Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
From big name brands as your favorite local spots, dining services,
stuff you're already fine all for less and you could
score one hundred dollars or other instant prizes just for
opening it, or seeve it even faster with mobile coupons
you can use right now at.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Voulpack dot com.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
Voupack there's definitely something in it for.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
You having issues with the busted water heater, slow drains,
toilet backing up Router and sun Plumbing. Family owned and
operated with four generations of experience. We are your local
plumber Cary today.
Speaker 4 (00:34):
He can fix anything or book on ning. We do
enjoy that. Did a poll of everybody in the studio.
They're also happy it's Friday, so hopefully your as well,
unless you promise the spouse you do something you don't
want to do this weekend and you're just dreading it.
So but other than that, everybody's in a good mood.
Well except most of the Democrats in Washington yesterday, who
(00:59):
I watch numerous videos about because I don't know if
they were doing another targeted thing. At least they weren't
all saying it in the same words, but they are
all saying the same thing and I think they were
doing another mass video roundup, but decided not to just
all simultaneously read the same script and release it because
(01:21):
that was just so weird. But full court press. And today,
in fact, I have a buddy who's flying to Chicago
this morning and he is super nervous. So you want
to know what this trader's doing? All right, So he's
flying to Chicago and then he is driving up to
(01:45):
Green Bay to attend Sunday's Packers game, which I, as
a Vikings fan, I did not like the sound of that. However,
he is the filthy Philly fan, the guy I tell
you about who's just like, if you're watching the Eagles game,
he gets not He's not angry at me or people
around us. He's just so emotionally. So he's going up
(02:08):
to represent and he's got all of his Eagles gear.
He sent me a picture of how he's going to
be decked out, and I know the mouth that he
has on him. So we'll see. Maybe he makes it back,
maybe he doesn't. But he he's like, what, you know,
what's gonna happen with the flight. He technically is flying
to Chicago and then Chicago to Milwaukee and then running
(02:29):
a car. All right, So we'll see. But if if
there is a giant melee in the stands at Lambo,
it might be him. I don't know. I asked if
that's a good idea. He's like, ah, it'll be fine.
Didn't you say people were nice up in them neck
(02:49):
of the woods, because he knows I used to live
in Minnesota, and I'm like, yeah, until you get inside
their stadium a little rowdy that, don't get me wrong.
I love going over to Lambo to watch I think
I went to three different Yeah, Vikings Packers game and
it's fun. It's a fun rivalry and we had a
good time up there. But yeah, man like it. Lambo's
(03:11):
not for beginners if you're an opposing fan. I guess
is what I would say. So uh but yeah, he's like,
I don't it was the flight going to happen. I
don't know what is he he boards here in like,
I don't know, an hour or something. I think I
can't remember what time he said. So, and I haven't
got any crazy texts, so things things might be okay.
All right. So with that in mind, we do have
(03:32):
some football related news. Very little of it has to
do with the game though a couple a couple of
stories there. Oh, and I have an addition here on
the this Kansas there there is this crazy story of
a mayor in Kansas. Hey, I don't understand how this
is possible, but then mains like, hold my beer, Kansas
(03:57):
on a city council election that I saw the results
of up there for bangor Bangor however you say which,
by the way, I don't know if you know this
is Darry, So if you know, for the Stephen King Darry. Yeah,
so that was my because that's where he lived. So
he modeled Darry after Bangor fun fact there, So actually
(04:19):
maybe it makes sense in this context. Let me just
hit you with that. Why don't we start the show
with that because it's fresh in my brain? And then
we got we got big bear news we have to
talk about too. But I have been following a saga
which now apparently has a conclusion, but a lot of
a lot of twists and turns going on with this thing.
(04:41):
All right, So here is from Bangor, Maine. They had
city council elections up there. They elected three new council members.
It's gotten much more progressive. It's so it's so progressive.
Here we go, Maine elects a woman convicted of killing
Canadian tourists, which, by the way, that's the other thing.
(05:04):
This can't be good for tourism. He's not from the
Great White North there, So how did she do? This
is even crazier so many many years ago, because she
did ten years in prison for manslaughter. So she's out now.
Her angle is and I don't know her angle is.
(05:25):
At the time, I was doing stuff, a lot of drugs,
a lot of drinking, which I guess as drugs, but
and you know, doing crime and whatnot. She is part
Native American, which is important because, according to the story,
her and her druggy boyfriend were at some bar in
(05:47):
some beach bar of some sort. Let's see here. Yeah, okay,
so that old Orchard beach and then some nearby that's
some nearby bar. But they're out on the beach now,
and one of the patrons started arguing with her and
her boyfriend and used a derogatory term for Native American women.
(06:08):
I'm assuming it was squaw or something along those lines.
I don't know. At which point the two beat the
dude down and she shoved a bunch of sand in
the in the while he's literally in the you know,
on the ground, unconscious, filled his mouth with sand, and
of course you know he's suffocated. She received ten years
(06:29):
in prisons. As she's changed, I don't know, maybe she is,
but all of her stuff is super progressive. But also
if it's you know, if it's the town with Penny Wise.
But it begs the question because I do you know,
I think if you have any sort of Christian worldview,
or if you if you have, if you have experiences
with people in your life, people can change. I know
(06:50):
that we have listeners who listened to the show who
you know, did time in prison. They'll contact whenever we
do stories like that, and you know a lot of them.
The story is, you know, that was fifteen years ago,
that was a different me, and now I got a
family and blah blah blah, And like I believe that.
And I think I think if you consider yourself religious,
you have to believe that too, because redemption's kind of
(07:11):
a thing. So with that in mind, are there crimes
that somebody could convict where they shouldn't be able to
hold office? I don't know. I mean I would say
if you messed with kids, no, how about no, the
(07:32):
recidivism rates through the roof on that. And also I'm sorry.
Maybe in the next life you can find forgiveness, but
in this sense, you're not leading people. Does any get
weirdos like that California State Center, Scott Weener or whatever,
Like any time I hear him talk, I just get
the creepy Crawley's not because I know that he's done
(07:53):
anything to kids. I want to be very clear here,
but when you are the loudest, when you're holding press confort,
it is to push back on the idea that if
you purchase a child for sex that it shouldn't be
a felony. I have a lot of I want to
(08:13):
see your hard drive, like that's of all the hills
to die on. By the way, he was successful. So
there's a bunch of hard drives who need to look
at in California. But so maybe not that one. I
mean clearly, but this is a you know, this is
a violent crime. This isn't uh there was negligence and
somebody died and you know I did my time. This
(08:35):
is a decision was made and you know clearly in
the heat of it, and I don't know how intoxicated
her on drugs that she was at the time, but
to not just beat the crap out of a guy
leaven laying in the sand, which at that point, right,
it was a fight, it was a particularly brutal one.
You probably should face some consequences, but you didn't leave
(08:56):
it there. You filled his air passage with sand, which
is it's very pennywise of you. So I don't know,
but not my state, not my problem. So there's there's
that as well. What of the what's the Kansas mayor story, Well,
we'll give you that one because it's pretty crazy too.
We'll do it next. Hang on, again, it is dairy,
(09:18):
so maybe that's just normal around there. This one in Kansas, UH,
is really strange because again you're dealing with you're dealing
with a very, very red part of the country. You're
dealing with agricultural communities. And I point that out not
from a derogatory standpoint, but like, if you've never lived
(09:40):
in a tiny little town, especially one that is an
agricultural town, uh, And it doesn't have to be agricultural,
but a lot of them are. But if you ever
you've never lived in a tiny little town of you know,
a thousand people or smaller. Everybody knows everything about you,
and if they're bored, they'll they a little spy on you.
The Reas church, they gossip, and you want to know
(10:02):
it's in your community. And if you run for office,
I don't know how you avoid this stuff. But that's
apparently with a now twice elected mayor in Kansas was
able to achieve. Well, yeah, this story is bonkers.
Speaker 5 (10:19):
The mayor of Coldwater accused of election fraud. The chartists
come hours after he secured a second term in office.
Attorney General Chris Kobok charged Mayor Jose Joe Sebaios with
six felonies, three counts each of voting without being qualified
and election perjury. Kobak claims Sabios is lawfully living in
(10:42):
the US, but is a citizen of Mexico, making him
ineligible to vote. The ag alleges the mayor illegally cast
ballots in the August twenty twenty fourth primary and November
twenty twenty two and twenty twenty three general elections.
Speaker 6 (10:56):
In large part, our system right now is based on trust.
Trust that when the person signed the registration or signs
the poll books saying that he's a qualified elector, or
that he is a United States citizen, that the person
is telling the truth.
Speaker 5 (11:10):
We reached out some Ayres of Bios for comment, but
have not heard back yet. The Coldwater City Council, though,
released a statement on social media saying the mayor called
them in for a special meeting over the noon hour
to quote discuss recent events that have transpired with the
Kansas Attorney General's office. While the recent allegations involving the
mayor are understandably concerning, we will allow the proper legal
(11:31):
process to take its course before making any further comments unquote.
Speaker 4 (11:35):
All right, so dudes, not a US citizen again, and
I've seen this confirmed. They did have questions, Well, how
is he? They say he is. He has legal status
in the US, so I'm not sure if he has
a green card of some sort or some sort of
permanent work authorization or whatever it is. So they're not
(11:57):
accusing him of being in the country illegally. But you know,
I don't get to run for office, not in Kansas.
In Kansas, while it is illegal, there is no penalty
for it, which is strange. But so there's like there's that,
but the the six voting counts those are felonies. Oh yeah,
(12:17):
every single one of them. Three different times you voted,
that's a felony. And then the perjury is him signing,
you know, attesting to the fact that he has qualified
to vote. So that's what those six charges stem from.
But like, there's the size of this town's like a
thousand people. And by the way, he got re elected
(12:37):
by eighty three percent of the voters that you know
that showed up. Yeah, it's whereas its about one hundred
and threty miles west of Wichita, so basically where there
ain't nothing out there in little town. That's the thing
that was most surprising to me. Uh, let's see here.
So yeah, I'll let you pick your poison between Kansas
(12:57):
and Maine there. But uh, you know the thing that's
that we're told never happens. It happened but again three times.
And you go, well they caught him. Well you know
why they caught you know how they caught him. That
that's the part that's why this is this is great.
They wouldn't have caught him, probably because with everything that's
(13:18):
going on with immigration, the guy finally decided to attempt
to gain his citizenship and that put it put him
on the radar of the AG apparently. I'm not sure
what fully triggered that, but it was it was him.
I think it was gossip milk because he had to
go down and file some paperwork and that got people
(13:38):
talking and then somebody called the AG. That would be
my theory. But yeah, yeah, so if he'd have just
if he had just held pat, probably would have got
away with it. So the thing that we're told never
happens happened and probably would have kept happening. Oh I know,
(14:04):
I know, all right, So people think can no, people think, yeah,
Kansas is crazier. Yeah, all right, Oh okay, I'm not
reading that, sir. Did you guys see the update to
the Louver story? Oh? I love these. I love these
(14:26):
so much. So when if you think of, like if
you were to sit down and you were starting to
plot a heist, right because these, I think crimes like
this rise to the level of heist.
Speaker 7 (14:40):
Right.
Speaker 4 (14:40):
This isn't a simple B and E. This is a heist.
So when you start plotting a heist of a facility
like the Louver, you think laser grids, windows, sensors, heat sensors,
you know, all the crazy stuff. You see in the movies.
You got to get around it. You got but one
(15:01):
of the big things is you got to figure out
what you can do with the security system. So you
got to have super hacker dude there, he'll work on
it and it'll be kicking down. Guys are screaming at him.
Three seconds for it goes off. Boom, he gets it,
smiles you guys, get on with your heist. Right well.
According to UH an employee, at the time of the
time of the heist at the Louver, the password for
(15:22):
the security systems and the video system was Louver, one
of the one of the buildings, one of the world's
buildings that contains the most loot. Their password was Louver
and it's called the Louver. God help us, man, Why
(15:46):
do how many of these stories have we done where
something A lot of times it's Internet based, like what
was your what was the password at the Pentagon? They're like, ah, one, two, three, four,
five six. You guys didn't think that was a bad idea.
We thought it was too obvious. We didn't know. I
mean about the love it's louve. Oh, I love it.
(16:10):
And apparently also they were having problems with the perimeter
security cameras and just kind of ignored it. So swards
the louver smart. Well they did catch them, so yeah,
I guess that end of the security was fine. Once
(16:31):
you got outside, it brought an actual police. We'll be
back overnight. Some folks decided they were going to go
mark Jewish buildings with swastikas, including some businesses, one of
the biggest Jewish day schools in whereas this Brooklyn, And yeah,
(16:56):
so just here you go. This is putting a nice
swastik on your stuff. So that's you know, that's probably
trending in an interesting direction. I can't imagine why they
would feel emboldened up there. Oh and yesterday and I
actually saw The New York posted a story about this.
So yesterday I was texting with a buddy who he
(17:16):
lives down in Florida, and he is, he's in real
estate down there, and he said that for their office,
and I'm not gonna tell you which one it is,
but it's a pretty big one in Miami. They have
tons of agents. Just to just people randomly calling for
consults is uplight. It's crazy. Like he said, he's going
(17:37):
to just be doing consults for a good chunk of today.
Just getting back to people talking about what are you
looking for? You want to you want to guess where
they're coming from. You want to know. Now, here's the thing,
this is what this is what people fail to understand
because they they have this picture that people up in it.
Because I saw some chick being interviewed yesterday and she's
(17:58):
just like she's just like, uh oh yeah, no, no,
we want we want all the people who are mad
to leave because I want to live in a brownstone
for cheap. Here first, bless your heart, trying to be nicer.
All right, you're an idiot. Do you think somebody who has,
you know, an Upper east Side brownstone is you know,
(18:22):
do you think they're just gonna sell it to you
for a buck? No, They're going to continue because here's
the this is what's going to happen. They're rich, okay,
and and when you're in New York City moderate rich,
you're really rich elsewhere because of the cost of living, right,
So they're going to go buy They'll go buy a
house in Florida. It'll be a nice house too, and
(18:45):
then they will spend exactly fifty one percent of their
time at the house in Florida, and then this will
have their house in New York because they got friends
in New York. They probably have, you know, things they
like to do up there, Restaurants they prefer or seasonally.
New York's a great place, right and then if and
then when it starts snowing or it's the middle, you know,
(19:06):
it starts snowing and you get into that, then boom,
you go down to Florida like it's the snowbird thing.
They're just not snowbirds, but they're people who probably are
in positions where they can do that. That's what's gonna happen.
Oh no, oh man, all right, Ross is History's training
(19:28):
Jade today. That's why he's kind of but he's also
working on some breaking news. And this is crazy here.
So Mandami sold the Buffalo Bills to Mexico. Oh man,
what a blow for you, dude. Yeah that's crazy. Yeah
yeah really. By the way, my real estate buddy is
super excited. Not I mean, cause look, here's the thing.
(19:52):
I understand. You're like, a, I don't come down here
in New York my Florida, but I this that's how
he makes his money selling stupid expensive houses in the
Greater Miami area. Yeah, so he's gonna be happy to
take those phone calls. So that's just what it is.
(20:12):
And you know what, if you're listening to me, probably
prefer they go down there. In fact, if anyone in
the greater New York City area is thinking of coming
down here, is listening via the iHeart radio app or something,
because you're trying to gauge the system. You know that
our bears not only have in the Great Smoky Mountain
area have cocaine addictions, but they also have chainsaws. Now
(20:34):
I'm not making that up. I thought somebody was making
it up because I saw this insane video of this
guy posted he lives just across the state line in
Tennessee there on your great Smoking Mountains, and he's he said,
he has a construction company. It lives out in the
middle of nowhere, right. He's just living the dream. Man,
If that's your dream, just right up in the beautiful mountains.
(20:56):
Does this thing looks like he does well for himself.
And he posted a video of like an outside security
camera and you see this black bear grab the handle.
Now you know it's one of the it's what the
top handle. Right, So when you're holding the chainsaw. There's
two handles. There's the one we're at the back of
(21:17):
the chainsaw with the with the trigger on it, and
then there's the top which just ringed down, so really
easy for a bear to get its mouth around that handle.
And you see it pick it up because he left
it sitting outside because you've been cutting some wood, and uh,
you know, just grabs the handle and takes off into
the woods. And if you remember from the documentary Cocaine Bear,
(21:37):
they also have and so then you have to ask yourself,
is the bear going to sell the chainsaw for the
crack or the cocaine or is it all coked out
of its mind and it's going to go on to
murder screen. You're like, you know what, I'm a bear
and I'm pretty good at murdering everybody, but this will
(21:59):
cut the work down. So I see this, I see
that video and immediately, because it's this day and age,
what do you think it's got to be a I right,
gotta be AI. But I couldn't find anything on there
and then I you know, so I'm now I'm like
scheming on this dude's Twitter account because he posts, so
there's a whole saga here and then because people kept
(22:21):
telling him it's Ai, he posted like the full series
of videos. He's got multiple cameras and everything going on.
It is clearly not Ai. And uh he also thinks
he knows why the bear grabbed it, so he he
he put he posted a video just explaining this thing
in detail, and I think he's probably correct. So him
(22:42):
and a buddy were cutting up some wood. Don't you
know what was going on there? Some firewood are not
going to treat on. And uh they while they were
doing it, they stopped at one point to eat, and
he had packed himself an entire rotisserie chicken. So you know,
you eat a rotiss chicken, which I'm anybody eating the
(23:03):
whole real rotissary chicken? Am I the only one? It's
not a big one, but like the little one at
the store I used to buy. I like to buy
the little ones too, because you know, they sew them
by the pound and just tear into that thing. And
there was any leftover chicken tacos. So anyway, so he
eats that, you know how that is? Now you're just yeah,
grease everywhere, delicious grease. But bears, you know, the old
(23:27):
factory sensus of a bear is bonkers, so he probably
could smell the little bit of grease left on that
handle from you know, the other side of the property,
and then that's the part that's gonna have the flavor
on it, because that's where your hand goes. So the
suspicion was that the bear grabbed it. That so now
(23:47):
and this guy's like, well, now I'm out of five
hundred dollars chainsaw. So he goes like walking around in
the woods because again he lives out of the middle of nowhere,
and he assumes maybe the bear would have dropped it
at some point, so he searched and search and searching,
and then all of a sudden he gets aways away
and on the hillside he thinks he sees his chainsaw.
(24:09):
The problem is there's two giant rocks jutting out of
the ground there in the picture, and there's clearly a
cavern beneath one of these rocks. So thankfully he's not
a tourist idiot, because a tourist would have just went
out and grabbed their chainsaw. He clocked what was going on.
Clearly that's the bear's den. Bears are really aggressive right now, right,
(24:33):
because you got moms with fresh cubs or just a
few months old, and the and they're all having to
eat like crazy because they're gonna you know, you've got
hibernation coming up, so you do not want to get
near a bear. So because of the the opening there,
it's likely that that's the bear's dead. He's probably just
(24:54):
feet away inside that thing. But the chain saw just
wouldn't fit. You never watched your dog try to bring
a stick in the house. It's too long, one of
those situations. So now he's got to figure it out.
So he actually went and got a lariat and lassoed
the thing from ways away, which caused it to roll
down the hill fifty feet, grabbed it and he ran
like hell. So good for him getting his chainsaw back.
(25:17):
But what a saga. But I'm just warning you if
you're listening and you're thinking, oh, you know, I would
really love to live in the Great Smoky Mountains, bears
have chainsaws and cocaine, and they're already mean this time
of the year. So yeah, I know. Maybe the lunatic
on the subway ain't so bad. Six forty four. Hang on,
Perhaps the bear was laying a trap, was not pleased
(25:39):
with the amount of greasy chicken you know, remains on
the said chainsaw. Thought, Hey, if I leave this right here,
I'll hide in here, something will come along. It'll be
a lot more meaty and boom. Now I'm hybridating on
a fool belly could be. And again, so I reiterate,
the bears of the Great Smoky Mountain of Tennessee and
(26:01):
North Carolina have a cocaine addiction chainsaws and are capable
of setting up complex traps to snare you. Maybe uh,
maybe uh go enjoy the gators of Florida or something.
I don't know, I don't know, but the whole thing,
there's no good option there. So I'm just I'm just
(26:23):
warning people before it gets two out of control. Uh,
speaking out of control. You remember the the dude who
threw the sandwich at police, which by every definition of
the law would be a sault. Right, you throw something
at a law enforcement office or anybody for that matter,
you throw something, you make physical contact with him, You
(26:44):
do not need to necessarily injure them. You you can
be uh, you can be charged with the with the salt,
probably misdemeanor assault or you know some other variation thereof people.
You instinctively know that, right. Well, though sometimes I see
those cop shows and I'm like, how do people know
you can't spit in a cop space? Oh, especially bodily
(27:07):
fluid like you should. But inherently you should know these things, right.
And I'm not talking like weird little things where you
were like, ah, catch officer, and the officer didn't catch it,
and then he's you know, went tire it on you.
I'm talking about you made a conscious decision to commit
assault with a deli weapon, okay, And in this case,
you know, a subway for long sub Did we ever
(27:30):
find out if it was tuna fish? Because that would
be extra offensive. I love tuna fish sandwich. I don't
like theirs for some I used to. I don't know
if they changed it or I was just much younger.
Whatever he threw at the officer seems pretty open and shut, right.
These are police in DC. They had been surged to,
you know, to provide immigration enforcement, also to tamp down
(27:50):
on the violence. He got his sandwich. He sees them
doing some sort of arrest and I think it was
a raid actually doing so. These are rofsers that are
outside I guess just well, the other officers were inside,
and he made a conscious decision to throw a sandwich
at I mean even said he did it because he
wanted them. Let me read his quote, because I don't
(28:13):
know if you know this. This guy is now a
folk hero. Okay, this is the this is the lunacy
of it. Expect to see him speaking at the next
No King's rally in DC. Mark my words. Yeah, so
he said, I wanted to I wanted to get them
away from what they were doing. Oh wait, I had
onions and mustard on it. He so, probably not a
(28:36):
tuna fish, although I put a little mustard in my
tuna fish, little dijon you guys, you guys know that
tuna hack. It's pretty good. Um So anyway, yeah, so
he he he said, explained that he wanted to get
them away from what they were doing. So if you
want to get them away, you in your mind feel
(28:57):
like you need to do something that would that would
make make them decide use their discretion that what they
were doing there was not as important because some other
crime was happening. So you made a conscious deshare like,
he admitted all this stuff. So the jury acquitted him
yesterday not for any real legal reasons. In fact, the
(29:19):
reporters were all there trying to talk to the jurors
and none of them would talk to any of the reporters.
This didn't care, and I saw people with erroneous information
like well, the only reason they quit it wasn't dury
nullification because it looks really bad. It looks like people
can go out now and if your city has enough
bias in one direction or the other, then they can
go ahead and accordingly commit crimes. And we've seen that
(29:41):
in this country before, by the way, where so many
people were willing to not humanize other groups of people
to the point where they could literally murder them and
juries wouldn't convict them. Do you want to guess when
(30:02):
that was and where that might have been, because there's
lots of examples of it. But I'll give you a hint.
Many of you were sitting in it in the south
Man's that's why you know, That's why you strive to
have you know, a it's the whole concept of the
(30:22):
blind justice. But that's not the case because these are
not humans. These are Trump's stormtroopers, and so the jury
is willing to do that. And yes, even though they
did seek a felony charge because people are like, no,
it wasn't jury mullification. They just they they overcharged him.
This this jury that acquitted him did not. That was
(30:43):
not deciding over a felony charge. It was the grand
jury who was presented with a felony charge and a
misdemeanor charge. They no build the felony charge, but allowed
the misdemeanor charge, the normal one, the one that most
of us would have faced. We can argue whether you
know they overcharged or not, but it didn't matter for
the purpose of this trial. He was facing misdemeanor, a misdemeanor,
(31:07):
the standard thing. He readily admits that he threw the sandwich.
He says that he wanted to get the police away
from what they were doing right there. Said, I threw
a sandwich. I did it to draw them away from
where they were, and I succeeded. I did it, and
they still acquitted him on it. That's scary stuff. And
(31:30):
then afterwards he is like, he looks like the Beatles
getting off that plane in America. Man, the amount of
peturely blue haired, septim pierced hippie lunatics that were surrounding
this guy trying to touch him like he's Jesus. This
guy's a folk this guy's a rock star in the
(31:50):
in the lunatic fringe community. Because he did it, he
got away with it. He rubbed it in their face.
He got one for the good guys. Even though you know,
at the end of the day, this cops still did
what they were doing there because they went got him later.
They chased him for a little and then they went
and tracked him down later. But his lawyer and these
(32:11):
courts have all have just said, well, the courts have
said that it is. And this was the argument the
lawyer made that he was he was so inflamed and
impassion that during the exercising of his First Amendment rights quote,
the sandwich got thrown, which is which is such a
(32:32):
how did it get thrown? Sir? That's like where you
had that car murdered twenty people? Did a car do that?
Did a car drive through a Christmas parade? Why would
a car do that? Was a kit from night Rider?
And like it's hard times because his show got canceled
and he's just I'm going out here, going out with me?
Is that what happened? Because I feel like that's not
(32:54):
what happened. I think somebody was driving the car, and
I think somebody was throwing the sandwich. And now you
have a situation and up in the District of Columbia
where it throwing an object but not injuring the officer
is not a salt. You really want that. You really
want that because you know, here's here's the thing. They
(33:17):
get really creative with the stuff that they throw. You
know how many Raleigh police officers I talked to when
they had the when they burned the seat my CBS
down and what they throw. They throw water bottles at them.
But they don't just throw any water bottles because they
can walk around water bottles and they probably want you know,
they they're frozen. That really could injure and has injured
(33:39):
officers and didn't Andy No get a milkshake that was
actually Quick Creek concrete mix. So this this is what
we can do. Can I throw a sandwich at Ross? Well,
Ross might like it, depending what the sandwich is, but
by no, No, everybody inherently knows you can't do it.
This guy clearly knew he couldn't do it, admits to it,
(34:01):
brags about it and then they let him walk. That's
not gonna end. Well, it's Friday, so you know what
that means. One hour from now, we'll chit chat with
mister Pete Callener. We'll definitely talk about this sandwich fun
because you know, that kind of is probably not a
good precedent to be setting up there. But if now
(34:22):
we can assault people with sandwiches. I was just telling
Ross off the air that if he keeps, if he
next time he makes one of those stupid AI things
of me on Twitter and changes the account, don't be surprised.
He gets a foot long Italian upside the head and
he didn't seem bothered by that. So maybe I'll think
of something else. I'll put guac on it. That'll teach him.
But yeah, like, what do you do? Oh wait, I
(34:44):
just thought of something. You know, sub subway. This is
very dicey, very dicey. But if you want to sell
more subs, hear me out, you're gonna lose all of
the police because I'm you know, police, a lot of
police officers heat you know, price subway, so you'd have
to balance it, but you know, start some sort of promotion. Look,
(35:07):
you already had the child porn dude, like you couldn't
have a worse marketing campaign than that one that which
was well not your own doing unfortunately embroiled you. So
get a bunch of subs, you can promise since they're
not going to eat them. You don't even have to
really use a lot of ingredients. It's just the fact
that it's a sub. And have a super thrower five
(35:29):
dollars super thrower or something. Again, you got to make
sure there's enough lunatics who want to throw sandwiches to
offset the fact that the police will probably never eat
at your stores again. But you know you do you Jamal,
what's going on?
Speaker 8 (35:45):
Hey see, good morning. I just want to say your
Casey about this stuff thing. And this is why I
have said for years the Department of Justice, especially now
we're having on the President Trump, we have the Civil
Rights Division, and they need to make political discrimination a
problem because the only reason why those people in d
C voted him not guilty is because it was a
(36:07):
Trump officials. Because of politics. This happens too much. And
and and remember Casey, the lady of the guy who
was assistant Hillary Quinton, and they charged him, they found
him not guilty. Of he was one about the god
the dirty Boxy eight. They fought him not guilty and
was less than an hour, but they found Roger Stone
(36:27):
guilty in less than an hour. The follow this guy
not guilty all because of he was a Democrat, and
they need to declare Washington d c. The same thing
they did to the South in the nineteen seasons. In
the fifth in the sixties they create said that breeople
couldn't get affairs, but if it were black, you couldn't
(36:48):
get a fairs stint in the South.
Speaker 4 (36:50):
So the jamal was even worse than that, because if
you and I were having this conversation in the nineteen
fifties and you annoyed me and I physical harmed you
or killed you, there were parts of the South where
I wouldn't do a day in jail for that. So
like this is not to that level. But uh, I
don't know how you get into the mind of the
(37:11):
jury though, because those twelve idiots who said this this
guy didn't do it, they're not gonna tell you it's
because of the politics. Even though everyone understands what's up here.
It was a misdemeanor, not a felony, and he admitted
to it, but I don't know how he cracked that egg.
Speaker 8 (37:30):
Well, Casey, here's the thing. They have had something stuff
like this similar done, like the people who got like
the people who assaulted the guy and me in DC
when they when he tried to steal his arm uber
the uber driver, they got assaulted and found out that
girls was released because the judge wanted to have mercy
and all this type of stuff. So it's actually a president.
(37:52):
Then you had other times in DC where Republicans have
been charged and found guilty. It's actually docum cases to
where things like hey, these people should have been found guilty,
like wh all them people that was charged with handguns
fellas with handguns. All these DC jurors are dropping cases
and so because they don't like Trump. And this goes
(38:14):
to show you that the area is so political that
they should be deemed the same way they deemed the
South back in the fifties and sixties. And the Justice
Department said, hey, boj W the Civil Rights Division, you
need it for political discrimination. So that Dall's areas that
are so blue New York and President Trump, all, I
gotta say those areas that are like that that you
(38:35):
know they will convict you just because you are republic used.
Speaker 4 (38:40):
Okay. So okay, so you want to move the trial.
This is what I'm trying to drill down on. So
you think they federalize the charges, Well, there are area
federal charges kind of in DC. And then what go
try and out by a jurian. Oklahoma, I mean, what
do you because, like I don't know that you're gonna
with that.
Speaker 8 (38:57):
Well, here, it's the sistence if you can prove the
same way they did in the sixties and in the
fifties when they start trialing things right there, you show
a president, hey, people aren't getting trial for what they did.
You let the Supreme Court say, hey, you take it
outside of Washington, d C. Prince George area a little bit,
(39:17):
or you may take it to all another area where
it's more well it divided evenly, make up, and you
trial it.
Speaker 7 (39:24):
Out there for those they've moved what they.
Speaker 4 (39:26):
Say they've moved actually trials to Richland for other reasons.
So Richmond. So yeah, all right, look, you're right. I mean,
this was clearly something they dealt with it at the time.
They had to show a pattern. You know, you're gonna
have a team of lawyers, and thanks for the call there,
Jamal are gonna say that's not a jury of my
peers because I'm a DC resident and I'm not a
(39:50):
Richmond resident or where, you know, whatever county you move
it to, Joe, you'll have that argument. But also it's
not like if they did get off, if you can
try them again, because you know, you have the whole
double jeopardy concept of our criminal justice system. Not not
a lawyer, So I don't know, and I have we
(40:10):
seen some cases too where I thought double jeopardy would apply,
and they just kept trying people like the cake baker
in the Colorado So what do I know? But it
is pretty clear that when you're in a ninety three
percent blue district and it's a something with a political angle,
(40:32):
that does being a police officer, because again now you're
saying all the police officers are Republicans, go to the
political angle. And did you know in d C it
is already illegal to discriminate based on political affiliation for
most things. I know Washington, d C does have that.
It more is about housing and things like that, but
that is that is something that already happens in DC.
(40:56):
So and maybe it's an employment status. You know, some
places employment status is one of the long list of
things you can't discriminate for. But I don't know that
they mean it as a classification of employee versus whether
you're employed or unemployed, right, because they're just saying if
somebody's unemployed, you can't discriminate based on this other stuff,
(41:17):
which I don't even understand the real application of that,
but it is in a lot of those laundry list
of things you can't in some instances, could you declare
somebody who works in the law enforcement field? Were we
already have differently difference in charges in many places if
you if if the person is engaged as a law
(41:41):
enforcement in a law enforcement activity or however they describe it,
like police officer. But also people work nine to one
one operators, postal workers, federal employees. We have special carve
outs where there are accelerators for criminal charges based on
the jobs that people do. So it's it's interesting, are
with you, Jamal? I think that at the very least
(42:01):
they got they need to start documenting it more aggressively
and maybe getting real specific about what they're gonna do.
Uh casey, not all people wear petchuli or lunatics. No, no, no, no,
but it's in combination with blue hair, one of those
bull rings in the nose, and a general disheveled look.
(42:24):
So if you like petuli, you do you? Okay? All right,
very good? Eight eight eight nine three four seven eight
seven four the phone number here on the show. All right,
let me do this. We'll go and hit our break
now and then come back here in just a few minutes.
Lots to get to here on the Friday Buckle in
here on the CaCO Day radio program. Yeah, I have
(42:47):
seen that you have multiple plates some of somebody to
send me an email said, have you seen the police
in Houston trying to snag nypt PD officers? Yeah, I
saw several cities in Florida, Texas. Where else did I
I think maybe?
Speaker 9 (43:05):
No?
Speaker 4 (43:05):
Is it? No is Nashville? Maybe? Yeah? Yeah, yeah, absolutely absolutely,
they're gonna they're gonna reach out. There's there's quite a
few NYPD officers that because I uh in Tampa. I
went cause I even would do the filling for Schnitch show.
He's based out of Tampa, and I was down in Tampa. Uh,
and you know, he's got a lot of officer officer
(43:29):
friends there, and the two that I was talking to,
we're both former NYPT officers who went down went down
to Tampa and uh one sheriff one's a police there.
So uh yeah, I mean it's possible. Absolutely So uh
all right eight eight eight nine three four seven eight
(43:49):
seven four. So my entire Twitter feed or the show
Twitter feed for in the uh in the four U section,
I would say is like eighty five percent the Sydney
Sweeney Vogue interview memes, so, which means that's somebody might
have been looking at a lot of Sydney Sweeney news on
(44:10):
there because normally it's just filled with Bills stuff and
Viking stuff because Ross and I both have access to it.
So anyway, but you know why one, it's extremely memorable.
I mean I saw a version of it where they
did the meme with the Real Housewives lady pointing in
the cat with the salad, where it's the Vogue reporters
(44:31):
the pointer and then the Sweeney's face over the salad.
I laughed out loud, man, cause there's just there's so
much to unpack with this. So if you're like, if
you don't know what I'm talking about, I'll don't play
the audio and talk about what I think is trying
to be accomplished here. But I want to take one
more call in the sandwich situation. Let's do that first. Hey, Tom,
(44:53):
what's up?
Speaker 1 (44:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 10 (44:55):
I was just gonna make a comment that they should
issue two foot long sausages or pepperonis to the cops
up there where the subway sand which was thrown. That
way they can beat the guy back with the sausages,
since it's not a crime, I guess to hit people
(45:17):
with food.
Speaker 4 (45:18):
Huh wait wait, wait wait, So in the in the
escalation of force charting, you wanted to go, you wanted
to go verbal cold cuts, taser gun? Is that what
we're looking for? Maybe some OC spray?
Speaker 10 (45:32):
Yeah, instead using a night stick, they could have a
big long slommy or something, and if a guy throws
the sandwich at them, they can whack him with the slammy.
Speaker 4 (45:41):
Okay, all right, Well I mean.
Speaker 10 (45:44):
That should be legal, right if you yell at the
cop and he yells back, well, yeah, I'm just.
Speaker 4 (45:53):
I'm looking at the whole escalation of forest. They're trying
to figure out where and if it's really spicy pepper spray,
you know, now you can get us, says sub So
I like the Spanish Italian. So there you go, all right, Tom,
I love it, thank you. Or somebody could just offer
police a free sub They're not gonna wait in the
middle of this, obviously. The last thing anyone at Subway
(46:15):
wants is any more controversy from now until when the
sun explodes. Okay, but you could do that, of course,
then you know, then the the they'd probably come bust
your windows in because you're sighting with the Nazis or
sother you know, whatever logic would be used. All right,
So a Vogue reporter sits down with Sydney Sweeney, and
(46:38):
you got to understand the You got to understand too,
the visual. You have the short haircut, super liberal, you know,
very not flashy. I'm not I'm and by the way,
I'm not gonna sit here and call the reporter ugly.
I'm just pointing out that, you know, she she kind
of fits the mold of what you think of when
(46:58):
you think of a lot of the kind of core Democrats,
very smug voters, right, and so she's interviewed with Sidney Sweeney.
So she's in you know, her mom jeans Sidney Sweeney's
rocking a the cowgirl boots, leather jacket, short shorts and
is just and she's just you know, she's just her right.
(47:21):
A lot of guys like her, a lot of women
hate her. So there's that there's that aspect also. I
think that's real leather too, because it becomes abundantly clear
that Sidney Sweeney, if she wasn't naturally gifted at it,
she's worked with PR people, which I'm sure she has,
and because she's very good at one of the things
that they will tell you if they're training somebody for PR,
(47:45):
and that is how to answer questions that you don't
want to answer and the and really put simply, you
don't answer them. You answer whatever you want, You answer
the question you wish you would have got. Politicians do
this a lot, but it is something that can steer
a conversation, especially when it's clear that somebody's coming at you,
(48:05):
and that is clear from this audio. This woman thought
Sidney Sweeney, Oh she's Hollywood right this. I'm gonna let
her come on, we'll do a struggle session. She can
say she was wrong about the genes thing because she
can't fathom the reporter can't fathom somebody falls outside her worldview.
That's what's going on here. All right, let's start. We'll
(48:27):
do this in this segment. I'll play the rest of
the next. Here we go literally in Jean's.
Speaker 11 (48:31):
On a two shirt, like every day of my life.
Speaker 12 (48:33):
Jeans are uncontroversial, Genes are awesome. You look great in
your genes. I think I know how you're gonna answer this,
but I'm gonna ask anyway. I mean, the President tweeted
about the jeens ad or truth social about the jens ad,
and that just seems to me like a very crazy moment.
Speaker 4 (48:54):
For she wants Sidney to say that she wished the
President wouldn't she didn't want to wait, she's added Trump,
that's what she's digging for anyone.
Speaker 12 (49:02):
And I wondered.
Speaker 9 (49:05):
What that was like.
Speaker 4 (49:06):
It was surreal.
Speaker 12 (49:07):
It was surreal, and it would be totally human. I
would probably feel like, would you thankful that somebody had
my back in public?
Speaker 4 (49:19):
And now she wants to steve if she'd throw in
with Trump.
Speaker 12 (49:21):
Some very powerful people had my back in public. I
wondered if if you felt that way.
Speaker 4 (49:29):
Many travelers may find themselves with some unique flying situations.
Today we have now the list of the forty airports
where there is going to be a ten percent flight reduction.
In fact, raced Agica, our weather guy, he actually he
was going to be flying SE's family or something later
(49:50):
today and the airline literally, I guess, reached out and
bumped them up, so he had to get on an
earlier flight. So we'll chat with Jeff Mark, is it.
That's what he raised emails said. But anyway, well we'll
talk to somebody from the Weather Channel coming up here
in about ten minutes, as we normally do. But that's
(50:11):
why raise gone. It's not Dallas Cowboys related, so as
you know a lot of times it is, but that's
more of a Monday thing. So yeah, Now in North Carolina,
so I was just scanning this list. The only airport
I see is Charlotte, so PTI RDU not on this list.
(50:38):
But here's the deal. Even if the airport you're flying
out of just this is just you know how it works.
If you fly right, snowstorm in the Northeast can screw
things up in Texas because you've got planes that aren't
getting out and the whole system it just starts having
problems and then they spread to other parts of the country.
So the fact that you have forty airports and many
(50:58):
of them are hubs like Charlotte is yeheah, But you
know a lot of these are going to be busier ones.
Although people are are nitpicking this list a little, saying
that some of this looks like it's because they're going
to try to paint it as Trump picked blue airports.
I already saw this, and the reality is the airports
(51:21):
are the big ones, and big ones are generally next
to big cities, and big cities are generally blue. So
you know, it's one of these self fulfilling prophecies if
that's your theory. So I don't necessarily buy into that.
One of the examples they were using was Honolulu International. Oh,
there's not a lot of flight traffic around Honolulu. He's
(51:42):
just doing that because Hawaii. You clearly don't understand the
airspace around Honolulu or Hawaii for that matter. But yeah,
you're thinking of the flights of tourists just going to
and from. But what you're forgetting is flying is the
only way commercially that one can get I guess, short
of renting your own yacht to and from the different islands.
(52:06):
So they have the amount of commuter flight service a
buzzing around the Hawaii is not in substantial, and in
many instances a lot of these commuter planes are They're
not thirty thousand foot planes, the smaller ones. So you
have people in all different levels of airspace over this area,
which admittedly is spread out, but it's not just what
(52:29):
you think. And it also with flights coming from Asia,
you can have you can have people lay over there
from different ones who are then traveling back to the US.
So don't underestimate what's going on there. I have a solution,
or I think a pretty good solution. Instead of reducing
all these other airports ten percent, including you know, Atlanta,
(52:51):
I'm just trying to pick the ones that would most
likely affect people flying out of North Carolina because Atlanta
clearly if you're flying Delta, both the Dallas if you're
flying American, since that's their big their big hub there.
Let's see, dude to do Uh it looks like both
(53:12):
Houston as well, depending on if you go through there,
and the New York airports all of them, uh not
you know La Guardia, JFK, Newark all on the list
here and well you get that, you get the gist
of it. The one here's the one you need to do,
and you should. What you should do is shut it down,
(53:33):
not staff it so inevitably would have to shut down.
And I think that maybe it might solve this. And
that's Reagan. I look, I love Reagan. I don't love
the airport in the sense that it's really really nice.
So though it is it's it's cool. It's cool airport
they got and they do have some good restaurants in there,
although I don't like the way where half of it's
pre and post security, which is just anyway. But the
(53:57):
Reagan's existence is is largely due to the laziness of
our members of Congress. That's that they keep that thing
up and running. And it's a whole weird deal about
where it can fly and where it can't. But the
whole thing is they love the convenience of being able to,
you know, go over to k Street, take their bribes,
(54:19):
and then you know, in short order, get over to Reagan,
board their plane back to their district while ignoring any
constituents who want to talk to him. And I have
seen several members of Congress in Reagan Airport before right,
they love it. It's great. It's kind of their little
private airport. Shut that thing down sucks. I don't want
(54:42):
to see it. But all of a sudden, if they
got to, if they got to make it all the
way to Dulles or or God forbid, bw I up
there Baltimore, all of a sudden, they're gonna start feeling
the pain. Because remember, these senators aren't feeling the pain.
They're still getting paid. Staff isn't but you know those
are beneath them. No, no, no, take ah, take one
(55:05):
of their little conveniences away. Trump doesn't need Reagan. Did
it matter to him. He's got it. He's got his
own special airport because he's the president. Yeah, you pop
Reagan down for for a little while, and they gotta
they gotta make that commute. They're not going to be happy.
(55:27):
That's how you it's it's kind of the reverse of
the uh, the the the barricades. Right when we had
the shutdown under Obama, where they were they were really
trying to make visual representations so that people would pressure
Republicans to agree to what they wanted. So they walled
off stone monuments. They intentionally hampered in my opinion the
(55:49):
Blue Ridge Parkway in ways that were wildly unnecessary, just
to make a point. Things like that. Uh but that
was turning it onto the people. Turn it onto the lawmakers.
Tell me, they're tell them to get their job done.
People are acting like Trump controls all this and he doesn't. However,
that is a way he can apply pressure. Take their
toys away. Is that how you punish your kids? Does
(56:13):
it work? Sometimes? I guess these are just big kids, man,
Take their take their toys away. Let them, let them
feel it. So that rased agent doesn't have to scramble
to uh go see his family and move his whole
life around. My buddy doesn't have to maybe get stranded
in Chicago instead of getting to go to the football
(56:34):
game that he wants or God forbid coming back, you
know whatever. That turns into a buddy flying to Chicago
this morning. He's going up to Green Bay to watch
the Eagles Packers game on Sunday. He's an Eagles fan.
So we're okay, yeah, well, uh well we'll put the
you want to talk about pressure points, We'll put the
(56:54):
pressure points. That's the way to do it, right there, man,
A right? Is that call screened? That call screened on
one there. Let's see here, all right, We'll let me
grab the call here real quick. All actually, no, wait,
it doesn't look like it's screened. It's yellow. Okay, Jeff
(57:14):
is on the comrades. All right, let's go ahead with this,
is it? Jeff mar this morning, mister Ray stage set
us a little note from the weather channel. How are you?
I'm good. We're just talking about all the flight insanity,
and I see Ray got caught up in that insanity.
So yeah, yeah, yep. So I'm just like, let's shut
(57:35):
Reagan down the one that Congress uses, and maybe they'll
get their butts in gear and get things done.
Speaker 2 (57:40):
So I think that's a great idea.
Speaker 4 (57:41):
Yeah, Atlanta and Charlotte, we did. Why are we getting
screwed on this because they're fighting? All right? So well,
do we have nice weather at least?
Speaker 11 (57:50):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (57:50):
Yeah, we do like it for a little while.
Speaker 2 (57:52):
Yeah, nice weather today and tomorrow is some mild temperature,
still on the warm side Sunday, but we've got a
strong call front that's going to move in as from
Sunday night and at the start of the week on Monday,
we'll feel the difference with temperatures about twenty degrees colder
by the start of next week. In the meantime, today,
we'll start off with sunshine, clouds. We'll fill into this
afternoon up to seventy and then a cloudy sky Tonight.
There may be an isolated shower after midnight with the
(58:13):
loan in the mid fifties. Warmer tomorrow with the early
clouds giving away to afternoon Sunday to hive seventy five.
Our stronger second cold front brings in some showers to
storms on Sunday with the highest seventy six. That rain
moves out Sunday night, and then clearing on Monday with
a high fifty one. The low Monday night she had
hovered near thirty two, and then a Sunday and cool
Veterans Day on Tuesday with the hind the upper forties.
Speaker 4 (58:34):
All right, thank you, Jeff. We'll talk in an hour,
and when we come back, I am going to play
the second half of the Sydney Sweeney audio. My next
show was just being crazy, so I pivoted over to
the other thing. But looks good now and we'll continue
that discussion, and of course our buddy Pete Calender, he'll
join us. That'll be at eight o five, all coming up. Yeah,
So I don't know if I'm looking, and I generally
(58:55):
don't mind flying. Some people don't like it. I don't know,
you know what it is because so much of flying
outside of the hassles allows you to kind of cocoon
yourself even though you're surrounded by, you know, thousands of people.
Right put the noise canceling headphones on, close your eyes.
It's just it's like the several hours of peace and
(59:17):
then they bring you and they even bring you food sometimes,
So you got that going for you. But yeah, yeah,
a lot of nervous people, and understandably. So that's why
I'm pro shut down Reagan where we go both all
this and Reagan. But I think Reagan had sent the
message that'd go ahead and get it done. All right,
one quick call and then the Sweeney audio Siam, good morning.
Speaker 7 (59:40):
Thank good morning, Cathy. How are you.
Speaker 4 (59:41):
I'm good.
Speaker 7 (59:44):
So, while we're going to this artificial problem with the
air traffic controllers, it might be a great time to
consider privatizing the air traffic controllers and put them on
the payroll of the local airport authority instead of the
federal government. So that they can't be used as poems
(01:00:05):
in the future.
Speaker 4 (01:00:07):
Yeah, you know, I've seen I've seen this debate, and
I think that there's good points on both sides. I
don't know that they'd ever get it done. I did
see some airport commissions who were offering to to cover pay.
But the problem with that is if you only get
four or five that do it and the other thirty
five or whatever don't, you're still gonna have the same
(01:00:30):
issue because you know, no, no airport exists in a vacuum,
right because you're going to someplace or coming from someplace.
But maybe, sir, I don't know, Thanks for the call.
Let's see here. I'd take the reprivatization of TSA first,
But that's just me, all right. Uh So City Sweeney
(01:00:53):
doing the Vogue interview, and again this lady's like, all right,
we're gonna get you out here. I'm gonna I'm gonna
get you you. You're gonna have to pick a side.
That's the goal here. And I think she holds out
hope that Sidney Sweeney is just young and inexperienced, and
if only she the Vogue reporter explained it to her
and her learned you know, forty something years on the planet,
(01:01:14):
then maybe, just maybe Sidney would get it and she
could be redeemed. And uh, in fact, let me replay
the first part of the audio two and we'll do
this all together.
Speaker 11 (01:01:22):
Literally, and Jean's on a two shirt like every day
of my.
Speaker 12 (01:01:23):
Life, jeans are uncontroversial, genes are awesome. You look great
in your genes. I think I know how you're gonna
answer this, but I'm gonna ask anyway. I mean, the
President tweeted about the genes AD or truth social about
the genes AD, and that just seems to me like
a very crazy moment for anyone, and I wondered what
(01:01:50):
that was like. It was surreal, It was surreal, and
it would be totally human. I would probably feel like
thankful that somebody had my back in public.
Speaker 4 (01:02:04):
By the way, so this is her pivot right here,
because surreal isn't an answer, because surreal could be good
or bad. Which again, I'm actually very impressed with Sweeney
in the way that she handles the questions, like she's
doing a much better job than people who are much
older than her, who have been in the business a
lot longer, who just can't control themselves and just you know,
(01:02:26):
fly out of the fly out of the handle, or
get hit with a gotcha question and don't realize it
happens all the time. And she simultaneously is very engaging
and sweet. But the RBF that she's got going on
to the resting you know what face is absolutely spot on,
spot on, So she doesn't get what she wants there.
(01:02:47):
So the reporter is now going to kind of try
to uno reverse her. Well, if you're not gonna tell,
you're not gonna say it was awful, you didn't want
him to do it, then now I'm going to try
to tie you to him.
Speaker 9 (01:02:58):
You know.
Speaker 12 (01:02:59):
And convenient, some very powerful people had my back in public,
and I'm wondered if if you felt that way.
Speaker 4 (01:03:11):
I don't think.
Speaker 11 (01:03:11):
I don't think that. It's not that that feeling didn't
I didn't have that feeling, but I wasn't thinking of
it like that, of any of it. I kind of
just put my phone away. I was filming every day.
I'm filming before you, so I'm working like sixteen hour
days and I don't really bring my phone on set.
(01:03:33):
So I work and then I go home and I
go to sleep.
Speaker 4 (01:03:37):
Yeah, all right, So and I remember I told you.
The other thing where you can kind of tell she's
pretty good at this is the ability to non answer
while answering and not make it seem really scummy, like yeah,
like Gavin Newso makes it sound really scummy. But there
are a lot of a lot of politicians who do
have that skill set and it doesn't come across us
(01:04:00):
as evasive, and Sweeney's very good at it. Listen to
the way she handles this next bit.
Speaker 12 (01:04:05):
You've made a really good case for keeping your thoughts
in your life separate from that work.
Speaker 4 (01:04:12):
Okay, And this is, by the way, the reporter's goal
here is to get her to apologize, say, oh, I
didn't realize it till after. I'm so thankful you and
others have informed me. I will change my ways, and
then you know that. Then your public scolding is over.
As we kick off our number three, and we do
so with our radio buddy to the South the middays
(01:04:32):
wbt's mister Pete Calender, what's up, good morning. I see
Charlotte Douglas is on the list of the forty airports
with a ten percent reduction, So you're screwed, but our
airports are fine.
Speaker 9 (01:04:45):
So there's no no, I mean, I mean most of
our traffic is disconnecting flights.
Speaker 4 (01:04:51):
Right as a hub there.
Speaker 9 (01:04:52):
Yeah, yeah, so.
Speaker 4 (01:04:56):
We'll reach into our airports. Thank you for reminding us.
Speaker 8 (01:04:59):
Yeah exactly.
Speaker 9 (01:05:00):
We will affect everybody, So we got that going for us.
Speaker 4 (01:05:05):
Do you think maybe the smarter play would have just
been to shut Reagan because I feel like you shut Reagan,
which you know is basically like it's basically Congress's private airport. Anyway,
the absolute inconvenience of them having to go to dalls
might actually break this thing.
Speaker 9 (01:05:22):
Yeah. Also withholding their pay that might have that might
have helped as well, but I think Rand Paul actually
killed that for some reason.
Speaker 4 (01:05:31):
Well, there's also the part where I don't know how
many would impact because they're all making eight figures off
of stock investing, So what is one hundred and seventy or.
Speaker 7 (01:05:40):
Whatever, Well that's going to go.
Speaker 9 (01:05:42):
That's I do expect that to be impacted. Now that
Nancy Pelosi is retiring finally after seven hundred years, and
so the House has lost its best hedge fund manager,
so I'm expecting some lower returns.
Speaker 4 (01:05:58):
Do you realize that we have had a Losi in office?
For almost one hundred years.
Speaker 9 (01:06:03):
I did not.
Speaker 4 (01:06:04):
Her father was a congressman. That's why there's all the
photos have heard or debutante days with d JFK and stuff. Mmmm, yes, yeah, yeah,
yeah man. So that's uh so anyway, uh so we
are going to have these impacts. People are looking ahead
to things. Oh did you hear what Scott Jennings said
about Pelosi? What Trump should do with her now? Put
(01:06:26):
her in put her in charge of the Social Security
Administration to handle the portfolio.
Speaker 9 (01:06:34):
Well, yeah, I mean with the returns that she has
realized over her career, it's she. I mean, she has
beaten the markets like every year.
Speaker 4 (01:06:42):
It's you want to know, the number is more obscene.
She beat the S and P five hundred over the
last ten years by five hundred and twenty five percent.
Speaker 9 (01:06:52):
It's amazing.
Speaker 4 (01:06:53):
Wow.
Speaker 9 (01:06:54):
Imagine imagine what her success would have looked like had
she not had to waste all of her time and
energy in Congress, right, Like, if she had just devoted
herself to simply doing the stock trading, right, she could
have been so much richer.
Speaker 4 (01:07:12):
Hm, I don't know, I don't know about all that.
Speaking of DC, apparently assault with a deli weapon is
not something that will convict you of I saw that
misinformation here because people are like, well they overcharge and
she tried to get him with a felony. No, no, no,
they presented one of the grand jury. The jury yesterday
was dividing or deciding on a misdemeanor and the guy yes,
(01:07:35):
and was charguing he knew it. And so now there's
this expanded First Amendment right to throw sandwiches and cold
cuts at police in the district. I feel like this
might be a bad thing, but I saw that press
conference with him after and people are trying to touch him
while he was Jesus, this guy is going to be
a center this This is going to elevate this guy.
(01:07:55):
He's going to become David Hogg, mark my words. Yes,
he's a folk hero.
Speaker 9 (01:08:00):
Yeah, and just exudes masculine energy at the same time.
So he is going to yes, yes, yes, yeah. So
he definitely is going to be able to address the
Democrats problem of, you know, losing the male, young voter,
and so I think this guy as the standard bearer
(01:08:21):
should pretty well shore that up for them to just
put him at the front of all the campaigns. And
this guy is going to just be a dude magnet.
Speaker 4 (01:08:29):
Yeah, he'll be next note kings, he'll be speaking in DC.
Speaker 9 (01:08:34):
Yeah, oh definitely. And the thing on this is like,
I'm now I'm curious, do we need I don't know,
like some statutory guidelines on the types of sandwiches that
are permitted to be thrown at people, because that's you know,
when he threw the sub at the ice officer, it
(01:08:59):
was wrapped, right. It wasn't like an open faced sub.
It wasn't like it wasn't.
Speaker 4 (01:09:04):
It was poorly wrapped though, because there was really mustard
and some condiments that were visible following the throw.
Speaker 9 (01:09:12):
So yeah, so he may have eaten some of it
and then wrapped it, rewrapped it, you know, and didn't
maybe wrap it as tightly or something. Definitely no sticker
on it that would seal the wax paper there. But
but I'm curious, like what if it's like, what if
it's not actually a sub, right, because if you.
Speaker 4 (01:09:33):
Would hear a forward grip on it or something.
Speaker 9 (01:09:36):
Yeah, or like an attachment you know, some sort of
like a scope or grenade launcher, you know, just because
when you I mean, I understand looking at it after
the fact, and you say it was just a sub sandwich, right,
and so there was no thread and all that. But
(01:09:56):
at the moment that that is occurring, the officer does
not know what it is that maybe in that sub right.
And so now with this this and this is jury
nullification is what that was?
Speaker 8 (01:10:08):
Right?
Speaker 9 (01:10:09):
You're talking about a jury in Washington, d c. Which,
by the way, ninety nine percent of all the people
that were charged with the J six stuff they all
got convicted. Right. So the idea that you're going to
convict you know, grandma for following a crowd into the capitol,
and you're going to convict her, but you're not going
to convict a guy who admits that he committed the
(01:10:31):
actual violent act. He actually he admitted he broke the law,
but you're not going to convict him. Now you're going
to get more of that. And if you don't think
that the leftist protesters are now going to be wrapping
things to make them look like sandwiches, like maybe I
don't know, a frozen bottle of water that they were
keen on throwing.
Speaker 4 (01:10:50):
It's exactly what a Raleigh officer explained to me during
the peaceful protest where they burn my CBS because they
can get the water in there and they know it's frozen,
so they're throwing that. And the other thing was the
Andy No incident right where they threw the drink, but
it was actually Quick Creek concrete made to look like milkshakes.
So they're already willing to do that. But now everybody
(01:11:15):
inherently knows whether it is a police officer, it is
two people on the street. As soon as you touch
somebody's game on in most instances, and the foods, if
you throw something on them, it could be bodily fluid
because you spit on them, could be it could be
a drink you throw in the face. Everybody inherently knows
(01:11:35):
with an IQ above five that you don't do that.
And the other thing is he threw it, yes, but
he also said why he threw it, and he threw
it in his own words, to pull the officers away
from what they're doing. And then he laughed and goes
and it worked. So now you're interfering with police conducting
(01:11:56):
their jobs. Arguably there's two crimes here.
Speaker 9 (01:12:00):
Right so, and now you're going to get more of it.
And that's that, that's what the jurors in d C
have now have now endorsed that they will they will
free people for engaging in this kind of behavior against
law enforcement. This is the this is the erosion of
order in the society. It's a destabilization, demoralization campaign. And
(01:12:24):
they may think that they did it for the right
reasons because you know, Orange Hitler bad, but what they're
actually doing is pushing the society down the slippery slope
towards decay.
Speaker 4 (01:12:36):
And uh, you know, by the way, you and I
broadcast in cities where not that long ago, depending on
what you look like, you could do whatever you wanted
to somebody and not face consequences.
Speaker 9 (01:12:48):
Well, we still we still have that.
Speaker 4 (01:12:50):
I understand. But like that's didn't it wasn't that a
thing We all collectively said, Yeah, this shouldn't be a thing, right, Yeah,
are you talking like historically, like way back like seventy
years ago.
Speaker 9 (01:13:04):
Yeah, where white people could abuse black people and then
the law would forgive them and the juries would have
quit them. Now, that was right, and that was that
was inappropriate at best. That was illegal, It was immoral, unethical, right,
it was wrong. But now apparently if the target is
Orange Hitler or anybody that supports Orange Hitler. Well, I
(01:13:27):
guess now that that's acceptable. So that's we've come sort
of full circle, this sort of horseshoe theory thing going on,
where now you know, one group of people has more power.
So in this case, the lefties, they've got them, they've
got more power in these urban areas, and so now
they're going to, you know, crack down on their perceived enemies.
I guess. And look this, and you see this born
(01:13:47):
out in the election results right in Charlotte, up in
Wade County as well. I think Republicans got wiped out
up there.
Speaker 4 (01:13:55):
As well, one win out of twenty six.
Speaker 9 (01:13:58):
Yeah, and so we only have now a single Republican
because he ran unopposed in a city council district that
leans Republican by like two to one, and so he's
the only Republican representative in the city. In the county
school board, right there are zero Republicans. The only Republican
(01:14:21):
that was on the school board got ousted. So that
tells me. And this is what I said when I
was in Ashville, and the same thing happened in Ashville,
is that Democrats do not care to listen to anything
Republicans have to say, and if you are a Republican
living in one of these cities, you do not have
(01:14:41):
any representation. There's nobody there.
Speaker 4 (01:14:44):
To stand the game too. Just because you mentioned Ashville,
they pulled that crap with the commissioners in Wake County
where rather than having you know, districts and you had
to be from that district than people in that district
would vote, they pulled that all at large model and
it wiped every Republican out right.
Speaker 9 (01:15:00):
And remember the at large model is designed to suppress
minority representation. Now in the past, it was done to
suppress black votes. Now it's designed to suppress Republican votes
because it's because the model is you know, race neutral.
It just suppresses minority views or candidates or representation. So
(01:15:21):
that's why and Charlotte has four at large city council
seats and that's why it has those. It should go
to a district model, in which case then you could
draw the lines, which, by the way, Democrats drew these
lines back in twenty twenty, twenty twenty one, and they
drew those lines specifically trying to oust one of those
two There were two of the seven district seats that
(01:15:43):
were held by Republicans, and they drew the lines to
make one of those seats more difficult for the Republican
incumbent to hold. He did squeak through, and he did
hold the seat. But then he went up and took
a job in the Trump administration and he left, and
this was the fight for control of that seat and
it went to the Democrats.
Speaker 4 (01:16:00):
Yeah, so how do you going back to DC? How
do you steer out of that skin? Because I had
had they had to steer out of it in the South,
and they took a lot of very unique aggressive roles.
They monitored, they moved trials, they did a variety of things.
So I like, how do you address that modern day
(01:16:21):
with this version of it? Do you start moving some
of these trials out of the district? The lawyers will scream,
that's not a jury of my peers, you can't do that,
But I don't know how you fix it.
Speaker 9 (01:16:32):
So just even thinking of this, like right now, would
it make sense? Much like you say, you know, change
of venue in are because we are so polarized, then
I think there becomes a case to be made that
if you are being tried as a conservative in a
(01:16:56):
district that is ninety nine percent Democrat or or leftist,
then you are not being you're not being tried by
a jury of your peers and so.
Speaker 4 (01:17:07):
And DC, by the way, is one of the few
areas in the country where discrimination on political beliefs is
enshrined in their laws. A lot of people don't know this.
DC has that, but it was meant to address like housing,
not this right, so right, how that would comport I
don't know, because that clearly looks like what it's happening.
Is that challengeable to appeal the jury's decision?
Speaker 9 (01:17:31):
Uh? Yeah, I mean I I don't I don't know.
And DC is weird, you know, because it's not a
state and there's federal control. I mean, if the federal
judiciary wanted to get involved, right, I guess they could.
I mean I've seen some calls for, you know, blowing
out all of the judges and such, but that doesn't
get to the to the jury problem is that you're
(01:17:53):
drawing these jurors from a pool that has animus towards
Republicans just like this doesn't change, by the way, this
isn't just Trump, right, And that's what the election on
Tuesday should should indicate, right, it doesn't matter. You know,
the Republican candidates all lost, even the ones that were
(01:18:14):
not trumpy, even the ones that didn't like Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (01:18:17):
They all lost, even the one running against a guy
who wanted dead children.
Speaker 9 (01:18:22):
Right, So there is so the only standard now that
matters is you're a Republican, and that means you are evil,
and I can do whatever I want against you, including
throwing sub sandwiches at you, even if you're not even
a Republican. You're just doing your job, Prisman officer. You
could very well be a Democrat, but just the fact
(01:18:43):
that you are working in this line of work, now
I get to make an assumption about you, and I
then get to abuse you, and I get the protection
afforded to me because a jury will refuse to convict
me for breaking a law in abusing you.
Speaker 4 (01:18:59):
Yeah, it's this is not a good path.
Speaker 9 (01:19:02):
It's just not a good path. And and and I
keep trying to tell the Left and they never listen.
But you're not gonna like it when this stuff gets
turned on you, because it will like when you when
you when you start thinking in terms of making arguments
based on these uh these criteria, uh of you know,
immutable characteristics. You're an oppressor because of your race or gender,
(01:19:23):
or political affiliation whatever. When you start viewing everything through
that lens and you start promoting everything through that lens,
you're not going to like it when people start accepting
the lens and then they start viewing themselves through that
lens first and foremost, because then you become.
Speaker 4 (01:19:41):
Their enemy real quick. Do you see the glen Back
thing where they think they he's got some reporter claims
to uh, probably know who the pipe bomber or the
person you put the bombs out, and it's apparently it's
a woman and she's in some and works from one
of the three letter agencies. I hate this part where
they where there. It's this teaser which never seems to
pay off.
Speaker 9 (01:20:01):
But I saw I saw the t's I've not seen. Yeah,
I just saw that. We you know, we think we
know who it is, but I didn't. Did they actually
have they produced?
Speaker 4 (01:20:13):
That's That's what I'm getting annoyed by this stuff. So yeah,
but he seemed mary adamant, and I think the guy actually,
I think the reporter actually lives in Raleigh or something,
because he emails sometimes just stuff. So but anyway, yeah, man, I, I,
I don't know, but yeah, what's going on up in
d C. Just so much craziness. Then you know, all
the flight stuff and it's and the and the misinformation campaign.
(01:20:35):
What a week to be in radio. All Right, I
appreciate it. You'll have to get on a plane or
a light rail this weekend, so I have a good one.
We'll talk next week. All right, there you go. Pete Kelener,
appreciate that. We always enjoy our Friday a chat with him.
All right, we will be right back. That's amazing for today.
(01:20:57):
If you if you missed the first chainsaw story, it
was earlier in the hour, and I I think it's
earlier in the show. Arguably the best argument if people
are wanting to communicate to people in New York City
that North Carolina Tennessee probably not for them. Because some
dude who lives a great smoking mountains right on the
border there, he's got a cabin rights in the middle
(01:21:18):
of the woods and he's chainsaw on some wood and
he says, chainsaw down, goes inside whatever. And next morning
chainsaw's gone. He's got exterior cameras and lo and behold,
a black bear came by, grabbed the top handle the
chainsaw and walked off with the thing in its mouth.
It's like a five hundred dollars Husvarna And at first
(01:21:41):
I thought it was Ai, but it's not Ai, and
it's a whole crazy story, man. But so what do
we know? We know the bears like cocaine near Great
Smoky Mountain and they have chainsaws. Well had because what
the dude did is he saw the bear doing it,
and then he figured to go walk around the woods
because maybe the bear would just drop it. And the
(01:22:02):
reason he thinks that it ate or grabbed the chainsaw
is because he was working. He took a break and
was eating a rotisserie chicken with his hands. That's on
the chainsaw. The bears can smell it, so that makes sense.
He then finds the chainsaw on this hillside near these
little rocky outcroppings, and thankfully he's not an idiot. He
realized that's probably right outside where the bear's den is.
(01:22:25):
So either the bear set a trap for him, right, which,
so now the bears they like cocaine, chainsaws, and four
D chess. Do you really want to move to North Carolina, Tennessee?
I don't know. I mean the subway crackhead might be
a little safer, so he literally gets a he ropes
(01:22:47):
the chainsaw from a certain distance a way. I suspect
he was armed too, because bears right now are very aggressive.
This is a very aggressive time of the year with
hibernation around the corner and you know, still with cubs,
so you don't want to fafo, as they say. So
he ropes it and it rolls like fifty feet down
the hill. But you got his chainsaw back and not
(01:23:08):
eaten by a bear. But that's the thing. Here's the
other chainsaw story. And for this we're going to Minnesota,
specifically Crystal Lake or Lake Crystal. We caught it. Wait.
I always thought it was funny called Crystal Lake when
I lived in Minnesota, because you know the whole horror
(01:23:28):
movie reference. Okay, So anyway, so this guy, according to police,
likes to do yard work naked, and he doesn't live
back in the woods like people drive by on public
roads and can see him, and so they show up
(01:23:48):
because this has happened multiple times. They show up and
the dude is chainsawn a quart of wood with nude.
I can't think of something I would want to do
less like that's that's the Wes's like one of the worst.
That or fry open frying chicken in a shallow cast
(01:24:09):
iron pan. There's just some things you can't do in
the nude, even if you're one of these people who
loves being in the nude. You don't fry food, and
you don't run equipment that throws splinters at a gazillion
miles an hour everywhere, or God forbid, the chain comes off.
(01:24:29):
That's terrifying. If you ever had a chain break on
a chainsaw, you start start thinking about getting your will
in order the first time that happens. Man. So, yeah,
so this guy's out running a chain saw just in
the buff and the other thing is this just happened?
Do you know what the do you know what the
(01:24:50):
high temperature up there is probably today mid forties maybe Minnesota,
and this guy's out there, a yeah, I gotta go
cut some trees down nude? Was he wearing shoes? I
don't even like, I can't even imagine anyone, anyone who's
(01:25:10):
done any amount of chain sawn. I hope you're with
me on this or the frying chicken thing, because I
think we've made that mistake. Not necessarily chicken, but and
not necessarily bottomless. Maybe I don't know unless you live alone,
but you know, maybe you don't get your shirt on
or whatever, and you're like, you put a steak down
on the skillet or whatever, and you didn't do the
(01:25:31):
thing where you lay it away from you. He dropped
it in and that little bit of hot oil hits
you in a very sensitive no thank you. That's right
up there with handling halapanos and then being a dude
who has to go number one. There's certain lessons you
only need to learn once. But chain saign on the
news and the nude no thank you, although I bet
(01:25:56):
if they did that for those lumberjack competitions, a lot
of women show up. So got a weird Chippindale's angle.
All right, let me get over to just a couple
of the things. Yeah, So some dude in the middle
of a pressure at the White House yesterday just just
I don't know if he passed out or if he
did have a heart attack. I didn't follo up see
(01:26:17):
what it was, but he just just standing there, you know,
as they always do. People are speaking, or if K's there,
Trump's there, everybody's there, and right in the middle of
somebody's talking, this dude just goes down, and of course,
right rather than just being concerned, Hey, I hope he's okay.
Everyone had to figure out their little evil media angle
(01:26:38):
for this and.
Speaker 10 (01:26:38):
Creating high value jobs.
Speaker 3 (01:26:40):
But today we are you, okay, courting you okay?
Speaker 4 (01:26:49):
All right. So and so the humans are like, you know,
people are concerned. They're gathering around down They're gonna handle
the breast, move them back because the dignity of the guy,
you know, the pressed sitting there filming this guy while
he's having you know, arguably one of the worst moments
of his life. Of Course, they're still filming him because
you know, they're there with cameras, that's what they're doing.
(01:27:10):
This thing just happened. So you got to deal with that,
and then you got to get the guy medical attention.
And that's what a couple of people do, including RFK.
And so when RFK left the room or he leaves
the shot, I don't know if he left the room
or just through the doorway there was and was hollering
for somebody. This narrative was created that he's always the
(01:27:32):
health secretary and he didn't even offer help. He's not
a doctor. And before you go, why is health secretary?
Most aren't. I know you're going to be shocked to
learn this. Most of the cabinet officials that have run
that department are not, in fact physicians. You could argue
that maybe they should be, but you know that's a
(01:27:53):
that's more policy forward. So what's he going to do?
So he goes to get help Aaron Rupar who's super
dishonest that he just ran away. And the longer thing,
you can clearly see him back in there and other
people are coming into the room. I'm assuming he's the
one who yelled at him. I don't know. He says
(01:28:13):
he went to get help, so I mean, that's his statement,
and I believe him because that's the logical thing to do.
But no, we gotta turn it into a whole thing there,
so I should not be surprised. And then finally, let
me just throw this last little story on for our
stack of just kind of strange things. And by the way,
(01:28:33):
I have a hard time judging this individual because I
don't know. God blessed teachers, man. I think I also
would have to be blitzed out of my mind to
be able to put up with you know, thirty kids,
seven times a day or whatever the schedule is. But
that's just me, and I don't dislike kids, but I'm
not a good kid manager. And I will be the
(01:28:55):
first to tell you this might be a little over
the top. A teacher at elementary school in Wisconsin. Muskego,
Wisconsin was arrested after police heard he was drunk on
the job. So they show up this dude. This dude
blew aero point three six and was awake, which is
(01:29:17):
really impressive. Actually, that, of course, would be more than
four times the legal limit to drive. I'm sure the
legal limit to teach kids is probably zero in some districts.
They probably have a strict policy on that, so you know,
he's a little over that. But yeah, according to complaint,
he had slurred speech, bloodshot red eyes, and smelled of alcohol.
(01:29:38):
Well I had teachers like that, and they were still
good teachers. I just thought it was from the night
before so they could cope with having to deal with us,
and I understood. And he had two active warrants. He's
a substitute teacher. Good lord, man, let me guess, d ui. Yep, yeah,
row I In Wisconsin, they called thing weird things, so
(01:30:00):
that duisow I kind of annoying. I don't know why.
What's more annoying is what they call water fountains bubblers. Ah,
probably gonna give that state to Canada. All right, let's
get Jeff mar from the Weather Channel if he's standing
by an if you don't, how you doing this morning, sir?
Doing good?
Speaker 2 (01:30:19):
Just getting ready for a blast of cold air early
next week?
Speaker 4 (01:30:22):
All right. It sounds like the weekend will be pretty
good though. That's what I care about, because this is
even golfing weather man.
Speaker 2 (01:30:28):
Yeah, yeah, this will definitely with some highs up into
the seventies. We're going to hover in your seventy this
afternoon with increasing clouds as wins pick up out of
the south, and some isolated showers and may move in
after midnight, with the low in the mid fifties Tomorrow,
clearing during the afternoon up to seventy five and approaching
cold front brings in scattered showers and storms on Sunday,
with the highest seventy six behind that front clearing Monday
with the high fifty one and the low Monday night
(01:30:49):
should dip down to the low thirties and the sunny
and cool Veterans Day on Tuesday with Behind the Upper Forties.
Speaker 4 (01:30:54):
Okay, all right, you have a good weekend, sir, and
are you with us next week?
Speaker 2 (01:30:57):
Yeah, I'm next to with your next Monday and Tuesday.
Speaker 4 (01:30:59):
I'll talk to that.
Speaker 9 (01:31:00):
Ok.
Speaker 4 (01:31:01):
We'll talk to you then see you Jeff Farther from
the Weather Channel, and we'll come back with Denise Pellegrini
from Bloomberg News next.
Speaker 7 (01:31:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (01:31:08):
I know you've been talking about all the things going
on with the airlines. A lot of people are just
really worried about whether or not they're going to be
able to get where they're going. They may get halfway there,
for example, and then have the second part of their
flight canceled midway, and of course the worst part about
it is not being able to plan. Tom Fitzgerald, he's
an analyst over at TD count. He says, right now,
(01:31:30):
though it's not really that bad. He says, it's more
like a snowstorm or a stretch of bad weather, not
really a catastrophic breakdown.
Speaker 4 (01:31:39):
Yet.
Speaker 13 (01:31:40):
He says the swing factor, at least from the airline's
business perspective, will be how long this lasts. We had
some interesting comments though from former New Hampshire Governor Christian
and who he happens to be the president in chief
exec now of the industry trade group Airlines for America.
He says, already, as of Wednesday, right before all these
new you know, flight cancelations, said almost three and a
(01:32:03):
half million passengers were already impacted by all the delays
and cancelations related to staffing shortages. So you can imagine
this is going to get a lot worse as you
go into the busy Thanksgiving travel season. If the shutdown
last I mean tens of millions, maybe hundreds of millions
of people affected. So it's not just about the airline business.
(01:32:23):
It's about you know, the individual and you know where
they're going over the river and through the woods, or
you know, maybe we should all just stick close to home.
Speaker 4 (01:32:32):
I'm flying that week, so they need to oh where
are you going? I you know what, don't worry about it.
Speaker 13 (01:32:38):
So all right, Apple streaming service is back up and
running after going down for some users last night after
the debut of that new series plur Abyss from the
creator that breaking bad right. The issue also affected Apple's
music and arcade services. Obviously not great for Apple right
that it had this outage especially as they're trying to
ramp up, you know, their streaming sports stuff. But interesting
(01:33:01):
that the series is showing early signs of being a
huge hit. Does have ae hundred percent rating on Rotten
Tomatoes and nine point two out of ten on IMDb,
so that's pretty amazing. Tesla shareholders approving a one trillion
dollar pay package for CEO Elon Musk, the largest payout
ever awarded to a corporate leader. Of course, Musk still
has to work for it. To achieve the full payout,
(01:33:22):
he'll have to deliver on his targets, despite consumer caution,
Holiday spending on track to pass a trillion dollars this
year and set a record. It's according to the National
Retail Federation, Peloton recalling hundreds of thousands of bike plus
units after reports seat post broke, causing some riders to
fall off. DraftKings sports betting platform reporting slower than expected
(01:33:44):
sales at the start of the NFL season. In Casey's
stock futures right now, they're putting to a lower opened.
Dow futures down ninety nine s and P futures down nineteen,
Nasdaq futures down one owaight, and I wanted to tell
you about this one more thing that's happening, which is
getting your credit card perks. Using them is turning into
a chore and actually kind of becoming a full time
(01:34:06):
job for some people with consumer spending hours tracking and
redeeming credits. Wall Street Journal has this story about this couple.
They have fourteen credit cards. They pay about two six
hundred dollars in annual fees for them, and to make
sure that they come out ahead and use all their
points and benefits, they actually have a color coded Google
spreadsheet as they redeem all the dining, travel, and shopping credits.
(01:34:29):
And the guy in this couple, Eric May, he's a
thirty six year old guy from Columbus, Ohio. He works
at a fintech company. Of course, he says, you know,
trying to use these things and go on these basically
you know, romantic couple things. But then they spend all
their time, like at the dinner table looking at the spreadsheet. Says,
it's a bit of a buzzkill.
Speaker 4 (01:34:49):
I think the I think the airline cards we use
them ride are still pretty easy. But you're right on
the other stuff, Yeah.
Speaker 13 (01:34:54):
The airline stuff, the one where you get that you know,
free baggage, get the club are check bag.
Speaker 4 (01:34:59):
Bag boarding priority and the right Yeah, that one I'm
not happy with. And I will tell you this the
let's just say that for the Thanksgiving week travel a
tropical airport will be involved.
Speaker 14 (01:35:10):
So oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, So I thank this
up for me, all right, thank you so much, appreciate it.
Speaker 4 (01:35:21):
Yeah, there you go. Denise Pelli Greeny from Bloomberg News. Yeah,
so you guys need to figure your crap out, all right,
super simple, and I've given you many ideas about how
to break the the steelmate there. I don't know why,
I just this story just made me laugh because like
(01:35:42):
everything that I've heard about, the stories we've done where
somebody's tried to involve AI in legal work has been
a disaster. I'm sure there's I'm sure that some of
you lawyers are out there are using AI and then
there are things that work, but like, do you remember
the lawyer who had AI rate of write a brief
and it's cited a bunch of cases, right, citations, which
(01:36:04):
is normal part of that, and he gat it, you know,
turn it into the judge and the judge was like,
none of these these are not real cases, and then
it's like, oh, yeah, I made them up, because sometimes
it'll just make stuff up. So Kim Kardashian blames chat
GPT for making her fail her law school tests. I
(01:36:25):
didn't know she was going to law school. Is she
really going to law school? Or is this just something
for her show, which I don't even know if is
on anymore? Because I know nothing. I actively avoid most
of that. Yeah. So on Monday she said, yeah, aspiring lawyer,
I said that, well, taking a test administered, All right,
(01:36:50):
here we go, I'm gonna go down the quotes here. Yeah.
So she said that I use it for legal advice.
So when I am needing to know the answer to
a question, I take a picture, snap it and put
it in there. But she says it has made me
failed tests all the time. Well, why would you keep
using it? And then I'll get mad and I'll yell
(01:37:13):
at it and you're yelling at a ananimate object and
be like you made me fail? Why did you do this?
And then it will give me attitude. Stop you you
know what you should do. You should learn the stuff.
I don't know in what way she's using it. Are
you allowed to use chat GPT on a bar? Exam.
I'm clearly that's not what she's talking about. I'm assuming
(01:37:35):
it's probably practice tests, but good lord man. Yeah, so
I think the rule of thumb is well. There are
uses for chat, GPT, or for any of the AI,
maybe just funny pictures