All Episodes

March 24, 2026 98 mins
Listen
Watch
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The last time the universe was so unified in us
talking about one particular story on this show. So that
is a combination of me seeing it everywhere, Ross literally
sending it to me in the middle of the day,
which is not how that usually works. If Ross sees

(00:20):
that I don't put something in the stack and he
thinks it's funny, then generally he'll send it to me.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
But to.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
Essentially notice something send it to me in the middle
of the day is quite rare. And then to have
roughly I don't know, twenty to twenty five of you
sending me a story going, hey, we listened to the show.
This seems right up in your wheelhouse here you go.

(00:49):
Can't wait to hear you talk about it. It doesn't
happen very often, but it's not very often that a
quadruple amputee pro corn hole player allegedly shoots until somebody.
So that's where we're starting today. I got absolutely blasted
with this thing yesterday. Ross. Have you figured out how

(01:10):
he done it yet? Because after he said it, man,
I I went on a thinking exercise and I still
don't understand.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
No, I sort of I took like the pyramid approach
to this thing.

Speaker 1 (01:21):
Okay where all right?

Speaker 3 (01:22):
You know, this amazing thing happened, and I could look
into it some more and try to investigate it and
like really try to figure it out. Or I could say,
you know, this is one of the grand mysteries of
the universe and just you know, let it lie.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
Yeah, okay, all right, I want to lose it. Listen.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
I don't want to I don't want to destroy the
magic of the story.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
Do you know what I mean? Oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
like that remember that Magician show or like how they
got it to do with the mask? Right, Oh yeah
that was you thought it was going to be interesting,
and they're like, this is kind.

Speaker 3 (01:48):
Of because it could in everything. It's an amazing headline
and it does have like it's like this way everybody
is sending it because it's a magical like, oh my god,
look at this, and I don't want to ruin it.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
This is like is this crazier or less crazy than
Remember the dude in the wheelchair was holding the gun
with his finger with his feet who robbed the jewelry store.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
This is more impressive because there's no arms and there's
no feet.

Speaker 1 (02:10):
There's still feet the headline again, because I know you
think you're not up, like you probably heard the headline. Oh, yes,
I'm not up yet. I guess I'm still dreaming, because
that doesn't make any sense. No, you're up. Quadruple amputee
pro corn hole player allegedly shot and killed acquaintance during argument,
then drove off with the body. I didn't even read

(02:33):
the second half of the of the thing. That's an
actual headline, and it's not from you know, the Babylon
be er said, that's a real thing that happened. In fact,
there's video of this dude shooting. So here's what you
need to understand. When they say amputee, we're talking knees

(02:54):
and elbows. Okay, So he still has a uh, you know,
a bit of each limb. So that's what we're working with.
And and and again there's video of him throwing corn hole.
So he uses essentially just chop your arms and legs
off at the knees and elbows, and he's able to

(03:17):
use what's left there too, not just play corn hole,
but play it really well to the point where he
does this professionally. And then he drives and then and
then occasionally, according to the story, he might murder.

Speaker 3 (03:35):
M like, you read all this stuff and there's a
part of you that's like, you know, well done. You
know it's terrific and awful.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
Not the murdering part. It's bad.

Speaker 3 (03:51):
Yeah, I wouldn't file it under the good category. It's
it's awful. But the fact that you did all those
things and you're in the physical situation that you're in,
and he well, I mean, well done, just let him
go at this point, I don't I don't know that
you could do that. But if i'm if I'm the

(04:11):
judge there, and I would be like a hanging judge
right ross the hanging judge and I'm sitting there.

Speaker 1 (04:17):
Can you hang him? No? Bright?

Speaker 3 (04:19):
And this person comes in and I don't know they
they wheel him in or whatever. Right, and then this
person shot, a person drove a car away and champion cornhole.
I'd be like, well, you might be free to go.
I'm I I have a dilemma here. I don't know
what to do.

Speaker 1 (04:33):
You're not gonna be able to strap him in an
electric chair anyway. No, he's just gonna keep getting out.
That's gonna be a problem. Yeah. I a quadruple amputee
who thrived as a professional corner hole player and posted
videos of himself firing off handguns. Again, there's like video
of him doing doing all the things, well not the

(04:55):
murder thing, but the other things, and they're like, oh, okay,
that's how he does it. And then you find out
he's better corner hole than you. Don't you feel inadequate.
Dayton Weber twenty seven, was driving three buddies in his
Tesla SUV during the lay. Oh well, that makes sense
if I was able to drive more effectively. Believe that? Okay?

(05:19):
During a late night joy ride in Maryland on Sunday,
when he got into a heated argument with his passenger.
The argument what was the argument over? I want to
know what the argument was over? Doesn't say. The argument
turned violent, and he allegedly shot and killed his friend,
Braderick Wells, who was sitting shotgun. The two other horrified

(05:42):
passengers in the backseat then scrambled out of the car.
When Weber pulled over. Weber asked them to help drag
Wells out of the car. Well, see, that's that's going
to be the hitching the gidea up right there. He
can do all these things, but bearing a body probably not.
That's gonna be problematic.

Speaker 3 (06:01):
I mean, I don't want to put limitations on the dude, obviously,
because that's not the kind of guy.

Speaker 2 (06:05):
He is.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
Sure, but right he tends to overcome.

Speaker 3 (06:10):
Going back to the norm McDonald theory, you would have
to dig. He would have to dig that hole well
in advance.

Speaker 1 (06:15):
Well, well in advance, and he sounds something that was
kind of a crime of passion, maybe between friends or
just in the moment. Yeah, he didn't sell planned.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
Like two or three weeks. He'd have to have that
whole Doug ready for the incident.

Speaker 1 (06:29):
Well, he can shoot, So if you get a you
can just keep shooting a hole into the ground. You know, Yeah,
you're gonna ge, You're gonna go through a ton of AMMO.
But eventually, any know what you have. Two hours later,
Prettyure reported finding a body in a yard. He's pronounced
dead at the scene, soon identified as the friend there

(06:51):
Webre's tesla. Meanwhile, I was tracked to Charlotte'sville, Virginia, more
than one hundred dollars away, where he was founded a
nearby hospital seeking treatment for an under disclosed medical issue.
Is it undisclosed? I feel like some of the medical
issues are readily apparent. Any who, Let's see, he was
released on Monday charges a fugitive from justice awaiting extradition

(07:15):
back to Maryland facing charges at first and second degree murder. Yeah,
let's see here. How do he okay? So he he
lost both lower arms and legs to a bacterial infection
when he was ten months old. According to his ESPN profile.
This dude's so pro he's on ESPN, that's right. Remember

(07:37):
when ESPN during COVID was running corn hole and stuff
now runs it on the weekends occasionally or maybe over
on the OCHO whoever refused to be deterred by his
disability and pursued wrestling when he was in middle school.
You know what, here's the thing. There was a kid
who wrestled who didn't, who was one leg amputee and

(08:00):
one arm amputee in Wyoming, and he was very good.
And one of the reasons is if you don't have
the lower part of the limb, there's a lot of
ways that guys can't get a grasp on you. So
I wonder what it's like with basically just legs and
arms for stumps. Man.

Speaker 3 (08:17):
You know, we've talked about a similar story with that before, right,
And the other theory was you don't want to be
the person to pin that guy. Also though, right, what
why Like if you're in the ring and you're going
against this person with no arms and no legs, I
don't know, I might look bad if you just pick
up the person.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
Yeah, but you would be the guy who got beat
by the dude with no arms and legs.

Speaker 3 (08:37):
I don't know which one do you want.

Speaker 1 (08:39):
I'm sorry, you're talking to a winner here, I know,
but you're either a villain or you're a off. You're
a big loser. So which one do you I'm not
I'm accepting, I'm accepting. I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
I'm saying, listen, there's a potential there for it to
be a moral dilemma, that's all.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
Dude. Dude, I don't I'm not victim blaming here, but
just keep in mind that his fan family is just like,
oh my god, a guy got murdered by a guy
with no arms and legs. Yeah he lost to him.
So like, it's that more of the lemma we had.

Speaker 3 (09:08):
What was it with Dancing with the Stars where you
had the woman with one leg where you're like, who's
going to vote off the woman with one leg. You know,
she's dancing on national television with one leg. It's impression.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
I would have voted her off, but I never watched
the show, so was she not a good dancer? I
don't think she won. Okay, well yeah, but that's the
problem with a lot of those reality shows now, like
the saddest story wins kind of stuff. Right, That's why.
That's why every now and then you see like, oh,
this person lied about their background on them on America's
Got No.

Speaker 3 (09:36):
You know, it's definitely a thing. And then you have
like coaches who when you go in reality TV now
or addition for reality television of any sort, they tell
you to find your story and go with it, like
your heart string sort of story. You know, those people
are going to get ahead because it gives the producer
something the showcase. Yeah, and the little segments before the
things on the show, well, they love it.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
Let's see here. He actually got interviewed by ESPN. Of course,
he did say, you know, I like using my strength
and being fit. I don't want to rely on other
people to do stuff for me. Light murder, your friend.
Look at that that he's a man of his word.
He didn't you know, he could he could have paid
a hit man or something. Allegedly, he said, sometimes when

(10:17):
I watch my teammates in certain situations, I wish I
had hands, but I just tried to do things on
my own. Um uh. Whoever, at the time of his
interview being interviewed, when asked, you know, if the cornhole
thing doesn't work out, what do you want to do,
he said, I either want to be a priest or
a secret service agent. Oh I don't think. I don't

(10:47):
think that second one was going to work out unless
you're the Unless you would your job is the vest
you know what. I'm sorry what you know what I mean?
Say it like you just strap him on as uh
and he's staring back off Trump's back. You know.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
Well, who was that football coach? This was another story
we did remember the coach who had the idea of
getting like a little person and throwing them over the line.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
Yeah it was. That was one of the SEC coaches. Yeah,
I think it was the coach for either Arkansas or
O Miss.

Speaker 3 (11:22):
I think he passed away. Whoever he was, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
That was. That was the guy who died last year.
His name escapes me. Here. But yes, he literally was like, hey,
can we get a little person and throw them into
the end zone essentially? And I get he brought it
up to the point where it turned into a discussion.
I can't remember which coach it was though.

Speaker 3 (11:42):
Anyway, the story it's bizarre because it's once again awful
and disgusting and wrong and bad. Right, it's it's probably murder,
but it's also kind of inspiring that he was able
to do all these things.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
Okay, all right, so let me ask you. Okay, so
let's say hypothetically Hitler was had no arms and legs
and was just but he did all the thing. Would
that be inspiring you know? Or does at some point
at negate the thing that they're doing for you to
be like, oh, it's inspiring. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
You think the German people would elect him?

Speaker 1 (12:15):
Okay, which this is a hypothetic and the.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
Whole story, ol, Hitler was never elected, and YadA, YadA, YadA.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
I'm just saying it would be a lot harder to
light the beer hall on fire from that elevation.

Speaker 3 (12:28):
That's a good point.

Speaker 1 (12:29):
Yes, So, like you don't know how it was gonna
and you know how hard it would be to kill
baby Hitler if Baby Hitler was a quadruple amputee when
he got back there. Oh you can't do that, yes,
so it changes the whole timeline. Man. So yeah, it's
you know, clearly he's achieved some stuff that a lot
of people are like, Wow, how did he do that?
The problem is then he probably achieved the other thing.

(12:53):
So and he's got a YouTube channel where he just
shoots guns perfect six nineteen. There you go. We'll probably
just do the story the whole show. Maybe maybe not.
We'll find out next hang on questions in my email
inbox about the the murder suspect, corner hole, quadruple amputee.
And I don't know the answer to that stuff. I

(13:14):
don't undert I don't know the answer to most of
this stuff. That's why we're doing this story. I don't
know how the handcuffing works. I don't. I don't. I again,
I don't know if they put him in his own cell.
You are asking me stuff I don't know. That's why
we're doing it. So many questions here, So you know
what I know. I shared basically every I squeezed every

(13:36):
nugget out of this out of the story here, So
I guess I guess you just have to stay tuned,
keep watching or following. I should say the story there.
All right, let me get over to a few other things.
Trump went to Graceland yesterday, Yes, sir, Yes, sir, went

(14:01):
went to uh went to the Graceland and uh, I
don't know. It was one of those things. And I
heard he was doing it. I'm like, this could be interesting.
So uh, let's let's dive right in, shall we.

Speaker 4 (14:13):
Yeah, Well, the fake news media look at this.

Speaker 5 (14:16):
I mean, do you ever see so much?

Speaker 1 (14:18):
Do you get treated?

Speaker 4 (14:19):
Tell me, does Elvis get treated better than me? With me?

Speaker 5 (14:23):
It's fake news? I think with Elvis it was a
little fake news.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
To I think in the UK we're about the same
as young so you have some of that. You have
something from both. You know, it's it's people want to
you know. He was so revolutionary and so important that
I think that people are brilliant people are afraid of Yeah.
I think people who are afraid of brilliance have to
lesh out. Well, it was special, all right, So yeah,
pretty much how you went you thought how you thought

(14:48):
it was going to go? So roz You ever been
to Graceland. I know, you go over to Tennessee sometimes
with the wife's family.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
No, but they were pretty cool. I think you go
to Graceland, I'd enjoy it.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
I've heard it kind of uh old in there. I
don't even know how to describe how it was described
to me. I yeah, I think I would enjoy it,
but I had it described to me as underwhelming by somebody,
so I don't know. Also, if you go to Memphish,
you get murdered, so that's a prod. No, not anymore.
Actually they were able to. That was one of the
cities they tamped it down. Any who continues, sir.

Speaker 6 (15:22):
Have taken him in a fight, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
You might be respectful enough to let you.

Speaker 7 (15:26):
Yes, he probably would.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
He really brought the potential murderer. Dude, if he was
baby Hitler, how would he salute? He has he has
up to the elbow. You're not gonna get the hand. Again,
this was I was just pointing out a scenario. It's
not a real thing. Not a real thing, okay, all right, AnyWho,
Let's get back to Trump's little visit to Graceland. Showy,

(15:50):
Let's talk here.

Speaker 8 (15:51):
About this that was done when he was in Basic,
China and Fort Hood, Texas, and it shows you Elvis's
natural hair color of blonde, real hair, blue eyes. He
died his hair black because he thought it brought his
facial features better out on film, and so he started
doing that after his first movie, I Loved Me Tender.
This is actually the oldest guitar in our collection. It's

(16:11):
in nineteen fifty six skips in j two hundreds.

Speaker 6 (16:14):
Elvis used it in the movie's Loving You Jack, if you're.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
The President of United not that everyone who goes to
Graceland's going to get to do it, but if you're
the president, you get to pick up that guitar. Strum it, right.
I would have like, how many times have you got
into a museum and you know, I'd like to touch that,
but you can. But if you're the president, you can, right.
I'm not sure how that works, just a question.

Speaker 6 (16:35):
On House Rock and King Creole. And then used it
in Vegas in sixty nine and seventy and then at
the top of the Stairs we have the alpha that
Elvis wears at the end of the sixty eight Comeback
Special when he sang the song if I Can Dream,
which was especially written for the.

Speaker 8 (16:50):
Show after the assassination of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy.
Elvis felt like he needed to make a statement of
how America could be. And so that's why, if I
can represent Son, he ended the show wearing.

Speaker 6 (17:02):
That outfit right there.

Speaker 4 (17:03):
So he loved this place, he.

Speaker 6 (17:05):
Did, and he left his country.

Speaker 8 (17:08):
And yeah, everything you see in the house is original,
all the furnishings, all the dreams, everything that you're seeing,
it's original. So Chandler about the stairs was actually taken
a part here in the hallway to.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
Be reassembled because it was too large to fit through.

Speaker 5 (17:20):
Any of the doors.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
Yeah, absolutely too. Trump looks actively interested too. But I
think I think that that that's a certain thing about him,
right because you know, clearly he considers himself exceptional. It's
hard to argue, you know that he probably isn't considering
he's you know, everything he's accomplished politically, but also just
you know, being in the public focus all these years.

(17:43):
So I think he has general admiration for people like that.
That being said, I think there's a little part of
it too, you know, because people now people attack Elvis
and they're like, ah, he stole his music from black people,
and it's like, I'm not here. I'm not here to
get into a any sort of debate on the you know,
how rock and Roll rolled out. But maybe he's just

(18:04):
a guy who embraced something he liked and was pretty
good at it. Like, not everything has to be nefarious, man.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
My favorite Elvis is like his early like his gospel stuff.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
It's really yeah, And dude, you'd really like that Elvis
movie because they do a really they get really deep
into that, and then they kind of skip over middle
Elvis because everyone knows middle Elvis. So it's early Elvis,
the gospel stuff, and then it's late stage special that
that special they just talked about in the clip is
part of the movie. And the guy who plays him
is very good. One of my favorite you know quotes

(18:38):
or whatever, when and he's being interviewed. I'm sure you've
seen it where you know, he's up there answering questions
from the press and there's some young girl and she
asked him about protests over Vietnam? Have you seen that?

Speaker 3 (18:47):
And he just looks over and he's like, sweetie, I'm
an entertainer and I don't talk about stuff like correct,
and yes, that is how it is. That's how it
should be done. That's how it should be done.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
Yeah, and it's not it's not that there was like
that special like that she just talked about. That was
the reaction to, uh, you know what happened with m
Okay that clearly was so there. But he didn't he
didn't go at it from a political standpoint. He's just like,
what's happening with our country? What's happening with our country?

(19:17):
But yeah, that's the only time I can really remember
him getting political. And I do remember that clip of
him going, look, I sing, what do you what do
you want me to do? I'm an entertainer, so yeah, man,
if I ever find myself, I've been to Memphis quite
a few times, never been to Graceland. So maybe maybe
it's because you gotta, you know, you gotta drive over
there from uh if you're staying in city center, you gotta,

(19:39):
you know, hop an uber or something. All right, let's
see here, Yes it was. It was a little busy
Trump day. Dude. We have we have a story out
of Utah. I'm gonna throw this out. I am torn
on this story. And and the problem is is I

(20:00):
look at it through a lens of when I was
a kid, which I think is easy to do on
any story where you're evaluating behavior of a story involving
an eleven year old or a couple eleven year olds,
I guess, and then you try to view it through
your childhood. But then you got to realize that that
childhood isn't an available childhood now, not from a societal standpoint.

(20:22):
So I don't know, but here's the setup. So you
have these two eleven year olds. One of them is autistic,
another one is apparently the bully, the neighborhood bully, and
he loves picking on this kid. I almost said something else,
and I guess it's pretty relentless. And I don't know

(20:44):
if there have been conversations between the parents prior to this.
It doesn't say in the story, but I mean in
some of the incidents. I think one of the incidents
that's alleged is that the bully urinated on the autistic kid. Okay,
so whatever kicked it off that day. The mother of
the kid who was being bullied, the autistic kid, her

(21:06):
name is Shannon Tofuga. This is in Utah, Salt Lake, Utah.
So she she either sees something or she hears the latest.
I do not know the level of autism. I know
that he can communicate with his mom because it says
she he said he told his mom what happened. So
but anyway, she's had enough, so she gets in her car.

(21:28):
She drives around the neighborhood and eventually she locates said bully.
She then stops him, confronts him, corrals. The word corral
is used. I guess she probably just voice commanded him
in before. So he got in the car. She drove
him to her house, took him inside and said you

(21:49):
don't leave until you apologize. And of course the kid
was optionate about it initially, but then Mom's like, you're
not going anywhere, You're staying here, and he did and
eventually he excuse me, provo utah And eventually some time later.
How long was it it was? I saw one report

(22:12):
that said it was an hour, but I don't see
it in this story. But he was there. He's in
her custody, so to speak, and from a legal perspective,
that'll be important. Eventually he breaks down, he starts crying,
and he apologizes, and mom said, all right, I hope
you've learned your lesson because if you had, if you

(22:33):
if you didn't, and this happens again, my husband's gonna
find you, and it's not gonna go well for you.
So she then releases him into the wild. He runs home.
This kid's parents call the police, and now mom is
facing kidnapping charges.

Speaker 3 (22:50):
See, I was unaware that she hunted down the child
and brought her, brought him back.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
To Well, it sounds like it was just she drove
around the neighborhood and she found him.

Speaker 3 (22:56):
Right still, man, like that, listen and what you're dealing
with here. And I have some experience as an autistic parent.
His autistic parents are some of the most patient people
you will ever meet, like the patients of Gandhi. But
there is a line, and once you cross the especially
if you don't live in the autistic world or if

(23:17):
you're not part of that community, And if you cross
that line, if you're pushing long enough, it's gonna be
bad for you.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
It's gonna Yeah, it doesn't sound like she did anything
physical to him, she still hunted down the kid, put
her in her car, and brought her back to her.
You can't do that, ye, I was imagining that, Like
you know, her kid is outside playing in the front
yard and the bully comes along, and then she's like
gets in between the two of them, and she's like.

Speaker 3 (23:38):
Hey, you need to stop this crap. And especially he
said he urinated on her child.

Speaker 1 (23:43):
Dude, I don't know if it was that day. It
sounds like there was a whole host of previous incidents.
So yeah, oh yeah, one hundred percent.

Speaker 3 (23:50):
Man at parties keep happening because once again, the patients
of an autistic parent, you would probably go to the
other parent, contact them, like, listen, my kid is severe
special needs. He's getting bullied. I would appreciate it if
you stop this. As that parent of the bully, if
you were a compassionate person with a normal level of empathy,

(24:13):
you should be if you should feel horrible, you should
be like, I can't believe my kid is bullying a
special needs parent student your student.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
Yeah yeah, I well, look they it sounds like they
live and they all live together in this same neighborhood.
So I'd find it very hard pressed if this was
something that kept going on that there'd never been any communication.
I don't know. Also, it's a Mormon neighborhood. I don't
know if that counts for anything, just in the sense

(24:41):
that you know they may interact because they might go
to the same church or something. I don't know. Yeah,
it is short on details other than a few examples,
but I'd have a hard time thinking at some point
she or her husband didn't try to talk to the
other boys parents, because that'd be the normal thing, right
you lived in the neighbor If you lived in the
same neighborhood as a kid who came over and was
tormenting Lincoln, you'd go talk to the parents completely.

Speaker 3 (25:03):
I would, yeah, yes, and I wouldn't fly off the handle.
It would be a normal, calm conversation like, hey, there's
a problem here in an incident, and I would assume
that you would be like, have that reaction like that's horrible,
sorry about that. That's not gonna happen again. I'm gonna
make sure it doesn't happen again. Little billy isn't gonna
you know, bully Lincoln or whatever.

Speaker 1 (25:20):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, well horrible. Yeah. Parents are all in.
They want they wanted higher felony charges and also they're uh,
they're probably gonna fire a file a lawsuit. According to
the the the bully's parents or the allegibley. I guess
the boy now suffers from serious emotional distress, high anxiety,

(25:41):
and has had to alter his daily rousult.

Speaker 3 (25:43):
No, no, altering his daily routine of beating up the
autistic kid and peeing on him. You would want to
alter that. I mean that's going to cause some anxiety
and some distress and that.

Speaker 1 (25:52):
Bully high anxiety.

Speaker 3 (25:53):
Oh, we wouldn't want that, that's aw.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
Yeah, this story is so messy, man, because I get
the Mama bear thing here, I'd be very I you
know what, I would really really really want to know
the whole pattern up to this, like had she tried
to have multiple conversations, had they had they gotten school
officials involved. I don't know if these kids see each

(26:18):
other at school, probably if one's autistic and eleven and
then the others eleven and not autistic. I have a
hard time thinking the necessarily the same class, but I
don't know the degree. Yeah, I'd want to know the
backstory because if it's a never ending revolving door of
nobody doing anything, like we talk to the parents, you
talked to the school, because how many incidents have we

(26:38):
covered where kids getting bullied at school? Parents say something
in the school doesn't seem to care. I know that's
not always the case, but we've had several stories. I
don't know that any of it would justify felonious kidnapping.

Speaker 3 (26:52):
Yeah, I mean, that's the issue is you're hunting it down.
And I also would like to know the time that
we're dealing with here. Was it something that's been going
on for a while or did it just that or
is it like a Walter White with his Walter junior
in the store. There's a scene in Breaking Bad where
you know, Walter White, his son has cerebral palsy, and
you know, he's getting bullied by some kids. They're trying
to like, you know, buy jeans for him for some

(27:14):
bad decision. Yeah. Well this is before he like Breaks Bad. So, like,
you know, they're bullying his kid, and he sees this,
so he leaves the store. He goes at the back
and he comes up the front and he recaps the bully,
like he takes his foot and just completely decimates their
legs and brings them to the ground. He's like, how
does it feel not to be able to use your legs?
And that happened in like, you know, two point two seconds.

(27:35):
If this was this thing where it was happening and
suddenly you're kidnapping the kid, there's probably some legal problems there.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
Yeah, well, now they if initially she was charged with
the first degree felony, however, the Utah County Attorney's office
determined that a reduction would be in the interest of justice.
So it sounds like there's at least enough there with
previous history that even the prosecutor's like, yeah, I don't
know that we can charge the full charge. And then,

(28:03):
of course now the other parent's mat over that. So
any who, that's what we know about that. If you
want to weigh in eight eight eight nine three four
seven eight seven four. But he's the here's and this is,
like I said when I started the story, I look
at this through the lens of when I was a kid.
My mom was fine with my friend's parents putting hands
on me, and I'm sure so like not beat you

(28:25):
with a stick over the head. My one buddy's mom
was an ear grabber, So if you were if you
were messing around or you weren't listening, she'd come over
and he thought she was snapping bones in your ear. Yeah. No,
the same thing.

Speaker 3 (28:37):
If I'm at a friend's house back in the day
and I'm doing something disrespectful or breaking stuff or just
being bad and the other mind like leands a hand
on me and it gets back to my mom. My
mom wouldn't have been like, hey, why did you do
that to my child? My mom would be talking to
me being like, what did you do to deserve that?

Speaker 1 (28:52):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (28:53):
Yes, whatever you were doing, stop doing it.

Speaker 1 (28:55):
Yeah. Yeah. And if I have said that Travis's mom
grabbed my ear, my mom would then probably have grabbed
my other ear, right, the one that's not looking call
a flower. So you wouldn't tell her like I would.
I don't know if I ever mentioned if if because
I hung out Travis's all the time. His mom's name
is Roxy. I don't think I ever mentioned my mom

(29:16):
that Roxy put hands on me, because it wouldn't have
done any good. It would have just brought up, as
you point out, it would have brought up questions, questions
I didn't want to have to answer because I probably
was being a little turd, all right, eight eight eight
nine three four seven eight seven four What a crazy
story man? All right? Six forty nine Hang on the

(29:39):
whole Utah kidnapping thing like how long? How long had
it gone on the bullying, how long was he held for?
And more on the the urinating incident. Now, all I
could find is more on the urinating and it says
the bully urinated on the boy's shoes. He got some
new shoes. Doesn't say whether he was wearing them or not,

(30:00):
but at the very least he clearly did it in
front of him. All right, let me grab a quick
phone call. That's about all the context I can find. David,
what's up?

Speaker 2 (30:11):
They What should have happened to him is what we
did to a bully in the second grade, and we
should have done it once a week. He was picking
on all of us in the class, and we finally
got tired of it, got the girls to distract the
teachers for a few minutes, and we we tied a
rope to his leg and dragged him around the school
yards for ten or fifteen minutes.

Speaker 1 (30:32):
How distracted does the teacher have to be a while
as you're pulling a rodeo move on one of the students.
It's been some very girls, I said, How distracted does
the teacher have to be to not notice you? Guys
pulling a rodeo move on one of your classmates.

Speaker 2 (30:49):
Well, playground was pretty big and the girls for yeah,
they were, they were all in on it, and they
were they were eager to see him get his justice.

Speaker 1 (31:01):
Okay, he did. He put to stop his crap after.

Speaker 2 (31:03):
That, sir, for a little while. Then he started right
back up. So we should have done it once a week. Uh,
sadly down the road. Uh after a few years after
high school he hung himself, but he apparent he never
really grew out of his bullying. He bullied his younger

(31:25):
brother after after high school and uh uh then he
had then he eventually hung himself. Yeah, I was really
sorry about that.

Speaker 1 (31:35):
But uh yeah, yeah he so we call it twist, sir.

Speaker 2 (31:40):
Okay, all right, but he's all understand force. That's all
they understand.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
Yeah. Well, it sounds like there might have been a
whole lot going on with that kid, But I could
just be a little compassionate for a moment, right, Like
what was his home life? Like? I don't know, David,
I appreciate the call there. Well I took a turn,
didn't it, So yeah I did.

Speaker 3 (32:01):
It was like a shyamal On twist, right, there.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
Yeah, you got me, Bruce WILLI has been dead the
whole time. What's what is that?

Speaker 2 (32:07):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (32:07):
I'm sorry, I just spoiled that for somebody. You had
your you had your window, you had your window. To
go ahead and check it out the CaCO Day radio
program where it is a billion degrees cooler than yesterday.
So just know that that's what you're getting this morning.
I know if Ross is complaining about it before the show,
it must be bad.

Speaker 3 (32:29):
So it was like eighty yesterday, it was like forty
this morning. The house is no idea. My house is
like I don't know what to do, Like this would
Trinker expand I don't know, man, I'm confused.

Speaker 4 (32:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:38):
Well, plus you got that whole new wing there. It's
a it's a problem. Man. So anyway, so race stage,
it could be along to take the blame for that
hearing about forty forty minutes. AnyWho. I know this isn't
really the deepest story, and I'll get to some others,
but I just saw this. So you guys know who
Bruce Pearl is. So, Bruce Pearl is a long time

(33:04):
Division one basketball coach. He's been at Tennessee, Auburn, a
bunch of a bunch of schools. He's he's been doing
this for thirty five years. He's he's a staple. And
this is important that I'm giving you this background. So
any who, you know, clearly got the NCAA tournament going on,

(33:25):
and uh, you know he's coaching, and then you got
post game, and you got Q and A and all
this stuff, and an interesting thing happened. One of the
reporters referenced, referenced what something that happened during the u
c l A Yukon game, all right, and the reporter

(33:49):
referenced that that the arena had been rocking with the
song Lose Yourself from Eminem and Bruce Pearl's like who
and that of course, like now everyone's interested. So Bruce Pearl,
a Division one basketball coach, claims, not only does he
not know who Eminem is, has never heard of the

(34:09):
movie eight Mile, did not know the song Lose Yourself,
which I found it hard to believe because it's kind
of an arena song. I've been to several sporting events
where they played that. He says he really doesn't know
any rappers. Is anybody buying that? And then people are like, oh,
that's racist. I don't know it could be racist since
the topic is Eminem. So I mean, how does it
make sense?

Speaker 3 (34:28):
How old is this guy sixty six and he's never
heard of Eminem.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
Thirty five years coaching That's the part. You're coaching basketball
for thirty five years and you don't really know any rap,
let alone Eminem. Like he was a D one coach
when Eminem everything was. You know, Eminem was as big
as he'd ever been.

Speaker 3 (34:46):
Like ninety nine, two thousand when he first came out.

Speaker 1 (34:48):
Yeah, yeah, Pearl would have been coaching Auburn at the
time whatever. He was a D one coach at the time. Yeah,
I don't know that I'm buying that.

Speaker 2 (34:58):
Man.

Speaker 3 (35:00):
I'm not saying he needs to know the lyrics to
forgot about Dre, but I mean he can't act like
you've never heard of Eminem. My mother's seventy six. He's
well aware of who Eminem it is, because there was
a while there where he was on like all these
twenty twenty shows and dateline shows and like you look
at the crazy popular white rapper. It was like a
big deal, right, yeah, like its like the Elvis of rap.

Speaker 1 (35:18):
But they were calling him maybe this guy's just so
in the like mentally compartmentalized right where, you know, because
you're like, oh, in the arena. They play these songs
as hype songs. But maybe he's so laser focused, like
he blocks it all out. I don't know. I'm trying
to find some way this could be possible, because I'm
with you, it just doesn't It doesn't sound possible. Man.

Speaker 3 (35:41):
Is he saying he doesn't know like any hip hop
or rap stars at all, He's never heard of sir
mix a lot, or he's never heard rappers delight his
entire life?

Speaker 1 (35:50):
Yeah? Well yeah, yeah, and I don't know. And the
other thing is too Pearl step down from Auburn because
then he kind of installed his son last year, so
he's kind of he's kind of there and he's being
interviewed for just because he's Bruce Pearl. Everybody knows him. Yeah,
I know, I don't know. Man. Again, he's sixty six,

(36:10):
but saying you never heard of eminem, I am so confused.

Speaker 3 (36:13):
This reminds me of those reaction videos you have on YouTube, right,
those are so fake? Yeah, they're so fake. You'll have
like a fifty year old black dude and he'll be
sitting there and they'll be like, first time ever hearing Aerosmith, right,
and he's sitting there, He's like oh, and like their
faces like, oh, I don't want to miss a Dang.
I've never heard this song before, like Janey's Got a Gun.

Speaker 1 (36:32):
Never heard your liar, You're you're the amount of fake,
the amount of fakery, you know. I went on my
whole Twitter ramp the other day, but I'm just like,
it's it's it's it's off putting to the point where
I like rage Block don't recommend channels on stuff like that.

Speaker 3 (36:46):
Yeah, I wanted to make a channel where I was
going on the channel. The premise of the channel would
be I'm a dude that just woke up from like
a thirty year coma and I've never heard any and
I'm not familiar with any pop culture references at all
for the last thirty yeah, or any fast food. So
it's just it's just me trying fast food listening to
music quote for the first time, you know what I mean. Yeah,

(37:07):
I'm like, oh, this is a big mac. I've never
had one before. I'm a forty six year old male
and I'm gonna listen to this song, What is this
song called?

Speaker 1 (37:13):
What is this em? And lose yourself? Okay, just did
I tell you about my Did I tell you about
my new channel? Okay, it's me just reacting to videos
of dudes who just got out of a coma after
thirty years, right, and then it's right, yeah, yeah, yeah,
because I never and I just react to those.

Speaker 3 (37:31):
Right, I'm gonna I'm gonna eat Taco Bell for the
first time, and I'm gonna listen to Van Halen or something.
I'm forty six, never heard it before.

Speaker 1 (37:37):
Look, the only way, the only time those channels work
now is when they catch they like Shanghai a British
dude and bring him over. Yeah, those all lot.

Speaker 9 (37:44):
Now.

Speaker 3 (37:45):
The age is different. If you have like a twelve
year old kid or something and you're playing a music
from like the sixties and seventies or even me, right,
here's journey or what is that is possible? Like you
can understand that's a possibility. But when you have a
fifty or sixty year old dude and there's one that's
coming to my mind, I can't remember his name, but
he's got a very popular channel, and that's the whole
premise of his channel, and he's been making these videos

(38:06):
now for like a decade. Apparently he's never heard any
song ever.

Speaker 1 (38:10):
Ever. Fortunate do you imagine never having heard music your
whole life?

Speaker 3 (38:15):
Sixty year old dude, you listening to the Beatles for
the first time?

Speaker 1 (38:18):
Shut up? Is it Bruce Pearl who does the channel?

Speaker 3 (38:22):
He's only heard Rocky Top, It's the only song he's heard.

Speaker 1 (38:25):
Oh? Man, Yeah, I see those, and I just I
don't even know why I get fed those. I just
simply don't watch them because I'm like, I'll see that.
I'll see that, you know, like on YouTube, I'll see
the headline they're like, oh, first time here and final countdown,
and you're right, I'll look at him and I'm like,
you are way too old for this, right, Maybe your
kid could pull this off, but nobody believes you. And

(38:47):
they never hate the music either.

Speaker 3 (38:49):
No, it's always the greatest thing they've ever heard, the.

Speaker 1 (38:51):
Greatest thing they've ever had. I never heard this, right, Oh,
I hate all of it. God, there's just just so much.
I could go out a whole nother rand. Have you noticed, too,
Like I'll give you a premise because some of these
I think about and that I forget kind of the
premise of so I have seen, you know how a

(39:12):
video will go viral, and then there's ten different versions
of it, and then you got it. You're like, didn't
I see this already? But that chick looks different and
then you realize people just stage remake these videos now.
And there's one that's going around and I have seen
three different people do it, and they all do it
the same way, and it all looks fake. And the
premise is it's a woman. She's on her computer. You

(39:36):
can't see the computer screen, but she's like on a
zoom call or a teams meeting for work, right, And
then there's a voice you hear coming out of the
computer that's clearly AI, except one of them sounds like
she got her friend to do it. And it's a
manager telling the woman she's got to turn her camera on.
She's got it. And then the woman in the middle

(39:56):
of it is she's boss babe, right, So she's like,
I've got the employe handbook here and it says turning
on your camera's not required, and it's a whole like
women's empowerment viral video where she tells off this evil
male boss who's picking on her and she schools them
and eventually he's like begging her not to go to

(40:16):
HR and it's all so fake. And I've seen multiple
versions of the same thing and they have like two
million clicks.

Speaker 3 (40:23):
Yeah, it's annoying. I think that's one reason I'm so
burnt out in social media is I think I've come
to the point where you and I are like the
same age where we've been on the Internet for so
long that a lot of what you're seeing is old,
recycled content from like even ten years ago, where you'll
see a tweet and be like, I read that ten
years ago. I saw that story ten years ago, and
I'm scrolling and I'm like seeing it, seeing it, seeing it.

(40:43):
Or it's these tweets where they're like there's a formula
to the tweet, right, so you can just take you
you have like the beginning, the middle, and the end,
and you just put different words in, but it's the
same tweet. It's like a formulaic if that's a word tweet.
And it's like, yeah, I'm scrolling and I'm like, I've
seen all this before. It's all old content. Now there
doesn't seem to be anything original.

Speaker 1 (41:02):
Well, because we have hit we have hit this weird intersection, right,
we have hit the intersection where it is so ungodly
easy to produce this content that and there are so
many people that are bereft of creativity, right, they don't
have a creative bone in their body. They're not good

(41:23):
at they're not good at things. However, what used to
be is it used to be if you wanted to
do a radio show, you had to get hired at
a radio station, or you had to have an excessive
amount of equipment, which would require you know, expensive, expensive equipment.
So you had all these hurdles. So naturally, people who

(41:44):
weren't creative, they they weren't going to make the investment.
They weren't going I mean, sure some of them would.
But now you can be as boring as you want
to be, have no idea of your own and for
the price of a cup of coffee. Because of everything
that's built into your iPhone or your your phone, you
can you can essentially produce a show and put it

(42:07):
out on the Internet or skits or any of the
rest of this. Yeah, and if you don't have any
your own ideas, you just you just go back and
you're like, what was what were the top YouTube videos
in nineteen ninety nine, eight thousand and five or whatever,
and then you just copy it. Yeah, that's what people
are doing, and that's its video. If it's if it's
just written word, just copy and paste or change a
word here and there and move the sentence around and
suddenly you have new content. But you actually stole it

(42:28):
from something that was made fifteen years ago. I wonder
if say, like the old vaudeville stars like in the
eighties whatever seventies, felt the same sort of way where
they have been performing for like a Milton Burrel, right,
your Milton Barrel, and you've been around for two hundred
years and now everything is there's nothing new under the sun.
You're looking at it like I've seen that bit, I've
heard that joke. I know we're going to go come

(42:48):
up with something new. I wonder if it was just
as frustrating. I'm sure it is because people. I think
that's why some older stars kind of developed that attitude
right and where it's very off putting. I think they're
just frustrated with it. I think they're just Yeah, with Milion,
you're talking about somebody who transition the talkies.

Speaker 3 (43:07):
Yeah, what I mean, I wonder if somebody who went
through that sort of progression now it's kind of similar
to going through like you know, when we were born
in the seventies, we had like the seventies tech to
going through the eighties and now like all this AI
digital stuff, you know, the Internet. I wonder if they're
they were equally jaded.

Speaker 1 (43:23):
I don't know, Yeah, I I because you know, comments
a little that are excited about doing all their own movies.
Have you seen now everyone's doing this iteration of crossover
superhero like five minute movies. Yeah, yep, yeah, and they
you know, visually they look fine, but again there's still
something about the audible or the audio like there's I

(43:44):
don't know how to describe it. I can tell when
it's an AI voice because it just doesn't sound like
there's any human there. They still haven't got one hundred
percent on that, but they're getting damn close.

Speaker 3 (43:54):
But you get these comics. It's very common in the
comic world where you'll have somebody when they're younger, they're
really fun, obviously vibrant and young, like like a Jerry
Lewis or Jim Carrey, right, they're super funny, and then
as they get older, you're like, where did that funny
person go? And maybe it's just the weight of life
on their shoulders, or they're so tired of seeing the
same jokes done over and over and over again, where

(44:16):
there's nothing new, they're tired of it.

Speaker 1 (44:18):
Or they made a Holocaust movie about clowns. Possibly, yeah,
so that kind of Jerry Lewis. And also there's there's
part of it's too is like my frustration with the
amount of stupid people that are consuming it. And I

(44:38):
don't know, maybe that sounds maybe that sounds a clash class,
you know, some weird like class thing, but it's not.
I'm just I am constantly amazed by the amount of
people that can't tell that that's a fake video and
just and it's not even bots, it's just normal people
or they there's no there's no thought process, Like, let
me give you a premise. I saw somebody did an

(44:59):
outrage video on this yesterday. All right, Ross, you're ready,
so tell me if you can in your mind explain
this away. So this guy was wanting to do a
takedown of the chat gpt UH and its ability to
be used to determine if something is uh it was
written by AI, well okay, or is is is ripped

(45:21):
off from somewhere else, which you know that that's this
is a problem within education, right you have you have
professors and teachers that runs kids papers now through programs
like that. And so what he did is he wanted
to prove that it doesn't work so or or that
it has no ability to differentiate. So it fed it
the Gettysburg address, and then it's it came back saying

(45:43):
that it was most likely ripped off. That's the premise
that the Gettysburg address that had been fed to it
as a test came back as the thing that they
fed to him was ripped off, not applying that Lincoln
wrote it, but ignoring the fact that AI is a
conglomerate of all the world's knowledge. So of course it

(46:07):
recognized that this thing you're feeding it existed prior because
it has knowledge of the Gettysburger. I just rolled my eyes.
I'm like, but this person didn't stop to think for
a moment that it's doing what you're asking it to do.
You you presented it as though some student just wrote it,
and they're like, no, no, that's this.

Speaker 3 (46:28):
Super famous I know what that is, right, Yeah, I
didn't it. I say, initially you were saying that the
computer was saying that Lincoln stole the Gettysburg address.

Speaker 1 (46:37):
No, no, no, no, it was saying, as the thing that
presented to me is stolen. He stole it from Jefferson Davis.
He's too, stole it from the Iroquois, right right, You
guys don't know that in the New History the ken
Burns thing, essentially the idea for the US government came

(46:58):
from the Iroquois nation. Yeah, yeah, I know. So anyway, No,
and so this idiot, because he has access to an
iPhone that has all the stuff on it, is able
to make this outrage video. And then you know, ten
thousand other idiots are like, oh, look at that doesn't

(47:18):
even know it's broken, And I'm like, no, this is
it's not putting Asian chicks in Nazi uniforms like this
one's correct. And you guys are all outraged just because
you want to be mad at Chad GBT for whatever reason,
which don't get me wrong, there's plenty to pick on,
but nobody stopped to think, well, of course it thinks
it's plagiarized because it's been educacated on whatever is existing

(47:44):
out there. So anyway, sorry, yes, this is my get
off the lawn Kids segment. Thank you emailer, But sometimes
it needs to be said. I don't remember how we
Oh yeah, Bruce Pearl, that's how we started all this?
All right? Coming up, coming up on the show, why
would you fight Jack Reacher? That's a weird story, so

(48:07):
we'll have to dig a little deeper into that. Apparently
there was a dust up with the Alan Richon or
whatever Richson, the actor, and one of his neighbors in Nashville.
I realized he lived in Nashville. That's probably where they
filmed that show, So that probably makes sense. So we'll
get into those details and what the heck's going on
with Iran. You got a little more there, and I

(48:30):
love it, love it, love it when these mainstream, non bias,
non partisan reporters leave whatever quote unquote mainstream outlet they're
in and then immediately tell on themselves. We'll get into
all that more coming up. So we just had a
second meteorite slam into in this case Texas. What was
the other one was Ohio, Pennsylvania last week? Now, a

(48:55):
meteorite broke up over the suburb of Houston. Let's see,
we spread over about twenty six miles. The various debreed
and selling. Anyone was injured, though one woman does have
a new skylight as the meteorite crashed through her home's roof.
See how dense is this thing? I remember? I remember

(49:15):
it was crazy? How dense? The other one was, oh wait,
hold on, go ahead? What je go ahead? I see
your damn hand hovering. Go ahead. Well it ain't a
media yeah it is.

Speaker 7 (49:29):
It came out of the sky.

Speaker 1 (49:30):
Well I'm sure it did, but it ain't. No Maydia.
There is a big old frozen chunkin.

Speaker 3 (49:35):
What Listen, man, if you send me a meteor story,
you're gonna get Joe dirt in the media every single time.

Speaker 1 (49:43):
Right but right, but if this is actually like the
prequel to a giant doomsday planet coming, you know how
many meteorite stories are going to be between now and doomsday.

Speaker 3 (49:52):
Well, I'm gonna say at that point, you know we're
gonna need some laughter. Y, yes.

Speaker 1 (49:57):
That would be that would that would be fair? I
need sub to cut up over. Let's see here, where
is this stage coach which I guess is northwest of Houston.
I'm not familiar. Oh Cypress Station, I've heard of that.
So yeah, twenty nine miles spam between Cypress Station and
stage Coach in Houston. Let's see. Wow. Yeah, so again,

(50:22):
the meteorite, which was estimated to have a diameter of
three feet, weighed a ton. It's just crazy density on
these things. It's three it's like three feet and it
weighed a ton prior to breaking up and then spreading
all over. Howould they even know that? I guess maybe
it's just the what you see visually. I will say

(50:43):
this though, she I hope she got to keep that meteorite.
If a meteorite crashes through your home, on your that's
yours baby.

Speaker 3 (50:52):
Oh can you imagine the government comes and tries to
take your meteor Yeah, especially.

Speaker 1 (50:56):
With growing gleen green like you know, I'm getting powers.

Speaker 3 (50:59):
Yeah, you're gonna be that like an Origin story or
it's super heavy and only like the Worthy can lift
the meteor Yeah.

Speaker 1 (51:06):
Well, now that you got that super strength the Worthy
as you although you know the other side of his
radioactive probably goes the other way and you're a putin victim.
But maybe there's a chance there's a chance. So I'll
tell you the scariest meteorite video I've ever seen. I
have to find it was years ago. Do you ever
see the video of the woman who was filming from

(51:28):
a plane where you could see the meteorite. I can't
remember how close it was. It wasn't as close as
you think it is, but from the video you think
it's coming to take your plane down. And she just
happened to be filming out the window and caught this
thing kind of ascending through the atmosphere.

Speaker 2 (51:43):
There.

Speaker 1 (51:44):
I'd be like, ah, we need to turn this plane
the other way man. But yeah, she said it hit
so hard. Well, there she is holding the meteorite, so
I hope she gets to keep it. Why are you
wearing gloves, coward? Why you wear gloves? She's got like
plastic sea through gloves on to hold the meteorite. Now,

(52:05):
you're not gonna get powers if you don't touch it. Lunatics. Oh,
speaking of space, So the Mars rover that's up there,
the name escapes me. What is the current Mars rovers name?
It doesn't matter. But anyway, so did you see what
the Mars rover apparently found? Rubies and sapphires are laying

(52:25):
around on Mars.

Speaker 3 (52:26):
What i'd seen it was like a week ago. There
was some sort of weird cylinder object they saw on
the They were like, look metallical. They were like, what
is that thing? We need to go look at that.
So now they're finding rubies.

Speaker 1 (52:37):
Yeah, just rubies and sapphires. I guess we need to
get to We need to get to Mars. Stat Man
there to scoop it all up for the government, gets it. Yeah,
it says ruby and sapphire like. I don't know what
that means, sapphire like. So it is ruby, but then
the other thing sapphire like, or they're both ruby like

(52:57):
and sapphire like. Maybe they can't tell. Alright, let me
go ahead and get back to a couple other things,
because we are all over the place today. But that's okay,
that's why you come here, just random thoughts. All right,
This story right here, this is from Axios. This is

(53:19):
obnoxious Democrat presidential hopefuls lean into their childhood traumas. Of course,
now you have to understand who we're talking about here.
So we're talking about Gavin Newsom. Remember, was so traumatized
that his father was he essentially ran in circles with

(53:41):
the richest people in the world, was gifted millions of
dollars for a winery. Right, so much childhood trauma. And
it's not to say that just because you're rich, it
couldn't exist. You know, there's a lot of rich people
on overbearing parents. That being said, we're not the same. JB.
Pritzker's one of the other folks done in this article.

(54:01):
The family the billionaire whose family you know, basically made
all their money off of the plumbing and everything else
their business. So this guy was never not a billionaire.
Tell me about your childhood trauma. And then Josh Shapiro,
who arguably did have a much more modest upbringing. But

(54:25):
like it's I I understand that it feeds the base, right,
But almost everyone on TikTok who's making these videos, who
are in these alternative groups, right, they're all they're all
like either neurodivergent or they have you know, they have
long COVID or they have you know, where you have

(54:46):
to list off all the horrible things that happened to you.
Because like I'm gonna say this, there were there were
parts of my childhood that were great. There were parts
that were awful, and I suspect that's the case for
a lot of people, and I understand that it's it
can vary. Right, you had people that were raised in
god awful conditions, had parents that were addicts that beat them,

(55:06):
that did worse things to him, and then you have
people basically they had a very happy childhood, and good
for them. But I but, like, these guys are so
incredibly successful even in spite of themselves. In the case
that JB. Pritzker, the governor of Illinois up there, like
it just feels so fake. All that knew some stuff

(55:28):
where he's talking about, you know, growing up in the
hood and and what was the other comment he made,
I don't even read. I'm like you at that weird
thing he said here a few weeks ago, Like, I
don't understand it. But then you get a cobbled all
together in an article, and I'm supposed to feel bad
for them, all right, So here here is here's apparently

(55:50):
how they were tortured story. Shapiro. He said his mother, Judy,
could be unstable and that he and his siblings believed
if you were good, we could stop the chaos and
the yelling all right, So you had you had a
mom that was uh was a screamer, got you. Uh,
let's see about uh, here we go. The California governor

(56:12):
Newsom says he had dyslexia and his mother had to
carry most of the burden of raising him and his sister.
And that's about it. Newsom says it although he meant
to that, she meant to comfort him.

Speaker 2 (56:27):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (56:27):
He said that one time she told him it's okay
to be average Gavin, and he said, he recalls no
crueler words. Dude, this is so milk toast man. But everybody,
everybody's got to have a grievance. You got you gotta
have a grievance. So even even when you're bored a billionaire,
I guess, all right, seven forty three, Uh, let's get raised.

(56:49):
Agic figure out what the hell's going on? Man, because
one you know, one minute your son tan in the
next minute you're you got to warm your car up
before you can go to work. What the heck's going on?
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (57:00):
Yesterday completely backwards day with a odd because now you
look at temperatures this morning and you're kind of like
twenty four hours ago was twenty five thirty five degrees,
milder than we are right now. The problem is is
that yesterday's highs for the most part, occurred during the
first part of the day, first half of the day.

(57:22):
Just you know what, I'm stalling a bit. I don't
know if you could tell yeah.

Speaker 1 (57:26):
It's okay.

Speaker 5 (57:27):
It was well, let's say, early afternoon, so low eighties
Raleigh at two fifty en maybe not I know Asheville,
their morning high occurred like, or their daytime high occurred
like at nine in the morning. The Triad it was
at one of weight, so a little bit earlier at
eighty degrees. So my message really being is that temperatures
have come down quite a bit and they'll stay down
for a couple of days. Tomorrow morning actually end up

(57:50):
being aule degrees chillier than this morning sun, some clouds today,
and low to mid fifties, so we are down for
the daytime highs. Tonight we're in the thirties, maybe even
the mid in spots, so a little bit chillier of
the morning. Wednesday, sunny in the afternoon we'll start the
recovery a little bit sixties, probably into the mid upper
seventies on Thursday, and Sunday, and a few afternoon showers

(58:11):
around Friday, with highs back into the eighties before we
cool off again for the upcoming weekend into the upper
fifties to low sixties, and the over night loads are
going to the thirties again, So got on that roller
coaster ride. Casey of temperatures, not a bunch of precipitation around,
A best chance of showers is probably going to be
Friday night. The weekend is gonna look good too though.
So Today sunny, pretty nice in the fifties, its sixties

(58:33):
Tomorrow and Sunnay Thursday in the seventies and then eighties,
so we make that slow climb before we're back down.
So not a terrible week all in all. I think
we'll be in a pretty decent shape for outdoor activities,
the chances of rain actually going up with the front
coming in sometime Friday Friday night.

Speaker 1 (58:49):
Okay, So you see that, you see Major League Baseballs
fragmenting again? Who all right? So you know Opening Days Thursday? Right?

Speaker 4 (58:56):
No?

Speaker 1 (58:57):
You know Opening Days Thursday? Right? Okay? So I just
I was on Netflix yesterday and they're pimping that they're
going to be broadcasting this these sports all hit like
nine outlets.

Speaker 5 (59:06):
Now, man, I know I did see Netflix. I did
see that. I was like, there, MLB is going to
be on Netflix. I don't know, honestly, Listen, I don't
have to like it and I don't.

Speaker 1 (59:17):
And it's just it's the Yankees Giants game. That's the
one that's going to be on there, is it? Yeah?
That's that's on Wednesday?

Speaker 5 (59:24):
So oh okay, yeah, I just so, is it football
season yet?

Speaker 1 (59:29):
No? Not quite, not yet this draft thing, but oh
that's right, that's right. Yeah, yeah, yeah, all right, what
do you do? You know what draft position you guys have?

Speaker 5 (59:39):
It's like eighteen seventeen or eighteen something like that. I
think it's in the.

Speaker 1 (59:43):
Teens, mushy middle there.

Speaker 5 (59:45):
All right, yeah somewhere around there.

Speaker 1 (59:46):
We'll talk more as we draw closer to that prestructure.
Are there?

Speaker 2 (59:49):
You go?

Speaker 1 (59:49):
Race to agic from the Weather Channel? All right? I
got to play the former CBS news reporter, the guy
who who couldn't be in good conscience continue to work
for CBS because, as he said, there was bias creeping in.
Wait till you hear his new gig. We'll share that next.
Hang on dough Yeah, the CBS former CBS former CBS

(01:00:13):
journalist Scott McFarlane, who what was his actual title at
CB He was the DC Justice Correspondent. Okay, all right,
So he was among those who were like, this is untenable.
This Berry Weiss chick's over here, and even though she's
not a conservative at all, clearly she's wanted to make
some changes over at CBS. He was among those who

(01:00:35):
were like, nope, nope, the bias is creeping in. So
he left. Well yesterday posted a video because he's got
a new gig, and it's just like, what was it?
What's the what was the ABC News guy ross Terry Moran? Right?
Terry Moran was when he when he got fired from CBS. ABC.
I can't remember exactly why they fired him. He screwed

(01:00:57):
something up. Now all this guy does is just post
videos and it's just pure TDS moon battery. And it's like, oh,
so you're telling me that you're twenty years at ABC,
you were a non biased journalist. Please. So this guy,
Scott McFarlane, he's got himself a new gig, posted a video,
is really really proud of it. Let's hear from him

(01:01:18):
and then we'll talk about where he's working.

Speaker 10 (01:01:19):
Okay, some news to share, and it's good news. I
have a new platform for my independent, unfiltered reporting effective immediately.
I'm chief Washington correspondent for the Midas Touch network at
the beginning in about two or three weeks, I'll begin
his anchor of a daily program called Scott McFarlane Reports.
And the Midas Touch and I share the same north

(01:01:41):
star of communicating that when you have news to break
or something important to explain, just get to it, straight
to the point, as soon as you open the camera
and open the microphone, simply declaratively and conversationally, explain what's happening,
Explain what it means. Put aside the production theater and
the useless bell and whistles.

Speaker 1 (01:02:01):
Right, I gotta, I gotta stop him here because I
just you just need If you don't know who Midas
Touch is, you need to understand this isn't me grabbing
all of the networks and pointing out that they lean left.
Midas Touch is a different animal entirely. Most people don't
see it as a journalistic outlet. In fact, Midas Touch
describes itself as a hyper progressive pro democracy journalists journalism

(01:02:27):
like they call themselves that. But what Midas Touch does
is basically just run propaganda videos and they cut them
like Aaron Rupert does. I know you've seen their stuff.
It's it's way to the left, like undeniably, in fact,
like I just read their own little own description where
they call themselves a hyper progressive pro democracy journalists out,

(01:02:48):
a journalism outlet. It's in their own name. So this
guy who said that the bias was creeping in at
CBS didn't just go to another network. He went to
a progressive Soros funded like Media Matters type organization, and
he's trying to pawn it off as though he's going
to be able to do great journalism. Now you're telling

(01:03:08):
on yourself. Let's get to it.

Speaker 10 (01:03:10):
I'm not an opinionist, I'm not an editorialist. I'm far
from a politician. I'm an enterprise reporter and have been
for a quarter of a century. What I'll do is
bring this enterprise reporting to all the components of the
Midas Touch network, all the contributors of the Miightas Touch network,
and anybody who sees, watches, or hears the Miightas Touch network,
and you'll still see all of my reporting on my

(01:03:32):
many platforms that you may have been seeing over the
past few months or past few years. This is such
a critical moment. It's important we underscore how significant this
moment is, this moment of unique political toxicity and unique
political danger, and the Miight's Touch and I have long
shared this same philosophy. You don't platform lies, don't platform

(01:03:53):
conspiracy theories, and you don't allow for the whitewashing of history.

Speaker 3 (01:03:58):
He just did like a one to eighty there like
ten seconds.

Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
What do you mean, you know, I'd be like.

Speaker 3 (01:04:03):
I'm not an opinionist or editorialist, and you know, I'm
not about the theater, the bells and whistles. But listen,
the Christopher Columbus statues are going to kill you. You've gotta
murder us.

Speaker 1 (01:04:11):
All.

Speaker 3 (01:04:12):
Yeah, we're all in danger.

Speaker 1 (01:04:14):
And Trump just unveiled a new one. Right.

Speaker 3 (01:04:16):
No, he just said, you know, you know, I'm not
any of these things. And then he immediately said, listen,
currently people are trying to whitewash history, and people are
conspiracy theories, and people are you know, it's a very
toxic political environment right now, and we're all in danger
and you're all gonna die because Orange Man Bad.

Speaker 1 (01:04:32):
Yeah, yeah, he spend ten tackles are off now because
minus touch will never rain him in. His job is
to Orange Man Bad And so I again like going
back to Terry Moran. So I'm to believe that for
twenty five years, which is what he stated his previous
experience was with networks, for twenty five years, you've been
shooting straight down the middle. When's the last time? When's

(01:04:57):
the last time? Because it has happened. I'm trying to
think when a network reporter left one of the networks
and then went to a hyper conservative outlet. Has that happened?
I'm trying. I'm sure it's happened. I just can't think
of any off the top of my head where it
may have happened. The one, the only one I can

(01:05:22):
think of, although she didn't really go to a hyper
conservative thing. Wash. Who's the reporter who was raped in
Egypt when she was working for CNN or whatever? Remember
she was gang raped during the UH when Egypt was
going through the Muslim brotherhood thing. I would say that
she appeared, Oh you know, the only the only one
I to think of is the ESPN reporter, the black lady,

(01:05:46):
she Sage Steel Sage Steel left ESPN and clearly she
has a very conservative bent with her with her talk show. Now,
how the hell as a truck driver do you not
notice this is going on? So in North Carolina, tractor
trailer driver, it's in hot Water up in New York

(01:06:06):
after So he's driving an over so it said oversized,
but it's actually an over height. That's important because when
you get an oversized load, you got the little pilot cars,
get the signage there. So it is just him. So
he's driving an overheight excavator on a flatbed. Oh yeah,
that's a beast. I'm looking at a picture of it here. So,

(01:06:27):
so it has a really long scoop arm on it.
And so when it sits on the flatbed, the the
the the joint on the actual arm is probably about
six feet higher than the top of the cab of
this thing. So it's pretty big and clear. That's the
cab of the of the loader. It's probably even more

(01:06:50):
so than the roof of the tractor trailer cab. So yeah,
you're gonna have you're gonna you're gonna know that this
thing's over height. And of course it's the truck driver, right,
that's an important thing for you to know is how
tall your load is. That's why we have signage everywhere,
and that's why you get the can opener intersections like
the one in Durham or the one over by the

(01:07:12):
events center in Greensboro. As you go over to the
restaurant's here off the backside right, trucks hit that. That's
a problem. But that's not what this guy did. He's
on the New York State Thruway. What's ross? What is
the speed limit on the throughway? Is that full highway
speed up there in New York?

Speaker 3 (01:07:28):
Man, it's been a while. I mean when I was
a kid, it was like fifty five. It's probably sixty
five now seventy five.

Speaker 1 (01:07:32):
Okay, all right, So I just want to point out
this dude's moving along at a clip. According to authorities,
he struck. He struck overpasses. Ross. How many overpasses do
you think he's struck? One? Bob? No, No, it's higher
than that one. Surely you'd stop it too, But this

(01:07:53):
guy did not. Oh Lord for Bob, doc did not
stop for four six? You know higher? It can't be ten, Bob,
it's higher than that. I don't believe it. No, No,
not that seventeen bucks. Oh you were so close to winning. Yeah,
oh it was eighteen. He struck eighteen different overpasses, didn't stop,

(01:08:17):
causing a minor to moderate damage to most of them. However,
two of them were significantly damaged enough they had to
shut them so they can evaluate them. Yeah. Yeah, he's
struck eighteen. How you have to hear that, right?

Speaker 3 (01:08:32):
And I'm thinking that they have to be released spaced apart, right.

Speaker 6 (01:08:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:08:36):
It's so like it's going down a highway and all
the you know, you just go under the overpass. I
would imagine typically if you hit one, you would stop
and pull over and be like, I need to check
this out. But this guy just kept going for seventeen more. Yes, yes,
and uh. According to police, they received a report around
one forty five in the morning informing them the detractor
trailer hauling an overheight excavator had struck multiple overpasses. How

(01:09:00):
many miles did he go? Wow, holy crap ross? How
many miles do you think eighteen work? Two hundred miles?

Speaker 3 (01:09:10):
Bob?

Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
Oh, god no, not that fifty miles bomb slightly higher
than seventy miles, Bob, No, not that sixty miles? A right,
look at that. You want to no. Six? So he
had eighteen over sixty miles. I'm a winner. Yeah, well
you're a half winner because you didn't get the first one.
So but hey, you bought five hundred, you go in

(01:09:31):
the hole. Uh yeah. So, according to police, he struck
eighteen overpasses with the excavator over the over approximately sixty miles.
Like I said, no injuries, but a couple of them,
did you get had substantial It says a few had
substantial damage, though most were only minor damage. All right,
So was he charged with He's not charged with like

(01:09:53):
drugs or alcohol or anything. Driver. The extravers charge was
second degree reckless endangerment, a total of twenty different fines.
I guess for every time you hit a overpass and
a few other things. I just don't know. How could
you be unaware? This is this is what I don't
understand you ever you ever like clip something in one
of your vehicles? Hell, you parked, you grind the curb

(01:10:17):
and it sounds like you're your cars.

Speaker 3 (01:10:19):
Now we're in the old sort of old timey station
vehicle where you had like the Marty and the top.

Speaker 1 (01:10:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:10:26):
I was with an intern who was driving back from
a radio station promotion, and we are going to where
Carr go to the mall and Crabtree and went in
there and just to enter the parking lot, there's the
sign that says the you know, the height requirement. And
as soon as we went underneath that thing here and
you could feel that thing.

Speaker 1 (01:10:46):
Yeah, yeah, I tell you. The last time I did
something like that is when I first when I first
moved into that apartment on Glenwood when I first came
to Raleigh, first apartment I ever lived in was one
of the buildings on Glenwood Avenue, and so you got
the parking garage there. I had a Tahoe at the
time I was driving, and it was and it also

(01:11:06):
had I it had been slightly lifted to accommodate some
larger tires. I remember the first time I went in there,
there was there was one part of the parking garage
where they happened to have a speed bump that sat
directly under one of the support railings, and the tahoes
at the time had that like four inch long black
antenna that sat up there. Took that ride off, I

(01:11:27):
thought the vehicle was going to explode. It was so loud,
and I had to get that replaced, and then I
just couldn't. I had to like drive in this weird
way so as to never do it again the whole
time I lived there. But this guy is cruising sixty
five miles an hour and he's rubbing a full size
loader against an underpath or an overpass to the point
you got to close it. None of this makes any sense.

Speaker 3 (01:11:50):
Maybe he was like cauling, like like feathers or like
pillows or something.

Speaker 1 (01:11:53):
Oh maybe he's just blasting CW. McCall like I don't know,
just got the speakers up too loud. But you would
feel it. You'd feel it something like that. You have
to feel it. I am so confused with this. Uh yeah,
all right, So I just throw that out in the
universe because none of it makes sense. Speaking of not
making sense, here's a follow up on the LaGuardia crash

(01:12:17):
right where you had the two pilots that were killed
as they struck a fire try. I guess it's more
accurate to say a fire truck struck them because in
the radio you can tell them. You can hear the
guy warning ground control, warning the fire truck off, and
they apparently didn't hear it or something. But here here's
the kicker to this story. So what happens when there's,

(01:12:37):
you know, an incident involving a plane. The NTSB is dispatched,
so immediately after this happens because like they're getting calls
like three in the morning, right, So NTSB sends a
team to LaGuardia so that they can begin the investigation.
And what do you think happens? Well, according to Safety
Board chair Jennifer Hammandy, is that how you pronounce your name,

(01:13:01):
believe it or not. The investigators got stuck in the
TSA security line for three hours. They were still not
ready to go through because the Guardian now is closed
too because you just had an incident. So everything's crazy. Uh.
And eventually the NTSB had to contact DHS, but DHS

(01:13:21):
is shut down before they could find somebody who would
fast track their investigators in so they could investigate the
friggin plane crash. That's a thing that happened one day,
just absolutely broken and uh I so what is what
is Trump doing to try to make this, uh, you know,
make this easier. Well, they decided that they have a

(01:13:46):
plan and here it is.

Speaker 4 (01:13:53):
Mine.

Speaker 1 (01:13:53):
That was mine that was like the paper clip.

Speaker 4 (01:13:56):
You know the story of the paper clip. One hundred
and eighty two years ago a man discovered the paper cliff.

Speaker 1 (01:14:02):
It was so simple, and everybody that looked at it and say,
why didn't I think of that? Ice was my idea.
I called. First person I called was Tom Homan. I said,
what do you think?

Speaker 4 (01:14:13):
He said, I think it's great. Then I saw it
today there was some masks so and I didn't think
the masks were proper. I put out a statement and
I asked them, would it.

Speaker 1 (01:14:21):
Be possible to take off the mask?

Speaker 4 (01:14:23):
Because they should wear a mask when they're dealing with
the murderers and the thugs left and let it jo
a guy.

Speaker 1 (01:14:30):
All right. So and actually that's where we're headed next
on this, because first of all, what is TSA doing
at airports? So the airports where they're at, they're not
doing the screening or what is ICE doing? Excuse me,
they're not doing the screening. That's the actual TSA officers,
ones that remain are doing that, because that you know,
that's still something you've got to be trained on. But

(01:14:50):
as you well know, if you've traveled through an airport,
there are also TSA agents who aren't in that main
screening line. They're doing other stuff. And that's where ICE
they're basically blocking exits entries. Right, they're controlling egresses, not
through the security but elsewhere. And I'll give you an example.
When you walk out of let's say you land at

(01:15:12):
RDU in terminal two, right, and then you make your
way to the middle there, you go up the escalators
and then there's that hallway you walk out. It's just
like any other airport where they even have sign says
once you go pass this line, you're no longer in
the secure area. You can't come back. There's a TSA
agent sitting there. And then just on the other side
of the line, depending on what time it is, there's

(01:15:33):
usually I don't know, ten to twenty people who are
there to meet their loved one as they show up.
So that's where you have TSA go or that's where
you have ICE going in, and then it frees up
that TSA agent to go over and do TSA stuff.
And it's been helpful. Apparently they were able to knock
some of the line times, but it's had another thing happened,

(01:15:54):
and it has to do with those masks. So what
else is happening. Well, remember how I just described this
up there at RDU where you have the families who
are waiting, they can just walk in off the street,
walk right up to that line and stand there. And
so Antifa idiots are going to the airports and harassing
the ICE agents who are acting in the TSA capacity

(01:16:17):
because they can get right where they are because they're
controlling the perimeters of the secure area. And so they're
literally going to the airport and doing whatever they can
to try to make it more difficult once again, because
what's happened is the ICE agents are then retreating because
there's such a commotion there, and then you have to
bring a TSA agent back. So the moonbats are willing

(01:16:39):
to go in harassed. There's tons of video of this
stuff and start screaming at them like idiots because they
don't have to buy a ticket and clear security to
reach them. They go walk in off the street. And
so they're I guess content with longer wait times, which
is which is ironic, because that's the whole Democrat strategy here.
They are so concerned, they're so concerned about the safety

(01:17:03):
aspect of stuff that they they're literally not even going
to fund the TSA. They're not going to fund the DHS.
ICE is already funded. That's that's the that's the thing.
They're already funded. And then the second funniest thing that
happened was what happened up in Chicago. So they had
the ICE agents in there doing it and uh, they
executed a couple of rests for immigration. So that has

(01:17:27):
that's incredibly backfired. So this thing where they're like, oh,
we forced a hand and now we got to send
ICE there. Uh. And the Democrats keep, you know, they're
they're content with this because I think they think they're
witting something here.

Speaker 2 (01:17:39):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:17:40):
Now cause people to get arrested who were coming off
of a flight or were trying to clear a security
checkpoint because now ICE is there. That happened yesterday, and
of course the the moonbats a screaming, bloody murder over it. Um,
what is your question? I don't know how much of
curious George the trucker was able to read here's the thing,

(01:18:01):
because I understand that aspect of it, like is this
one of those four I don't care what language you speak.
I think metal scraping, concrete and metal at sixty miles
an hour eighteen times going down a highway translates universally
like you know, whatever you scream, the effort did when
you realize it happened. What other language, it still means

(01:18:22):
the same thing. But not to this dude man. He
was just he thought he was in grand theft auto
or something. I don't know. All right, anyway, it is
eight nineteen here on the Cacoday radio program. So I
just found that deeply ironic everything going on with the
ice there. Kermit Gosnell has died. If you going I

(01:18:48):
heard that name, that's because this the amount of politics
surrounding the story. So, Kermit Gosnell was a Philadelphia abortionist
and he was serving three consecutive life sentences plus some years.
The charges they got him on they described his office
as the house of horse because he was doing like

(01:19:08):
a bunch of off book abortions and stuff. And in fact,
three of he had three infants that were born alive
that he murdered, which was the main crux of the charge.
But he actually a grand jury indicted him on hundreds
hundreds of murders of babies born alive and then killed,

(01:19:29):
but they only ended up prosecuting him on seven, and
then getting the high charge on three, which gave the
life sentence. But when the grand jury again a Philadelphia
grand jury, heard the evidence and issued all these indictments.
They you know, clearly it was horrific. But then the
politics crept in charges were ultimately limited to seven murder

(01:19:50):
counts after pressure from senior political and law enforcement officials.
Planned Parenthood had their people out trying to spin this thing.
It was so gross, man, But yeah, so he died,
didn't say how he died. I'm glad Chuck Norris is
there to receive him, though. I mean it probably won't

(01:20:10):
be around each other for long, but maybe he can
get right at him. Yeah, that's all, dude. I don't
be eating when you go back and read up on
this stuff, because it's crazy. One of the other murder
charges was an adult, right, somebody who died during one
of the yes all right, yeah I was Yeah, died

(01:20:31):
of an overdose of anesthesia during a botched abortion. But
the fact that the fact that the political class rallied
around so this guy didn't have hundreds of charges because
that would have looked bad, I think for the whole industry.
It just shows you where people's heads are at So yeah,
so he's gone. Do we have our trifecta now for

(01:20:54):
the week because you have Gosnel, you had the only
fans founder who died what yeah, yesterday? Right and Chuck Norris.
So I feel bad. I feel bad for Chuck in
that equation right there, But either way, he is no more.
All right, I'm not gonna pair that story with that story.

(01:21:17):
Let's do this. Let's hit a break. We'll be back
casey O Day radio program. So, uh, let me go
to let me go to this Giants player story first.
So the injured running back, although they are very hopeful
about his future. Where'd he play? Was played for Arizona,
New Mexico or something? Uh, he wasn't. He wasn't really
high on the radar going back to his draft class.

(01:21:40):
But boyle boy, uh did he look like a steal
when he was on the field before he got injured. Also,
he's very He's like an edgy gronk, right, and so
when he got injured, he he just started doing like
all the podcasts, and there have been a few times
where let's just say that he probably shouldn't have said something.

(01:22:00):
And I think I saw a report too that the
Giants kind of tried to rain them in with some
of the stuff he was talking about. So anyway, so
he's doing a podcast the other day, a sports podcast
called Bring the Juice. I'm not super familiar. Is this
one of the barstool ones or I don't know, it
doesn't matter. So he's he's doing it and clearly ross

(01:22:21):
you they're trying to be edgy, right? Would that be
the best way?

Speaker 3 (01:22:25):
I feel like they're joking around most of the time.

Speaker 1 (01:22:28):
The problem is is one of the things they're joking
around is about is CTE right, so that you know,
the football head injury stuff and the NFL has they
don't want I saw former players talking about how the
NFL essentially instructed them not to talk about CTE and
and how to handle it if those questions come up,

(01:22:50):
because the NFL doesn't want anything to do with it
because it's a liability.

Speaker 3 (01:22:52):
Is it just a concussion, No, it's it's a whole Yeah,
it's it's because I.

Speaker 1 (01:22:59):
See it a time. But what is it? It's it's
essentially it's a permanent damage. It almost sponge likes part
of your brain. So I don't pretend to understand all
of it. But it's it's you know, it's with a concussion.
The effects you know, eventually you you recover from this
just keeps adding up, adding up is best I understand it. Again,

(01:23:22):
I'm not a doctor, so hangout. I'm trying to remember
what CTE stands for, chronic traumatic in seth pholopathy parthy items.

Speaker 3 (01:23:32):
So it's like a head of injury that keeps compounding
to get worse.

Speaker 1 (01:23:35):
It's a progressive degenerative brain disease found in people with
a history of repetitive head impacts, multiple concussions, and then
the you know, boxers, football players. It causes a protein
accumulation which eventually leads to memory loss, confusion, aggression, and depression,
in some cases suicide. It was the San Diego player,

(01:23:56):
the former Chargers player who killed himself. They were thinking
that CTE. So, but the NFL doesn't want you joking
about They don't want any of their players talking about
it because again they're you know, they're being sued over
this still and of course you know how the NFL
doesn't want to part with a dollar. So anyway, so

(01:24:17):
I'm gonna play the clip for you because it touches
on CTE. But it also touches on asthma. And that's
the edgy joke here. Essentially, what he's trying to say is, uh,
these are those are just excuses for losers right us.
Where you ever see a winner with asthma? That's the
joke here. The problem is people are well, they're all upset,

(01:24:39):
because of course they're upset. Here we go, here's the
twenty three seconds that angered everybody. You think CT is
a real thing, No, that's an excuse. I think asthma
is an excuse too.

Speaker 3 (01:24:50):
Yeah is that a hot take, No.

Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
That's a good said, yes, asthma's face.

Speaker 5 (01:24:55):
Is there anything worse than when you're in fourth grade
and someone's huffing and puffing you're just soft?

Speaker 1 (01:25:01):
Yeah? Just literally there? All right? So anyway, yeah, they yeah,
they I guess they're they're trying to be edgy there.
I don't know the seriousness level. The problem is that
Scatterbow keeps going on podcasts and saying stuff that irritates people.
So of course uh he did, he did this, and
then uh, you know, people lost their damn minds over it.

(01:25:23):
Uh pig people with asthma taken to Twitter.

Speaker 6 (01:25:28):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:25:28):
And then of course this I'm I dude. I think
the NFL will probably talk to him about the CTE
thing because they're so skittish on that. But all here's
here's what I will say. And I'm not even trying
to be edgy. This is a real thing. The biggest
problem I had with asthma is that this incessant need
of people who write movies to shoehorn in a kid

(01:25:49):
with asthma is a plot. Yes, agreed, every it's I
feel like it's for so many movies have this.

Speaker 3 (01:25:56):
Like you is such a big deal, but it wasn't
a big deal when you were run away from the
Vertellies in that mine.

Speaker 1 (01:26:02):
Yes, is one of the offenders. Yes, yes, but like
how many movies and they they shoe horn in the
asthma kids so that at some point the kid doesn't
have his inhaler or her inhaler and you have to go.
It's it's a fetch quest, I guess would be the
best way to describe it. It becomes the mcguffin of

(01:26:24):
that scene, and sometimes it's meaningless. What was the zombie
movie with Brad Pitt World war Z? They had the
asthma kid in there, signs they had the asthma kid.
I do. There's so many I might start thinking about it.

Speaker 3 (01:26:38):
My brain might be inventing this. It is a complete possibility.
But I swear there was a Friday the thirteenth where
a kid had an inhaler, like running away from Jason
in a clauset, like getting you know, I can't give you,
I can't breathe. It's yeah, you know in the movie
It they got the kid with the inhaler. Yeah, a
lot of horror movies have it, right or in this

(01:27:01):
case of the zombies, like with Brad Pitt, but like
then you have you gotta have the asthma kid in
there and then and it'll always it'll be like the
first or second scenes of the movies where you're getting
to know the characters and they introduce the asthma kit.
I roll my eyes, not because I don't I don't
think asthma's real, but because I know that I'm gonna
have several minutes of my time wasted at some point

(01:27:21):
in this movie so they can go find it inhaler
because they didn't, you know, nobody, because I'm sorry, do
you not have multiple inhalers?

Speaker 1 (01:27:28):
I don't. I've never had asthma. So I don't know.
Are you just always with one and the only other
ones are in the zombie infested pharmacy across the street?
Or do sometimes you had your kid has one, and
then you have one in the medicine cabinet. Maybe you
got moms got one in her purse in case the
kid needs it?

Speaker 2 (01:27:45):
Is that?

Speaker 1 (01:27:46):
Or are they? Are you only allowed one inhaler at
a time under penalty of law. I don't know the answer,
but I know that when I see it in a movie,
I'm like, oh, here we go again, Here we go again.
All So, if you're a kid with asthma, like you
put it, wouldn't you feel bad? Because in every movie
then like the hero has to put themselves in like

(01:28:07):
mortal danger to care for you. But there are so
many Yeah, here we go. I found the thing where
initially saw this asthma tropes and the kids who hate
him the whole video. I watch the guy's like forty
different movies. Oh anyway, all right, and the most sent
to me story in quite some time, And I understand

(01:28:30):
why even Ross went out of his way to send
this to me yesterday. Is this here's the headline, quadruple
amputee pro corn hole player allegedly shot and killed a
quaintance during argument, then drove off with body. How many
questions do you have hearing just that headline if you

(01:28:51):
know nothing about this story you're telling you, you're telling
me a quadruple amputee who is a professional like he's
on ESPN corn hole player, also shooting guns and driving.
The hell's going on? Okay, So first and foremost, he's uh,
he's cut off at the elbows and knees, and that's important, right,

(01:29:14):
because he's now fashioned what's left of his arms to
be able to do some of these things, including shooting
a weapon. Although I did see him. I saw a
video of him doing this. And so he's got like
a nineteen eleven pistol and he's like, look, I can
load it myself. Well I don't think you loaded the
mag but whatever, let's go ahead, and it puts, and
so you see him racked it in there. He's able

(01:29:35):
to then take the pistol and prop it against his
body and then rack the slide.

Speaker 3 (01:29:41):
I've watched the video of him shooting the gun several
times and I still don't get it.

Speaker 1 (01:29:45):
But here's the thing. When he racks the slide. He's
still he has there's no muzzle awareness because he has
the the muzzle of it is on his leg or
what's left of his leg. So if that thing discharged,
like you would never point a pistol you were loading
at your body, he has no choice. But I guess
what's he got left to lose when he throws corn

(01:30:08):
a hole. You've seen that video too, right, Ross.

Speaker 3 (01:30:10):
I don't know how that No, No, I've yet to
see that.

Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. How does he throw the thing?
How does he he throws the He pinches it between
his two flipper I don't think arms or whatever, and
then throws it like with both of them. And clearly
he's very accurate. You know, he's sponsored, he's playing in
this league that there's on ESPN sometimes. But yeah, so

(01:30:33):
he's in a seated position obviously, and then he pinches
it between what's left of his two arms and throws
it like that with both hands and and again very accurately.
But yeah, but then graduated to murder. The hell's going
on here? And there was four people in the car
when he shot one of the other dudes who was

(01:30:55):
riding shotgun. Uh, they what were they arguing about. They
got into a heated argument. They don't say the argument
turned violent, and he allegedly shot and killed the guy
was sitting shotgun, which is a horrible way to describe
his seating arrangement, considering, which then caused the other two
to get out of the car immediately because they just
witnessed a mur excuse me, a murder, and then uh,

(01:31:17):
clearly police. He drove a hundred miles, but police caught
up with him. I mean, look at all the things
he's been able to accomplish, even if they're horrible.

Speaker 3 (01:31:28):
Right, Yeah, listen, it's it's bad, yes, you know, it's
it's not good, No, despicable, it's yeah, you know you
want to frown upon that. Yeah, However, it's sort of inspired.
It's sort of amazing. You read the headline and you're like,
first of if you think it's a Babylon b article
or an onion and you're like, this can't be real.

(01:31:49):
And you read the details and you're like, no arms,
no legs, cornhole champion shot a guy drove a car away, Like,
how does that even happen?

Speaker 1 (01:31:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:31:57):
So, I mean you that guy walks in and you're
the judge. You might just be like, you know what,
well done, I get let I'm gonna let you have
this one.

Speaker 1 (01:32:05):
Yeah, I know. Also apparently it was a state ranked
wrestler in high school. Now, I will say this, there
are several wrestlers who are very good who are missing limbs,
and arguably it's kind of an advantage because there's less
to get a hold of. But I don't know how
you do it with all four gun. Apparently he did
it very well. He's excelled in a number of things. Unfortunately,
now looks like he's excelled in murder. Raised agent, I'm sorry,

(01:32:28):
just looking at the block here. Do you see this
crazy story? The cornerhole guy with no arms and legs
shot his buddy allegedly in the.

Speaker 5 (01:32:33):
Way I saw the headline?

Speaker 1 (01:32:37):
Yeah, I guess that's all like, and then your head
your brain almost exploded.

Speaker 5 (01:32:41):
Huh, yeah exactly. It was interesting and yeah, just like
move along from that one. But yeah, it's crazy, all right.

Speaker 1 (01:32:48):
Well, it was the most sort sent to me story
in quite some time. Got to give the audience.

Speaker 5 (01:32:53):
Anymore, Yeah, give them what they want, right, got to
provide and you got to do that too, I hope.
I hope that's what I'm doing right. We're not quite
out of like these changes, which are more dramatic than
they are not when you get into the summertime. Especially.
We're down a little bit today in the afternoon as
temperatures yesterday got into the eighties. Today most likely seeing

(01:33:15):
temperatures that won't get out of the fifties, mid upper
fifties tonight, mid upper thirties. See sunshine, some clouds today,
more clouds tonight. However, tomorrow we should get back to sunshine,
highs and the load to mid sixties. Thursday, warmer, mid
upper seventies, probably get into the eighties again Friday, with
the chance of showers in the afternoon and into Friday
night before ending Saturday morning. Then we kind of reset

(01:33:36):
again and we go back to the upper fifties to
low sixties for the weekend. But good look a weekend.
That's way it looks right now, upper fifties to low
sixties both days again and then overnight loads go back
down in the thirties. So just like we did, I
think last week, we went down, then we went back up.
Now we've come back down. Now we're going back up,
and then by the weekend, we'll go back down.

Speaker 1 (01:33:55):
So no bake.

Speaker 5 (01:33:56):
Storms, no severe weather, no frost or freeze. I don't
see any of that, So really nothing to be too
concerned about. All in all, we should be in a
pretty good shape.

Speaker 1 (01:34:05):
All right, Thank you appreciate it, ye, and we will
be right back with Bloomberg News. Denise Pellegrini, Denise, what's happening.

Speaker 7 (01:34:12):
Yeah, the Nintendo is cutting back the production of the
switch to casey. That's after demand for the console trail
the company's expectations during the holiday season, especially in the US.
They're cutting back by about thirty percent now on that production.
This is a big hit for Nintendo, after all the
goodwill the company got with investors for the surprise success

(01:34:33):
of that new Pokemon Pocopia game that we talked about before.
If you need a new router, or I think yours
is going to break soon, you might want to buy
one fast to the FCC banning the import of all
foreign made consumer grade routers because they pose unacceptable risks,
according to the FCC, to the national security of the

(01:34:55):
US and persons in the US. There could be some
exceptions for those who have some of these routers, but
it's not clear. If you have a band router in
your house, you can apparently continue to use it. Retailers
that have them can sell the ones they have, they
just can't import them anymore. The US government has gone
after TPE link or tried to go after tp link before,

(01:35:16):
so that could be the major target. But then again
they make the majority of the routers. So the big
question is if you know, if you need a router
and you can't use one of those, what do you
use instead, because most of the routers are not made
here in the US. Chipotle topping its single day sales
record thanks to a Friday the thirteenth offer of buy one,
get one for anyone with a real or fake tattoo,

(01:35:38):
company says single day sales were about ten percent higher
than the previous sales record that they set back on
National Burrito Day back in twenty twenty four. And this
one's for you if you're a fan of Little Debbie
oatmeal cream pies. They sell them at Walmart and of
course in their stores. They're available now in ice cream
bar versions. After Egley Choppers spotted the new frozen treats

(01:36:01):
and stores this weekend, and since talking about food, Nutella
announcing a new flavor for the first time in its
sixty year history. It is launching Nutella Peanut, cocoa and
hazelnuts spread blended with peanut flavor that's expected to arrive
April fourth. Stock futures casey, they're struggling again today. We're
back to worrying about rising oil prices in the war

(01:36:23):
in the Middle East. After stocks jumped yesterday on hopes
about possible US Iran talks, So doubt future is now
down two fifty one. SNP futures down thirty two, Nasdaq
down one seventeen one. Thing getting some attention. Futures for
oil and stocks worth billions of dollars right changed hands
yesterday big time in the right direction. Just fifteen minutes

(01:36:46):
before that social media post from President Trump about there
being talks between the US ERUN. That's a crude prices
tumbling and equity stewing. So there were some big buy
positions taken on stocks and some cell positions taken on
crude oil just before that, according to exchange data compiled
by Bloomberg. So that's raising an eyebrow a little bit.

(01:37:07):
And forget about highway billboards. How do you like ads?
On the refrigerator in your house. Samsung testing ads on
some of its smart fridges in the US, along with
the banner at the bottom showing you know, news, weather,
and a calendar. Some owners are thinking about sending them back,
according to The Wall Street Joannel, LG Electronics, Whirlpool, and

(01:37:28):
Ge appliances, though they say they plan to keep their appliances.

Speaker 9 (01:37:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:37:33):
No, I'm to the point with these smart applying give
me the old fridges that used to suffocate kids, right, oh,
because I don't have to worry about being spied on.
They work. I mean, that's that's all I'm asking for.

Speaker 7 (01:37:45):
You don't need one that you don't need one that
tells you no.

Speaker 1 (01:37:48):
Yeah, I hate all right, Denise, thank you very much.
Preciate you tomorrow. Yeah, there you go, Denise Pelogreni. And
just because I left him holding for so long, I
feel bad. Daniel, I got about a minute. You want
to comment on the truck driver hitting all the overpasses.

Speaker 9 (01:38:00):
Yeah, yeah, So, I mean we got to give credit
where credit is due for the strap down, tie down
job that guy did. I mean, that's incredible, the fact
that those things held with eighteen bridges or whatever it was.
Also to tie in another story which is pretty crazy. Uh,
this amputeue guy that shot and killed somebody and drove away,

(01:38:21):
did they mention what kind of vehicle it was?

Speaker 1 (01:38:23):
Was it oversized trucks? A Tesla? It was a Tesla,
which makes sense because then it can do the draging
for you, so
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Betrayal Season 5

Betrayal Season 5

Saskia Inwood woke up one morning, knowing her life would never be the same. The night before, she learned the unimaginable – that the husband she knew in the light of day was a different person after dark. This season unpacks Saskia’s discovery of her husband’s secret life and her fight to bring him to justice. Along the way, we expose a crime that is just coming to light. This is also a story about the myth of the “perfect victim:” who gets believed, who gets doubted, and why. We follow Saskia as she works to reclaim her body, her voice, and her life. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com. Follow us on Instagram @betrayalpod and @glasspodcasts. Please join our Substack for additional exclusive content, curated book recommendations, and community discussions. Sign up FREE by clicking this link Beyond Betrayal Substack. Join our community dedicated to truth, resilience, and healing. Your voice matters! Be a part of our Betrayal journey on Substack.

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

Connect

© 2026 iHeartMedia, Inc.

  • Help
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • AdChoicesAd Choices