Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You can't tell it, and it probably you will because
of what professionals Ross and I are. Other than me
telling you, you would probably have never noticed this. For
some reason. I can't hear myself, or I can hear myself,
but I can't hear anything else in the airchain back
(00:22):
to me, which includes Ross's voice audio that I would
play you the music bed you just heard as the
show started. So we are. But since you can hear
me and Ross is in there beating on stuff with
pipes or whatever the fix it is, we're just going
to roll with this thing. So just understand, if at
any point I do sound it's a little distracted, it's
(00:43):
because Ross got it fixed. So all right, good, wonderful.
This is so weird not even hearing any of the return,
but that's okay because what we lack in technology, but
we lack in technology, we make up or in preparedness
because we got a lot of fun stuff obviously coming
(01:06):
our way today. Pete Callander will join us. That'll be
at eight o five to uh, you know, talk about
one or two items out there. The story in New
York obviously is going to be one of those with
the with the assassin, but now that has that has
turned into something else, and we gave you a little
inkling of it as we started the show yesterday. When
(01:28):
I say something else, like specifically, you know, specifically, we
we had Rachel Rachel Lorenz, Taylor Lorenz, former New York Times,
Washington Post, whatever, absolute lunatic who feels bullied by the way.
That's her big thing. If you remember her crying during
(01:49):
the interview, it's because people bullied her.
Speaker 2 (01:51):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
She she was out there posting on the blue sky
some of those memes we were talking about. But also
like the picture of the bluke was a Blue Crosses
or human I don't know, one of the other company.
I think it was Blue Cross posting the CEO's you know,
name and likeness, which isn't private information, but it's the
spirit of it. And then it was just absolutely everybody
(02:15):
under the set, not everybody in total, but like across
all the different demographics that were like, yay, the evil
CEO is dead. That's what he gets.
Speaker 3 (02:29):
Then, and.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Think about where that, think about what it is you're advocating.
You're advocating the position of eat the rich. You realize that, right,
even if you don't like the rich. You're advocating that
position that words words weren't enough, were not getting in
our way, and so they go out and they shoot
a CEO, and I say they as though it's a conspiracy.
(02:55):
Doesn't have to be. It's just that people are in
spirit with it. Then it breaks it down just a
little more, like, well, look at the response he got right.
This is you're getting into that weird school shooter kind
of thing where people feel that, hey, there's a way
I'll be remembered. And every time you you know, every
(03:17):
time you open that and you sit here and you
perpetuate it and promote it, like the media does this stuff.
They drive some of this narrative. Now it's easy in
the world of health insurance because it is. It is
absolutely one of the most frustrating things out there, and
there are people who fall by the wayside, and the
insurance companies are they don't have your best interest in mind.
(03:40):
They have their investors, right, and as an adult you
should know that, but you also have to understand how
you're going to operate within the system. Doesn't mean there's
not people in the insurance game that care, but at
the end of the day, if you're a giant, giant
health insurer. You're answering to shareholders most likely most of
(04:00):
them are publicly owned. So and and no, is the
system perfect?
Speaker 3 (04:06):
No?
Speaker 1 (04:07):
But is it better than things like the NA n
H R, n I H or whatever that is over
in the UK. Sure feels like it. Sure feels like
it's better in Canada's too, since I used to live
in Minnesota and medical tourism from Canada to UH to
Minnesota is gangbusters. That Mayo clinic has a lot of
Canadians flying around it, and it's not because the government
(04:28):
covers it up there. So with with that in mind,
you have almost this this this permissiveness, and that's where
stuff starts getting dangerous. That's how people think they can
take a shot at Trump and half the country will
think they're cool of tality. Man, it's not a good look.
And uh unfortunately that's so that's that's what we saw
(04:52):
up there. Now, there is another story that I thought
was pretty wild on how the these photos that emerged,
how these photos that emerged of what they purport to
be the suspect, but with his face uncover he's got
to beg old grin on his faith. As I saw
people spect that is that a guy or a guy
(05:13):
I don't that looks like a dude but whatever, or
is that the same guy? I don't know. I mean
it kind of looks like the clothes and everything fit.
And there's the timeline there. I mean, the officers are
not just throwing it out because they looked at the
photo and they went, that's probably him. Like remember, they
were tracking They were tracking dude back because they got
a whole surveillance network up there. So yeah, they're they're
(05:36):
they're going through there and they're putting all this stuff
together and so they have probably a number of reasons
they feel that it was confidently him. But the question becomes,
how do they get how if, if if, if people
are professional and and all of that, how would they
slip up and allow themselves to be filmed right there?
(06:01):
And the answer is, uh, women, ladies, Yeah, tests hormones.
Dude was so according to according to law enforcement, the
(06:22):
photo that they released or the two other photos, but
of with the smile, the reason he's smiling is because
he's flirting and being flirted with h with the girl
at the front desk of the hostel. He's trying to
hit that and Apparently she's reciprocating telling police that she
was flirting with him, and as part of flirting, she's say, oh,
(06:45):
take your fat take your mask down so I can
see your face there. Do I sound like a flirty girl?
I'm very good at it. And he's like, yeah, you
know why. And we mentioned this on the show the
other day. Women we can lay rock women weakened legs.
This is exactly what Mick was talking about going out there.
(07:08):
Oh you got a girlfriend, all their weakened legs. Man,
this is what he means by that. This guy has plan.
He had his bike, he knew where he was going
to go to avoid the cameras. He had the pistol,
he had the silencer suppressor. Don't calling yellow ross over that.
He had all of these things. He had this guy's
itinerary at least enough to be knowing where he needed
(07:31):
to wait, at what time he needed to wait. And
then in a pretty methodical fashion, minus whatever the deal
is with that pistol, and why is racking the slide
which might be the attachment on there, the silencer, all
of this, and he's going to be undone by a
(07:55):
pumpkin spice latte and some girl he thought he could
get her digit from. We're so dumb. We're so dumb.
I bet the latte was for her. Do we even know?
I mean, the power bars are probably his, but that
is how they got the photo. She's she's flirting with him,
(08:18):
which is which a pretty crazy thing. So I mean,
think about that for a moment. These two are flirting.
She's probably got some some thoughts going through her head.
And then to find out later that that dude you
were gonna go hook up with or at least, you know,
hang out with, might be the one who just walked
(08:40):
over and assassinated the CEO down the street, she probably
wants to hook up with him more. Sorry, I'm sorry.
You know I'm right though she won't say it, But
that's that. That's that bad boy thing right there. Yeah,
(09:00):
they sitting in the hostel, You're probably surrounded with them,
so maybe that's why you work there. I don't know,
but yeah, that's crazy. That's crazy. That's the undoing of
this dude who. By the way, I just want to
be abundantly clear on this show. We want that person arrested,
we want that person charged with murder. We want whatever
led to it the tire story to come out so
(09:21):
that people can, you know, understand everything, no matter how
crazy or weird than it is. And I want the
footnote to the story to always be that this individual
may have gotten busted because he couldn't keep it in
his pants. Just one of life's funny little twists as
(09:44):
it as it pertains to this this particular story. And
that's not our only update on it. But well, you
you see how things are going. It's Friday, so everything
gets thrown together. The operation get hag Seth is in
full full force.
Speaker 3 (09:59):
Now.
Speaker 1 (10:01):
I think that they took it personally over there at
Trump HQ, and so you had that moment where heg says, look,
I remem with the President. He's just like, yeah, let's
do this thing. Man, We're gonna keep doing this. Don't
don't let him get you down. You had that, and
then the media got mad because I think they thought
they were going to push him out with the thing
(10:21):
with his mom and all of that within a minute.
Because remember confirmation hearings when the Republicans coming in are
the absolute ringer, the absolute clenchius kind of search that
you can imagine that they're willing to do to you. Meanwhile,
Democrats come in, they're just like all right, I mean
(10:42):
the Republicans do it, but it doesn't drive the narrative
because the media won't parrot it or they'll carry water
for it. They'll be like, oh, well, yeah, no, he
was the mayor of He was the mayor of a
small town in Indiana. But they had buses, have a
very good bus system, you know, just a little stuff
(11:04):
like that. So Haig says, going through there, and now
now they think they got him because he drank some beers.
He drank some beers at work. I thought of having
a beer during this show, but I don't have any
beer in the fridge there, so I thought it to
(11:25):
have to pretend he drank some beer at work. However,
it was in a pretty pretty specific situation. So we
got tons of audio on this. We're gonna get to
if we're able to fix whatever thing is that makes
me so I can't hear things. And I'm not deaf.
(11:46):
I checked because Ross and I obviously had it off
the year conversation, and we can hear each other's voices,
so it's not that. But yeah, yeah, so we'll dive
into that. Just when I can get into the audio
and what a villain arc man. I did not have
this on my Bengo card. So I want you to
(12:08):
understand that you are waking up in a country right now.
You're waking up in a country right now where if
you did a popularity poll and this would be terrifying
and maybe one of these pole companies got nothing better
to do. Maybe this is what you should do today.
I want to see the favorability rating on CEO Shooter
guy and Hawk to a Girl because I feel like
(12:33):
right now, at least if the Internet, which I understand
is not reality, but Twitter is the closest to reality,
at least as it breaks down across our demographic lines,
I would say that people on Twitter are more mad
at this Haley Welch chick the Hawk to a girl
to spit on that thing. Girl, Yeah, more mad at
(12:54):
her than the guy who murdered somebody in an assassination
in Manhattan the other day. Why she did the crypto
rug pule thing. So if you don't know, if you
don't know how this works, And by the way, I
don't need a bunch of crypto bros calling me and okay,
well now I can hear myself so we got that
going for us. So so that's that's it. Oh, it's
(13:19):
so distracted, I've to take my headphones off. All right.
So anyway, Haley welch talk to a girl? All right?
Now I can just hear Ross's voice in my ears,
So all right, yep, yep, yep. All right, dude, this
is I'm telling you. This is like doing surgery every
day while spinning plates man sometimes sometimes with the tech.
Uh So, Hailey Weld, social media influencer, hawked to a girl.
(13:43):
Uh yeah, here was the thing because people initially they
had like some big opinions on this girl, and I'm
just like, whatever, she's drunk. You asked her a question,
she said something, so you thought it was funny if
you thought she was cute, or you like the accent
or whatever, and that's fine. It was funny. It was
funny for the moment, and then you just moved on
(14:04):
from there. And and so she now has to figure
out how she's gonna seize that fifteen minutes. And of
course I think most people were like, ah, when does
the only fans open? But she didn't go that route.
She went and she established a podcast, because everybody has
a podcast now even though this is the superior one.
(14:25):
So she does a podcast and she gets big guess.
I've seen little clips on like YouTube shorts and whatnot
of her sitting there with like Rachel Maddow. I'm sorry,
not Mark Cuban. I apologize, I confuse them, and and like,
so she's got big guests. I don't know how she's
monetizing it, but I see her everywhere. So she was
(14:47):
making a run at it, but apparently the run wasn't
fast enough. So what did she do. She launched her
own crypto coin. And here's how the shady launches work.
And by the way, this is not every crypto. Don't
call on you all at me because I don't care,
all right, I do care. And by the way, yes
I do own some crypto. I bought it as a
joke on the radio years ago. And it may start
(15:12):
with a bit so what do you know? But in
these case you get. What you do is you get
one internet idiot, all right. It could be a Paul Brother,
It could be this check, It could be anybody, could
be just someone. It could be that low life running
around Korea, Johnny Somali or whatever. It can be any
(15:33):
of it. But generally it's going to be attached. It's
a meme coin because it's attached to kind of a
meme individual. Really, and you say, I've launched my coin,
all right, So like let's let's say we did ross coin, okay,
and then you launch it, and then immediately Ross and
his inner circle they own ninety seven percent of the
(15:54):
coin or whatever it is, and then and they and
now they start selling it, and they sell it, obviously
at at a much more inflated price. I think the
valuation of a coin. For a moment the market cap
was like a half billion dollars and then within twenty
minutes it's worth a tenth of it. But you've sold
(16:14):
it the high price to all of your fans and
taken their money. It might be illegal, it should be,
and this chick could end up in jail where I
don't know if you spin on it in there. I
don't We'll be back because now I can hear Ross
and I can hear all our stuff. But then our
our log has disappeared, which is a digital thing. But
now it's back, so I guess maybe I'll Can you
(16:38):
smell anything, I can't smell anything, so I don't know
what's going on, but they got the Gerbil back in
place and off we go. So I'm so glad it's Friday. Ross.
You know, I had a great thought this morning. Do
you know what?
Speaker 4 (16:54):
You know?
Speaker 1 (16:54):
What today is? After today's show?
Speaker 5 (16:59):
Two weeks till the vacation. Vacation not as if I'm
cutting down or anything.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
No, he not that he has a giant advent calendar
in there, but not one that's sync to the to
the Christmas holiday, but rather pays off on what is
the twentieth or last show of the year. I think so,
so whatever that Friday is, And but it's leftover turkey
sandwiches in each of the holes and not chocolate. So
he's just he's just flexing now, all right, So Pete
(17:25):
hag Seth, he was the object of yer. Do you
see the Washington Post headline? Hold on just a second. Sorry,
we were trying to make our stuff work, so I
got distracted. Uh, here we go, and I need I
need military folks to help me out with this one. Okay.
(17:48):
Now the Washington Post headline is as follows, Get out
of my way. Ah, just want to see the headline.
I hate this stuff so much. These paywalls. Your whole
business model's busted. Nobody cares. So it has to do
(18:13):
with hegsas Bronze stars. Okay, and what what is your
understand a Bronze Star? Ross? You and I are both
non military, what is your understanding of a Bronze Star?
So if you find out somebody got a Bronze Star, I.
Speaker 5 (18:26):
Would say if if you, like someone came up to
me and said, hey, I have a Bronze Star my
dad did, I'd be like you, They're a badass. That's
my assessment.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
Yeah, that would be that would be most peaceable people's assessment. Now,
I understand, and I understand that Bronze Stars are awarded
for a variety of things. It's not necessarily you know,
the stories don't have to be the same as a
Medal of honor recipient or something. Right there, that being said,
they are a they are a It is a award
of distinction, okay. And it is one that I as
(18:57):
far as I've known, Washington Post has always been a
fan of, including this. Here's one from where they were
reporting on a guy who received let's see here Bronze Star.
A Army sergeant here we go was honored with the
bronze Star for taking on duties above his rank. And
(19:18):
they write this whole story and they're very excited because
you know who gets to give them the award, Joe Biden.
Joe Biden got to give him the award, and so
he's given him this bronze star and it was this
is a big damn deal, which is fine. Look, I'm
you know, good for getting the recognition for doing something
like that. So fast forward, because heg Seth, heeg seys
(19:41):
got himself a couple of these. And again the Washington
Post apparently they've switched all their employees because they have
a very different take. Here's the headline. Bronze stars like
those heg Seth earned are common among military officers. So
here's the deal. Because I do know this to be
the case, and you know, not all purple hearts are
(20:04):
the same. You start getting into things with clusters and
things like that. That being said is still a word
of distinction. But is the Washington Post right that these
two bronze stars that Hegseth earned are essentially meaningless. You're
willing to got you, you're willing to go that they're
out the common among military officers. So a military officer
(20:26):
is never just has served with distinction if they happen
to have a bronze star. Because I know a military
officer with a bronze star, and the story with that
and his purple hearts sound pretty it sounds pretty badass.
Sounds pretty badass, like Rambo kind of badass stuff there,
(20:48):
so does I'm not sure how it works. So I
as a civilian, somebody's gonna have to help me out.
Somebody's got a couple of bronze stars like the one
heg says has Is it no big deal? Ho hum or?
Is the Washington Post just doing Washington Post stuff? Eight
eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four. I'm
just curious, right, I'm not going to come on here
(21:09):
and tell you that I know everything. Some of the
stuff I don't know, And a lot of this is
culture on. But you know, to a civilian, when you
see a guy with a couple of bronze stars and
they're not, you know, acting insane at that moment, you
tend to have a positive thought on that individual or
purple heart, unless you're Jane Fonda, then they're all baby
killers or whatever. But no, for most people, that's fine.
(21:31):
So The Washington Post sees that people see this and
they realize it's another attack point to go after Hagseth,
and so they do. And they're not alone. Everybody was
trying to get their rib kicks in yesterday, including CNN,
who boy, oh boy, is hung up on people drinking
(21:51):
on the air. I want you to remember that CNN
has a big pro or in this case, not even
not even on the air. So no, no, no, people are
sending me emails. No, no, no, this is what I want
to know, all right, Yes, there is a distinction. People
can get a bronze star if you're a field grade
(22:12):
officer or a senior enlisted based on your deployment in war.
Then there's bronze star with value. I absolutely yeah, these
are the words I was searching for. I understand that
there's a difference there. The point that I'm making is
it's why is all of a sudden Washington Post bringing
this up. By the way, the bronze star in that
(22:33):
other story I used was also not the v not so,
but Washington Posts had a very different outlook on it.
So it's fine to contextualize, but you've got to be
consistent when you do it. And that's why I asked
this question on the show, and I'm kids, this is
why I want the answers. I want people to be
armed with the information because now Washington Post is having
(22:58):
to essentially slight the previous outlook on this stuff so
they can go after somebody, and then it becomes telling
as to why they're going with it. CNN, on the
other hand, like I said, they decided to go a
slightly different route get after heg Seth. And I don't
want to say drinking on the air, but drinking adjacent
to the air.
Speaker 6 (23:16):
And we just have to sort of put some meat
on the bone here, which is allegations keep coming out
of various forms. One of thembum was at the Washington
Post yesterday, which reported at Fox News Hegseth had a
reputation as a heavy drinker. That's according to six former
Fox News employees who worked directly with Hegseth and saw
(23:37):
him drinking on the job or visibly drunk at work
events and who spoke on the condition of anonymity out
of fear of retaliation and before.
Speaker 1 (23:45):
All right, all right, so yeah, so retaliation. So these
are all former employees. Probably they're tech people, who now
work for CNN. Because it's a small group there, right,
kind to go back and forth and so so they're
sitting there and they're feeding this stuff to it. But
the wording is important. Saw him drinking at functions, and
I believe hegseeth when he did. He did an interview
(24:07):
with Megan Kelly said that, yeah, before he met his
wife and and found religion, he was the hard drinking dude. Also,
you know, love the ladies, good looking guy. Obviously he's smart,
in a pretty high profile position, easy to fall into
that trap. But now I'm like, did I don't know,
(24:28):
did they kidnap all those kids all at once? Got
so many damn kids? And and just you know, talking
about how he is now. I don't know. I'm not
around the guy each and every day, but the allegations
need to be something more than he drank at a
company function. Give me some of that on air drink.
Can you do any on air drink? And tell me
about you?
Speaker 6 (24:49):
And I want to say that heg Seth's attorney, Tim
Parlatory very clearly denied those claims, and Porter pointed to
on the record Fox employees who supported and do support
for the people will give you their names.
Speaker 7 (25:07):
And hag Seth himself behind closed doors talking to senators
as well as a little pit stop in the house
yesterday also said of the same things. I am not
an alcoholic. That is what he is telling these senators.
Seems like some Republican senators have welcomed that, specifically the
promise that hag Seth is making to them, which is,
I also will not be drinking on the job. I
will not be drinking if I am confirmed.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
Because there's a whole narrative just created.
Speaker 6 (25:31):
And that's pretty significant.
Speaker 7 (25:33):
Maybe could move the needle, but there's still so many
other questions.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
And just in her report, I'm sorry, I gonna pause this,
you moron. She is, she is in her in what
she's saying right there. She's now accepted the premise as
fact that hag Seth would just you know, he just
drinks on the job. But don't worry, he promises he
won't do it. You feel the capture there. What they're
trying to do. It's the when did you stop beating
your wife?
Speaker 3 (25:55):
Thing?
Speaker 1 (25:56):
Oh well, he said he wouldn't do he wouldn't drink
on the job. There four, he's promising to not do
the thing he previously did, and we're going to assume
that it's accurate for the purpose of this. It's a
it's a weird little trick, a little thing there, but
but it has to it now operates on your BS premise.
And and so you're it's so now the question and
(26:18):
the and the in the minds of the viewer is
supposed to be, will he honor his commitment to not
be the psycho drunk he always is?
Speaker 3 (26:25):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (26:26):
Will he turn his life around? And you've never established
the fact that this was in any way, shape or
form a thing anyway? Do you understand what I'm saying?
All Right, we'll.
Speaker 7 (26:34):
Continue Christmas reporting about right now. There aren't any hard nos, Well,
there could be at a certain point.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
All right, So so this is this is what CNN
is cooking up. And well, while they prepared it for
everyone to get fired, does that happen in this week?
When does that happen? And where they're firing all the
CNN people pretty quick? Here? So I guess I don't know.
Maybe some folks like I'm probably out of here. So
let's keep the behavior going that God is here development
(27:04):
as Pete Hexath. All right, So here's a whole segment.
They decided to do you ready development.
Speaker 8 (27:08):
As Pete Hexath fights to hold on to his nomination
for Defense Secretary, he arrived on Capitol Hill just a
short time of go as. New reporting from the Washington
Post cites six former Fox News employees who say they
witnessed Hexas drinking at questionable moments. They say Hexath quote
had a reputation as a heavy drinker, and they say
(27:29):
they saw him quote drinking on the job or visibly
drunk at work.
Speaker 1 (27:33):
Evets.
Speaker 8 (27:34):
CNN has learned that Hexath has faced questions from senators
including are you an alcoholic?
Speaker 1 (27:39):
Or you a womanizer?
Speaker 8 (27:40):
And did you embezzle money?
Speaker 1 (27:43):
And by the way, he's facing questions from a bunch
of people who themselves are probably functional alcoholics. Good good,
there's good bunch of women there. That's some high. Washington,
DC is a hard drink in town, and especially when
it comes to Congress. I don't know if it's quite
the h the giant weird orgy stuff that Madison was
(28:06):
talking about, but maybe so. And then then this just continues.
This is CNN's day.
Speaker 9 (28:12):
But new reporting Wednesday night from the Washington Post cites
several employees from his time as a Fox News host
that seem to undercut those claims. They write this quote.
Heg Seth had a reputation as a heavy drinker. According
to six former Fox News employees who worked directly.
Speaker 1 (28:27):
This is fifty one intelligence antaists. By the way, just
this is there. You know they love lists. We've talked
about this. They love the list. Oh we all we
got eight because when you're when they're, when everyone's anonymous,
you can make up whatever number you want, make whatever
number you want. Absolutely, I have eight thousand former iHeart
employees who all will testify that Ross likes mild chicken
(28:51):
wings and he's been lying to you, the milder the better.
But one any of that buffalo in there, And I
got I got eight eight million former iHeart employees. So
you're cooked. Man. Sorry, I can't tell you who. But no,
that's I got the number here. That's what you're That's
this exactly.
Speaker 9 (29:11):
With heck Seth, and saw him drinking on the job
or visibly drunk at work events. They spoke on the
condition of anonymity out of fear of retaliation.
Speaker 1 (29:19):
How would they how would they as former former employees
of Fox news, how who would retaliate against them? Oh, oh,
you're shaping up the bigger narrative. See, that's why we're here.
And the bigger narrative is if you thought anonymous source
usage around Donald Trump was bad in twenty sixteen, you've
(29:43):
seen nothing. And because that's the justification right there. It's
not retaliation from you know, people who work in the industry.
It's retaliation from the president. And because they've created this
narrative that he's going to run around and pushing people
out of win like Vladimir Putin, that you are allowed
(30:05):
to violate the norms of many of these things. So
you can make up whatever you want, and you can
say it's anonymous, and you can never give up the
sourcing because if you do, that person will be drugged
from their house in the middle of the night and
summarily executed or whatever narrative you're putting out there. So
you're going to get anonymous sourcing on steroids this time around,
(30:26):
because this is the justification they're using. It's the same justification.
Now CBS News is reporting that those pardons, preemptive pardons,
those are going to be a thing probably, So we're
talking Fauci and Liz Cheney, and by the way, they're
calling them bipartisan pardons because Liz Cheney's in there. The
(30:47):
amount of norms being violated, new things and angry reactions
that you're going to see, they've been a little stayed
right now. It hasn't felt like twenty sixteen. But I
feel like it's going to be much more ominous than
that because they got nothing to lose, had nothing to lose,
and uh, you know, the highlight for some of them
(31:09):
over at CNN is if somebody gets the Butler thing right.
I think, as crazy as that sounds, you have people
who think that if you believe that the Fourth Reich
is upon you and all of that. Again, it justifies
all of these things. It justifies acting in a new way.
They're in the media and just doing whatever you want
(31:29):
and destroying people, absolutely destroying people.
Speaker 9 (31:33):
Ex That's Lawyer denied the reports when asked for comment
by the Washington Post. Now HESP needs to win over
Republican senators to get confirmed.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
Okay, so what you want an example? Because I wanted
an example. I mean, what does that mean? He's he
would drink on the job, and he was drunk in events, Well,
what events? Was he was he drunk at? Was he
drunk at a big old barbecue that they had for employees.
I don't know if they have those for Fox, but
I mean, was it? Was it the Christmas party? Was
(32:03):
he drunk at the Christmas by? Well, what are you
talking about? Give me an example? And then they did,
and then they did so apparently, and this was Fox
and Friends was doing a segment. They were doing a
segment on a very particular day. I would say it's
(32:30):
one that falls in March. It's in the middle of March.
I would say, it's Boston, Paul's favorite day. So they're
doing a segment and as part of the segment, they
had poured Irish beers into these cups, and the cups
are sitting there. They get done, They get done with
the show. When does Fox and Friends at nine or whatever?
(32:50):
Ten nine or ten, they get done with the show?
Haig Seth, he's like a happy say, picks up one
of the beers, which admittedly had been sitting there for
I think they said like an hour. So I don't
know how stale or warm that's gonna be or whatever,
but if it's a Guinness, he picked it up, and
he drank it and was making jokes about it being
Saint Patrick's day. What are you talking about. It's Saint
(33:13):
Patrick's day. His show's over. And here's the other thing
you all don't realize. Even though Ross doesn't drink anymore,
maybe he can. He can, he can echo this with me.
It's less weird for somebody who gets up at two
or three in the morning to have a beer at
one in the afternoon, even though societally you may think
that it's weird if you go to bed at oh,
(33:35):
you know, super early and you get up super early,
or if you work third shift, you work an overnight shift.
Speaker 5 (33:40):
Yeah, because your entire schedule, your timeline is shifted.
Speaker 1 (33:43):
Do you know what time I eat lunch? He lunched
after the show.
Speaker 5 (33:46):
I was just about to say, like, we eat dinner
at like three thirty, yeah, because Marky gets up kind
of early too. But yeah, I mean I get up
at two thirty three o'clock.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
So so you know, it's so if I if I
want to go down to Raleigh Times or whatever, I'll
go down there sometimes and it's two in the afternoon.
You can look at me weird that I'm drinking a beer.
That's me sitting down to do some show prep and
get ready to eat dinner because I don't like to.
You know, you know you shouldn't eat within a certain
amount of time when you go to bed, but it's
(34:15):
when you have this schedule. It's too easy to do that,
so you have to like convince yourself to eat a
little earlier. But that's your that's it, all right, we'll
be back phone number eight eight eight nine three four
seven eight seven four. Well, I apologize, excuse me, of course,
you gotta sneeze right when I come back. He's Ian
(34:35):
Craig Cray today. All right, I apologize for accusing you
of posting a fake photo. And I'm horrified that that's real.
This is why I don't like photos. Excuse me. So
there's a Biden photo and yeah, look the guy. The
guy's an old dude, all right, he's got you know,
(34:57):
he's got the uh, the weathered lines there. And even
though he did he does look botoxy. Let's let's go
in and be honest. It's not it's not as good side.
It's not his best angle. Where's ross brow? He wrote?
Looks like dude was just visited by all three Christmas
ghosts or he is one. But yeah, absolutely, all right, Well,
(35:17):
I apologize. I thought that I didn't realize that that
was real. Oh are you kidding me? Is there one
thing more today? They can just stand in the way
of getting the news out? I'm assuming this is probably
we spiked my water this morning. All right, Well, that's
that's what they're accusing over on CNN of Hegseth of
(35:38):
doing over on Fox. In fact, MSNBC two and Morning
Joe had to apologize on the air yesterday to Fox
because they just they one of their guests came on
and said, no, everybody at Fox just drinks all day,
and that was too much for the corporate lawyers over
there at MSNBC. But let's go back to who's running
(36:00):
this stuff. Let's go back to CNN, shall we. So
CNN just wants you to know that people in a
in a national broadcast capacity who might consume alcohol on
the air, it negates them from polite society, regardless of
the situation. Right, And in the case of the the
(36:21):
HeiG Seth doing a morning show and then after the
morning show on Saint Patrick's Day drinking, one of the
guinnesses that's sitting there. That doesn't feel problematic to me
or most normal people, and it especially doesn't to me
and to Ross and to others who work the hours
that we work, because you don't operate on the nine
(36:45):
to five. That's not you. So everybody can go ahead
and judge all they want, but it's it's just absurd.
But the question becomes a CNN do you have access
to your own archives? Because okay, what's gonna happen? I'm
gonna get something.
Speaker 10 (37:03):
So we've invited our new friend Chris over and Chris
clearly has many, much much ink. And the decision all
night has been should it.
Speaker 1 (37:15):
Be a tattoo for a I mean, what are you thinking?
Speaker 10 (37:20):
People want to know what crazy?
Speaker 11 (37:23):
Let me ask?
Speaker 1 (37:24):
Let me ask Kathy.
Speaker 12 (37:27):
I think Kathy Anderson wrong, Kathy?
Speaker 1 (37:30):
What should I do?
Speaker 13 (37:32):
Nipple?
Speaker 1 (37:33):
Nipple, niffle nipple? No love you, Kathy, I love you?
Speaker 10 (37:39):
You don't want to I mean I don't you too,
But we really don't need to see what's.
Speaker 1 (37:43):
About that happen here?
Speaker 13 (37:44):
No?
Speaker 1 (37:45):
That is that is the CNN crew for their New
Year's Eve broadcast, including Don Lemon Kathy Griffin. They're hammered.
They're they are. Don Lemon is obliterated there right, he's
not in sentence made mode. He gone, Anderson Cooper, he
doesn't hold his liquor much better, cheers jers. I feel
(38:11):
better already.
Speaker 13 (38:12):
Anderson made me promise not to complain about the weather because.
Speaker 1 (38:18):
Also, who does his shot like that? I forgot that's
how he does shot. Can you imagine being in a bar,
You're next to a table where there every now and
then they're pulling some shots, and every time they do,
one of the dude does that thing that Anderson Cooper
just did.
Speaker 5 (38:32):
I mean, you get punched for that.
Speaker 1 (38:33):
Oh my gosh. The bouncer be like, you need to go, sir,
What are you gonna say ross that?
Speaker 2 (38:41):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (38:42):
Yeah, and he'd lose my mind as some guy's making
that sound.
Speaker 5 (38:46):
Yeah, they're gonna throw you out.
Speaker 1 (38:48):
Oh but he's he's on there and I know what
you're saying. And what I saw people defend. They going, well,
that's New Year's Eve. You're right, it is. They probably
went over the line I think with Don Lemon, and
there realized it. Uh and and when they were that hammered,
but you know it is. It is in Saint Patrick's
day after the segment drinking a Guinness because he's been
(39:09):
up doing, he's been in makeup since two am. Shut up,
and you're all anonymous source. You have to be an
anonymous source to retail a time a dude drank a
Guinness that he probably doesn't even deny. Good lord, wait,
where's the other one?
Speaker 2 (39:28):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (39:28):
Here we go, Andy Cohen? The game with you called
have you gotten high there? Okay, I'm gonna run through
various locations and I want to know if you have
gotten high in them? Okay, all right, snoop, have you
gotten high?
Speaker 2 (39:46):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (39:46):
I do too? Have you gotten high on a yacht?
I have got high there?
Speaker 14 (39:55):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (39:56):
I know the answer to this one because you talked
about it.
Speaker 1 (39:58):
I watch What Happens Live? Have you got high at
the White House?
Speaker 5 (40:02):
And you do know that? Yes? Yes, yes, yes?
Speaker 1 (40:06):
Okay?
Speaker 4 (40:07):
Have you gotten high at Martha Stuart's house?
Speaker 1 (40:11):
What is happening?
Speaker 4 (40:12):
Just? I mean?
Speaker 3 (40:15):
Why?
Speaker 15 (40:16):
Yes?
Speaker 13 (40:17):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (40:18):
This is this is appropriate? Inappropriate? I don't it doesn't
matter to me. But like the CNN running around acting
like a bunch of teetotalers when in reality, again they
they've they've accused the guy. If I can't believe I
have to sit here and defend this. This is so dumb.
And and then for them to mischaracterize one what that
(40:42):
particular incident was. We had to dig up more of
the details there two to operate on the assumption, as
you heard in that other the other cut, that we're
operating under the assumption that he's a violent drunk at work.
So we want him to promise not to be if
he gets this job, which is why dishonest way to operate.
(41:02):
But that's that's what you heard in the previous uh
previous notes. And then the other thing they were upset
about is Pete heg Seth visited the nine to eleven
memorial in his underwear, which I when I saw that,
I saw the link to that. At first, I'm like,
is this a parody side I've not heard of? What
are they talking about?
Speaker 4 (41:24):
What?
Speaker 1 (41:24):
What?
Speaker 2 (41:25):
What on?
Speaker 1 (41:26):
Because that sounds like that sounds really disrespectful when you
see it like that, Right, Pete Hegseth goes to the
nine to eleven memorial in his underwear. That's more damning,
I think in people's minds unless they understand what's going on.
But sure enough, then you see you see hagg Seth
standing there and just uh, you know, short shorts basically,
(41:47):
But then you realize what they are, and you realize
why he was there, and wait, he's why he's holding
that flag, and what the hell's going on? See, this
is how much they're willing to lie to you. Let's go.
Speaker 11 (41:58):
Well, as you might have noticed it yesterday, Pete and
I took off all our clothes and finished the Navy
Seal Swim yesterday helping raise money for members of the
Seal community and the Navy Seal Foundation, including active duty
veterans and their families.
Speaker 1 (42:12):
So he didn't show up to the nine to eleven
memorial in his underwear. He and a bunch of seals
former seals swam the Hudson obviously coming up. It looks
like their point was the peer there was at Pure
nineteen or whatever it is up there, which is directly
adjacent to Ground zero. So the idea that Navy seals
(42:37):
swam across the Hudson River as a fundraiser, which by
the way, not an easy swim, not an easy swim,
that's a big long swim. But did that to raise
money for these various foundations and fallen members, families and
all of this, and then after coming aboard, coming up
(42:59):
on to Manhattan, then at the the end of the race,
so to speak, was nine to eleven Memorial is the
most on brand Soldier Seal fundraiser thing I've ever heard of.
And they're swimming literally in the trunks that they swim in.
(43:20):
So does that sound a little different then? I don't know.
The guys showed up to uh just in as you know,
it's quite drunk and his underwear have been a long
bender that night. It was disrespectful of nine to eleven Memorial.
I don't think it is. I think those are two
wildly different things.
Speaker 11 (43:37):
Here's what you man missed if you weren't watching on Saturday.
Speaker 3 (43:41):
Here we go.
Speaker 5 (43:41):
This is the warm up one mile run.
Speaker 16 (43:43):
You're ready.
Speaker 17 (43:45):
It's a one mile run over to the water's edge
where Will and I will then put on fins and
start the swim. About seventy Navy seals, vets, first responders,
cold star, families of patriots, all honoring those who serve,
remembering nine to eleven.
Speaker 11 (44:00):
Three miles, three hundred push ups, sixty six pull.
Speaker 17 (44:03):
Ups, all to honor the Navy Seal founding.
Speaker 1 (44:06):
My body hurts listening to what they're about to do. Okay,
that's that's so it's not not not how you not
how you worded it.
Speaker 17 (44:17):
And so we're two little tiny parts of it.
Speaker 1 (44:21):
Well you're ready, We're got war to now.
Speaker 18 (44:27):
Right now, they're on their first leg of the swim.
I am told this is the most difficult portion of
it because they're actually swimming against the current right now.
It's about a one mile swim. They're on their way
to the Statue of Liberty Liberty Island.
Speaker 17 (44:39):
Would you pass by that statue Liberty in the water,
and then you see what these guys can do. And
you know, we're doing this one morning right when you
think about the fact, this is what they do for
a day job, right, you know, across the globe on
behalf of all of us.
Speaker 1 (44:53):
So so, and they didn't even as you heard, they
didn't even swim straight across. They literally swam out and
around the Statue of Liberty. And anyone who's been in
the harbor there, that's not a short distance as you heard,
it's a mile there, and it's a mile when you're
swimming because they're swimming against current and then they're swimming
with the current. So it's you know, it's like an
(45:14):
incline on a on a treadmill or something. But it's
all part of a fundraiser. You're telling me that CNN
and some of the others losing their minds. I think
Joy Reid and others. So those her mind has been
long gone. You tell me they couldn't google this. No,
they live in New York, most of them. I think
they probably are well aware of what this was, you know,
(45:37):
and yet they would report to you the other The
other way.
Speaker 5 (45:40):
What's super annoying to me is to start this topic. Right,
You played a segment from CNN and they open it
up saying, hey, there's these rumors, right, these unsubstantiated rumors
that you know, this person that could be in political
power if they if they get you know, approved or whatever,
they possibly possibly have a drinking problem or be an alcoholic.
Did they mention the Kamala Harris drinking rumors at all,
(46:02):
because that was sort of a thing and it was
a big deal.
Speaker 1 (46:04):
Well, there's no video evidence of that. There kind of is,
but there's not any evidence that I have on my
button bar.
Speaker 5 (46:12):
I mean, I think it's the one that's purple there
that's called Kamala wasted, because that's definitely thing and there's
the thing we saw through the campaign and maybe they
did talk about it and I'm unaware of it, but
did not make it like a last week or she
put out right before Thanksgiving. Yeah, okay, all right, Well
let's see if Ross is right.
Speaker 14 (46:28):
We are all in this together and on this practical
eve of Thanksgiving.
Speaker 5 (46:35):
Look at her face, that face.
Speaker 14 (46:38):
Thanksgiving with the ability and to find the ability at
this moment.
Speaker 1 (46:44):
Two, Hey, let's get you some water.
Speaker 14 (46:49):
And so I wish for you that you are surrounded
by the people you love and who love you. As
you know, I encourage you to be around family in
whatever way you compose that family, but to take a
moment and.
Speaker 1 (47:08):
I can't.
Speaker 5 (47:09):
And this is after being on vacation in Hawaii for
two weeks or whatever it was. And she should be
looking rested and have like a layer around her neck
and be like, hey, I lost it sucks, but here
we are, and she's just like, look at her face,
she's drunk. Yeah, and that this has happened during the campaign.
You had people inside the campaign saying, hey, she has
a drinking problem. It's something we heard about.
Speaker 1 (47:29):
Right now, threw it into a shit right, so prominent. Yes,
but she's not up for senate confirmation. Loss, that's the
difference you need to understand. I'm sorry, she's not. I
feel in fact she's she's ahead of the Senate. I
don't know if you know that. So not up for
Senate confirmation. So that's an extra layer of hypocrisy. Some
(47:52):
would say, but no, they're absolutely close. You just see
the Tim Walls interview. So he did a Tim Walls
in an interview with KSTP Chance five Hubbard broadcasting at
Minneapolis station there. So he did an interview. I just
want to play, Yeah, let me just play. There's a
couple thoughts here. I'm hesitant asked the question, do you
(48:16):
think it's possible that Tim Walls may be lying in
this interview? Do you think that there is a possibility
of that? Or am I just mean for bringing that
up because I Eh, here we go.
Speaker 12 (48:28):
Do you think ultimately you helped or hurt historial right
that it wasn't my decision to make. That was the
vice president's decision. You know, those did they make the right?
You know, as I said in this campaign, when you
asked the question, are the things you could have been
done differently since we lost, The answer is obviously yes
on this one, I did the best I could.
Speaker 1 (48:46):
Walls admit, Okay, a couple of things. One that part
of its honest, that part of its honest right there, right.
If we lost, there's probably things we could have done better. Okay,
well that's an honest assessment. But then for you to
tag it with I'd done the best I could coach
obviously not obviously we needed more double hand waving, a
(49:09):
weird dance thing, entries with your hand over your heart.
We need some more of that. Uh, it just didn't
do enough ross you would agree, not an.
Speaker 5 (49:19):
I feel bad that you are insulting general jazz hands.
Speaker 1 (49:22):
It's uh just a little a little more jazz hands
and he could have pulled this thing off, sir. No,
the real line's coming up here.
Speaker 13 (49:29):
He felt confident going into election day, excited about what
might come after a grueling three month campaign that ultimately
ended with a decisive loss to Republican Donald Trump and
his running mate jd.
Speaker 1 (49:44):
Vance.
Speaker 12 (49:45):
It felt like at the rallies, at the things I
was going to, the shops I was going in that
the momentum was going our way. And it obviously wasn't
wasn't at the end of time. So yeah, I was
a little surprised. I really I thought we had a
positive message and I thought the country was ready for that.
Speaker 1 (49:59):
Okay, one hearing me just blame the country, which is
what she's done too. It's not us, It was the country. Yeah,
now the country. Oh, there are a bunch of a
holes o the country. Right, So it's so it's that,
but also this is why he's lying. Uh it felt
like it at the rallies. Yeah, but you know what,
I bet it didn't feel like it when you opened
your internal polls and looked at them. That's what if
(50:21):
they're the reporter here, that's the that's the thing we
find out now that your polling, we find out that
the polling, which you had access to even under Biden
was so bad. Then they got to yours, and they're like,
how could it get worse? And then it got so
much worse And you have access to this stuff. You're
telling me that the candidates don't know this, this thing
(50:42):
that said that there's no way they can win whatsoever.
Speaker 5 (50:44):
Yeah, I think it was what David Pluff was saying,
that they never led internally in their own toolls never
and they would look at the national polls from like wait, oh.
Speaker 1 (50:51):
No, no, we got to hit a break.
Speaker 3 (50:52):
Hang on?
Speaker 1 (50:53):
Were hit a break? Comeback?
Speaker 3 (50:54):
Hang on?
Speaker 1 (50:54):
In addition to saying that they never oh up till
the very moment we thought we had this thing within,
you're lying because you have internal polls, and your internal
polls never showed you quote having the thing ever, ever, ever, ever,
and we know that, we know that. So you're telling
(51:15):
me that the candidates didn't get the internal polls confused.
But the other thing you said was we ran a
positive campaign. Oh wait, hold on, Ross's I'm sorry, Ross,
what do you not well?
Speaker 5 (51:28):
I mean, like you said, David Pluff was looking at
the like ABC, CBS, all these polls right way console
and being like where these numbers from? Because our numbers
internally are not showing that at all. Showed that we're
like far behind, and you could you could tell remember
when like when he went from Joy like overnight they
went from Joy to her screaming about Hitler right then
and how your advance was. The tone completely changed and
(51:51):
they looked like they were in panic mode. And that
explains why.
Speaker 1 (51:53):
Yeah, last three weeks was all hitler all the time.
Every once they found out about them, remember the very
and they found out they were doing a Madison Square
Garden event. What were the first stories? What were the
very first stories ahead of that, which was nice because
they knew what about a week and a half out,
you know who else? You know who house gathered at
Madison Square Garden one time? Right, And so from the
(52:16):
word go it was that narrative, and the campaign wholly
embraced it. All the networks did everybody did? Yeah, everybody did,
in the in the media, and in the in the
world of politics. Never mind that like Bill Clinton did
his did he need to do his acceptance speech at
(52:38):
Madison Square Garden? Like there's all of this stuff and
it's all just stupid. But the fact is you didn't
have to participate. You chose to because, as Ross just
pointed out, you're probably desperate as hell at that point
because you do see the internal So Tim Walls for
the first time apparently has been caught in a lie.
(52:59):
There's no other way to describe it. And meanwhile, these
very same folks that are out there who want to
play that level of hardball are about to do something
that I'm telling you is going to be so injurious.
And that is to define because now you're furthering, you're
continuing this thing where that's not your political opponent, that's
literally Hitler right where we've broken down to this stuff,
(53:23):
and as a result, you can take extraordinary action to
combat Hitler. And the new extraordinary action is all of
these all of these criminals. There's going to be a
bunch of criminals in there. The stuff that many members
of Congress do would be criminal or could be shoehorned
into a criminal charge for a regular person, right, Adam
(53:44):
Shift doing all of those things and lying about those
things and yet continuing to steal money, in my opinion,
to further that lie for political purposes sure should be criminal.
I understand it's it's a tough line to figure out
how to delineate, but I would argue that to look
(54:05):
at that and not agree that he is so far
over the line, because there is real damages here. There was,
and and some of it can be it's speculative damages.
Like how much did what he do hurt Trump? I
don't know. Maybe I heard him in twenty twenty, didn't
hurt him this time? So that's one thing. If Fauci
(54:26):
against If Fauci on behalf of the United States was
secretly funding gain of function research, which is something that
the Obama administration expressly forbid. Like to point this out,
which is when they speculate that this started. How is
that not criminal? Like the on the big List? And
(54:49):
I don't say this lightly because I'm not with very
with other other than when you know, somebody hurts a
bunch of kids, and I when I'm thrown in a
wood chipper, I'm I'm I'm generally not to be the
Jalem political guy, because I understand where that leads. But
when people commit real crimes, you have to there. There
are there are people out there who there's no reason
(55:12):
that they should not be in jail. And if Fauci
did what they're accusing him of, and I and I
and I don't, I don't purport to know all of
the answers. That's horrific. That's you know, you're acting as
an agent on behalf of the United States, and you're
doing something that may have caused a worldwide pandemic or
contributed to it, and then you lied about it, and
(55:35):
then you lie to and this just before we get
into any of the pharmaceutical conspiracy theories out there. So
let's just let's just go with this. You're out there
doing this thing. You're doing this thing and it backfired,
and I and I tend to believe what that House
Committee narrative came up with because it makes the most sense.
You just now, you're just on my list of people
(55:57):
I can't believe or not in jail. In fact, you
know what, if I just put you, I just put you.
I'm not talking about it. Stop it, you weirdo Patriots fans.
I don't care. I don't care. I'm just glad. You
know what, Here's what I'll say if Bill Belichick comes
to coach at UNC. You guys are excited because you
can go hump his leg every day. So I understand
(56:19):
your passion, but I'm we're dealing with something else here.
So my big list of people who need to be
in prison but aren't. If it's if that's true that
the narrative in there, you're not. You're on there next
to I'm gonna find next to the prank net guys.
Remember the prank net guys. So you and prank Neck
(56:40):
that that's the story of the dude I can't believe
is not in prison the most ross. Do you remember
prank net from back in.
Speaker 5 (56:47):
The day, No, you have think.
Speaker 1 (56:50):
Okay, all right, So this is a dude in Canada,
Lizen Windsor, Canada, and he organized a group of pranksters
on the There was some of the US, some in Canada,
and they carried out a couple of the most notorious pranks.
Do you remember do you remember that story of the
(57:11):
McDonald's workers or somebody called and they said they're from
corporate and they made them strip search that girl and
the other employees did it because the power of somebody
on the phone that's not them. They saw that and
they went in a different direction. So they called it KFC.
In New Hampshire somewhere, there's three women working and they're
(57:34):
working in tandem, like one guy is the guy from corporate.
They got another guy who's pretending to be from the
fire department. I think whatever. So they convinced one of
the workers that there is a there's a mechanical failure
with the with the sprinkler system, right because they have
these really heavy duty because you're cooking with all that oil,
they have really crazy fire suppression system in there, and
(57:59):
they convinced this woman that the suppression system was not
operating properly and that she needed to do something. So
they had her push a lever. Well that was the
lever that made the suppression system go off. So and
it's it's not water because it's oil, right, So it's
it's essentially a chemical vapor thing that just eliminates oxygen.
(58:21):
It's what it's for. And so they have her do it,
and you can hear it in the video, the damn
thing going off, and all of a sudden, the guy
on the phone, who's the prankster, he turns on the
panic mode. And they convinced the women that if they
got any of the mist on their clothes, they needed
to remove all of them. So they all three of
them stripped naked. Now they go a step further. They
(58:45):
convince the women that they have to emergency treat their
skin the same way that you emergency treat a jellyfish sting.
Do you follow what I'm telling you? And so when
police showed up, there's three nake kid KFC workers going
number one on each other. And then they try to
(59:06):
convince the fire guy who actually showed up because you
could hear the audio of what was going on. Then
they started screaming at him and hung up. That was
number one. Number two, they called a dude at a hotel.
They got a random door. They called a hotel, random room.
They convinced this guy that there had been a chemical
(59:29):
leak in the hotel and that they were very concerned,
but they didn't want to panic everybody, but he needed
to He needed to provide a urine sample so they
could immediately test, and then he had to stay kind
of quarantined. So they what they did is they convinced
him to provide a urine sample in one of the
little plastic cups in the room, and then they told
(59:52):
him to take it out to the front desk and
don't say what it is. Use code words so you
don't alarm the guests, and tell them here's your apple cider.
While that's going on, one of the other dudes has
called the front desk where a young woman is working,
told her that the president of the Martinelli Apple Cider
(01:00:15):
Company is staying at the hotel and they have a
new flavor, a new brand, and they wondered if she
would be interested in having a sample, and so yes,
and she said, okay, yeah, that's fine because they had
registered a room and kind of made it look like
it was under Martinelli, but it was not that room.
(01:00:37):
I can't remember how they explained it, but so all
of a sudden, these two people who don't are not
part of the scam. The guy comes walking out of
this cup, puts it in front of her and says,
here's your apple cider, and then, as per instructions, turns
around walks back to his room to quarantine. Because people
are dumb. If they hear authority tell him to do something,
they'll do it. And then you hear on the phone
(01:00:58):
where they get her. They ask her a sample, sample
the sider. It's a warm sider, they say, and you
hear her drink it and immediately gag it, starts screaming
with this is awful, this is awful, and then they
start calling her a stupid B word and hang up
on her. And those guys never went to prison because
at the time they did it, they used the voiceover,
(01:01:20):
they used a phone on the internet based phone number,
and nobody knew how to prosecute it. And there's a
bunch of other stuff they did, but just horrible stuff,
just traumatizing people. So they're on the list, and then
we'll throw Fauci on there as well. Look at that.
You learn some stuff seven forty six race stage to
help you learn whether it's arguably you know, not a
(01:01:41):
big surprise, but you know, oh on the phone, Oh
dang it, that's right. Everything is crazy now. And what's
going on? Race agic on the phone? How you doing, sir?
Speaker 3 (01:01:50):
Well, I'm doing okay.
Speaker 1 (01:01:52):
How are you? You know, say it? We'll see my fault. Yeah, no, no, Friday.
It's a very interesting tech day around here these parts.
That's okay.
Speaker 3 (01:02:01):
Yeah, well listen, we've got our own set of problems
here on the tech side.
Speaker 4 (01:02:05):
But uh, you know, no problems otherwise.
Speaker 3 (01:02:08):
Yeah, they Doppler ten million broken agains. I mean the
good news is I don't need it. I mean that's good, right, yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:02:16):
Because it's still rain. Just make stuff up anyway, So
go ahead, yeah, we make it up.
Speaker 3 (01:02:20):
So yeah, have.
Speaker 1 (01:02:21):
Farm Farmer's Almanac in front of you, fire oazer.
Speaker 3 (01:02:24):
Yeah, it's cold, not record cold, though, we're close by
three or four degrees. I guess in my business that's
close to the records from the Triad to the Trianglar.
Upper teams roll mid twenties for most. There are some
teams that have snuck in around the Triad this morning
seen at seventeen right now nineteen. That one's over the
(01:02:46):
west side of Winston Sale more like a little bit
twenties around Raleigh and Durmom as we go through the
day on either side of forty. So another cold shot
coming in tonight, upper teams to low twenties and clear,
and the weekend there's going to be a sunny one
with a war me trend pulls of the normal with
upper forties on Saturday and sunny Sunday sunshine upper fifties
(01:03:07):
to maybe some low sixties, so Sunday will be really
nice about the Sunshine ACC Championship tickoff. Temperatures Saturday night
in Charlotte forty degrees, clear, calm, so besides the chill
and falling obviously into the thirties as the game goes on,
no problems and no problems travel wise either wherever you're
traveling from in the southeast. It's not until early next
(01:03:28):
week we get back into the showers and very mild temperatures.
By Tuesday and Wednesday, we could be in the mid sixties. Okay,
see this cold snap this week will be turned around
one hundred and eighty degrees to milder and damp weather
as we get into at least the first couple of
days of next week.
Speaker 1 (01:03:45):
Okay, real quick, who you like?
Speaker 3 (01:03:49):
Well, you know, I like, but I think SMU is
probably gonna win.
Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
Oh okay, all right, yeah, yeah, you know the spread
flipped already on that game, right, It was opened at
Clemson minus two and now it's plus two.
Speaker 4 (01:04:03):
So yeah, I just I they got to put it
all together, and they haven't had a many games where
everything was clicking defense, offense, and I just I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:04:14):
I haven't seen that some of you play, but the
highlights I've seen have been pretty darn good. So we
need our best, but I think we're gonna fall short.
Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
I don't like the over though. Fifty three and a half.
I don't know, man, but yeah, that's a lot. It's
fifty five and a half. I'm sorry, I just misread that.
All right, any talk ten an hour, appreciate it, all right?
Seven forty eight CaCO Day Radio program Phone raisedagic and
your calls coming up next hang on. But they always
do that thing where you know that guy, that time
traveler dude on TikTok, he's got a popular account, just
(01:04:43):
claims to be from the future whatever. He always now
for years he just makes predictions. And so they got
a list of upcoming predictions. And you're not gonna have
to wait too long. One of them, Ross is just
a couple of weeks away, shortly after Christmas. You ready
for this? The rocket the Falcon nine. So when Elon's
rockets block five is sent to space, I think that
(01:05:05):
is when they're gonna send it, right the check but
is met with disaster as it runs into the firmament.
Speaker 5 (01:05:14):
Yes, yes, it's a dome that encloses the flat Earth.
Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
Yeah, that runs into the firmament, and we learned that
the outer space is actually a massive ocean. Many discoveries
we made shortly thereafter, all right, But it does lead
to good things because once they find out find out
they're in a bubble underwater, apparently the world finds peace. Really,
(01:05:47):
you think that's you think that's gonna be unifying. If
people find out that we're in a bubble in a dome,
you think it's gonna be peaceful? Huh? All right, well, yeah,
you got a higher opinion of humans than I do.
Speaker 9 (01:06:02):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:06:02):
And then it'll be revealed shortly after, on February second,
that the aliens are not only here, they've been living amongst us.
And we're gonna find out a bunch of people, you know,
are aliens. Oh, ross, who's the alien at work here?
If that's the case.
Speaker 5 (01:06:15):
I don't think there's no aliens here. I think it's
it's silly to speculate, and I think we should just
drop topic. It just dropped the topic completely there. It's
you know, I'm offended. I just can we just stop
talking about it?
Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
Yeah, there's no aliens here, man, I didn't know there's
there's no aliens here. Sales or back off engineering. Some
of the engineering guys are a little you know, maybe
all right, well we may never know.
Speaker 5 (01:06:35):
We're not an alien.
Speaker 1 (01:06:36):
Bro, I did what? Stop it? I said, that's not
what I said, absurd. Oh there's a bunch more stuff
here too, all right, And it's it's pretty much doom
and gloom after that. But then we figure things out,
all right, real quick, let's grab a call here. Uh, TJ,
what's up? All right? He's probably an alien? And he
(01:06:57):
was like, Oh, they're on to me, Kerry, go right ahead.
Speaker 3 (01:07:00):
Hey man, I just wanted to tell you thank you
for giving me a whole new sensation with that apple
cider story.
Speaker 1 (01:07:07):
You owe me laugh and it's horrible, it's real and
it's crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:07:14):
I wish yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:07:16):
But another thing was I wish they would put Pelosi
in jail and everybody on the January Series committee and
hold accountable for all these news stations that propagated some of.
Speaker 2 (01:07:25):
This out there.
Speaker 1 (01:07:28):
You got to find crimes and uh. And I think
it's interesting when you talk about money, but you know,
if you criminalize all money ways, you got to lock
up Paula Washington. But with Nancy Pelosi, you know, there's
a lot of speculation about uh, the uh, you know,
insider trading kind of stuff, especially with the trains. So
if they if there is in fact a crime, the
problem is is we don't know. I don't know. Find
(01:07:51):
it a coincidence that every time we have Pete on
the whole world's just decided to try to explode in
front of our eyes prior to it. So let's do
this Pete calendar from mid WBT. Let's see the Korea
has almost tried to reunite in the wrong direction. Somebody
assassinated healthcare CEO, which is being lauded, and uh oh yeah,
(01:08:11):
you get a pardon, I get a pardon. Well what's
going on? Man?
Speaker 2 (01:08:16):
I don't know what I did, but it doesn't matter.
If I can get the pardon, then.
Speaker 1 (01:08:19):
Yeah, the window if you're Hunter Biden. And like Sunday,
obviously we found out about the pardon, but like you,
dad had to tell you on Thursday, right over Turkey
at least. Sure, Okay, how Hunter Biden had the restraint
not to go on the most epic bucket list crime
spree of federal crimes in those few those four days
(01:08:40):
is beyond me.
Speaker 2 (01:08:41):
How do you know he didn't.
Speaker 1 (01:08:43):
Because you just got you just got a purge pass. Man,
I don't know yet. I don't think I saw him
in an Arby's in the in a photo, so.
Speaker 2 (01:08:51):
Ware, you don't know. We don't know whether he went
on a crime spree or not.
Speaker 1 (01:08:55):
No, we don't. I'm just saying I would. I would understand,
of course, now he's got a transport the hookers across
state lines before he ods them. But you know, other
than that, just as long as there federal crime so
you're good to go.
Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Yeah, we're gonna have to wait for him to drop
off a laptop someplace again to find out.
Speaker 1 (01:09:12):
I guess, well, if the files are dated in that
eleven year window, you're out of luck. All right. So
I know that nobody on the planet who's intellectually honest
sees this as normal. But the narrative is Biden never lied,
except then when Trump won he went, oh, no, the
bad man's in, so I got to do something, and
(01:09:34):
so he did this to stave it off. So everything's
on the up and up moral high ground achieved. It
still doesn't explain the eleven year very specific thing there.
So he can let's start at the basic he can
do it right, like, legally, he can go ahead and
do it.
Speaker 2 (01:09:51):
This is this is yeah, the president has this kind
of yeah, sweeping authority. Just you know, Jerald Ford did
it for Nixon, albeit from much, you know, for half
of the amount of time period covered. But yeah, you can,
you can totally do it. It's one of the few
king like powers that was vested in the executive by
the founders.
Speaker 1 (01:10:12):
But now we're going to step further, and we have
this discussion now about preemptive pardons. And I'm telling you,
I'm a slippery slope guy. You know, I'm a slippery
slope guy. This is really this is really scary stuff
because what it does it creates a cast system which
already kind of exists. Like we talk about hey, you know,
you guys get away with anything if you're rich or
(01:10:32):
if you're a politician. And but we but we talk
about it in a negative way. This is talking about
it in a positive way. Where so what's to stop
you from pardoning what's the time from taking Keith Olberman's
advice and pardoning every Democrat?
Speaker 4 (01:10:46):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (01:10:47):
And and now you have zero accountability. Even if you
only have one percent of accountability right now, you effectively
have zero at that point, right? Or how dooming gloom?
Do you see this?
Speaker 4 (01:10:59):
Well?
Speaker 1 (01:10:59):
Right?
Speaker 2 (01:11:00):
Because then like this is the quote Banana Republic, Uh,
you know chapter where anybody who wins office they get
to do whatever they want and they can behave terribly,
they can you know, abuse the citizens and then they
just give themselves pardons on the way out and there's
never any kind of accountability. And so if you've got
(01:11:21):
an expectation that sort of develops after this that hey,
we can do these abuses because we're gonna get pardoned
on the way out the door. Then you just encourage
more of that thing, right, because you've incentivized people to
color outside the lines. I mean, I just saw that
Jesse Jackson is asking Biden for pardons of his son,
(01:11:44):
I believe, and so, yeah, like, what's to stop this stuff?
Speaker 1 (01:11:48):
People don't remember his son was what a member?
Speaker 2 (01:11:50):
It was?
Speaker 1 (01:11:51):
He a congressman right when?
Speaker 2 (01:11:52):
Yeah, I think so yeah, and his I guess his
ex daughter in law as well or something. So h
And Honestly, if you like, if you're going to make
the argument that well, Republicans could go after filling the
blank well you could fill that blank in with anybody,
because and here's the thing too, like what if what
if there are people on that list like I saw,
(01:12:13):
you know, they're single. We could just take the the
list of all of the people on the House Unselect Committee,
as Donald Trump calls it on January sixth, Right, take
all of the Democrats and Republicans that were that were
on that panel and just give them blanket pardons. Well,
what if they actually did commit some sort of grievous
or heinous crime during the time period and you just
(01:12:35):
don't know about it at this point, but you've pardoned
them in an attempt to protect them from you know,
a frivolous prosecution, let's say, but you've also now given
them a pardon on something that you would not have
pardoned them.
Speaker 1 (01:12:48):
All around with kids or something. Yeah, no, right, yeah,
I think I used Hastard as the example to make
this point yesterday and here it is a practical application
as a rebuttal. Right, So if if if Biden does that,
why shouldn't why shouldn't Donald Trump say that on day
one he's pardoning all of his cabinet appointees of anything
(01:13:10):
unilatterally because yeah, yes, but just say then it So
it's not worth your time to sit here and wonder
why Pete Hegseeth showed up in uh in uh ranger
panties at the nine to eleven Memorial and leave out
the context that he was there for a fundraiser too,
for you know, a fallen Seals families, right, So it
(01:13:30):
wouldn't be with to be pardoned.
Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
Yes, yeah, he just swam across like the Hudson River
or something as part of the fundraiser.
Speaker 1 (01:13:37):
He swam around the around lady Liberty and then over
to Manhattan. So it was a little longer than that,
Like you and I'd be dead, sorry man.
Speaker 9 (01:13:45):
But.
Speaker 1 (01:13:47):
Yeah, but what's the point now? I can just pardon
And if you're a if you're an incumbent president, you're
wanting to make a change, or you want to appoint somebody,
and you know what he has les preemptively pardon him.
Cauld be so wildly abused, And it's it's a hallmark
of how of the things that this country expressly rejected, Right,
these are the things that we rejected. We looked, well,
(01:14:10):
these old ways of doing anything, where you have a
noble class that can do whatever they want in premac
or your wife on wedding night, Like, we're not going
to do that anymore.
Speaker 2 (01:14:20):
Right, That's exactly right. This was a there is a
disintegration of sort of the class based party system where
Republicans were at least perceived to be the party of
the wealthy business owners and the corporate leaders and all
of that, and the Democrats were for the people. That
has now been obliterated. And like this, to me, it's
(01:14:44):
an example of why people voted for Donald Trump. Once
the permission structure existed, for them to do. So there
is and I mean you look at the I just
saw some data on the confidence in.
Speaker 3 (01:14:58):
Higher education and it's cratered.
Speaker 2 (01:15:01):
I mean nobody, well except like Democrats, and they're only
at about half of percentage of the Democrats. About half
of Democrats have confidence in higher education. I mean, it
is a hollowing out of institutions. But that is what
Marxism does. It's a parasite. It comes into these institutions,
whether it's you know, colleges, or its government or its
(01:15:24):
media or Hollywood or whatever, and they hollow out the institution.
They walk around wearing the institution's credibility as a skin
suit and demand that you genuflect. And people are done
with it. They're tired of it. And that's what we saw.
And so Biden doing this one, I will say there's
some positive I think that comes out of it, which
is that I think some people on the left now
(01:15:46):
are going to be freed up to examine Joe Biden
and his actual legacy in a little bit more of
an honest way because they're going to feel somewhat betrayed
by this, and that yeah. I mean, well, I mean,
if you have some media people that are like, hey,
they lied to us, and they made us look like fools.
(01:16:06):
Joe Biden made me Yeah, well I.
Speaker 1 (01:16:10):
Don't know, but I'm just to piggyback on your point.
I'm after the debate and him looking so bad even
though it was intellectually dishonest, they realized that they couldn't
hide that they themselves were part of this, so they
immediately turned on Democrats for about a week. For about
a week, there was some real honest reporting going on there.
So this is I think you're right. I think this
(01:16:30):
is another example of it, because what do you have
to news right now? Nothing really right.
Speaker 2 (01:16:34):
And it's going to be really difficult for him to
build a Joe Biden presidential library. Yeah, that's one of
the benefits. Also, like, yeah, they're not going to be
able to raise the money from people who just blew
tens of millions of dollars, hundreds of millions of dollars
on Kamala Harris's campaign. They feel lied to, you know,
we found out afterwards. Oh, by the way, all of
(01:16:55):
the internal polling showed her, you know, behind the whole time. Meanwhile,
they were running around telling Democrat donors, oh no, we're
going to win this thing. We just need, you know,
another one hundred million dollars and they feel the trayed.
So the Democrat Party is going to be in a
rough way for a little while, and media people are
at an inflection point, and whether they choose wisely or not,
(01:17:17):
I mean, I do expect them to rediscover, shall we say,
their role as government watchdog under a Trump administration. But
I don't But I don't believe that there's going to
be any kind of long term course correction on this.
Speaker 1 (01:17:31):
We woke up this morning in a world and you
correct me if I'm wrong where I don't know if
somebody will do the polling today. Lord knows, there's enough
bolsters out there. But we woke up in the world
this morning, Pete. Where from a popularity standpoint, the guy
who shot the CEO of the healthcare company is more
popular than the hawk tooy girl who said spit on
(01:17:53):
that thing in a drunken rampage. So the Robin Hood
esque tree of this guy who, by the way, did
you see how they got that photo with no cover
on his face? Do you know why that happened?
Speaker 2 (01:18:05):
Well? Yeah, he was flirting, Yeah, they flirting with.
Speaker 1 (01:18:08):
Yeah, yeah, women make weak legs rock. That's uh, that's
what's going on here. But how creepy is it watching
these people go? You know, because you know what it is.
It's it's eat the rich in action. Correct, That's another
slippery slope.
Speaker 2 (01:18:24):
So well, that's but that's always been That's always the
hallmark of Marxism, right, I mean it is inherently a religion,
a philosophy of envy. Yeah, and so you know, when
when somebody has something or this person works in an
industry that you don't like that, therefore then you can
kill them. Uh. And that's always been part of the
(01:18:47):
Marxist revolutionaries ideology. And I have no doubt this is
a Marxist revolutionary. Apparently now we learn that they took
a bus, a Greyhound bus up from Atlanta, uh and
escaped on a bicycle. And that tells me it's screams leftists,
screams it is. I mean, no self respecting conservative, yeah,
(01:19:08):
would jump on a city share bicycle and ride it off.
Although now I heard that apparently it wasn't one of
the cities.
Speaker 1 (01:19:14):
The city wants to wants you to know, it was
not one of their bikes.
Speaker 2 (01:19:16):
Now one of our bicycles, but.
Speaker 1 (01:19:23):
Lorenz stuff too. I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 (01:19:24):
Oh yeah, I was gonna say the Boston Marathon bombing.
Uh that guy on the cover of Rolling Stone.
Speaker 1 (01:19:30):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:19:32):
So it's the same sort of dynamic and this, I mean,
there are whack jobs all over the place that fall
in love with you know, mass murderers and serial killers.
I mean Ted Bundy got married in court during well
while he was on trial right for raping and murdering
a whole bunch of women.
Speaker 1 (01:19:49):
See Charlie Manson's wife at the end, still twenty five
year old, looks like the same girls he had back
at the ranch. Man. Also, that's why I'm kind of
wondering if that hostile clerk is more or less turned
on that she almost hooked up with this guy. Right,
So yeah, interest question. But you know what it is,
it's school shooter syndrome, right, if this guy gets a
positive reception gunning down the CEO of United health United
(01:20:12):
health Care is, to be specific, the insured. You tell
me there's not a but there's buckets of lunatics on
blue Sky right now who are getting turned on at
the idea that they, oh yeah, they could do that
and that's that's where this gets dangerous and it feels
once again school shooter stuff, you know, right.
Speaker 2 (01:20:32):
It's a social contagion, right once you give the permission
structure for how how you know this looks once people
see it. There's also a thing called the preference cascade,
right where where sort of like in a riot, where
somebody like you and I are out of protests and
my number is zero, so I don't need to see
somebody else pick up a brick and throw it through
(01:20:53):
a window. I'm just going to do that because my
number is zero, but your number maybe one. And once
you see me do it, now you're going to do it.
And then somebody else a numbers too, And so that's
how these things they get out of control very quickly
at a societal level but also the personal level. And
so when you see these types of attacks and then
they get the reception that we are seeing, then you're
(01:21:15):
going to have more people who are encouraged by that,
and then you're going to end up with more violence.
And then of course people are going to be complaining
about gun laws, got to take the guns away and
all of this, because we're going to have more you know,
gun crime but I don't know, and I saw what happened.
You see what's going on in Canada. They're going to
list the whole like three hundred and something more guns
(01:21:37):
that they're going to quote buy back, yes, send them
to Ukraine.
Speaker 3 (01:21:42):
Well that guy.
Speaker 2 (01:21:43):
Did you see the guy who got up there and
made that speech or made the announcement?
Speaker 1 (01:21:47):
No, I just read about it this morning, So okay.
Speaker 2 (01:21:50):
Well, if you get a chance to check the video,
I swear he's wearing makeup. He's got like eyeliner going
and blush. Yeah. I don't get it.
Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
I don't know. The whole canad of things weird because
it feels like all all of the Canada discussion has
been predicated on a stupid meme joke and that we
then people were doing like they were doing, like analysis
if if Canada came in, what the electoral college would
look like and then they found out Trump was still
would have won, right if there's the voting patterns held
the same based on demos, So like people are putting
(01:22:19):
a lot of work into it, all right, One quick question,
it's a pretty important topic. Is I can't every day
I wake up and I can't I fail to understand
why we can't get an emergency you thought the use
authorization if you want to call it that for these
tiny homes out there, and that absolute lunatic County commissioner,
(01:22:40):
plus what we're still seeing out in western North Carolina.
Do you think there's been any increase we got about
a minute and a half, have been any increase in
people actually trying to take this seriously at a governmental
level to hold them accountable, because I don't know about that.
Speaker 2 (01:22:54):
I have not seen it. I have not seen any
kind of pressure applied to either the governor the incoming
governor legislative leaders about lifting some of the regulations and
building code restrictions to allow for these temporary shelters because
which are, yes there. They're not better than a you know,
a full home, but they're better than a freaking tent,
(01:23:17):
you know. And this idea that oh, you're going to
freeze to death or be attacked by a bear because
all of your food is being stored in your tent, like, oh,
that's what you have to die that way because you know,
we're trying to look out for your safety and there's
no bathroom in your in your shed, your insulated shed,
tiny shelter. It's just ludicrous.
Speaker 1 (01:23:37):
It's ludicratic. And by the way, there's another story. We
don't have time to get into it. It's I'll tell
them off the air. But this the two hundred dollars
window versus the fifteen thousand dollars hotel room story. Just
waiting for it. It's coming up. Look, Pete knows he's laughing,
but it's not a happy laugh. All right, we got
a roll man, Thank you very much, appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (01:23:54):
All right, I have a good weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
I had a time when we're deconstructing people's lives and
lying about him. But they're like, oh, he's always drunk
at work. Oh he drank a guinness on New Year
or on Saint Patti's Day. Huh, okay uh and hegzath
is he be smirched nine to eleven victims by showing
up in his underwear. Oh he was literally in the
middle of a fundraiser for dead soldiers families and he
(01:24:16):
just literally swum a swam, swam, swam, swam around Lady
Liberty and all the way back to Manhattan, which is
a little bit of a distance. He used to look
it up. But you're willing to do that, And yet
I'm greeted this morning with an article about how awesome
Amberhard is because she's raising two kids on her own
and she's and you know, we should take advice from her.
(01:24:40):
I can never look at Amberhard and not go Isn't
that the chick who pooped in Johnny Depp's bed?
Speaker 5 (01:24:44):
Yeah? No, that's her legacy now completely like she was
in the latest Aquaman movie. Yeah, kind of the cut
her towent her time down significantly because she, you know,
she has this bad area around her now. And as
soon as she came on the screen, well, both market
and I really get off the screen.
Speaker 1 (01:25:00):
Yeah, go away and hold on, hold on. Do you
want me to say this article so you guys can
get some parenting advice or do you want something? And
I think here's here's your first piece of advice. Don't
poop on your kids anyway? That should be chapter one, right, Yeah,
well it shouldn't have to be, but in this case
it is. So you guys want some advice.
Speaker 5 (01:25:20):
No, I just don't understand that you can screw something
like that up, because pretty much everything you hear about
Johnny Depp is he's like a cool dude to hang
out with, just to hang it, Like, like what they
get mad.
Speaker 1 (01:25:27):
At Depp with the Trump? What was the thing they
got mad at Depp over? Oh he made that he
made a joke about, uh, the Lincoln assassination and reporter.
Speaker 5 (01:25:36):
Right, Well, I mean, if you want politics, a sure
one thing. But I'm saying he seemed like and like
that he's beating women or something. It's just stupid. It
all turned out to be bull crab.
Speaker 1 (01:25:47):
I don't think the poop was I that.
Speaker 5 (01:25:49):
Wasn't that was real? Like she did that? She did that.
Speaker 1 (01:25:53):
I'm sure your kids will be absolutely normal, like most
Hollywood kids are, right, Like Charlie, it's their own who
was able to go and adopt multiple kids from various
different African countries and yet each of them are all transgender.
Did you know that? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:26:08):
I think the athletic kids are like that too, right, Yeah,
like ben afflets kids.
Speaker 1 (01:26:14):
So I don't know. It's but not with her or
her as easy. Just you're the one who did that
in the bed and you're a lunatic. So I'm not
going to take parenting advice. I don't even have kids,
and I feel like it could be damaging for me.
All right, really, are you guys still on this? I
don't care? All right, So whatever, Bill Belichick got interviewed
(01:26:34):
to maybe be the coach over a UNC. Here's the deal.
Here's the deal. All of you Patriots fans that are
just so excited this morning Bill belichick personality last ten
seconds on un seats campus, can we agree on this? Hell,
that's probably a compliment for him, and I don't hand
many of those out. Bill Belichick couldn't operate in a
(01:26:55):
butt hurt university society. He'd be walking, he'd be walking
across campus over the fieldhouse over there or whatever, right,
and there'd be some one of these Free Palestine protesters
gets up in his way. How do you think that goes?
Speaker 5 (01:27:13):
Yeah, I don't know much about his politics, but he
always seems like more of like a conservative guy. But
that's just speculation. But I read it last night and
I'm like, there's no way he'd last on a college campus.
Speaker 1 (01:27:22):
Something. He'd say something and they'd be like, you need
to apologize that was a microaggression, and he would he
just leave. He'd just leave, maybe shopping for a new girlfriend.
And by the way, even at a time, well, hey,
you know right in the window. I M I don't
begrudge him that whatever people are like, oh it is weird.
(01:27:43):
I just feel bad for the dude because he got
he got like drug into posting Instagram photos and he's
clearly given up. That being said, going back to my
my little scenario there, and it's also if it was
some pro Palestinian protester, like that's a person who needs
more to take a look at their life. I don't
know if you guys are aware of the motivation of
(01:28:05):
that horrific school shooting that happened the other day, which
I thought was funny because right after it happened, Washington
Post and others are running like why does nobody want
to talk about the continued murder and that? And now
they're just quiet about it. You know why, because that
dude who decided he was going to go shoot two
kindergarten students and then himself did so because of the
(01:28:26):
Palestine thing. So he went there and he went, ah,
the Jews are committing you know, genocide in Gaza. I
need to have my voice heard. I don't want to
glue myself to anything. Hey, what if I go murder kindergarteners?
(01:28:48):
I don't see that everywhere. I were running it on Fox.
I heard they're running it, But like, why is that
not a bigger story? Oh well that does That's not
the whole group there, No, it's probably people. Most people,
even people who are little lunatics camping on Columbia's campus,
wouldn't murder kindergarten students. That being said, they did. This guy.
(01:29:11):
This guy literally was a quote unquote ally he was
at some he went to some events, and don't get
me wrong, he'd had some arrests. They said, some of
it having to do with protesting, and he had mental
health issues to the extent that that informed that. I
would argue anyone sitting there at Columbia and acting like
(01:29:31):
all of those students did, or at UCLA or whatever,
openly talking about how anti Semitic they can be, and
you would have to wonder if they're all suffering from
a mental illness. That being said, he went and shot
two kids over this. And I promise you if some guy,
regardless of mental health history or whatever, walked into a
preschool today and started murdering kids or attempting to murder kids,
(01:29:55):
and he was doing so because he was mad over
and then pick whatever tr position is. There would be
no other stories today. They'd probably impeached the guy now
for existing. This guy shot up a kindergarten because of
the US's foreign policy, and specifically Biden's policy. This is
(01:30:18):
what he wrote, Biden's policy on how we're dealing with
you know, everything going on in Israel. That's terrifying, man.
And we're shooting CEOs and people are celebrating it. That's
pretty terrifying. We're issuing blanket pardons. All that stuff has
has pretty Some of it's immediately terrifying, and some of
(01:30:38):
it's going to be much worse, much further down the road.
And in it all swipes at what we do. There's
a reason that we, as I told Pete, have rejected
a lot of things, and we and we and then
we reject them as we grow too. Right, So initially
we launched this country and we reject things like having
a a serfdom class and a lord class, which was
(01:31:00):
a hallmark to this day of Europe in most places,
most places continue to have classism, even if it's kind
of unspoken other but we rejected that, and we've rejected
variations of it, and then we rejected. We didn't initially
reject slavery, but a lot of people wanted to, and
then we did. And to the credit of the British Empire,
(01:31:21):
they they also at that same time decided we're not
going to have this anymore, and real American and British
treasure and blood was spent in attempting to steymy the
slave trade that never gets talked about. But you know,
we have a history of looking at things that are
going on, some crazier than others. Do you know what
(01:31:41):
happened russ Do you know what happened when the British
took control of India? Do you know one of the
first things they did. I don't remember the name of
this practice, but I remember what it is. Do you
don't know what the first things that the British did
when they gained control of India because it was a problem.
It was a tradition that was going on and they're like,
we're not going to do this anymore. So in India
at the time, and it wasn't the totality of India,
(01:32:04):
but it was one of the main areas when when
you would die as a man. All right, so let's
say Ross, you let's say you bit the bullet today. Okay, never,
never gonna happen, but okay, all right, but but hold on,
it's gonna get a lot worse for your wife. Oh
get ray, but ran hold there, all right. So let's
say that Ross eats a tainted leftover Thanksgiving turkey sandwich
(01:32:27):
and that's all she wrote. We would all be very sad,
but your wife would be the saddest, and not just
because she's mourning you, but because, according to Indian practice
at the time, they're going to burn your body and
she's getting burned with you. Oh my god, that was
the thing. What yeah, not okay with that, right, that
(01:32:47):
was the thing. And the British showed up and they're like,
we need you to stop.
Speaker 5 (01:32:50):
Wait wait wait So so the dude would die, yes,
and then the woman who was still.
Speaker 1 (01:32:57):
Alive, well for that for a moment, he would burn
when you're alive next to her husband's body. Yeah, on
one big.
Speaker 5 (01:33:02):
Thing, and they would send them down the Ganges or whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:33:05):
Uh I think they use pires more than yeah whatever.
Speaker 5 (01:33:10):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that sounds awful.
Speaker 1 (01:33:12):
But it also sounds like a good incentive for your
wife to cook healthy for you.
Speaker 5 (01:33:17):
That's a good point.
Speaker 1 (01:33:20):
Make sure you're right, sure your feet are round, keep
me happy, Yeah, cause if I die, you'd be sitting dude.
It's like, it's like, if you're sitting there one day,
you guys are in a fight, just pick up a gun,
hold it to your head, be like, what're you gonna do?
What you gonna do? It's like that. Yeah, that was
the thing. And then we got there, or the British
got there, and they're like, yeah, we're not gonna do
this anymore. We're gonna we're gonna not burn all the widows,
(01:33:42):
so let's stop it. We reject things, crazy things, but
also not so crazy things, or but then we have
short memories and uh, that's unfortunate. We look to the
things that we rejected here as the creation of a nation.
We're like, now we're good to go, while over in
India they're just mad they can't burn the widows anymore.
(01:34:03):
Any who, it's eight forty five or a stagic from
the Weather Channel joining us. What's going on, sir.
Speaker 3 (01:34:09):
I'm much just looking forward to warming trend. Cold morning. Yeah,
well even got some wind chill this morning in the
single digits off to the west and in the mountains.
He's seen some single numbers from the higher elevation seen
a seven and a nine now closer in Tria Triangle,
basically in the upper teams to low to mid twenties,
but it's going to be a chilli day with a
(01:34:30):
breeze and most of us in the upper thirties to
low forties. But as I said, a good looking day today,
upper teams, low twenties, and then we'll start the warm
up over the weekend. Saturday sun around fifty and then
on Sunday will be close to sixties. So it's going
to be upper forties to near fifties Saturday, upper fifties
to low sixties Sunday, and again good looking days until
(01:34:50):
we start to get some precip in here. But it
will be warm enough and actually pretty warm early next
week for rain showers. By Tuesday, KC could see temperatures
well into the sixties in some spots. So it looks
like we do flip it around early next week, go
from cold and dry to mild and maybe a little
bit damp too, so a terrible no big rain coming in,
but certainly a little wet weather for the early and
(01:35:12):
maybe middle part of next week.
Speaker 1 (01:35:14):
Yeah, Well, thank you, sir, appreciate it. We'll yeah tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (01:35:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:35:18):
Ross. So if anybody is weirdo and wants to learn
more about that thing I just told you. From India,
it's called sati sati. And by the way, the first
governor of India the British governor, because initially he's like, no,
you need to stop murning widows, and they came to
like but it's our tradition, and he's quoted as saying, well,
tradition in our country is that when a man murders
(01:35:41):
a woman like that, we hang him from his neck
until he's dead. So feel free to continue your tradition.
We'll continue ours, and then they stop doing it. So
there you go, you learn something, we'll be back.
Speaker 19 (01:35:51):
Well, good morning, Casey.
Speaker 3 (01:35:53):
There was a bigger than.
Speaker 19 (01:35:54):
Expected rebound and job growth last month. A labor department
just reported two hundred and twenty seven thousand workers were
added to payrolls in November. The nation's unemployment rate ticked
up a tenth of a percentage point four point two percent.
Economists thought the rate but old steady. General feeling on
Wall Street is there's nothing in this report to argue
(01:36:14):
against another interest rate cut this month. Now the focus
will be shifting to the inflation reports that come out
next week. Stock market future is a little bit higher
right across the board ahead of the Friday session. Now,
futures are up thirty one points. Sales of beauty products
and intimate apparel were strong at the start of the
holiday shopping season. All to Beauty and Victoria's Secret both
(01:36:36):
posted better than expected quarterly results after the markets closed yesterday.
McDonald's getting the word out letting everyone know it's food
is safe and an e Coali.
Speaker 11 (01:36:46):
Scare is over.
Speaker 19 (01:36:47):
McDonald's US president Joe Erlinger told Bloomberg News some customers
pulled back after an e Coali outbreak was disclosed in
late October. He said the fast food giant is testing
different messages, offers, and deals to reach out to customers
who have yet to come back. And Casey, this year's
political donations by Elon Musk totaled at least two hundred
(01:37:09):
and seventy four million dollars. The world's richest man became
America's biggest political donor in twenty twenty four.
Speaker 1 (01:37:16):
Casey, all right, thank you, Jeff, appreciate it. We'll talk tomorrow.
Or we'll talk Monday. I think of that.
Speaker 19 (01:37:22):
All right, You have a good weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:37:23):
Take care, are you too? All right?
Speaker 2 (01:37:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:37:26):
And Ross and I work two more weeks and then vacation.
All right, Jen, what's up?
Speaker 15 (01:37:32):
I wanted to let you know that the day before Thanksgiving,
I called the Governor's office and I asked them about
what his stance was about the tiny houses.
Speaker 20 (01:37:43):
They told me that it is a local matter, they
have nothing to do with it, and then it was
because of the floodplane. I told them that it's not
what FEMA definition of the Floodplaine was due to the
one hundred year flood.
Speaker 16 (01:37:58):
I've worked for FEMA, I've worked for the US military,
I've done DISCA, and I just recently did my FEMA
certificate this summer. I was hung up on. I was
very nice to the woman. I didn't cry, I didn't shout,
I didn't cuss. She hung up on me, and then
when I called back two hours later, it went straight
(01:38:19):
to voicemail.
Speaker 1 (01:38:20):
I just say, I'm not surprised. You're about the fourth
person right around that window who's told me the same
story and the idea that state building codes, which that
local county commissioner out West, who we talked about last week,
is relying on aren't a state matter. I'm having a
lot of trouble on that one. Jen, thank you very
very much for the call and to again, I like
(01:38:42):
four or five people have done or told me that
that's exactly what they've done, and that's the response that
they ended up with