Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Useless day. But we'll get through this because the Eye
on the Prize for a lot of people is everybody's
favorite to socialist holiday coming up here at the end
of the week. I know, I know some of you're
sick of hearing it. Training your kids to go demand
other people's things under threat of force or trickery, basically
(00:22):
the Democrat political strategy right now. So man, if they're
willing to starve their own constituents using their language, you know,
I don't know that that's not a fair comparison, to
be honest with you, between that and losing their h
(00:44):
just losing their ever loving minds. Over on MSNBC and
some of the adjacent interviewers, the Lawrence o'donald stuff is
like I'm processing our audio cuts this morning through the
lens of high schools students, you know what I'm saying.
Like with Laurence o'donald's just mad about this, clearly this
(01:05):
other guy who's getting more chicks. And then Newsom is
like a he's like an angry dater right where he's
just it's like, lady, he's just not that into you.
Over Joe Rogan, like it's this got super super high
school vibes on the button bar today, which we'll get to. Actually,
(01:27):
the Newsom thing's so funny, why don't we start there? So,
as you know, Joe Rogan was in his podcast played
what some would argue was a pretty pivotal role. I mean,
you know, to the extent that you needed it to
realize that Kamala was not ready for prime time necessarily.
(01:47):
But alas, the reaction from the left was to go
out and try to find the quote their own Joe Rogan,
and they ended up with Michael Vick. So a light
because wasn't he the ross He was gonna be the
next dude, right, the guy with the shot callar whatever
his name is, hasan piker. He was supposed to be
(02:10):
the left Joe Rogan. They did a big piece on him,
i think in what New York Times, big feature piece.
I'm pretty sure he was the first one up, and
they've tried some other stuff. But so Gavin Newsom, you
could tell, really wanted on Rogan's podcast, and Rogan really
doesn't seem to like Newsome. And so Newsom's doing an
(02:32):
interview yesterday and he has just the weirdest exchange. But
I will explain I'm not. Look, I don't speak for
Joe Rogan, but I have a pretty good sense of
what's going on here as somebody who's basically you know
who is in the same business, so to speak, Like,
I get what's happening here. But here's newsome upset that
(02:52):
the uh, the girl he likes and won't talk to
him or whatever. This vibe is.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
He hasn't for you.
Speaker 3 (03:00):
Years and years he's been attacking me and it's one
way and he won't have me on. He's consistently not on.
By the way, I'm moving on, I have no interest.
Speaker 4 (03:07):
You're done with him.
Speaker 3 (03:07):
Joe Rogan's the Facebook of podcasting.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
This is so this is so high school.
Speaker 4 (03:15):
He reminded me of like his mannerisms and the way
he looks and the way he's talking and reacting like
it doesn't bother him. It reminds me this dude, is
Patrick Bateman looking at the business cards at the table? Yes, yes,
And that's what I realized this morning, Like he's I know,
Patrick Bateman from American Psycho has become a meme, right right,
(03:35):
He's sort of like and obviously the character is very negative,
but this is like all of the psycho traits of
Patrick Bateman, not the memorable. It's like, if this guy
does a crossword puzzle, it's all just meat and bone,
you know what I mean. Yeah, he's crazy. He's a psychopath.
He is, and he's one.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
You know, Frankly, that should be Joe Rogan's concern, right,
he's gonna shot Joe Rogan's gonna show up in a studio.
There's gonna be rock cloths everywhere.
Speaker 4 (04:02):
Just like, are you painting? What's going on in here?
Speaker 1 (04:06):
Yeah? Sit out in the chair. Yeah, oh oh, this
gets so much worse.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
He was sitting across one of the brightest minds in
podcasting right now. The guy was in the mic, and
there are a lot of people at the mic doing
extraordinary things in podcast big audience still, you know what,
But with all due respect, if he's if he has
a big audience and he but he doesn't have big
enough confidence. I didn't go there to have me on.
(04:31):
Well you called him a Chian, but he's been attacking.
Speaker 1 (04:34):
So now he's biff handing right with uh? With Bateman.
It's uh, it's Biff Bateman. That's where we had I
call him. I mean, I don't think Rogan wants to
sit down with a guy that he knows. It's one
bs right, I mean he lived in calorn I think
it's more personal. Yeah, you go, you're about to go
where I'm going with this. It's more personal than that.
(04:55):
Let me finish the cut. It sounds like you and
I arrived at the same place.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
But here's the thing. These guys they all have something
in common. It's one way. They attack. They belittle, they demean,
they take things out of context. But this is a
serious thing. Yeah, and so often we just.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Sit Remember this guy's running this meme site. Just just
super clear if you don't, if you haven't seen the
the newsome, what is it, communications account or whatever it
is with all the memes, that's his team doing that.
Speaker 3 (05:23):
Back and go, oh god, I really would love to
go on. Oh if Kamala Harris just went on Joe Rogan,
she would have won. It's not It's so much deeper
than that. And the unwillingness for a guy like that
to even have the common courtesy to attack someone and
not have the DC say, you know what, why don't
you have a chance to come on, let's have a
civil dialogue. I've watched you on podcasters like Sean Ryan,
(05:44):
who's a close buddy of this. He had the curse
on me have four hours, right, Sean Hannity, Folks like that.
And so if I go on Sean Ryan and Sean Hannity,
what are you worried about? What are you?
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Joe?
Speaker 3 (05:54):
You're gonna cook me or I'm gonna cook myself?
Speaker 1 (05:57):
All right, So, and it's just it's it's so scummy.
But to really get drilled out with Newsom, you got
to understand that Joe Rogan had his whole life had
to change because of Newsom. Right, Remember, Joe Rogan was
in California. Joe Rogan didn't He felt like a like
(06:19):
a frog in the pop man the waters getting warmer,
and he saw crime, he saw he saw taxes, He
saw the wildfires, he saw the just the sheer and Sandy,
saw the homeless people everywhere. He saw the California that
was rot and it required him to pick up his
entire operation and and not just his uh you know, however,
(06:44):
many people work for Joe and and and relocated. And
sure he found the most california et section of Texas
moving to Austin, but he still moved to Texas, and
so I bet he's got some prey personal thoughts on
what he witnessed because Joe Rogan was a California guy.
(07:05):
I mean he's not originally from California, but he was
clearly engrossed culturally in it. And look, California, if you
can ignore the bad stuff, or if you can remember
back before it got real bad, is an amazingly beautiful
place to live. I loved it out there, but I
was a dumb college kid, you know, the land of
(07:26):
Sirius now where you know, you got bills and you
got safety concerns. And Rogan's got a family and what
do you do with your kids?
Speaker 4 (07:32):
But I mean he's also been out there for He
was out in California forever, right correct, Yeah, film in.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
News radio this, Yeah, he's been.
Speaker 4 (07:39):
Out there forever, right yeah. So I mean he's seen
it go from one way to the other, like you
know what I mean, Like he's been there through the
progress of it. So I mean, yeah, he probably hates newsome.
I don't blame him.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
But also Rogan's thing is he wants to do an
entertaining conversation.
Speaker 4 (07:55):
This other idea that you know, he wouldn't dose him said,
if Kamala Harris went on Joe, she would have won, No,
she would, she would have lost even worse it would
have been not I think he.
Speaker 1 (08:03):
Was poo pooing the eight because he said it's not
deeper than that. So he in typical Gavin. I like
fresh prints of gelled hair. I think we might go
with that. It's a little long. I'm working on it.
Speaker 4 (08:16):
It's so weird though, because we played that cut yesterday
where he's like the NBA persona Gavin Newsoman is speaking with.
How come he's not using that same so what's going
on here? Why? It's sort of like he morphs into
whoever he needs to be depending on whoever is in
front of him.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
It's weird, and I think that Rogan realizes. And I
don't know. I can't speak for Rogan, but to me,
what I would see is, even though it would be
a get, a good get if in fact he is,
you know, actually running for president, which he clearly is,
you know that that would be a good get for
the purpose of informing people. You then have to evaluate
(08:51):
whether that person is going to have a conversation or
just intentionally twist things and lie so they're rather than
covering the things that you want, they chew up valuable
clock and then it becomes frustrating and then it's not
a friendly discussion at that point anymore. And you just
(09:12):
don't And let me tell you, without name and names,
there are politicians that if you don't give them the
airtime that they want, the crazy comes out ross do
I speak the truth that there are politicians that if
you don't give them the airtime that they want, the
(09:34):
crazy will come out there?
Speaker 4 (09:35):
Sure is that is true. I've witnessed it. You have too.
Speaker 5 (09:40):
Yeah, so.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
That's what's going on here, That's all I'm saying. And yeah,
at least from you know, me handicapping what I'm watching there.
And the irony is, if Newsom had just shut up
about all this, there's probably a pretty good chance that
if he got traction, Rogan's people would have money. And also,
(10:06):
I don't know if they've ever had a conversation and
Newsom's people tried to do the restrictings things, which is
you know what it came down to with with Kamala Harris.
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (10:18):
If you go to Joe Rogan, right, you say, hey,
I'm gonna come on, But we can only talk about this, this, this,
and we can't talk about like that's.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
Going to be a no go no. And I don't
know that that happened, but I'll tell you what, I'm
going to be looking out for Joe Rogan clips today
because I'll bet he has something to say. And if
you remember, he finally he laid bare all of the
stuff with Harris, you know, the whole Oh, then she
would only do an hour and then it was going
(10:46):
to be adjacent to the Beyonce rally, or we can
come out and then this, and then you can't do that,
and then they got mad because they were interviewing her
opponent and or he had.
Speaker 4 (10:56):
A flight to her he had to sit down at
like a different studio. Yeah, who the hell are you?
You know what I mean, You're not different than any
other guests. You go there and you sit down and
do the podcast, you do the thing special, you do
the thing.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
And yeah, so like just the just the again, the
high schoolish nature of him whining. And by the way,
the dude who's whining to him is kind of clowning
on him. He's like, you're calling him chicken. Like even
the even the interviewer I don't even know who that is,
even the guy interviewing him. It's like, this guy's weird. Man,
(11:31):
this guy's weird. And then they went back in the
green room. Nothing at drop class never seen the interviewer
since Very Unfortunate six eighteen. Hang on, uh, we'll even
hear from the star of the third best Predator movie.
So you know, got that going for us. That's I'm
trying to decide what I found more offensive last week.
(11:52):
Cross whether it was some twenty year old somewhere deciding
that the original Predator is only the third best Predator
movie or another twenty year old deciding that Michael Jackson's
Thriller is only the twenty second best Halloween song. I
think it's got to be the music, right, Just if
(12:12):
you're just going stupid, patently offensive takes, it's got to
be the Michael Jackson Thriller take. But the Predator thing's
no joke anyway. We got some on old audio we
will get to and let me just go ahead and
let me do this, since we're already messing around with
useless leftist politicians. Have you guys seen the new Mandanni
(12:36):
ad Mamdanni whatever his name is. This is it's the
Jews for Zorn Collective or and I they're a thing,
like they're an actual like five oh one C three,
I guess. So anyway, so they have a new ad
supporting Zorron. Here give her a listen, and I'll try
(13:00):
to fill in what you can't see because of course
this is radio. Hi Rabbi, Rabbi, Hi Rabbi. Okay, well, okay, okay, Arabbi.
It's like the view. So you got a bunch of
female rabbis mostly ros said anything about that third rabbi
(13:26):
stand out to you? And you were dubbing everybody in
this morning. Yeah, so yeah, I guess what was that
the rabbit? It's the person's rabbit.
Speaker 4 (13:35):
Noess, Yeah, there was just so much rabbi news anything.
I mean, that's a dude.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
Oh okay, dude, that's a dude. Yeah, that's a dude.
So for all it's like it's some catch for like
I only put female rabbis like well not technically all right,
but anyway, you just all happen to walk into each
other in the middle of New York there and to
you know, greet each other.
Speaker 6 (14:03):
What else you got, Hi, Rabbi, Rabbi Hi, Rabbi, Hi,
Rabbi Hi. We're among the thousands of Jewish New Yorkers
who've been out door knocking and phone banking to alex
Ouran Mamdani.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
We're also rabbis.
Speaker 7 (14:19):
We know zoranable fight to make our city affordable and
safe for our families.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
But ma'am, ma'am, you don't look comfortable on camera.
Speaker 6 (14:28):
Ma'am, And for our neighbors of all faiths and backgrounds.
As New Yorkers, we're also just people who live here
who don't want to get Christ out of this incredible
city that we call home. We know fellow Jews want
to be able to afford housing, transportation, and childcare for
their families too. As Jews, as Rabbis, as New Yorkers,
(14:51):
we believe that all people deserve to thrive.
Speaker 1 (14:55):
Zoran agrees.
Speaker 4 (14:57):
But let's get real.
Speaker 6 (14:58):
This isn't only about belief, it's about action.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
So let's build a flourishing city together.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
Let's at the end. They sound like the Claw and
the Aliens and Toy story.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
Yeah. That ad, by the way, is also visually disturbing
because it's like one you guys are stand in the
middle of the street. That's dumb, but just just super
uncomfortable man. And again it's just it's another in this line.
And maybe it doesn't matter in this race because it's
New York City and it's pretty clear that this isn't
(15:37):
a candidate in any way about you know, even pretending
that he's he's going to try to represent all New Yorkers,
which is why one in four say they might leave, which,
you know, gird your loins. Florida, North Carolina, probably the
Nashville area because that's that's generally where the outflow goes,
(16:00):
so we shall see. Meanwhile, Kathy Hochel, Hokeel, whatever, the
governor up there, she's decided that if she's if Zobron's
going to creep out the greater New York City area,
she's going to go creep out outstate for a while.
So we have a let's go Brandon moment. And I
(16:24):
guess if not that any of you probably need a refresher,
but maybe one of you do. This goes back to
Joe Biden and a chant specifically that was going on
at a NASCAR race while the NBC I think it
was NBC Sports is you know, it's just the woman
who goes around does the interviews, right, So she's interviewing
(16:46):
the driver, one of the drivers, and there's a chant
going on in the background, and the chant is clearly
F Joe Biden, and it was not the first time
that this has been a thing that kept happening at
sporting events in this window, and she interprets it because
the driver's first name is Brandon that she said, oh, oh,
(17:06):
they're chanting let's go Brandon, which then, of course people
started ironically using to mean F Joe Biden, to the
point where people were getting kicked off planes for let's
go Brandon shirts. You know, there were political dust ups
in public. If you posted it in certain places on
social media, you could literally get your account put on
(17:30):
time out. And I don't Maybe Hoko thought she needed
one of the one of her own moments, and unfortunately
she used Ross's team to do it.
Speaker 8 (17:40):
Given the reception you received last night at Zoe Roun's rally,
where people were chanting, tax the rich, tax the rich,
are you going to hold the line on raising taxes
even if it means losing an endorsement or getting a
primary challenge.
Speaker 9 (17:55):
I could hear what they were chanting. I thought they
were saying let's go Bills. I wasn't. I wasn't sure
you guys when you're up there, I heard some noise,
I heard a lot of cheers. But later on it
became a third to me that there is a I know,
this passion for that. I went in there as the
leader of the Democratic Party whose job it is to
unify and unify behind the Democratic nominee. I love the
(18:17):
energy out there, all right.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
So remember this is a rally. This is not a
NASCAR race. This is a zoorn rally. So if you
could find a group that I think is less emotionally
invested in the success of the Buffalo Bills, I would
be surprised.
Speaker 4 (18:33):
It's so dumb. She's acting like she woke up, but
she was like, let's look out, what's on my itinerary here? Yeah,
you know, and in mid mid late October and you're like, oh,
it's a Buffalo Bills rally we're doing. So that's weird. Yeah,
that's weird too. The location is super weird. But I'll
do yeah.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
Yeah, Oh it's about Donnie rally. I'm sorry, do any
of it? Do any of these four people, Hi Rabbi,
Hi Rabbi, give you a Bill super fan vibes with
that comport because every literally any fan account of the
Buffalo Bills is Ross's timeline right now? Does that is that?
Speaker 4 (19:12):
Listen? Any anyone's allowed in the mafia. You just have
to jump through the table while it's on fire. It's
not a big if you're going to do that, you
know that you can. You're in the club, you know,
and you have to really be a fan. But it
sort of it reminds me of like Andrew Cuomo in
twenty twenty. There was a quote of him saying, Hey,
I don't want to deal with with the COVID pandemic.
(19:32):
I want to go watch the Buffalo Bills or whatever
it was. It was like, Oh, you're a big Buffalo
Bills guy. Are you Andrew bo there in New York City?
Speaker 1 (19:40):
From the story to Culomo's of the shores of Lake Erie?
Speaker 4 (19:45):
Maybe, yeah, Andrew you know lake Front snow Cuomo is
what they call him.
Speaker 1 (19:49):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's I remember that. So since we're
retroactively nicknaming everything, like did you know the East wing
of the White House was the heart of the nation?
Speaker 4 (19:58):
Really?
Speaker 5 (19:59):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (20:00):
I read it the New York Post yesterday. Apparently It's
always been a thing. We've all talked about it for years.
Remember when we talked about it for years, how the
east wing of the White House was the heart of
the nation all the time. Yeah, constant water cooler discussion
around the station like a rock Yeah, yeah, one, what
are we doing? This is an actual thing. The Washington
(20:22):
Post wrote about yesterday the east wing considered the heart
of the nation, and they have it in quotes. I'm like,
that's what is that a thing? And then the best
description and reasoning I saw was because that's where the
First Lady's office is. And it's like, oh oh, so
(20:42):
it's the suicidal empathetic portion of the of the nation.
What we call it that? And like historically they found
there is a reference to that, you know, people saying that,
But that's not a thing. That's a wonky, weird quote
that nobody's ever heard kind of thing. So yeah, for
(21:02):
for you know, Clomo to be the Bills super fan
is he apparently claimed to be. I remember seeing I
remember they were he had he had like a uh,
I'm not gonna call it a toboggin, I don't care,
but he had, you know, a Bill Ski cap on
one time, and I remember them roasting them.
Speaker 4 (21:19):
Oh yeah, listen, there is a obviously the way the
country is divided, and we mentioned yesterday, you know, just
because here in New York doesn't mean you're a crazy
comy lib correct. There are red There are people on
the right side of the aisle there.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
But so there are.
Speaker 4 (21:31):
People in the fandom where whatever Hochel will bring up
the bills because she's a big fan, you have people
like just stop, please.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
Please, Well, that's because you guys are paranoid, right, So
is it that you think she's cursing the team? Just
stop making everything so political, dude, because there's a big well,
there's that, But I will tell you that there's a
big contingent of Vikings fans now that if Tim Wallace
talks about the Vikings, right, we shut up. Yeah, but
(22:00):
a lot of it's like, oh, you're gonna curse us
because you're such a loser. So they didn't like Walls
to begin with, but now it's turned into a whole
nother thing. And the part where he knows zero about football,
mister pick six there, So the whole the whole thing
gets real awkward, real quick. And on the final stop
of our crazy actual politician tour. Oh wait, we have
(22:24):
the Jefferies. We head up to Maine where the the
Nazi tattooed or formerly Nazi tattooed but maybe currently still
Nazi tattooed because of the other tattoo and anarchist Antifa
super soldier his words. He decided, after all of the
(22:47):
Nazi controversy, to well get into this yesterday and this
is a video he posted on his own account.
Speaker 2 (22:54):
I'm a big buses and trains guy.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
Oh so, where.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
My oyster farm is just about about a kilometer distant
is a boat yard.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
But you, by the way, did you catch that part?
Did you catch that part right there? Which should be disqualifyed?
It's subtle. It's subtle because I know you're literally a
guy with a Nazi tattoo's telling you about his love
of trains right now, and that can be a little jarring.
But he said something there that should be disqualified. I'm
gonna play it again, see if you could pick up
(23:25):
on it.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
I'm a big buses and trains guy. I mean so,
where my oyster farm is just about about a kilometer distant?
Speaker 1 (23:36):
All right, Ross, did you catch it there? I think
I did kilometers. Oh I heard something else. Yeah, he said,
is his oyster farm? Would that make him an oyster person? Yeah, yeah,
I think it would.
Speaker 10 (23:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (23:54):
No, no, no, that was it. But no, this is
a guy running for office in America who's explaining directions
in kilometers.
Speaker 4 (24:00):
You can't be doing that, dude.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
I understand the military side of it even then. No, No,
that's for that's for them. I mean, you're in Maine.
It's for the people north of you. It's not for you,
all right. Anyway, tell us more about your love of trains.
Guy with Nazi tattoo.
Speaker 2 (24:20):
I'm a big buses and trains guy. I mean, so,
where my oyster farm is just about about kometer distance
is a boat yard, But it used to be the
terminus of a train terminal came down from Bangor all
the way to Hancock Rust.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
Do you know where else there's a terminus of a
train track?
Speaker 4 (24:41):
Where would that be?
Speaker 1 (24:44):
Well, they have some in Poland, parts of eastern Germany,
but the one in Poland is particularly famous.
Speaker 4 (24:54):
Listen, man, he just wants to make sure the trains
are there and they're running on time, and they're full.
That's all he wants. Yeah, yeah, mister main komf here,
Uh what you used to be able.
Speaker 2 (25:05):
To take a train from Hancock, Maine, h anywhere in
the United States. If I'm any kind of Democrat, I'm
a New Deal Democrat, and I believe that I believe
that we need to be looking at our entire structure,
the structure of our society in a holistic way.
Speaker 1 (25:24):
And I think arguably the other guy was really into trains.
He very much probably agreed with that.
Speaker 3 (25:31):
One.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
In a holistic look at society and reforming it where
necessary and including the makeup of it. Your fellow train.
Speaker 2 (25:40):
Enthusiasts, transportation rural and urban is something that requires we
can't just put it onto states and municipalities. I very
much look at my role in the US Senate as
bringing that kind of big structural chain.
Speaker 4 (26:00):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (26:02):
Yeah, yeah. I would argue that the other guy wanted to.
He brought some big structural change as well. By who
thought it was a good I mean, I understand you
might get to get asked about trains, but at no
point is anybody in your orbit go, you know what,
maybe you shouldn't talk about trains this week. They all right, well,
(26:22):
I'm about to talk about my hunting camp. We'll talk
about camping. No, no, you should probably you probably won't
avoid that as well. Nobody said any of this because
they then they said it in a thing, and then
they clipped the video and then they put the video
on the internet. That's how I got it. Nobody's like, hey,
(26:45):
talk about the oysters, lean into that, not the trains man,
not the trains anyway, all right, I I you know,
arguably we could play The Republicans said that it would
be a dog whistle thing. But I don't, I don't
we have to. This guy talked about urban to rule
rule to urban train terminuses and his love of you
(27:08):
know them lots to connect to right there, you know,
if you're awake. So somebody's taken it upon themselves. Maybe
it's Ross, I don't know, to basically mine old interviews
from the nine billion podcasts that NBA players will subject
themselves to, and it's players who are among either the
(27:33):
individuals actually named in the in the indictments, the indictments
we saw with the gambling stuff, or people even secondhand
talking about like Damon played poker with and apparently there's
a like ten different references to them playing poker poker
(27:54):
with Lebron James. Now, it doesn't mean it was the
rig poker games. You don't know what they're referencing there.
But like you, I don't care who you are. You
don't want those videos floating around.
Speaker 5 (28:07):
Man.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
But but like you think, Lebron, I mean believe it.
I've heard enough. I've heard if I've seen enough, well, yeah,
you know, I've just told you about them.
Speaker 4 (28:21):
Yeah, I'm listening, Prison, and you need to strip them
of all of accolade. This is pete rose and steroids
and all goes back to Lebron.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
Not everything. I think you'll let him keep his finals losses?
Speaker 4 (28:31):
Yeah, no, no, no, yeah, I can keep those.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
Yeah yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (28:34):
So I don't know why, after all this time you
would doubt me.
Speaker 1 (28:37):
I'm not. I'm say technically now you're my second sword.
See look at that settled science.
Speaker 4 (28:43):
Unbiased opinion. I'm saying I've seen enough.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
Oh we just dude, I'm sorry I saw something. Yeah,
go ahead.
Speaker 4 (28:54):
No, I was about to say, I haven't really seen
any of the evidence, but you know, my gut is
telling me.
Speaker 1 (28:58):
You know, Prison, we just talked about. What movie? Did
we just talked about earlier in the show Merriic psycho. Right, Yeah,
do you know who is now I guess purported to
be the person who will be starring in the remake.
Speaker 4 (29:18):
Yeah, no, no, no, yeah, no, I've heard about this, Yes,
Margo Robbie. Yeah, they're doing a gender swap. I think
you know, say what you will about the gender swap boo.
I'm not yet whatever. But if they're going to do it,
I think she could probably pull it off. Like, if
that's the road they're going down, I could see I
could see her doing a good job in that role.
Speaker 1 (29:38):
She is, she gonna be naked the whole time.
Speaker 4 (29:40):
I don't know, like I'm saying, like I wouldn't write
as a gender swap, but if they're going to do it,
I think if you're going to gender swap into this
like where you have to play some psycho, like, you
could get a you could get a female.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
Actress to sell it.
Speaker 4 (29:55):
Yeah, but I think that maybe the problem with her
character would be is I think it's believable at face
value because she kind of looks like she can be crazy,
Like she has like a crazy look crazy mate, So
maybe you want to go with somebody that doesn't look
crazy to pull off Patrina Bateman or whatever the name's
gonna be.
Speaker 1 (30:13):
Yeah, I don't know, man, what is she one hundred pounds?
That's the other side of this. So I I all right,
we'll see. I had not seen that, so I was unaware.
So okay, you got a little bit of a shocker
to me. I saw two things this morning. One was
that and one was the Chinese public toilets, which at
least that's funny. So I don't know if you guys
(30:35):
know this. So over in China, home of the social
credit system, they have a new thing with public bathrooms.
They're going to start in public and I guess they
have put them in some already. So if you go
to the public bathroom, it's not like Europe or you
got to put coins in Ross did you know that?
And a lot of the public bathrooms over in Europe
(30:55):
you got to put coins in.
Speaker 4 (30:56):
No idea.
Speaker 1 (30:57):
It's like a vending machine for the privilege of going
in there. So in China you can go in, but
if you want toilet paper, you'll have to scan a
QR code on the dispenser and watch a video and
or you can pay to skip it. But if you
watch it, you're only going to get a certain amount
(31:19):
of toilet papers. You may have to watch multiple videos
depending on what you're trying to tackle there as we
need to do rossfy calling. To be on the show,
you got to listen to a thirty second ad before
we'll put you on the air. Don't tell sales. I
might actually do that. All right, let's talk about the
evolving media landscape this morning show. We because I think
(31:40):
there's a couple, well there's one just horrendous thing, and
then there's something that's actually kind of funny. Let me
start with this. So if you remember, headed into the weekend,
Trump was talking about how a private donor he did
not name the person, had called him and said, hey, whatever,
(32:00):
you guys need to make sure that the US military
members of the US military get their their upcoming payroll.
I will go ahead and close that gap. And Trump
said that this individual gave one hundred and thirty million
dollars to pay troops. And then the speculation began, and
(32:22):
I think most people, because that's not people who were like, oh,
I know it was Elon who did it. Well, it
wasn't Elon who did it. That's not a knock on Elon,
but they've they eventually figured out who who gave it,
and I recognize the name immediately because this dude is
he is, he's a known commodity in Wyoming. He's he's like,
(32:45):
he's a very secretive dude. He's got a big spread,
he owns a bunch of properties in Wyoming. He's not
an oridgin. He's not in Wyoming night by birth or anything.
But you know, he's he's he's just very reclusive. His
name is Tim Mellon, and yes it's that melon Carnegie Mellon,
the melon banking family. He is one of the those melons.
(33:08):
He's actually very accomplished himself, but again he just kinda
he just kind of hides it his giant estateed over
near Jackson and does this thing. Man. But he but
he's he's in. But he has done a lot of
philanthropy around Wyoming, so he's established a name there as well.
So it's all that to say, he strikes me as
(33:30):
a dude who would want to give them money and
then just be done with it. And really, really quickly
you understand why. So this guy who did nothing to
nobody except pay the members of the military a single
payroll by the way. But yet for a guy who's
(33:50):
probably worth I don't know, a billion, maybe a few,
maybe a couple billion, I think is what the estimate
is for him. I mean, that's still a healthy of change.
You know, if he's worth a billion, that's thirteen percent
of what he's worth. So once they find out it's him,
(34:10):
what do you think the New York Times? Does you
know what they did? Tim Mellon, the GOP donor who
gave Trump one hundred and thirty million to pay troops,
has a history of negative comments about black people. When
a New York Times reporter with a Hispanic surname contacted
him in twenty twenty in English, he replied with the
(34:32):
Goya slogan in Spanish, Goya the you know the the
beans and all you know the can goods there so,
which is, by the way, leaving a lot a lot
out of what that exchange was. But you know this
is this is a dude who like just gave one
(34:52):
hundred and thirty million, and the first instinct of the
New York Times is to try to cancel him. Well,
the only reason this is the reason they want exact
dollar amounts on all the donations for the ballroom, because
then some lackey over the New York Times or Glenn
(35:15):
Thrush who did this, is just gonna sit there and
go down the list and try to cancel as many
people as possible. But this is the thanks the guy gets,
gives one hundred and thirty millions so members of the
military don't miss a payroll while they're putting their butts
on the line, and the New York Times wants to
do a takedown of the person who stroked the check.
(35:36):
It's I mean, it's just so predictable. But even then
I thought, maybe they'll just sit this one out. Of
course they won't. Now you got to get in on that.
And then simultaneously, since we're talking about the evolution of
the media, as you know, Barry Weiss is now the
head of CBS News and everyone's kicking his screaming over that.
Barry Weiss, who is not a conservative by the way,
(36:00):
not a conservative, just a more open minded, you know,
liberal East Coast writer, has clearly made some changes there,
and they've now decided that she's forced she's forced the
people at CBS News to become a right wing network,
and they wanted the evidence, apparently is an interview that
(36:23):
was done with Hakeem Jefferies, where he's asked questions of
substance and and follow up questions when the answer he
seems to not what he did, when he seems to
not want to give the answer. Some would say, this
(36:43):
is exactly what every interview on mainstream media of anyone
who is considered to the right has been since my
entire life. And uh, it was funny because Margaret Brennan's
doing the interview and she's a hack, but clearly she's
a hack who wants to keep her job, so she
(37:04):
was able to feign actual journalism. And it's crazy because
the bar is so low. That's all that people are
asking for is actual journalism. And I want you to
listen to how Hakeem is. They're just not. This is
the whole problem and will continue to be the whole
problem with Democrats. They they've never had to live in
(37:27):
an environment where they got called on their BS really,
and I don't mean Fox doing it or somebody online
doing it. I mean they they knew for forever that
if they rolled into a CBS News sit down interview,
it was going to be like, what's your favorite pony name? Right,
(37:47):
oh man, when did you discover you were so stunning
and brave, you know, questions like that, and if there
was controversy they would do it was a management tool.
They could they go in, they could get a little
hand slashed app so that the journalists can look like
they're doing journalism, but then feed whatever talking point they want.
It would go unquestioned, and then that would become the
(38:07):
official narrative. The team Jeffries isn't ready for that. Listen
to this.
Speaker 11 (38:13):
You said, Democrats, there are no election deniers on our
side of the aisle. You said that back in January,
but recently you've been using the term rigged elections in
reference to the upcoming midterms. Democrats were appalled when President
Trump used language like that. How do you justify using that?
Speaker 5 (38:29):
Now?
Speaker 11 (38:29):
Doesn't that undermine faith for voters? You need to show up.
Speaker 12 (38:35):
No, I've been using that term in the context of
Donald Trump's unprecedented effort to jerryman their congressional maps in
a partisan fashion all across the country in order to
rig the midterm elections.
Speaker 1 (38:49):
And I'm going to posit it here because this is
what you just heard right here, This is what Jeffries
expects this is how how you get rid of that little,
this little nagging question. Right, she asked that question. There's
a certain aggressive nature to it. But he's like, oh, yeah, no,
I got the explanation here. I was talking about the
other thing. And in any other sense, this interview would
(39:09):
then pivot to another topic. There wouldn't be a follow up.
She would take it at face value that he's talking
about the rigging and the jerry mandarin which apparently only
Republicans are doing, and she would just move on. But
that's not what's going to happen here.
Speaker 12 (39:23):
And deny the ability of the American people to actually
decide who should be in the majority as it relates
to the.
Speaker 11 (39:30):
House of Democrats are also going through through jerry mandering
and redistricting.
Speaker 12 (39:36):
No, no, no, well, Democrats are going to push back
aggressively to make sure that we have fair maps across
the country, not partisan jerry mandering, which Republicans have initiated
in state after state after state.
Speaker 1 (39:50):
All right, So, and again his narrative is we're all over.
Democrats are only reacting, you know. And by the way, Brennan,
Brendan could have gone harder, and she should have like
and if it was a Republican saying that with when
maps of Illinois exist, let's say it was all flipped,
or the state of Massachusetts situation exists, you do go
(40:12):
harder because that's such a non and that's such a
BS answer. But just the fact that there was even
one follow up there, it has caused people on Blue
Sky to decide that CBS is now Fox News but
but more like CBS is now officially a right wing
propaganda network because of because of that interview, that's just
(40:39):
that's just normal. Hell I would argue it's still a
little to the left, but but it's much more normal.
And it's been in years, and they can't they've had
it that way so long. It looks like bias in
their minds, right, because if they a lot of them
probably thought CBS wasn't left enough. So yeah, anything outside
(41:03):
of that normal scope, obviously it's going to look like
a lurch right word, But they haven't even come back
to center. So there's our little little tour of the Oh, no,
one more cut. This is Schwarzenegger too, like on this
jurymandering stuff like here's Arnold being interviewed and listen, how
surprised the reporter.
Speaker 13 (41:23):
Is as you as you acknowledged.
Speaker 1 (41:26):
The interviewer obviously, and it's Tapper.
Speaker 13 (41:28):
As you as you acknowledged. This all started because of
redistricting in Texas, and this was Trump pushing Republican controlled states.
Speaker 1 (41:35):
I would correct that it started in Texas because Biden's
DOJ and lawsuits forced Texas to do redistricting. That always
gets left out. You know why, why why Texas was
even doing this because they were court ordered and the
DOJ under Biden threatened them. So that's the thing.
Speaker 13 (41:53):
To throw out their current congressional maps so as to
cook the book so that there is less it is
less likely for Democrats to retake control of the House
during the next year mid terms. I mean, is it
fair to argue that do you believe that the Republican
Party is starting.
Speaker 10 (42:12):
Us No, Jake, there has been cherrymandering going on for
two hundred years. There is such such extreme cherrymandering going
on that in the state like Massachusetts, it has like
forty percent of the puper voting for Trump. They only
had they have Seer a representative. The Republican Party has
(42:33):
zero representatives sent to the House. Think about that in
New Mexico, have forty five percent of the people voted
for Trump and voted Republican, and Cyril is sent to
the House zero representative from the Republican party. So there's cherrymandering,
crazy cherrymandering going on all over the country. And we
(42:54):
wanted to try to stop it in California, and they
did stop it in California, and we made around the country.
So I think this whole thing about finger pointing and
said they did it. It's a difficulation doing it. That's
not really the way to go. Did one party should
outperform the other party? It should be performances?
Speaker 6 (43:11):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (43:12):
Ross, why'd you cut it off? Right there? Man?
Speaker 14 (43:15):
All right?
Speaker 1 (43:15):
Ross cut it off. Directly after he got done with
that sentence, Arnold's arm turned into a ten inch blade
and he sliced Tapper in half long ways.
Speaker 4 (43:23):
Oh wow, I missed that. Yeah, I can't believe I
missed it.
Speaker 1 (43:26):
Yeah. Could I would have put that in there? Yeah,
I mean it was horrendous. It just Tapper, Okay, And
here was the thing. He then starts speaking in Tapper's voice.
Speaker 10 (43:34):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (43:35):
Yeah, and you couldn't tell the difference. It was crazy man.
All right, Well I'll just fill in the blanks for
You's seven nineteen hang on Pall. The guy who donated
the money to save the Troup pay was Thornton Mellon. Yes,
you're absolutely right. That's a good reference though. Oh what
a good movie, Rozid fan of Back to School your
(43:56):
Rodney Dangerfield. Sam Kinnison's in that movie.
Speaker 4 (44:00):
There was a time back like when we were kids
where they would play that movie on the weekends on
like Fox. Yeah, Like it seemed like it was every
other weekend they'd play you.
Speaker 1 (44:07):
Know what you bring up? But you just sparked a memory.
There were about ten movies that for whatever reason were always.
Speaker 4 (44:13):
On on the weekend yep, and it was always on Fox. Yeah,
Like Fast Times at Ridgemont High was one of them,
and they were they played the hell out of Shock,
but of course they were on like you know Fox.
They were super edited, right, Well, I.
Speaker 1 (44:26):
Mean you'd have to for a lot, especially movies of
the eighties ero where they're just like, let's just put
ten topless chicks in here, so you were gonna get
those parts and oh yeah, that was that was what
a great movie that was, man, Rodny Rodney d That's
why Rodney Dangerfield. It was so jarring. I think we
mentioned this on the show, probably not that long ago.
(44:48):
That's why it was so jarring when Natural Born Killers
came out.
Speaker 5 (44:52):
Yeah, it's like and in.
Speaker 4 (44:55):
That movie, he's just so disgusting. Yeah, you can see
the sweat, sweat, You could smell him through the screen
like all your growth.
Speaker 1 (45:04):
And he played it perfectly, perfectly. But yeah, it was
not It was not the Rodney Dane. Oh well, you
want to go see a Rodney Dangerfield movie. Sure? Oh
my gosh, what have we gotten ourselves into?
Speaker 4 (45:16):
That man though, that man you know on the golf court,
he reminds me so much of Kevin Campbell, doctor I
mean dresses.
Speaker 1 (45:23):
Yeah, yeah, and Campbell has been known to have a
Bluetooth speaker a little different but slightly different. I don't
know where you got that golf bag. He was using
a caddy scheck, but I'd be down for one. By
the way, did you just did you see that the
the assassinated former Japanese Prime Minister Abby Did you see
(45:46):
his wife gifted Trump the guy's personal golf clubs, which
are like these are not just golf clubs.
Speaker 4 (45:54):
Did you see the photo of Trump in the Imperial Palace. Well,
you know he you know, he wants to be an emperor.
I think it's problem, but this is another one of
those things where it's like a tradition, like it's like
a real honor that isn't given to everyone. Like I
don't think Joe Biden was ever in there. Like it's
one of these things where like it's it's really impressive.
Speaker 1 (46:14):
They hold it out. Yeah, it's a holdout for people
they really like or want to impress. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (46:19):
And the funny you see these photos of Trump sitting
there is tie matches the background of the palace, Like
people are like, did he plan that? Because it's it's
the exact match his ties, the exact same color of
the walls of the pal like this golden like yellow,
the same the same shade.
Speaker 1 (46:36):
The only problem was they didn't play the Rocky theme
when he walked in. I know, disappointing, but you know,
other than I guess you could have gone for something
that's more maybe from the Karate Kids soundtrack or something.
Speaker 4 (46:49):
Like You're the Best.
Speaker 1 (46:50):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you know thematically keep up with it.
Eighteen inning game last night, obvious, I clearly I did
not make it through all of it. I was watching. Initially,
I was watching kind of going back and forth, but
(47:12):
watching the Kansas City game, which was a game for
the first half. They picked Mahomes twice, the Commanders, Redskins,
whatever you want to call them. Obviously they had Marcus
Mariota filling in their quarterback. But it was going. And
then like right, we get into the second half and
(47:32):
it's tied seven to seven going into half, come out
and all of a sudden, apparently the Commanders forgot that
you can't keep committing all these weird infractions. Now I
had a hard time seeing some of them, but yeah, man,
they got they were super pass interferior apparently. Then oh no,
it's weird. Rossette's weird.
Speaker 7 (47:51):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (47:52):
The whole momentum of the game changed, and then Kansas
City put twenty one points on them and Washington never
scored again. And I think most people expected that Washington
would lose. Chiefs relatively healthy the Redskins without their you know,
a couple of big stars. But still that was a
(48:12):
little suss. I should have watched the baseball game. The
game six hours, forty minutes, eighteen innings, and there's something
that annoys me here. Well, one even if you're not
a Dodgers fan. This is America versus Canada, so pick
a side. I don't even know if Canadians stayed up
(48:33):
to watch this thing, because it's like Ross, it's sir
harvesting and musson season, right, and I think that's what
ninety five percent of the economy is. I'm not sure,
so they probably had to go to bed early. But
I was getting very irritated with the decision to walk
Sha Ho sho he Otani for the four times in
(48:55):
the extra innings, just in a row. It got so
bad the umpire when Otani would be, uh, you know,
on deck, the umpire would literally crane his neck to
look over at the dugouts so we could get the
hand signal, which is you hold four fingers up if
you're the manager, and that's you know, announcing the intentional walk.
They did it four times. People want to watch Otani.
(49:18):
I under like there should be a limit to the
number of times you can intentionally walk people Ross. Would
you get on board with that? More of a baseball
purist that either has to like maybe you can do
it once or twice, because like they did this to Bonds,
it was irritating. But to Otani in on a World
(49:38):
Series and they're walking the dudes for four times now,
some would say, look, that's part of the strategy. You
got a player in there that they're gonna give you
a base runner, Shut up and take it. But people
tune in and they want to see him hit and
hit he did. The big reason they walked him his
last four at bats was because of what happened in
(49:59):
the four regular In the regular innings at bats, he
hit a double, then a home run, then he hit
another double, and then he hit another home run, and
he also got on bass because he bad at nineteen
you got, he was on base every damn time. I
think that was a non intentional walk. I don't remember,
but yeah, yeah, this he never had when they got
(50:21):
into extra innings, So Tani never got to swing a bat.
Speaker 4 (50:24):
Yeah, And it was a rule like there where you
can only do it a certain number of times.
Speaker 1 (50:27):
Yeah, or maybe you can't do it in extra innings.
Speaker 4 (50:30):
I will say this, I mean they played two full games.
You know America's game, there's no ties, that's right. They
just keep playing until someone wins.
Speaker 1 (50:39):
And they don't have to bastardize themselves to do something else,
you know, like a shootout or something like that. Right,
it's just you. You You're sticking with the game there, man. Yeah,
I say, all right, we're gonna have We're gonna have
a home run derby to see who wins. No I
hate that. No, No, they just keep trucking the World Series. Man,
gotta do what you gotta do. But yeah, you know,
(51:01):
arguably the biggest name in baseball, and you don't even
get to see him swing the bat once you get
to extra innings. But it didn't matter. Freddie Freeman walk
off for the Dodgers again. I'm long gone by then,
so I had to catch up this morning what happened.
But still, yeah, tany reach base nine times in Toronto
six to five, walkoff, lost Game three. So we keep trucking.
(51:28):
When is I was gonna say, they're not travel I
think they play again to night. Yeah, they play again tonight.
So hope everyone's getting their rest because seven hours, seven
hours playing baseball, even though it is a you know,
a slowish sport, it's just, you know the amount of
stress and everything on you. You're on the biggest stage,
(51:50):
You're playing in the biggest series of the sport that
which you play, all eyes are on you. Baseball has
done a much better job of being an international sport,
as evidence by the fact that half the Major leaguers
seem to come from Latin America, and now you have
this growing. It's always been a big sport over in Japan,
but you just but Japan was very protectionist and how
(52:13):
players would make it over And now you're seeing what
a handful of Japanese players, the best of the best
are are doing to the major leagues over here, and
it's really exciting. And of course everyone's over there, you know,
over in Japan, like nothing was getting done because of
the time change, nothing, you know, and japan they're kind
of strict, like everybody's going to go to work. Everyone's
(52:34):
just watching this thing. I'm sure it's not everyone, but
I saw a bunch of videos of a normally bustling
Japanese society just on lockdown to watch this thing. And
I don't know that's what Roger Goodell drules over except
it was more organic with the Japanese, you know, Russ,
you know the origin story largely of why the Japanese
(52:55):
they love baseball so much. This goes right back to
World War Two. Man, this goes right back to World
War Two. I kid you not. There are two things
in Japan you can directly trace to the occupation and
the post the rebuilding section of World War Two that
are absolutely ingrained in Japanese culture. And one of them
(53:17):
is baseball, because you know, you had all the American gis.
They loved themselves in baseball, and then that baseball and
playing to the baseball and the rules and everything, and
that was something that was embraced by a lot of
the Japanese during our continued time over there. And then
the other one, and I think it's hilarious. I think
(53:38):
it's really funny because of the marketing angle that it took.
And I mentioned it on the show Japanese. When it
comes to American food, Southern style American food is really
big over there, especially fried chicken. And again that comes
from gis that were over there that were making fried chicken.
(53:59):
And in fact, it became so big and that when
KFC launched in Japan, they just lied to the Japanese.
They lied to them and they said that a for
Thanksgiving or no for Christmas, excuse me, for Christmas. Everyone
in America sits down for a big old helping a
fried chicken, and they marketed that.
Speaker 14 (54:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (54:22):
I was about to mention the Christmas part because it's fascinating.
Speaker 1 (54:25):
Yeah it's yeah, because that's the American tradition. And now
in Japan they run Christmas specials like pre orders, like
you pre order a turkey or something if you get
the prepared thing. So KFC has all these pre orders
and then you know there's other brands as well, but
KFC is the big one. They they run all their commercials.
(54:45):
I think we played one on the air just to
demonstrate it.
Speaker 4 (54:48):
It should be in it, that's what I think. What's
that It should be a Christmas tradition, big old bucket
of fried chicken. Love it. I mean that's why the
bucket is read. That's when the bucket is red and white.
Speaker 1 (55:00):
Well they make it red and green over there too, amazing.
Oh yeah, just to tie in the whole the Christmas angle.
And so now that's just a Japanese tradition. Man, it's
like it was a lie, wasn't true. I don't know, man,
I mean I'm with you. I don't like turn down
a big old bucket of fried chicken, but give me
(55:21):
a good Christmas roast, tough stuff? Is mister Stagic alive?
Do we know what's happening with him? All right? Maybe
not yet, but it is him today, Okay, all right,
I know he's dealing with some stuff. So although I
did see something this morning that I think it's a
(55:42):
really good idea that I want to I want the
weather community to adopt because I think it'll be far
better for us non weather people. And it has to
do with Hurricane Melissa, which I don't know if you've
been seeing what's going on. Hurricane Melissa is like roster
you found any of this? No like the size of it,
(56:04):
the it's apparently the driest from an eye perspective, driest
hurricane because I don't know, maybe watches Harry Sison videos
and and and it's just things a friggin' monster and
probably not good to be on Jamaica right now, mister Stagic.
Speaker 7 (56:19):
What's going on, sir, Hurricane Melissa? And that's good advice.
Anybody who needed to leave or had to leave, I.
Speaker 5 (56:29):
Guess is gone.
Speaker 7 (56:29):
But I don't know how much that really helps in
terms of the infrastructure. I mean, you have to guess
that the infrastructure is not supportive of the strongest hurricane
to ever hit the island of Jamaican.
Speaker 5 (56:43):
There's no signs that it's going to weaken.
Speaker 1 (56:45):
Noo or whatever. That gout disappeared by a hurricane, yeah,
or just Rio, so that guy disappeared by a hurricane.
So if you've ever been on vacation there, it was
there and then it wasn't one day, and now it's there.
Speaker 5 (56:57):
Again, yep.
Speaker 7 (56:58):
And they'll be that either you know, landscape changing for
x amount of time or forever. Maybe with some of
these places that you know, we spent our honeymoon there,
you know, and you know, you go outside of the.
Speaker 5 (57:12):
Resorts and you know how it is, and you didn't
murder the amount.
Speaker 1 (57:14):
That's good.
Speaker 7 (57:15):
Yeah, right, So here I am the amount of rain
and then the amount of wind. I mean, it is
a small core of one seventy five plus winds, but
you're still talking about where that center comes on. Sure,
a hurricane force winds extending out. Let's see, I think
it was thirty thirty miles or x miles from the
center of the storm, and then tropical storm force wins yeh,
(57:36):
hurricane force winds thirty miles from the center. So that
is the radius of the diameter of the hurricane force
winds is two times to two times, are right? Two
times radius equals diameter if you go back to it
was an elementary math.
Speaker 1 (57:51):
Come on, man, we don't do math then the.
Speaker 7 (57:55):
But yeah, so you're talking sixty miles per hour, and
then tropical storm force winds which will do damage do
go out one hundred and seventy five nine five from
the center. So you're talking about a wind field that's
almost four hundred miles across. And they've already seen in
Jamaica some of the wind gusts close to sixty miles
(58:16):
per hour and that was a few hours ago. Montigo
Bay already fifty five earlier today, so things are starting
unraveled now. It's basically the strongest winds in the eastern
side coming in central and western island of Jamaica. So
Kingston spares the worst, but still a very heavy rain.
Can you imagine two to three feet of rain. That's
(58:37):
a bunch of rain. Hopefully the only thing that could
help is if it's that.
Speaker 1 (58:41):
Which it is, start North Carolina rain. I mean, yeah,
I know slood London.
Speaker 7 (58:49):
Yeah, sometimes I forget but h so then eastern Cuba
and into the Bahamas, South southern Bahamas especially, and then
maybe Bermuda impacts in the lower forty minimal, and I
say minimal because the storm that's gonna come through here
midweek will go north and then eventually catch up Melissa's
gonna catch up in the northern latitudes and speed up
(59:10):
when it gets to the northeast New England. The latitude
of let's say, for example, New York City, some of
that moisture might get drawn into the second area of
low pressure and enhance the rain northeast. So yeah, just
a catastrophic if it's starting to unfold now, especially for
the Guyland the Jamaica.
Speaker 5 (59:28):
We're kind of sloppy.
Speaker 7 (59:29):
The rain and showers continue today, taper off a little
bit as we go on through this afternoon, but another
roundcoming as we go through tonight and tomorrow.
Speaker 5 (59:36):
I think we'll have more rain.
Speaker 7 (59:38):
Some probably doesn't shine here at least a full force
until sometime maybe late Thursday, if not Thursday, served by
Friday in the weekend. Halloween looks good right now. Weekend
looks great with highs and the low mid sixties, overnight
lows upper thirties, low forties. So a couple of days
of this crud casey, and it's gonna be much better,
especially by Halloween.
Speaker 1 (59:57):
All right, two questions if you got a moment one, Uh,
is there a threat? And if so, the percentage that
we get part of that hurricane that turns its attention
to mainland US or no? Okay?
Speaker 5 (01:00:11):
That chance is yeah, that chance is about zero.
Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
About Vikings super Bowl chances.
Speaker 5 (01:00:17):
That's about zero Cowboys bills.
Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
I wasn't gonna bring bills, won they Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:00:24):
But I talked about super Bowl chances.
Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
Wow that I heard one of your weather cohorts this morning.
I can't remember some of the stations who was talking
about the pressure inside the hurricane being at nine hundred
milli bars, but they said but they said mini bars.
And I think that's a good change because nobody loves
what the hell ross? Do you know how millibar is?
How big that is?
Speaker 4 (01:00:48):
No idea?
Speaker 1 (01:00:49):
Do you how do you know how big a mini
bar is?
Speaker 5 (01:00:51):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (01:00:52):
Okay, yes, see, so if you guys would convert it
to mini bars, then we could judge the scale of
this thing.
Speaker 5 (01:00:59):
Uh, get to work on that.
Speaker 1 (01:01:01):
Take it up with the rest.
Speaker 5 (01:01:03):
Well, I'll take it up with cantory. Okay, thank you,
he's the franchise.
Speaker 1 (01:01:07):
Yeah yeah, no, I hear you, man, I hear you.
But like the math that Ray was trying to do
this morning, throwing cars and phrases, yeah give me. Many
parks are do it like they messed comments now where
they're like it's thirteen giraffes and five pygmy hippos. Get
on the train. All right, we're talking about because nine
hang on. A New Jersey woman, uh will, let's see
(01:01:31):
what are they? How many years? Soon eight years? She's
facing for this. She's pleading guilty, so it's probably gonna
get seven and a half years. They think, all right,
so here's what happened. A New Jersey woman is so
she's got herself a friend with benefits, right, little booty
call thing there, and it's like middle of the night,
(01:01:53):
it's like really early in the morning, because it's like
what two in the morning. They're texting each other and
she's like, hey, come on over. He says, all right,
I'm gonna come on over. But I guess he'd been
drinking or whatever. And so right around the time she's
she thinks her booty calls on the way, he's he
just falls asleep, and that does not sit well with
(01:02:15):
this woman. According to authorities, well, she stood over for
about an hour and a half. Eventually, at four in
the morning, she drove over the man's house. He's passed
out and so and and so. When she knocks, he's
not answering it. So she arsends the house with him inside.
Speaker 4 (01:02:35):
After what a thirty minute wait or something.
Speaker 1 (01:02:38):
No, it would have been about an hour and a
half by the time she'd gotten her car. So yeah,
I think he started He started texting it too. I
don't know how long they text. Yeah, I can tell you.
Speaker 4 (01:02:49):
It seems like a sleigh overreaction.
Speaker 1 (01:02:51):
Okay, yeah, yeah, how about I don't know, you just
make his life hell the next day or or find
somebody new Stokes. So this is woman's name is no,
his name is Stokes. I'm sorry. He survived, thankfully. So
she was she's you know, was she pled to attempted
(01:03:13):
murder and aggravated assault. Let's see here According to here
we go, all right, according to Curtis Stokes, who's the
guy he invited the Oh no, he invited the defendant
to his residence. Okay, so all right, So the one
part of the story says the other way around. Oh,
(01:03:34):
they were talking about that. So then he's like, all right,
you come over. So when she showed up and started knocking,
he's not answer because he passed out.
Speaker 10 (01:03:41):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:03:41):
Stokes also added that Russell was just his side chick,
so I guess that irritated her. So she's already stewing
on this uh and she uh. By the time Russell arrived,
Stokes had fallen asleep did not respond her at the
door in sensed, Russell started sending the woman's name is.
Russell started sending the text complaining you wasted my money
(01:04:01):
to come out here, and then she wrote you smoked.
I'm gonna see you die. I hope you die. She
then went to a gas station nearby, purchased lighter fluid
matches and a cigarette lighter, went around the outside of
the dude's house, spraying the lighter fluid, and then stoked
it up. Congratulations are in order, here we go, Yes, sir,
(01:04:25):
we have Glamours Women of the Year. Actually women of
the Year. They select a handful of them, but they
just named two of the women of the year who
will join. Let's see Demi Moore and Tyler Tila Tyler.
I don't know Ross. You know who that singer is,
(01:04:46):
Tyler or Tila, So it's spelled t y La. I
don't know who that is. But so, you know, maybe
that's a good choice. Maybe it's not to me more Again,
I don't know the context. Uh So yesterday they had
two Rachel's added Miss Rachel. Wasn't there some conscious miss
(01:05:11):
racial controversy or something? Okay? Yeah, I was gonna say,
I just I know nothing about kids programming, but I
swear we just saw ah that's what it was.
Speaker 4 (01:05:21):
Yes, No, we we talked about this lady a bunch
of times in relation to like Gaza and COVID and
politics and Biden and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:05:31):
Right.
Speaker 14 (01:05:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:05:32):
But the one so you just put the audio up
this is this was she's hosting this starving gosen girl
who runs a popular cooking channel. Want to repeat she does?
She she does a kid's cooking which is fine. Look,
you know kids kids like to cook. That didn't they
(01:05:53):
have a whole cooking show where it was just kids
cooking on like food channel or something.
Speaker 4 (01:05:58):
I think that was a Gordon Ramsay show.
Speaker 1 (01:06:00):
Oh did he do? Oh kids? Yeah, that's right, he did. Yeah, yeah, yes,
I'm all for it. I think if your kid wants
to learn, Look, what are the things that I actually
really appreciated. And some of it's born off the fact
that I come from a broken home and I was
the oldest I kind of learned to cook, and I
actually enjoy making stuff and making it correctly at my house,
(01:06:22):
you know, so like I appreciate that. So if kids
want to learn to cook, I understand it. The problem
was if you're going to bring this little girl on
and you're gonna claim that you know, she's starving to death,
and yet she's posting cooking videos recently. Uh, it's like
did you did you google her before you did the thing?
(01:06:44):
Here's the audio.
Speaker 15 (01:06:45):
Friends, it's miss Rachel. I have someone really special that
I want to introduce you to today.
Speaker 1 (01:06:50):
Hyer. Yeah, yeah, from me guy.
Speaker 15 (01:06:55):
Yeah, Jean has a really important message she wants to
share with the world.
Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
Peaseth.
Speaker 15 (01:07:03):
No child should ever have food, water, or medical care
block from your heart. No, no where they're born, has
human rights.
Speaker 1 (01:07:12):
If I say, oh good, yeah, Lean.
Speaker 15 (01:07:15):
And I are asking everyone to speak up for the
children of Gaza. Leaders, parents, celebrities, teachers, anyone who cares
about kids. When children's rights are taken away, adults must
speak up. It's not a choice, it's a responsibility. Please
listen to Lean, share Lean's message tag people Lean and
I want to thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:07:34):
You will love you. Yeah, that's great. Also share the
video that was posted five days prior to that by
the little girl making some hummus thing which I think
is food. Ross's hummus food. Will you check on that?
I see it at the store. I'm unclear, sure.
Speaker 4 (01:07:50):
Let me check it is.
Speaker 1 (01:07:50):
Yes, Oh it is it? Really it is food.
Speaker 4 (01:07:52):
I mean it's debatable, but yes.
Speaker 1 (01:07:54):
Oh okay, but some people consider it food. Gotcha? All right?
So anyway, yeah, that miss but that's not even that's
not even the headline of this. If that was the
only thing, I probably wouldn't be doing this story because
remember how I said it was two Rachel's That's right.
Glamour magazine has included Rachel Zegler as one of the
(01:08:15):
Women of the Year. I'm trying to figure out what
an accomplishment was like, like if you, let's say, you
had to come up with something to put on the plaque.
You know, this is like Obama with the Nobel Prize
right where you're like, we gotta say something. We think
that he's he's brought about a new era of where
things are gonna get done or whatever the BS was
(01:08:37):
they made up. It was something along those lines, like
they gave it to him for being hopeful. I think
it is what it boiled down to. What has Rachel
Zigler done? How would you even spend that?
Speaker 8 (01:08:46):
What?
Speaker 1 (01:08:47):
What accomplished accomplishment would you spin she made? She she
was that other than the memable face or because the
lack of facial emotions. I mean, I don't don't know
what she accomplished. She accomplished probably costing a bunch of
people at Disney a lot of money, and she accomplished
(01:09:07):
sabotaging her own career to some extent. Right, Remember the
producer's son wrote that big post about what a child
she was being, and then he literally had to fly
from La out to New York to scold her in person.
Speaker 4 (01:09:19):
I think she had like some sort of like comeback
on Broadway where she had like a standing ovation. I
remember was she Helen Keller. There was something frank They're like, oh,
it's a stunning comeback from you know, the Disney debacle
to this amazing performance, you know, on Broadway or whatever.
Speaker 5 (01:09:38):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:09:39):
Oh, she's in a vita you know what. That's perfect,
Actually it is, isn't it. She's a Vita perone. Oh yes,
if you guys don't know anything, you should look that up.
Oh man, that's a that's a socialism breakdown, ah fever dream,
probably for many on the left.
Speaker 4 (01:10:03):
Yeah, but the entire premise is stupid because you know,
she was in the mainstream with this big Disney movie
and it bombed, and they're saying the comeback is that
she's come back in the in the liberal bastion of Broadway.
Speaker 5 (01:10:14):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:10:14):
You have to remember, you have to remember she wasn't
just in that Disney movie. She was already tapped to
be in a bunch of other big movies. And you
remember they like like they kicked her to the curb
in a couple of those because they didn't want to
deal with it, or and one of them they stopped filming.
But she, like her next decade was set because she
(01:10:35):
was the it thing. You know why, because I think
they saw her as the female pedro Pascal and what
a what a great place to launch from, you come,
because they just assumed the Disney thing was going to
be a sure thing. So then if you're a producer,
and this isn't speculative, this is a process. If I
know that you, as an up and coming actor or actress,
(01:10:58):
are going to be in this big thing, that's gonna
be a license to print money. In my mind, I'm
gonna get you attached to my thing, which is right
after this thing, because you're you're gonna be You're you're
gonna be the hot thing. Right. It's a bit. You'll
have a name, draw and you can build it up.
And so they try to sequentially stack these things. It's
why you'll see an actor come out and have a
(01:11:20):
breakout performance and then immediately they're in four other movies
because people want to capitalize off of that. She didn't
just she didn't just screw the Disney thing up. She
screwed a bunch of those up or they either replaced her,
they haven't moved forward with production yet, So I don't
know what the accomplishment is. But it's Glamour magazine. And
(01:11:44):
for all the people say why do magazines fail? Here
you go all right, all right eight eight eight nine
three four seven eight seven four Let me arm you
with just a little nugget of info here real quick,
because now California has decided that they're all right, so
you got to you gotta follow this. So the DOJ
(01:12:08):
announced that they would be sending watchers. They would be
dispatching watchers to watch among I think it was two
states races, right, California being one of them. And that's
why that's important to the story. New Jersey was the
other one, by the way, So why is that important? Well,
(01:12:28):
the Democrats have now decided that that is Trump trying
to rig the election, even though these people just watch.
They're there to watch and.
Speaker 14 (01:12:38):
Ross.
Speaker 1 (01:12:38):
Do you happen to know the number of watchers the
Biden DOJ the number of states that they sent observers
to during the twenty twenty four election, because I look
this number up. Do you happen to know? Put the
number one? Man, if they're mad about two here, fifty
fifty Bob, No, no, and I monitor they're already forty
(01:13:01):
bob less less than that. Twenty Bob, it's higher than that. Actually,
twenty five, bob. Oh, it's a little bit higher than
the twenty six. Boss, you are so close. Twenty seven
Bob give it jo, I don't know. I did the rigg.
The new robot spotting system in the NFL says you're
already over the cliff. Yeah, twenty seven. So when you're
(01:13:21):
gonna hear, when you're gonna hear Democrats wide and complain
that the DJ under Trump is watching two states elections
they sent twenty seven and under Obama. I think there
was a situation where they sent thirty some in one
of the elections. I can't remember exactly. It's in the thirties.
I can't remember what the number is. So that's what
(01:13:42):
they're mad about. So how are they responding to this?
Gavin Newsom announced that his own his own, uh you know,
Department of Justice there within the city of California. It's
called the what do they call it? That doesn't matter
what they call it. They're gonna they're going to dispatch
watchers to watch the watchers. So you're gonna have watchers
(01:14:05):
watching the watchers watching the election, and then watchers to
watch the watchers watching the election. Does that make sense?
But who would be watching the watchers who are watching
the watchers watch the election? I think is a fair question.
But that's what they're gonna do. It's gonna be dude,
(01:14:27):
it's gonna be a whole room of you know what
that is. That's like old Soviet Russia stuff too, where
people would be you'd be tasked under penalty of you know,
problems for you with watching your neighbors, and then they
would have somebody who watches the people who watch the neighbors,
who then would report back. And I don't know how
many layers you got there, but probably a few. So
(01:14:49):
officially election watchers who are watching those who technically are
already watching because they're the boundary. They're counting the bounds
and conducting the election. So we're already gonna have watching
watchers and now watchers to watch the watcher watchers, which
you know, makes perfect sense if you think about it.
So last week, last week they one of the Kardashian
(01:15:12):
I don't even track which one it is anymore. It's
just they're a collective, Like the board, one of them
released underwear with like fur on it, basically Murkin underwear,
and they got sold out. I don't know if you
saw the follow up ross they sold out. It's just
a license to print money with these people, but not
(01:15:34):
not you know, not resting on their win. There we
just I just saw this yesterday, Courtney Kardashian, which again
I know that's one that that wasn't the one married
to Kanye, but I don't know then who they were
after that, announced a new line of lollipops. Okay, well
(01:15:57):
you like Casey, What's I mean? It's lollipops. What's the
big deal. They're not for your mouth. They're for women
to eat. I'm assuming, yeah, for women to put them
somewhere else. I'm not making that up. A specially designed
(01:16:20):
supplement described as probiotic, which apparently is a design to
support health in that particular area. But it comes in
the shape of a lollipop. Because I'm dumb, me sitting
here going all lollipops work. They stole They stole my
idea again. What I was about to announce today, I
was about to announce Jolly Rancher treats for your ass,
(01:16:43):
and now they come out, Yeah, Jolly.
Speaker 4 (01:16:46):
Ranchers for your butt, And now I stole my thunder again.
I'm so tired.
Speaker 1 (01:16:52):
Why do you wait? Why would I put a job what?
Speaker 8 (01:16:54):
What? No?
Speaker 5 (01:16:56):
No, no, no, no no.
Speaker 4 (01:16:57):
They're probiotic.
Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
As long as they're pro biotic, then buy me a case.
Speaker 4 (01:17:04):
I think they've gotten to the point now where they're
so rich they're just messing with people.
Speaker 1 (01:17:08):
They're Mortimer and what was the other one's name? Mortimer
and Randolph Duke. Yeah, they're just from trading places.
Speaker 4 (01:17:15):
They're just sitting around their mansion and they're like, will
people buy this? Or people so dumb they'll buy They're
like this close from hunting people, you know what I mean,
They're gonna get bored and they'd be like, what if
we hunt people? It could be fun.
Speaker 1 (01:17:29):
Can you imagine being hunted by the Kardashians wearing the
Mrkan underwear with a lollipop sticking out of your butt,
Like that's not even fair. People gonna be the ice
cube side on that one.
Speaker 4 (01:17:45):
People going to be getting invitations to like you know,
oh you know, I got an invitation to the new
Kardashian Isle. I'm a winner. You know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (01:17:52):
You go the Caribbean island there where it's just you
and the Kardashians is let me ask you a question.
Is there a system of laws on this island?
Speaker 4 (01:18:00):
And then well there is a code, sure, there's a coach.
Speaker 1 (01:18:03):
Oh Okay, well that's there. You go, all right, so
you think the next yeah, you know what, like you
got nowhere to go but up love pops for your huhah.
You have underwear where it looks like the hair is
coming out of it. It's the seventies again, so dumb.
Speaker 4 (01:18:19):
And they're selling out every time. People are yeah, I
need to buy that definitely.
Speaker 1 (01:18:23):
Well, you know what, I'd like it, And I want
to just blame them because Gwyneth Paltrow's also to blame.
But you want to talk about a trend setter in
the uh selling ridiculous things to shove in your nether.
Speaker 4 (01:18:35):
Region candles and jade eggs. But the Kardashians with this
stupid underwear And now that this sounds like old gifts
you would buy at Spencer's back in the day, Yes
it does.
Speaker 1 (01:18:46):
Yeah, and you'd buy him as a joke, right for
a white elephant gift or you know whatever. No, and
they'll probably sell out. You probably won't be able to
get a hold of one of these, and then they'll
be the This could be the most awkward TikTok challenge
I've ever heard of. Also, oh my gosh, I'm just
(01:19:08):
thinking about this how messed up? Is that the Tutsi
pop owl commercial?
Speaker 4 (01:19:18):
Now, yeah, dude, yeah, you just.
Speaker 1 (01:19:25):
Three don't What are you trying to encourage here? I
can't say that I had because I had another theory
that popped into my head and an involved man's best friend.
We got a bunch of a bunch of sound. I
want to run by you, but I want to start here.
So I am. I was aware. This is a thing.
(01:19:45):
I've seen it reported on, and you know it's usually
reported in like odd news, quirky news. But there is
a festival that takes place at in a city in
northern India called the Agra Festival. Okay, so what do
you do at the Gora Haba Festival? Well, you know
(01:20:05):
how you know how much they like the cows right
there in India. So in the as part of the festival,
there is a ritual where everyone saves up as much
cow dung as they can get their drubbies on, and
then they have a big poop fight with the cow.
The cow dung and like, some of it's dried, but
(01:20:26):
most of it's not. But it's a thing and it's
been going on for a very long time. So some
YouTuber I don't even know who this is. Tyler Olivera
apparently has a pretty big following and goes and film
stuff like this, went to the festival. He's not being
mean to anybody. He's dressed in like a he's got
goggles on and he's in like a big painter's outfit,
(01:20:48):
you know, the full white thing with the with the
the even the hood on there, and he's got and
he's just sitting there right in the middle of it.
Everybody's doing their thing. He's not punking people, he's filming it.
So now he's canceled, unfortunately for for you know, all
(01:21:09):
of all the horrible things, but primarily making people think
that the Indian population who lives in this village or
are a little backwards. So they're they're canceling him specifically
saying that he let's see here, yeah, in a video
(01:21:30):
entitled Inside India's Poop Throwing Festival at the Gorahaba Festival,
let's see in one picture he shows up in one
secsion he's wearing a hazmatsu with goggles covered in brown smears.
I thought this is northern India. It's actually southwestern India.
Not that it matters, but it's a it's a subset.
(01:21:51):
This isn't even all over India. This is just a
kind of a unique thing to this particular region. And
again it's been covered and the and it's it's one
of the grossest things you've ever seen. But it's a thing,
right And now simply showing this thing happening rather than
the part that it's happening. Uh is is a bridge
(01:22:14):
too far? Uh you blankety blank?
Speaker 2 (01:22:19):
Fellow?
Speaker 1 (01:22:20):
You why do you record poop? Why don't you record poop?
Speaker 10 (01:22:22):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:22:22):
Wait, hold on you s word fellow? Why don't you
record poop in your own western poop fights in your
own western countries? Is that a thing? Ross? Do they
have a feces throwing festival somewhere here in the US
that I'm unaware of San Francisco? Maybe, I guess, but
(01:22:43):
I don't know. If they fling it is? That's is?
That's maybe Western New York. Do you guys have like
a a feces fight? Not that I know of, Okay,
I don't. Again, they're like always here to the fame.
He's not in or he's not saying any people are
hugging him in this video, which is in the self
gross because everyone's covered poop.
Speaker 4 (01:23:02):
He went there and he's like, hey, here's something they do.
I'm going to record show it to you. And then
people are like, you can't do that because it's racist.
Yes the video when it's happening, was he like, oh,
look at these you know blank Like was he being no?
Speaker 1 (01:23:16):
He literally explains the thing, so.
Speaker 4 (01:23:19):
It's it's just educational, it's not.
Speaker 5 (01:23:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:23:21):
I mean he's having fun with it because he's a
twenty four year old YouTuber. So he's like, whoa, I
just dodged the undodged the bullet there right.
Speaker 10 (01:23:28):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:23:29):
You know, he's hamming it up. But in every section
of the video, the villagers are like hugging him, they're
putting hands on him, they're smiling because you know, they
probably don't get a lot of Westerners standing in the
middle of this thing on the annual recording it. And
you know, obviously it's weird and I don't want to
take part in it, but you know it's I I
(01:23:52):
maybe maybe I have. Here's the thing. Do you know
how much cow vcs I've handled my life? I've never
and have I on occasion a in a cow pasture
we have There's two things one. We have cowchip bingo,
which I have seen in North Carolina, so I know
(01:24:13):
some of you know what it is. But basically, you
take a big square pasture and you take white spray paint.
You go out in the pasture and you create these blocks, right,
usually about six feet by six feet or whatever, and
then you write a number in there. And so there
might be you know, a hundred of these parcels in
this in this field, and then you can go buy
a number.
Speaker 4 (01:24:34):
You know, my dad was a country boy from upstate
New York, and even I know that is. Yeah, I
know what that is.
Speaker 1 (01:24:40):
And by the way, you can also try to Here's
where it gets sketchy because if you depending on who's playing,
having an edge piece is either good or bad because
you can try to attract the cow over. You can't
physically feed at anything, but you can be like, hey, buddy,
come on over. That's legal. Also, there's the part where
(01:25:02):
you could scare the cow away from somebody else's piece,
so like there's just panemonium going on. The Other thing
is I can't tell you the number of times I
have been in a cow pasture for whatever reason. And
there is a nice dried circular cow patty there right,
it's now dried out. It's a frisbee and you take
it and you wing it at your buddy. That's the thing.
(01:25:27):
And if you hit him in the head, oh so
many points like so you got and then you got
your head on a swivel too. When you're in a
cow pasture with your buddies making sure nobody's got anything
in their hands. This is a little different because they
apparently go for the freshest possible, whereas we would look
for one that's dried because uh but yeah, man, I
(01:25:50):
will tell you this. I am talking about this right now,
and I can smell a cow patty? Is that just
because I grew up with that smell. I know that
smell a million miles away. I'd be like, there's cows about.
I'm I'm like a bloodhound on it. It is a
very unique smell. It's not even one I find like
(01:26:12):
gag inducing just because I'm so used to it. But
it's still what it is. What it is, Oh, just
sitting here talking about it. So, yeah, he just showed
them doing this thing that they do, and now he's canceled,
and then the we have a second cancelation. Now This
chick's not some big famous YouTuber, not some big famous YouTuber.
(01:26:33):
She's just She's just a woman in Brooklyn who was
trying to make friends. Her name is Ellen Christie. She's thirty,
and she posted on one of the social media boards
that she was wanting to organize a Bunco club. I
don't know anything about Bunco. I do know that it
(01:26:55):
involves dice, and that's all I need to know for this,
because they've accused her of colonial violence and literal genocide
for attempting to organize a dice game. She wrote, Bunko
is a game of rolling dice, think yacht see, no
(01:27:15):
skills required. Would love you to join us. And it's her,
and there's like six other I don't know women look
like late twenties women who are sitting around, they're smiling,
they're playing Bunko whatever. She's putting it out there. And
people lost their crap, absolutely lost their crap. And Ross
I was looking at the picture. You know who's not
even in the picture Ashey, Larry. I thought, if you
(01:27:38):
were going to do any sort of dice games in
the Greater New York area, you're required to have ashy
Larry there.
Speaker 4 (01:27:44):
I mean, yeah, you can pick him. I'd go personally,
I'd go Leonard Washington.
Speaker 1 (01:27:49):
Oh, I would go fuk And then I can't say
this last year, right, yes, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. Do
you like Leonard Washington in that?
Speaker 4 (01:27:58):
All right?
Speaker 1 (01:27:59):
Look, everyone's gonna have a favorite player, is what it is.
You're playing Gentrified. Just the comments here, man, And by
the way, in case you think that she just offended
the quote unquote, because again, all she offended her other
thirty something year old white women. That's who's mad at her,
because they're always mad on everybody's behalf. I don't see
(01:28:21):
a single poster here who's black, upset with it or Chinese.
And that's important because the game itself is called ce
Low is thought to be kind of what Bunco came from,
and that was a game that was brought by Chinese laborers,
and then eventually it was adopted in many inner city
black neighborhoods just due to the proximity in which a
(01:28:43):
lot of the Chinese laborers would live with, you know,
then freed slaves in some of these communities, so there
was carryovers. So she's canceled from two different races of people.
But by her own race, which is just pure when
I've come to expect these days. So don't try to
(01:29:05):
play you out see your bunko, you will get canceled.
Apparently all right, race stage is here, and I'm curious
they like my mini bar idea.
Speaker 7 (01:29:16):
Well, you know, they're still kicking it around to think
at the nine am maybe we'll get an answer on that.
Speaker 1 (01:29:22):
The uh so when listeners had a good idea, because
you have to have scales. How many mini bars equal
one teachers bar right and then a sports bar right right?
Sports and so there's a whole scale there you got
to figure out.
Speaker 10 (01:29:35):
I like it.
Speaker 1 (01:29:36):
This is like, well whatever weather, guys instead of mill
of bars, say mini bar this morning, and I thought
that's better because nobody knows what the hell of millibar is.
Speaker 7 (01:29:44):
Right right, And you know, thirty plus years of doing this,
I don't even know what a milli bar is. There
you go see, it's a measure of pressure. Let's put
it to you this way. It's low. Like my wife
asked me this morning, she likes, how's the hurricane? I
said strong? You know, i'd be what's how is it strong? Dangerous? Catastrophic?
All wards at the hurricane center I was using for
(01:30:06):
especially the central western parts of the island of Jamaica.
Right now, it's kind of hugging seventy eight degrees west
and longitude the eastern edge of the eyewall anyway, slowly
drifting north and just east of north, so forecast pretty
close to Matigo Bay to come on shore here over
the next couple of hours, and then we'll see it
(01:30:26):
unravel going to the island of Cuba, potentially the eastern
half of it as maybe as strong as a Cat
three and we can a bit before it gets into
the southeastern Bahamas and that maybe make a run at
the island of Bermuda maybe mid or late week. But
catastrophic and certainly going to be an event that you
know is going to be a memorable event and the
(01:30:47):
strongest hurricane's ever hit the island in Jamaica.
Speaker 5 (01:30:50):
Casey, So yeah, history being made.
Speaker 7 (01:30:52):
May not end up being the lowest pressure storm in
the Atlantic basin, that would be Wilma, but certainly up
there in the top ten easily in terms of its
lowest pressure.
Speaker 1 (01:31:01):
You think they're gonna there will be no more Melissas
now after this.
Speaker 7 (01:31:07):
Yeah, it's a it's a pretty good guess. I think
they based it upon, you know, the dollars of damage
it can be done, so that'll be tough.
Speaker 14 (01:31:15):
I mean.
Speaker 1 (01:31:17):
In the totals.
Speaker 7 (01:31:19):
Yeah, so yeah, it's I think Kingston, Jamaica's got a
population of about a million and go west, you know
a lot more tourists than there probably are. Your basis
coming in a lot of infrastructure that's weak infrastructure. Yeah,
that's not really built for this type of event to
come in. But as we said with the eight o'clock
(01:31:41):
advisory approaching Western Jamaica, and yeah, we're still at nine
hundred and one millibars and wins at one seventy five
gusting to two hundred.
Speaker 1 (01:31:49):
All right, well you uh yeah, we'll keep up on it.
We'll talk tomorrow. Thank you, and come back with Jos
Pellegrini next.
Speaker 16 (01:31:56):
Yeah, we had a lot of job cuts to tell
you about, starting with Amazon, and this report is sponsored
by Fidelity. Fourteen thousand corporate jobs being cut at Amazon.
Sources say this will be in logistics, payments, video games,
and it's cloud computing unit. And on top of this,
ups Casey revealing it has cut thirty four thousand jobs
(01:32:17):
this year supporting way better than expected third quarter profits.
Guess it's doing what it takes to do that and
paramount skuidance actsing a thousand jobs today. That's the first
round of cuts. They say more are coming. I meantime,
if it's getting to be review time, listen up. It
might be AI Casey writing up your performance review. CEO
(01:32:38):
of City Banks says bosses at City, for example, are
using AI to write employee reviews, especially the first draft.
Of course, there's no rule saying as an employee, you
can't also use AI to help you write your own
self review.
Speaker 10 (01:32:51):
You know.
Speaker 16 (01:32:52):
Just tell chat GPT what all your amazing accomplishments have
been this year, asked the AI chat about to write
how amazing you are, then add something about being a
team player. Keep your fingers crossed you get a raise there.
Johnson and Johnson have seen a seventeen percent jump in
new lawsuits claiming its baby powder causes cancer. That's after
its latest attempt to force a global settlement was thrown
(01:33:12):
out of bankruptcy court. Now the company is facing more
than seventy thousand suits from consumers who claim the baby
powder cause their illness. But Jane j says talk doesn't
cause cancer, and there's never been any asbestos in its
baby powder, and it's refusing to pay up.
Speaker 4 (01:33:29):
We talk a lot about inflation.
Speaker 16 (01:33:31):
Feds meeting today for a two day meeting, widely expected
to cut interest rates, But there's another kind of inflation
that people might be worried about. Harvard says it has
been giving too many a's to students. More than half
the grades handed out at Harvid Harvard College are a's',
according to the report by its office, and the reports
(01:33:52):
author is now urging faculty to cut the practice of
awarding top scores to the majority of students, saying it
under my academic culture. And the report recommends faculties share
the median grades for courses and review the distribution of
grades over time so that they kind of pressure each
other to stop doing that. And you know, I mean,
(01:34:14):
you guys have some preppers who listen to your station.
They buy you know, food, Well, no, I'm sure, I'm
sure you do, because every station does. And yeah, yeah, absolutely,
as people should be thinking about these things. And one
of the places that has that kind of product is Costco.
(01:34:34):
They have that three thousand dollars ready wise emergency food
supply kit. Right, it's built to sustain a person for
what about a year. It's got seventy five hundred servings
of food. It's supposed to have a shelf life of
twenty five years. But of all the kind of entities
to look at this, Food and Wine did a review
(01:34:56):
of this year's worth of food says the survival kit
could feed you for year, but it lacks in fiber,
lax in protein, and lacks some other nutrients as well.
And you'll, of course also need room to store this
thing because it's what thirty eight point five to three
gallon buckets along with one hundred and eighty calendars. You're
(01:35:16):
gonna need a whole another wing.
Speaker 4 (01:35:17):
To your house to store that stuff, yeah.
Speaker 16 (01:35:22):
Yeah, or a second home, or maybe you could stuff
that in your garage and park the car in the driveway.
Speaker 1 (01:35:29):
Yeah maybe. All right, what do you got with stock
futures there?
Speaker 16 (01:35:31):
They're higher fed, as I mentioned, kicking off that two
day meeting, widely expected to cut interest rates, and that's
lending some optimism to the situation today. We did have
those record highs for stocks yesterday. Looks like the feel
good thing is continuing on Wall Street today.
Speaker 1 (01:35:48):
Denise have a wonderful rest of your day. We'll chat
to borrow two. All right, there you go, Denise, Pelly Green.
I'm gonna grab one quick phone call. I got about
a minute Andrea, what's up.
Speaker 14 (01:35:58):
Good morning, Casey. I just wanted to let you know
my son played football for Grimsly from two thousand to
two thousand and two and my husband and I did
a cow chip bingo for them to raise money for
the football team and it was absolutely hilarious. We asked
the football coach to enclose the football field and he
(01:36:19):
put up a yellow string and needless to say, the
cow got He walked right through the strings, or she
walked right through the strings and it took the entire
football team to round her back up.
Speaker 2 (01:36:32):
Wow.
Speaker 14 (01:36:32):
And that was the highlight of the night.