Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I saw an interesting video yesterday where they're trying to
break down kind of the you know, we call Linus's
session in the US, right, so if something happens to Trump,
you go to dvance and then you got the Speaker and
the Senate majority and Cabinet members and all that stuff.
And it was very interesting to the point where I'm like,
(00:23):
all right, I gotta go see if somebody else says this,
So I go watch another podcast. This is like literally
an hour of my life yesterday. How did the transition
of power happen there? And for those of you who
don't know, there are thirty one thirty or thirty one.
(00:48):
Apparently there's some dispute over this states in Iran and
one of the things that was put into motion prior
to him getting you know, turned to missed. The Supreme
Leader essentially had a plan where each of these states
(01:12):
essentially ruled themselves in the event of his death via
military attack, which complicates things. You know, Trump yesterday said
it was bridge day, it was electrical power day, We're
going to go do these things, and now they say
(01:34):
that they have a In fact, let me this's the
APS article. Let me read the exact quote. Here. Iran
Supreme National Security Council has accepted a two week cease fire,
and then Trump posted something on truth. I honestly, I
(01:58):
really wish this guy would just tweet. I know it's
his thing, but whatever. So the APM deadline last night
for I ran to open the Strait of Horbe Mouze
came and went. But just prior to a reported pro
regime Iranians had earlier gathered as human shields around power
(02:20):
plants anticipating Trump's infrastructure Tuesday. However, the Supreme National Council
said that was just patriotic citizens gathering doing their own thing. Weird,
a lot of women and children. But even though that
(02:42):
was going on, they would happily accept a two week
ceasefire in the war and begin negotiations with the US
in islamis Bad beginning Friday. So I don't know why
we have to wait till Friday, but we're going to
wait till Friday. But the translation of their message basically
(03:04):
reads it is emphasized that this does not signify the
termination of war. Our hands remain upon the trigger, and
should the slightest air be committed by the enemy, it
will be met with full force. So he didn't destroy
(03:25):
a civilization. He didn't do the war crime thing. I
know you all were, I mean most of you not,
but most of the world of journalism were oddly rooting
for it. I don't even know how to describe the
coverage yesterday. He didn't do any of the things. He
did the thing that I kind of assumed that thing
(03:47):
was intended to do, and that is make them pick
up the phone. Now, going back to what I just mentioned,
where this plan, this do aster plan basically said, if
you know, some enemy comes in and annihilates the Ayahtola,
(04:09):
we're going to go ahead and basically push it out
to thirty one or thirty states so that it can't
be infiltrated. And it's all written around Israel. By the way.
The reasoning behind that is they recognize that Israel has
infiltrated a lot of things, probably a lot more than
(04:32):
they even realize, and so by pushing the power, that's
why you hear this council thing, pushing the power out
to the individual states. Even if Israel gets you know,
ten of them, they still got twenty of them where
they haven't infiltrated leadership. Although I don't know like literally
(04:53):
the dude who was in charge of looking for Israeli
spies was an Israeli spy. So no saying, but yeah, yeah,
I didn't know what today was gonna be when we
woke up this morning as far as the news cycle goes,
because we were hitting carg Island. You had the people
(05:16):
that were in the big circle around the power plants there,
and then you can't really do anything because shockingly it's
women and children mostly, which is great because you know,
Iran is very progressive getting the women and kids out
there first. And by the way, it is a tactic
(05:37):
that is specifically specifically mentioned going back to the war
crimes thing in the list of war crimes right for
the Geneva Conventions. Yeah, you can't put kids and well,
(05:58):
you can't put civilians, let alone kids and women in burkas.
You can't put civilians surrounding targets that you don't want
to get struck militarily. I know Hamas has a big
day of it. Clearly Iran was like they had. They
there's videos posted of like Iranian generals going, do you
(06:20):
want your son to be a man? Come on down
to the power plant protest and circle up and Remember
the videos you're seeing of those that hit the internet yesterday,
those are all Iranian videos, meaning specifically the IRGC cause
(06:43):
they've cut internet for like forty days now. So I
don't know if those women all in their brain because
you can't see their facial expressions. I don't know if
there's guns pointed at them or what's going on. Man.
But yeah, crazy day. Thankfully our troops didn't have to
go in there and do something like that. And it's
(07:06):
not new, right, this is the Japanese did this when
we were we were felling islands. Put the women and
children out in front of the caves so we didn't
essentially blow up all the caves they were hiding in.
So old tactic, but yeah, technically a war crime. And
uh people, oh well, we're Trump bent the knee. I honestly,
(07:34):
I think the whole thing yesterday, you know, the truth
or the tweet or whatever you want to call it,
was all designed for this. Now. I don't trust Iran.
We're not even going to start negotiating until Friday. Last negotiation. Remember,
their opening salvo was we're right on the cusp of
(07:55):
eleven nukes and if we why would we give those
up and that's you know, that was widely reported. So
it'll be very interesting here at the end of the
week to see what their terms are. All right, eight
eight eight nine three four seven eight seventy four. What
is this? M Oh yes, yes, absolutely. The Part three
(08:20):
contest is today, dude. It's Master's week. It's one of
the best weeks out there, you know, potential war notwithstanding,
we're going to have good weather for it. I will
tell you it is a betting nightmare. A betting nightmare,
(08:41):
you have no sub five hundred odds. It's a why
Scottie Scheffler is clearly the favorite obviously, just the guy,
you know, number one golfer playing great golfs. Masters actually
probably appreciates it because they don't have to be as
showy as the other tournaments. But it's a wide open field.
(09:03):
So yeah, super excited about that. But I thought I
should probably you the Iran thing first, so that's where
we start. But don't worry. We got quasi amnesty and
defund the police and all sorts of insanity. Plus we'll
chat with Congressman Brad Not But picked a horrible day
(09:24):
to come on the radio because all this crap. But
that'll be an A and O five. So six seventeen,
stick around cac O Day radio program, the News and
Observer wr L, others, all our Iranians on, you know,
ont of some sort of weird watch party, waiting to
(09:45):
see if Trump murders everybody in Iran. I'm gonna be
honest with you. And I got asked about this almost
immediately after the here's the deal. Bye, We're gonna make
a deal. I know he's on true social I'm gonna
say tweets, Okay, I'm not going to ban about its
(10:06):
tweets because they just then retweeted on the forty seven accounts,
so whatever. So anyway, like literally within moments of Trump,
like civilization will end. I had people like, oh my gosh,
he's gonna murder ninety million Iranians. There was zero moments
where I ever even gave it a thought that he
(10:27):
would murder everybody in Iran.
Speaker 2 (10:29):
There were people actually nervous yesterday, which boggles my mind.
And I talked to these people by a text or
you know, yesterday after the show, and I'm like, these
people are actually really concerned and they think something's going
to happen. Do you know how much mental energy I
put into thinking about Iran yesterday after the show.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
Absolutely, hold on, hold on? Was it equal to or
lesser than what you wanted for dessert after dinner? Uh? Less?
Oh that's what I thought. Yeah, you know none.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
Yeah, because we've watched this guy since twenty fifteen. Right
at this point, if you still don't understand how he operate,
do you think he's going to tell you, yes, I'm
gonna bomb this place. At this time, they thought he
was gonna nuke to run. I don't astounding. How does that?
How does that compute in your brain? After eleven years
or whatever it's been. I don't understand it.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
What was the what was the whole thing during the
first term? Don't look at what he says, look at
what he does? Right? And I maybe got lost in
translation during the Biden years. A lot of stuff got lost,
like Biden during those four years. But uh yeah, at
no point did I think he was gonna Hiroshima Tehran? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (11:46):
And somebody text me and they're like a big news
day today, question Mark and I'm like, no, nothing's gonna happen.
And he's like, I don't know, it's not what I'm
here and you know, I mean that's not true.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
I finally got the the cables, I or oh nice, Yeah,
so I can literally like re rig my little home
studio things. So like if you transport yourself into my
house yesterday, like Fly on the Wall watching, Wait, can
I teleport like the guy?
Speaker 2 (12:12):
Okay, you are absolutely no time consumed or put into
Iran and Trump at.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
All at all? What Lofton wasn't like greatly concerned about this?
What was he doing? No, no stress? What was he doing?
Just laying there smiling, being adorable?
Speaker 2 (12:29):
But no point am I thinking yesterday it's gonna be
like fallout. We're all gonna be living in vaults and
it's gonna be like super mutants, and it's gonna Trump's
gonna you know, turn the world to glad. At no
point because I have a functioning brain, right and you know,
I somewhat understand how you didn't. Do you think Trump
wants to be the guy he wants his legacy to
(12:49):
be that he's the guy that started World War three?
Speaker 1 (12:53):
Do you use the nuke again? Yeah? Yeah? Would you?
This brings up an important question. Would you rather be
in a vault or out? You know, out? Just make
it a work outside. No one what we know about
Fallout the TV show.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
Oh and I want to be like a vault dweller
or b in the wasteland because like some of them
vaults are yeah.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
I mean, they all have something weird going on, right,
But I one the Canadian Chick runs, I don't want
to be there.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
I mean, my experience from the game is I would
prefer to be a vault dweller that goes out into
the wasteland.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
But okay, but that's not the option I get in
the waste land. I don'tant to. I don't want to
live in a vault. Okay, all right? Yeah, Freedom America
AF woo Woo America hashtag. Yeah yeah, no point did
I assume that nukes were coming.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
But there really are people that were terrified and scared
yesterday that that was going to happen. And I don't
understand how that works in your brain. I I don't
understand it. And then as soon as what happened happened,
and they go, ah, Taco Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (13:58):
Which is weird, you know what, and it's it is
a weird deflection. But I agree with you because I
didn't even know Tako Tuesday was a thing until I
obsessively went through the links this morning, right, and I'm like,
this is the dumbest thing. That's a thing. I think
there's some people that are disappointed. I don't mean people
that are like Boo Iran. I mean people that are
(14:20):
Boo Trump who wanted him to do it so they
could whine about it. Which is that's that's its own thing.
Here is the statement, by the way, from Trump, based
on conversations with Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif and Phil Marshall.
(14:41):
So this is Pakistan's leadership. Phild Marshall Assim Manure. Wait, dude,
you're bro. Your last name is Manure. I get why
you're angry. I want ross. Would you want your last
name to be Manure? Hell no, AnyWho? That's probably wise
(15:03):
Field marshally shooting people wherein They requested that I hold
off the destructive force being sent tonight to Iran and
subject and subject to the Islamic Republic of Iran, agreeing
to a complete, immediate and safe opening to the Strait
(15:24):
of Hormuz. I agree to suspend the bombing an attack
of Iran for a period of two weeks. This will
be a double sided cease fire. I don't know if
I don't know how this ties in Israel though, because
it's my understanding the Lebanon's not part of this, and
that's kind of a problem for Israel night at the moment.
(15:47):
But whatever, all right, I suspend blah blah blah. The
reason for doing so is that we have already met
and exceeded all military objectives and are very far along
with definitive agreement concerning long term peace with Iran and
peace in the Middle East. We received a ten point proposal. Oh,
(16:10):
it's down from fifteen. Remember the first one was fifteen
and Iran it's like, nah, we're not gonna do that.
So I guess we're down to ten ten point proposal
from Iran and believe it is workable, a workable basis
to negotiate. So maybe they get back closer to fifteen.
I'm not going to read this whole thing, do there.
(16:35):
I guess the timeline is just two weeks, so I
don't know. I don't know. I saw the Daily Man,
of course, is reporting Iran pulled out of peace talks,
and the irony is they published that story seventeen minutes
before Trump issued a statement so clearly they have their
finger on the pulse. On behalf of the United States
(16:57):
of America as president and all so representing many countries
in the Middle East, it is an honor to have
the kingdom or the long term problem close close to resolution. Sorry,
it's in a weird font. Thank you for your attention
to this matter, which he always writes. So all right,
so we're gonna spinning wheels for two weeks is what
(17:19):
we do. This is actually very helpful because we haven't
told you. Guys. Are y'all sitting down? Everybody should be
sitting down. You get sitting down, maybe you're in the
shower and you can't sit down, Just you know, grab
on to something. We're not here next week. Ross and
I Ross is actually brokering the peace deal over in Tehran,
(17:43):
so we're sending him over there. So I'm just gonna go.
And it's you know, tax next weekend, so I'm gonna
just watch them burn my money. So it's gonna be fun.
But no, we are off the air next week. But
we're not gonna Gordon deal. You some of you may
have picked up on so you know, we we started
(18:06):
running a rather Gordon deal. We started running the what
is it called Ross Fox roundup or something. I don't
know that. I don't know what the technical name is.
But in addition to running that in Deal's position when
we are off the air, it's a it's an actual
bloviators such as myself. So but yeah, we're we're not
(18:29):
gonna be here next week, so you have to deal
with that. That's okay, we still care about you. We'll
be back the week after and and look, Trump's timed
it out perfectly for us. I would prefer we took
this week off because masters, but you know, beggars can't
be choosers. Just how it's going to go. All right,
(18:52):
you've been warned and I'll but you know, i'll post
the requisite we've not been fired stuff, but I know
we'll do any good. But just wanted to mention since
we got it all finalized yesterday. Okay, all right, wonderful,
all right, six forty what is this? Apparently Boston Paul
(19:12):
thinks he's the only person who's being assaulted by the
toll scams. I'm just wondering how it took the song. Dude,
he has sent me message after me. I was gonna
mention this yesterday, I promised you, but then I don't know.
Stuff came up.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
Dude, Dude, I've paid so many tolls over my phone
in the past week or so. Yeah, so dude, I.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
Gotta I got a toll alert from the Philippines, and
I'm like, you know, Philippines once, but that and you
thought you could get away with it, but they found you.
They do. They're very you know, it's it's a brave
new world. So yeah, that stuff's all fake. So it's
all fake. But I but again, I like, that's also
(19:55):
like last year when I was getting pounded with those,
so I apparently they just moved on to Boston, Paul.
So Boston Paul, yours are probably legit, right, ross, right
because ours were last year when.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
Really, you know, check with the groc in Boston. Paul's
there really is. Yeah, you can probably he probably should
pay those. Actually here, do do this, tally it up.
Speaker 1 (20:17):
Send the money to the station. Russe will handle it
for you. You don't even have to you don't have
to deal with them. Just set in cash. We need
cash so we can facilitate.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
Uh, you know, you not you know, it's best. It's
easiest to make the payment online if you have cash.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's why we give it to you.
And then you're gonna handle it right, totally. You're gonna
handle it completely. Yeah. Yeah, that's a service we're willing
to do for you because we care. So send all
the monies. Yeah, I got one, second one and most
of it. It's just like Florida. I can't. I can't
(20:54):
even by the way, you know, there's a feature on
the phone ross are you Yeah, yeah, yeah, I was
just about to bring this up cause go ahead, go ahead.
I found it the other day. Yes, yeah, no.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
So now if you have like the recent update in
your iPhone, right, you go to your text messages and
there's like three lines in the right hand corner, like
blue lines, and you touch that. Now there's a spam
folder and that's where all of my like, hey you
os money things went.
Speaker 1 (21:19):
Oh no, no, not all. So that's one thing I
thought you were going to say the other thing too.
So you know, there's a feature now, and I have
a turn on on my phone, so if you call
my phone, well, if you call my phone, it'll be
fine because you're in my context. So there's a feature
on the iPhone that if you're not in the context,
and you call the phone, it doesn't ring. You get
(21:39):
a thing asking you to verify who you are, and
then they'll check with me. I've only had it come
through once. I have not had a spam call since
I implemented that. I have had a very frustrated salesperson
who was a new salesperson who I did not have
in my little contact list with that number, but otherwise
(22:02):
works like a charm. It's great. Are you aware of
this ross. I've heard about it, yes, but I haven't
put it into action. Dude, you need to make it happen.
I know. If there's one person besides me who wants
to not get phone calls more is probably raw. He's
(22:25):
not a fan of that. Wait, hold on, what is this.
Speaker 2 (22:28):
Well, I'm at the point now. So Lincoln's on spring
break and he plays her on my phone a lot.
He likes making videos and movies and cartoons and stuff
and making lists and so like, he had my phone
for I don't know a long time yesterday, and it
gives me a great reason to be like, and no,
I did not get your call because I did not
have my phone.
Speaker 1 (22:46):
Oh, that's a wonderful loophole. Man, I should have a
kid just for.
Speaker 2 (22:50):
That, and I'll just yell into the other room like
I'm like, buddy, He's like, yeah, mine, Did I get
any text messages? He's like no, all right, there you
go like once an hour, I do that like a
personal assistant.
Speaker 1 (23:01):
It really is. Yeah, no more ping. Now you got
Lincoln perfect.
Speaker 2 (23:07):
He's been kind of bored on break. I was thinking
about bringing him into the for like the show, to
hang out just like over here on the phone or
on his switch.
Speaker 1 (23:15):
You brought him in one day once, didn't you.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
I mean, he's been in here in a weekend when
we're not doing the show, but he's never been in.
Speaker 1 (23:19):
I know, you brought him in after the show. Yeah,
never during a show. Did you see the Sports Center
guy brought his kid in for National Autism Day? I know,
I am surprised. I honestly, I didn't send it to
you because I just assumed one hundred people send it
to you. So he brought his He brought his kid
in and let him talk about how much he sounds
(23:43):
like Lincoln. He's the same age, roughly, he sounds like Lincoln,
like he's all about drawing McNuggets. Boom boom boom, and
let him literally show off his drawings and kind of
explain a little segment they were doing on Sports Center.
It was very dusty in the room and watching that, man,
I am blown away. You didn't get that. I'll send
(24:04):
you a link to that. But yeah, bring him, Man,
he can scring calls. That'd be amazing, especially the angry
calls right when he yell, because I'm assuming he's very
positive when he interacts with people.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
For the most part, it depends if he interacts with them.
There's a good chance he's not going to interact. Well,
I could make call screening.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
Difficult, but yeah, it's yeah, I'm all for that. So again,
going back, We're not here next week, but yeah, Lincoln's
on the super break because he's on the year round schedule.
When does he go back next We leave on the
twentieth twenty Good lord, man, Yeah, they got me thinking, like,
(24:48):
do I want to be Would a year round schedule
have been better as a kid. I mean, don't get
me wrong, summer break was amazing, but he gets what
he gets four of these three week breaks.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
Right, His winter break is actually longer than his summer break. Really, Yeah,
his winter break was just so long, and then it's
like three months later he's got like another month off.
Speaker 1 (25:14):
What is when do they go on winter break? It
was like weeks.
Speaker 2 (25:18):
It was like, yeah, it was like halfway through December
and the entire month of January, and then I maybe
some of February. I don't even remember. It was like
super long because his summer break is only like two
or three weeks.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
See, that's a regional thing too. That is the that's
when we can assassinate animals on our property because we're
at the end of the hunters and then the season
runs till January fifteenth. And here's by the way, here's
a shocker. The best hunting is either opening week if
you're ever gonna go out west and you're gonna you know,
(25:53):
go with the outfitter that outfits on their own property,
or that lasts like two weeks. That the first two
weeks of the year, all the elk are like next
to the house because there's so much snow, right, so
they just keep coming down like like I've had to
like drive around them leaving the house to go. You're
(26:13):
not walking anywhere. So if you're lazy and you want
to whack an elk. That's a good time of the
year to do it. But if it's all about horns
for you, maybe not, because you know, any of the
big bulls in a particular herd, if they have a
lot of hunters, might have been whacked or shwhacked. I
guess is the word the Pentagon uses. So now a
(26:34):
little pro tip for you right there, all right, six
forty seven here on the Kcoday radio program, and my
email just all the messages, everything just disappeared, probably because
I was trying to read this email from Boston, Paul.
So I don't know what's up, but I'll fix it
you right back. Hang on, I'm telling you, I'm reading
(26:55):
some of the reactions to basically the nothing Burger a
Taco Tuesday, if you will. That was yesterday, and I
was going to re reiterate this point Ross and I
say on this, at no point from the moment Trump
tweeted what he tweeted about civilization to I guess this
moment right now, did I ever assume he was going
(27:18):
to do something like, you know, New Tehran or you know,
some super duper war crime. Never crossed my mind, because
it's here, This is this is who he is.
Speaker 2 (27:29):
It's just Yeah, at no point yesterday did I even
get give it any really thought or concern or I
wasn't nervous. It was not even in my brain yesterday.
And the reason is this isn't the first Trump term.
It's not like he's just in office and he's kind
of for me anyway. There's a matter of trust there
where I know it's going to be all right because
there's a track record there, there's a history. I could
(27:50):
understand it. But this was the first like year of
a Trump term, and you're concerned about how this is
going to go. But at this point, if you've been
consistently wrong about everything and you still don't, I mean,
you need to reassess everything in your life because this
is a massive This has been a massive IQ test.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
If you're in the media and your job is to
report on this guy and you don't have the ability
to evaluate, yeah, at this point, that's problematic.
Speaker 2 (28:12):
If if you were this wrong yesterday about this thing,
which was so obvious what was going to happen, that
nothing was going to happen, right, you need to reassess
everything in your life because you're probably wrong about a
lot of things a lot of the time because this
was a no brainer. Yeah, this was why would you
say that, Why would you stress it all yesterday? Be like,
oh my, it's gonna be the end of civilization and
(28:33):
it's gonna be the end of he's gonna bomb ninety
million Iranians and he's a crazy person. No he's not.
But you're wrong consistently and you need to look in
the mirror and admit it.
Speaker 1 (28:42):
I was looking at the reaction from Washerman Schultz, the
Florida congresswoman former DNC had I feel like she's upset
he didn't.
Speaker 3 (28:53):
No.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
Really weird because they're so elite, like aligned and loyal
to the party. They put part party in front of country.
They put the Democratic Party in front of the country.
They want the war, they want the nukes, and they
want economic collapse because then their party gets back in power.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
It is illusional. One. Oh, and I was looking at
some of the police.
Speaker 4 (29:16):
Dude.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
The funniest thing yesterday was watching I haven't seen you
know what. I hadn't even looked up the results. There
was this weird thing in the media yesterday where they're like,
maybe the Democrat has a chance to fill Marjorie Taylor
green Seat, who is a lunatic. And I would just
point out on this show, we always thought she was
a lunatic, even when she first got in And I
(29:40):
said that woman's a lunatic, and some of you sent
me very hateful messages as what to point out. I
was right. AnyWho, But she's in like a plus three
thousand Republican district like or the Democrat could have a
chance there. So let's just see how that house race
(30:01):
fared yesterday. Again. I even forgot to look it up.
I was so non concerned about it. House raised Georgia results.
Tell me what we got here?
Speaker 2 (30:17):
Uh ah?
Speaker 1 (30:22):
Google is just the worst man? Why did they alway
every single This is the problem with Google and in
kind of with Twitter too. The amount of times I
get served paywall stories is so frustrating. You have to
assume all of that rosster you sitting down? Are you
(30:44):
grab the handles your churir? No, No, I'm gonna go prone? Okay, yeah,
go prone?
Speaker 5 (30:48):
All right?
Speaker 1 (30:49):
All right? Wait, why are you holding the sword? Don't
hold the sword. That's dangerous. All right, all right, there
you go. Republican one in the plus thirty six R
plus three or excuse me, R plus three seven district. Yeah. Uh,
now they didn't cover the point spread if you want
(31:10):
to get into the gambling side of it. So there's that.
But uh yeah, that was that was big nothing Burger.
A fast food restaurant employee initially turned down a reward
from a man who left nearly ten thousand dollars in
cash in the bathroom of the Chick fil A in Kingston.
(31:31):
Jaden Centrone Centron Centrone, I don't know, I apologize, said
he was taking his usual break when he found two
white envelopes. The envelopes were labeled two different banks, so
they were cash deposits. And you know, this guy came in.
I guess he used the bathroom there and they fell
out of his pocket. I don't know. I feel like
(31:55):
and I carry cash, but if I'm carrying that much cash,
I'm doing bought checks on the regular. But anyway, the
eighteen year old, when when he found the envelopes, one
with five thousand dollars, the other with four three hundred
and thirty dollars thirty three dollars, excuse me, I said,
he didn't even think of keeping it. He said, that's
(32:18):
not what Jesus would have done. Check this out.
Speaker 6 (32:21):
Kinston Police say on Friday, almost ten thousand dollars in
cash was left in the restaurant's mints restroom beside the toilet.
Centron walked into the stall during his break like he
always does and saw the cash. Then I just picked
it up and I brought it to human resources. The
money was inside two envelopes when he found it. I
asked him why he didn't just keep the money. But
that's not what Jesus would have done. That's not what
God would have wanted. Money is useless without character. Kinston
(32:45):
Police Chief Keith goy Yet said it's amazing that Centron
did what he knew was right.
Speaker 1 (32:48):
A lot of people will unfortunately take that money and
run with it.
Speaker 3 (32:52):
But kudos to that employee at Chick fil A definitely
deserves an award.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
Well pro tip, you don't want to run that a
little suspicious, but he can walk, you know, quickly. But dude,
it's the whole meme, man, it's the whole. It's the
fast food meme. Right go to McDonald's and like I'll
kill your children, and then you go to Chick fil
A and they're like, have a nice day. It's just um, yeah,
(33:20):
good on this dude, and then to turn down initially
turned down a reward, he did accept one. Finally after
this got a little little pub here. Goyet, who is
wait hold on kin simply Chief Keith Goyett. That's who
you heard in the little audio there. Goyett said. The
owner of the money came forward to claim the ninety
(33:42):
eight one hundred plus dollars. Cintron said the man offered
him a five hundred dollars reward for his good deed,
but he declined, telling the man he expected no reward
for doing what his faith told him was right. Here's
the problem with the story. And you're like, what's the
problem with the story? Here's the problem I was. I
(34:04):
happen to see this story on Twitter and Ross, what
do you think the recommendation the Twitter comments was for
this dude when he found probably take the money, yeah yeah.
And then it was also because like, ah, screw, it's
probably some white guy's money, was the first comment. Shut up.
Speaker 2 (34:25):
I don't know, man, I'm so scarred from like if
I'm in like a bathroom, like a Chicken Place bathroom
and I find like a bunch of cash, I immediately
think like breaking back Gus Fring or no country, frilled men,
And I'd be terrified to take that money. I would
I wouldn't be able to sleep at night. I'd be like,
there's some dude with a bad haircut, Like, there's some
dude with a bad haircut and barefoot is going to
(34:45):
show up my door with a silent shotgun and it's
gonna be bad. I ain't taking that money the guy.
Speaker 1 (34:50):
But Gus Fring's fine, right, everything worked out? Uh? Why
are you quiet?
Speaker 4 (34:55):
What? No?
Speaker 2 (34:56):
I'm saying? I listen, I'm just traumatized. I've learned my lesson.
I'm not taking that. I would automatically assume like this
is like drug money.
Speaker 1 (35:02):
It's a trick.
Speaker 2 (35:03):
Yeah, ye, yeah yeah, there's just something checking every dollar for,
like some sort of homing device like a beacon. I'm
like that dude's gonna find me and kill me and
no thanks and pass on that.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
Well, also, maybe you could not take it because it's
not the right thing to do. Well, yeah that as well.
Speaker 2 (35:19):
But also the ball, the weird guy with the haircut
in the and the bare feet in the shotgun, it's
on the shotgun. It's it's another reason, but also because.
Speaker 1 (35:28):
It's the only one. Yeah, I think I think that's
a you thing right there. Let's see. So he did
get a reward. I don't see what the reward was.
Did he take the whole five hundred? He did? Good
for him and good for the guy who left it. Good,
you know, good on everybody there. I So I went
(35:49):
to I went on a golf trip to the Caribbean,
to the Bahamas many many years ago, and we were
at We're not at Nasa, we were at one of
the other islands, and they have a casino in this
hotel resort thing. We said. It was a bunch of
(36:09):
just a bunch of dudes from Raleigh, and so we
go there and lo and behold, Apparently I was very
good at three card poker. I was really inebriated, but
I won like eight hundred bucks on you know, I
walked in with a hundrow and I don't even remember
walking out with eight hundred, but whatever, And I zipped
(36:32):
it in a jacket pocket and flew back literally the
next day from the golf trip. It was our last
night there, and I went to the Bison. Some of
you may know that bar. It's kind of close to
my house and had you know, had a couple of
drinks whatever, and I had I literally left my jacket
(36:55):
there with eight hundred dollars in the zip pocket. So
I get I happened to know one of the managers there,
so I get a text the next morning that like
super early, I think he was probably still up and
I was freaking out the whole thing, and he's like, yeah,
one of our waitresses grab we looked through it to
see a jacket it was, and have any id any
of that, but I remember seeing you in it and
(37:18):
all of that. I tried to give like the staff
one hundred of the eight hundred dollars, the two who
were in there, I'm like, just split it up. I'm
so sorry, I'm so stupid. They wouldn't take it, and
I don't know. These are the things that make me
kind of feel good about society still, because reading all
those Twitter things made me feel not good about society, Like,
(37:39):
oh man, that's one person's if you really like Jesus,
that's Jesus giving you the money.
Speaker 4 (37:45):
Is it.
Speaker 6 (37:47):
Is that?
Speaker 2 (37:47):
So I was up with lofton this morning at like
twelve thirty one o'clock in the morning, feeding him right. Yeah,
And I like watching the old Unsolved Mysteries.
Speaker 1 (37:56):
Yes, in the morning. It's just for some reason that's
become a routine. So I'm watching them.
Speaker 2 (38:00):
This episode and this takes place in like nineteen ninety
or something about a guy who comes out he hears
like a big bang in his backyard, and he goes
in his backyard and there's ten thousand dollars in cash
just he just laying it like on his roof and
you know, in his yard, and it fell from the sky.
And the guy is like, you know, I did what
I was supposed to do. I called the police, you know,
(38:20):
because I didn't know if it was drug money or something.
And you know, he had an ad in the paper
for ninety days. Hey I found this money, call me
for details. Ninety days went by. He got to keep
the money. But the entire time, even back then, people
were like, no, take the money, keep the money.
Speaker 1 (38:32):
Yeah, yeah, I thought that Jesus saying, oh, well, Jesus
wants you to have it. I'm like, I don't know.
I think there's a whole story about temp table. Yeah,
I know that's what they were saying.
Speaker 2 (38:41):
Though they were saying it was like money from heaven
like it just fell from the sky, like you know
God sent you that money?
Speaker 1 (38:47):
Did he did?
Speaker 4 (38:48):
He?
Speaker 1 (38:48):
Though? I don't know about that, dude, speaking of things
falling from the sky. Did you see that video? I
can't remember if I sent it to you at the prep.
So I have a lot of questions. So down in
Florida they had and somebody said, can I post it
on Twitter that their church and Raleigh did this too.
They're in a big field right and then they are
(39:10):
dropping I don't know if it's from a crane or what.
They're dropping thousands of Easter eggs, and so all the
kids are getting ready so they can all run, you know,
just mayhem up to the Easter eggs. But a little
boy runs and gets away from his mom and is
standing where they're about to drop a thousand Easter eggs
(39:31):
off an elevated position, and luckily some woman swoops in
there and grabs him. She kind of got pelted a
little because the drop was coming. Who thought that was
a good idea? Also, what an interesting way to meet Jesus?
Do you know what I'm saying. You get up there
and you're like, oh, hey, what happened? Buddy? Hey, so
(39:56):
you know the thing we do for you. Yeah, you're
like at your big event. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah,
and then you have to explain that we do eggs
and then we have a rabbit and then get over
that awkwardness. Yeah. So so I post that story, and
then somebody said that a church and Raleigh. I don't
(40:18):
it's their church or a church, but a church and
Raleigh did that at one of the schools. They essentially
rented the field so they could have their big Easter
thing and they dropped it from a helicopter, like thousands
of eggs. So that's that sounds like the worst idea
ever because not only is gravity propelling the eggs to
(40:39):
the ground, you got rotor washed too, right, You have
this immense downward stream of air from the helicopter, like
that's a bunch of missiles and you got a bunch
of kids standing there. That sounds like eighties.
Speaker 2 (40:55):
All right, really dumb question where they like real eggs
or like the like the eggs you put stuff into
the realistic plastic eggs.
Speaker 1 (41:02):
Okay, yeah, yeah yeah, but still so and again I
don't know the video I saw was a helicopter because
it never really you just see them coming from the sky.
It looks like it probably dump dumped from a crane
or something to put it up there and then released it.
But the helicopter thing just served me for a loop because,
(41:23):
like one that's not cheap. Are you gonna get a helicopter?
You do all that stuff, like, I don't know if
that's the best expenditure of a church's money. Is what
I'm driving at. Because you can just keep the kids
in the parking lot and then like ten adults can
go with a hundred of plastic eggs, you know, like
(41:46):
a bag and just spread it around a thing. But
whatever you do, you but yeah, some kid almost met
his maker because he got a little full enthusiastic over
the Easter egg hung videos on are twin count at
Casey on the radio. You want to want to pop
down and see that, all right, speaking of kids, Gavin,
(42:09):
I honestly I didn't know much about Gavin Newsom's wife,
and I kind of wish that had stayed that way.
She but she is, to use Trump's favorite term, yes,
two days ago she's from Central casting as the super
liberal forty something suicidal empathy person. Right. She also killed
(42:37):
her sister. Did you guys know that. I did not
know that. Now, I don't think that when you hear
the story, saying that in that way is probably disingenuous.
She was seven. I guess she attempted to pilot a
golf cart. She ran over her sister. Tragic. I don't
assign blame there. She's seven. That's not what my problem was.
(43:03):
She took that story and they sent her up to
one of the prisons in California, and she was speaking
to juvenile offenders who had been convicted of really heinous stuff.
Right they were transitioning into the adult prison. They had
committed murders, most of them. And I just I just
(43:28):
want you to hear this because it's so insane.
Speaker 7 (43:32):
Here we go, that had to be very raw.
Speaker 8 (43:34):
When we interviewed the young men who were juvenile offenders
in San Quentin, I told them about my own loss
where I lost my older sister a few days for
my seventh birthday, and I blamed myself for her death.
Speaker 1 (43:50):
And I share that. She doesn't elaborate on the story,
but I looked it up. So that's what happened. Seven.
She had the golf cart ran over her sister. What horrible, horrible.
I feel bad for her. I can't imagine carrying that around,
But just understand what her situation is, because she's going
to compare it to.
Speaker 8 (44:09):
Theirs, because that they ultimately were accused of committing these
violent crimes and sentenced for life. And I think it
shocked them that this you know, blonde lady who was
you know, the interviewing them, had a similar story. But
she perhaps in the wrong place at the wrong time,
(44:30):
and but wasn't punished the way they were because.
Speaker 9 (44:33):
Clearly it was an accident.
Speaker 8 (44:34):
But theirs was probably an accident too, was So anyway,
I share that just because I guess, you know, I
quite enjoy spending time with people and being real and
unmasking and showing them that it's safe to unmask themselves.
Speaker 1 (44:54):
Yeah. Rog how many people did you accidentally murder when
you were a tween? None? Thank god? But you thought
about it?
Speaker 5 (45:03):
Right? No?
Speaker 3 (45:04):
I did not?
Speaker 1 (45:06):
But you almost right? No, they almost almost not even close.
Several times again, she's seven. There is a party or something.
I don't know why they had the golf cart, It
doesn't matter. She's seven and she's excited to go somewhere,
and she doesn't know what she's doing. She hits the thing,
(45:27):
she runs over her sister. Tragic. Tragic. Do you think
the juvenile now non juvenile because they're transitioning to San
Quentin because they're eighteen, you think they all accidentally murdered
their sister with a golf car when they were seven,
Because she says most of them was probably an accident. Uh, noah, wasn't.
(45:48):
You could probably find one or two stories in there
where you could try to make a case that, you know,
the men's rea wasn't there or any of the rest.
But for the majority, what are you The people she's
talking to, they're like, see that fool, I'm gonna murder
that guy, or I'm gonna shoot that person, or I'm
gonna stab that person. A lot most of it, you know,
(46:12):
clearly within gang stuff, right. I think it was eighty
some percent of juvenile offenders who receive life sentences in
California it's gang related, according to one of the stories
I was looking at. But yeah, man, so you go
in there and they're like, ah, it's an accident. Here's
the thing. The family of the person you murdered probably
doesn't think it's an accident. Secondly, isn't part of because
(46:36):
not all of them are in for life, right, they
get you know, juvenile plus twenty years, thirty years whatever.
You got to take accountability for what she did. And
so if you've got the wife of the governor in there, going,
you probably accidentally fired that gun eight times into your
the other guy's head. I don't know that that's helpful
(46:59):
in ountability and changing your life and not wanting to
reoffend when you get out, but holy hell, I had
no idea. All right, let's see seven twenty three phone
number eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four.
There is a crazy Markway Mullen story. We'll do it next.
(47:21):
Hang on, there is a Michael Jackson biopic movie coming out.
It actually twenty fourth is the opening day of this month,
so just a couple two three weeks away. The trailer
looks really good, and the guy playing Jackson looks really good,
and that's probably because the guy playing him is his
(47:44):
actual nephew, Jaffar Jackson. And apparently that dude can sing too,
which you know is gonna be helpful here and Ross,
did you see Bohemian Rhapsody or Rocketman?
Speaker 2 (47:56):
Did you watch either of those I'm not, but mind
other is absolutely obsessed with the Bohemian Rhapsody movie. She's
seen it probably a thousand times.
Speaker 1 (48:05):
It's a good it's a really good movie. Malick or whatever.
Ronny Malley, he does a great job because like trying
to trying to be that dude just you know, a
lot of people I'm said, I probably do. Freddie Mercury
has like his mouth is all messed up. He has
(48:25):
like a bunch of extra teeth and his jaws, like
like he he kind of a freak or was a
freaking that but it allowed him this.
Speaker 2 (48:36):
Yeah, and he had some sort of weirdness going on
with his vocal cords too, that allowed him to hit
octaves that most normal human non mutants can't hit.
Speaker 1 (48:46):
There was there was I saw this in the Harry
Nielsen biopic. So a lot of people don't remember Harry Nils.
I love Harry Nielsen. Nielsen Smielsen is one of those
albums you can just throw. Yeah, I'm weird. I like
music that literally came out before I was born. Whatever.
Harry Nielsen, Ringo star and Rammy Malick literally had a
(49:09):
contest to see who could hit stuff, and Nielsen ended
up tearing his vocal cords trying to do it.
Speaker 8 (49:16):
Man.
Speaker 2 (49:17):
Yeah, and Malick apparently was able to do. That's why,
because there was a weird deformity of your thing going
on with his vocal cords. But my mom, it's so
funny hearing her talk about it, because she just stumbled
across Queen and Freddie Mercury in her seventies, like real
she had she had not only had she never heard
of him before, she would have been at her prime
(49:37):
because my mother had two was raising two daughters on
her own, and then I came along, and she was
focused on family. And absolutely she never even knew that
Live Aid was a thing. She was unaware of it
until that movie came out, and then she now she's
like the biggest Freddie Mercury fan on the planet. She
has like cardboard cutouts of frek Freddie Mercury t shirts.
Speaker 1 (50:00):
Books. Well, she don't tell her what happened, She's well aware,
but she was completely oblivious to the fact of, like
what of Queen being a thing while Queen was a thing,
because she was so focused on family. It makes me
rethink the criticism of those stupid YouTube channels where they're
like fifteen. They're like, I've never heard.
Speaker 2 (50:17):
Audio speed because it was so funny talking.
Speaker 1 (50:20):
She's like, have you heard of Freddie Mercury and Queen?
Speaker 4 (50:24):
What?
Speaker 2 (50:25):
Yeah, I saw this movie because she's at the old school,
like cable. So they were playing Bohemian Rhapsody, the edited
TV version because it's not the HBO version or whatever,
over and over and over, and she she taped it
and she watches it on her VHS and she's.
Speaker 1 (50:41):
Just like, I love Queen Freddie. Freddie mrcury is the
most adorable man ever live. Yeah, he would he wouldn't
have been into you. Yeah. Yeah, it's so funny. How
you just because that you know, nowadays it's it's easy
for musicians just due to longevity is just not a
(51:01):
thing anymore.
Speaker 2 (51:02):
Well, i'll give you an example where I saw Queen
was Well, ever, i'll give.
Speaker 1 (51:06):
You an example.
Speaker 2 (51:07):
So it's the same thing that I'm so focused on
family and work that sort of I slipped. I'm not
paying attention to popular hours of sleep again, well, even
before Lofton was born, because focusing on family and Lincoln's
autism and work, that's where my priorities are. So I
remember recently, you know, I had a live event at
the Aluminum Company, right, oh, did this broadcast there?
Speaker 1 (51:30):
And I was with our young.
Speaker 2 (51:33):
Promo girl helping, yeah, and like our computer whiz, and
she started talking about Billie Eilish And now Billie Eilish
is a pretty big musical, you know, performer, and she's like,
what's your favorite Billie Eilish song? And I'm like, I
cannot name one, and I've never heard a Billie Eilish song.
So it's a very similar thing to what my mother
went through at the time.
Speaker 1 (51:53):
With Queen, where she had never heard of it before.
Speaker 2 (51:56):
Never Now, I'm sure she had heard at sporting events,
are watching shows, you know, we will rock you and
stuff like that, but it didn't click in her brain
as to what that was.
Speaker 1 (52:03):
Yeah, no, that's fair, although I would say also the
you know, we have too many choices. Now we have
too many choices. You can you can stream so much music.
Whereas when Queen was in their prime and your mom
was in her family prime, everything was much more regimented, right,
(52:25):
So the stations all had their rotates, and you know
that's where you're gonna probably sample music was on radio.
Still were people sample music, but you didn't have a
thousand options. That's crazy that she was able to. Yeah,
she discovered Queen in like at the age of seventy.
Well good for her, man, dude, you know that's fine.
Speaker 4 (52:45):
I do.
Speaker 1 (52:46):
I love music. I clearly we don't do music here
on the show very often, but uh and I love
like finding some old band and then getting back into
their back catalog and figuring it out. You guys will
laugh at me. One of the bands. I'll give you
an example. This is many years ago, and now I
(53:06):
have a crap ton of their songs on my playlist
that I use to ignore people with. And that's Little Feet,
a lot of you know, the only thing most people
know about Little Feet is Dixie Chicken, because I think
that was their biggest hit. And like, this is a band,
by the way, that has been going on for decades,
(53:28):
and yet nobody's been there the whole time. Like they
just keep swapping out people and it just keeps banging away.
And they have this album called Representing the Mambo. I
know it sounds weird. I can put that thing on.
They got a song in there called Angenoux. It's fantastic.
So what a prize to get the whole Queen catalog
(53:52):
later in life to be able to sample it for
the first time. Man, that's amazing, all right. So going
back to the Jackson thing, they were gonna do this
kind of well, you know that movie Bohemian Rhapsody if
you haven't seen it, kind of opens in that same way.
So it opens with the ending. You know, Live Aid
is the ending. The bands back together, they're rushing out
(54:14):
on stage, so you have that momentary open and then
they get into the backstory of how Freddie Mercury ended
up joining the band at some pub, and you know,
the rest is history, and then they end at Live Aid.
So the Michael Jackson movie, which I still want to
watch this initially was going to open with Michael standing
(54:36):
outside his home there at Neverland Ranch up in Sennez
and you just see a stream of police vehicles rolling in,
right and that, and they were going to address then
in the the third act of that movie, that era
of Michael Jackson, right with the allegations, the settlements, the
court hearings, all of that stuff. Well, they ended up
(55:00):
having to reshoot the entire final third of the movie
because in one of those settlements back in nineteen ninety three.
Let make sure I have the you're right. One of
the accusers, his name is Jordan Chandler. He had a
clause in that settlement. I don't know why a lawyer
(55:22):
had put it in, but he put it in that
barred his depiction, the depiction of the alleged crimes, or
any mention in any films, movies, TV music, all of it.
And he exercised it when he heard that this movie
was happening. So they ended up having to like reshoot
(55:43):
the So what they did is they basically just figured
out how to make Michael's dad a bigger a hole,
so they have a bunch more of those scenes to
fill the time there. So now if you go watch
the movie, it doesn't mention any of that. They just
grapped the entire kid stuff out of this movie, because
I wonder how they're going to handle it, because clearly
(56:04):
that is so the way the movie ends now is
he is when he went on his tour for the
Bad Album, which I mean, you want to talking about
flying high, That's that's Pete Jackson right there. Clearly he
had some success and then he had some lows after that.
But dude, between the Bad Album The Dangerous Album. I
(56:26):
used to go to sleep to The Dangerous album on
a walk band love. I would I got that album
for Christmas one year. Yeah came out. Yeah I want
to very bad, so excited, but yeah, I saw it.
Now I think people are gonna lose their mind over Oh,
they just chose not to address it.
Speaker 3 (56:46):
Now.
Speaker 1 (56:46):
They filmed like thirty minutes of a movie and then
they had to scrap all of it. But my question is,
if you're one of these, if you're this uh Chandler
here and this thing happened to you, you say, this
thing happened to you, got a settlement the whole thing.
Wouldn't you want people to know that? That would be
(57:07):
my question because now it's not his name's not out
there right some of the news stories that are reporting this.
I don't know, man, I would think I would think
you'd want that in there, just you know, because this
thing happened to you and you want people to know,
or you want people because now you're just gonna get
You're just going to get a you know, Michael Jackson
(57:30):
in his peak, and the only drama is going to
be apparently his dad. You know, the dad son relationship
all thing's weird, man. But yeah, that opens on the
twenty four. So if you're interested, there you go. All right.
Raced Agic from Z Weather Channel is with us. Anthony, hangout.
I'm gonna get to your call here in the next segment.
(57:50):
All right, pick your horse. Who you got? Very gord
adding on the Masters this year. Oh, I haven't looked
yet Wednesday.
Speaker 7 (58:01):
I mean, right, don't have another day?
Speaker 1 (58:03):
Who do you have? Let's go with that. Have another day.
But the lines are gonna move. It's gonna be a
whole thing.
Speaker 7 (58:07):
I am traditionally the last minute person. Like even for
my basketball brackets, I was like, oh, they're doing an
hour and it was a sweet.
Speaker 1 (58:18):
By the Stagic family.
Speaker 7 (58:19):
Anyway, my wife won the men's tournament bracket in the
family and I won the women's bracket.
Speaker 1 (58:26):
So our station, our station bracket was won by somebody
who I've never heard mentioned basketball. It maybe how it happens.
Speaker 7 (58:35):
And then my wife fesked up. She actually had AI
pick her bracket. That's how that's so it is wrong.
Everybody was mad at her. But my nephew, who put
together the brackets for us, said, hey, you know what
he goes I never said and the rules you can't
use AI.
Speaker 1 (58:51):
So it's what dude. It's one of my favorite episodes.
Remember the show Coach. You watch Coach back in the day,
I did so. Uh you know his wife is she's
newscaster and for whatever reason, she has to do the
sports one night because sports guy's out, and so she
picks the She picks the team that she thinks's gonna
win based on how how much she likes their colors
(59:14):
and their uniforms. Right, it's all aesthetic, and then she
nails it. And then the whole bit is like every
week they demand that she comes out and picks, and
she keeps nailing it.
Speaker 7 (59:24):
That's what my mom does. She like, I like the
ones whose butts look good in the pants. I'm like, okay, thanks, mom,
appreciate that. Yeah, that's what she said. I like the
ones who look good in their in their pants.
Speaker 1 (59:35):
Got a cougar mom, you got running around?
Speaker 7 (59:37):
No, no, not even It's just if you knew her,
you'd be like, really, it'd be so weird coming from her,
But she like pays no real attention to it, and
she's just like I just think he's I'm like, okay,
if it works, it works, whatever works, whatever works, weather
works well. Seventies where we should be this time of year,
about sixties where we're going today. We'll get back to
(59:58):
seventy tomorrow to beautiful days coming up. The mornings will
be chilly. Tomorrow morning might be a little bit cooler
than this morning, as we'll be in the mid thirties
Tomorrow morning.
Speaker 1 (01:00:07):
Some spots could be in the low thirties.
Speaker 7 (01:00:09):
Especially in the mountains, and then forties Friday morning load
to mid seventies in the afternoon. Beauty of the weekend
with sunshine. Large area of high pressure is going to
stay in control of our weather, maybe even into next week,
as we'll be at our above eighty degrees by the
weekend and early next week. Might not see measurable rainfall
here until about the window of the eighteenth to the twentieth.
(01:00:32):
So next late next week and into next weekend may
not see much in a wave rain as deficits now
since the first of the year. Climbing let's pick Raleigh
for example, just over five inches, but about three and
a half of that is since March first, so it's
been very dry since the first of March.
Speaker 1 (01:00:48):
Yeah, no question, just keep raining on the mountains. They
want it out there, they need it, so they do.
We'll keep it up just on. All right, we'll talk
in an hour, Thank you very much. Seven forty eight.
Hang up, let me grab a quick phone call Anthony.
What's up.
Speaker 5 (01:01:06):
Russ was talking about Billy Alis and stuff, and I
know who's not knowing any of the songs. I don't either,
But well, we need to talk about as a concert
ticket prices, like I understand, Like I looked up Chris
Stable that was coming to Charlotte, and you know, like
one hundred big eight dollars for those lead seats. But
my both my kids went to a concert. My older
kids went to a concert last week or two weeks ago,
(01:01:28):
and I think it was like three Oaks or Treaty
Treaty Oak or somebody, some man I've never heard of.
And the tickets are like seventy, seventy or eighty dollars. Yeah,
it's uh, And don't get it started on moregar brawling tickets,
you know, but it's freaking ridiculous. And it's for people
you never heard of. I saw Blake's telling that the
long brass for twenty bucks.
Speaker 1 (01:01:50):
Yeah, it's it's it's it's gotten pretty crazy, man. You
know a lot of people out it's you know, it's
the Live Nation or Ticketmaster which was absorbed Live Nation,
any of the rest. But it's, uh, it's if you
want to go, if you want to go to a show,
like if you want to go to show like Walnut Creek,
you know, or you're kind of air the whole day
doing the whole thing. It's you better really like the
(01:02:12):
person you're going to see. I'll say that.
Speaker 5 (01:02:15):
So I go watch it on YouTube. I don't care.
I ain't got to be there.
Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
I don't know. Man, there's something and I will say
I take it.
Speaker 5 (01:02:23):
If you just enjoyed the media, if you just there's
going to on the radio.
Speaker 1 (01:02:27):
Yeah, but uh, I and I know it's it's it's
an opinion thing. There's something about live music though that's
just different, and it's weird because I hate being around
a bunch of people. But some of my best musical
memories or live shows, but I was working them though,
(01:02:48):
either as a stage hand when I was in college
or you know, in radio. I don't know if you
know this. We get free tickets to stuff or I
used to do an afternoon show on our alternative or
old alternative station Raleigh. So I'd have to go down
to like you know, Red Hat or whatever and do
stage announcements and introduce the band. We do some interviews
(01:03:08):
and that's fun. But like I told, I told the
one story when I was on stage, I'm a Red Hat.
I come out and who was the band? It was
like Catfish in the Bottlement or something. And I come
out there and there is nothing but like tween girls
dressed like whores, and I'm like, I have I have
(01:03:30):
aged out of this man. They don't want to see me.
I don't. I don't think their fathers wanted to see
the way they're dressed. And that was I don't have
to do that anymore. Ro's you're the same way, man,
Like that was part of the gig when you're in
music radio and I hated every minute of it. But
I loved watching live music, you know, I didn't.
Speaker 2 (01:03:48):
I hated doing the concerts, yeah, because I'm not a
big fan of live music, because I wanted to sound
like it sounded like on the CD. Oh okay, So yeah,
Like I would go and I'd be like, that's not
what the sound. The song is a post to sound
like or they would play stuff that hear's our new
stuff off of our new album.
Speaker 1 (01:04:04):
I don't want to hear that. I want to hear
play the hits. Give me the hits. Yeah, anything I
just paid all the money for, Well, you didn't pay.
Speaker 2 (01:04:10):
I felt a similar way of doing club gigs because
I would have to do a club gig like Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
so you have to go to the club downtown and
get in a microphone and you'd be like the flavor
flavor of the hype man and they would pay you
money and give you free booze just to hang out
at the club for three or four hours. But like
right before I joined the show in twenty eleven, I
was sitting there and I was like, what like thirty
two or something, and I realized I was like, I'm
(01:04:31):
like the old dude now at the club.
Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
Very excited. Part three, thing happens today. I know, I
know I nerd out more than most of you, but
it will be a hallmark for the rest of the week.
But it is Wednesday. It is the third hour, and
it's the every other Wednesday. So we talked with Congressman
Brad Nott, who joins us right now, how are you doing, sir?
Sorry I thought my phone was broken.
Speaker 3 (01:04:52):
There, Cathy, I'm doing great. It's good to be here.
Speaker 1 (01:04:56):
Yeah. Hey, I am really disturbed by some of your
colleagues this morning. Do you know I don't mean this well,
I know Washerman Schultz is one of them, but I
saw malt I don't. I don't understand, and maybe I'm wrong.
(01:05:16):
I think they wanted Trump to do a war crime
yesterday for their own edification, and they were disturbed that
he didn't. And then that disturbed me that they didn't
get the war crime they wanted. Where where are you
at on all this? We got so much to dig into. Uh,
just give me the uh, give me the uh with
(01:05:39):
the rescue and then with the tweet yesterday or the
truth yesterday about civilization. It's you know, everyone's screaming war
crimes just to sheer insanity, and none of that took
place right right. Well, on on a.
Speaker 3 (01:05:54):
Broad level, I'm grateful that that there is a ceasefire,
and of course the devil is going to be in
the details.
Speaker 4 (01:06:01):
The President gave what I thought to be the.
Speaker 3 (01:06:03):
Most encouraging update last night when he said that they
were working towards American retrieval of the enriched uranium, and
you know, to me, that would be just unbelievably beneficial
for the world and the community in the Middle East obviously,
and from what I understand, the site that is believed
(01:06:28):
to contain most of the enriched uranium has been under
constant surveillance via satellite and drone cover. They had not
detected to any of it has been released. And so
if Americans could go in their casey and retrieve the
uranium and remove it from that country, that would be
a tremendous win. And you know, in terms of the
(01:06:49):
tweets and the.
Speaker 4 (01:06:51):
Posturing, the President is a serious person.
Speaker 3 (01:06:53):
He's a serious negotiator and very serious armaments took off
from Europe and around the Middle East, perfectly consistent with
the president's timeline that he gave Iran. And when those
airplanes were in the air and the aircraft carriers were
sending jets into the Iran airspace, that's when the seafire
(01:07:15):
was announced. And so my hope and trust is that
the President was serious about delivering heavy hits to Iran
hoping that they would come to the table, and it
looks like he was successful. And now we will just
see if the Iranians can keep there into the bargain
and if we can iron out some type of durable piece,
which is what I think most Americans want.
Speaker 1 (01:07:38):
Do you think the language was a pro This is
what everyone's hung up on because they always to eliminate civilization.
I didn't read that as he was going to murder
ninety million people, because we have a track record with
this guy. But you know, he puts it eye. I
can't tell if he's just doing that to troll CNN
and Iran simultaneously. But it worked like a charm. Did
(01:08:00):
you interpret that? Mean?
Speaker 3 (01:08:02):
It seems to have worked like a charm. And if
you remember, Casey Nicki Hayley gave a very compelling testimony
about her time at the UN because the international community
took Trump unbelievably seriously because he was so unpredictable. And
my personal belief is he was speaking a language that
(01:08:22):
got through to the Iranian terrorists. They're leading the country,
and it is the media has under reported how hard
Trump has dismantled that country's ability to exist in their
current form. I mean, he has really eliminated layers and
layers of their corrupted evil government. They've been precise, they've
been overwhelming, they've been unrelenting, and his patience was wearing thin.
Speaker 4 (01:08:47):
Was he going to.
Speaker 3 (01:08:49):
Destroy the entire country? Absolutely not. Was he going to
hit them very hard and seriously.
Speaker 4 (01:08:55):
One and for all the Democrats that are saying he
was going to.
Speaker 3 (01:08:59):
Wipe Iran on the map. If that were the case,
he would not have been sending you know, dozens of airplanes.
You know, those weapons are much more covert and they
come off of a submarine or one of three airplanes,
not dozens.
Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
Field in Montana. Yeah, yeah, exactly, that's right. Yeah, he was.
Speaker 3 (01:09:14):
He was negotiating and he was punching, and obviously, at
least in the short term, it brought the the evil
Iranian leaders to the table.
Speaker 1 (01:09:25):
You can't deal with. And I know people don't want
to accept that because they see Iran, God help us
sitting on the Human Rights Council at the UN. But
I have a radio colleague. He says that that part
of the world's run by money, hot chicks, and brute force.
He's one hundred percent accurate. Like from everything I know
(01:09:45):
people are in the oil industry that the bribery is
just out of control. Over there. So when when you're
when you're doing news analysis, or you as somebody who
sits on committees that have some oversight over some of
this stuff, what is the mindset versus how you deal
with Iran versus how you deal with Canada? I guess
(01:10:07):
would be my question. And do you have the plagues
that refuse to accept that they're different?
Speaker 3 (01:10:12):
Well, keep in mind casing this Democratic party wanted to
defund the police to boost funding for social workers, right,
this is the Democratic party that you had elected judges
completely disrespect and walk all over American victims to obstruct
ice enforcement.
Speaker 4 (01:10:30):
In her own courtroom, she.
Speaker 3 (01:10:32):
Was convicted of several crimes.
Speaker 4 (01:10:34):
Some of these far left Democrats have lost their.
Speaker 3 (01:10:37):
Minds and they derive perverted virtue by being overly sympathetic
to evil people. And there's really no way to say
it other than that. And with Iran, they cannot fathom
that there is an Iranian individual, group of individuals that
would absolutely nuke the United States given the first they got,
(01:11:00):
they can't understand that.
Speaker 4 (01:11:02):
And to add to add a cherry on top.
Speaker 3 (01:11:05):
If the president is involved in it. They won one
hundred percent believe that the president is the most evil
person in any arrangement whatsoever, whether it's with Iran, China,
North Korea, whatever, if Donald Trump's involved, they will take
the other side. They get their own worth, their virtue,
their empathy from taking up for whoever Donald Trump is
(01:11:25):
working against. And that makes it a very hard governing
environment in Washington, DC.
Speaker 1 (01:11:31):
But this is so overwhelming you even see breakthroughs. Jay
Johnson was on I think NBC's weekend show, I can't remember,
the Christian Welker Show, and like I assumed he was
going to give a pat Democrat answer, the guy was
actually I thought it was very honest for a moment
talking about what the military has accomplished there. And that's
(01:11:54):
one of the biggest things. I know that we pick
on all the little ledges there, but what the US
military has accomplished with the opening salvo with fifty percent
of the time, we don't just destroy the missile, we
destroyed the delivery method with going in after a French
general said that there's snort and cocaine, there's no way
you can go in there and rescue your guy and
(01:12:15):
build a runway on a farm. And then they do
it twenty four hours later, and then this well we'll
get into the tech stuff. But like it's it's scary
how good we can be when a real estate mogul
and a Fox newshost running things. What the hell have
we been doing for fifty years?
Speaker 3 (01:12:34):
Well, you know, they are completely focused on delivering righteous violence.
And that's that's a creative way of saying it. But
they are not a social experiment. They're not a feel
good agency. They have recognized again what you said earlier, Casey,
there is evil in the world that will kill you
without losing one wink of sleep. And to protect the
(01:12:55):
United States, to protect the United States interests, there is
such a thing, as writes, is violence, and you better
be better at it than the bad guy. And you know,
the United States is unbelievably fortunate to have virtuous, humble,
focused public servants in the military. I'm not talking about
Pete Hegseth or the President. I'm talking about the people
(01:13:15):
that we've.
Speaker 4 (01:13:16):
Never heard of.
Speaker 3 (01:13:17):
You know, I saw the soldier who flew the helicopter
in in Venezuela. He was the most humble man that
anybody would have ever met. And that spirit, that humility,
that that patriotism is what enables the United States to
still leave the world in so many different ways, and
we do not do a good enough job celebrating those
(01:13:39):
people that And you know, that.
Speaker 1 (01:13:41):
Was the first story that was just so crazy because
like again, if people don't realize this, he wasn't just
he wasn't in a neighborhood. Dude was living in the
middle of the most armed part of Venezuela. He's on
a military base, and we roll in there and just
snatch him and we just combinate people. By the way,
so you got some clearance. Have you seen the discombobulator?
Speaker 4 (01:14:02):
What is that?
Speaker 3 (01:14:04):
Well, we can't talk about some things over the air casey,
but we've we've we've been given updates and so forth.
And I can just say that again, the American economy
and the innovation that that's taking place, it has enabled
the United States to maintain its military superiority. And when
you have great people working with unbelievably profound tools, you
(01:14:28):
can achieve great results. And we've seen some of that
in Venezuela. We've seen that in Iran. And again, my
hope in prayer is that the United States remains a
righteous country and that we that we retained the military
edge needed to protect this great country.
Speaker 1 (01:14:43):
You know, you could sneak that into the chamber and
discombobulate some people and just you know now that you know,
anything to happen to them. But if they can just
not talk, that would be useful. So the latest little
tool which is equal parts really cool and kind of
terrifying because you know, big brother c I a ghost murmur,
a CIA tool that was allegedly used to find and
(01:15:05):
rescue the second American airmen who was shot down. Basically,
it is a long range quant I'm gonna say words
that I don't even know what they mean, quantum magnetraumty
uses its quant I can't even pronounce it to find
the electromagnetic fingerprint of an individual's human heartbeat. Like that's
(01:15:25):
insane to me. Again, it's equal parts cool, but also
like if if the bad people are in charge, I
don't know that I want them to have that. What
do you say? What do you think of the reaction
to people who, especially you see this over in Europe,
who are like, I can't believe you would waste two
aircraft to go rescue somebody. Can you imagine being a
(01:15:46):
European service member and they're gonna do a cost benefit
analysis of helping you if you're pinned down like that
part is insane.
Speaker 3 (01:15:55):
Yeah, Well, the slow decline and death of the European
continent is discussion for another day. But they have far
more debts they can ever repay, They have far more
dependence than they can ever care for, and they don't
have any political will to write the ships. So they're
going to be in the ground before too long. But
in terms of comparing their military two hours, it's ironic
(01:16:17):
that they are criticizing the United States right now because
that the United States had not rose to the occasion
in nineteen forties, they'd be speaking German, the United States
not maintained a posture of overwhelming force and power and excellence,
they'd be speaking Russian. And when you look at what's
going on to the European sphere right now, their lack
(01:16:38):
of ability to fight the necessary battles within their own country,
and certainly their lack of willingness to help their chief
ally the main reason that they still exist as a
continent and individual countries. It's unbelievably disheartening. And when you
make public statements like that criticizing the United States, servicemen
and women who are relentlessly pursuing not only their neighbor
(01:17:01):
safety but the world safety.
Speaker 4 (01:17:03):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:17:04):
You know, I don't have a whole lot of patience
for it. And I say again, shame on Europe for
the one hundredth time. Whether it's their censorship, their regulations,
their nonsensical energy policies, their budgets, their socialism, it's it's
it's a it's a continent that's in slow decline. And
unfortunately that comment was very unsurprising.
Speaker 1 (01:17:24):
Well, and this is why I'm kind of leading you
leading into this water here. So one of the things
you talked about the planes that descended upon the Middle
East that I ran and got an eye full of
and maybe uh helped change some things. Did you happen
to see the flight path on some of these planes?
I did, so I did. They're coming out of Ramstein,
so they have to fly initially, they have to fly
(01:17:47):
up north and then and then literally skirt the European continent,
pop back into the med through Gibraltar, and and then
and only then, and when you see that and you
see the reaction of the Europeans, Marco Rubio had some
pretty significant words like, Hey, I don't know that we're
friends anymore, right, what what what is your opinion on
(01:18:09):
closing bases, which, by the way, if people don't know this,
when we close the US military base in a foreign country,
the town that it's in is decimated financially.
Speaker 3 (01:18:20):
Oh oh, it's more than just the town, it's the
it's the region, you know. I don't I don't know
about the about closing bases necessarily because we do need
bases in Europe just from a location standpoint. But you know, again,
Europe cannot get out of its own way. Europe is
giving their the money they don't have to Ukraine while buying.
Speaker 4 (01:18:39):
Oil from Russia.
Speaker 3 (01:18:40):
I mean, this is this is the lunacy that is
the European content right now. They will shut.
Speaker 4 (01:18:45):
Down oil asploration off the coast of the UK or
France and they will.
Speaker 3 (01:18:50):
Buy Russian oil. I mean, these these people are insane.
And what they did to the United States it was,
it was. There were probably some mixed political motivations, but
they're definitely catering to a far left fringe of their
of their voting base. But also some people were saying
they refuse to get involved in the conflict because they
cannot afford it.
Speaker 4 (01:19:10):
Again.
Speaker 3 (01:19:11):
The European continent is going broke. They cannot afford to
do things that are otherwise deemed essential, and I'm unbelievably frustrated.
I agree with Marco Ribo. With friends like Europe, you're
going to be fighting a lot of wars by yourself
and h there needs to be some real re evaluation there.
Speaker 4 (01:19:31):
And I don't have I don't have a who a
lot of tolerance for it.
Speaker 1 (01:19:34):
Do do you think we should leave NATO?
Speaker 3 (01:19:37):
I think NATO needs to be reconstructed. I mean, by
the terms of NATO, you can make a very compelling
case that that they they they were contractually bound to
help us in this fight. I mean when you look
at how Iran, I mean, I ran attack Europe during
this war, right, you know there were sleeper sales in
Europe that committed amous acts of terrorism during the conflict,
(01:20:02):
and I ran over the last couple of weeks.
Speaker 4 (01:20:04):
And they still refuse to assist.
Speaker 3 (01:20:06):
The United States and removing this threat or trying to
remove this threat.
Speaker 1 (01:20:10):
So we didn't ask him to shoot anything or do anything.
We asked him to let us fly planes like.
Speaker 4 (01:20:18):
I wish.
Speaker 3 (01:20:19):
I wish the president had I know that it was
being discussed. I wish he had just disregarded their instruction
not to use their face. They're our bases. We can
take off from these bases whenever we want to, and
we will fly back to them whenever we want to.
I wish he had done that, and I know he
was trying, he was weighing that. For whatever reason, he
went a different direction.
Speaker 1 (01:20:37):
Okay, well, we're gonna have to leave it there. And
I didn't even get to half the stuff I wanted.
I think you could have flown over Italy. I think
she kind of likes Trump, but the friends, they would
have lost their damn minds. All right, Congressman, thank you
very much. We'll chat here in a few weeks. Okay,
all right, take care. He there you go, Congressman Brad
not joining us here on the CaCO Day radio program.
(01:20:58):
We will be right back hanging out now, you guys, Savgy.
This ghost murmur thing. So basically, this tool can find
human heart beats right where you know you're hiding whatever,
you're in a building, you're in a crevice of the mountain, clearly,
but it is also able to differentiate them, which I
(01:21:22):
don't even know how that works. And the CIA's got
this thing, which, again for the purpose that they used it,
I'm like, hey, awesome, that's great, man. But also I'm like,
that's the ultimate big brother, get your weapon I've ever
heard of. Man, that's see through wall stuff right there.
I don't know that the discombobulator, you'd be unstoppable. Ross
(01:21:46):
What do you want more of the ghost murmur or
the discombobulator? I still think the disc combined.
Speaker 2 (01:21:50):
I mean, I've been aware of the ghost murmur for
a while, which is why I've learned to slow my
heart down with ninja focus. Okay, I've been working on
this for a while. Probably this the discombobulator.
Speaker 1 (01:22:00):
Yeah, because then he can because you, like, you want
everyone tased, so why don't you want him discombobulated? That
that makes sense, But yeah, yeah, because you guys have
to You have to remember too. We mentioned that the
last radio transmission from the guy they were looking for
was God is Great? Or would you say God is good?
Or God is great? Something like that, and there was
(01:22:23):
actual discussion as to whether that was him indicating that
rescue might be walking into a trap, because you know, uh,
there is alo akbar right, But the English version of
it kind of and uh, like that was a whole thing.
But no, they so to find this guy. That's how
(01:22:44):
the CIA found him, because that was the part of
the story that was missing. They said the CIA located him.
And then at which point Trump's like, all right, what
are we gonna do? And the CIA is gonna put
that fake story out that they're moving him in a
convoy and ether can put him on a boat and
then they put all the deeper drones to protect the dude.
And it's just crazy. Meanwhile, that that Joe Kent guy
(01:23:06):
and the canvass Owens people. I don't know if you've
seen their theory on this, it's insane. Joe I saw
the Joe Kent clip yesterday. He's like, yeah, they were
actually trying to murder that pilot because you know, if
he got her weapons systems officer, but whatever they wanted,
they were trying to blow him up. And in reaction
(01:23:27):
to blowing up the actual like the whole order of opera,
you know, blowing up the stuck airplanes, the whole order
of operation was off and they and and of course
the conspiracy rabbit hole is why was he miles away
from the pilot and Ross. Do you see any of
this with the they're they're saying it's all fake because
(01:23:47):
he was miles away from where the pilot's parachute came down.
I watched, I wasted like fifteen minutes of my life
yesterday watching just absolute idiots go through because everything's everything's
a conspiracy, everything's wrong, And at no point do they
they all they did zero research on how the ejection
(01:24:12):
seats work. They were under the impression that you have
the pilot, you have the weapon systems officer, and then
when you eject, they eject simultaneously. They don't do that.
That's not a thing. You know why, because they die
probably you know how fast they're going. Plus the bottom
of the seat, the seat, the ejection seat has friggin
(01:24:34):
rockets on it. It's like a Space Shuttle launch, a
little mini one that pops you up in the air.
The protocol on those jets, as I understand it, is
pilot ejects second, weapon systems goes first. There is a
point four second minimum delay. I don't know if it's
(01:24:57):
automated or they still have to pull the handle, but
if you pull the hand handle before that half second,
it won't for obvious reasons, Right, You guys are going
to gazillion miles an hour. They hit anywhere from mock
two to mock seven based on the speed they're traveling,
plus the rockets when they ejecked, hence the concussion this
dude had. And uh, yeah, they're the thing that's conspiracy
(01:25:18):
because the pilot was nearer the wreckage, whereas this guy
was literally miles away. But a simple run of the
math and understanding the ejection system, you realize why he's
miles away. Not to mention whatever happens when you're floating
down in your parachute. You can cover a lot of
ground that way, depending on how you manipulate it. So
(01:25:40):
people were working overtime to take it apart. The most
insane criticism of the weapons system officer was some woman
who was upset over his call sign, which was a
dude forty four bravo, because it was a toxic masculinity
(01:26:00):
or something.
Speaker 5 (01:26:02):
Ross.
Speaker 1 (01:26:03):
Can you think of a career choice where you'd want
more masculinity than in the in the seat of a
fighter jet.
Speaker 2 (01:26:09):
These people, man, it's the same like yesterday the woman
that was upset about them fleshing the poop out of
the shuttle into space because of pollution or something stupid, Like,
what do you do?
Speaker 1 (01:26:17):
It's all you thought it was gonna start an interstellar battle.
Speaker 2 (01:26:19):
To be fair, it is possible, but I mean, what
do you stop? Just get a hobby besides being angry
at the world all the time, find something to do
in there. You had a good suggestion off the air,
he should go much darker than that.
Speaker 1 (01:26:34):
Do you ever? Did you ever when you watch Top
Gun you ever talked about what your call sign was
gonna be? Uh? No, no, dude. Me and my cousin
had a huge conversation and it was funny because my
cousin wanted to be you know, that was that was
his plan. He's like, I'm gonna join the Air Force.
His dad, my uncle, uh did serve in the Air Force.
(01:26:54):
So there's a little family history there. He's not a pilot.
I can't remember exactly what he did something some logistics thing.
Speaker 4 (01:27:01):
But.
Speaker 1 (01:27:04):
But he was And I mentioned this on the show.
So that slice of my family. My dad's brother and
his wife, they had a couple kids and then they
couldn't have kids anymore for some whatever happened medically, so
they ended up adopting five kids from the Philippines. So
I had five Philippine cousins growing up. They're all babies, right,
(01:27:28):
And so that cousin was interesting because you want to
be a fighter pilot, and even when we were in
our formative years, I knew he would never be because
he's like five foot two and he might even be
shorter than that anyway, And there was you couldn't be
that short to be a pilot. Now you can so,
(01:27:48):
but that didn't change till twenty twenty.
Speaker 3 (01:27:50):
I guess.
Speaker 1 (01:27:50):
So he sells real estate. Now he's good at it,
give him that. But yeah, man, he wanted to be
so we talked about call signs. But yeah, so this
dude's dude forty for Bravo and some woman's upset and
it's like this guy just ran seven up a seven
thousand foot mountain, hid in a crevice while an entire
country was going to murder him for sixty thousand dollars.
(01:28:14):
Shut up, shut up, lady. Oh man, Let's grab a
call William. What's up?
Speaker 4 (01:28:21):
How are you doing, Casey?
Speaker 1 (01:28:22):
Love you? What's up?
Speaker 2 (01:28:24):
Sir?
Speaker 5 (01:28:25):
Uh?
Speaker 10 (01:28:26):
Yes, I've spent twenty some years retired Air Force terra rescuing,
combat control and participating in at least seven combat operations
a combat search and rescue of aircrew, all of which,
thank god, we're successful. I'll just look at this, and
(01:28:46):
it was a to me, it's a routine recovery operation.
It's that pilot and air other the wizzow was separated.
You could have a up to a twelve mile separation
between aircraft frontier and backseatre because of what you said,
the velocity the aircraft going to alcitude, the sequencing of
(01:29:10):
the ejection, and also the wind currents. There was someone
that went down in South America and a two seater aircraft.
The pilot was about fourteen miles separated from the backseater
because of the winds. Once you hit a parachute, you know,
the your mercy of the wind because or those are
just rescue parachutes at the time, and you don't have
(01:29:32):
direction controls like you do on these airfoil shoots that
the Golden Knights and such have.
Speaker 1 (01:29:39):
Yeah, I was just upset. I was upset, sir, that
nobody was doing the minimum basic research to try to
understand this that I did, right, because like I'm like, well,
there's no way they ejected at the same time. Let
me look into this, and it's easy to find this stuff.
And yeah, I actually saw some that said that there
have been separations of twenty miles on that particular aircraft
(01:30:00):
on dual ejections.
Speaker 10 (01:30:01):
So yeah, the F fifteen ever since the two theaters
came about yet four F fifteen. So whatever two seaters
you have, the rear seater is the first to go
because if the front theater goes first, the canopy goes
off and you're going to cook the rear seater, right.
Speaker 1 (01:30:18):
Yeah, yeah, they were getting it wrong too. They were
claiming the pilot ejected first, and I'm like it, clearly
an easy search would tell you that that's not the case.
For the exact reason you just stated. It's just very frostrated, sir,
just very frustrating. Well, I'm glad they found everybody during
your career there, sir. That's that is an accomplishment. I
appreciate the call this morning. Okay, Roder that case you
(01:30:42):
have a going all right you too, sir. All right,
let's get Ray Stage I here from the Weather Channel.
I bet he's never rescued an F fifteen pilot like
our last color no, definitely not. Our last guy was
good at it too. Wow that's impressive. Yeah, it is
ever lost a man? All right? So wow, uh what's up?
(01:31:02):
I said? Oh wait, wait, why I have an email
from you? Sorry? God, you're such a diva dude. So
you're taking tomorrow off. You'll be back Friday. We're taking
next week off to spite you. Oh I was good.
That's terrible. Yeah, this is what you get. So do
(01:31:22):
your weather. You've been We are really taking all next
week off.
Speaker 7 (01:31:26):
Okay, well I'll be here Friday. We can see how
we're doing. I'm gonna go with the I'm gonna go
with the defending maybe the defending champ. So you want
my pick for the master, So that's who I'll go with.
Speaker 1 (01:31:36):
See if you can repeat Roy there? Yeah, why not?
That's the only one I.
Speaker 7 (01:31:41):
Really recognized that I've best bet. So there you so
bet on the weather. It's good, gonna be great, gonna
be great for the masters. Always say with a little caution,
I know.
Speaker 1 (01:31:52):
We need rain.
Speaker 7 (01:31:52):
I know it's been a dry really not much changing
with sunshine around. As we continue to push through today,
we might see a few It's gonna be a little
cooler though close to sixty tonight in the mid upper
thirty so little chilly tomorrow morning, than sun close to
seventy in the afternoon. The war return will continue Friday, sunny,
little bit seventies and lots of sunshine right into the weekend.
(01:32:14):
At early next week, lower maybe middle eighties, but it's
looking real nice as overnight lows.
Speaker 1 (01:32:18):
We'll come up into the fifties.
Speaker 7 (01:32:20):
Get better on the masters, but don't bet on rain
because I don't think we'll get any over the next
seven to maybe even ten days, which could lead us
through most of next week.
Speaker 1 (01:32:28):
Okay, I appreciate it, sir, Thank you. I we'll talk
to you today Friday.
Speaker 3 (01:32:32):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (01:32:33):
Denise Pellegrini joins us next from Bloomberg News. Hang on, Denise,
what's happening? Hey?
Speaker 9 (01:32:38):
Well, we usually kind of talk about Wall Street at
the end, but gotta say stock futures are crazy right now.
There's skyrocketing. Dow futures are up almost thirteen hundred points now,
so that would be a one thy three hundred point
gain at the open for the Dow. Send P futures hired,
Nasdaq futures skyrocketing eight hundred and forty five that's almost
(01:32:58):
unheard of. As celebrate the two weeks ceasefire and things
kind of moving through the strait of horror moves again investors,
So they're still kind of ignoring the fact that there
are these reports of attacks and fighting in some places.
For example, just got to report Saudi Key East West
oil pipeline has been hit by a drone. Even so,
(01:33:18):
crude oil futures are plunging. We'll see the effect at
the pump soon with gas going down because crude oil
is now at about ninety two bucks a barrel on
West Texas crew that is elevated, but you know, about
twenty percent lower than it was a couple days ago,
so that's good news. Also, hormone therapy patches for women
(01:33:41):
are in crazy high demand right now. Ever, since the
FDAs drugmakers to remove strict black box warnings from hormone
patch therapy labels, which the agency said was leading to
fear and misinformation, and FDA officials now tell us they're
working to make vaginal cream estrogen available over the counter.
As celebrities like Gwyneth Paltrow, Halle Berry, Naomi wats you
(01:34:01):
name it kind of destigmatized perimenopause symptoms and prescriptions for
all this are absolutely surging to the point where there
are shortages. Here's something that parents of kids probably already know.
Youth sports is a huge business, you know, Casey. For
each day a child plays a sport, researchers found parents
(01:34:21):
expend get this, three hours twenty three minutes in efforts organizing, driving,
watching games, practices, making snacks, doing the laundry, and spending
on youth sports as surge to forty billion bucks a year.
We talk to one family. They're spending one hundred thousand
dollars a year on their two boys to get them
into Major League Baseball. How will we entertain ourselves in
(01:34:45):
the future, that's a good question too, if we're not
playing sports. Wall Street Journal says some are predicting a
shift towards staying home, you know, virtual card and board games,
virtual reality, fantasy experiences replacing movie theaters. Others see a
future with robots performing at home, Casey, or even brain
implants giving auditory and visual stimulation. And Burger King is
(01:35:08):
testing some mini sliders. This is a box of six sliders. Columbus, Ohio,
probably the closest place to you where you'll be able
to get these for a limited run. It lets you
build a box of two or six sliders, including bacon
and cheese or the Steakhouse Bacon Slider. They're taking their
que from Jack in the Box, which recently announced its
(01:35:29):
own smash Jack slider that's a snackable, kind of smaller
version of the original smash Smashed Jack. You get three
in a box. From this idea of these like little
handheld munchie things where you can get a whole variety,
they're finding that people are really going for those.
Speaker 1 (01:35:45):
I imagine. I'm just I've going back to the kids
sports things like I do you know some parents who
do the travel leagues?
Speaker 9 (01:35:52):
You ever run into that, Well, we have five kids
and they're a little older now, but we did do
their travel league.
Speaker 1 (01:35:59):
In fact, crazy, we drove crazy.
Speaker 9 (01:36:02):
We drove NonStop from New York City to carry okay,
soccer with five kids, no baseball for girls who played baseball,
not softball, and we wanted them to see women play
because they had never seen women play baseball.
Speaker 1 (01:36:21):
So we drove all the way to carry even show
them the movie. Well that's sort of I mean there's
no crying in baseball.
Speaker 9 (01:36:30):
I mean well, movie was really cute, but this is
like this was like contemporary women playing baseball, and.
Speaker 1 (01:36:38):
We had we had a girl who was a picture
on the team.
Speaker 9 (01:36:41):
Was they had some competitions and my twelve year old
daughter beat the adults and won the bunting contest, which
was which is really exciting. But they also went to
Florida and Arizona and uh and.
Speaker 1 (01:36:58):
That's the people I know in North Carolina. They have
a bunch of boys that are probably one or two
of them is going to go to a D one school. Yeah,
I play baseball. And they were in Florida more than
they were in North Carolina.
Speaker 9 (01:37:08):
The thing they tell you about like don't first we
read all that stuff, don't invest because you know there's
only a one in twenty five thousand chance your kids
can get a sports scholarship. Do not believe that we
didn't pay for and discouraged one of our kids from
playing and she ended up being a professional pro ultimate
(01:37:28):
frisbee player.
Speaker 1 (01:37:30):
I don't understand that sport, but good for her.