Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vordiez. We're honored to have you here. Our job
is to playfully hold you hostage for as long as
possible and not make you want to run and hide. However,
this first story is this is all that's an all
encompassing statement there, Lucy, you should not run and hide.
(00:22):
I want to start here because this is seemingly unrelated
to the Democratic National Convention, which kicked off their week
last night in Chicago with some big speeches, including the
biggest of which that happened after most of the country
had gone to bed. Because this seemingly has nothing to
(00:43):
do with the convention, but it has everything to do
with how it's being reported to us, and it has
to do with someone who I met at the Republican
National Convention in twenty twelve. The radio station at this
time sent me down to Tampa, Florida for the convention.
(01:03):
I said, isn't there a hurricane bearing down on Tampa. Yes,
that's why you should get there a day early. Like,
how about I get there a day later. I don't
know if I want to be there in the hurricane. Ah,
you'll be fine. So I went down to Tampa and
had a great week down there. It was absolutely fantastic
and enjoyed kind of the pageantry of it. It was.
(01:25):
You'd just be walking around, next thing, you know, you're
I was broadcasting right next to Heraldo my my not
my roommate, but the guy in the room next to
me at the hotel who I talked with every day
and had breakfast with the last day we were there,
was my good friend brit Hume from Fox News. I
(01:45):
was walking along the hallways there and ran into all
of the Oakridge boys. I hung out with John Oliver
for a little bit from he at that time he
was on the Daily Show. I was in the bathroom
standing there at the urinal next to Herman Kane. Let
me know when I go into too much detail about
just how weird the whole thing wasop Well, there was
(02:10):
one other person I met down there and had a
delightful conversation with because we are both fans of the
great weird Al Yankovic. In fact, she was his love
interest in the movie UHF. Former Saturday Night Live cast
member of Victoria Jackson, the blonde bubblehead you know, played
(02:30):
kind of that dumb role for several years on SNL,
And it was announced the other day that she has
an anoperable cancerous tumor in her windpipe and she's treating.
Relating this news with a bit of dark humor. Here
she says, I have thirty four point eight months to
(02:53):
live if I don't get hit by a meteor, shot
by a MAGA hater, get COVID again, or World War
three breaks out. And she goes on to talk about
how she says, they can't operate and cut out this
marble in my chest laying on my windpipe that will
eventually suffocate me to death. She's been prescribed a drug
(03:16):
that could hopefully shrink the tumor she's fighting. She's hoping
to live long enough to see her grandson born and
hopefully see her second daughter also have a child. She's
not giving up, but she related this terrible news. I mean,
if you really think about what she's facing here the
(03:37):
way that she describes it, if this treatment doesn't work,
she gradually suffocates to death from a tumor growing on
her windpipe. So why do I bring this up? Because
(03:59):
this is how well it's been reported here. In some
of the news articles, a lot of them will say
things like Victoria Jackson starred on Saturday Night Live from
nineteen eighty six to nineteen ninety two, previously battled breast cancer.
The MAGA mentioned in her caption says I might get
(04:20):
shot by a MAGA hater. That's a reference to her
well known conservative stances and support of Donald Trump. All Right,
that makes sense to color in this portion of the
story with that phrasing. They don't stop there, though, They
have to say about this woman who was a player
(04:41):
on Saturday Night Live. She was in the weird al
movie UHF. This was thirty some years ago. She was
in a movie with Leah Thompson called Casual Sex, which
I never saw, but as a little kid, I was
very titillated by the title of that film. And since
then she I don't really know what she's done. But
(05:05):
here's a woman who says, hey, I'm probably dying, and
the media has to say. Victoria Jackson has expressed anti
gay views, once claimed that Muslims were taking over the US,
linked the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooter to women who
(05:26):
have abortions, and unsuccessfully ran for office in Tennessee in
twenty fourteen. What does any of that have to do
with her life? Her resume and just to look here,
she's expressed anti gay views. Oh my gosh, what did
she do? She said, I'm trying to watch TV with
(05:47):
my daughter and one and it seems like all the
shows we watch feature gay couples making out, and I'm
watching this with my young kid, and I have to
deal with this as a parent. Is that an anti
gave you? Should she instead be celebrating anyone you know,
having you know, makeout sessions on there? And she also
(06:10):
said she doesn't understand how liberals can both be pro Muslim, like, oh,
we want unfettered access into our country from all these
people from all these Muslim nations, and at the same
time be pro gay because a lot of the people
that they want unfettered access to our nation from these
Muslim majority nations would gladly kill all the gay people
(06:34):
and do that's in fact Sport, where some of these
people come from. And she's just calling out the hypocrisy
of these people, saying, oh, no, Trump is terrible and
racist for not wanting all these people in here, and
we love gay people. Gay people are like, I don't
want all those people from Yemen coming over here. They're
going to kill us. She's called out of that hypocrisy,
(06:58):
and we got to make mention of that. And it's
something that she posted on social media that said, hey,
by the way, I'm dying. Yeah, well she deserves it.
She once claimed that Muslims were taking over the US. So,
you know, good riddance to Victoria Jackson. I mean, is
(07:20):
the is that what we're supposed to get from this?
So when this is how the media even relates this
little bit of pop culture reference news to you, how
do you think they're going to relate to you Night
one of the Democratic National Convention. If you didn't watch
(07:42):
last night, you just maybe listened to the radio station
this morning, perhaps picked up the USA to day. By
the way, that characterization of Victoria Jackson's life was from
the USA today. If you turn on many of the
TV stations promoning, do you have any idea what the
theme was of Night one of the Democratic National Convention.
(08:06):
They're doing kind of the same thing that I think
most of the conventions do. Every night has got a
special theme, and last night's theme anyone, if you didn't
watch it, maybe you don't know. The media hasn't been
saying anything about it. It was after all, this is the
party that's going to take control of not only continuing
(08:28):
to take control of the executive branch, but they're going
to limit the power of the judicial branch and take
full control of the legislative branch so they can do
all the stuff they want to do to us, which
isn't nearly as transparent as whatever they keep saying Project
twenty twenty five is. So this is the first night
of their convention. What was their big theme last night?
(08:54):
No one reproductive freedom. Did any of the news stories
today about this mention that several of the speakers last
night were going up there and one after the other
promoting this lie that sense Trump ended Row versus Weight, which,
(09:17):
by the way, is that on its face a lie.
Trump didn't get into office and go all right, where's
my pen on my phone? Like President Obama said he had.
I don't need Congress, I don't need the courts. I'll
just do all this myself. Roe versus Wade. You know what,
I don't like it there, there's that decision that's gone.
(09:39):
What else can we do? I want to ban all
them Muslims, you know, Like he had vacancies on the
Supreme Court, he nominated a person this went through confirmation
from the US Senate. They were sworn in. Wow, what
an extreme takeover of our country. And since that, since
(10:02):
they when asked about abortion, he didn't say, yeah, it
should be like even if you take the morning after pill,
you should be put in jail. He said this should
be up to the states. That is how this was
originally intended, and that's how it should be fought. Now,
every state's having a good conversation as to what they
find to be permissible, when what boundaries should be put up.
(10:24):
Hopefully some some stronger than others, which is good to see,
and some states might decide that up to the point
where you say, I see the head woman can change
your mind, and apparently that's reproductive freedom. Trump didn't end this,
but there's been this lie promoted over and over again
that women are dying as a result of the Supreme
(10:51):
Court making a different decision on that which was entrenched
in law that no members of Congress have ever voted
on or done anything. There was no federal law about this,
and the Supreme Court said, yeah, the Supreme Court went
too far fifty years ago with Roe versus Wade. We're
sending this to the states and women are dying, said
(11:15):
speaker after speaker. Who where when anyone ever bothered to
check any of this stuff? I mean, the best I
can find is there was a woman in Missouri who
at eighteen months wanted to have her baby, but her
water broke. At eighteen months. Well, that's not even close
(11:39):
to where we need to be, anywhere close to the
finish line. So suddenly it became an emergency situation. And
the story says that the doctor said, we don't know
if we can do anything about it here in Missouri
because you're past the point where you can have an abortion. Now,
(11:59):
no one's arguing the woman's life was in danger, but
she wanted it taken care of right then and there, which,
you know what, I'm gonna be the last guy to
stand up there and yell through a megaphone that I
condemned that decision. The writing was on the wall. She
was going to have a miscarriage. The question was just
(12:19):
a matter of time and who was going to do what?
But the state of Missouri said, we're not sure here
based on the laws we currently have in the books
in Missouri. So what did she did? She die? Now?
She took a car ride she drove north to Illinois.
Illinois is like, yeah, you know, do whatever, whenever, whoever,
(12:41):
and they took care of that. Now, as we go
forward in this very important and sensitive conversation, do we
need to address various circumstances. I think so, because right
now we've got a number of especially young women out there,
all ready to vote in November, who feel like on
(13:04):
this particular issue, which was the theme of Night one,
which is so unpopular that number one, the media won't
tell you about it. Number two, they won't even call
it abortion. They won't even say, yeah, it's our pro
abortion rally here in Chicago at the Democratic National Convention.
We'll call it reproductive freedom. It's not reproductive freedom. It's
the choice you have to stop a beating heart in
(13:27):
many instances, And that's what we're talking about, the States saying,
after so many weeks, when this child is alive, maybe
we don't murder it, give that baby a choice. Look, sorry,
that's all the beating of the theme I'll do on this.
So women aren't dying. States are deciding things, and the
(13:56):
media won't even tell you that this was the big theme,
and they won't call it abortion. So when we're starting
to digest that which we're learning about from Chicago. Realize
this is the same media that won't tell you these details,
(14:18):
that will tell you. Victoria Jackson from Saturday Night Live,
remember her, she wants sang the Star Spangled banner or whatever.
She did doing a handstand on Dennis Miller's desk, allowing
her dress to fall down and revealing she was wearing red,
white and blue briefs. Yeah, oh yeah, Well she's also
(14:38):
a pig and she said piggy maga things and she
supports Trump, you know, so sooners she could die the
better right And sorry, I was pausing for a second there.
I was like I was on a different track. And
then I swear, oh yeah, all these women ready to vote,
all these especially young women, have this idea that the
(15:01):
conservative Christian right in this country is just standing there,
arms folded with a woman being told, sorry, it looks
like your baby is not going to live and you
will die along with it, and we're not going to
do anything because it's God's will. None of that is
(15:23):
happening anywhere in this country. But that's what they're going
to do. What they told you last night. If anyone
actually watched this last night. That's what they told you.
Republicans want women to die, and they are. So that's
fact check number one. Number two has to do with
(15:45):
this crowd last night. Maybe the biggest lie of all.
I'll explain next. Scott Boyes News Radio eleven kfab just
looking at last night's or the Democratic National Convention Night
one last night, which was really funny to watch on
(16:05):
Fox News because they didn't show all the speakers. Instead,
the speaker speakers are up there talking and sometimes they're like, hey,
let's go down to Peter Doosey. Now you got a
person up there, like I think James Clyburn was up
there speaking and people are trying to listen to him,
and he's down there in the crowd. Yeah, I'm here
with the people in Washington. Look at these hats. You know.
(16:26):
People are looking at him like I'm trying to watch
the speaker here, and I got someone from Fox News
No Less out here bothering us like how wow, I'm
surprised he didn't get torn apart down there. But like
most people, they were just happy to be on TV.
And it looked like they were pretty lit up.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
Woo hats.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
You know. So It was kind of funny to watch
that because they kept looking at the clock, going, we
still got thirteen speakers who are supposed to go before
President Biden give us his speech tonight, and we noticed
that this person was just scheduled and they've already skipped
to this person. So it looks like people are getting
shaved off, all these people that are supposed to be
(17:07):
given their ninety seconds that they turned into seven minutes.
And then so they started to saying, well, we're we're
moving speakers to other nights. What do you want to
bet they don't push off President Obama tonight to the
death spot close to midnight East Coast time, it was
well after eleven o'clock here in Chicago, Omaha time. When
(17:32):
President Biden finally they're like, look, if we don't get
him up there soon, I mean, he's already bursting at
the seams with B twelve. This is gonna he's he's
gonna explode. It's gonna be scanners up there. He's just
gonna we're gonna like, do one more shot of B twelve.
(17:53):
He's gonna go up there and he's gonna be like, hey, America,
it's just gonna just blow up and like, I stay
up for that. But the President last night, here's the
big fact check thing that I would look at, not
that he's kind of setting aside here to all the
(18:14):
protesters outside, and he said, those protesters out on the street,
they have a point. What protester are these the Charlottesville
racist The President Trump licks up and down like a
baby kitten. No, no, oh, these must be the January
sixth people the Trump sold to go in there and
just wait, no oh, no, no, these are anarchists. These
(18:37):
are progressive liberal anarchists that have already been frothed up
into a ladder from so many of these progressive elected
Democrats over the years. And President Biden, the leader of
the free world, last night just said, yeah, these protesters
out there, they have a point. Who are the protesters?
They're anti Israel protester. Who's Israel one of our biggest allies.
(19:00):
And here's our commander in chief last night throwing Israel
under the bus and loving on these protesters who were
out there fighting with cops in the streets of Chicago.
Now as it's Chicago and the Democratic National Convention, I mean,
that's just a regular occurrence. We'd all be disappointed if
(19:20):
that didn't happen, so that that's something that could be
focused on instead. The big fact checking I would do
for both President Biden and this crowd last night was
the waves of adoration going back and forth. People were chanting,
we love Joe, We love Joe. He's like, I love
(19:43):
you too. In America, I love you, and all these
people that thought, like all these people out here, these
are delegates from all fifty states, and then you get
like Puerto Rico and DC America, Samoa and whatever else
they packed in there, and al Qaeder, whoever it was
(20:06):
that they get to come out there. These are the
people who were leaning on the party officials. These are
the party people in the states who were telling everyone
get rid of him. He can't he can't win. We're
not going to have another four years of Trump. That'd
be the worst thing ever. And it's Joe Biden's fault.
And we got to do something. We're not giving to
(20:27):
give him any money, We're not going to give him
any support. You've got to get rid of him. And
so like Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama and George Clooney,
they all had to get together and tell him Hey, Joe,
you're done, man, You're all done. And he knows it
and they know it. Yet last night there was this
(20:48):
kabuki theater of their like we love you Joe, oh Bull.
They know that they forced him out. He knows that
they forced him out, and he knows that they know that.
He knows that they forced him out. Yet they were
gonna let this love fest go on last night. I
(21:08):
love you guys, we love you Joe, and he's allowed
to sit up there and basically put himself out there
like I'm I'm like George Washington. You know, I could
have stayed on as king in this nation, but that's
not what America is. And sometimes you got to know
your limits. And I decided, for the good of the
(21:29):
country and my party that I was going to turn
the reins over to Kamala Harris oh Bool. The media
ever mentioned any of that this morning. No, they're still
talking about how Trump doesn't understand AI as it relates
(21:50):
to Taylor Swift. I'll have this story for you next,
Scott Boy's News Radio eleven ten kfab A. Dozens of
protesters smashed their way through a security fence near the
site of the Democratic National convention opening night in Chicago
(22:10):
last night.
Speaker 2 (22:11):
The wall didn't work.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
The wall didn't work. Now on one side of the wall,
you've got delegates. These are people engaging in the throes
of democracy, which is I understand it is under attack
from Trump. And the whole January sixth thing was that
Trump told his people go in there and fight like hell,
(22:35):
especially if you're horribly racist, and if you happen to
show up wearing a Viking helmet, we need you to
go in there and disrupt official proceedings. Well, the convention
is official proceedings, even in the Democratic Party, where right
now they'll be nominating and coordinating a person to be
the nominee of their party who has not received a
(22:57):
single vote in any primary or caucus in this country
this election cycle, not one, but still, I mean, we're
going to allow this to be the kabuki theater of
democracy in action here. So the people in there trying
to smash through walls and security perimeter to shut that down.
(23:18):
These are people who should be locked up right for years. Right,
some of these January six people are still in jail.
It's been three and a half years. Some of them
still have yet to be able to kind of put
their lives back on track. How many of these pro
Palestinian protesters aka anti Israeli protesters, anti Jewish people protesters,
(23:47):
how many of them are going to be subject to
the same scrutiny and life altering decisions from a courtroom
standpoint made as the j six people. I don't know
why Trump told these protesters to go out there and
try and smash their way into the DNC, but that,
by the way, has said incredibly tongue in cheek. Yeah,
(24:12):
it was a big fight last night. Police officers and
gas masks were out there fighting with protesters. Many were detained,
handcuffed by police, led away, but they said, well, the
inner security perimeter surrounding the convention site was not breached
and there was no threat to those attending the convention.
(24:33):
And then President Biden got up on stage last night
and said, yeah, these protesters, they have a point. So
I wonder if there'll be more or less fighting and
all arrest the stuff tonight. Now that Joe Biden, the
leader of the free world, has emboldened them, the media
talk about that. No, the media continues to call Trump
(24:56):
a big dummy. This is from Sanford. So the media,
You big dummy, there's your seventies TV reference for this
segment of the radio program. That of course is as
I said, Sanford and Sons, I'll just do that one.
So Trumps on this truth social the other day, saw
(25:17):
these posts them and going around. Someone put four different
big pictures or memes together to create one big meme.
And the point of this is to show there are
a lot of young women who are Taylor Swift fans
(25:37):
who support the candidacy of Donald J. Trump. There are
four pictures. The first one says Swifties have determined they
want a strong leader in the White House. The Swifties
for Trump movement is real. It's a bunch of women
(25:58):
wearing t shirts saying Swifties for Trump, and they're turning
to Trump after Isis destroyed their chance to see Taylor
Swift in I don't even remember where the concert was
supposed to be the other day, when terrorist threats got
the concert shutdown Vienna or something like that. A lot
(26:20):
of American women who couldn't get tickets to see her
in Kansas City or Phoenix, Phoenix are like, I'll go
see her in flight of a stock Russia if I
have to I'll go anywhere. So a lot of American
women are over there, and apparently they got a lot
of these girls wearing T shirts saying Swifties for Trump.
So that's one, it's a bunch of them. Then there's
(26:41):
another one that just you know, one girl smiling Swifties
for Trump. Nice shirt. Then there's another one saying the
Swifties for Trump continues to break the Internet. Here's more
girls wearing T shirts saying Swifties for Trump. And then
there's the other picture which features what is obviously a
(27:09):
fake picture of Taylor Swift as Uncle Sam, you know,
pointing as the you know, we want you thing. So
here Taylor Swift wearing the Uncle Sam get up and
it says Taylor wants you to vote for Donald Trump.
This is part of the other pictures in this whole
(27:32):
image collection. Trump like post it on social media or
read tweets it or whatever you'd call it on truth
social and says, I accept, well.
Speaker 2 (27:46):
How do we know he's not kidding?
Speaker 1 (27:49):
He is kidding? Well, I mean he's kidding for the
the part of it that it purports to show an
AI version of Taylor Swift supporting Trump, like he knows
Taylor Swift, Oh, doesn't support his candidacy.
Speaker 2 (28:02):
I thought you were suggesting he was not leaving them.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
No, the media is suggesting, oh, that Trump is believing this.
So the media is keen in on the one fake
picture of Taylor Swift, and they're like, Trump is so dumb,
he doesn't even know this. Really isn't Taylor Swift directing
her minions to go vote for Trump? He's so dumb.
You was so dumb. You so dumb. Remember that guy
that the media went and talked to, like, we got
(28:28):
your T shirt? You so dumb? Love that guy. So
they're basically doing that for Trump. And I think even
Rolling Stone said maybe Trump was kind of in on
the joke here. Oh you think maybe he was in
on the joke here. But what none of them actually
(28:49):
talked about was all the other pictures of all these
young girls wearing shirts saying Swift He's for Trump? Is
that fake too? Now, let's not kid ourselves. Here is
that movement? If you've got a bunch of screaming, young
eight at least eighteen year old voting blockage girls at
a Taylor Swift concert, I'm guessing the number of those
(29:11):
who would vote for Trump is pretty small, and the
number of those who would wear T shirts telling everyone
I'm voting for Trump and you should do is probably
even smaller. I don't think Trump gets into the White
House based on this wave of Swifties for Trump. But
(29:32):
here they are wearing these shirts. I don't know. Maybe
it's bigger than I think. And Trumps giving them some
love here by saying, all right, these are Swifties for Trump.
I accept. You know, the whole idea. Swifties are turning
to Trump because terrorists are trying to shut down Taylor Swift.
And if there's anyone who the polls show the American
(29:55):
people's support when it comes to fighting terrorism, it's Trump
over Biden or Harris. So they're like, all right, if
the terrorists are going after our hero Taylor Swift, then
maybe we need Trump to fight the terrorists. And Trump's like,
I accept, I accept your nomination as leader of the
Swifties or Trump Party. And the media is just like,
(30:16):
he's so dumb. He thinks Taylor Swift has just supported
his candidacy for the presidency. I don't think that that's
what he thinks. And then you've got this the media
has promoting. This is forty seven seconds that played a
crucial role in the rise of this political juggernaut. Kamala Harris,
(30:41):
someone who still has never received a single vote in
any caucus or primary for the presidency, but is poised
to be the next president of the United States. Well,
how did all this start? Let's take you back to
twenty ten. She's running against Steve Cooley. He is a
Republican law time Republican in the race for California Attorney General.
(31:04):
He was the district attorney in Los Angeles and was asked,
after several years of being DA in Los Angeles, where
he gets his pension? Would he take his pension and
his salary is for being attorney general? And I'll skip
(31:24):
ahead to his answer in this because it's kind of
hard to hear the questioning, But this is a debate
between Cooley and Kamala Harris in this California Attorney general race?
Are you going to take both your pension and the
money you would get as attorney general? I earned it
thirty eight years of public service. I definitely earned whatever
(31:49):
pension rights I have. Can you hear this? This is
so quiet? I mean, this is I've got this as
loud as I can possibly get it. So he's saying,
do you plan to take this? Yes? I do. I
earned it, which is fair. So then the moderator looks
at Kamala Harris and says, do you have anything to
add to this? You can hear her. Let's go here.
(32:11):
Anything you like to add to that, go for it, Steve,
can you get there? You don't want your too, So
she's yelling into the microphone. You can cackling into the microphone.
You can hear her. So they're looking at this, you know,
So here's what happened. Her campaign took his answer and
(32:33):
turned it into, oh, I guess one hundred and fifty
thousand dollars a year isn't enough When the average California
household earns about fifty four thousand dollars. This guy thinks
one hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year isn't enough money.
They turned that against him. Harris ends up winning the campaign.
Is this really where this campaign hinged? No, I mean
(32:53):
it had a lot to do with Proposition eight people
getting out to the polls and droves as Democratic voters.
But they're trying to say that this was a pivotal
moment in her political rise because of his answer, her
response was so weak. Go for it, you you earned it.
(33:14):
She had nothing substantive to say in response to this.
That makes me really excited to find out how this
debate is going to go. Coming up on September tenth,
there will be a News Radio eleven ten KFAB debate
viewing party.
Speaker 2 (33:32):
When did that's get scheduled?
Speaker 1 (33:34):
The debate viewing party?
Speaker 2 (33:35):
No, no, no, the debate itself, I missed it.
Speaker 1 (33:38):
We've talked about it a lot. You' stour on the
radio show once in a while. It's fun to listen to.
We got a Fox and KFAB news update next. For
whatever reason you're listening, we hope that we provide that
for you, no matter what that could be. We're going
to try and give you exactly what you want. Now.
For some of you, it's valuable news, information and opinion
on the dealings of the day. For some of you,
(33:58):
it's There was a great guy who emailed me just
like last weekend, just the middle of the weekend. He's
just thinking about the show. Maybe he caught the podcast,
which is always available at the a vintage Vorheaz link
on the Scott vorheas page at kfab dot com. But
he sent me a nice note and said, I listened
to you for years. I've never emailed you. I just
(34:19):
love that you're a huge smart alec and you say
a lot of the things that I feel like I
want to say but don't. Well, you know you're gonna
get that here. Some of you only listen to have
your blood pressure go up, whether you agree with me
and you're just really fired up, or you hate everything
I say, and you it's kind of like the people
(34:40):
who light a match and then hold their hand over it.
Like they listen to this show for much the same reason,
to show everyone how much they can withstand, to how
tough they are, Listen to the torture I'm putting myself
through listening to these people on this radio station. Sometimes
it's I feel so dead inside. I don't even know
if I can feel anymore. But I listen to that
(35:01):
guy Scott on the radio and I feel loathing, hatred,
and just a general malaise, And then it reminds me,
I guess I'm still alive. I can still feel. If
that's what you're going to get out of this program,
we're just glad you're here. Some of you are hoping
(35:22):
I talk about something at some point in this segment.
All right, I'll do it now. I'm not saying that
we take the people responsible for doing this over and
over and over again and kill them. But I'm also
(35:50):
not saying that. I think it's not an appropriate response
at this point. I feel like humanity has been given
enough chances not to make this mistake. It's not even
a mistake. It's just, eh, I'm not gonna do that.
(36:10):
Why doing that? That would take what ten fifteen seconds
out of my day? Ten or fifteen seconds?
Speaker 2 (36:18):
Hey, nobody got ten for day.
Speaker 1 (36:22):
I'm not gonna do that. I'm just gonna decide I'm
not going to do that. I'm not gonna take ten
or fifteen seconds. The results of which if I if
I don't go through the arduous task of walking for
ten seconds, the risk reward here is. The reward is
(36:44):
I get fifteen seconds of my life back. The risk
is a kid could die. I've weighed out the risk
and reward of this situation. I've decided I'd rather have
the fifteen seconds. What are you talking? It just happened again.
(37:04):
This happens a handful of times every year right here
in the Omaha area, and it happens throughout the country
all the time too, and it's absolutely inexcusable. The timeline
is this, someone says, I'd like to be a school
bus driver. Now, I could probably go back in the
(37:26):
timeline on a couple of different examples of people as
how do they got to that point in their life.
I think that if we're going to throw them into
only two categories, you got some people who say, look,
I think we need better bus drivers out there. I
think it's a It gives me the flexibility and the
money I want. Some of these guys make pretty decent money,
(37:47):
like twenty five bucks an hour. You work a few
hours in the morning, you work a few hours in
the afternoon. There's enough time between shifts to go play
some golf. You know, if you're retired, it's not a
bad game. You're just driving. You pick up drive. Some
people have decided kind of in the same way I
(38:10):
described earlier. The people who listened to the show just
to hate it have decided, well, I've given up on life.
I think I want to go be constantly mentally, emotionally,
and potentially physically abused with a bus load full of hanyaks.
I think I'll go be a school bus driver. Whatever.
(38:33):
There's really only one big thing you need to do
in addition to the picking up and dropping off and
trying not to, you know, drive off of a bridge.
There's really only one big thing, especially if you got
little kids in the bus, little special needs kids on
the bus. What do you do you get to your
(38:56):
last stop, everyone's supposed to be off the bus. Do
you get up and you walk the length of the bus.
Maybe you got a neck problem, like all that looking
left and right and all that. That really hurts my neck.
So all right, so you walk up and you look
(39:16):
to the left. Anyone here in these seats? No, now
you don't even have to move your neck. You turn around.
Your neck is still positioned left, but this time you're
looking at the other side of the bus, and you
look in those seats. Any kids in here?
Speaker 2 (39:29):
No?
Speaker 1 (39:30):
How long? Does this take ten seconds? Maybe you're really slow.
Maybe it takes seventeen and a half seconds. A bus
is not a mile long, it's you know, bus sized.
All you have to do is just walk up and
down the bus and look to see if there are
kids in there. Well, I'm not gonna do that today
(39:52):
because you know I usually do that and there's never
any kids in here. Oh, by all means, why take
the extra few seconds to do it today? Because I
guarantee if you decide that you're the fifteen seconds in
your life you're gonna get back by not walking up
and down the bus is more important than some kids
sitting back there in the bus who didn't get off
for whatever reason. If you decide, eh, I always look
(40:16):
and there's never any kids back there, that will be
the day that there's a kid back there. That's how
it works. It's a student transportation of America's law. It's
kind of like Murphy's law, except it's specifically related to
school buses. It's what's the name of the bus driver
on the Simpson Auto. It's Auto's law. If you stick
(40:38):
your hand out the bus, you're gonna lose it. And
if you don't walk up and down the bus to
see if they're kids back there, there's a kid back there.
That day happens every time. So this bus driver in
Bennington yesterday failed to follow protocol. What protocol? Walking the
length of the bus.
Speaker 2 (41:00):
Inside?
Speaker 1 (41:01):
Yeah, the inside of the bus. Look if they're like, hey,
you got to crawl under the bus and make sure
there's no one hanging on you know, like underneath your
Robert de Niro style. There's your eighties movie early nineties
movie reference for this segment of the radio program. Yeah,
we think Robert de Niro might be hanging on to
the bottom of the car for hours and hours on end,
(41:23):
So you got to check for that. What movie Lucy
Casino is one we've never quoted on this. Yeah, the
part in Casino where de Niro thought he'd hang on
to the bottom of Cape Fear.
Speaker 2 (41:35):
I didn't see it.
Speaker 1 (41:36):
So that's pretty good. Like, I'm not suggesting you gotta
walk like a crawl under the bus, put the the
mirrors under there to make sure no one's hanging on
down there. You're not running a prison bus, though sometimes
bus drivers might say it is very much the same thing.
We're not asking you to crawl on top of the
(41:57):
bus anyone up here. Just inside the bus, walk down
and back, make sure there's no kids in there. So yesterday,
five year old kid with autism was picked up at
his bus stop. They helped the parents help their kid
(42:18):
get on the bus at about seven thirty yesterday morning,
and then they go on about their morning little coffee,
getting to work, whatever, listening to news radio eleven ten KFAB.
Ten o'clock in the morning, the school calls, your child
(42:42):
has an unexcused absence. This kid's five, Maybe he's a
first grader. He's probably if he's five, now he could
be uh no, no, no, no, no sorry. Read the
entire story more hunt, I will thank you. A kindergartener.
So he's he's a kindergartener. He just started school in
(43:05):
the last week or so. And like I said, you know,
he has autism. He's uh, you know, he's not nonverbal,
he's fairly verbal. It doesn't particularly love to go, you know,
communicating with everyone. But I think you could probably say
that of a lot of different kids. So you your
kid just started school and he's on the school bus
(43:26):
and maybe he likes it, maybe he's still a little
nervous about it. But you're like, no, no, it's good
to get our kid with other kids, you know, feeling,
you know, all the different thing here. It's all it's
just really good for him. And then you get a
call from the school at ten am. This is two
(43:47):
and a half hours since you put him on the bus. Yeah,
your kid's not in school. How do you not immediately
think about that kid with autism from Papillion a few
years ago who ran off from the school and no
one has seen him since that kid was older, Maybe
a different circumstance, but how do you not immediately think
about it? How do you not immediately think? Is my
(44:11):
kid dead? Has my kid been kidnapped? Has he wandered
off somewhere? He's not in school. What's the first thing
you'd say? Check again, he's gotta be right. Are you sure?
Where else could he be? And as a parent, if
(44:32):
you ever lose track of your kids, you're at wherever,
a bunch of kids all over the place, and especially
when you've got little little kids and you look around
and for about five seconds you don't know where your
kid is. It's amazing how the entire film Ransom with
(44:52):
Mel Gibson can suddenly start playing in your mind. Or Taken.
That's again where I told my daughter I made her
watch Taken with Liam Neeson as a tutorial not to
put herself in bad situations, because, as I think she's
well aware, her father does not have a particular set
of skills I don't have. I mean, I get on
(45:15):
phone with the kidnappers in that instance, and like, I
want you to listen to me. I have a particular
set of skills. I don't know who you are or
where you are, but I will talk about you on
the radio and I will make some sarcastic Facebook posts
making fun of you. That's pretty much all I got.
(45:35):
So my daughter is I mean, it's it's it's see
you later. How do you immediately your kid's missing for
even a few seconds. How do you immediately not think
about this stuff? So here are the parents getting a
call from the school. Yeah, your kid's not in school? Like,
what times school start? Eight? Ten? It's ten o'clock in
(45:59):
the morning. Why am I getting this phone call? Now?
Where is my kid? And so someone probably thought, well,
sometimes the kid didn't get off the school bus. What
do you do call the school bus driver? Did you
clear the bus after you were done? Probably? Probably? Maybe? Probably? Sure? Yeah,
(46:25):
I mean I always do, right, that's what you do,
It's protocol. Did I did? I really?
Speaker 2 (46:29):
Do?
Speaker 1 (46:34):
They have to go find the bus at this point
in the morning, it's parked back at the bus yard,
which is somewhere. If it's it's same bus yard it's
always been. It's around like forty second in L Street.
How do you know, Scott Oh, I've had kids who've
taken the bus, which means at some point, invariably a
kid has left something on the bus. You need back.
In my daughter's case, it was her viola. It really
(46:56):
was her case. It was her viola case with the
viola inside that we paid for. So you got to
go to the bus yard and hope that they can
find the bus, like the number of the bus, that's
your kid's bus? Point number one? What's the number on
your kid's bus? The number? I'm like, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (47:16):
How does a kid not know it?
Speaker 1 (47:18):
They don't know it's the bus that picks them up
at this I don't know which one you get on
because it's the one that school, the one that comes. Well,
there's only a few buses after. They sometimes know right now.
My wife, I don't know. My wife could probably tell
you the number of all of our kids buses they've
ever taken. I don't. They'd call me like, what's your
kids bus? I barely know my kid's name. I don't know.
(47:40):
So they got to go find the number of the bus,
and they got to look in there, and then you
got to sit there and wait for them to say, yeah,
there's nothing in there. But once in a while they're
able to say, oh, yeah, here it is. Here's your
kid's viola, or in this instance, here's your kid still
sitting there in the bus. You want to have your
(48:01):
heart broken this morning, Think about a five year old
kid sitting there on the bus for three hours, two
over two hours of that is by himself on the bus.
No kids, bus isn't moving. Bus driver didn't think to
check kids just sitting there on the bus. That this
(48:25):
kid's sitting there wondering. Maybe he was thrilled. I don't know.
Maybe he's like, you know, seems like by this time
of the day, I'd usually be in school. But I'm
not in school. I'm on the bus. Still, this is great.
I'd rather sit here on the bus. I don't know,
but I guarantee the parents were losing their minds. This
(48:51):
story has a happy ending. They went and checked the bus.
The kid was sitting on the bus. Now what do
we do We have a bus driver. I don't know.
If you've heard people aren't exactly lining up to be
bus drivers. We got a bus driver, what do you do? Like, Hey, no,
(49:11):
when we told you walk up and down the length
of the bus and make sure there's no kids in there,
we did mean that. We do want you to do that.
Don't let it happen again. Do we let this guy
off of the warning or do we drag him behind
the bus down the length of Dodge Street. Look, I'm
not a murderous person. I'm not saying you kill the guy,
but if he were to accidentally, Let's say we're taking pictures,
(49:35):
like it's picture day for the bus drivers, and picture
day just happens to be on top of the Woodman Tower,
and you're like, I can't get enough. I can't get
a good picture. Here. Back up a little bit bag.
One more step they take one more step back. Oh,
it was an accident.
Speaker 2 (49:54):
You can't kill the bus drivers.
Speaker 1 (49:57):
I didn't murder the guy. There's an accident. Back up
the old Grand Canyon trick. We just gets picture day
for the bus drivers and a beautiful day, and I
thought we'd get you a little closer to the sky.
That's all. Take one more step back. Oops, Hey, there's
(50:23):
an opening. I'm just saying I have and I don't
know if this is clear or not. Run out of
patience with this very common story of the bus driver
deciding I'm not just gonna walk up and down the
length of the bus and see if there are kids
(50:46):
in here. There's really no place they can hide. Just
walk up and down the bus. Maybe you crouch over
a little bit, just to be sure. How inexcusable is this?
Speaker 2 (51:02):
Has the bus driver made a statement?
Speaker 1 (51:06):
This bus driver should commit hot to curate at this point,
just as a way of letting us know that he
knows that this was something in which he failed society,
and it's time to literally throw himself on the sword again.
I'm not killing the guy. I'm just saying, if he
(51:28):
were to do that, in some cultures, that is a
thing of honor. Are you uncomfortable with me finding ways
for this bus driver to die a little? Maybe we
just put out our cigarettes on him for a year,
you know, we just call him up. It's like an
uber thing. Maybe the guy's name is Schmoober and we just,
(51:51):
you know, do a thing on our phone. And you're
at the end of your cigarette or your cigar, and
it's time to put it out. I don't need this anymore.
Where do I put it out? I put it out
on Schmoover's face, and you just walk around just covered.
Speaker 2 (52:06):
And maybe what they should be doing is during the
application or the interview process for bus drivers, is they
come up with some kind of a test to test
their ability to focus.
Speaker 1 (52:24):
Yeah, that's a good question. Yeah, do you have time
in the morning and afternoon to drive? First of all,
do you have a CDL? Do you need a CDL
to drive a bus? Probably? Right? So, do you have
any moving violations? Do you tend to get a lot
of DUIs? I don't know how many is a lot? Well,
we can come back to that one. Are you a lazy,
no good piece of crap? If so, we're gonna have
(52:48):
to discuss as to just how far your laziness or
piece of crapidness goes In this instance, you can be
kind of lazy, kind of a piece of crud. But
you know, really it's just, you know, just walk up
and down the length of the bus. Hey, speaking of smoking, Lucy,
I never thought i'd say this, but there's a California
(53:10):
school district doing something that I think we need to
do here in Nebraska. In council bluffs all over the place.
This is a great idea. And if you don't immediately
understand why we should do this, then you don't have
a kid in middle school or high school. Now here's
the part of the show where Lucy says she's glad
(53:32):
she doesn't have kids.
Speaker 2 (53:33):
What if I was a kid, well, in middle school
or high school, then well that long ago.
Speaker 1 (53:38):
Then you are either you are in one of two camps.
You either are a kid listening to this idea saying yes,
oh my gosh, yes, thank you, we need to do this,
or you're a kid going hey, man, don't violate my freedom,
don't mess up a vibe, because you're one of the
guilty parties. All right, here's what they're doing. It started
(54:00):
in a bad communistic place. I don't I don't.
Speaker 2 (54:07):
Know.
Speaker 1 (54:08):
Yes, but no, it started with the school districts receiving
a slice of a multi state settlement with big E SIG,
the manufacturers of e cigarettes, so they could take that
money and put it towards improving the health of young people.
I don't agree with this. It's part of this idea
(54:30):
of oh, these e cigarette manufacturers, just like the cigarette
makers and all the rest of them. Alcohol distributors, they're
the same way. They've got this product that they know
is addictive, and they try and hook young people by
putting it out there and yummy flavors like bubble gum
(54:51):
and root Peer and bubblegum Root Peer, Root Peer bubble gum. Well,
I'm an adult. If someone handed me a hard Seltzer,
I'm like, I don't want to drink that. I'm a man, Like,
it's not just seltzer, it's hard selz Like, oh, well
that sounds awfully tough. What flavor is it? It's ruper
(55:13):
bubble gum. I'd probably drink it because that actually doesn't
sound too terrible. So suddenly, like adults can't enjoy a
little flavor in their alcoy hal or their easy cigarette
vaping pan or whatever the rest of this stuff. Oh,
because we put stuff out there with the cotton candy flavor,
(55:33):
then kids are gonna want it. You know what, kids
want cotton candy.
Speaker 2 (55:39):
And can't smoke cotton candy.
Speaker 1 (55:41):
Right, But it doesn't matter what this stuff tastes like.
Twice in my life I tried chewing tobacco. The first time,
I immediately spit that garbage out and I said out loud,
this smells and tastes like a horse's rumpus. And so
then a few weeks later, someone said, hey man, you
(56:02):
want some chewing tobacco because we were filming an after
school special, and that's how this kind of thing is
offered to you. Hey man, you want to be cool,
You gonna be cool like us, got no stonewashed and
jean jacket. You wanna be cool like us? Over here?
You gotta try this, man, Like, no, I don't like it.
I tried it before and it tasted like horses. But
(56:23):
oh well, you had the flavor of horses, but this
tastes like mint. And I was like, oh I like mint.
And I tried that and that tasted like minty horses.
But so I spit that out too. The point is
is that kids are like, here's something you're not supposed
to have. What's it taste? Like? Who cares? You're still
(56:45):
gonna want it? Alcohol, cigarettes, chewing tobacco, vaping. But this
lawsuit was that they they were marketing this stuff towards
kids in the East. Cigarette makers like, all right, how
much do you idiots want? We want a bunch of money,
all right, here's a whole bunch of money. We're making tons.
(57:06):
So California has taken part of that money and they've
put it into a device that can be placed in
school bathrooms. If the senses detect certain vapors. This is
not about to be This is a highbrow This is
(57:28):
a radio show for high since when for highbrow people
people are not interested in the low road and look
down on bathroom humor. I could probably go off on
a tangent here about sensors detecting certain vapors in a bathroom.
Don't put it in the men's room here at the
radio station. Off your note of the we're not doing that.
(57:52):
If the sensors detect certain vapors like those emitted by
ease cigarettes and vape pins, there's a silent alarm that
goes off. It sends a message to administrators they're vaping
in the boys' room or the girls' room or whatever.
They're not smoking in there. You can tell if people
(58:15):
are smoking in there. But these vape pins very easy
to conceal, and they also have a certain I don't
know about the flavoring or the vape vapor scent that
it puts off there, but I can tell you what
they're vaping. It's cartridges that give them a buzz high
from marijuana from Mary Juanna. These guys are getting high. Yeah,
(58:42):
oh yeah, yeah, they're getting high in every school bathroom,
in every high school and every middle school throughout the
listing area and probably everywhere. Not in my kid's school, yeah,
in your kid's school. Ask your kid when your kid
comes home from school today, Well.
Speaker 2 (59:01):
You can hardly smell smell their hands.
Speaker 1 (59:04):
I no, no, no, no, you can't.
Speaker 2 (59:05):
No.
Speaker 1 (59:05):
But let's presume here for sake of this conversation, that
your little angels aren't doing this kind of thing. Ask them,
do you feel comfortable and safe going in to use
the bathroom at school? Then have that conversation with the kids.
Here's the reality of that. You're only allowed to go
(59:26):
to the bathroom like before and after school and during
passing periods. They've really shut down the number of passes
you'll get in class to be able to go to
the bathroom. So now if you want to go to
the bathroom, you have to make a big show of
it and ask the teacher. And the teacher's got to
be like, how come you couldn't go during passing periods. Now,
the reality of this is you can't go during passing
(59:48):
periods because that's when all the tough guys and the
rough guys go in there to smoke and vape and
their their e sig, CBD, whatever the heck stuff. Right,
they're in the bathroom. The girls too, They take up
the whole bathroom. They don't want anyone they don't know
coming in there because you might be a nark, and
(01:00:09):
so you immediately get threatened when you go in there.
You want to wash your hands, good luck, all the
girls put their giant backpacks in the sink, so you
can't actually use the restroom because they're in the stalls.
You can't wash your hands because the big backpacks are
in the sink, and you go in there and you
immediately feel threatened, like, am I gonna get beat up,
They're gonna take my lunch money or whatever, They're gonna
(01:00:31):
give me a hard time. So they don't go to
the bathroom during passing periods.
Speaker 2 (01:00:35):
How do you know that?
Speaker 1 (01:00:36):
So? Now? Well, because the as the liner says, now
is the part of the show where Lucy says she's
glad she doesn't have kids. I'm glad I have kids,
and that is how I know this stuff. I've been
hearing about it for years.
Speaker 2 (01:00:49):
Well you haven't. You been experiencing it for years when
you were in school. What's changed. The bathrooms were always monopolized.
I'm gonna try that again. Monopolized by the cool kids.
Speaker 1 (01:01:01):
I don't that wasn't my experience.
Speaker 2 (01:01:03):
The well mind either because I was one of the
cool kids.
Speaker 1 (01:01:06):
Because the kids who were smoking were just smoking on
the sidewalk on the other side of the school property
in the morning.
Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
I'm not talking about smoking. What you're describing is you
can't go into the bathroom because all the cool kids
are there and all their stuff is all over the place.
Speaker 1 (01:01:20):
So here's the difference. Used to be if you were
in class, you go up, you know, at a at
a convenient point in the classroom and say, hi, mister Gabriel,
can I get a pass for the bathroom? Yeah, here
you go, you can go. Not a big deal. Now
it's oh, I see, mister Voorhes needs to use the restroom,
which is especially for like a middle school kid or
(01:01:42):
like a high school freshman. Couldn't be anything more embarrassing.
Now everyone's looking at you. Oh you got to go
to the bathroom. Huh, how come you couldn't go during
passing period? Now you can't say because all these kids
sitting around me in class are in there vaping. Because
now you're narking on these kids, and you're absolutely gonna
get your butt whooped. And now you've got to try
(01:02:03):
and you know, say like, well, because I didn't know
I had to go then it was ten minutes ago.
How do you not know? You know you have to
You have to make an argument and win an argument
in a school classroom with a jury of your peers
watching you and laughing to get a pass to go
to the bathroom. They're really cracking down. Why because they're
afraid someone's gonna leave class to go vape during classroom time.
(01:02:27):
But they're not doing that. They're doing that in the
passing periods. The kids that actually need to use the
bathroom are just holding it. This example from California is
using a silent alarm to send a message to the
administrator they're vaping in the bathroom. Now, maybe you're thinking
(01:02:48):
that sounds expensive and it sounds like something could be
easily tampered with. All right, you're probably right. Here's how
you know if kids are in there smoking their marriage
juana vaping it in the bathroom. Are there kids in
your school right now? Yes? All right? Are the bathrooms locked? No?
(01:03:11):
Then the answer is yes, there's someone or someone's in
there vaping drugs in the school bathroom.
Speaker 2 (01:03:17):
Look how much money you could have saved them.
Speaker 1 (01:03:19):
There you go. California got one hundred and seventy six
million dollars from their settlement against Jewel. The singer no
ju u l the vaping people. It's happening, as the
commercial says, happening every day in Nebraska's public schools. Scott Play,
(01:03:44):
Travis and Buck Saxon coming up here in fourteen minutes
with a lot more on last night's convention, which we
discussed in the last hour of the program. The one
of the changes between the Republican Convention and the Democrat
Convention convention is at the g convention, hul Cogan ripped
his shirt off to show that he was wearing a
(01:04:07):
MAGA shirt or whatever he was saying last night. Had
the leader of the UAW, the United Auto Workers' Union,
he took off his jacket to reveal a shirt that
said Trump is a scab. That's the worst thing that
a union member can call you if you are scabby.
(01:04:30):
Trump is a scab, all right? We had that last night.
Steve Kurr did the night night Steph Curry thing like
all the time to put him to bed, did the
night night thing. Yeah, a lot of fun. Anyway, they
all talked on and on and on and on and on.
President Biden was supposed to have really had the stage
(01:04:51):
last night in primetime across most of the time zones
didn't get up there until after eleven o'clock Central time,
a lot of B twelve. But Clay and Back will
have much more on that. And if you missed my
earlier discussion of the various ways the media needs to
(01:05:12):
be fact checking themselves and their reporting of all of this,
it'll be posted on the Vintage Varheats podcast link on
the Scott Vorheas page at kfab dot com. So, Scott,
if you're not going to talk about that, what are
you going to discuss with this right now? Well, I
would just like us to think for a moment, you're
on a flight from Boston to Dublin. You are described
(01:05:35):
here in the media as an elderly woman. I don't
know how old she is she might be reading this
going elderly. I'm sixty four. I don't know may at
what age is elderly, Lucy. I know elderly is more
of a state of mind than an.
Speaker 2 (01:05:52):
Age, but I think it's just how you feel it.
Speaker 1 (01:05:55):
Well, we're all thinking about our grandma right now, old, beautiful,
wonderful grandma. All right, so she's on this plane from
Boston to Dublin. Maybe she's she's gonna go see Ireland
for the first time, so excited. This is a real
big deal for her. Next thing, you know, former NFL
offensive tackle Goster cherylis, who played a first round pick
(01:06:20):
for Detroit back in two thousand and eight, played for
the Colts and the Bucks before retiring from the NFL
in twenty seventeen. As I said, he's an offensive tackle.
He's a big guy. Next thing, you know, this guy
is standing over you, probably blocking the sun while doing it.
He is a huge dude. You are described here as
an elderly woman. Former NFL offensive tackle Goster Cherilists now
(01:06:45):
steps to you, and now you're looking at by him like,
oh am, I in his seat. He's now standing directly
over me. I wonder what he wants. He unzips his
pants and for the next next twenty seconds, according to
a police report, empties his entire bladder on this woman
(01:07:09):
on this flight, and then punched a guy on his
way back to the seat who had the nerve to
suggest that maybe she wasn't the bathroom. Can you just
sit there for twenty seconds, just like, oh no, why
is it still happening? Why fly? Why? How? What is
(01:07:33):
I shouldn't be laughing? This is terrible, terrible. Guys six
' six weighs two hundred and eighty pounds. After he
was done, he weighed two seventy five. They turned the
flight around. They arrested the guy. He says, oh, I
had a problem with a sleeping pill. That does happen.
Speaker 2 (01:07:52):
I'm never flying again.
Speaker 1 (01:07:53):
Can you imagine? All right, claim Buck, they'll talk you.
You think that's bad? Claire Bucker could talk about Hillary
Clinton next. Scott Voies mornings nine to eleven, Our News
Radio eleven ten KFAB