Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I just think you got me thinking about like movies
(00:02):
that that are able to capture that duality, right where
you can watch him as a kid and you got
one experience, and you watch him as an adult it's another.
There's not a lot of movies like that. There's a few,
but we're just talking about The Money Pit. That was
one of my mom's favorite movies, And you're absolutely right.
I remember when we were when she put it on, right,
(00:23):
and then she'd watch it, she'd be laughing. I'd be laughing,
But it was probably for different reasons, right, because I'm
a kid, right, and.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
It's like the slapstick like him falling to the floor
or the tub going through the floor, or the kids
catching on fire, that kind of stuff.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
Yeah, right, But then you're an adult and the humor
lies with the uh, the wanton frustration of the process
of trying to do home run avay, anything that requires permits, inspections,
things like that.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
So I remember, like that movie. There was a scene
in the movie in the beginning where he's trying to
get like the plumbing done, and you know, the foundational stuff,
and all the different people are showing up at different
times and he's being frustrated because you know they're not
showing up when they're supposed to show up, but then
they all show up and then as a kid, like
you don't really realize like that. That's funny, you know,
like the the inspector trying, you know, the city inspector.
(01:12):
When are you gonna show up?
Speaker 1 (01:13):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
I'm gonna show up whenever I want to show up,
because he's gonna show up when you're not there, and
he's get pissed off that you're not there even though
he was supposed to be there two hours earlier. And
that kind of stuff is funny. That move's great.
Speaker 1 (01:23):
Well, you know, you're just lucky. It sounds like because
Ross is doing some work around the house, and it
sounds like you've actually had a smooth process.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
Yeah, I know, it's been great.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
Yeah, Okay, good, good, good good. He's building an octagon,
so we're moving the end.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
Yeah, we're building a new wing.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
Yeah, it's the the ah, it's gonna be amazing anyway,
all right, Well, good luck with that. Fingers crossed. Hopefully
everything goes well. All right, coming up on the show.
Let's see here the other thing we were talking about
before the show, is I am amazed, Like, there's a video.
(01:57):
I'm gonna play the audio for you, and it's you know,
it's it's a pretty crazy example of it. But it's
not an unusual thing just to see some Karen wigging
out in public. Not not your sister Karen. She's a
nice Karen, but you know, the the lunatic. And then
in this case, some moonbat who just decided to lose
(02:18):
her crap on some guy on like a dog trailer
at a dog park. And there's no shame in her game,
as you'll as you'll find out. And the thing that
blows me away is when you at the end of
the video, because the guy clearly is like, this woman's
a lunatic. Watch out, he he. At the end of
(02:41):
his video, there's a freeze frame and like it kind
of close up into her, so you can really see
what she looks like. And the whole time I just
assumed she was younger, and then I realized she's probably
in her forties. And I point this out because she's
dressed nice, looks like a very nice area where they live,
(03:03):
which means she's probably got a job at some level
of success in society where she's married and you know
whatever it is. And I'm like, how do you if
that's your person? How do you advance in life? Used
to be if somebody was a stark, raving lunatic, like
(03:26):
they weren't outcast within society. And she's just like, I
don't want to say she's normal, because she's clearly not,
but like the upward mobility that she has enjoyed in
her life has brought her to this. And the fact
that she would snap on a dude and I'll let
you hear why, and apparently snapped on was snaping on
other people. That's the other thing too. So clearly, well,
(03:48):
let me tell you what her beef is. Her beef
is if she sees somebody with a dog that appears
to be a purebread because now it's not a rescue dog,
which either way unless you unless there the shelters on fire, ma'am,
and you're coming in there like Tom Cruise and mission
impossible with your little zip lining thing. You didn't rescue nothing, Okay,
(04:11):
you adopted, and good for you and I And if
you know that's that absolutely, if you gotta if you
got to actually put less dogs down, that's fine. But
but you didn't rescue it. I just hate that term.
That being said, it ross if you had a visceral
negative reaction to laying eyes upon a purebred dog, where
(04:32):
would you probably not go if it bothers you so much?
To a dog park? Right?
Speaker 3 (04:40):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (04:40):
Yeah, there would probably be the one, yes.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
Or you know, anywhere where there's gonna be a bunch
of dog like be wouldn't go to a doll You
wouldn't go to the Westminster Kennel Club dog show, right.
Speaker 2 (04:49):
Because that would that's like that would be hell for you.
Go and bring my sign right right? Would you do it?
You'll suck right?
Speaker 3 (04:56):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (04:56):
Yeah? Yeah, except uh, I don't know. Let me just
want to gob of money there. Look, my point is
she puts herself in this situation. She she clearly has
no self control, and yet she looks like she's doing okay.
That's the part that kills me here. How how she's
not been shunned? We you know what, bring back shunning?
(05:19):
We don't shun enough because we has been beating our heads.
You're not sporty. Shunning served a purpose. Man shunning was
a useful tool. We don't have to go full like
Quaker shunning. All right, the or pilgrim type of shunning
where they're like, well you don't get to live in
(05:40):
our village anymore, and so now you got to go
into the wilderness, and I hope your family survives. Okay,
it's more modern day shunning, like this woman should be unemployable,
people should not want to be around her. And because
there's no way this is her first rodeo. So what
do we get? We get this?
Speaker 4 (06:02):
Oh yeah, kill dogs, because he has to have this
bread dog me. Yes, you bought those dogs, didn't you. No,
you didn't adopt them.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
You didn't save their lives.
Speaker 2 (06:11):
You don't care about them.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
You don't care about anyone.
Speaker 4 (06:14):
That dude.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
You are crazy, lady.
Speaker 4 (06:16):
Get away from me, then get away from you walked
up to me.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
Away from me. This guy won't leave me alone.
Speaker 5 (06:21):
Help me, help me.
Speaker 4 (06:22):
This guy won't leave you alone. And he is said
that I said of the racist when I absolutely did not.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
You did.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Please help me.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
I did not say anything to me talking to hell
they hell, they did.
Speaker 5 (06:33):
Please get this away from me.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
Adopt the dude.
Speaker 6 (06:36):
You need medication, lady, to get away from me. Go
that way, Go that way. You want to attack me
if you touch me, I will knock you out. You
I have a right to defend myself.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Also, I don't understand that. I don't understand the racist component. Two,
I'm not really getting to read on the dude, so
I don't But like, there's nothing on there. But it's
just this thing that the keeps coming up. So clearly
something was said before he started filming, obviously, which prompt
him to start filming. Oh, and she had screamed and
he had watched her scream at another dude. And yeah,
(07:11):
he does have dogs that look like they're they're different,
but as we find out, they're literally that's the ones puppy.
So so his dog clearly had a puppy, and she
has a different color tone to her. So I don't
know what this woman's on about.
Speaker 4 (07:28):
Let's let's do this buddy. Get away from me, now,
this guy.
Speaker 6 (07:35):
I have lots of film, lady.
Speaker 4 (07:36):
I did not say anything great is at all.
Speaker 6 (07:38):
Go away from me, lady, I go away from me.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
Go away. She's following him, he keeps moving, she's chasing
go By.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
I'm trying to go by go By.
Speaker 6 (07:49):
I have all I have everything you said before.
Speaker 7 (07:52):
I'll have it all on video, Lady, I have it.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
All on video too.
Speaker 6 (07:56):
Then you don't.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Go away, I let you by go way too. He
has now literally backed himself up. He's off the trail.
It's like, I'm trying. I can't really get a read
on where it is. It looks like the foothills in
Colorado because you got just kind of rolling there and
you can see the pine line going up, but they're
in the woods, so it's hard to tell. It could
also be northern California, but and it's pine. It's all
(08:26):
pine straw. It reminds me a lot of going into
the woods of Wyoming.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
Yeah, he's like backing up off the trail and she's
like on him, like glue. Like Yeah, at this point
she's screaming at him. I'd be like, is this woman
gonna stab me or something?
Speaker 1 (08:39):
And you don't really see it in his video until
the end. There's a bunch of other people around because
it is clearly this is a popular trail or something,
and it's it's open and there also is like a
fenced in area I guess, so it's it clearly looks
like it's an established dog park. So he's kind of
like pinned himself behind that. So he's not anywhere near
(08:59):
the t and now she's following him down that. Look
at the guy, Look at his bread dogs. Look at
what an unethical piece.
Speaker 6 (09:06):
Of that's his mom have.
Speaker 4 (09:08):
Bred dogs because he has a small penis. He has
no freaking.
Speaker 8 (09:13):
Isn't this lady amazing?
Speaker 9 (09:15):
No integrity?
Speaker 10 (09:16):
You are?
Speaker 1 (09:17):
You are mental? By the way, what why do I
hear that insult? More and more? Usually some woman snapping
and seat And I've never heard a guy like launch
a comparable insult, right sophy, you know, no guy's sitting
there and making roominess jokes okay, and yet or insults.
(09:41):
And yet I multiple videos I've heard that. I guess
they think that's the gotcha whatever? Ill?
Speaker 5 (09:47):
You are mentally ill, lady, No, you are mentally ill.
Speaker 6 (09:52):
Your Trump supporter, you are mentally ill?
Speaker 1 (09:55):
There we go, where's that?
Speaker 2 (09:56):
You?
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Probably a Trump ill supporter? Waw easy call Ice?
Speaker 6 (10:03):
Yeah, I'm done with you have fun in your psycho
word good now.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
That's the only clue, because she says, let me call
Ice now. And I don't know if that's a Trump
reference or that he's Hispanic and that's where the racist
stuff comes from. I just don't know.
Speaker 11 (10:15):
Taking medication today.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
Yeah, all right, uh and then uh you did, it'd
be over now. A bunch of other people are there,
and of course nobody's saying anything. I don't know. They
don't want this woman's vitriol. But and she had already
screamed at somebody else too. Again there's now Now, there's
probably about ten other people you see through the course
of the video, just passing through with their dogs. Right again,
(10:42):
She's clearly at a dog park, and she has a
problem with bread dogs. It's a self inflicted wound here.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
This is amazing.
Speaker 6 (10:52):
Yes, I am, I am.
Speaker 1 (10:57):
Do not purchase animals. Please bye for me.
Speaker 4 (11:00):
Please support your local animal shelters.
Speaker 6 (11:03):
This is amazing, This is amazing. It is I always
see these Karen videos and I never thought i'd get
a good one myself.
Speaker 4 (11:13):
So much for letting me support animals. Thank you for
letting me sake that it is unethical to buy a.
Speaker 6 (11:21):
Crazy careing coming.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
Wait all animals.
Speaker 6 (11:24):
I know this lady's freaking crazy.
Speaker 5 (11:27):
Thank you.
Speaker 6 (11:28):
She just screamed at some dude randomly. Then me then
called me racist because I was saying, lady's fricking milk.
You don't watch out for her wire, She's freaking fire liar.
Speaker 4 (11:43):
He is a liar. He is a liar.
Speaker 6 (11:49):
No, you called me racist, dude, that other guy I
have it on film.
Speaker 2 (11:54):
The other guy saw too.
Speaker 6 (11:57):
Look how you're behaving. You're not a little child, act
like an adult lady.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
All right, so you get yeah. Yeah, So he did
say something interesting, he said, I always see these videos,
and I always I know, I wonder if I ever
get one for myself. Ross, would you ever want to
have your own situation where you encountered one of these
lunatics for the viral nature?
Speaker 2 (12:21):
I know, I know management would probably prefer it because
they'd like the clicks, but I would probably not want
to go through that. I probably would say no, I
would not like that.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
I don't know, man, I kind of want to watch
one in the Yeah.
Speaker 2 (12:33):
No, I mean it's really sad, and it makes me
believe more and more that you know, there's a lot
of mentally ill people around, and I think a lot
of it has to do with being on your phone
twenty four to seven, social media in the twenty four
hour news cycle completely. I think if they were to
put that down and abstain from the news for like
a week, they'd be in a much better place mentally.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
She probably needs a month. Yeah yeah, yeah, she might
need a bigger dose. Y yeah. Man. It's the part
then where that's that's not that's not the first time
she's waggd out right, we believe that because if you
believe that's.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
And you know, I was thinking about I want to
see the follow up video of her in her car,
because you know, she made one oh one hundred. She
went back to her car, she got in, she turned
on her phone, and she started like screaming at her phone.
You know, it's out there somewhere.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
M probably got alterary eyed before she started, so she
can play the victim. But so the thing is, how
how does that person function in society? How do they
have food to eat, a car to drive, leisure time,
be out walking dogs and randomly screaming at people? Like,
(13:40):
how does that happen? Those That is the Luna, that's
the screaming you know what that is. That's the old
lady from the Simpsons. You know what I'm saying, The
cat lady right where she's all like frazzled and screaming
at people. Nobody takes her seriously. That character, that's her.
She should be parked up in a in an asylum somewhere,
(14:03):
or at the very least, maybe lives a little out
of town. Or she's that house on the street where
if the kids hit a ball into the yard, it's
a whole problem because nobody wants to go in there
because that's where the witch lives. Did you, Ross, did
you have one of those houses growing up where like
the mean old man like in Home Alone or the
or the witch lady Sandlot or something? Yeah, yeah, we
(14:25):
all did. Yeah, I know exactly. That house was this
giant white house and it was just this weird couple
that lived there. They didn't have any kids, and but
they had like the big end thing. This was in town.
They had like the big end, and so it was
like a like three lots, a huge, huge, old It
was a very old, historic house and they were just
(14:49):
meaner in hell, just meaner in hell. We were terrified
to go up in there, so some went over. The
fence is gone. That's theirs.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
The rational part of me is even trying to like
think about the argument she's trying to make and believe
it or not. I'm having a hard time following it
because she's crazy.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
Also, those dogs don't look pure bread.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
They don't. But also, if you buy a dog, or
if you adopt the dog, you're still sort of saving
the dog, right because I mean, you're giving it a
life and you're providing for the dog. So what is
her argument here? I don't understand it.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
Well, the argument is that you incentivizees breeders then to
breed dogs, and YadA, YadA, YadA. But she also said
don't buy animals. I don't know how that's functional, right,
there's only so many rescue cows. Right at the by
the way, if there was a rescue cow, I'm going
to go rescue it, you know, in a particular way.
(15:39):
But you know what I'm saying, like, what do you mean,
don't buy any animals? Agriculturally? That doesn't work, ma'am. But yeah, regardless,
just absolute looney tunes. But I thought it would be
invigorating for any of you or up this morning. You're
getting ready to take your dog outside or maybe for
a walk or a jog, whatever you guys do. That's
(16:02):
out there somewhere lurking, just waiting for you. And boy,
oh boy, wouldn't that be a fun way to start
your morning? Not as fun as this show, of course,
but fun nonetheless, all right, six twenty three back in
just a few hang on, I saw this stat yesterday
and they basically had ranked the NFL teams or they
(16:23):
surveyed fans, and then what they wanted to determine is
the average number of drinks. I don't know if it
was beers or drinks, but whatever consumed on game day.
And so they were kind of focusing on the top five,
and the top five are I will tell you who
the top five are, but she probably guess. Bears, Packers,
Vikings were six. We didn't make the top five. We
(16:45):
got a step per game up Browns, Bangles, and Bills,
mostly the b teams. But that's not what the crazy
part is. So if you go to through five, which
is I can't remember what order it is, but its Bears, Bengals, Packers,
and I just forgetting one now but whatever, those teams
(17:12):
average between four point eight or four point nine beers
and five point two. Okay, so it's really close, right,
But then you go to the number one spot and
it's the Bills. Ross knowing that there's just tens of
a point difference between most of these teams, how much
of a gap. Do you think your team has opened
(17:34):
up over the rest of the league's fans.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
I would hope it was at least like a ten
beer gap.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Well it's not two. That'll be dead because you're averaging.
This is the average of fans. There's gonna be a
bunch of fans who don't drink on game day. There's
gonna be you know, sorry ladies, there's gonna be women
who maybe don't consume as much. No, no, no, no, you
guys are like eight point seven or something like. You've
got a three beer lead basically over the rest of
(18:02):
the cop looked at more than that three and a
half beer lead, which is there's no gap in the
rest of that list that's even that close. You guys
are so far ahead, you're uncatchable and at eight point
eight point seven, And that doesn't account for the heavy drinkers,
because again, it's an average of the fans.
Speaker 2 (18:21):
Right, So it's an average. That's why I whenever I
see stuff like this, it's skewed for me, being like
a recovering alcoholic, Right, So I look at these like
you say, eight point whatever it was, and my first
reaction to you leg off of the air was like,
was that per hour? And you're like, no, that's the
whole game, my ass, the rookie numbers, because that's really
how I would drink. I would drink, you know I wouldn't.
I would start with like an eighteen pack, right, you
know what I mean? Like per day and so.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
Yeah, so they'd have to average that for the one
hundred pounds cheerleader who can only handle, or like.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
The kids that aren't drinking, or like the yeah, I
get it.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
Yeah, I don't know if they counted kids, but I
think you had to be over eighteen was the thing.
So clearly they are counting they drinking.
Speaker 2 (18:59):
What people don't underst stand though, when it comes to
the bills. You know, fan alcohol consumption, it's really a
safety thing because it numbs your body while you're flying
through the table that's on fire. It's for safety.
Speaker 1 (19:11):
Well wouldn't it be safe for not to throw yourself
through a flaming table? I'm not following what, But if
you like, if you didn't do it, why would you
mean you're not doing it? Why wouldn't you do it?
Because the table's on fire, and then there's the force
where you hit it, and then there's the elevation because
some of these things are like a top of horta
potties that you're jumping off.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
So are you not a fan?
Speaker 1 (19:30):
No, I'm pointing out that if it's safety as your
primary goal, you should not do they You're.
Speaker 2 (19:35):
A crazy person. I can actually follow this conversation. You're
like the woman in the woods with the dogs.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
Yeah. Oh yeah, that's me one hundred percent right there. Uh,
let me grab a call on that particular woman, Vince,
what's up.
Speaker 3 (19:50):
Safety? I'm calling it a little while. Uh, I'm a
I'm a liberal, uh man loves I love all it
takes like sports. I actually loved it, and I was
I was. I was telling a screener.
Speaker 5 (20:06):
I heard that.
Speaker 3 (20:07):
Video of the lady, right. I know you guys got
a video, but.
Speaker 5 (20:10):
I heard it.
Speaker 3 (20:11):
So how do you determine, uh, someone who's passionate from
from being a lunatic. And I'm saying this in the
in the in the context.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Of I'll get I'll get a straight answer. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
I used to.
Speaker 3 (20:23):
I used to debate with people with politics. He used
to love right, but but recently you can't debate Why
I can't debate with people because if you don't agree
with you. You called a lunatic, and it shuts it
shuts things down.
Speaker 1 (20:35):
No, no, no, no, I'll tell you why she's a lunatic
and why that's not impassion debate because if you and
you should watch the video if you haven't seen.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
It, she is.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
She is physically closing in on him and is intimidating
a manner as she can. Right, So that's not a
hallmark of debate. Once you've had to, then you know,
go and and go into the physical intimidation, you've probably
lost whatever debate you were having, right because now now
it's not a war of words and ideas, it's uh,
she she's trying to square up on this guy, physically
(21:06):
intimidate him or get him to do something so that
she can scream that this evil man's beating on her.
But the law that the bigger answer. And I think
you would agree with this, and I think it's accurate
about ninety five percent of the time. Is kind of
like the Supreme Court ruling where they were like, how
do you know it's pornography? Well, you sometimes you just
know you know it when you see it.
Speaker 3 (21:26):
I mean, but if you're passionate about I'm sure you're
you're like, you know, you're passionate, a on the vikings
or whatever, right, even though they suck, you're passing.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
Come on, that's just cold, that's his cold.
Speaker 3 (21:36):
I'm just saying, if I bring up to Pittsburgh stellers,
I'm very patient and contained. But if you start yelling,
and maybe someone who is bad just start yelling, I
can't just then call you a lunatic for yelling because
you're passionate about what you're saying. Well, the context of
what you're saying, what's the.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
Purpose, what's the purpose of the yelling? Like in sports,
it can just be that you know that masculine energy,
but that's not what was going on here.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
Yeah, yeah, I understand that.
Speaker 1 (22:04):
And do you think that? Let me ask you a question, Vince.
Do you do you think that lady's mentally stable?
Speaker 10 (22:11):
No?
Speaker 3 (22:11):
No, No, she sounds mentally I don't know her.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
I can't, right, right, but she.
Speaker 3 (22:16):
Sounds mostly unstable. But in the same token, if that
video was what she's saying, she's not that unstable. Where
that dude told her he knocked her out and she
stayed away.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
From him enough, No, she knows, she really didn't stay
away from She just didn't put her hands on him, but.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
Yeah, but enough where he didn't feel threatened.
Speaker 1 (22:37):
Enough to hit her.
Speaker 5 (22:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (22:38):
And I also think she clocked the racist comment. I
don't know what the dude's ethnicity is, but when she
made the ice comment, I wonder if perhaps he might
look hispanic at the very least. And I think for
a moment she clocked that that could be a problem
for her because she's she's, you know, pasty white woman.
I don't know, man, I just in this case, it's
like that's that's who gets called a luna. But I'm
(23:00):
going to tell you too, the people who think that
Donald Trump is auditing the Smithsonian so he couldn't get
a hold of all the adrenochrome under it are also
mentally unstable. Okay, So I'm I'll go, you know what
I'm saying, like.
Speaker 3 (23:15):
Yeah, I understand that, but it's just it makes it
all hard to day and age that if you love politics,
to debate with her, it becomes the basement and then
a you know, I'm a grown man, I'm almost fifty,
and when people start yelling out things like she did
a yell out some stuff that was crazy, like almost
like like like child and stuff. Right, Yeah, kind of
(23:37):
kills the debate when you start being so yeah I said,
I didn't get off about tests this morning. But yeah,
that's all I want to say.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
Okay, all right, there you go, Thank you, Vince, appreciate it.
What a lunatic huh that guy not I'm kidding, completely unhinged. Yeah, oh, absolutely,
just play it. Did you hear did you hear the
Smithsodian story? Okay, so, like, I don't know if audit's
the right word, but basically I think they're just wanting
to get a look under the hood. And so I'm like, okay,
(24:10):
I just saw that passively yesterday and all of a sudden,
man like I went down the conspiratorial rabbit hole. I
was just reading all this stuff on these accounts, and
they're just absolutely convinced that this is Trump's four D
chest move, so he can he can get under this. Now,
the Smithsonian museums have tunnels under them. That's not that's
(24:31):
not some made up weird thing, you know that, that's real.
And they use it obviously to move things back and forth,
which makes sense, right, rather than having to move it
outside of the buildings on the you know, city Street
and surface one hundred percent. But the idea that Trump's
doing this because he's going to be able to get
in there and find where all the sex, the child
(24:51):
sex slaves are in the adrena chrome, and that this
is subtrifuged to gain access. I don't know. You lost
me along the way, So I don't know. Rossie said
that they filmed or they I don't know that they
actually film in the Smithsonian tunnels for Night at the
Museum or.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
Remember which movie it was, like the second or third
one where they go to the Smithsonianah, there's tunnels in
that one.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
Yet. Yeah, do you think they're full of child prostitutes
and adrena.
Speaker 2 (25:20):
Cry That was not in the movie?
Speaker 1 (25:22):
Okay, all right, I can't remember if I've seen that movie, so,
but I just know that that's uh, that's a bruin?
Speaker 10 (25:32):
Is this?
Speaker 1 (25:33):
Oh wait, Boston Paul. And that's a good point, Boston Paul.
How Patriots fans weren't even on the top ten of
this thing. I think y'all are lying. I think that's
what's up there. I think the number actually was higher,
but then you deflated the number a bit so as
(25:54):
to not fall in the top ten, If that makes sense.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
Do you think a team is more likely to drink
if their team really sucks or if their team is
like really good, because you could drink be like, Oh,
I'm gonna drink to celebrate my awesome team. But then
you can also drink, like I need to drink to
get you know, numbness pain of my team.
Speaker 1 (26:11):
I think if you have I think if you live
in a community that has a higher percentage of alcoholics,
both work, right, Drink. Drink when you're happy, drink when
you're sad.
Speaker 2 (26:20):
You're just looking for a reason.
Speaker 1 (26:21):
You're like, oh it's oh, I'm sorry. Does this day
end in? Why? Oh it does? Yeah? So I yeah,
I don't know. I did not see that as part
of the little factorid sheet. I was, uh, it was
attached to the article there, so maybe maybe they did
ask them some other questions. Alrighty, coming up on the show,
(26:42):
you the funniest thing happens. So there's a Twitter account
and they got a crap ton of followers, by the way,
and it's called Washingtonian Problems And basically it was just
a clearing house for you know, news stories videos that
people filmed in and around Washington. It could be giant potholes,
it could be violent crime, it could be traffic jams, protest,
(27:05):
you name, and clearly because of what it's called. The
point of the point was to shine a light on
these things so that maybe they could get around to
fixing it. Okay, that makes sense, right, Sometimes you gotta
sometimes you gotta shame politicians and finally doing something. Their
(27:30):
reaction to the whole Trump thing yesterday was mighty interesting.
And by the way, it's kay, it's Washingtonian problems, but
it's at wash Props is the actual handle memes news
and community. So you would think that Trump and and
(27:52):
crew getting up there to do their thing yesterday and
they have what about ninety thousand followers, you would think
this would be music to their ears. Twas not. We'll
get into that next Cacoday radio program. And I know
we're only into the third day really of this, but
every day, man, there's just been one of these stories
out of DC that made me laugh. Like yesterday when
(28:14):
the Washington Post we read the man on the Street comment, right,
we talked to one local resident and asked about the
safety of the city, and they said it was safe
and then you go see what the resident's name is
and like, who did not, who decline to give their
name out of concerns for their safety. So that was funny.
This though, this is this is pretty good too. So
(28:36):
the Twitter account x account whatever Washingtonian Problems ninety thousand
followers pretty popular among DC residents, and they, you know,
post a little bit of everything, but most of the
things that they post about are crime problems. So it
could be viral videos, news reports, memes, whatever, and they've
(28:59):
grown quite a fall. So you would think, if you
are a website dedicated to highlighting all of these problems
so that hopefully, maybe possibly they get fixed, Monday would
have been a pretty good day for you. But you
would be wrong because the problem is when when you
are a moon bat first, right first, and not somebody
(29:23):
who is like, even though this is the identity you've
purported to be, right, You're here because you want these
problems to be fixed. If the wrong person, I guess
is suggesting to fix them, then that's a problem. So
they started tweeting stuff out and then it just got relentless.
They had to shut their comments off. People are now
just quote tweeting them just pillaring them, and they tweeted like, hey, DC,
(29:47):
let's push back against the negative narrative about our city.
Share why you love our beautiful home and help show
the world the real DC and that and that went
viral because they ended up shutting the comments off because
they were just ravaging them, and then people took them up,
and so they started quote tweeting them and then explaining
(30:09):
these stories like this woman who said a man exposed
himself to me on the metro and followed a complaint.
We ended up going to court where he had had
two hundred other incidents of doing the exact same thing. However,
the court case got delayed because he started screaming the
(30:30):
sea word at the judge, so she gave him four
hours to calm down. When we reconvened, she dismissed the
charges and then hashtag the real DC is the hashtag
they went with for this, just torturing him man every
single day, every single day too. They were posting posts
(30:53):
on this about the lost generation. It was a big
topic of discussion, talking about how young kids are emitting crime,
and it was constantly discussed on this, and now they're
like everyone's given DC a bad rap. And it's like, yeah,
they're linking your videos to do it. Bro. So uh,
(31:13):
it's just I've net. We get these incidents every now
and then where people are just willing to squander everything,
especially as part of their identity, because they just got
to be anti Trump first man, H and I and
I and and by the way, if if if this
was a massive problem that I had to live in,
and it was under Biden's presidency and they were actually
(31:36):
to go in and enforce the law, because that's what
people want, you pull them, that's what they want. You
can criticize Biden all you want, but if they were
actually really going to enforce it, then I don't care
if you didn't vote for the guy. You get what
you want. Shut up? Why are you talking?
Speaker 2 (31:57):
It goes? How many times have we heard that? You know,
since twenty sixteen. You know, if Trump came out and
cured cancer, suddenly you'd have a bunch of libs that
were for cancer. Right, it's the same thing.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
Yeah, it's like but it's also it's like negotiation one
oh one. Once you get the yes, shut up any
once you get the answer you want, stop talking. You're good.
This is clearly what you want, but apparently it's not.
So I don't know, man now, and then you gotta
(32:27):
throw monikers around and all sorts of stuff like, oh, dude,
this is the funniest thing for me. Just so gu
at CNN. CNN just got Donald Trump a new nickname,
and I'm so jealous. Hang on, let me get the
audio of this insanity. Check this out.
Speaker 12 (32:41):
Let's get right to what America is talking about. Donald
Trump makes himself Batman, and the nation's capital is Gotham City.
The President of the United States has declared himself crime
fighter in chief, and he's taking over Washington's police force.
It is a move that the DC mayor is calling unsettling.
Speaker 1 (32:59):
Do you guys understand? And maybe and I'm sorry having
to be a little sex this year because maybe this.
Maybe you're a woman man the you know, you don't
understand this, but guys, and I think most women will,
but but not her. Guys, how excited would you be
if somebody, not just somebody your enemy called you batman?
(33:25):
Oh phone number eight eight eight nine three four seven
eight seven four US. I was just mentioning CNN called
Trump batman, and I'm jealous.
Speaker 12 (33:33):
Let's get right to what America is talking about Donald
Trump makes himself Batman and the nation's capital is Gotham City.
Speaker 1 (33:40):
I think there mean that as an insult. Ross you're Batman?
Are you insulted? Do you feel insulted if I call
you bat? I know if I'll ever recover from this.
Oh no, you're currently he's building a batcave right now.
He's calling it a wing. But we all know what's
going on. Yeah. Yeah, Please if you dislike me and
you want to accuse me of being like Batman or
(34:02):
iron Man or Superman or what, that's fine. I didn't
I admit I was iron Man the other day. I
can't remember the context of it. So yeah, I don't
think that's the insult that you think that is, because
like any any dudes, like really a playboy billionaire with
all the coolest tech in the world and the ability
(34:23):
to kick ass and take names. Oh I hate that. Ah,
I can't believe you said that to me. Over in
the UK, they just throw in jail for that, dude.
Have you see the new thing they're doing? Okay, so
uh here we go. All right, so this is this
includes the woman and the men or just the woman
(34:44):
the women?
Speaker 2 (34:46):
Yeah, no, it's uh, it's it's both it's okay, all right,
and the news anchor there from the UK, oh.
Speaker 1 (34:51):
Thank goodness, all right, good good, good good. So they yeah,
I don't know if you'd know this. They've solved all
the other crime stuff in the UK, they get that'll
fit I know, earlier this week, maybe I'm not sure.
So now now they got to crack down on the
real crime that's happening, and they're having to go undercover. No,
(35:15):
not at a strip club for six months, but rather
undercover female officers out for a jog. Here we go.
Speaker 13 (35:23):
These women aren't friends out for a run. That actually
undercover police officers taking to the streets in sorry, as
part of a new operation trying to stop people cat
calling and harassing female runners.
Speaker 1 (35:38):
Can I ask which people? Which?
Speaker 2 (35:43):
Who?
Speaker 1 (35:44):
Who do you think is going to get caught up
in this dragnet here? If you had to guess, because
I noticed you just kind of randomly said people there.
But I'd like to know more about who the usual
suspects might be, which would also be helpful for members
of community who find themselves face in the type of
harassment that you're hoping to stop. Here, you should probably
let them know things to look out for. Anyway, I'm sorry,
(36:08):
continue get hold.
Speaker 13 (36:10):
The stair in the hanging out of the window just
to look at us, and it just.
Speaker 1 (36:14):
I think they're you yes, maybe not anyway.
Speaker 13 (36:16):
It's so so so prevalent, and police teams are ready
to intervene the moment the officers are beaped out, followed
or shouted out pulling people.
Speaker 14 (36:27):
Over All, those type of behaviors may not be criminal
offenses in themselves, but they still need to be addressed.
And of course, the people that are likely to commit
those kind of behaviors, you know, they may then go
on to commit more serious offenses or more serious behaviors.
Speaker 1 (36:45):
Yeah, like like what like? Who?
Speaker 5 (36:47):
Like?
Speaker 1 (36:47):
How so what you do? So if it's not, you're
just on the whistle registry? Now what are you doing?
And by the way, if you guys want to bump
your whistle registry numbers up, I'm not. I'm just saying
you could go hotter if you really want to get there.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
I don't know, mas Uk, maybe that's like the top
of the scale, you.
Speaker 1 (37:12):
Know what I mean, there's some pretty hot actresses from there.
I don't know, or at the very least, uh, the
the workout clothes. You should go more current American gym,
you know the ones where the women are wearing the
pants now and you can see their wombs. Maybe go
in that direction, because I mean, again, how embarrassing if
(37:32):
you're one of these officers and you don't get whistled at.
You know what I'm saying. You're like the undercover, go
undercover and you're like, oh yeah, all right, so I'm
gonna be the hot jogger. Huh okay. And now you
run like a whole marathon and you haven't made one
one one traffic stop? What does that do to your
self esteem? And they are they talking or maybe doesn't matter.
(37:56):
Are they talking about like ed down at the pub
or are they talking about the what's the word the
rape gangs? Well, I think a little something in between.
What are the big issues there is they have? You know, culturally,
it's perfectly culturally acceptable in a lot of and it
is a cultural issue. Now, sure it could it be
a drunk soccer hooligan, absolutely, but that's not when I
(38:20):
see these interviews and people talking about the problem, that's
not who normally they didn't show any people here, But
there's more than enough videos that women in the UK
have put out where this is what they go through
when I'm walking. It's a whole series. There's a whole
bunch of these videos, and so if they're just walking
down the street, they're just kind of recording and there's
(38:43):
some themes you notice, is all that I'm saying. So
I'm actually surprised they would undertake something like this, considering
the probability that their dragnet may play out more heavily
and one direction then the other. And rather than having
(39:04):
a culture discussion about how that's you know, we don't
do that here in the UK, then they just get
accused of being racist for targeting people who are first
generation immigrants. Oh, mark my words, that that'll be the
fallout there. So and then you know, and then you're
on the whistle registry or whatever, and I don't know
how that impacts you later in life. So AnyWho, all right?
(39:26):
Eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four.
The whole thing's just dumb, man, Not that I'm saying
that women should be literally sexually harassed going down the street.
I just want to be clear here, but kind of
feel like maybe this seems just a hand grenade you're
getting ready to pop off. All right, where is this other? Oh?
(39:47):
Here we go. We gotta go back to Cincinnati. This
is gonna make you angry. Sorry, it's gonna be. Uh,
it's gonna be how it is because we played you
the audio. We played you the audio from earlier in
the week, the with the woman who, if you remember
the Cincinnati video, was the one on the ground with
her eyes open, the place she was dead. And it
(40:08):
was very very interesting to learn a few things, not
the least of which is that she really didn't know
the guy. She just happened to be in this bunch,
larger group. She was the only one who stepped in,
apparently because according to her, he had been getting beat on,
and not by just one dude or one set of people,
but people were coming in and out of their taking
(40:30):
turns who had nothing to do with this. They just
saw that they could kick a white guy in the face.
And she said it went on for fifteen minutes. The
guy took fifty seven blows to the head, if I
think I'm remembering that correctly, And it was just random
people who had nothing to do with it coming by.
And then when the police showed up, not only did
(40:51):
they not take her story, they didn't take her name.
So at this point, all of this insanity we saw
from city leadership who had to know this, who was
berating the media for not having context. It just showed
you how dishonest they were being. Well, now we have
(41:15):
the black community leaders, that's how it's described here, who
held a press conference. They held a press conference yesterday,
and they have made a demand. And I tell you
it's uh, I've never heard this. I did not hear
(41:37):
I've not heard how this works this way. Maybe it's
an Ohio thing. I'm unfamiliar with it. But here's what
they're demanding.
Speaker 9 (41:44):
Six individuals were charged with aggravated assault, which is a felony.
The white guy incited or arned six other people to
commit a felony.
Speaker 1 (41:54):
Well, I'm sorry, what so you want? I'm sorry, So
he incited others to commit felonies by existing? Because again,
there has not there has not been anything that I've
seen where they were. It has been proven that this
(42:14):
guy did anything that would how do I say this?
You haven't proven to me that he himself literally was
in a situation where six people thought that they were
justified in impounding on him. It doesn't mean that if
he just didn't strike somebody that there may not be
(42:35):
a charge waiting for him. But I don't think inciting
others to commit a felony because they want to beat
your face in is how the law works. I mean,
so if some if if some guy is arrested for
smacking his wife around because she won't stop nagging him,
are you going to charge her with inciting him to
(42:56):
commit domestic violence? Let me know how that goes for
you at the press conference, you lunatics.
Speaker 9 (43:04):
Method by what's this situation has been handled?
Speaker 6 (43:07):
Raises serious questions as to what does as there's.
Speaker 1 (43:10):
Bias involved in the investigation, it does, You're right, it
also brings into questions the possibility of your lack of
integrity and whether there's something else too hide. You know what, sir,
We absolutely one hundred percent agree based on those words,
but probably not for the you know, same reason right there.
(43:34):
I'm sorry, there is a bigger issue here, and it's
not that somebody had too punishable a face. Well, his
face was just so damn punishable. It's not my fault. Yeah,
Now he's got one of those punishable faces. He's out
here it's entrapment. Again.
Speaker 9 (43:56):
Six individuals were charged with aggravated assault, which is a
the white guy insided or or six other people to
commit a felony.
Speaker 1 (44:06):
What what are you talking about again? I can't get
over the mental gymnastics required to go gather a gaggle
of media, get a whole bunch of other quote unquote
black leaders for Cincinnati, get all dressed up in your
Sunday best, and then hold a press conference so that
you can claim that that somebody's face is too punishable.
Speaker 2 (44:33):
As loun as you man, you need some personal responsibility here.
It's infuriating.
Speaker 1 (44:37):
Yeah, but ros you see somebody who's really a really
punishable face.
Speaker 2 (44:41):
I mean we said why I said this before in
the show. There's nothing somebody can say, whether it's a
word or whether you're making fun of their mama, that
gives you the right to beat someone to nearly to death.
Speaker 1 (44:54):
The only exceptions are, uh are when there are threats
of impending violence and they may have the means to
carry it out. There are some but though that's not
what was going on here. Okay, this is you know,
it's like, yeah, I have a bomb, and that more
has to do with what it allows police or military engagement.
Speaker 2 (45:13):
Right, But for you to say that, you know, oh,
they sort of what she's kind of saying is they
deserve the beating, like they yeah, because.
Speaker 1 (45:20):
Again, may there is a chance maybe the white guy
was the first person to put his hands on somebody,
and and if that person then hits the dude back,
then I don't think that person should be charged. If
you're going to hit somebody, you might you're gonna get
smacked in the mouth. Sometimes I'm fine with that. But
she's also ignoring the fifteen minutes of free kicks that
were going on here.
Speaker 2 (45:41):
And they're like, well, yeah, they did break the law
and they did commit these felonies, but they were forced
to commit the felonies by the actions of the other person.
That's not how it works. You need personal responsibility here.
You can show some self control and control your emotions.
Speaker 1 (45:53):
That's a trapman, So it can't help them. It's like,
uh that you ever bring a puppy around a bunch
of girls.
Speaker 2 (46:01):
Ah, right, they absolutely lose it. Yeah, what do they
want to do?
Speaker 1 (46:04):
The first thing? I want to put hands all over
the thing. So I incited them to do that with
the cuteness of this puppy, except in this case, the
guy's just very punctuble. So whatever, A horrible waste of
a press conference to make yourself look that much dumber.
So I guess you accomplished that. Good for you. In
(46:27):
a way, you could say that it's not your fault.
You you felt you had to hold the press conference
to show people how stupid you are. You were incited,
So not your fault, ma'am. That's that's what's important. Seven
nineteen hang on to I don't know, are you guys
seeing the Chuck Schumer story with let's his this family
(46:53):
called the Bailey's. And by the way, the person who
exposed this is John Oliver. And it's always weird when
you watch because Oliver is that make no he he's
he's got TDS of the whitest variety and and generally
generally most of his targets tend to be on the right.
So I'm actually surprised to see him going after Schumer.
(47:17):
I guess was Schumer, though he's kind of fallen out
of favor. If you're John Oliver because you're more of
an AOC probably uh mandamie kind of guy or whatever.
That dude's name is so Schumer's old guard. So now
as we do in society with older folks, I guess
you can just cast them away. That's what's going on here.
(47:38):
But it's like it. And the thing is, Schumer will
pay no penalty for this, but he's I know you're
gonna be shocked. He's lied to you for all his
all his years in politics, which are not insignificant in number,
and what he had is he had this. He would
always go to this family. And some politicis do this,
(48:01):
and I would say that a lot of politicians do this,
and generally it looks like this. I was on the
campaign trail the other day and I met this wonderful
lady and you know Wilmington, and her name was Eileen,
and she she works at this thing, and she told
me this profound thing. And there's no way to check
(48:23):
to see if I really met somebody. Maybe I just
wanted to say it. But if you think another regular
person said it and it's not me saying it, then
maybe it carries more weight. And that's not to say
that people don't actually meet people and tell stories anecdotal stories.
I do it here on this show as well, but
a lot of politicians over the years have basically been
(48:44):
called out where it's like, I don't think that happened
to you, Russ. What is our favorite story on this
show to prove that men are dumb and won't seek
medical attention. What is the story? What is the example
we have used since you did the story?
Speaker 2 (49:00):
Like forever ago, the guy shot himself, had a harpoon
in his head, like a harpoon shot in his head,
and like he would not go to the hospital. Well,
guess what did it? Wait?
Speaker 1 (49:09):
What it happened again? This time it's a bolt, which
is a crossbow, a crossbows called a bolt. I guess
that people don't know a sixty four year old man
who is described as a crossbow enthusiast inadvertently, I wonder
how do you get the bolt into how do you
(49:30):
shoot himself? Because the way you even load the damn
thing is pointed anyway. So well, anyway, he put a
bolt in his head and then he just went home
and finally family members after two days, because he's conscious,
although he didn't have much of an appetite, they finally
got him to go to the hospital and they had
(49:51):
a Nerrousey to do emergency surgery, and in fact it
was so through it prevented him from two turning his
head and he didn't go seek medical How what did
you think? What did you think, sir? Was what the
cool new piercing? Oh? What's going on? And as a
family for two days they're trying to get him to go.
(50:13):
You should probably go see somebody about that. He's like, dah,
that's fine, walk it off, and he knows and you
just I knew it was a guy because immediately because
the headline was just crossbow enthusiasts. Yes, I'm trying to
figure out where did it enter where to come out?
Speaker 2 (50:37):
I mean, that is a typical guy thing to do, though,
I mean it's extremely it's extreme because it's a bolt
or harpoon in your head. But how many times you,
as a guy, have you had like some sort of
issue or pain. I know I have before in the past,
And I'm like, you know, it isn't that bad if
I sit this way, or if I walk up the
stairs this way, or if I just avoid doing this,
so I I I'll just do these new things as
(50:59):
opposed to go to the and this is my life now.
And then it goes when it goes.
Speaker 1 (51:02):
I almost I literally almost. I don't know if I
almost died. I could have died, but I almost, irreversibly
messed up my entire digestive system. I once in my
twenties and like mid twenties, and I'm very healthy at
this point, I had a bout of diverticulitis. I don't know,
but basically it it caused a blockage so that what
(51:24):
things are getting through It was low enough, it was
just off the colon and the small intestine there and
it just stops and nothing's moving. Do you know how long?
And I could. I literally was in such pain. The
only way to alleviate the pain was to sit in
a hot bath, and the moment you got out it
was excruciating. Again, I took I didn't go into work.
(51:44):
I was doing the morning show that time. I didn't
go into work for like three or four days, and
finally I'm like, maybe I should go see a doctor.
I ended up in the hospital for a week.
Speaker 2 (51:54):
Right, you just put it off because a lot of times,
obviously it sucked for you and you had to go
to the hot But a lot of times the problem
will just go away, It'll heal right, or you'll adjust
or how many times have you said okay, fine, I
will go to the doctor and you go there and
it turns out to be absolutely nothing, and you feel
like you wasted all that money now.
Speaker 1 (52:12):
Yeah, and you're the time and your money and all that.
Oh man, And they really hit home. One of the
nurses came in and she was like, cause it was
really really real. I'm not gonna get into all the details.
I will say the moment I walked to the hospital,
they figured out what it is when they've shot me
up with like the louden or something. Holy cow, man,
I understand why people get addicted to stuff like that,
(52:33):
Holy crap. But no, it was I was just in
my house. I couldn't sleep for days, and I was
just so My water bill was crazy, the amount of
usage that I had, because I remember to go back
and check because I was just curious, and I would
just sit there in a warm bath all day. And
the doctor's like, you know, you realize that if we
had if this, had you had let this progress, like,
(52:54):
we may have had to remove you may have been
on a colostomy bag. It terrified me, But fine, never
had another incident.
Speaker 2 (53:02):
I don't know I mean I can see the dude
shooting himself with the bolt in his head and it
comes out the other end or whatever, and he's like,
I guess I'm gonna wear a hat now, right, right?
Speaker 1 (53:10):
Yeah? Yeah, no, I mean that's that's how it goes,
you know. And and I I don't know. I was
an archery hunter for a lot of years, man, right,
because rif will hunt l Wyoming for some things is
kind of it's not that challenging because if you you
know the if you understand where the if you have
the whole season one, but you also understand where the
(53:30):
animals are moving, all you gotta do is wait for
it to snow, and they're gonna be right out in
the field. So bow hunting was a little more fun.
I had. You could cross bowhunt too, in certain circumstances,
so I really got into that. Uh, you know, my
good ross, my good friend William Tell actually taught me
to shoot, so I was very good.
Speaker 7 (53:48):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (53:48):
And then another guy, Robin Hood. I don't know if
you've heard of him or my instructors don't check that stuff.
Speaker 2 (53:56):
I'm sorry, I'm having a hard time focusing. I'm I
can complete honesty off the Air. I'm dealing with some
stuff today. My good friend George Bailey. Oh no, the economy,
the Trump economy is so bad. Yeah, he was considering suicide.
Oh no, not a bridge. And I'm just learning about
his story and it's it's so.
Speaker 1 (54:15):
Tragic, right around the holidays.
Speaker 2 (54:16):
It was around the holidays. Yeah, oh gee, but he
was out there and according to him, I don't know
if he was like being deluded.
Speaker 1 (54:22):
You have a family.
Speaker 2 (54:23):
No, he had a family, a nice family, little little
not kids.
Speaker 1 (54:26):
Though, right, yes, oh no, yeah, young kids. Girl. Yeah,
we're mocking Chuck Schumer. Why are we mocking Chuck Schumer
because of this? Just listen to this.
Speaker 8 (54:42):
But I actually want to talk less about Chuck Schumer
himself and more about two of his favorite people, Joe
and Eileen Bailey. There are a couple that throughout Schumer's
career he has talked about a lot.
Speaker 7 (54:53):
They're a middle class couple in Massapequa, which is a
suburb on Long Island. Joe and Eileen Bailey. This middle
class couple they brought into Reagan publicanism in nineteen eighty.
Joe and Eileen are worried about losing their jobs or
their friends jobs. So that Baileies really don't believe in
trickle down. They don't believe in a whole lot of
government spending, but they believe in tax breaks for kids
(55:14):
to go to college. He's an insurance adjuster and lives
in the New York subjects. By New York standards, he
makes fifty thousand year if he lived in the middle
of the country, make forty. Wife works in a medical office.
She makes about twenty. She might make fifteen elsewhere. And
you know, I have guided my political life through the bailies.
Speaker 8 (55:30):
The baileies have guided Chuck Schumer's political life, which is
a little weird given they don't exist. Seriously, he invented them.
Schumer first introduced the world to the bailies in his
two thousand and seven book Positively American, Winning Back the
Middle Class Majority, One Family at a Time. In it,
he mentions the bailies and astonishing two hundred and sixty
five times in two hundred and sixty four pages. But
(55:54):
he'd apparently been talking about them for years before the
book was published. One of his former spokespeople said he
he's always asking what would the Baileies think, And to
be fair, Schumer acknowledges that some may find this a
little weird.
Speaker 7 (56:07):
If you ask my staff, I've been talking about that
and talking to the Baileies for fifteen years. I have
conversations with them. One of my staffers once said, I
had imaginary friends to the press got me in some trouble.
But these people are real and I respect them and
I really love them.
Speaker 2 (56:24):
I care about them.
Speaker 8 (56:26):
Okay, sure, but they're literally not real job.
Speaker 1 (56:31):
I mean, all right, so you get to it's a
longer piece, and he just tortues them through it. And
again I explained what I thought the motivations were. But
do you think Chuck Schumer has one iota of guilt? No,
mean for a moment, No, not at all. And the
issue with these people are and you see with other
politicians too. Joe Biden used to do this with like people.
He would just make up the Amtrak guy. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
(56:52):
Corn Popper whoever. Like he had tons of them or
these stories. But you have these, you have these politicians
that have worked within this of mechanism or the way
things worked for a long time, going back with thirty
forty years and back in the day, you could make
up these stories and you you couldn't. You couldn't fact
check them immediately, and you couldn't really look at it,
and they could say stuff, and there's no idea you
(57:12):
would know. You'd never know if they were made it up.
Now that's not how it is. But they've done it
for so long they can't help themselves. Yeah, because I
don't disagree. And also we had the Corey Bember Corey
Booker pulled this crap. The difference was he he should
he was, He's not old, he was not Chuck Schumer,
Joe Biden old.
Speaker 2 (57:31):
Right, Yeah, I don't know why he would think he could.
He should know better that, you know, he should understand
the day and age that he's working in. Where then he.
Speaker 1 (57:37):
Got immediately immediately called it. By the way, let me
play the audio real quick.
Speaker 8 (57:41):
T Bone comes to.
Speaker 10 (57:43):
Me after I get elected and says to me, Corey Corey,
can we go for a ride. And I say, t Bone,
your car m and I very nervously get into his
car and we drive off of Martin Luther King Boulevard
NGE South Orange, and we pull over to the side
of the road and I sit there and t Bone
(58:06):
tells me you got to get me out of here,
and I'm like, okay, T Bone, I got some programs
and plans. You see, we at that point had gotten
the drug dealers away from the front of the building.
We at that point had gotten the slumlord convicted in
federal court. Feeling incredibly confident, he says to me, you
got to help me get out of here, all right.
Speaker 1 (58:22):
So immediately he got called out, and he then he
said that T Bone, if I remember, Kraby, was an
amalgamation of people he knew from he said, the hood,
but from Camden and the bad part of Camden is
what he was saying, which, by the way, is arguably
(58:42):
some of the most racist crap ever. Right, because he
made up whole cloth a character who was from this
this very urban part of New Jersey, who was in
the drug trade, who scared him because he was thuggish,
and his name is T Bone. Right, if if I
put that character together as a writer, he as a
(59:04):
white writer, people would have problem with that. He used
it as a campaign crutch and immediately got busted on it. So,
and part of what Booker was doing was trying to
make himself look tougher because he had a little bit
of an image problem. People thought he was soft, and
so he really kind of leaned into that. There were
also rumors that I knew bothered him. I don't know
(59:27):
that I necessarily believed him that Booker was gay, remember that,
and like because it was just because he had such
a visceral reaction to it. Then people started doing other stuff,
and then all of a sudden t bone emerged. Who wasn't
real or lives with? The Baileys were unsure seven forty six,
Race Stagic is real? For now, I've never seen you
(59:50):
in person.
Speaker 11 (59:51):
No, the aire end of the phone, so it could be,
could be, Hey, I can't duplicate this.
Speaker 1 (59:59):
It could try. Yeah, not yet one day, man, That
is the terrifying thought in our business. AnyWho, what's going on? Man?
Speaker 11 (01:00:08):
Not much except the little rain, A lot of rain
in some cases Johnston County around Smithfield flood warning for
the Noose River that rains crossing nine ninety five heavy
rainfall getting into western central parts of Wilson County. Coming
out of Johnston County and across the Triangle, see a
lot of orange and even some red around so ponding
water on roadways. Slow travel here over the next few
(01:00:30):
hours back into the Triad seemed more scattered rainfall and showers,
and we're staying in at this warm, soupy air mass.
Speaker 1 (01:00:38):
We'll get dispatched.
Speaker 11 (01:00:39):
Through this morning and we'll see more scattered stuff through
the day today, tonight, and even tomorrow. High's again in
the low mid eighties, very humid outside, so downpours and
heavy rain at times could lead to some more Flooding've
already had some of that this week, so maybe some
changes by Friday of the weekend, more kind of the
afternoon pop up stuff and temperatures getting into the mid
(01:00:59):
to upper eighties, so we'll get a little bit warmer
with maybe a little more sun. So casey got a
bunch of rain around right now. We'll i rained pretty
hard through Wake County, Hartnett County and off to the
east now and more scattered back towards the west. But
still gonna be slow here for the commute for many
of us in around the triangle. If you're going eastbound, yeah,
(01:01:19):
that's going to be even slower because you're kind of
traveling with the rain. So kind of tough out there
for some early this morning.
Speaker 1 (01:01:24):
All right, Colin six, stay homeless and thank you appreciate it. YEP.
There you go, raced agic from the Weather Channel. All
right seven eight, Hang on, Anthony, what's up?
Speaker 10 (01:01:35):
It was up with up?
Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Casey.
Speaker 5 (01:01:38):
So I'm from Long Island. I went to I went
to the Delphi in two thousand and seven to two ten.
And when I was first at a doubt like the
first graduation, I went to Chuck Schumer was there because
he's because he's Alvarada and east ode of speech. And
then six months later I was at another friends graduation
and he did the exact same speech. Well that I
(01:02:00):
was like, this guy is It was like it was
like for Batim and I honestly I think he might
even have like a same for his book at the time.
But I was actually taking party sigh, and that turned
me off the entire time. I ended up switching beages
to electrical engineer.
Speaker 1 (01:02:18):
How'd that work out for you? Probably making more money.
Speaker 5 (01:02:23):
I'm an auto mechanic, now go figure?
Speaker 1 (01:02:26):
All right, well, hey, yeah, so did you THEA during
his speech?
Speaker 5 (01:02:31):
He probably did? I mean, I like, I don't remember
that much of it anymore. I just remember being like
my mind being blown. How like I thought those people
were honest up until then. Yeah, But I've always said
like he was. He was you turned me on.
Speaker 1 (01:02:49):
Politics that naive again just for you know, every now
and then it's the lot of stress level down. All right, Anthony,
thanks for the call there. Ross, did you have a
big graduation speaker of Sconnectedy you know who are? Do
you know who our speaker was for our graduation? Buffalo
Bill Cody? Yeah? Wow really yeah yeah yeah, And I
(01:03:09):
remember at the end he said, whatever you do, don't
bury me on Lookout Mountain in Colorado. So stuck with me,
Ross is asking if I I believe in the Buffalo
Bill Cody.
Speaker 2 (01:03:24):
Conspiracyah, there's a conspiracy because you know he wanted to
originally be buried in Cody, Wyoming, like up on a
mountain socker, right, yeah, right, you would assume.
Speaker 1 (01:03:32):
But they want to basically on the Sunlight Basin Highway there.
But yeah, where they were talking about they moved it.
Speaker 2 (01:03:37):
We were watching that what is the Expedition Unknown with
Josh Gates, like watching the show. We like the guy
seems like a nice guy. Yeah, And there's a conspiracy
that instead of being buried in Colorado, they smuggled the
body back to Wyoming. Yeahd his wife like or somewhere
where do ye I assume that you had heard of it,
where do you still oh yeah, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah yeah yeah. Being from Wyoming and I've driven by.
Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
So if you ever go to Denver and you go
up seventy, like you're going in any of the ski areas,
just as you get to the edge of the metro
and start to climb, the first exit right there, which
would be the exit to Golden Colorado, home of Coers. Right,
that's where Lookout Mountain is. Right there. There is a
big sign, and I've been to the actual thing there.
They have like an interpretive thing there and all that.
Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
But where do you think he's buried?
Speaker 1 (01:04:23):
I think he is buried there at Lookout Mountain. I
think he is. I don't even know if anyone in
Cody really believes that. If you go to the Buffalo,
if you ever get a chance to go to Cody, Wyoming,
they have an amazing the historical Center there, but the
permanent exhibit in the basement of it is one of
the largest antique firearms and Western firearms collections. I think
(01:04:43):
it's the largest in the world. And it's there. So
if you're in, if you know, if you're into guns
for even a minute. Don't worry. They got all the
other cool stuff. And I would I would say this
for families who are looking at maybe for a Western
vacation that's not typical, and you know you're gonna go
do the Yellowstone thing? Would I would go to Cody.
(01:05:03):
There's lots of great places to stay. The Historical Center's
awesome during the summer. They have rodeos every week and
I say rodeos because sometimes they have them two week.
Those are those are great to go to and you'll
get it feels a lot more Western than some of
the faky stuff that's out there, although it is it is,
(01:05:24):
it did get a little California up is my understanding
since I've departed. But Cody is you could have an
amazing time there for a few days and all the
outdoor stuff around there. And if you want to go
just down the road, you can go to heart Butte
because they have one of the old Japanese and tournament
camps for World War two where my grandparents met. So
that's another awkward family fun fact. So yeah, then Yellowstone's
(01:05:45):
right there, and the drive into Yellowstone, or if you
cut up and go to like Red Lodge and then
double back on the Chief Joseph there. It's one of
the most beautiful drives in the world. And you know what, Ross,
if they do make the decision quickly, it'll all time out.
So so I'm seeing something here where apparently some of
the Spirit Airlines is talking about the possibility if they're
(01:06:10):
not allowed to do some of the bigger merger stuff
that they keep seeking that as to whether they're gonna
be able to stay in business, which I don't know
that that's new, but they were supposed supposedly trending in
a different direction. I'm very sad because now if Spirit
Airlines went away, then where am I? Who am I
going to go watch passengers beat the crap out of
each other? Right? You lose that. But Ross had a
(01:06:34):
brilliant idea. You land the planes and then you put
a bunch of cheap Chinese made Halloween stuff in there.
Speaker 2 (01:06:43):
Yeah, Spirit Halloween could purchase Spirit Airlines.
Speaker 1 (01:06:46):
Yeah, you need to throw it in the plane there,
carve it out, and then now you got storefronts that
you can move around that already have signage on them.
Speaker 2 (01:06:54):
You got to put that banner on the side of
the Spirit Airline though it says spirit on that now.
But you need the banner.
Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
Yeah, really for the it does? It is the nice touch,
isn't it.
Speaker 5 (01:07:04):
So?
Speaker 1 (01:07:04):
What did I see? Trump made some announcement they had
what was it where they were like, oh I would
do a spirit I can't remember what it was, man,
But yeah, so people are looking for opportunities. The spirit
area is the spirit Hello, I'm assuming Spirit Halloween is
open already on falls of News. Did you drive up
that way right?
Speaker 2 (01:07:23):
I haven't seen it in a while. We had one
in Weak Forest. I don't know if it's coming back. Yeah,
super excited when we had it.
Speaker 1 (01:07:29):
Yeah, but like when do they normally start opening up?
I would assume pretty quick here.
Speaker 2 (01:07:34):
Late August September.
Speaker 1 (01:07:35):
Yeah, yeah, because I mean, yeah, you probably want to
let you probably want to minimum a month, probably more so. Yeah,
maybe right around September first. I'm not sure the standard
standards there. So you got your God, I've never been
inside of Spirit Halloween.
Speaker 2 (01:07:49):
No, we love it, man, it's fun.
Speaker 1 (01:07:51):
Well, I do I have kids? What do I need
Halloween stuff for? You know how I feel about Halloween?
Speaker 2 (01:07:56):
Yeah? You think you believe it's a it's a it's
a socialist experiment.
Speaker 1 (01:07:59):
It is. It's a it's a commedy socialist uh mind
control thing. Do I need to explain this again for
our new listeners? What what do you do on Halloween? What? What?
What have we taught children to do?
Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
What are they You walk up to the house, you
see the big bull of candy, and you take the
whole bull of candy.
Speaker 1 (01:08:20):
Okay, no, no that's not it. It's literally for it.
Speaker 2 (01:08:27):
You take the whole bowl.
Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
You're not working for it. You're begging. You're begging, but
you're not just begging, you're demanding, and you're demanding under
threat of vandalism. That's you know, that's like, that's the
hallmarks of the exact opposite, the antithesis of going out
(01:08:49):
starting a candy factory from nothing, pulling your bootstraps up
and now you have all the candy. No, you're not
working for it, you're demanding it under threat of violence.
Speaker 2 (01:09:00):
Between the Halloween trick or treating and the pumpkin spice,
I don't know how you survive October.
Speaker 1 (01:09:07):
It's well, it's gonna thank god football's back, right, and
usually the vikings are not mathematically eliminated by then, so
there's still hope. If not, I'm joining. You know you
have to. I'll be on that bridge with George Bailey.
I don't know, man, your buddy there. So the pumpkin spice,
the thing I don't look the beef is is that
(01:09:29):
if you go to one of the places RY enjoy
going and you know, having myself a delicious beer, and
I am a strong ale Belgian enthusiast, and so once
the weather cools down, it makes a little more sense
to drink those well right around the time, excuse me,
the weather's cooling down. If I go to a tap house,
it's got listen, they got ten taps rotating taps on there.
(01:09:51):
You know, chances are there's probably gonna be one Belgian
or strong Ale on there, maybe two if it's later
in the year. But now once you get into pumpkin
spice or holiday spice, the more cinnamony stuff, well now
that's chewing up two to three taps, which then lessens
the possibility that I'm gonna find a normal beer uh
more along the lines of what I traditionally drink. So
(01:10:12):
I'm getting screwed over because people who don't like beer
want to pretend they like beer. But only if they
jam enough fruit in it. So that's what's up with that.
Good guys said, Yes, I sound like an old man
complaining about clouds or whatever. I understand, but dang it,
(01:10:33):
you're screwed up. You're screwing up the tap house. You
don't come in here and drink beer the rest of
the year. You only come in. Oh, let's get one
with apple smuckers or whatever in it that's not beer.
And now that tap couldn't possibly potentially have a nice
trapella there or something I want to drink. And then
you're gonna send your kids to bag. You're they're gonna
(01:10:54):
get what they always get. If it's on a if
it's on a school night, they're gonna get nothing. If
it's not on a school night. And I've tipped a
few back, I'm going to find the worst things in
my pantry that I haven't eaten all year. They're going
in a box and your kids are getting kidney beans. Okay,
And let me tell you, kids aren't always down with that.
I did have a kid get really excited over baby
(01:11:16):
corn one time. In retrospect, should have kept those Those
are delicious. I'm thinking blood sausage this year, something maybe
like liver patie. I don't know what. A kids really
hate to step up the game this year. What what
day of the week is Halloween on this year? Hold on,
(01:11:36):
do do do do?
Speaker 8 (01:11:37):
Do?
Speaker 2 (01:11:37):
Do do? Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:11:40):
It's a Friday night this year. I bet police are
super stoked about that. Dude.
Speaker 2 (01:11:48):
I'm Patrol Live. It is gonna be awesome.
Speaker 1 (01:11:50):
It's gonna be lit good stuff, literally lit like arson
and stuff. What are they still do They still call
it Hell Night in Detroit or whatever where they're just like, oh,
it's just burn a bunch of stuff. Is that Halloween?
I think that's Halloween? Oh, man, Friday Halloween this year.
Let me just tell you he's right on. Patrol Live
(01:12:10):
is going to be amazing, and the slutty costume level
is going to be kicked up a notch too. Man.
Speaker 2 (01:12:19):
Oh yeah, because you're allowed to be hot again.
Speaker 1 (01:12:21):
Yeah, You're allowed to be hot again because the you
know what happened with Sydney Sweeney. Those are the rules, man.
I don't make the rules. So yeah, and there'll be
some woke schold girl who couldn't pull off the slutty
sewer worker or whatever. Right is going to be really
mad about it still, but nobody's gonna care. Amazing time.
(01:12:42):
I bet Boston Paul is going to be ecstatic.
Speaker 2 (01:12:44):
And then you have like over half the women now
on ozempics. So yeah, more comfortable now around Halloween.
Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
Right? The earth is healing, isn't it?
Speaker 2 (01:12:52):
It really is?
Speaker 1 (01:12:53):
Yeah? Oh man, all right, some feminists is so mad
at this show right now. Tell you what, man, go
get some jogging gear, get a camera, and then pull
guys over. If they whistle at you, go ahead and
jump on that with the Brits over there. So everyone
cannot have fun that make you feel any better, or
(01:13:17):
you could, you know, as you go, as you could
go as the lunatic lady screaming at the dude in
the dog park that if this meltdown is this was whoo,
there's a lot going on here. So her beef is
she's at a dog park, and her beef is that
a guy has dogs that she thinks he may have purchased.
But I don't understand why because they don't look like
(01:13:38):
purebreads to me. But she's one of these. If it's
not from a shelter, you're a horrible person. And she's
just randomly screaming at people, and she just gets onto
this dude. And the thing that kills me is she's
not a young woman. She looks pretty well, you know,
she looks like she's doing okay. And I don't understand
how lunatics like this are able to advance and have
upward mobility in society and why they're not aimed into
(01:14:00):
living into a hut in the woods or something away
from society because nobody wants to be around him because
this video is insane.
Speaker 4 (01:14:11):
Oh yeah, kill dogs because he has to have this
bread dog me. Yes, you bought those dogs, didn't you.
Speaker 1 (01:14:17):
No, you didn't adopt them. You didn't save their lives.
You don't care about them. You don't care about anyone.
Speaker 6 (01:14:23):
Dude, You are crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:14:24):
Ladies, get away from me, then, get away from you
walked up to me.
Speaker 1 (01:14:27):
Away from me.
Speaker 4 (01:14:28):
This guy won't leave me alone.
Speaker 1 (01:14:29):
Help me, help me.
Speaker 2 (01:14:30):
This guy won't leave you alone.
Speaker 4 (01:14:32):
And he is saying that I sensibly racist, when.
Speaker 1 (01:14:34):
It absolutely did not.
Speaker 2 (01:14:35):
You did.
Speaker 4 (01:14:36):
Please help me.
Speaker 2 (01:14:37):
I did not say anything to me talking to.
Speaker 4 (01:14:40):
How they how they please get this guy away from me?
Speaker 6 (01:14:44):
Adopted dude, you need medication, lady, to get away from me.
Go that way, go that way. You want to attack me,
If you touch me, I will knock you out. You
I would right to defend myself.
Speaker 1 (01:14:57):
Yeah, all right, And I'm not gonna play all the
audio because we got several more minutes of it, but
we got it. We did tweet the video out. So
if you want to go and the thing is that
she has a problem encountering dogs that she does not
feel rescued by a shelter, then maybe the worst place
for you to hang out is where all the dogs are, man,
because that she's clearly at a dog park. You'll see
(01:15:18):
the little that little corral area there for this, I
guess maybe for the smaller dogs. It's in the woods.
Looks very nice. People, everyone's walking around with their dogs.
She's just randomly screaming at people.
Speaker 2 (01:15:28):
We had to call her earlier in the show. They
were like, maybe she's just being really passionate about the
dog issue, but man, she's crazy. Like she's backing them
up off the trail and at one point I'm like,
she's gonna stab this dude.
Speaker 1 (01:15:37):
Something, yeah, yeah, or shove them. They're on an incline there,
Maybe shove them. I don't know what was going to happen,
and he did. This guy and he tells her at
one pike cameraph it was in that audio, but he says,
if you touch me, I'm going to I'm gonna knock
you out or something any meant it. But and then
she and while she didn't put hands on them, she
(01:15:58):
didn't stop coming to stop screaming. So then starts filming
yelling at other people. It's just it's it's crazy. How
does that person function in society, because at some point,
even if you do think that there's a mental illness
going on, it doesn't mean you want to be around it.
(01:16:19):
You wish her well, just not in your proximity. Check
it out at Case on the radio eight seventeen. We'll
be right back. This is a it's a story about
sportsmanship that I found kind of interesting I wanted to
share with you. So, yeah, I don't know if you
know this name. His name is Mondo Duplantis, which is
a very interesting name by the way.
Speaker 2 (01:16:38):
Uh and uh.
Speaker 1 (01:16:39):
He is the current world record holder for pole vaulting,
and he's so dominant that basically he anything he enters,
he wins, and it's just assumed he's gonna win. Because
nobody can keep up with him. So he set he
(01:17:00):
first set the world record back in twenty twenty and
since then has broken his own world record twelve different times.
So you're like, well, what's the problem. You know, pole
vaulting doesn't necessarily other than the Olympics, nobody really thinks
about it. Or the picture remember the picture of the
(01:17:20):
really hot pole vaulter chick that was like a meme forever.
It was right around the time when the other chick
who did the like her warm up, little dancy dance
routine was trending. But other than that people anyway. So
this is why people are mad at him, because rather
(01:17:44):
than going and trying trying to beat those records, you
know all, and do so in a a a with
a much larger gap, even though he already owns the record,
he's only been breaking the record each time by about
one point one meters, So you know, what is that seven?
(01:18:07):
Trying to do the math there, I'm not even sure.
I'm not gonna oh yeah, here we go, So about
what's seven and a half inches each time? Okay, So
why is that a problem? Well, for him, it's not
a problem, and in fact, it's made him incredibly wealthy
because the way that the rules work, the way that
(01:18:27):
there is monies that are paid out for under I
A a F is there is a fat bonus for
athletes who compete here to break records. If if you
in any of the divisions, if you break a record
at an official I A a F event, there is
a there's a financial windfall that comes your way. Also,
(01:18:51):
he has sponsorship contracts that have escalator bonuses, which is
which is the way it happens in sports everywhere, right,
Structured bonuses for teams, structured bonuses for players, structured bonuses
that you know that the teams will give people for stats.
(01:19:12):
It's why when you get to the end of the
NFL season and guy needs like two more catches to
hit a bonus and the game is kind of meaningless
or it's junk time, they'll try to get him the ball. Okay,
So he has a deal with Puma's his biggest sponsor.
So and under the deal that Puma has, if he
breaks the world record, they then hit him with a bonus.
So this guy figured out every time he competes, he'll
(01:19:35):
only take even though he could probably add another a
lot more. You know, height and really set the bar
as high as possible. He realized that just bumping it
up the minimum point one meter has caused him to
break the record twelve times and thus be bonused by
his sport and his sponsors each time. And people are
(01:19:57):
having a problem with this ross. What do you think
on the sportsman line?
Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
I I, well, first off, I don't really care, right,
but here's yeah, he's a he's a pole vaulter, right
who has figured out how to make bank pole vaulting correct.
So I mean that's like super genius level stuff right
there anyway, And I mean if he can, so they
want him to do it like all in one shot,
give it, give it his all, that but it and
then he can't break his record and then he can't
(01:20:21):
profit off it, or he would.
Speaker 1 (01:20:23):
Attempt to, and then maybe it would cause him to
lose one of these competitions too, right if he's trying,
if he then does try to go for it, yeah yeah,
I you know, I don't know if pole vaulters are
out there getting rich, but this guy is. And also
here's the other thing. Change the rule if you don't
like it. But I mean he did was read the
rules and then follow the rules.
Speaker 2 (01:20:43):
How would they change the rule? Right, you'd just have
to say you can't get greater than you've already done,
or they you can only beat your own record if
it's X amount more.
Speaker 1 (01:20:50):
I well, I don't know what it looks like for Puma.
I think if you're Puma on your sponsor, you just
decide on a dollar amount. You don't have an escalator bonus,
do you know what I'm saying? Depending on where you
are and you look outside a window, you may not
be able to determine whether that is AM or PM
because it's getting dark out there. So AnyWho, but yeah,
(01:21:10):
we got weather. We'll get into that with Race Agic.
So between the weather moving through now and uh, what
is the what is the hurricane erin? I think it's
the name that they're gonna they're all super excited about.
So we'll touch base her in about ten minutes with
him and see what's up. Okay, all right, So let
(01:21:30):
me flip back over to a little something here. I
thought this was interesting. So the the the I guess
the police I guess she technically is police chief Pamela
Smith up in DC, even though she's not the top
of the food chain. For the time being because of what,
(01:21:51):
you know, what Trump did on Monday. Somebody asked her
a really basic question yesterday there and one she had
to assume was coming. And I gotta tell you her
reaction was a little disconcerting. Part of me is wondering
if she heard the question. But then with the follow up,
(01:22:12):
you realize she did hear the question. I don't know,
you'd be the judge. Check this out? Is what the
Shane command is? Now?
Speaker 2 (01:22:20):
What does that mean?
Speaker 3 (01:22:20):
Well?
Speaker 11 (01:22:21):
Is it Pam Bondi?
Speaker 1 (01:22:22):
Speakers of America?
Speaker 8 (01:22:23):
This work?
Speaker 15 (01:22:24):
So the executive order is clear the President has requested
MPD services, and our Home Rule Charter outlines the process.
The President designated Attorney General Bondi as his proxy to
to request services through me.
Speaker 1 (01:22:45):
Okay, but it's that first part, like what what do
you mean? What do you mean?
Speaker 2 (01:22:50):
Right? Because they asked the question and then the officer says,
what are you talking about? And then she's pushed aside
by what who is that? Mayor mayor Bowser? Who's that?
Speaker 1 (01:22:59):
Yeah? That's that's the yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:23:00):
That answers the question, And she looks like she had
no idea how to answer the question.
Speaker 1 (01:23:04):
Or but she but not even not how to she
she didn't understand the question. I don't think it was
a not clearly it was scary. It was very simply asked.
It wasn't a complicated question. Does what the chain of
command is?
Speaker 10 (01:23:17):
Now?
Speaker 12 (01:23:18):
What does that mean?
Speaker 3 (01:23:19):
Well?
Speaker 10 (01:23:19):
Is it? Pam bondis speaking.
Speaker 2 (01:23:20):
To them, right, and then you get and then he
get that what is that? And then then she's pushed aside.
She looks, yeah, I agree with you completely. I don't
think she understands it.
Speaker 1 (01:23:27):
How are you the tie the number one in the
chain of command and then you delegate then to your
underlings through the chain of command not understanding what the
chain of command is. And I don't care if it's
your first day as a sworn officer. The phrase chain
of command is everybody knows, even people were not in
the military or police or anything, understand what chain of
(01:23:51):
command is. Maybe not the chick it was talking about
gators yesterday because she struck me as a little dumb.
But I don't know, man, So that is not instilled
confidence in me. Were probably anybody. So there's a couple
other things that happened yes which I thought we're intry. One.
I enjoy watching Morning Joe have to come to terms
(01:24:14):
with what's going on. And I will give him credit
for at least sharing this anecdote from although he doesn't
identify the person. So maybe it's the Baileys that Chuck
Schumer made up. We'll never know, but like this is
more prevalent than I think. A lot of these MSNBC.
MSNBC has just been spastic. I was watching some clips.
(01:24:34):
Yes I didn't pull any, but they're not dealing with
this well. CNN is not really dealing with it well.
But MSNBC is having a real hard time. And the
irony is the very same building where MSNBC, CNN, Fox,
they're all in the same building, and it's directly and
(01:24:55):
actually we broadcast from the roof of the building, and
I remember when it was in my radio row. I
posted a picture I took across because the buildings like
it's like a U shaped, So we're one one side
of the building, and then on the other side are
these risers and camera rigs and lights and everything, and
that's where when you see a reporter who's got the
(01:25:18):
Capitol in the background of them, that's where they're physically
standing up on top of this building. Because it doesn't
have rails over there, so you get a clear shot
and you know, and it's a beautiful shot. Right. So
they're all in this stuff. And the reason I point
this out is because the last time I did the
radio row thing up there in front of this building
(01:25:40):
and the hotel, which are just like they're they're not next,
but there's one building in between them, but you can
see from one to the other. The entire street below that,
going over to Grand Central Station was nothing but hobo
camps and crazy people and naked crazy people too. So
like anyone who in the facility has to wade through
(01:26:03):
that to get into the office. So it's not like
they don't know what's going on and they just won't
admit it, although some of them will, and if some
of them will and it will sneak through when there's
normally just this barricade, I have to assume they understand
(01:26:23):
that this is far there's gonna be. If it's successful,
it will be far more popular than they're than they're
comfortable with. Here is morning, Joe yesterday, and I want to.
Speaker 16 (01:26:32):
I want to read you a text from a someone
who I won't say their name.
Speaker 4 (01:26:39):
But.
Speaker 16 (01:26:41):
They're we'll just say that they're very liberal. And uh,
he says, this may sound controversial, but I'm not totally
opposed to Trump's National Guard move in DC. I know
he's doing it for politics, but crime remains rampant. I've
had too many friends carjacked, shot at. None of us
will walk more than three blocks after eight pm. Thirteen
(01:27:02):
year olds are committing many of these crimes. Quite a
change from the decade ago when things were much calmer. Well,
that actually sounds like the DC that I lived in,
when I lived a block behind the Supreme Court and
you know, every three days some one of my neighbors
was getting held up at gunpoint. I mean, there has
been a crime problem in d C.
Speaker 1 (01:27:23):
That's a nice neighborhood too well, And maybe that's him
being raggedocius, I don't know, but yeah, it almost doesn't
matter where you are the part I was just talking
about by Grand Central and Phoenix Park Hotel and then
where the media building is we're doing the broadcasting. I mean,
that's a really nice area. It's right by the pedestrian
(01:27:45):
you know, there's just a couple of blocks of the
pedestrian mall to the capitals, just two blocks to the
Senate Building, the heart Setate Building. It's like a block
and a half, very popular. And then you got all
the really nice restaurants. As you go a little further
down there and you get past you go pass the
Ford's Theater. That area is really nice. You got like
the really nice hotels there, you get over the White House.
(01:28:07):
I mean that corridor there is where tourists go. It's
where nice restaurants exist. It's where nightlife exists. And he's right,
people like don't The thing they tell you is don't
walk anywhere at night in DC. They were they were
literally telling the hosts that, yeah, we forgot to go anywhere,
take an uber at night, even if even if you're
just walking over. Because I went over and I met
(01:28:30):
uh and this is on the other side of the Capitol.
I met with this is when he was still a congressman,
Mark Walker and Ted Budd when he was a congressman.
For he's a senator and for the Republicans. They have
what's called the Capitol Club over there, and uh so
I got to go over there, which is interesting, right
it's only for members of Congress, and then who who
(01:28:51):
they invite in there? And myself and uh sheriff uh
uh two of the sheriffs. I'm trying to the North
Carolina sheriffs were with me because they bring the sheriff's
up too, is part of that event. And uh, like,
I'm with two guys with guns and we didn't walk
over there, so don't point that out. Uh yeah, Sheriff
(01:29:16):
Page was one of them. I can't remember who the
other one was. And we still we still took a
car service over. It would have been a smooth little
walk man. The weather was nice. Hell no, these guys
are armed, and we're just like, yeah, well, well we'll
get an uber. We popped over and that's when I
got to see Jim Jordan, the fastest walking person ever,
which was I thought was kind of funny. But yeah, man,
(01:29:39):
so if there, if that's one of the if that's
leaking through the cracks, like that's what people think. Man,
even now, don't don't get me wrong. If it doesn't
work out, then you know, the partisan nature will re
emerge and people like I said Trump's a the idiot.
We said it wouldn't work. But if it works, I
think a lot of people are gonna be willing just
to bite their tongue on this stuff. So we shall see.
(01:30:01):
All right, is mister stagic there, because yeah, it is
impossible if you look out the window of the station
right now to determinative it's eight thirty at night or
in the nun that's not okay. So no, no, no,
it's not and it's not going to really improve.
Speaker 11 (01:30:16):
Actually, since we left left our heroes that you and
I at eight sixteen, a new flood advisory came out.
Speaker 1 (01:30:22):
That's not a hero.
Speaker 11 (01:30:23):
Well, I mean he's kind of included, right, we left
our heroes.
Speaker 1 (01:30:27):
Oh collectively I understood, right, Robin, all right, I got
you right right now.
Speaker 11 (01:30:34):
So yeah, anyway, so we have seen a new flood
advisory come out. This is until eleventh thirty ants in Harnett, Lee, Montgomery, Moore, Richmond,
Stanley Counties. I've seen some heavy rain. Ground's already been
saturated and looking at this area, low lying areas, port
drainage areas, how the Weather Service kind of no words
it and due to these thunderstorms, some minor flooding going
(01:30:55):
on in the advisory, we've seen one to two inches
of rain. So souther Plaines, Troy, Carthage, Pinehurst, Bisco, Andersonville,
and everybody in between watching this little batch here coming
through even Montgomery and More counties too, into Lee County
getting in that, and also the one in Johnston County.
The flood warning along the river there is moving east,
so there are some batches of heavier rain and thunderstorms.
(01:31:18):
Rain a real hard in some areas, so just travel
cautiously this morning. This will probably lessen a bit toward midday.
Then we'll get more scattered storms this afternoon. The air
mass is just disgusting, for lack of a better term,
a little bit eighties. I don't know if we'll see
any sun storm chances still with us tomorrow, and again
flooding will be a threat. I think less of a
(01:31:39):
chance Friday, and for the weekend, maybe more afternoon stuff
and we make it a little bit warmer, mid upper eighties.
So yeah, pretty tricky out there. Dangerous next several hours,
I think, with some of this flooding going on and
the rain coming down pretty hard kse but less rain
west more from about let's say, more Montgomery Counties points east,
(01:32:01):
especially south of Raleigh and Durham. As that next batch
of rain's coming right over the area in Johnston County,
Harnett Counties where it's already rained hard, So be careful
if you do live in those areas.
Speaker 1 (01:32:10):
Okay, but you know, as far as the triad goes,
they're escaping a lot of this, right.
Speaker 11 (01:32:15):
Yeah, they're seeing a little bit of rain Yadkin County,
some heavy rain up near mount Areas. You go up
seventy seven and Stokes County, but no flood advisories there.
It's more scattered and modern rain than it is heavy rain.
I mean, it's more like green and yellow rather than
orange and red and really red here Norman in Montgomery County,
and you get into Southern Pines and Carthage, some pretty
(01:32:36):
hefty rainfall heading toward Olivia and Lillington. These are areas that
may be affected by this next batch coming through. So
we've got to be careful again in that line through
Harnett County and into Johnston County that's seen this heavy
rain come through already. This next batch looks like it's
coming right at you again, and we may see some
more advisories for that.
Speaker 1 (01:32:54):
Okay, all right, we'll talk tomorrow, sir, thank you, okay,
and we'll come back with Jeff Bellinger next. Bloomberg updown
now with Jeff Bellinger. Jeff, what's going on? Well, Good morning, Casey.
Speaker 17 (01:33:03):
There's growing optimism the Federal Reserve will start lowering interest
rates next month. Stocks rallied yesterday on hopes for a
rate cut. Each of the major averages were up more
than one percent of the close. The S and P
five hundred and the Nasdaq settled at record highs and
the Future suggests investors are still in a buying mood.
Dow futures are up one hundred and fifty nine points
(01:33:25):
at the moment. Mortgage money became cheaper last week. Bankers
report the average interest rate on a thirty year fixed
rate home loan was down to six point six seven percent.
The rate dropped by the most since February. Mortgage bankers
were flooded with refire requests last week. There was a
twenty three percent jump in applications from homeowners who wanted
(01:33:45):
to refinance. Home purchase applications were up modestly nearly one
and a half percent. It is considered a long shop,
but Perplexity wants to buy Google's Chrome browser. The AI
startup made a formal offer of thirty four and a
half billion dollars Perplexity says the unsolicited bid has been
submitted to alphabet open AI is also indicated it would
(01:34:07):
be interested in owning Chrome should the government anti trust
actions force Google to divest the browser. Haynes Brands getting
a new owner. A Canadian company, Guilden Activewar, has agreed
to buy the American underwear maker and a cash and
stock deal worth two point two billion dollars. No relief
in sight for red meat lovers. In fact, beef prices
(01:34:28):
may even go higher next year. The Department of Agriculture
projects American beef supplies will shrink two and a half
percent in twenty twenty six to the lowest level since
twenty nineteen. And Casey Barbie collectors will want to put
a new doll on their shopping lists. Mattel releases a
new venus Williams Barbie on Friday. It's part of its
(01:34:48):
inspiring women's collection.
Speaker 2 (01:34:51):
Casey.
Speaker 1 (01:34:52):
But isn't Barbie all about women all the time?
Speaker 2 (01:34:56):
Yeah? I would say so.
Speaker 1 (01:34:57):
So aren't you always inspiring women? Okay, all right, whatever,
I guess it's marketing. Thank you, Jeff, appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (01:35:03):
Okay, take care.
Speaker 1 (01:35:05):
Yeah, there we go. That's weird, all right, marketing meeting.
You're sitting around. We need some ideas. What should we do?
What if we targeted women with our products?
Speaker 2 (01:35:15):
Genius?
Speaker 1 (01:35:16):
All right, let's go ahead and do that. Ross. Congrats,
your truck trap nagged snagged a goody this morning. Get
you got a truckload of condiments, including mustard and ranch dressings.
Speaker 2 (01:35:31):
I'll take it.
Speaker 1 (01:35:33):
Do you have a preferred ranch? I'm a Hidden Valley
purist myself. For a while I thought like the best
ranch was actually the ranch from Zaxby's. Uh we know
how I feel about Zaxby's in general, So this is it?
Pretty good it I've ever had. Yeah, I'll tell you
the worst ranch the Newmans. You have the Newmans, which
(01:35:54):
is weird because I like their Italian But I don't know,
but yeah, give me the Hidden Valley there. I don't
know what kindness is though. It doesn't say, but anyway
you're gonna be. You could uh, as you're putting on
your new wing, you get you can have a pool
of ranch. Who's got that flex man? Right?
Speaker 4 (01:36:13):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:36:14):
You got a saltwater pool? Those were all the you
know that's that was the big trend. What's yours? Uh?
Wing dip?
Speaker 2 (01:36:21):
I can't explain to you. I really hope the construction
we're about to do in my backyard, uh, building the
new wing of Hayes Manner, I really hope it. It
bugs the crap out of all the people in the
ginormous townhouse behind us that blocks out the sun, that
was under construction for like like four or five years.
I can't wait.
Speaker 1 (01:36:38):
Those guys are gonna be out there work and you
canna go out. You're like, do you have a louder drill?
Speaker 2 (01:36:43):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:36:44):
Yeah, so you got something that sounds like a fan
belt slipping on a car every time you drew something.
And could we use that in can you?
Speaker 2 (01:36:51):
Can you put the porta potty as close to their
property as possible?
Speaker 5 (01:36:54):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (01:36:55):
Yes, I didn't even think about that.
Speaker 13 (01:36:58):
M m.
Speaker 3 (01:37:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:37:00):
Make sure that there's no shade either. So it really
starts to ferment. I mean, I feel bad for the
construction workers, but yeah, I kind of used to it.
This is uh, this is so is this whole thing
just about seeking revenge on your enemies?
Speaker 2 (01:37:14):
For I told you before mention it don't trifle with me.
I'm not to be trifled with. Yeah, play the long game.
Speaker 1 (01:37:22):
Well again, I tried to encourage you to throw like
Native American remains or dangered species on the property, and
it would have quelled all this. But that ship has sailed.
So although it's gonna suck, if you on earth remains
right the halt there, you wouldn't want to build on
top of that, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (01:37:39):
I would build with the remains.
Speaker 1 (01:37:41):
Oh geez man, that would be an intimidating wing right there.
So what is that a chandelier? Or is that elk horns?
Speaker 3 (01:37:48):
What is that?
Speaker 1 (01:37:49):
Oh? Oh, not exactly. I don't know what it is
or who it is. We just call it Bob. That's Bob.