Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Eight eight, eight, nine three four seven eight seventy fours.
As we get things rolling this morning, I will say
I was I was very impressed with the speed and
organizational adaptiveness of the residents of putting that in quotes,
(00:24):
because they purport to speak for all residents of DC,
which I don't know about that we're able to or
you know, with these organic, instantly organized, multi neighborhood anti
Trump protests. Within like an hour of him speaking yesterday,
(00:46):
Marre he spoke at ten o'clock and by lunchtime, he
spoke for a little while. By lunchtime, we were rocking
and rolling. And what how how fortunate on a Monday,
all those people had the day off too, was Monday.
It was yesterday a holiday, and we missed it because
we don't miss holidays, right.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
I believe yesterday would have been the birthday of Hulk Hogan.
Oh it's possibly it, but I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
Okay, all right, that's that's a good point there. So
maybe it was Hulk Hogan's birthday, which might may maybe
that's a district holiday.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
And so everyone was there and they were able to
you know, go ahead and get right down there, and
the speed and consistency of the professionally printed signs, which
then found themselves at multiple different anti Trump protests within
an hour. I mean, for having a speed run, a
(01:45):
totally organic reaction because you didn't know what he was
going to do yesterday, We didn't know what he was
going to do. And then to be so on point
ready to roll with it was It just speaks to
the industriousness of of Americans, doesn't it. And And to
(02:06):
really top it off, the quality of the message and
the speakers put forward by these hastily organized, but well organized,
totally organic anti Trump speakers and and and all of
this very impressive. I learned a lot. Uh, what the
(02:32):
hell is this woman talking about?
Speaker 4 (02:33):
The President has been trying to promote violence here right
here in the black communities and in the brown communities.
Heaving ice, kidnapped our neighbors, having brock, having the black
community be harassed and profile and want want of response,
We say, hell, no, we won't go.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
To work. We won't go to work.
Speaker 4 (02:58):
Said we won't go I mean, we're not going into
the to those mass and costs into into their prisons
and enslayment. We won't go into their to their ice.
Those in count those what do you call his beautiful
sinners that he got?
Speaker 1 (03:13):
We won't go.
Speaker 4 (03:14):
To where alligators live?
Speaker 5 (03:16):
Hell no, we won't go.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
All right?
Speaker 5 (03:20):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (03:21):
Ross?
Speaker 6 (03:21):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (03:21):
Would you want to comment on the points she was making?
You want to you want to pull that apart and listen.
The idea that you can't correlate or equate speech patterns
to IQ is insane. This woman's a moron. Yeah, but
the gators, man, the gators.
Speaker 2 (03:35):
Then you've got to take into account what she's actually
trying to say. And then you realize that she's like
super dumb.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
Yeah, they're putting them in the reflecting pool. I don't
know if you know this.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
Nobody's sending you to an ice migrant camp. Nobody's sending
you to Alligator Alcatraz. Nobody cares.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
Man, Just know they're bringing Alligator alc They're putting them
in the reflecting pool. Oh okay, yeah yeah, yeah, they'll
put some palm trees up and you get the vibes.
Maybe yeah, yeah, Man, the gators come to you. Is
she also are the police quote enslaving you, Ross, are
(04:15):
their giant police plantations? Where like that's what.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
I'm saying, Like, you've got to take into account what
she's trying to say, what the point of her messages,
and it's insane, it's dumb and it's stupid.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
Yeah, there's no other words for it. But it's organic
and that's what you need to understand. And you can
tell because they all the same printed signs done within
a span of I don't know the printing shops in
DC are elite. They are. Yeah, so yeah, not just
at one gathering, they had them at multiple gatherings, yet
they all were the same.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
You try to get like a like a sign or
a banner done and say, like you go to Staples
and you know they'll print out like a sign. You
know how long this stuff takes. Yeah, you can drop
it off. It's gonna be like a you know, depending
on how big the order is.
Speaker 1 (04:57):
Well how much you'll pay for it too. You can
pay for the the speed of printing. You can go
to Staples and generally get something turned around. It's not
gonna be it's not gonna be in an hour if
it's that complex. But I have had to go down
literally and get something printed out of Staples. Uh for
it was signs for the for my selling home. It's
alling the home back in Minnesota, and I remember I
(05:21):
remember going in there and they have actually a package
for the yard signed thing there. I don't know if
they still do this. I have, you know, had something
printed in forever and I dropped it off. It was
not that the complex, and then I picked it up
after five. So I dropped off first thing in the morning,
after five, and I think that was as fast as
they would print it. That was super last minute on it.
(05:42):
But whatever up in DC totally different. What if that
is their job? Yeah, that is the tongue in cheek
thing with the you know, the insta protesters. But I
feel like I feel like most of the people there
probably were residents of DC who just didn't have have
anything to do. And I wouldn't be surprised if food
(06:05):
was offered to get people out there. And then if
that's if that's your spokesperson, good luck, good luck man.
I don't know. Let's go to the person who is well,
who supposedly the best of the best. That would be
the mayor of DC. Right, you know, you want to
(06:27):
elect the best is your merit, it's what we do
report to do. And you know she's been the mayor
for a while let's see what her thoughts are on this.
Speaker 7 (06:37):
I've said before, and I'll repeat that I believe that
the president's view of DC is shaped by his COVID
era experience during his first term, and it is true
that those were more challenging times related to some issues.
Speaker 5 (06:57):
It is also.
Speaker 7 (06:58):
True that we experience a crime spike post COVID but
we work quickly to put laws in place and tactics
that got violent offenders offer streets and gave our police
officers more tools, which is why we have seen a
(07:20):
huge decrease in crime. Because of those efforts, we have
been able to reverse that twenty twenty three crime spike.
Speaker 8 (07:31):
This year.
Speaker 7 (07:33):
Crime isn't just down from twenty twenty three, it's also
down from twenty nineteen before the pandemic, and we're at
a thirty year violent crime low.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
Okay, all right, And you are also currently having suspended
one of your top commanders in the department for manipulating statistics.
While that's investigated. And there's also the way that everyone
who lives in DC who's being honest about this, including mediums, Dude,
the amount of uh, what I would say, are left
(08:09):
wing media people who have an individual experience of being
targeted is crazy. I don't know, Ross if you spent
time reading a lot of people's first person accounts yesterday
on Twitter who work in the DC bubble up there,
like every one of them has an insane story of like,
(08:30):
you know, the way of carjackings. They just had a
carjacking where the guy in the gall in the car
were both shot five times by kids.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
Right, you know, I know I know several people who
have had like, you know, incidents up in DC like well,
you mentioned our former promotions and yeah, right, yeah, I
mean she hadn't been here like over ten years or something,
but she moved up there a while ago. Yeah, yeah,
she was. She was robbed and kicked in the head,
and she said, if it wasn't for you know, somebody
like Big Balls being you know, that attack that happened
(09:00):
up there, you know, which gave the matter of attention, Yeah,
the kind of prevalence. Then suddenly you know, now it's
an important issue. And that's good that that now it's
it's getting the attention that it needs.
Speaker 1 (09:11):
Yeah. Not good that big Balls got No.
Speaker 2 (09:13):
Well, he's very brave of what he did though. That's
pretty amazing.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
Yeah, yeah, And He not a big dude either. He's
just a dude who understands that that's what you do. Right. Yeah,
and uh good on him. He earned his moniker right.
He can legally he can legally change his name to that.
I was thinking, how about Senator big Bulls? I love it? Well, yeah,
all right, because he's from he's from Mountain, Cali. So
(09:39):
when they throw shift in the clink, will instill him
install him? That's what it has to say on the
little placard because I would watch any committee hearing. He's
in my colleague from California, a senator big balls, you know.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
On Mayor Bowser's comment there, I had like really genuine questions.
The question would be, is DC doing what other metros
do where they don't report their violent crimes to the
FBI so they're not counted as statistics, and the other
like these are like serious questions that I'm asking And
the other one because I don't know the answer, And
the other one would be do they what is their
(10:15):
release program? Do they arrest people but then they just
let them ride out? And because how many cationalists bail?
They have capless bail, So how many heinous stories have
we seen where something horrific or violent happens and it
happens to be that person who did it was arrested
and released the previous week.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Oh well, there was they had one recently. And the
answer is quite quite a few. And if you go
through the statistic now, people go, well, look, how can
you manipulate murder. It's a little more difficult, but I'll
explain how you do it. One, their murder rate is
down from where peaked last year. That is true, but
let's keep in mind that the murder rate at that
time was higher than and Ross. I don't know if
(10:50):
you've heard of these cities, Boga, Ta Columbia, Mexico City, basically,
I don't have the Listit Compton, right, just Compton. It
was the highest in the nation at the time. It
(11:11):
was six times higher than New York, four times higher
than Los Angeles. And I think you get the gist
of what I'm laying out here now. The way that Chicago, Now, Chicago,
they did a big thing where they were like, ah,
the murder rates down, and they did an interesting thing.
And I don't know if DC plays this game as
(11:32):
much as Chicago does. Chicago has a general sense of
what's called Chicago Land, right when you refer to the
entirety of the metro to Chicagoland, right, So that includes
cities that are adjacent to Chicago proper, like Buffalo Grove
and Roselle and various others that when what they did
(11:53):
in Chicago is they were successfully, they were successful in
getting less people to murder each other within this sacific
city of Chicago. And then the murder stats spiked in
those first ring suburbs like Buffalo Grove that I mentioned.
If you if you've ever been to a convention in
Chicago for work, that's where the big convention center is there.
(12:15):
And I were by the yeah, out towards the inn.
You're out. It's out in between the airport and and
and downtown. And so then they started talking about Chicago
proper versus murders in Chicago Land. The wording change. So
up in DC, I believe that their murder rates down.
Their violent crime, though, is still rampant, even if it's down,
(12:40):
like it's not even close, it's down, but it's still
higher than than the other major US cities. So and
and and and when you when the juvenile stuff is
running rampant, you can't say that you have new tools
to throw at it if you still don't allow the charging.
(13:01):
And let's also keep in mind, a murder is a
murder if it's charged as a murder. That's the other thing.
If you don't, if you don't, if it's not, can
rule a murder. Right, So, if there is how do
I describe this? This is what I wonder about, how
they're grooming some of the numbers, and then also just
(13:22):
the commander just sitting there and being suspended because he
was allegedly blatantly fiddling with the numbers. There's a lot
of questions, and I think what the Trump administration would
benefit from is to because they have they're going to
under home rule. They're taking operational control Pam Bondies the
head of the Metropolitan Police Department in DC now, just
(13:45):
so we're clear on this. And if they have operational control,
I think one aspect of what they do is they
need to lay bare these things that we're asking about. Okay,
I think that that's fair. Let's let's go ahead and
let's fully understand how these different changes over the years
(14:05):
have impacted things. Because they're only going to tell you
if a change is positive, and if if it's not,
they're going to pretend they're going to pretend that it
had no effect. Like talking about cashless bail. Just burning
and churning people out back on the streets would have
been the real long term impact of that. Through the
totality of the change, let's and let's figure it out,
(14:28):
because you have all aspects of this, right. You have
the you have the uh elements of the judge, you
have the elements of the rules that are put in
place that may hamstring what the judge can do. Right,
and then you have the policies within the city on
how the police and and enforcement goes. And keep in
(14:49):
mind that DC is down, I want to say, nine
hundred officers four hundred from a year ago. And of
course they blame Trump for that, for not giving money,
But the bigger problem is is that the money that
they have, they can't recruit. A lot of departments face this,
and when you can't recruit, you then start paying officers overtime,
(15:13):
which is obviously going to sap that money faster. And
that's what DC is facing up there. So you know,
let's let's go ahead and and and you know they
love information dumps I wish they'd do some more Epstein.
But let's go ahead and get that all out there,
and then maybe, just maybe we can figure out what
(15:34):
is New York doing the DC's not doing and ending
up with a six times less murder rate. That would
be helpful. Or we can you know, we can talk
about not wanting to go near gators. All right, So
what did Trump actually lay out? Oh, we got some audio.
We'll go ahead and get into that. Also, Well let
(15:55):
me do let me do this, because I'm just looking
at the clock here. I'll give you a rundown here
in just a few minutes of a few of the
other stories we'll be getting into again. Phone number eight
eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four. You
want to be on the show back in just a
few minutes, all right. This guy's name is Jim Kessler,
and he ended up on Fox News. He said when
(16:18):
because he's there to basically defend what's going on. All right,
here we go. He says, if people are afraid to
come to DC, I've lived here thirty seven years. I'm
not afraid. I live in the city. I'm not afraid.
But if you're afraid, go to Disney World. Get fat
eat French fries. We don't need you. Man, I cannot
(16:40):
understand why the Dems are pulling at eighteen percent right now, Ross,
you've been to Disney a bunch. How many times have
you and the family been carjacked in the Magic Kingdom?
It's never happened. Okay. How many times have you been
murdered or family members been murdered at Disney?
Speaker 2 (16:59):
We talk about like which which part, like Disneyland or World?
Speaker 1 (17:03):
Uh well let's go with Disney World.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
You know, you know, you know what I did twice
the work and I looked into it. That was zero
at both parks. Family, that is correct?
Speaker 1 (17:14):
Oh wow, okay, that's that's strange. Robbed at gunpoint maybe
over by the monorail or something, or on the people mover.
I'm sure the people movers where they get you, right?
That is man?
Speaker 2 (17:25):
Yeah, because you're like so rested and you're like just
the greatest ride I've ever been on, and then it
goes into dark tunnel by tomorrow Land and suddenly, yeah,
your purse is gone, you know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Oh? No, yeah, and that happened? How many times?
Speaker 2 (17:37):
None?
Speaker 1 (17:37):
Oh? All right? Did you eat more than you should have?
But probably, but you walk it off.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
Okay, Well, I mean you're gonna get you ten thousand
steps in at Disney.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Did you eat French fries at Disney? Yeah? Yes, Okay,
so he's he's no, no lies detected? So what what
a what a dumb statement? Man? Do you think, sir?
It's also might have to do with the fact that
a lot of these victims, I don't I don't know
if if you've noticed this, including the intern who was
(18:10):
murdered big balls, would fit this description our former uh
former intern, and many of these other stories. There is
a deciding factor here. They're not a rather tall, lanky dude.
A lot of these people. It's it's let's just say,
(18:31):
it's a lot easier for them to rob How how
big was that female intern She's I'm assuming she's not
some like a cat.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
She was like a toothpick.
Speaker 9 (18:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
That also plays into this when one is selecting a victim.
I don't know if you know this, but anyway, what
did Trump say that set off this fire storm yesterday
where now protesters think he's going to feed him to
gaiters or whatever. Uh, Well, it was this, We're.
Speaker 10 (19:02):
Here for a very serious purpose, very serious purpose. Something's
out of control, but we're going to put it in
control very quickly, like we did on the southern border.
I'm announcing a historic action to rescue our nation's capital
from crime, bloodshed, bedlam, and squalor and worse. This is
(19:22):
Liberation Day in DC, and we're going to take our
capital back. We're taking it back under the authorities vested
in me as the President of the United States. I'm
officially invoking Section seventy forty of the District of Columbia
Home Rule Act. You know what that is, and placing
the DC Metropolitan Police Department under direct federal control. And
(19:46):
you'll be meeting the people that will be directly involved
with that. Very good people, but they're tough and they
know what's.
Speaker 5 (19:56):
Happening and they've done it before.
Speaker 10 (19:59):
In addition, deploying the National Guard to help re establish
law order of public safety in Washington, d C. And
they're going to be allowed to do their job properly.
Speaker 1 (20:10):
And people go, what is the Guard going to be
what are they going to be doing? They don't really
have to do that much. And I just want you
to hear me out if if you're a no good,
dirty scoundrel carjacker and you see that, you know, every
few blocks or in and around some of the more
popular areas, there is a National guardsman there. You're probably
(20:35):
not doing your carjacking right there. It is. It's visual deterrence, right,
police squad cars. The reason, one of the reasons that
it's you know, people want to see them in a neighborhood,
well maybe not the woman holding the protest, is because
even though you do see these weird videos where people
commit christs right in front of police, generally it's going
(20:59):
to curb one desire to strong arm rob people directly
in front of somebody who's probably better armed than you
and better trained than you, and they don't have to
because he has part He has apportioned these various federal
law enforcement agencies to do the real work. In fact,
(21:20):
there were videos emerging yesterday, uh like these said, there's
these two dudes are standing there on a bus stop.
Every other words the F bomb. But the gist was
they're watching as Homeland Security rolls up and goes into
this building and just drags these dudes out. We find
out that they were executing felony warrants. Okay, uh, they're
(21:42):
they and what was amazing. Ross is this was hours,
within hours, they were able to locate where these dirt
bags were. That's crazy, isn't it. That's amazing.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
So what what happens if what happens at the border
happens in DC?
Speaker 1 (21:58):
Like what if we where where?
Speaker 2 (22:00):
It just correct? Yeah, it's so stark correct Thinca. We
had heard forever from the Democrats, right and even from
members in the Republican Party that in order to fix
the border we needed comprehensive immigration reform and it was
a big thing. And now all this stuff had to happen,
and it was, you know, take a long time.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
Remember Trump was going to give Dreamer, he was going
to give Pelosi the Dreamers. Yeah, remember that meeting where
she mocked him. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (22:21):
And it turned out the way to stop people from
coming across the border was to stop people from coming
across the border. The same thing with law. And they're like, oh,
law enforcements very complicated. It's a complicated issue. I don't know,
maybe just enforce the law.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
What if it's the simple and it's and it's twofold,
it's it's to physically stop him coming across the border.
But the one of the ways that you do that,
and it's probably the most important piece is you have
to de incentivize what what is available and what is
possible once you've crossed right.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
Right, And and that idea used to be mocked, like
you take away all of these freebies and then you
were going to see self deportation, which is actually like
people are like, well, I'm not getting into these benefits anymore. Right,
I'm going back home. I've seen a bunch of videos
like that from people like so I'm going back home.
Speaker 1 (23:08):
And the tune in most of the countries, and not
just Latin American countries, but countries all over the world. Remember,
the people that were crossing the border were not all
Mexicans or Guatemalans or any of that. Like it was
what did they have at one point they had every
country in the world except like three represented.
Speaker 2 (23:25):
Yeah, no, they're like major people like from for like Pakistan.
How did Obama say Pakistan Pakistan like Chinese nationals to them?
Speaker 1 (23:33):
Yeah? Yeah, And so the word got out. The word
got out, So you know, the idea because it is
important with the people. Remember, I told you one of
the craziest things that I ever encountered was radio advertising
and posters of people that were openly advertising in Latin
American countries to go ahead and hey, you want to
(23:58):
go to America. Joe Biden's let everyone in. They were
marketing that idea, and and people believe that because it
matters what the people who would make this, you know,
want to make this journey think. And if they don't
believe they can get in, which they clearly don't know,
they're not going to try. But when you tell a
(24:18):
bunch of people, especially a bunch of really poor people,
that once they get up there, that they're going to
be able to get in, and they're desperate, they're going
to believe you just because they're looking at their current situation.
They're like, it's got to be better than this. Do
your matter realizing it's not.
Speaker 2 (24:33):
Do you remember when we had these like mass caravans
and you had tons of people in these caravans wearing
Biden Harris T shirts.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
Yeah, or and then goes back further, remember the Obama
shoes right? Yeah, yeah, dude, absolutely, And and so criminal
organizations that would profit from this, they would sell this,
this this farce, but it wasn't really a farce at
that point because everyone you knew somebody. You probably knew
(25:00):
somebody back in your home country that was now living
in the US sending money back to their family, and
so you went, now you know somebody who was in
the US who got their butt arrested and was brought
back here and now they can never even apply to
try to get in.
Speaker 2 (25:19):
That sends a message. So it's a pretty strong one.
So what happens if what happens at the border happens
in ec Like what if this turns around super fast?
And then you compare that to other metros across the
country who still have these like really bad you know
crime rates or murderis like what happens?
Speaker 6 (25:33):
Then?
Speaker 1 (25:34):
Uh yeah, it's It's damning, is what it is. And
tell people forget about it. Do you remember when New
York went stopping frisk and the broken windows policy render Juliani?
People what Julie? What what New York used to be?
And what Times Square used to be. People were old
enough to remember what Times Square was and the transition
(25:56):
that's with Giuliani and and Cokotch I don't even know
how to pronounce that guy's name and subsequent mayors. Everyone
was really happy with those changes. Crime plummeted up in
New York and then how many years did it take
before they all forgotten? They're like, all right, we got
to go soft on crime again. And then what happened.
(26:17):
Du Blasio crank those numbers up, put them through the roof. So, yeah,
it'll be shocking and they'll have to claim it's all
Gestapo tactics. But the numbers won't lie unless you lie
about the numbers. Yeah, what's up.
Speaker 3 (26:34):
I grew up in the suburbs just outside of DC,
and in the mid seventies, a local independent TV station
did a news article. They pointed a camera up into
northeast DC, all sorts of videos of crime going on. Yeah,
(26:58):
drug deals right out in the open. The police would
not respond. They were told that sort of company, if
not battalion size force, they would not go into that
quarter of d C. And right outside in Prince Jeordan's County, Maryland,
(27:20):
the police had the highest kill rate in the country,
all justified because of a violent crime spilling out.
Speaker 1 (27:29):
Yeah, I absolutely believe it. Man. There's you know currently
currently d C, if it was its own state, would
have the highest murder rate of any state. And I
think it would have that record for decades or something,
some crazy stat I saw yesterday. It was also the fact.
Speaker 3 (27:50):
That there's also the fact that if it didn't want
to be d C a completely independent territory anymore, that
land belongs to the state of Maryland. It was seeded
specifically to be the nation's capital. No state affiliation at all, Right,
(28:11):
if they want to get rid of that and they
become part of Maryland.
Speaker 1 (28:14):
Yeah, I think there's I think there is a lot
of people who think that you keep the corridor essentially,
you know, with the Capitols, Print Court, White House, whatever,
that corridor is basically the National Mall and the blocks
around it, and then you see the rest back to Maryland.
Just be done with it. I'm not opposed to that. So,
(28:36):
but DC statehood ain't happening, man, that's for sure. Jim,
thanks for the call there. No, we're not playing that game.
And and remember DC, anytime they get called out on crime,
they kept making really dumb adjustments. By Ross. Do you
remember one of the first adjustments they made. I guess
in more of my adult adult life, and I remember
(28:59):
it was just so laughably stupid. They thought if they
changed the name of something, the crime rate would go down.
Do you remember what that was? Come on, I think basketball.
Do you remember that stupidity? It's on the tip of
my tongue. The Bullets. They used to be called the
Washington and I remember the absurdity of it. They're like,
(29:20):
we can't call them the Bullets anymore. That's violent. So
then they change it to the Wizards, and it like
people were like, oh yeah, no, this is People were
analyzing that somehow the name of the NBA team was
part of the problem with the crime rate. It was,
and even young me was like, this is the dumbest thing.
(29:43):
What year do they change that. I'm gonna look that
up here. Oh hang on, Oh, actually that's a that's
a separate thing he's commenting on. All right. So that's
just a little round up of what's what's going on
up in DC. Obviously, more information will come clear. I
don't forget the DC shooter. Oh yeah, Malvo and uh well,
(30:05):
the the the Uh yeah. I told you. I was
driving up there and I pulled into a gas station.
I pulled into the fast food place in his gas station,
like right next to it, and I didn't realize that
it was one of the gas stations where somebody had
been snipered. With the whole DC shooter thing, they had
like a little plaque there, and uh man, that was
(30:29):
the the absolute panic that you know that embroiled Washington,
d C. With that. I think that's less of a
d C thing and more of insane sniper people. Because
remember remember Ross, do you remember how they were sniping
people out of the car, right out of the truck.
He was in the trunk. They had cut a hole
(30:49):
and they graded a nest essentially sniper's nest in the
trunk of the car, and it's this dude and his
young underlying man. It was just that's a crazy story. Yeah, yeah,
but yeah, I do remember that. All right, Well, I'm
sure glad they changed that NBA team's name. That's what's important.
We'll be right back the stupidity with the name change.
(31:11):
So yes, back in nineteen ninety seven, so it would
have been going in my senior year in high school there.
So now I'm paying attention to stuff and the whole thing,
especially being out in Wyoming where we all had guns
in our trucks in the parking lot while we were
in our at school. They're like, oh, bullets are making
everyone murdery in DC were like, we have a lot
(31:33):
more bullets than you probably, and it's not murdery here,
so I don't know that that's it. So they decided. Basically,
the owner, under pressure from city leaders, was like they
wanted him to make this big gesture as though it
would help, So they decided they were going to ditch it.
They held a contest and they had five choices and
(31:53):
then everyone voted on it. The choice was the Wizards,
which they eventually went with, but the one, as you
may not remember, was the Express, the Stallions, the sea dogs,
and the dragons. And then it was really funny when
they chose the wizards, and I was correct too, because
critics of the selection pointed out that wizards had its
(32:15):
own negative connotations the Klan, but so does dragons, I guess.
But then they went ahead and did it, and you'd
be shocked to learn ross you know what happened The
year after they did it. The crime rate went up,
So it want want didn't work.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
Because there were no bullets to help defend the good
citizens from crime, that's what.
Speaker 1 (32:39):
And gators don't forget me the gators. Man, What an
absolute lunatic this woman is he didn't. If you didn't
hear the audio first thing, what the heck, let's give
it another run.
Speaker 4 (32:49):
Tried to provoke violence here right here, in the black
communities and in the brown communities, heaven ice, kidnap, bile neighbors,
having the black community be a ass and profile and
want want of response, we say, hell no, we won't go.
Speaker 1 (33:08):
It's the word because we're all here and I'm under.
Speaker 4 (33:13):
When we said we won't go, I mean we're not
going into their to those mass and costs, into into
their prisons and enslavement. We won't go into their to
their ice, those in camp, those in what do you
call his beautiful centers that he got We we won't
go to where alligators live.
Speaker 5 (33:31):
Hell no, we won't go.
Speaker 1 (33:33):
All right, So lrel make up whatever. I don't know.
I obviously I'm not a consumer, but I'm familiar with
the brand. I don't know if this was Sidney Sweety
inspired and they just overcorrected or what did you see?
Who the new spokesperson for Loriel is you? This is
(33:53):
the person. I guess it's going to be selling makeup
to your daughters. I guess. So it's uh, how do
I say this her name is Ari Christia Christisa. I
don't know how to pronounce her last name. She's an
actress too, so that's uh. And it's a she unlike
(34:16):
a previous campaign where they had a dude who they
were had like a dude's line of makeup, but it
was the dude was not dressed like a dude, so
they went in a different direction. Ross, have you seen
any of this one of those films?
Speaker 2 (34:31):
I was gonna ask what kind of movies like anything
I've heard of or what has she been in?
Speaker 1 (34:35):
Well, action flicks? She's she's a porn star.
Speaker 2 (34:44):
Oh okay, yeah, Why is their makeup all smeared?
Speaker 1 (34:48):
I don't know, Man, has she been crying? I don't know.
Did you hear the first commercial they put out? Hold on,
I'm gonna play this so I don't know how convincing
that's gonna be. But they hired a porn star to
be the face of Lorio Makeup.
Speaker 2 (35:06):
You know, you know, dependulum intensive, swing back and forth.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
But this is like a little bit, a little bit.
Speaker 2 (35:16):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
Specifically, Uh, she is marketing to teenagers. Specifically, uh she Uh.
So she started in the biz on only fans and uh,
and then went a little more mainstream in some of
her acting roles. I guess anyway, there you go? Uh
(35:40):
and I kid you not. This is literally the marketing
tagline in the piece. I'm not making this up. She
is promoting the idea of quote uncensored makeup that performs
on stage, on camera and yes, even off camera.
Speaker 3 (35:58):
What is.
Speaker 1 (36:01):
Yes? So they're not they didn't just bring this person
in and it's normal marketing. They're playing up on what
she does for a living as part of a marketing campaign.
Speaker 2 (36:09):
The whole marketing campaign is that she was a porn star.
She is yeah, well is yeah?
Speaker 9 (36:14):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (36:17):
The decision to work with her. Let's see here. According
to the actual charter for Loreal, the influencers must share
Loreal's ethical principles and must not have previously posted pornography
and other content, which is at odd. So they just
ignore that. Is there an actual ad and not the
(36:39):
one I made out? There's got to be an actual ad.
Hold on it says it's been viewed on TikTok a bunch.
Well I'm gonna find this. I want to hear how
pun filled this thing is? M Ross, do you feel
(37:01):
that you could safely try to find this the ad.
I'm gonna send this. Yeah, I can look for you. Sure,
all right, I'm gonna send you the I have an
article here from not to Be, but it doesn't have
the ad embedded, but it says it's on TikTok. It's
been viewed a bunch. I'm just curious how it sounds.
So let me let me send this over to h
Ross real quick. And uh could I because if if
(37:25):
it is actually marketed at like teenage girls, I'm society's cooked. Man.
I don't even know what to say. All right, let
me grab a quick call while I send that. Jamal,
what's up, hey, Ksey?
Speaker 8 (37:40):
How you doing this morning? I can't believe the Democrat
Party and liberals have finally said something that that, you know,
I couldn't understand the poly said. They said they made
at President Trump more dormal trunk. They're trying to send
a wrong DC to crime going down, wealthy a JC.
(38:00):
Their opinion, Why don't we get rid of the Department
of Justice Civil Rights Division because a little racism, Because
racism going down, so we don't need to worry about
racism anymore. Oh, why don't we get rid of the EEOC?
Speaker 3 (38:13):
Uh?
Speaker 8 (38:14):
You know, why because Hey, racism's going down. We don't
need a federal government or ainy the laws talking about
the EOC had Let's repeal the nineteen sixty eight Civil
rights at, excuse me, sixty four civil rights at. Let's
go on and repeal that because James James Kasey and
you know what, we don't need them old acts no more.
(38:36):
As matter of fact, let's go put back up to
the Confederate statues. Did everybody keep saying, you're like, when
black people walk past the Confederate statue, it smashes them
up like that white that that crazy black woman was saying.
You know that, John, Yeah, because he's gonna because you're
gonna send them to the gators, you know, cause I'm
Confederate statue statues. Okay, see, I'm gonna tell you I
(38:59):
was walking the statue.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
Hold on, wouldn't they be called Confederate snatues and not statues?
Speaker 5 (39:05):
Y'all?
Speaker 1 (39:05):
Good?
Speaker 8 (39:06):
Case that's a good I'm gonna use that one glock
by a Confederate snatch you so casey. When me and
my daughters was walking downtown Raleigh before them idiots removed
all the statues and I was teaching them about history.
You know what that that statue. I told my daughters run, run, run,
because daddy gonna have to take this beat and forget
the statue came down and start beating y'all. Tell y'all that.
Speaker 1 (39:29):
We just we just went to it's the snatue.
Speaker 8 (39:32):
Use it the statue. Yeah, and I'm from Rocky Mount.
We had to snatch you up for over one hundred
years in battle Park, put up and created by some
black more people who do are this snatch you call?
That snatue was at battle Park and Rocky Mount where
the actual battle took place in the silver ware Rocky Mount,
(39:53):
My mom down. They took that down. They took that
snatch you down. So casey, if what there for that?
President Trump saying, oh, the crime is going down. And
noticed they say as of the current state twenty twenty five,
current state twenty twenty four. So if you still got
thirteen thousand property values, you still got eighteen hundred violent crimes.
(40:19):
And notice what they do and this is how they
keep saying it. They are changing the names of crimes
and then they do it so not convicted, the police
can arrest you. But guess what if they don't convict you,
just like they do here in Durham when they talk
about the crime man dumb you know sat Tanna Doomberg.
(40:39):
You know I can stand her, but all they do
down here in Durham.
Speaker 1 (40:45):
Yeah, Jamal, I saw a stat over the weekend. I
should have pulled this. Do you know that Durham, as
percentage of identified political persuasion is the third most liberal
city in the United States? Now, it's like seventy one
percent of the city is a is declared progressive or Democrat. Yeah,
(41:08):
and you want me to.
Speaker 8 (41:09):
Tell you the bumble. One way to tell your city
is progressive, And I want everybody to listen. The best
way to tell is your city is progressive. You see
piles and piles of black children being shot down in
the street, and the same people who are shooting the
black kids who are black are put back on the
street and given probation, and the prosecutors and the judge
(41:30):
are worried about whether or not that black shooter who
just shot a black child was he a victim of slavery,
gym core racism. Yes, I can understand why drum is
the third most liberal city because look at the crime
and the shooting for the murders to go around here.
Speaker 1 (41:45):
Well, and that is why it's always yeah, And that
is why the people who are most excited by what
Trump did is the DC police officers. Their union basically
put out statements because they realize that they can go
arrest guy like you pointed out as much as they want.
But if they didn't see that dude on the same
corner a week later, what's even the point.
Speaker 8 (42:08):
And I'm gonna kill them. Yeah, Hey, Ksey, I'm gonna
tell you something. And if that's what and this is
what the younger black generation want, not the older black generation,
people don't understand. It was the people who marchin ar
and civil rights in nineteen nineties went to Bill Clinton
(42:29):
and Joe Biden. I'm a Republican, normal Republican, but like that, Admit.
The nineteen ninety four Crime Bill saved people because people
from the civil rights went to Bill Clinton and said, hey,
you got to do something about these young black men.
They are killing, they are robbing. They were killing people
who marched them. The civil rights people who survived being
bitten by dogs and sprayed by water holes were being
(42:52):
killed by their own grandchildren being robbed in mob by
the people whom they marched for to be able to
go to integrated schools. So they went and asked for
about it. And so what did the people who saw
their cousins be arrested for the crimes they committed. They
made it look like it was a problem and back
to problem people people listening to these younger generations who
(43:13):
don't want people going to jail, people have to understand
they don't want people going to jail if you are
a particular party. And I hope they moved them out
and declare Washington, DC like they did the South when
you had certain when you had crimes that was done.
A lot of people don't know when you had crimes
(43:35):
that was done the South. For many years, they didn't
trial them down here because they said that the courts
were so biased they couldn't get a fair trial. Well,
looking they did for on voting rushing.
Speaker 1 (43:48):
Yeah, well, and now the unfairness of the trial is
the other half in most instances, because that's why it's
the people versus this individual who's got eighteen felony arrests
and is back on the street. Uh de pendulum like
much like this porn actress, the face of loreel U
has has swung significantly. All right, Jamal, thanks for the
(44:08):
call there. Watch out for the Snatchhoes, okay.
Speaker 8 (44:12):
Y album next time in we go to Fort Fish.
I'm scared of Fort Fisher going transform it. Ralston know
about this one. He gonna Transfort Fort Fishing transforment to
Metro Place and gonna be the biggest transformer you ever seen.
Oh coo Omega Supreme Fort Fish.
Speaker 1 (44:30):
Yeah, go ahead, watch out because DC's got tons of
status snatchues so and they're very cunning, like the Lincoln
one is particularly diabolical because you think it wouldn't but
apparently it does, is what you're saying. So anyway, all right,
thanks Tom, Yeah, yeah, no, why that words so funny?
Snatch you okay? Oh beautiful? All right? So Ross has
(44:54):
located it, all right? So is it all right? So
here is the Here is the lorio I'll add from
the porn actress whose name I can't pronounce. Mar is
it Does it sound before I play? Does it sound
like they're marketing to younger girls?
Speaker 2 (45:10):
But there's a lot of innuendo. Okay, but I'd never
seen this person before. She looks rough? What do you
mean like she looks beat up.
Speaker 1 (45:18):
Oh she crying, she's been crying.
Speaker 2 (45:19):
I assumed, I don't know. I envisioned something, you know,
like pray. She looks like she's been around. Did this
no answer?
Speaker 11 (45:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (45:27):
No, okay, all right, well let's listen in we.
Speaker 6 (45:29):
Interrupt your scrolls with an urgent message. We are in
a blandemic. Was it makeup made to perform on stage?
On camera?
Speaker 5 (45:38):
And yes, on mattresses. Censorship is out.
Speaker 6 (45:41):
Of control coming from my content. What really needs to
be canceled? Boring makeup. I'm not afraid to go all
the way, but it seems like the world is no glitter,
no individuality, no expression. It's giving basic, not bo fifteen
steps for a barely there. I mean, I've started roles
(46:02):
with less coverage than that. It's time to end this
plague of dry because I'm not turned on, and neither
are you. Let's blur the bland, leep the boring, and
bring on censored make up back to center stage.
Speaker 1 (46:15):
Techno geez okay, and then and it's going on TikTok,
which clearly if you look at the demographic who's on
the TikTok consuming this? Okay, all right, Brave New World man,
Brave New World. I saw somebody defending this. Oh, everyone
was fine with Tracy Lord's, you know, working in mainstream films.
(46:39):
I'm sorry if you have to go back what forty
years for a reference? What are you talking about?
Speaker 2 (46:45):
She looks like this woman. She looks like a beat
up version of Emmastone, like a trailer tragedy version of
Emma Stone.
Speaker 1 (46:51):
That's the look. Well, you have to understand she's not smart.
How many times has she been tricked?
Speaker 8 (46:57):
Right?
Speaker 1 (46:59):
Like she thought if she showed up to get that
you know, she you know, to show up for that
roommate thing, it was you know, it was just going
to be purely and then like the whole thing took
a took a sideways turn.
Speaker 3 (47:09):
Man.
Speaker 1 (47:10):
Or she got on that bus thinking she was just
getting a free ride. Clearly, clearly she's been hoodwinked quite
a few times in her life. Probably all right, Well,
now she's marketing to your daughters. Yay, seven twenty hang on,
So I don't know, tell me if this sounds familiar.
According to authorities, three individuals decided to carjack a truck.
(47:31):
They stole an F one fifty. It's actually in Lancaster,
which is way outside of LA's are going towards Vegas,
but they then started their way into Los Angeles Metro
proper and police. Well, initially the first guy they carjacked
for the F one fifty was I guess he jumped
(47:51):
in another vehicle of was a friend or what pursued
them and actually got into a shootout with these guys
while they're busting away in his truck. Say They then
u as police were chasing them, ditched out of the
F one fifty after I guess they had hit something
with it, and then hopped in and carjacked a tanker
truck and then drove that for a while, led police
(48:15):
into downtown LA which got cumbersome in a tanker truck,
and so they bailed out, carjacked another pickup truck, sped
away for a while that got disabled, jumped out, stole
a sedan, and then eventually got away. That's Grand Theft Auto, right, ross,
(48:38):
Can you can you explode a tanker truck? In Grand
Theft Auto? You can? You can? You can skyjack a plane?
I'm assuming you can sky you can jack a tanker truck?
Speaker 12 (48:46):
Right?
Speaker 1 (48:46):
No, it sounds just like GTA five. But have you
ever have you ever jacked a tanker truck. I believe
I have, and I.
Speaker 2 (48:52):
Think I ended up flying off a cliff and like
you know, didn't end well.
Speaker 1 (48:56):
Favorite state to find these stories in has has got
a banger. Man. Let's go ahead and get into this.
Speaker 5 (49:07):
Florida Man. Florida Man.
Speaker 12 (49:09):
Is something in the waterty errors hand that makes you
do all that crazy crap. It's like the state is
wanna be dumb ass trapped nowhere else?
Speaker 5 (49:17):
How's the Florida Man?
Speaker 12 (49:20):
It is almost like as the Weird Factor climbs, you
find out it have been in Florida every time.
Speaker 5 (49:29):
Florida Man, Florida Man.
Speaker 12 (49:31):
If anyone can cheer me of you know, you can
just mind life, you crazy, but of course.
Speaker 11 (49:36):
But it's not.
Speaker 5 (49:37):
It's bad crap, crazy as yours. Nowhere else are you
gonna find him?
Speaker 1 (49:42):
They're so used to it they don't mind him.
Speaker 5 (49:44):
Hooray for Florida Man.
Speaker 1 (49:47):
Oh man, This is a doozy all right. So here
is the tale of thirty two year old Anthony Smith,
and I used the word tail intentionally. This happened in
Jensen Beach, specifically at what's known as Indian Riverside Park,
which is a park that is directly next to the
Children's Museum of the Treasure Coast. So the park is
(50:12):
bustling as parents are there to pick up their kids
from summer camp at the museum, and you know, the
park's kind of part of the museum. I guess just
looking at a picture here, and so all of a
sudden they see this dude come walking through, and it's
clear that it's a dude, even though from a distance
(50:33):
it might look like a woman. And so they call
the police, and I'll tell you why, because it was
of what he was wearing. In just a moment, witnesses
dialed nine to one one to report a suspicious individual
who was exposing himself to the children, and police rushed over. All, right,
(50:53):
so what outfit was he wearing on his little stroll
through the park that was filled with kids coming back
from some camp. According to the arrest report, Smith was
wearing see through women's lingerie, including bottoms that were of
a thong variety. But because of the nature of the lingerie,
(51:14):
everything was see through, so you could see everything.
Speaker 8 (51:18):
He had.
Speaker 1 (51:20):
He had fake hoots, fake tops, which again you see through,
you can see what's going on, a wig of long
black hair, a black mask around his face because you know,
you wouldn't want anyone to know who you are. I
guess I don't know. A I don't know how to
(51:42):
say this. A ring, but not one for your finger,
but it is described as bejeweled, which again because you
can see through the underwear and the cherry on top.
He was also wearing a bushy tail, and I know
(52:04):
what you're asking. You're like, what do you mean he
was wearing it? How was with the with the outfit
you just described? How was he holding it into place? Well,
the tail is actually a it inserts and that's how
that stays in place. What happens if you forget and
(52:26):
sit down? For you furry uh tail enthusiasts. Oddly, this
is also a mission in GT five. Oh it's okay,
I miss I missed this one.
Speaker 2 (52:39):
They're talking about the tail. I saw a video on
X a while ago. It might have been back when
it was Twitter and I was scrolling and it was
somebody going to like a cosplay, like a furry convention,
and they had a tail coming out of them and
they were like, how do wait, how does the girl
have a tail coming out of her? How does that work?
And the comments were enlightening or what they were enlightening?
Were they he learned a lot?
Speaker 1 (53:00):
Yeah, yeah, a lot, a lot of stuff you wanted
to know, or I would say respect, I would say definitely,
don't sit down. Yeah, definitely, definitely don't want to do that.
Uh oh dude, what do you think? Okay? So what
do you think this guy does for a living? I
love this. I love what his job is. It's like
an actuary or something. He's a wedding DJ. What was
(53:22):
his name, Anthony Smith? Okay, what are you thinking it
might be? For a second, I thought I might have
been one of my old buddies.
Speaker 2 (53:30):
Oh no, Jesus, he's a wedding DJ in Florida.
Speaker 1 (53:33):
He's great. It's the guy that was on the Okay,
I understand that he had to go. You had to
make the connection with the job and the location, But
then you had to also believe there was a possibility
your buddy decided, I'm going to go for a walk
in the park. What should I wear?
Speaker 2 (53:52):
You remember when I told you that he's the guy
that ended up on Springer because he ye.
Speaker 1 (53:57):
In like two different roles.
Speaker 2 (53:58):
Yeah, but he was a DJ at a strip cl
elso did a wedding, still does and you know he
ended up on Springer and his boxers with the hearts
on it being spanked on the stage at Springer on Springer,
So I mean, I wouldn't listen.
Speaker 1 (54:10):
Listen.
Speaker 2 (54:11):
He likes to party, is all I'm saying. And you know,
you never know, you never. I'm happy it's not him.
Speaker 1 (54:16):
Yeah, well, is your buddy black? Because this dude's black?
I know. Oh okay, all right, so uh yeah. When
questioned by police, he said that he has an addiction
and that engaging in the lude behavior is how he
uh releases the uh anyway, is this going to be
(54:38):
shocked to learn this was not his first run in
for something like that? Is this what the kids would
call an oro farmer? I don't know what that is,
and after I don't want to know. Is I don't
think I want to know if it has to do
with insertable tales, So I'm not sure. Yeah, he said
(54:59):
the reason he has to do this is because he
has taken a vow of chastity before marriage, and so
that this is his only release.
Speaker 2 (55:10):
So that's so once it gets married, right but once so,
once he gets married, all this will be in the past, right, Yeah, yeah,
he's getting it out of his system. Yeah, yeah, it's
gonna work.
Speaker 1 (55:20):
Yeah, it's I'll pin up. So I'm sure the ladies
are lining up, man, m yeah he uh he said.
According to police, Oh, dear lord. According to police, he's
been arrested twice in the past for the very same act.
So I guess you thought third time is the charm.
I don't know, but an, he lives with his parents,
(55:44):
so there's there's that as well. Uh, he does have
a good BBB rating. I don't know why they included
that in the story, but I guess that's We're terrifying.
He's real looking for a wedding DJ, and you know,
you actually go and try to figure out some reviews
or maybe the BBB rating or whatever. You're like, oh,
this guy looks nice, and then your wedding rolls around
(56:06):
and you're like, who let the who let a fox
in here? What's going? What the hell's going on? Man?
So there you go, Florida man overperforming.
Speaker 2 (56:15):
It was the craziest chicken dance we've ever done before
at the wedding drift. What is the fox whatever? I
don't I don't know what he's just bushy tail. I
guess maybe I don't know. So they didn't, like, you know,
going to what kind of tail it was, I didn't say.
Speaker 1 (56:30):
Well they actually they they used the actual name of
the product, which I don't know that I can say
on the air. It is literally a sexualized furry insertible
adult toy, uh plug of sorts. But you get the gist,
which I didn't know was a thing, but it's a thing.
So there you go. All right, that's a fun image.
(56:52):
Starts your Tuesday morning. Oh yeah, Oh is that the
new Vikings cheerleader? You guys are all so funny. Rosz,
you might have been the only person that I know
who didn't send me that story yesterday.
Speaker 2 (57:05):
Yeah, I be that was intentional and I haven't brought
it up.
Speaker 1 (57:08):
Yeah yeah, I got, I must say. And you know
how it is when there's Bill's News, one hundred people
send you stuff. Two hundred people must have saw that
Vikings thing and thought I needed to hear all about Blaze.
That's a dude's name. By the way, who is the
new one. There's two actually male cheerleaders. Now he's not
(57:29):
dressed as well. I saw people were misrepresenting this that
he's he's he's dressed in drag while he's doing it. No,
he's dressed like a male cheerleader that you might see
but j I would say on a sideline at a
college game. Except they're not doing what male cheerleaders normally do, right,
which is, uh, you know, throwing small, much smaller cheerleaders
(57:49):
in the air. He's more it's more dance thing with
the Vikings cheerleaders, like most of the NFL cheerleaders. But yeah,
and the fact that he's named after an American gladiator
when surely judging I don't think he'd do well on
that show was not lost on me. But yeah, I've
seen it, so thank you. And by the way, the
(58:10):
Vikings aren't the only team with male cheerleaders. I just
pointed the Panthers have.
Speaker 2 (58:14):
One reaction because I think my reaction if, like, you know,
it was Buffalo News and they're like, hey, here's our
new dude cheerleader Nitro or whatever, yeah.
Speaker 1 (58:21):
Would be whatever. I'd sort of look at it and
be like whatever and move on. Yeah, that's what I do.
Mm hmm. Now, because at first I thought, I'm like,
if he was dressed as one of the female cheerleaders.
I would understand what people be probably much more wondering
what the heck's going on. But now it's just dude
likes to dance, I don't know, and be named after
(58:42):
American gladiators. I'm just I just need the Vikings to
not suck at quarterback position this year. That's my big concern. So, uh,
we will see, all right, race stage be who's got
his own NFL troubles down south? What do you gotta
have those? What are you gonna do with Parsons?
Speaker 6 (59:02):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (59:03):
We have him?
Speaker 9 (59:05):
Who turned me off?
Speaker 1 (59:06):
I hear myself. Oh you're getting a minus oh midtle
mixed minus issue a little bit.
Speaker 9 (59:12):
Yeah, it's not there, got all that? Okay, good, we
got the raid. I don't know, did you ever a
week or so ago, did you catch Colin Coward's kind
of discussion about that and I but I honestly think
he's overrated. Get a sack on first down when you're
not expecting a pass, make a stop on a you know,
(59:34):
on a get a pressure when you're not expecting you know,
third and longs and near pass it. Basically the point was,
you know, anytime there's a predicted or more more of
a chance of passing the ball than running the ball.
You know, he's he's good, but I just think he's
overrated and I won't miss him.
Speaker 1 (59:53):
So that's me.
Speaker 9 (59:55):
I still a little bowld NFL fan, and maybe somebody
else will step up either way. I mean, we're going
to the super Bowl. So what's the difference now? What
kind of altitude is that?
Speaker 3 (01:00:03):
Sir?
Speaker 1 (01:00:05):
How many years of it? I mean, I mean Cowboys
fans where every year it's their year? Please please? I
got the only Cowboys fan who's honest. I appreciate that
I got.
Speaker 9 (01:00:17):
I got. I got out of that about five years ago,
where every year was our year. You know, I thought
that was going to be the championship quarterback. I'm not
going to say he's not a good quarterback, but he's
no Akman.
Speaker 1 (01:00:28):
So who was the other quarterback before him? And got
the week the Yeah, Romo, And then.
Speaker 9 (01:00:34):
If Romo had a better supporting cast, they may they
may have gone further.
Speaker 3 (01:00:39):
You know.
Speaker 9 (01:00:39):
It was kind of juggling at running back and didn't
really have a lot of consistency at the receiver position.
Yeah he had Dez, but yeah, you know it was listen,
you know, my focus isn't on the NFL this year.
After that ap pole came out, I.
Speaker 1 (01:00:54):
Saw I saw a little something about the something something
some team in South Carolina. I don't know.
Speaker 9 (01:01:00):
Yeah, that's what you're going to hang your entire.
Speaker 1 (01:01:02):
Existence on Clemson. Obviously they're picked to win the ACC
that's understandable. But yeah, yeah, it was actually know Ile
State are gonna be tough this year.
Speaker 12 (01:01:11):
Man.
Speaker 9 (01:01:11):
Yeah, and that's a great Saturday. Two couple of weeks.
That is a great from noon right till lsu clems.
That's gonna be a great day. Anyway, not so great. Yeah,
the pounding parts of the Triangle took yesterday. Record rain
at the airport three point sixty five was one of
the rain gauges at let's see fire Station twenty six
(01:01:36):
near Raleigh. So there was this pocket a real heavy
rainfall and flooding. Then you go out near to the
try and it was basically like what are you talking about?
Quarter inch? Almost three quarters an inches some of the
higher totals. So this is what we do today tomorrow,
get these rounds of rain, some showers starting to work
through right now down to the south, working north, and
then as we get through the next couple of days
(01:01:57):
in the afternoon hours especially, you start seeing increasing intenty
and coverage, and you know, some areas will get heavy
rain and some won't. So that's way it'll be probably
for the rest of the week. May see a little
lessening of that towards the end of the weekend the
upcoming weekend, but the emitte it'll stick around. Really not
too much change over the next few days. We don't
think severe, but I think fluttering can be a greater
threat than severe weather. Aaron's a tropical storm still over
(01:02:21):
a week away, if it even does make a run
at the US East Coast, forecast to become a major
hurricane by the weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:02:26):
Okay, all right, well, I know that's you guys are
very excited, not in that way.
Speaker 9 (01:02:32):
Super bowls right, speaking of a meteorological super Bowl, right there,
So okay.
Speaker 1 (01:02:37):
All right, sounds good, Thank you, sir, appreciate it. Ah Ross.
By the way, speaking of taken a pounding, I just
learned something horrific. So I finally got a chance to
see the video of the porn actresses Loriel commercial. She's
twenty four.
Speaker 2 (01:02:51):
Right, I nailed there, and I told you rightly, that's
that's a rough twenty four man, and it's a makeup
company and they do like, you know, close ups of
her face, and it's like, I don't know, do you
have is it working?
Speaker 3 (01:03:02):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:03:03):
Look, I don't have personal animosity for this girl. I
understand she's probably gonna take their money, but it's like
the Decisi but she's twenty four man, Holy cow? All right?
Seven forty nine hang on bowman at the mouth there
in DC, as Trump is laying out kind of what
they expected him to do, and then everyone rushed to
their super organic protests with their instantly printed signs. It
(01:03:27):
was Trump also started while he was at the press or,
like he started like riffing on other stuff. And there's
one moment where he leans in, he goes onto like
the trans topic and uh, Pete hegg Seth standing behind
him because he was there for the National Guard component,
and you see Haig Seth realize that Trump's now gonna
start talking about this other thing, and he's he has
(01:03:49):
to like hold back a laugh because at that moment,
this very same thing that pot because I watched this
thing live, the same thing that popped into my head,
clearly it popped into his. Yeah, that was Trump's already
irritated all these these idiots in Washington, and now he's
just going to go irritate another like they're already foemen
at the mouth. Okay, and so here's what he was saying,
(01:04:14):
hold on, come on, but here we go.
Speaker 10 (01:04:17):
Probably won't get one Democrat vote because they have no
idea what they're doing.
Speaker 5 (01:04:21):
That's why they want men playing in women's sports.
Speaker 10 (01:04:24):
That's what why they want transgender for everybody, everybody transgender.
And they've just got Wallace collection and a landslide and
they haven't changed one thing. I saw the other day
the certain gentlemen who were very well known politician Democrat
was fighting like hell that men should be allowed to
(01:04:45):
play in women's sports.
Speaker 1 (01:04:46):
They just don't get it.
Speaker 10 (01:04:48):
They said it's an eighty twenty issue, and I think
it's a ninety seven to three issue.
Speaker 5 (01:04:52):
And I don't know who the three are.
Speaker 1 (01:04:53):
I've never heard anybody come.
Speaker 5 (01:04:55):
Nobody's ever come up to me. Sure, you have to
let men play in women sports.
Speaker 11 (01:05:00):
You have to do it, sir.
Speaker 8 (01:05:02):
Nobody's ever approached me.
Speaker 9 (01:05:03):
I don't know where this issue even comes from.
Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
Yeah, so again he's there for the crime thing. And
then well if we go in that direction, and it's
kind of interesting he might have been He might also
been thinking about it because there was a big federal
lawsuit file against Trump for the Trump administration. It was
I don't know if his file Friday, but I saw
the reporting yesterday and that is one of these MS
(01:05:27):
thirteen leaders that is now in federal in federal lock
up for murder, I would point out, is suing to
be able to be identified as a woman. And I
don't know that he wants the process, but he wants
the identification so he can be moved to a federal
woman's prison. And he's a MS thirteen convicted murderer. So
(01:05:50):
got an hour to go. I read a very disturbing story,
and I admittedly I had to educate myself on this
because that don't have I don't have kids in a
school system that may have this this particular program we're
going to talk about. But I understand why it exists.
And I know some people think it's a little Orwellian.
(01:06:14):
The problem is, and I'll explain this to you because
it's called, uh it's called Gaggle, not Google gaggle. The
problem is, and it's meant to uh keep you know,
it's meant to combat the possibility of like school shootings
and stuff or other violence, you know, or illicit activity
that may be happening. So with that in mind, but
(01:06:37):
of course it also looks like something that could be
used for thought controls. So that's where you get the
Orwellian stuff. But let's just let's just go with what
it is intended to do. The problem why every other
discussion that we have about these things is the complete
and utter inability or unwillingness by who are purportedly the
(01:06:57):
adults in these instances to use common sense. And it
goes both sides. Like Ross, do you remember when we
were finding out the number of interactions that that school
shooter in Parkland had had with that sheriff's department, It
was like, what thirty different interactions with law enforcement and
and like that dude I ended up losing his gig
(01:07:19):
for that because he was a lunatic. But like, you're
not using common sense at that point, that's clearly a threat. Okay,
So that's one end of the spectrum. This program is
meant to monitor, and it monitors any district owned devices
(01:07:39):
that the kids may use and any district network. So
if there's an internal messaging, email or chat system, it's
monitoring that as well. Okay. And in the article they
they talked about how how this was mishandled in some instance.
But the story I want to tell you about is
from Tennessee. It's really the most egregious thus far, and
(01:08:02):
it involves a thirteen year old girl. She is in
eighth grade. She goes to a middle school in Fairview
Middle School in Tennessee, or I should say she used
to go there. And uh, she is in a chat
with some her friends, right, and one of her friends
because this girl has very dark complexed, it is very tanned.
(01:08:23):
She tans a lot of guests, which thirteen. I don't
know if that's healthy, but whatever, one of her friends
jokingly called her Mexican, and she you know, and they
laughed about it for a little while and uh, and
then she said, she said, we're going to We're gonna
kill the Mexicos. Okay, And the reference is to them
(01:08:45):
referring to her as Mexican. Is the context, right, it's
it's it's weirdly written, but and I understand ways either
word kill and then not Mexicans. The Mexicans she's referring
to the reference and that triggered this program, this AI
because it's AIS who's coming over all this stuff and
(01:09:05):
it flags anything it sees as a threat. Now at
that point, I got and here's my question, Ross, do
you know if Wake County uses this? And I would
assume they'd have to disclose it to parents if they did.
I wouldn't be surprised if some schools in North Carolina
us this. Again. I understand the intent of the program, Uh,
(01:09:26):
but what happened next is insane. It's called gaggles AI
program monitors chats for threats. But being a machine, you know,
context is a loss on a machine, and this is
where humans have to come in. So if you're the
principal or assistant principle or an SRO or whomever this
stuff goes to, and you read this, even me reading it,
(01:09:50):
it's it's definitely a lot of this stuff. The whole
conversation is very much in teen speak, which yeah, we
talked about here on the show. But like, wouldn't the
law logical thing at that point if you honestly thought
there was a threat there to baby, I don't know,
attempt to figure out what she's saying, or talk to her,
(01:10:11):
but that's not what they did because they got zero tolerance.
And this is this is the This is one of
my big beefs, and I think it's very lazy administration.
And I understand a lot of times it's could people
do it because they don't want to look biased, They
don't want to look this. They don't it will look
like there's favoritism. And I'm like, well, the problem is
(01:10:31):
you're dealing with humans and not everything is apples to apples. Man.
Common sense needs to prevail here. But what they then
did to this girl is if you're a parent, this
is this is insane. So rather than doing due diligence,
let me give you the whole thing trying to figure
it out. The school personnel immediately alerted police, who promptly
(01:10:54):
arrested or showed up and arrested the girl. Just snatched
her right out of the school, drove her to the
police station. She's thirteen. I want to remind you of
this where they strip searched her, forced her to shower
on camera, coerged her into signing documents that she didn't
understand without a lawyer, and threw her in solitary confinement
(01:11:16):
for twenty four hours. By the way, the parents didn't
know where she was, only that the police had come
and taken her. Where They finally figured out where they
were holding her where they had taken her, they attempted
to contact her, but were told that she could not
be contacted until after the solitary confinement. So for a
day this girl, I guess better than a day, because
(01:11:39):
it was the clock started when they threw her in there.
Her parents weren't even allowed to talk to her, and
so at this point you're like, what are we doing here?
I mean, there's being proactive and they're just being dumb
about this stuff. So finally they get her to a judge,
and you're probably thinking, Okay, well, now a judge is
going to have to ree what the heck is going
(01:12:01):
on here, But not this judge. The judge later kept
up the lack of due diligence, and in fact, in
one in part of the in part of his initial
the initial court hearing, he literally said and ruled that
the girl was likely mentally retarded. Those are the and
(01:12:24):
that's an exact quote. He didn't even use developingly disabled
or anything. That's the that's the what he used in
the hearing. He then ordered a psych evaluation, put her
under house arrest where she was not allowed contact with
anyone but her parents for what eight weeks? And she
now she had to go to an alternative school now
(01:12:46):
and all of that. Okay, again, how many adults were
involved in this and not a single one went, well,
I'm reading what she wrote, do you really think that
that's what she was going to do? No, they immediately
decided because of an AI's interpretation that clearly you're dealing
(01:13:07):
with the next Columbine boys here. And I don't know
if there's been behavior issues with this grou She's thirteen.
Obviously you're not going to disclose this stuff. Here's the
problem though, And the article goes on to highlight other
districts where they've had problems, including they focus on Lawrence, Kansas. Gaggle.
How many alerts do you think that school officials are getting?
(01:13:29):
This is why they'll claim that they don't have time
to do all the due diligence. They have to act
fast so to make sure that something doesn't take place. Well,
the problem is Gaggle alerts to twelve hundred incidents during
the previous school year in Lawrence, Kansas. So last year
got to they got twelve hundred alerts, two thirds of
(01:13:51):
which were immediately deemed by school officials to be non issues,
including over two hundred false alarms from student homework where
they wrote about out things having to do with war,
and the AI thought that they were putting together a
list of what they were going to do, So students
(01:14:12):
and photography classes were constantly called in the principal's office
over concerns that nudity have been detected, and then the
photos automatically deleted from the students drives. There was no nudity,
but by then it was all gone. So and yeah,
there's just there's a bunch of examples. The Tennessee one
is just the most egregious because that took more than
(01:14:34):
just the AI, more than just the school officials. It
took law enforcement and the judge to continue this farce.
So I'm very curious the actual success rate of this. Again,
the intent, the intention is probably good the way it's
been carried out, and then when you divorce yourself of
(01:14:55):
doing any due diligence on this, then at that point,
if there's that, if there's twelve there's not twelve hundred
school shooters in your Lawrence, Kansas district. Okay, there might
be one ruin, maybe two. Well, there ain't twelve hundred.
So at that point, how do you how do you
not go? Well, we got to comb through this stuff,
(01:15:16):
and that's what Lawrence, Kansas ended up doing. Apparently they
didn't get the message there in that in Tennessee, and
as you can imagine, the parents have filed a big
old lawsuit on this. Absolutely nuts man. But hey, if
there's no if there's no consequences, then why even try, right,
(01:15:39):
So I guess that's probably the way they're going to go,
all right. A couple other things, by the way. By
the way, I am, I am absolutely flabbergasted that these
videos keep cos there's things that I don't understand that
people keep doing. One is when people kept keen tesla's
(01:16:00):
and then would immediately get caught because everyone knew they
had all these cameras, and then they would keep doing it.
That one never made sense to me. I also don't
understand all the people that are making these tiktoks complaining
about their ebt not being able to buy candy anymore.
We played that audio of that woman who was upset
over the reeses last week, and yet I must have
seen a half dozen No, I probably saw a dozen
(01:16:23):
different ones, like what do you think is gonna happen
with the TikTok? Do you think some lawmakers going to
see that and be like, Oh we messed up? Look
how upset she is? And a really good point, my
favorite point though, that was made on this, which is
why I kind of bring it up. And it really
is just it's the icing on the cake of this,
quite literally is sure you can't go into the Walmart
(01:16:44):
bakery and buy some big made cake, but you can
go to the aisle with the spices and the baking
stuff and you can buy literally every ingredient you would
need to make that cake. But you're too lazy to
do it? Is it that ross? Isn't that hard to
make a cake? Your wife bakes? I've never baked a cake,
(01:17:05):
but I cook. Can't be that complex, right, get some eggs?
I mean I think it takes some knowledge. I mean
I don't think I could pull it off the way
Marky Bakes makes a cake. Oh no, claric.
Speaker 2 (01:17:15):
She was all about baconcy nasty and gross and flat,
and I get to ask, we can't eat that. It's
going to poison us. Stay away from that.
Speaker 1 (01:17:22):
But you think you could educate yourself how to make
a cake? Right? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:17:26):
No completely, Yeah, yeah, your.
Speaker 1 (01:17:27):
Functional human being. The YouTube's a thing, right, you could
probably I get I like to I cook, man, I
like to cook. No, I could do it. It would
just take practice, is all I'm saying. Like, you know,
and so if there's something I want to make and
I like, I just I'll go and I'll find a
recipe and I'll try it. It's like, if you can read,
you can do this. It may not come out as
(01:17:50):
good as somebody who's got the touch, like your wife,
who's you know, who's baked the gazillion things in her life,
but I probably won't poison you. Oh crap, you're not
supposed to put arsenic in this. Nobody told me. I
feel like, can I just put it in the air fryer?
Can you wait? You can't make him in the airth
I don't know. Maybe I should get canned bake in
the air fryer. I saw somebody say that, and I'm
(01:18:12):
just like, I don't think I'm gonna try that because
I don't want to ruin my air fryer? Right, yeah
I did? What did I put in the air fry
There was a horrible idea one time, though I try
to remember what it was. It took. I had to
like take the bottom off the machine, the machine and
like clean it out. I'm like, all right, never throwing
that in there again. Uh so uh anyway, No, look,
(01:18:35):
I'm sure if you know what you're doing, you can
do anything. But if yeah, if you're upset that you cut,
you can't go buy cake, pre make cake, learn to
make a cake. They'll make a TikTok video? What are
you doing? Eight nineteen Hang on journalism that I had
to uh review yesterday following Trump's decision to essentially invoke
(01:18:56):
home rule and take over the DC least to actually
crack down on crime. The Washington Post, you know, home
field advantage. This is the one that absolutely sent me.
So they posted a story yesterday afternoon where they had
gone and they did like man on the street interviews
(01:19:16):
to talk to DC residents. Strangely, everyone they talked to
is like, no, this is a super safe city. In fact,
let me read this, this is a safe city. While
while it is, it can be disturbing overhearing or seeing
camera footage of some disturbing things. This is a safe city.
He is wrong, and who said that? We don't know
(01:19:42):
because the residents spoke on the condition of anonymity over
concerns for personal safety.
Speaker 2 (01:19:53):
That's ruby, Yes, I don't know, man, like one of
those things is not like the other. You know what
I mean, it's very safe, super safe.
Speaker 1 (01:19:59):
So say it's I mean, it's not safe enough to
be quoted in the newspaper, but other than that, it's
super safe. Somebody took that wrote that, reported on it,
had describe it, and at no point they go this
probably this is tell it on ourselves. This is a
safe city, said one resident, speaking on the condition of
(01:20:21):
anonymity over concerns for personal safety.
Speaker 2 (01:20:24):
Listen this the town is super safe. You have nothing
to worry about. What's your name? No, let's not get
crazy here.
Speaker 1 (01:20:29):
Oh come on, I don't want people physically canceling me
jeezh And then he print that quote. I don't know.
Maybe there's some guy in the Washington Post who's just like,
it's like subterfuged. He can never speak his mind, but
he's like, listen to this insanity we'll put this in here.
(01:20:50):
But either way, man, they had their press conferences and
then immediately they had their protests, and I think those
will continue in DC, and you know, there might be
a violent altercation and it will then turn into finger pointing. Well,
because remember the vibe from a lot of the residents
(01:21:10):
yesterday was if you if you come in and try
to stop doing crimes, then they're going to do more crimes,
or in some cases, we're going to do more crimes.
And I'm like, what a weird response. So if you're
not allowed a certain amount of crime, you'll do more crime.
To make your point, there's a new show on Netflix
called The Hunting Wives. Ross have you heard of this show?
(01:21:32):
The Hunting Wives?
Speaker 6 (01:21:34):
No? No?
Speaker 1 (01:21:35):
Okay. So one of the characters on the show is
a politician's wife, except she's awful and she's having affairs
and she's evil and all that. The actors who plays
her name is Malan. Ackerman was doing an interview last
week to promote the show because it's a new show.
(01:21:56):
This is with Vulture and they asked her, you know,
how writers, you know put the you know, they went
deep with with that and how the characters are formulated
and in the interview promoting the show, trying to get
people to watch your show, she said that the awful, cheating,
(01:22:17):
manipulative character is based off do you want to guess who?
It's based on? Millennia. They can't help themselves. Also, what
they hell did Milania do to anybody? But it's a
it's incredible when you hear her speak. She's so not there,
(01:22:40):
like most of the president's spouses have been like she
just in the background. Occasionally she decorates the White House.
They trash her for it, and now you have a
show and you're like, yeah, so I needed to play
like a Jeoffrey level evil character, and I decided that
(01:23:03):
base it on Malania Trump. Just garbage people all around.
Speaker 3 (01:23:07):
Man.
Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
All right, Yeah, So the character's name is Margo, the
wife of a rich want to be politician. And by
the way, she's not just cheating. There's also like all
the abortions, the murdered somebody. It's really dark, and it's
fine you want to play a character off like that.
I mean, we saw that what was the Kevin Spacey
(01:23:32):
show that was so popular before he got canceled. He
was an evil piece of garbage in that show. So
that's fine, But to sit there and say that you
based your evil character off the first Lady of the
United States when you know that it's gonna have people
are gonna read this. Fox News is reporting on it
this morning. They're not gonna go watch your show now,
(01:23:53):
and then you're gonna go I don't care. And then
if and it's harder to determine with Netflix, so you
can see the Eames on Netflix, and then people don't
watch it, and it's snow white all over again. Like
will nobody learn a lesson in Hollywood? I don't know,
But I'm really curious. What's the most evil thing that
(01:24:17):
Malania has ever done? Helped me out here? By the way,
what show do I know this chick from? This Malan Ackerman?
I've actually she looks very familiar to me, and I
think it was from a show I must have watched,
hang On, Just to give you a reference. If you
don't know the name, maybe I can give you another
show she was in. Um, all right, well, yeah, oh
(01:24:46):
that's right, I know exactly this is. Do you know
who this is?
Speaker 7 (01:24:49):
Ross?
Speaker 1 (01:24:50):
Did you ever watch the show Billions? That's a good show.
I sure did not. Oh, that's too bad. She's the
wife in Billions. I actually really liked her character in Billions.
What a piece of garbage man? Anyway, all right, so
there you go. If you're thinking of watching the show,
just understand that the lead actress wants you to know
that they based the evilest character off of Milania Trump
(01:25:14):
so that she can score some sort of political points. Uh,
let me grab a quick phone call here, Alan, what's up, hey, man?
Speaker 3 (01:25:25):
Yeah, hey, hey, I'm sorry, I don't know I was
on Hey.
Speaker 13 (01:25:28):
I was going to ask you about It's it's frustrating
with the with the way that the Democrats are presenting
stats in on the news. And I mean, I know
that they lie, and we've all known that, but for
them to sit up there and say that that the
crime is the lowest it's been in thirty years, when
it's the opposite is true and it's provable, and it's
(01:25:50):
just I just don't know how they just continue to
get away with that.
Speaker 8 (01:25:53):
It's so maddening.
Speaker 1 (01:25:54):
Well, it's because again you're dealing with statistics. So what
do you when you say crime? What do you mean?
And then one person definition is I don't know violent crimes. Well,
if you decide like Chicago, did that a robbery that
doesn't involve a firearm? No longer is I can't remember
exactly what the language was, but they changed it so
it wasn't quote unquote a violent crime anymore. Well now
(01:26:16):
you're you know, there's there's lies, damn lies and statistics
at that point. So it's just like what matters is
what the residents feel. And if you got a guy
who is out of one side because he's probably lived
neighbors or standing next to him, he's like, no, it's safe,
but then won't give his name because he's too scared.
(01:26:36):
I'm gonna that's more informative to me, at least anecdotally
than what some politician on a podium saying.
Speaker 13 (01:26:45):
No, absolutely absolutely. I just they need to get theirs,
you know, hopefully it's coming soon.
Speaker 3 (01:26:51):
Hey.
Speaker 13 (01:26:51):
On on a side, movie, do you know Buck Brandman?
Speaker 1 (01:26:55):
Who Buck Bran? I don't know, tell me who that is?
Speaker 13 (01:27:02):
That is a horseman in Sheridan, Wyoming And.
Speaker 1 (01:27:07):
Oh literally Randoman's yeah, is that that's a ransom story
I believe outside of Sheridan or a big horn.
Speaker 13 (01:27:15):
Yeah, And I figured say, you know, you're always talking
about about Wyoming and Sheridan and stuff, and I figured
it's small enough town where you'll probably.
Speaker 1 (01:27:25):
I'm from Buffalo. I'm from the even smaller towns and
we u those were our rivals. So plus it's where
we drove because it was the big city, so we
could find girls that weren't technically related to us. That's
how small a town I was. Yeah, man, all right, all.
Speaker 3 (01:27:41):
Right, Hey love your show, have a good day.
Speaker 1 (01:27:43):
Thanks. Yeah, no, man, you grew up. I'm sure some
of you in North Carolina. You hail from a town
that was settled by like eight families. You gotta do
the math. You gotta do the math. So you're just like,
I'll just go to Sheridan.
Speaker 2 (01:27:58):
You know, going back town. Question about the statistics, you
had mentioned something to start off the show that I
didn't know about the person in charge of the statistics
in the police department. You said, it's suspended, dude. So
they've been suspended, yes, for doing what remind people you
told us, right, for fudging the numbers or something.
Speaker 1 (01:28:17):
They're alleged to have been manipulating the statistics.
Speaker 2 (01:28:19):
Yes, you know how far back that suspension is that
like recent? Just like what I mean, like did Trump
come out yesterday and say, hey, we're going to take
the capital, and then they're under investigation.
Speaker 1 (01:28:28):
Around No, the department, prior to Trump taking it over,
had already placed this person on suspension. That's crazy. Yeah,
and now they're just like what what? I don't know
what the problem is. Yeah, this is a known thing.
Hold on DC. Yeah, for me, that was fascinating to
hear this morning. Yeah it again, it just blew me away.
Hold on police suspension. Yeah, it was one of the
(01:28:55):
I thought everywhere, and now I gotta manipulation. Sorry, we're
doing this literally on the air. Guy, I've just got
so many stories to figure out where exactly it is.
It's just easier to find it again.
Speaker 3 (01:29:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:29:19):
Yeah, here we go. DC police commanders suspended accused of
changing the numbers. This happened July eighteenth, So this proceeds,
you know what we're now dealing with a month later.
So they did this last month. This is a story
from last month. That's from NBC News Washington. Let's see
(01:29:39):
here the police supervisor in the department was accused of
manipulating crime data. So this is one of the one
of the upper level folks. Oh jeez, I don't wired
every news outlet, making their websites absolutely non functional with
pop I swear man. Yeah, here we go. A DC
(01:30:03):
police commander under investigation for allegedly making changes to crime
statistics within the district. The police Department confirmed that Michael
Pulliam placed on paid administrative leave. Actually he was suspended
in mid May. It just took a while for the
news to get out. It happened a week after Pulling
filed an equal oh a EEOC complain against an assistant chief,
(01:30:24):
and the police union accused the department of deliberately falsifying
crime data, obviously to make it look safer. Yeah, man,
this Pulliam, the former commander of the third District, So
Adams Morgan Columbia Heights placed on leave with pay and
the investigation continues. So yeah, no, that's a thing that happened.
(01:30:46):
And you're right, it's crazy, not as crazy as the
weather which raced. Aging's here to drop upon you because
here in a week we may be doing spaghetti models
or something. I don't know.
Speaker 9 (01:30:56):
Yeh, spaghetti models. They're out on aaron tropical storm forecast
to become a hurricane and major hurricane by the weekend
or just before as it approaches the windward Leeward Island,
so that's still well way's away, and if it does
have any impact to the East Coast, it wouldn't be
till after even this time next week, so it's still
a long time to watch. Monitor. We'll see what happens,
(01:31:18):
but could become a major hurricane, as we have mentioned
f KAT three or higher, we'll have to deal with
our own set of problems here in the interim. A
couple batches of showers run right now near Sanford, heading
towards the Triangle, another small batch north of Greensboro, another
one going through Hickory again, and one down in Columbia
producing a flash flood warning right now. So we've got
these areas that we'll continue to rotate through through today, tonight, tomorrow.
(01:31:40):
Just kind of put all the next several days and
nights together because we'll have these rounds of showers, thunderstorms,
and like yesterday. Not that I to say we'll have
record rain as we did in Raleigh, but we could
have some heavy rain in flooding. I don't think severe,
meaning we're not gonna have winds to sixty or any hell,
at least it doesn't look like it but I think
the rain's gonna be the biggest threat case. Some more
(01:32:00):
flooding possible because the ground is saturated. Maybe toward the
end of the week and the weekend, still rain chances,
but more of the afternoon stuff and warmer temperature some
more typical this time of year rather than you know
what we're in right now. So keep the rain gear handy,
exercise wet weather driving skills over the next several days.
Looks like there'll be rounds of wet weather. I mean
there'll be some dry hours in between, but I think
(01:32:22):
we'll get quite a bit more rain here over the
next couple of days, even on into the end of
the week.
Speaker 1 (01:32:28):
Okay, thank you, sir, appreciate it. There you go, rased
agent from the Weather Channel and going back to our
previous caller because it's just racking my brain. The guy
I'm thinking of in story is not Brandam and it's Brandon.
It's Jim Brannon and he's a stock provider for rodeos.
So but I'll look up who the Buck Brandiman guy is. Okay,
all right, very good. Eight forty six coming up. We'll
(01:32:52):
get a Bloomberg update and there's a kind of there's
an interesting video. I'm not one hundred percent on the
province of it, but it's fun and it purports to
show an incident between a pleasure craft and a large
naval ship. I'll play the audio for you. At the
(01:33:14):
very least, it will be instructive on why you don't
drive your little boat next to a battleship and how
that's going to work out for you. Okay, so we'll
get into that. Coming up, case O Day Radio program.
Jeff Bellinger, what's going on, sir, Good morning, Casey.
Speaker 14 (01:33:31):
The July jump at the cost of living was in
line with forecasts, and investors are okay with the numbers.
The Dow futures are up two hundred and forty three points.
The headline Consumer Price Index rose two tens percent last month.
It was up two point seven percent from July of
last year. The core CPI, which omits food and energy costs,
was up three tenths percent for the month three point
(01:33:54):
one percent year over year. President Trump extended the trade
truce with China for another ninety days. The tariff increase
that was to go into effect today is deferred until
November tenth to allow more time for negotiations. Spirit Airlines
is continuing to struggle. The carrier's warning investors it may
not make it. Spirit says it may not survive as
(01:34:15):
a going concern if it can't raise cash to satisfy creditors.
Sports fans will have a new streaming option in the fall.
Viewers will be able to bundle the ESPN direct to
consumer service with the Fox one direct to consumer offering
for forty dollars a month. This all starts October second.
Haines Brands could have a new owner soon. The Financial
(01:34:37):
Time says the Canadian company Guilden Active Wears close to
a deal to buy the American underwear maker. A deal
would reportedly value Haines Brands at about five billion dollars,
and this case might be something to look into if
you seldom turn on the television. Sling TV has launched
a day pass. It allows instant access to all of
(01:34:58):
the sports and other programs on its platform for five dollars,
good for twenty four hours. There's also a ten dollars
weekend pass and a fifteen dollars week pass. Sling says
this new package is rolling out just in time for
football season.
Speaker 1 (01:35:12):
Casey, you know it's it's really smart. I can't tell
you the number of times where I've been looking for
a sporting event through all the streaming stuff I have,
and because I don't have regular cable and like it's
Fubo and Sling or your options, but you had to
sign up for the whole thing. So they're gonna I
think they're gonna make a killing with sports Runner on
the court, especially on the college football games. It could
(01:35:33):
be hard to find if you're traveling. So all right,
very well, we'll see. How donty much, Jeff, I appreciate
a good day. Yeah, I like that when a company
actually listens to consumers. So we'll see. By the way,
I don't know if you guys saw this, if you're
into MMA, did you see the deal that they just
did No more pay per view, no more pay per
well and the individual pay per view. They they just
(01:35:56):
struck a deal. This will start. I think it's next year,
but to check. But yeah, they struck a deal with Paramount,
so CBS, if you got Paramount Plus app, you can
watch all the UFC stuff. Man, that's gonna be awesome.
Love it, love it, love it. So there's a couple
of good things entertainment wise. All right, So I saw
(01:36:18):
this incident yesterday and it purports to show a small
pleasure craft coming within five hundred yards, which is generally
that's how far you need to stay away from a
large naval vessel out just outside of Norfolk. And you
know if you boat, you know, you don't approach these.
And people go, well, what's the problem with the small
(01:36:38):
naval vessel? Well then you don't know the USS coal. Okay,
that's how they got the USS coal. Basically, a small
boat that was rigged with explosives hit it while it
was refueling there near Yemen, I guess, and that's what
killed all those people. Blue a giant holes. They don't
they don't mess around, and some say it's a training exercise,
but there is no disagreement that this is the process
(01:37:01):
for it. And I just I thought the audio was
really funny. All right, check this out, Kavin, all through your.
Speaker 11 (01:37:09):
Board immediately up to defend the measures. But the US,
he said, they pretty showed it in the bigger faith
lead run it too, may can.
Speaker 1 (01:37:18):
You drop the James Brenton and the boat's don't listening, responding, well, I.
Speaker 11 (01:37:26):
Like that way better. More more better, I need you
to turn outbound immediately. You were, indeeding an art security building.
Speaker 1 (01:37:41):
Somewhere over box shot all right, that means flares, Captain,
I needed.
Speaker 11 (01:37:50):
To turn outbound immediately, players out us. I don't know
if I can listen to you anymore. Outbound immediately and
acting my security zonner. You be the measures. What is
this the bit of measure thing?
Speaker 6 (01:38:06):
Mean?
Speaker 1 (01:38:06):
What are you saying by that?
Speaker 3 (01:38:08):
Whiskey with you?
Speaker 11 (01:38:09):
Whiskey?
Speaker 1 (01:38:10):
Whoa man?
Speaker 9 (01:38:11):
Come on?
Speaker 1 (01:38:11):
Come on? All right, so whiskey, whiskey, whiskey. The weapons, weapons, weapons,
all right, that's and so what they do. The second
thing is now they're going to put tracer rounds fifty
cal tracer rounds over your bower in front of your
boat or wherever. And you notice those when they're going
(01:38:35):
by