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May 30, 2024 • 102 mins
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(00:00):
Coming up on the show. Let'ssee, we're gonna solve a bunch of
problems. We're pretty good at that, i'd like to think, and we
got a few. In fact,we're gonna help New York City out of
all places, because I'm not surethey're doing this right. And I'll get

(00:22):
into specifically what's going on here.We'll help the city of Boston out because
you know how fond we are ofthose folks. And today could be the
day, we don't know. Butit also, and I'm referring to the
Trump trial with a verdict perhaps,but also, and this was pretty terrifying.

(00:46):
I was watching an interviewer. Idon't know, maybe it's not an
interview. I think it's actually hisshow, a little little mini show that
Alan Dershowitz does, and he startedtalking about something, and at first You're
like, you can't do that,But then I remember things that we've seen

(01:06):
during the trial, and Dershowitz talkedabout case law and a specific set of
circumstances, and it just adds onemore wrinkle to what potentially could happen.
I don't know how closely you're followingsome of the juror speculation that's going on.

(01:30):
There is an interesting little graph thatcame out yesterday. You know,
the jurors do questionnaires and some ofthem are pretty extensive. So, especially
when you're in a high profile triallike this, they're going to ask you
a bunch of questions and not justhey, do you think you could be
impartial? Have you how much ofyou heard about the case? You know,

(01:57):
the standard stuff. They ask thema ton of stuff, and one
of them is it's not attached individualsnames, but rather it's anonymous than with
numbers attached. One of the thingsthey asked them is where they get their
news from? And you have tocheck any of the boxes that apply,

(02:20):
and you have ABC, CBS,NBC, New York Times obviously, which
was the most checked box among thejurors. You have. You just have
a bunch of stuff. USA Today'son there, box news is on their

(02:43):
social media, the very social mediaoutlets on there. And yesterday the jury
deliberated, but then they came outwith a note based on the what is
it fifty pages of instructions and Iinitially they wanted a copy of the instructions

(03:04):
in there and they were denied that, which I don't understand that but the
judge did re explain it to them. And at the Trump table, you
see one of his lawyers, whowas a longtime prosecutor, who doesn't really
emotionally react to stuff, just fora moment, he got this little half

(03:24):
smile on his face and said,some of the Trump are looked over at
Trump, and you could tell Trump'smood softened. So the body language would
tell you that his lawyer, forwhatever reason, found that to be a

(03:45):
positive potentially for his clients. Sothen people started going through stuff and one
of the things that was there waswhere do the jurors get their media sources
or where are their media sources fornews? And one of the jurors has
a pattern that looks very dissimilar tothe rest of them, the vast majority

(04:09):
New York Times, CNN, there'sa there's like two or three that checked
the Fox box, including the oneI'm about to tell you, who indicated
that they get the majority of theirnews from x, Twitter and truth Social

(04:30):
So look, I'm not a scientist, but it looked incredibly different than the
rest of the jurors. Now whyis that important? Well, a lot
of people would look at that andgo, well, what you're dealing with
is somebody who is probably a probablya Trump voter, which, by the

(04:51):
way, isn't an exclusionary thing whenthey were picking jurors, at least not
officially. I'm sure that during thejurisdelection process what air or whatever they call
it, the prosecution probably was tryingto guestimate in the same way that the

(05:13):
defense is kind of where somebody standsto the extent that they can they only
have a certain number of challenges.But then I'm reading this thing this morning,
and in it you have Dershowitz who'stalking about a case in New York

(05:35):
where and this is what the scenariowould look like. They could come back
and be like, we cannot arriveat a decision. We'll talk about,
by the way, the instructions onthe because people are slightly misrepresenting it,
I've noticed on social media. Butwhat exactly the judge said. It still

(05:57):
sounds sketchy as hell. But we'llget to that just in a moment.
But with the juror thing, Dershowitztalked about where the jury came out the
foreman presented within the bounds that theycan right, they can't. They they're
not in New York. They can'tcome out and just say initially, yeah,
there's eleven of us who want todo this, but there's one person

(06:21):
and that person is this person,and then the judge goes after him individually.
What the judge is gonna what thejudge could look for, according to
Dershowitz, and in the cases caseis that he cited, was the judge
to make a decision that the personwas violating their oath by refusing to deliberate,

(06:45):
and the way that Dershowitz described it, and take you look, take
it with a grain of salt.I've read the case law. The The
scenario was the eleven erors were prettythey were like, yeap, no,
this person did whatever this thing is. And then the other person said,
no, I don't think they did. And I'm not listening to your arguments.

(07:08):
Now, whether you after a certainperiod of time, can go,
look, I've listened, I've youguys haven't convinced me. This is still
my decision. Where that line islike how long do you have to listen
to opposing arguments? What would beindicative of you going all right, let
me listen to your argument. Okay, okay, I'm considering it. In

(07:29):
fact, here's even rebuttal and thenwhat that looks like. But the idea
that a judge in New York couldcome out and say, well, look,
they listened, but they didn't listenfor long enough because he hasn't dismissed
the alternative alternate jurors, which isn'tcompletely unusual because you have a really high

(07:53):
profile. Okay, last thing youwant is there to be you know,
they're honestly deliberating, but then oneof them is, I don't know,
watching something on their phone, somenews report, and then you got to
switch them out. You want tomake sure you still have the alternates there.
But yeah, so that's that soundscrazy, right, that sounds looney

(08:16):
tunes. How could you do that? How could that be fair? Where
you could just spurge jurors they're notgiving you the result that you want.
You do it under cover of sayingthat they're violating their oath. Now,
I don't know that is pure speculation, but the fact that it can happen
like that with a non definitive likeI understand. Again, I understand if

(08:41):
you go into the jury break roomlike it's lunch and one of them snuck
a phone in and he's watching clipson YouTube or about the trial. Right,
I get that one hundred percent.But where you could just say,
you know, I'm not getting theresult I want in the other jurisday,
the other person can't be convinced,how do you go to determine if that

(09:03):
person is deliberating fairly? So that'syou know, that's the nightmare scenario I
listened to with the juror with thejudges instruction to the jurors. People are
posting that the hit he said thatthey could they could have four different crimes

(09:24):
that they think he's because he's chargewith multiple crimes. You know, four
could want to convict on one,four could want to convict on another,
and four could want to convict ona third and he would still see that
as unanimous. That's not exactly whathe said. Because what he said,
and remember how this works, there'sthe crime, but there is the crime

(09:48):
that is predicated on another crime becauseit's a cover up. And this is
where you get into the conspiracy stuff. So you have to determine one,
did he falsify records and that's thecharge. That's where you get into the
felony side of things, and thenyou have to determine if he did did

(10:13):
what was the crime he was attemptingto cover up. So what the judge
said is, if you all thinkthat he falsified business records, but you
four of you think he did itbecause of one of the pre existing theories,
so he did it too, andthen you know, insert what it

(10:33):
is he did it to manipulate theelection would be you know, one path.
Another path would be he did itbecause there was a financial motive there,
and then you look at those littlepot of charges, and then you
know four going another direction. Thepoint he was making is if you all
believe he did falsify the records,but you believe it was to cover up

(10:58):
different crimes, that's good enough forhim. Now I'm not a lawyer,
but that sounds that sounds kind oflooney tunes to me, because the requirement
for the charges or that he didthis thing and then went, oh crap,
I'm gonna get caught, so hedid this other thing. Right,

(11:22):
it's an ongoing set of things.I don't know how you can you can
split it all up like that,but apparently you can't. So that's where
we are. They'll begin deliberations short. I think about nine thirty, so
shortly after the show this morning.But it's gonna be a crazy day,
man. And then if they dofight him guilty, what do you do?

(11:46):
Do they remand him do you immediatelygo hey, we're appealing and then
that just goes forward? Is itgood enough to have it hanging over?
I don't know any of this.I do know though, that the dude
over at MSNBC totally wants to sleepwith his judge. Is that and is
that is now? Hold on?Maybe that's not a fair exaggeration. Roger

(12:11):
dubbed the audio in you think thatMSNBC dude doesn't want some candles, some
a nice dark room with the heneeds some attention from that judge. Oh
man, he's he's like he's likea teenager. It is very tiger,
you know what I mean? Yeah? Right, yeah, Like he said,
like posters of the judge over hisbed, what's he doing to those
posters? Why is his door locked? What's up with? What? What?

(12:35):
What is going on in there?As you've noted with dispection judge Marshaan,
I mean I am, I amlike now you know I have like
a man crush on him. Heis such a great judge that it's hard
to see that the jurors wouldn't havethe same impression. And he's just you
just keep on thinking. If youlooked in a dictionary for like judicial temperament,

(12:56):
that's what you get. I mean, I guess for the judge,
at least he can sign the restrainingorder against this dude. That's who they
brought in to do legal analysis overon MSNBC. Man, So if you
flip over there for even half asecond, just understand the charges. Excuse

(13:18):
me, just understand the analysis aboutthe charges and the trial that you're listening
to. Okay, all right,very good. It is six point twenty
oh we got oh and Oregon.Thank you for being in the news today
and not for you know, thethe lunatics that live there. I uh

(13:39):
I it's refreshing and I'll explain whycoming up here on the Cacoday radio program.
I know everyone's looking at the MiddleEast right now. You gonna want
to keep an eye on what thosecrazy bastards are up to. All right,
Uh, Bob, what's uh what'sgoing on? Hey? Good morning,
Katie, I'm good sir. Heydo you think that's awesome. Do

(14:00):
you think the judge is kind oflooking at these Trump trumped up Trump charges
as like, uh, you know, if your kid breaks a glass,
You're like, you know, Idon't care how it got broke. Did
you break it? You know,I don't care if you've knocked it off
the ledge, if you broke andwashing it, you know, if you're
playing toss with it, I don'tcare. How do I think the judge

(14:22):
is willing to do? Is thejudge willing to groom the process to get
the outcome that he's already determined thathe wants. I mean, that's look,
that's the accusation, and I youknow, you you're never gonna know
unless I guess he just comes outon somebody's recording him and he's had a
few too many trying to trying tosleep sleep with the dude from uh formally

(14:46):
the undercover dude James o'keeth. Idon't know, sir, So that's what
you're looking What if it's like whatif it's like now you see me where
you know the guy who he thinksreally after him the whole time, is
really in cahoots with him, orlike red, Notice what if it's one
of those, then like it comesout, you know, a month from
now, him and Trump Rahma yachttogether like appreciate you, judge. I

(15:07):
mean, yeah, how many Chiefsplayers are going to get arrested or charged
with crimes this offseason? What iscoing told you? I told you my
solution already. I told you thiswill keep happening. Well it has kept
happening. Now we have a ligneman, Isaiah Bugs, who, according to
authorities, so he's got during theoff season. Like a lot of players,

(15:28):
especially players that play you know,Kansas City or cold weather environments,
you know, once offseason hits,they generally are they're out of there.
And so I don't blame them forthat. I don't know where, if
he lives in Florida or one ofthe other places, but Bugs apparently has
a residence in Kansas City and offseason hits and you know, you win,

(15:50):
arize it, you snowbird wherever you'regoing, and then when it's time
for the teams to report or whatever, boom, you're back right And Kansas
City does their training camp in Wisconsin. Actually I've actually been to their training
camp. So according to police,when he left, he left. He
had some dogs. I don't knowif there are attack dogs or just regular

(16:12):
old pets, but he just justleft them there, no food, no
water. Maybe he thought they wouldgo feral, fend for themselves, and
and then when he comes back inAugust or September, they'd be there,
but the neighbors noticed. And nowhe's charged with cruelty to animals second degree.

(16:33):
But it's second degree felony. Yeah, And then you have and then
all the other stories from the fromthat car accident to a melee here about
a week ago. It's pretty crazy. Now Ross thinks we can arrest our
way out of this problem. I'msaying there's one common thread through all these
things, right, you gotta goto the to the to the queen,

(16:55):
the queen bee to get rid ofthe problem. And that person is Patrick
Mahomes. This is not hyperbole.I don't even know that word means not
getting no joke. Arrest Patrick Mahomes. I have nothing to gain from this.
I'm getting like a weird thing onyour mic. So six thirty seven
kc O Day Radio program. Letme check this and then we'll get into
the North Korea stuff. All right, Hang on, Ross, your board

(17:17):
was like it didn't sound right onTuesday morning, right, first thing ross
state. My settings were all likescrewed up on Tuesday, right, Yeah,
so we think it's a CIA conspiracyor the cleaning lady's got one of
those duster ones. But you knowwho knows anyway what we tell you jailing
Patrick Mahomes, Right, And likeI was saying, it's not hyperbole.

(17:38):
I have nothing to gain from this. No, no, no, no,
nothing to gain. Oh wait,let me check. Are they in
your division? I mean that's youropinion. There's nothing again in your in
your division, not your com they'rein your If they're in your division,
I don't know what that has todo with with anything with the Buffalo Bills.
I'm right now. My focus ison the people of Kansas City,

(17:59):
and they're say, and all theseplayers that keep getting arrested in the Kansas
City Chiefs, there's the one thingthey have in common, and that is
that they surround Patrick Mahomes. He'slike their center here is that Queen Bee.
You know, you got to takeout the queen if you want to
get rid of the problem. ArrestPatrick Mahomes. Once again, I'm biased
opinion. I have nothing to gainfrom this, go bills. Well,
let's test your let's what was thatlast part? Nothing to and then anyway

(18:22):
in consquestion, so let's test this. Proximity to mahomes? Are linemen close
to the quarterback? Could you lookthat up? They? They? They
should be? They? Oh,they do, they should be? Why
not if you're playing for like Cincinnati, probably maybe? No, no,
probably not. Why about wide receiver? Well, they don't stand right next
to them, but do they interactsometimes the wide receivers and mahomes sometimes yes?

(18:45):
Yeah? Wow, yeah, Icould find no fault in this,
So there you go. We couldeither do that or we could turn North
Korea loose on them. They're havingan interesting week over there and North Korea.
First last week when they had anew satellite they were super excited about
and then it exploded into smithereens,so that that was that was one.

(19:11):
And then they launched a rocket yesterdayand obviously the Japanese and South Koreans don't
like that very much. But theythen went in a different direction and I
don't know because it's technically not arocket, can we use our Kim jong
un rocket a Wocketman Song I guesswe can because he did technically launch a

(19:33):
rocket. So you know, ifwe're gonna do this thing, we haven't
played the song in a while.Let's do this thing, right he wave,
He's flag to eg nite the outrightzero hour nine am, little rocketman
singing, doing a good job,and I'm going to launch a right o

(19:57):
wat Japan our roody Earth someday Ibet my life our wind this arms race,

(20:19):
it's such a man fight. Thatwas pretty good. Yeah, that
was pretty good. And I thinkI'm gonna ruller long wrong time this show
down. Bring me around to getto fight. I'm not a man they

(20:42):
think a man home, Oh no, no, no, I'm a working
man, a working man, alittle man with a huge nose cone and
also very big hair. And Ithink I'm gonna roar a long wrong time

(21:04):
this showdown. Bring me around againto five. I'm not a man making
a man whom No, no,no, I'm a walking man. The
dear Leader's a walking man, arettle man with a huge north cone.

(21:25):
Yeah, well, not exclusively,not exclusively a rocket enthusiast. In fact,
now South Korea is dealing with anew attack after photographs have been released
of nearly one hundred and fifty bigass balloons. All right, let's say
look this up ross. You knowhow big these balloons are? You ready

(21:48):
for this? Man? The balloonsare seventy two cicadas wide. I mean
that's Can you imagine me what kindof cicada that we're talking about? Like
African or European cicadas? Does itmatter? Does it please? I see

(22:10):
what you did there? Anyway,it's seventy two cicadas wide. They're about
an inch, so you do themath on that. Although my wait,
hold on, that's length. SoI can't use the length of cicada.
I have to know how wide theyare at the hips, so it's a
lot more cicadas wide, so it'sabout six feet anyway, So they have
these like ATV sized balloons that arecareening across the border, and they're not

(22:34):
explosive, well they're not explosive lateAnd instead the balloons are then toting these
big bags which they're able to actuallyI guess remotely open, and they're full
of poop. They're sending way whatthey're flying poop balloons over South Korea.

(22:55):
So yeah, it's a bio weapon. Yeah, I mean it is.
But also so the first thing,I'm like, how hard would it be
for an average North Korean to fillone of those? I was just thinking
the exact same thing at first.Those things probably like somebody's job there to
fill up the like you're this isthe Yeah, yeah, you're the battalion.

(23:17):
You you fill up these balloons thatwe fly over South Korea and then
we pop them or whatever. Yeah, but they don't eat over there,
So how are they even filling theballoons up? I did, well,
I was thinking it might it probablyis Kim Jong uns. Is that dude's
eating, right, that's I'm assumingyou have to like, yeah, that's
where you have to harvest it.So in a way, if you are

(23:37):
you know, if you're one ofthese poor bastards in soul and you know
you're look at this ballue, you'relike, oh is that what is that
balloon? Is that a hobby balloon? Oh? My gosh, right,
that's really special because remember this dude'smagic, right. Remember the origin story
of the of them is being borninside of a log talking. Is it

(24:04):
the log cabin or the mountain thattalks? Anyway, you know that mountain,
then nobody can go up except thatfatty on a horse. Right,
so they what they teach him inschool roughly is that there's a secret log
cabin. I don't know why inthere that it talks or the mountain talks.
They can't remember. And then theyare magically. They're not born because

(24:30):
and this part is part of it, they're not born per se because if
they did, it would kill thehuman woman because of their strength. Right,
it's the Superman conundrum kind of right, where the old how could Superman
in Lewis Lane? He'd kill herwhen he was you know at that point,

(24:55):
right, that's a stupid nerd debate, but it's part of the lord
here. So with all of that, the ability to do all these things
and yes, real honest to goodnessmagic, like is can you imagine that
being your superhero origin story? Becausethat this this squad who puts these balloons

(25:17):
together was like, where are wegoing to get that much feces? And
they're like have you seen how longde your leader is in the bathroom for?
And then they harvested from there.They may in a way, they
may be creating South Korean superheroes andthey don't know. It's like everyone down
the South that's gonnaet hit by likethe meteors. Yes, the spiders that
make spider man like like you couldbe this could be your own demise,

(25:37):
right, and you're contributing to it. So because you go out into the
country, you trying to you know, you try to find some peasant out
there is like eaty, oh what'sfor dinner? Oh? Grass again?
All right? I mean that there'sa lot of fiber there, but there's
not a lot of substance. Butalso, uh, you know what a

(26:00):
what a plan of attack? Man? If you gotta feel like the guy
who came up with the trebouche atthat point, So gross man, all
right, six point fifty two.Yeah, it says it's filled with that
and coupled with other refuse and filth, including rotten well where they find rotten

(26:22):
food. I don't know that I'mbuying this anyway. We'll be back.
Oh wait, hold on, nevermind. Just realize, looking up at
my clock, I took the breakbecause my mic was all jacked. All
right, lea, well, thenwe'll continue. This is what's kind of
crazy. So I'm reading this articlehere from this is a quote let's see

(26:45):
you from Casey and a News agency. I guess, uh this is read
that as a quote from the NorthKoreans. Go all right, Uh.
The reasoning according to the North KoreanDefense Vice Minister Kim Kang. Ill,

(27:07):
Oh my god, it's Kang.Dude. I didn't realize they had Kang.
Isn't that the dude who's super opYeah, that's the problem though.
There's so many Kangs. They're differentversions of king. Yeah, but he's
probably pretty. He's not. He'skind of low rent probably Okay. Well,

(27:33):
anyway, Uh, he said thatthey had the North Korean had North
Korea had no choice but to retaliatebecause South Korea, I don't know if
you know what South Korea does,and then we we used to do some
of this too, but they flyballoons and then other and then groups do
too, like humanitarian groups do this. They they fly balloons over into North

(27:55):
Korea and they drop leaflets and andsometimes they'll drop media like when I say
media, I mean like DVDs andstuff, because they a lot of them
do have access to that, andso they'll send like, hey, if
you heard of freedom, it's awesome, and then leaflets and so North Korea
said that they had no choice thisis simply quote tit for tit action,

(28:19):
that's tit for tat, but Iwouldn't want to correct you Kang. There
will also be taken against frequent asa result of the frequent scattering of leaflets
by South Koreans near the border areas. I don't know. I mean,
we're not talking about leaflets here,so arguably it is an escalation. And

(28:47):
North Korea also says or I don'tknow if this is part of the official
teaching, but they indicated that SouthKoreans love feces, which I don't know
what that's a I probably don't wantto know what that's about. But wild,
wild times there in their careas manand the balloons are the balloons are

(29:10):
white, so they kind of wouldblend into the you know, if you
got a cloudy day, you're notgoing to see him right away depending on
the altitude, and you know,and then you and then it's you're covered.
So yeah, lots of horribleness.Speaking of horribleness, uh, Hunter
Biden has well, one of hislawyers has indicated a lawsuit that's coming for

(29:36):
Fox News based on a Fox Newshost and guest having a conversation where Hunter
Biden was referred to, and I'mgonna I'm gonna have to repeat it here,
was referred to as a degenerate crackhead. What she said is defamatory.

(30:00):
Now, I would point out thatin his book Hunter, Biden referred to
himself as crack addict, crack smoker, crack head, crack daddy, and
a crack addict, but not adegenerate crackhead or crack daddy or crack addict.

(30:22):
What's the line there? What separatesa degenerate crackhead from a from a
just a normal, run of themill crackhead. Because I just assumed that
if you've made a list of thingsthat are degenerate crackhead, crack headery is
on there. If that's a wordthat I can use and I could suit

(30:44):
for. So, if you're callingyourself all those things and then somebody throws
the word are there? Are therecrackheads making a difference? Are there crackheads
you know out there spreading positivity that'snot crack for other crackheads? I guess
maybe that that could be seen aspositively. I Hi, I'm a crackhead,

(31:07):
You're OK. Look, I broughtcrack for everybody in that slice to
the rest of the populace. Theystill think you're a crackhead, but the
other crackheads are probably pretty excited youshowed up to the party. What does
discovery look like on that? Isn'tit just a recitation of the videos with
you arguing with a prostitute over yourcrack wye with a gun at your side,

(31:32):
and you're you know what out foreveryone to see. Because that seems
like degenerate behavior, getting into acrack deal argument naked, holding a gun
with a naked prostitute. Some woulddescribe that as degenerate. Ros If I

(31:56):
told you that that was how Ispent my Memorial Day weekend, like you
know what, we're getting together?Wait, in the back of your mind
is you'd be like, dear godman, what is that? That is
degenerate? What a degenerate? Imaginemy excitement yesterday when I saw this story
breaking in Oregon. Not courthouse takeovers, not you know, the burning of

(32:24):
downtown Portland, not even that.Who was the transactivist who was giving out
basically going to schools and literally violatingstate law? I can't remember that now.
I remember the The activists describes themselvesas a let me make sure I'm
getting this right. And autistic transnon binary witch. Yeah, but that's

(32:55):
not that story. That's that's justyou know how they roll in Portland there,
So now this is something different forthis. We're headed to the coast.
Baby. Check this out. Afew miles behind me in the hill
and Bay is a whale quickly floatingto the shore. It was about three

(33:15):
o'clock and I saw this huge thingjust out there in the ocean. I
thought it moved. I looked atit, and immediately I thought it was
a whale, and it was definitelybloated. That's why it was floating so
high on the water. Joe Pacourand Greg and Cheryl Gosser live along Manhattan
Beach and had a clear view ofa whale making its way into the surf.
We live up on the hill hereand we're trying to get a bit

(33:37):
of view on my deck, andat that point it was almost straight out
from us, and you could evensee the fins sticking out at the side.
The core has spent two years asa commercial fisherman, and says his
educated guests, the bottom of ithave striations in it is that it's a
humpback typically, he says he seesgray whales in these waters. Greg spent
more than forty years as a merchantmariner and says he's seen a lot of

(34:00):
whales and lots of dead ones,but never off Manhattan Beach. He immediately
called the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the National Marine Fisheries, Coast Guard,
and the Tillamok Sheriff's Office and SeasideAquarium that the numbers were not available
on a holiday weekend. As thetrio watches waves break over the whales body,

(34:21):
they say, now we wait,we were just hoping it didn't wash
up here. They smell and they'rehard to get rid of. If it's
days in the surf. They worryabout sharks feeding on the carcass as the
beaches fill up this Memorial Day weekend. Yeah great, Okay, anyway,
I have I have a solution.One. I've been there. The coast
of Like, like I mentioned withCalifornia, the coast of Oregon is gorgeous.

(34:45):
Man, so like all of thatarea is so gorgeous. It's just
such a shame it's filled with suchmoonbats. But this area, this is
not Portland, This Obviously, whenyou get Astoria is a little moonbatty,
but as you get into the coastover there, it's gorgeous. And they
have the cheddar cheese, which they'revery proud about. So if you like

(35:07):
eating gobs of really high end cheddarcheese on stuff, it's a good place
to go. But more importantly,we have an answer. We've trialed and
aired this, and I feel likeI feel like we should look to the
past here. Now that you havea big, old, dead bloated whale

(35:29):
on your shore, why don't youguys get it right this time? And
by that, for those of youwho don't know, there is a very
famous news report of a live eventfrom what what was that the eighties?
The seventies. I mean it wasa while ago. I said, like
the film grain looks like the seventies, seventy, Yeah, it looks very
seventies, where they were trying tofigure out, so what do we do?

(35:52):
And then they decided, what ifwe stuff it with dynamite and exploded
into a gaze million pieces, asthe president would say, a zillion pieces,
and it'll be fine. And itwasn't fine because everyone heard what was
going to happen and they did thelogical thing, right, you know,

(36:14):
you want to stay away and notshow up and wait for authorities to come
and let you know the job isdone. Well, that that's what they
wanted. But then but no,everyone showed up like it was like it
was a monster truck event. Andso when they blew this thing up,
you have to understand there's the beachand then there's this long, windy walkway

(36:37):
one hundred a couple hundred yards awayto where you get to the parking lot.
And they were so crap at blowingthis whale up that what they ended
up creating are like small car sizedpieces, human sized pieces, big boulder
sized pieces, which then proceeded toabsolutely recap. Highway Division not only had

(37:00):
a whale of a problem on itshands, but had a stinking whale of
a problem what to do with oneforty five foot eight ton whale dead on
arrival on the beach near Florence.It had been so long since a whale
had washed up in Lane County nobodycould remember how to get rid of one.
In selecting its battle plan, theHighway Division decided the carcass couldn't be

(37:21):
buried because it might soon be uncovered. It couldn't be cut up and then
buried because nobody wanted to cut itup, and it couldn't be burned,
So dynamite. It was some twentycases or a half ton of it.
The hope was that the long deadPacific grave whale would be almost disintegrated by
the blast, and that any smallpiece is still around after the explosion would
be taken care of by seagulls andother scavengers. Where did it, by

(37:44):
the way, where did you guyscome up with that idea? Why do
I think? It's in the oneof the bars near there with some dudes
from the Highway Department, you know, maybe a guy who's a bit of
a firebug and some county commissioners.I don't know, I just know you
compare relate to two video is theone recent one we played in this one
from whenever it was forever ago,and it's we used to be a proper

(38:05):
country. Yeah, yeah, I'lljust blow it up. I got any
Everyone's just like, what do wegotta do? What the sharks to show
up? But there's no options.There is just because you didn't get it
right the first time? Can ross? Can you imagine if you quit everything
you didn't get right the first timein line. So we talked about this
a few days ago. Like theguys that you have the old timy videos

(38:27):
in black and white of the guysattaching wings to their arms and jumping off
the roof trying to fly, right, we didn't quit at that point,
right with this stupid bicycle with aballoon attached to it that they ran off
a cliff, right, somebody died, but they didn't quit, and they
kept going. And then the BrightBrothers came along and they did it right.
You don't buy it right, youkeep moving forward. And and also
we wouldn't have giant poop balloons,right if not for that dude. They're
like, Okay, I can't holda human on a bicycle, but what

(38:50):
about a big bag of dung?Right? All right? So so anyway,
that's the plan they put together.Let's listen to the actual Let's what
is that somebody's whiny? What doyou guys? Always go back to the
story. Shut up. They're gonnablow a whale up and it's not gonna
go well, spoiler here we go. Camera stopped rolling immediately, all right.

(39:19):
Just by the way, do youhear how excited they are in that
moment, in just that half second. Yeah, I mean when their legs
are boring. I mean, yes, it's mundane, right, monoton.
It's the same thing over and overand over again. You get up to
go to work, you go tosleep. But on this day they blow
this whale on the beach. Howfast are you and the family there?
But to it? You know,I hate the beach, but I'm there.
Yeah, you show it up allright? Anyway, So they're excited.

(39:44):
Let's see if that lasts. Ourcameras stopped rolling immediately after the blast.
The humor of the entire situation suddenlygave way to our run for survival.
It's huge chunks of whale blubber felleverywhere. Meat passed high over our
heads, while others were falling atour feet. The dunes were rapidly evacuated

(40:05):
the spectators escape both the falling deBrian and the overwhelming smell. A parked
car over a quarter of a milefrom the blast sight was the target of
one large chunk. A passenger compartmentliterally smack. Fortunately, no human was
hit as badly as the car over. Everyone on the scene was covered with
small particles of dead whale. Excusethe wording there so hard? Yeah,

(40:27):
the wording there is so great.And once again you compare reports, Yeah,
dude, like that the wordsmith rightthere, like you compare it to
the recent report. Once again,we just played and you know, it's
a young eighteen nineteen year old girlthat they don't know what to do about
the whale, and then they goto this guy and like the way that
was worded was perfect, Like thechoosing of the word blubber, Yes,

(40:49):
fantastic, little meat flew over ourheads. It's like when you compare old
civil old timey Civil War letters hometo like, you know, the way
people write letters now, and it'sthere's no comparison. Yeah, whatever type
somebody's like all these Civil War guysthey were you know, they were illiterate,
right, they're just there're a bunchof country bumpkins all that. And
then the and then you look atthe pros and the wording on on those

(41:10):
letters and and the the handwriting qualitytoo, right, the the the the
flurry within the yeah, in thecursive there, it's it's truly fun.
We used to be able to writelike, you know, like he'said impressive
handwriting or passive handwriting, and nowbecause of text messaging where we all write
like doctors. Like I had towrite something the other day and I was

(41:31):
like, oh, that's the grossYeah, yeah, I don't I'm not
a big big fan of that.Yeah. I saw these two crazy documents,
a lot of a lot of veryillustrious cursive and uh something about we
the people. I don't know.Have you read that book? I read
it, But we need to blowup this whale as the founders intended.
Yes, but I think, okay, maybe dynamite wasn't the answer. I'm

(41:53):
thinking Tanner write a metric crap tonof of tannerite, which I suspect that
I could round up a ton oftannerite if everyone, in the sound of
my voice who has some was willingto pitch in on this, or make
it like a big community event.Give everyone like an old timey cannon and

(42:14):
just everybody shoot it from a distanceor one of those. It's like,
it's a what brings the community together. We did this at a radio station
event before, like a murder,like an old school pumpkin chunkin your able
a giant catapult and you just tryto pummel the whale. Right, okay,
one. Animal based radio promotions don'talways go well. Do you remember?

(42:36):
I remember what happened in Cincinnati withthat Thanksgiving promotion, Dad, listen,
that was a mistake. Mistakes aremade, but I mean the attention
was good. Yeah, and heit sounds like the program director actually thought
you could, right, so hedidn't go into that with malice. But
then also, people need to takesome responsibility. Look up for once,
ah, I was decapitated because ofa falling frozen turkey or whatever. Come

(42:59):
on, ye ye, how abouta personal responsibility here? Well yeah,
and if you already know that,the meat and blubber will fly over your
head, so you've been warned.But here's the here's the problem. This
is why I don't trust a moonBack government to do this, because they
would take your cannon idea. Well, actually they wouldn't because because she doesn't

(43:19):
say you can own a cab acannon. But if they did, let's
say they got past that. Theproblem is is they would, but then
they'd arrange them in a circle,right, yeah, right, and then
they would totally they would. Thenthey would blame the cannons right for the

(43:40):
decapitation or the giant sucking chess woundsthe size of a fist. You know
they went through Bob's chests not becauseof their poor planning, because fine,
it would be the cannons. Yes, fine, take away the cannons.
Just give everyone in air fifteen.We've seen the damage they can do.
The mist and like a shot.You supposed to hunt or dispose of whales

(44:01):
with an air fifteen. It's irresponsible. Yeah. Remember if you put a
two two three round through somebody.I believe the exit wound is what the
size of a buick. I believeI was told. So, yeah,
look, we do something. Buthere's the part. We can use your
thing with the cannon or the airfifteen and the tannerite, So tannerit.
For those who don't know, ifyou've ever watched dudes go out, not

(44:22):
just dudes, I guess, butyou ever watch people go out and shoot
a target that just explodes, that'swhat you're dealing with. So you're telling
me, if we couldn't pack inenough of that inside this big old humpback
whale, we can't take another crackat this. The problem is not that
they used dynamite. Probably it wasthat they didn't use enough or a high

(44:44):
enough quality. So let's let's hey, let's let's go round two. There'll
be another whale that washes up atsome point, and you're only two choices.
As we know on the West Coast, if you're countering a whale and
proximity is either to blow it tosmitherings or uh take it into space for
some reason. What if we justtricked the enterprise into picking it up because

(45:09):
we weekend at Bernie's the whale it'sa good point. Why isn't Elon Musk
candling the whale? But you haveto because you got to push it on
the ocean. Then you gotta havelike dudes divers under it making it look
like it's alive, or they're notgonna come get it. So you gotta
you gotta go weekend at Bernie's JoeBiden press conference with this thing, right,
put a little life into it,and then maybe, just maybe that'll

(45:31):
solve your problem. You're probably gonnawant to go with the Tanner right,
who is see so excited? Whowould see more alive at that campaign event?
Joe Biden or the dead puppet whale? That's not fair. They wouldn't
be close. Dude, what ifyou just what if you tell the homeless
it's there? You gotta have tobe quick, right, what dude are

(45:55):
you well? I meant, areyou assuming they're gonna use it for shelter
or for like both both? Likethe Native Americans? Right? Remember how
they used all the buffalo or whatever? My name is, Jonah, Yes,
dude, come on, you're tellingme you could. You don't even
have to take him over there,just cut it up, good taking.

(46:15):
What do we have it at theshelter tonight? Oh we're having a seafood
stew again. Yes, again,this is God answering. Think about it.
What did he send? All right? It's like the problem in California
they had where they had a droughtand then what did God bring a giant

(46:35):
snow? They for water, Butthey didn't do that because they're stupid,
because they're in California. Same thing. You have a hungry you have,
you have a homeless poverty situation.People are hungry. The Lord has provided
you a whale. It's here.It is. It's that old joke right
where the guy dragged you up intoheaven because he was on the roof and
of flood and uh. The firstguy came by in a canoe and he's
like, no, no, no, God will save me. And then

(46:59):
here comes a motor by. He'slike, no, no, God will
save me. And then he saton his roof and here comes a helicopter.
They're like get in. He's like, no, God will save me.
And he gets up to heaven andhe's like, what the hell God
I believed in you. He's like, I sent you a canoe, a
boat, and a helicopter. Here'syour whale. And you're if you don't

(47:19):
do my thing blowing it up,your other option is this what are you
doing? All right? We'll beback hang on. If you haven't seen
this video yet, I'd be veryvery surprised. But maybe there's one of
you. I don't know, butcrazy story out of Michigan little courtroom drama.
We'll get to that. And StephenKennell joined us. That's coming up

(47:39):
eight oh five. We got oodlesof stuff to get into, bros.
And I can't off the air.We can't stop talking about the quality of
the broadcast, the verbiage, thewriting, the delivery, everything of reporters
in the seventies, you know,and you hear some of this old stuff,
just the the the flourish of wordsthere. Right, it's we don't

(48:05):
do that anymore, but we're tryingto solve a problem. Now. Somebody
says it would be a bad idea, even though we want to treat this
whale as a gift from God,and then they could use it to feed
homeless and provide shelter maybe, andthat's a lot of shelter in fact,
specifically if it is a humpback whale. I remember going to the Santa Barbara
Natural History Museum when I was incollege. You go over there, pretty

(48:29):
cool. Outside of it, theyhave a humpback well skeleton and you can
walk around inside of it so youcan see how massive it is. So
you can kind of walk inside,and then you're like in the rib cage.
And he realized just how damn bigthese things are. But you could
stack you could stack hobos like cordwoodin there and then use the oil for

(48:50):
heat. Although some people are slayingin my email that the moonbats might be
bad. Not if you call itartisnal artisan whale oil, that's your loophole,
and hipsters love that crap, right, Like ah, we're opening an
artisal butter churn store right, onlyusing genuine imitation old school butter churns,

(49:15):
right, and it'll be super superexpensive. And then they'll open something like
that hell they got if you mostlyprobably know that you've been to Boone or
Blowing Rock. I don't know ifthey saw the one in Blowing Rock.
But if you go on the maindragon Boone on the left, just before
you're headed back out of Boone,like to the west, there's like a
they have a store there that justsells like olive oil, like one hundred

(49:37):
different flavors of olive oil. Andit's not cheap. It is good that
somebody give me a gift of thatone time. You know, I like
to cook. I like Italian food, so I was down with that.
But yeah, so we'll open Caseyand Ross's artisan whale oil store and they'll

(49:58):
be fine with it. But thoseare not the only ideas. Let's head
to the phones, David. Yougot a plan. What's up? Good
morning there? Yes, I gota plan. Two toug boots, all
right. They go in and theyhook into that thing and they drag it
out in the ocean. You callit a military and tell them to send

(50:19):
in a couple of fourteens take thatsucker out way after an ocean somewhere,
well, a way out, wayout. Yeah, you want to get
away out there because yeah, butthey would get some target practice. You
know, they need some target practice. Oh so then you want the coast
guard or the knave if you're gonnahave to drink, you know, you'd
have to get it out past ourwaters. But yeah, then the navy

(50:42):
can go light it up. Isuppose that are drag it over, drag
it over one of other countries thatneed some food, do you know what
I'm saying? Or send it toNorth Korea and see if they try to
float it into South Korea. Thereyou go. All right, I like
it, sir. We're problem solvingthis morning. Appreciate the call. Thank
you, thank you. Hey,look, I appreciate you'll all right,

(51:05):
Oh well, thank you very much. Look at that. That is a
man who's who makes very good decisionswith his time, listening to us talk
about blowing up whales. Yeah,Bob, what's up? Uh, you're
giving me too much time to thinkabout it, casey, because my one
step process is now a three stepprocess that's signed government loves complicated processes,
sir, What do you got?Okay? Step one? Uh, industrial

(51:30):
logging equipment and wood chippers. Theyhave that equipment in Oregon. It irritates
many a hippie. Yes, allright, number two. Step Step two,
break out the bathematic and make anice little puree, and you want
a whale pete of some sort.Okay? All right? Yeah, and

(51:50):
then you break out your confiscated sentineland dose it appropriately for safe pumption and
just put out flyers. Seattle Onproblem solved. Well not. Now you
have another thing that people are addictedto, sir, which is kind of
a problem. I don't know ifyou've seen the Seattle Is Dying documentary that
we've talked about many times, butit's got a bit of an open air

(52:13):
drug market. You have like crackheadsliving o'll excuse me, I have to
call them crackheads. You got crackheadsliving in trash cans. Yeah. I
think you might be able to enticeJoe Rogan to come back and break out
the fear factor. Maybe and we'llmake it, make a day of it.
Yeah, yeah, all right,maybe. I mean I like some

(52:34):
of the steps there. I lovethe idea that there there would be a
new drug that's just uh fentanyl,whale. What would you thanks for the
call there, sir f Ross,What would you call that? Because you
couldn't say you're hooked on whale.You got, like every other thing,
you gotta have a you gotta havea little nickname, right, you're you're
a slave to the blubber, rightsomething. But it's got to have a

(52:57):
street name, you know, likemeth is meth but meth is also can
be ice, can be all sortsof stuff, cocaine, boog or sugar.
Right, So we'll get on we'llget on that. But while we're
doing that, I got to flipover to a few other things. But
I like that people are coming upwith ideas. Man, That's that's what

(53:20):
we need. All right, Welllet's talk about what happened to Michigan.
So, like a lot of courts, and I'm not necessarily opposed to this,
I think that the defender should havethe option though that a lot You
know how a lot of courts havetransitioned to video and it wasn't all COVID

(53:40):
related, Yeah, because a lotof court systems were already finding it was
easier rather during initial appearance than bringing, you know, bringing twenty inmates over
from the local jail, which isthe whole thing, and then having that
and then you know, taking themback from a security standpoint and ease of
you standpoint. You see a lotof courts that they the court is in

(54:05):
session, everybody's there but the actualdefendant and sometimes the defendant's lawyer is via
remote screen. They're generally there intheir orange jumpsuit or whatever. And there's
been some pretty comical moments where peopledon't think the judge can hear them and
now they're doing contempt time. Itdoesn't go well, and the sovereign citizen

(54:27):
dudes hate it too for whatever reason. It's really hard to have the judge
look at your crumpled handful of paperworktalking about how you're a traveler via the
remote connection. But you know alot of instances courts have found, even
for people who are not in thatsituation where it's a direct line from the
courtroom, that they can hold courthearings remotely. So I mean half the

(54:52):
time when you see like a courtrecording that goes viral, it's five zoom
windows or teams windows. And youknow, insanity is ensuing, but he
had a case where a dude hadthis he was stocking this woman, and
the I don't know if it wasone of the prosecutors, somebody noticed that

(55:15):
the background the dude had looked awhole lot like this woman's house. And
they come to find out that thewoman who is on the connection kind of
she's connected with one of the lawyersnot on the main screen, is petrified
to tell anyone that he is physicallyin the house, which would be a

(55:35):
violation of a bunch of orders.And they picked up on it, and
then they literally sent a squad carover and they arrested the dude. This
is different. This guy's appearing beforea judge. He's on his third charge
of driving without a license, issuspended license and no insurance, so it's
traffic court, but it's now escalated. So he's making an appearance on that.

(56:00):
And it's when you're listening to ituntil the end, you can't really
figure out what's going on. Butyou have to understand that the judge is
looking at this guy like he's gotsix heads the whole time he is getting
ready to commence with the court proceeding. Here we go, say some public

(56:20):
under should be present in zoos.Are you driving, Ashley, I'm pulling
into my doctor's office actually so,so I'll just give me one second.
I'm parking right now. The lookon this judge's face there, I'm pulling

(56:40):
right now at this second, andhe looks like one of those old school
judges that's seen a lot. Andyou can tell even e even he's like,
what the hell am I watching?So you probably picked up on it.
Dude is in a car with theyou know, driving with the phone
Visionually you see him sitting there andyou see things moving behind him, and

(57:02):
he's just like, oh, yeah, no, no, no, I'm
pulling into a parking lot. Iam all right, what are we doing,
your honner. We are especially requestingin a German in this matter up
possibly the four weeks at the courtwould allow. So maybe I don't understand
something. This is a driving onelicense suspended, that is correct your enter

(57:23):
and he was just driving and hedidn't have a license. Yep. Oh
that's the noise the dude makes.By the way, Oh like, how
do they catch me? What's what'sgoing on? Or did your honor?
Yes, no, I'm looking athis record. He doesn't have a license,

(57:45):
he's suspended, and he's just driving. That is correct, your inner.
I don't even know why he woulddo that. So defendant's bond is
revoked. In this manner, defendantis turned himself into the Washington kind of
Gail by six them today, failureto turn himself in while we result on
the bench fort with no bond.Yeah yeah, OMG is right, dude.

(58:10):
The best part is the dude's slowlike realization that he is a dumbass?
Is it? Though? Eventually youcan watch him and you can see
his face transform to be like,hey, I'm just backing up into this
spot too. I am an idiotand I'm going to prison. Yeah yeah,
how how like? Why do youtwo? First of all, you

(58:30):
gotta if you followed ross rule numberone of video meetings, this wouldn't have
happened to you. I don't thinkRoss's camera works on on any of his
devices. I never. I mean, we've seen it work before on the
Hayes for I'm not one for selfpromotion, but for the Hayes for share
of twitch channel and I'm meetings.No man, I'm tearing that camera off

(58:52):
and I'm muting my microphone as well, and then I'm putting it over here
on this counter, and then I'mgoing over there and doing something else during
the meeting and in the distance right, and then you rent over there and
you're like yeah, yeah, concur, Yeah all right, anyway, let's
uh, let's okay. So that'swhat I've thought. All right, we're
having this is why we're laying hererace, I'm telling you what. Yeah,

(59:15):
we're having a little technical issue earliertoo, So yeah, I have
no problem. Yeah, we'll tryto figure it out anyway. How you
doing service going on? Well,it's doing okay and enjoying this beautiful weather
and you kind of get out therein a casey and you're like, yeah,
well this ain't gonna last, andyou're right, it's not so enjoying
the next few days. Actually waspoking around in the mountains and found like

(59:37):
forty two degrees at the elevation aboutabout five thousand feet, So there's some
real cool stuff as you go west. Right now, temperatures across the area
are load of mid fifties tryad westand closer to sixty, a lot of
upper fifties near sixty degrees for thetriangle, but a beauty of the day.
Today we're close to eighty. Tonightwe're even cooler. Load of mid

(59:57):
fifties for everyone. Sunny Friday,the upper seventies. Over the weekend we
get warmer, might notice a touchof community, but no rain. A
load of bit eighties and back intothe upper eighties next weekend. But about
I think Wednesday, mid week nextweek we'll start to see the shower with
thunderstorm chance come back in so realgood run, coming out, very comfortable,
next few days, little up tickin humidity over the weekend, but
especially next week as we get intoJune, the heat him if it comes

(01:00:21):
back. Okay, all right,so good day for picnic a top Mount
Mitchell, is what you're saying.Yes, I agree, have fun with
that. All right, we'll kickthe machine and hopefully we got it.
We can get your connection. Thanksour sir, Thank you all right.
Ross. By the way, theodds on favorite to what the street name
for the fentanyl whale is called,they want to go with the Moby.

(01:00:44):
I think that you might face alawsuit from Moby right, because he's not
gonna want his name associated with adangerous Maybe the first time in a long
time, people were like, hey, you remember Moby, but I remembered
Moby, but maybe it was thetrigger there. You could go with the
second part of that whale's name,and then you could say you're addicted,

(01:01:04):
which I think is a fun playon words. Or you could say you're
addicted to the Moby. That mightset it apart and it's a pun so
contemplate. Then we'll be right back, all right. So another suggestion called
the fentanyl whale oil drug flubber Dude, Disney would sue you in like three
seconds. I love it, don'tget me wrong, but they're very litigious.

(01:01:27):
All right, A couple of quickcalls, Anthony, what's up?
Things? You gotta call it thejuice, the joint? You know that's
not bad. I don't. Ican't see the loss. Yeah, that's
a little too on the might bea little two on the nose. A

(01:01:50):
good not a good thing to say. Uh, I had my ex was
that was her thing? So anyway, all right, I gotta, I
gotta, I gotta go man,So she had a disease or because like
a what is the AA for that? So many questions Sean, go ahead,

(01:02:15):
hey real quick, anybody says justto calling the Japanese fleet. I
mean you know, oh you knowwhat, sir, that actually inspires me
a little bit because you remember whochases the Japanese fleet around? Yeah,
the the whale ward hippies. Dude, you you know how hard you control

(01:02:37):
them with this thing? Yeah?I mean maybe they wouldn't take it because
the committed suicide. You know,I don't want no, no, no,
I don't want them to. Iwant them to think it's really a
whale. Have you ever because they'llhave you watched that thanks for the caller
Sean like it a live whale?Right? Can you imagine you're just you
just go zooming by them and you'rejust towing that thing at like fifteen knots

(01:03:00):
the freak out that they would startchasing you, and you're doing the thing
where you're making a move and really, because you're toning, it kind of
looks like you I love it.And then while they're while they're coming up
and they're they're panting and screaming atyou with their bullhorns and the rest of
the crap that they do, whichdidn't salt it was totally uneffective or ineffective.

(01:03:22):
You can have dudes out there likemessing with the way. Oh yeah,
you got options, that's all I'msaying. Glad to have you along.
Is we get into our number threeand it is Thursday, so we
welcome in our official NERD correspondent,Stephen Kent. He's with this. How
you doing this morning, sir?Kay see, I'm doing well. Good

(01:03:45):
morning to you. Yeah, it'sbeen a fun morning around here. So
let's not screw it up. Okay, that'll do my best. Well that's
equally on me as well. Soall right, well let's start here.
It is officially marketing season for thenew Acolyte Star Wars program. And I
know this because I saw my veryfirst Kathleen Kennedy all a you male Star

(01:04:11):
Wars fans hate women quote. SoI guess we're just gonna we're going to
stick to the standard marketing here ofdriving driving away interest in people who might
have been interested if you keep yourmouth shut. Why do women in this
position talk so much? So that'sa great question, Casey. It's you

(01:04:34):
know, it's like a total like, thank you, sir. May I
have another approach to marketing movies.I don't understand the impulse to go on
the attack and interviews. Now,the thing that I do suspect is that
a lot of times these comments fromthe likes of Kathleen Kennedy or Leslie Hedlins
who's heading up the Acolyte, showthat they're responding to loaded questions in many

(01:04:58):
cases, so like the questions thatget asked at at entertainment pressers and sports
pressers. As somebody used to Iused to go and go to the postgame
press conference for the Vikings when Iworked at iHeart Minneapolis, and I saw
this transition of hey, let's talkabout the game, to hey, here's
this contentious thing in the news.What do you think? And you're spot

(01:05:21):
on, but you don't have totake the bait. Yeah, that's right.
I mean, it's it really isa tough situation, but you know,
they they answer these questions and theytry to navigate through it so they
can get positive press coverage for theirshows and their movies. And they know
they know what gets them the goodpress, and it's punching down at legacy

(01:05:44):
Star Wars fans aka gen X males. You know, this is the way
that it goes. But then theyneed them to go watch it and get
their kids to watch it. Forit to be a financial success for Disney
Star Wars, and it continues tobe one failure after another. Did you
have you seen the clip of MattDamon on the Hot Ones program floating around?

(01:06:08):
So he's there, you know,sings doing this stuff and there's a
clip floating around, and because it'sit's pretty interesting, and it basically is
the host is asking how come theydon't make the movies that they used to
or is that fans having an inaccuratememory, which I think is a good
question, and Damon pointed out hesaid DVDs. He said, back in

(01:06:30):
the day, we could make amovie, and his example was Candle behind
the Candelabra, which I don't think. I watched that movie and for whatever
reason, it didn't look like somethingI wanted to watch. And he was
talking about how you could you couldmake those kinds of movies. Sometimes they'd
be winners, but sometimes they wouldn't. A lot of the comedies, the
old comedies that you just don't seeanymore, we were within that era.

(01:06:51):
And so you could make a tropicthunder or a hot tub time machine and
spend one hundred million dollars when youadd marketing. Because you got your money
at the box office, but thenyou got your money on DVD. And
Damon said, in a lot ofcases for movies like that, they were
equal. So if it cost fiftymillion to make, fifty million to market

(01:07:11):
and you're splitting or yeah, orfifty million total to market and produce,
and then you have to split revenuefor theaters, the DVD is really where
you get your money back. Andgone are those days because you don't make
it. Well, if you're soDy who, if you're somebody who in
the now is irritated with Kathleen Kennedy'scomments, and you go, you know

(01:07:32):
what, screw this, I'm notgoing to the theater, which, by
the way, I saw you're onTwitter. You're not a fan of the
theater. We'll talk about that.But you would you may go, all
right, you know, seven monthsdown the road, go I'm gonna I'm
gonna rent that DVD or I'm gonnabuy that DVD because it's got people in
it that I like and I heardgood stuff and so and in a way

(01:07:56):
you kind of you're gone as youranger and now you don't do that.
Now, Damon said, you can'tmake movies like that, and he's probably
not wrong. The way he describedit sounded pretty convincing. Kathleen Kennedy has
to know that. She has toknow that. I mean, I really
it defies all reason that you wouldcontinue to put yourself in this situation where

(01:08:20):
fans are going to be fighting eachother, dividing amongst themselves. Right now,
my Twitter is just overwhelmed with StarWars fans yelling at each other and
calling each other names. Nobody istalking about The Acolyte. Nobody is talking
about this new series that takes placeone hundred years before the Phantom Menace,
which should be cool and neat forStar Wars fans, but they open up

(01:08:44):
the culture war and it might justbe it might just be a casey that
a lot of what happens in marketingthese days is people going to watch stuff
in order to spite other people Likethese sort of a more left leaning Star
Wars fans who are culture warriors themselves. They just now want to watch The

(01:09:05):
Acolyte out of solidarity with the castand to own right wing Star Wars fans
who they don't like. It's areally, really weird phenomenon, but I
actually think it drives a lot ofmovie consumption and television shows. Okay,
well, and there's gonna be someof that. I guess it comes down

(01:09:26):
to if you're offsetting the one tospite the other leg how does the math
math? Because we saw the Disneywe saw them take a bath on so
many things last year, so manythings, and it's it's real. When
you start breaking down the numbers tosee the whole list, it's crazy how
much they lost their butt on whatwould have normally been sure things. So

(01:09:47):
let me Devil's advocate, all right, let me take her point. What
she's saying is that movie audiences willnot consume a female led series. And
then they always point to the youknow, people pushing back on Shehult and
some of the Captain Marvel reaction,even though the first movie did great.

(01:10:08):
Is that true? And if it'snot true, what's your evidence that it's
not true? Evidence has never required. There was a post by the Quartering
Big YouTube account the other day talkingabout how the most recent mad Max Furiosa
film was kind of like the latestpiece of evidence that people are tired of

(01:10:30):
female led films. That seems tobe sort of a viewpoint. Without evidence,
you can't prove that that's why amovie bombs, but it also doesn't
then explain why Star Wars has alwaysbeen a blockbuster success when you had Carrie
Fisher helping to lead Star Wars justas much as Mark Hamill and Harrison Ford.

(01:10:51):
Like when you actually just look atscreen time of those different actors for
the original films, those were likeensemble cast movie where everybody was getting a
lot of time in the limelight.People have always loved having awesome, kick
butt female leads topping movies. Itjust sort of matters whether or not it's

(01:11:12):
meant to be a statement, meantto be a statement against fans, meant
to be a statement against people whobuy movie tickets. You know that Mad
Max steriosa movie. I think itbobbed over the Memorial Day weekend simply because
it's bleak, ugly. It's afamily day holiday, and people don't want
to go see a violent dystopian filmwith their children and their grandparents for fifty

(01:11:34):
dollars or more to get everybody intothose movie seats. People don't have that
much cash. Kid to that though, right, You don't get a kid
to no, I mean no,that would be horrible. But you know,
people just generally don't want to goto the movies these days. I
don't want to go to the moviesthese days. It's the ninety minutes of
entertainment for fifty to sixty dollars justfor me, my wife and my child.

(01:12:00):
That's not much mileage. There area lot better things that I could
do for much less money, likethe skating rink, or just going downtown
and walking around and buying ice creamhere and there. Like, people don't
want to make that big of afinancial commitment for a movie they don't know
is going to be good. Wellin the marketing leading up to it,
Like when the Mad Max the onecame out about what five years ago or

(01:12:23):
something six years ago, it's beena little while. The buzz around it
was substantial, Like I probably wouldn'thave gone and seen it right away.
I like Mad Max, but youknow, it's just Hollywood doing hunt.
But the buzz was so aggressive thatI didn't go to the theater to see
it. But the moment it wasavailable hit Apple and I could rent it.

(01:12:45):
I rented it, and I wasglad that I did. I really
enjoyed that movie. So the buzzis there. We were having a conversation
the other day Stephen about superhero moviefatigue. I think the movie I'm most
excited to see right now is DeadpoolWolverine. So I'm not fatigued. I'm
fatigued on bad stuff and stupid stuff. But if you put something, you

(01:13:06):
put a product out there, Ithink people are going to gravitate towards it.
And I remember it's been a whilesince there's been a movie where I'm
like, I really want to seethis thing. Yeah no, And then
the buzz around Furios is also generallypretty positive, like the reviews came back
really good, and it doesn't explainnecessarily why the movie kind of tank this

(01:13:27):
week because the last Mad Max moviealso got really good reviews and positive buzz,
but it had a better showing intheaters, and that was led by
Charlie's their own, So you know, like, what are you to make?
What are you to make of thosemovies basically being the same premiss and
one failing and one not. Idon't know. And by the way,

(01:13:48):
I like Charley's Thrown was Atomic Blonde. I thought that was a I thought
that was a good movie. Ithink I own it in my on my
Apple stuff. I think I itwas packaged there and people will go,
oh, because it's got Sophia whateverher name is. I can't remember the
actress's Boo something or other, theFrench actress, right, And and is
it plausible what's going on there?No, but it's not supposed to be.

(01:14:11):
It's like every it's like every JasonBourne movie kind of thing, right,
with the particular set of skills thatare obviously enhanced. So I'm willing
to I'm like, I'll disconnect fromreality. And uh, you know,
Liam Nisa hasn't taken out the entireAlbanian mob probably, but I'll watch him
do it. Hell, I'll watchhim do it three times. But in
in, in these these instances,you're right. It's the other little nuances

(01:14:33):
there which brings me back to theKennedy thing. If you're already having to
see how it's gonna whittle out withthe various mindsets that people have to throw
another hand grenade in there is bafflingto me. But all right, I
want to ask you about a storywe did yesterday, and I'm sorry I
didn't. I didn't send this toRoss to send to you, but maybe
you've seen it. So the haveyou seen this report about how North Korea

(01:14:58):
had a bunch of people or youknow the story, right, so North
Korea no, oh, the poopoloowe were talking about this morning too.
That's that's a whole other thing.That's a whole other thing by boy uh
No. But uh the actually thisthe State Department warned of this, that
North Korean was utilizing stolen American ideasand having North Koreans become remote IT workers

(01:15:24):
for big companies. Right, sothey you know, these are all remote
you you might do a video interviewultimately, but you know, so they're
they're they're they're North Koreans who weretrained to have some to be able to
pass as whoever the Americans idea is. And then they get a job working
for a big company Fortune five hundredcompanies has described and in reality, they're

(01:15:47):
using it one as access to getinto the system of these companies. And
you saw what happen when they gotinto Sony system. And and also the
money that they're then paid by thecompanies is used is comp skated by the
North Korean government and used to fundtheir missile and or poop balloon program.
And that's wild to me like,how does that, how does that happen?

(01:16:11):
And how dangerous is that we alreadyknow they do the hacking. Plus
I thought about it's the perfect coverbecause you know, even though you may
have English, you live in NorthKorea, and so you're not going to
be You're not going to have theability to probably get a lot of pop
culture references, things that would seemodd to talk to somebody who reportedly grew

(01:16:34):
up in America. But then Iremember, and no offense, I t
nerds some of you don't get popculture references and can it can appear as
awkward in discussion, And I realizehow genius that is of a cover thing.
Yeah, the North the North Koreanregime is just the most fascinating troll

(01:16:58):
operation I have ever seen. I'vebeen thinking a lot about that Sony hack
lately. Yeah, after the Jamesthere was the James Franco Seth Rogan movie
The Interview where they go to NorthKorea to interview one of the Kim family
rulers. But you know, thisregime has just done wild things over the
course of so many years, fromyou know, the poop balloons that just

(01:17:19):
happened yesterday to gosh. In nineteeneighty, Kim Jong eel wanted to have
North Korea producing award winning movies forthe Cannis Film Festival, and so he
watched this movie. I've watched theKorean actress. Yeah, I just dude,
I just watched a documentary on NorthKorean entertainment over the years, and

(01:17:40):
they focused on this as well asthat army dude from the eighties or whatever.
Remember he walked across and they kindof made him like a movie star
too. Yeah. But the kidnappedthis actress so she could make propaganda movies.
Is wild and her ex husband whowas a movie producer, so he
kidnapped these two former lovers, forcedthem in to making movies for the North
Korean regime on house arrest and theseare like monster movies, Western and Kung

(01:18:05):
fu flicks that you can still findon YouTube. And they had to like
escape in a car chase. It'sjust the most incredible story. But this
regime is only able to do thatbecause they have nuclear weapons. You can
only do this when you basically havea gun to the world's head, right
right, yeah, absolutely, andevery day and and you know, and

(01:18:29):
then you got even balancing it outbecause some South Korean news outlets are are
definitely exaggerating, which is wild thatyou'd even have to do that. But
the stuff that they admit to,like the poop balloons, they issued a
statement saying where it's retaliation for SouthKorea doing it to us, but South
Korea is dropping leaflets, and alsowhere do you find North Koreans to be

(01:18:49):
able to fill these balloons? Likeright, other than Kim Jong's. We
decided that I'm to be Kim Jongsand that considering he's magic and was raised
by a talking cabin inside of asecret mountain with magic, he doesn't go
to the bathroom. Have you notheard the legends? Right right, right

(01:19:10):
right? I understand that. Sothat's what's good cover. But ultimately it
could be a superhero origin story ifhe really is magical, so you might,
you know, people might be seekingthese balloons out. So anyway,
all right, Well that was thatwas a fun rambling trip through a lot
of stuff, but I appreciate itas always, sir. Okay, you
bet, Casey. You have agreat rest of the week, are you
too? There you go? StevenKent joining us here on the CaCO Day

(01:19:34):
radio program. Yeah, we madeit. We got the poop balloons,
didn't get the whie in. Butyeah, we're batting five hundred there.
I'm okay with that. All right, will take a break. Lots to
get to here in the back partof the show, including Little Biden Naudio
coming up next. Hang on,we'll be back. I'm Kyle Wilsons.

(01:19:55):
I'm Chris Foster. Sure is aformer President Trump's criminal hush money trial in
New York Or back in court ninethirty Eastern time this morning. They've deliberated
for four and a half hours sofar. While deliberating, the jury submitted
two notes to Judge Mershawn. Theyasked for five things, including David Pecker
and Michael Cohen's testimonies about a meetingthey had with Donald Trump back in twenty
fifteen. During that meeting, prosecutorsalleged they discussed a conspiracy to get Trump

(01:20:18):
elected by killing negative stories about him. Jars also asked the judge to read
the jury instructions back to them again. Foxes Brooks Singman, fourteen pro democracy
activists are convicted in Hong Kong.They were charged with conspiracy to commit subversion
over an unofficial primary election the NationalSecurity Law was imposed by Beijing and has

(01:20:39):
been accused of drastically cutting back onHong Kong's freedom socks. As Jonathan Savage
thirty one others already pleaded guilty,Paul could face life in prison. America's
listening to Fox News from now MarkSpain real estate traffic center accident forty westbound
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(01:25:24):
M talking to Triangle and US Talkninety four to five WPTI in the Triad.
Alrighty, it is six thirty five. Welcome back, dear God oh
man. All right. You knowhow sometimes people have to have something that
you gotta have, something pretty horriblehappen, and eventually it causes them to

(01:25:48):
reevaluate what's happening, and you know, turn their life around and perhaps even
maybe be so inspired by this thingthat happened to them that they don't want
it to happen to anybody else.So they, you know, they get
out there, they start telling theirstory and before you know it, this

(01:26:09):
is what they do. Now.They go out and they inspire, hope
and or irritate people in the caseof some of the you know, like
the David Hoggs of the world.But I but I can get it.
You know, the guys who goaround speaking at schools because they they they

(01:26:29):
screwed up and they got addicted todrugs and they did some things, and
now they want to tell the kids, Hey, look, I grew up
in the same neighborhood as you,and I understand that things are tough and
and you're going to be These thingsare going to be put in front of
you. And here's why you wantto not follow that path. I'm cool
with all that stuff. I've seensome very inspirational speakers throughout the years that

(01:26:54):
tell very compelling stories. This isnot it, this is something else entirely
so. A father and his adultdaughter have started a awareness campaign about the
dangers of only fans. Now Rossyou haven't seen this story. What do

(01:27:17):
you think the backstory is? Whatdo give me the guess that you think
the backstory is that inspired this thisnew effort by what is the guy's name,
Tony Alderson and his twenty three yearold daughter. All right, what
do you think the backstory? Ihave absolutely no idea, Like maybe he
found out his daughter was doing onlyfans right, and he's just like,

(01:27:39):
oh my god, this is nothow I raised you, and this no
please please don't tell me he wasthe one with the only fans. No
no no no no no no nono no no, she had the only

(01:28:00):
only fans. Well, like shewas just like, you know, like
browsing and she stumbled across dad.H yeah, you know'd be even worse
if it was him and he subscribedfor eight months? Ooof did you oof?
I think he got a oof andit destroyed his marriage because, uh

(01:28:25):
do you think? And it's nothis stepdaughter? Because I thought maybe because
that I've seen that was actually astory I saw some OnlyFans check talking about
on like Twitter. Sh had avideo shut our clothes on calm down anyway.
No, so it went like this. Apparently the man had subscribed to
the twenty three year old's account,but she never showed her face. I

(01:28:49):
was I was just about to askif that was the case. So it's
like a waist down anonymous skip.It was more of a neck down,
and which I get, Look,do do this is delicate? Do dads
know what their adult daughter looks like? Sans? No? Probably not unless

(01:29:13):
I don't know their nudae or butyou know parts of it. But more
importantly, he interacted with her undershe obviously was using a fake name,
but they had substantial conversations, whichis part, you know, part of
why people get on the Only Fansbecause it's not just photos and videos,
it's it's that interaction, which alot of that is why people are seeking

(01:29:36):
out stuff like this anyway, right, They need some sort of validational relationship,
that kind of thing in their life. So for eight months he talked
to her. See so I amignorant and oblivious to this fact. So
because I've never been on OnlyFans.If you're an Only Fans, if you're
talking to somebody, if you're talkingto the streamer, it's the streamer talking

(01:29:59):
back to you, where they allalso chatting back, is it? It's
obviously she can't chat with him becausehe's he's typing and she's reading, but
he can hear her voice, right, and then she's talking back to him,
and uh so it's like twitch yes, ugh, how can There's no
way he didn't know you're you're talking. It's like talking to somebody on the

(01:30:19):
phone, right, and she's yourdaughter? You know that voice? Yeah?
I I don't know. It's myunderstanding that from reading this article from
the Daily Mail here, which isyou know they because they write like the
longest articles ever. She may youcan process your voice. Some people do
do that. Who who choose toremain anonymous? You could pitch your voice?

(01:30:40):
I I don't know. And uh, most of the interaction it seemed
came from you know they She wouldthey like text or something during the day,
and not text on the phone butthrough the app. But I and
I mean this, you guys aregonna laughing. I don't I don't know
all the functionality of OnlyFans. Yeah, yeah, I literally, because it's
just like, you know, ifyou want that stuff, it's free.
I don't know, if you likeI can imagine it if it's like an

(01:31:02):
added benefit, like hey, youknow you you subscribe to my my port
channel and then if you text meduring the day, I'll text you back,
like chat messages over and she wasproducing custom content you could get customed.
So he'd be like, hey,it would be really cool if you
would do this thing and then sendme a video of it, and then
she would. And but I meanstill, unless she's completely doesn't use your

(01:31:25):
voice and you can't hear her atall in the videos, there's no way
dude did not know. The dudesaid that one day it it's it dawned
upon him. The man who admittedto make a request chatting buying content Craziness
said that he had come across theprofile. This is where it gets even

(01:31:47):
creepier after it was recommended to himby some of his friends at work,
who's probably I'm assuming if they're howgood of friends. It probably met the
girl, he said. After abouteight months he there was she made some

(01:32:10):
references to things that were near wherehe lived, and he started to investigate
because he didn't think it was hisdaughter. He thought that she must be
local. So that's even creepier becausenow he's looking into it, like maybe
maybe she'll meet up and started aconversation. I kid you not you ready
began a conversation to meet up,so she was also apparently prostituting herself,

(01:32:38):
and once they got into that discussion, he said he realized it was his
daughter and then the wife, andas you could believe it or not,
the wife was like, I amout. And following all of this,
the father and daughter say that theywant to start a campaign to raise awareness

(01:32:59):
about how dangerous the only fans canbe and that it's not at all a
cover story. Where he was heknew that was his daughter and now he
got caught by his wife, butthe whole thing is just bonkers, man.
Uh. He also said that fora very long time, because he's

(01:33:21):
now just out here. This happeneda while ago, and apparently they've been
in counseling. I'm shocked, hesaid that he was after the incident.
For months, he was not ableto speak to his daughter or be a
round her, and he said hewould have become violently ill anytime, but

(01:33:41):
he couldn't date, he couldn't doanything because he said that anytime he started
having those kinds of thoughts, hewould become physically ill. Remembering what happened
with the daughter, dude like Thisis like make Satan happy kind of stuff
right here. Man, this isso screwed up. But the moral of

(01:34:05):
the story now is that they wereable to eventually resolve this and now they
feel the communication with others about whatcould happen is a thing, and Halderson
said that there have been numerous examplesof people have come forward, including grandparents,

(01:34:26):
siblings, and older family members afterthey quote inadvertently found relatives on the
site, although it didn't sound likeit had progressed to this, dude,
this whole thing is I'm gonna hearyou say. Here's the crazy idea.
How about you focus your time andenergy into your spouse. Yeah, yeah,
well that's the thing that's you know, the people do that, right.

(01:34:46):
I can't believe my marriage is fallingapart. Oh yeah, you're spending
eight money. And by the way, he spent a crap ton of money.
Oh dude, by the way,this little nugget in the store according
to research by I don't know who. Click through here, so I want
to leave the article Spring or Research. Oh okay, I actually know who

(01:35:08):
that. They do a lot ofstuff, all right. They estimate that
eighty nine and a half percent ofsubscribers on OnlyFans are in fact married,
So it sounds like there might bea bigger issue going on here, just
saying all right, i'll look atthat. We still got problems with this
thing. All right, let's getraised agic from the weather channel. Dude,
you're gonna be so happy you didn'tget in on that last conversation.

(01:35:30):
It's just good some of them.I'm okay with other ones, I'm okay
with not being in them. Youmean your dad subscribed to his daughter's only
Fans for eight months before he figuredout what was up. Oh yeah,
that's a tough one. Yeah,yeah, all right, so I'll just
let you do weather. You're offthe hud, Okay, Yeah, thank
you. I appreciate that. Goodlooking weather. Next few days, gorgeous,

(01:35:55):
enjoy it. The change comes towardthe weekend, really not too much
over the next few days, changingupper seventies, low eighties through Saturday.
They start to come to the mideighty Sunday in the little community, coming
back, but I still don't thinkcase is still about Wednesday when we start
to get into some showers, thundershowers, but some maybe back closer to
ninety by Tuesday. Wednesday, maybeeven Monday mis upper eighties around Saturday,

(01:36:19):
big day, especially for meteorological type, first day meteorological summer, Yeah,
budd Ay, first day of theAtlantic hurricane season. Predictions this case haven't
heard well above average right now thoughin the northern Hemisphere things pretty quiet and
well outlook from the hurricane center nextseven days. There's nothing forecasts to development.

(01:36:41):
Even in the Eastern Pacific, wherethey get started on May fifteenth,
hasn't been to much activity there too, So it's been an unusually slow start
to what is forecast to be avery active season. So when needed and
if warranted, we'll be sure tocheck in the tropics too over the next
couple of months. All right,thank you appreciate it. Well, chat

(01:37:02):
tomorrow, sir, and we'll comeback and Jeff Bellinger will join us.
Plus, what has the mayor ofBoston suggested that her city full of degenerates
do exactly the worst thing probably possible. So all of that more coming up
Kcoday Radio program. Well, goodmorning, case. The government just revised

(01:37:24):
its estimate at first quarter economic growthdownward. It now says the gross domestic
product expanded at a one point threepercent annual rate, at the start of
the year. There was a smalluptick last week and the number of workers
signing up for unemployment benefits. TheLabor Department counted two hundred nineteen thousand first
time applications, three thousand more thanthe prior week. So quite a sell

(01:37:45):
off yesterday on Wall Street, andthe futures are pointing lower this morning.
Look what looks like there's more ofthat to go. Dow futures down three
hundred and fifteen points. Amazon dotCom is increasing its stake in grub Hub
and expanding its partnership with the fooddelivery service. Amazon users here in the
US will be able to order takeouton Amazon's website and shopping app. The

(01:38:09):
FBI says a massive worldwide botnet hasbeen taken down. The agency says nineteen
million computers and more than one hundredand ninety nations were infected with malware,
and the botnet was leased to hackersfor various cybercrimes. The FBI linked the
network to financial fraud, identity theft, child exploitation, bomb threats, and

(01:38:30):
cyber attacks. The alleged administrator ofthe botnet is a Chinese citizen, and
he has been arrested in Singapore,a lot of young adults continue to depend
on the bank mom and dad thathas put their parents' financial future at risk.
Bankrate says more than sixty percent ofAmerican parents have made sacrifices to help
their adult children make ends meet.Nearly half of that parental health has gone

(01:38:54):
toward housing and Casey, Apple isapparently ready to make its TV Plus service
available to users with Android phones.The company has posted a job listing for
a senior engineer to help build atelevision and sports app for Android. Apple
would not comment, but that listingsuggests it will set aside its rivalry with

(01:39:15):
Android so it can gain market sharein video streaming. Casey, it's all
been I'm telling you, that wholething, with the relationship between some of
these companies, with the old Amazonstuff too, not having apps, it's
been among the most frustrating part oftrying to make that streaming transition. So
I'm glad the almighty dollars winning out. Okay, there you go, all

(01:39:35):
right, man, all right,there you go. Jeff Bellinger Bloomberg News
appreciated, sir. All right,couple things here real quick. Oh,
by the way, I know you'reyou don't like to brag and you're humble
and all that. Dude, yougot yourself a serious fanboy's posting this morning.
Have you seen this Ross? Thisdude is obsessed with you. All

(01:39:59):
right, hold on, let meread this text. I don't know some
dude you mentioned you inadvertently mentioned yourstream. I know you don't like to
do that. The Twitch thing.What's that? I'm sorry, very very
busy here. You understand it.You had a hate for sure of Twitch
channel. Yes, okay, Iwas confusing for a second. Uh huh
okay, all right, nobody believesyou. Uh anyway, hey, hey,

(01:40:20):
hey, love it when Ross talksabout it. The biggest fan of
the stream, best thing going andunlike you, Casey is always right.
And it says signed your friend,Uh, Supreme Leader KAMENI. So I'm
that is you? Uh, he'syour buddy. I don't know. Man

(01:40:43):
got an interesting job. Apparently hehe's the leading sponsor of terror. So
I'm sure that's a video game reference. No, so what am I?
What am I teasing Ross about?So yesterday the head of Iran the leading
sponsor of terror and the dude reallyin charge, not the president, but
Supreme Leader tweeted quote, dear universitystudents in the US, my advice to

(01:41:06):
you is to become familiar with theQur'an. He then went on to talk
about how what a good job they'redoing, and how you know, how
they're on the right side of history. That was my favorite part of it,
when that dude's tweeting that you're onthe right side of history. You're

(01:41:26):
not on the right side of history, okay, And then of course the
Kalisi reference. So, in ingeniousfashion, three year Letterman decided he was
going to respond to some of thesesome of these tweets, Oh it's good
stuff, man, that he wasgoing to respond to some of these tweets,

(01:41:47):
which, if you don't know howit works, then drags in all
of these absolute nut jobs who can'tunderstand that it is in fact, hey
that might you know, that mightbe a parody of some sort or sarcasm,
and then they get owned over waterbedsand all sorts of stuff. But
one other things they do is theyalso call them by the wrong name.

(01:42:08):
And so Letterman pointed out that theQuran is just the Bible translated from its
original language of English and Arabic,and people lost their crap,
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