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October 23, 2025 • 98 mins
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Every single I'm telling you, it's it's it's usually equally
horrifying and wildly amusing these little easter eggs that we
keep finding out about what was going on during the
UH during the old Biden administration, Like just all sorts

(00:23):
of weirdness, man, And we sorry, making sure I have
this right up here, all sorts of weirdness as we're
now finding out another little secret Service easter egg, a
little nugget of info, and it has to do with
one of the agents that was on uh in this case,

(00:45):
was on Kamala Harris's daughters. Uh, the model on on
her detail and uh, it's a doozy man. So one
of the agents, well, one of the secret Service agents
that was a signed to protect Kamala Harris's daughter had

(01:10):
not passed a fitness test in like it, what does
it say? Sorry, for some reason, my outlook's just being
very weird this morning. But I do have it here,
so hang on just a sec. Yeah, here we go.
All right, it's from the Daily Caller. Kamala Harris family
secret Service agent reportedly moonlighted as plus size model. Yeah,

(01:36):
a female agent formally on the detail for Vice President
Harris's stepdaughter Ella moonlighted as a model and a body
positivity advocate, which actually would deincentivize her from, you know,
getting into shape because it ruins the side hustle. And
apparently she was uh you know, did like national some

(02:02):
some pretty big national campaigns. So like this isn't just
walking around money. Uh, she was, she was making Uh,
it was quite a quite a supplement. The problem was,
if you're a plus size model and you're known for
your curves, you can't go out and you know, really

(02:22):
get fit because then you blow your other gig. So
as a result, and because she she also had this
notoriety as a body positivity advocate on both social media
and he also gave speeches to other government employees about
body positivity. Uh, when she failed her physical fitness test

(02:43):
eight times, they kept her in the field. I mean,
just it's it's just every day, it's some other little
thing where just just nobody cares. Nobody cares, it's gonna
go ahead and do whatever whatever we want here. When
I mean, if of all the places to cut corners

(03:08):
like this arguably has to be one of the worst,
considering the physical requirements that are expected of agents to
potentially have to be like Ross, did you see how
much Gerard Butler had to move around when it hit
the fan and Olympus has fallen? Or which one was his?
I always get the two mixed up because they had

(03:28):
the one with him and then the other one with
what Channing, Tatum and Fox, So I can never remember
which of the names. Like, there was a lot of
cardio there that I clearly I don't know that this
woman would be able to do. But you know, just
the fact that you just the fact that you're like,
you have this employee they have and remember the standards

(03:50):
are actually were actually increased under this administration, so you
had a lesser standard. You have this such a basic thing,
and this is the kind of stuff that was going
on in the military too, And then she's rubbing it
in your face by being in these magazines and these

(04:11):
these other campaigns. Have a few examples here of some
of the stuff she did. I'm not familiar with all
these clothing brands, but yeah, they're your standard fashion things.
Like what is the stuff we're never gonna find out about? Man,
that's what's gonna be. That's what's just gonna be crazy
about this, all right? Eight eight eight nine three four

(04:33):
seven eight seven four. I don't know what is going
on with that. We'll have to figure out Rogie and
nevity outlook issues. This morning, I should have opened this.
Oh you did, okay, Ah, okay, no, no, no, it's side
of the code. I can't get the name thing to load,
uh literally populate the the emails that I sent this
morning from my phone. All right, well, anyway, I'll figure

(04:55):
that out. I can read it off my phone though.
That's fine. Of course I need to get the stack
here too. Let's see here, how long does she work
for the Secret Service? So she was hired on okay,
so she she started serving in the last administration. It
was hired by the woman that they blew out of

(05:16):
there after the the Trump near assassination. Yeah, that's just
that is just awful. Actually it said she was assigned there.
So I don't know. And they're they're kind of withholding
her name in this one article here, but I suspect
it wouldn't be hard to figure out.

Speaker 2 (05:34):
Who she is.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
Never oh, she never passed a physical How does that
even possible? And are Secret Service agents allowed to moonlight?
I don't know the answer to that. I don't even
know what a Secret Service agent makes, but especially one
who's on a family protection detail, right, because most most
people work for the Secret Service are not, you know,

(06:00):
out there assigned to individual details. They're doing a bunch
of other stuff, you know, going out ahead of time
and and things like that, but you know, handling threats
online things, you know, things of that nature. She's she's
doing actually body detail for UH, for Harris's kid.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
All right.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
I scanned the whole article, and I can't tell exactly
when she came on, but you get the gist of it,
just like one thing after another after another, and you laugh.
Becau's just like the sheer absurdity of it, right, Like
come on, man, you wouldn't if you wouldn't believe it.
If you saw it in a movie, it would be like,
you know what, it'd be like, who's the what is

(06:43):
that comedian's name?

Speaker 2 (06:48):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (06:48):
She did as she did the she did that great
impression of Trump's first UH spokesperson, the dude when he
had like the he had like the lectern that was motorized?
What was what is what was Rossberber? What her name is?

Speaker 2 (07:03):
That?

Speaker 1 (07:03):
The comedian? She did the Heat movie with Sandra Bullock.
I can't remember her name anyway, Yeah, McCarthy. It would
be like if McCarthy was out doing Secret Service detail
unless it was a comedy, like people would be like,
ass is it real? Can't buy this because that's that's
kind of the figure that she has. There's a photo

(07:25):
of her with her head with just the bottom part
of it so you can see the body there. That's
what you're talking about. Which, again I'm not criticizing that,
I'm criticizing the idea that she's decided that to be
a secret service The US Secret Service said, no, this
is fine, and she is de incentivized because she's making
money with that figure to actually attempt to achieve the

(07:45):
health standards that are required of Secret Service agents like
she had. She actively doesn't want to get healthier because
it would screw up what I'm sure is, you know,
pretty decent little side hustle. And I figure that out
this morning within like two minutes of reading this article,

(08:09):
and nobody as Secret Service went out this might be
a little bit of a conflict, might be a little
bit of a problem, not because it was all, oh, yeah, no,
this is the representation we need. Too often secret Service
agents are portrayed, are portrayed as healthy people. Yeah, and
I don't know about you. If I was a protect
e man and everybody showed up, all right, here's this person.

(08:33):
This person ran your detail, I'd at least ask some questions.
I'd be like, how is I mean, the only theory
that is, I guess if there's that situation where they
have to cover you, there's more real estate there if
they have to take a bullet for you. So unless
that was the thinking, I don't understand it. But uh,

(08:57):
that's just because I'm a big old media I guess.
All right, six fifteen, we'll take a break. We got
lots to get into and Stephen Kent will be joining us.
That's at eighth five. Souh, stick around back in just
a few says six twenty one here on the CaCO
Day radio program. What is this? Okay?

Speaker 3 (09:20):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (09:20):
Ross, you're not a doctor, right you? Doctor? You're not
a doctor. I'm not a lawyer. You're not a doctor.
I want to be a buntantly clear here. All right,
Ross is not a doctor. This is gonna be important
because I, yeah, I have my thoughts on it. I'm
also not a doctor, and I think it's important to
get a second opinion here from another non doctor. Let's

(09:43):
say hypothetically you needed surgery, outpatient surgery to I don't know,
sportscar enlargement. Okay, which of these three surgical sites would
you think was the most prop would you be least
inclined to go get the surgery? A A big hospital,

(10:06):
right and all the departments, all the doctors, all the specialists,
you know, the whole Just one of the big main hospitals.
That's that's say B one of those big outpatients surgery centers,
you know where most people go if they need like
rotator cuffs or sports injury surgeries or you know, basically
anything where it's not super duper life threatening or c

(10:30):
on the side of the road in the back of
a nineteen ninety seven Toyota Corolla.

Speaker 4 (10:37):
Which what kind of a crazy bastard would choose?

Speaker 3 (10:40):
See?

Speaker 1 (10:41):
Like hold on, hold out?

Speaker 4 (10:43):
Like who would do that?

Speaker 1 (10:44):
Hold on? The first option runs in the tens of
thousands of dollars, The second option can be in the
you know, basically the high thousands, and the third option
is less than five hundred. Does that change?

Speaker 4 (11:03):
Perhaps I want to hear this question. I want to
I want to see Dave Ramsey field this question.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
In fact, the one uh, let's see the cheap According
to police that because, believe it or not, they actually
arrested this doctor and at one point he charges two
hudred and twenty nine dollars for one of the enlargements.

Speaker 4 (11:24):
I mean, you know, you get what you pay for.
It's all I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
Right now, there's a picture here. I see a metal
tray with you know, gloves and stuff like that.

Speaker 4 (11:33):
Yeah, yeah, I mean it could be worse. You could
be I'm gonna go with the Albanian hostile or whatever
it is, you.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
Know, yeah, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. Do
you see how hot those chicks are there? Though, I mean, wow,
what's the worst that could happen?

Speaker 4 (11:49):
Yeah, I'm gonna go with the shipment container with the
chair in it.

Speaker 1 (11:52):
Surgeon pattayahmulin age fifty one offered the UH enhanced and
actually he was. He was offering a variety of them.
But again, he would then do the surgery in the
back of a ninety seven Toyota Corolla. I would say, though,

(12:14):
it looks like he does take care of his vehicles.
Do they have a picture of it here, and it
seems to be a remarkably good shape.

Speaker 4 (12:23):
It's not like, you know, splattered with blood and pain.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
No, no, no, very professional, very professional. Look, here's the
other part of this. You're not you know, you don't
have to sit around and wait for a bunch, right,
there's not the you know, the other patients.

Speaker 4 (12:40):
Where's the car parked?

Speaker 1 (12:42):
It looks it's on this side. He would party, doesn't
he feel like, does like a park pull off or something?

Speaker 3 (12:48):
All right?

Speaker 4 (12:48):
I was because you know, I was wondering if it
has a nice view during the procedure.

Speaker 1 (12:52):
Well, it's that's the beauty of it, depending on what
your perfuwed preferred preferred view is. It's mobile, right, So
if you want to get a shady enlargement surgery with
a mountain vista, I'm sure that can be arranged. I
don't know if it's extra.

Speaker 4 (13:07):
And if it does go tragically wrong, you can drive
immediately to the hospital where you went in the first place.

Speaker 1 (13:13):
Now see why this is a tougher decision than you
first uh, get it. And by the way, he was
advertising on TikTok, which is actually because you're like, where
would you find enough idiots? To make this profitable. And
then I saw that and I'm like, yeah, that's probably true.
M see what other services is he accused?

Speaker 3 (13:36):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (13:36):
Okay, uh, pearling, I don't know. Do you know what
pearling is?

Speaker 4 (13:43):
I don't think I want to know.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
Now I need you. I'm gonna need you to do
some research, buddy. I'm very busy doing you know this
thing or oh, never mind, I can tell what it
is from this They they it's they would insert a pearl.
I guess it would act like a piercing. I didn't

(14:04):
even know that was a thing. That's a thing. It's
a thing. How much how much do you think that costs? Ross?
Are they little slicy open stuff of pearl in there
sewed up? How much?

Speaker 4 (14:18):
Hoping it comes free with the procedure or something. I'm
not one and fourteen dollars? Okay, so we're we're total there.
Maybe it's fourteen for the pool. Does he have any
does this doctor have any testimonials? Like, hey, I went
to doctor so and so and it was great, and
you know, i'd.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
See his tiktoks because then you know, you wonder if
these there's some reviews under there. I don't know, and
then that's the other thing too. If the police come
to try to get you, also, you can just take off.
Hopefully you're not mid pearl procedure or the other thing.
But yeah, so unfortunately he's he's had to shut the

(14:59):
practice down because police arrested him looking at a picture
of the pearls. Thankfully, you know pre install there and
they come in a variety of shapes and sizes for
all that. Okay, well look at that. We learned new
things about the Secret Service this morning and this horrible, awful,

(15:22):
insane thing, and now we all know what pearling is.
So SEC has permanently suspended of one of their referees
for the Auburn Georgia game. I don't know if you
guys watched that, and I think really that the touchdown
I guess then the non touchdown that turned into a

(15:43):
fumble because of this guy was the straw that broke
the camel's back. Ken Williamson is now permanently suspended by
the Southeastern Conference from officiating games after reviews of eleven
of his calls showed nine to be in air, including
that touchdown, which was a big momentum shift. I mean,

(16:04):
I don't know that You can't definitively say because it
was at the end of the first half that that's
why Georgia won. But if you're an Auburn fan you
think it is. But still it was. It didn't matter
what angle you looked at. Dude, the guy was in
and had not fumbled the ball. So yeah, so he good.

(16:28):
I mean, I'm not happy that a guy's losing his gig.
But and people go, well, it's just sports. It is sports.
But there's also billions attached to things like this. There's
a lot of money that's tied up through things like this,
And then there's just the idea, at the end of
the day, if you suck at your job, you might

(16:50):
get fired. I don't care whether it's a referee in
college football or the NFL or you work at you know,
Olive Garden. Yeah, if you're not good at your job
to getting things wrong constantly, you might lose your gig.
He has spent twenty one years with the SEC and he,

(17:12):
you know, is doing bowl games all that stuff. And look,
if you're going to be in that business, the business
that he's in, and on the football side of things,
this is where you want to be. SEC is going
to be your your plumb gig there. I would maybe
the NFL can figure out who in New York called
and uh, after my tight end caught a touchdown in
the last Vikings game and the referees on the field

(17:37):
for an NFL game all decided it was a touchdown,
and then some guy can pick up a phone in
New York call and negate it and then we lose.
That's weird, weird, weird, weird. And then my poor tight
end's got to sit there and probably get himself a
fine for criticizing it. By the way, kind of mentioned

(18:02):
oligarden that ross. There's a new challenge and it's it
might harm the olive garden for that the kids are doing.
And I know that the employees are very not happy
with this. So it's called the never Any Pastave Challenge.
It's exactly what it sounds like, except you are because

(18:25):
you're going to get as many portions as possible so
you can get as long a receipt as possible. You're
going to you're going to lean into pastas and sauces
that are going to be the least filling so that
you can create these super receipts in a single sitting.
The problem is it's thirteen ninety nine and as long
as you stick to the you know, you're not getting

(18:46):
add ons or anything. You could sit there like it's
like it's a king's feast for hours. And the servers
hate it because you're only paying fourteen dollars whether you
have ten refills or no refills, and you're they're getting
kept accordingly. Plus people are you know, they're like hiding
pastas and all this stuff all so they can go
in there and do it. And now olive gardens. You know,

(19:11):
there was a there was a reason so many of
the other fast casuals ended there all you can eat stuff.
It was getting abused and now they're abusing it for
for clicks on TikTok. Oh, just looking at this one
receipt here, Holy crap, I mean people.

Speaker 3 (19:29):
Was this.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
Uh six okay, there's six people at this table.

Speaker 4 (19:36):
There is like a limit or like a time limit
on it or something. Yeah, buffets too, where these guys
get like kicked out of the buffet after like ten
hours or something.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
This is why we can't have nice things though. Yeah,
it's just like.

Speaker 4 (19:47):
U cidly, you know, TikTok is going to ruin olive garden.
It's it's just TikTok is going to ruin blank. You
just feel right whatever it is, Yeah, can't.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Here's the thing. I would feel better about this if
some of them were harm themselves, not egregiously, but like
because that can help adjust what you do. Like with
the cup of noodles thing we talked about where the
girls are see how fast they can eat one right
as it's ready, which is insane because it's still steaming
hot and they're getting burns. Then they probably won't do

(20:18):
that in the future. Right, there's a there's a course
correction here. Unless somebody I guess explodes from pasta intake.
Then I don't know, like you.

Speaker 4 (20:27):
End up like the guy in seven, Remember the gluttony guy.

Speaker 2 (20:30):
Yeah, yeah, yea.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
Yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah if he if something that
happens to somebody, maybe maybe al right, So one two, three, four, five,
six seven heat hold on one two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve,
thirty two, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, thirty thirty thirty three,

(20:59):
thirty four, thirty five thirty six. That's thirty. There's thirty. No,
there's thirty seven refills.

Speaker 4 (21:06):
Yeah, on the table that say they need to start
highering like individual like Joey Roast beefs that hang out
in the back. And then when somebody's abusing and they
just come out with a baseball bat and just stand
over your table.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
Just treat it like the Vegas casinos, right, yes, right,
Or they're just like, all right, I think you've been
winning enough. Right right, that's it. Joe Pesci comes out
the back, right, it's that. Or they take you in
the back, put your head and device. These are your choices,
all right, I'll go thirty seven refills. So that is

(21:37):
Remember I said there's six people, so that's six refills
on top of their initial orders. That's seven rounds of pasta.
And I don't know who they consumed it all hoarded
this and or there was some unfinished or whatever, according
to Oligar, and their standard policy is as part of
it not only not only is it is it unlimited

(22:00):
after the first serving. If you want to try another one,
even if you haven't finished your first serving, they will
box your first serving for you and then give you
only one more. But if you keep eating, they'll just
keep letting.

Speaker 4 (22:13):
You order it you finally leave, you go in the
parking lot and your car explodes.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
All right, It's just I bet people are just throwing
up outside too. You'd have to get Is it safe
to consume that much carbs in one sitting? Like you're
more tuned in on the putting food in the body?
Is it like is shoving twenty pounds of pasta and
you're gulling?

Speaker 4 (22:34):
I don't know. Maybe if you're running like a marathon
the next day, you got a load load upon this.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
Yeah, I mean I've heard of that, but.

Speaker 4 (22:42):
I can't even like, we'll get pizza now and I'll
h you know, I'll like splurge and eat like three
or four pieces of pizza and I'll have to take
a nap immediately. I'm like so tired, dude.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
I had fried chicken last night. I was, but it
was really good.

Speaker 3 (22:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
I had Korean fried chicken, which if you guys never
had that. There's a really good place on Capital just
above the belt line. But you know, you take your
life in your hands. Yeah, but yeah, And I'm sure
there's one ore in Greensborough. I don't know exactly where
they have cream chicken over there.

Speaker 5 (23:15):
But.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
It's dude, I and and I was never eat that much,
just gorged on that. I thought I was going to
pass out for I could do prep yesterday. Oh so good. Yeah,
I got it all nice and early. So the point
of it is all right, So that okay. So there's
six of them. So the the total bill was one
hundred and fifty dollars for those six people, which is okay.

(23:40):
That sounds about right right, because they got some drinks
and stuff on their one hundred and fifty dollars. But
this poor server has now had to make and I
let's say that she's carrying two at a time. She's
had to make just for the pasta, the initial and
the refills, she's had to make nearly twenty trips to
the kitchen. And it doesn't say how long they were

(24:03):
there in this story, but uh, you know, twenty percent
of one hundred and fifty is thirty bucks. Is thirty bucks.
And by the way, the servers are really mad because
this server had no other tables because of this table
and what was going on. Yeah, I'd be I'd be

(24:24):
mad all around, man, I'd be mad all around. Plush. Yeah,
you got other people there in the restaurant, and what
if they're a little short staffed and now you're dealing
with these dumbasses. Come on, all right, six forty four
very important, very important olive garden news and you know
that we will we will always make sure to avail

(24:45):
you of it on this show. That's our commitment to you, uh,
the Democrats commitment to ice. We're gonna let people track
yous uh and uh totally uh figure out where you're
gonna be, where you're going, where you have been, patterns,
those various things. So if people want to harass you

(25:05):
or God forbid, harm you, we're going to make it easy.
As they announced a brand new ice tracker, I.

Speaker 3 (25:11):
Share this with the mayor.

Speaker 6 (25:12):
Over the course of the next couple of weeks, the
Oversight Committee will be launching on their website a master
ice tracker.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Well we can.

Speaker 6 (25:21):
We're going to be essentially tracking every single instance that
we can verify thats the community will send, you will
send us information.

Speaker 1 (25:28):
On Okay, So it is a combination. I'm sure of
actions that have been taken because they are the Oversight Committee,
so they get you know, they get the very frequent
reports on numbers. Yeah, we at two hundred arrests over
the weekend in Laredo or you know, whatever it is,
and coupled with the very same thing that was being

(25:50):
used on those websites, and that that one Twitter account
that eventually got shut down to track ICE agents figure
out where they're staying. Now they'll say that it's we're
tracking what they do. But if they're going to basically
offload the populating of this where people can submit it,

(26:11):
and people are going to submit things like they're at
this hotel and you may not catch that right away,
right because there's no there's no way you can review
every single thing that gets up there. This is wildly
irresponsible if you're going to allow people to update it
outside of you know, there being a central clearinghouse, which
is what they're describing. If you go, if you listen

(26:35):
to the larger if you watch more of the coverage
on this, you realize that they want this seem to
be pretty extensive. It is an intimidation tactic, That's what
it is. Let's see.

Speaker 6 (26:49):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (26:49):
Yeah, So Robert Garcia, that's who you just heard there,
by the way, who is uh? I think he is
he ranking member on House overside. I think he might
be along with Mayor Karen Bass. We're at the press
conference announced the plans for their master ice tracker. What
do they think they're gonna have this up and running? Well,

(27:13):
I don't know, okay, Yeah, and so the previous thing
was called ice Block, That's what it was. Yeah, man,
this is just about scroll with the ice agents. I mean, putting,

(27:33):
putting them on notice, making their jobs a little more
dangerous at the very least, just showing a little more
difficult because then you know, they how many of these
videos where you see where they're doing some sort of
raid and somebody catches it and then posts about on
social media, and by the time they're pulling whoever they
were resting out of the house, there's ten people outside

(27:55):
screaming at them like lunatics. In this In New York City,
that's almost the norm now. In fact, I was reading
how they were adjusting to try it. Basically, they were
trying to figure out how to be as speedy as possible,
because the longer it takes you on site to do
what you're doing, the more of these lunatics can show up.
And after what happened in Chicago where they were rammed,

(28:17):
you know, they rammed the vehicles. Now they're prioritizing doing
it quickly. The problem is when you're doing something that's
dangerous quickly, it doesn't make it safer, by the way,
for the agents or for whoever they're taken into custody,
because remember the goal of the people that are being
taken into custody largely largely is deportation and not inside

(28:43):
the US incarceration. So there is a there is a
different endgame there, and you're going to create a scenario
that's going to make it more dangerous so that you
can make political points. Good for you six forty eight.
Hang on, do you guys see this or here? I
guess it would be the better, better thing, right. Russ

(29:04):
told me about this yesterday and I hadn't. I didn't
get a chance. It was during the show, so I
didn't get a chance to listen to it until right
after the show. But so this is, uh, this is
Michael Jordan being interviewed by Mike Tarico. Right, So we
got NBA kicking off, they got themselves a Jordan interview
and he says something that I think a lot of

(29:25):
people are going to find pretty surprising. Tarico asked him,
you know, how about still playing basketball, and you know,
when's the last time you shot a ball? And Jordan's
answer will probably surprise you because the answer is it's
been a minute, which is it's not the first time
I've heard this. I heard an interview with Larry Bird

(29:47):
and he had said that he really doesn't shoot the
ball around anymore. And I, you know, I get it,
but it's it's just one of those things where it's like,
this is what you're not. You're not just known for this,
you're known in the same mention of the word of
the game, right, and so then to not do it now,

(30:09):
It's not like Jordan doesn't do stuff. He plays golf.
He's got memberships for about nine different golf clubs. But
then the sound of my voice here, you know, Fishes
obviously loves going down there. He's got the collection of boats.
He does his thing. He's you know, he's invested in
a bunch of stuff. He's just living the great he's
living his life. Man. But he told a story then
about the last time he shot and uh, basically he

(30:31):
he a lot of times when there's a big golf
tournament somewhere, the big houses that are on the on
the the course generally get rented up a lot of
times by the golfers and a lot of and people
like Michael Jordan. So this is a scenario. He's rented
a house and uh, he's talking to the owner of
the house, and the owner's got kids and grandkids and

(30:52):
this listen, just listen to this.

Speaker 3 (30:54):
Do you ever do you pick up a ball and
to shoot? I haven't picked up a ball in years.
Come on, just like walk. There's got to be a
hoop somewhere at your place. You don't see it anywhere
around here. I don't. So the last time you picked
up a basketball and shop, I was at the ride
a Cup.

Speaker 7 (31:12):
Yeah, And I rented a house from from the owner.

Speaker 3 (31:17):
Sure, he came over to do pictures.

Speaker 7 (31:20):
He had grandkids, and I was beating greet and thank
him for allowing me to stay in the house.

Speaker 3 (31:26):
And he had a basketball court. He says, I want
you to shoot.

Speaker 7 (31:29):
One of the free throw I said, really, I already
paid for the already paid for the houses.

Speaker 3 (31:35):
Like you got to see me. So when I stepped
up to shoot your free throw, that's the most nervous
I've been in stopped in years.

Speaker 7 (31:45):
Stop it, Come on and the reason being is those
kids heard the stories from the parents about what I
did thirty years ago, right, so their expectation is thirty.

Speaker 3 (31:57):
Years prior and I have n't touch the basketball. I
hope you switched it absolutely.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
Of course.

Speaker 3 (32:07):
Most gratifying that whole.

Speaker 7 (32:09):
Week is that I was able to please that kid,
not knowing if I could.

Speaker 1 (32:16):
What a wholesome story, man, what a great story. I
don't know, Ross, I think I had him dunk be
chatting with our official NERD correspondent, Stephen Kent, and uh
we got all sorts of nerdery. Oh wait, hold on.
Russ also sent me I want to talk about the
Netflix stuff for sure. Yeah, we can have that to
the list. There also we have Ah, well, I'll just

(32:39):
tell you that one of the things here, so uh.
The guy who made some of the Nightmare on Elm
Street movies also directed The Mask that the Jim Carrey
movie from back in the day, which is one of
my favorite movies when I was younger. Ross, you're a
fan of the Mask. I think we've talked about this right, Yeah, yeah,
for sure. And that's important that I tell you both

(33:01):
of those because, as we all know, Hollywood is absolutely
bankrupt of ideas, so they're like, hey, what if we
redo the Nightmare on Elm Street or at least, you know,
maybe produce some new movies or who knows what they're
gonna do. But what's important is who they are considering

(33:23):
to play Freddy Krueger. Since England's probably probably not inclined.
There was one point I think he said he wasn't
gonna do anymore. And now it's been a lot of
years too. This the director wants Jim Carrey to play
Freddy Krueger. I don't know how I feel about that.

(33:45):
Right there now, I will say this, Jim Carrey has
he did a movie where he plays like this really
grizzled detective or I think it's in Russia is where
it's kind of set and it's really it's a really
dark movie.

Speaker 4 (34:01):
Yeah, Jim Carrey I think kind of has the range
maybe to pull it off because you think of goofy
Jim Carrey, but he can be really depressed, like scared
Jim Carrey.

Speaker 1 (34:09):
That movie was so dark man that gave me a
whole new edge to him. I can't remember what. It
wasn't particularly great, wasn't awful, but the whole time, you're like,
it's Jim Carrey. The guy's funny, and this is the
least funny movie I've ever seen. So it'll be perfect
because now that you're you're talking about letting Lincoln watch
horror movies, you can get them.

Speaker 4 (34:27):
He can no, I mean, it isn't gonna happen. But
he's been curious about them.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
The watching horror movies.

Speaker 4 (34:33):
Yeah, guess Halloween. He sees these thumbnails pop up on
Netflix or even on Disney Plus now, which is super weird.
He's like, what is that? And we explain it to
him and he's like, I want to watch it. We're like, no,
you can't.

Speaker 1 (34:44):
I'm trying to think what would be a good starter
horror movie.

Speaker 4 (34:47):
I mean, this is why we're not gonna let him
watch like Friday the thirteenth or Nightmare on Elm Street.
We try, we got we had him watch Ernest Scared Stupid,
and it comes to a point we're like the person
there's like a kid in the bed and they turned
into a troll or a troll shows up under the
bed and it scared the ever living you know what

(35:08):
out of them.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
Oh the troll.

Speaker 4 (35:10):
He ran upstairs and he started like crying, and we're like,
all right, so we're definitely not going to do the whole,
you know, Halloween Michael Myers type thing. This is not
gonna happen.

Speaker 1 (35:20):
Yeah, well after after you know you large you large
marched him is what you did? It's ah yeah and
then uh and Ross, by the way, we've had this discussion.
Ross is on team Jason. Uh and Uh just found
out his wife's on team Freddy. So that's interesting. Don't

(35:41):
you guys talk about stuffore you get married?

Speaker 4 (35:43):
You probably should have. Yeah, yeah, hey, what where.

Speaker 3 (35:48):
You wanna you know this?

Speaker 7 (35:49):
That?

Speaker 1 (35:49):
And by the way, what's your uh, what's the superior
horror for?

Speaker 4 (35:52):
I mean as a kid, I just always thought, you know,
growing up, like as a teenager, got really big into
the horror movies like Friday thirteen. We loved, Like I said,
we were big, Jason, answer me. Everybody Phil who lived like,
you know, a block away from my mom so I
still lives there. We love Friday the thirteenth. We probably
watched those movies. I don't even know how many times.
But I always felt but he was a fan. He
also like Freddie. I always felt Freddy was a bit

(36:13):
too goofy, like stop talking and murder people, you know,
and just personal opinions, where if it was like stop talking, yeah, man,
like get to work, dude. And then when you see
the body count, you know, Jason's side compared to Freddy's side,
you know, it's it's not even It's like comparing MJ
to Lebron more of a specialist, yeah, whereas Jason was

(36:36):
more of you know, it was quantity over quality, whereas
you know there was with with Freddy.

Speaker 1 (36:45):
It was about the mental manipulation first, right, that was
the horror.

Speaker 4 (36:49):
I always thought it was dumb. I mean, yeah, but
I'm saying that, you know, that was that was part
of the I remember when we were kids. The the
it was a big event when Jason versus Freddy came out. Yeah,
they and they like they did and well they did
the thing where nobody really won, right because Jason cut
off Freddy's head and he's standing their spoiler on the
dock holding Freddy's head. But then at the end, Freddy,

(37:10):
I believe Likedy throws Freddy's head in the water. But
then Freddy's eyes open, right, so nobody really wins to
make both fan bases happy, Yeah, but Marky was like, oh, well,
you know, Jason can't go anywhere but that camp. And
I'm like, he went to the moon. He hitch hiked
to New York City, So I don't know what you're talking.

Speaker 1 (37:26):
Remember, okay, but to be fair, he's only operating in
one plane of existence, whereas.

Speaker 4 (37:33):
Right, right, And remember in the movie there was a
big deal because that They were like, how are we
gonna get Jason to go to sleep so he can
go against Freddy? And remember they ended up doing this thing.
We're like, somehow there was some team if I might
be misremembering this, it's been like thirty years or something,
but you know, they they somehow got him and tied
him down and loaded it up with loaded him up

(37:54):
with a truckload of thorseen or something to knock him
out because he doesn't sleep. You know, that's basically what
they did to Kong, right, get him on the boat.
So really, if you want to beat Freddy, he's just
gotta be a meth head.

Speaker 1 (38:05):
Okay, well that's what we need. A meth head. It
no wait, because I was gonna say, Rob Zombie already
did that with one of those one of the ones
he had Oh, you definitely want to make sure he
doesn't watch those. Have you seen any of the rob Zombie,
House of a Thousand Courts and stuff? I had a.

Speaker 4 (38:19):
Buddy, but you know I've talked about in the show
the DJ at my wedding. He was on Springer wearing
the heart pattern pants getting getting whipped by a stripper
on the on the Springer Show. It's my buddy, Bob,
you know, my old stunk guy from my different radio shows.
And there was a time, I think when the first
movie came out where he had that on a loop.
He was a big fan of that, but I was
never a fan of it.

Speaker 1 (38:40):
Well, it's just that's super super Yeah, it was super Yeah, exactly,
it's just weird. All right, Well, good luck with that.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry that the earnest thing didn't work out.

Speaker 5 (38:49):
So.

Speaker 1 (38:50):
Oh, by the way, so I finally got around to
watching since I basically wasted this segment on movie stuff
the John Candy documentary last night. Yeah, it's good, right,
I was gonna watch it over the weekend. I just
I was doing a bunch of stuff.

Speaker 4 (39:03):
I I had no idea because I cannot recommend that
movie enough. Yeah, I had no idea when he died.
So when he passed away, he was making that you know,
wild West comedy Wagons East. And he had such bad
crippling anxiety towards the end of his life because he
was worried about keeping everything going and you know, yeah,
being a success and always making people laugh. And I

(39:23):
guess the day he they found him, right, he was
dead on his bed, curled up with the Bible open. Yeah,
he would he read the Bible as he had the
heart attack.

Speaker 1 (39:32):
I I was really really interested to see how much
he impacted Tom Hanks' his life. Going back to us
splash like that was really good segment.

Speaker 5 (39:42):
The uh.

Speaker 1 (39:43):
I think the tribute that Ackroyd gave was really good too.

Speaker 3 (39:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (39:47):
No, yeah, it's very very good. It's on Prime.

Speaker 4 (39:50):
It's amazing to see one of these stories, one of
these you know, biodocs whatever they're called. Where because you
typically watch one of these and then there's always like
the reveal where like actually he was a huge druggy
who did tons of heroin and coke, and he loved horrors,
beat children, all this. There's none of that. It's just
he was a genuinely nice guy from beginning to end,

(40:10):
and nobody has anything bad to say about his daughter.

Speaker 1 (40:13):
Looks like she absolutely adored him. Yeah, she's she's doing
a lot of the narrative in that thing. Yeah, you
guys should if you get a you know, if we
ever get any rain again and you got a little
rainy evening, or you just want to do something inside.
It's not the worst expenditure of about an hour and
a half your life. So, uh, what is it's called?

Speaker 2 (40:31):
I like me?

Speaker 1 (40:32):
I believe I like me. Yeah. So, but if you go,
if you pop prime, it's probably one of the top
recommendations because it was it was right there at the
moment I opened the app in the movies tab. So
go ahead and check that out. Anyway, we'll get into
a little.

Speaker 5 (40:46):
More of that.

Speaker 1 (40:46):
We got some Star Wars nerdery too to get into
with Steven, and I am curious if Steven is if
he can, because they've ross they've torn the entire White
House down now right judging by the Di's what I've heard. Yeah,
it looks like Gaza it's gone, man, Dude. The Washington
Post angle somebody went and showed that. Why they like

(41:09):
they to take the picture to make it look like
as much of it was gone as possible, rather than
simply the facade. Now the the entirety of the edge
of that footprint is going to be expanded, so eventually,
but they're they're building out one side and then the
other too, because it's you know, it's a square already.

(41:30):
But a lot of people don't realize when they do
state dinners at the White House right now, they put tents.

Speaker 4 (41:37):
That we they have that's embarrassing.

Speaker 1 (41:40):
Yeah, so that's I mean, that's what was going on.
They don't have a large enough space in there for
to do big things. There is there is an interior
like I don't know if I call it a ballroom,
but an events room over there. Uh, And if you're
having a smaller thing, you can do it. But like
when you in a movie, when you see a state
dinner portrayed at you know, like where there's a where
it's a fake president and all that, it's always in

(42:02):
some room you just assume as part of the White
House that doesn't exist in the White House. They don't
have a giant ballroom. So when they do bigger events
or they have a big state dinner, they get I mean,
these are professional grade tents. But that's how they do it,
and they're very expensive just to have the companies come
out and do it like in the millions, and so

(42:23):
you know this this will I guess if you have
one of the tent companies, you're mad. But in this
case that's and of course they don't really get into
that in the article. They're just like, he's destroying it.
Then they find some woke person from a historical society
saying he's which is so disingenuous because then that I
watched two interviews or saw two quotes there, and they

(42:43):
don't give any context, like if you're if you are
a true blue historian of the White House or the
nationally you know, the the US or DC buildings, and
you don't mention the multitude of renovations additions. Barack Obama,
I'm made three hundred and fifty four million dollars worth

(43:04):
of construction improvements on the White House during his first term,
three hundred and fifty four million, and you and I
paid for that, Trump doing two hundred and fifty million.
If it stays at the price and you're not paying
for it, and now you won't have to pay for
tenths in the future for state dinners. But now they're

(43:27):
doing like these weird angles where he just looks like
a bomb hit the thing. It's it's so bad man,
all right, So we'll see if Steven's weepy over that.
We got let's say, oh, we got a Prince Andrew's update,
but we got to talk about the main Senate candidate
with the tattoo. Apparently apparently that's all that's all water

(43:49):
under the bridge or something.

Speaker 4 (43:50):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (43:51):
We'll get into it next. Hang on a set it
candidate up in Maine. I guess I can't technically call
him that anymore because he announced to the world via
a series of topless photos and an interview yesterday that
he has had the tattoo covered up, which is technically true.

(44:15):
I don't know how to describe it. It's it's like
a Celtic themed DreamCatcher looking thing with wolves with a
wolf which ross. Uh do you know one of the
one of the other things that Nazis were obsessed with
and included, uh, dream catchers? No, No, something else in there.

(44:39):
Think of what Hitler named his house, his vacation home.
Is it the Wolf's Den, the Wolf's Lair? Yeah, yeah, yeah,
and they had entire divisions that were named after wolves
or logoed with wolves. However, this does not visually represent one.
But I did think it's interesting for two reasons. One,
it can contains ruins on the design, which, as you know,

(45:04):
that was the problem with seapacks. So now I think
the seapack stage rules apply.

Speaker 2 (45:09):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (45:09):
And then secondly, it's not good. No, it looks awful
like it's so yeah, it's it's like really really not good.
And then I guess there's a third weird thing. Now
everything's fine, I guess. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (45:22):
First off, I'm glad you said it was like a
dream catcher sort of thing, because I looked at it
and I thought it was like a turtle from the
top down with like tenacles. They has turtle colors. Yeah,
like a turtle on top of a wolf, but with
like octopus arms. So I had no idea what it was. Yes,
but also like, oh, everything's fine. Now everything's you know,
I covered it up. You can vote for me. No,
I want a candidate that doesn't have to cover up

(45:44):
their Nazi tattoo. This should not have been a thing,
and how does it erase what happened? Like now, it's fine.

Speaker 1 (45:49):
Yeah, you're one of these perfect candidate people.

Speaker 4 (45:52):
But now they're going after Pete Hegseth, going, oh well,
Pete Hegseth has that Nazi tattoo in his chest, which
that's not what it is. Literally, that's like the pope
has that on his outfit, like the Jerusalem Cross. Yes, yes, yeah,
so the pope's a Nazi.

Speaker 1 (46:06):
No, well, the one remember they remember they said the
one was because he was technically uh, because he was
German and he happened to be a child during the time.

Speaker 4 (46:16):
Yeah I remember that. Yeah, yeah, this specific pope.

Speaker 1 (46:20):
No, no, no, not not a Nazi. Oh yeah, everything stupid.
And I just saw some pictures of the rally he
had last night, the entire it's full, it's shock full.
So everyone who showed up to his thing yesterday evening
where they just now have these photos had clearly already
heard about the Nazi tattoo and still got in their car.

Speaker 4 (46:43):
Right, So Trump is the Nazi even though he did
everything he just did over there in the Middle East
and everything he's done, Trump is the Nazi, right and
a king, a Nazi king, which is even it's like
a double whammy. Oh yeah, But the guy who actually
had a Nazi tattoo is not a Nazi.

Speaker 1 (46:59):
Yes, yeah, okay, so you do understand, okay, okay, yeah,
all right. Yeah, it's just I mean, how quickly, how
quickly we're gonna and and the uh, the other Democrat
who's running against this dude isn't even doing like attack
ads on it. It's so weird. Wouldn't that be like

(47:20):
if you're if you're the other Democrat, because and you know,
you're trying to get this this nomination so you can
be the one to unseat what's your bucket up there?
Like how does this drop into your lap? And then
you just basically ignore it? That makes zero sense to me.
And maybe he's doing something more aggressive, but as of yet,
he hadn't. He hadn't, he hadn't like used it as

(47:42):
a campaign tool, according to the article I was reading
this morning. So like if I'm sorry, if you Ross,
if you and I are running for something and all
of a sudden there's a oh, there's Ross at the gym,
and oh that look at that giant swastika. That's all
the ads I'm running here On the case O Day
Radio program eight eight, eight nine, three four seven eight

(48:04):
seven four. So Trump Trump announced something yesterday that they
are working on and he's talked about this before, but
now it appears that they are putting together the strategy
to try to achieve it. I don't know. I do
know this. Lawyers are getting ready to make a lot
of money who litigate, you know, these these political disagreements

(48:27):
because states are going States are going to sue Obviously
interest groups, there will be Racism will be alleged, and
that's not new. But this is going to be on
steroids if they really start making any headway on this.
And it has to do with mail in ballots. As

(48:48):
you know, Trump's not a fan. A lot of people
are not fans, I would point out, and while he's not,
he says something although he does kind of check himself
about we're the only country that uses him. We're not.
But most don't because in the past they have been
found to be very corruptible. And I'm talking first world

(49:09):
nations just don't use them with the exception. This is
the thing that is the intellectual lazy part of this,
because unless somebody specifically brings up the fact that there
will be carve outs for things like you know, members
of our military who are deployed overseas, you know, they
will have to figure something out and they plan to

(49:31):
Everyone goes, oh, he doesn't want the military to vote.
That's what he's talking about. And that's just it's clearly
that's not what he's talking about. He's talking about situations
like in California. So in California you have these mail
in ballots and you have legal ballot harvesting, which opens

(49:52):
up all of these avenues for fraud. And you know,
here's how the fraud works. I'm going to go to
a neighborhood and I'm going, well, I'm going to go
to a neighborhood. I'm going to get a bunch of ballots.
And there have been instances where people figure out, because
that is a very conservative neighborhood or a very liberal neighborhood,
whether they're going to in fact turn them in. People

(50:15):
have opened them, they've found patches of where these things
have been thrown away. And in the last election, in
this last election, California had or I guess getting ready
to have, they have the sample ballots and they have
a very unique feature. There's a hole cutout on the
ballot and this is the ballot for the redistricting stuff

(50:38):
because you vote yes or no, and when you put
the ballot into the envelope, the whole allows you to
see whether they voted yes or no. So if you
want this thing to happen, and you're out harvesting ballots,
or you're a woke postal person who doesn't mind maybe
going to jail, those can get lost. Thing happen, right,

(51:01):
But there are also states like Colorado, Oregon I believe
that primarily vote via ballot. Here's what he had to
say in the Oval office yesterday.

Speaker 8 (51:11):
Mail in ballots are corrupt.

Speaker 3 (51:13):
Mail in ballots.

Speaker 8 (51:14):
You can never have a real democracy with mail in ballots,
and we as a Republican party, are going to do
everything possible that we get rid of mail invalots. We're
going to start with an executive order that's being written
right now by the best lawyers in the country to
end mail in ballots because they're corrupt. And do you

(51:36):
know that we're the only country in the world I
believe I may be wrong, but just about the only
country of the world that uses them because of what's happened,
massive fraud all over the place. The other thing we
want change of the machines for all of the money
they spend, it's approximately ten times more expensive than paper ballots,
and paper ballots are very sophisticated. With the watermark paper

(51:58):
and everything else, we would get secure elections, we'd get
much faster results the machines. I mean they say we're
going to have the results in two weeks with paper.

Speaker 1 (52:07):
And let me pause here. He's absolutely right, because the
way the machines were really sold to people was that,
Oh no, it's it's so much faster because then we
can just look at the data and now and I
don't know what ross, what would you say? It was
the last what like two elections presidential elections, the last
you know, four election cycles where they just all of

(52:30):
a sudden, Now you don't get results the same night.
And how long we've worked in radio, how long.

Speaker 4 (52:35):
It's not even a matter of working in radio. It's
we've been alive since I've been alive since nineteen seventy nine, right, yeah.
But then because they're trying to tell you this is
how it's always been. Oh it was normal. Remember all
the articles coming out like, oh it's normally yeah, yeah,
the election is today, but we're not going to get
results for like two weeks in this normal.

Speaker 1 (52:50):
No, it isn't.

Speaker 4 (52:50):
It's never been normal.

Speaker 1 (52:52):
It used to be, and it used to be even
doing a morning show. You could get tapped with doing
election coverage for a talk station and be home at
a reasonable time, and so it wasn't objectionable. Now there's
no way I would commit to do election night coverage
and then agree to do a morning show the next day,
because you'd never leave. You'd roll one right into the other,

(53:14):
and you still wouldn't have results. So this part about
machines making it faster is hogwash. And to Ross's point,
everybody who remembers more than about ten years for you know,
is more than ten years old, has experienced an election
where we knew. Look at Trump's twenty sixteen.

Speaker 4 (53:32):
Election, No, you always knew.

Speaker 3 (53:33):
The night of.

Speaker 4 (53:36):
The only one I remember where there was like a
delay was like Bushcore, That's what I remember.

Speaker 1 (53:40):
There was like, well, yeah, that was for very specific,
the hanging Chad thing. Yeah, but I watched I watched
Trump get in twenty sixteen. I watched the forlorn faces
of and when he won, I took so much joy
in flipping over to all the different cover so I
could see how what their mental breakdowns were looking like,

(54:03):
and it did not disappoint. But we knew very early.
I want to say we knew Trump before we knew
some of the state races. If I'm remembering correctly, I
think we knew Trump. We knew Trump had won before
we knew Roy Cooper had won. I can check on

(54:24):
that now. I'm pretty sure. I'm pretty sure that's accurate. Yeah, yeah,
I believe that's accurate.

Speaker 7 (54:28):
Now.

Speaker 4 (54:28):
During COVID they were like, you know, it's a pandemic,
voting is different, so we're not going to know for
two weeks. And then it was the next presidential election.
They were like, it's always been this way, this.

Speaker 1 (54:38):
Has been reretional election. Still yeah, but yeah, you're right.
Then they're like, no, this is the norm. What do
you guys, what are you guys on?

Speaker 3 (54:46):
So ballots, you have the results that night.

Speaker 8 (54:50):
Most people almost but most people many countries use paper ballots.

Speaker 3 (54:54):
It's the most secure format.

Speaker 1 (54:56):
So there you go. And as you can imagine the
case and screaming and teeth gnashing and lawsuits that this
will bring about if it starts getting traction is going
to be immense, Right, This is this is not something
that I think Trump just due to the wheels of
justice the states. And I also don't know if it's

(55:17):
you know, I don't know that he has purview over
state races, state balloting. I'm find I'm sure he doesn't,
with the exception of some states that are bound by
you know, the Southern states were bound by so you
we'd be talking about federal races here. So you then
have to make a decision if you're in a state,

(55:38):
because if he can get a decision saying that yes,
they can dictate this for federal elections but not state,
what do you do if you're one of these moon
bat states who's got all this stuff going on and
you still want to be able to, you know, have
ballot harvesting and do all that stuff. The people would
be less inclined to vote in federal elections if they
could have then accomplished what they want in the state

(55:59):
electiontions via mail, because it's you know, we're just inherently lazy.
Sometimes that's a nightmare scenario for them, absolute nightmare for them.
But it is a possibility. And uh, we'll be be
watching this and I'm and I will the every federal
elected official we interview, I'll be sure to ask them,

(56:20):
like can we talk to the congressman next week and
the next time Bud's on about some of these intricacies,
because I want to understand what that path looks like.
But it looks like it's going to start with an
executive order and we'll go from there. All right, SEM
forty four here on the CaCO Deca radio program coming up. Uh,

(56:40):
have you guys seen the Have you seen the guy?
The detective who's on the Louver case. It's the most
French thing.

Speaker 4 (56:49):
That's a real guy? Is that a real guy? That's
a real guy, that's not like AI or something.

Speaker 1 (56:53):
That's the dude. I don't know if he's the only detective,
but it's it's he's he's listed as one of the
detectives on the Loof case. He looks ahi, doesn't he
He's wearing like, I don't know how to describe it.
He's he's he looks very well dressed. He got the umbrella,
all the rest of that stuff I saw.

Speaker 4 (57:13):
When you see that guy, do you see that? Do
you look at him and say, ah, he's going to
crack the case.

Speaker 5 (57:18):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (57:19):
I'm mixed I think he's either going to crack the
case because he's young, right, so he must be good
if they're going to a sign. But in a way,
in a way, when I when it comes to like
the the European detectives, I want that grizzled looking uh.

Speaker 4 (57:35):
Yeah, age from his wife, alcoholic, Right, that's the guy
you want, you.

Speaker 1 (57:39):
Know, that's the dude who gets the job done, has.

Speaker 4 (57:42):
Difficulty down to the police station whatever, like oh there
is gonna be but always gets the job done.

Speaker 1 (57:46):
Always in the captain's office, Canna yell at right. Yes,
So I don't know, maybe it works differently over there.
But I did look hot, he looks he looks young,
So I have to assume if they assigned a young
guy to something so high profile, he's probably pretty good good,
But who knows?

Speaker 3 (58:01):
All Right?

Speaker 1 (58:02):
Raced Agic from the Weather Channel is yeah, what's going
on now?

Speaker 9 (58:07):
I'm much we're the same old, same old.

Speaker 1 (58:11):
Okay, we're we're just talking a little football because my
team gets to go first tonight.

Speaker 9 (58:16):
Oh yeah, that's tonight.

Speaker 1 (58:18):
How you feeling about the Broncos and there, especially with
what they did last week? Well it's in Denver?

Speaker 5 (58:28):
Was it?

Speaker 2 (58:28):
Three and a half.

Speaker 9 (58:29):
I I don't like it at all, Like we probably
just lose it outright.

Speaker 1 (58:33):
But well, you only play three quarters, they're very beatable.
Well yeah, that's true too.

Speaker 9 (58:39):
If we'll play five minutes at the end of the game,
come on, man, that's a different story.

Speaker 3 (58:44):
Yeah, yeah, it is. It is.

Speaker 9 (58:46):
But yeah, I don't have high hopes. And I'll actually
be with my family up in Upstate New York be
able to watch it so we can all kind of together.

Speaker 1 (58:56):
Yeahs Ross has to play the Panthers.

Speaker 4 (58:58):
So Bill, we're gonna lose by like fifty and they're
gonna rush for different to him, they're gonna rush. They're
gonna rush for like five hundred yards. Bill's gonna lose
by like fifty points. I'm telling you starting quarterbacks out.
It doesn't matter because they're going against Bill's legend, Andy Dalton,
so it's even worse.

Speaker 9 (59:17):
And no, he's not playing, is he?

Speaker 3 (59:21):
Yeah he is?

Speaker 9 (59:22):
Yeah, why is he playing?

Speaker 1 (59:24):
Panthers QB is injured.

Speaker 4 (59:27):
Yeah, he's back up for the ball.

Speaker 2 (59:28):
That's right, that's right.

Speaker 1 (59:30):
Thankfully, it looks like it's gonna be for one week
if you're right, right, But it just happens to be
this week, so we'll see.

Speaker 9 (59:39):
Gotcha, gotcha? So couple things in the weather department. Yeah,
the Weather Service to put out kind of this higher
fire danger thing for today, dry, no humidity, lots of sunshine,
of west, breeze around upper sixties, low seventies, and that's
why they did that tonight in a little bit forties,

(59:59):
and maybe they'll do tomorrow too, being in the low
to mid sixties. Tomorrow morning frost and freeze advisories in
the mountains. So I did expect that to happen where
temperatures to the west, even of the Triad, probably going
to get into the thirties, and then Saturday morning will
be near forty just about everywhere. There could be some
upper thirties for the Triad, and then the afternoon into
the sixties array next week. So early next week finally

(01:00:21):
looks like another change. Damp, cool weather expected maybe for
a couple of days. So get on out there, get
the leaves up now. The leaves probably aren't all down yet.

Speaker 1 (01:00:29):
So no, no, what's heard parts of the state. It's
it's i'me leaf people though, right leaf peeping.

Speaker 9 (01:00:37):
Get it done before early next week because Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
at this time look damp and cool.

Speaker 1 (01:00:44):
So oh, by the way, you lost the race, because
I know all you weather guys, you all you weather
guys race again, first one to remind us to cover
our tomatoes. I don't know why teaching a meteorological school.
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (01:00:58):
Did you hear those words out of my mouth?

Speaker 7 (01:01:01):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:01:01):
I didn't. But one of the local TV stations I had, so.

Speaker 9 (01:01:05):
I'm like, yeah, congratulations, Sorry.

Speaker 1 (01:01:11):
Not me, I didn't. I don't take the win. It's
a it's a TV station that we have no affiliation with.
Sook anyway, all right, we're talking an hour.

Speaker 3 (01:01:20):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (01:01:21):
Coming up. There is a new book on Prince Andrew
that's got a little little little epsteiny connection stuff here.
And uh, I want you to I want you to
hear Prince Andrew.

Speaker 4 (01:01:34):
Uh how how why?

Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
According to this biographer, how Prince Andrew explained, uh, hooking
up with all those prostitutes, not necessarily underage ones, but
just in general. Uh it was an accident. Whoops. Yeah, yeah.
Don't you hate it when that happens, When you spend
decades sleeping with prostitutes and and then you're like, you

(01:02:00):
didn't know, but I'll explain. Coming up next here on
the CaCO Day radio program. This Prince Andrew thing is
absolutely insane. There's a there's a book that came out
and when they get into you know, his purported love of,
you know, just being a man whore, they talk about

(01:02:22):
how exactly he came to be in contact with these
women of the Evening and they would have you believe
in his camp it was an accident, right, apparently, an
accident that kept happening again and again and again for decades.
But here's here's how it worked. So Andrew, in the

(01:02:42):
cording of the book, would tell staff and friends that
they should arrange dates for him if they do, you know,
any nice ladies. Wink wink, nod, nod. It's pretty clear
everyone knew what was up, even if the word wasn't spoken.
And that's only if you believe this version. And according
to the book, people knew that Andrew had a type

(01:03:07):
he wanted as young as possible, and maybe even too young,
we don't know for sure, but he did pay Gumphrey
a ton of money. He liked quote, blonde ballerinas was
his preferred thing, and Russian. He liked Russians too, which
you know I got a lot of blonde ballerina Russians

(01:03:28):
probably to choose from, and then he would show up
to events and people would be like, hey, here's a
nice lady from the office, and of course she'd be
all over. He had to think he was irresistible if
he didn't know, which I don't know, maybe if he
got a royal title, you are, But clearly everyone knew
what was up, and so all of these people who

(01:03:50):
wanted to, you know, be on his good side because
he you know, he does have a royal title, would
essentially go out and buy high end escorts, tell him
just to you know, show up, you know, tell him
not to say what's up, and then hook up with them,
and then they would flot the bill for it, and
then those people would have access to Prince Andrew. But

(01:04:15):
like there's some other stuff for some staffs pushing back,
they're like he knew, he knew because he was tipping
some of them. So but yeah, he has now been
asked not to use his royal titles anymore, and he's
still a prince. I guess they can't take that from him.
But the Duke of York is going to pass to

(01:04:37):
one of the kids. One of the oldest of the
king's grandson, which, by the way, I didn't know this
because I'm not British. Do you know that that title
is like cursed?

Speaker 5 (01:04:50):
I did not know that.

Speaker 3 (01:04:52):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:04:52):
And they had a whole thing in this one story
I was reading. It's like the Madden cover for England.
So I don't know if Archie's probably that's the old
son's name, right, Archie. I don't know if that's gonna
work out well for him, but there you go. So
he didn't mean to. It was an accident that time.
Oh the week where we we welcome in Stephen Kent
from the Greater DC area? Or is that where you

(01:05:15):
are this morning?

Speaker 2 (01:05:15):
Sir?

Speaker 5 (01:05:16):
They don't have me deployed on any missions today? Did
stick to you? Ksey?

Speaker 1 (01:05:21):
Are you sad this morning?

Speaker 2 (01:05:24):
A little bit?

Speaker 7 (01:05:24):
I have it.

Speaker 1 (01:05:26):
I have it on good authority that Trump has raised
the entire White House judging But yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:05:32):
You know, democracy, democracy is is over in the United States.
The East wing of the White House, where there is
very little history or important uh you know, historical items
is being changed.

Speaker 2 (01:05:46):
What will we do?

Speaker 3 (01:05:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:05:48):
Yeah, it is just everywhere. What is this headline for Politico?
I have your hangout this one. Now they use Hillary
Clinton's quote in the headline, because of course they do,
and it says, quote, it's your house and he's destroying that.
Trump demolishes White House East Wing.

Speaker 5 (01:06:08):
Yeah, that's a puzzling one. You know. One of my
friends and observers of this whole thing tweeted out this
morning that not even not even Palpatine, you know, demolished
the Jedi Temple on his first year in office. I'm going, well,
he's not a Jedi. The question would be whether or
not Palpatine did renovations for the Chancellor's office at the

(01:06:31):
Senate Building. Come on, that's not even a good analogy.

Speaker 1 (01:06:34):
You have just you don't even know it, But you
just created the best thing ever.

Speaker 3 (01:06:39):
Here's what we do.

Speaker 1 (01:06:41):
We convinced the press at large that Trump thinks he's
a Jedi, and then they have no Jedi protests.

Speaker 5 (01:06:50):
That would be really good. Actually we should do that.

Speaker 1 (01:06:52):
And they're all dressed as Siths in giant inflatable Nisaur costumes,
but a Sith version of one of those, I don't
know what it would look like. Yeah, yes, and then
they have to be a team that happen. Yeah, they
ought to be like, God, we'd rather be sis And
it's like, I don't know about that. Read some evil
stuff there, Oh, oh that'd be beautiful.

Speaker 3 (01:07:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:07:13):
And I, as I reiterated earlier on the show, Barack
Obama's been three hundred and fifty four million. There's footage
now from news coverage where from you know, back during
his first term. So you got twenty year old news
footage and it's like the White House press lady from
ABC and she's giddy. She's like, look at all the
cool stuff they're doing around here, and it's just that's

(01:07:35):
how that's how all that was covered. And we paid
for that, the three hundred and fifty four million in
renovations he did. And then with Trump, it's like they're
going to build a ballroom so they don't have to
rent tents every time they do a state dinner, which
is how they currently handle it for the bigger events.
But you know, when uh, with a polling on the

(01:07:56):
shutdown thing isn't savaging him, I guess you got to
come up with something else. What's it like in d
C with now this, you know, three weeks plus of shutdown.

Speaker 5 (01:08:08):
You know in the in the DC area, there is
a lot of people going to the gym right now.
There are a lot more people at the bar and
at restaurants. And I mean that in all seriousness. You know,
there's just a lot more people out and about just
kind of waiting on furlough and you know, beeping around
Northern Virginia towns. It's actually, it's actually pretty interesting. You

(01:08:29):
can go to any of the gyms around here and
you're just like, hey, what are you up to. I
haven't been to work and you know, a month, so
here I am. There's a lot of that going on.
I do worry about, you know, people in this area
who are not going to be able to pay some
of their bills and keep the lights on. But I
have to believe that this is going to end here

(01:08:49):
in the next week. But I've been wrong before.

Speaker 1 (01:08:52):
Yeah, and and so, and in each of these shutdowns,
for the most part, they then are retroactively paid. That's
usually part of these and there is there are there's
a draw that I guess a lot of federal employees
can avail themselves of of up to five thousand dollars.
I don't fully understand how it works. But and then
they just when they retroact to pay you then get

(01:09:14):
it less, so there is a little bit of buffer there.
But you know, five thousand dollars in why should in
d C? Doesn't go that far. It's a very expensive city.

Speaker 5 (01:09:24):
Yeah, very expensive indeed, and it's not better or worse
out in northern Virginia, but you know, it's it's it's
tough to live out here. So that's why federal workers
you could argue or paid so much these days, but
it might be a check the chicken.

Speaker 3 (01:09:39):
And egg problem.

Speaker 5 (01:09:40):
The high salaries mean the.

Speaker 2 (01:09:41):
Higher cost of living.

Speaker 5 (01:09:42):
The higher cost of living mean the higher salaries.

Speaker 1 (01:09:45):
Who knows, do you watch any of the ghost Hunter shows?

Speaker 3 (01:09:48):
You?

Speaker 1 (01:09:49):
Were you ever in any of that?

Speaker 5 (01:09:51):
You know, I've always watched some ghost Hunter shows on
and off. I didn't have a particular favorite.

Speaker 1 (01:09:56):
So so you're probably familiar with the story of Aaron Goodwin,
one of the hosts of Ghost Adventures, and his wife
who tried to have a murdered with the inmates she
was having it. You don't know this story, Oh, this
is so crazy. So this guy, his name is Aaron Goodwin,
He's one of the guys who host Ghost Adventures, and

(01:10:16):
this crazy story emerged last year, his wife started she
started speaking with an inmate.

Speaker 3 (01:10:27):
What was he?

Speaker 1 (01:10:27):
I think he was a murderer And they had a
torrid documented because she's communicating with a prisoner, fair emotional affair.
And then they talked to all right, I need to
get rid of my husband. You're a criminal. I bet
you know how to get rid of people. And they
literally documented this whole plot to kill the guy. And

(01:10:49):
I can't remember how the plot got unveiled. It was
just this weird happenstance and thankfully nothing happened to him.
But they just announced over a Discovery who produces the show,
that when he was contacted by police and explain, hey,
your wife's trying to have you murdered. We need to
figure it. You need to come in because they they

(01:11:12):
didn't know if somebody was out there ready to do
it at that moment. And they're filming, they're in the
middle of filming at some you know, closed down mental
asylum in California, and the cameras are rolling while it's
being explained to this dude that his wife and and
this inmate are trying to have him murdered, and they're,
you know, they're unclear what the progress is and so

(01:11:35):
you know this just this.

Speaker 5 (01:11:36):
Just makes me think there's a great opportunity, you know,
over at Netflix for them to do a documentary on this,
and then once they actually add in Spotify video podcast,
they can have video analysis from like the Ringer and
all these different podcasters covering this story. That could be
actually pretty darn cool.

Speaker 1 (01:11:56):
Yeah, And I mean I was going to actually roll
into that. It's just going to add one other thing.
They so they put up a teaser They're going to
release the video of this guy find probably having the
worst moment of his life. And they've already put a
little teaser up on the Discovery Plus app, which I
don't have, so I haven't seen it, but yeah, I
might actually watch that just because it's what a human

(01:12:18):
crazy human moment, whereas most of the it's the realist
is Ross says, the realist thing never happened on one
of those shows. So yeah, help you walk walk, Yeah,
walk me through this Netflix thing. Uh, And and what
we're talking about here, So Netflix just had a for
the first time in a while, they had they got
beat on their Wall Street earnings expectations. We talked about

(01:12:39):
it in Business News earlier this week and uh, but
they have a lot of irons in the fire. And
according to Netflix, the only reason they lost money is
because they had to pay Brazil a bunch of money
for some reason. So take us through.

Speaker 5 (01:12:52):
There's a there's a there's a good bit of truth
to the Brazil tax the tax dispute. But Netflix did
not meet their goals here for this quarter. But that's
going to be okay. Like what they're looking at in
the year ahead is they are not competing with traditional
cable you know, packages and streaming outlets anymore. Like their

(01:13:13):
competition is not paramount, It's not HBO, you know, they're
in a real competition here with YouTube, you know internet
only streaming platforms where you know the algorithm is serving
you up content to stay on it as long as
possible and keep your eyeballs there for ad revenue. That
is what Netflix is actually in terms of a business. Now,

(01:13:35):
they have announced a partnership with Spotify to come together
and by the way, Ted Sarandos, who is the seed
of or co CEO of Netflix, is on the board
of Spotify, So I think that's why this deal was broker.
But they're going to be hosting video podcasts from Spotify
on Netflix. Now, when you think about people like Joe Rogan,

(01:13:57):
you know, Joe Rogan has an exclusive deal with Spotify,
and then in his contract he is now able to
cross post to YouTube again after about a year where
he did no YouTube videos from the show. So I'm
kind of scratching my head and going all right, So
it's like Joe Rogan going to be on Netflix. This

(01:14:19):
is a major war against YouTube and Google by these
two smaller partners. It's it's a pretty interesting business shake up.

Speaker 1 (01:14:26):
I know, I think you couldn't do the deal without
having Rogan exclusivity. It's it would have to be one
of the because it's one of the biggest draws. That's
the way if I watch Rogan, I'm watching him. You know,
after they there's a certain amount of time before they
post it. But that's where I watch the the Rogan
stuff on YouTube. But I got to tell you about YouTube, man,
and I don't do you subscribe to YouTube? Do you

(01:14:46):
spend a lot of time on YouTube?

Speaker 5 (01:14:50):
I do?

Speaker 1 (01:14:50):
Yeah, okay, I I It is one of the services
that I pay for. And I know a lot of
people think that's crazy, But like watching being able to
watch YouTube without ads. I find very, very valuable, and
I'm willing to pay for that. The problem is this,
and I was talking before the show to Ross about this.
I love documentaries, and if you love documentaries, YouTube is

(01:15:12):
or was a great place because history Basic History Channel
basically has their entire library loaded up there discovery all
of them, and so if you're a nerd like me,
it's fantastic. But the problem is, and I'm on the
verge of canceling for every literal, actual documentary or a
team of people in a real voiceover guy, and you know,

(01:15:34):
cinematographers and historians actually put blood and sweat in to
make something. I get three hundred recommendations for absolute AI slop.
Nothing is pronounced correctly. It's nothing but video that's probably
common use or you know, depending on where it was
filmed in the public domain or just outright pirated, and

(01:15:58):
they mispronounce everything because it's all AI. It's just AI
slop and it has taken over YouTube.

Speaker 5 (01:16:07):
Oh yeah, I mean the AI trailers that people release,
you know, and they're often you know, it's like, oh,
a new Chronicles.

Speaker 2 (01:16:14):
Of Narnia movie is coming out, and then.

Speaker 5 (01:16:15):
Someone will post, you know, trailer revealed for new Chronicles
of Narnia movie, and it's just some sort of AI
generated you know, fever dream of a trailer just to
wrap up AD revenue. I mean, even myself as a
YouTube creator, I run geeky stoics on YouTube. We've got
a video pushing a million views right now, which is
really exciting. But then income the vultures, they they take

(01:16:40):
the transcript of my video, they run it through an
AI database, they change the script a little bit to
make it somewhat original, and then they have AI read
the video that I made and wrote with new video
footage layered on top from some sort of AI video generator. Now,
these videos don't perform super well in most cases, but

(01:17:01):
it's still piracy. It's still fast, and it's everywhere.

Speaker 2 (01:17:05):
You can find this problem to any video.

Speaker 1 (01:17:07):
Yeah, and it's say and as an now, what do
you think YouTube's position is? I mean, is this is
one of these things that will allow to exist because
there's so much content. Because I'd like to think that
they realize it's a problem, and they realize that when
people start canceling because I don't need to spend ten

(01:17:27):
minutes trying to find and the search. The search on YouTube,
especially on the apps that are on like Apple TV
and some of the smart TVs, the search function is
is horrible. It's been horrible for years, and so if
I get frustrated, I leave the app and I go
because there's lots of documentaries on Peacock and others. Maybe
not the amount's that I want to see, but it exists.

(01:17:50):
And now that you're going to lose my what is
it eighteen dollars a month or whatever I'm paying these people.
So this is a real problem I think for YouTube, well, I.

Speaker 5 (01:17:59):
Think that this is a problem, and it's also a
huge opportunity for consumers to get better content. You know,
YouTube needs a real competitor. And so what Netflix is
doing here with Spotify bringing in video content. You can
imagine people binging their favorite true crime show or a
new documentary series, and then the ringer or the rewatchables,

(01:18:19):
who specifically are going to be carried on Netflix, you know,
then have video analysis that goes up. We all like
to watch shows and then watch the analysis and video
essays about those shows. So Netflix is making a play here,
and you know what they're not going to have. They're
not going to have AI slot because Netflix is more
tightly curated than is YouTube, which is really run by

(01:18:41):
the users with not that much moderation all things considered,
and so YouTube is going to have a quality control
issue on their hands and that might be good for
the platform in the long run.

Speaker 1 (01:18:53):
Yeah, these two stories tied together, I think are very
interesting because it's definitely a shot across the bow Star
Wars excuse me, Star Wars actor Adam Driver I said
that he and I think it was a sodaberg. Right,
We're working on a Kylo Ren solo film. Lucasfilms loved it,
and then Disney put the kibosh on it. Is Disney,

(01:19:16):
just what are they just going to wait it out
for a few years and maybe try to because they've
canceled a ton of projects.

Speaker 5 (01:19:24):
Yeah, you know, this is a script treatment. So a
script treatment is basically just the creatives get together and
you know, in this case with Adam Driver, the actor
behind Ben Solo or Kylo Wren, and they've kind of
put together, you know, a short pitch for what this
movie would be. Now, it is true that at the
highest levels they nixed to this idea and shut it down.

(01:19:46):
It might have fit into the cannon of lucasfilm. But
I mean, I'm not really shutting any tears here. We
need to move on from those stories. And also the
Hunt for Ben Solo at the same time when the
Lord of the Ring was going to put.

Speaker 1 (01:19:59):
Out The Hunt for Gold. I believe that is that true.
I saw that people were saying it was gonna be
on the same release date. But I thought that might
have been one of those things you talked about where
that part was fake but the rest was real. Was
that real?

Speaker 2 (01:20:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:20:12):
No, I don't know about the release date, but I
mean we're talking about two movies in production from you know,
very similar or aligned franchises at the same time the
Hunt for Somebody. It's just a little bit ridiculous. I'm
sure that wouldn't have been the final name. But Ben
Solo is dead. We watched them die. We don't need
a hunt for him. It's a very strange thing.

Speaker 1 (01:20:34):
Did we did we watch But that's the that's the thing.
We watched Chewi die too.

Speaker 5 (01:20:41):
That was misdirection.

Speaker 1 (01:20:42):
Casey, oh, come on, how many we I think we
did this one? We talked about this how many times
Star Wars in the last three you were just like,
all right, we're gonna murder. Oh they're not dead. Oh
we're gonna murder. So they're not dead. Like the Chewy
thing was absolute emotional manipulation. All right, we'll have to
leave it there. Unfortunately I can get into the Krueger story,
but we talked about that. Steven, I appreciate it. Let

(01:21:04):
me know when he starts. I'm assuming what demolished the
Washington Monument probably today maybe the Lincoln Very busy in DC,
so call out. Yeah, oh now, now all right, thank you,
appreciate it. There you go. There's Stephen Kent here on
the Cacoday radio program.

Speaker 3 (01:21:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:21:22):
Man, that showy thing was mean as hell. It's a
twenty three. We'll come back. We got some more audio
for you, including Jeff Daniels, who's mad at the president.
Hang on, I'm just seeing some riots over in Ireland
that looks like that's going well over there overnight. They're
saying thousands. I just see a bunch of stuff on fire,

(01:21:43):
so mostly peaceful. I guess why are they rioting in
Northern Ireland there or not in northern Ireland, but in
the northern part of Ireland. It might because a ten
year old was walking by one of those migrant hotels
and and they just say like, well, I guess we're
gonna go rape her. And the locals not pleased with that.

(01:22:08):
So the police show up and surround the migrant hotel,
but they're not facing in, they're facing out, and that
kicked off these protests. Police say ten year old Irish
girl was raped by a man from where did he
come from? Northern Africa? Doesn't say which one, Oh, betray,

(01:22:32):
I don't know Northern Africa, but please say he was
raped by a man of the who was staying at
that hotel. The girl who's not just ten but is
also special needs, and wandered away during any planned outing.
When police say that the migrant snatched her up and

(01:22:55):
and did this, that of course, you know, got people
very upset. But I think what really triggered it is
once they decided that they were going to try to
downplay this, and and we've seen some other stuffy I'll
see these videos pop up where people are going to
some of these migrant hotels and they're having you know,
they might get in or they might get near it,

(01:23:17):
and then the police show up and show them off,
and there you know, there's there's crimes and stuff that
are going on. There was an arson incident, there was
another rape, there was a group rate. I thought this
was the group rape. This is not the group rape
of an extremely young girl. That was a different one.
I think that girl was eleven. And so, you know,

(01:23:37):
it just builds and builds and builds. You now what
it's going to look like, I don't know, but it
is definitely sideways in this in this picture, where is
this city? Well, I don't Yeah, I'm looking for the
estimate here how many things they burned? Was it just cars?
Do they burn any buildings? I think it might have

(01:23:59):
been just cars. But here you go this again. This
is why as much as I'd love to go back
to Ireland, I don't. I don't know if I'm gonna
be doing that anytime soon. I don't know if that's
on the old bucket list. All right, let me get
over to this. Jeff Daniels seems like an odd choice
to bring in run MSNBC to talk about Donald Trump's

(01:24:22):
AI video. This is the one with Trump and the
fighter jet wearing the crown flying over a protest. There's
Harry Sisson, Now there's feces all over him, and you know,
everyone lost their mind. I read somewhere that Cissons lawyers
sent a cease in asist. That's the dumbest thing you
can do. Yeah, because did you see the follow up video?

(01:24:47):
Follow up videos? Yeah, which is the which was the direct.

Speaker 4 (01:24:50):
Follow The one that I saw was it was Vance
now flying the helicopter but it was like fat meme Vance. Okay, which,
by the way, he should definitely dress up like that
for Halloween. If he does it, it's a crime, right,
It is mean chubby Vance in a military helicopter. Fortunate
son is playing and he dropped another load of poop
on asism.

Speaker 1 (01:25:10):
Yeah, so so so Jeff. That made Jeff Daniels very
mad and and of course under those and then I
saw a system was on Piers Morgan to the other
day and just got did you see any of those videos?
I didn't pull the udio, yep, just got owned. He's like,
tell name one high ranking democrat that's ever compared Trump

(01:25:31):
to a Hitler. And the conservative group of like the
two or three conservatives that around there, their eyes just
bugged out of their head and they started rattling off
like fifty examples. They're like wait, I know this one
hand with time stamps and direct quotes, and Harry's like
freaking out. You know, his mouth is opening like a goldfish.

(01:25:52):
It's oh, it's priceless, priceless. So a little more managed.
Jeff Daniels the actor, he hates him selves some trump
They bring him on to do analysis and uh which
uh which cut is? Uh? Which one is the analysis cuts?
It's the second one or the first one? There, mister Ross,

(01:26:12):
I can't see because, just as Daniels.

Speaker 4 (01:26:15):
The first one is him talking with the MSNBC chick.

Speaker 1 (01:26:20):
Okay, there's the part where you tell me it's the
second one.

Speaker 4 (01:26:23):
Oh you know it's the second one. It's the best.

Speaker 1 (01:26:25):
Yeah, yeah, that's the one I want.

Speaker 4 (01:26:26):
Okay, Oh, there it is.

Speaker 3 (01:26:29):
There is.

Speaker 1 (01:26:32):
This is Jeff Daniels a unique qualification for this segment.

Speaker 4 (01:26:39):
Yeah, he's demand for the job.

Speaker 7 (01:26:42):
Here.

Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
This guy knows uh, he knows poop, so that it's
just the irony kills me. All right. Here is the
actual Jeff Daniels whining.

Speaker 10 (01:26:53):
I would like to think that things like decency and
civility and respect for the rule of law, and respect
for things that are bigger than you, including the office
of the presidency, which is different than a monarchy, will
matter first. It will be about the economy.

Speaker 2 (01:27:13):
It always is. Carville was right. It just is and
that's okay.

Speaker 10 (01:27:19):
But I think then people will start to go, well,
maybe it wasn't worth it him.

Speaker 2 (01:27:24):
By the way, do we really have to treat people
like that?

Speaker 10 (01:27:29):
You know the meme that he had where he was
flying with the crown and the you know, spewing or
excrement all over the.

Speaker 2 (01:27:36):
People down below the country America? Yeah, it would Lincoln
have done that.

Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
No, it was pretty specific. He didn't cover the whole
country in poop. This is not the city of San Francisco.
That was was very specific. And this idea that you
can't do two things at once. Now, do I think
that Trump maybe shouldn't be doing those on his own account?
I don't know. I don't know. Like I'm sorry. The

(01:28:06):
Blue Sky stuff was hilarious to me last weekend, where
right going into the weekend last weekend, they launched like
blue Sky accounts for like twenty different federal you know, offices, divisions, sectors,
and advanced you know, Vance is already the top five
most blocked account on there, and he put the he

(01:28:28):
put like that one where Trump is standing there and
he pulls his sword like a night's sword out and
holds it up in the air, and then it cuts
to the Democrats bowing to him, wearing those kenty cloths
that they wore when they were having that weird Capitol
Rotunda protest, and it just perfectly melds together. Vance uploaded

(01:28:49):
that they lost their minds over there. So that part,
I don't know. But to Jeff Daniels point, he's right
on this front. People care about the economy, right, and
they're going to evaluate and or reevaluate based on how
things are changing. And for a lot of people, right,
do you see gas was under two dollars in Colorado, Yesterre, I.

Speaker 4 (01:29:13):
Was going to say, but what they don't understand. I
was reading an analysis. It was from a either like
Wall Street Journal or Forbes or something, and they were saying,
depending on where you live, you might think that the
economy is bad.

Speaker 3 (01:29:22):
Right.

Speaker 4 (01:29:22):
It's different if you're an area, like if you're in
a blue state like Chicago or New York, yeah, you're
probably thinking the economy is really bad. But if you're not,
if you're a side of that, you're like, I'm seeing
a good difference, and it's positive.

Speaker 1 (01:29:32):
It's better some foods down, it's not. It's not all fixed. Look,
I mean, if you're tost of food is still out
of control.

Speaker 3 (01:29:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:29:38):
But if you're Jeff Daniels and you're living in California, yeah,
it's probably awful and you're like, oh my god, it
must be like this everywhere.

Speaker 4 (01:29:44):
But it's not.

Speaker 1 (01:29:45):
Yeah, it's just it's not the case. And people are people.
We saw, you know, we have reports now over the
last just over the last two weeks with consumer spending.
People are out there and they're spending on stuff that
they don't spend on when they're financially struggling. Right, They're
picking up more vacations, hotels, things like that are picking up.

(01:30:06):
Like people are out there and they're able to move.
It's not out of the woods. And I think that
there's a lot of stuff that you're never going to
fix that COVID broke, and I don't necessarily disagree with
people say that there was not some companies didn't take
advantage of that situation, because I think they did. But
a lot of the times too, it's attached to especially
when you get into like the food service industry. How

(01:30:28):
many videos do I see people going, look all the
fast food's expensive. Now, okay, all the restaurants were basically
bullied into fifteen dollars per hour. What did you think
was going to happen? Except for and that's not all
of it. There's also where you always got to show
earnings if you're a big, massive company. But the food costs,

(01:30:48):
even for mom and pops is up. And that's the
competitive environment because the fast foods do it. But you're
making less at a not let a mom and pop
than mom and Pop's got a match which you can
get flipping. There's a lot of moving pieces here. But yeah,
it does depend where you live. Now, raced Agic, what's
up my man?

Speaker 9 (01:31:08):
Ah much?

Speaker 3 (01:31:09):
How are you?

Speaker 5 (01:31:09):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:31:10):
Pretty good? You know, just talk about stuff and some
other stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:31:13):
Man, just do things.

Speaker 9 (01:31:14):
Well, I've got nothing. I mean, you know, we've got
this fire statement out kind of abnormally dry, gusty wins
today that could contributes. So don't burn anything upper sixties
maybe seventy, mid upper sixties tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (01:31:29):
So he tells me what to do. Yeah, nobody tells me.

Speaker 9 (01:31:33):
Uh well, that's the advice. And then for tomorrow morning,
west into the mountains are of frost and freeze advisory.
So yeah, signs of things to come in the sixties
for Saturday and Sunday, mostly Sunday. There is a pattern
change coming next week. Next week looks a little damp
starting Monday, and we may see multiple days here on again,
off again rainfall if that'll materializes. So dust off the umbrellas. Hey,

(01:31:55):
look you there, right on time. The new drop monitor
just rolled into my inbox.

Speaker 1 (01:32:00):
And oh no, we've got news.

Speaker 9 (01:32:03):
Yeah, I mean it's not high levels of drought, but
looking at D zero to even D two across the state,
so D zero obviously being the lowest, so we're kind
of the middle triad in the D zero D one
and then triangle D one D two, so well, normally
drive to severe drought, accuse the rain and we may
get a bit as some may see a decent amount

(01:32:26):
of rain early next week. Is this next area of
low pressure comes in. So really, to me, looks like
we're starting to make that change. Two more stormy kind
of fall like pattern. That's what it looks like at
least right now.

Speaker 1 (01:32:41):
Okay, hey, just real quick, they got thirty ses. You see,
the SEC fired one of their references in Georgia game.

Speaker 2 (01:32:48):
I did see that.

Speaker 1 (01:32:49):
Well, why is it all going him?

Speaker 5 (01:32:50):
Though?

Speaker 9 (01:32:50):
I mean, are there replay officials and he's the he's
the head official there, he's the head official. I got you, Yeah,
I got yeah that that's too bad.

Speaker 2 (01:33:00):
It's too bad.

Speaker 3 (01:33:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:33:01):
I don't know, man. I feel like after what happened
with the Vikings, that that somebody in New yorkans be fired.

Speaker 9 (01:33:07):
Well that's what I'm thinking. I just I don't like
the whole You see it, and that's it done.

Speaker 1 (01:33:13):
If you're bad at your job anywhere, the chances are
you could get fired. It just seemed like reps unless
they were caught Gambler never were. But anyway, I got
a roll, Thank you, sir, and we'll chat with Denise
PELGRENI next, what's happened in Denise.

Speaker 11 (01:33:25):
Yeah, we're keeping a close eye on Starbucks because CNBC
says Starbucks Workers United is looking at a strike authorization
vote that'll start tomorrow. The union also planning a bunch
of rallies. They're hoping for better hours to improve staffing,
and the number of people that Workers United reps is
just about twelve thousand, still a small number compared to

(01:33:46):
the total number of Starbucks employees, but they're talking about
some sixty rallies in more than a dozen cities over
the next few weeks, So you could see some fuss
outside your local Starbucks as you try to crawl in
there to pick up your caffeine. Believe it or not,
COVID m on our COVID mRNA shots may supercharge cancer therapy.

(01:34:07):
Study finds that patients with advanced lung or skin cancer Casey,
who got a COVID nineteen mRNA vaccine within one hundred
days of starting immune therapy drugs lived significantly longer than
those who didn't, and researchers now plan to test the
effect in a large randomized trial, with some saying the
implications are extraordinary and could really revolutionize the entire field

(01:34:32):
of cancer immunotherapy. The world's most popular dating platform will
soon require all new users in the US to verify
identity through a biometric video face scan. Tinder's new verification feature,
face check, requires data to take a short selfie in
a form of a video to confirm their physically present
and that their face matches what's shown on their profile.

Speaker 1 (01:34:53):
So many people are screwed. People are screwed.

Speaker 11 (01:34:59):
Bumble does things similar. Of course, Bumble is that, you know,
designed for women's It kind of makes sense that, you know,
they want to make sure people are who they say
they are, because that's the other thing. It's not just
about people pretending they're thirty years younger, right, It's about
people actually being who they say they are. But then
I was thinking about it. If someone's trying to have
an affair, do they want to be who they say?

(01:35:22):
Do they want to say who they actually are? I mean,
it gets a little sticky there. We've got some headlines
on Cracker. Beryl the CEO, says that logo change wasn't
about culture. This is the word from Julie Felsmass You No,
She says company was trying to make it logo easier
to be seen on highway billboards. When they made that

(01:35:43):
design change, you remember, they took off that man in
overalls leaning against the barrel, put a new streamline version
featuring just Chain's name on. But there was a lot
of backlash, and that's talk is down about thirty percent
right now.

Speaker 2 (01:35:56):
You're to date.

Speaker 1 (01:35:57):
Yeah it was uncle Wilberg. You're talking about out any yeah.

Speaker 11 (01:36:01):
Uncle, yeah, yeah, yeah, He's not my uncle, but he's.

Speaker 1 (01:36:05):
All our uncle. Right, what do we got for a
stock future?

Speaker 11 (01:36:09):
Well, stock teachers are putting to a lower open. Some
trade concerns. Dow futures down ninety s P futures down
for Nasdaq futures down thirty eight. Tesla among the shares
trading lower. They had nice ev sales, but their costs
apparently sort of surprised investors a little bit. And then
there was the end of the earnings call with CEO
Elon Musk kind of pleading with investors for that what

(01:36:30):
trillion dollar pay package. Some thought that was a little
bit unseemly. Who am I to judge? But trillion dogs,
that's a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (01:36:38):
Yeah. I saw him working on the like the proxy vote.

Speaker 11 (01:36:42):
For highly unusual for someone to get on the end
of an earnings call. But is it plugging for their
own pay package? I don't know what would be Nothing
is unusual for him, right, Hey, that's fair.

Speaker 1 (01:36:53):
All right, Denise, I appreciate it, Thank you much, Denise
PELGRENI there from Bloomberg News. Ross Why what he just
texted me?

Speaker 2 (01:37:02):
So what?

Speaker 1 (01:37:04):
I'm sorry? What what would well?

Speaker 4 (01:37:09):
I know it's disturbing, right.

Speaker 1 (01:37:10):
I'm specially Michael Jackson's Thriller has been ranked the twenty
second best Halloween song of all time.

Speaker 4 (01:37:17):
How are there even twenty two Halloween songs? I was
thinking about this because I saw the A. Well, first off,
that's absurd. That's number one, yes, but two, I can
think of maybe five Halloween songs, right, Thriller Michael Jackson.
Michael Jackson to Halloween is Mariah carry to Christmas when
it comes to direct right correct? Yeh, let's see Monster

(01:37:38):
mash that's number one. Ghostbusters is number two. Ghostbusters hadn't
even thought of it. Good point. This is Halloween, this
is Halloween. This is that song.

Speaker 1 (01:37:49):
Janet Jackson's Black Cat is eight.

Speaker 4 (01:37:52):
Shut up?

Speaker 5 (01:37:53):
What?

Speaker 3 (01:37:54):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (01:37:55):
Eighth? Number seven is Scher's Dark Lady.

Speaker 4 (01:37:58):
This is stupid. It's so dumb.

Speaker 1 (01:38:00):
Imagine that Dragons, demons. I'm just reading ones that beat
thriller real quick. So I got a little time in excess.
Devil Inside, Devil Woman, Credence is Bad Moon Rising, Black
Magic Woman, Santana Kodak, Black Super Gremlin, Charlie Daniels, Devil
went down to Georgia. Justin Bieber's Ghost is better than
Michael Jackson's thriller
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