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April 21, 2026 35 mins
We're offended by things the President says ... but have you seen the way we behave on social media, in public, and during the "Endless Shrimp" promotion?  Needing to calm down after that rant, I welcome "Arrested Development" star Judy Greer on to talk about her new film, "Mabel."
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Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
About fifteen to twenty minutes ago, Jim Rose delivered his
rosy did you nosy? And a little late to the game.
A lot of other people over the last two three
weeks here have said, I don't know what's going on
here with the President of the United States, the language
he's using, the threats he's making against Iran, the picture

(00:24):
of him is the Lord and Savior healing a guy.
What is going on? And I asked Senator Ricketts or
his response to all of that when he was on
with us half an hour ago. He said, well, the
president has always been unorthodox and how he relates to
the American people, and the American people have elected him.
Like that's a very safe swerve of an answer, right there.

(00:47):
Do I love what the president doesn't and says all
the time? I do not. Do I understand why he
does some of what he does. I don't know if
my understanding of it is the same as why he
does it. Mostly, I think the reason why he does
all this stuff when it comes to him either having

(01:12):
McDonald's do door dash over to the Oval office, or
him as a picture of Jesus or whatever he's doing,
he does these things to tick off people who already
hate him, just to keep them spiraling and angry and
out of control, because I think it gives him some
sort of personal joy to do that. As far as
the tough talk against Iran, those guys are genocidal maniacs.

(01:37):
When the President starts using harsh language and very serious threats,
they get that, they understand it. And it's not just
against Iran. He's also looking at their terrorist groups. The
huthis the his bellah Hamas. He's looking at China, he's
looking at Russia, and he's and Syria and North Korea,
and he's letting these guys know, hey, if if you

(02:00):
get out of line and want to make nuclear weapons
to and threaten US with these weapons, then here's what's
coming for you as well. So I get all that,
But what I think is truly fun We've talked about
all of that. What I think is truly funny is
when the American people collectively furrow their brows, fold their arms,

(02:22):
and say, well, I don't know about the language used
by whether it's President Trump on truth social or Senator
Chuck Schumer at a rally, or Robert de Niro at
an awards show, or anything like that we all sit
there and go, well, I just I don't know about

(02:43):
that kind of thing. I never And then there is
something that's in the news today that kind of has
us hold a mirror up to society and let's see
what we see. And that announcement here is coming from
Red Lights, as they announced for the first time since

(03:03):
twenty twenty four, when they had to halt the promotion
because it was getting out of control and they were
losing a bunch of money. Red Lobster says, we are
reviving the endless shrimp deal. Why is this a thing? Well,

(03:24):
as it was posted online from someone who has worked
at Red Lobster, the endless Shrimp promotion turns patrons into
demons and the restaurant into hell. I've never seen any
one corporate decision supply more chaos, unhappiness, and disdain for

(03:46):
humanity than endless Shrimp, hug a Red Lobster employee today.
They need it why because at some point that shrimp
is no longer endless. It's like the all you can
eat buffet. You be here, four hour, you leave now

(04:09):
at some point. That's our friend, the late comedian John Pinnett,
with that one. He was a mountain of a man
who would go into the all you can eat buffet
and then realize that the all you can eat bffet
does have a limit on it. You leave. Now, at

(04:29):
some point, endless shrimp does end. I don't know if
it's between ships or what. Or people are like, yeah,
give me, give me nineteen more shrimp, and then you
only eat one and go. I can't eat the rest
of this. Tell you what, Give me a to go box.
Oh no, you can't. You don't get the endless shrimp
to go? What are you gonna do? Just throw all
this away? Come on, man, put it in the box.

(04:52):
Fights breakout, anger. People are losing their minds over this.
Endless shrimp used to be let's see here fifteen ninety nine.
Later they uped it to twenty bucks, and now in
some markets prices start at twenty four to ninety nine
for endless shrimp. How many shrimp can you eat? Lucy?

(05:16):
Are you a fan of the crustacean?

Speaker 2 (05:20):
I am a fan? And how much shrimp could I eat?

Speaker 1 (05:25):
One one sitting? Honestly? How many shrimp do you think
you could eat? Or shrimps?

Speaker 2 (05:30):
I can't think.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
More than twenty thirty fifteen twenty fifty out they're gonna
say fifty.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
I mean, I don't know. I've never sat down and
tried to eat how many shrimps I could eat.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
It's just one bite.

Speaker 2 (05:46):
Yeah, I can't imagine. They're very large shrimp, shrimp sized
shrimpy shrimp.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Yeah, and you get the the goofy term jumbo shrimp.
But you gotta most of work with the shrimp is
trying to get all the meat out of the tail.
I know a guy who eats the tail. Yeah, he
throws the hole.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
They did that once on accident, and it was not pretty.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
It was not paint's peeling off the walls. It was
it was a mess. So if it turns customers into demons,
Red Lobster is bringing back endless shrimp. I don't know
when it starts and all the I have no idea.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
The key. You just don't eat the biscuits.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
No. If you're like, that's the thing with the buffet, Yeah,
I'm gonna get a salad first. A salad. Do you
think I came to the all you can eat buffet?
Or I could load up on salad.

Speaker 2 (06:42):
If it was Ruby Tuesday. I miss that.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
We had to say goodbye Ruby Tuesday.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
But that solid bar was amazing.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
It actually was. So people fold their arms and look
at the president with some of the things he does
and says, and go what he he shouldn't do though
though that's very unpresidential. He needs to rise above it.
He needs to be better. Hey, endless Shrimp is back.
Let me go out there and fight all the people

(07:12):
and yell and scream and beg to take some home
and make things miserable and bring me more shrimp. You've
been here for four hours. You can't stay here all day. Hey,
I'm here from open to closes. It's endless Shrimp. I'm
paying twenty five bucks. Here's another example. Here's an editorial
in the Washington Post about how people's love for the

(07:37):
guy who killed United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson of Iowa,
rendering his children young children to be raised without a father.
The guy who killed them, Luigi, who's awaiting trial for
that December twenty twenty four murder, is fast becoming a
symbol of a new wave of ideologically motivated violence. And

(07:59):
they say there have been a lot of examples people
inspired by Luigi, who women love and think he's very
very handsome and cute, and therefore, hey, it's okay to
kill a guy that that healthcare company, the insurance company
probably cut him off or a family member. Turns out
none of that was true. This guy's just a nutjob.

(08:19):
But they say Hiss inspired deadly shooting at the Manhattan
skyscraper home to the NFL headquarters, California warehouse arson that
costs five hundred million dollars in damage, a firebomb attempt
at open Ai CEO's Texas home where the suspects referenced Luigi.

(08:44):
He's a bit of a folk hero among some on
the radical left in this country who think it's okay
to go after It's not just about occupying Wall Street,
it's about trying to murder them, and it's just fine,
you know, especially if you're handsome Luigi, you know. And
at the same time, we're looking at the President going, well,

(09:06):
he shouldn't have said that on true social Now, if
you excuse me, I'm gonna go murder somebody, and then
I'm gonna go kill that endless shrimp. Here's another example.
There is a business in Wisconsin that has for years
raised animals for the purpose of doing testing on these animals,
and immediately you're thinking the testing is horrible, painful things.

(09:29):
I don't I admit to not exactly knowing. I know
that this business gets a license review all the time
and they're able to retain their license. And then they say, well, no,
we're not in here torturing dogs. But we're talking about dogs.
People love dogs, and if we're talking about any testing, like, well,
that shouldn't happen. Again, I don't know what testing. It's

(09:53):
not like they're what happens if we break all their bones?
Do they feel paid? It turns out they feel paid.
Like that's a example, but that's what people think is
happening at this place. So a few weeks ago, they
are a group of people that decided they were going
to have a raid and try and free those dogs,
and they were unsuccessful. So they relaunched things for this

(10:17):
past weekend and they went and told everyone on social
media like, we want dozens of people, we're gonna storm
this compound and we're gonna free those dogs. Well, it
turns out that big social media push got back to
the people at the business who had armed guards ready,
who are now firing pepper spray and rubber bullets at

(10:40):
this oncoming group of vigilantes, and people say, but they're
hard to in the right place. They're doing testing on
animals in there. You don't know what kind of testing
they're doing on there. Again, they apply for a license
all the time, they get renewed, and they say that
we're not abusing animals in here. People like, we don't
believe you, So we're going to go and what are

(11:01):
you gonna go in there and murder the people who
work for this place. So they showed up there to
try and free these dogs. They didn't even get anywhere
close to inside the building. Turns out pepper spray and
rubber bullets have a way of turning people back. Now,
I I didn't know we're gonna come up here and
get shot at by rubber bullets. That stuff hurts. But

(11:26):
the same society that can't handle a zipper merge in
traffic or anything else, We're gonna look at the president
and go did you see the language he used on
true social What am I trying to say that many
of us, if our behavior was scrutinized twenty four to seven,

(11:47):
would not pass muster. I would That's why I'm here
to judge you people there that ought to help me
out in the ratings. What are you talking about? Ron
emails and says Scott, I'm pretty sure those who like
to eat shrimp are the same people who like to
eat erasers in grade school? Who is serving you shrimp?

(12:09):
By the way, if you put enough cocktail sauce on
a pencil eraser, I'd probably eat it. I'm Scott Vorhees,
dietitian and here with Lucy Chafs.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
And you're telling people to eat erasers here with cocks.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
With cocktail sauce. Here on news radio eleven to ten
kfab Look, I I just I'm just saying, I uh,
here's another thing I probably shouldn't say on the radio.
I don't like going on social media anymore. And I
really enjoyed it there for a long time. And I'm
not saying that I'll never go back on there. I

(12:46):
go on Facebook every day and wish people happy birthday,
especially if it's their birthday and still and they're still alive.
You got to keep up the problem. You got to
keep up on that. I have a lot of Facebook.
And when I say a lot, I mean I have thousands,
and I know maybe a few dozen of them, and

(13:06):
sometimes they die and I don't know that. They friended
me on Facebook ostensibly because they love this radio show,
and then they found themselves listening to it and decided
to jump off a bridge or something, and they're dead
and I don't know them, and I don't know that,
and so I say happy birthday, Rick, and then people
are like, how dare you? What's the matter with you?

(13:29):
Rick's dead, it's been dead for thirteen years. Well, I've
wished him a happy birthday the last thirteen.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Years, and they're just not telling you, right, And.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Then I'm like, all right, is it disrespectful to then
unfriend the profile of this guy who's dead? No, because
I guarantee in a year from now, I won't remember
and I'll be on there again. Hey, I hope you're
having a great birthday, Rick.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
Oh, it's okay to unfriend them, because then you won't
do it again and they'll.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
Never know anyway, I go on social media.

Speaker 2 (14:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Well, then so I go on social media and I'm
just met with just like I didn't know how. I
didn't know how to spell that, but as soon as
I see it on there, I recognize it. It's just
so I don't. We've ruined Facebook. We ruined my Space

(14:29):
and Facebook. My Space was ruined by bands who were like, hey,
check out my band, Like I don't know these guys,
I would check out, Oh, actually this band is pretty good.
And that Facebook which went from your aunt posting pictures
of her cat now is just your aunt posting pictures
of her at some rally, going ah, why are we

(14:50):
all so mad all the time? Do we have any
idea if they took any single one of us who
were just mad all the time and dropped a away
from Omaha, Nebraska and the greater metropolitan area and dropped
us into I don't know, Mogadishu, Tehran, council bluffs, just

(15:11):
some some hell. And I'm kidding. Hey, sorry, I grew
up in Nebraska. It's my god given right to occasionally
take a shot at council bluffs. I love council bluffs.
And when I found about council bluffs is they don't
care what we think. They're doing. Great, their taxes are lower,
they've got greater entertainment options, and they make a bunch
of money off our senate advice. Many of that's been
paid by me. So council bluffs. God love you anyway,

(15:33):
it's it's uh, Plasmas. We really need to pick on
why am I? Why? Why am I doing this? Why
am I? If you take hate? I know, but I'm
trying to do it with a smile on my face.
So you take all these people who just all the
time and just take them to Tehran and drop them
off and go, well, hey, you hated America. You as

(15:56):
as former now Omaha State Center Hunt posted on Facebook
the other day, the reason why so many women are
not now and will not in the future, have babies
is they don't want to bring babies into this horrible world.
All right, go try and say that. Go speak out
against the government of Iran in Tehran. See how that

(16:17):
works for you.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
Well, she's not one hundred percent wrong.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
I believe that she's right. I think that that sentiment
is wrong. She's not. Oh wait, are you believing that
people don't want to have a baby to bring more
people into this horrible world? Where I don't sure Trump
because it could be president and Republicans can tell families, Hey,
I don't think it's a great idea to chop off

(16:42):
your son's a Weien because he decided he's a girl
today as a fifth grader. Maybe we should wait on that.
How dare you? Is this what we're talking about now?

Speaker 2 (16:52):
I don't think that the vast majority of women don't
want to have children, first of all, so that's the baseline.
I think most women want to have one or two
or three kids. But of those who do not, I
think that that could be a percentage of those women
that have made that decision not to have kids, and
I think that percentage is probably up around eighteen to

(17:14):
twenty eight percent.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
Well, no, I get that there are people who don't
want to have kids for whatever reason. She's saying. The
reasons they don't want to is because America is so awful.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
That's what I'm saying with.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
Trump and MAGA supporters, that it would just be awful
to bring And she specifically post reposted someone who said
that people don't want to have kids because those girls
will grow up to be women without bodily autonomy, meaning
we're deciding not to have kids because I want my
daughter to have an abortion someday and she might not

(17:47):
be able to. Therefore, we're not going to start a family.
If that's the diseased freaky way. Some people are thinking,
I am glad they're not having kids, good for them.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
That checks out too. But you're telling me in that
you are that that baby is not a human in
order to make decisions on its own once it grows up.
You're a monster. I mean, you don't have not have
kids because you want to make all of their decisions
for them.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
I think the real issue is what you said a
moment ago when you said, yeah, some people want to
have one or two or three kids. At what point
is it too many kids where you start judging them like, wow,
that's that's a heck of I'm not answering that your
life put a number on it.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
No. Really, first of all, it's none of my business
how many kids you have. And secondly, what I think
about it is it's probably skewed a bit.

Speaker 1 (18:44):
Okay, all right, Well I'm just checking. I'm just I'm
just checking key emails Scott at kfab dot com and says,
as far as social media, my assertion, social media used
to be fun and now I can't. I can't stand it.
And I imagine that there are several of you who
listen to this program probably wondering why and we're connected

(19:05):
on Facebook or ex Twitter or Kfab's Instagram page. I
don't know what else we have here because and please
don't let our promotions director know I said that or
admitted that, and I never see your posts. I see
angry political screeds from people I don't know. I've never

(19:26):
seen their stuff before. And then Keith Emails says Instagram
was ruined when ninety nine percent of the videos are
trashing Trump and the other one percent is girls deciding
I need to know that they have breasts. Percentage is
not totally off. There was there was a time. This

(19:46):
is another thing why I don't go on Facebook as much.
I go on Facebook. I'm afraid to do it now
because I like my marriage. I would see like, first thing,
I'd see Trump's them, you know, I'd see that, and
then i'd see this week in rock history, here are
the charts from nineteen eighty seven, and I'd be like, wow,

(20:08):
Expose was burning up the charts. I wonder whatever happened
to them? And then I would see videos of girls
doing sexy things, and I would every time I go
on Facebook, I would keep seeing those things, probably because
I kept clicking on them. That's probably. And then let's

(20:32):
see here. Keith says TikTok was ruined from the fight videos.
I tried snapchat and deleted it. I guess this means
I need to get off the couch and get some
home projects done. Oh, Keith, don't do that. Yeah, TikTok
was ruined from the fight videos. This was just happened
in was it Gretna? They had some kids filming themselves.

(20:55):
I presume kids like big teenagers. They'd pull up there
in the middle of the night. They get out of
their car and they would film themselves, or one of
the door cameras in the neighborhood would film them getting
out of the car, running up to the garage and
kicking at it Bruce Lee's style to try and damage
the garage or in some instances knock in garage door panels.

(21:18):
The story here from First Alert six News. One lady
had it happened to her twice fourteen hundred dollars to
repair her garage doors. Five days later they returned and
kick dens into the new panels. And there are other
people in the neighborhood. This was just says in Gretna.

(21:40):
In some areas of Sarpi County. They'd show up the
mill of the night and they'd run out there and
they'd do a full blown, like Jackie Chan karate kick
into the garage door. I guess we're not running through
fences anymore, guys, Is that what we're doing. We're just
kicking in garages.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
You know, when we were kids, we had places to
go and things to do. Did we cruise Dodds? Sure?

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (22:04):
And we then.

Speaker 1 (22:06):
We got then Councilman Lee Terry said we couldn't everything,
so we went over to cruise Broadway.

Speaker 2 (22:13):
Actually I never did either one. But we had places
to go. We had skateland, we had the mall, we
had movies. We had all kinds of things that we
could do and go and play in arcades. And none
of those things are around anymore. Movies are still around.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
But you know what we had then that we have now,
parks or just out out in the street or the
nearest field to go and do something.

Speaker 2 (22:38):
But we were more socialized. I guess we had more.
We had more reason to take care of things around us.
We didn't have. We didn't have the desire to destruct
things just for fun.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
I don't know that that's true, we like.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
They do today.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
We used to ring and run people, what are you destructing?
And there were some guys that we decided their yard needed
to have a bunch of forks in it and toilet
paper needed to go in trees. But we were never
gonna like damage property.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
Tear down a gate running into it.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
I may have, as a Lakers fan, gone to a
friend of mine who was on the basketball team, who
was a big Celtics fan and wrote Celtics suck in
glue on his windshield. I may have done that, well
saying I'm not saying I did. It might have happened,

(23:33):
but we weren't gonna damage, you know, his dad's house
because we were afraid of what would happen to all
of us. Now no one seems to care. And and
the weird thing about that is there's much more of
a surveillance state that exists now than then. Not to
mention that these guys are filming themselves doing it, and
it's got to be posted online somewhere. What's the point

(23:54):
of doing anything if you can't film yourself doing it.
Back to rest here, I talked about the endless shrimp
deal turning customers into demons. According to some Red Lobster employees,
endless shrimp is coming back to Red Lobster and employees
are scared. And now I'm gonna talk about tacos. I
don't think I ate enough for breakfast. I'm just talking

(24:16):
about food today. The owner of Javi's Tacos. He has
other businesses as well. He talked again to First Alert
six News. Wawt you see he's got five restaurants. Hobbies
is a hobby or jaby? How would you pronounce Jaya? Vi?
I hobby. I'm gonna go Hobby, Hobby's Tacos, Time to

(24:39):
Rise and Shine, Frosty Mug, Helados Locos, and El Melagro.
He's got five restaurants. Good for him, an enterprising guy
his name Javier. Yep, we're gonna go with Hobby, So
Hobbyer says, we're not gonna do the door Dash, grub
Hub and Uber eat thing across our restaurants anymore. A

(25:03):
very popular thing, so popular that we lose money on it.
He says. He spent last year one hundred and eighty
eight thousand dollars in commission fees to delivery apps that
come and pick up the food and take it to
whoever ordered it, and you're like, well, you're not going

(25:24):
to pay that much in commission fees unless people are
ordering a lot of food from you. Well, I think
he's he's banking on people doing the strangest and this
is weird. Follow me on this one really, really listen.
What I think of what he's wanting is you go

(25:44):
to the restaurant. Yeah, that's the first obstacle. You go
to the restaurant, you order the food, and then you
sit there and eat the food. Or you can order
that food and then then take it back to your
house if it's so important you need to eat at
your house. He's kind of hoping that you would do that,

(26:05):
or maybe he needs to hire more employees who would
go out and deliver stuff. But he says, I'm not
using these third party delivery services anymore because I lose money.
They're taking commissions one hundred and eighty eight thousand dollars
last year at a door, Dash, grub Hub, and uber eats. Well,
then the argument is what about the people who are

(26:27):
working for those places now they don't have those jobs.
He's like, I didn't have as much of it to
begin with. He said, a lot of times, maybe there
weren't enough door dashers in the area, so someone orders
Tacos and then it's kind of like, get I've never
used any of these services, but I imagine it's like Uber.

(26:49):
You need someone to come pick you up and drive
you someplace. So you go on Uber and say I'm
here and I want to go there, And if you
have enough Uber drivers in the air, are one of
them takes a look and says is this worth my time?
And they can accept the offer and go do it. Well,
what if what if you're someplace without enough Uber drivers,

(27:12):
or if people are looking at you going yeah, you
have a very bad writer rating, you have a half
star rating. Apparently, you get in the car, you change
all the parameters where you want to go. You're always drunk,
You're harassing people in there, and you can't stop throwing up.
You're like, I've got a bile problem. Yeah, you're not
going to do it in my car, So they decide
not to drive you. Now you're just sitting there. Well,

(27:35):
apparently the same thing happens with the door dashers. You
order the food, the restaurant gets the order to make
the food. They're already making the food, but there's no
one available to come and get that food and take
it to your doorstep to you, you precious little thing.

(27:55):
And so the food just sits there. No one picks
it up, no one pays for it if they don't
get the food, and so the loss is on the restaurant.
And Hobby says, this happens all the time. You know
what else I bet happens. You ever go into a
restaurant that has a lot of uber eats stoor dash activity,

(28:18):
and that food is always just sitting there on a
shelf kind of near the door, And I'm looking at
this going. Human nature being what it is these days,
you know, there are people that just go in there
and just grab a bag and hey, just have a
wave like, yep, I'm the door dasher. No you're not.
You went in there and stole that guy's food.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
I never considered that.

Speaker 1 (28:41):
I bet that happens all the time. These are people
who are trash. They're trashy animal people, and apparently they're
just they love the restaurant so much. They're like, I
don't even care what's in that bag.

Speaker 2 (28:53):
I'll eat it like the pizza rat.

Speaker 1 (28:56):
They're just pizza rat people. I'll eat whatever is in
that bag. It's like it's a literal grab bag. They're
grabbing the bag and then whatever's in it, this is
your dinner. And I imagine that happens all the time.
And then the restaurant. Now now that here comes the
real door dasher. Hey, where's this order of a giant burrito?
We had it sitting over there. It was not here.

(29:17):
Now then they got to make another one. They got
to eat that cost. Hey again, strange deal. Maybe maybe
you're not the King of west Omaha. Maybe occasionally you
got to go and get your own food. But he
got it all right. Hey, special accommodations for special people.
But some of you, some of you are just lazy.

(29:40):
You are go.

Speaker 2 (29:42):
Get your own food or well maybe you have a car.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
There's another dumb idea. Every once in a while, go
to the grocery store. Get food. There's grocery stores just
teeming with food. You just go get the food. You
come home and make food. You get ingredients and make
different things. I know, what a what are you know?
There's actually a new story today that says here's something
that you kids could try these days. It's called Nonah Maxing.

(30:06):
The idea is, is you live a life like your
grandparents would have lived, like your Nonah, your grandma the
Italian phrasing there, so it's Nonah Maxing. You live a
life like your grandma, which is you kind of You
make your own food, you keep better hours, you have
a glass of wine once in a while. You don't

(30:26):
hire black people. You you know, it's just stuff that
like your grandparents would have done. Scott Voice, News Radio
eleven ten. I'm just seeing if you're paying any attention.
That's I'm not criticizing your grandma, but depending on the age,
it's I am. Scott Vorhees and Lucy. We have a

(30:49):
fantastic character from a couple of our favorite shows. I
know one of mine is Arrested Development. I don't know
if I've gotten you into that yet, but Archer. We
both love Archer. She's been a voice on arch and
an Arrested Development. She played the great Kitty Sanchez, worst
office secretary of all time.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
Michael returned to work where his assistant Kitty greeted him
with some startling news.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
Your wife's online one.

Speaker 2 (31:14):
Michael's wife had been dead for two years. What Kitty
realized her mistake. I said, your wife is online one,
but not immediately.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
Oh oh god, I'm sorry. George's way Kitty Sanchez. Actress
Judy Greer joins us. Now, good morning, Judy. Do you
ever what you've got to turn on Arrested Development and
watch that from time to time? It is such a
fun show.

Speaker 3 (31:42):
I don't ask you.

Speaker 4 (31:43):
Because there's so many reals and memes on social media.

Speaker 1 (31:48):
Yeah, it's come across.

Speaker 4 (31:50):
I think my algorithm feeds me myself on Arrested Development.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
Well, yeah, I'm not a psychiatrist, so we won't delve
too far into that here this morning, but I do
want to talk a little bit about the psychology of
a different decision you made here recently. A few weeks ago,
my wife said I want to watch this Emma thompson
thriller Dead of Winter, and I thought, oh, okay, cool,
Judy Greer is in it. She must be hilarious. You

(32:16):
are a psycho in this movie. What's the matter with you?
I was yelling at you the whole time.

Speaker 4 (32:21):
Yes, very crazy. That was an unusual character for me
to get offered. I had the best time doing it.
Emma is a genius. We all should bow down and
you talk about goats. Yeah, I love that opportunity.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
Yeah, it's a really really good movie too. Dead of
Winter is available right now, as is a new film
called Mabel. Tell Me About Mabel.

Speaker 4 (32:50):
Oh, I love Mabel. Very very different than Dead of
Winter tonally, pretty much in every way that you could
be different. Mabel is a coming up made a story
that centers on a young girl named Callie who is
socially awkward and she ends up finding a connection through
science and loves this movie. It's a small, beautiful film.

(33:13):
It explores curiosity, isolation, and sort of how a young
person finds a sense of belonging when she feels like
she doesn't fit in. Through plant intelligence, really, it serves
as a way for her to explore wonder and discovery
and kind of an unconventional way to understand the world.

(33:34):
It's such a beautiful story. I play Callie's teacher, missus G,
and I am sort of shepherding her through this idea
of plant intelligence and science and experimentation, and as Callie's
family just moved to this new place, it's sort of
like a way that Callie can feel grounded and connected.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
You are her substitute teacher in this film, maybe the
one instance on film where anyone had any kind of
respect for a substitute teacher.

Speaker 4 (34:07):
Yeah, exactly. I think I liked the subs because we
would watch a movie, and that's why I always liked
having a substitute teacher. But yeah, it was it was
a to me. It was a different type of teacher
student relationship because because missus g treats Kelly really like
a like a human being, not like a child. And

(34:28):
I always really loved when an adult would teach me,
treat me not maybe not as they're equal, but treat
me like I had an opinion and like I had
something to say and they cared about it. And I
think that's what drew me to this role because it
was not like your conventional relationship.

Speaker 1 (34:47):
Mabel is in theaters right now, just release this past weekend.
What are you working on that we can see you
in next.

Speaker 3 (34:54):
Judy, Well today, Mabel's also available on demand, so you
can watch it at home too if it's not in
the theater near you, So that you.

Speaker 4 (35:06):
Can see me in today. I just wrapped season two
of Stick for Apple Television. I also have season two
on Apple TV right now. The last thing he told me,
And oh, I'll be seeing in a five star weekend
this summer on Peacocks And yeah, Mabel right.

Speaker 1 (35:28):
Now, Yeah, and stick is you and Owen Wilson, you
get the last thing he told me with Jennifer Garner
and Judy Greer. Anytime you're on the screen, even in
a very scary role like your film with Emma Thompson
The Dead of Winter, I I'm always very happy to
see you, even if you're not flashing, Even if you're
not flashing Will Arnett. Okay, thank you very much. Thanks Judy,

(35:54):
great talking to you. That is Judy Greer. The new
film Mabel available on demand right now.
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