Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, coming up on the show, let's see a
few little interesting things going down. We may be facing
an extinction level event, which I was only now learning
about yesterday, you know, from from a societal standpoint, from
a capitalist standpoint, really really really scary stuff. And boy boy,
(00:27):
I gotta tell you, I don't know how we're gonna
get through this. How many times per day do you
think you would be impacted in the event that all
the moon bats went on strike? Just roughly now, depending
on where you live, that number may be I don't know, zero,
or maybe a lot more. You know, when you go
(00:49):
in to get your you have talk to your favorite barista,
or you need to get your healing crystals, or you know,
whatever it may be. But now now moonbats on the
internet are calling for a free three day vacation. And
I'd love to tell you what it is, but that's
part of the secret. So listen to this insantay.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
What if millions of us stopped working, stop spending, and
stop producing all at the same time. There's a movement brewing.
It's called the people Sick Day, and what it is
is a three day economic blackout that means no work,
no shopping, no production, just pause three days where we
remind the system that without us, nothing moves.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
Really, there's there a lot of moon bats dedicated work
in the production lines. Is that okay? All right? So anyways,
it's days, by the way, not day because you said
three days. But tell me more about this.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
But here's the twist. We're not giving out the dates
until forty eight hours before because we don't want to
give the corporations time to plan and stop us from
having this happen. Because let's be honest, if they knew
what we were planning, they'd shut it down before started.
This isn't a protest. This is a strategic disruption to
(02:06):
the machine that feeds off of our hard work in labor.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
To be part of it, go to are you raging
against it?
Speaker 2 (02:13):
Would you say the People's Sick Day dot Com? Join
the discord and join the movement. This is how we
stand up against what is happening in our country. We
need to shut it down, right, we need to shut
it down. So go to the People's Sick Day dot Com,
sign up for the discord and you can get more
information there.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
Uh ross, can you imagine the healthscape that this would
create when we're just going about our business on a
regular day, and you can't go to a game stop
and get screamed at by a six foot five dude
yelling it's man.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
It's just so dumb because they're trying to do the
Atlas Shrug thing, but like they're like the people that
in Atlas Shrug you were like protesting against right right right, Yah,
it's so dumb. And what if you think the corporations
are going to do if they get the secret date, Like,
if they have a secret day, they're gonna shut us down?
How what do you what do you mean?
Speaker 1 (03:04):
Maybe they'll enforce their day off policies as they normally would.
Speaker 3 (03:08):
Jeff Bezos is going to send all the delivery drivers
to your house to force you to buy something on Amazon, Like, you.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
Know, here's a here's a funny thing. I know a
couple of delivery drivers what drives for Amazon? They're not
moon bets, Like the one is a big p one
of the show. How many people have showed up at
your house have gotten excited because they've delivered to your house.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
I've met a few, You've met a few, super cool
each time.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Yeah, yeah, so that dude's not showing not not showing up,
So no, you're you're talking about like like how many
how many days a week do you think you? Or
Mark he picks up healing crystals, like this is where
the real IMPACT's coming.
Speaker 3 (03:44):
Yeah, I can't remember the last time we did that,
to be honest.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
Yeah, okay, we grow grow your own. Oh that's nice,
real farm to table stuff there. Yeah, okay. Do you
remember in Iceland when all the women didn't show up?
Do you remember that? And first of all, it wasn't
(04:07):
all the women, but they made it sound like it
was all the women. They did nothing happened, nothing happened,
There was no discernible difference in the grand scheme of
things like maybe something didn't happen that day. It's like
when they do the gas thing, this is this is
what's all so stupid? All right, So let's say you
(04:28):
want to do a gas boycott and I we just
to have listeners that call and be like, but let's
we're doing We're doing a gas boycott because it's so high,
And I'm like, all right, well, how do you prepare
for that? Why am I go fill up all the vehicles?
So on Friday we don't get any gas?
Speaker 3 (04:40):
Right, Okay, yeah, I say, we're not going to use
these corporate services for like these three days, but after
that we're going to go back to using them.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
So now here's the real I have a brainbuster for you.
All right, ready, you ready for this ross because nobody
can answer this for me. What is protocol for this?
If you're job is paid protester.
Speaker 3 (05:03):
That well, that's what I'm saying, Like, that's exactly the point,
right because they are the group, they are the party,
they're perpetually they're always right protesting.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
That's what they do, right right, No, But I'm saying
if they if they physically work for that Crowds on Demand,
which is an actual company, if they if that is
their employer, and your job is to essentially add numbers
and bulk to various moon back protests right where you're
just you're not usually the ones on the front line.
You're just there to fill out so it looks busier.
(05:32):
So if that's your job, or you work for one
of the NGOs, or you work for the Democrat Party,
or you work for you know, one of the thousand
ancillary things with it, and you get like I told
you in DC, they can do insta protests. When we
showed up for that radio row in DC that one year,
they had a bunch of like insta protesters. But that's
(05:54):
all they do. They won't talk to you, the make
animal sounds at you, and the whole stupid signs they
says race his center here, things like that. They have
no reason to do. That's somebody put them up to it.
It's clearly part of their gig. So if that's your gig,
and the point of the protesters who refuse to show
up to your gig for three days, like it's it's
(06:15):
like this weird doom.
Speaker 3 (06:16):
Yeah, I want to know it's this thinking about it, yeah,
because it's like that. They are the crowd of being
the professional protesters. Remember remember that woman We played the
audio of the guy like she was trying to get
to work and they were in the street. I forget
what they are protesting. Look like I said, you're.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
Talking man bun, Yeah, you're talking man bun guy.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
And she was like, you need to get to work,
and he did the hands thing and he's.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
Like, ooh, work.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
Right, that's his job. They're professional whiners. It's all they
do since since the inauguration. That's all they've done is
make protest songs again in the streets. Okay, So if
you're taking the day off, does that mean we can
get to work without having to worry about being blockaded in.
Speaker 1 (06:54):
I can't imagine three days of not hearing that. No,
what are we gonna do?
Speaker 3 (06:57):
Oh man?
Speaker 1 (07:01):
And you can't cheat and do it over fourth because
that's a day off anyway. So I'm gonna need it.
I'm gonna need it when it would most annoy me.
So all right, well we're gonna wait and see what
the dates are. We don't know. Now there's the other
side of this Ross And I ain't ever met a
day we didn't want off. So if it's free, so
(07:21):
you know what, Ross, I think we should have a
three day stick out.
Speaker 3 (07:26):
It's just weird thing after the other with these people though. Man,
it's like the no Kings and then the sick day
and it's like, you guys just don't want to work.
Speaker 1 (07:33):
But this is like, remember this is what they did
during the first Trump Remember they remember they had the
pink cats, and then they had this scientist against Trump,
and then they had and then it just every weekend
was something.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
Right, It's a different thing every week, and they're they're
constantly whining, and it gets to the point where you
don't even remember what the individual protests were. Like when
I was talking about the ooh work guy pointing at
the woman trying to get to work, I don't even
remember what they were protesting. There was it ice, I
don't know. I have no idea.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
It might have been part of no King.
Speaker 3 (08:02):
I don't know, right, That's that's my point. We don't
even know anymore. You start to ignore it doesn't matter.
It's like somebody just you know, you've you ever been
in one of these, like like a bad relationship where
the person just whins and bitches the whole time.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
And eventually you just start tuning out.
Speaker 3 (08:15):
Just tune it out, does it? Or it's like growing up, well,
we live to block away from the fire department, the
fire trucks have come out. You hear it so often
you sti't hear it anymore.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
Yeah, when I live by the train tracks, it kind
of starts blending in.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
It's just like, oh, they're whining again.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
Yeah, but then they can't do this, keep on free days,
keep on mo of not moving forward side. I'm on
the free day off side all right, So I won't
torture you with that too much more. But I just
(08:51):
know that that might be a thing. So but we
don't know, and we'll know forty eight hours, you know.
It's also that's the other thing too, So if once
the dates out there, it'll get reported. If there's any
size to this movement, there probably won't be. It probably
be like, I don't know, a thousand lunatics across the
country on whatever this chicks Facebook group is or something.
(09:11):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (09:12):
They got a website and everything. You've got these group
of people, and it's very sad. They're obviously so devoid
of purpose in their life. They're looking for anything to grasp,
like grasp on to to give them something to live
for it.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
So it's the adrenaline kick. But you know how we
talk about the dopamine you get when people like or
retweet your stuff or any of the social media stuff. Right,
So the dopamine for these guys is just a little different.
It's the idea that they can communicate that they went
and they did something virtuous to other people who enjoy
(09:44):
doing things, so that they can tell other people how
virtuous they.
Speaker 3 (09:47):
Are, right right, it is, And in the end, they're
not really accomplishing anything.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
Ever.
Speaker 3 (09:51):
No, it's no different than yeah, you can go out
and you can protest and wind twenty four to seven
in the street about whatever policy you know, the Democrats
tell you to protest about that day, or the media
tells you. But in the end, it's no different than
changing your flag emoji on your social media account. You're
not doing anything right, Well.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
That's not true. Sometimes you're causing wide sale destruction. And
you know they just estimated, by the way, I don't
believe this number. So the city of la is saying
that the ice protest cost them thirty two million. I
don't know if you saw this yesterday. Did you see
how they're going to make up that budget shortfall. They're
going to fire four hundred and six hundred respectively, police
(10:31):
and firefighters.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
Oh great, that'll help the next time. Right, that is
the one thing they're accomplishing. It's a good point. It's
the destruction of private property and like people's jobs and
people that actually want to work for a living.
Speaker 1 (10:42):
Or people who actually produce what are the core functions
of government as we understand them. So all right, we'll see,
we'll see what's going on with that, all right? Coming
up on the show, Trump murdered fourteen million people yesterday.
I probably should have led with that, huh than moon
Bat's wanting the moon Bat. I should have led with
(11:02):
the part where he murdered fourteen million people yesterday. Sounds
like a much bigger deal. CNN. I'll explain it to you.
I don't have the details, and so we'll get that.
One of you had an interesting day yesterday or run
Atlantic Avenue and Raleigh. We'll talk about that. And I
(11:24):
can't decide on the new Running Man Ross. You watch
the trailer. You don't have to get into details. Yay
or nay?
Speaker 3 (11:33):
Are indifferent? I mean, I know it's different from the
original Schwarzenegger movie, but I mean, I guess it's it's
more true to the book from what I've heard, the
Stephen King book.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
Yeah, all right, we'll we'll dive into all this and
more coming up six eighteen. Hang on, So they decided
that they were going to go shut down a gala
gala gala Ross gala or gala gala, I don't know
in this case, probably gala because they've like the guy
screams it. So but yeah, I agree, with you, it's
(12:01):
the other way. But anyway, we just shut down at
gala honoring US Senator Lisa Murkowski. Murkowski is a murderer.
She incinerates us to enrich her cronies as Chevron's top
lobbyist gave her an award. We stepped in and stopped
the ceremony. So what you have is you have a
gaggle of moonbats. Is it a gaggle, I'm not sure
(12:23):
what a group of them's called, who have stormed up
on this stage. It looks like it's in any standard
conference center at any late Marriott or Hilton, and it's
just the sheer volume and running up on stage. All
of a sudden, you get this big pile of people
rolling like a critter ball off the thing, and they're
holding signs and their security and then there's the people
(12:44):
on the stage and they all go tumbling off. But
my favorite part of this video, which we just retweeted
at Casey on the Radio, is in response to climate
defiance and saying we shut down at gala honoring Murkowski,
a murderer who incinerates us and richer crony's. The community
note suggested, which I just said, is helpful, so hopefully
(13:05):
it gets there, says quote, no climate activists have been
incinerated by anyone but themselves, which is a good point ross.
How many videos have we done where some moonbat lights
theirself on fire. I think we had four or five
high profile incidents incidents of this during you know, going
back to the summer, mostly peaceful protests. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (13:27):
Right, they tend to do it to themselves, right.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
Oh then remember the one chick who light herself on
fire in front of like the RNC or the DNC
and we made that parody song of girl on fire. Yes,
and you don't even do it in the way that
you know Southeast Asian monks did it where people were like,
that's amazing, what commitment. You do it in the dumbest
way possible because you don't mean to self emilate. You're
just dumb. You're just bad at stuff. There could watch
(13:55):
this video on loop man, what are some of the
other notes? They're just destroying them? Oh here we got dude.
All right, so I told you. The first suggested community
note is no climate activists have been incinerated by anyone
but themselves. So if you don't know, if you don't
have access to the notes before they'd posted. There's usually
a bunch of them, and then it's people fighting in
the community notes, but most people never see them because
(14:18):
they're not birdwatch accounts. And so then the second note
says the current existing note features an unnecessarily sarcastic tone,
even though it's true. Further context actually supports the claim
that Murkowski is connected to corporate interests. Are you guys
(14:40):
sitting down here? They're all connected to corporate interests, So
they're madic. Kaitlyn Clark again because her team, the Fever,
beat the Minnesota Links for the Commissioner's Cup. Okay, however,
Kaylen Clark did not play in last night's final game
to win it because she has been she been battling injuries, whatever.
(15:03):
But after they won, and the team's in the locker
room dancing around. You know what you see after any
team wins, right, they're all excited. Champagne's getting sprayed, people
are dancing doing interviews. Whatnot? She is She's seen on
video celebrating and they're mad at her for celebrating with
her team because she didn't play in the game. Is
that how that works? Ever? Has that ever been how
(15:25):
that works because you know it's it's it's like a
whole season thing, right, pretty sure that's how that goes.
So have you win the Super Bowl? So have you
win the Super Bowl and you play Let's say you
had a lights out year all year, but you suffer
an injury, maybe in the NFC Championship game or something,
(15:47):
but your team goes on to win the Super Bowl.
Are you not allowed to celebrate with your team out
there in the middle of the field even though you're
wearing like a boot or something? And ross, what was
the stat you told me either yesterday or where they
within the internal voting of the players they rank the
other play Yeah.
Speaker 3 (16:07):
I don't know if it was like VIP or whatever,
but it's some sort of thing. Yeah, they voted her
the ninth the best guard in the league.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
These are her fellow player.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
Now, the fans voted her number one, the media voted
her number one, I believe, But the other players in
the league voted her number nine. Because they are a
bunch of races.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
Well, the argument I saw is they would know best
because they.
Speaker 3 (16:28):
Play right right, or they're all horrible races.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Oh okay, all right, there is that as well. But
that's pretty crazy. I mean, I want you to think
about what happened, even if you do care nothing for WNBA,
I want you to think. I want you to think
about the Bulls. And let's say it's game seven and
Jordan can't go. But here they are, they've gotten here,
(16:56):
they just you know, they just won in ninety six.
Now it's ninety seven. And let's say that Jordan isn't
able to step in for game seven or right, I
can't remember how many games finals went to a ninety seven,
but he hasked to sit, and so what do you got, yeah, ku, coach,
you got.
Speaker 3 (17:12):
For they never went to a game seven?
Speaker 1 (17:13):
Though, Well, I'm just.
Speaker 3 (17:15):
Pretting a crazy scenario here, you're painting, okay, I want
to create a sor right? Fair enough, fair Okay.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
Let's say it's the final game of the finals and
Jordan can't go and the Bulls still win. Is Jordan
not allowed to be happy because he didn't play in
that game?
Speaker 2 (17:33):
No?
Speaker 3 (17:33):
I mean because he he he brought them there, right.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
Right, yeah, A little bit of that, A little bit
of that. And even if he doesn't, even if you
want to get away from him bringing him there, it's
it's like the inspiration when you're playing, when you're do
when you're playing around somebody is really good, man, It
inspires you to be better. It really does, especially if
(17:56):
you have that proper mindset that some of these pro
athletes just exude.
Speaker 3 (18:00):
I mean, you had people back in the day, like
when we were growing up, like a Jordan or a
Gretzky or you know, before Tom Brady it was Joe Montana, right,
And you might not like them to compete against them
because they're whooping your ass, but I mean they still
got the respect of their fellow players because they could
recognize how amazing they were.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
Right.
Speaker 3 (18:20):
Yeah, this it's like what is happening here? Like, can
you name another guard in the WNBA?
Speaker 1 (18:26):
I can't.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
Now, she's the reason that you're flying first class now,
she's right, She's the reason that people are watching the games.
She's the reason you're making more money. And yet you're
gonna rank her number nine because you're racist.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
Yeah pretty much. That's how it is, man, Because spotlights.
This is the thing. The idea is that, well, the
spotlight's now not on you. I hate to break this
to you. There was no spotlight. There is no spotlight, right, nobody.
Care's never been a time in my history of covering
you know, news, sports, whatever's transpiring that the w NBA
(19:02):
ever got this level of discussion.
Speaker 3 (19:04):
And it's not even closer, right because it's embarrassing to watch.
But if you don't have Caitlyn Clark highlights where she's
like shooting lights out like Steph Curry style, right.
Speaker 1 (19:11):
I like her blonde teammate and forced her.
Speaker 3 (19:14):
Yeah, just bodies. Yeah, you know her blonde Draymond Green.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
Right, yeah, yeah, pretty much.
Speaker 3 (19:19):
But if you don't have Caitlyn Clark highlights or you know,
I wouldn't call them highlights like low lights of like
you know, the other people in the league abusing her
and not getting fouled, like poking her in the eyes
or whatever they're doing.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
The scratched her eye.
Speaker 3 (19:33):
Yeah, I mean, what are.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
The other highlights injuries she's been dealing with?
Speaker 3 (19:36):
The other highlights are Angel Reese missing her own shot
twenty times in a row, and like rebounds.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
You mean getting nineteen rebounds, that's what you mean? They
call them me bounds, right, yeah, me bounds? Uh yeah, hey,
they count on the statue count.
Speaker 3 (19:52):
The same man I was watching it was I guess what,
They're in the finals now.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
Right, Well that's what this was, the commissioners cut.
Speaker 3 (19:58):
Yeah, okay, well I was watching some high maybe it
was like from a year ago. I thought it was
this year. It was like the Lynx versus, Like I
don't even know the teams. All you know was King Clark.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
But it was like I know the links because we
used to broadcast some of their games.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
It was like a two or three minute span of
them going up and down the court and it was
just one team airball, next team down the court, airball,
next team down the court, airball, repeated like four or
five times in a row. It's ridiculous. These are like
the best teams in the league.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
Yeah, no, do you remember the Do you remember the
guys who were betting on Angel Reese to miss her
first shot and had hit like seven out of one.
Speaker 3 (20:31):
Or something to do that's like an infinite money glitch.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
Yeah, I think they're up to I think they got
it all the way up to twelve out of one. Yeah,
I think they So the prop that was that Angel
Reese would miss her first shot, and these guys were
just cash and checks, just cash and checks every time.
All right, So With that in mind, I guess congrats there,
(20:55):
And if she wants to go celebrate, I'm I'm so sorry.
I'm sorry you're upset about it. Now you want to
voter ninth best in the league, because, as Ross pointed out,
you're horrible races. So let me know how that goes
for you. Let's see here, all right, let me go
back to Mondani here. So he's got a bright idea.
He's got himself, a good one, never been tried before.
(21:18):
Might work out, might not. Let me run it by you.
And this is I'm dealing with affordable housing up in
New York City. How do you make this happen? And
so this is his suggestion and I can't help but
feel like it sounds famillion.
Speaker 4 (21:33):
We're the Vienna model. We'll have to go beyond the market.
We can establish community land trusts to gradually buy up
housing on the private market and convert it to community ownership.
We can give tenants to write a first refusal to
buy out their landlords when buildings go up for safe
and we can fully commit to a new era of
social housing, ending subsidies for luxury housing development, and using
our wealth to build beautiful, high quality social housing projects
(21:56):
that offer good homes and strong communities to everyone. We
won't decommodify housing overnight, but we know what we have
to do, and we have history to guide them.
Speaker 1 (22:06):
Okay, all right, Hey Ross, does that sound like anything
you've ever heard of? Right there? Where you're basically you're
building these huge housing complexes, you're basically giving them away.
Speaker 3 (22:18):
You're seeing like big like housing projects or something.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
Ah, yeah, I mean that's that's use. Yeah, projects, that
sounds industrious. Yeah, let's go with projects. How do you
get you want? Some projects? Will sound like a good idea.
This new thing you thought of called projects. I think
I'm trying to think of what would be a good
name for it. Oh you know what, Let's see green, right,
(22:44):
you know what I'm saying, because they like green stuff
right with with on the moonbat side. You can't just
call it green? Oh man, what's what am I looking for?
A Cabrini? What about Cabrini green? Because that sounds Italian? Right?
That sounds really nice? Cabrini green. Yeah, we should do that.
You should google what I just said.
Speaker 3 (23:05):
I mean, all I really know about the projects is
what I've learned from like nineties gangster rap like few
Biggie smalls and stuff, and it sounds great.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
I mean, yeah, no, it does. Also the Dice thing
on the Chappelle Show. Those took place in the projects
with Ashy Larry and all those guys. They don't think
they were having fun. Yeah, you don't know what Cabrini
Green was. It's likely one of the most notorious projects
in all of America and it just enveloped South Chicago.
(23:34):
Oh what was that horror movie that also took place
in the projects where if you said the guy's name
three times, he'd come murder all of you.
Speaker 3 (23:40):
And there was bees was that candy Man?
Speaker 1 (23:43):
Candy Man? Yeah, you can't have candy Man if you
don't have projects. And we haven't had a new candy
Man in a while, or maybe we have because they
made way too many of those things. Yeah. Also see
The Wire, which is HBO show. That's that's why I've.
Speaker 3 (23:58):
Heard that's a good show. I haven't got into that,
but I've heard it's really good, Like on.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
Anyone who watched it will tell you that over and
over and over again. But those had projects in there,
so yeah, I mean, what's the worst that could happen?
Here building projects. Let me know how that goes other
than Candy Man murdering all of us. Speaking of remakes
of movies, there is a new Running Man coming out.
(24:27):
It was a little bit of a twist one. He's
married and has a kid, and I did notice that
they did get a little woke. They'll mix up mash
up with the family there, so you've got to have
the interracial stuff there. But I don't think it sounded preachy,
so take it for what it's worth. However, if you
(24:49):
remember the parameters of the previous Running Man, he's what
was he a helicopter pilot? Right? And then they faked
video of him murdering a bunch of citizens because Evil Corporation.
Then they bring him over the game, and then they
bring his little girlfriend over and they stick him down
in the you know, the play area there, and then
they basically have a laundry list of street fighter characters
(25:13):
that have to go hunt him down. And it's really
over the top, but it's a good movie. Ross You
enjoyed Running Man back in the.
Speaker 3 (25:18):
Day, right, Yeah, it's a classic classic movie.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
That's not what this is. First of all, the character
is not all jacked like Arnold I don't think they
have to be, but he's not. Two rather than and
there are people that specialize in this, but rather than
having their gladiators, if he will, because that's really what
they were going for, was gladiators. You know, if you
read anything about what why they went in that direction
(25:44):
for the movie, they wanted this. They wanted a futuristic
gladiatorial scene, if that's such a word. And I think
they accomplished that here. It's kind of the purge. So
you'll hear it in the trailer here. Basically, if you're
gonna go, everyone can hunt you, and you got and
(26:04):
you've got to survive for thirty days. But I mean
everyone now they have these over the top murder characters
that engage in it, and most of the population really
doesn't engage in it. They but they love watching it.
And so that's and and that is closer to the book,
which a lot of people didn't realize that Running Man
(26:26):
necessarily was a book let alone, a Stephen King book.
But so which means he'll probably hate this regardless because
he hates all this stuff. But I don't care because
he's lunatic. But most people haven't read the book, and
so I saw people making that argument, and I always
hate these, well the book arguments. I always hate that
because this is what you book nerds need to understand,
(26:47):
and I have read the book. That being said, I
recognize that most people's experience with Running Man is that movie.
It's not the book, So their expectations are going to
be Schwarzenegger what they remember from that. And even though
it looks like the production value is pretty good on this,
I wonder if people are going to be turned off.
Speaker 4 (27:09):
Ben Richards thirty five, marry one child in medical crisis.
Speaker 5 (27:15):
We need money for a doctor now, Ben, what's employment status?
Speaker 1 (27:22):
Blacklist? But there's still a way out for you. It's
the biggest show in the country.
Speaker 4 (27:32):
It's our birthright.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
Great, welcome to the run.
Speaker 3 (27:42):
People in these games never come back.
Speaker 5 (27:44):
And I'm not trying to do myself killed such just
last twice.
Speaker 1 (27:49):
Right, There is why you can win this game. The
rules are simple.
Speaker 4 (27:54):
Survive thirty days the entire nation Haunsingman downright?
Speaker 1 (28:00):
Are you go watch the whole trailer we got it
out there for.
Speaker 3 (28:02):
Yeah, I'm not gonna lie. The thing that really took
me out of the trailer was theanos's big purple head
talking to the guy. What that was Theos?
Speaker 1 (28:15):
Right, was it?
Speaker 3 (28:17):
Josh Brolin?
Speaker 1 (28:18):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (28:19):
Yeah, Okay, but every time I hear his voice, all
I hear is the Noos now Thanos?
Speaker 1 (28:24):
I do that to Josh?
Speaker 3 (28:25):
I do, I do? I can't help it, can't help it.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
Man.
Speaker 3 (28:28):
I know he's in the Goodies, he's great. But every
time I hear his voice, especially in that delivery, it
sounds like the dude, you know, it sounds like his
character for Marvel.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
I'm sorry, have you heard of No Country for Old Men?
I have.
Speaker 3 (28:37):
It's one of my favorite movies.
Speaker 1 (28:39):
Okay, did now do you think Theos the whole time
you watch that?
Speaker 3 (28:43):
I did not, because he was doing like what I
just said, that delivery. Is this Theano's voice and No
Country for Old Men? He's got like a Southern you know,
Texas accent, completely different.
Speaker 1 (28:53):
Okay, all right, so it's the delivery. Yeah, so he's
got to fight Theos.
Speaker 3 (28:57):
Yeah, he's doing Theano's voice.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
Okay, Well, I know it's just an exec I think
in this uh this capacity here, I don't know. Maybe
it'll be good, maybe it won't. It's kind of like
the upgraded Judge Red where they went in a different direction.
Speaker 3 (29:11):
How was that movie?
Speaker 1 (29:13):
I you know, it was not awful, but it wasn't great.
I mean, give me the give me the It's also
Total Recall. You remember seeing the Total Recall remake with
Who's it calling? Uh the Colin Farrell. That wasn't that.
I think it was. So I don't know. I just
hate that they're that they're scavenging all of all of
(29:34):
the eighties early nineties stuff right now, But it looks
like they may have made an effort. So no, no, no, no, no, okay,
So now people are getting mad at me. Interracial couples
are not necessarily woke. It depends how they're presented. If
you're doing it because you just were casting people, that's
one thing. But if you make a point that that
(29:57):
every commercial that your company runs has to be staffed,
and we've seen these call sheets where they tell them
that you cannot staff a same race couple, then you're
doing it to be woke. I was saying here, it
doesn't look like that, so you know, pay attention to
what's being said there. But also I haven't seen the movie,
(30:17):
so f yi, and I don't know if that's in
the South. I don't know where this is necessarily taking place.
All right, six fifty one kco day radio program. Hang on,
we've got a few things going on. Let me let
me just throw this out because hopefully this is a
window in which you can hear me. So Ross and
I do a terrestrial radio show. Okay, So that means
(30:40):
on the FM dial, right, you tune in at ninety
four to five or one o six one, depending on
you know which side to try a triangle you're on.
And then it's streams at cacothradio dot com or on
the iHeartRadio websites. And there's a slightly different way in
which it takes the signal from what we're doing live
(31:01):
and then does ad insertion. And then there's a fourth
mechanism which we have no control over, and that is
on the iHeart Radio app and it's we've heard from
a lot of you over the last few days, and
we have communicated it up to who we need to
communicate it up the food chain that there's for some
(31:22):
of you. When you're listening, it's literally just taking it'll
just take the break at fifteen after even if we
didn't hit the brake there. So if we go to
seventeen or whatever. Then it cuts out early and then
you miss some content on it, so I don't know
why it's doing that. They've been, you know, we've been
doing some They're always moving stuff around, and the iHeartRadio
(31:43):
app normally is pretty bulletproof, and I love that you
guys use it, so I hope they you know, they're
they're they're getting this fixed real quick. But if that
is a problem for you right now, I would encourage
you if you can to listen, either streaming it on
the website without the app, or on the FM dial
if possible, so that will fit because I want you
(32:06):
to miss a minute of it. And like I said, uh,
I don't have any control of Ross doesn't have any
control over it, so they're gonna have they have they're
having to figure that out at much higher levels than us. Okay,
but we're aware of it. So that would be my recommendation.
I know not everyone's gonna hear me, so, but that
would be my recommendation until I get word that they've
(32:28):
they've got that figured out, which is so weird because
the app actually worked really well for years. It worked
really well. I've streamed I use it to listen to
like a couple of radio buddies, like, man, you got
to hear this interview I got coming up at three
oh five, and then I'll fire the app up to
go listen to them. And I like using the app.
So but I don't know, there's some sort of a
glitch in the matrix or something, so we shall see.
(32:53):
I do have to correct something I pointed out yesterday.
Yesterday I was announcing that Trump was going going to
Alligator Alcatraz, and I said, what was amazing is it
was only like two weeks ago that the Attorney General
for the state of Florida suggested using this It was,
(33:13):
you know, this abandoned air strip out in the middle
of the Everglades, so it's an airstrip, and then the
next to it is where the base was. It's just
a huge concrete pad. And that they were able to
get that thing up and running in two weeks, that
was amazing.
Speaker 3 (33:26):
I was wrong.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
About the time it took them to get it up
and running and exactly what it was, because holy hell,
listen to trumpet this thing yesterday, and then I'll explain
to you the background. Think our viewers at home should note.
But this is air conditioning facility.
Speaker 5 (33:43):
So if any of the news claims are keeping them
out in the hot human South Florida, that is wrong.
Speaker 1 (33:47):
It's probably sixty two there here to be under Hey,
Biden wanted me in here. Okay, he wanted me.
Speaker 5 (33:54):
It didn't work out that way, but he wanted me.
Speaker 1 (33:57):
Yeah. So they're standing there in full suits and middle
of this thing, which is air conditioned and only took
eight days to build. I want to reiterate that they
built this three thousand bed facility which look Is it
the lap of luxury? No, it's not. Is it better
than anything I saw in Eagle Pass, Texas where they
(34:19):
were housing people which in many instances was under an
underpass or an overpass without air conditioning. Yes. Does it
have a lock do they lock down within chain link? Yes?
Do they have a bunk system, yes they do. But
in eight days they accomplished creating this huge facility through
(34:40):
a series of large tents, quanst huts and temporary structures.
That is going to be more than adequate. And remember,
people are not going to be there very long, so
they're not putting them out in the middle of the
Everglades to get Zeka all right, or you know, all
the mosquito borne illnesses they are in climate controlled settings, yes,
(35:03):
in a detainment. They're being detained for the purpose of
getting them on flights back to you know where they're from,
or in some instances, third party nations because they can't
put them back there. And they did it in eight days.
When's the last government project that it cut. When's the
last thing that's your workplace that got accomplished in eight days?
(35:25):
That required three thousand logistics for three thousand people. That's incredible, man.
And all I saw was protesters standing outside of the thing.
And then they'd be like, because you know, they get
all those ditches that run along the roads out there
in the Everglades and they're full of alligators. Nobody disputes them.
And then they'd be like, look, I see an alligator.
(35:45):
They're using alligators to car It's just the dumbest stuff.
But they did it in eight days, eight friggin days. Man,
It's incredibly impressive. And everyone's going to be losing their
minds over, although they're more losing their mind over the
fact that Trump murdered fourteen million people yesterday. So how
(36:05):
do I know? CNN told me The Secretary.
Speaker 6 (36:08):
Of State Mark Rubio, is hailing the end of USAID,
the nation's largest foreign aid agency, even as a new
analysis finds that its closure could contribute to some fourteen
million deaths in the next five years.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
Okay, yeah, so there you go, fourteen million deaths. I
have tried to understand how that is. If you remember
ross how many AIDS people do they murder? In like
just a few days when they did that. Do you
remember that that stupidity. Oh then it came out of there,
I go because of the lack of funding. Now these
people suddenly have AIDS and died. Yeah, it was like
(36:43):
three days after they announced the lack of funding. Yeah,
so excuse me if I don't necessarily believe what you're doing.
And also, CNN, you're doing some real sketch stuff over there,
including promoting the Ice of Aasion app, which has taken
a rather interesting turn because now a bunch of MAGA
people are on there just making false reports and they're like,
(37:07):
all right, I want to go to this place, so
I'm going to report that ICE is there, and now
there's a lot less people there, which is kind of diabolical.
But CNN was promoting an app that lets you track
ICE agents. I think we've discussed why this is a problem,
and I understand it's kind of on the cusp of
free speech, but the idea that CNN would promote and
(37:28):
name it is pretty crazy. I'm not even giving you
the full name of it. You could probably google it,
but you know they're on there promoting this.
Speaker 7 (37:37):
Now the Trump administration steps up ice raids and mass deportations,
one tech developer is pushing back with an app designed
to track ICE activity in real time. It's called ice Block,
and it's controversial, to say the least. Santa Claire Duffy
is with us. Now, how does this work, Claire, and
what are the legal implications?
Speaker 8 (37:58):
Yeah, John, I talked with Joshua Aaron, who is the
longtime tech worker who developed this platform, and he said
he really wants it to be an early warning system
for people about the location of immigrations and customs enforcement officers.
So he says he does not want people interfering with
those officers' activity, but he does want people to be
able to avoid them altogether if they want so. You
(38:19):
open the app. It looks like a map and users
can tap the map to report an ICE sighting in
their area, and then everybody who uses the platform within
five miles of that siting will get a push alert.
This is a free iPhone app. It is anonymous erin
says he doesn't collect any user data. And what I
think is really interesting about this in this moment is
we've seen so many of the biggest leaders in tech
(38:41):
supporting President Trump. But Aaron is sort of an example
of the fact that there are people within the tech
industry who are really resistant to Trump's policies. I asked
him what he would say to those tech leaders who.
Speaker 1 (38:52):
For by the way, before we get to what he
would say, I think her going all this it just
shows you that there's people within the tech world that
are resistant to Trump. Was that ever in question after
what we saw with the Biden administration and the social
media companies and just the lunacy that is Silicon Valley
(39:13):
with some of this stuff where people wonder, what, oh, well,
obviously all the tech bros are in it for Trump. No,
they're not. All you gotta do is look at Google, man,
look at all of the stuff that we talked about.
Look at how quickly after the Butler PA shooting that
would you Google stuff about presidential roster. We ran this
(39:33):
on the air right where we've got Google presidential assassination attempts,
and the Trump stuff would get buried and it literally
had happened like the week before.
Speaker 3 (39:42):
Yeah, or you would ask it about like you'd be like, hey,
tell me about this thing that happened, and it would
deny that it happened.
Speaker 1 (39:47):
Or deny that he was shot. I remember there was that,
and so they had to keep like, what do you
do You think that that's not intentional? Wikipedia is just
as bad man, So stop it with this lunis. See.
Oh ok well, finally some tech people have stepped forward.
Speaker 8 (40:02):
Example, we're at the inauguration. Here's what you told me.
Take a listen.
Speaker 1 (40:08):
I understand that you have shareholders to report to you.
Speaker 7 (40:11):
I understand that you have employees that need their paychecks.
Speaker 1 (40:15):
But at what point do you say enough is enough?
Speaker 8 (40:20):
And John I should say that ICE did not respond
when I asked them about this platform and about Aaron's
opposition to their activity.
Speaker 1 (40:27):
Okay. And and by the way, it's how you present
this versus how it's utilized. And I can give you
another example of this. So you heard in the CNN
thing They're like, it's not for people to be able
to follow the ice people around, it's for people to
be able to avoid where they're going. Right, Okay, don't
you guys remember the whale app Remember do you remember
(40:47):
that show that was on called whale Wars? I think
we've talked to Yeah, I remember that. Yeah, all right. So,
so the whole premise of it was is you had
this this organization that was in opposite to is it Japanese,
so just Japanese I can't remember Japanese Chinese whaling operations,
(41:08):
And so they would follow the whaling ships around and
then they would try to like get between where the
whales were, and there'd be some confrontations, mostly with like
on deck fire hoses and stuff, and most of it
was shot inside of the ship with all of the
the eco protesters, and it would also it was also
interesting about that show, is not just at they're protests,
(41:30):
by the way, I don't have beef with them necessarily
if they feel passionate about it. The problem was is
every now and then there'd be some illegal stuff being done.
And as somebody who is an outdoor sportsman, I've seen
this crap all through all through my enjoyment of hunting
and fishing. They used to come out to Wyoming during
this big coyote coaling event we had and they would
(41:50):
spike roads and stuff. Now you're doing something entirely different.
So but but you'd also see the interpersonal relationships of
the protesters and it was it was like it was
like Jerry Springer man this crazy stuff. But there was
a story that emerged around that time where I don't
(42:11):
know if it was their organization, but another one put
together an app so you can track whales so that
people if they wanted to whale watch, and it was
it was so that people would have a greater appreciation
for whales, which are amazing. I don't know if you've
ever been anywhere whale watching. If you go, if you
go to the Pacific side, when the humpbacks are migrating,
that's a huge thing all the way up the west
(42:32):
coast and it is pretty cool. I remember being able
to see migrating whales from my patio in Isla Vista.
There you see Santa Barbara and that was pretty cool.
But what do you think happened with that app? What
do you what do you think? People said, Oh wait,
I got a way to track whales. The Japanese fleet
started using it. Whoopsie yeah yeah, yeah, yeah I think
(43:00):
they they they did something and essentially new to it.
But I'm like, yeah, that was kind of predictable. Man.
Speaker 3 (43:08):
This whole segment though from CNN, and they know exactly
what they're doing, and they're trying to act like they're
not doing what they're doing.
Speaker 1 (43:13):
Do you know why they added the caveat Remember this
is for people.
Speaker 9 (43:16):
So anyway, if you know you're thinking about maybe you
don't want to be stuffed in a van and sit
down in Mexico, hey we've got this app for you
and do.
Speaker 3 (43:25):
But then they go into the details.
Speaker 9 (43:26):
So what you want to do is going into your notifications,
turn them on so you know you're not going to
miss where they are.
Speaker 3 (43:31):
You know what you're doing.
Speaker 1 (43:33):
Yeah. No, Now on the flip side, I saw somebody
in the Trump administration was like, I don't know, maybe
they should be held criminally liable. I don't know if
you're going to get there. That being said, everyone knows
what's up, right.
Speaker 3 (43:48):
They're showing you it, they're showing you how to use
the app, and they're like, oh, going into your settings
and do these things, so use it for this, right,
but don't do that.
Speaker 1 (43:57):
Do you remember that? Do you remember when somebody got
to filter out where it could like un they were
they were tricking what were they doing. They were tricking
like girls into doing bude wash shots, but through a
filter so nobody could see it. And then somebody came
up with a filter.
Speaker 3 (44:12):
Right, there is a way to take down to filter
so you could see them.
Speaker 1 (44:14):
Yeah, you could see all their nakedness, wasn't.
Speaker 3 (44:16):
It like during that silhouette challenge? Remember that?
Speaker 1 (44:18):
Yeah, that's what it was, the silhouette challenge. And uh
and then and then I remember watching one of the
news outlets like but whatever you do, don't get this
other filter and you know, because it might unblur the nudity.
And it was like that. It was like the top
downloaded thing or whatever. It's like, come on, man, you
know what's up. Everybody knows what's up. But what has
(44:40):
happened now is people to fight back. Have they've gotten
this this this app and they are now flooding it
so if they want to go somewhere and they don't
want traffic, they flood a bunch of things at the
mall I saw some people posting videos of themselves doing
it to basically undermine what the app's doing. So now
the developers can have to figure Okay, well, how do
(45:00):
you fight back against that? How do you sit there
and go, oh, this guy you just put in twenty
seven false reports basically to clear a lane for him
to go to the beach with his family or something.
Because that's what's happening, and it was entirely predictable. All right,
this though not predictable. I got to tell you I
(45:23):
have spent many, many, many a moment driving up and
down Atlantic Ross. You've driven up and down Atlantic. It
runs right adjacent to the radio.
Speaker 3 (45:30):
Station every single day. That's how I get to work.
Speaker 1 (45:35):
And how many days of every single day have as
somebody who's nude with a wood thing tried to carjack you?
Speaker 3 (45:45):
That hasn't happened. I have been yelling and screaming at
the constant construction in Atlantic that's super annoying. That's been
going on for like twenty years years.
Speaker 1 (45:54):
Been hitting that thing over there by the ballet.
Speaker 3 (45:57):
Yeah no, no grand theft auto naked man.
Speaker 1 (46:00):
Okay, well all that changed yesterday. Apparently we will get
into this and I got to figure out where exactly
is this in front of four thousand block of Atlantic.
I'm gonna look that up here during the during the break.
But uh yeah, yeah, so just real quickly, this little
new snow it saw like a naked man running around.
Speaker 7 (46:19):
He had a bottle on his end, breaking windows and
he had like a like a metal thing.
Speaker 1 (46:22):
He was breaking on more windows of that too.
Speaker 7 (46:24):
I think he broke a door to and they were
all glass.
Speaker 1 (46:27):
Yeah, yeah, so that's what That's what one motorists reported there.
We'll give you the full details of that coming up
here just a few minutes on the cac O Day
radio program. Hang on, And I know many of you
are and you all think that I hate cats, but
I actually I don't endorse actually harming animals even even yes,
I know there's some vegans like you guys rerease beef cattle.
(46:50):
Yeah that's different. I mean, for there is a detailed
process there, and believe it or not, we take steps
to make sure that it is as humane as possible.
But the things that I get equally irritated over, although
I think people have to use common sense, is when
people leave pets and cars and it's hot out. Now,
(47:12):
can you leave a pet in a car when it's
not hot out for a few minutes. Yeah, I don't
think that's a problem. And the pendulum has swung a little.
And I'll like, I was in Wyoming one time and
I had my buddy's dog in my car and I
pull up to a trailhead. You have to understand, it's
like fifty degrees out, so yeah, it's fall fall whatever,
(47:33):
And I was just gonna walk into the trailhead grab Basically,
there's some camping forms that you need there for this
particular spot, but you're gonna walk like fifty yards up
the trail to where the little ranger box thing is
and I wanted to grab a couple of those. I
walked back and this woman is holding a rock getting
ready to smash my window, which is partially down because
(47:55):
she sees the dog in there, and it starts beating me.
I'm like, ma'am, it's fifty degrees. I walked fifty feet
in there. The dog's been in there three minutes. You
could not have arrived more than two minutes ago. And
the dogs and the dogs just like, hey, hey, what's
going on. Everything's fine. That being said, I've seen instances
where people at pets and cars and you know, the
heat gets up there and law enforcement gets called, people
(48:18):
smash windows. I don't have a problem with that in
the right scenario. This, on the other hand, this is
the craziest amount I've ever seen. So what happens if
you're somebody who's willing to do that, but you're also
a crazy cat lady. Well for that, we go to
Merced County, California, where witnesses say they saw up to
twenty cats up in like the you know, the front
(48:42):
dash of this van, so like you look through and
you see cats, just just a pile of cats in there.
And so they call authorities and what they found is
is absolutely nuts. Sixty nine year old Jeanie Maxon was
arrested after deputies were dispatched. It was at a taco bell.
She was in the taco be I guess getting some.
(49:03):
So they show up, they confront her and they get
her to open the van. How many cats do you
think this woman drives around with? How many cats? How many?
By the way, how many cats? There's too many cats
to have in a vehicle. One.
Speaker 3 (49:15):
I drove the minivan once back when we had the
town and country with Elliot, and Elliott was maybe like
I don't know, not even a year old, and it
was so confused. He was all over that van, all
over the place, jumping around a windows, getting in boxes
in the back that we were moving, seriously, almost caused accidents.
That was one cat.
Speaker 1 (49:35):
That's one cat. So she has slightly more than one cat.
Speaker 3 (49:39):
All right, so you're talking like two cats yoda law, yodalan,
how about like ten cat? Ten cats?
Speaker 1 (49:47):
Sheep? Going, now, I need to find the yodel guy. Man,
all right, go ahead, I'll wait. All right, so're just
gonna look for the yodel because that's gonna be very
very important here. And I know we got it. This
is the yodle guy from Prices, right, So we got
to keep going.
Speaker 3 (50:00):
Maybe did I have an under cliffhanger or did I
have under.
Speaker 1 (50:03):
Yeah, I don't remember what it's under. Might be under cliffhanger,
might be under yodel maybe prices right, I don't know,
there it is, Okay, all.
Speaker 3 (50:14):
Right, I think that's what the buzzer at the end.
Speaker 1 (50:16):
I'm not sure. Okay, well whatever, all right, yes she
left off. I think you're up to twenty cats.
Speaker 3 (50:21):
All right, so we're going like twenty five cats.
Speaker 1 (50:23):
No, keep going, keep going.
Speaker 3 (50:25):
Hold on, we I gotta play it.
Speaker 1 (50:27):
Yeah, hold on, gonna play right? Is not my button mark,
I'll play it. Let me, let me play it.
Speaker 3 (50:31):
So okay, I'll go thirty cats, keep going about like
forty five cats.
Speaker 1 (50:39):
Keep going.
Speaker 3 (50:40):
I'll go fifty cats. Bob double that and keep going.
Oh my good lord, wait what seven seventy cats?
Speaker 1 (50:48):
No? I said double fifty.
Speaker 3 (50:50):
There's no way. It's like eighty cats.
Speaker 1 (50:51):
Oh my, one and thirty four cats. She had one
hundred and thirty four cats in a van. It looks
like it's a full It's like one of those U
haul vans. She's had to get a U haul van,
not a full U haul t She moving them somewhere
with no she just needed the She needed to rent
it to like drive around with us. So she had
(51:13):
been long run and she'd been running the U haul van.
One hundred and thirty four cats. Yeah, and not all
of them in great shape. It looks like how many
had to be put down? Twenty eight? So yeah, i'd
like throw this burious woman under the prison. I don't care. Yeah.
(51:34):
The cats who ranged in age from one week to
eight years old. Were seas taking them or said County
Animal shelter. I can't imagine she's charged with ninety three
counts of animal cruelty and a bunch of other stuff.
Can you imagine trying to pilot a vehicle down the
road with one hundred and thirty four cats in said
vehicle that it clearly can free rome because they were
(51:56):
up in the windshield. All of that, Like the fact
that the van didn't flip is a man. Let's see
here cats, cats are being medically cleared by that staff
will be available for.
Speaker 3 (52:10):
Adoption, maybe like a like a puppy farm sort of thing. Right, Like,
there's no way.
Speaker 1 (52:15):
It sounds like she just really love cats and she
couldn't figure out how they kept more cats kept showing up.
Now I'm trying to see there's a statement from her.
I guess you really didn't make a statement, just that
those were her those were her babies. Dude, somebody's cats
are super long here and I bet it was hot
as Helen RSA this weekend? Oh what is wrong with people?
(52:37):
All right? So back to this crazy story. A naked
man was taken into custody Tuesday afternoon after attempting to
steal a car near Atlantic Avenue. It happened around two
twenty in the afternoon. Officers responded to a person in
the forty five hundred blocker forty one hundred block of
Atlantic Avenue. All right, I did look this up, So
(52:58):
anyone want to guess where the forty one hundred lock
of Atlantic Avenue is. So we thought it was going
to be where all like the Mexican grocery stores and
the nightclubs are slightly north of there, like by Chapel
Hill Tire, but kind of across the street, but not
quite all the way to the chart Grill. So if
you want some sense of where there was a lunatic
(53:18):
running around naked. The suspect approached let's see here Quarty
two witnesses. The male suspect had no clothes on. Well,
it's been really hot, right, so I guess I can
understand that. Right.
Speaker 3 (53:33):
You're just out and about.
Speaker 1 (53:33):
Maybe you're taking a walk with your giant wooden post
you're carrying and your bottle, and you're like, man, who
sweating right through these You gotta do something? Hey, what
if I get naked? All right? So the suspect approached
one of the witnesses, who had just exited and unlocked
his vehicle, demanding access to the Do you ross, would
you get out of your car if there's a naked
(53:54):
dude standing in the parking lot holding a bottle? I
would have a wood post, Sure wouldn't. Yeah, so I'm
gon assume this guy didn't see him, demanding access to
the vehicle for the witness to drop everything he was carrying.
The witness complied. The suspect then hit him with the
wooden post. The man then approached other witnesses who were
sitting in their car eating lunch. Where is this at?
(54:18):
Is this at? There's like a Peruvian restauran. I bet
it's right in the parking lot of that Peruvian restaurant.
I'm not blaming them. Let's see. Uh, so she's sitting
in her carting lunch. He struck her in the arm.
I guess she had her window down, then pulled her
out of her car and tried to drive away. But
you ready for this stick shift? You got undermind by
(54:41):
the stick shift. After being unsuccessful, the suspects ran into
a wooded air Oh goodie, isn't there a police station
right up the street from this correct me if I'm wrong,
Raley PD, somebody you can send me an email or
a text or something. Isn't there a police station like
between the char grill and like where the FedEx or
ups is all that up there? In Atlantic right red
(55:04):
turns wherever the speed limit goes up. I thought there's
a police station right there. So this is brave. So
he goes into the woods because some dude's got like
a farm back there. I don't know if you know
it kind of jammed in between and officers got the
old fur missile out. Dude, that's nightmare stuff there. And drones. Dude,
if you're naked and the canine's coming to champ on you,
(55:26):
that's going to be a problem. That's worst case scenario, right, yeah, man,
you know know what that dog's going to bite down on.
He did have to be taken away in an ambulance
and he's in custody. Police say charges for forthcoming. I
need to know more, all right, So watch out for
(55:47):
crazy naked dudes with fence posts just up the street
from the radio station here except for this one because
he's in custody, all right. Eight eight eight nine three
four seven eight seven four raced agic ready. So we
have some crazy naked dude just up the street from
the station, chasing people around and assaulting them with stuff.
(56:08):
And then he ran into the woods and now he's
naked and they got a canine bearing down on him.
So it's just both all around. Yeah, it does sound
a little bad, right, And it's hot out man, you know. Yeah,
we've all been there, Yeah, been there, done that, right,
So to avoid this, I mean to need you to
get it down a little. That'd be good.
Speaker 3 (56:30):
We will.
Speaker 10 (56:30):
I think we'll drop the commidity just a bit. Front
still kind of laid over the top of us or
just to our west, and it's not moving real quickly,
so it's gonna leave the shower thundershower threat in the
forecast for today. Already seen a few showers still around town,
even around the Triads, some white rain showers just northwest
of Raleigh. Now a little thundershowers start to develop, So
(56:51):
I think we're going to be in and out of
it today. The showers, showers, and the humidity will still
stay mid eighties for most of us, and we'll continue
to show th undershower threat early tonight and then get
into some sunshine. I think we're going to have a
little bit less humidity tomorrow. I really want to check
on this because although we're going to be in the
upraighties to maybe ninety both tomorrow and again on the fourth,
(57:12):
and probably through the weekend, humidity should come down a
little bit at least for a couple of those days,
and then maybe start creeping back up as we look
ahead toward the end of the weekend and early next
week as the rain chances come back.
Speaker 1 (57:22):
So still, I'm gonna call it.
Speaker 10 (57:24):
Unsettled today, not really outlooked for any widespread severe weather,
just a small chance. Yesterday had about a handful of
storm reports Davidson County, Guildford County, but not widespread, nothing
too terrible, just some wind and tree damage. Looks like
we may see a stronger storm today, but nothing too widespread.
Speaker 1 (57:42):
They're out of it.
Speaker 10 (57:43):
Absolutely beautiful weather tomorrow and on the fourth and through
the holiday weekend. The beach is now the beaches aren't
going to be so nice for the weekend. With an
area that the Hurricane Center actually has a chance of
developing off the southeast coast at forty percent, maybe week
low pressure sitting off the Georgia or south North Carolina.
That's going to keep brain chances up, probably from the
(58:03):
outer banks at south toward Tybee and the beaches of
northeast Florida. I'm gonna keep brain chances pretty decent at
least for now, and even some high rip current risks.
Speaker 1 (58:12):
Okay, all right, thank you very much. Do appreciate people
talking an hour. Sure, there you go, Race Agic from
the Weather Channel. All right, coming up yesterday. Yesterday we
saw some rather interesting, rather interesting info coming out about
Tillis and his choice not to run. I also saw
(58:32):
a very annoying tweet from our Speaker of the House,
and I hope you didn't mean it like this, but
we have to discuss it as well as and you'll
just have to take this for what it's worth. I'll
throw it out there. Some sources that we're communicating to
some of the reporters about internal polling surrounding Tillis versus
possible Democrat challengers, including I'm sure Roy Cooper. Right, So
(58:55):
you know how these work, where they're like, all right,
here's five people we think might run. We're going to
to pull people as to who they'd vote for versus
the incumbent, and let's just say it wasn't good. Wasn't
good at all. I'll give you those details coming up next.
Hang on, thank you emailers. The sound you heard when
we were getting done with Ray is Ray was adjusting
(59:17):
his microphone. It was not a toilet flush, but it
did kind of sound like that, So I will give
you that. Actually, Boston, Paul, you since you're the one
who sent me that. That sound you heard that sounded
like a toilet flushing was the Patriot super Bowl hopes
this year, So I understand you guys have been mathematically eliminated.
So sorry to hear that, but yeah, it was a
mic adjustment. So rosskinna screw with them next time. He's on,
(59:37):
all right. So I saw two tweets yesterday having to
do with all of the all the Senate race stuff,
one from Andy Speck from WRIL with a little bit
of reporting. Take it for what it's worth, because there
is some anonymous sourcing in here. But I'm not surprised
by this either. And I think that I have to
(59:58):
assume Tillis's camp, if these numbers are true, has had
knowledge of this, and as well as the National Republican
Senatorial Committee, which is a document that Andy has obtained
and basically it was it was something that was sent
out to big Republican donors. And to sum it up,
I'm not going to read the whole thing, but it
(01:00:19):
basically says, with Tillis deciding to clear the way, we
are now more confident than ever that Republicans can retain
the Senate seat in twenty twenty six. So the question
is why do they have more confidence now because normally
you'd be more confident with an incumbent, right, That's what
everyone wants. The power of incumbency. And according to what
(01:00:42):
Specter's reporting here, internal polls showed that Tillis trailed potential
Democrat opponents by nine to thirteen percentage points. I'm going
to read that again. Internal polls showed Tillis trailing Democrats,
so you know, potential opponents by nine to thirteen percentage points.
(01:01:04):
Just show me the dang clock? What is ro? Why
does why? When you people update stuff, whether it is
the iOS and the photo gallery update on my iPhone
or Microsoft making in Windows eleven. The clock that I
use literally is a timing clock so that when my uh,
because sometimes my next gen is not in my field
(01:01:25):
of vision. So you take the clock away, all right,
I'll have to figure that out after the show. So annoying, man,
So annoying. All right, Um, so check this out. A
couple things going on here, this story breaking overnight. The
headline is Paramount CBS forced to pay eight figures change
(01:01:48):
editorial policy and settlement with Trump. Let me tell you
how many angry moon beats there's going to be in
mainstream media today because they were even the ones who
didn't work for CBS were upset that CBS was considering settling.
And of course they're accusing Trump of shaking him down
because the settlement is something they think needs to happen
(01:02:09):
for the merger that Paramount wants, and not just their
own bad behavior. But I digress. So Paramount Global and
CBS agreed to pay President Trump a sum that could
reach north of thirty million dollars to settle the president's
election in her interference lawsuits. So this lawsuit surrounded the
(01:02:29):
infamous Kamala Harris sixty minutes interview, where, if you remember,
they clearly cut it on what they aired so that
they did not have to show that this woman was
dumb as a box of rocks with a rambling answers,
so they they trimmed it down. They actually supplemented one
(01:02:50):
part of the answer, which was actually part of the
follow up question answer, so that it would be somewhat coherent,
and then they just put it out there. And of
course when they interviewed Trump, they did him dirty previously
and refused to put out the whole thing. And if
you remember how Trump handled it, so they they edited
(01:03:13):
him and he's like, that's not the answer I gave you.
And so the Trump administrator, the Trump campaign, i should say,
released the because they had been taping it themselves and
it clearly showed that sixty minutes was very favorable to
make Harris look good and attempted to make Trump look
as bad as possible. So that's what this lawsuit was about. Well,
(01:03:36):
Trump's going to get sixteen million dollars up front. That'll
cover legal fees, costs to the case, a contribution to
this is what this part made me laugh. Contributions to
his future presidential library and other right wing charitable causes.
So sebe, these moonbats at CBS not only are going
(01:03:58):
to pay for part of the presidential Trump Library, they're
also some of that money is going to go to
conservative charities, which I notice has to make them so mad. Also,
there is anticipation that there will be another allocation in
the mid eight figures that will be used for advertisements
public service announcements in support of conservative causes that will
(01:04:23):
run on CNN's network in the future. So an in
kind donation is part of the settlement. So CNN will
have to run pro life PSAs and stuff that's going
to stick in their crop. And finally, and this is
my favorite part, going forward, those involved in the settlement
(01:04:47):
will adopt a new rule that is dubbed the Trump Rule.
So the Trump rule is very simple. Going forward, the network,
when they interview a presidential camp did it well at
the same time they released the interview, will also release
full unedited transcripts of future presidential candidates interviews. It says transcripts.
(01:05:12):
I don't know if it'll be the video, but it
will be transcripts. And so now when they're putting these
things together during editorial meetings, somebody will have to point
out that they have to abide by the Trump rule. Dude,
They're gonna be so mad. They're gonna be so because
it ain't about the money for Trump. This was about
making a point, and clearly in the settlement he made
(01:05:34):
the point. One there's a new rule, it's my rule.
Two you're gonna run PSAs for stuff that you detest,
so good on that. And three you're gonna pay all
my legal cost and for part of my presidential library.
Thank you, CBS. And remember ABC settled for what fifteen
(01:05:54):
million with the Stephanopolis rape stuff. So if this is what,
as they say on the Twitter, if this is what
winning looks like, yes, yes it is. Let's see is
there any other parts to this? Trump was seeking twenty
billion though, so he is getting slightly less, but obviously
(01:06:16):
that's just throwing a number at a wall and seeing
what's going on. CBS says they will not acknowledge any
journalistic wrongdoing as part of the settlement though now it
is different though when you get over to what's going
on at U penn So we also found out yesterday
that the University of Pennsylvania has agreed to resolve the
(01:06:36):
Title nine violations surrounding Lea Thomas. Lea Thomas, of course,
is the swimmer repeeded against among others. Riley Gaines set
all the records and Title nine is about protecting women
in sports, and the theory by U Penn and others
was that Lea Thomas, who identified as a woman but
(01:06:58):
was a biological mayle, met that burden. And clearly it
was probably the highest profile case of men in women's
sports and just dominating up till that point. So what's
going to happen. Well, as part of the resolution, pen
will adopt definitions for male and female contestants based on
(01:07:19):
you know, chromosomes, basic biological sex. They will restore the
records to the previous record holders. So because remember Lea
Thomas set new women's NCAA swimming records and now that'll
be that's gone. They will give titles to the female
(01:07:39):
athletes that Thomas competed against. Now, you're never going to
undo some stuff like certain swimmers who may have qualified
for Olympic trials who didn't. Is that you know that
has passed. There's no way to resolve that. But oh
and they will issue this. The university will issue personal
apologies to each female swimmer that Lea Thomas had to
(01:07:59):
comp heat against, as well as change locker room policies
to abide by the previous thing. There. See, this is
the problem for all of this stuff because how many
you know, we would sit here and we'd see all
of this stuff, a lot of it during the Biden administration,
where they would just blatantly do things. They'd be like,
all right, we're going to we're gonna have this thing
(01:08:20):
at this public university, but it's only for black, brown
or whatever people. The way people can't attend. You're like,
I don't know how that's legal. That seems like a
clear violation. They go, no, we think it's legal, and
then nothing would happen. You know, nothing would happen. You
saw during COVID too, where you'd see blatant violations of
constitutional laws and the courts didn't want to touch that either.
(01:08:44):
And I think this speaks a lot to the corruption
of the judiciary, which continues to be a big problem.
They just had a district judge do a national thing
again a day after the Supreme Court did the ruling,
well one work day, i should say, after that happened
on Monday, an injunction, a national injunction over Haitian deporting immigrants.
(01:09:07):
They just had a judge say, I don't care what
the Supreme Court did, I'm gonna do this thing. So
it was such low hanging fruit. I'm not surprised that
when you actually have a justice department that's willing to,
you know, challenge and by the way, put federal dollars
on the line. University of Pennsylvania could not afford to
just ignore those federal dollars, so they were willing to
(01:09:29):
actually and this isn't Trump arm twisting. It's a direct
reading of Title nine. And the judge agrees. But yeah,
there's gonna be there's so many but hurt moonbats today
after just a few stories, it's pretty amazing. All right.
So I saw this story yesterday. What do you know
about sleep apnea? Ross, What do you know about sleep apnea?
(01:09:52):
Because we've had we have clients who literally run ads
on here. But what do you know about sleep apnea
and how you end up where you are, or at
least the your understanding of how people end up having
to go get one of those sleep studies, maybe get
a seapap machine. One of the biggest contributors is what
people who are overweight, right, that's a thing that's a problem.
(01:10:15):
And so when we when I hear people advertising or
having to seek it out. One of the things that
a doctor will tell you if you're dealing with sleep apnea.
And even though with the seapap one of the ways
that you can there's surgery. You can get implants for
this stuff, or or you can get healthy, and a
lot of people that's how their sleep apnea goes away.
(01:10:35):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:10:35):
I used to have like a big issue when I was, like,
you know, really overweight and drink a lot, right, And amazingly,
when I stopped doing both those things, right, it went
sober and lost like a lot of weight. The snoring
went away.
Speaker 1 (01:10:47):
Oh wow, it's not just snoring. I want to be
very clear. Sleep apnea is actually very dangerous because snoring
is one aspect of it. But you can literally stop breathing,
so it you know, it does a joke, man, that's
what you're that's what you're doing. Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah yeah.
So uh so you think that maybe your diet may
have contributed to that situation? Yeah, lifestyle, yes, okay, okay,
(01:11:10):
well good news for you. Nope, No, it was climate change.
This whole time.
Speaker 3 (01:11:17):
I had no idea.
Speaker 1 (01:11:18):
Yeah no, you thought it was man make right, you thought.
Speaker 3 (01:11:20):
Yeah, shoveling cake though, no climate chann I feel dull,
I feel stupid.
Speaker 1 (01:11:26):
Yeah. Look, yeah, you gave up. You did all that.
Remember all those potatoes you ate I do. Yeah? You
never forget that, will you. All you had to do
was just go climate change? Yeah. New study from ABC News.
Uh and uh what is this? Uh some Australian university whatever.
Rising temperature is amplified by climate change or contributing to
(01:11:47):
an increase in cases of sleep apnea, a condition in
which breathing repeatedly stops during sleep. According to a new
study published by The Journey or the journal Nature Communications,
temperature keeps rising the way we projected, the burden and
prevalence of sleep apneum may double, according to researchers. Uh,
(01:12:08):
this is so, this is dangerous too, is what it is.
This is dangerous because you're you're you're telling people that
have a condition that could literally kill them that while
not one hundred percent effective effective in mitigating it, the
best way to mitigate it is to get healthy, lose weight,
(01:12:30):
or at least seek out some other you know, some
other alternative, whatever it may be. But when you tell
people it's not their fault, none of that matters, and
it's climate change. Now, all of a sudden, you don't
you don't feel. If you don't feel somewhat of a
personal responsibility, it's really hard to make personal changes because
if you think that, well, you don't have any control
(01:12:52):
over it, then why would you change your lifestyle? Ah,
let's see. The risk is even higher for males and
individuals who normally sleep longer have higher body weights. So
you literally say it in the thing, extreme heat can exasperbate,
making it harder to sleep. The study notes, as our
(01:13:14):
planet warms, heat waves are becoming increasingly more cod Just
I'm not going to read any more of this garbage.
So yes, yes, climate change is causing your sleep app
and not the cake so cake on eight nineteen. Hang on,
all right, hold on, let me grab this, Steve. What's up? Hey,
I'm curious as to what the time of the year
(01:13:37):
does it eficially become.
Speaker 11 (01:13:38):
Winter so that the cure for sleep appre to kick in?
Speaker 1 (01:13:43):
Well you want to ray about hold on, you're making
the classic mistakes here because you're thinking global warming, and
they very clearly use climate change, so then they can
use that all year. So oh yeah, yeah, CMU shaking
you go. Nothing you could do, man, the evil oil
companies doing this to you. If we're using the seabees. Wow, Sally,
(01:14:06):
get you all right? All right? Man? I thought I thought, no,
you thought you found a loophole and you did not, Sir,
I got.
Speaker 10 (01:14:15):
Just like the crazy cat lady delivering meat to talk about.
Speaker 1 (01:14:19):
Well, I don't think that was her goal, but it
almost took place. Sorry, Steve, thanks for the call. There
By the way, Ross, did you lose a bag of heads?
Do you do? You have a bag of heads? Maybe?
Any left?
Speaker 12 (01:14:34):
Im?
Speaker 3 (01:14:34):
Sorry? Bag a bag of what?
Speaker 1 (01:14:35):
Heads? Heads? Human heads?
Speaker 4 (01:14:37):
You know?
Speaker 1 (01:14:38):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (01:14:38):
No, I'm not bago.
Speaker 1 (01:14:39):
I believe it's called bago heads. It's like bago glass
from my snel. Yeah, bag of heads.
Speaker 3 (01:14:46):
No, that's that's awful.
Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
Just in case you're wondering why people really, really really
don't want cartel members operating here in the US, I
present to you this. Uh. Twenty bodies were discovered, including
four decapitated corpses hanging from a bridge in the Sinaloa
portion of Mexico. All twenty of the victims male had
gunshot wounds. Five of the bodies were decapitated, and next
(01:15:12):
to them was a plastic bag. Well that's not environmentally friendly,
is it? Using a plastic bag. It's not even a
reusable bag, used a plastic bag. What are you trying
to pollute the planet? Plastic's a big issue in Latin America.
Just use you want to get the brown bags at
the checkout, or use reusable. If you're going to stuff
(01:15:34):
five cartel enemies heads into a bag, these guys are
very irresponsible. The bag containing five human heads found close
to the bridge where they were hanging, and a van
was plastered with a banner referencing an ongoing war between
rival drug cartels in Sineloa. Because this is what you get, right,
these are the types of people you're dealing with. It
(01:15:57):
was the comments that really blew me away. And it
was talk talking about generational snaff foos, which actually is interesting,
right because we just what did we talk about a
few weeks ago where it was putting what was it
punctuation in text right, where some younger folks thought it
was aggressive if you use like periods and stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:16:15):
Like that, right, And they also like to use like
lo o l at the end of sentences so you
know they're kidding, so that.
Speaker 1 (01:16:20):
You know they're kidding and it's not serious, okay, And look,
this is that's interesting we don't have to get into
a debate between generations because it's it's you know, things change,
and it is interesting how some people interpret it versus others.
You know. One of the biggest downfalls with texting why
I hate texting is I'm very sarcastic, and it doesn't
always it can't always tell you know.
Speaker 3 (01:16:42):
It's the same way in social media, and you have
like the younger generations that are like, you need to
put like a slash and an ass so people know
you're being sarcastic. And I'm like, no, I will not.
Speaker 1 (01:16:51):
Yeah, nope, Yeah, you don't get the joke that's on
you or sark. Yeah, I see what they see. So
this is what I saw yesterday. Ros you tell me
if you guys are violating this. Apparently it's now considered
rude among some younger younger folks to leave appliances sitting
permanently on the counter in your kitchen.
Speaker 3 (01:17:10):
What what are you supposed to do with that?
Speaker 4 (01:17:15):
Like?
Speaker 3 (01:17:15):
What do you Yeah, no, on our counters. We have
an air fryer, we have a toaster of it. We
have a toaster. We have the carrying machine I think
like a mixer or something like what are we You're
supposed to put him underneath.
Speaker 1 (01:17:26):
The burning hundreds right now while he's doing lighting stuff
on fire. Yeah yeah, no, I'm sorry man, Why why
why you gotta flex your air frer.
Speaker 3 (01:17:36):
Like see, I'm going to push back a little bit.
And what you said previously about how like you know,
you know, all generations are you know? He said, like
you know? No, if I listen, they all suck. They
suck the zoomers.
Speaker 1 (01:17:46):
And sucks for a different reason.
Speaker 3 (01:17:47):
Or I will take Gen X, and I will take
the boomers and like the late half of the millennials,
I guess like some of them are I but the
rest of them garbage. Oh no, how many stories like
this do we need to cover before we realize that
they're they're cooked?
Speaker 1 (01:18:04):
You have a generation not even as storage issue. I
got a big kitchen, it's sough. I could easily take
all and I have a couple of cabinets with the
with the big pull out you know, flat shelves that
roll out, and I could easily organize all of the
air fryer. The the microwave does a microwave count The
microwave has to be exempt, right, well.
Speaker 3 (01:18:25):
Ours is like one of the big microwaves. That's like
on the wall. So it's like a mounted.
Speaker 1 (01:18:30):
Mine, sits on a count it sits on like a
side work station.
Speaker 3 (01:18:33):
Don't know, you'd have to put that away again. I
guess you know.
Speaker 1 (01:18:37):
It's also in my kitchen. Uh ah, one of those cats.
You know that, like the thing you have in your
studio there that that fridge, that tall fridge, it's clearly
a bottle fridge. I have that too. I bought it
at Costco. It's supposed to be like a wine fridge.
I use it for like waters you need to so
and occasionally be a wine in there, maybe a couple
of big beers every now and then. It's great. And
then I also have a cagerator.
Speaker 3 (01:18:58):
You need to put some sheets or owls over them.
They're showing off. You're gonna make them feel bad. Yeah, yeah,
you know what it is. Maybe it's just like the
minimalistic mentality now, where like you know, everything's supposed to
be super clean and and you know, nothing on the
counters now. So you know, you go into some of
these houses now and it doesn't look like anybody lives
in them. They're just they look like they could.
Speaker 1 (01:19:18):
Some updated kitchens where they would panel over everything and
it looks good, don't get me wrong, but it's like
where's your fridge and you got to know exactly where
to touch because there's not even a handle. Very high
end stuff. I clearly that's not the aesthetic I'm going for.
I'm going for the laziness, static.
Speaker 3 (01:19:33):
Like some of these houses now, the way they have
them set up, like you see like pictures and stuff
or photos that we've gone over to people's houses where
it's like you walk in and it doesn't look like
people live there. Like if if you were like Barton baby,
if you were like a burglar and you're breaking in
and you're like, I want to break into this house
and you get in, you're like, oh, I broke into
the show house. This is the house they show when
people came through it up to see if they're gonna
(01:19:55):
rent their buy or whatever. I'm gonna go in the
house next door, Like there's nothing out there. There's no foat,
there's no nothing, no knick knacks. It's weird.
Speaker 1 (01:20:02):
There's a couple I'm trying to think if there's any appliance.
There's so there's a couple appliances that do go in
the drawer, the dehydrator because I only have to make
venison jerky like once a year, so or you know,
fruit sometimes or very very rarely. But like I can
I can't imagine this is lazy. I can't imagine having
to dig out the air fryer every time I want
(01:20:24):
it or the toaster for that. Yeah, it's nuts, man,
I eat toast a lot, you know. So here's a
simple solution rather than having to figure out space we
may not have space. Don't invite young people to your house.
Speaker 3 (01:20:36):
That works.
Speaker 1 (01:20:37):
So now they're not offended.
Speaker 3 (01:20:39):
See, I'll be really confusabil Like these are all my
my appliances that I'm not going to put it. This
is the chair where we put clothes that aren't exactly
dirty but aren't exactly clean, and yeah, the halfway put
them in a halfway chair, and they'd be super confused
by that. I have no idea what that's about.
Speaker 1 (01:20:54):
That's great. I have two of those, because there's at
least a halfway and then there's almost there. Yeah, where
you're gonna give it a moment to dry out in
the heat, and you're going to see if it smells
and then if it you know, and then it goes
right in the washer. The chairs are really close to
the washer. It's perfect. It's a great setup. Oh man. Yeah,
(01:21:14):
after all that traveling, I did the thing with the
suitcase when I unpacked it. Right, I'm up at Asheville
for a week in Greensboro, and I just have like
a small roller bag, man, so that's all I need.
And the moment I got home, the first thing I
did when I got home is literally throw it on
a chair, the suitcase, and then proceeded not to touch
(01:21:35):
it till the next day.
Speaker 3 (01:21:36):
As you right, And then afterwards you're like, what's going
to the chair?
Speaker 1 (01:21:39):
Yeah? And then I opened I finally got a few minutes.
I opened it up and I did the pulled everything out.
I'm like, okay, that smells okay, you go on this chair.
And then some stuff did not smell okay, like some
shirts when I was walking. I was walking around outside
in Greensboro, sweating my you know what. Off, Those go
right in the washer, and and then some other stuff
went on the other chair and we searched out. So
(01:22:00):
I'm sorry. If you guys are offended by appliants.
Speaker 3 (01:22:03):
Showing off your appliance is in your clothes. Yeah, I
flex everything, man. So all right, so we got that going. Also,
you guys ready for this?
Speaker 1 (01:22:13):
This is fun? Oh wait, hold on, hold on, hold on,
let me grab a h grab a quick call here, Yes, Donna,
what's up?
Speaker 11 (01:22:20):
Good morning, Casey.
Speaker 12 (01:22:23):
You need you need to listen.
Speaker 1 (01:22:24):
I have many you have that you drive around in
a van with? And is it one hundred and thirty four? No?
Speaker 10 (01:22:31):
That really?
Speaker 9 (01:22:31):
You know what?
Speaker 12 (01:22:32):
That turned my stomach?
Speaker 2 (01:22:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:22:34):
That was in addition to obviously the cruel nature of it,
and probably Taco Bill like, I don't know how you
operate a vehicle with one hundred and thirty four cats
bugging out in a van? Man, I don't know a
lot of them are.
Speaker 11 (01:22:48):
Not If people go look at the picture, it's horrendous.
Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
Yeah, it's fine.
Speaker 12 (01:22:57):
That's not that's not.
Speaker 11 (01:22:58):
Love for a pet that does not want I don't
know what that is, but it's not love. So listen.
I need to tell you one thing. First of all,
now I have counter envy because you guys have way
too much counterspace. The other thing is you need to
update your language because you might hurt some feelings over look,
well you didn't call MS thirteen a gang I mean,
(01:23:22):
if you called them a gang, you're supposed to call
them a.
Speaker 1 (01:23:24):
Click Okay, well one, I wasn't talking about MS thirteen.
I was talking about the two of the cartels in Sinaloa, Mexico,
and MS thirteen is Salvadoran.
Speaker 11 (01:23:33):
So oh well, I just want you to know then.
Speaker 1 (01:23:36):
Going forward, Okay, you.
Speaker 12 (01:23:39):
Need to update your language. According to ABC, it says
the leader of an MS thirteen in the suburbs of
New York faces sentencing wednesday in a federal wrackteering case.
Speaker 1 (01:23:50):
That case, well, I just want to make sure a
heade ful of bags full of heads and then making
the irresponsible decision to use you know, non recycled plaster.
Speaker 11 (01:24:02):
It's very very irresponsible.
Speaker 1 (01:24:04):
I agree, I got a roll, so I have yourself
a good one there. Yeah. I just look, you can
be a horrendous murderer and be green, so you know
that's important, right. I'm just trying to filter this through
the apologetic nature of our media. By the way, you
guys want to hear something insane that I'm sure is
(01:24:25):
going to impact your life very very much. There's a
new you know how they just keep coming out with
a new type of protest every week that Donald Trump
is in office. You had no kings, you had the
let's burn La down. Now they got this new thing.
And I am all in favor of this, because I
cannot imagine a more peaceful three days stretch than what
(01:24:46):
this woman is proposing. Unless you're really into, you know,
getting coffee from your barista or magic Crystals or any
of the other places where the moonbats normally work. This
should be great.
Speaker 2 (01:25:00):
Millions of us stopped working, stopped spending, and stopped producing
all at the same time. There's a movement brewing. It's
called the people Sick Day, and what it is is
a three day economic blackout.
Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
Okay, what all are you producing? I don't see you
guys as Rosy the Rivet or all of you protest
every weekend lunatics. Generally you're busking on the streets of
Asheville offering to write poems on an old timey typewriter
for ten dollars. Don't I don't feel like three days
of that not being there's going to be a problem.
Speaker 2 (01:25:29):
But continue means no work, no shopping, no production.
Speaker 1 (01:25:33):
Just okay, it's pretty much normal for you.
Speaker 2 (01:25:35):
Pause three days where we remind the system that Without us,
nothing moves really. But here's the twist. We're not giving
out the dates until forty eight hours before because we
don't want to give the corporations time to plan and
stop us from having this happen. Because let's be honest,
if they knew what we were planning, they'd shut it
(01:25:56):
down before it even started. This isn't a protest. This
is a strategic disruption to the machine that feeds off
of our hard work and labor. If you want to
be a part of it, go to the People's Sick
Day dot Com, join the discord, and join the movement.
This is how we stand up against what is happening
(01:26:16):
in our country. We need to shut it down. We
need to shut it down. So go to the People's
Sick Day dot com, sign up for the discord, and
you can get more information there.
Speaker 1 (01:26:27):
Okay, I have so many questions, like one, how would
the forty eight hours notice? How is the evil big
corp going to shut you down other than maybe invoking
whatever the standard sick policy is for you and holding
you to that. Two, what do you think the massive
level of production and contribution that uh these hardcore protet
(01:26:48):
What do you think the thing that they provide that
will be missed as that's what I want to know that.
Don't get me wrong. Genuinely, people are working in a
service industry. If I want to go in and they're understaff,
sure it could go it up a little bit. But
like you make it sound like the most productive people
in capitalism are also the same people that would don
(01:27:09):
an Antifa mask. And that's just that's looney tunes to me.
And also, what if your job is you work for
like crowds on demand company, and your your official job
is a paid protester, how do you That's a that's
a conundrum right there. Do you not show up for
work to do what you do at work? Or do
(01:27:29):
you show up for work to do what you do
at work so that you don't have to do what
you do at work. We'll be looking forward to when
those two days are and the weather with ray stagic
right now, more.
Speaker 10 (01:27:40):
Heat, we might break it a little arm for your microphone.
Yeah probably. Now that's just that's meat leaning on the No,
that's me leaning on the desk. That's so that's that's
all self. I'm not the most graceful broadcaster. I will
(01:28:02):
tell you that. Yeah, all right.
Speaker 3 (01:28:06):
Ray, Ray, I absolutely love it because you know, before
the broncat, you know, before you get an ear, I'm
always putting your your pot cue and see you're there.
And in the past I wouldn't know if you're there,
maybe raised out there. But now I hate the Cuba
and I hear it. Yeah, he's there, man, he's there.
Speaker 1 (01:28:21):
I should I am not. I don't know. I'm just
that person. I just I'm not.
Speaker 10 (01:28:27):
I'm not the you know, don't have all the sophisticated.
It's okay, man, you're big. I got and I need
to lean on the desk. Yeah, it is funny, that's okay.
I'll try to do bet. I'll mute it when I commit.
Speaker 4 (01:28:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (01:28:42):
We got a little wet weather right now, seeing some
showers around the triad, a coupled north of the triangle.
They're coming through and still see these kind of hit
miss showers today, still fairly human before the front goes through,
low to mid eighties and still a threat maybe for
a shower thundershower into the evening. But I think things
should be wrapping up and by tomorrow and the four
things are going to be looking great. Maybe a little
(01:29:03):
dropping the humidity with bright blue sky close to ninety
be on either side of ninety and I think that
type of weather takes us right through Saturday and Sunday.
Speaker 1 (01:29:11):
All right, thank you, we'll come back with Jeff Bellinger next.
Speaker 5 (01:29:14):
Well, Good morning, Casey. This report is sponsored by Total
Wine and More. ADP's monthly report has gotten Wall Street's
attention could catch the eye of some Federal Reserve officials
as well. The Payroll Processor says thirty three thousand private
sector jobs were lost last month, most losses and the
service producing occupations. The ADP report has historically not been
(01:29:37):
a good predictor of the Labor Department's non farm payroll data,
but some economists may revise their forecast for the government report,
which comes out tomorrow. Stock market futures are modestly lower
right across the board after that report. Automakers report the
pace of sales slowed last month, but strong demand in
April and May made it a good second quarter for
(01:29:58):
most car companies. General motor sales rose more than seven
percent for the quarter. Ford sales were up fourteen percent.
Toyota saw more than seven percent gain, but Stilantis sales
fell ten percent. Toyota is going to hold off on
electric vehicle production in the US. Company says gas powered
and hybrid versions of its Grand Highlander suv are still
(01:30:21):
big sellers and it has to keep manufacturing capacity free
so it can produce them. The owner of CMX Cinemas
has filed for bankruptcy for the second time in five years.
CMX is a small chain of dine in and imax theaters.
There is a theater in Kerry, according to the website.
Other chains have had to close theaters or restructured debts
(01:30:42):
since the pandemic. Lockdowns changed the way we watch movies.
In case, it could cost a lot more to celebrate
Independence Day next year. Just about all of the consumer
fireworks used around the world, ninety percent of those used
in professional pyrotechnic displays are producer in China. As of now,
fireworks are facing a thirty percent import tax under President
(01:31:05):
Trump's trade policy. This year's fireworks likely don't reflect the terrifikes,
but the American Pyrotechnic Association warrens consumers could end up
paying a lot more when America is celebrating its two
hundred and fiftieth anniversary in twenty twenty six.
Speaker 1 (01:31:21):
Casey, I think a factory in California just burned down
with a bunch of fireworks in it too, because you
heard that.
Speaker 5 (01:31:26):
I'm one of my other stations just mentioned because they're.
Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
Not legal there. So all right, anyway, thank you, sir,
appreciate it. Okay, all right, there you go. Jeff Ellingser,
Bloomberg News. I shout any callers on here, don't We're
good to go there. Apparently there's been a heist of wolves,
so you know, I guess look out for that. A
(01:31:49):
wolf rescue in Minnesota claims that two people broke in
and stole two wolves. What how do you flip the wolves? Man? Ross,
be careful if somebody tries to sell you wolves today,
they might be hot. No really yeah yeah yeah yeah,
what do you like? What do you do? You take
him to Rick's pawn shop and see what you can
(01:32:10):
get on.
Speaker 3 (01:32:11):
Then he's got to frame the wolves and he needs
to have somebody come in down me a while. Wolf expert. Right,
you got to feed him. Where did you say they
were stolen from?
Speaker 1 (01:32:20):
Uh? I think it's up by Tower, Minnesota. It's one
of them. You have a bunch of wolf rescues out
in Minnesota because they have a big gray wolf population
up there, so yeah, so I mean you got to
smuggle those out of Minnesota and get him somewhere else probably,
So why we have we just go to you go
to Grandfather and still wolves here if you want. I mean,
I'm not encouraged you need to do that, but I
(01:32:42):
think they still have some wolves over there, so