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December 2, 2025 • 67 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott VORDIEZ.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
We've got a number of things here that I honestly
and I shouldn't admit this. I know, as a talk
radio fledgling who's been in the business too long to
still be at amateur status, I shouldn't admit that. There
are a lot of things I just don't understand. Here's
one of them. And we went over this a little
bit ago when Gary and Jim mostly Gary asked me, Scott,

(00:27):
what do you think about the narco boats? The answer
is a bit more nuance nuanced than what I spat
out at the time. Here's the nuance part of it.
Do I think it's totally constitutionally, militarily geneva conventionally legal

(00:47):
what we're doing here? Oh? Probably not. I don't know.
I'm sure that you have a whole team of attorneys
and whether it's the United Nations or the Hague or wherever,
who would sit here and take exception to anything that's
happening right now. We just look at a boat and
go well, with the boats coming from here, it's got
some bad looking ombres on there, and this is a

(01:09):
known drug running lane, so it's probably people. Can we
kill it? Well not unless we not unless we designate
them terrorists and declare that we are on a war
on terrorists. Why aren't we still in a war on terrorists? Well,
I would call narco terrorists. Ooh, that sounds scary. Can
I hit the button? Now? Sure? You go right ahead

(01:29):
and bang we blow these boats out of the flip
and water. So are we allowed to do that? I?
I don't know. Would the same people who love what
Trump is doing every time one of these boats blows up,
would they find some problem with it? If President Kamala

(01:49):
Harris were doing this? Probably? Would this be the worst
of all the potential scenarios of what President Kamala Harris
was doing to us?

Speaker 3 (02:01):
No?

Speaker 2 (02:01):
Absolutely not. But there is obviously that you have to
look at it through a prism at least I do.
Well if the if the party that you don't like
were doing the exact same thing, would you be as
supportive of it? And the honest answer is no, No
one will give you the honest answer will you be
giving it? And that's true of both sides. It's true

(02:24):
of both sides. This whole thing about President Trump is
rounding up illegal immigrants and deporting him. Funny, I didn't
hear any protests. Didn't see any protests when President Biden
did that, when President Obama did that, when President Clinton
said we got to round up these illegal immigrants, we
got to deport the I didn't hear any any from

(02:45):
the media, from the people, from the protest, none of it.
Look the other way and move on with your life.
But when President Trump so much as sneezes, here comes
a protest against Kleenex. So with that in mind, are
there going to be people who just have an issue
with everything President Trump does because it's Trump doing it?

(03:06):
Of course, So if they're really going to argue this,
we can't blow up Narco terrorists because we don't know
that it's it's legal. I mean the constitution, this is
the water is off of Venezuela and the Caribbean. The
Constitution doesn't exactly apply to these guys, but you know

(03:30):
it's America doing it. Are these war crimes? Is Trump
a war criminal? Yes, say the people who as soon
as he declared himself a Republican in twenty fifteen running
for president, they declared Trump was guilty of war crimes
and should be impeached. This is before he was even elected,
so I'm going to take all of that opinion and

(03:51):
just put it over here. I'm not going to ignore you.
I do have a question for you, though, if you're
one of those who says Trump's a war criminal and
the Department of War, who God, what is the Department
of Work good for absolutely blowing up narco boats? Sorry,
I went to a little Edwin Starr on you on that moment.

(04:14):
For all of you who say all this is illegal
and we shouldn't be doing it, what is it exactly
that you want? Because if we don't blow these boats up,
and the narco terrorists or whatever it is that you
call them, they're fishermen who have got to make a
living the fish because of global warming and hurricane season

(04:36):
more on that later in the program. Because of global
warming and hurricanes and climate change and Greta Duneberg, and
there's just not there's no fish. There's zero fish anywhere
in this area. So they have to make a living
somewhere somehow. And so they're selling drugs to probably these

(04:59):
you know, Trump Epstein types, to do all the drugs,
and they're just bringing all the drugs in here for
all of these guys. You know, who's really being harmed.
Drugs should be legal anyway. This is a crime without victims.
I don't see any problem with it, all right, So
what you're saying you want is drug traffickers to bring

(05:24):
illegal and very harmful, potentially deadly drugs into our country where, Yeah,
there are people who, as I've said several times, how
do we stop all these drug traffickers from coming across

(05:44):
our border. Well, the biggest way to do that is
stop doing drugs. But for some people, apparently that's not
an option. I'm not your mother, I will tell you
that probably. I know when Mom said try everything, she
was talking about Brussels sprouts, not fentanyl. There are a
lot of people out there, let's call him, today's teenagers

(06:06):
and college kids who are doing the exact same thing
we did when we were kids. You're at a party,
you're hanging out, someone says, here, try this, it'll take
the edge off, which, by the way, is a phrase
that one of these guys on the drug boat I
was on in the Caribbean last week said to my son.
Last we were on a cruise, and my son said, yeah,

(06:30):
these guys are cool. One of them tried to give
me and then he named a particular prescription drug that
was being abused and said, here, take this, it'll take
the edge off. What is this and what does it do?
I said, did you take it? Because we're going to
find out and he didn't. At least he said he
didn't and you know, take the edge off. So yeah,

(06:53):
that kind of thing still happening. My son was allegedly
smart enough in that instance not to take it. I
don't think the person given him to him was, you know,
like some bad eighties after school special. Hey man, do
you want to be cool? Everyone's doing it. Man, take this,
It'll take the edge off. And I don't think it
was something like that. I think it was kind of like, hey,

(07:15):
this is something that I'm into and I want to
share it with my friends. Would I have taken it
at that same age in that same instance, Well that depends.
Is my mom listening to the show right now? If so, no,
I would not have done that. Drugs are bad, and

(07:39):
first Lady Nancy Reagan said just say no, So I
would have just said no. Now my mom's not listening,
so I The problem is is that the stuff back
then was just some pills that some idiot snuck out
of his aunt's medicine cabinet, and it was probably just
tailand all, which RFK Junior, would you will kill you

(08:00):
instantly and give future generations nothing but autism? But who know?
I mean? And some of the stuff that people were
having us drink or take or it probably probably wasn't
going to kill you instantly. Today's stuff has a really
bad habit of causing fewer customers for future drug traffickers

(08:24):
by killing the potential client base instantly. Either they know
it's lace with this, or they know it's lace with this,
and some people can handle it, and some people are
thirteen and they die. And these people they don't know
that they're taking this stuff. They don't know what dosage

(08:45):
they're taking. These people are making it in a toilet
in a prison, it's being smuggled out in some guy's keister,
and now it's being introduced at your middle schooler's weekend party.
They don't care, They don't have any idea. This isn't
breaking bad. These guys aren't making like, hey, this is
the good stuff we want to be careful about. These

(09:07):
are people who are just like, hey, make this stuff
as cheaply as possible, cut it with this really cheap,
easy to get stuff called fentanyl. Sell it for this
because they'll ford it and we'll just make money. You know,
some of them die. Well, it's unfortunate, but you know
it's not my fault. You know. They they should have signed,
they made him sign the waiver, right. They don't care.

(09:31):
They don't know, and they don't care. And this stuff
is coming from the guys on the boat that Pete Hegseeth,
our Secretary of War looks at and says, I see
some guys on a boat. They ought to know better,

(09:51):
and they're just blowing these boats up one by one. Well,
they've been doing this for months now. I've hit this
sound effect button several times over the last several months
with various levels of enthusiasm that's probably not very sensitive. Well,
this latest one, I guess this goes way back to

(10:14):
September second and it wasn't the strike on the boat.
It was the second strike. The allegation is these guys
are coming up here and we're like, that's a drug boat, okay,
blowing up. But it was only just a half explosion.
Only some of the guys on the boat died, and

(10:34):
then there were survivors and they're paddling around, swimming, hanging
on to the boat. Kate winslet's like, give me some room,
and they're like it's thank goodness the waters are warmer.
And so they're out there paddling or whatever, and we're like, hey,
all right, take a look, see how we did. And
they'd take a look at their satellite imagery, like you
believe this, Look at this. Survivors. These guys over here,

(10:59):
they serve vibe the blast and now they're paddling around
out there in the water. Now. Convention says, if you
do a strike against someone and you have survivors, you're
not okay. All right, So as I was explaining the
rules to you, you want ahead and just blow them
up again. Well that was the idea. It's not like
the boat or the drugs themselves. No boat has floated

(11:23):
its ghost ship way to our nation with drugs that
are like, let me at them. I want to get
in some American people. I have a drug and I
want to kill these kids. None of them do this
on their own. That's how they sound. By the way,
the boats don't boat themselves, and the drugs don't bring
themselves up here. It's the people who are doing this,

(11:47):
and if if there are some people who are like well,
I was okay with killing them once, but killing them
twice seems excessive. What are you talking about? The idea
behind and this was find the people responsible for doing
this and blow them up real good. So if it

(12:09):
took a couple of times, hey, sometime. I mean, if
at first you don't succeed, keep pushing the button that
blows up the boat. That's the phrase I saw it
in a fortune cookie. So Confucius was a badass dude.
I mean he would do that. He's like, I just

(12:30):
blow up all the people, and I write stuff down
the little slips of paper and I put them in cookies.
So this particular one. Then the argument was, well, then
who authorized the second strike? Colonel Jessup, did there's your

(12:52):
nineties movie reference for this segment of the radio program.
I'll take just a quick respite here will Lucy Chapman
takes a swipe at that one. Colonel Jessop ordered the
code red strike on the second boat.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
Is that hunt for October?

Speaker 2 (13:07):
No, it's a few good men.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
Oh well, I wasn't far off.

Speaker 2 (13:13):
That's the famous Jack Nicholson Tom cruise courtroom scene.

Speaker 3 (13:16):
Yeah, you're damn right.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
I did.

Speaker 2 (13:18):
Come on, I know that.

Speaker 3 (13:20):
I know that if you would have said that, I
would have said that one.

Speaker 2 (13:23):
Movie se I Want the Truth movie. That's right, that's
what it's called. Can I get two tickets to I
Want the Truth? You can't handle the Truth? I love.
That's one of the greatest scenes in movie history. And
who better to pull it off than Jack Nicholson. How

(13:44):
great is it that we grew up and we're still
here in the era of Jack Nicholson just bathing that
for a second. So, Colonel Jessop, they're like, who ordered
the code red on these Narco boats? And they're like,
probably Pete Hagseith Haig Seth is like what hey, oh hey,
don't look at me. I it was. It was Mitch

(14:09):
Mitch Navy Admiral Frank Mitch Bradley nicknamed Mitch. They pulled
Mitch from Frank his middle initials and maybe it's Mitchell
and they call him Mitch. Navy Admiral Mitch reportedly ordered
the controversial second strike on that Narco boat that was

(14:32):
allegedly involved in drug trafficking in the Caribbean Sea September
second so Hegseth is like, hey, I didn't do it,
but then he says he posted this on ex Twitter.
Let's make one thing crystal clear. Admiral Mitch Bradley is
an American hero, a true professional, and has my one

(14:52):
hundred support. That guy's gonna get fired, and I stand
by him and the combat decisions he has made on
this septem number second mission and all others. Sense America
is fortunate to have such men protecting us. When this
Department of War says we have the back of our warriors,
we mean it. So he either believes what he said

(15:16):
there or they knew, and Mitch probably knows, like, all right,
if someone has to fall on the sword for this one,
it's going to be you. Don't worry. The President will
pardon you, thank you for your service, thank you for
your attention to this matter. Either either that or he
honestly means it, and the guy's fine. I don't know,
but you know, there's certainly concerned that this guy's the scapegoat.

(15:37):
And this is not what the anti Trumpers want. They
don't want Mitch to go down for this. They want Pete,
they want heg sith Secretary. Heg sith and certainly the
Commander in Chief to go down for this. But why
They're like, Hey, we don't want you killing drug traffickers

(15:57):
who are illegally bringing illegal narcotics into our country to
kill Americans. Okay, just tell us that's what you want.
Just say, look, I if the drug traffickers are brave
and smart enough to get in here, I need to
party this weekend, so I want to have the Just

(16:17):
tell us this is what you want. You're like, well,
what Amazon doesn't deliver this stuff. I gotta get it
from some boat from Venezuela. Just tell us that's what
you want. Of course, now it says bipartisan lawmakers clash
with the Trump administration. No, you know what bipartisan means.

(16:38):
It's all the Democrats and one Republican. It's usually how
it is, like one or two Republicans. So that's that's
your your bipartisan lawmakers clashing with the Trump administration. So
this is the latest outrage here in the last few days. Meanwhile,

(17:00):
the Treasury Department is investigating whether Governor Tim Walls of Minnesota,
Nebraska native, was allowing millions of dollars of taxpayer money
to go to another terrorist Operation Wait in Minnesota. Details
next Scott Voice News Radio eleven to ten KFAB emails

(17:25):
here Scott at kfab dot com. Craig says, So, the
logic is, you only get one shot at one person
in the middle of a battle, and if they don't
get hit, they're free to go unless they shoot back,
then you get another chance. Yeah, it's it's basically the
same premise apparently with blowing up terrorists as when you
were playing whether it was cops and robbers or the

(17:51):
politically insensitive cowboys and Indians or whatever, it is basically
some variation of hide and seek. When you were a kid,
kick the can, call whatever you want. We had a
great time playing that, but there was always that one
kid like, all right, I shot you. No you didn't.
You missed. I had a shield up. I don't see it.

(18:12):
It's an invisible shield. All right, Well I'm now poking
you in the eye with with my arrow. You're dead.
No I'm not. That's a glass eye. And you know
he's always like one kid. So or they're like, nope,
you didn't touch me. I was on base. That's not base,
it is I declared this earlier. This is other base.

(18:34):
We don't have other base. Base is the light pole
right there in the middle of the circle. Also, this
mailbox is base. There's always that one kid trying to
change the rules. Apparently that's how war works. You get
one shot of blowing up their boat. And if you don't,
you know, there's always like a couple of narco terrorists going, hey,
you missed me, Now you gotta let me go. They're

(18:55):
like the kids who when you were fighting with some
of the neighborhood kids, which invariably would happen, they're your
best friends at noon, but by three o'clock, I hate
these people. And now they're they're in front of your
house mocking you, and you're like, you gotta get off
my property. I'm gonna call the cops. Eh, we're on
the sidewalk. The sidewalk is public property. Like suddenly these

(19:18):
little twerps in your neighborhood knew about eminent domain and
public private property rights and all this stuff easements. And
then there suddenly the geniuses and little twerps and they're like,
we're on the sidewalk. You can't move us. You are
a jerky face and a poopyhead. You're both of those things,
and you're like, I hate my life. This is the

(19:40):
worst thing. But by after lunch or after dinner that night,
you're out there playing with them again, and you're probably
ganging up and picking on some other kid. This was
life in nineteen eighty six. And also this is apparently
how narco terrorists work, so we hate Nope, sorry you
didn't get me. I was on the sidewalk of the
Caribbean Sea and you can't get me in the sea.

(20:04):
And oh, apparently they don't play by the rules as
they goog glok glog. Look to the bottom of the sea.
Some kids are out there snorkeling. Look, it's a swordfish.
That's a man of ray. Is that a dead Narco
terrorist right there by the reef? Wow, these goggles are amazing.
Speaking of terrorists, the Treasury Department is Trump administration is like,

(20:29):
all right, we got money being funneled to terrorists from
the governor of Minnesota. Who wants this one? Treasury Department's like,
come on, give me something to do, all right. Who's
in charge of the Treasury Is that Scott Bessen? All right, Scott,
get after it. So Treasury Secretary Scott Besson announced a
probe into Minnesota Governor Tim Walls, Nebraska native, because they

(20:53):
are investigating weather. His feckless management allowed millions and taxpayer
dollars to be funneled to a group called al Shabab.
Who's what's al shabab? It's a terrorist organization out of Somalia.
These guys are fun. They love suicide bombings, they love

(21:14):
assaults on civilian targets like shopping centers, hotels, all they
love that stuff. They're like, where are the innocent people
who won't shoot back. Let's go attack them because I
don't want to get killed today. I'm a cowardly terrorist.
That's that group. Where do they get their money from
the feeding our future meal program? This is what's alleged.

(21:39):
Apparently the governor in Minnesota and all that stuff is like,
all right, we got a meal program. They're supposed to
feed people here in Minnesota. And a lot of the
money went to those who are refugees in Minnesota. And
a lot of the refugees in Minnesota are people who
Minnesota Congressman Ilan Omar directed be there from her friends

(22:01):
in Somalia. Some of these who just came in here
completely unchecked. We have no idea who they are, what
they're doing allegedly now have ties to the terrorist organization
Al Shabab, which is Somalia based. So they're like, oh,
we need money. There's a lot of people here who
need food, and how much do you need? If you

(22:22):
could just give us a blank check, that'd be no problem.
And so they give all this money and they're like, thanks,
but rather than feed the people with it, we're going
to use it to buy AMMO and military stuff for
our terrorists in Somalia. And this is the allegation. And
Governor Wallas either didn't have any didn't have anything to

(22:45):
do with this, and had no idea what was going on, which,
based on how that guy seems to be, could very
well be the case, or he didn't look into it,
as allegations were like I think this money is going
to a terrorist organization. Oh it's not, I asked Congresswoman
Ilhan Omar and she said it wasn't and so it's fine.

(23:07):
So now the Treasury Department is looking into it. Why
isn't the governor of Minnesota like, Hey, I'm doing a
full scale investigation into all. This is ridiculous. The taxpayer
money of the good people in Minnesota. We deserve better
than this. Why isn't he leading these this discharge? Oh
he said I'm friends with terrorists. Isn't that what he

(23:30):
said in the debate? Fox News update next, now here
are a few more things. I guess I just don't understand.
I told you, I don't understand why people are losing
their minds over the second strike on one drug boat,
because the first strike didn't kill all the narco terrorists
we intended to kill. Apparently, there's some people are like, hey,

(23:50):
you only get one shot, and if you don't kill them, well,
they're on base. You can't touch those guys. You have
to be compassionate. You have to sympathize with their needs.
You have to make sure that they're not being Okay,
now we're going to blow him up. And if the
first strike didn't work, let's see, do we have more
in the chamber? Oh? We do. We have an endless supply. Great,

(24:13):
just keep blowing up the boats. I don't understand why
that's the second strike that people are really upset about,
other than the fact that and this is probably what
it's all about. It's Trump and so we're looking for
any way to get him. Trump doesn't seem to get
got very often, so he's just gonna keep blowing up

(24:36):
the boats. And anytime you cry about it on social media,
he sees it and he feasts upon your tears. He's
not human. The other thing I don't get is why
suddenly now it's a time for the guy who killed

(24:58):
CEO Brian Thompson, an Iowa native of United Healthcare. He's
the CEO of United Healthcare. He was killed about a
year ago in New York City. They arrested the guy
a few days later at a Mickey DZ in Pennsylvania.
And I don't know that there was ever a whole
lot of thought that like, well, I don't know that
we did are you? Are you sure we got the guy?

(25:21):
Apparently he's sitting there with a gun and a notebook,
wearing a T shirt saying I killed the CEO. And
I don't think that was exactly it, but he I
think we everyone feels pretty good we got the guy.
It's taken a whole year now to get him in
a courtroom, and it's now we're His attorneys are like, okay,

(25:41):
you can try this guy for the murder of this
family man who had nothing to do with anything in
the really hunky murderer's life. He wasn't a client of
United Healthcare. He nor any family member didn't have United.
It wasn't like my mom had surgery that was denied
by her insurance at the United Healthcare and because she

(26:05):
was denied, she died, and as that's why I had
to go kill the CEO. None of that happened. People
had all kinds of fantasies about that and him, because
apparently some people think he's light on the eyes and
he's a bad boy and I can change him. So
now here we are a year later, and his attorneys

(26:26):
are like, okay, we want the court to dismiss the
evidence against him, which evidence his gun and his notebook,
as well as statements given by him to the police
who arrested him. Now, I guess who's asking for that

(26:47):
to be his attorneys A good attorney? Well does he?
I mean? Is I guess? I don't? I guess the
attorneys have to do this thing you ask for. The
doesn't mean that. I mean, if the federal prosecutors are like, okay,
that's fair, then I guess they have other evidence to

(27:10):
convict him. But or if a judge is like, Okay,
you've arrested the guy. You've got statements he made to
the police when he was under arrest, and he had
his Miranda rights read to him. We have the notebook,
and we have the potential murder weapon. We don't need
any of that stuff here. Good luck, Like, what is

(27:30):
law enforcement for. We arrested the guy, We read him
his rights. He started babbling anyway, he's saying stuff like
ah luigi or whatever it is that he said. And
I don't know samanaia, you know. And so we arrested
the guy, read him his rights. He's babbling anyway when

(27:51):
he's also writing a notebook, going, hey, it's hard to
write I killed that guy with these handcuffs on. Can
you loosen them a little bit? I want to make
sure you have all the evan. By the way, here's
the murder weapon. You can trace the bullet to the
gun chamber, and all the redues, the striation marks and
all whatever they do this thing and uh and and
here's here's all the evidence. And some judges like evidence,

(28:14):
we don't need that. Just uh you put him out there.
Here's a whole jury full of college age girls with
pink and purple red hair. Who and not like real
red hair, not like redheads, like dyed red hair with
a bunch of tattoos on their face and all the
rest of it. Who were just looking at this guy
like he's so dreamy and he did something that was

(28:37):
socially justified. Uh, this is the jury and uh yeah,
just uh put them there in the on trial and
then just look at the jury and go, come on,
would you get there? Would you do you think this
guy could kill anybody? Look how cute he is. Pinch
his cheek, and then he'll walk scott free. He's pled

(28:57):
not guilty and connection with the murder of the United
Healthcare CEO. I don't know how long now it takes
for anyone to determine whether the requests by his attorneys
to suppress all the evidence against him. Wouldn't it be funny, though,
I don't know how long that takes. Wouldn't it be

(29:18):
funny if the judge is like, yeah, he wasn't read
his rights fast enough or they got something wrong, so
we're throwing out all the statements he made to the police.
Also the notebook. We got one handwriting expert who says, well,
there's enough reasonable doubt to say maybe he didn't write

(29:39):
all of this. So we're going to throw out the
whole notebook and the gun we lost it. We put
it in the evidence room with all the other guns
that people have used in crimes, and we got him
mixed up. Happens all the time a lot of people.
You would be surprised how many people take the wrong
baby home from the hospital. You'd be surprised. Look at
your kid. That's probably not your kid. But you know,
so these things happen. So they throw out all the

(30:01):
evidence against him and they put him on the stand.
They're like, did you kill this guy? Yes? I mean no,
You're like all that work by his attorneys just suppress
all the evidence and he blew it. He blew it anyway.
Wouldn't that be funny?

Speaker 3 (30:16):
I'm laughing now, Okay, that's a great story.

Speaker 2 (30:18):
Thank you. Yeah, none of this is probably gonna happen,
but it'd be darkly funny if it did, right.

Speaker 1 (30:25):
Yeah, Scotties News Radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
Thanksgiving is so like that was just a momentary blip.
We're into Christmas and someone has stolen the baby Jesus
in Belgium, there's a Nativity scene where they have they
have Joseph and marrying the Baby Jesus and the Wise
Man and the Angel, all the nativity stuff, but none
of them have faces. They decided like, we're not gonna

(30:52):
put faces on the Nativity scene. People are like, it
looks weird. They look like Minecraft characters, Chick and jockey.
So someone got so mad that they have a faceless
Nativity scene that they went and they stole the Baby Jesus.

Speaker 3 (31:16):
Well why would they do that, Why wouldn't they just
paint some faces on there.

Speaker 2 (31:19):
Well, I'm surprised that some kid didn't come up and
put googly eyes on it. That seems to be what
they do. Yeah, so you can't steal the Baby Jesus.
Put it back. You're that commercial a moment ago for
van wall equipment from our friend Emery Songer afternoons two
to six here on eleven ten kfab I double checked

(31:41):
the start date on that commercial. I could do that
with my fancy computer system of all of our words
from our sponsors. Because he said something there that finally resonated.
He said, Hey, the Old Farmer's Almanac says it's going
to be a cold winter. With snow starting earlier than normal,
And I thought, did he record that? It seems like

(32:01):
I've heard this commercial on a radio station for at
least a couple of weeks. Did they? Did they do that?
Like ten days before that snow in the final hours
of November, which is not exactly earlier than normal, but
seems earlier than previous recent years. No, that started October thirteenth,

(32:24):
and the Old Farmer's Almanac predicted that months if not
years before that, which I think is funny because our
friends at Noah, the North Omaha No what is it?
North Oceanic? Oh? Uh, this is anyway, the GAA, this

(32:47):
is the GRIP. I forget what it stands for. This
is the group that every single year predicts the hurricane
season and at the beginning of the year. This just
this past spring. The experts, the scientists at Noah, and
these guys, they don't mess around. They are rooted in

(33:09):
where's my button? Who moved my button? I was only
gone for a week. I found it. They're rooted in science.
And this was just this past spring. Looking at the
twenty twenty five Atlantic hurricane season that technically hurricane season
starts on June first, and runs through November thirtieth, and

(33:33):
what they said this past spring was a thirty percent
chance of a near normal season, a sixty percent chance
of an above normal season, and only a ten percent
chance of a below normal season. In the Atlantic this year,
only a ten percent chance of a below normal hurricane season.

Speaker 3 (33:55):
It depends on how they behave in the area.

Speaker 2 (33:59):
Well, I it's yeah. Sometimes the hurricanes show up and
they do a bunch of damage and they knocked up. Now,
sometimes they're actually kind of nice. They're like, look, I
know I look rough, but I'm all about charity. We
do a Toys for Tots drive every single year of
my other hurricane friends, and I know we look a
little scary and rough, and some of my friends they
get a little out of control, your little cantankerous around

(34:20):
these parts. But no, we're okay, we're good. It's like
Hurricane Carter spent some of us life in prison, and
some of his life was spent not doing criminal things.
You know, the hurricanes. So it's a it's a boxing
reference for you. Oh okay, okay. Ten percent chance predicted

(34:42):
this past spring by the experts of a below normal
hurricane season. Do you want to guess now that hurricane
season is done. Whether it was a normal above like
above average, or a below average season and hurricanes. It
was certainly it was below average.

Speaker 3 (35:03):
I didn't even know it was over. In fact, I
didn't know it had started.

Speaker 2 (35:06):
Yeah, well, you don't live in Jamaica. It's not like
there weren't any hurricanes. Technically, anytime a tropical storm has
winds of one hundred and eleven miles per hour or more,
then it's like that's a hurricane. Not many of these
formed in the Atlantic, and they didn't make landfall. Over
the United States, we didn't have any hurricanes make landfall.

(35:30):
We had tropical Storm shan Tall made l landfall near
made a landfill near Litchfield, South Carolina that was in
early July, blew some stuff, some rains and wind across
North Carolina Virginia a little bit flooding rains blamed for
at least six deaths. So it wasn't like it was

(35:51):
completely unscathed, but it wasn't technically a hurricane. So for
the first time in a decade, no hurricane made landfall
in the Union the United States, the average has been
about eighteen named hurricanes a year. This year, we had
thirteen thirteen named storms and only five of them were hurricanes.

(36:14):
So the average is like eighteen. We had five thirteen
named storms, five hurricanes, and if you were in the
path of Hurricane Melissa, that was that was Remember that
was just like a month ago, and that was the Caribbean, Jamaica, Cuba,

(36:36):
the Bahamas, one hundred and eighty five mile proa winds,
massive destruction across mostly western Jamaica and other than that.
Though from like the strongest point in hurricane season, which
is August twenty fourth to September sixteenth, no named storms

(36:56):
at all in the Atlantic during that period. The last
time that happened was nineteen teen ninety two. Before that,
the last time that happened was nineteen thirty nine. So
just a few months ago, at the start of the
hurricane season, the experts told you there was only a
ten percent chance of a below normal hurricane season in

(37:18):
the Atlantic this year, and that ten percent turned into
one hundred percent. It was one of the lowest hurricane
seasons of all time. Now I get it, these things
are very difficult to predict. As one said, it's like
trying to forecast a twig moving in a river, how

(37:42):
far it's going to get when there are a lot
of rocks and movements in the water and various sandbars
and whatever else that can suddenly catch that twig and
stop it or change its direction so dramatically that it
ends up, you know, impacting over here, or it gets
dragged and it stalls out. Okay, I get it, I
get it. I'm I'm just saying, though, so many of

(38:04):
these environmental predictors and scientists and all the rest of
us stuff, even though in many instances they can't predict
six o'clock at five point thirty, have no problem telling you, oh,
we're all going to die in a lake of fire
here in this generation due to global warming and climate change.
All of the snow caps on whether it's the polar

(38:26):
ice caps or the snow caps on that mountain over there,
they're all going away. The ice shelves are all going
to melt, the seas will rise to the point where
we get beachfront ocean property in Omaha, Nebraska or at
least Grand Island, and finally give it some reason to
be named that, which doesn't sound all that bad to me.

(38:47):
But they have no problem telling you, oh, yeah, in
the next fifty years, there will mean nothing left of humanity.
All the food sources will dry up, and the amperature
is going to rise, and the seas will drown us
if the sun doesn't burn us to death. But as
far as at the beginning of hurricane season, they can't

(39:10):
predict six o'clock at five thirty. Well, it's hard. I
get it. I'm not saying it's not. I'm not saying
these guys are more. I'm just saying, don't tell me
that the predicting of weather three hours out. I've seen
a number I've been doing severe weather on this radio
station for many years, and I've seen a number of
models that tell me, with absolute certainty, in one hour

(39:31):
from now, al Maha is going to get hit by
a severe thunderstorm. The radar is showing it. It's thirty
miles away, it's like an hour away. And we'rein an
hour from now, we're having a thunderstorm. In an hour
from now, nothing happens. What's hard. I get it. But
don't tell me that's hard. But you can tell me

(39:52):
in absolute certainty that in seventy two years there'll be
nothing left of humanity due to global warming. You can't
have it both ways. There. That ought to settle that problem.
I made some reference in the last hour too, and
I don't remember why or how. Oh yeah I do.

(40:14):
We were talking about the Narco terrorist boats and I said,
who it Basically people are looking at the Trump administration
trying to figure out who ordered the code. Red said
that was your nineties movie reference. Lucy said, the Hunt
for Red October. Well, you got it correct, and that
it was an awesome military based movie, but not the

(40:36):
correct film. You at least were in the right decade
for a change. Usually you say, uh, white Christmas, you
know it's yes. Also a military base.

Speaker 3 (40:50):
Movie, right, yeah, yeah, a military base.

Speaker 2 (40:52):
Yeah, theying tribute to the military officer, general, colonel or
whatever it for the old guy. Right. My wife is
so mad. She's like, his name is this and his
rank was that? And they're like, okay, we went we
went to a few good men, and I said, the
courtroom scene with Tom Cruise and Jack Nicholson Colonel jessep

(41:19):
that you can't handle the truth. That whole scene is
one of, if not the best scene in movie history.
You've got some you want to dissuade me of that,
not to argue against that scene, but to say, well, Scott,

(41:40):
have you considered this scene? I don't want to hear
about like this is my favorite movie? Yeah? Great, I
want to hear the scene. What scene is the greatest
scene in movie history? You tell me Scott at kfab
dot com. Or I'll even do with something I just

(42:02):
don't do often enough. I will open up and actually
listen to more of our talkback mic entries, which I've
gotten super super lazy on personal criticism on that one. See,
I've already got some coming in today, haven't even listened
to them. Sorry, No, I don't mean to ignore you.
I forget so Scott atkfab dot com. Or if you

(42:27):
want to act out a movie scene for me, do
it in the talkback mic. That's our free iHeartRadio app
little microphone button there. You can don't just tell me.
I want to hear you say the greatest movie scene
like for you, I would say, you know a few
good men with your dad, right? I did you know?
I want to hear that out of you. Or you
can just email me and I'll do my best to

(42:48):
recreate it. If I know what scene you're talking about,
greatest movie scene in history? Let's hear it Scott atkfab
dot com. It's a secondary topic weaving its way through
this hour of the program. I said, a moment ago
we talked about Trump babies. Here it is Michael and
Susan Dell. You see the computer guy. Did he start
Dell or is it just a coincidence.

Speaker 3 (43:11):
I don't think his name was Mike. I think it was.

Speaker 2 (43:13):
Frank, Frank, Frank Frank Dell. Yeah, yeah, tech wizard Frank.
Do you how many Franks do you know? Are any
of them tech wizards? Or are some of them still
calling you try and help you program their VCR? Why
is it always noon? There's a reference the kids won't

(43:37):
get all right, Michael and Susan Dell. These are described
as billionaire philanthropists. What a great time. How do you
get that job?

Speaker 3 (43:46):
I'm guessing because you're a del Yeah.

Speaker 2 (43:51):
It's got to be the Dell computers, right? What happened
all that Gateway computer money? The one with the cowboxes
you get? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (43:59):
I think they got sold.

Speaker 2 (44:00):
That was so great. It was so cheap, Like here's
a personal computer and he's going there and you buy
some cowboxes and you bring them home. Bang, You're certain
you get a Compus served disc and you are surfing
the world Wide Web.

Speaker 3 (44:14):
They're out that commodore sixty.

Speaker 2 (44:16):
Four HTTP colon slash slash slash sticks his head in
what Oh no, sorry, not you, bud, go back to
what you were doing Banada.

Speaker 3 (44:30):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (44:30):
Yeah, he's chairman of Dell Technology. So yeah, we called
that one. Uh. These billionaire philanthropists have announced one of
the largest direct charitable gifts in US history. It's a
six point two five billion dollar pledge to fund investment
accounts for twenty five million children children. Sorry, there's your

(44:54):
eighties stand up comedy reference for this segment of the
radio program. I don't know that I can say the
word children without doing that voice inflection. Lee would take
a crack at that one. No, not Lewis Black, though
I love Lewis Black. That's Eddie Murphy's impression of Bill Cosby.

Speaker 3 (45:12):
Okay, I have five children, I hear it now.

Speaker 2 (45:18):
Yeah, so this is for twenty five million children. Me
and my wife could meet. You are gonna give money
to the children.

Speaker 1 (45:28):
Now.

Speaker 2 (45:29):
The Dell's commitment is a new federal initiative that will
deposit one thousand dollars in investment accounts for every baby
born in the US from twenty twenty five to twenty
twenty eight. Lucy, there's still time.

Speaker 3 (45:44):
You're saying, there's a chance you have a baby.

Speaker 1 (45:47):
Now here's the part of the show where Lucy says
she's glad she doesn't have kids.

Speaker 2 (45:51):
And then extract money from that baby. Of course, yeah,
this is this is quite a deal here. So wait,
so every baby born in the United States from twenty
twenty five to twenty twenty eight, the Dells would just say,
congratulations on the birth of your new baby. Here's one
thousand dollars. We're putting it in an investment account. And
they figures it's not going to be there. Well, I

(46:14):
don't know. I'm sure there's rules of how it all
works and who can access it when and all the
rest of this stuff. But there will be some people
in this country who won't take advantage of it because
of what they're calling it. Oh, they're calling these accounts
trump accounts, trump babies, trump babies. The gift is designed

(46:36):
to help families feel supported from the start and encourage
them to keep saving as their children grow. When children
have accounts like this, they're much more likely to graduate
from high school, from college by a home, start a business,
and less likely to be incarcerated. You give a kid
one thousand dollars a birth, the kid won't go to jail.
Parents might when they're trying to extract that money and

(46:58):
blow it all on on the casino.

Speaker 3 (47:02):
Well, that's not against the law.

Speaker 2 (47:07):
If they're not if they're extracting the money. And I
don't know, I mean, at some point you say like, well,
it's our money, it's our family's money. But I think
the idea withdrawals will only be possible once the child
turns eighteen.

Speaker 3 (47:22):
And how much will it be worth?

Speaker 2 (47:24):
That's it? Well, I don't know, so let's see here.

Speaker 3 (47:28):
It's only eighteen years. You can expand out a little
bit on that.

Speaker 2 (47:31):
Yeah, I mean, but then I could say, well, if
I invested one thousand dollars when I was born in
nineteen seventy six, how much would that have been worth
when I turned eighteen three dollars in nineteen ninety four?

Speaker 3 (47:44):
Oh no, we still ye then.

Speaker 2 (47:46):
Yeah, but the question would have been, like, well, invested
at how? You know? There's different ways of investing. Is
this just a mutual fund? Is is it all investing
in Dell Technologies, here's some money, and turns out the
ves in our company.

Speaker 3 (48:01):
Wow, thanks all of it.

Speaker 2 (48:03):
We took the hand from the took the money from
the right hand, and we put it in the left hand.
And your baby was some here in the middle. But
I don't know all the details. It's set up by
the federal government, and this would be managed by the
Trump administration.

Speaker 3 (48:18):
I just look at it this way.

Speaker 4 (48:19):
They're just going to put some money aside, maybe a
couple thousand dollars, and in eighteen years, if if anybody
comes to claim any.

Speaker 3 (48:28):
Of it, it's like, yeah, what do you take? Will
you take five five thousand? Just go away?

Speaker 2 (48:34):
Yeah? Well, I don't know. If I put the money
in bitcoin right now, that's down more than thirty percent
just to do it. In the last month and a half,
it hit a record high one hundred and twenty six
thousand dollars per bitcoin. And how big is a bitcoin
is just a bit. I don't know anything about crypto.

(48:57):
I wouldn't mind knowing something about I taught my daughter
a valuable money lesson though last week. I'll tell you
about that next week.

Speaker 1 (49:05):
Scott Fordies NewsRadio eleven ten k FAD.

Speaker 2 (49:11):
I taught my daughter a valuable money lesson last week.
I will make this quick as like uh Scott talking
about his cruise that he took last week. Again. No,
I just thought I thought this was funny and I
wanted to share it with you. In international waters on
a cruise ship, you only have to be eighteen to

(49:31):
play in the casino games, so I thought I would
try again to have one of two desired outcomes my daughter,
who is almost nineteen years old. That's freaking ridiculous, but
she's almost nineteen, so she's eighteen. She can play the

(49:52):
casino games, and I've been wanting to take a second
shot and a money lesson. I tried to teach her
when she was very young, and I didn't think she remembered,
but she called back to it later after playing the
casino games. I said, over her mother's protestations, I said, hey,
let's go have Grace play some machines. So we go

(50:13):
into the casino. Here's all the difference, bing bing bingmingming,
all the slot machines, video poker, and all the blackjack
tables and craps and all the rest of the stuff.
I hey, just pick your game. What do you want
to do. I will fund your I will back your losses.
I will uh oh, I'll stake you. That's the phrase, right,

(50:33):
But I won half of your winnings. Now Here are
the two desired outcomes. Either I get a second shot
at a lesson. I tried to teach her when she
was very young, and we went into fud Rutgers because
that's how my family rolls. Sorry to be flexing on
you right now, but we go into fud Rutgers and

(50:54):
there was the Claw game. She'd never seen it and
she never played it before, and she said, Daddy, can
I play that game? And I should have just said absolutely, sweetheart,
how much do you need? But no, I said, like,
let's let's try and set her up for reality. I said, okay,
we can play that game. I can either give you

(51:16):
I think it was like a I don't know, a quarter,
a lot of money to a kid quarter to play
the claw game. I said, I tell you what, no
one ever wins at that game. I'll give you this
quarter and you can keep it and you can spend
it on whatever you want. You can have this quarter
or you can have that you can put it in
that slot right there. That quarter will disappear forever, and
you'll have nothing to show for it, because no one

(51:37):
ever wins the claw game. She's like, Daddy, I want
to play the claw game. Like she's like, all right,
press your luck, go ahead, have at it. So she
puts the quarter in, she moves the little joystick around
and hits the button and the claw goes down. She's like, daddy,
I got a pony or whatever she wants. She got
like teddy Bear an iPhone. I don't remember what she won,
but she won something coin, she won something, and I

(52:02):
was like, ah, I wanted.

Speaker 3 (52:05):
You were willing to stake her again.

Speaker 2 (52:07):
Yeah, well because of one of two desired outcomes. Either
she sits down and she said, she's like, I have
good luck at these games. Remember the claw game? Like
I didn't know that she even remembered that she did.
She's like, I've got the mightst touch with this stuff.
I'm like, okay, the desired outcomes. The desired outcomes are

(52:29):
either she does and she wins, because she already agreed,
I get half of her winnings. Maybe she hits.

Speaker 3 (52:36):
What if it's another Teddy Bear, you get to cut
in half?

Speaker 2 (52:39):
Maybe it is. Maybe we do down the middle, I
want lefty. So either she wins and I get half
of her winnings. That's a pretty good deal. She's certainly
okay with it. I gave her a couple of bucks,
and she put her a couple of bucks in there,
and then put a couple more bucks in there, and
then soally, here was the other desired outcome, and that

(53:02):
was to teach her the reason why these casinos as
fun as they are, the reason why they're all lit
up twenty four hours a day, seven days a week
like giant Christmas trees, with great entertainment and drinks and
food and all this stuff is not because they're giving
away money to everybody. Yeah, you win sometimes, but if
you're willing to say, here's the amount of money I'm

(53:23):
willing to lose tonight and I'm not going to get
addicted to it, good luck with all of this, then
have at it, have a great time. I don't mind
that one bit. But you have to know you are
probably probably not going to win. So my daughter, magically,
to my great excitement, turned twelve dollars into forty cents.

(53:48):
She's like twelve dollars. It took a long time for
me to hear my daughter say this looked like fifteen
years but as you say, ah, dad, I guess you
were right. No one wins at these games, so I
don't know if that. I don't know if that was
a valuable money lesson or you know, she is like

(54:10):
sneakily competitive, so she might just be like, I'm gonna
get after it, and I'm I'm gonna win this, I'm
gonna research it, I'm gonna go in there. I don't know.
Maybe she'll see her on like the ESPN two Poker
Night or something. I don't know. I don't know what
I just created. But I watched her turn twelve dollars
into forty cents, and I was very excited about that.

(54:31):
Best twelve dollars, sorry, best eleven dollars and sixty cents
I ever spent.

Speaker 3 (54:37):
Did you get you twenty cents?

Speaker 2 (54:40):
No? I actually I don't know what happened to the
forty cents. I might have let her keep it, and
it's changed. And these kids don't even know what money is.
It's like I swiped my phone or I swiped this
card and things. I buy things, so I don't the
change was probably just thrown away. I don't. That wasn't
the point. Fox News Update in just a moment, getting

(55:01):
great response here in the inbox with what you consider
to be the greatest movie scene of all time. I say,
if it's not the courtroom scene and a few good men,
then what is it? You tell me? We'll get to
it next, Scotty, I said earlier this hour, I want
your nominations greatest movie scene in history. Now, many of

(55:24):
you are giving me movie quotes, which is fine if
I determine that it's part of a great scene. There
are some great quotes that are fantastic quotes, But is
it really the greatest scene? Like I'm saying it's a
few good men. If it's not, I want to hear
what is. Because that courtroom scene, Tom Cruise, Colonel Nathan Jessup,

(55:47):
Jack Nicholson, that goes on for several minutes, a lot
of different twists and turns, and the whole thing as
a beginning, middle and an n and what an incredible
punch to the ending of that scene. It's a great
movie scene, maybe the best in movie history. So I'm
saying it's a few good men. Lucy, do you have
a nomination?

Speaker 3 (56:06):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (56:06):
Definitely, And that would be that is a scene in
Titanic when she won't let Jack up on the door.

Speaker 2 (56:12):
That's how you that's how you see that scene? Away?
Is that is that I see? I don't remember it
as Jack saying, hey, if you could just move it. No,
I'm I take up a lot of space, and there's
all sorry I remember, Sorry, big guy, there's only enough
room on this door for one of us.

Speaker 3 (56:33):
Give me that necklace and it's gonna be me before
you go down.

Speaker 2 (56:37):
Maybe if you take the necklace off, this big heavy
jewel of a necklace, we could both fit on the door.
I've grown quite fond of it. And you don't want
to be an Indian giver like I don't think you
can use that phrase even during this time. So that's
it's culturally insensitive and uh so, yeah, that's eighteen. Yeah,
you're right. I think we just did that scene the

(57:00):
justice it deserves. Let's see here, all right, let's go
to the email Scott at kfab dot com. I have
many of you who are singing the scene and scent
of a woman, both Jared and Daniel like one on
top of the other. These emails came in and said

(57:23):
the scene where al Pacino's defending Chris O'Donnell and questions,
according to Daniel, what truly makes a man? And and
turns the tide of the courtroom hearing. So he's defending
cryst O'Donnell in front of the school board and the
student body. That might be a great scene. I've never

(57:44):
seen that movie, I know. Don't yell at me. I've
seen bits and pieces of scene. Scent of a woman,
al Pacino is blind, and yeah, I do.

Speaker 3 (57:56):
I love Carlito's Way, one of the greatest movies.

Speaker 5 (57:59):
Ever, fantastic in the Godfather films. Yeah, I'm not, I've
I know, I've never seen Scarface. I've never seen Carlito's Way.
I think it's probably because when I was a kid,
the first al Pacino movie I saw was Dick Tracy.

(58:22):
This was the Warren Beatty and Madonna and al Pacino
in the Dick Tracy movie, which was so bad. I
don't like any of those people like, nor do I
like Dick Tracy, So I probably need to Now I'll

(58:44):
tell you what I do like al Pacino in h
and you could. I could probably throw in there as
a great movie scene. The Alec Baldwin scene in Glengarry
Glenn Ross or really any scene in that movie, but
al Pacino in that Jack Lemon, everyone's in that movie.

Speaker 3 (59:02):
That movie's cringey good.

Speaker 2 (59:04):
Oh it's so good.

Speaker 3 (59:05):
Yeah, cringey.

Speaker 2 (59:06):
But Alec Baldwin the scene where the punchline, which I
can't I can't do the full punchline, but it's teaching
these guys how to sell. Make them sign on the
line that is dotted. You got that you the blanks
play like. I love that scene. It's so good, so
I'd go I'd also throw Glengarry Glenn Ross in there.

(59:29):
But many of you like Scent of a woman. Let's
see what else here, Mark says, as good as the
few good men's men's scene is the scene from Gladiator
when Russell Crowe says, my name is Maximus Decimus Meridius,
Commander of the Armies of the North, General of the
Felix Legions, oil servant to the so he said, and

(59:51):
I will have my vengeance in this life for the next.

Speaker 1 (59:55):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (59:56):
That's really good. Yeah, Gladiator is you know, I think
a lot of people we say the are you not entertained?
Which is a great line. Maybe not the best scene
from the movie. According to Mark, did you anyone see
Gladiator two? Is that any good?

Speaker 4 (01:00:13):
Do?

Speaker 2 (01:00:13):
I need to spend some time with them?

Speaker 1 (01:00:15):
One?

Speaker 3 (01:00:15):
See Gladiator? One?

Speaker 2 (01:00:17):
Oh you should see Gladiator. Gladiator was one of the
movies that did you have a group of friends that
all decided in their mid twenties they're all going to
buy a house together, and you would never want to
live with them, but it was a great place to
go hang out because no one cared if they trashed
the place, Like, uh no, so we had We had

(01:00:38):
that when I was living in Kansas City, and that
was That was Joe and all of his buddies and
one of their favorite activities. There were three movies that
they would just get ripped and watch these movies over
and over again. One of them was Gladiator, the other
one's Outlawed. Josie Wales were the third one. But yeah,

(01:01:01):
they they just get drunk and watch Gladiator over again.
We were like, where were you four? It was great,
Rob says the Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca. You know the
scene of play at Sam. Everyone always says played against Sam,

(01:01:22):
but that's not actually the line because.

Speaker 3 (01:01:23):
He hasn't played it yet.

Speaker 2 (01:01:24):
Rob, Yeah, I would think if people are going Castablanca,
they probably do the the ending scene.

Speaker 3 (01:01:36):
Yeah, I don't know how to whistle, don't you.

Speaker 2 (01:01:39):
Well, that's that. That's not Casa Blanca, is it. I
think you're screwing it up. Of all the there's also
that of all the gin joints and all. I don't know.
I'm not a big Castle Blanca guy.

Speaker 4 (01:01:51):
But.

Speaker 2 (01:01:53):
I'm more of this scene. Darryl says the best movie
scene in history Christmas Vacation, when cousin Eddie is out
in his bathrobe emptying the toilet in his RV and
announces that it's full. I can't say that's right. Check
dar Honey. By the way, chevy Chase was in town

(01:02:14):
last night for a screening of National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation
and then a Q and A with the audience afterward.
I didn't attend. I'm glad that it went okay. Who
brought him in Omaha performing arts? Chevy? I love chevy Chase.

(01:02:35):
I celebrate so much of his work. Chevy Chase in
the last twenty years or so is not the chevy
Chase with whom I grew.

Speaker 3 (01:02:46):
Up angry, bitter.

Speaker 2 (01:02:50):
I want the best for him. I think that when
he decides, I can get away with saying literally anything
and doing literally everything I want at the most inappropriate times,
and saying the most inappropriate things to people who don't
find his stuff fascinating. They just find it awkward and

(01:03:12):
and awful in some instances. I wish that that would stop.
But look, they brought him onto that TV show Community
because Dan Harmon, the creator of that great show, Same thing.
Like I grew up a chevy Chase. I got a
chance to work with chevy Chase. He's great. A couple
of years later, they were kicking him off the show.

(01:03:33):
Oh and this was people on a cast who love
chevy Chase, and they're like, and we can't work with
this version of him. But as I understand, I know
it's it's very bad. I hope he's having fun playing
golf and spending time with his family, and I guess
last night was pretty good. He did go off on

(01:03:54):
some inappropriate rants, but it wasn't like Newsworthy. It was
you know, if you were there last night, I hope
you had a great time and you would have seen
that scene in its entirety. Let's see Mark says either
the end of gone with the win. Frankly, my dear,
I don't give a good gosh darn or whatever he says.

(01:04:18):
And a wizard of Oz, I don't think we're in
Kansas anymore. Yeah, that's a great line. Is it a
great scene?

Speaker 4 (01:04:27):
I cannot believe, in all seriousness, I cannot believe that
the final scene of Star Wars.

Speaker 2 (01:04:36):
Has not been Empire strikes back.

Speaker 4 (01:04:38):
No, the final scene of Star Wars where they're being awarded,
they're getting their awards, Princess Leah is awarding them at
the very end.

Speaker 2 (01:04:46):
Yes, that's that's very nice. Not nearly. It's ranks in
the bottom five percent the best scenes from that movie
or the franchise.

Speaker 3 (01:04:57):
But it may not have been the best scene.

Speaker 4 (01:04:59):
But that's a scene that's chills down your spine. It
makes you well up, you get tears in your eyes.

Speaker 2 (01:05:04):
I got people emailing saying the scene and Empire. No,
I am your father. You know that that's probably the
best scene in the franchise. And I've told this story before,
but I don't really remember watching that and being having
my head explode as a kid. So I watched that

(01:05:27):
movie with my daughter when she was old enough to
understand what was going on. We started watching Star Wars
and we get to that scene, and I didn't watch
the TV. I watched her face for her reaction, and
her eyes lit up and she's like, wait what, Like
it was so awesome to see that through her eyes.
In that instance, that's one of the best scenes in

(01:05:47):
movie history. I got a lot of other people saying
the scene in Christmas Vacation where Chevy Chase goes on
his rant after learning that he's not getting a Christmas
bonus this year. Hey, I got a good idea. I
want my boss, Frank Shirley. I don't want to hear
tonight with a big ribbon on his head, and I
want to tell him what a lion cheating night. I

(01:06:08):
can't do the whole line, where's the tail and all
that that. That's a great thing. Give me you some
more of your best movie scenes in history. Scott at
kfab dot.

Speaker 1 (01:06:19):
Com, Scott Voices News Radio eleven ten KFAB.

Speaker 2 (01:06:24):
All right, just a minute left here. I said to
get some talkback mics in here too. I've asked for
the greatest movie scene in history. A number of people
are saying the opening scene and patent, Yeah, really good.
When Harry met Sally diner scene. Sure, I love every
part of that movie. No, they're not. But let's go

(01:06:45):
to the talkback mic and see what we are acting
outt This is a hard one. Wow, you got two
thousand and one, you have Star Wars, Star Trek, even
the pink panther theme, all right, not movie theme, movie scene.

Speaker 4 (01:07:05):
Hey, Scott Brian, I got three and they're all from
pulp fiction.

Speaker 2 (01:07:10):
And we can't say him on the air. And then
this one. One thing I like about them high school girls.

Speaker 3 (01:07:19):
I get older, they stayed the same age.

Speaker 2 (01:07:22):
Weird thing about that one is he wasn't giving us
a movie scene. He just wanted to let us know.
And there we have it. Thank you all so much

Speaker 1 (01:07:32):
Scott Fores, Mornings nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven
ten KFAB
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