeah.

Speaker 1 (47:24):
I'm a conservative. But and then insert the least conservative
position on something you could find. Yeah, that's a known commodity.
But or I thought they're in a coma and they
squeezed they thought they were squeezing twice and then they
squeezed once or something. So I don't know, because I
can't even explain the eight percent. I don't know how

(47:45):
anyone looks at this and goes, yeah, they're they're shooting
straight man. I don't know. I don't know how we're
gonna save this as a species if we're going to
be this dumb. I just read a crazy stat from
Shriner's Hospital in Boston. I'll tell you about that here
in a moment. He's speaking of Boston.

Speaker 3 (48:02):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (48:02):
You know, he sent me a picture yesterday from in
front of the White House ross Boston, Paul giving him
and his lovely wife's standing there in front of the
White House, and so I explained to him that he
needs to hop the fence and run inside.

Speaker 2 (48:14):
Love How we're on the same page because you just
said that. And the first thing I asked myself was
did he jump the fence? Coward?

Speaker 1 (48:20):
Wouldn't do it?

Speaker 2 (48:21):
Really, you're telling me the guy that chased down Whitey
Bulger and a horse down the back alleys of Boston
was a.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
Friend to jump the house?

Speaker 2 (48:27):
Now, yeah, it really does mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (48:29):
Yeah, And it's the government shut down, there's no security,
there's no laws. Yeah, and there's no laws. Yeah, clearly,
bus we get in there just you know, be like hey,
big fan and then you know, probably let's just sleep
in the Lincoln bedroom or something. No, I didn't do it.
Read it's something about, oh, I want to be able
to go to my son's wedding or something. I don't know.

(48:50):
I don't know whatever. So congrats on that. But come on, man,
you're gonna go there and you're gonna send the picture.
We're gonna have some expectations. That's all I'm saying. All right,
Noodle news and it is of the crazy crazy variety.
Here we go. Wait, so this is This is from

(49:10):
again Shriner's Hospital Children's Hospital in Boston, and this stat
right here blew me away. One third of pediatric burn
injuries that have come into Shriner's Hospital over the last
several fews, I guess two months have been the result

(49:31):
of the Ramen TikTok challenge.

Speaker 2 (49:34):
Okay, what is the Raman TikTok challenge?

Speaker 1 (49:37):
So there is on Netflix, which I see everyone's very
happy with on Twitter right now, putting elon there. And
I have seen this floating around. I've never been dumb
enough to push the button, but any whenever they have
like the top you know, if you go to the
movies tab, it's like you scroll down, you can see
the top ten movies in the US. Right now, this
movie has been in there, still in there. I just

(49:59):
checked and it's h K pop Demon Hunter. Now when
I hear K pop, I know that's not for me.
When it's anime and it's got K pop in there,
so I have not clicked it. You said your wife
sneak previewed some of this.

Speaker 2 (50:16):
Ah, yeah, because you know we were scrolling. It was
there and she was, yeah, what is this thing? So
she hit play and watched it for like ten minutes.

Speaker 1 (50:23):
I'm assuming it's mindless, just just mindless entertainment.

Speaker 2 (50:28):
I guess it's about like you know, K pop, Korean
get their superheroes or something, or they fight crying. I
don't know she was. She she spent like ten minutes
and she was out.

Speaker 1 (50:38):
I had the thought has crossed my mind if I
was a teenager now would I be into K pop?
And if so, I would hate myself for that. So
but then I remembered all the stuff when we were
growing up was far cooler, so we have that going
for us. So anyway, so the challenge is you make
the ramen right, and you know, I don't make my

(51:00):
in the microwave, I boil. I'll boil water because I
have like a like a kettle, one of those electric kettles.
Throw some water in there, pour it in, pop, you know,
pops up over the lid. About five minutes are good
to go, and then it doesn't make the noodles as gross.
But I don't eat that much ramen. Used to when
they sold it downstairs a lot, but not so much.

(51:21):
So then ross, what do you do after the five minutes?
Do you immediately shovel all the ramen in your face?

Speaker 2 (51:29):
I would personally let it cool down a little bit.

Speaker 1 (51:31):
See okay, So part of the challenge is once it
hits whatever the recommended cook time is, you've ripped the
lid off, and as part of a scene in this
thing where the girls have Ramen cups, they as fast
as possible because it's a cartoon, so you can do
it comically fast. Shovel all the contents of the ram
and the hard contents into their face while still scalding hot,

(51:51):
and then shut like a shot of the broth that's left.

Speaker 2 (51:55):
So you're chuggling, you're chugging boiling hot water. Yes, it's
so dumb.

Speaker 1 (52:01):
That's and and one third of children's burned injuries into
the Shriners Hospital since this movie came out or since
this challenge started, have been a result of that. I
don't know how you saved that generation. What are you doing?
And we're just about to by the way, I was
just seeing this ross. Your kid is going to be
his twenty twenty five kicks off the end of the

(52:22):
Alpha generation, and now your child is going to be, uh,
one of the very first generation betas? Are we really
going to go with that name?

Speaker 2 (52:31):
And I think the generational thing is like a it's
like it's like a construct. Oh that's important thing to
remember here.

Speaker 1 (52:39):
So you could like write, so if your kid wants
to identify as gen X.

Speaker 2 (52:44):
That you should be able to Yeah, yeah, but you
should also have to pass some sort of test by
a fellow gen xer, like an actual gen xer, Like it's.

Speaker 1 (52:51):
Like an honorary tyree phone or something. Right. Yeah, I
see those videos where they like they're like, ah, here's this,
try to dial it and then they and I think
they're stage because no, no, no, no, I saw it
first tan with my nieces when they were here. Now
they're growing up now and they're very successful. Yeah, my
nieces Katie and Emily, my sister Debbie's daughters, brought them

(53:15):
here to visit. And I don't know how old they were.
I think they were maybe like six or seven or something,
maybe a little older. Maybe one of them was ten.
I don't know, but with the videos I've seen are
with like high school driving age teams.

Speaker 2 (53:26):
No, these were like I would say ten. They were
definitely not teenagers yet. Okay, they're ten. When you're ten,
you could rock the electronics in the phone. So sure,
we went to the these like you know, retro stores
or whatever they're they're selling like older stuff, like you know,
I wouldn't say like an antique shop. It wasn't like that.
But it was downtown Wake Forest and they had an old
rotary phone and they had no idea what it was

(53:47):
or how it worked. And we explained, we said, that
is a phone, and then we said, how do you
think you used this? They had no idea. They they
did not understand what the you know, the put your
finger in and you know.

Speaker 1 (54:01):
But if I knew nothing about it, Okay, I'm a caveman.
I am a caveman. You just unfroze from the ice
a Sino man. Yeah, yes, okay. And and once I
touched this item and I realized that things spun wouldn't
just general deduction and no vowue to think maybe just
maybe the only physical mechanism of the whole thing should

(54:23):
be operated in the way that it appears to be operated.

Speaker 2 (54:27):
Because I've also seen I've also seen the video where
they had an old rotary phone and they said, you know,
I will buy you a PS five or whatever if
you can make a call on this within five minutes.

Speaker 1 (54:38):
Around those are the ones I think.

Speaker 2 (54:39):
Yeah, and the kids like could not do it, like
like they're like two thousand and one space out to see,
like banging stuff together like the monkey like trying to
figure out to use the phone I saw, but.

Speaker 1 (54:51):
The monkey would eventually figure it out. There probably the
one smoked for three.

Speaker 2 (54:55):
But I can tell you, you know, but yeah, my
niece has had no idea what it was or how
it would work. They'd like like it just landed, like
like what is that. I've never seen it before? That's
the fault.

Speaker 1 (55:04):
And I've heard this argument where they're like, oh, well,
you know when your generation, you wouldn't have known how
to use things from the fifties, And I'm like, no,
that's not true.

Speaker 2 (55:11):
That's not true at all.

Speaker 1 (55:12):
There's a lot of there's a lot of old style
equipment that is utilized by the ranchers and farmers used
that has progressed from the fifties. But I still know
how to do it the other way. So and there's
you know, there's other technology. And it's not to say
it's just the complexity of technology is very different. The
speed at which we evolved is very different. That being said,

(55:34):
the further back you go, the more simplistic the mechanism.
So it's not a fair comparison, all right. So that's
noodle story number one, Noodle story number two. If you
eat this common noodle dish, you're increasing your risk of
an early death. And by the way, this was a

(55:54):
four year long study on people who eat ramen and
they split them down into four groups based on how often,
and the fourth group, which said to have eate ramen
three or more times a week, had an increased risk
of early death. However, I don't know if I'm buying

(56:15):
this because you ready for this. They had a couple
other identifiable factors that seem to trend into the hazard
group of the participants. Those who ate ramen the most
also were almost exclusively younger men who smoked, drank alcohol,
and were overweight. All right, is it the ramen doing it?

(56:39):
Because it's just the Ramen. Shouldn't there be like, shouldn't
the campus of NC State look like Jonestown after the picnic?
Right now? Wait, if ramen was killing people, I think
colleges would have figured it out, considering they're the ones
doing the study.

Speaker 2 (56:55):
Yeah, I mean in my younger like my early twenties,
I survived off ramen.

Speaker 1 (56:58):
I think a lot of us diod Yeah, man, the
right of passage. I still enjoy a Ramen. The couple
of very specific brands.

Speaker 2 (57:06):
I remember the first time I went like shopping at
a supermarket, right when I had moved away from home.
I was like seventeen eighteen, right, And I remember going down.
I'd never like done my own shopping before. And I
got the car and I'm looking like, what can I
afford to buy? Because I'm hungry?

Speaker 1 (57:18):
Did you look like the monkey bang in the phone.

Speaker 2 (57:19):
He did, yeah, shop okay, but I remember like stumbling
across the packet of Ramen and it was like, you know,
fifty things of ramen for a buck or whatever. It
was the best thing ever.

Speaker 1 (57:30):
I'm like, oh that stage, it's just burst and let's
get him in on this conversation. All right, So ram
They're like, oh, Rob, I will kill you and it's like, no,
it's not, or all the college kids be dead. Shut
up college? Did you go?

Speaker 2 (57:43):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (57:44):
Well, I mean I still man, hey, ro.

Speaker 3 (57:51):
I usually do two packages, right and oh yeah yeah.
I usually a hack.

Speaker 1 (57:58):
A hack is to have some sure uh huh that
do Mommy? You get there?

Speaker 2 (58:03):
Oh yeah, I mean do you remember stumbling across the
whole packet rama at the grocery store and you were
young and being like this is like so amazing. I'bout
like fifty minutes.

Speaker 3 (58:13):
Yeah yeah. Now you go buy it by the case
and you're like you drain all the water out, you know,
you drain all the soup part out of it. You
don't just eat the news. We still have some there's
something in my cloud pantry here right now, absolutely.

Speaker 1 (58:26):
Like the the Y two K going on.

Speaker 3 (58:30):
Yeah, yeahcalypse.

Speaker 1 (58:33):
So my entire house of eight, eight dudes lived in
this house, right, So we rented during college, uh well,
the beach side. So and we would go and there
was a room that was just the ramen room. It's
like this weird little like off pantry thing down the
hall and it was nothing but stacked ramen. And then
our entire freezer. And thankfully the house had like an

(58:55):
extra chess freezer in there. Because this guy was running
to eight college students at a time, wuld be nothing.
But we'd go down to Milpus Avenue, which is like
the really hard checking area of Santa Barbara, and would
go to a beauty shop and then the old lady
who I guess her daughter ran it. She made Tomali's

(59:15):
and they were clearly not legally being sold, right, it
was you know, backroom Tomlly's. But they were so cheap,
and we would buy hundreds of them. We cool for
like fifty bucks and we'd get hundreds of these things
and we bring them back and then just fill that
chest freezer. And that's all we ate was ramen. And
and in the second year, who was a chef a

(59:38):
major and he wanted to practice on us, so that
worked out really well. So anyway, all right, I put
some in my packet for you, buddy, because I knew
you were going to be excited because I saw your
fellow weather folks nerding out over this. The record setting
hurricane distance was just achieved. Yeah, the closest two hurricanes,

(01:00:01):
full hurricanes have ever come to each other in oh yeah,
close recorded history. Five hundred miles so.

Speaker 3 (01:00:08):
Yeah, unusual. Well, yeah, hot to go join, I'll bring
my ramen. So and another interesting thing is now Alberto
has become Amy. Did you see that? I think it's
Amy because over on the.

Speaker 2 (01:00:23):
Other side of they're not hurricanes now, I'm just the overseas.

Speaker 3 (01:00:30):
They now they named storms too. I think it's Amy.
Hold on, let me Yeah, Alberto now goes to Amy
cyclone storm Amy for Ireland, Ireland in the UK. So yeah,
they named storms too, so it's not just us.

Speaker 2 (01:00:51):
Yeah, but yeah, but but we named it first.

Speaker 3 (01:00:54):
Yeah we did. We we named it.

Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
First, Gulf of America on these bastards.

Speaker 3 (01:01:01):
But anyway, yeah, it's uh yeah Amy Alberto. Topics do
have a couple other things. We're looking at ten percent
chance of a small area of thunderstorms of Florida. It's
gonna be wet, very wet on the east coast of
Florida the next several days of flooding, very heavy rainfall.
But nothing coming to that in another way of coming
across the Atlantic. I mean, we're all winding it down,

(01:01:22):
but still October can get busy, so we'll keep an
eye on all those waves. Other than that beautiful weather
over the next several days, cool mornings in the mainly
mid upper seventies in the afternoon hours. Probably won't see
some showers in here till midweek next week. All right,
And I did take Clemson, so you and I are
in on this.

Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
I'm in on a parlay. You guys got to cover
the over.

Speaker 3 (01:01:43):
Took damn me over. I took the over on Miami
Florida State.

Speaker 1 (01:01:48):
Yeah, I paired him together, which is dumb. But if
one oh there you go, all right, don't screw this
up for me. We'll talk to you an hour, Sarah,
Right there you go. So Bert would be dead naming
now how does that work? What a day to be alive?
All right? Seven forty nine, hang on, here we go.

(01:02:10):
Traditional public school districts should be able to opt out
of placing class rank on high school transcripts that according
to a state Board of Education vote that you know,
which is it's a guidance vote for lawmakers. Lawmakers would
have to change that, and I see people are reacting

(01:02:33):
in the same way some of these other proposals that
we've talked about with like changing how the tests work.
And you know what constitutes an A versus a B,
which is you know, which is pretty crazy, especially if
you're like our age, Cause like what was an A
when I was in school? What was a B when

(01:02:53):
I was in school? Is now an A for a
lot of school districts all around and we did not
have that luxury. But this class I don't know if
class rank really matters. I know that some colleges that's
something you would say, I was, you know, top three
in my class, and that's impressive. But I guess the
perspective from me is, I don't know if this is
necessarily like what does class rank dictate anyway? Like let

(01:03:18):
me give you an example, Ross, how many kids do
you think we're in your graduating class? Probably hundreds and
hundreds Right in Schenectady, I'm assuming probably hundreds. Big city
I had seventy six. In mind, it's seventy six.

Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
Yeah, I was thinking because you asked me previously, and
I was like, I has to be over a hundred,
I asked Garak. It just says six hundred, six.

Speaker 1 (01:03:38):
Hundred, So if like I was top twenty in my class, right,
that's almost Meaningly, I hated to do homework. I could
have I could have done better, but I knew stuff.
I ted like if I did a test, fine, I
just knew it because I would. I was. You know,
I'm the same nerd who just likes watching documentaries and learning.
So but it's like, out of seventy six, that's not

(01:04:01):
as impressive as top twenty out of six hundred, not
at all. But I remember at the time the UC school,
they wanted to know my class rank, and they didn't
ask out of how many students, And I remember thinking
that was dumb. My buddy was homeschooled, wrote first on
his were sitting there filling out some he's filling out

(01:04:22):
he was at his house. He's literally filling out one
of these rates first. And I'm like, I mean, technically
that's true, but Corey, you're also the worst student because
he was the only child. So I I whatever, So
that's just something they're kicking around Friday. And even though
we had to move stuff around with a regular guest
earlier in the week because you know, government shut down
and the purges on and all that not, Pete Pete

(01:04:44):
Calendar joins us now at his normal time. Good morning
to you, mister Pete Calendar of WBT. What's going on?

Speaker 5 (01:04:51):
And yeah, good morning to you as well.

Speaker 1 (01:04:54):
So are they purging and Charlotte With the government shutdown?
It is so interesting to see this government shut down
where Republicans are in charge versus the barricade shut down,
which I'm sure you remember explicitly, especially because you were
in Asheville at the time, and the punishments that they

(01:05:14):
decided to dole out was weird, unnecessarily randomly spaced closures
of the Blue Ridge Parkway and the facilities along it,
the wrapping of barricades around inanimate stone objects up in Washington, DC.
And then you realize one party decided to intentionally punish
everybody while the other ones is sitting back going, hey,

(01:05:36):
if you just agree to the thing, we'll do the thing.
But you don't notice it as much, so I'm sure
that's something you've probably talked about on your show.

Speaker 5 (01:05:45):
I did, and yes, at the time, there's up in
the Mountains, there is a seasonal restaurant that opens along
the Blue Ridge Parkway and they were basically put out
of business for that for the duration of the shutdown.
And we were told at the time that you know,

(01:06:05):
this was the Republicans holding Americans hostage, that they were
the hostage takers. And I note now that the Democrats
have shut down the government that now it is once
again the Republicans who are the hostage takers. So I'm
not I guess, I guess the rule here is that

(01:06:27):
Democrats are incapable of taking hostages, which is weird because
so many of the far left violence that occurred, like
in the nineteen seventies where there were five bombings on
average a day in America by leftists, that they and
they took hostages. So I don't know when they turned
over that leaf that they are no longer taking any

(01:06:49):
hostages budgetarily or violently either way.

Speaker 3 (01:06:53):
But this is great.

Speaker 1 (01:06:55):
Somebody's going to clip this up, put it on media
matters and be like, oh, are these two guys recommend
hostage taking?

Speaker 5 (01:07:01):
So yeah, exactly, yeah, no, look the the you were
you know, you just mentioned some of the most ridiculous
ones where they you know, they won't they they they
put changes around.

Speaker 1 (01:07:12):
In the room. They had to sit in a room
because you realize how much flexibility they have, because that's
what Trump and his budget director are talking about. They're like, fine,
we get to make all these decisions now, right, So
a team under Obama sat in a room and went,
how do we make this as visible and painful as possible?

Speaker 3 (01:07:29):
Right?

Speaker 5 (01:07:30):
And that it was. It was a media campaign that
relied on the media amplifying the narrative that the Obama
administration wanted despite the absurdity of the closures. There was
the one, you know, the Mount Rushmore one. To me,
that was always the most ridiculous one where they you know,

(01:07:50):
they put up a barricade along the side of the
road so people couldn't literally pull over and take a
picture of Mount Rushmore from miles away. They did not want,
so they closed this little turn off area and completely
un they closed.

Speaker 1 (01:08:06):
There's four of them, as somebody who's from this area
or from that area, there's four different plays they closed
them all. I talked to my cousin out there he said,
they closed all of them because they live in Aladdin,
which is right on the border with South Dakota there
and there's all these different places if you know where
to drive. They closed the ones that only the locals
even knew about. Wild stuff man. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:08:27):
And you know then of course the World War Two Memorial,
which is basically a sidewalk. I mean it's just you know,
an open air sidewalk with you know, monuments around it.
And they got the hero flights that were arriving World
War Two veterans, you know, in the twilight of their
lives and wanting to see the memorial that took you know,
fifty years to build to them. And you know, the

(01:08:49):
the Nazis on the beach of Normandy didn't stop them,
and so obviously a bunch of fencing didn't stop them
from going to see their their monuments either. And that
was the coverage of it was it was, I mean,
it was so blatantly ridiculous that, you know, the way
the media was covering those closures and trying to blame Republicans.

(01:09:10):
It's like, no, but the administration made the call, like
they decided what to shut down and what to leave open,
and the stuff that. Remember they put the they put
like a little ropeline around Old Faithful. You weren't allowed
to like take pictures of the geyser.

Speaker 1 (01:09:27):
Like it just absurd natural object that's been there for
a billion years on top of.

Speaker 5 (01:09:32):
A right, yeah, exactly, So, like those were intentional decisions.
And who did they hurt? Right, they hurt people that
were going to see a bunch of water spit up
out of the ground, like that was that was who
they were hurting, Like, don't don't take a picture of this,
you know, carving of the founding fathers in the mountain.

(01:09:52):
Don't don't take a look at that. Uh, and don't
let the world work you veterans in And they did
that in order to apply maximum pr pressure on Republicans.
And here's the thing with the shutdowns is that there
really are no good off ramps. Republicans have learned this repeatedly,
and now Democrats, for some reason, I guess they need
to learn this lesson too, because I don't know how

(01:10:14):
you get up and say we need to have you know,
a trillion dollars in more spending, including money for illegal
alien gave expansion and the medicaid racket. You know, and
this is the mat you're going to go to. Well, okay,
then what's your what's your compromise position on this? And
you know apparently there is none and by not having one,

(01:10:37):
now you're going to allow Russ vote at Office of
Management budget to make all of these cuts, which is
precisely what he has been chomping at the bit to do.
And real quick, you know, the political angle on this
is really about Chuck Schumer and how nervous he is
about Alexandria Casio Cortez, congress woman from New York.

Speaker 1 (01:11:02):
And yeah, I had the brad not on. He said
that earlier, and I've heard like five different Republicans say it,
so it's clearly the talking.

Speaker 5 (01:11:08):
Point, right, So that's a talking point, But it is
also rooted in truth, which is that Schumer would win
in the general in New York because of the moderate
Democrat voters, but he may not get the chance because
he can't get to the general if she jumps in
to run against Schumer, who remember, angered a lot of

(01:11:31):
the Democrat base, the far left who believes remember also
that the left wants their Democrat elected officials to quote fight, right,
That's what's driving the low poll numbers for Democrats is
that their base is angry with them because they are
not fighting the orange hitler man hard enough. They want

(01:11:53):
more done. So this is what they want. This has
taken the fight, and so Schumer's kind of in this
jam where the last time he agreed to the continuing Resolution,
he got savaged by his own party and his polling dropped,
and now he's worried and AOC is making rumblings. So
it's like, okay, you know, then I'm gonna go ahead
and cave and I'm gonna do this for the base.
But what's the off ramp there? Today you got AOC

(01:12:16):
saying I'll enter negotiations with the Senators. Yeah, well, I
mean you got this. Yeah, you got this backbenchure. And
look she is where the energy is the AOC and
zar on mam donnie, that's where the energy is in
the Democrat base. They want them some socialism and they

(01:12:37):
want it good and hard, and they are going to
drag the Democrat Party over to UH over to the left,
even further to the left. And the Democrat establishment doesn't
have an answer for that, but.

Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
They're willing to do it. Yeah, absolute gool, you have
to contort yourself into to go to Charlotte sit it,
a panel be provided, I'm sure sure notes along with
photographs of who will be testifying, and then to do
so little research and to care so little so that
you're only there to spit out facts which are not

(01:13:11):
facts about you. Know how Republicans in the legislature made
it so Charlotte as dangerous. All this to be Deborah
the cyborg Ross as we call her on the show
to say this.

Speaker 8 (01:13:23):
Long before this hearing, particularly after pointing at a picture
of a rena. Well, I'm sorry, I am so sorry.
I'm so sorry. Thank you so much for bringing that.
Thank you, thank you, sir.

Speaker 1 (01:13:40):
I am so sorry for you, thank you for what
does that mean? I am so sorry.

Speaker 8 (01:13:45):
I'm so sorry for your loss. And my heart goes
out to you. My heart goes out to you.

Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
I did not know her, Yeah, yeah, yeah, she's not
the one on the light rail. She's the one who
went to visit her friends at the University of South Carolina,
was ripped out of naked in the middle of the
night and executed so somebody could use their credit cards, who,
by the way, had like four times the arrests of
crazy sharks, dude. Uh and to not even care enough.
I have not I did not see where she went

(01:14:13):
and talked to him after the hearing. I looked for it.
So I'm like, you have to hume and you got
to go up and be like, I am so sorry
I was reading one. I just putt but like she
probably just got out of there after it.

Speaker 5 (01:14:24):
Look, we had the list of the witnesses that you know,
that were going to appear. There were only four of them.
Arena Zerutzka, who was murdered on the light rail line
was not Her family were not part of the witness list.
And Democrats brought their own witnesses. They brought two and
we got a write up, like they told us, here
are the people, you know, murder victim's family kind of

(01:14:47):
stuff like that. And there was one guy, a bail
bondsman guy, and so they told us who they were.
And the fact that like, and the other thing that's
astounding also is that they didn't know how to pronounce
in A Zaruska's name right. Al Adams from Charlotte, she
like stumbled and fumbled the name, couldn't get it right.
And the fact that Deborah Ross would not know that

(01:15:08):
the picture she's looking at is not Arena Zerutzka. I mean,
people all over the world know what Arena Zeruzka looked.

Speaker 1 (01:15:16):
Like, right, the Federico girl look alike. And I'm like,
except no, except they don't know. They're both blonde and small.
But that's about it.

Speaker 5 (01:15:27):
That's it. Yeah, blonde white chick.

Speaker 3 (01:15:28):
That's it.

Speaker 5 (01:15:29):
Like, that's the only commonality there's they do not look alike.
And the fact that she wouldn't know that from the
photo first of all, but then to not even have
like done the bare minimum to read who is on
the witness list. And this guy lost his daughter and
he's from the Federico family, is from the Charlotte area,
and that's the connection to why they were at this hearing.

(01:15:51):
And yeah, and he got rightfully really upset about it.
And then when he had his you know, his opening statement,
he laid into her again. That's the clip that went
viral as well.

Speaker 1 (01:16:03):
We played that as well. Yeah, it's it's the whole thing.
Was just and have you interviewed her ever the Congress? Uh?

Speaker 5 (01:16:14):
Yeah, oh no, no, no, they generally don't like coming on.

Speaker 1 (01:16:17):
Look and this is and that's that's come on, that's
the crazy part though, because she we have an open
cattle call for interviews. That's how I do mine. Around election.
I'm like, if you're on a ballot, here's the window
you call us. We're not scheduling, yeah, because then it's
a it's an equal time thing that I don't have
to worry about. And she called. We were flabbergast and
she called in and we didn't know much about her,

(01:16:38):
and so we talk and it was like interviewing a
speak and say, Pete, yes, there was no human there.

Speaker 5 (01:16:44):
It was.

Speaker 1 (01:16:44):
It was ross. You would say that that was the
least human interview we've ever done on the show, probably
by far anybody running for office. It was bonkers, Pete, No,
I believe it.

Speaker 5 (01:16:56):
I mean at least she called in. But that's a
very what you just give them, like an Ope and
Mike kind of a deal for a couple of minutes,
like tell us about yourself kind.

Speaker 3 (01:17:03):
Of a deal.

Speaker 1 (01:17:03):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, we do. We do the statewide
or the Congression you know, or the federal offices one day,
and then the local ones. And the rule is, if
you're on a ballot and you're in one of the
two markets, we will make it available and you guys
can call in and then that's that's how that's how
I choose to do it, and then we'll schedule some
stuff sometimes, but I don't want to get into it.
I want them to have to go. I want them

(01:17:24):
to want the time.

Speaker 5 (01:17:26):
Yeah, but any how, Yeah, my rule is open door.
Anybody wants to wants time to come on the air
and have a conversation, they can always come on the show.
I do reach out to some like especially if they
send out a press release. Then I'm like, hey, I'll
have you on the show. Let's talk about it. And
the last time I did that in an a state
senator from Charlotte actually agreed to come on. It did

(01:17:47):
not go well for him. And this is part of
the problem that Democrats have is that they make these
inane arguments and these bumper sticker slogans, and they think
that passes for debate and conversation, and when you ask
them any kind of a question that gets below the surface,
they are stalled and they don't know how to respond.

(01:18:07):
It was remember a couple of weeks ago when one
of the state lawmakers from Charlotte said that not all
cultures are equal, and she got all that blowback, Carla Conningham,
she got all that blowback from Democrats, and so so
I brought one of the Democrats on. I was like,
tell us why she's wrong, and he couldn't articulate any
kind of a response.

Speaker 1 (01:18:28):
It's saying that they're not equal. It is. There's a
couple of different ways to determine that. So they're like,
you're seizing upon the lesser than argument rather than the
different than argument. Correct, So you better be able to
make that case. Did you see Elizabeth Warren yesterday when
a CBS reporter actually read their proposal and said, well,

(01:18:48):
you just said it doesn't include this, but your own
proposal literally uses the language. She didn't know how to
respond because she thought CBS would never do that to her, Right, Yeah,
I'm sorry.

Speaker 5 (01:18:59):
And that's why they that's why they become intellectually flabby.
That is precisely the reason is that media for so
long does not press Democrat elected officials like they press Republicans,
and so over the course of decades, Republicans had to
get better at making their arguments. That's the way, you know,
you forge the steal. And with Democrats getting a pass,

(01:19:21):
they get the kid go up treatment that when they
finally do encounter somebody that asks them a difficult question,
they stalled. It's just muttering and stuttering.

Speaker 1 (01:19:31):
Yeah. Did you see the Gallup, the annual Gallup Trust
of the Media thing that came out yesterday?

Speaker 5 (01:19:37):
So are they doing well?

Speaker 1 (01:19:38):
Are they doing well? All right? Are you sitting down?

Speaker 3 (01:19:41):
Are you sitting now?

Speaker 1 (01:19:42):
So they've done this annually. Gallup's done this since the
late mid late seventies. By the way, when they first
did it in nineteen seventy six or seven, I don't
have in front of me. The trust of the media
was seventy percent, do you, and now it's twenty eight.
But then when you break it down by party, it's
fifty one percent for Democrats, twenty seven for moderates, and

(01:20:06):
only eight percent of Republicans, which, by the way, Ross
and I's theory is those are the those eight percent
are the people call in and go, I'm a conservative
butt and then provide abortions for toddlers or something. Right. Yeah,
So the seminar callers, I think is Rush used to
call it absolutely Are you shocked, man at those numbers
they got less than a minute.

Speaker 3 (01:20:27):
I am actually surprised.

Speaker 5 (01:20:29):
That that it is so high among Democrats still at
fifty one percent. That is kind of surprising. I thought
that that the media would be pulling somewhere in the
neighborhood of Headlfe.

Speaker 1 (01:20:42):
Well, especially after the because you know, a lot of
them are trying to claim that they were tricked by
their own people in the media over the Biden thing.
So you think that yeah, yeah, yeah, you know, because
they couldn't use their own eyes or something. All Right,
we got to leave it there, though I appreciate it, Pete,
So stay safe Murderville, USA.

Speaker 5 (01:20:58):
There, Okay, all right, I have a great.

Speaker 1 (01:21:00):
We'll be back. So I am confused on the whole
Greta thing because didn't we ross didn't have a story
earlier this week or last week where they were like,
she's not on the boat anymore after the Flair incident
because she's too high pro I don't remember what the
what the reason.

Speaker 2 (01:21:16):
We did have a story about her not being in
the boat anymore.

Speaker 1 (01:21:19):
And now she's then she's but then she was back
on the boat when they decided they finally they did
make it to where the Israeli navy was staged and
uh were intercepted and uh, she started posting videos. So
this this video, I'm gonna play one of them because

(01:21:41):
apparently it's just it's horrendous what the Israelis are doing
to her. The the problem is this video was recorded
prior to them being intercepted. I just want to be
clear here. Also when they did, when they did get
their flotilla intercepted, every one of these guys started throwing

(01:22:02):
their smart devices into the ocean to kill sea turtles. Probably,
I don't know, because you know so it's like, oh,
it's an op thing. We don't want the we don't
want the enemy to get our information. It was just
absolute buffoonery. So she recorded this prior to being taken
into custody. There just just want to be very very clear.
But we do get a pronouncer on her name finally,

(01:22:23):
so here we go.

Speaker 9 (01:22:24):
My name is Givin jian Bay.

Speaker 1 (01:22:26):
I'm a citizen of Sweden.

Speaker 9 (01:22:27):
If you are watching this video, I have been abducted
and taken against my will by Israeli forces. Our humanitarian
mission was non violent and abiding by international law. Please
tell my government to demand my and the other's immediate release.

Speaker 1 (01:22:42):
Okay, all right, couple things. One I called Ross I
called Sweden and demanded the opposite, So we'll see how
they responded that. Mike, I demand you tell them to
retain her. So she made that video. But then there's
other videos too that started to emerge. So she is
in such torturous conditions there as a hostage of Israel,
as she stated in some that they were feeding her.

(01:23:04):
She's not in what looks like even a lock up facility,
and they're giving her access to things to make videos with.

Speaker 2 (01:23:09):
No, there's a video of them like giving her sandwiches. Yeah,
but she's acting like they're hamas, like they're not gonna
like release her.

Speaker 1 (01:23:15):
Yeah, they're taking turns raping her and starving or fake executions.
That's what a hamasa's things they like to do. Get
you down on your knees, tell you that they're gonna
If there's several of the released hostages that have told
this story, please tell me we're gonna execute you, and
then the gun's not loaded, there's a click.

Speaker 2 (01:23:32):
Please please tell me. You saw the video yesterday that
was around social media of I don't know if it
was the same flotilla or a different one, but it's
the same sort of thing. I think it's the same
group and they're out there and they were like, we
can't get close to Gaza. So what they started doing
was taking the supplies, putting them in like you know,
containers and bottles and floating them over. And they realized

(01:23:56):
that the way the currents were, it's not how the
current work that those those are either going to go
to Egypt or tell Aviv.

Speaker 1 (01:24:02):
Yeah, well that on require you to do when it's
actually not that complicated research whoops. Yeah you can if
you see, if you have any knowledge of navigational charts,
that's something that you can discern. So it's just it's
it's the keystone cops of of of leftist LARPing these
like anything this girl touches. I remember when they kept

(01:24:25):
re arresting her so she'd have the perfect arrest video
and the police were in on it clearly like all right, well,
I guess we'll do it again. And they did it
like three times, except somebody was filming the thing. Well
kept happening. These idiots are throwing their iPhones into the ocean,
littering and they're floating stuff to Egypt, which I'm maybe
some guy in Egypt to be very happy, but it's

(01:24:49):
it's like, you know, you can you can send money
if if you really want to do something, you can
send money. There's a lot of aid organizations that are
able to have access there, but it won't be as
uh vlog worthy. I guess, so a bunch of lunatics.
I didn't realize that was the same group. I just
thought those were other idiots. But either way, man, all right,

(01:25:12):
uh oh, I got one other piece of audio. I
feel so bad for the Speaker of the house. Man.
So there's this other congresswoman who decides Democrat congresswoman. Her
name escapes me, it doesn't matter, and she has Mike
Johnson like pinned in a corner. You know, he isn't
like the dude can't get The look on his face
is like is this happening. I mean he's a speaker,

(01:25:33):
so he's gonna be somewhat polite. She's not the I
saw it couch just having a conversation. They're not really
having a conversation. She just wanted to unload. She then
ignores what he says, and the look on you know
the meme ross have you seen the meme where there's
they're like like like eighteen year old kids and the girl,
little blonde girl screaming in this guy's ear because they're
at a party, and the look on his face is

(01:25:55):
like I want to be anywhere but here, so I
that's that's what this reminded me of. Here is the speak.

Speaker 4 (01:26:02):
The president is unhinged, he is unwell. What are you
doing on your side?

Speaker 3 (01:26:06):
Are too?

Speaker 1 (01:26:07):
I don't control?

Speaker 4 (01:26:07):
Oh my god, please that performance in front of the generals.
It's so dangerous. You know, I serve on foreign affairs
and appropriations. This is the collision of those two things.
Our allies are looking elsewhere, our enemies are laughing. You
have a president, you have a president who is.

Speaker 1 (01:26:25):
Unwell, and the utter horror when he said you have
pete crazy people on your side too, where she was
just like flabbergasted over that, Like what are you talking about?
I don't know how you move those two sides together. Man,
don't know how you do that. But did kind of

(01:26:45):
feel bad for the dude, because you know, we've all
been there, show up at something, the coworker rolls over like, oh,
here comes you know and insert whatever their name is,
And now five minutes of your life have evaporated. Madeline,
I want to make sure I gave you the name.
That's Madeline Dean, who is another crazy congresswoman. I don't

(01:27:05):
really know much about. Okay, a couple of things here,
so you guys dig on the Spirit Halloween Ross. Do
you guys go to Spirit Halloween.

Speaker 2 (01:27:16):
They had one open in wake Forest. I don't know
if it's going to be back. We were super excited
when it opened. Uh where Really, it's over by the Target,
like across the way the shop from the Target. Yeah,
and it was like an empty mattress store or something.
I don't know if they're going to be back, but
when it was up last year or the year before,
we were super excited. We got tons of like you know,

(01:27:38):
Halloween decorations and stuff, not necessarily the costumes.

Speaker 1 (01:27:43):
But the costumes are so like they're not the highest quality, right.
That's been my only experience with them is the costumes.
I've been around some of the costumes and the names
are funny. But you're telling me the decor some of the.

Speaker 2 (01:27:54):
Yeah, yes, like the props and stuff. We've got tons
of Haunted Mansion stuff and uh what else Beatle juice stuff,
Like tons of stuff and it's aysally good quality stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:28:04):
Well, I al, would you like to do it for
Christmas as well?

Speaker 2 (01:28:08):
We probably would.

Speaker 1 (01:28:09):
So Spirit Halloween has announced that they will be opening
thirty Christmas theme stores this holiday season. This actually makes
a lot of sense because you know, they come in,
they do the short term lease of empty space, but
instead of you know, one month or two months or
whatever it is for the lead up to Halloween, it's
perfectly time. You just keep it rolling. Halloween happens, and
then you know, November first you got staff in there

(01:28:31):
putting all the Christmas stuff in, and then you just
roll through the Christmas season and it's just a continuous
three or four months of operation. Unfortunately, though I have
a list of the first they say these are the
first thirty, and if it's successful, I guess probably they'll
they'll maybe do some more next year. But none of
them look to be in North Carolina. I'm trying to

(01:28:53):
think of even what the closest ones would be Lexington, Kentucky.
It's mostly up in the northeast. I know, you're shocked.
And then uh yes, uh, Ohio and Michigan and Pennsylvania
and then basically the all of the Northeast. So who knows, maybe,

(01:29:14):
but they're gonna go the full thing. Santa will be there,
you know, all the stuff, and then you can get
all your Chinese lead painted other stuff for the Christmas season.
I don't know, man, I just hope it's a good quality.
Cause can you imagine you buy some like star ornaments
for your for your tree and then they'll just like
falling apart in five minutes. That'd be very depressing. But

(01:29:36):
uh yeah, it doesn't look like going to do any
down here in the South. Well, whatever, screw you guys,
then tell maybe next year. So we'll see. All right,
eight forty three Cacoday Radio program and it's mister Ray
Stagic from the Weather Channels joining us. Now, how you doing, sir?

Speaker 3 (01:29:55):
All right?

Speaker 1 (01:29:56):
If you love spirit Halloween, they're now going to also
do Spirit Christmas.

Speaker 3 (01:30:00):
Oh okay, So a lot of Santa Claus and el costumes.
I've got to replace mine.

Speaker 1 (01:30:06):
They're all sluty.

Speaker 3 (01:30:08):
So okay, well I think I'll.

Speaker 1 (01:30:12):
Do they make me wait, hold on, discird Halloween sell
costumes in your size?

Speaker 3 (01:30:17):
Well, I mean you know, Santa Claus is a little
bit of a larger size, right, yeah, but.

Speaker 1 (01:30:22):
Your boys for the part where everything you would wear
would be Caprice.

Speaker 3 (01:30:26):
I'm thinking, right, exactly.

Speaker 1 (01:30:30):
Have Capriz he lives at the North Pole Man.

Speaker 3 (01:30:35):
Exactly exactly. Well, you know, hey, whatever it is, it is.
But it's funny because I just got a picture. Actually
I've done the role before, and my sister actually sent
me the picture when I was playing the role back
in high school. So it was kind of funny, kind
of funny stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:30:52):
But I'm looking at the rest of these games this week.
There's not a lot that I even care to watch.

Speaker 3 (01:31:00):
Uh, it's not uh yeah, not very excitingly.

Speaker 1 (01:31:03):
In Europe for a second week.

Speaker 3 (01:31:04):
So yeah, I like, uh like, uh, move over, Virginia.
That's it's gonna be a fair game.

Speaker 1 (01:31:11):
So I was talking about stuff, but yeah, no, there's
all that.

Speaker 3 (01:31:15):
Dude, Yeah, y'all give me jets. Cowboys doesn't intrigue you.

Speaker 1 (01:31:19):
You know, I thought about it and then I wished
I hadn't. So there's that right, right.

Speaker 2 (01:31:25):
Right right, Ray, you can't let me down.

Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
Yeah you gotta win. Yeah, you gotta remember when you
let me down last week. I need you to.

Speaker 3 (01:31:32):
Yeah, right, But it's it's only what two and a
half or three and a half something like that. I
was surprised. Yeah, it's not a lot of points.

Speaker 2 (01:31:40):
Yeah, this is a this week in My faith is
in the Cowboys and in the Panthers.

Speaker 1 (01:31:47):
Oh that's right. Yeah, a big Panthers fan.

Speaker 3 (01:31:49):
So yeah, well something.

Speaker 2 (01:31:53):
So I'm sure, I'm sure we'll be fine.

Speaker 3 (01:31:56):
Yeah, well, best of luck.

Speaker 1 (01:32:01):
Right, Yeah, we need we need some good weather, but
not too good weather that you want to go outside.

Speaker 3 (01:32:06):
And yeah, I mean Friday night football, beautiful white jacket.
After the sunset's gonna cool up pretty quickly with hiding
the load of mid seventies today, upper forty to low
fifties by tomorrow morning. On a beautiful weekend coming up.
We're going to continue to see what looks to be sunshine,
and now the triangle could get closer to eighty degrees
by Sunday. Monday, Tuesday thet up for seventies for the

(01:32:28):
try it, and we'll start to see the clouds come
in early next week in showers by midweek. But we're
staying on this dry stretch here. Maybe Monday will dig
in and check up with drought monitor, which came out yesterday,
but I don't have it here in front of me,
so they'll give me something to do for Monday.

Speaker 1 (01:32:42):
Okay, we'll have fun with that. Have a good god buck. Yeah,
we'll see all right, don't let ross down or else,
and we will be right back.

Speaker 10 (01:32:50):
Good morning, Casey. Boeing is facing yet another setback for
this much maligned Triple seven X, as the wide body
plane is now slated to fly in twenty twenty seven.
The delay could potentially cost Boeing billions of dollars in
accounting charges. Luftanza, which is a launch customer for the
Triple seven X, is already making plans for the delay.
The jet is already six years behind schedule. A Boeing

(01:33:11):
CEO Kelly Orberg attributing the latest delay to a quote
mountain of work rather than new technical issues. Boeing will
be reporting earnings on October twenty ninth. In a court filing,
open Ai says that a lawsuit accusing it of stealing
technology from Xai is just an attempt by the company
to hide the fact it's unable to match open AI's innovation.
The Elon Musk owned Xai says the chat GBT creator

(01:33:34):
poached at least eight employees while stealing intellectual property open Ai,
Sam Altman, and Musk worked together a decade ago to
launch open Ai, but had a falling out soon after.
OpenAI is asking federal judge in San Francisco to dismiss
the case. Crackerbow has cut ties to the marketing company
behind this controversial logo change. The restaurant chain hired marketing

(01:33:55):
from Profit last year as part of a three year
rebranding campaign, including redesigning its restaurants pop and then created
a new logo, which of course angered conservatives. Cracker Bill
Cracker Barrel backtrack last month and returned the previous logo.
Will also announceing on Thursday they were retooling the company's
leadership structure. Tesla facing another lawsuit overclaims the doors of

(01:34:15):
the cyber truck are defective. The allegation stems from a
fatal crash in San Francisco in the San Francisco Subward
back in twenty twenty four, the result in the death
of three college students. The families of two of the
students say that their children would have survived the wreck
if the door handles weren't defective, With Tesla knowing for
years the handles were problematic. A Bloomberg News investigation revealed

(01:34:35):
that people were unable to open doors on the cyber
truck after a loss of power, especially after a crash.
Taylor Swift's latest album, The Life of the show Girl,
dropped at midnight and will make the singer even richer.
Bloomberg says Swift is now worth two point one billion dollars.
That's up a billion dollars from two years ago when
the Bloomberg Billionaires Index first added her to the list.
Most of Swift's wealth comes from her song catalog, as

(01:34:58):
well as her record breaking Eras Tour, which grossed over
two billion dollars in ticket sales, and the Company concert movie.
And finally, Casey, let's look at the futures market's opening.
In about thirty five minutes, the Dow is up a
tenth to one percent. Naszac now is essentially flat, barely up.
The S and P right now is also barely It's
barely up three points, so essentially flat as well.

Speaker 1 (01:35:19):
Casey, alrighty, thank you, Dan, have yourself a good weekend.

Speaker 3 (01:35:22):
Okay you as well, Buddy, all right, there you go.

Speaker 1 (01:35:24):
Dan Schwartzman from Bloomberg News, Dude, Ross, I just saw
the craziest animal horder story I think I've ever come
across this. This is a ninety five year old woman they
found this is and these were running around our house.
How many animals total? Two hundred and eight animals? All right,
what do you what kind of critters do you think

(01:35:46):
they were? Ross? You have two hundred and eight.

Speaker 2 (01:35:47):
I gotta be like cats or something. Okay, Please don't
tell me their reptiles, Like.

Speaker 1 (01:35:53):
No, it's it's the it's the variety that's going to
shock you. So cats are on the list, followed by dawn.
And this is all inside of her house. I wouldn't
be abundantly clear. This is inside her house running free
like Doctor Doolittle or something. All right, cats, dogs, roosters, ducks, pigeons, quail, rabbits, crows, geese, chipmunks, doves, chickens.

(01:36:21):
I guess roosters and chickens, hamsters, ferrets, guinea pigs, hedgehogs, voles,
flying squirrels, parakeets, parrots, cockatoos, chinchillas, tortoises, turkeys, and various
other species. Is how it's written in the story. Is

(01:36:41):
she preparing for a flood or something? Yeah? Or is
this like a wuhan wet market? I mean, what's going on?
How are they not all murdered each other. But you'll
notice ross no reptiles except for the tortoise, which I
don't know. People are just creeped out by tortoises, I guess,
but you know, not snakes and stuff because that I

(01:37:02):
don't think you could have snakes in that house. Can
you imagine being a snake in that house? So yeah, dude, Oh,
you'd be the fattest, laziest snake you've ever seen, just
sitting there beyond the snake version of my six hundred
pound life. You're like, I can't stop eating man everywhere.

(01:37:24):
At least you get a job in that new Anaconda.

Speaker 2 (01:37:26):
Movie forest for my snake jeez.

Speaker 1 (01:37:30):
Yes, ah, and those are active decisions. Those aren't just
cats that kept doing it or rabbits that kept hooking up,
Like you have to go out of your way to
acquire a chinchilla. That's so bad. And Boston Paul is
talking trash about the Sunday night Bill's Patriots game.

Speaker 2 (01:37:48):
I don't blame him.

Speaker 1 (01:37:49):
Yeah, I don't know if we want to take advice
from somebody who's too much of a coward to hop
the fence of the White House.

Speaker 2 (01:37:54):
I mean, that's a good point
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