Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Kc O Day radio program and glad to have you
along eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four.
That'll get you on the show this morning. A little
sad news this morning. I'm sure you probably heard. Maybe
I don't know all the details of it, but theo
Huxtable or Malcolm Warner obviously has he drowned at a
(00:28):
resort in the Caribbean, specifically in the on the Caribbean
coast of Costa Rica. There's a Cocals there should resort there,
and I guess he was swimming in the ocean and
he and another described as another man, I haven't identified
(00:48):
him yet, and they got a very strong current pulled
him out to see and he he didn't make it
so very sad there.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
I always thought.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
I always felt really bad and thought it was very
It was a very perilous set of interviews that he
and and really the rest of the Cosby kids had
to do. You know, after all the Bill Cosby stuff
came out, and I never thought it was fair, really
because I saw a couple of them that.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
Were people.
Speaker 1 (01:23):
People were being very critical of them, and I thought
it was unfair, and they're like, why wait, you didn't
see anything and I'm.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
Like, there were kids, man, wait, wait, what what do
you what?
Speaker 1 (01:33):
Are you mad that Rudy Ruddy Huxtable didn't speak up?
I mean, they're kids, I would have and even though
he was the oldest of the kids, I I what
what what do you do you think Bill's inviting him
in for drinks?
Speaker 2 (01:48):
If that's the case, probably not. So you got that.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
And uh, every time I ever saw an interview with him,
he really he would talk and this is this, this
is how you could be how do I say this active?
Maybe activist isn't the right word, but you can you
can be political a little, or you can read in
past the it's just entertainment and talk about things without
(02:14):
coming across as uh, you know some DEI lunatic. And
that was the this this this show that It's not
to say that there weren't black television shows before then,
but it was.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
It was.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
It was very different. And you had that, you had
the whole family, and he's a doctor and they're pretty
well to do, and and it was very I would
say it was. It was just it was very normal.
And as a result, it it didn't it wasn't just
people in the black community who watched it. It was
(02:50):
everybody the Cosby Show. Holy crap, I was assuming you
watched the Cosby Show growing up.
Speaker 3 (02:55):
Everybody watched the Cosby Show. Everybody watch everybody. Yeah, So
like you know, you can you can make the argument
that the Cosby Show did more for like race relations
in this country than like Al Sharpton.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
Right, Well, did the Cosby Show ever murder a jew?
Speaker 4 (03:13):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (03:13):
Not that I know of it?
Speaker 1 (03:14):
All right, now we'll check on that. And to be fair,
just so I he rallied. He he whipped a mob
up who then murdered a jew. So just do you
understand how that worked? Do you remember how like it
was like a big crown heights. Yes, it was a
big thing.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
Every season, Like with the intro of the show would
be do you remember yeah, because.
Speaker 2 (03:32):
Yeah, the dancing and everything.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
Yeah, man, that was that was the biggest That was
the biggest thing going. And so you know, he he
would talk about that and he seemed very very proud
of it.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
Plus and this is this kind of the other side.
Speaker 1 (03:47):
I got to think that he and the rest of
the actors and actresses.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
Boy, they took a big royalties hit, is right.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
Yeah, Hey, Cosby Cosby show is one of those legacy
shows where they were probably you know, there's a huge
check coming for streaming rights every year.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
But the whole thing, like how would the kids not know?
Like he I don't maybe I don't. I mean I
don't know the facts of it, but I don't believe
like he ever did he do anything? Like on the
set right in front.
Speaker 1 (04:11):
Of me, I think one of the girls had an
inkling about something. I can't remember which of them it was,
but it might have been Lisa Bonett. But I'm not sure.
Speaker 3 (04:20):
You see this all the time too, like you've seen
it before with like children of like you know, more
heinous crimes, believe like a serial killer, right, like the
daughter of like BTK BTK exactly there, Like how would
you not know? And You're like, how do what do
you mean? How would I don't know? He's my dad?
He never like murdered anyone or did anything in front
of me, And you know, I wouldn't come home and
hold the head like what's that? Oh nothing, honey, just
(04:43):
go to your room, to your homework, all right.
Speaker 5 (04:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
I always thought that was really unfair because it's like, wait,
do you think they all hang after the I mean
clearly they I think everybody liked everybody. Excuse me, Yeah,
jeez mankler Ah, there we go, so like everybody liked everybody.
(05:09):
But yeah, I man, the whole the whole angle was
just dumb.
Speaker 3 (05:13):
This show, though, was just funny. It was just a
funny show. I still remember this episode where Bill Cosby
comes up. It's on Thanksgiving, and as a kid, I
didn't think it was that funny. But yeah, the premise
of the show is on it's Thanksgiving and he just
wants to enjoy the time of his family and he
keeps having to leave to go get stuff that day forgot,
and that's its entire day, and it's so relatable.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
It's so are you saying, are you saying you've been
sent out on that? Well?
Speaker 3 (05:36):
I remember the past, the finals. I still remember the
final seat of that episode and I probably haven't seen
it in like what thirty years or something, And the
scene is he opens the door and it's storming behind
him and he's holding the bags and that's like the
end of the show, and it's just such It was
a great show.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
What have we got out of the bat? Oh? Okay?
See put the ah, Yes.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
The gold Shirt was it gold or blue? Should we
start that argument or it will forever just be the
gold shirt.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
I'm pretty sure it was. God, what is it like
a Gordon Gordon Gatrail or something shirt?
Speaker 2 (06:06):
Remember that?
Speaker 6 (06:07):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Yeah, hang out, we get a little audio.
Speaker 7 (06:08):
Here this shirt shirts.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Of the Cord Trail. Ask me the question again.
Speaker 8 (06:22):
I hate it.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
Look at it and.
Speaker 3 (06:32):
Yeah, just the best part of that scene is Vanessa,
the little girl. Yeah, the entire time of that scene
when he comes out wearing the shirt, she's doing the
TV thing where like she's busting out laughing, but she's
trying to hide it so she's put in her face
like her hands, you know, like kind of yeah. Yeah,
I mean it was just funny.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
So and you know he was he was just on
a show for about the last five years or something.
Speaker 1 (06:53):
I didn't watch it. I was just looking up because
he did a lot of voice over. He and he
worked a lot. He he ended up doing some fresh prints.
I do remember he was on there for I can't
remember the storyline was where they had him on there,
But and then he was a doctor on one of
those doctor shows. I do ever seeing that, and he
was in he was in some of the stuff like
(07:14):
American Horror Story.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
He was in one of the seasons, so like the
dude was working.
Speaker 1 (07:18):
I mean he was if you look at his IMDb
if he's constantly had something cooking, even if it wasn't
something necessary. But it'll never be as memorable as the
Cosby Show, right, how do you That's that's the tough thing.
When you're on when you're on Seinfelder, you're on Cosby,
you're on Friends or anything like. The chances that you'll
achieve that ever again are pretty slim.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
Man. Is there any has there been anybody.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
Who has been on number A, super duper number one
legacy show and then somehow found themselves on another one
like we're two of like the top ten or you know,
show series or sitcoms of all time.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
I'm trying to think, man, so but anyway, you know
they all had.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
Some stuff going there. But yeah, very sad news man,
those riptides. Man, you don't think about it as much
in the Caribbean, but it's uh, it'll get you there.
So all right, it is a six fifteen here on
a CaCO Oh wait, hold on, perfunctory all right, six
fifteen CaCO Day radio program back.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
In just a few minutes.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
Glad, glad, you could make it up and early and
out into the strangling humidity, which at least is on
its way out, so it'll be better than yesterday. And
Ray'll update you on the path of this, so you know,
I got that to look forward to. Hunter Biden gave
an insane interview yesterday. I'm not surprised about that, but
(08:44):
I will say this, He's burning all the bridges, man, everybody,
everybody on the planet is the reason his father is
not still president except for you know, everyone around him.
The way they were acting, the insane decisions that they
were making the universe because of obviously the cognitive issues
(09:10):
that were very very apparent now. So it's basically George
Clooney's fault. It's and and and especially it's not his
fault with his insane antics. So let's just be very
very clear, what is it really a bitter dude? And
that which is kind of crazy to me because like this,
(09:33):
this is this is a guy. I don't like to
use this phrase often because I don't think it's fair
to pigeonhole people just because of who their parents are,
But this is, you know, this is a guy. What's
the phrase go born on second base and thinks he
hit a triple or something. Who the hell knows, but like,
if anything, he should be he got away with it
(09:57):
kind of right, all that you got all money. Lunatics
are still paying for his paintings there. He basically walked
on rent, which we yield more rent out there for
a house. I can't remember if that house burned or
didn't burn with some of the fires there where he
just walked away and owes hundreds of thousands of dollars
(10:21):
And there's never any consequences for this dude because he's
got his pardon, his retroactive pardon. What does he have
to be mad about? What is, if anything, have a
little bit of self you know awareness, What on earth
does Hunter Biden have to be mad about?
Speaker 3 (10:40):
Especially he's going off you know, Trump is the real
criminal and all this kind of stuff, and it's like,
I don't know, man, you know, you've kind of broken
a lot of laws, including the press, you know, gun
laws that the left always has, Like you should be
in prison over that alone, right yeah, yeah, but the
auto pen sort of saved you, the autopen pardon or
whatever it is, Like m h, what retroactively back to
what like.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
Fourteen, give him ten years, Yeah, dude, and and and
and again. Also I go to the money thing. People
are still buying this loon. I don't know if it's
at the same rate, but they were buying this. And
he'll fail upwards, they'll they'll they'll put they'll find something
for him not to mention. And I ah, Joe Biden
(11:23):
has a pretty decent amount of money and he's not
long for this world. And so who knows, maybe his
father gives him the money back that he gave him allegedly.
Speaker 3 (11:33):
Remember the story. There was a story about like the
money he was paying his dad to live at his house,
and it was like a scene amount.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
Of money something.
Speaker 3 (11:40):
Yeah, and they were like, I don't know, maybe that's
sort of laying in the money that's being laundered.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Well, what you've never paid two hundred fifty thousand for rent,
went back when you were running your home.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
Just a little bit lower, a little bit not exactly
that high, but all right.
Speaker 1 (11:53):
Well you know some people, Yeah, some people can afford it, apparently,
and it not at all be a money laundering thing.
Speaker 2 (12:03):
So that's what's important to remember.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
Yeah, just listen to him all the stuff on illegal
immigrants too, which, by the way, I've never heard this claim.
Speaker 2 (12:14):
It sounds so fake. I almost I'm almost not even
gonna look it up.
Speaker 1 (12:19):
I tried yesday. I couldn't quite find it or anything
close to it. So I'm I think he just made
this up in a crack.
Speaker 9 (12:26):
Dream, like all these democrats say, you have to talk
about and realize that people are really upset about illegal immigration. You,
how do you think your hotel room gets cleaned? How
do you think you got food on your table?
Speaker 6 (12:39):
Who do you think washes your dishes?
Speaker 9 (12:41):
Who do you think does your garden? Who do you
think is here by the sheer just grit and will
that they've figured out a way to get here because
they thought that they could give theirselves in their family
a better chance. And he's somehow convinced all of us
that these people are in the criminals.
Speaker 1 (13:02):
Yeah, and and and he's he's going on. At one
point the claim that.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
He makes is like.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
It was like white, white white men are forty times
more likely to convince to commit a violent crime than
an illegal immigrant. Where does that like that? There's no
basis in reality for them? And every by the way,
and and people also realize that it is it is
(13:31):
it is more difficult to get your hands on data
surrounding uh some crimes, as it pertains to.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
People who are here illegally because.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
They are off people are often the victims of what
they are, right, so you know, black on black crime,
or one illegal immigrant committing a crime against another because
they because they're in communities. When you're in proximity in
communities with people and some of you are criminals, those
are the people that you're going to criminalize.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
So now if you're a victim.
Speaker 1 (14:03):
Of a crime, you know, let's say somebody beats the
crap out of you, but you are in fact here illegally,
you're probably not going to the police, So then you
don't know, you don't even know that the crime happened.
Speaker 3 (14:16):
It could also be he's like conflating, like, you know,
it could be like a per capita sort of thing.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
Well but yeah, but but like but it's but it's
not per capita. Per capita works even less in this situation,
and he's what he's saying is a total number of
which is a horrible way. Per capita is what debunks this.
But if he's saying that in West Virginia, which is
I believe the whitest state as a percentage that there's
(14:42):
a you know, a much higher number of white people
that commit crimes, particularly let's say a drug a drug crime.
All right, they love they love the hillbilly heroin stuff
up there. And let's versus the black community. Are you
do you mean per capita or do you mean total number?
Because you say total number? Fine, but what a useless number.
(15:03):
And also the forty times that doesn't that doesn't even track. Now,
this guy's just you're just going off, going off on everybody.
We'll play the clooning thing here in just a moment.
And you've got a little crack cocaine stuff. So yeah,
so a little more of this insane interview. But what
do you have to be mad about?
Speaker 2 (15:22):
Bro?
Speaker 3 (15:22):
Three five?
Speaker 1 (15:23):
We're just listening in on the angriest of angry interviews
with mister mister Hunter Biden here, who again, will you
had to be mad about?
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (15:33):
They said they said this about my dad, Oh they
said this about me. Well they said that about you
because you documented all of it, bro, like you, nobody
had to search in it. People, somebody didn't hack your phone.
That stuff was on your computer that you left, and
under property law in the state where you left it,
you left it for a period of time that allowed
(15:54):
the ownership to transfer.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
To the owner of the store.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
Remember when they were gonna, remember they were gonna basically
throw that guy in prison forever. They were like, oh,
we gotta get the computer guy. Oh yeah, we'll proscut.
You can't do that. You noticed they didn't because you
can't because the law is very easy to understand there,
So save save me the waterworks. But yeah, no, he
(16:18):
was just he was just mad at everybody's including George Clooney.
And if I just remind her, so his beef with
Clooney is Clooney made you know? He had that fundraiser
and he said that he was at the fundraiser and
he had done obviously fundraisers for Biden in the past,
seen him, I'm sure with the Obama stuff too, And
(16:39):
so he he had a bead on how Joe Biden acted.
He said he showed up with a fundraiser and he
didn't recognize the man. He was a very very very
different individual, and so and he said something about it,
and everyone got all super buttered over it. But everyone
who had eyeballs should have came to the realization that
George Clooney did.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
So saved me that. But Hunter's big mad over that.
Speaker 9 (17:05):
Kim him, him and everybody around him.
Speaker 6 (17:09):
I don't have to be nice. Number one. I agree
with Quentin Tarantino.
Speaker 9 (17:13):
George Clooney is not an actor. He is a like
I don't know what he is. He's a brand. And
by the way, and God bless him.
Speaker 6 (17:22):
You know what.
Speaker 9 (17:23):
He supsedly, treats his friends really well, you know what
I mean, buys them things, and he's got a really
great place in Lake Como. And he's great friends with
Barack Obama. You what do you have to do with anything?
Why do I have to listen to you? What right
do you have to step on a man who's given
fifty two years of his life to the services of
this country and decide that you, George Clooney, are going
(17:43):
to take out basically a full page ad.
Speaker 6 (17:45):
In the New York Times.
Speaker 9 (17:46):
And James Carville, who hasn't run a race in forty years,
and David Axelrod who had won success in his political life,
and that was Barack Obama. And that was because of
Barack Obama, not because of David Axelrod and David pluff In,
all of these guys in the pod Save America, guys
who were junior speech writers in you know, on Barack
Obama's Senate staff, who've been dining out on the relationship
(18:10):
with him for years making millions of dollars, The Anita
Dunns of the world, who's made forty fifty million.
Speaker 6 (18:16):
Dollars off the Democratic Party.
Speaker 9 (18:18):
They're all going to insert their judgment over a man
who has figured out, unlike anybody else, how to get
elected to the United States Senate over seven times.
Speaker 10 (18:27):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
Well, one, I don't know that that's success in the
modern day and age, considering the apparatus. But let's let's
let's let is let's say that it is okay because clearly,
you know it was able to ascend to the presidency.
Who the hell is Hunter Biden to be begrudging to
claim claiming anyone, let alone a laundry list of people
(18:47):
have not have no earned success.
Speaker 3 (18:54):
Does he have to be like, what exactly have you
done with your life? Hunter?
Speaker 1 (18:57):
And you could say, oh, I sold these paintings? Did
you sell them just just because they were good? It
is And by the way, we've been pointing out he's
not a terrible artist. But if without that last name,
you're not selling paintings, not in the.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
Modern era when they were.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
If you're in the arts and you're a white male,
good luck finding yourself there. I want to say that
I read something that New Yorker magazine hasn't had a
white man do write a guest essay or guest article
for them in like a decade. So good luck trying
to break into the arts scene as a cis white male.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
In this healthscape that activists have created.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
So yeah, what what have you achieved addicting your former
sister in law and lover to crack?
Speaker 2 (19:46):
What else?
Speaker 1 (19:47):
I'm trying to ross? Do you have a list of
Hunter's achievements? You're a cancer on society, bro, you have
no earn success of your own.
Speaker 3 (19:57):
I can think of one achievement.
Speaker 2 (19:59):
Oh what was that?
Speaker 3 (20:00):
He's uh, you know, we had like a at least
when it comes to Trump, Trump is like man, this
Epstein news cycle needs to end. If only something, Yeah,
if only someone would throw a hand grenade.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
Yeah, I mean, okay, all right, but he's too stupid
to have thought of that, right, So I don't know
if I can count that anyway, So you continue to
ramble on, sir, what else you got?
Speaker 9 (20:22):
Now?
Speaker 6 (20:23):
Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 10 (20:23):
Well, because they think cocaine scarface very cool, crack cocaine,
they think the wire.
Speaker 6 (20:28):
Oh in that chance, oh absolutely, you.
Speaker 3 (20:29):
Know what I mean?
Speaker 10 (20:30):
Like, they don't know how similar the chemical compounds are.
Speaker 9 (20:33):
The Only difference between crack cocaine and cocaine is studying
pypricarbonate and water and heat.
Speaker 6 (20:38):
Literally, that's it.
Speaker 10 (20:40):
And those things are pretty much free if you go
to like a science store.
Speaker 6 (20:43):
This is free. You can go to.
Speaker 9 (20:48):
Your neighborhood convenience store and just kidding anyway, I don't
want to tell people how to make how to make
crack cocaine, but it literally is a managed jar cocaine
and baking soda.
Speaker 10 (20:57):
How different is the experience?
Speaker 9 (20:58):
I was vastly, absolutely different, And like, for real, I
feel really reluctant to kind of have some euphoric discussion.
I know you're not asking me to do that, but
have some euphoric discussion about crack coocaine.
Speaker 10 (21:12):
I think this might be kind of the opposite here.
Speaker 6 (21:14):
Okay, no, it's the exact opposite.
Speaker 9 (21:16):
I'm saying I don't want to have the experience of
some you for a Greek call. That's how powerful crack
cocaine is. Does crack cocaine make you act any differently?
Speaker 2 (21:26):
No?
Speaker 9 (21:27):
Is it safer than alcohol? Probably people think of crack
as being dirty. It's the exact opposite. When you make crack,
what you're doing is you're burning off all the impurities
so that they're combined with the studying bicarbonate, which makes
it smokable.
Speaker 6 (21:41):
That's all. You know, all of these.
Speaker 9 (21:44):
Actors and you know people in the past that talked
about they had a problem with cocaine and freebasing, they
were smoking crack.
Speaker 10 (21:52):
So straw on the stove is the same thing.
Speaker 6 (21:55):
Not exactly but close to it, but it's a little
bit different.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
All right, First, where's the free science store at? I
understand what he'sa What Hunter was trying to say there
is you go to Walgreen CVS, you get these ingredients.
You're probably like convenience store. Maybe yeah, But.
Speaker 2 (22:14):
I will say ross, he's got a he's got a
very deep understanding of that.
Speaker 3 (22:17):
I didn't know made those previous cuts that I recorded
in this morning. I manually inserted all those bleeps. Right,
that's something that I have to do a part of
my job. I insert all those bleeps, and every time
we play something like that, my hands in the dumb
button because I'm super paranoid that I missed one of
the f bomps.
Speaker 10 (22:32):
Right.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
Yes.
Speaker 3 (22:32):
However, in this clip where he's talking about crack cocaine,
he talks for a minute thirty seven seconds and he
turns into Oppenheimer.
Speaker 2 (22:42):
Right, he's so nice.
Speaker 3 (22:43):
Yeah, and he's he's sort of like folming at them
out there. But also the point about how it's safer
than alcohol. Bro, Bro, listen, if you are in our
audience and you have some fake teeth in your mouth
or all your teeth are fake, understandable. You know you're older,
you're you know hap this guy lost all his teeth
at the age of what thirty? Yeah, what are you
(23:06):
on about?
Speaker 2 (23:07):
That's it.
Speaker 3 (23:07):
That's insane. That's a crazy statement right there.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
Yeah, he was talking about his passion, and you could,
like the vibe was so different if you just don't
listen to the words.
Speaker 6 (23:17):
Man.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
So yeah, all sorts of.
Speaker 1 (23:19):
Insanity there with this dude. But yeah, he's burning, burning
all the bridges. But what a person to sit here
and talk about personal accomplishments and start lecturing George Clooney
or it.
Speaker 2 (23:31):
Look gonna be wrong. Clooney is a moon bat. But like.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
Is did did Clooney not get into acting on his own?
Did he not make a ton of money? Was he
not in like some of the coolest uh the Ocean series?
I love those movies, So give me a break on
give you a break on that. Yet, go right now
(23:59):
to donnaa what's up?
Speaker 11 (24:01):
Good morning? You can't see how you doing?
Speaker 2 (24:04):
Uh crack making some crack.
Speaker 11 (24:07):
So I will not believe that he is sober. He
was salivating as he's giving me instructions.
Speaker 2 (24:14):
He is sober, I mean clearly, you know addictions, addiction.
Speaker 6 (24:17):
But yeah, yeah, and you.
Speaker 11 (24:20):
Know what I'll tell you both. He's wrong about alcohol.
Alcohol is the most dangerous drug there is. You can
die coming off of alcohol. You're not going to die
giving up crack. Seriously, if you if you look it up,
it's more dangerous.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
Okay, all right, alcohol is more dangerous. Yes, I always,
I always hear this.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
I'm not going to engage in a debate over it
because it depends on what you're talking. You're talking about
somebody who is addicted to the point where they could
die coming off of it. But if hus crack, I
don't want to say at a measured pace. If you
use crack at a measured pace and use alcohol and measure, hey,
likely the physical ailments that you're going to suffer, such
as the teeth that Ross reference, are going to be
(25:08):
a sure bet.
Speaker 2 (25:09):
Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 3 (25:09):
I mean, I'm saying that as they recovering alcoholics. So
I've done a fair share of drinking, and I would say,
by far, I'm never going to do crack because I've
known a lot of crackheads and no thank you.
Speaker 2 (25:18):
Can for both of us.
Speaker 3 (25:19):
Right now, have you have you ever done a sexual
deed for alcohol or have you gone through the the
your carpet look looking for a crack like it's parmesan
cheese and you're like, yeah, bring that over here, I'll
do whatever you need to give you five bucks. Yeah,
that's insane.
Speaker 11 (25:34):
Difference. The difference between him and saying an alcoholic is
he was hitting the crack pipe how how often the
day and he didn't die of a heart attack. Kid,
it rotten, it ruined his teeth, but he didn't.
Speaker 8 (25:47):
Die of a heart attack.
Speaker 3 (25:48):
I would say, I would say, I would say he's
very fortunate, yeah, that he did not die of a
heart attack and were it's not to say that's still
not going to happen.
Speaker 11 (25:58):
He was doing the good stuff. He wasn't hitting the
Houston thing.
Speaker 3 (26:04):
We're like always, you know, crack is whack and code. No,
it's all it's ridiculous, it's stupid, it's dumb. All right, Hey,
don I got I gotta go to break. But alright, alright,
you too, all right, look at.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
That, all right, six forty five uh CACOD radio program.
Hang on West Virginia statistically the whitest state. Somebody wrote
not Wyoming. No, but you would think that, and it's
fair to think that. But what you have to understand
is Wyoming, Alaska, the Dakota's, even Montana they have we
have big minority populations in those states. They're Native Americans.
(26:38):
So yeah, if you go down around Shoshone, it's almost
the almost the entire area that we are, the wind
River down there, and uh yeah, and then you don't
have a huge population even in and of itself in
those states. So if you have a significant Native American population,
that's how you get there. So that's that's the reason why.
(27:00):
And I believe it's still that. It's been a few
years since I've seen the staff, but it was quite
a significant gap.
Speaker 2 (27:05):
So but that's what's up with that.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
And Southern Wyoming has has definitely had a large increase
in Hispanic people moving into just because the agricultural stuff there.
So all right, let's uh, let me grab one more
quick call as we debate crack the alcohol. It's not
a conversation is ever going to get into this morning,
but okay, let's do it. Uh, Janet, what's up?
Speaker 9 (27:32):
Hey?
Speaker 4 (27:32):
Okay, see, I was just sitting here and listening to
Connor explain the ABC's or crack there. Yeah, I didn't
realize that it was such a wonderful and mild drug.
Maybe somebody should go and tell all those people, the
dirty people living under the bridge a crack. But you know,
it's actually a wonderful drug. There's nothing wrong with it.
We can even pass it out for Halloween.
Speaker 2 (27:54):
Well, some sick of you probably done that. So there
was there is that.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
And to give weirdos any any worse ideas, I got
a psychopath I storry about here in just a moment
so I don't think.
Speaker 4 (28:07):
It's going to follow him and down that twisted.
Speaker 2 (28:12):
Yeah, I don't.
Speaker 1 (28:13):
Look if people want to argue, because one of the
favorite arguments that you'll hear people on the left make
is that they prosecute crack differently than cocaine, and some
municipalities they give harsher sentences and here's and then they
decide and thanks for the they call their janet. They
decide it's a it's some sort of racist thing, and
(28:34):
it's not. And here's why. They also in many municipalities
or areas prosecute methamphetamine higher than cocaine. And the reason
is the same for both leaders within those communities, including
within the black community in Los Angeles, where when they
really really started this started the ball rolling decades ago
(28:57):
on this we're begging lawmakers to crack down, for lack
of a better word, on the on the crack epidemic.
And so it was it wasn't like the Klan came
by and that's a black drug, and this is a
white drug and whatever one people of all, clearly crack
(29:18):
is not just a black drug. The hunter Biden's the
whitest dude on the planet.
Speaker 2 (29:22):
So stop it with that.
Speaker 1 (29:24):
But that's why there is this sentencing disparity, which then
activists now go, look what the evil white people did. No,
if you go back and you look into the expanded
sentencing that happened in southern California four Crack, that was
driven primarily by minority leaders within the affected communities, So
(29:45):
just save it. That's so, I think that's maybe what
he was getting at. I don't know, but you want
to hear a real lunatic.
Speaker 2 (29:53):
I got this for you.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
This is horrific, all right, Rosam, I need you to
guess here. So what is this guy's name? Lou Jose
Luis Mendoza Gonzalez. He is he is a Mexican national
in the country illegally in Chicago.
Speaker 2 (30:12):
And this is horrific.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
So they found he's fifty two, he's a legal alien
and he was arrested because, according to authorities back in
April at the time they charged him, a woman had
gone missing for two months and they found the woman's
body on his property.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
But it's what he did with it.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
According to officials, the woman's body had been decapitated. Then
he had like one of those those like pod storage
units on his property and inside he kept the woman's remains.
I'm going to read this how they reported it. He
was charging April with concealing the body of a woman
(30:58):
missing in a storage container in his yard for two months,
abusing her corpse, an obstruction of justice. Okay, So so
he gets arrested. They put him in front of the
court and ross. How much do you think his bail
was by the Chicago judge?
Speaker 3 (31:19):
If you had to get that is horrific, I'd go,
I don't know that. Five million?
Speaker 2 (31:24):
No, no, a little less, little less?
Speaker 3 (31:26):
Four million, oh no, little less? Oh one million, one million?
Speaker 2 (31:31):
No, no, you got to go lower.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
Really, five hundred thousand?
Speaker 1 (31:35):
Okay, uh, nope, gonna be a little lower. You get
ten seconds before we go over the cliff.
Speaker 2 (31:38):
Get him right?
Speaker 3 (31:39):
Two hundred and fifty thousand.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
No, no, lower, one hundred thous oh now the correct
answer was zero. What Yeah, ro r Ice picked him
up thankfully. So he is in custody.
Speaker 3 (31:57):
Yeah, they let him walk. Did they let him off
because they knew that Ice was gonna pick him up?
Like with Ice waiting?
Speaker 4 (32:02):
No?
Speaker 1 (32:02):
No, no, no, this judge has a pattern. Apparently this
she's an activist judge. She's a because you know, in Chicago,
they went with cashlest bail except in extreme circumstances. And
I don't know having a headless corpse, and how many
headless corps do you have on your property? Yeah, you
can just give me a rough estimate. How many are
you killing at the man?
Speaker 2 (32:23):
Zero?
Speaker 1 (32:23):
Okay, all right, let me move on to a few
other things like this.
Speaker 2 (32:29):
This p s a that the Democrat.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
I think it's a pack actually, But whatever that Democrat
political organization is running, just listen to this.
Speaker 3 (32:47):
I can tell you all about it.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
So it's they're doing asparagus harvesting and just do this
is getting shared it all over and it shows crop
pickers one Alonso Oscar Roman Reyes, just a whole bunch
of them as the hands that feed us. And it's
like hunter Biden made reference to this too. Is it
(33:16):
possible to hear one of these people on the left
defend people in the country illegally without referencing bedpans, hotel
room cleaning.
Speaker 2 (33:28):
Or crop picking? Is it possible? I don't think it is.
Speaker 1 (33:34):
And so this is the direction that you went there,
the hands that feed us?
Speaker 2 (33:38):
Right?
Speaker 1 (33:39):
And yes, I understand that there is an outsized percentage
of people who are in the country illegally who do
participate in.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
This.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
But it's you know, it's not the agriculture is not
the top job category. Oh it's food. It's food on
the inside of it and in the kitchens of restaurants
and things like that, as well as food processing. So
you know, if everything's crop picking, everything's in the fields.
(34:10):
It's just a tired argument. By the way, tomato producers
in the US I saw this yesterday.
Speaker 2 (34:15):
They are static.
Speaker 1 (34:18):
They're ecstatic because the Mexico tariffs have have switched the
supply chain and as a result they're able to expand
planting and harvesting. Like there are some of them who
are talking about expansion plans that they have for next
year as long as the tariff situation stays the way
that it is. I have not seen a marked increase
in the price of tomatoes, and in the article they
(34:40):
talk about it being an evening thing. Right now, the
constant the cost of transportation is pointless when you add
the tariffs, so buying in the US shipping from less distance.
Speaker 2 (34:51):
Is much more feasible.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
The question will be will the numbers be there? So
you know, if you want to get into agricultural arguments.
There's plenty to go around, all right, So this is
quite an interesting, uh climate global warming change thing, and
of course Bill Gates is at the center of it.
(35:14):
So a company is a company called Vaulted Deep, and
he is an investor in it, and as a result,
Microsoft has now signed a one point seven billion dollars
deal with this company.
Speaker 2 (35:28):
And what the company does is it mitigates.
Speaker 1 (35:31):
A carbon and methane release, right, so it's basically carbon
credits kind of, and it does it in a rather
interesting way which I had not heard of. So it
mitigates it by instead of when you go number two
that then going into the sewer system and then into
(35:52):
the areas where they mitigate and attempt to break it down,
there's a lot of methane release.
Speaker 2 (35:57):
Right.
Speaker 1 (35:58):
So this company, this company is building a five thousand
feet tunnel underground into the earth and it's just going
to it's just gonna pipe the poop into the earth
and then it'll be there totally not hitting an awkward
for at some point and this turned into horrible but like,
(36:18):
whoa I is that a good idea to start just
taking all the all the all the feces and just
firing it into the center of the Earth. I mean, now,
if you hit hell, I assume it rains poop there anyway,
so you're probably fine.
Speaker 2 (36:33):
But if there's a hollow earth, you know, mad, they're
gonna be.
Speaker 3 (36:35):
I was gonna say this is one of my expertise
because you know, one of my passions is geology. Okay,
geo thermal dynamics, like I won't stop.
Speaker 2 (36:45):
Talking about you just use those words in the wrong order.
Speaker 3 (36:47):
Yeah, anyway, And I know this from you know, my
expertise comes from the documentary from the late nineties early
two thousands, The Core, which is a very scientifically accurate movie.
And so all this being said, my concern is they're
going to pump it into the earth and then it'll
come out of the volcanoes.
Speaker 1 (37:03):
Yes, that's a very good point. Oh no, oh man,
wowm it's screwed.
Speaker 2 (37:08):
Man.
Speaker 3 (37:09):
Yeah, Yellowstone is gonna be even worse.
Speaker 1 (37:11):
Yeah, Yellowstone is a super volcano. Can you imagine you
try to go pet the bise and they're all covered
in poop.
Speaker 2 (37:17):
Oh that'd be horrible.
Speaker 3 (37:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (37:19):
So that's that's you know, that's that's very good.
Speaker 1 (37:21):
It's another concern, what if we instead of going five
thousand feet down into the earth.
Speaker 2 (37:26):
Ross, I just realized this.
Speaker 1 (37:30):
We fire at five thousand feet in the air where
it's so cold up there, it freezes. What's what, what's
the worst that could happen there? Anything you can think of?
Speaker 2 (37:41):
I just teeth.
Speaker 6 (37:42):
It ain't a mede, yeah it is. It came out
of the sky.
Speaker 2 (37:46):
Well I'm sure it did, but it ain't no maydia.
There is a big old frozen chunkin what so that
you know?
Speaker 1 (37:55):
Now, what if it goes down into the geothermal thing
that Ross is an ex right right, comes out of
the volcano.
Speaker 2 (38:01):
The volcano with such four shoots it into the.
Speaker 3 (38:04):
Street today and suddenly we have poop ice icicles falling
from the sky.
Speaker 1 (38:10):
Yeah, this is this is like when these guys want
to put up a bunch of particles in the atmosphere
to blot out the sun, which is literally like the
opening uh part of the matrix.
Speaker 2 (38:20):
So that worked out.
Speaker 3 (38:21):
I mean, if we can see you know, if you
and I just just taught you know, spitballing here, can
foresee these problems. You'd think these quote scientists would be
able to see the same.
Speaker 1 (38:30):
There's too much money at stake. Microsoft is spending one
point seven billion with this company. That's a huge revenue stream.
And all you gotta do is fire a poop pipe
down into the you know, into the end of the earth.
So yeah, as far as the aquifer thing like that
is a genuine concern, and they'll say, well, we're not
gound be in an area, but like aquifers move seismic activity.
(38:53):
Does this I'm really curious where they're going to be
piping it?
Speaker 2 (38:57):
Does they say we're they're going to be piping it?
Hold on, just a who's signing up for that? All right?
So where do they actually pipe it in? Where is
this thing at? Oh?
Speaker 1 (39:08):
No, Ross, Oh it's your backyard, buddy, I'm so sorry. Yeah,
you be able to put the new wing on. So
I bet this sells like hotcakes in San Francisco. All right,
So we'll we'll wait and see how that project works out.
Speaker 2 (39:27):
You know.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
They're also I saw there's another company that's cutting down
trees and bearing them for carbon mitigation.
Speaker 2 (39:35):
What I thought. I thought we wanted trees. So, like
I clearly I don't understand the science.
Speaker 1 (39:41):
But based on our short discussion here, as Ross just
pointed out, maybe they don't either.
Speaker 2 (39:48):
And how am I okay?
Speaker 1 (39:49):
So, uh wo, how many metric tons of human droppings
do you think that they plan on firing into the earth?
This is this is a lot more than I thought.
Five million metric tons. So and uh, let's see how
(40:11):
much does it cost to bury one ton of feces?
Let me do the math here real quick, about one
hundred and fifty bucks.
Speaker 3 (40:17):
I prefer we just shoot in the space.
Speaker 2 (40:21):
Yeah, I mean literally people. Dude. There was a guy
who was saying that that's how we get rid of garbage.
Speaker 3 (40:28):
Yeah, I mean it's sound. It's like like a great
idea until like, you know, your your truckload of floating yeah,
you know, human waste collides into some sort of alien
spacecraft and then you're there the matter right right right now?
You started like an intergalactic war.
Speaker 2 (40:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (40:45):
Yeah, you turn the windshow wipers on, mate, you hope
there's still some some fluid in there.
Speaker 3 (40:50):
I mean, if you were if you were flying past
a planet and you got the splattered with pooh, when
did you be upset? It's a declaration of war vamporizing
your planet. Now, yeah, well it's that gonna end well
for you or the volcanoes all right, seven to fourteen.
Hang on, So so Microsoft is invested in the elaborate outthouse. Well,
the difference, of course, is the outhouse is still mitigating methane.
Speaker 2 (41:13):
H Ross.
Speaker 1 (41:14):
Somebody brought up a point during the commercial on our
alien theory. If you wanted to pass that along, because
I did not think about that.
Speaker 3 (41:21):
No, yeah, it came from a you know, my friend
Ryan also known as Harbager fifty on Twitch. He said,
you know, what if what if the alien's passing by
earic is splattered right by our waste right.
Speaker 2 (41:30):
Into the volcano feces that shot up?
Speaker 3 (41:32):
And yeah, yeah, what if they don't find that to
be an insult? What if to them that's like the
ultimate honor.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
So there's the skeletor mean, yeah, I'm in I mean
different cultures. You know, it's true we shouldn't judge, right,
so I'm hey, maybe man, I don't know, but it
just sounds like a bad idea all around.
Speaker 2 (41:51):
So we'll we'll go with that. Okay, all right, uh
you ready for this? All right? Here we go.
Speaker 12 (42:02):
Florida Man, Florida Man. Is something in the waderty Arrow
Sam that makes you do all that crazy crap It's
like the state is one to be dumb ass trapped.
Speaker 10 (42:11):
Nowhere else has the Florida Man.
Speaker 12 (42:15):
It is almost like as the Weird Factor climbs that
you find out it happened in Florida every time. Florida Man,
Florida man, If anyone can, jeer me if you know
you can, does mine life be crazy? But of course,
but it's not as bad crap crazy as yours. Nowhere
else are you gonna find him? They're so used to
(42:38):
it they don't mind him.
Speaker 10 (42:39):
Hooray for Florida man.
Speaker 2 (42:42):
All right, we had to Lee County, Florida.
Speaker 1 (42:45):
This is southwest Florida, where the Sheriff's office had a
rather interesting arrest, according to authorities, on Saturday night at
a Planet Fitness so ross.
Speaker 2 (42:56):
You can tell me whether this is normal or not.
Speaker 1 (42:58):
Since you go to Planet Fitness, the received reports of
a naked man running through the gym, screaming at people,
trying to crawl into the ceiling, and then attempting to
start a fire to burn the Planet Fitness down. He
so coording authorities, the twenty five year old had been
asked to leave the gym at closing time when he
(43:18):
began acting erratically. He then, I guess, removed all his
clothes and went sprinting through the building, entering multiple rooms.
Initially laid down naked on a hydro massage bed because
they got cameras everywhere, and then as police were inside
trying to locate him, he hid in a rather unique place.
(43:38):
But unfortunately they brought a canine, so the canine found him.
According to authorities, he was completely nude, found inside a
closed tanning bed at the gym. Do they have the
are they the laydowns or the standouts?
Speaker 10 (43:50):
They?
Speaker 2 (43:52):
Yeah, doesn't say so.
Speaker 1 (43:54):
I don't know if he was pretending like he was
just getting a tan but if you tried to light
the building on fire, that's like.
Speaker 3 (43:59):
A super right Listen, I'm not saying you should do that,
but I'm saying perhaps, yeah, all right, let's hear both
sides here. What possibly he was at the gym for
a prolonged amount of time, longer than he wanted to be,
because he was waiting for the bench or whatever. I
just want to bench press. There was a big crowd
of teens at the Planet Fitness there because they get
to go to the gym free during the summer, which
(44:20):
is absolutely insane and he lost his mind. He's like,
now I'm gonna strip naked and I'm gonna I'm gonna
burn the place down, and then you need a place
to hide, and you're like it makes sense. I'm gonna
go in the tanning bed. I'm not saying you should
do that, but maybe it drove him nuts.
Speaker 2 (44:33):
This this scenario that you just made up having to
wait forever because there's a giant crowd of teens who
get to go to the gym for free. Bring this
up a lot.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
Yeah, I don't know, Like this is like probably three times. Yeah,
I've heard this, so this completely made up. So you
think it drove him that.
Speaker 2 (44:51):
You know.
Speaker 3 (44:51):
It's even worse is when you've been on a machine, right,
so say you're on the I don't know, hypothetically, I'm
just gonna throw it out there once again. He was
trying to see it for both sides. Maybe he's on
like the bicyp curl, right, he's on bicyp curls. Yeah,
and this same group of teens that like to just
like hover over the machines and never move when you
get on a machine, just say this one the bicyp curl.
(45:12):
These same teens will then come over. One of them
will come over and ask you how long you're going
to be because they've been waiting for your machine.
Speaker 2 (45:20):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 3 (45:21):
At that point, you're like, I'm burning the place down.
I'm burning it down.
Speaker 1 (45:25):
And no clothes because you don't want to get your
clothes dirty. Why why would you try to crawl in
the ceiling though, I mean, I appreciate you trying to
see both sides, and I bet because I have I
have two criminal stories here back to back. I don't
think you're going to be as magnanimous to the next guy,
(45:45):
which also informed me that this is a felony, and
I didn't even know it was a felony. All right,
So listen to this creep. This is in Louisiana, not Florida.
So this guy's name is Marcus gil Gil. He's sixty
and he had an issue. According to according to the
police report, there was a woman in his house that
(46:08):
he wanted.
Speaker 2 (46:09):
To leave who had refuse to leave.
Speaker 1 (46:12):
And by the way, her name is Jurethra. No, they
got it quotes. Maybe that's why. I think, maybe that's
what he told them.
Speaker 2 (46:21):
I don't know. The whole thing's weird.
Speaker 1 (46:25):
That might be a misspelling. It's got to be a
misspelling or an autocorrect. I don't think her name's probably
a Retha. But whatever, it doesn't matter. So police show
up to the house when ouse he's now standing outside.
When police get there, he tells police that she was
in the home, but he doesn't know if she's still
in the home, like maybe she went out a different
door or whatever. And it doesn't really say what the
(46:46):
argument was about. But you know, look if by the
end you know, it's probably a smart thing. It's not
only the only smart thing he did here. If you're
in some sort of domestic situation and it's gotten to
the point where you're having to call police, then you
probably don't want to. You probably should remove yourself from that,
just so at the very least there's not allegations that
(47:07):
she did something or start filming man. The problem for
Marcus though, is when police arrived and.
Speaker 2 (47:14):
They said, I don't know if she's in there.
Speaker 1 (47:18):
The police asked, do you want us to go in
and clear the house, and he said, nope, that's what
you're here for. Go into the house. So they go
into the house. They do not find the woman. However,
they walk into one of the bedrooms where he has
on a bed three child sized sex dolls.
Speaker 3 (47:37):
Dude, that is creepy.
Speaker 2 (47:38):
Hold on, it's worse.
Speaker 1 (47:40):
According to report, he had also altered the dolls by
piercing their woman parts, which I don't know how that
works on a plot. Wouldn't you puncture it? But whatever,
Maybe they were clip ons. So now he has altered
the dolls so that they have pierced breasts or again, we're.
Speaker 2 (48:00):
Talking about children.
Speaker 1 (48:01):
They're they're literally one is an infant. Oh and they're
anatomically correct.
Speaker 3 (48:07):
And in Tennessee, he's going to prison, right.
Speaker 1 (48:10):
Louisiana, yea, yeah, it's a felony in Louisiana to have
dolls that.
Speaker 2 (48:15):
Actually have It's I'll tell you how it's worded.
Speaker 1 (48:20):
He was charged. Oh and he had drugs laying around too,
but I think it was just marijuana. Uh So he
was arrested for possessing, trafficking, or importing of a child
sex stall, which is a felony in the state of Louisiana.
The Alamo, Yes, that Alamo has installed a new permanent display.
Speaker 2 (48:40):
And it has nothing.
Speaker 1 (48:42):
To do with the you know, the wartime history of
the Alamo, right, and and all of that, which if
you go, I've been to the Alamo.
Speaker 2 (48:51):
It's pretty cool. I you know, I like the history stuff,
so you check it out.
Speaker 1 (48:56):
However, Uh, the new permanent display is uh Lit's. It's
a little different. Give it a listener.
Speaker 7 (49:02):
At this time, I'd like to conclude our tour, and
I mean.
Speaker 10 (49:05):
It, y'all have been one of the brightest groups I
have ever worked with.
Speaker 2 (49:08):
Really, Okay, are there any questions?
Speaker 10 (49:12):
Yes, where's the basement?
Speaker 2 (49:14):
Excuse me?
Speaker 3 (49:16):
Aren't we going to see the basement?
Speaker 2 (49:18):
There's no at the Alamo.
Speaker 1 (49:23):
That is pee wee getting a little social shaming there
because during his big adventure, that is where his bicycle
was reportedly located. And uh now that uh that bicycles
got is on display at the Alamo.
Speaker 3 (49:37):
This story brought me so much joy yesterday when this
is so great, and anybody in our age group will
agree that it's great.
Speaker 2 (49:44):
Right, yeah, unless you're a pureist, unless you're an Alamo truthers.
Speaker 1 (49:49):
I don't know, but yeah, so some people are not
happy with this. Uh the CBS CBS affiliate to k
e n S TV Channel F.
Speaker 2 (50:01):
I was talking about this.
Speaker 1 (50:04):
And he, you know, one of the things they said,
the Alamo holds a special place in the hearts of
people everywhere. Pee Wee's Big Adventure helped to introduce a
new generation to the historic site. That is absolutely accurate.
Speaker 3 (50:16):
Yeah, no, it's true. As a kid growing up in
New York, do you think I would know anything about
or learn about the Alamo? Maybe for like what ten
seconds and.
Speaker 1 (50:22):
Get a pass, so let's talk about Santa Nita and stuff. No, No,
let's know.
Speaker 3 (50:27):
Right, The reason I learned about it was because of
this dumb movie. I mean, that's really it. Yeah, and
I learned it didn't have a basement.
Speaker 1 (50:37):
Well they just will never tell us, right as prior
where they keep all the aliens stuff. So anyway, Yeah,
the artifact perfectly illustrates how the Alamo lives on in
pop culture, and soon visitors to Texas top tourist destination,
we will be able to see it up close in
the new museum there. So no, this is super cool, man,
(51:02):
you know. And then with the passing of Paul when
did he die? What a year and a half ago
something like that? It would have been cooler if they
got it done prior to his death, probably, But either way.
Speaker 3 (51:12):
You were saying off the air that they have people
that show up dressed like Peewee on the tours.
Speaker 1 (51:16):
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah. So one of the one of
the people at the Alamo. Because I asked. I didn't
ask the basement question. I asked, I said, how often
you can ask about Peewee? And she said that the
people literally show up dressed as pee Wee occasionally with
the you know, the gray suit with the red bow
tie thing there.
Speaker 2 (51:33):
That's a fan.
Speaker 1 (51:34):
Man, that's you're going to cosplay at the Alamo and
you're not I don't know Bowie or Santa or you
know whoever. Now you're going as pee Wee man. The
movie by the way, Wow, the movie. So here we
go ross. You know what that movie costs to make.
And guess you have to remember too, the director of
(51:55):
this movie was Tim Burton.
Speaker 3 (51:57):
I did know. It's like, if you were to ask me,
maybe a month to go after I watched the pe
Wee documentary that came out, I would have known.
Speaker 2 (52:03):
But now I left my brain seven million dollars.
Speaker 3 (52:05):
That's crazy, and it.
Speaker 1 (52:07):
Grows forty one million, which would be about one hundred
and twenty adjusted. But that's yeah, that's a pretty good
rate of return there nearly seven times. That's a that's
a really good rate to return.
Speaker 2 (52:19):
Though.
Speaker 1 (52:19):
Also as part of the as part of the display,
they were going to hold free public screenings of the
film on certain you know, like some evening events. I
don't know how often they're going to do it. And
this is the bike. This isn't a recreation of the bike.
This is the bike. Oh wait, hold on, no, it's
(52:41):
one of the bikes. Well, that makes sense generally as
movies have it. Well, oh bye, dang. Do you know
what one of the bikes sold at auctions? This is
not this is not the one. Yeah, so this is
one of the most recent one to change hands. I
don't know how long the Alamos possessed one, but this
is a different one. So one of the bikes. How
(53:01):
many are there? It doesn't say in the story. Is
a collector paid one hundred and twenty five thousand dollars
for Pee Wee's red bicycle or one of them from
the movie that was actually used in the movie. It
was initially expected to fetch only thirty to sixty thousand,
So somebody really wanted that bike, all right, Yeah, and
(53:23):
then you got the haters on here.
Speaker 2 (53:24):
Oh that's not appropriate.
Speaker 3 (53:26):
What's crazy about that movie too, is they released it
not they thought it was gonna be like a failure.
They released it only in a handful of theaters, right,
and then like it really it grew exponentially, like.
Speaker 2 (53:37):
Oh, tell everyone who helped write the movie too.
Speaker 3 (53:40):
Phil Harmon, Phil Harmon, Yeah, Phil Harmon. And the other
thing like that was surprising to learn from the documentary
was that the movie came out before the television show,
which is insane.
Speaker 2 (53:51):
Did it? Did it come out before the show?
Speaker 3 (53:54):
Yeah? Pee Wee's Believe You, pee Wee's Playhouse came out
at night because we thought it was the opposite, because
you would think it was yeah on eighty five, right,
pee Wee's Playhouse came out in eighty six. Pee Wee's
Big Adventure was in nineteen eighty five.
Speaker 1 (54:05):
Yeah, and then they made that what was a Big Top?
That wasn't as good?
Speaker 3 (54:09):
But that movie sucked.
Speaker 2 (54:10):
Yeah. Do they have how much that made? No, it
doesn't say. They just refer to as the much maligned
and less successful sequel Big Top. Pee Wee Dude, you
know what you got to get a large march, cause player.
Speaker 3 (54:25):
There i'd be terrifying. Dude, Well, no, you.
Speaker 1 (54:28):
Do it as a couple and want to use normal
Marge and then the thing that destroyed my childhood dreams.
Speaker 3 (54:35):
It'd be like to Beyonce concert the other day, like
why are all the kids screaming?
Speaker 2 (54:38):
Why the right? Right?
Speaker 10 (54:42):
Dude?
Speaker 2 (54:42):
Man?
Speaker 1 (54:43):
All right, So if you're planning a trip to you know,
the little tourism stuff in Texas, and you weren't thinking
you want to go to the Alamo, I think it's
a must do now, all right? Eight eight eight nine
three four seven eight seven four. Let me get over this.
So there's a story out of Memphis, and again this
(55:07):
is where you get. You get people who are just
trying to be just trying to push back on stupid
stuff like the Alamo. People shut up. So a woman
in Memphis, three home intruders kick their way into her house.
They're very much aware she's in there by the way,
and it's a guy and two women in they're like
(55:28):
early twenties, and clearly I don't know if they're there
to harm her necessarily, but at that point it doesn't matter.
They're there to get in her house. She's telling him
not to. She's got kids in here, and they keep
pounding and kicking the door, and eventually they're able to
kick her door open. So she takes her kids and
flees to a back bedroom where she has a line
of sight, and when they come around the corner, she
(55:50):
shoots one of them.
Speaker 2 (55:53):
All right, and yes, in the.
Speaker 1 (55:54):
State of Tennessee, absolutely castle doctor, and this is a
no brainer. So now she's she's not charged with anything.
So I see they blur her face and don't even
put her name in articles. That's fine, but you have
community leaders who are upset, activists who are upset because
you know the fact that she shot a home intruder
(56:16):
and then she quote mocked them. Oh yeah, yeah, and
she filmed it too, She filmed everything that was going on.
Speaker 13 (56:24):
Woman inside her Shelby County home ran into a room
armed with a gun. Investigators say three people had been
banging on her door and eventually kicked it in coming
inside the house without permission, she fires a single shot,
hitting a woman. You then hear the woman shot asking
for help.
Speaker 2 (56:48):
I'm her, I just tell today.
Speaker 13 (56:50):
The Shelby County Sheriff's Office says the woman, twenty one
year old Kamari Burnham, was taken to the hospital in
critical condition, but has since been upgraded to non critical.
Burnham is charged with aggravated burglary and vandalism along with
twenty one year old Nola Kelly. Twenty two year old
Dewan Payne is charged with aggravated burglary. Defense attorney Brandon Hall,
who is not involved in this case, says, based on
(57:12):
what's in the video, it's a clear sign of self defense.
Speaker 5 (57:15):
And Tennessee, you can defend your home with deadly force.
Once they crossed that threshold and they're inside your house,
that's enough to assume there's a presumption made that they're
there to do you harm.
Speaker 2 (57:27):
And let me let me just explain something too.
Speaker 1 (57:29):
First of all, I don't think she mocked them as
much as she scolded her. So that roster you said
it was scolding or mocking. You know that told you
my kids running kids here here, man leave. Yeah, she
told you my kids are up and here. You get
what you get. And let me just anybody listening is
thinking of breaking into my house. If I shoot you
(57:49):
and you're still moving, I'm not rendering aid for you.
And it's for practical reasons. It's not just because I'm
a jerk, especially when she has kids still in there,
because I don't know. Even if I haven't seen a
weapon in your hand, I don't know if you have one.
Speaker 2 (58:03):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (58:04):
If I lean down to you know, do something, and
you don't pull a gun or a knife out, you're
gonna lay there and then police can show up with
and because police ain't just gonna walk up on you,
they're gonna come in guns drawn if you're still moving.
Speaker 2 (58:17):
So you know, I don't know what they expect from
this woman. And by the way, the fact that they're
making it a race issue.
Speaker 1 (58:22):
All three of the intruders are black. The woman is black,
her kids are black. It's Memphis, Like, good on her man.
Speaker 2 (58:33):
She did what she had.
Speaker 1 (58:34):
To do, and now they're trying to docks this woman
to go after people are lunatics. All right, let's get
raced agic for the Weather Channel if he's ready to go,
because he is trending in the right direction. Uh and uh,
we're good with that.
Speaker 2 (58:50):
So how you doing? So?
Speaker 7 (58:51):
Yeah, I'm doing okay.
Speaker 2 (58:53):
Oh has Ross picked your musical assignment for the week yet?
Speaker 7 (58:56):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (58:56):
No, I have not seen any he.
Speaker 1 (58:58):
Volunteered for that job. So he did have a suggestion
the other day. What was your suggestion?
Speaker 3 (59:04):
You were saying it was gonna be like a wrestling
walk on music, right, Yeah, we could do like Hulk Cogan.
We could do n W O or yeah, well both both.
Speaker 2 (59:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (59:14):
We could have one what right, w w F or
seven o'clock and then we could have w c W.
Speaker 1 (59:19):
Oh well, we can't do it at a thirty five
because we push up against business and right.
Speaker 7 (59:23):
Yeah, so all right, well, which sounds great, that sounds
real great out of the accordion.
Speaker 3 (59:31):
I think you can pull it off. Dude.
Speaker 2 (59:32):
You did the rude, you did chance form. Well, you
set the bar really high.
Speaker 6 (59:37):
I did.
Speaker 7 (59:38):
I did what was I thinking?
Speaker 3 (59:40):
And you did the Chicago Bulls theme?
Speaker 1 (59:42):
So yeah, yeah, all right, well look you want to
do Barbie Girl?
Speaker 2 (59:46):
I mean, oh no, careful what you asked for?
Speaker 7 (59:49):
No, I was thinking like, oh, Danny Boy or something.
Speaker 2 (59:52):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (59:52):
No, no, no, no, no, We're we're expanding what people
thinking of the accordion is.
Speaker 2 (59:58):
You can rick roll us too.
Speaker 7 (59:59):
We're going to make it hip. We're going to make
the Accordion hip, right absolutely.
Speaker 2 (01:00:03):
Man, yeah, all right, So what's going on?
Speaker 7 (01:00:07):
Well, Hotter Weather now is retreated just a bit. Believe
it or not, we have gotten a front through. Temperatures
this morning are down a couple degrees from twenty four
hours ago. Today only near ninety try it will probably
stay the mid upper eighty same thing for tomorrow. Tomorrow
probably a better looking day and there's no thunderstorms in
the forecast. There are a couple out there yesterday, not
(01:00:27):
many today tomorrow probably not any at all. Overnight lows
will be in the sixties and upper eighties, low nineties.
For Thursday and then Friday we're back to the little
bit nineties and for the weekend, middle and upper nineties
expected to come back. So we get a little bit
of a break next couple of days from the heat
and the storms. Storms will start coming back, small chances
started about Thursday and then into the weekend, but really
(01:00:50):
don't see great rain chances. But the temperatures are going
to be going back up. I hope nobody thought it
was over with, right it is what July twenty second,
We get this nice little treat right, more suitable temperatures
and the heat's coming back. Big bridge building in the
Ohio is going to retreat back towards the east. There
was a disturbance of the Atlantic yesterday. I had a
small chance of developing. That chance now is gone to zero.
(01:01:11):
So I don't even know why it's on the map,
but it is just to remind everybody. O. No, they
took it away with the eight o'clock updates. So right
now tropical Atlantic states quite big area of Sahara dust
out over the Atlantic the main development region keeping things
from developing there.
Speaker 1 (01:01:24):
Okay, yeah, you guys, rope it opens again. It's what
you do, all right, thanks man, appreciate it. Yeah, there
you go. Race stage. It carried seven to forty eight.
Hang on, the City of This is an interesting story.
So the city of Boston has a new free mammogram
van program.
Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
One of these.
Speaker 1 (01:01:46):
Before actually like the State Fair here. I can't remember
who had it, but uh yeah, the City of Boston
has got a bunch of vans and they and then
they can get free mammograms and they just drive around
some of the underserved neighborhoods.
Speaker 2 (01:02:00):
So let me get this straight.
Speaker 1 (01:02:01):
So a hospital system in Boston partner with the city
and drive around with the vans. But if I get
a van and spray paint free mammogrands on the side,
I'm a threat to public safety. A huge double standard here.
But any who thought that was kind of kind of interesting,
I'll tell you the most interesting van mobile van service
(01:02:23):
in the world, though, is in China.
Speaker 10 (01:02:25):
Ross.
Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
Do you know what that is?
Speaker 3 (01:02:26):
I do not.
Speaker 1 (01:02:28):
So that's they have execution vans. What yeah, oh yeah,
you should google that.
Speaker 2 (01:02:35):
Yeah, they got they got a whole mobile execution unit.
Speaker 3 (01:02:40):
So but but but what do you mean late?
Speaker 1 (01:02:44):
I mean literally to carry out state executions of criminals?
Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
They have a mobile van?
Speaker 3 (01:02:48):
Do they have do they have like a trial for
I know it's China, so maybe they don't. Do they
have they Well, if you want to call it that, yeah,
they do, they do. Hold on this second, let me
I remember seeing something about this and just falling down
a rabbit.
Speaker 1 (01:03:02):
Hole on it, all right, Whereas yeah, here we go. Yeah,
they called execution vans. Yeah, the execution vans.
Speaker 4 (01:03:11):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:03:12):
And it's lethal injection.
Speaker 1 (01:03:14):
Vehicles equipped with an execution chamber and a bed that
physically restraints prisoners. They've been used since two thousand and three,
so there you go. Yeah, shortly after kind of legalized
lethal injections.
Speaker 3 (01:03:27):
So the vans come to the prisons.
Speaker 1 (01:03:31):
Yes, yeah, so they go wherever these guys are being held,
because you know, not all prisons have execution chambers. It's
why you know we have well, we don't even use
ours anymore, even though it's quasi legal, because nobody wanted
to push back because republicans or cowards. But yeah, yeah,
they just show up to any of these other holding
(01:03:52):
facilities that may not have an execution chamber and then
into the van. They also don't tell you when they're coming.
That's the other thing. Wait, you know, so you don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:04:02):
They're just saying.
Speaker 1 (01:04:02):
You just be sitting in your cell and then they'll
be like, hey, your ride's here, and now you know
what that means. M Yeah, Basically, it's to serve localities
that were would be cost prohibitive to build execution facilities.
Speaker 2 (01:04:17):
So mostly it's taking place like out in the rural areas.
But yeah, that's that's the whole thing, man.
Speaker 3 (01:04:23):
Like, actually, I was imagining something even worse, Like you know,
they have a social credit score system over there, so
you're like, oh, I want to go into this store
and buy something, and your phone says and open, and
the van pulls up and then you're stabbed in the neck.
Speaker 1 (01:04:34):
Well, look, do I think that all the executions that
they carry out in China are filled with as much
due process as ours? Probably not? Probably not, But yeah, yeah,
let's see. One of the first people to be executed
was organized crime leaders, some big mob guy over there.
(01:04:56):
And they got a bunch of others here too. So yeah, yeah,
so so, by the way, the local municipality has then
charged three hundred and seventy five dollars one hundred and
twenty five for the drug and two point fifty for
the service. We could imagine that's your job, like you're
an Amazon delivery guy, just drive around all day. Executing
(01:05:18):
people takes a special individual, I guess.
Speaker 2 (01:05:25):
Yeah, yeah, I know.
Speaker 1 (01:05:26):
It's all about cost and just the fact that they
have a lot more executions. Some lunatic got one of
more interesting to you guys i've seen so courted troopers,
a man by the name of Christopher Spain. This is
in Brooksville, Florida. Brooksville is I don't know, about hour
north of Tampa. It's on the tollway on that the
(01:05:49):
whatever they call their toll way down there, so it
is a controlled access highway. Clearly so according to authorities,
this happened at eight thirty.
Speaker 2 (01:05:58):
In the morning.
Speaker 1 (01:05:59):
By the way, that'll be relevant here in just a moment.
They received multiple reports from witnesses saying that a man
was driving a lawnmower erratically. I think just being in
a lawnmower is erratic enough on a seventy mile an
hour highway or whatever that is.
Speaker 2 (01:06:17):
That's just me.
Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
And they got cameras all over, so you can just
see this dude cooking and it is it's a.
Speaker 2 (01:06:24):
Gravelly Gravely I remember he pronounced that brand.
Speaker 1 (01:06:27):
It's the one from a size perspective that has the
two the joystick arms to drive.
Speaker 2 (01:06:34):
So it's it's not a very big one.
Speaker 1 (01:06:37):
It's one of those Zuo turn ones you'd probably see
somebody in a landscaping business have. So he's cooking along,
he's cooking along, and so police intervene and there's literally
a picture of him pulled over on the side of
the road here from one of the squads and oh yeah,
he's drunk out of his mind at eight thirty in
the morning. So this dude has accomplished acquiring himself a
(01:07:00):
dui charge.
Speaker 2 (01:07:03):
Sorry, I just saw his picture. Oh no, oh, no, yeah,
yeah he did.
Speaker 1 (01:07:13):
It that bad dude. What is with the cut and
paste of the browser update? So annoying? All right, hang on,
hang on, sorry, conducted some business. Here's some business, because
I want to share this with you, and so I'm
gonna have Ross Dui mower.
Speaker 2 (01:07:35):
All right, Ross, I just sent that to you.
Speaker 1 (01:07:38):
Scroll down when you get this story and tell me
if that looks like the face of a man who
would be hammered out of his gourd at eight thirty
in the morning driving a zero turn mower down a seventy.
Speaker 2 (01:07:47):
Mile an hour toll highway. Cuz, yeah, yeah, I think
that might be him.
Speaker 3 (01:07:57):
So, yeah, it looks a little guilty, a little bit
he had a little bit.
Speaker 2 (01:08:01):
Yeah, all right, So, uh it's not just me. Uh, okay,
I'll get on you, sir.
Speaker 1 (01:08:08):
I don't know how many I bet this isn't the
first lawnmower of d u I in in Florida history too.
By the way, there's no way, it's just there's too
much Florida and too much Florida people.
Speaker 10 (01:08:21):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:08:21):
Also, okay, all right, so it might and by the way,
it might not just be alcohol. While they didn't get
drugs on him. They did have a straw with some
white powder in one of his pockets.
Speaker 3 (01:08:32):
I was gonna say, you know, he looks more like,
you know, crackheady than drunkie, like his face. So that's true.
I heard that, yeah on the radio.
Speaker 2 (01:08:44):
Sorry picking.
Speaker 1 (01:08:47):
Yeah, so so that and he was very combative.
Speaker 2 (01:08:52):
Uh let's see, and he was.
Speaker 1 (01:08:54):
He was doing a lot as like sniffing, throat clearing, spitting. Unfortunately,
when he starts spitting around office, er, that's a good
way to catch another charge.
Speaker 3 (01:09:01):
But he's been mowing, right, so he probably needs like
anti histamines or like.
Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
Out Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, that's the worst it is. Oh, dude,
I used to and mowing was part of my job too.
And when you're running a mower, dude, the two things
are the worst.
Speaker 2 (01:09:15):
Over the mower. But uh, loading hay bails, do you
have any sort of.
Speaker 1 (01:09:19):
Allergies and you gotta like you gotta load hay bails
into a barn. Just just know the rest of your
day and probably the next.
Speaker 2 (01:09:26):
Day is just it's gonna suck. Let's see.
Speaker 1 (01:09:30):
He also refused to perform field sobriety exercises, saying that
he's on a mower and not in a vehicle. That's
not how that works. Or you can get a dui
on a horse in some states, although I thought somebody
challenged that in one because they said that the horse
has the autonomy to avoid dangerous situations, and that clearly
(01:09:53):
was a ruling by somebody who's never been around horses.
Speaker 2 (01:09:57):
But I digress.
Speaker 3 (01:09:58):
Now I'm remembering the story. Didn't we have a story
Maybe it's made it up in my own mind, but
didn't we have a story where there was a guy,
like during an ice hockey game who was drunk on
his zamboni and they arrested him.
Speaker 2 (01:10:07):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, but what was where was he driving?
Hold on.
Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
The problem is remembering this stuff and then try and
remember if it's right. Let's see, yeah, no, sure enough,
here it is Zamboni addressed it. This is in Quebec.
This happened in Canada. Zamboni driver arrested for driving under
the influence.
Speaker 2 (01:10:31):
But I was okay, So he was driving it in
the rink. It's not like he had absconded with it.
Speaker 3 (01:10:38):
Was like right, But they're like, you know, it's a
vehicle and you're drunk and that's against the laws.
Speaker 1 (01:10:41):
And he struck another he struck another zamboni. I guess
like he got into an accident literally on the rink
with one of the other I know if it was
a zamboni, says another vehicle. So yeah, that's a good
way to that's that might be the most interesting.
Speaker 2 (01:10:58):
That's pure case.
Speaker 1 (01:10:59):
That's that's a super Canadian story, though, that would be
that would be a ken to get anyone on a moose, right,
So but I think everyone ross, could you look at it?
I think everyone has a zamboni in Canada, right, illegally
the other they're obligated to have to. Oh it's like
the Okay, it's like Finland where you have to own
a gun. Right, Okay, yeah, okay, my bad. So ah,
(01:11:22):
just not everything's nutty, man. We got a main story.
I'll do that later in the show. All right, let
me hit on a few of the more serious stories.
Very sad news yesterday, one of the Cosby kids has died.
In this case, the oldest mister, Theo Huxbold, also known
of course as Malcolm Jamal Warner, who was dead at
(01:11:43):
the age of fifty four. According to authorities, he was
on vac on the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica and
was swimming there at in near Lamone. But by the way,
near Lamone's fine. Never go to Lamone. I think that's
the only city down there because I you know, if
you go to look at the state department stuff, I
(01:12:04):
think it's they have like a state department.
Speaker 2 (01:12:05):
Don't go there, warning because that's where that is a.
Speaker 1 (01:12:10):
It is a battle right now in not just in
Costa Rica, but in several of the Caribbean ports of
where people who are moving narcotics to Europe, not to
the US, but to Europe. It's where they just it's
it's it's their embarkation point. And so of course as
a result then you have cartels and gangs literally fighting
for control of these ports.
Speaker 2 (01:12:31):
So that's what makes that so dangerous.
Speaker 1 (01:12:32):
But once you head south out of there, beautiful, absolutely gorgeous.
Uh there's the The where I went on at one
time is a place called Porta Viejo, and highly recommend
it because it's that old vibe where you've just got
like beach shacks set back into the palm trees. There's
almost nobody around there, very small little towns, and just
all these great beach bars and restaurants. It's very very
(01:12:55):
old school, very calming. He was at one of the
bigger resion where it's there, and according to authorities, was outswimming.
Him and another unidentified man thus far both were pulled
out by the current. And while the other man did survive,
unfortunately THEO Huxmal or Malcolm Jamal Warner did not. And
(01:13:16):
I said this at the beginning of the show, but
let me just bring it up again in case you
guys were joining us. I always felt really bad for all,
you know, all the kid actors on that with you know,
after the Bill Cosby stuff came out because I saw
on several occasions where reporters were or activists or just
people weighing in on this were somehow criticizing the children,
(01:13:39):
who are child actors at the time for not knowing
this was going on. I think one of the girls
said that she had heard some stuff, but their children,
they're absolutely their kids. And also I don't like the
way this article reads.
Speaker 6 (01:13:57):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:13:57):
You know Warner known for playing THEO on The Cosby Show.
He said, Colm the ared in nineteen eighty four to
nineteen ninety two, and then they give a U.
Speaker 2 (01:14:06):
They give a little rep there.
Speaker 1 (01:14:07):
But at one point in the article they said that
it was it was uh, or maybe it was a
different article was somebody wrote that it was the first
time where where black families were portrayed positively, and I
reject that.
Speaker 2 (01:14:23):
That's insane. What do you mean by that? I think
you mean. I think you mean something else.
Speaker 1 (01:14:29):
And that's how you chose to write that, because you
have you had blackstick cooms that were that.
Speaker 2 (01:14:36):
Did very well.
Speaker 1 (01:14:38):
Right, And are you saying that the Jeffersons was not
a positive portrayal.
Speaker 2 (01:14:44):
Of his family? Did I miss something? Did I? Did
I not catch the episodes that were more negative? You
had good.
Speaker 1 (01:14:50):
Times, you had What's the the was one other I'm
thinking of? Right, So to say the Cosby's was not
the it was very influential, Don't get me wrong.
Speaker 2 (01:15:03):
It was.
Speaker 1 (01:15:04):
And I remember I've seen interviews with Malcolm Jamal Warner
were you know, battling with the legacy of it.
Speaker 2 (01:15:10):
And think about the financial hit all of those.
Speaker 1 (01:15:12):
Actors took because at that point the Cosby Show which
was getting uh, you know, with these streaming stuff, with
these old sitcoms they make bank Have you seen What's Which?
Cheers and What Friends? And several other Seinfeld do you see.
Do you know what the streaming rights costs are on those?
Speaker 2 (01:15:34):
It's not cheap.
Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
Because people want to go watch that stuff, and the
Cosby Show is among them, and then that that's biggo
just turns off.
Speaker 2 (01:15:40):
Man.
Speaker 1 (01:15:42):
But you know, trying to act like the kids should
have been policing what's going on with Bill Cosby? Shut
up the hell are you even talking about?
Speaker 2 (01:15:51):
All right?
Speaker 1 (01:15:52):
Eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four
it is eight sixteen. My next gen's acting fun? Oh
there it goes okay.
Speaker 2 (01:16:01):
Uh, there's one other thoughts. One other thing I was thinking. Oh,
and and he had been he'd been working.
Speaker 1 (01:16:06):
I checked out as IMDb page just to see this
guy's been constantly working. And I vaguely remember some of them.
But obviously, when you've had the success that you had
at the Cosby Show.
Speaker 2 (01:16:16):
It's hard to recreate.
Speaker 1 (01:16:17):
And I actually asked a question earlier, I said, are
there any actors that pivoted from one iconic, top tier
sitcom to another successfully? Because it's really hard to catch
lightning in a bottle twice? Right, And I couldn't think
of any, but somebody had a suggestion, and I think
it's fair, and that's Ed O'Neil, i'd say so, well,
(01:16:38):
I don't watch The Modern Family very much.
Speaker 2 (01:16:42):
I watched The hell out of Al Bundy. Man, what a.
Speaker 1 (01:16:46):
Great show that was, especially for all the people who
hated it. Man, like that was and and and it
was interesting because I've seen people debate whether that was
a positive or a negative, a negative portrayal of a
you know, a Midwestern family.
Speaker 2 (01:17:03):
I don't know, ross. I think it was positive.
Speaker 6 (01:17:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:17:05):
Here's the funny thing. So in my house growing up,
we could watch The Cosby Show. The Cosby Show was
like a staple, such a great show. I was not
allowed to watch Married with Children because it was considered dirty,
more adult humor, and it was on Fox, which at
the time, Fox is like, you know, we're gonna be
going to push the boundaries.
Speaker 10 (01:17:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:17:24):
Yeah, But but I don't think it's a negative portrayal
per se.
Speaker 3 (01:17:30):
No, Now when I go back and watch, because you know,
I've watched it as an adult, and no, there's nothing
wrong with it. It's it's funny. It's very funny, I feel.
Speaker 1 (01:17:38):
Yeah, but also acting like the Cosby Shows the first
positive black portrayal in a network sitcom, that's nuts.
Speaker 2 (01:17:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:17:46):
No, it's not to say that it wasn't influential. Again,
as I pointed out there, and there's lots of examples
of it.
Speaker 2 (01:17:52):
But also, let me ask you a question.
Speaker 1 (01:17:55):
There are more black producers who put out big, big,
big projects, huge projects now and they could just as
easily lean into the Cosby esque.
Speaker 2 (01:18:05):
Field, but a lot of them don't.
Speaker 3 (01:18:07):
But a lot of these shows wouldn't even exist without
the Cosby Show, Like you wouldn't have had Family Matters,
you like all these shows.
Speaker 1 (01:18:14):
Like there's another there's another one right there that was
so that was must watch TV in my household. And
and now you get you've actually you've taken these series
that that did were the top series among all racial demographics,
like the Cosby Show. Cosby Show was also the top
(01:18:34):
Hispanic one I remember reading for part of its run there,
So you have this, you have this show that feasibly everyone,
the majority of everyone who's viewing, finds palatable.
Speaker 2 (01:18:47):
And I don't know if shows like that exist. I'm trying,
I'm trying to think of other examples like that.
Speaker 1 (01:18:54):
A lot of a lot of times when people are
going to make stuff nowadays that is specifically and that's fine,
I'm not criticizing if you're gonna if you do well
and you have a target audience, so by all means,
but the Cosby Show is it was that outlier man
because of the level of success that it achieved, because
of its demographics of the viewers, and you had for
(01:19:17):
a while, we had a lot of shows like that
that starred primarily minority audiences. George Lopez Show, Fresh Prince
of bel Air. I mean, there's there's a lot that
you can add to add to that list. So yeah,
very very sad there. And everything I've seen from you
seemed like a very nice guy, really down to earth guy.
Speaker 2 (01:19:38):
So very tragic. All right, eight twenty, let's take a break.
You're right back. Hold on Ross. Oh yeah, another Ross,
what's up? Yeah?
Speaker 8 (01:19:46):
I got a question for you, So, like, how are
they going to handle this like DWI situation with the
self driving cars because we all know that, like all
gasoline has alcohol in it, and here you are sitting
sober getting a ride and there's alcohol throughout his system.
Speaker 2 (01:20:02):
Like this is your card, is your car?
Speaker 8 (01:20:05):
And well actually yeah, definitely my car is an addict.
Speaker 2 (01:20:10):
Okay, well you got you guys have an intervention for
it or what you.
Speaker 8 (01:20:14):
Know, I drive it. I drive it and it satisfies
its needs.
Speaker 4 (01:20:19):
MM.
Speaker 2 (01:20:19):
So you're you're you're literally feeding its addiction.
Speaker 8 (01:20:23):
I'm enabling.
Speaker 2 (01:20:24):
I just want to be clear what you are, sir.
So all right, yeah, you know I.
Speaker 1 (01:20:30):
Will say I will say this as far as and
thanks for the call there.
Speaker 2 (01:20:34):
Uh, you know, it is a fair.
Speaker 1 (01:20:36):
Question when you talk about it, and some of it's
been adjudicated.
Speaker 2 (01:20:40):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:20:40):
There was a guy who got a d u I
and he was in a Tesla and he had it
in the full driving mode. However, as part of the
caveat there were full driving you still have to be ready.
Speaker 2 (01:20:51):
In case something right and as a result, since he
was assisting in it, he they did.
Speaker 1 (01:20:57):
They did charge him with the Duy yesterday decided to
tweet out a one year anniversary commemorating the start of
her presidential campaign.
Speaker 2 (01:21:07):
WHOA what are you doing? Do you want people to
remember that? Dude?
Speaker 3 (01:21:13):
What a complete moron?
Speaker 1 (01:21:15):
Just it's like the Japanese commemorating that time they attacked
our Pacific fleet. How'd that work out for you? Probably
don't want to bring that up. Heirout one year ago today,
I began my campaign for president. Over the one hundred
and seven days of our race, I had the opportunity
and honor to travel the nation to meet with Americans
who were fighting for a better future. And today, millions
(01:21:38):
of Americans continue to stand up for values, ideals, and
our democracy. Yes, because you did it in a very
democracy kind of way.
Speaker 2 (01:21:47):
We'll get to that in a moment.
Speaker 1 (01:21:48):
Their courage and resolve inspires me, whether you're tending to protest,
calling a representative or building communities. Okay, I want to
say thank you. We are in this fight together. No,
you're not anymore. Oh, they may screw up make you
the governor of California and then they can, you know,
get everything they.
Speaker 3 (01:22:09):
Deserve over that, And he mentioned of how this happened,
of how you know she was put in this position?
Speaker 1 (01:22:14):
Any uh, oh, the part where they basically just threw
the old man out and then didn't even use primary votes,
just just crowned her.
Speaker 2 (01:22:22):
Yeah, we can start she clearly she ran out of characters.
Speaker 3 (01:22:25):
Okay, all right, we could start back at the debate performance,
right the crash had burned there, or how the establishment
Barack Obama kicked them out so they could nominate an
idiot being her none of.
Speaker 2 (01:22:34):
That, but they would.
Speaker 1 (01:22:35):
I think Barack Obama wanted to nominate somebody else initially,
if I read, if I remember that story correctly, and
then Joe forced Kamala as like screw you to them,
which I love that version of it, and.
Speaker 3 (01:22:45):
That is pretty damn funny. Yeah, yeah, yeah, He's like,
all right, you're gonna kick me out, You're gonna get her.
I mean, that is funny. I said it was funny
at the time. Man, I'm just like, that's because it.
Speaker 1 (01:22:57):
Was clear at that point he for a while, and
I think it really it was Jill and Hunter probably.
I mean that I'll play a little more of that
Hunter audio. What an angry piece of crap this dude has.
This dude has no reason.
Speaker 2 (01:23:12):
To be as angry as he is.
Speaker 1 (01:23:15):
He's He's never had to accomplish anything in his life.
It was all handed to him, even though he was
quote unquote screwing up. And I would want to use
more aggressive word for what was going on every step
of the way. Big guy just why you know, has
some big thing that would have been career ending for
most anybody. He just get another gig. Oh, let's put
(01:23:37):
you on another board. Let's have people pay way too much.
Speaker 2 (01:23:41):
For your art.
Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
Let's give you a ten year retroactive pardon. Like this
guy has failed upward his whole life, and he's losing
his damn mind. In an interview that was posted yes
to say that poor Ross had to spend thirteen hours
bleeping he's so angry about.
Speaker 9 (01:24:00):
Like all these democrats say, you have to talk about
and realize that people are really upset about illegal immigration. You,
how do you think your hotel room gets cleaned? How
do you think you have food on your table?
Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
All right, hold on, I just this is just dawned
to me.
Speaker 6 (01:24:15):
Ross.
Speaker 1 (01:24:15):
Do you think there's anyone who cleans hotels for a
living that was ever happy to see?
Speaker 2 (01:24:19):
Hudder? Biden? There, I know?
Speaker 3 (01:24:23):
Not Just crack it again?
Speaker 2 (01:24:25):
Like why is everything covered in lube? What's going on
in here? Oh man?
Speaker 9 (01:24:30):
Like all these democrats say you have to talk about
and realize that people are really upset about illegal immigration. You,
how do you think your hotel room gets cleaned? How
do you think you got food on your table? Who
do you think washes your dishes? Who do you think
does your garden? Who do you think is here by the.
Speaker 6 (01:24:50):
Sheer?
Speaker 9 (01:24:52):
Just grit and will that they've figured out a way
to get here because they thought that they could give
theirselves in their family a better chance.
Speaker 2 (01:25:00):
And you want to get you okay, so you want
to you want to hear and get really angry.
Speaker 3 (01:25:03):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
He's also big mad at George Clooney, which, if you remember,
George Clooney had that fundraiser, and George Cloone had been
around Joe Biden many many times, going back to Obama
and maybe even before that, so he knew Joe and
what Joe was. And then he had that fundraiser and
he said he didn't recognize the guy who showed up,
and that really got the ball rolling where some in
(01:25:24):
Hollywood and maybe an occasional reporter because that was remember
this after the debate, like they had to kind of
now pivot because remember the media had like this weird
period for a few weeks when they were all over
this and it was it was all about covering their
own butts.
Speaker 2 (01:25:40):
And Hunter Biden is so mad about.
Speaker 6 (01:25:42):
That, kim him.
Speaker 9 (01:25:46):
And everybody around him. I oh, have to be nice
as clue. I agree with Quentin Tarantino. George Clooney is
not an actor. He is a like, I don't know
what he is. He's a brand. And by the way,
God bless him.
Speaker 6 (01:26:00):
You know what.
Speaker 9 (01:26:01):
He's fuzzily, treats his friends really well, you know what
I mean, buys them things, and he's got a really
great place in Lake Como, and he's great friends with
Barack Obama.
Speaker 6 (01:26:10):
You what do you have to do with anything? Why
do I have to listen to you?
Speaker 9 (01:26:13):
What right do you have to step on a man
who's given fifty two years of his life to the
service of this country and decide that you, George Clooney,
are going to take out basically a full page ad
in the New York Times And James Carville, who hasn't
run a race in forty years, And David, I.
Speaker 1 (01:26:30):
You're picking up on the angry there, which is why
the transition on this next cut is so jarring, because
every other moment of this interview it's f bomb after
f bomb, screw that guy, screw this person, hate them all,
is burning every bridge until the interviewer brings up something
that does get him excited. And no bleeps really were needed.
(01:26:57):
There's a couple at the end, but for like he
was able.
Speaker 3 (01:26:59):
To bost know, there's none is there.
Speaker 1 (01:27:01):
None in this whole cut one thirty seven He was
able to go one minute thirty seven seconds after he
used all the F bombs just prior to that, Like
it was like Andrew Dice Clayed and Quentin Tarantino in
Django Unchained didn't have the N word as many times
as the F word is in the Hunter Biden interview.
Speaker 2 (01:27:20):
It's out of sorts.
Speaker 1 (01:27:21):
But when he's talking about something he enjoys, then it's
a total like sea change, almost in a bipolarish nature.
Speaker 6 (01:27:28):
Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 10 (01:27:29):
Well, because they think cocaine scarface very cool, crack cocaine,
they think the wire oh in that sense, Oh, absolutely,
you know what I mean? Like they don't know how
similar the chemical compounds are.
Speaker 9 (01:27:38):
The only difference between crack cocaine and cocaine is studium,
pypocarbonate and water and heat.
Speaker 6 (01:27:44):
Literally that's it.
Speaker 10 (01:27:45):
And those things are pretty much free. If you go
to like a science store, this is free.
Speaker 6 (01:27:51):
You can go to.
Speaker 9 (01:27:53):
Your neighborhood convenience store and just get anyway. I don't
want to tell people how to make how to make
crack cocaine, but it literally is a manage jar cocaine
and baking soda.
Speaker 10 (01:28:02):
How different is the experience.
Speaker 9 (01:28:04):
It's vastly, vastly different, and like for real, I I
feel it?
Speaker 2 (01:28:09):
Does it? Wait? Does it have to be a mayonnaise jar?
H Ross?
Speaker 1 (01:28:14):
It has to be dukes in North Carolina if you're
making crack, right, I believe it's the rule you mayonnaise people.
Speaker 9 (01:28:20):
You guys all uptight, really reluctant to kind of have
some euphoric discussion. I know you're not asking me to
do that, but have some euphoric discussion about crack cookine.
Speaker 10 (01:28:29):
I think this might be kind of the opposite here.
Speaker 6 (01:28:31):
Okay, No, it's the exact opposite.
Speaker 9 (01:28:33):
I'm saying, I don't want to have the experience of
some you for a Greek call. That's how powerful crack
cocaine is. Does crack cocaine make you act any differently?
Speaker 4 (01:28:44):
No?
Speaker 9 (01:28:44):
Is it safer than alcohol? Probably people think of crack
as being dirty. It's the exact opposite. When you make crack,
what you're doing is you're burning off all the impurities
so that they're combined with the studying by carbonate, which
makes it smokeable.
Speaker 6 (01:28:59):
That's all.
Speaker 9 (01:29:00):
You know, all of these actors, and you know people
in the past that talked about they had a problem
with cocaine and freebasing.
Speaker 6 (01:29:08):
They were smoking crack.
Speaker 10 (01:29:09):
So straw on the stove is the same thing.
Speaker 9 (01:29:12):
Not exactly but close to it, but it's a little
bit different.
Speaker 1 (01:29:17):
Okay, Well, look he was very knowledgeable about this ross.
Are you a little jealous that your addiction was with
alcohol and not crack?
Speaker 3 (01:29:25):
Let me check on that one. No, I'm not okay,
but I would say that this this interview where he's
a crazy person. Yeah, coupled with Kamala's weird, stupid brag
about the anniversary of her campaign, is a gift to
Donald Trump during this new cycle.
Speaker 2 (01:29:40):
Every single day of it. Yes, yeah, people forget what
we what we missed, you know what we could have had,
And this is the reminder of, hey, this is what
you avoided.
Speaker 1 (01:29:52):
I mean the amount of people that you know are
still sitting down. Did they have protesters in front of
the Colbert the CBS theater that Colbert does the show
with the Late Show out of old a bunch of
signs that says, keep Colbert out with Trump or whatever.
Late You're never gonna quell the lunatics. But Hunter Biden
like it's it's it's far worse, uh, in my opinion,
(01:30:15):
because like, this guy has had everything handed to him.
And it's not to say there's not adversary. There obviously
adversary at whatever.
Speaker 9 (01:30:23):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:30:24):
I mean, he lost his brother. I'm sure that hit
him some sort of ways. Then there's all the weirdness
with his brother's ex wife and and all like that
whole thing. But like he's there's never been accountability for
him ever, ever, And it's just on.
Speaker 2 (01:30:37):
This grandiose scale.
Speaker 1 (01:30:39):
He's he's that that turd of a kid your neighbor
has that they never disciplined, and you just know he's
going to juvie at some point on a presidential level.
Speaker 2 (01:30:48):
Man. But he sure does love talking about crack. So
there is that, all right?
Speaker 1 (01:30:53):
Eight forty five, let's get race dag. Yeah, you'd follow
the recipe for crack.
Speaker 7 (01:30:59):
Yeah, it's something about a manny's jar.
Speaker 2 (01:31:04):
Do you make artisanal crack or do you I don't
even know what that means.
Speaker 1 (01:31:09):
I don't know, but if you throw that word in
front of it, it means it's more expensive usually.
Speaker 7 (01:31:12):
Oh is that what it means? Learned something new every day?
Speaker 2 (01:31:15):
You know those cheese shops or you know they make
the cheese there. Yeah, cheese three times as much that
kind of cheese. Yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:31:25):
Anyway, So what's up weather, sir. Wild Temperatures down, not up.
Next couple of days may only be in the upper eighties,
close to ninety. I'll try it maybe and spend a
day or two in the middle eighties, so a little
bit milder triangle, but still small chances of showers. Well,
I don't think there's gonna be a much rain. Had
some yesterday. Now with that front going through, temperatures are
(01:31:46):
anywhere from five to nine degrees cooler this morning or
not as warm. And as I said, this trend will continue.
And I'm gonna say till about Thursday when we start
sneaking above ninety again, and then the weekend and Friday
of the weekend we're back into the mid maybe upper
nineties for the tle try it probably a little bit
nineties even into early next week. So our little break,
take it while we have it for a couple of days,
(01:32:06):
we'll go by the wayside, and we're back into the
summertime heat soon enough.
Speaker 1 (01:32:10):
All right, thank you, sir, appreciate it, and we'll come
back with Jeff Bellinger next Jeff Bellinger, Jeff, what's going on.
Speaker 3 (01:32:17):
OL, Good morning, Casey.
Speaker 5 (01:32:18):
The software engineers at Microsoft are working on additional patches
to stop hackers who are exploiting a security flaw in
a program used by organizations all around the world.
Speaker 2 (01:32:29):
Now.
Speaker 5 (01:32:29):
One patch was released over the weekend, but more are needed. Apparently,
A two cybersecurity firms say criminals are launching attacks through
the Microsoft vulnerability and targeting SharePoint clients. One source Systems
used by the Department of Education, Florida's Department of Revenue,
and the Rhode Island General Assembly are among those that
(01:32:50):
have been accessed. We may be hearing about changes at
Subway shops very soon. Former Burger King executive Jonathan Fitzpatrick's
going to take over a CEO of the Sound and
Which chain next week. Subway is looking to Fitzpatrick to
revive its sagging sales. Coca Cola confirms what President Trump
announced on social media last week. The company will launch
(01:33:11):
a new coke product sweetened with US cane sugar this fall.
Another global pharmaceutical company got the Trump administration's message about
manufacturing in the United States. Astrazenica joined other European drug
makers promising a big investment in the US. Astra Zenica
says it will invest fifty billion dollars before twenty thirty
(01:33:31):
in These plans include a new drug making facility in Virginia,
an orange juice distributor going to court over the Trump
Administration's plan to impose a fifty percent tariff on Brazil
starting next month. Johanna Foods estimates that tariffs will increase
its cost for not from concentrate orange juice from Brazil
by sixty eight million dollars over the next twelve months,
(01:33:53):
and it could hike retail OJ prices by as much
as twenty five percent. Egg prices meanwhile coming back to work,
but egg production in the US is still low. The
Department of Agriculture says production last month was down more
than five percent.
Speaker 6 (01:34:07):
From June of last year.
Speaker 5 (01:34:09):
And Casey south Park is coming to the Paramount Plus
streaming service. Sources say Paramount reached a deal to buy
the global streaming rights from the creators of the Comedy
Central program. It is said to be a five year
deal worth one and a half billion dollars. Nice work
if you can get it, Casey, Yeah say so.
Speaker 1 (01:34:28):
Speaking of the entertainment, I'm sure you saw the sad
news about Malcolm Jamal Warner. I did, yes, yeah, would
you know I'm assuming you watched the Cosbies like everybody else, you.
Speaker 3 (01:34:38):
Know, I didn't.
Speaker 2 (01:34:39):
Oh, okay, never mind, then all right, thank you, Jeff.
But it is sad news.
Speaker 1 (01:34:43):
Okay, yeah, absolutely, man, all right, thank you very much,
Jeff Elacher Blueberg News. H Okay, hey, quick quiz here Ross.
Hypothetically you're in charge charge of the Bangor, Maine fire Department. Okay,
(01:35:03):
you're the chief, all right, and you guys get a call.
A homeowner says that a man is on his roof.
Him and his wife are in their house. His wife
thinks she hears something, because women always think they hear something.
This time she was right. And so the guy, the
husband goes out and he sees this dude screaming at
(01:35:24):
people and banging around on his roof trying to get
like trying to climb into his chimney. And he's like, yeah,
you need to not be on my roof screaming at people,
you lunatic. This is about four in the morning, by
the way. So so the guy then proceeds to claim
that God hid drugs in the chimney. And he was
(01:35:46):
trying to get him, which God does work in mysterious ways.
I don't know if he's hiding drugs and random chimneys
is ross. Have you seen anything in your biblical learning
where God likes to put drugs in chimneys?
Speaker 3 (01:35:58):
You know, I am a new but so far I
don't think so.
Speaker 1 (01:36:00):
No, okay, all right, so all right, so all of
this in mind. Now you're the chief of the fire
department who now shows up, police and fire show up?
And should you give that man an axe?
Speaker 3 (01:36:13):
I would not give him the axe.
Speaker 2 (01:36:15):
You ain't good? No, well, you might be more qualified
than the current leadership. So and this is this is.
Speaker 3 (01:36:20):
The woke you mean, like throw an axe at him,
like hey, catch this?
Speaker 2 (01:36:23):
No no, no, no gingerly handed? No no, oh yeah, hold on,
listen to this.
Speaker 1 (01:36:28):
So uh and and there's so much woke in these
quotes from the fire chief because they said this is
this is unfortunately, we're there to take a more compassionate
approach to somebody who may be in crisis, where we
treat people with dignity and respect. So here's what they did.
They get the fire truck with the ladder or the
(01:36:48):
bucket lift on it. They then zoom, you know, position
the bucket over to him. Well, what is attached to
the bucket tools including a fire axe, So they they
zoom the bucket over and compassionately ask him to come
down from the roof.
Speaker 2 (01:37:05):
He jumps into the bucket, grabs the axe, jumps.
Speaker 1 (01:37:09):
Back onto the roof, and starts chopping holes in the
homeowner's roof.
Speaker 2 (01:37:13):
Once again, your social worker approach paid big dividends.