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September 5, 2023 • 105 mins
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(00:36):
All right, good morning everybody.It is six o seven. It is
Tuesday, Casey O Day Radio programwhere we are innovators, we are forward
thinkers. Ross I wanted to runsomething by you if I could, so
we kick off the show new idea. You're ready for this four day weekend,
three day work week, four dayweekend, three day work week rather

(01:02):
than three day weekend, four daywork week. My gut is telling me
your idea is the correct way togo. Look at you know what.
We need funding. We need fundingto implement our thing here. So then
he could have stayed a burning manA day later. How was it?
Do you have a good time?My penis fell off? Oh no,
what you have to get in theright dome? Man, You get on

(01:25):
the row. It's so excited aboutthe orgy dome. Yes, yeah,
and uh not tent. I calledit a tent and was correct. It's
a dome. Yeah, it's adome. And they're like, you get
to go into the track. It'slike the Caligula ones they had that we
covered the boat and the show backinto like the three boats. But it
was like like a like attractive likehotness factor and they're like they're like you're
going in the hot tent. Iwas like yes, and then I went

(01:45):
in there and they're like, allunibrows, you got me? You're on
the third boats. Yeah, weassume the third boat was nothing but leppers
and it's just the sound of popcornpopping in the distance. So can you
imagine if you're like an a boator and then just like you go back
year after year and then you showup like it's your fifth year. You're

(02:06):
like, I'm a veteran now andyou're like, oh, you're you're on
b Vote Vote. You're like,whoa, what happened? Yeah, you
didn't keep up. Man's gonna getyou, man, Yeah, he'll do
it, so ah or something.I turned down the invitation of that thing
every year. But Burnie man,I'm always invited by like celebrities and stuff.

(02:27):
They're like coming to Burnie. I'mlike, and that that in Bohemian
Grove and I'm like, I'm notgoing. I can't do it. And
then what if you mix up andyou wear your weird mask for a Bohemian
grove and your toga but to burningMan. Oh can you imagine the embarrassment?
Yeah, and people like dude,dude, where are you? What
are you doing? And now you'vegiven away secrets and stuff? So ah,
you did. We did get alittle peek behind that though. They

(02:50):
did finally release the Epstein calendar.Did you see this over the weekend?
You're gonna be shocked to learn now. No, Remember, these are people
who met with Epstein a lot,a lot, a lot, and even
after he had garnered sex offender status, continue to meet with him. And

(03:12):
I don't mean like once or twice, like who is this guy? But
I mean like lots of lots ofmeetings. And let's just say there's some
names there that I understand why there'sconspiracy theories out there. I'm not saying
there's a Rothchild on that list,but there's a Rothchild on that list.
But keep in mind too, thiswas the guy who, depending on the

(03:38):
lens that you look through it,for some inexplicable reason, knew how to
make ungodly sums of money and keepungodly sums of money. So when you
have a big chunk of cash,and this is the this is the reason
that you had a lot of theserich folks fall into the Burnie Madoff trap,

(03:59):
right because they had big old chunksto change, and they heard there's
a guy out there that could getthem returns far in excess of anything else.
And if it's too good to betrue, YadA YadA, or or
he had compromising material and all ofthem. You be the judge, but

(04:23):
it is a It is quite thewho's who on the h And then I
realized I looked at it and I'veexceeded my click throughs on the Wall Street
Journal. Start to go back tomy phone now annoying. Luckily I have
it here. Okay, let medo this boom ba boom reader to me

(04:46):
and Ross because Rosk is gonna retweetit. Sorry, I thought i'd sent
it to you this morning and methis morning, but I didn't. Okay,
all right, come and come andcoming, almost say a Comma chameleon.
After that? Do you know welost three singers over the weekend,

(05:10):
so we had our three right ina row. Jimmy Buffett. Jimmy Buffett
gone too soon? What a lifethat guy lived? Right? How many
Margaritavilles were there? I saw anumber that at one point there was one
hundred and fifty of them. Prettymuch. If you ever went on a

(05:32):
cruise anywhere in the Caribbean and yougot off the cruise boat, there was
a Margarite to Vote Margaritaville waiting foryou. I mean, they had him
frigging everywhere they went in like Falmouth, Jamaica, which is not a nice
place. I had an intern whowas conceived add a Jimmy Buffett concert,

(05:53):
and he was so proud of it, dude. I mean, I don't
know if you remember read he nowhe's on like full time works and like
a major market, and yeah,he was like one of his favorite stories.
He's so proud to tell this story. He was conceived at a Jimmy
Buffet's show. Do you ever haveyou? Did you ever go see a
Jimmy Buffett show during your mind?I did get to see a Jimmy Buffett

(06:14):
show. It was good. Itwas good. I remember it. I
remember we went to the Jimmy Buffettshow. This was down in Florida.
Went to the Jimmy Buffett show.And I was staying at a hotel where
obviously a bunch of other people wereand these two women got on the elevator
after the show and they looked likethey were fine, but they were not
fine. And one of them decidedthat all of the peanut coladas and margarita's

(06:40):
and everything she'd consumed, she wantedto show everybody on the elevator. So
yeah, that's by Jimmy Buffett story. I'm not sure if she conceived a
baby after that, because we didn't. We didn't, We didn't talk to
him. We just kind of likehugged the edge or the other side of
the elevator on a very uncomfortable abouttwelve floor ascension. Yeah, but he
got he got straight up conceived atone. So that's a hell of a

(07:03):
story. So Jimmy Buffett gone thelead singer of smash Mouth. This is
like a serious Mandela effect for me. Somebody mentioned this while I was streaming
this weekend. I swear I could. This is the most extreme Mentella effect
I've ever experienced in my lifetime.When I remember this dude passing away,

(07:24):
I remember as talking about it onthe show. I remember Jimmy Buffett or
smash Mouth. Smash Mouth. Ohokay, like somebody mentioned it. I
was like, that dude died ayear ago. Well he left the band
for like some big health stuff.It was Yeah, I'm like really like
like freaked out by it, I'mlike, this dude already died, Like
I already experienced all this. Thisdude, this dude was a really nice

(07:46):
dude. I may interviewed him,Yeah, exactly, I interviewed him,
and actually when I was working concerts. It was one of the concerts that
I worked when I was in whenI was in school down in California,
and he like came over with thelocal crew and was like hanging out with
us, which is kind of abig deal. They normally they have their

(08:07):
roadies that travel with them, right, and then they have the local stage
hand crew, and yeah, likethere's a separation there, and dude came
over and was just like super jovin. I Am and the lead singer of
Tool were the only two guys Iremember doing that. And the Tool guy
drug a cooler full of Heineken overfor us, I will say, because

(08:28):
we did. I did two radioshows with him and he was there and
they were like a significant year's apart. Right the second time that he performed,
the dude was drunk on stage.No wow, I mean that's compared
to the first time. But yeah, but his face was like that alcohol
read do you know what I'm saying, and I know he was also on

(08:50):
Celebrity Rehab with Doctor Drew, soobviously, yeah, he had issues,
but there was a million day differencebetween the first time I saw him in
the second time. But like yousaid, super nice dude. You know
who the third singer was. Ididn't know this till this morning. Dream
Weaver, dude, I'm a songdream Weaver from back in the day.

(09:13):
I think it was on one ofthe Guardians soundtracks too. What is that
dude's name? Hold on, GaryWright? Yeah, guy did dream Weaver.
He died he was eighty so yeah, boom boom boom on the on
the musicians over the weekend, Soall right, anyway, none of them

(09:33):
on the Epstein list, though,we'll have to get to that. Plus,
uh, dude, did you inbetween your your fun at Burning Man
and trying to escape which, bythe way, did you see like Chris
Rock had to walk like six milesto get out of there and Danni Ka
Patrick had two I saw him ona truck full of people, like on
a flaphead or whatever. Yeah,pickup truck or whatever. You they they

(09:56):
driving him out of there. He'smaking everybody they laugh. Dude, I'm
telling you, if you're the ecomoonbats, today's the day they're letting them
go. Do you dare set upyour little, your little roadblock again,
I mean, if you're committed tothe cause. I saw somewhere they said
that they're investigating that police officer,but it sounds like they just told him

(10:18):
that so they would shut their faceholes. I don't know that they're actually
investigating that police officer, because againit's tribal police and they give zero f's.
So but yeah, they got somuch rain, the only road in
and out for seventy thousand people becameimpassable and they literally had to shelter in
place at an orgy dome. Today'sthe day they're supposed to burn stuff.

(10:41):
I wonder if they're ever gonna beable to do that. They burned the
burning man today, It's like thewhole reason it's weird. So who got
selected this year to be burned?Nicholas Cage Belas Cage really every year he
put him in that wicker basket everyyear. Yeah, he needs the work,
So what are you gonna do?So, yeah, we'll see if

(11:03):
that goes down. But yeah,the Daily Beast story is amazing. Daily
Beast M Daily Beast did a storyto take down another news organization and then
did all the things in the storythey accused the other organization of doing,

(11:24):
and then had to issue a retraction. It's amazing. If you didn't see
it over the weekend, we'll fillyou in on that. Plus we have
Airline Insanity, a more complete lookat lockdowns. You'll want to be sitting
down for that and exactly how usefulthose were. It's uh, we're gonna

(11:46):
bounce around a lot. There's alot of stuff from over the weekend.
But now we'll take a break.Six nineteen hang on, keeping you connect.
This is ninety four five w PTIand the Triad and one oh six
one FM Talk and the Triangle.All right, good morning and welcome.

(12:16):
It is six twenty four here onthe CaCO Day Radio program phone number eight
eight eight nine three four seven eightseventy four. As we get things rolling
this morning. Oh that's good.It restart my next gen for some reason.

(12:37):
Sure, that's not going to bea problem as as everything unfolds.
All right, do do do dodo? Where will oh? The Jeffrey
Epstein insanity? All right, letme get to this, So who are
the names in Jeffrey Epstein's calendar?So Wall Street Journal got a hold of

(13:00):
the calendar. And again this isn'tnecessarily people who were on the island,
but it gives you some sense ofthe folks who were constantly in contact with
Epstein doing literally in some cases,dozens and dozens and dozens of meetings.
Yeah, I already got the emails. So the weather guy's off today because
Duke Clemson. Yeah, dude,we were just talking about that before the

(13:20):
show. Dukes smoke Clemson yesterday.Now, to be fair, Ray was
already taking this day off. Hedid say that, but I wonder if
he'll take another day off. It'sno big deal. It's the preseason.
Yeah, it's now. Look,it is the time of the year where
you know, there are warm upgames. The problem is that's an ACC

(13:46):
game. So it's literally not justnot the preseason, it's not surely they
didn't have their starters, so really, yeah, they're new, highly touted
quarterback for Clemson and oh no,oh yeah yeah. So it's like it
wouldn't be just if you lost.It would be like if you lost to

(14:07):
the Jets or Patriots. If youwere bills right, because division, so
it has extra extra implications. Soyeah, not to try not to trash
on Duke. They played a goodgame. Induced quarterback looked really good.
I did watch. I didn't watchthe whole thing, just because I was
exhausted and fell asleep actually pretty earlylast night. But I'm really like,

(14:31):
I'm happy, I'm not. Idon't really follow a lot of college football
and stuff because because it's not popularup in New York where I grew up,
but because like Bright, you knowhow, you have like teams on
the West Coast or something in theACC which makes no damn sense to me
at all. Insane crazy. Now, man, it's just gonna it's gonna
be nothing but super conferences. It'sit's a thing. Now here's the deal.

(14:54):
I like college football for two reasons, not because I necessarily I do.
Look, we didn't even have afootball team at the school I went
to. You see Santa Barresid footballstadium, no team whatever. But like
you, I wasn't really into collegefootball growing up. University of Wyoming got
so in the nineties, got soscrewed by not getting invited to bowls even

(15:16):
when they were good. It destroyedtheir program. No one would go there
because even when they were six inthe country, they couldn't get a bowl,
a decent bowl game right because theydidn't have enough fans to travel.
So it never really never really garneredmy interest. However, I when I
moved to North Carolina, I hadtailgated Vikings games for years, and I

(15:37):
enjoyed tailgating. So like with doctorCampbell and his crew that would tailgate NC
State, I'm like, oh,you guys tailgate, but I wasn't.
It's not like I had affinity forNC State other than they had a good
tailgate and I enjoyed tailgating. PlusI heard you can gamble on them too.
Other than that man whatever that beingsaid smoking Clemson like that, holy

(16:02):
crap. I think Clemson at thegame time was twelve and a half point
favorites too, And I had somebuddies who went on Clemson. I'm like,
I didn't touch it, so I'mlike, I don't know. It's
too early, so we'll see whatRay says when he comes back. So
anyway, I'm the Jeffrey Epstein thing. I'm just gonna get to tease you
because we're already great again. It'sgonna be one of those mornings. There's

(16:26):
some some big names on that listwho spent a lot of time meeting with
Jeffrey Epstein, Woody Allen Man,Woody Allen was all up in his office
all the damn time. I knowyou're gonna be shocked. But the names
go on from there, and Ipromise we'll get to him in just a
few one oh six one FM Talkw PTI, two stations driving Best in

(17:00):
Talk. This is Casey O Dayand Carolina's Morning News. All right,
six thirty five, welcome back.Let's go ahead and actually get into this
because I was skimming through the JeffreyEpstein calendar story. Now as you go
through basically everyone on this list whoand it's not a comprehensive list, it's

(17:25):
not literally everybody on the calendar,but everybody's like, for the most part,
going, oh, we were justwe were talking about philanthropic endeavors and
charity and stuff, so which Idon't know. Maybe they were because Epstein
did have a bunch of money thathe would move around, or at the
very least, you knew how tolike hide money and keep money. And

(17:47):
when you're a super rich person,you kind of like the sound of that,
But it just shows you the levelof connections and really how small the
world is when you get down toit, because you got to hear a
lot of recurring names. But oneof the known commodities that Wall Street Journal
points out is the vast majority ofthese meetings were after after he was a

(18:12):
registered sex offender. And I don'tknow, I think if you're a super
rich, high profile pursuit, youlike, even if you don't, you
have your people vet this stuff.Right, You're not shaking hands with a
sex offender. It's a photo opor charity galla. It shows you how

(18:32):
seriously they took the initial convictions.They're in Florida, which themselves were soft
sold. So this is based onschedules from twenty thirteen to twenty seventeen and
a lot of names you recognize.One of the most prominent and most often
was Woody Allen. In fact,with a lot of these other cats like

(18:53):
like Norm Chomsky and whatnot. Literallythey were meeting with Epstein and flying to
go to meet and have dinner withWoody Allen. And of course you know
with Woody Allen, there's the wholebackstory of him and the adopted daughter and
all of that. So make ofthat what you will. But Woody and

(19:17):
sun Ye lived literally in the sameneighborhood as Epstein and went to a lot
of dinner parties at his townhouse.I'd be the one with the creepy Bill
Clinton in the dress picture. I'mnot gonna read all the names. Former
Israeli Prime minister who Barack dozens ofmeetings. Thomas Barrick, one of the
big colonial capital dudes and an informaladvisor for Trump's campaign. Now Trump,

(19:45):
if you remember famously during the initialinvestigation, according to the prosecutor, was
really the only person who was whowillingly worked with the prosecutor because Trump had
thrown him out of Marlago because hewas literally skulking the staff there, and

(20:07):
uh, miss Maxwell, I wastrying to recruit from there. Is what
they claimed a bunch of like privateequity people like Leon Black and whatnot.
Let me get some names that aremore familiar. William Burns is on there.
Ross you know who William Burns is? Do you want to get into
all of the conspiracy theory stuff?Are you familiar with who William Burns is?

(20:30):
Perhaps you should say no, becausehe's the head of the CIA.
I've never heard of the dude whoyeah, yeah, director of Central Intelligence
Agency now only since twenty twenty one. Prior to that, he was used
to be a Deputy Secretary of State. Now he's head of the CIA.
I mean that doesn't help the wholeYou know, Epstein was what a CIA

(20:53):
asset? What conspiracy that would becomeone? That? Doesn't you think that
doesn't help? He said, Uh, is there a rothschild on here?
I mean, just if you wantto get in the world of conspiracy theories?
Holy crap, dude, Yeah,yeah, ahead of the CIA.

(21:17):
Now, uh, crazy town.Let's see here, h Sergey Brin,
co founder of Google. He wasjust working on setting up tax saving trust
funds for his kids. What youknow, pretty much go to any financial
advisor for that, even if you'rea super rich guy. I'm sure there's
financial advisors that just work with you. Why would Epstein, who's not a

(21:42):
who's not really licensed in any ofthese areas, be your go to Norm
Chomsky who he has that tie inwith Woody Allen and all that stuff.
And he flew with him a bunchthe Russian UN ambassador. But we got
a Russia story for you today too, of Italy Churkin. Cherkin, by

(22:07):
the way, if you remember recently, not super recently, but in the
last few years, he died ofjust a mysterious heart attack. Hmmm mmmmm,
weird. Huh. Let's see here, Bill Gates, I know you're

(22:32):
shocked. He he hung out onthe regular with with Epstein. Reid Hoffman.
Okay, so Reed Hoffman, Yeah, you know, read from co
founder of LinkedIn, but also fromthe story we just did. He's one
of the big money guys that aretrying to create the Moonbat utopia that we
talked about last week. And hebasically is the finance yer for many of

(22:56):
the ongoing lawsuits against Trump, includeStormy Daniels and most recently the woman who
he financed that whole thing to saythat, the woman who said that Donald
Trump raped her in the addressing roomof the department store. Reid hoff and
paid for all that. And he'sthe guy who kind of apologized for funding
a disinformation campaign trying to connect aSenate candidate in Alabama to the Russians,

(23:21):
a Republican that was the height ofexactly what they were accusing Trump of.
And they just kind of shrugged andwent, ah, I don't do that
again. Thomas Pritzker is the chairmanof Hyatt Hotels. Bill Richardson, who
also is one of the former NewMexico governor presidential candidate, and one of

(23:45):
the few names that came out specificallyfrom the young woman who was one of
the underage prostitutes who said that Billrichards she was with Bill Richardson quote frequently.
U Arianna de Rothschild mentioned that it'squite the list. Lawrence Summers,

(24:15):
he was a former Treasury secretary underBarack Obama and then as woke as he
was, he went to Harvard andI can't remember what it was. I
think he defended Halloween costumes or something, and so the moonbats ran him from
there or something. Yeah, thatwas a whole thing. But yeah,
that's just a yeah, that's justa small smattering. There's a lot more

(24:37):
names on there, but that wasrather interesting, kind of eye opening.
Yeah. I mentioned there's a RussiaNews going back to Sergei there. Uh.
This one though, is a differentformer insider of the Putin circle.
Uh. Pavel Ontov, former memberof Putin's United Russia Party. He was

(25:00):
the He's a big wheel. Hewas an oligarch, but not in stuff
that you would normally think, like, you know, oil or you know
some of those others. Uh Antovwas known as the Russian sausage magnet.
They called him abe Forminsky the sausageKing of Moscow. They did not call

(25:23):
it. I mean they did inthe sense that passed tense because he's dead.
Well, I swear I read iton social media. They called him
abe Forminsky the sausage on social media. Rot it all right? Yeah,
then he would be able to readit because you'd read You're like, oh,
let me read what I Oh,it's one source. Did anybody retweet

(25:47):
it? They did? Oh,no, you got two sources. It's
a good point. You're a journalist. Yes. The Russian sausage magnet and
politician who briefly criticized Russia's invasion ofUkraine, Sad, died over the weekend
after accidentally falling out of a windowat a luxury hotel in India. I

(26:07):
guess India's got the same building standardsthey do in Russia. Huh, very
dangerous windows. The billionaire was reportedlyon a trip to celebrate his sixty six
birthday when He was found lying ina pool of blood outside the hotel PSI
International in India. Police in Indiasay they currently suspect he took his own

(26:34):
life. I love what they whythey say so they think he took his
own life because his own hit Oneof his best friends accidentally fell out of
an did he fall out of awindow? He was found dead at the
very same hotel, and Vladimir beatenOff was his name. He also criticized

(26:57):
Putin and I guess it made himreally sad when his friend accidentally died previously,
so he then flung himself out ofa window. According to the not
at all paid off India investigators,man, so dangerous, so dangerous.

(27:18):
Do you worry about the windows atyour house? Ross? You got a
second story, right, do you? I really don't. You'd never like
get near the window and you're like, oh my gosh, I'm way too
close. I could fall out ofanymore even that, you know, even
if it's closed or whatever. Meanthey don't, they don't even they don't
even open. So oh uh huh, I see, like we can open
the top floor. We cannot,I see, but you could feasibly like

(27:42):
fall through one of them. Imean they're just glass, right. I
mean, I guess if I wasin my house and you were really depressed
or something, giant rushing dude,pick me up and throw me through the
window. I mean that is feasible. Huh. Well, it's weird that
you do that scenario instead of youjust being like accidentally falling through there as

(28:03):
so many people have, or takingyour own life over the depth of a
friend who did the same thing.So weird, man, that's so weird.
All this stuff keeps happening. Who'snow, Who's gonna be the new
sausage King of Moscow? That's thequestion. Does some guy does some guy
just kind of slide in there?Or is it like I think it's like

(28:26):
a dread pirate Roberts thing where whoeverit is is going to be known as
Abe for Minsky, the Sausage ofMoscow. Yeah, just pass it right
along. I just wonder if nowit's like an open sector and there's like
sausage gang warfare to see, right. I'm not sure how it works.
I'm not in the sausage record.Maybe the current sausage King of maybe Abe

(28:52):
Froman takes it over right, itgoes international could happen. But yeah,
I'm telling you this much. Thisthing would never happen in Chicago. Alright.
Now that's a good point. Absolutelyeverything's on the up and up there.
All right, Let's see why can'tI find the upstad The Wall Street

(29:14):
Journal did a big piece on it, so if you want to find it,
there you go. There is apaywall on it. But I'm not
saying there's websites like twelve foot Ladderyou can go to and enter any you
are l and then you get aroundit. So I'm not saying that,
but I am saying that I've heardthat that's a thing. All right,
six forty seven case O Day Radioprogram. All right, so I mentioned
the Daily Beast thing. We're gonnahave to get into that because Holy Cow

(29:37):
and a flight, an international flightfrom Atlanta to Barcelona, which was already
two hours out over the ocean,had to make an emergency return over a
bio hazard. Oh no, man, that's not good. I think it

(29:59):
tear purists or something. Right,that's a little different. We'll get the
details for you coming up. CaseO Day Radio program. The show after
the show is on the iHeart Radioapp. Search case O Day for the
podcast on the iHeart Radio app.I have just closed my eyes again.

(30:21):
Yeah this dude, did you haveany other hits? The Train one of
the three musicians over the weekend totake away My day to create feat trifecta.

(30:45):
Here we Go, Here's the Party. Nine Gone at the age of
eighty. Gone at the age ofeighty is Gary Wright, who you're here
and sing right there? Who diddream Weaver along with smash Vile. Steve

(31:07):
Harwell the lead singer. Although hewasn't the lead singer at the time of
his death, he had left thegroup a few years ago. He was
dealing with a variety of health issues, may or may not have had been
alcohol related. In fact, ifyou read some of the quotes from people,
they're like he was a star thatburned out really quick. Like they
were just like I partied a lotso and Jimmy Buffett, Jimmy Buffett,

(31:30):
I gotta take doctor Campbell's gotta bea just here. He was a very
time I was around that dude.He was playing Jimmy Buffett. Man loved
him some, Jimmy Buffett. ButJimmy Buffett, I'm telling you, man,
if that if that guy, ifthere was a life spent. Well
that's some Jimmy Buffett stuff there.I like Jimmy Buffett for a very strange

(31:52):
reason. He was really good friendswith Hunter as Thompson I can imagine,
yeah, And it's got that wholevibe there. Man. When Hunter was
going through his DIVI, Jimmy Buffettloaned him a boat. Can you imagine
that, being like here, buddy, take my boat. Well crazy,
but friends are for right, That'swhat That's what good buddies will do for

(32:15):
you, right there. Oh yeah, just the whole island. SID mean,
Like Jimmy Buffett, the biggest thinghe had to think about every year
was which like Caribbean location he wasgonna do a pop up like big show
on a boat and then people ontheir other yachts would all anchor around and
people on land and what a lifeman, and what a lifestyle. I

(32:38):
know they do the whole parrot headthing, but there's a lot. There's
the you know, the Caribbean isdotted with a bunch of burnout expat dudes
who just listened to too much.Jimmy Buffett made enough money and just went,
you know, screw it, man, I'm gonna go live in the
Caribbean for you know, and thenthey got like a really unhealthy tan just

(33:02):
rocking out, man, just livingthe lifestyle. That was a whole thing.
Reportedly died of skin cancer. Who'ssurprised by that? It was seventy
six, diagnosed with skin cancer fouryears ago. The disease eventually progressed.
I've said, this is actually that'smy mom died progression of skin cancer.

(33:23):
So then I gotta go, like, I go in and do the mapping
thing right where they're like, allright, stand here naked while we stare
at every little thing on your bodyand make a map of it. Oh,
it's a great time. Lived hislife in the sun, literally and

(33:44):
figuratively, said one close friend.Yep passed away September one, surrounded by
family, friends, music, anddogs. That's great. Do you know
that? Do you know? Hemade a cammy in the Jurassic world And
he's on screen for about a halfsecond and it's so Jurassic Worlds. The

(34:08):
first one that had what's his bucketfrom Guardians of the Galaxy, Chris What
is his name? Why? Ican't remember his last night? Chris Pratt,
Chris Pratt, Yeah, Chris Prattand they it's the very commercialized look
of the island where there's actually thereis like a David Busters and all that
stuff on there. In the scenewhen all of the pterodactyls get out and

(34:30):
are terrorizing all of the tourists,there's a scene of a dude running with
two giant margaritas in his hand,and it's Jimmy Buffett doing a cameo.
So a little fun fact there,all right. So the Daily Beasts decided
they were going to call out anothernews agency and then in doing so committed
the actual sins that they were accusingthe other ones of. Oh it's great

(34:52):
and it's next all right, goodmorning, and welcome to it. It

(35:23):
is an hour number two. You'reon your pc O day radio program.
Oh man, all right, I'lllook it out. Somebody who sent me
a text message I was asking ifGarry Clark from The Dream or Garry Righting
Susan from Dream Weaver had himself anotherhid uh not as a soul. He

(35:45):
was an argent, So hold yourhead up. They're a big hit.
Oh okay, all right, areat did it two ways? I don't
know, man, it's I'm alittle disappointed. By some of the actual
back round they do on some ofthese musicians. Like so Steve Harwell,
lead singer of smash Mouth. Isaw several articles or they made two big

(36:07):
airs including this one. Who isThis is from CNN, So I know
you're shocked. The former founding leadsinger of smash Mouth. Yeah, here
we go, Harwell, founding memberin ninety four, longtime lead singer of
smash Mouth, best known for theirchart topping singles All Star and I'm a
Believer. Yeah, that is criminal. Those are their big hits. Uh

(36:30):
what Walking on the Sun was theirfirst big song? Right? Yes,
now they are little more accurate onthe second point. But I saw several
articles pointing out that smash mouths reallyowes their success to the inclusion of All
Star in the Shrek soundtrack, Likeyou know, there were some unknown but

(36:50):
the reality is the song came outlong before the movie and while it you
I don't know if renaissance is theright word. It definitely expanded generational the
song All Star being utilized and basicallya kid's movie, but All Star was
its own thing. Smash Mouth wasa big deal. And then to have
that song included, but to Ross'spoint, walking on the Sun was first,

(37:15):
and there was this window where youhad just boom boom boom, smash
Mouth and Limp Biscuit. I knowpeople make fun a Limp Biscuit, but
Limp Biscuit in that same era theyhad like a five year window where they
had quite a few hits. Ican say this as a young DJ music
radio DJ. Walking on the Sunwas an amazing song. To talk up
the song and it was a big, a big chart topping hit. That

(37:37):
was music that put him on LettermanLeno. Yeah, I was doing music
at the time too, and itwas it was a big deal. In
fact, the concert that the concertthat I worked it was smash Mouth,
Matchbox twenty No smash Mouth, ThirdEye Blind and one other band, and
like that was the hot of thehot at the time, and they were

(37:59):
like co headliner at that thing,and yeah, walking on the Sun was
the was the song at that time. This was this would have been pre
Shrek because Shrek was two thousand andone, so yeah, it would have
been pre Shrek and they were justthey were a big deal. So but
yeah, those two points got likeweirdly conflated in some of the coverage.

(38:21):
Ross's theory is that it's a bunchof teenagers writing articles. He's probably not.
I'm seeing more and more of thesearticles where there's just glaring, obvious
mistakes that somebody who didn't live throughthat era would not know of. Like
it's they just go on, theydo some research, they go in Wikipedia,
or they do a quick Google search, and that's it. Yeah,
they saw it when they searched smashMouth songs. They saw you know,
they saw Shrek's picture and they're like, oh okay, right where they were

(38:45):
a little kid and they saw Shrekand that was the first time they heard
him. Yeah. So yeah,a little little more to that, just
if you want to get in theworld of accuracy. All right, So
this Daily Beast thing, this isgreat, dude, dah So Daily Beast,
I love this story. Daily Beastwrote an article calling out John Solomon

(39:07):
and Amanda Head, who worked forReal America's Voice. All right, so
this is one of the upstart conservativenews outlets right where they're like, ah,
Fox isn't getting it done because they'resellouts. Right. So, Real
America's Voice and John Solomon is notan unknown presenter, journalist whatever, but

(39:28):
literally he is. He has adude who is coming at it from a
conservative worldview. There's no question there. So Solomon and Head did an interview
with Trump. And Trump's been doingquite a few interviews here as of late,
so not unusual guys running for president. And he's got some stuff going

(39:50):
on in the news. I'm sureyou've noticed. So they published the interview
and Daily Beast runs an article says, MAGA network in estigating weather duped by
fake Trump. So they ran anarticle alleging that the person that was interviewed,
because it was interviewed via satellite orwhatever, it was not Trump and

(40:15):
it was an AI Trump. Sothey alleged that these two journalists for a
Real America's Voice thought they were interviewingTrump and instead interviewed either a Trump impersonator
or an AI generated deep fake Trump. That's quite the allegation, right,

(40:37):
And they pointed to the glitchiness ofthe interview, but they also pointed to
what they said was an interview theydid. So Daily Beast reporters claimed to
have interviewed Robert Sigg, the ownerof Real America's Voice, and in the
interview, they said Sigg told himthat there was an investigation underway into the
reporting by Solomon in head, hedescribed it as a major oversight. They

(41:02):
quoted Sigg in the article. RobertSigg, owner of the network, tells
The Daily Beast that the Trump onthe call sounded like chat goop to him,
and then an internal investigation will beneeded as to whether his hosts were
duped. This is not the companyvalues the American people tune in for.
Sig added, this is a majoroversight by John and Amanda. Our news

(41:24):
directors will need to go through additionaltraining about journalism practice and how to present
the facts and truth to the Americanpeople. Ross you would say, that's
a pretty damning story for a newsoutlet, right, I get it.
I would Do you know why it'snot? Can you think of any reason
why not by Boom? Maybe notbeat Well, they did interview Trump.

(41:51):
In fact, after the interview,Trump ragged about it because I don't know
if you know this. Trump likesto talk, so he literally and I
get so any press releases and I'mon the media press release from Trump,
like I'll get six sometimes in liketen minutes, and sometimes it's just stories.
He started doing this after he gotkicked off Twitter, and even though

(42:12):
he had True Socialists and outlet,he still would hammer this mailing list like
they were tweets. They looked liketweets. And because we you know,
we did interviews with Trump, andwe did interviews with his kids and campaign
people. So like I had tolike back off the number of our email
addresses that were on there because Iwas getting so many duplicates. Trump talked

(42:34):
about it, He posted about onTrue socially, posted about doing the interview
and things he said that he thoughtmade him sound really smart, and you
know, which is typical Trump.All of this stuff was out there to
confirm he did the interview, andthe Daily Beast I guess didn't see any
of that unless the thing confirming wasalso AI. Well, now that you
bring it up, so how didthey get ahold of Robert Sick? That's

(43:00):
what you're referring to, right,the owner of the mega news network,
who is the boss? Right?So the apparently they had a phone number
that they thought was Robert Siggs,so they texted it and whoever texted him
back, whether it was AI orsome smartass pretended to be Robert Sigg,

(43:22):
I was like, oh, yeah, no, that's totally me and said
and gave them quotes that if you'vestopped to think about it, the owner
of this news network is not goingto be like, ah, Trump's sounded
like he was on chat gop,right, He's not gonna make a bad
joke about Trump be an AI.But they just went, oh, well,
we texted this random number that's notSIGGS. That's something that we that

(43:45):
we found on the internet or something, and the person totally confirmed that they
were the guy and gave us thesejuicy question and then they ran the story.
So you wrote a whole article abouthow this news outlet got duped by
fake either Trump or trump AI.So you ran an article about it,

(44:07):
and in your article you got dupedby either fake sig or sig AI.
And literally there were tons and tonsof quotes from Trump talking about the interview
and referencing the interview that should havethrown up a gigantic amount of red flags.

(44:29):
I mean, the level of selfowned on that is amazing, but
it can't help themselves. I watchedMatt Taiebe be interviewed over the weekend by
the guy from Reason magazine, andwho's Taiebe's a leftist dude. But he's

(44:50):
one of the Twitter files guys.It's an amazing one hour thing. And
I think it was actually done afew weeks ago. I just haven't seen
it. I mean, he wasa leftist, right or yeah, but
these Rolling Stone he was the RollingStone campaign head of campaign coverage and the
Twitter files, and then he didlike an appearance or a few appearances on
Joe Rogan and suddenly they're trying tocall him like a righty yeah. And

(45:12):
even in the interview, he's likeyou could tell he's trying to critique his
leftist buddies because it's like that's histhing, man, And so he's talking
somewhat about the Twitter files. He'sjust talking about all of this, like
just the you know where people wentcrazy. Journalists just went crazy over Trump,
and they continue to do it.I told you about the Wall Street

(45:34):
Journal article this morning with the Epsteincalendar, which is ninety nine point nine
percent. If you want to getinto politics, people on the left,
Woody Alan, Bill Gates, right, these are the cats doing it.
Yes, there are a couple offinance dudes who were one was an informal
advisor to Trump. And then youhad the Russian ambassador, dude. And

(45:55):
if you go read the headlines,and I know some of you have been
sending this to me this morning andI'm not I know. If you go
look at if you go search JeffreyEpstein calendar, the headlines are like,
Jeffrey Epstein tried to weasel his wayinto Trump's political orbit. Epstein courted Trump
and Trump allies and even a Russiandiplomat. That's market Watch, CNBC,

(46:16):
Yahoo News, all this craziness wherethey decided that the whole article that they're
even referencing about Wall Street Journal,which is just a straight up hey,
here's a bunch of people you know, and here's why you know them,
and here's all the times they metwith Epstein. Isn't that weird? That's
the article. And they look atthe article and rather doing their own unique

(46:40):
reporting, decided what it obviously showshis Epstein trying to get all up in
Trump's orbit. And don't get mewrong, there is obviously some of Epstein,
in his usual way, wanting toingratiate himself with whoever is at the
head of the you know, power, in the same way he did with

(47:00):
the Clintons, in the same wayhe tried to do with the bushes,
was not as successful with that,and obviously did with many people in Barack
Obama's orbit and the orbit of SiliconValley, because that was his thing.
He wanted all these powerful people andwhether he literally did have you know,

(47:22):
compromising files and videos on all ofthem. Again, this is all stuff
that needs to come out, butat the very least, these calendars show
that these folks found enough reasons tomeet with him, whether it was for
philanthropic purposes, which everyone's got,Oh, it was just for charity one
of the dudes ahead of like BardCollege and whatnot, and he's like,
yeah, no, it was.It was for donations for scholarships. But

(47:45):
if you look at the meeting Epsteinalong with quote a group of college age
women went on a campus visit tomeet this dude. Well, were they
all like shopping for colleges? Doyou think that's what That's what was up.
But there's spending all this stuff.So Daily Beast easily checkable writes this

(48:09):
article to uh, you know,to damn a rival news organization, because
why not, and then does allthe things they accuse of. And it
was so easy to debunk because theyjust texted a random number and did no
follow up. You just wouldn't.I wouldn't do that with a guest.

(48:34):
We have we have more thorough vettingwhen we do our stupid little campaign thing,
right when we because like I don'twant to sit there and schedule all
the people running for stuff. Soyou've heard over the years like we get
around like a primary day or whatever, and I'll have like a day or
a couple of days to be like, all right, if you're running for
office and you want to get onthe air boom, here's the number.
You think. Ross just puts anyYahoo who calls through as a particular and

(49:00):
it right, they call and Iasked him a quick question, I say,
do you support Hayes for sheriff?And if they say yes, they
get on. That's not don't giveaway the first of all, that's not
it. It's you do just youdon't have to say what you do.
But you do more than that,please, for love of God, yes,
right right, I'm not taking questionsat this time. He does he

(49:20):
does more than that? Why?Because I don't need somebody calling on and
being like hi, oh this isTed Budd and then comes on He's like,
Hitler did nothing wrong, right,we can't have that. But if
we have a more thorough vetting processfor on the fly political interviews than the
Daily Beast, who is doing afull takedown of a rival news organization,

(49:42):
it shows you just how rabid theseidiots are. Man just craziness, but
they don't care. They don't thejournalism has been flushed. And that Taiebi
interview was it was eye opening anda lot of people are like, well,
that's what rolling Stone got rid ofhim, because obviously he was copyright

(50:06):
heat. No, they he leftrolling Stone. He left Rolling Stone because
and he talks about in the interview, there was the head of Rolling Stone
at the time basically said we're gonnado this thing promoting Hillary Clinton, and
Tabia went, well, you know, I've done some stories. I don't
know if you know this. There'ssome not good stuff there, and she

(50:30):
like, she's tied in with allof the culturally things that Rolling Stone has
been very suspicious of, like youknow, Wall Street and all of these
things. But at the very least, should we really be just deciding to
go all in? And he wasbasically told, well, yeah, you
know, that's how we used tothink, but now it's like, we
can't, we can't have Trump.And he just went I'm out, I'm

(50:51):
done with this and he went overand did the sub stack thing. He
says, he makes a crap tonmore money. Good for him, but
he didn't want any part of that. But the you know, all of
the journalistic ethics, the way thatthey did, it's all gone. They
can they can cry and wind andsay that Trumps maligned them and they're getting

(51:13):
a bad rap, but the realityis their action show. I'll give you
another example when we get back,having to do with the Catholic Church,
which was another object of ire formany in the media. If you haven't
seen what's going on with the massunbarked graves of Canada, wait for this
story which is coming up. Wegot news and everything else here on the

(51:34):
case O Day Radio program one Osix one FM, Talk in the Triangle
and there's talk f w PTI andthe Triad. All right, seven thirty
five and welcome back. Let's goahead and get into this. I do

(52:00):
we have so much craziness this morning, you're not gonna want to miss a
moment. We're only we're really halfwaythrough all right, so before we get
on to more music news, letme get into this. And this is
one of those things going back tohow journalism just whatever the hot moonbat topic

(52:24):
is, that's what they're off to. Have you heard of the Unmarked mass
Native Graves of Canada? Do youknow about this? This is something that
took on. It's it's a ittook on like a cultural thing within Canadian
pop culture, even like they hada really so I can't remember the name

(52:47):
of the TV show I streamed thewhole thing. It was a season long
on one of the streaming services,and it was like a horror mystery detective
story, but it was based aroundthis thing. And this thing was the
Unmarked Mass Graves of Canada. Andso it goes like this. Back in
the day, as the Catholic Church, uh, sometimes the Mormons, but

(53:12):
a various religious entities made their wayinto rule Canada, they would set up
these schools uh. And this happenedin uh in the US of A as
well, where you had it,but in Canada was it was kind of
its own thing. And so theseCatholic schools would be set up out in

(53:34):
and they and they were they wereschools for Native Canadian, you know,
Native Americans or Native Canadians, FirstNation or whatever they referred to them up
there is and but but the churcheswere all horrible, and so like a
bunch of the kids were killed,and then they would just mass bury the
kids and these unmarked graves. Andthere was a lot of allegations they did

(53:58):
it because they weren't aligning themselves withthe church doctrine, or there was a
large scale abuse going on or whatever. It has one hundred and one different
narratives. But you had enough journalistswriting articles about how these things were a
thing that you then had other groupsin search of the thing, who would

(54:19):
literally go to places like Our Ladyof Seven Sorrows Church, which was a
on the Pine Creek Residential School area, and they would be like, ah,
the bodies are here, and theywould use like ground penetrating radar to
find anomalies and they're like, there'sa bunch of dead Native children under there,
and the church was covering it up. And it's and and it worked

(54:45):
its way into and I'm not evenmaking this up, so into Canadian culture
and these mass graves that it wastaught as just a thing that was a
thing that happened in universities there,and they even have a national holiday in
Canada Canada based on this, calledthe National Day for Truth and Reconciliation,

(55:09):
which is coming up here in justa few weeks. It's September thirtieth,
and the current Pope, Pope Francisapologized, quote I humbly beg forgiveness for
the evil committed by so many Christiansagainst the indigenous peoples of Canada. So

(55:30):
with all of that, I've justtold you this was obviously a thing.
Now, don't get me wrong,even in our own history of some of
the Prairie schools and some of thesome of the schools where we although they're
not necessarily all connected to a particularchurch, but there were a lot of

(55:51):
situations where as westward expansion was athing that Native children were basically expected to
conform in these school settings, inthese reservations settings, and they were not
allowed to they were they were taughtEnglish, they were not allowed to speak
their native language, and they weremade to appear more westernized. Look,

(56:15):
these are actual those are things thathappened. There's lots of evidence of that.
But these mass graves of Canada werecrazy and they did whole television programs
the popes, the popes do apologizingthey have a holiday over it. Okay,
So they finally decided, hey,you know what we should do.

(56:39):
Why don't we since they did allthese ground penetrating radar which confirmed all these
dead children, why don't we exhumethem and bury them properly and get to
the bottom of this so fie Andfor whatever reason, I know you're shocked
to learn this, they stonewalled aneffort to do this, saying that you

(57:00):
know you're you're digging, you're diggingaround in Native American graves, even though
they were mass graves that weren't inkeeping with traditional style, and everyone saw
poultr guys, you don't want todo that, and pet cemetery, and
like all of these horrific things comesup. It came up. But then
they finally decided, through the universe, one of the universities up there,
that they would go ahead and excavatethe largest which was this Our Lady of

(57:22):
Seven Sorrows, and they expected tofind the remains of at least sixty children
because of what the ground penetrating radarfound ross how many how many dead Native
American children from the eighteen hundreds.Do you think they found in that grave?
I can't even think about it,so sad. Thirty. Remember the

(57:43):
estimate was sixty, right, theysaid sixty based and we were thirty.
Uh that's a little lower, alittle lower than that little lower. You
want to guess again, I'll gotwenty. I got at least fourteen.
Uh, let's not have two numbersin the answer. Let's just have one.
Okay, chumbo, We're gonna goeight. All right, let's go

(58:05):
with the number that some people arguewhether it's a number at all, So
less than eight, keep going sothat that definitely wouldn't be five. No,
no, no, no no,because people nobody disagrees at fives the
number. Yeah, you nailed it. Yeah. Nothing. Zero. The

(58:30):
archaeological team from the University of Brandon, the same team, by the way,
that was relied upon by regional policeagencies when doing the ground penetrating radar
and all this stuff. Nothing.They found zero evidence of any human remains.
So then they went and they didanother one were they estimated that they
would find. Uh, let's seetwo hundred and fifteen children. All right,

(58:52):
so this obviously this one, right, this is the this is the
gold mine of evidence here. Soin the one they then did where the
chief researcher, doctor Sarah Boulet,estimated two hundred and fifteen children were in
there, but later downgraded or estimatestwo hundred probable burials. How many do

(59:13):
you think they found in that one, the big one, the motherload?
Two hundred and fifteen or two hundredthe two best estimates. What do you
think the number is. I'm gonnago too fifteen, bob, Yeah,
correct, I went over? Okay, yet a little over, spitch over,

(59:34):
still going up there, man,yeah, I mean, don't fall
off the cliff. Surely cliff,surely will not fall over the cliff.
I cannot be that fall over.Okay, yeah, Well unless the answer
was like zero again, oh yes, yeah, goose egg yeah yeah.
Following this, following the double gooseeggs, Boult later clariff that the anomalies

(01:00:00):
simply pointed to disruptions in the soiland not necessarily bodies and instead o Other
critics of Boulay suggests that the disruptionsand soils which her and her team said
were likely bodies proving this this wholething, were likely trenches that had been

(01:00:25):
part of the school's septic systems atthe time, and Bouley, who had
initially alleged that she found a child'stooth and a rib bone during a small
test dig. It was later confirmedthe tooth was not human and the rib
bone nobody eve ever seen it,nobody understood. No, it never was

(01:00:46):
a thing. She made it up. So they got a holiday, They
got the Pope apologizing. They havea zeitgeist within pop culture of this.
The media ran with it, bothin Canada and the US. There's lots
of reporting on this and in realitydoesn't look like it happened at that point.

(01:01:08):
I feel like Ron Burgundy and Anchorment, like, I'm not even angry,
I'm impressed. It's crazy. Thestory is crazy, dude. We'll
tweet the whole thing out to yousummer say. Some people are alleging that
maybe it was media fervor meant totrash on the Catholic Church. And don't
get me wrong, if you gotbeef with the Catholic Church, there's plenty

(01:01:30):
of reasons for that. I getit, I understand it. You know,
people think of the you know whathappened in Boston and the reporting there
by the Boston Globe and moving thepriests around and all of that scandal.
But remember that scandal was everywhere.There was within Raleigh, there was there

(01:01:51):
was pieces of that, Like Ithink I get it, But this whole
thing, this whole, this wholecrazy thing. Here was a bunch of
activists, journalists and activists folks withinthe university. You were just making the
stuff up, and nobody questioned them, and then they didn't want to look,
and then when they did look,they didn't find anything. And the

(01:02:15):
irony, of course is the I'msure they're not canceling the holiday or anything.
Move right forward. So and Ross'spoor alpine hiker fell. Look at
all the tragedy that has ensued fromthis. Oh though, Bleat, along
with one of the chiefs chiefs an Epanoch, says that they are concerned

(01:02:37):
that the findings of the excavation couldadvance denialism among skeptics. Yeah, yeah,
could could could advance that. You'reabsolutely right. Seven forty six Is
that Jeff Marr from the Weather Channeltoday, since race agent had to watch
Clemson get pounded, Yeah, hemay need a couple more days. I

(01:03:00):
was just wondering he was all excitedand Duke just smoked him. Then they
did Holy cow. All right,So in his stead, we'll see if
he re emerges. What do yougot for us today? Got some more
hot weather as we head through thisafternoon. We'll see sunshine, the high
in your ninety seven, the heatand decks in here one hundred when you
had the humidity, and then tonightdry, clear, a light wind,
and overnight low down to seventy two. It gets even hotter tomorrow, sunny

(01:03:22):
up to ninety eight, the heateddecks near one oh two. We'll stay
hot Thursday and see some more sunwith the high of ninety six, then
up to ninety one Friday. Scatteredhowers and thunderstorms to developed during the afternoon
and the temperatures trink cooler for theweekend. We'll hold on to that chance
for some scattered showers and thunderstorms Saturdayand Sunday as high temperatures hit the mid
eighties each day. All right,thank you, sir, to appreciate it.
There you go, Jeff Marr fromthe Weather Channel, Oh, here

(01:03:43):
we go, expect it this maybethere, hold on. No, they're
talking about their concern that it fuelsto nihilism of the abuses suffered by Native
suffered by Native Americans at the handsof Canadian and US government. Nobody's denying
that, dude, Absolutely we were. We were treaty violating. Didn't give

(01:04:05):
a crap that was a thing.And as somebody who's more steeped in this
than probably you, due to havinga much more expansive understanding of Western history,
it's pretty gruesome stuff. Like everyone'sheard about a little big horn.
They don't realize some of the retaliatorystuff that happened, like going up to
doll Knife and basically going, howwe're going to murder all of you,

(01:04:28):
Like, there's a whole lot ofthis. There's a whole lot of really
bad stuff that happened. But thiswas specific allegations about these these wilderness church
settings, schools and whatnot where theywere literally just murdering kids who didn't conform
or for any other heinous reasons andbearing them in mass graves, and they

(01:04:51):
just took it as this all totallyhappened, while ignoring some of the more
recent disappearances, which are a bigthing within Canadian and culture of many youth
of Native American tribes out there,or in this case first persons in Canada
where where kids just leave and youknow, one explanation is they were murdered

(01:05:14):
by the church. The other oneis maybe they left because they're dealing with
some real, stark realities of povertyand not wanting to conform to necessarily that
lifestyle and they go, you knowwhat, I'm out of here. Hell
in South Dakota, one of themleft to go live with the Flash.
So no, nobody's denying any ofthat, but they are pointing out that

(01:05:38):
if you're going to see, ifyou say there's a mass grave at two
hundred and fifteen bodies or sixty bodiesand you find zero, that maybe some
of your theories could could use alittle review. That's what I'm saying.
Seven forty nine, give it athink. We'll be back Smart Talk all

(01:06:00):
day, w PTI in the Triadand one six one FM Talk in the
Triangle. Yes, thank you,John. Let me just yes. Three
Pines is the name of the Canadiandetective series. So I thought was really
well done. I'm not gonna I'mnot gonna lie, but it's all it's
based on that Lauren legacy of theseschools with these mass Graves and now on

(01:06:27):
the show they did Fine Graves spoileralert. But but there's a lot more
to it, and you should gosee that pretty pretty crazy and it's on
Netflix. I didn't look it up, so if you want to go look
at that. But yeah, howbonkers is that? Man? That's like
even Haraldo had to cringe at thatreveal, you know, but it you

(01:06:50):
know, you had all of thesemedia folks who were all in on this
and never really demanded evidence because itkind of fit with the narrative. All
right, I asked us this,and I'm so, I'm so excited when
I find something like this that Rosshasn't dug into. So let me let
me get to this. I asked, are you familiar with Acon? They

(01:07:13):
may know who Acon is. SoAcon is a singer. He had a
few hits, Smacked that and others. What early two thousands, mid two
thousands, Yeah, early to midtwo thousands. So, but he's moved
on to some stuff. Acon,who has roots in Senegal. I think

(01:07:34):
he actually is Senglanese or however yousay that, partially decided that he wanted
to parlay his popularity into doing somethingthat he would be remembered for so back
in twenty twenty, Acon announced thefirst stone would be laid on the future

(01:08:03):
six billion dollars, which was initialinvestment City of the Future in Senegal.
So he went there. He hadlike this the first stone he laid it.
He had press conferences. He promisedit's a coastal city near Mobideen in

(01:08:23):
Senegal and that this would be thebeginning of construction on this city of the
future. And he was inspired byWakanda from the Black Panther series, and
he was asking any anybody, anyAfrican Americans of wealth to make an investment,

(01:08:44):
claiming that they would get rich bythis, and he hoped to raise
all of the revenue. The city, which was to be called Acon City
because of course, would feature ultramodern twisting skyscraper, the latest in technology
and commerce and be just be afinancial powerhouse of the world. He really

(01:09:08):
envisioned like a Singapore kind of kindof set up where it's really it's kind
of its own thing. Macau tosome ext Hong Kong, but you know,
not with some of the Chinese tieins, but really it's own thing
with finance and tech and Wakonda.He wanted Wakonda and so he started this,

(01:09:30):
he threw a little bit of hisown money, but really what he
needed he needed rich people of Africanheritage to come on board. And he
promised the residents everything from future jobsthat would outpace even the earning potential of
people in America and Europe and alland tourism and it was just going to
be crazy. Well, a littlebit of a problem. Now he's getting

(01:09:55):
a little desperate because the only thingthat they've built is that stone he laid
at the press conference. It's twentytwenty, and now he's claiming that this
beacon of innovation and human development maynot happen. And some people are saying
also, even with investment that hascome in, it might have been he
might have been doing something with themoney. Hang on for that. All

(01:10:43):
right, Good morning, Anne,welcome the can is I remember three man
here on your Tuesday Tuesday we'll callit if everyone had a good week third
weekend, I should say so,as we initially mentioned on the show,
I liked the idea of three dayweekend, four day work week, but

(01:11:04):
what about four day weekend, threeday workweeks. Because you know, we're
innovators here on the show, weshould probably try that sooner rather than later,
although I think we have one ofthose coming up in October because Ross
and I took a couple of daysoff, so we'll give that a whirld.

(01:11:24):
But for now, we got lotsto get into as we truck here
into our number three and just crazinesstoday, just craziness, man, a
lot of journalist stuff. We mentionedwhat happened with Daily Beast, where they
wrote a whole article about one ofthese upstart conservative news networks and claimed that

(01:11:45):
they interviewed a Trump AI and thenran a whole story saying that they did,
and included quotes from the owner ofAmerica, the American News Network,
and where he was like, yeah, no, this totally happened and we're
retraining, and everyone was bad exceptDaily Beast. One didn't check to see
that the interview was real, whichit was with Trump, or two checked

(01:12:05):
that the random phone number that theytexted to get the quotes was in fact
the head of this network. Sothey wrote a whole article in their in
their fervor to take down their politicalopponents that turned out to not only not
be true, but also to commitall the sins they accused their competition of
committing, which was mind boggling.So we had that. Then we had

(01:12:30):
these excavations in Canada of what isjust a known historical fact that at these
Catholic and not always Catholic, butreligious schools, wilderness schools with Native Americans,
there were these mass graves of FirstNation children. They have a national
holiday over it. They did groundreadings, they knew they were there,

(01:12:51):
but nope, you know, toreminded me of Ross. You watched some
of these shows. You ever seeingthese dudes who run around with their ground
penetrating radar doing mining down in likeNevada, and they're always like looking for
the mother Love. You seen thisshow? I can't remember the name of
the show is, but it kindof gave me vibes of the Oak Island
stuff, you know, right,this is it, this is We're finding

(01:13:13):
the goods, this is the time. And did they ever find anything on
Oak Island? Ever? I didn'tstick with the whole series, so I'm
not one hundred percent. I don'tknow, but yeah, but then they
dug them up and they're like nope, and then like some of the evidence
used to push this down, butit was you know, it was a

(01:13:35):
very willing media going along with it. Well. Over the weekend, there
was a podcast interview of one ofthe Washington Post reporters, and if you
remember, I pointed out that theWashington Post did a big piece on that
congressman in New York who basically justmade up his whole bio, and because

(01:14:00):
one of the elements of his backgroundthat they said he lied about was a
photo that emerged of him in Brazilin drag back in the day, and
like, he denied that was true. And then finally he said that it
was a thing that he did oncebecause the family friend pressured him into it.
There's nothing inherently illegal about it,but they wanted to really pile on

(01:14:20):
with all of this other stuff,which, yeah, the guy is the
guy was, he's completely full ofcrap, and as such, the voters
of his district at the next electionshould probably throw him out. I don't
disagree, but I don't know ifthere's anything criminal about it. But yet
they they decided they were going toexpend a crap ton of resources to sending

(01:14:44):
a team down there to like infiltratethe drag scene of Brazil to put together
this huge story, and they interviewedlike a hundred people try to get photos
and all this stuff, and I'mlike, wow, that is a lot
of energy. Imagine if he putsjust a little bit of that energy into
other members of Congress or other politicoswhere there might actually be something that is

(01:15:08):
inherently illegal and not just somebody lyingabout that. How long he wanted to
wear women's clothes and you can canlike elon Omar and you know the allegation
which has there's a lot of smokeas to whether she committed immigration fraud in
the same way that a lot ofimmigration fraud which appeared in the Twin Cities

(01:15:29):
at the time was occurring, whichwas people who were misrepresenting their family status
for the purpose of getting to leaveSomalia income to the US. People would
present his families and they were notIt was hard to track the documents.
In some cases it was two adultsand children that were not either married or

(01:15:51):
had any relations. And sadly,what would happen is they'd get here and
then everyone went on their own.But now you got kids that are essentially
now a strange land on their own. It was very sad stuff. Washington
Post didn't put any effort into thatand all of this Biden stuff, you
could tell that they're not really interested. So one of their big reporters who's

(01:16:13):
done a lot of these investigative takedownstuff on Trump, Philip Bump, was
being interviewed and he's not even beinginterviewed by a you know, like a
serious news journalist podcast. He's onwith known dwarman who I think the dude
owns a comedy club, right,and so he's kind of he's kind of

(01:16:38):
got that Joe Rogan vibe. Buthe's on there with them and he's doing
an interview, and during the interview, Bump gets asked about, you know,
Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, andsome of the some of the evidence
including a text that Hunter sent tohis adult daughter in which he said,

(01:17:00):
quote, I had to give fiftypercent of my income to Pop. So
adult daughter's asking Hunter for money,and Hunter's explaining why the money that the
adult daughter thinks her dad has isnot as much as he actually has.
I had to give fifty percent ofmy income to Pop. And in that
scenario, that income is money thatis coming in as part of this Beizma

(01:17:21):
stuff. So some would say thatthat's just one piece of things that might
deserve some investigation, and so Bumpgets asked about it. This is Washington
Post. This is deep throat,This is you know, Watergate. This
is the job that this dude nowhas to be intellectually curious about this stuff,

(01:17:45):
and he's being asked by a comedyclub owner about it. It's a
tougher line of questioning, but ina softer sense, and it's really coming
from a place of not gotcha.But hey, I'm just a guy who's
hearing this stuff and I'm scratching myhead while you're not doing more about it.
And I want you to listen tothis exchange, during which Bump pieces
out pulls the rip chord. Hedoesn't want to have this conversation. He

(01:18:11):
is the guy who is the Watergateguy of now, just to be very
clear, he is the Washington Postinvestigative reporter when it comes to these things,
and you can tell he wants nothingto do with this old one button
bars being crazy. All right,here we go, Well that's great,

(01:18:33):
what is going on there? Yeah? Why ross played on yours? Because
mine's not even allowing it to play. So please, what do you take
from the text message to his adultdaughter, uh hundred text, I have
to get fifty percent of my incometo Pop. I have no idea what
that means. I don't. Ihave no idea what that means. But
it's it's it's I know, it'scircumstantial evidence, and you prefer that what

(01:18:54):
click? I have no idea.What doesn't do? Well? I appreciate
your has anybody has anybody asked her? I don't. No, I don't
know. Don't you think somebody shouldask her? Okay, Like I'm not.
I just said I don't know,and I don't know what to make
of it, so I have nothingabout it. But doesn't say yeah,
But you say there's no evidence evidence, But then there's a text message where
he says, I give Pop fiftiescent of my money. That's that's evidence.

(01:19:15):
Okay, well what do you Okay? Fine? Fine, so evidence.
I appreciate you having me out.It doesn't that's something like that.
Who do you think it's me worried? I love that I'm saying I am.
I feel you want me to leave, like, just walk out in
the middle of this, because thatway you can you can go. Is
this a standard? Really? Thisis the way the Washington Post handles people
who disagree with them. I agreeto beyond for forty five minutes, and

(01:19:35):
then they get on for an hourand fifteen. Yeah that After a while,
I go, thanks man, rightright, right, dude again,
everyone is playing that. You know, people are just they're demonized in the
media because they want you to haveto believe what they're doing. That's that's
the dude who's supposed to be thepinnacle of investigated political journalism being asked by

(01:19:57):
a comedian slash comedy club owner aboutone of those things that people who are
only partially connected into the news cyclewould look at and go, I don't
know, that sounds weird because theyhave brains that can process this stuff.
Right, something doesn't smell right.They may not have the full timeline.
They may not understand the financial transactionsthat came through Romania and Kazakhstan and some

(01:20:20):
of these other Chinese things they're connected, or even fully what's going on with
Bizma and all Ukraine and all ofthat. Like, they may not have
all of that down, but thenthey see things like that, they hear
things like that, They look atthe creepy pictures and they go, I
don't know about that, and evenif they still want to politically defend quote

(01:20:41):
unquote their guy or their side,it don't look good. And that's the
guy who's supposed to go, youknow what, this looks crazy, This
looks a little fishy. We're gonnadig into this after they just sent a
team down to Brazil to infiltrate thedrag scene. Just bonkers man. And
he just walks off the podcast andthen he puts tweets out saying that the

(01:21:04):
guy ambushed him and or added stuffto it. I don't know where i'd
added. It's a straight video ofit. I could you could say it
was just a small clippet of alarger thing, of a larger thing than
fine, But I don't know thatI would claim it's out of context.
He's not even really pounded on thedude. He's just saying, wait,
you said there's no evidence. Youdon't think that that's evidence. Bump could

(01:21:26):
have very easily said, yeah,no, there's a lot of stuff there,
and it's supporting part of my jobto set there and put context to
it, which is what we youknow, what we're trying to do.
Like he could have tried to deflectthis, but he didn't. He just
got really irritated over that because heknows he knows he's a hack man,
but he doesn't care. He getsover it. In the clip, he

(01:21:48):
calls it circumstantial, right, right, which which is it? Yeah?
It is to some extent, Yes, it is right because you know he's
talking about giving you. I'm justsaying, if Casey Anthony say there was
a text message between her and somebody, she's like, hey, I killed
my baby. Would that would thatbe circumstantial? More accurate? But here's

(01:22:10):
why it's circumstantial because he doesn't sayto my father, Joe, you know
what I'm saying, He says,pop okay, right, I mean,
look, see a circumstantial in thesense that we all know what that means,
but we don't one hundred percent.No, like maybe you know because
some people call their grandfather pop popright or corn pop right? You know

(01:22:30):
what I'm saying. So, butbut this is why do you then take
that and go, oh, okay, you take it from circums But when
you have a laptop full of thisinformation, So you're saying the all the
like, the entirety of the laptop, the emails, the every like the
Romanian transfers, the Romanian transfers,if you will watch this, they do
a very good job of breaking downwhere it's literally listed as Hunter getting it.

(01:22:54):
But then there's these other by lineswith an equal split that just say
Biden. And it's like, well, that's not Hunter because we see Hunter's
byline, and we see Joe's brotherhis byline. We even see some of
the the wives, like Bo Biden'swife, who's now Hunters fling and all

(01:23:15):
that, Like we see all thatstuff. So who is other Biden?
Or how is this money that's gettingsplit into other account in a very equal
sense? Where is that going?That's circumstantial kind of, but it raises
an immense amount of red flags thatif you're this dude from Washington Post,
you wish should have intellectual curiosity overthere. I mean, it could be
enough information, right, enough ofit to sway a jury, yeah,

(01:23:42):
or at the very least a grandjury, right, a grand jury,
which is you know what you're doingwith Trump. It's the whole indet to
ham Sandwich. They go to thesegrand juries in Washington, DC or you
know, Blue Blue Atlanta, andyou're able to get grand juries to go
all right, there's a preponderance ofevidence. So yes, they use the

(01:24:04):
word evidence there as well. Iknow, absolutely crazy town, but that's
that's the guy who's in charge ofat least for one of the major news
outlets to get into the bottom ofthis, and you can tell he wants
nothing to do with it. Eighttwenty k c O Day Radio program hang
on one oh six f M Talkand nine five w PTI, two stations

(01:24:27):
driving the best in talk. Thisis case O Day and Carolina's Morning News.
A delta flight. Uh, let'ssee Atlanta to Barcelona. Oh yeah,
d into Spain. Well they wereit. Airbus A three fifty,

(01:24:49):
which was two hours into a transatlanticflight on Friday, had to make an
emergency return. Oh that's gotta suck. Two hours when you're settled in good
to go nice, I'm sure.I'm assuming it was an overnight flight.
Yeah, probably probably got dinner servicedone and people are just out. Apparently

(01:25:13):
all hell broke loose following what apilot described as quote a bio hazard issue.
That's what the pilot told air trafficcontrol and that was enough to get
the plane turned around to come backto Atlanta. And here's what happened.
I'm gonna read. I'm gonna readthe actual transcript from air traffic quote,

(01:25:39):
this is a biohazard issue. We'rerequesting direction or return this to air traffic
control. We've had a passenger whoquote had diarrhea all the way through the
airplane, and we need to comeback to Atlanta. What does that mean
when you say, do you meanlike one of the laboratories was impaired,

(01:26:02):
or do you when you say allthe way through the airplane, do you
mean somebody was making a suicide rundown the aisle. That's horrible, but
it described initially as a medical issue. The flight was red redirected to Atlanta,
with the additional commentary recorded on ATCrecordings, with the pilot giving a

(01:26:26):
specific reason, though they did notelaborate further on the quote unquote medical reason.
Delta announced the teams were quickly andsafely to decontaminate the plane. Eventually,
that plane load was put on adifferent plane and they got to Atlanta
like eight hours later than scheduled.But the very same plane was back in

(01:26:47):
use within a couple hours for anotherseries of flights, so they took everyone
off the plane, hosed it down, didn't use that to go to Spain,
put everyone on a different flight toSpain, and then use that for
other flights. What happened, itdoesn't know. What they didn't say is

(01:27:11):
whether the individual who caused the biohazardwas then on the redirected flight. I
mean, obviously it doesn't sound likeit that was something that they wanted.
I wonder if it was one ofthose where they had the seatbelt sign on,
because I've been on flights where theyjust keep it on all the time,
but then people kind of ignore itif it's not directly landing or takeoff,
and the flight attendants don't really sayanything. But then I've been on

(01:27:35):
others where they put it on andif somebody blinks, they scream at them
and like people are having to pleadtheir case. So I don't know,
but then you're two hours. Thenyou're doing two hours back with that going
on, versus what additional five hoursor whatever the rest of the probably less

(01:27:55):
than that, the rest of theflight. What about. I don't know
what you do, man, Ihate flying. Your day Smarter one oh
six one FM Talk and News Talkninety four five w PTI More with Casey
starts now eight thirty six k cO Day Radio program. Very disappointed to

(01:28:25):
see this, Hey, ROSSI yetby wyoming music. Still I feel like
I haven't used that in a while. We're gonna need that. I don't
know I've got. You know,this is ever since I left, things
have just been on a downhill.In some areas, like the part riger
up in last time I went tovisit. They're like a bunch of moonbats
mingling around, screwing with the waythat we utilize the mountains and just minded

(01:28:46):
our own business, all right,because you know, the wyoming that I
knew, we didn't deal with this. We kept to our own. We
dealt with our own and we handledstuff through grit and determination and hard work.
And occasionally they all will say itcut into the corners, but we

(01:29:09):
knew was the right way to getthings done, and we got things done.
And now, well it's just notthe way I remember it. So
and that's, you know, becausethat's the way that it was. No
no with them to the sheep.Okay, that's not the way that it
is now. During an interview withthe Cowboy State Daily and then another interview,
looks like by Fox News, themayor of Casper, which when I

(01:29:31):
lived there was the biggest town justby a little and now it's the second
biggest, just by a little.Basically, Cheyenne's little bigger than Casper now.
But when I say big, Ijust want you to know that the
biggest cities in the state of Wyominghave sixty thousand ish people in them.
Those are the metropolis is And Iwas like, that's where we'd go.

(01:29:55):
Remember, I said, that's wherewe'd go if we want to go to
mll or to visit an escalator,because we only had two escalators in the
state and they were both in Casper, or if we were really good,
it was graduation or something really important. That's where the Olive Garden and the
Red Lobster were near the mall inCasper. So it was a big damn

(01:30:15):
deal to go to Casper, whichis about two hours south where I grew
up, or to Billions, Montana, about two hours north. But you
know, that was civilization, man. But the city of Casper is not
immune to some of the other insanitygoing on with quote unquote big cities.
And in the interview, this isthird world country stuff, man. The
mayor of Casper, Bruce Nell talkedabout how they had been overrun. A

(01:30:40):
little chunk of the city had beenoverrun by homeless people, about two hundred
homeless individuals. And what's crazy isthere was a motel, this Econo Lodge.
I know right where this is,and I think, I think I
have to be sure if it's theone that's next to the Super eight,
which I think it is. Whenwe traveled for football one year to play
Kelly Walsh High School in Casper,because we try you're traveling so far from

(01:31:05):
football, you literally stay overnight.I think we actually stayed at this econolage.
But eventually it closed down, itwas abandoned, it got it turned
into a bank owned and it wasjust kind of there and apparently it got
overrun by vagrants. Man, butit does, it says Adjason's nearby park.

(01:31:25):
So I think it's the part thatsits right on the river there,
so Platte River to any who.It turned into a bit of a problem,
and according to Nell, the motel, along with the river park there
an area was overrun and destroyed bysome two hundred squatters. Pictures published in

(01:31:47):
news reports show piles and piles ofgarbage, as well as five hundred pounds
of human feces and the motel justripped to shreds. Absolute devil station,
and now they're trying to figure out, well, we're gonna need an ordinance.
The city has since condemned the propertybeen boarded up by the bank.

(01:32:08):
It's a little bit on the banktoo, I mean the city. Obviously
there's some enforcement on private property,but you probably should just raised the whole
thing, man, because it didn'tlook like they're going to rebuild it.
Yeah. Population of Casper fifty eightyfive forty three. The estimate there's about
two hundred homeless, so's there's nota huge population, mostly because I don't

(01:32:29):
know if you know this well,there's kind of miserable in Casper. I
never like Casper because, unlike manyof the places in Wyoming, once you
get south of the Bighorn Mountains orthe Tetons, we are out of the
mountain ranges, Wyoming's a bit ofa wind swept hell hole. Not in
a bad way, but it's justlike it'll cut through you on I eighty.

(01:32:51):
Like the favorite sport of the weatherdown there is blowing trucks over.
It's crazy talent. If you've everdriven through there. That's why I lived
up in the north part, rightat the base of the mountains. And
a mountain range that runs north tosouth provides relief from stuff like that,
so you get it's a little moretemperate. You get a little banana belt

(01:33:12):
action there. But Casper was weirdbecause it was a small mountain range.
So the big Horns ended north toCasper and the small mountain range Hogdon in
that area that ran east to west, and Casper sat on the north side
of that range. So but ithad the river ran through there and whatnot.

(01:33:34):
It became a you know, thebiggest city at the time. But
there's an easy way to deal withthis. So because it has that small
mountain range and that part where thisbacks right up to it, and the
hotels are right there and whatnot.I don't know if you know this,
Bears love a trash pile. Infact, one of the famous tourists at

(01:33:55):
tractions and Yellowstone for years and yearswhere they had bleachers set up, is
they'd bring tour us in to visitYellowstone. They go look at the springs
and stuff, and then they'd goand sit in this arena and then they
would dump all the park trash inthe middle, and then the bears would
come running in and gobble it upand people watch that. So if you
got piles of garbage, man,just get the hogan on bears down there.

(01:34:18):
I probably this is going to solveall the problems. Man, boom
done. But now they're getting soft. They're like, God, maybe we
need some more rules, even thoughwe already have rules about you know,
trespassing and going on other people's propertyand putting giant feces piles. But whatever.
But yeah, many of you sentme that article. I'm very sad

(01:34:40):
to see it. Little moon BatteryJackson was really the where you kind of
and Laramie were really the areas whereyou had like the little blue pockets in
Wyoming because the University of Wyoming's andLaryamie and then Jackson is all rich Californians.
But it started to spread. Man, there's this like misconception, right
that like if you were just togive homeless people a house or a home,

(01:35:04):
that they would be fine. Buta lot of a lot of people
who are homeless are mentally ill rememberor addicts. Yes, And that's obviously
what they're dealing with here, whichis why they couldn't get into the shelter,
which the actually have a pretty goodshelter system and casper. But if
you won't receive treatment and if youwon't stop shooting heroin, they don't want
you in the shelters there. Soright, so they need like, you
know, help or rehab or something, because a lot of times if you

(01:35:26):
were to say you were to givethese people like mansions or something, it
would be destroyed within like a month'stime. Yeah, well you've seen that.
Remember the they did this in NewYork where they put a bunch of
people up in one of the whatis it the Franklin Hotel or up there,
and it's just getting it's just gettinghammered. Man. Oh, and
then didn't they do a big crewRemember in Oakland they pulled a cruise ship
in and put a bunch of homelesspeople on there. And now it's it's

(01:35:48):
like you wish you were on theTitanic. But to your point, yeah,
no, it didn't. It didnot farewell, and it didn't farewell
because there's larger issues that many ofthose folks are dealing with. So do
I think that the you know,an abandoned econo Lodge could have feasibly been.
Honestly, I don't know how youhow you live in Casper, Wyoming

(01:36:11):
without access to heating elements, evenduring the summer when that win. That's
one of the windiest places on earthbecause that East West Mountain Range, it
creates this funnel, so when thewind's blowing, it literally blows it right
through there. I never liked Casper. I kind of We went there because
the mall was there, the restaurantswere there, and whenever there was a

(01:36:33):
concert in Wyoming, they would gothe Casper Events Center or Big Rodeo or
whatnot. So we enjoyed that.And that has a great bar called the
Beacon, which also hosted shows,and even if you were younger, they
would have shows where you'd have towear a wrist band if you were under
twenty one. But other than that, I never liked Casper, And one
of it was the weather. Icannot imagine being homeless there, of all

(01:36:57):
places, even in this busted assEcono Lodge man just crazy town. So
yeah, I got your emails,Thank you everybody. But I'm just saying,
bears love trash piles. There's abunch of bears there at Hoganon,
which is the mountain's the name ofthe ski area too, But it's just
this little mini mountain range. Yeah, go down, and nobody wants to

(01:37:19):
be around a bunch of bears gorgingon a trash pile. So but then
there's nothing around gasp for for liketwo hours. Man, you could like
you couldn't walk to another city.You can walk to Douglas maybe, and
that would be that would take youdays. You just you have no idea
how remote it is out there.It's just crazy, man, all right,

(01:37:40):
eight forty five Jeff Maher Weather Channel, he joins us. Now,
all right, my man, Well, it's definitely not win or whether they're
dealing with there or anywhere for thatmatter, because it's hot and Jeff's gonna
keep it that way, So goahead, sir. Yeah, I canna
stay hot here over the next fewdays and then we'll eventually cool a little
bit during the weekend with highs inthe mid eighties. And that's not the
case though, is you're going tobe out and about into this afternoon with

(01:38:01):
sunshine and hide you're ninety seven.That he did in decks around one hundred.
Adding the humidity overnight clear, light, winds in a low dropping to
seventy two, sunny and even hottertomorrow. Hide your ninety eight once again
a triple digit. He didn't dexsunshine in a hive ninety six Thursday,
a few scattered after room thunderstorms Fridaywith a high ninety one, and scattered
thunderstorms during the weekend as highs hitthe mid eighties. Okay, all right,

(01:38:21):
well I'm I'm assuming we'll have ourguy back tomorrow. But as we
talked about, that was quite abutt whooping Clemson took. So if he's
still not feeling one hundred percent,maybe we'll talk tomorrow. Sir, Yeah,
I have a good one, allright, Jeff Marr from the Weather
Channel. Yeah, stagic off todaybecause Clemson duke and his daughter goes to

(01:38:45):
Clemson, so he was all pumped, and well we know how that went.
So anyway, Jeff Bellinger, hedidn't give he didn't care about it.
So he'll be here in just afew minutes. Hang on, keeping
you connected. This is ninety fourfive WPTI in the Triad and one oh

(01:39:09):
six one FM Talk in the Triangle. All right, welcome back. It
is eight fifty two Jeff Bellinger joinsUS ready and rested up for a long
weekend. What's going on, JeffWell, Good morning. Casey stocks closed
out last week with a mixed session. Looks like the index has made do
a little back pedaling at the openingthis morning. Now futures are actually they've

(01:39:31):
just turned higher. They're up twentysix points. They were lower all morning
up until now. We get theConference Board's Employment Trends index and the government's
monthly reading on factory orders at teno'clock this morning. Economists at Goldman Sachs
think the odds are the economy willavoid a recession. Goldman now sees just
a fifteen percent chance of a USrecession. Apple takes the wraps off the

(01:39:54):
next generation iPhones a week from today. Bloomberg reports. One major change involve
the charging port. Apple devices haveused lightning connectors for a decade. Bloomberg's
Mark German reports that after resisting foryears, the company will shift the port
to a USBC connector. Climate riskis on most house hunters radar screens now.

(01:40:15):
Zillo reports the way people shop forreal estates being reshaped. Eighty percent
of home shoppers consider the risks whendeciding where they want to live. Flood
risk is the biggest concern, followedby wildfires, extreme temperatures, hurricanes,
and drought. Walt Disney owned TVchannels still blacked out on charter communications cable
systems. Now Disney is escalating thefight, saying that viewers should know they

(01:40:42):
have an option. They can discontinuetheir charter subscriptions and subscribe to Hulu with
its live TV option. They'll getback all of the Disney channels, as
well as dozens of other cable networksthey watch via charter. Variety reports Disney
started launching a series of media promotionsover the weekend. Rolling Stones announced the

(01:41:03):
release of their first studio album ineighteen years. The title is Hackney Diamonds.
Details about the release will be livestreamed on YouTube tomorrow. Elon Musk
blames the Anti Defamation League for asixty percent drop in advertising sales for his
ex short messaging platform. Musk saysthe ADL has tried to kill the service

(01:41:25):
formerly known as Twitter with charges ofanti semitism and Casey The Equalizer three was
the holiday weekend's top movie. TheSony Pictures release had taken in thirty four
and a half million dollars. Thatwas as of Sunday, according to com
Score. Casey, alrighty, yougot a burning Man, you get stuck
in the mud. No, Ididn't. Didn't make it this year.

(01:41:46):
Okay, saw you saw that insanity? Though I did? Oh yeah,
yeah, yeah. Pictures were great, But then I saw like Chris Rock,
Dannika Patrick, and our former Solicitorgeneral all had to hike out of
there. So who just pandemonium?Man? All right, well, thank
you, Jeff, okay, havea good day to take care of all
right, man, I just assoon he went, yeah, that was

(01:42:12):
that was nuts. They were andthey were hacking on the former solicitor general.
Is this dude's name? Yeah?Are We tweeted the story out earlier
if you want to see more ofit, because he puts this, Yeah,
here we go, Neil Katail Katielquote. It was an incredibly harrowing
six mile hike at midnight through heavyand slippery mud. But I got safely

(01:42:38):
out of burning Man. Never beenbefore. It was fantastic, dude,
And I love like the Special Forcesdudes clowning on this guy, like,
oh, a six mile hike atmidnight in mud welcome to Ranger School.
Son. Oh yeah, but thennow, like people had a shelter and

(01:42:59):
look, here's the if there's gonnabe a breakdown, societal breakdown at a
place and it's a burning man.I can't think of a group of people,
with all the weirdos there that wouldresort to cannibalism faster, do you
know what I mean? Like ifthey were, if they were along the
Donner party, they wouldn't have waitedeight days or whatever it was. I
think day one they'd just be They'dbe fat and happy and pulling straws,

(01:43:21):
like you don't want to be ona raft with them. So I understand
why people were literally willing to walkout of there. Man, h Ross
didn't even make it Ross. Wedid some ground penetrating radar under your henge
though, and we've seen some soilanomalies. So why why do you have

(01:43:45):
a mass grave under your hinge?I'm assuming that's what it is, right,
Why would you do such a thing. We're probably gonna have to actually,
Oh, how was your real quickly? How was your your game?
Oh? My space game, Spacegame? It was good man. I
enjoyed it. We streamed it onFriday. It was fun. I've only
put four hours into it because mylife is pain. Apparently I want to

(01:44:10):
try to play more of it.We did two streams on the weekend.
It's fun, man haters. Idipped in for a few minutes and watch
it, just kind of watch it. Yeah, it was good. Look
fun. I didn't see you likenuke and a planet or flying to the
Sun or some of the other stuffyou were kind of I want to attempt
to go to the Sun. Ido want to try it. I did
see you decide that you could beon the planet, another planet's surface with

(01:44:32):
no helmet, and I didn't seemto well no, So i got off
to the plant's surface and I'm surroundedby my people, and I decided I
want to do it a certain mydominance, and so I'm braver than that.
So I took off my space helmetand nearly suffocated the death, and
they respected me for herself off acliff or something. Right, didn't even
make it to the cliff, Soall right, and then probably you ate

(01:44:53):
beef. How do I know?Because apparently just twelve percent of Americans,
mostly men, consume up to fiftypercent of the US beef supply good.
That means there's twelve percent of peoplewho get it. ROSSI. It's a
lot of protein, like an ungodlyamount of protein, So I'm gonna assume

(01:45:15):
you're on team twelve percent. Butalso it kind of creates a list for
these moonbats who want to get ridof the cows, like who the problem
is? Yeah, new study period. But the people that you know the
beef are the ones with the muscles, right, I was just gonna say,
you gotta fight now, you gottafight the well muscled army of carnivores.

(01:45:35):
Wop wop. Don't know how that'sgonna work. Yeah, I need
study reveals fifty per just the fiftypercent of the US beef is consumed any
given day by just twelve percent ofthe US population. Yeah, the ones
you get it, then I needa state now. I retweeted this earlier
over the weekend with the I'm doingmy part from space super space
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