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September 9, 2024 • 93 mins
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You watch the Minnesota Vikings this year. They are going
to dominate. Ross gets sick of it. He's a Bills fan.
Others do. I don't have a lot of Vikings fans
surrounding me. But that's okay. I'm willing to I'm willing
to back the purple. There and lo and behold what happened?
They handed out an apple? Absolute ass kicking, that's what

(00:20):
they did. Made the Ross. Would you check on a
map and see, uh, which is more populous Minnesota or
New York? Ross is gonna check that. So I'm putting
it through this system. It says in New York, New York, Wow,
they have a lot more h No, hold on just
New York City because the Bills basically are the state's team,

(00:41):
right you guys are you guys are because you're the
only team in New York?

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Right there?

Speaker 3 (00:47):
Say that they are the only team in New York.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
Yes, yeah, so so other than New York City and
half of New York City. Yeah that's so. I'm not
being unfair. So is half of New York?

Speaker 2 (00:59):
It is?

Speaker 1 (01:00):
Okay, all right, but you're the Minneapolis Okay, wow, how
that happened? They're giants? So no, seriously though, like the
amount of Vikings fans that I do, like see on
the Twitter and whatnot. They're like, do it's gonna be
our year? Like that, because they're still they're still remembering
two years ago when the Giants beat us in the playoffs,

(01:21):
like we were a JV football team and they did,
but tone it down. Everyone on our team is dead.
I don't know how that happened. The way that happened
is the Giants are dog crap. Meanwhile, the other the
actual New York team. I'm watching their quarterback. He's levitating

(01:45):
throwing passes and did you see that picture they got
of him? But they were running.

Speaker 3 (01:49):
So here's the thing. Yeah, this is where I am
this year. Okay, okay, most year for the most of
my life. I watch all the games, and they lost,
and then my strategy went to.

Speaker 1 (01:59):
It didn't lose all of them, they just lost the
big ones.

Speaker 3 (02:01):
So the strategy move too. I'm not going to watch
the game. I'm not going to pay attention to the game.
I watched the highlights afterwards and then we'll win. And
that here's my strategy this year. I'm not paying any attention.
I'm not watching any highlights and I'm not talking about
it or posting about it period.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Well, you have to mention on this show, but you
can be passive about it completely. I'm not posting it,
I'm not talking about it, I'm not watching its. How
does he do? How does he levitate? You don't have
to talk about it. So it's going to be I will.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
Be a bandwagon for you to support you a Vikings
fan this year.

Speaker 1 (02:41):
But when I'm not doing it, we're doomed. We're doomed.
That was the worst thing that could have happened, you
know why, because then when we actually play a good team,
and again I hope I'm wrong, either a bunch of
people are like, oh, we were misled, No, you weren't.
You played a really bad team and and and dudes

(03:02):
came out and functioned. This is kind of like a
hallmark of the Vikings, like where you know, remember we
brought paston not in there, and we brought the dudies
like he's a rocket scientist and he looked amazing for
about a game and a half, and then eh, Bryce Young,
is that ever gonna work out? That was tough to

(03:26):
watch yesterday. I wanted to be good. I want Panthers
fans to be happy until the playoffs. Other than that,
you know, and then it's you know, then NFC on
NFC violence. It's fine. I know, y'all, same way. It's
good to see we keep giving Germany our best though,
you know that. Okay, that's yeah, that's what I might

(03:48):
look at it. So, uh, dude, tell you what, man,
if you're the coach of the Panthers, do you rent
her own? That was a question that occurred to me.
Got to be a renter, right, But then, like, doesn't
that that's one of those things that would indicate to
your boss that you're not serious about this, and then

(04:11):
he throws a drink at you. You can't win, man,
you absolutely can't win. So there you go. Would it
help if you called your team by like, you know,
don't say their name.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
No.

Speaker 1 (04:26):
I've decided though, I'm really tired of my happiness depending
on a football team that I've never met. I've never
been to Buffalo. Like, I'm just tired of my entire
weekend hanging in the balance of how a football team,
and I'm going to avoid that and focus on my happiness.
I have to, yeah, for my own mental well being,
well no, no, no, but I never I never thought you
should and and I never thought that people who make

(04:48):
it all about their identity. I can't help it though.
It's just the way my brain works.

Speaker 3 (04:51):
Like I watch and I am a competitive person and
I sit there on a Sunday and it's it's just
I'm just wrecked mentally because i want the team to
win so bad and I've got to step away from
that because it's so unhealthy.

Speaker 1 (05:05):
It's so unhealthy. You should try bandwaggony, man, I hear
it's what I'm saying. Yeah, I will support you in
the air for the viting, not me, just whomever, whomever
every week, whoever's leading. You should wear that jersey And yeah,
I don't understand that that mentality and just how people
do that.

Speaker 4 (05:22):
Just I should just.

Speaker 1 (05:24):
Get that, Oh look at that the you know the
what have the Seahawks or the top of the NFC.
Oh ross roll, you got a Seahawks jersey. I've seriously
been thinking about it, and it's like my time here
is so limited, and I'm spending it on the weekends,
like some of my only free time completely nervous wreck
and it sucks that I don't want to do it
this year, step it away. Okay, all right, Now that

(05:47):
I do that, this will be the year that they
win it all. And then every year after that you
will be so paranoid that if you don't repeat the
process exactly, it's your fault that they Oh man, all
look at that. We got some Boston. Boston. Paul's already
in here. Okay, yeah, I saw the Cowboys. He's not

(06:10):
Raised not here today? Right, I think he's not here.
I didn't even have even checked out. I don't it's
Jeff mar today. Oh it's Jeff Barr. Do you think
he wants to have a lively discussion about football for
you know, twice? Maybe I don't know. We'll find out. Yeah,
Raised not here, because I'm sure he is absolutely his

(06:33):
his liver. It's recovering. So you could watch the Coboys
game yesterday and uh so we'll but we'll remember, we'll
remember to chat with him.

Speaker 3 (06:43):
Give me meat about Dak Prescott being the most the
highest paid player in the NFL ever, because that makes sense.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
Yeah, I mean, uh, he's gonna be abnoxious. You know,
if if nonough of us could get together, I think
it'd be really fun to pretend that we've never heard
of the Cowboys and when that's not a team and
it's the multiverse. But that's gonna take a heavy lift.
But it would be fun watching a Cowboys fan think

(07:14):
for a second his team doesn't exist and his whole
life has been constructed around a farce. But I do
know that we have that kind of time, all right,
coming up on the show stuff and then some other stuff. Okay,
we had stuff about stuff. We got news about stuff,
some fun discussions about stuff. We got the ap being
a complete bastard when it comes to this story on

(07:36):
ABC eleven. Oh damn. Stuff some stuff there anyway, we'll
get into that. I'll give you a rest of the
rundown here on the CaCO Day Vikings Win It All
National Championship radio program. Hang on, it probably picked up
on I sound a little different today. That's cuz I

(07:57):
met our Greensboro studios and if you remember, they we
built brand new studios in High Point right downtown right
about the stadium here, and then they get a food
hall and all that. It's great location, uh for if
you you know, if you got if you got to
work someplace, this is it's a fantastic location. But we

(08:20):
got brand new studio. I got new boards and monitors
and ross. If you saw this thing, he'd probably quit
considering what we have in the Raleigh studios. You'd You're like, no, no, no, no,
I want for this. You know they want to move
my studio down the hall. Yeah where were they talking
about it? To partition off the where they'll because we're

(08:40):
moving him back right, they want to put me in
the rock studio in the morning. Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
And I'm so against it. And I told Matt our
engineer there in Greensboro, who's who told me they want
to do this, And he thought I was gonna be
like super excited, like you just said, and I was.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
Like, no, I love my old board. I like the
old anial like this I've used. Listen, this board is
a same sort of board I used over at g
in two thousand and like six, like, I've used this
board every day, and I've worked from two thousand like
to like eighteen years. You just want your stuff to
function in the way that it is at all the time.

(09:14):
I don't need to be on the on the enterprise.
I don't need to be on the bridge. I'm very
comfortable and you know how I am. I hate change
and this is I'm very comfortable in this studio with
this board. So how do I sound? How does it sound?
On the air?

Speaker 3 (09:26):
You sound fantastic and the headphones for someone saying you
sound like super filtered. But I think it's just like
a headphone thing.

Speaker 1 (09:32):
Okay, Well I don't know, but I here's what I
do know. And I've forgotten about it until I strolled
in this morning, and I've been losing my crap. They
have the left handed mice in here. Still, I'm sorry?
Did we not address this problem last time I was here?
And and shame the person on the air repeatedively. So

(09:53):
for those of you who don't know, you can reverse
the buttons on your mice, your computer mice. Say in mice,
isn't it mouse? That always confused from me? Because there's
because there's because there's two of them. Okay, yeah, so
on your mouse, I guess I could say it either way.
But yeah, I'm staring at two of these, so I say, mice.
But point being point bean, you reverse the buttons. Now

(10:16):
what you're thinking? You're like, why would you reverse the buttons?
That sounds insane? And you are correct there's no reason.
And then I asked the person who happens to be
the program director for the station who uses the Greensboro
studio primarily because obviously this is uh, you know, I
visit here, you know, every couple months or whatever. And

(10:40):
he's like, he's like, it's because I'm left handed. I
have to reverse them. And I immediately immediately contact Ross,
who I don't know if you guys know this left handed,
and I'm like, you guys, reverse your your mouse button. Now,
you guys are so weird.

Speaker 3 (10:58):
And we brought to to the audience as well as
social media, and it's myself and this is complete. That's
not a thing, and that is lunacy in his part.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
Yeah, yeah, what you're saying, you want to know what
it's like to try to use reverse mice on our
mouse and you've never done it. Imagine you are, you're
a ute youth ute growing up on I don't know,
North Sentinel Island, right, you know, the one with the
amazing border control over there in the Indian andyan Cea

(11:29):
right where they're like nobody can go there, and then
once every fifty years somebody does and they sling arrows
in them all right, So that's you. You have nothing.
You're an uncontacted lost tribe, and somehow here they cut
and they grab you and they take you to civilization.
They sit you down here in the enterprise where I'm sitting,
and they're like, here's a computer. Have fun. That's what

(11:52):
you would look like. That dude from North Sentinel Island.
They just sat in front of Windows eleven and it
was like, all right, I do a report or something.
Here you go any TPS reports. Chop chop. That's what
you would look like trying to for it. And that's
what I look like in the morning, trying to use
this thing on talking because I've trained my brain to

(12:14):
be able to do things, literally, do things while I'm
talking to you that would be very distracting, and you
know to most people, because you just do it in
the same way that there's adaptive things that you do
within your job where you could kind of do it
through muscle memory. And so when I'm sitting here talking
to you right now, I'm also opening this I'm kind

(12:35):
of scanning my clocks.

Speaker 3 (12:37):
This is something that you've done forever a certain way,
and you now now you just go an autopilot and
it's like a subconscious thing. So it's going to completely
mess you up. Imagine if you got in your car
today on the way home or you're going to work,
and the steering pedals no, no, the steering wheel was inverted.
Imagine if when you went left it turned right and
right eternally. You'd be in an accident every two seconds.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
Yeah, you'd murder all the best the kids of the
bust up. Yeah it's it, and yeah, that's it, because
even though you've been told exactly what it does, you're like, hey,
this car is special. Oh really, what's it? You got
a spoiler? What is it? It's everything is a reverse.
Oh it goes reverse. No no, no, no, no, it's
just you're gonna love it. You'd be out of your

(13:19):
damn mind. I'm sitting here talking and I'm trying to
flip over to check call screener. I'm trying to figure
out how much time into the break I'm gonna have
enough time to uh do the full rundown or even
get to this story. And it's like I just and
then I get distracted, distracted, Uh us constitute all right,

(13:43):
so check this out. I'll just give you the I'll
give you the rundown here because I thought it was
pretty cool. And somebody said, one of the news guy Kyle,
said this to me, signed US Constitution copy found in
North Carolina filing cabinet being auctioned for millions. That's a

(14:05):
flex piece if I've ever seen one. Do you imagine
you's like, oh, why do we head into the what
do we head into this study?

Speaker 5 (14:13):
Right?

Speaker 1 (14:13):
Because you've got to have a study. You're gonna have
one of these.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
And you go in.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
It's one of those big mahogany rooms with the leather
couches and the cigar humidor and you know, the glass
bottles of unlabeled glass bottles of you know, crystal bottles
of liquor, and you sit down with your buddies and
you're like, yeah, that's a that's a that's a zebra
that I killed over in the in Africa. And you
just know how pretentious you are because you have it.

(14:39):
You called it a zebra, all right, So I'll get
to you in a moment. Hold on, sir, uh yeah,
And they're like, oh, what's that over there, bill? That's
an autographed copy of the Constitution, and how did that
work back in the day? Did you have to go
stand in line where the players walk out? How did

(15:02):
you have to go to a card show you? How
did you collect them all? I suppose you could show
up at the well, not at the White House because
it didn't exist, but you could show up. That's the
craziest story man about the White House back in the day, Russ.
You ever read about when the White House first opened up?
That anyone could show up and people would show up. Yeah,

(15:22):
I need to talk to John Tyler real quick. They're like,
can you wait like thirty minutes. Absolutely, I'm gonna have
to arse in this studio and we're gonna rebuild. There's
no other option. I mean, I guess maybe if I
broadcast here every day, the Greensborough Studio, I'd get used
to it. But why should I have to? I'm old
and curmudgeonly ish. All right, So we had a little

(15:45):
football thing there. I'm gonna get to you the rest
of this nice friendly there's a cool little constitution story, right,
cool little Constitution story. Everyone's enjoying themselves. There's no there's
no reason to do the thing you always have to do.
There's no reason. There is a copy and it may
be the most expensive. When it's all said and done,

(16:07):
it may be the most expensive copy of the Constitution
sold in uh from private hands to private hands because
of the quality of it. And they just found it
in a filing cabinet in like Ashville or something. It's
been sitting I mean, it has obviously been sitting in
that filing cabinet, but it's been sitting there for a
long damn time. And uh it, uh it, you know

(16:33):
it is gonna sit there and probably fail at least
a million and I think that's the minimum bit already met. Now, uh,
the the person who's signed it say it's signed, I
don't mean like, oh, look at that. It's got everyone's signature,
and it's specifically you know, ink to or ink to paper.
These are copies. It's obviously not one that has the

(16:55):
all of the signatures. However, when they say a signed copy,
they mean that Charles Tomsen, the Secretary, signed it so
as to indicate that it was official. So it is
it is official in that sense that there are eight
of them. I think there's eight. Hold on the get
of the story. Yeah, eight, uh seven are publicly owned

(17:20):
publicly so museums things like that. This is the only
private one. So how cool is that? Ross? You like
that stuff, right? You like history? That's pretty cool.

Speaker 6 (17:27):
Huh.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
Can you imagine? Can you imagine walking into your house
and right next to the stars, trek, dude, pet and
a cat? Is the is one? Is the only is
the only privately held signed constitution copy. We're gonna talk
about a conversation piece. Holy crap, man, you gotta get
all you'd have to get like a laser field. People
have to dance, so you're gonna want to go all out.

(17:51):
So let me continue the story. Since we're all having
a good time, and for history nerds, we think this
is pretty cool. And for all of you who watch
the Pickers shows and Antique road Show and all that
this is gonna be you gotta think this is amazing.
This is this is your xanadu here. But we can't

(18:12):
just enjoy ourselves. We can't have conversations about these things
because of this. Thompson likely signed two copies of each
of the original thirteen states, or for each of the
original thirteen states, essentially certifying them they were spent to

(18:37):
they were sent to special ratifying conventions. Were representatives all
white and male, wrangled for months before accepting the structure
of the US government. Why why did you put that
in there? Well, but it's but that's true, Yes, it
is true. How is it remotely relevant to this story?

(18:58):
How is it remotely This is why everyone hates you.
This is why we make fun of you. This is
why the word moonbat exists. Because you can't help yourselves.
It's a sickness. It's an illness. You are the ones
with a problem, because it's not that people, you guys
are denying history. No, we're not. I am perfectly aware
of who was in that room. There's a picture. There's

(19:22):
a picture. It's unambiguous. Although to be fair, so you
know the dress and the hairstyles of the day. I yeah,
they're not as they're not as manly as as some
would like. But that being said, that was that. But
they we got it.

Speaker 3 (19:43):
You remember how we were talking the last week about
like woken entertainment, right, and like what is the definition
of it? We're talking about how like you have like
a perfect story out of nowhere. It slams you over
the head, right, it's the message, it's the political it
has nothing to time story, and it completely ruins the
narrative or whatever you're trying to the story you're trying
to tell.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
It's the same thing here, like it has nothing to
do with it. And you're like, oh, but did you know?
And you're like, oh my, you're insufferable. Shut up. It's
not about who was there. It's the story is about this,
did you are there? And are there people out there?

Speaker 6 (20:13):
Russ?

Speaker 1 (20:14):
Do you did you at one point think that the
room was filled with Chinese dudes or you know, and
then like or the Native Americans did it? Or you
know it was some dude from Mexico or it was
the un No, because you've seen the damn thing that
turns into the meme every time. And I think Elon
Musk posted this damn meme yesterday and it's the one

(20:35):
that goes and they're gonna get to say whatever they want,
and then one of the other guys goes, oh, we
should should we give them guns? And then another dude's like,
oh my gosh, this country's gonna be lit. You've seen
that meme, right, yeah, I've seen that one. Yet white dudes, right,
a lot of white dudes in that they're not hiding anything,
but none of it matters. For the purpose of this,
Can we just can we just have this for a

(20:57):
moment without you having a all white and males wrangled
for months. Well, I'd say it worked out pretty good
for you white women too. Huh. I'd say that worked
out pretty good. And frankly, I'd argue that it worked
out pretty good for most everybody. I yeah, is that

(21:18):
a controversial statement. If it is, you all should get
out and travel some do a little traveling. And I
don't mean go to Canada, this your cousin or to
Cankun and stay in the all inclusive. You need to
get out. You need to get out and go some
explore some stuff. You need to be. You need to

(21:39):
be in a part of the world where you go
for just for a moment ago this exists. This is awful,
this is horrible. That'll let the compassion kick in, Let
the uh, I don't you know whatever guides you, but
also so that you can you can understand what it
looks like to and even though everything's crazy to have

(22:01):
your crap together and not have your crap together, and
it is perfectly logical to talk about how you got
there and what it meant. But you know nothing when
somebody starts telling me how awful the US is versus
other places, and they haven't visited other places. I don't

(22:22):
count your opinion because you don't know, and you know,
and with the with the US, it's perfectly reasonable to
sit there and talk about various elements of history and
how it shaped it, and yes, things that were done incorrectly.

(22:42):
You're not talking about that. You're talking about some person
who's opening a cabinet looking for insurance documents, like what
is this? It's a signed copy of the Constitution. It's
a one of eight and you had to jam that
in there. But they're acting like it was some sort

(23:04):
of colossal failure, like the US Constitution is one of
the other. That's my point, that's my point. Yeah, he
did a pretty damn good job. Yeah, how's the Venezuelan
constitution hold it up right? Because they have one of
those I don't know if you know this. They have
a constitution and everything is that. Does that work it
out for them? We're gonna tell you what. We'll check
in on Venezuela. We'll get back to you. Okay, hold on,

(23:26):
I guess i'na football homers want to talk trash in
my inbox. Let me get to this. Oh wait, hold on, Boston, Paul.
If you can't drive the way Ross said, you'd never
be able to drive the rear of a hook and
ladder fire truck. I guess I won't. That's one of

(23:47):
those things where like you think it's like something you
want to do. Like it's like Kramer and Seinfeld when
he's in the back and he's like, whoa, I'm driving
the fire truck. But Marky and I recently saw we
were driving, like to go pick up something or other,
and we saw one of those go by and it
like went under the little bridge there in WAK four.
It took a write by the seminary, and we both
looked at each other and be like, we would murder everyone. Yeah,
but you know efficiently you could do it too. That's sideways. Yeah, yeah,

(24:11):
you're right, bosited Paul in this very very rare what
off circumstance? That is correct. But that's so. This is
a is a standard run of the mill radio studio. Okay,
I'm not splicing jeans in here or whatever. Hold on
this one, says Tom Brady. What is oh okay, exuse
Tom Brady did the broadcast and yesterday, oh look at that.

(24:35):
I figured you were gonna get all right, So Boston
Paul gave a letter grade for Tom Brady's broadcasting. I
didn't send any audio this morning because I just I didn't.

Speaker 3 (24:44):
I know, so I was reading about it. I heard
it was horrible. I heard it was ablutely bad.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
So all right, here's what Boston Place says. So far,
I give him a D. You know what, Boston Paul,
I bet you would.

Speaker 3 (24:55):
Like certain people, they step into that role and they
really they do amazing at like Romo, Like remember.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
We sort of doing that?

Speaker 3 (25:00):
Yeah, yeah, great at this, right, but didn't they give
like Tom Brady like three hundred million or something to
do that?

Speaker 2 (25:05):
Right?

Speaker 1 (25:05):
It was stupid? Yeah. Can you imagine me and everyone
who's done it for you know, one hundred years now,
Michaels and all these people, and then they stroke a
check to a guy who's never done it. I think
it's important to remember that Boston Paul is giving him
the D. So that's did they not let's give him
like did he not have to like send in a
demo tape? Or it was almost as if it's almost

(25:27):
as if it's uh, it's kind of irrational a little
bit there. So all right, well, hopefully he gets better,
Boston Paul, or you can give him you keep giving
him a D every week. I don't know. I'm sure
that would make you happy. So all right eight eight
eight nine three four seven eight seven four back in
just a few and we noticed in the world of

(25:49):
radio that is just such a weird one, and that
is election years. It's far worse than a presidential election.
But it's also pretty bad, you know, in the uh
you know, and the the off the off cycle part
of it too. So every two years, basically you got
to deal with this all of a sudden, a bunch

(26:09):
of accounts, left wing accounts, so we've never interacted with
they do. They're not regular. It's one thing if you're
just a regular old troll we see every week, right,
you're just sitting there in Chapel Hill stewing every day
that not enough constitutional facts about white men are included
in puff articles like the one from ABC we shared you,

(26:31):
and so you get your way and it just grinds
your gears and then you go on the Twitter and
you start, uh, just crap posting, and you're not even
making solid arguments. You're just trying to troll people. I
can respect that a little bit because at least you're consistent. No,
what happens every damn election is we get these these

(26:54):
these accounts that I clearly have never interacted with the show.
I've never seen them and is non specific, right, They're generic,
you'll never identify who the person is, and and they
just go in and they just stir, and they just
they write things that are wildly inaccurate or incredibly misleading,

(27:15):
knowing tactically that what they're doing is they're stopping people
from having the regular conversation. I mean, this is where
you get into like the Zelensky stuff, right, because if
you get enough trolls going in into a conversation about
what should we do about uh private you know, uh
private funding for schools or school uh funding for private schools,

(27:37):
I should say voucher programs, and instead of having an
adult discussion, these trolls come in they're like Dave Burder
children over there. And then then now you're doing that
and for whatever reason, they only show up at my
account every two years with and they're just they're they're
complete garbage. I'll give you an example. I was talking.

(27:58):
I posted over the weekend about out the decision there
where they wouldn't take RFK off the ballot. And clearly
one of the things that Roy Cooper did is he
upended the elections board in a way that was previously
not done. People liked who was the head of elections,
they found her to be nonpartisan, and he's like, nope,

(28:19):
I my people, and you've seen what it has wrought right,
a board of elections that was willing to remove all
of the candidates who you know, we were likely to
take votes from Biden. Now, don't get me wrong, the
political parties play this game. So it happened to me
wants to be like, no, this is your game. You

(28:40):
started this. You sue when you don't like the guy
in this cycle, we've had the Democrats sue to both
keep RFK on and to take him off. But I
realized it's not about them, not about those a holes
don't care. It's about logic, right, and the logic for
most people who are not these partisan pieces of guard. Yes,

(29:01):
I was walking, I literally was walking by the Democrat
headquarters yesterday on Hillsboro Street, that big old white mansion.
I'm sitting there looking at it and I'm just like,
that thing is bought and paid for with lawsuits. Man
did a lawsuit after lawsuit, although to be fair, they
almost couldn't pay for it not that long ago. And
you know, you get further down Hillsborough and you walked back.
That's bought and paid for with lawsuits. I know you

(29:24):
don't like that, but it is. That is the thriving
industry within it, the amount of people whose job it
is just to suit for no reason because you might win.
And they'll argue that they're doing it because it's about
winning and that's all that matters. And the reality is like,
when I look at a presidential ballot, maybe you should
give me a ballot. This is the Norman Rockwell dude.

(29:47):
That mean that people keep using? Right, how about how
about we only put people on the ballot who were
running and what and are qualified you know, meet the
whatever the requirements are or whatever they made the filing.
How about that well he was yeah, but he's not now.

(30:07):
He's not running now, and so logically, why would you
present a ballot with this dude on there?

Speaker 7 (30:15):
That?

Speaker 1 (30:15):
Don't get me wrong. Republicans are like, wow, earlier on, well,
we gotta keep on there, but then it benefit of them.
I don't care. You both suck. I is the person
going to step into that box. Just give me a
ballot with people who are actually running for the office,
and then I'll decide. Okay, it's just super simple. And
I pointed out that Democrats they literally got they put
a woman in there who didn't receive any electoral votes.

(30:38):
Throw her in there, and and supertrol. So what is
his damn what is this thing he calls himself supertrol
from Chicago's like, gosh, she did educate yourself. I don't
have the tweet right in front of me. And that's
the argumentative twist there, right, because he wants me to
sit there and spend I'll give you a little radio
time because I'm I'm letting you know that it's not

(30:59):
worth your time to engage with those folks. Just ignore them,
just mute them. And it's not helpful when you do.
If you go on there and someone's posting some of
that stuff, they're just going to keep coming for you.
But if you enjoy that, just then you know you
found your ying to your yang and you kids have fun.
But just ignore them. I found it's extremely effective. Yeah,

(31:21):
if you don't engage.

Speaker 3 (31:22):
Yeah, where these people that like you, like say, you
have no history with them, you've never heard of them.
Suddenly election cycle they come out of nowhere in their
content on all these things, and it's just like then
you look at their location, it's like Chicago.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
It's like probably none of that's true. They're probably in
the Philippines somewhere, sitting in a sweatshop. I don't know.
I was about to say it's a tiny Asian woman somewhere. Yeah,
with one hundred phones on a board here see those photos? Right? Yeah? Oh,
like I said, you should travel and you'd be like,
you know what, we got it? Okay, things are working

(31:53):
out so uh yeah any any who, Yeah, just just
don't engage them. And what he means is you'd did
because you're read yeah, an election cycle ago, and he
wants me to sit there and and now my time
is wasted doing that. He loses nothing. It is it's
one of those mornings, but it is because it's a Monday,

(32:14):
and all Mondays are one of those mornings. Helly, that's uh.
Do the amount of spam stuff is just wild. I
was just kind of reviewing going back and looking at
some of these uh uh these spam folks who uh
sit there and uh you know, emerge like cicadas every

(32:37):
every election cycle to to go ahead and uh offer
their two cents. I feel like even the description on
this dude's account is meant to distract you from having
a discussion about the regular issue, right, but that makes
it you know what I'm saying there, like you're gonna
be so you're gonna because you what do you do?
Do you know that one of the most rewarding types

(32:59):
of engagement in according to the what they understand about
the current x algorithm, the Twitter algorithm is to go
look at your bio. So if you click through to
look at somebody to go, you know, where you actually
hit the let's go look at their account, That apparently
is very rewarding in the algorithm, And of course you

(33:20):
could see people then manipulating it because they figure out
how many characters will show by hovering, and then they'll
you know, they leave a little cliffhanger, which is a
it's a teaser. It's essentially a digital teaser. So do
you have people that are on their trolling and they
have an absolutely insane absolutely insane screen name. It's gonna

(33:43):
be very long. It'll have a bunch of stuff like
here's like, here's here's an account. The account title is
never forget Trump sat on his fat behind for three hours,
letting the mob he's sent into the capital defecate, break things,
and the soul cops while chanting to bang his va
or to hang his vap. Excuse me, there is no comparison.

(34:09):
That's his that's his screen name or his handle. Going
into the description right there. Also, Donald Trump isn't the
person in charge of security for the capital, but that's
what he wants. He wants you to come in there
and engage him on it. And that's why it's interesting.
What was the other guy's account? Try to find it here? Yeah,

(34:30):
here we go, Chicago family man, progressive socialist libertarian. Explain
that to me, like I'm five, Explain what a socialist libertarian?
Ross brought this up to me? He doesn't know either,
He's like, well, listen to this guy, socialist libertarian. I

(34:50):
have no idea what that means. Does that mean you
don't want you don't think government should pay for roads
except for everybody?

Speaker 2 (34:58):
But you.

Speaker 1 (35:02):
Helped me out here because again, I think that that
may be a little bit of a hook calling out fascist.
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's Chicago. I'm a socialist.
Anarchist is what like ghost of Carl Marx is like buddy,
you know what, though, here's the thing with people coming

(35:24):
up with like genders where they're a cat right or
sapio sexualism or you know anything. Every week that's a
new thing, like hey, here's this what was the one?
You're a bisexual who only what only has uh only
dates or hooks up with one of the genders, So

(35:48):
you're straight or you're getting what what? You're one of
those You're not this other thing in the middle. I
feel like that's what's going on with political parties. But
what are you? I am a robotocrat when who the
hell is that? I feel like you got to do
what's in the best interests of the government and then
and the forty people, forty million people have to die,

(36:10):
that's what we have to do. But with mine, we
use robots to kill them. It's different. It's different. We
don't just drown them in the Yellow River Valley. We
don't just starve them to death. By confiscating the proceeds
of their farming endeavors. No, no, no, no, we said robots
in it's a new thing. You want to come to
our meeting, which I don't know is probably people that

(36:32):
do like, oh, grease of people with robots. Sure, why
not work for that Dallas cop killer. Here's your candygram sir,
have fun. It worked. The cop killer thing worked like
blazing saddles. You realize that right they used. They used
the same way that they were able to get a

(36:55):
hold of Mango to grease that dude. And I, for one,
the irony was not lost on me nor the rest
of the folks at my robotocrat movement. It's gonna be great.
You'll send us money. That's how this said. This refrain
always work. Send us money. We need more robots to

(37:16):
murder people with. All right, seven to twelve here on
the Cacoday radio program. I'm gonna not make the transition
to that audio because I just realized how not being
good taste. But we do have to give you an
update on what's going on with the Georgia case. Remember
they arrested the dad. So if you if you missed
it at the end of last week, I brought this
topic up and I'll throw it if you I did

(37:36):
it late, so I'll throw it out again. The father
was charged at he's facing one hundred and forty years
in prison, the father of the alleged school shooter. The
father was arrested, and I simply pointed out, should should

(37:57):
parents be arrested? I mean, we charged people for crimes
when there are tragedies that happen based on negligence. People
are charged all the time, maybe not to the extent
that this dude is. But if you if you go

(38:17):
and and and you you know, look like dad like
to hunt with his kid based on some videos I've seen,
I'm not sure the kid was digging it that much.
But if you go and the schools like, yeah, we investigated,
and we don't you know, we're not gonna remove them
from the school or anything. Why shouldn't the school Why
shouldn't whoever made that decision in the school also face

(38:38):
criminal charges. Why shouldn't that be a thing and not
just not just somebody within the school. Did somebody in
law enforcement drop the ball, like in Florida where you
had that sheriff where and generally it's not gonna be
your your beat cops or the people even doing the
intervention necessarily, it could be uh, you know, upper management,

(39:00):
so to speak, or to prosecutors decide they didn't want
to help you out. Going back to the cop thing.
How many times do law enforcement officers arrest somebody, provide
what they you know, the evidence, and then uh, the
prosecutors like, nah, I don't want to you know why
they don't want to? So they could run around their
PolitiFact check this morning, which you're gonna get into, and go, oh,

(39:21):
crime's down again, Yeah, why is that? Is it because
less crime's happening or is this some other stuff going on?
So I point all this stuff out. We get in
these discussions. But if you're going to charge the parents,
remember these are the parents that many of you think
governments should be able to usurp if you're eleven year
old once newtered and you won't sign off on it.

(39:41):
So if they feel they have that much control of
your children and they don't do anything, and tragedy strikes
and you think you're going to charge the parents, you
need to start charging them, or you need to sit
down and look at the situation and not try to
politicize it. So you can have your gun grab. I
don't know the total of what Dad did. I don't

(40:02):
know what was or wasn't ignored. I do know you
arrested them in about thirteen minutes. So I don't believe
you do either. How do I know? Because stuff's still
coming to light as we speak. Absolutely, And I wonder
if I have to assume the prosecutor was aware of this,

(40:22):
but maybe they weren't. But you will be next here
on the CaCO Day radio program. Did you you just
murder ducks and eat them?

Speaker 8 (40:31):
You never?

Speaker 1 (40:32):
You don't want a photo of you caressing a sweet
motelard or something. Apparently there's a new Trump meme that
Russ was just telling me about. So this is based
on those crazy stories of like my Haitian neighbors eating
my cat. Right, So, I don't know you guys have
seen any of this stuff. And they've got tons of
people at like city council meetings complaining, like the way

(40:54):
does he pets are disappearing?

Speaker 3 (40:56):
I just watched one where they're talking about because the
Biden Hair Hair Administration flew in like twenty thousand Haitians
in this small like town in Ohio whatever it is. Yeah,
And so there's this guy in front of the city
council meeting and he's talking about how like he was
at the park and there was Haitians like you know
you have the ducks in the pond.

Speaker 1 (41:14):
Yeah, like like grabbing them. I saw the photos of
walking back with it with their with their catch there rabbit.
I'm cutting the heads off the ducks and eating them,
which is I mean, that's not that unusual. It's where
they're getting the ducks, right. People eat ducks all over
the world. These are not those kind of ducks.

Speaker 3 (41:31):
This is the Alex Jones ducks. Just like the Alex
Jones means talking about how there's free ducks at the park, just.

Speaker 1 (41:37):
Tak Yeah, there is. I mean there's three lots of
stuff with the park. When I was driving from Braley
to Greensboro yesterday, I pulled over to that you know,
that rest stop the just I guess past like Evan
and everything, pull over in that rest stop and there's
like there's like fifteen deer or something. I'm standing right there.

(41:58):
If you've been in that rest stop, you pull in,
trucks go one way, cars go the other, and then
on the left closer to the road, it was like
fifteen deer, and like, I see this family get out
there and this they're like their kid wants to run
over there, and the dad makes a joke that he's
gonna go with him and get a deer, and his

(42:20):
wife just hits him on the shoulder. That's what that
would be akin to. Right, You're just like, man, this
is easy to look at that deer over there. Although
then I was thinking that they when they went into
the woods, they went into that sliver between that and
the highway, So they're probably some of you are seeing
them on forty this morning. I suspect, and not in
a good way. But yeah, yeah you go and uh,

(42:40):
let's get a free deer, get some free ducks. The
cat the cat thing is wild.

Speaker 3 (42:45):
Yeah, Like people are like, hey, my cat's missing, and
all these cats are like all these pets are missing
in this Ohio town. It's like they're being like kidnapped
for food.

Speaker 8 (42:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (42:53):
So now that people are using these AI creations to
generate photos of there's one that I just retweeted the
showccount where he's a case in the radio. He's in
that looks like the Oval office and he's just hugging
a duck and a kitten. And then there's other ones
where they've beaten movies where it looks like he's in
front of a pond full of ducks and he's like
holding the one duck and like kissing the duck's head. Yeah, yeah,
I'll never eat you. But can you imagine Let's say

(43:14):
that one of these people, one of these cat owners,
was accused of I don't know, killing their cat or
murdering their cat, when in reality their cat was stolen
and eaten by Haitians. That would be a miscarriage of
justice right there. That's what I'm saying. So anyway, let's
go ahead and uh oh, and hear this audio.

Speaker 3 (43:32):
Oh, by the way, this county, this county, by the way,
where they flew in the twenty thousand Haitians, And I
guess it's like one of the reddest counties in Ohio.

Speaker 1 (43:38):
It is, Yes, hands down. Yeah, it's not even close.
They say, yeah, here you go, Here you go, dude,
I will I will tell you though. There was a
guy in this this is a nice neighborhood, but he
was a little rednecky. Uh and he had birds. He
was really into birds. And I mean when I say

(43:59):
had birds, he had birds. He had a bunch of
birds around, but he also raised some birds, but specifically
birds that were used for hunting farms, so like chuckers
and stuff. And so as you can imagine, you get
a bunch of cats, the neighbor's cats that come over. Dude,
there was like a meeting in this is in deep Haven, Minnesota,

(44:21):
which is a very nice suburb around Lake Minnetonka. There
we had these meetings with a bunch of whiny, whiny
rich people showing up going all our cats are disappearing.
And this guy showed up at the meeting and got
up and spoke and talked about how there was a
lot of coyotes in the area because he was a
bit of an outdoor guy, and he started telling people

(44:42):
at coyote and to this day I believe he got
rid of their cats and then had the stones to
get up in lecture about coyotes. So, yeah, people do
some crazy things. Man, do some crazy things. So let
me go ahead and play this audio for you real quick,
and then we'll get some call. Does this change whether
you think the dad should be charged or maybe others charged.

(45:05):
If you're gonna do this thing, if you're gonna do
this thing, We're gonna start charging the parents. It feels
like it is meant to have any chilling effect. This
is where the balance is right because it's easy. This
is one of those devious things somebody thinks up in
one of these gun graber nonprofits, like, well, what if

(45:30):
we do every time there's a school shooting or any shooting?
We just charge the parents. Oh, any shoot or no
school shooting? Okay, what about other shootings? No? No, no, no,
what if there's a what if some of the parents
are a likely Democrat voter. No, we're not gonna charge them.
We'll just ignore that problem entirely. No, I'm saying anytime
we get the vibe it's in a red area and

(45:50):
there's a school shooting, and the parents might might have
any way, shape or form also touched a gun, even
if they didn't buy it for them and it was
one of the family ones. We'll go ahead and do that.
Why because it's gonna make parents very nervous about being
on video teaching their kid to shoot or buying their
kid a gun for their twelfth birthday, which is what

(46:12):
I got. Best day ever, I didn't murder anyone. But also,
would you have a good read on your kid at twelve,
maybe maybe you wouldn't, especially that age range how quickly
they change. So with all that in mind, and everyone's
salvating for blood and activists wanting to use this as
an opportunity to further dissuade people from ever even thinking

(46:34):
about owning a gun, we get this, and this is
going to make you want to punch a kit or
a duck.

Speaker 7 (46:41):
Remembers and a classmate about what they say happened the
morning of the shooting, Cold Grace Aunt, telling ABC News
details first reported in The Washington Post that the fourteen
year old's mother called a school counselor the morning of
the shooting to warn them about an extreme emergency, reporting
that the suspect's mother texted her sister saying she told

(47:04):
the school counselor to go immediately and find her son
to check on him. The ten minute call apparently came
at nine to fifty am, according to the suspects Unt,
nearly a half hour before the suspects allegedly opened fire.

Speaker 1 (47:20):
What is going on? What I'm sorry s as we
talked about for a little bit on Friday, although we
kind of got buried through some guests and stuff like that.
The charge to father, and it was so fast. I'm
just like, all right, this is the new norm. This
is what we're gonna do. Then I have to process

(47:41):
why are they doing? Are they doing because they genuinely
believe that that parent in this specific instance has criminal liability?
Maybe they do. I don't purport to know enough about it.
I do know this though. If negligence is the key,
then negligence should not be limited just to the parents,

(48:01):
especially if you are of the opinion that you know,
were you trying to erase the parents man or at
least diminish their power so that in all of these
instances you and your cohorts can step in and you know,
flex your political muscles and literally take people's kids away

(48:23):
because they won't. They won't let a nine year old
make a decision about gender ideology. That's okay. Then when
I was nine, you know what, you made decisions about nothing?
Not really yeah, yeah, I get I guess whether to
something in your brain. But at the end of the day,

(48:44):
all of your decisions were there was a higher authority
you call them mom or dad or whomever raised you,
and and that's who. That's who was could could tell
eight year old or nine year old you you're being dumb,
shut up, and you know what, you were better off
for it, do you know dumb? I was a an
eight nine year old, especially a talkative one. Thank god

(49:07):
I was able to channel this into something. But I
don't have good ideas. In fact, often I had very
bad ideas. And that's where you get the guiding there.
So if you think that that needs to happen outside
of parents, then you've just let me know that you
feel that these organizations, especially schools and whatnot, are more powerful.

(49:32):
And so if you believe that when they show what
sounds to me like extreme negligence, are you going to
charge them? And the answer is no. These prosecutors don't
want to necessarily charge them because I you know, from
a political standpoint, irritate school teachers and stuff. It may
not even be accurate to do. So I don't want
people charged. Let's ask he committed a crime. But if
you're going to do go down this road that, I'm

(49:55):
going to challenge you to at least be intellectually honest
that you think anyone who had any anguige and should
be charged. And you may start arresting people. I'll wait
because you won't do that, because people be like, no,
this is dumb. This is dumb. Let's figure out something else.
Especially when you're a school that the superintendent of which

(50:15):
runs the education stuff in Georgia, and when he was
superintendent there, he did not want teachers armed. You didn't
want any of these things. He just wanted to grab guns.
And when you have people like that in charge, you
bet they should have some liability if you don't want
to take other methods. But once again, here is the audio,
and then we'll grab calls here because it is mind boggling.

Speaker 7 (50:38):
Mind boggling family members and a classmate about what they
say happened the morning of the shooting. Cold Gray's aunt
telling ABC News details first reported in The Washington Post
that the fourteen year old's mother called a school counselor
the morning of the shooting to warn them about an
extreme emergency. The Post reporting that the suspect's mother texted

(51:00):
her sister saying she told the school counselor to go
immediately and find her son to check on him. The
ten minute call apparently came at nine.

Speaker 1 (51:09):
To fifty am.

Speaker 7 (51:10):
According to the suspects unt nearly a half hour before
the suspects allegedly opened fire.

Speaker 1 (51:18):
What do you want parents to do? I'm one hundred
percent series in that situation. It's don't give me a snarky, Well,
they need to raise him better before that, and blah
blah blah. That's not what I'm asking. If you identify
an emergency situation, your kid went to school and you
just went in his room and he's left a suicide
note or something, right, what do you want parents to do?

(51:41):
I mean, for those of you in education, I'm not
attacking you. I'm not attacking for those of you who
work in education because this affects you. Right, that's school.
Those were two staff members killed there too, and I
don't know if he's one of them gave him a
D one time and he was mad, or if it
was just opportunity. But I really mean this because this
is about your leadership protecting you as well. What do

(52:02):
you want the parents to do other than to get
immediately get on the phone and talk to the person
you know higher up there who's supposed to be the
person to kind of be dealing with these issues, and
tell them unequivocally you need he's coming to kill you.

(52:23):
I can't think of anything else, So how dare you
not not go after them too? If you if this
is about liability, a bunch of jackasses? This is? That is?
That is so crazy? Man? Can you imagine Ross? Pretend
you're colonial times? All right, You're just out doing your thing,

(52:45):
mind your own business, You're howing your turnips or whatever
you do, and all of a sudden this here comes
Paul Revere say hey, hey, hey, dude, they're coming, the guy,
the guy. The dude's in red, they're coming. And you're
just like, ah, are you sure? I don't know, you
know what? I like to look at that hat? What
is that whalebone? Get out of here? A red coats?

(53:06):
And then you're speaking British. Still what you're thinking about?
It is English? No, it's not spell color. Then get
back to me. I don't know what else you want
parents to do, but I am curious in our local
education systems. I'm sure parents are eight eight eight nine
three four seven eight seventy four. What has your leadership

(53:29):
told you that if a parent calls, Let's say a
parent has a good relationship with you, and they call
and they're like, hey, uh, mister or missus whatever, blah
blah blah, they're coming, He's coming. What is the process
is it to him? And Han go, you know what,
I'll talk to him when he gets here. And you're like,
he's showing up like rambo. Okay, well I'll call him
rambo if he wants or do you have an immediate

(53:52):
procedure called lockdown? Ross you're a parent, I have to
assume that you would want the school lockdown if it
was your kid's school, a SAP with the with sealed
team six showing up. If a parent, you want everything.
They're trying to say that they were there was a
confusion with the child and they were trying to figure
out what child they were talking about, and the shut
face contact them, so then they just sort of what

(54:14):
I guess, moved along at that point. If somebody calls you,
if a parent calls you and they're freaking out and
they're like, I think my child might shoot it at school,
you lock down the school immediately immediately. This because this
isn't somebody made a bomb an anonymous bomb thread. This
is a person identifying themselves and this is totally different.
And you have you have you have a child who

(54:36):
has a history of like you know, apparently in the
past few years, like mental illness. Yeah, like a lot
of issues there, So I mean they're I mean a
lot of boxes were checked and the parent called the school.
I don't know what they It sounds like the school
just failed on every level. What you need to do
is if you're if you're hopefully you have a secret
sniper rifle your kid didn't take and you gotta show
up and deal with this yourself. Okay, Well then if

(54:59):
that's not it, tell me what it is. All right,
let's get to the phones, Jamal, what's up?

Speaker 6 (55:04):
They see that?

Speaker 2 (55:05):
It's unsetting me because Casey, you know, I'm trying to
show this month because I called to talk about the
voter Mcasey. You know, I totally.

Speaker 6 (55:14):
Agree with you.

Speaker 2 (55:14):
Matter of fact, I argue to something that I said, Casey,
Do you mind if I switch tropics and talk about
what you're talking about right here?

Speaker 1 (55:23):
Do you mind?

Speaker 2 (55:24):
Ya?

Speaker 1 (55:25):
Yeah, just got a few minutes.

Speaker 2 (55:26):
But go ahead, jac If they're gonna sit there and
charge that parent with shooting, they better charge every parent
they loaned their child a car and went out here
and drinking and driving and killed people. Why are they
just doing it to this one family, and of course
is Georgia because they're Rainal. Republicans keep trying to appeal
the Democrats, don't come. They're not charging the people up

(55:48):
in Chicago, New York, Houston, Atlanta. For all they little
fifteen sixteen year olds out here banging and shooting out here, making.

Speaker 6 (55:57):
Rap songs about who they can.

Speaker 2 (56:00):
Then they turned around and you find out they really
did kill them and get shot. This is specifically don't.

Speaker 1 (56:07):
Ruin do don't ruin the Florida thing for don't you
dare ruin this Florida thing for me. They didn't rap
about who they would kill. They rapped about a specific
way in which they would die, and then they themselves
died in that horrible way. It's a crazy story down
there in Jacksonville and Tampa. But anyway, digress go ahead.

Speaker 6 (56:25):
But Casey, they're constantly finding ways to take the second
Amendment is always just the second? What about these plants
and drop these kids off hitting the mall? Who they
know about to do a flash mall? They know about
the running here and do stuff and steel stuff, but
they did nothing. It seems like it's always the second

(56:46):
Amendment they find the most strengthless.

Speaker 1 (56:49):
Because it's about because it's about chilling. It's about chilling,
it's about chilling people wanting to participate in it. You know,
they always talking about they always talk about Donald Trump's
trying to chill free speech. What they mean by that
is you want to make it so uncomfortable or so
fraught with peril. And thanks for the call, Jamo, that

(57:11):
will you get people to go? You know what I'm like,
I don't think we need any guns in the house,
or I don't need to be shooting. I don't need
to teach my kids how to shoot because you know,
God will God forbid? I just and then they won, right,
Because that's the goal. You get people to not pass along.
That's why hunting and fishing in America's one of the
main reasons people don't pass it along, because it is

(57:31):
chilling to attempt to participate in a lot of places.
Now that's not doe necessarily to politics. Some of it is,
but some of it's just due to access and costs
and just the ways that they fundamentally change, but also
government regulations and make it harder and harder and harder
to do things. But easier for people to go and
grab a duck out of your local pond with no repercussions.

(57:52):
Jeff Mahr from the Weather Channel, he's standing by, Is
it maybe a good day to go down and steal
some ducks from the park because that's the thing that
people doing. How you doing?

Speaker 9 (58:01):
Great day for that?

Speaker 8 (58:02):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (58:02):
Good good?

Speaker 4 (58:03):
I like it.

Speaker 1 (58:03):
Yesterday was fantastic. Keep it up. Yeah, and it's gonna
get even better.

Speaker 9 (58:07):
As we had through this week, high pressure the dominant
weather influence, and then the result will be dry weather
and some mild and comfortable temperatures. A little bit of
fog early today and cool initially but right around eighty
under sunshine this afternoon and an overnight clear with light
winds at a load dropping to the loaded mid fifties.
We should reach eighty five with sunshine Tomorrow, run eighty four.
Another sunny day on Wednesday, slightly cooler Thursday, clouds moving
up to eighty two. Our next chance to rain. That'll

(58:29):
be Friday. A few afternoon showers should develop with a
heidier eighty and during the weekend, highslight the low eighties,
when an occasional shower thunderstorm to dodge if it could
be spending some time out and about.

Speaker 1 (58:38):
You know how noxious your co worker is going to
be tomorrow. Yes he is the Cowboys. I'm not Kicker's God.
We have God for a kicker. I just can't with him.

Speaker 9 (58:46):
But I know meanwhile, not such good news for the
Falcons of Panthers.

Speaker 1 (58:50):
Right, Yeah, I'm a Vikings fan and I thought we
were gonna get drilled and the this is so bad
because we're so getting set up. So we'll find out.
All right, thanks Jeff, appreciate it, my man. All Right,
there you go, Jeff mart from the Weather Channel feeling
your pain Panthers fans is a Falcon fan, he is.
But all right, we'll get more calls coming up and

(59:11):
we'll get into it next. Hang on, I didn't even
think that that was gonna be a thing, but it's
a thing. Ross. Do you know who we triggered? Who's
feverishly fevershly upset at me. He's an oldie, but a goodie.
In fact, I put him into a junk box so
I never really see his emails, but sometimes they get through.
So as I'm sitting there and I'm talking about heating

(59:33):
dire warnings and how this is insane when the schools
didn't get it. Naboo U. Dude's mad at us? What
what the same thing I've been warning you about. Naboo
over here? You know, one day the boy's gravity, he's
gonna shift and you're gonna be float around the osiern't
take you up like I told you was. I'm a
float bie, I'm a float by make fun of you.

(59:59):
You're right, sir, you're right. I'm not heated your warning.
I think it's probably because what was it like three
years ago? He's like, this is it October? Yeah, you
can't see him with your tiny microscope, but we can
see hiding. But October you're all dead. And then I'm
in October. I went out of the air. I'm like, duh,
still here. And it was at that point he got

(01:00:19):
moved over to mute. I'm glad you're still out there, sir,
screaming into the void. Oh wait, hold on, I wonder
how many email I'm not. I'm not even gonna look
at my in my or my junk pies. Don't care.
All right, let's get some more calls. Raoul. What's up?
How you doing? Brother?

Speaker 4 (01:00:37):
Hey?

Speaker 5 (01:00:38):
I'd like to argue that the parents could have walk
up the gut the rifle and uh make it on
unaccessible to the king on that there was an adult supervisor.
That's what yeah could have done.

Speaker 1 (01:00:55):
I mean, yeah, there. Look, there's a lot of ways
you can secure firearms. I don't know that anything is
hundred percent. I mean, you know, if the kid, if
the kids got access to bolt cutters, you can probably
get a lot of locks off stuff like that and
you know, as safe as as safe as a safe.
So it's probably pretty good. But that being said, the

(01:01:16):
obligation to sit there and lock it up is only
one part of the thing. And it sounds like dad
from the videos, the dad was wanting to get this
kid into hunting. I have looked. I have no problem
h sitting there at a situation and going look, the
parents obviously wanted that. They didn't want to think this
about their kids, so they ignored obvious signs. And I

(01:01:36):
would expect parents would do that. But once a parent
has taken the opportunity to reach out to the school,
because it wasn't just in the morning of there had
been incidents, so they had been working with the school
about at that point like that, that is what they
want you to do. That is what they want you
to do. So if that portion of the preventive measures

(01:01:59):
was also bumbled badly, that if you're going to spread accountability,
then you need to spread it too, everybody. That's all
that I'm saying.

Speaker 5 (01:02:07):
And I agree with you on the on the fool part,
absolutely luck of the school.

Speaker 2 (01:02:11):
But I mean, you can buy it and you get
a gun and uh you even ingrained his name on it,
you know, Yeah, that's your right pull no doubt. Yeah
you cannot touch it.

Speaker 5 (01:02:25):
I'll you.

Speaker 1 (01:02:26):
Oh no, I hear you. Yeah, I knows one hundred percent.
I'll tell you. My mom let me keep my Uh.
When I was about the time, I was fourteen fifteen,
but I had a gun cabinet that had a simple
lock key, but it had a glass front, and she
and I it was dumb because you could break that
glass in two seconds. But if that thing was unlocked
in my room, she'd pull the guns out of there,

(01:02:48):
and it happened a couple of times. I left it
unlocked because she was teaching me a lesson because I
got siblings, and I totally get it one hundred percent.
So I'm glad that's the rule. That you have. That's
a smart rule. Absolutely, So all right, Raoul, appreciate the call,
have a good morning. Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, you don't
get me wrong. Look, parents are gonna screw this up,

(01:03:10):
and it's it's because nobody wants to look at their
kid and go, my kid's gonna murder his classmates. Even
if you think that, you get probably get mad at
yourself for thinking that. I get it one more quick
one and then we'll get some more in the next hour. Yeah, Ronnie,
what's up?

Speaker 4 (01:03:27):
Hey, Casey? Great talking to you. I listen to you
every day, Thank you so much. I just came causing
an idea. You know, I got sixteen years of law
enforcement and I just dropped my grandchild, eight year old
grandchild off the school, so I got a little bit.

Speaker 1 (01:03:43):
Of skin in the game, Yes, sir.

Speaker 4 (01:03:45):
Thinking that, I'm thinking that if you got follow alarms
in all the schools, little red boxes in on the wall,
why don't you get a yellow one right beside it
and give it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:58):
A different tone tone, a.

Speaker 4 (01:04:00):
Different tall, very long tone, and that way the whole
school go out now simultaneously, I.

Speaker 1 (01:04:06):
Just just I just want to clarify here because I
saw somebody say this in an email. I'm not trying.
I'm not trying to tell you the dudes. The dad's
some sort of great dude. I don't know anything about him, right,
I know. What I know about him is a couple
a couple quotes. I know some stuff that his wife

(01:04:27):
told among others ABC News. I saw the video of
how he interacted with his kid after they just hit
a spike buck or I guess it was. Technically it
was a two pointer on one side, laid one down, and
you know, it reminded me of you know, you take
your kid hunting for the first time, and I was

(01:04:49):
trying to gauge whether the kid was enjoying the hunting
very much. But it's really awkward. It's it's you know,
for a lot of people, it's awkward the first time
you go hunting, first time you kill a big old deer. Man.
Up to that point, you probably shot some prairie dogs.
So if you're like me, some you know, some birds.
I just to remember my first deer. I don't want
to brag, but it was nice. The mule deer was

(01:05:16):
it was typical and it was well above average. And
that's just because that's who I am freaking Jeremiah Johnson,
what do you want? And so but I remember I
shot to this day. I remember it. I shot it
with a at about eighty yards with a two forty three.
I came over and the damn thing was coming up

(01:05:37):
a draw and it didn't win me, which was amazing
because I was totally on the wrong side of this thing,
and my little fourteen year old Braid's thinking about all
this stuff. And I put it down and it was
and it was one shot. Boiler Maker done again. I'm
literally Jeremiah Johnson. My beard is very haggard this morning. So,

(01:06:02):
but what is the adrenaline rush? And it doesn't go
away if you like hunting. I don't care how many
years you hunt. It's that that moment when you see
something right, are you here? Something like what is that?
What is that over there? And then you see horns
or you see you know, whatever you're hunting for, and

(01:06:24):
you got to get in the right position. You had
to wait for the shot. All this work's paid off. Oh,
your wife said you're stupid for spending every week before
the season out there sitting in your stand, but ha ha,
what does she know? And here you are here, you are,
and then you gotta get set up and uh and
take this thing the buck of a lifetime and uh

(01:06:46):
you you left, you left your uh your your bleat.
Uh uh that attached your wrists and it bangs against
something and he's gone. You're like, dos I did everything.
It's it could be frustrated, it could be amazing to
any of it. And I don't know. It's got regular
kid doing it. But apparently there's a lot going on
behind the scenes or the family. It might be a

(01:07:06):
little dysfunctional. I don't know. I don't know the grandfather
of Georgia school shooter Colt Gray or a lad shooter,
I guess, but whatever, that'sweyth. They wrote it says the
boy's father deserves the death penalty.

Speaker 2 (01:07:24):
What now.

Speaker 1 (01:07:26):
He doesn't give a specific reason, but then he goes
this from the New York Post article, after spending eleven
years with that son of a bee, screaming and hollering
every day. It can affect anybody. He's evil. They couldn't.
They didn't survive in it. Colt has to pay for
what he did, But I'm telling you he was driven,
no question in my mind. So the read there is

(01:07:48):
what that dad was a very angry man, and him
being an angry man drove drove this kid to go
shoot up to school. It probably didn't help him. But
is that a valid excuse that we're going to accept
in the courts now that somebody had a rough childhood,

(01:08:08):
who had a parent who was verbally and or physically abusive,
and it somehow it shapes people. Don't get me wrong,
Absolutely you want to you want to create a cynical
person who really doesn't care about what other other folks think.
That's one of the roads to get there. But holy hell, man,

(01:08:31):
that's not you. You. But if you're going to charge
him based on he was he was a bad parent,
you better have specifics. And I just can't believe you
were able to gather the information necessary to do something
like that in just a few days. And everything you
talked about was having to do with the gun, making
the gun accessible to him, So it didn't even sound

(01:08:52):
like they were keen in on that anyway. But also,
what's Thanksgiving like over there? What is Thanksgiving? Or what
Thanksgiving like at dead house? Where the grandfather's like dom
my son should be executed and his kid too. Now,
actually he says. I don't know if he said execution
for the kid or am I misreading this quote, Ross,

(01:09:14):
because you're the one who said it to me. It's
he's talking about for the father, right, and then the
kid he's talking about. He's talking about his son. He said, Cole,
you know, should be punished for what he did, but
the dad should be given the death penalty for screaming
and hooting and hollering his kid NonStop for eleven years
or whatever it is. It says it. You know, it's
not not a healthy environment. I don't disagree, but a
lot of people live in not healthy environments. It sucks,

(01:09:39):
but they get away and look, there's there are degrees
of non healthy environments. Some people live in an environment
where they're largely ignored and that could be detrimental too.

Speaker 5 (01:09:49):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:09:49):
You never feel you never feel really loved, You never
really feelly connected with your with your family. And I
don't screw people up. There's there's families. People come home
and they catch a beat and every day because you know,
dad's got to take his day out on him.

Speaker 3 (01:10:06):
Yeah, there's got to be something out of the norm
here though, for the grandfather to be like, hey, give
him the chair right, his son.

Speaker 1 (01:10:14):
This is why I'm sitting here saying, well, and who knows,
maybe they got old beef over something. Maybe the grandfather's crazy.
I don't, but I just want to be clear. I'm
not vouching for the character of the father. But when
we take as long as we take to charge people
with stuff that where there is, especially when it's something
that's not traditional, and they charge that dude in days

(01:10:37):
and they only ever talk about the gun angle, then
I feel like it's not about that thing, it's about
this other thing. And I don't want people. I don't
want people falling back on it if it's not procedurally
going to be done in the correct way, because you
know what it does. It allows a prosecuted further to
further expand what it is they can go after. And

(01:10:59):
it just so happens to almost exclusively aligned with people
surrounding uh. You know, guaranteed uh uh guaranteed recognized rights
given to you by God that are within the within
the constitution. And I know some of you flip out
when I say that damn thing, but that was the
mindset of the founding fathers. As much as you want

(01:11:21):
to change it, oh, it's one federalist paper said this
one thing. Well, no it didn't, first of all, and
two shut up because like it's very clear from all
every other thing why they thought people should have these
rights and white government shouldn't be able to come in
there and do it do anything about it. But you
you expand the ability to if you do something large.

(01:11:44):
And by the way, what if it's not just kids
who come and shoot a school up. What if it's
just your kid brought a gun to school? Should that
be treated the same as when they brought that?

Speaker 2 (01:11:57):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:11:58):
Remember you ever see those stories of the kids like
five and they show up for show and telling. What's that?
You're like, mommy's, mommy's cocaine? That story. There's one story
a year where some kid has has taken their parents'
drugs to school and and obviously the parent, the parent
gets in trouble. The difference is a firearm is legal

(01:12:18):
owned versus you know that bag of heroin that your
kid did a book report on and then showed the class.
So there's a lot of nuanced issues included in this thing.
Do you accomplish that in two days? I don't know.
And now we got family calling for family execution. Everything
is I'm telling you, man, that's got to be if

(01:12:41):
you're one of those people who gets off on watching
dysfunctional families on something like that, you know the coach
or where Phil? You know doctor Phil's talking to him?
R whatnot?

Speaker 2 (01:12:49):
This?

Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
This sounds like it's right up your alley. Uh we
got a call here?

Speaker 2 (01:12:53):
Uh is it?

Speaker 1 (01:12:54):
Mahina? Mahina?

Speaker 2 (01:12:56):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:12:56):
What's up?

Speaker 2 (01:12:58):
Hey? How far back are we on with the grandfather
just admitted he knew for eleven years that the dad
was like that.

Speaker 6 (01:13:04):
Shouldn't the grandfather get charged too?

Speaker 1 (01:13:06):
Oh boy, that's a good point. Yeah, absolutely, and anyone
he told, right, what's some of the grandma? Do we
know where she's at? I don't get me wrong. It
sounds like the whole family may be scumbags. But this
isn't just about that. This is about figuring out a
system where parents and school officials feel that they can
provide a safe environment. Parents feel specifically that they're going

(01:13:29):
to be able to deal with something with their kid.
And uh, we don't have to we don't have to
have these because that's what everyone wants, isn't it. We
just they just they we want this to stop, and
everyone's fighting over how to do it, and uh, I
just I don't want to ever. I don't ever want
to do a school shooting story on the show again
if I don't have to. And I'm sure you don't
want to hear about it either, right, exactly, Yeah, this

(01:13:52):
is super all right, you too, Thank you very much.
This is easy. And so going back to the ballot thing,
I am I'm adopt to keep it simple. Stupid this
campaign season, through all the arguments, Oh, he needs to
be on the ballot, No he does, and I'm suing
and now I'm suing the other way. How about me?
Just the guy voting is like, hey, can you just

(01:14:12):
put people on there who are running. I'll figure it
out from there, all right, thanks? Yah, put that on there.
In this case, Hey, if we're going to go down
this road, can there be clearly defined parameters so people
understand what's going on here and within those defined parameters,
if one of the kid's parents calls the school and

(01:14:34):
he's like, he's coming right now and he's armed to
the teeth and he's gonna murder you, and it's a parent,
it's not a random unsigned email, which you should still
take seriously to the extent, but maybe you differentiate. She's
on to say, Hi, I'm giving you my name, and
I'm telling you I'm the mother of this kid who
was enough of a problem that everyone in a punishment

(01:14:58):
leadership position seems to remember him. And you know, it's like,
all right, well, we'll talk to him at lunch. You're like, no, no,
he's going to shoot the school. Yeah, but uh, you know,
class about to start. That's the problem here, that's the
big unaddressed issue. And uh, I you know, I'm gonna

(01:15:22):
have a lot less flexibility if you're just decided, all right,
our new policy as anyone whose kids shoots up a school,
we charge as long as they're not minority or uh
maybe you know, or there's def you know, define democratic
yard signs at their house. And it's just a bastardization
of everything else. And it is gravy training for the

(01:15:44):
for the purpose of change on an absolute tragedy. And
there used to be a time when people get called
out for that, but apparently not anymore. All right, eight eighteen,
Hang on, I don't run the ads, you know, do
you guys? Do you guys not know this? It's not me.
I will tell you this though. It is by far
the most dishonest political AD I have ever heard, and

(01:16:07):
I have made my opinion known for the purpose of
I don't I have to. I don't know why. I
don't know why there's not been a more thorough review
of that.

Speaker 2 (01:16:19):
That is, that is me.

Speaker 1 (01:16:21):
But when an AD meets legal requirements, we and people
want to buy it. We do not discriminate. We are
not the left wing morons out there who literally were manipulate,
They were rigging the AD system to punish people. I
don't do that, But I will tell you there have
been a handful of time I'm not going to get

(01:16:41):
into details. One of them was recent where Ross and
I have raised objections to an ad is for a
different reason, and it does not air on this show anymore.
Am I am I lying? Ross? I'm telling the truth right,
Just to just be one hundred percent clear. I know
I'm the one that pointed it out to you. Yeah, yes, yes, yes, yes,
and and with that and I said, you're absolutely right,

(01:17:02):
and we talked to management and it's gone.

Speaker 2 (01:17:06):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:17:06):
But if there's a candidate who wants to run an AD,
right and they're not breaking any laws, right, we're going
to run the ad, especially because it's political advertising with
a candidate, right because I mean tell you, some of
these people are the whiniest little bitches you've ever you've
ever had to deal with, and you would be surprised
who it is or who they are. I am blown
away the way that the mask will come off every

(01:17:28):
year with one or two candidates where they know I
can't believe you're doing this, where they're just like, you
know what, sir, why don't you say that into my microphones?
People know you're insane. So with that in mind, they're
also so petty that we're going to be on We're
going to be on there, I think you should appreciate
it for what it is the best opportunity to explain

(01:17:50):
the amount of BS going on with that campaign possible
right there for you. But you know, don't sit here
and yell at me and retweet your stuff or I'll
blow your damn account. Yes I will not because I
don't care what you want to say. But because I
have now addressed it on the air, I've given you
more airtime than your fifteen followers will ever have. So

(01:18:11):
I'm just done dealing with you. Maybe because we're too
much into the into the business. But like to me, like,
it's obvious that's how things are run, right, You can't
just be like I'm just gonna run ads from one happily.
But no, but it shouldn't it be obvious, like you,
we can't just run ads from one side of the
political spectrum. You can't do it. But why would people

(01:18:32):
believe that? Watching everyone else in the media, Well exactly,
they would think that, why don't you do exactly what
they do?

Speaker 3 (01:18:39):
Well, I'm not going to be them. A lot of
the times, like why won't you hear Trump add in
MSNBC or whatever. Maybe he runs them, I don't know,
but a lot of the times because they constantly don't
run them.

Speaker 1 (01:18:47):
No, but they can't. Bet that's because right the campaign,
the Trump campaign says, this is a waste of our money.
People watching this aren going to vote for us. Well,
it's the same way if Kamala runs an ad on
this on this station. But I mean if she wants
to spend the money, Yeah, there you go. You think
she's turning anyone other than you to get pissed? How
what do you, sir? Let me ask you a question,
since I am a what is this so called conservative

(01:19:10):
radio show promoting propaganda? Let me ask you a question, sir,
What if the point of the ads is to flip
people like you so that you start attacking people like me?
The Vikings the most dominant team in the NFL. What
go ahead and go ahead and challenge the math. It's

(01:19:32):
pretty clear won by twenty two points. I know what
you're saying. You're like, wait a second. Didn't the Saints
beat the Panthers? Yeah, but that's the Panthers. They were
not having it. And I don't Again, I don't want
the Panthers to be bad, but I don't know this
Bryce the young thing is gonna work out. Man. Let's
see Bill's They went by eight. That's it, that's all

(01:19:56):
the stuff. Oh wait, hold on, what is that? Oh stupid?
All right, Patriot it's uh? Did they play yesterday?

Speaker 2 (01:20:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:20:05):
They did?

Speaker 5 (01:20:05):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:20:06):
And the Patriots beat the Bengals. All right, you all
beat the Bengals by six. There's a Chris Rock bit
and it's the one that Michael Scott quoted. But at
the backside of the bit, it's you're supposed to do, don't.
You're not special for things. You're supposed to do. I
take care of my kid. You're supposed to beat we

(01:20:27):
beat the Bengals, but you're supposed to You're supposed to
beat the Bengals. This is not hard, all right. The
Bengals supposed to be a good team with Joe Burrow
and the did you have you seen them play last year?
I didn't have significant injury stuff exactly. He was injured
last season, so they were this year. He was supposed to.

Speaker 3 (01:20:49):
They were supposed to be great this year because he
still has where he doesn't he still have his wide
receiver corp, right.

Speaker 1 (01:20:54):
You know, except one of them, one of them is like, damn,
you're dead, and I think they're tight ends injured. I
can't remember. It's Joe Burr, right, He's supposed to be
this generational talent, right. Well he remember he got paid.
He was the most most paid court well for a
while and then it was it three or million they
gave him. Yeah, So I don't know. But these are

(01:21:15):
the Patriots we're talking about. They think they could beat
I don't know, God, right, some of their fans. So
I don't even get me started on that. What is it,
By the way, what is it do we know what's
going on with the Tyreek Hill thing. Do you see
the photo of his TV celebration.

Speaker 3 (01:21:33):
I saw him on the side of the road and
to me unbiased opinion, Yeah, let me let me clarify, unbiased.

Speaker 1 (01:21:40):
Yeah, they have nothing to gain. That's all the cops
they're talking to him. Yeah, it looked like to me
he was resisting, and I think they should have prisoned
him for life. He wasn't he was joking. No, he
was king. No like it, We're serious. They should have
tased him and he should be in prison for life.
Unbiased opinion. I have nothing to gain from this, nothing
nothing him off the field specifically maybe for the game

(01:22:01):
coming up on Thursday. Just take takeing.

Speaker 3 (01:22:03):
Oh no, oh no for that one game. That's diff
be a punishment there. Unbiased opinion.

Speaker 1 (01:22:13):
So the story, this is the story as we understand it.
So because they were like, oh, they saw a black
man trying to try to walk into a football stadium
and they just stopped him, which, by the way, say
that sentence out loud. Okay, please if you could, they
saw a black man who was just trying to walk
into a football stadium and arrested him. Do you understand

(01:22:36):
what your Sunday would look like if that was rampantly happening.
The story as I what, yes, you just clicked, how
stupid that is?

Speaker 2 (01:22:47):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:22:49):
Some copst you know, some cops set up a DUI
checkpoint right outside the Panthers stadium. They're like, all right,
we're gonna say it's for this. But if you see
Andy min already's walked through here, yeah, you put him
in handcuffs, right, and and now you don't play football, right,
And just to clarify, because some people can't detect sarcasm,

(01:23:09):
I obviously don't think he should be in prison. And
I am completely biased on this because I want the
Bills to win. It's a bill, it's a divisional thing.
When I see him out there and they show his amazing, awesome,
you know, two billion dollar automobile and he's outside, I
assumed it was for speeding in the well, the amazing car. Yeah,
so basically he was it. This is how it looks.

(01:23:32):
I don't know if this is what it is. He's
he's in his uh I make a gazillion dollars very
cool car, which good for him. I don't begrudge him
any of that. He's very good at what he does,
which is why Ross wants him taste right before the game,
because he's very good at what he does and he's
a great and he should be in prison anyway, I heard,

(01:23:52):
well anyway, Uh so, so he's in his amazing automotive
and you ever driven like a really beefy car where
you just you got you do stupid stuff. First time,
somebody was dumb enough to let me borrow a scat
pack for a week. I almost killed myself and all
of you.

Speaker 3 (01:24:09):
And to get that under control, they brought me out
there was like a Lotus dealership or something in Durham
when I first like moved to the market back in
the time.

Speaker 1 (01:24:16):
Wait, I'm sorry, there's a Lotus dealership at that time
in Durham. Yeah, So they brought me out to it
was like a remote for radio station at like a
Lotus dealership, and they gave me a fight in one
of those cars and it was I was terrified. Yeah,
fight and the guys just flying around the roundabout. I
go through that, I'm like, oh, it's the Jeff Gordon.

(01:24:36):
Have you ever seen the Jeff Gordon thing where he
pretends to be a taxi driver and they put this
dude in the back of it. They really did that
to him. They had this guy, so they want to
screw with this dude. I can't remember what his connection was.
He was with one of the companies that work with
Jeff Gordon. So they put him in and he's dressed
like a redneck who just got out of prison, right

(01:24:57):
you can only kind of see the back, but he's
all scruffy, he's got tats. And they put this guy
in the back of the taxi. He's driving up somewhere
and all of a sudden, some a cop cars, a
pretend cop lights up. Gordon. Gordon pulled whips into this
this huge like cement mixing plant, so they're off the
main roads and proceeds to go full on car chase

(01:25:17):
with this guy in the back, screaming, screaming. It was
for a Pepsi commercial, and all of a sudden whips
into this garage where banners and everything there and it
was that and then one of the jackass riders for
what is the what was the Gawker one Japlotnick or
how do you pronounce that, Japlotnick? One of those riders

(01:25:39):
did a piece to take Jeff Gordon down for this
is a lie and all your fans are racist. So
they did it to him. There's another video if you've
never seen the follow up where they had to dress
him up more. If this guy thinks he's in there,
he starts screaming like a girl. Man, no offense to women.
Actually he was screaming much worse than that. And so

(01:26:05):
Tyreek Hill has this supercar and he drives like a jackass.
Some people do. And so the police are saying that
he did a traffic in fraction. They were attempting to
stop him, and then Tyreek Hill attempted to do the
home base thing. Do you guys know what the home
base thing is? If you've watched enough police cop cop shows,

(01:26:27):
you you know what the home base is. It's this
loophole that people think exists that doesn't exists. Let's say
you kind of guess what this is. But yeah, yeah,
go ahead, yeah, all right. We have not discussed this
at all, but I watched I watch Patrol Live.

Speaker 3 (01:26:44):
So is this when they're chasing somebody who is at
speeding and they're like, oh, well, I'm going to drive
home and then they can't tow my car because it's home.
Ye I'm going to get to where I'm going and
then it'll be okay. And it's and by the way,
that is not how it is. Like if you're speeding
going a thousand miles down the interstate and then you
drive all the way home, they're going to rescue and
then take your car.

Speaker 1 (01:27:01):
Not if you're on your own property to touch your
base or flag or whatever, we'll take your car, dah,
not if you if you want. What if you run
into your house and you're park in the garage, that
doesn't matter. Taking your car. Oh wow, you're going You're
going to jail. Yeah, it happens all the time. So
the amount of people that do that though, it's always
crazy to me. Like I'll watch a cop show and

(01:27:22):
the guy will turn into a neighborhood and I'm like,
he's going home. He's gonna do the thing.

Speaker 3 (01:27:26):
Yeah, And they think that and then they got you
for speeding and then for of eating if you're fleeing.

Speaker 1 (01:27:31):
Yeah yeah, but also you're on you're a sovereign citizen.
You were only traveling and now you're on your own
country or whatever the hell you think. So see loopholes abound,
all right, No loop pole in the weather it's just
nice stuff coming your way. Jeff mar from the Weather
Channel to fill you in what's going.

Speaker 9 (01:27:48):
On, Sir h Looking at a stretch of dry weather
and comfortable temperatures early this week. The next chance rain
later in the day on Friday, and during the weekend
we may have a few showers and thunderstorms to dodge.
In the meantime, though, be heading out to and Apache.
Fogg is lifting right now, so we'll see some sunshine
of the afternoon and hit eighty then clear overnight with
the low cooling of the load of mid fifties. A
little bit warmer tomorrow, high up to eighty five under sunshine.

(01:28:10):
It's more sun on Wednesday or the high of eighty four,
clouds increased Thursday up to eighty two, and then a
little bit cooler on Friday. A few afternoon showers may
pop up under a cloudy sky with a high close
to eighty degrees.

Speaker 1 (01:28:20):
All right, thank you, Jeff, appreciate it, Ma Man and
uh dude, Russ. I cannot get over the fact that
somebody's like, hey, you know what I'm gonna do. I
I go to derm and sell lotuses. Were they were
they moving them? Or were they like desperate. I don't know.
I think I think there was like two people that
stopped by the entire broadcast because you're at a Lotus dealership,

(01:28:40):
and I remember thinking, like, this is a really cool
these are amazing cars, but like, who's going to stop by?
Like I I mean, now, probably move them. The quality
of cars did you see driving around the triangles? Pretty
crazy and you see some really exotic stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:28:53):
I terrified are the sales rip. I think it was
Amanda at the time. I can't remember who the app was, No,
it was it was somebody else, because like they were like, hey,
do you want to drive one? And I said no,
I lost my license. And when I said it that way,
it was my wording. What I meant to say was
I miss politically, I misplaced it. I couldn't find it,
and at the time it was still like a salt

(01:29:13):
in Nebraska driver's license or something, and the sales rep
was like, oh.

Speaker 1 (01:29:18):
My god, why don't you go he does he's a
drug driver and I'm like, no, no, I misplaced it.
I was smuggling heroin and I ran for the police
and I drove. I drove to my house. I don't
know what the problem was That's great, dude. You want
to make Bank and Durham. Here you get. You guys
want a million dollar idea, here you go. You want
to make Bank and Durham open an unlicensed and unregistered

(01:29:40):
ATV motorcycle street dealership. That's what you should open because
those sell like hotcakes. They love them over there anyway,
eight forty five.

Speaker 8 (01:29:49):
Hang on, well, Happy Monday to you, kse Well. Worries
over a cooling job market sent stocks into a tailspin
on Friday, but it is looking like a happy Monday
on Wall Street. Futures are hire right across the board.
S and P futures are up thirty four, the Nasdaq
futures are up one hundred thirty six, and the Dow
futures are up two hundred seventy two points. We get

(01:30:10):
the Conference Board's Employment Trends Index at ten o'clock this morning.
It could offer some clues to the pace of hiring
in the months ahead. Oracle releases its quarterly results after
the markets closed today. Big Lots has filed for bankruptcy
after years of same store sales declines. The company filed
for Chapter eleven and announced plans to sell its assets

(01:30:31):
and ongoing business to Nexus Capital Management. Under the agreement,
Nexus will buy big lots if no other parties come
forward with better offers. Apple holds its biggest event of
the year today. The company will reveal its iPhone sixteen
line up, along with updated versions of its iPods and
Apple Watch. A suite of artificial intelligence features and a

(01:30:52):
revamped Serie Digital Assistant will also be introduced. Boeing has
a tentative contract agreement with its biggest union. The deal
hammered out during marathon talks over the weekend. It comes
just days ahead of a strike deadline. Direct TV subscribers
missed out on more football games over the weekend. That
carriage dispute kept ESPN, ABC and other Walt Disney owned

(01:31:14):
channels blacked out on the satellite service over the weekend.
Direct TV filed a complaint with the Federal Communications Commission,
accusing Disney of bad faith negotiations. Beetlejuice can still draw
crowds to movie theaters. The sequel Beetlejuice. Beetlejuice came out
thirty six years after the original film. It was the

(01:31:34):
weekend's number one movie, taking in one hundred ten million
dollars and KC. Today is National Teddy Bear Day build
a Bear Workshop, celebrating by rolling prices at its stores
back to nineteen ninety seven. That's the year the company
was founded. Good chance, you can go. You can go
make your Ross Hayes spy bear today at a good price.

Speaker 1 (01:31:54):
Casey, yeah, he's a spy man. You never know, You
never know. If that guy's watching it the big the
Beetlejuice movie. What happens that he can't do a third one?

Speaker 6 (01:32:02):
Though?

Speaker 2 (01:32:03):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:32:04):
I don't know what would you call the third one?
Based on the trends of the first two.

Speaker 8 (01:32:09):
I won't have me beetlejuice. Beetle juice, beetlejuice.

Speaker 4 (01:32:12):
No, what did you do?

Speaker 2 (01:32:14):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:32:14):
Come on, Jeff, what do you all right? Get out
of here, man, We gotta clean this up.

Speaker 8 (01:32:18):
Oh what did I do wrong?

Speaker 1 (01:32:21):
At that's how you see that, That's how you spawned beetlejuice. Man,
you say it three times? Oh okay, well now we're screwed.

Speaker 8 (01:32:29):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I knew. I knew about candy Man,
but I didn't know about beetle Juice.

Speaker 1 (01:32:34):
Oh God, great, you gotta go man, because I got
no this is all right? Look at that Jeff Bellager
trying to murder everybody with well technically he's trying to
murder everybody. What Like South Chicago, isn't that where he
was operating. I feel I didn't think he'd fall for
it for a moment. Yeah, oh it's so Look at

(01:32:55):
that road they just shrunk ross his head. Ross put
it in my top ten favorite Jeff interactions. Okay,
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