All Episodes

October 21, 2025 • 81 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
I was just reading a little breaking news from overnight
last night. I'm trying to figure out if they've actually
made a statement on this. Check the Cincinnati chief of police.
You might remember her from right after you had a
pretty high profile videoed incident during some sort of music

(00:25):
festival or whatever it was here a few months.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
Ago, where they.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
Beat the crap out of a number of people. But
the one that was most visually remembered, I believe, had
to be the woman who looked like she was dead
after she got hit, just laying on the ground there,
eyes wide open, will Creed reference. And then this woman
got on a microphone and was like, all right, everyone

(00:55):
needs to calm down, don't worry, everything's fine. All you
guys are racist, And it's like, why what do you
tell you? Oh, and don't share videos. It's irresponsible of
the media to show you this. And I think everyone
collectively was like, who the hell are you? I mean,

(01:20):
who are you to tell people that they're not allowed
to report on this thing just because it makes you
look bad?

Speaker 1 (01:24):
And then to you know, hold press conference after press
conference basically saying not everything's fine, And you know, how
quickly did that story go away, and then that woman
has to go on an interview tour and explain how
horribly they treated her.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
Remember they she they finally got cops, this this group
that was there lad that night, and the police who
showed up wouldn't even do anything that day. They were
kind of joking about it, and the whole world for
a moment, thought she was dead because we didn't have
an initial update. We just see a woman lying there

(02:02):
looking like every dead body we've ever seen on every
Law and Order episode.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
Well, she's been placed on.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
Leave, and I'm just trying to figure out if it's
incompetence or if there's something deeper here. And right now,
it just looks like they've decided that she's incompetent, which
is weird because ross you remember those pressers where she's
scolding the media. I realized she was incompetent then. And
I haven't been to Cincinnati in forever, but I'm glad

(02:29):
they came around to it.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
I don't really know.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Anything about the assistant chief who's now the interim chief
or whatever, but I don't know, man, things are happening,
and I you know, I don't live in Cincinnati, so
I haven't been able to follow it. But the reason
why I'm bringing it up this morning is it feels
a lot like the vibe I get from police and

(02:55):
elected officials in Charlotte that don't believe you're lying. Nice thing,
I mean, getting the nineteen eighty fourish nature of it,
just the you know, don't trust your lion eyes.

Speaker 1 (03:08):
Everything's fine.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
We talked on Friday with Pete about this because last
week Charlotte Mecklenburg Police had their little third quarter crime
presser and I happened to catch some of it online.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
In fact, we played some.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
You know, we played a little bit of the audio
of the news coverage talking about the fifteen year old
who had one hundred and eleven arrests in like two
years and two months average you more than once per week.
And in the same presser you had a question directed
at the community the police and.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
They're like, hey, is uptown safe?

Speaker 2 (03:49):
And they're like, oh, yeah, absolutely, and talking to Pete,
I don't think that's the case, and residents of Charlotte
don't think that's the case. And ironically, they had another
shooting or excuse me, another four murders, but one specifically
in the uptown of parking lot of a bar which
had had a previous officer involved shooting a few months ago.

(04:13):
And it gives me hope because even though I don't
broadcast in Charlotte, I think that if there is movement
in Charlotte or they bring in the National Guard there,
it forces soft on crime policies in the cities we
you know, we live in the cities that I broadcast

(04:34):
in and to rethink this because if not the tie
the public tide is turned, they're done putting up with it.
And you know, the last thing they want is the
Fed's coming in here and being like, all right, I
guess we're gonna I guess we're gonna have to do
something because you're not doing it. So you know, does

(04:55):
Cincinnati influence Charlotte, which can influence Greensboro Durham Ally, Winston said,
I don't know, but you know, a few years ago,
I don't know that you'd have seen movement on this,
And now there's there's cities I think rethinking these policies
that Trump hasn't even in some cases threatened to send
troops to just because they don't want to end up there.

(05:18):
And and you know, the fight now is Seattle, and
I guess San Francisco was watching, which seemed to.

Speaker 1 (05:24):
Be on his radar. Uh.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
And you know the mayor's are mad as l. Gavin
Newsom's tweeting all over and it's like, well you have
you have an opportunity, especially in Seattle, like clearly you
know what the problems are. I have constantly recommended just
because I think it's very well done. I think it's
great local news, uh, stuff which you don't see very

(05:47):
often a lot of big cities, which is this two
part documentary series that one of the TV stations in
Seattle did.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Called Seattle Is Dying.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
Like there's your roadmap, go get the crazy Oscar the
grouch dude.

Speaker 1 (06:03):
There's a dude who like, it's just it's such.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
A weird says. There's a frequent flyer. It's a white dude.
He's a druggy. I I assume there's some mental health
issues there too, but he's just a NW sense and
they're they're interviewing him and showing an interaction. Dude's just
in a trash can. I mean he's physically in a
trash can.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
But don't let that think, you know, don't let don't
let that convince you that he's just you know, at
Sasame Street stand he's he's a violent criminal.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
And it just it was everywhere. So any movement I see,
I'm gonna look at and go all right, and other cities,
look at what other cities are doing, and and frankly
with here's what I think Trump needs to do for
for these cities. And I know some of you I
might not like this. If if your city's out of

(06:56):
control and you're you're a possibility to basically have the
National Guard come in there and just just be a
visual deterrent, which, by the way of the cities that
are in there, you don't really see the national Guard
tangling with these protesters.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
They just stand there. Well wash it.

Speaker 2 (07:18):
In DC, they're standing around and that works. The numbers,
the numbers don't lie. If he if if you've identified
a city and say, hey, if you guys don't get
your crap together, I'm gonna send three hundred troops in here,
and whoever that is goes, I'm gonna I'm gonna try
to sue you and go judge shops so we can

(07:39):
jam this up like they did in Portland and then
just lost.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
Then you send six hundred. It's like a.

Speaker 2 (07:47):
Judge who's you know, there's any of those scenes you
see we are like, I'm gonna hold you in contempt.

Speaker 1 (07:52):
That's gonna be thirty days, and they're like a few judge,
They're like, that's sixty.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
I don't care, that's ninety, right, do that with the
National Guard be threatened to send three hundred and they
want to get law suit.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
Ye, then when they lose.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
You send six hundred.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
Let them know you're just gonna the number will continue
to go up every time. Or you can just be
part of the solution instead of being part of the problem.
Why don't people take my advice? They really really should,
because we know stuff here on the show.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
You know what else?

Speaker 4 (08:27):
I know.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
Let's see here, lots of stuff for that matter here here.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Well, let me do this. We're gonna take a break
and then we'll come back. I'll give you a little
rundown of what we're gonna be talking about on the show.
We got a little I honestly, I don't know what
the answer is. We have a weird little airline story
to tell you about, so we will definitely get it.
Not the not the dude threatening to shoot up the
Atlanta Airport. We'll tell you about that as well. But

(08:57):
because I read the headline and I'm like, oh, geez,
the stupid airline. Do now, And then I read the story,
which you should because too many people just read headlines,
and I'm like, I don't know, man, I'm kind of
on the fence over this one.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
So we'll get into that and uh much more.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
Oh and the absolute as a history as a guy
likes history, the absolute lunacy of people who think their
White House historical experts was possibly the most annoying thing yesterday.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
I'll explain what I mean I got.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
I pulled some tweets just to give you an example
that we're getting a lot of traction that clearly people
know nothing and not even I mean like basic basic
facts clearly escaped them or they just never committed them
to memory as it pertains to the physical structure that
is the White House. So I will use valuable broadcast

(09:51):
time to lay a few things out for you so
that if you encounter this in the wild, you can
respond and then you don't have to go and you know,
Google and stuff, So stick around. All that more coming
up hanging out all right, I don't know if you
guys saw so last night the.

Speaker 1 (10:08):
Blue Jays clinched their trip to the Big Game or
series of games.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
I should say, sorry, I got in corporate speak super Bowl.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
Mode, like, don't size super Bowl, you have to say
the Big Game. Except we're on news talk. We do news,
so it's okay.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
But yeah, the World Series is going to be Blue
Jays Dodgers, which I think is hilarious because and look,
I don't know who's gonna win, but I know that
the Blue Jays one of the one of their one
of their studs who was like, it's been things have
been very clutch, but they have suffered some injuries. They
did they were able to get it done last night,

(10:46):
and the Dodgers are just firing on all cylinders. Man,
just all so like for the US to give Canada
another l this year for some reason, it's just hilarious
to me. So Ross, I'm assuming you're you're a Dodgers fan,
even though you're Yankees fan. For the purpose of the
World Series, I mean, we can turn this into a

(11:08):
whole battle of the country's thing.

Speaker 5 (11:09):
I'm completely checked out, but I know, you know from
what I've seen on my feed in the news and stuff.
I would assume that you know, LA is gonna win, right.

Speaker 2 (11:17):
They've also spent like a gazillion dollars on their team,
as we talked about with the Denise there. But like
it's just the whole canon of versus us thing just
since that's still a simmerin simmern thing there.

Speaker 5 (11:31):
I mean, I can't, I still can't get over the
weekend of like Otani's performance and it doesn't matter. We
dropped two nukes on them and they played the long
game to a viscerate Babe Ruth And it's diabolical, it
really is.

Speaker 2 (11:43):
He's got to tip your hat man incredible. Have we
tested him for radio activity?

Speaker 1 (11:51):
What if that's the thing? Right?

Speaker 5 (11:53):
I just saw a montage of, you know, of that game,
of all the strikeouts and all the home runs, and
it's just absurd.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
For those of you don't know, Otani pitches and hits
really well both, which you know that used to be
a thing. And then for obviously you know that it
really wasn't a thing. And it made.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
Sense that it wasn't a thing because if.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
You pitch, and you don't pitch every game, and so
having you then in the lineup there every five days doesn't.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
Make good used if you're a good hitter of your skills,
it's a waste. So you just haven't said. But Otani
just comes in and just kills it.

Speaker 2 (12:33):
But he kills him, man, and then they can rotate
him around with what he does and the guy.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
I mean, it just it was.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
It was pretty amazing what he accomplished. Even if you
didn't watch, you should go watch the hockey.

Speaker 5 (12:45):
It was like ten k's and like six scoreless innings
and three home runs.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
Yeah, is that good? It's pretty good. Yeah, Yeah, I
think that's pretty good.

Speaker 2 (12:55):
So yeah, man, the the whole, just the whole Canona
versus US angle. I saw people already chirping, you know,
like uh, doing the trash talk, and I don't know,
maybe it brings people a little closer. I think, chirpin.
I think people who actually understand sports understand the the

(13:17):
chirpin's just the trash talk, right.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
I think it's a I think it's an.

Speaker 2 (13:21):
Amazingly fun part of sports. The amount of Packer fan
friends that I have that I will just send that
I'll send memes to on the weekend, right, Uh, that'll
send them to me, like when the night when Carson
wentz through that pick six because uh, you know why not?
Wall said they're great.

Speaker 1 (13:42):
I my phone.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
I glanced down at my phone and then it just
started to populate and I just smiled, and I just
knew who was going to be there. Like I love
that part of it, and that's the friendly side of it.

Speaker 1 (13:55):
So I don't know.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
Maybe maybe maybe that cools some of the the butt hurt.
But I don't know that the most Americans are really
butt hurt. But there's a lot of Canadians that are
butt hurt. So we shall u we shall see.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
All right. Uh, let me get into a couple of things.

Speaker 2 (14:15):
Oh it said it was gonna give you a little
run down, all right, so we got we gotta talk
about the mayor's race in New York. I don't know
if I like what's happening here. I understand that people
are trying to get to strategic now, but this whole
uh where Cuomo look Cuomo against Mondami. It's it's clearly

(14:36):
one is arguably more destructive. But are we forgetting Cuomo
killing all those old people?

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Is that? Why? Like did that not happen? Ross? Did
I imagine Cuomo stuff? And grandma's and Grandpa's in the home,
so that like thousands of them died, including the Fox
News reporters, and that happened, right.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
We were all pretty mad about that, and the part
where he was he was on TV every day and
everyone was like salivating over him and he was just lying,
just lying. The Cacoday radio program, I've connestly on the
show talked about how in California, like the all the

(15:21):
TV stations, especially in southern California, so San Diego, but La,
it's on steroids, Like you build your local TV station
to be able to cover car chases and it's an
amazing thing and for whatever, and it's just built into
the society there that there's once a week there's gonna
be the most insane police chase you've ever seen, and
then everybody stops what they're doing and just watches, perfectly acceptable,

(15:47):
just stops and watches, and they love it. And the
ratings are huge, but they have to kind of pretend.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
That they hate it. It's like, you know what it
feels like.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
It feels like the first verse of don Hen's a
dirty laundry. That's the best way I can describe it.
That's a great song, by the way, and so, and
they've changed a little because they were showing too many
like people's heads exploding and like bodies flying out of
cars because they're, you know, rolling it at one hundred

(16:18):
and twenty. So they had they do a lot more
pullback shots. Now if they think something's gonna happen, is
really an art to this thing. And then the funniest
thing is immediately after it is so abundantly clear that
the dude is dead, could you all just watch it?
They then have to cut to the studio where the

(16:38):
host have to put on the most like an Oscar Worthy.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
We didn't mean to show you that performance. Oh it's so.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
And we had a doozy out there in La yesterday,
So I want you to listen for that. You'll pick
up on it immediately. Then I'll tell you kind of
what happened and why I think it happened. But I
just started laughing when I saw this this morning because
the overacting on the Oh, I can't believe we just

(17:11):
showed you that. We're just trying to be news. No,
you're trying to be slate. It's okay, it's fine, just
own it, show it on slow mo replay, change the
lighting so we get a better picture.

Speaker 1 (17:27):
Bringing uh, bringing a one of those body language experts.

Speaker 5 (17:30):
I I kind of felt like the dude's reaction was
real because I didn't.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
I think it's real.

Speaker 2 (17:35):
It's the words they're having to say, right, wow, No
you so you think he really didn't mean to show
him that.

Speaker 5 (17:41):
I don't think anybody expected him to jump out and
fall and die like that. No, not at all.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
Yeah, Dudel, people dumping out and then getting all right,
well you kind of gave up. What happened a guy
getting out of his car and smoked by a car.

Speaker 5 (17:55):
I was more like his reaction seemed real. It was
my reaction watching it, but it was her reaction to
me that was like very cold, like she's a psychopath.

Speaker 1 (18:03):
Well, let's look if you.

Speaker 2 (18:06):
If you, I will say this, if you are one
of those LA TV stations and you've been there for
a minute, you've covered a bunch of these, So I
don't know. Maybe it's also she's a little jaded on it,
but all right, I like your perspective. Let's listen to
this and see how it sounds. Okay, so uh, getting.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
Out of the colt breaks slamming on the brakes trying
to get out.

Speaker 5 (18:28):
Whoa, whoa wow, Oh my god. No, you don't want
to show them on TV either.

Speaker 1 (18:36):
Oh my god.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
We just saw oh dude, when I was in school,
when I in the nineties, when I was there, they
would show Yeah, but.

Speaker 5 (18:42):
It's not the nineties anymore, and they don't want to
show them on TV anymore.

Speaker 1 (18:44):
They meet I agree with you, Yeah, yeah, yeah they have.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
I think they got in trouble with the FCC at
one point, for uh, there was it was a guy
who shot himself.

Speaker 5 (18:54):
Yeah, you can't right, you can't show that exactly. And
and the way like the van slow rolls to the
side and the guy quickly just jumps out and leaps.
It's like really fat. I think it was a completely
real reaction that dude. And the woman is like, well
his head was a viscerated and turned to missed.

Speaker 4 (19:09):
And woman woman, Yeah, yeah, so he's a cold wench,
like what is happening with you have some human reaction here, man,
So so to just to visually describe it to you,
and then I'll play the full audio. He's he's going
I don't know at the top, he's in the lanes
at the top of the screen. Uh, and he pulls
against the center divider the van he's running in gets

(19:32):
out of that van. At first I thought he was
gonna like slam himself because the vehicle's still moving when
he jumps out. He jumps over the center divider, and
as he enters the lane of traffic and opposed the
opposing way, he's immediately smoked by a car that's doing
like seventy miles an hour. That's what you're watching.

Speaker 5 (19:52):
Yeah, And the thing is like, like I feel bad
for the dude, but at the same point because I
didn't expect to see that, like it happened so fast,
but also like, yeah, I feel bad for him, but
it's also so dumb.

Speaker 1 (20:04):
It's incredibly dumb.

Speaker 2 (20:06):
And and and by the way, it's I think that
today's youthful criminals would be well served to have played
some Frogger because I would have known not to do this, right,
You play some Frogger back of the day Ross, Oh.

Speaker 5 (20:20):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I did. I even had a version
that they had a version of the Atari where it
was like you were a chicken crossing the road and
not a frog. It was like the poverty version of Frog.
I had that one too.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
Oh look at you like you're a hipster right now,
you're Oh Froger, that's so mainstream, man, have you ever
heard of h.

Speaker 5 (20:36):
No, Froger was better. I'm just saying we were so poor.
First we had the chicken poverty version. Oh no, and
then we got Froggers like I've made the big time,
moving on up.

Speaker 2 (20:46):
Yeah, so it's clear today, clearly, Yeah, nobody's played Froger.
That's doing these because you once you get out in
the middle, that's where it gets you.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
It hones you in.

Speaker 3 (20:55):
Man.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
So all right, one more time with the full cut.
So getting out of the.

Speaker 2 (21:02):
Car, breaks, slamming all the brakes, trying to get out.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
Whoa, whoa, wow, oh my god, oh no, oh.

Speaker 3 (21:11):
Why he got hit?

Speaker 1 (21:12):
Okay, we're gonna keep our shot.

Speaker 6 (21:16):
Who is being pursued get out of their car and
actually get hit by another speeding car. I mean it
was just the other one. As Desmond was just talking about,
it's very curvy, it's narrow, it's very narrow, and you
just had that Carol really dividing the two sides.

Speaker 5 (21:36):
Yeah, you know, you have these like studies of like
people like you know, with the industry of the most
psychopathic people.

Speaker 3 (21:41):
She's not.

Speaker 5 (21:41):
It's like you just will yeah, she's because she's nuts.
It's not a normal human reaction. It's like you just
witnessed the jfk assassination and you're going over the geometry
of the road calmly, well, you know that's that can
happen if the book depositories right there and the road
wines out of forty five, Like, what are you talking about? Woman?

Speaker 2 (21:59):
Maybe she's got Maybe she's got ex Maybe she's ex
military they beat you.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Calm under pressure man. Maybe she's seen a hundred of these.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
I'm not necessarily the fact I watched a man throw
a baby on one of these. I've talked about it now.
The police caught the baby.

Speaker 3 (22:16):
So that was good.

Speaker 5 (22:17):
And I hope when you watched it you weren't like, Okay,
they threw a baby. You should have been like, oh
my god, that threw the baby. That's a normal they did,
like the baby. There was no spiral there the baby.
It was a wobbly throw.

Speaker 1 (22:26):
So no, So I'm like, I know when I was
I remember.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
Distinctly one of the people, one of my roommates, was like,
that can't be a real like we were trying to
pretend that it was clearly not a real baby, because
you would throw a baby because it was awful, Right,
it's so crazy. Yeah, you're not analyzing it like you're like, oh, well, two,
it just underthrew the pass, right, well, he.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
Does do that.

Speaker 2 (22:47):
No, we were trying to make it make sense and
you're just you're not gonna make it make sense in
certain situations. So all right, So you so you think
she's essentially just a stone cold cycle.

Speaker 5 (22:58):
I mean, maybe that's who you want out in the field.

Speaker 3 (23:00):
Though.

Speaker 5 (23:01):
You should send her to like, you know, like a
war zone or something, because she's going to be super cool.

Speaker 3 (23:05):
You know.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
Yeah, yeah, just calm under pressure.

Speaker 4 (23:08):
But Jones just died a horrific death step down of
land mine. Anyway, we're going over to Hey, let's go
to Bob and Sports. Yeah any landmines with the with
the playoffs.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
There to uh throwing that pass. I don't know, man,
I mean that, yeah, clearly that's what you want. I look,
here's the here's the deal there, we was.

Speaker 1 (23:33):
There. Have you ever seen a TV person start crying
on the air?

Speaker 2 (23:38):
And I don't mean like at nine to eleven where
we did see some of that, but like for some
of the for things like this, I mean I really
have but but but but it's not it's not the norm, right,
and so like there's a certain you got to keep
it together. Man, what were you going at? What was
where you saw somebody crying on there? I'm not making
fun of you know, because it's it's just a human

(23:59):
reac Actually, you know, I know, I've seen it. I know,
but like you know, they would prefer that you don't because.

Speaker 5 (24:05):
I mean, I know, I know, I know I've done it.

Speaker 2 (24:08):
Right, but but you have, but you have to tell
you part of it is like I'm I have to
do this and I have a job to do. It's
like you have to be able to compartmentalize. But I
don't know that that necessarily makes you a psycho. But
also I know a lot of TV people that are
straight up psycho yep, So who knows, right, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (24:28):
Man, but this the this the whole the whole thing there.

Speaker 2 (24:33):
But yeah, no, I do remember distinctly that I think
it was k T L A got a lot of
hot water because they had a very close shot.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
This guy gets out of his car. He has I
think it was a shotgun.

Speaker 2 (24:45):
There's and he clearly he has a shotgun, and clearly
he's not pointing it at officers. He's pointing it at himself,
puts it up under his chin, pulls the trigger, and
they're they're zoomed in on him. And that right there.
I think there was a whole big thing because of that,
and it fundamentally changed how they do camera work. But

(25:07):
like some of I told you, some of his TV
stations have.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Multiple choppers ready.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
You have like ready rooms, like you know, like for
fighter wings, but for helicopter guys.

Speaker 5 (25:16):
You'll you'll be watching like on Patrol Live with Dan
Abrams or whatever, and something terrific or awful will happen
live and they'll just immediately cut from it and be like,
we can't show that.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (25:26):
Yeah, that's that's where we are, all right, six forty
five here on the CaCO Day radio program. Hang on,
I love me some history here. I don't always get
it right, but I try.

Speaker 1 (25:36):
I don't. Sometimes my brain connects stuff.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
And this is just this is why if there's an
opportunity to do a little refresher, it's always funny, which
you kind of forgot about something you're like, oh, yeah,
that's that's that thing. Yeah, so we're gonna get a
little white house stuff there. Let me give you an
example how my brain like misconnects things. And you guys
probably experienced this where you've seen this person a hundred times.

(26:00):
You know their name is not what you think it is,
and for whatever reason, it's just ingrained in your brain
the wrong one.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
We used to have a sales guy in Minnesota that
I always called the other one of the other sales
guy's names, and there's no, there's no they're not even
look alike. I don't know why, but there's another there's
another thing, and it's every like whenever.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
This once a year, I'm reminded of this. So yesterday
you had a lot of governmental accounts and politicians that
were wishing everyone happy dwale.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
Uh And I I know this to be a a
a an Indian holiday. I know this, I am, I am.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
This is is not a question in my brain. And
every time I see that word, I think of the
song Counting Blue Cars by.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
I know that they're separate things and it's not that's
not even a me trying to be an a hole.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
If you from over the.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
Holiday or anything. I'm glad, I have a happy Dwali.
I don't know why. It's like misconnected in my brain.
So little things like that.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
And then there's like, but that's one of those things
that's it's human, right, it's hard, it's hard to hard
to control that.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
Then there's intentional ignorance that is something else entirely. And
so yesterday they started the construction of the White House ballroom,
and to do that, they had, you know, they've they've
opened up an outside wall over on that side of

(27:35):
the White House, and they had a picture of this
big hole in the White House and construction crews and
all that, and everybody is now a White House construction expert,
and some of it is the most ignorant garbage I've
ever seen.

Speaker 1 (27:48):
Let me let me give you an example of what
I'm seeing here. Where is this? What did you do
with that? Sorry? I yeah, here it is all right? Sorry, sorry, sorry, sorry,
I want to this chick's post.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
This is just a representative example that made me just
want to beat my head into the wall. All right,
So here is here is somebody who, by the way,
is a DC resident and are you ready worked for
the federal government. I believe it looks like she works

(28:30):
for the Smithsonian Holocaust Museum. Okay, so she is a
DC resident, works in a historical capacity. I don't know
what she does historical capacity, and then wrote this, the
White House is a historic National Landmark. There are few

(28:51):
changes that can be made to a historic building like
the White House that was built by enslaved persons in
the seventeen hundreds. For God's sake, why are we letting
him destroy our white House? He is only a temporary occupant.
So that's a good representative example. There are the amount
of people yesterday who just wanted to be mad at

(29:12):
Trump over this, who either think that the structure of
the White House that you see now is what it
looked like in seventeen you know, at seventeen ninety eighteen
hundred era when it was built and then Adams moved in.
When you think it's the same, you're an idiot. Also,

(29:32):
there's a little something that happened to that version.

Speaker 1 (29:35):
Of the White House too.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
Oh, I don't know, eighteen twelve to eighteen fourteen, there
was a little thing going on ross you're familiar with.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
This, yes, yeah, Also.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
This the this is gonna irritate some somebody's gonna call
me a racist for us.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
I don't care.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
I learned this. I learned this when I was much younger.
This is pretty neigh eleven. We could still do the
tours of the White House. They will tell you this,
and they talk about the original construction of the White House.
The you know in that the last the last decade
of the seventeen hundreds. And but it's the way that
it gets represented is that the White House was It's just,

(30:19):
you know, there's a hundred slaves that are just building
the thing, right, I've seen it visually depicted like that.

Speaker 1 (30:24):
That is not how the White.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
House was constructed, because most slaves don't have are not
you know, they're not construction crews that build giant Georgian mansions, right.
It's just it's a certain skill set, a skill set
that came and inspired by some European building styles. So
the actual hands on construction part at the site was

(30:47):
largely done by construction crews, most of which were European
crews because they were established crews, right were a very
young country that they brought over. A good portion were Scottish.
Of the mason the masonry crews now slaves were utilized
to mill and do the actual stone work, which arguably

(31:10):
is probably the worst part of it. So it's not
to say that it was not part of it, but
generally they were. You know, they're cooaring stones, they're carving
them off site, they're brought in, and the crews are
putting them together, crews who have experienced building these kinds
of things. Then more of eighteen twelve go fastward. Eighteen fourteen,
they burn it down. It has to be rebuilt. Nineteen
oh two major renovations and the addition of the part

(31:34):
where Trump's putting the ballroom, which and then in nineteen
forty two was also basically added and reconstructed. Then a
guy put a bowling alley in, then another guy did
outdoor work and put a basketball court in, and then
another guy changed the garden, and then the most recent
guy changed the garden. And by the way, a priority
project that they've been one team, not just in this

(31:55):
presidency but in many others, was in fact a ballroom.
It's been on a to do list since the forty
two renovation where they thought about putting one in but
they did not, So they're like what is hat and
and the other ding is Trump's paying for it, well
him and I think there's like four major donors. They're

(32:17):
paying for it, Ross and Nevers Chattel lit. More about
the White House, I mean just the do this year ignorance,
and some of it I think is intentionally. I there's
no way that woman doesn't know the White House at
the very least of the White House as we see
it is not the same one built in late seventeen
hundreds because the stupid British don't worry, we rekicked their butts.

(32:39):
After that, that being said, just the pearl clutching, and
then the other one. The other hot take I saw
is Trump's building a ballroom, which is proof that he's
a king because only kings have ballrooms, which is peak ignorance.
But also if you're talking, I'm not paying for it,
and you're not paying for it either, right, it's being

(33:04):
paid for now? Is will Trump take a little satisfaction
in the likelihood because the generally if something is renovated, reconstructed,
or created and then implemented the White House, most of
those rooms or features carry the president who did its

(33:25):
name with them, and that it may then be called
the Trump ballroom, but I could see some Democrat coming
in and renaming it just to be spiteful.

Speaker 1 (33:33):
So I don't know.

Speaker 2 (33:34):
Does he have a little satisfaction? Sure, he's got a
little bit of an ego. You can't I don't think
you can be president without it. Plus he clearly enjoys
trolling people, so there's that as well. But like not
knowing this or pretending not to know this and then go, oh,
you've got a ballroom. Oh he also does state dinners,

(33:55):
which I don't know. If you know this, you don't
pay for either. The way that that works. That's a
whole thing too, like the president's pay. There's a I
want to be clear, there's there's like different things that
are covered.

Speaker 1 (34:11):
There's a lot of things that are not covered.

Speaker 2 (34:14):
Uh and food is one of them, which I didn't
I that was was one of those little factoids. Now
what was the tap factoids? You told me Ross? This
was very interesting.

Speaker 5 (34:24):
Oh he's the one that turned the Executive office into
the to an oval shaped before he could fit because
he was so fat, and he was like this place
needs to be round her.

Speaker 2 (34:32):
You wouldn't mind if I double check that, right?

Speaker 5 (34:36):
I mean it is true though, so all right, we'll
go it's true. I don't I don't know if it
was the fat part, but I mean he.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
Did well, no, no, I'm saying the the.

Speaker 5 (34:48):
He said, you know what, you need to make these
tubs bigger too?

Speaker 1 (34:51):
Yeah it's good. Oh yeah, yeah yeah. I mean how
many times you have to pull them out of one
of those?

Speaker 5 (34:55):
What is is a tub for ants?

Speaker 3 (34:57):
What was his what was his.

Speaker 1 (34:59):
Call sign there?

Speaker 3 (35:01):
Tubby? Right?

Speaker 1 (35:03):
Yeah, yeah, Tubby's Oh, Tubby's down. They come in with
all the butter, right, get him out. I remember he's
got to pay for the foods. This is getting very
expensive for TAFT just to get them out of there. Man. Yeah,
it's just so.

Speaker 2 (35:20):
But then I'm like, maybe she doesn't because I saw
a Lay's potato chips, did a pole or they did
like research because they're rebranding the bags.

Speaker 1 (35:29):
I don't know if you know this, and.

Speaker 2 (35:33):
I feel dumb saying this out loud when I'm about
to tell you forty two percent of consumers didn't know
that Lay's chips were made from potatoes.

Speaker 5 (35:47):
I mean, is it's half of the name, right, potato chip? Yeah,
the potato chip.

Speaker 2 (35:53):
Well, no, because Lays just calls him lays on some
of the packaging and then you gotta like flip it over.
They showed different examples of over the years.

Speaker 1 (36:05):
But what did you think? What did you just in general,
what do chips come from?

Speaker 2 (36:11):
And I know that there's some healthier varieties that come from,
like you know, there's sweet potatoes and some of those,
but the basic your basic OG's of chips, potatoes.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
Or corn tortillas. Right, that's it. There you go, Like I.

Speaker 5 (36:30):
Can see being confused about say something like like cheetos
or like a cheesy pool or a sun chip. Yeah.
I saw there was somebody who ordered you can order
like I don't know how, but you can order cheetos
without all the cheese dust. And there was a photo
of these sons. Yeah, and he did like a review,
like an eating review of it. And wait, who would want.

Speaker 1 (36:50):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (36:51):
I think it was just like out of curiosity, any
wanted the clicks. But it looked like you know, packaging
peanuts or something. And he said, like it just tasted
like straight up plastic and it looks gross like Lincoln
with cheese. Yeah, yeah, Lincoln loves cheetos. I don't know
what the hell they are. And I do know this though. Okay,
I know Elliot, my crazy cat that I mentioned before

(37:13):
in the show. He loves boxes and the other thing
he loves though, is anything made of plastic. We constantly
have to have him stop eating plastic. If you have
like a case of water and it's covered with the you know,
the plastic, the white over it, he'll try to eat it.
Anything plastic. So when we recently had the addition done,
we did like the straight the spray foam for installation.
We had to block that off so he would to

(37:34):
go in there. We were trying to explain to the contractor,
our cat will go in there and try to eat
it all because he's insane when it comes to plastic.
So when Lincoln will be eating his Cheetos in the
living room, he'll have it on his little table there
by the couch, and we cannot get Elliott to stay
away from the Cheetos because they're probably plastic. So I
don't know what cheetos no, no, no.

Speaker 2 (37:54):
No, no, no, Clearly Cheetos were designed for cats. Yes,
look who's look who's the maskot?

Speaker 3 (38:00):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (38:01):
Right?

Speaker 5 (38:01):
Advertising? Right?

Speaker 1 (38:03):
Yes? Really who it was? Prido l or whoever?

Speaker 2 (38:07):
Owns Cheetos is clearly or no, maybe I think it's
PEPSI owns.

Speaker 1 (38:11):
Uh so?

Speaker 2 (38:12):
Like like what if they were made for cats and
they just tricked us into eating possibly, yeah, and your
cat like trying to tell you something.

Speaker 5 (38:20):
Potato chips. There's no way you should know what a
potato chip is made of, even if it doesn't say
potato chip and says, you know, lays chips or whatever.

Speaker 1 (38:28):
Right, that's good standard looking chip. It's potatoes.

Speaker 2 (38:32):
Oh so look, people don't know that and think that
somehow the founding fathers had the foresight to put in
a a nuke resistant bunker and some Tomahawk missiles.

Speaker 1 (38:44):
Then I don't know what we can do.

Speaker 2 (38:46):
Can you imagine Jefferson trying to explain to everybody else
why they need anti aircraft devices when none of those
were even words for the most part, Like he's using
words no one had ever heard.

Speaker 1 (38:58):
And yet they had the foresight. That's amazing, that's.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
What you believe, you people who don't know the chips
are made from potatoes. Let me grab a call here Andrew,
what's up?

Speaker 7 (39:12):
Hey, good morning, Casey. I just wanted to comment on
the White House. Do I had a friend who was
the contract manager for the construction manager with a company
contracted for the White House, and a lot of people
don't know. I didn't realize until he told me that
every first lady has a like it's a ridiculous amount

(39:37):
that they can use a taxpayer money to redo whatever
they want in the White House, like, for instance, Jill
Biden showed up. I'm thinking it's close to a million
dollars for one bathroom. And just because they imported like
eight different studs for the talent from eight differ the

(40:02):
beautiful bath.

Speaker 1 (40:04):
I'm sure it would be a pleasure to get another
two with them.

Speaker 7 (40:07):
Sir. Yeah, yeah, I guess they need something special for us.

Speaker 1 (40:16):
Yeah yeah. And one of the and and uh yeah.

Speaker 2 (40:19):
One of the things too is they kind of I
don't get into all the pettiness on this, I you know,
because I think it's really I think a lot of
it's really dumb, because I would prefer whoever the first
spouse is is not sitting there trying to do policies.
So if they want to go decorate a bathroom, I'm
almost more happy with that, because it seems like every
time one of the spouses starts meddling all of a sudden,

(40:42):
like your kid's cafeteria food starts to suck, or Hillary
becomes a thing, you know.

Speaker 1 (40:48):
What I'm saying, sir, And none of that's good for him.

Speaker 2 (40:50):
Oh yeah, all right, thank you, Yeah, go go, uh
go garden or whatever. And and by the way, if
there's a woman president and there's a guy, still, I'm
the same way. Bill Burr, back when he was still
trying to be funny, had He's got a whole bit
about this about Michelle Obama.

Speaker 1 (41:11):
We didn't elect you, we elected your husband.

Speaker 2 (41:13):
He goes, I don't call a plumber, and then his
wife shows up and it's like, don't worry, I'm a
plumber's wife.

Speaker 6 (41:18):
No.

Speaker 2 (41:20):
Yeah, So you know, you want to make the world's
craziest bathroom whatever.

Speaker 1 (41:26):
I'll bet there's a lot more.

Speaker 2 (41:27):
Things in that bathroom that the guys are not allowed
to touch than the normal bathroom. But there's already landmines
you're not allowed to touch, like the special soaps or
the towels, certain towels. I bet it's just on steroids
and that thing. But uh, okay, oh that's a very
good that's a very good recommendation.

Speaker 1 (41:45):
Hang on, here. Ah, Google Earth actually has a time
lapse tool that lets you look at old satellite photos
and you can just keep going back. So maybe the
lady in the tweet that I read, you can I
get the White House images going back to seventeen ninety
eight and educate herself. Yeah, that would be good. Again.

Speaker 2 (42:08):
The things the fauniding fathers had the foresight to create
is amazing. Okay, I'm gonna read you this headline. We'll
take our break, and then when we come back, the
head like, the headline's going to make you think one thing,
but when you hear the story, I don't know, it
just kind of I am up. I'm up in the air,

(42:30):
which is kind of a pun for this. All right,
here's the headline. Man says he was humiliated by flight
attendant over use of hearing aids after flight attendant demands
he cover his hearing aids with headphones. All right, And
that's how that's what you would see when they were
pimping the story on Twitter. You see the headline and

(42:52):
then that first little subheadline, and that sounds bad, right, Like,
is somebody so visually offended by somebody's got headphones that
they're up in this guy's isiness.

Speaker 1 (43:00):
How rude is that?

Speaker 2 (43:02):
That might be an eighty A violet? I don't even know, Like,
just deal with it, Karen. But actually there's more to
this story, and I'll explain coming up next. There's listeners
that are sending me obviously fake but very entertaining white house.

Speaker 1 (43:15):
Buttingffects this morning.

Speaker 2 (43:16):
I'm gonna I'll probably collect some of these and maybe
when I do this story again later in the show, read.

Speaker 1 (43:20):
Some of these. I did not know. Okay, all right,
I gotta move on to this other thing though.

Speaker 2 (43:29):
Let's see, all right, So a man says he was
humiliated by a flight attendant because he has hearing aids.
This is an Alaska Airlines flight, and reportedly the attendant
demanded he cover his hearing aids with headphones.

Speaker 1 (43:46):
Okay, so what's going on here? Because like when you
when at first the way that they sell this story,
it's a little clickbaitish, like, oh, can you believe this happened?

Speaker 2 (43:57):
Like someone who was somebody visually offended by this man's
hearing aids, like none of it makes sense. But then
he read this story and I don't. I don't need
hearing aids, so I don't know how advanced and all
the features they have now, but these have come a
long way.

Speaker 1 (44:14):
From like the hearing aids.

Speaker 2 (44:15):
I remember my grandfather had hearing aids, and you know,
you could tell that he had him, and if he
didn't have him in, you could say stuff to him
and he'd get really annoyed because clearly you could see
he didn't have him in.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
And then we were kids and we'd do that, but
just to be a little jerks sometimes.

Speaker 2 (44:33):
But now hearing aids, man, so like hearing aids now
have like built they're like built in.

Speaker 1 (44:38):
Bluetooth speakers too.

Speaker 2 (44:40):
Again, I don't know anything about hearing aids, but that's cool, man, right,
and it makes sense right because if you want to
listen to music with air pods, I haven't a you know,
to manage and just crank them. They only go so high,
especially the earlier edition ones. I don't know all the
off brands, but that's fine. The pro is this, and

(45:01):
anyone who flies knows this isn't a hearing aid problem.
It's a human problem. And the human problem on airplanes,
at bars and restaurants you'll see this, uh and in
public spaces, be on the be on the subway or something,
and people do this, and.

Speaker 1 (45:20):
It is people who will who will blast their own
devices rather than using headphones where nobody can hear them,
and I it's so annoying. So I the amount of
the amount of times I've been somewhere and somebody is

(45:41):
just listening to a show out loud. And I don't
mean you can just hear a murmur in the distance,
but loudly, and they're not even ashamed over it baffles me,
baffles me.

Speaker 2 (45:54):
But on an airplane it is a much bigger deal
because there's only so much real estate and you largely
can't move from the real estate that is the little
section of your plane that you just overpaid for. So
if somebody's listening to something and they listen on speaker,
I have seen flight attendant after flight attendant that will

(46:15):
go over and they will immediately and nicely be like, hey,
you need to get headphones. I've been on flights where
it's so there's so many people doing it that they
instead of individually the flight attendant will come on to
the intercom and remind people of this. And I've I
was on one flight where it got so bad the

(46:37):
captain said something and there was some little verbal altercation
with somebody, some guy who was I don't have to
turn it down, who ended up turning it down. I
don't know what they threatened him with, but like they
have a lot of things they can do to you
on the old airline. The problem with this guy's hearing
aids is that while they were in his ear, the
people around him could all hear him, hear what he

(46:59):
was listening to. And I don't know what brand or
how any of that works, but that's where I'm like now,
I don't know, because yeah, I do find it annoying.
I don't even know that. I don't think any of
his and people around him turned him in either. It
sounds like the flight attendant was walking by could clearly
hear what this guy was going on.

Speaker 1 (47:19):
This guy's hearing aids.

Speaker 2 (47:20):
I don't know if they're just a bad brand or
because they're hearing aids, that's a thing that's gonna happen.
But she was able to hear and know what he
was listening to and said something to him, and then
he got really offended.

Speaker 1 (47:32):
He's like, these are hearing aids. What do you want
me to do? You got a little hearing aide thing.

Speaker 2 (47:36):
Oh the chip guy we went away to Okay, I
was gonna grab a couple of calls, but we'll start
with the hearing aids issue. Just to recap, I saw
this story. Here's a guy, he's he's given an interview
of the news.

Speaker 1 (47:48):
He was on Alaska Airline's flight. He has hearing aids.

Speaker 2 (47:51):
Flight attendants said, hey, people can hear what you're listening to, which,
again I've seen it one hundred times. Any of you
who travel a lot, travel for business, I'm sure you've
seen it a thousand times. And somebody who's blasting something,
they tell them to turn it down, and usually they're
very polite about it, even though people should know they're

(48:13):
gonna take that tact. And this guy got offended and
he said, these are hearing aids. They're not headphones, or
they're not you know, or these is what they are.
And she suggested that he cover them with that he
cover them with headphones, which I think is a very
simple suggestion, right, But I also know I don't have
hearing aids, but like I have, I've had all generations
of the AirPods, and you don't hear them when they're used.

Speaker 1 (48:38):
Correctly.

Speaker 2 (48:39):
And now he was saying that he needs to be
able to hear the ambient noise, which is why he
had him set up how they were set up. But
that doesn't make any sense. What's the first thing that
if you have air pods when you get on a plane,
that you do You reach your you reach your hand up,
click the little button on there, and then it sound
cancels everything else because I don't want to accidentally have

(49:02):
to interact with a stranger. But if I need to
hear what's going on, but I don't want to try
and then I hit the button again. Maybe there's the
you know, there's an intercom thing going on. I want
to hear that, but without taking These are all options.
But in every instance, people around you can't tell what
you're listening to. That's the point of it. So at

(49:24):
that point I'm like, well, I don't know that I
agree with you, sir.

Speaker 1 (49:28):
All right, let me grab this call here Marie? Good morning?
What's up?

Speaker 5 (49:34):
Hey?

Speaker 8 (49:34):
Good morning? Can you hear me?

Speaker 7 (49:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (49:36):
Yeah? What can I do for you? Hello? Marie? Yeah,
you're on the air. Go ahead.

Speaker 8 (49:46):
Hi. Sorry, I just wanted to make sure you could
hear me. Okay, I'm doing my morning commute. Yeah, so
I wear here it aids, but I wear glasses. I'm
in there hearing aids. And they have the Blue Shoes
device in it too as well, and typically you cannot
hear the noise from it. However, I do have friends

(50:06):
that have the Bluetooth activated hearing devices and you can
sometimes pick up the sun.

Speaker 7 (50:13):
Noise from it, but it should never be.

Speaker 8 (50:15):
Loud enough that you can have others around you hearing it.
And also to add, you cannot put headphones over hearing devices.
It's very uncomfortable and it just doesn't work. It's not
a suitable solution.

Speaker 1 (50:30):
Well, so I want to hear that.

Speaker 2 (50:33):
Just let me say one thing real quick about this,
because I'm trying to visualize what he was asking. And
I have professional grade studio headphones. I'm wearing them right now.
And these are Sony's. I've had Sennheisers, and these are
full over the ear, right. They don't go in the ear,
they don't just touch on the ear. They go all
the way around, and there cavity in there. And I

(50:53):
will tell you that when I have been in situations
where I have my AirPod in one ear, you're under
the the scope of the big headphone, and it's it's
quite comfortable, and then I can listen to two different
things at once. There's been a couple of broadcast situations
where I needed to do that and that has been
a solution.

Speaker 1 (51:14):
And so it is possible.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
And you're not you're not pulling the sound necessarily from
the headphones. You're simply using them as a muffling device
in the situation she's testing.

Speaker 1 (51:24):
So that's why I.

Speaker 7 (51:26):
Say that that.

Speaker 8 (51:29):
Yeah, and if you had that type of access to
those really nice headphones that you were just describing, I
think it would be great. But on a plane he
probably didn't, So I don't really know, Like as a
person that wears sharing devices, I don't know what the solution.

Speaker 7 (51:44):
Would have been.

Speaker 8 (51:45):
It would have just been to take them out period
and use ear pods. That would have been the I
think the most neutral solution. I wear glasses like glasses
have hearing devices on on, so they're pretty amazing. Try
I don't have to really worry about it too much
for iacy and here at the same.

Speaker 1 (52:03):
Time, that's yeah, yeah.

Speaker 8 (52:08):
So I just want to I just wanted to say,
like it's you know, hearing devices are very uncomfortable, and
typically people don't have like the type of headphones that
you're describing to muffle any of the off putting sounds
that you might be getting, and they should be very vague.
So I'm really shocked that it was annoyed enough to

(52:31):
cause a disruption like that because I've never I've never
heard them.

Speaker 9 (52:36):
Give off that one one.

Speaker 1 (52:37):
I was blown away.

Speaker 2 (52:39):
I was blown away learning about and it should have
been obvious what headphone or what hearing aids can do now,
because you know technology, I just never really thought about it.

Speaker 1 (52:48):
But the other side of it is my theory.

Speaker 2 (52:50):
I think he's just got really bad I think he's
got really crappy, uh ghetto hearing aids.

Speaker 1 (52:56):
Yeah. I think it's just hot garbage and they're expensive.

Speaker 8 (53:00):
Yeah, well you can get him anywhere, like you can
pick them up as a CBS now, like just some
off brand, weird you know, thing to sticking and they're
more like noise and handsterns than hearing as.

Speaker 1 (53:11):
I think he got it off. I think they're from TIMU.
That's my theory.

Speaker 7 (53:17):
Hearing as they exist, I'm sure they do.

Speaker 2 (53:20):
Yeah, all right, thank you for the caled you Marie
appreciate it. Yeah, Ross, that's my theory. He's got it.
They got them off, Timu, and at some point they're
going to burst into flames, because you know, that's what
stuff from China. Remember the Chinese little uh what were
they the cover boards that were burning everyone's house down
a few Christmases ago.

Speaker 3 (53:39):
That's my theory.

Speaker 2 (53:41):
But uh, I, you know, maybe maybe I'm wrong, but
it's just I realized it wasn't as cut and dry
as I think that they were trying to make it.
And because then he get into the argument should he
have to go out of his way to buy a
better brand or bring the larger over your head phones
like the ones you and I wear to accomplish this

(54:03):
because it's a disability.

Speaker 1 (54:07):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (54:09):
I mean, I under look, I understand a reasonable accommodation
and like I understand and I actually support it in
most instances. But there's also a little bit of where
you try you try to mitigate any of the problems
and if you and if you're trying, if you have
paid for a device that is not AIB and other

(54:30):
devices exist, but I also understand budgetary issues and I
don't know what the answer is It really, I really am.

Speaker 1 (54:37):
On the fence here and I've kind of gone back
and forth. So all right, so let's see. Yeah you
can put now.

Speaker 2 (54:47):
I got people saying that they put headphones over hearing aids. Yeah,
I think it depends on the type of headphones. The
ones that sit on the ear would probably be very
uncomfortable if I had my AirPods there, But studio style
headphones go over the year, I've I've had an air
pod stuck under one side of them on very many occasions.

Speaker 5 (55:08):
Just you know, know I've done that on Twitch a bunch.

Speaker 2 (55:10):
Okay, yes, you know exactly what when you want to
audio channels, the ability to hear traitific things at once,
that's the way to accomplish it.

Speaker 1 (55:17):
And it's comfortable.

Speaker 5 (55:18):
But it's different because we have these headphones.

Speaker 2 (55:20):
So yes, yeah, but you know, and but you don't
have to if you went over your headphones, you don't
have to go buy the Sony's or the Sennheuser's the
you and I used, Right, these are studio quality I
have seen over your headphones that are right on par
and and they're they're going to be clearly cheaper than
hearing ads. But in this case, you could get ones

(55:42):
that are broken because you're just using them to muffle.
At that point, you got options, is the point I'm making.

Speaker 1 (55:49):
All right.

Speaker 2 (55:50):
Oh no, we had a little issue at a hockey
game or a hockey match out in California. I got
to tell you about. Uh, so we get into that. Uh,
the incident in the Atlanta airport. In fact, speaking of Atlanta,
is mister Stagic ready to rock and nope? No, okay,
maybe he's at the airport, save it everybody.

Speaker 1 (56:15):
I will ask him when we talked to him. Uh.

Speaker 2 (56:18):
And big peanut butter news. Apparently you're supposed to dip
your babies in peanut butter now or something.

Speaker 1 (56:23):
I don't know. Maybe I'm missreading this.

Speaker 2 (56:24):
Although babies will dip themselves in peanut butter if you
just put it near him, is what I understand. But uh,
I don't know why this is not the story everywhere yesterday.
But I don't have a kid, so I've never had
to go through the peanut butter advice. But apparently the science.

Speaker 1 (56:40):
Is now the opposite. So there you go. All right,
what's going on there? Raced agic much, ma'am?

Speaker 3 (56:47):
How are you?

Speaker 2 (56:48):
I don't know, It's just we're gonna get in this
story about the dude who showed up at the Atlanta
airport yesterday.

Speaker 1 (56:52):
That was a little bit of an incident.

Speaker 9 (56:54):
Huh yeah, I'm kind of like, I'm glad it wasn't
one am I flying Saturday?

Speaker 3 (56:59):
Yeah, yeah, kind of crazy.

Speaker 2 (57:01):
But also like so he showed Uh, I mean, I'm
really glad that the family called. It looks like he
did not bring the thing in initially.

Speaker 1 (57:09):
So I don't know if he was scoping. It sounded
like there's some mental health issues.

Speaker 2 (57:12):
But let's also be honest, if he wanted to get
into the airport, like into the airport and do something,
they would have had two hours to get him while
he was just going through security.

Speaker 1 (57:19):
So right, which has been my experience at the Atlanta Airport.

Speaker 3 (57:23):
So they were at time, plenty of time, right, Yeah, no, go.

Speaker 1 (57:28):
Get lunch and then But no, I'm glad that everything
worked out great.

Speaker 7 (57:31):
There.

Speaker 1 (57:31):
We'll get in more than that, but you gotta talk weather, sir.

Speaker 3 (57:35):
Not bad, Yeah, keep it up, not bad at all.

Speaker 9 (57:38):
Uh, mildest day of the next several probably next week
is going to be today, probably between seventy and seventy five.
Try it obviously, low seventies towards the triangle mid seventies,
Lots of sunshine and.

Speaker 3 (57:50):
Plenty of what you see, what you get.

Speaker 9 (57:51):
And then if you're out later today tonight, early, you
may notice the wind start to pick up. That's actually
a front coming in. That'll bring a little bit of cloud.
So I gonna bring any rain showers, though those are
gonna stay west of us and diminished as they approach.
I mean it would it be shocked if there's a
sprinkler too. No, but for the most part where dry
will wake up Tomorrow morning low mid fifties, and then
Sunday tomorrow near seventy degrees. Same thing on Thursday and

(58:14):
Friday and the weekend we actually fall to the mid
upper sixties for highs, so it's a cool air coming in.

Speaker 3 (58:20):
Overnight.

Speaker 9 (58:20):
Lows will be in the low to mid forties in
the mountains by Friday morning to the west, maybe dipping
into the thirties, and maybe a little frost for some
of the normally colder spots off to our west. So yeah,
pretty chilly air mess and everything casey right now. The
pattern that's shaping up for the next couple of weeks

(58:40):
looks to look more like winter, especially to the north,
certainly looks like fall. In places where it's been very
mild and dry, it looks like they'll get some wet
weather too. We don't get any, though, we could use
some rainfall. And don't be surprised if you hear Melissa
getting tossed around today Tropical storm Melissa. Looks like that's
going to happen today and that'll be down on the islands.

(59:03):
If you have a trip planned, like my poor sister
going to the Dominican Republic on Sunday. She just texts
me and said, how's the weather and the Dominican looking
I guess to her it looks yeah, it looks pretty
uh not good? Yeah, yeah, I'm a hurricane up close.
Is she going to poot Takana, which is right on

(59:23):
the east end.

Speaker 1 (59:24):
I am not quite sure where she's going.

Speaker 9 (59:26):
And listen, the guidance is all over the place, so
I'm not really sure where the storm.

Speaker 3 (59:30):
Is gonna go either.

Speaker 9 (59:31):
So I've got to give her the old you know,
I gotta give her the meteorological dance as we all
can do.

Speaker 2 (59:37):
Right well, it's just so so if she's going to
put Takana, that's gonna be. That's great because it's basically
like Florida because there's nothing they put it on an
end of the island or nothing was, so it's it's
just like going to Florida resorts.

Speaker 1 (59:50):
But it's also where the hurricanes you know, come from, right,
so you get there and get the front of it.
But if she's going to other places, hurricanes will not
be her biggest safety concern.

Speaker 3 (59:59):
So guess so I have to guess that's where she's going.

Speaker 1 (01:00:02):
Yeah, yeah, So.

Speaker 2 (01:00:03):
All right, because I was down there, not in Puta
Kana one time and we were leaving the airport and
there was a dead body line on the road. Three
hours later after we'd gone and checked in at the
with the house we had rented there and we're going
back to the golf course, the body's still there.

Speaker 9 (01:00:20):
So well, I can find that anywhere, like just most
recently in Clemson or a day or two call they
found a body somewhere.

Speaker 1 (01:00:30):
Yeah, that's that's South Carolina.

Speaker 3 (01:00:31):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:00:32):
No, I know, I'm just picking. I'm just picking. All right,
have a good one. We'll talk at an hour, thank you. Yeah,
there you go, all right, seven forty eight. Oh and
if you thought there was not I'm not even gonna
call this an eighty twenty issue. We'll call this a
ninety nine to one issue. If there if you thought
there was not a crazier, dumber issue where Democrats might

(01:00:56):
start and some have already start latching onto that one.
Oh say, I don't even think Trump set them up
for this.

Speaker 1 (01:01:05):
They're just walking into it. They're the laz potato chip people.
It's the dumbest crap ever. We'll share it with you
coming up.

Speaker 2 (01:01:12):
Check this out, Like ah, I always I asked myself,
is it is it forty chests and a trap was set?

Speaker 1 (01:01:21):
Or is it just you're just dealing with people who
are so emotional that they haven't paused for just a
moment to think. And I just I don't know that.

Speaker 2 (01:01:30):
I believe that they don't realize this is a horrible idea.
I can't fathom it. But then I go back to
the chipstat we had earlier, forty two percent of people
didn't know lays were made from potatoes, And they're like, well,
it doesn't say potato on there. You're correct, it doesn't
say potato on the big front part of it.

Speaker 1 (01:01:48):
But there is another feature.

Speaker 2 (01:01:50):
Ross, did you see the other feature that is on lays,
even though it doesn't say the word potato on most
of the front packaging.

Speaker 5 (01:01:56):
Yeah, sure there's a photo of a potato. When there's
a picture of potato on the bag, on every bag, it's.

Speaker 1 (01:02:03):
Like we we it's it's so it's actually dumber, right
because they put it on there in case you can't
read the picture of the potato. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:02:16):
It's like when they have warnings with warnings in words,
but they've had to go to pictures because some dude
who can't read you don't kill themselves and oh, I
guess we got to revert to pictures.

Speaker 1 (01:02:26):
They made this very easy. So and that is troop pay.
This is the issue. So as you know, Trump was,
oh that's nice. Sorry next year, Well the next one,
things acting weird again.

Speaker 2 (01:02:41):
I might have to have them figure this thing out
with engineering because this isn't normal.

Speaker 1 (01:02:45):
There it is now it's back okay. So that's troop pay. Right.

Speaker 2 (01:02:49):
So one of the one of the things that during
the shutdown that people say, oh, what are we gonna do?

Speaker 7 (01:02:54):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:02:54):
You have federal employees that aren't being paid, air traffic controllers, troops, uh,
and uh Trump was able to for the air traffic
controllers give them partial pay. You should know that there
is actually a five thousand dollars stipend program that federal
employees who are not getting paid can avail themselves of

(01:03:15):
during a shutdown. It's called I don't know, it's like
shut down something is the name of it.

Speaker 1 (01:03:20):
And so, but for the.

Speaker 2 (01:03:21):
Military, Trump found he reappropriated money that had already been
appropriated to the military, I should say, and just moved
it around because it had not been spent yet for
projects that were either put on hold. Some of these
projects had been appropriated under Biden and were DEI related,
and then the money hadn't been spent.

Speaker 1 (01:03:40):
And that's what a lot of this is to pay troops.

Speaker 2 (01:03:43):
And now activists and even some Democrat lawmakers are going
to legally challenge this.

Speaker 1 (01:03:50):
It sounds like you're.

Speaker 2 (01:03:52):
Going to sue so he can't pay the troops. Have
you guys focus grouped this or.

Speaker 1 (01:04:05):
Do you you?

Speaker 2 (01:04:06):
Your position is we and I understand the larger argument.
They're like, why are only certain segments getting paid in
others or not? Well, one, the military is not able
to avail themselves of this fund that your staff can
so it is different. But two, you're opposing paining people
who are in the military.

Speaker 1 (01:04:28):
That's your action.

Speaker 2 (01:04:29):
This is boo God stuff again, Like but they remember
there were they boo God at the Charlotte Convention.

Speaker 1 (01:04:35):
It's like it's an it's such an unforced error. What
are you doing. I hope you, guys, I hope you
doubled down on this because I didn't see this yesterday,
uh when it when it came in.

Speaker 2 (01:04:48):
But I did see that that is a really cool
thing that that listener made for Lincoln. Man, I didn't
cause I really didn't understand what it was. Now I'm
just seeing this thing. I mean, that's a lot more
intricate than I even thought when you described it.

Speaker 5 (01:05:01):
No, and he absolutely loves it too, dude. He got
it this morning and he brought it down from his
bedroom like it's making him feel better. So we mentioned
before in the show how like because of Lincoln's autism,
he hears certain like things louder sharp noises. Yeah, yeah,
like sudden things. And it's not like, you know, the
pitch of it that that bothers him or scares him.
It's the sudden unexpectedness of like a loud boom in

(01:05:22):
his ears, right, Yeah, And one of those things is
a soda can opening. So whenever we open one around
the house, we have to tell him, hey, you know,
I'm about to open this, and he'll prepare himself and
then we open a can or whatever. But sometimes it's
bad because we go out into public and people that
you know, will open soda cans in public, like we
were at the Museum of Natural Sciences up at the
cafeteria area and people bring their drinks and you got
to kind of get used to it. So a listener

(01:05:44):
made him like a crocheted plush soda can figurine that
he can use to comfort himself before or after a
soda can is opened.

Speaker 1 (01:05:55):
So he's got.

Speaker 2 (01:05:55):
Arms and legs. It's it's antima. It's yeah, you know,
it looks like a mister Potato head, but.

Speaker 5 (01:06:01):
Yeah, like a soda can figurine.

Speaker 2 (01:06:03):
Yeah, but it's also really it's like really good crochet.
And my grandmother used to crochet, and like I remember,
I remember my sister tried to do it and uh,
let's just say no, no, it was she had the
saddest little weird looking blanket thing.

Speaker 5 (01:06:20):
Man, So we gave we gave it to him yesterday. Yeah,
and he's like, he just thought it was the funniest
thing in the world. But so it's really great to
be associating something funny and joyful to something that sort
of scares you, Like it's a good coping mechanism. So
we explained to him what it was, and he was
super excited and he pretended he was opening it. We
made a video we posted online on the socials and

(01:06:41):
Karen made it for him and which you want to say,
thank you Karens. But yeah, yeah, yeah. Her letter even
says that one of good Karens.

Speaker 2 (01:06:48):
Oh okay, yeah, so we're making it, making a list
of the good Karns here.

Speaker 1 (01:06:53):
Ah right, yeah. I just I, for whatever reason, I
did not see it yesterday. So but just looking at
in the video, very nice.

Speaker 5 (01:07:00):
But it was so funny because we explained it to
him and there was this pause for a second, like
he's computing what it is and what's going on.

Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
But I didn't understand what you were describing either.

Speaker 5 (01:07:09):
Yeah, So and like you know, at dawn and hey,
he realized, you know, he understood what it was, and
it this huge smile came across his face. And he
just thought it was hilarious. He's like, this is awesome.

Speaker 2 (01:07:18):
Honestly dumb me yesterday I thought it was like a
cozy for Minsoda camp, which wouldn't make sense because then
you don't put the can still have the noise.

Speaker 1 (01:07:27):
But no, it's something some different. It is retweeted on
the account if you want to go check that out.

Speaker 2 (01:07:32):
Okay, okay, dude, I didn't even realize ross did you
know there was there's there's all the The Louver heist
was not the only heist in Paris Museum this uh
last few weeks somebody went and uh wrot And I
don't guess, maybe because it was only worth about one
point seven to five million. They have a mineralogy museum

(01:07:58):
and in there they have you know, much of minerals
and rare, rare precious stones too.

Speaker 1 (01:08:04):
But they also have a huge collection.

Speaker 2 (01:08:06):
Of gold, and not just any gold, but like historically
significant gold. Like there's some of the gold that was
part of the Tsar, the last Czar's collection before the
the Communists decided to murder the entire family.

Speaker 1 (01:08:26):
Because you know, that's what communists do, they like murdering people.

Speaker 2 (01:08:30):
There's a nugget from the California gold Rush, one from
the Australian gold Rush. So anyway, somebody went in there
is one person and at one in the morning, using
an angle grinder, gained access and then they used a
cutting torch that they brought with them to open the
case and were able to extract, you know, like I said,

(01:08:51):
almost two million dollars worth of gold. Leave Paris, go
to Barcelona. They caught her in Barcelona.

Speaker 1 (01:08:58):
It was a woman, a Chinese woman who when they
did it was so funny too, because she did the
thing you see on on patrol Live Ross when you
got drugs in the car. What do you idiots do
when they're getting pulled over, Like please don't know to
look for this, throw it out the wind. Yeah, And.

Speaker 2 (01:09:16):
Like every officer is like, I see you doing that,
and I'm trained to look for it.

Speaker 1 (01:09:19):
And they go find it in your screw they.

Speaker 2 (01:09:21):
Throw it out or they eat it or eat it
yeah yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. But so she tried to
literally like dump the gold on the ground and pretend
that there was just gold there.

Speaker 1 (01:09:30):
She's like, oh, oh, is that gold over there, you know.

Speaker 2 (01:09:33):
Because it's in nugget, it's not like made into jewelry,
but also like they're not got the cops are going
to buy that, Like she just happened to stumble across
the uh uh an unfound untapped gold market in Barcelona. There,
So anyway, they got her, one Chinese woman. She was
on her way back to China.

Speaker 1 (01:09:51):
I don't know what. I don't know she was. I
scoped it out from China.

Speaker 2 (01:09:55):
If her background, there's not a ton here, but yeah,
they just caught her in Barcelona. So it clearly does
not appear to be connected to the Louver heist.

Speaker 1 (01:10:05):
But there you go.

Speaker 2 (01:10:07):
So anyway, back to back to the troop pay, there
was a couple of things I saw, yes say around
just like and look, I understand because somebody sent an
email or maybe it was a Twitter thing and they're like, look, it's.

Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
The part where you're moving money around.

Speaker 2 (01:10:23):
Versus what it's been appropriated for it. And I understand that,
and I do share that concern. But I will say
that that is something that is legally allowable. I don't
think it should be, but it is with certain caveats,
and it is something by the way, that is very much,

(01:10:44):
very much practiced by incoming and outgoing administrations and has
been and you and and it is very fair to
argue it's been abused, but the fact that this was
monies that were allocating and the military does have additional
flexibility with the ability to move money because you know,

(01:11:06):
if you're engaged in something, or god forbid, you're in
declared war and things need to move fast. You can't
necessarily wait on Congress to be able to reallocate funds,
right So if you've got a bunch of money, you know,
World War two would be a good example of this.
If you have monies that are allocated for naval battles

(01:11:28):
versus and the equipment that goes with it, versus allocations
that are for moving through Europe. Once the European front fell,
you can't just sit there and wait for Congress to
reallocate more for the Japanese effort, even though eventually they'll
catch up and do it.

Speaker 1 (01:11:44):
You got to be able to do this on the fly.
So that's kind of what Trump's arguing. It's a slippery slope.

Speaker 2 (01:11:50):
I agree, But what is far worse a look is
for a bunch of members of Congress.

Speaker 1 (01:11:58):
Who all got paid to start holding press conferences complaining
the troops got paid like strategically, it's really dumb.

Speaker 2 (01:12:13):
It's it's it's right up there with yesterday on the
UH there was some federal employees on UH that were
UH with talking about air traffic controllers and as well
as members of the Air Traffic Controllers union who were talking.

Speaker 1 (01:12:29):
About maybe having a everyone walking off the job. Yeah,
I do that is everyone who works air traffic younger
than me. Yeah, probably, Like we don't even have to speculate,
and we have we have court precedent on this on

(01:12:49):
what might happen, whether he's able to do it, like
does it's the I think the theme of today's prep packet,
and it is a lot is just I didn't know
that people of this stupidity level existed in such great numbers.

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

Speaker 5 (01:13:07):
To be fair, listen, I think there are young Republicans
who listen to the show who will probably understand what
you're talking about in the reference. But I completely believe
that there are younger Democrats who have no idea what
you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (01:13:19):
No idea what Reagan do.

Speaker 3 (01:13:20):
None.

Speaker 2 (01:13:24):
The only thing here's the only caveat Remember, yeah, these
are federal employees, and they're federal employees that in some
instances that are clearly are part of this group. So
if you are a if you're somebody who works at
a fast food restaurant up in you know, wherever, and

(01:13:45):
it's your first job, all right, right, But the people
who are sitting there who would make this decision or
push this idea are people that it would be malpracticed.

Speaker 5 (01:13:58):
Not to know that forty two percent of people didn't
know that there were potatoes and potato chips. No, I
want to believe that there's a segment of the Democrats that, like,
you know, there's.

Speaker 1 (01:14:07):
The ones who would be the spirit, the ones who
spirhead an effort like this. I mean, you know what
I've come to the conclude, here's what we need to do.
You guys like the movie Idiocracy. Ross You like Idiocracy? Yeah,
it's a great documentary, great documentary. Would you want to
live in it? Probably not?

Speaker 5 (01:14:24):
Sure would not, but it's.

Speaker 1 (01:14:26):
Fun to watch.

Speaker 3 (01:14:27):
All right.

Speaker 2 (01:14:27):
So here here's here's what we need to do. And
this is my this is my grand plan to raise
the national IQ over the next few generations by a
ton of points, become the super brains, you know, beat
the China Chinese athletes or whatever. And that is we
we opened a three strike idiot policy. Okay, so if

(01:14:51):
you are like, so, if you're among the forty two
percent there, you got to strike because you didn't know
potato chips had potatoes in them. Strike one. If if
you were in air traffic control. Uh, and you are
recommending that all the members walk off the job in
the United State, that's a strike. And then if you
get three strikes, we will have a huge containment area, right, Uh,

(01:15:15):
Idiotsville or whatever you want to call it. Okay, maybe
we won't call it that. Well, we'll come up with
something better, right, and then we did. You move there,
and everything is pretty much the same. You go, you know,
you get TVs and all that. But we it's a
containment area for stupid people. And then as they breed,
as is the setup in idiocracy, they'll continue to get
dumber and dumber and dumber, and then eventually we will

(01:15:39):
have our own Truman show of idiocy to watch.

Speaker 5 (01:15:44):
You need to rebrand it though, it needs to be
called some like happy smart Town or something.

Speaker 1 (01:15:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:15:48):
Yeah, no, no, not understanding, We'll call it something so but
also would they catch on, No, they probably wouldn't.

Speaker 1 (01:15:55):
Yeah, and then they.

Speaker 2 (01:15:56):
Can have their you know, questionable chips in there and
and conversation, and then it can and then it will,
it will, you know, it's it's the Darwinistic effect, but
in reverse. And then eventually we get you know, President
Camacho and monster trucks and we get to watch that.
It'll be amazing. And then the rest of the country

(01:16:17):
their IQ would you know, hopefully go up. Probably have
to do something about education. But yeah, so now we
get entertainment. This is like, this is big brain stuff.
Get in on this.

Speaker 5 (01:16:29):
I saw Paul recently. They were talking about potential Democratic
candidates going into the next presidential election, and the Rock
I believe, was polling at like fourteen percent or something.
I did see those stories bouncing around, so it might
happen sooner than later. I just I just wanted in
a nice, controlled environment, and they'll be you know, they'll

(01:16:51):
be stupid. There won't be intellectual diversity because everyone's going
to be done there. But they won't probably won't pick
up on the fact that everyone's done because they'll just
feel normal.

Speaker 2 (01:17:01):
Oh you thought the White House was built in the
late seventeen hundreds and exactly the same. It looked exactly
the same with all the features it's got.

Speaker 1 (01:17:09):
Now that's a strike. That's a strike. I don't make
the rules. It's very simple.

Speaker 2 (01:17:18):
And then maybe, and just maybe we could do something
a little something about it, all right. Speaking of France,
they're mad at us.

Speaker 1 (01:17:24):
What's new? Oh the Ross. I don't know if you
saw this.

Speaker 2 (01:17:26):
The Netherlands announced yesterday that they will no longer share
defensive intelligence with the United States. The country that new
Hitler was coming and still surrendered in four days doesn't
want to be our intelligence slash war buddy anymore.

Speaker 1 (01:17:49):
I think we'll be fine. I think I think we'll
pull through on this. Just my two cents.

Speaker 2 (01:18:00):
But uh, you know, I didn't even I didn't even
see any reaction from Washington on it yesterday, so who knows.

Speaker 1 (01:18:08):
And then this guy, what is this? This this guy
in France.

Speaker 2 (01:18:11):
Uh, well he's you know, everyone's looting your museums and
your tourism's dying, all right, so check this out. This
is one of these EU guys. But he's French, dude,
he said, And let me just read this. Sooner or
later his name is Thomas Picketty. Uh, sooner or later
the rest of the world will have to impost sanctions

(01:18:31):
on the US for their exceptionally high per capita carbon emissions,
their non cooperative attitude on taxation, the multinationals, blah blah blah.
So this guy wants the world to collectively because see,
I'm sure he's mad about you.

Speaker 1 (01:18:45):
Know, Trump with the tariffs and all this stuff. But
it's just like.

Speaker 2 (01:18:51):
The have you seen a graph with carbon emissions with
China and the EU for that matter, Okay, and uh
and then other and then the US and others. It's
everything's flatlined among the really developed nations with the exception
of China, Russia and India, and then it's just it's

(01:19:12):
just straight up. It's like a rocket launch. And this
guy's running around because he's but hurt over other stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:19:19):
He wants to threaten that.

Speaker 2 (01:19:20):
Uh, I will say this, sir, in fact, let me,
let me actually, let me try to meet some common ground.
I too sometimes feel that we may have been wasteful
in all those carbon emissions that we were admitted by
the landing craft. Yeah, so I sometimes maybe think that

(01:19:45):
was a mistake.

Speaker 1 (01:19:47):
Is that what you want to hear, sir?

Speaker 2 (01:19:49):
My little struggle session here, and those will be the
landing crafts from the forties. I don't know if you've
seen them. They have a couple on display when you
go to Normandy. Normandy's a coastal city and your fine country,
and there's also it's a big graveyard that you should
check that out. It's it's quite it's it's very sobering.

Speaker 1 (01:20:09):
But we used it. We did. You're you're right. We
used a lot of carbon to accomplish that.

Speaker 2 (01:20:14):
And I'm very sorry for that, very sorry that now
we got to deal with idiots like you, dude. These EU,
the EU versions of all these people are just it's
like each country's worst type of bureaucrat. And it's so
funny because it's clear that you see it with uh
maloney in Italy right now. It's clear that the local politicians,

(01:20:36):
even the heads of the countries, like the EU versions
of their people think that they're somehow over them. And
it's and that's why Italy is like, maybe we don't
need to be.

Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
Full members of the EU.

Speaker 2 (01:20:49):
And it's and and and I already have the name
picked out. It'll leave like brexit, it'll leave. You're woke, Yes,
you can have that. We came up with a bunch
on the show one time like we had. Check out
for Chechia and Italy and Denmark, all yours for the asking.

Speaker 1 (01:21:05):
We'll be back
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

It’s 1996 in rural North Carolina, and an oddball crew makes history when they pull off America’s third largest cash heist. But it’s all downhill from there. Join host Johnny Knoxville as he unspools a wild and woolly tale about a group of regular ‘ol folks who risked it all for a chance at a better life. CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist answers the question: what would you do with 17.3 million dollars? The answer includes diamond rings, mansions, velvet Elvis paintings, plus a run for the border, murder-for-hire-plots, and FBI busts.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.