Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Boards, I get to be Scott Voorhees for a
couple of hours now nine to eleven. As we announced
earlier this morning, the nine to eleven show comes to
an end after Friday as well, with Gary Sadlemeyer leaving.
I'm jumping into the morning show. But all of this
nine to eleven show is not going away. I'll be
(00:22):
on each morning from six until ten, Fox News Rundown
full hour everything you need to know to start your
day from Fox News, the leader in news that's at
five o'clock, Kfab's Morning News slash Nebraska's morning news. New
name I'm tinkering with. Get in some good feedback on
that to Scott at kfab dot com. From six to nine,
(00:44):
everything you expect from that show with Les Gary. Gary
will still pop in once in a while. He's always welcome,
and then we'll do this thing that we do from
nine to ten and through the holidays, and he'll further
notice Glenn Beck ten to eleven. That's a placeholder. More
(01:06):
details to come. We're looking at a variety of ways
of entertaining you here in twenty twenty six on eleven
ten Kfab, which means we're done entertaining you in twenty
twenty five, so just wait starting after the new year.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
I think you're not telling them the truth. I just
wanted to jump.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
In there and what do you why? What?
Speaker 2 (01:28):
What that you're done entertaining them?
Speaker 1 (01:30):
Oh no, we're done, And to be honest, we stopped
weeks ago. But I have high hopes for January. Today
is the day in Australia that if you have a
kid who's on social media then there will be fines.
(01:52):
Do the parents get fined? No, the big tech companies.
Big tech companies will get fines up to I mean
thirty three million dollars if they fail to comply to
find ways to block kids under the age of sixteen
from social media platforms like TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat and put
(02:15):
Another Shrimp on the Barbie which is an Australian video
platform which features kids putting shrimp on Barbie dolls. I
think that's how that So this is the day when
kids in Australia can't be on social media anymore. Australia
(02:35):
has said no, we're blocking it and forcing a sixteen
year old age limit on social media and that takes effect. Now.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
I love it.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
Well, everyone agrees that allowing your kids too much access
to staring at a screen and sucking in all that
social media has to offer, which has obviously positive and
negative stuff depending on what you're watching and how long
you're watching it. Everyone, I think pretty much agrees that
(03:09):
it's not good for kids to be raised solely on
this little social media screen. But here's what I disagree with. Okay,
this is not Australia's job. This is Robert's job. It's
Diane's job. It's Brandon and Brendan's job. Gay couple raising
(03:34):
kids with confusing new names that could be a Netflix movie.
Brandon and Brendan raised little Brandon. It's their daughter. This
is a parent's job. It is a parent's job to
police how much screen time their kids get. Well how
am Because if your kids are on your plan, which
(03:56):
I presume that they are, you're paying for their phones,
You got parental controls, and you can go in there
and beat bop boop and say this phone is shut
off every day at this time, and it doesn't come
on until every day at this time. Once you've reached
this many minutes of screen time every day it's off,
you are blocked from using these various apps, and if
(04:17):
you're going to get an app like TikTok Instagram, these
are all apps you need a parent's permission. In terms
of you get a notification your kid is trying to
access this app? Do you give them permission? And then
you talk to your kid and you get browbeat into
it and sometimes you let them and sometimes you don't.
That's parenting. This is what we signed up for. It's
(04:41):
not Australia's job. And of Australia is like, but the
parents are terrible, Well then that's their choice. And let
me tell you how else this is dumb. Let's so
as Australia says, all right, you can't be on Instagram
until you're sixteen. So you go to get the Instagram
(05:05):
app and it says tell us your birthdate and you
give them a fake birth date. Are you at least sixteen? Yes?
And you click that thing and now you're on Instagram.
Why how did they James bond their way? They must
have maguivered the way around that one. Oh, I tell
(05:26):
you what what are these kids think of next? Lying
about their age? You get access to something they're not
allowed to do. None of us have ever done that.
Since the dawn of time. This is dumb.
Speaker 2 (05:36):
Well, using your own argument, then wouldn't you say that
a child can make their own decision, or a parent
could make their own decision that if they wanted their
kid to drink or to smoke, or to watch X
rated movies even though they weren't eighteen or twenty one,
depending on whatever it was, then wouldn't that also be
(05:56):
a parenting thing.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
Yeah, I'm not saying it's a great idea, but that's
essentially how it is now.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
But those things are illegal to underage.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
It's not illegal.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Well, drinking is drink.
Speaker 1 (06:09):
Yeah, I thinking about if you let your kids watch
Texas Chainsaw massacre. You know, you can let your kids
do it if this is what you want to do.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
But what if you're a terrible parent you want your
kids to drink, you can't do it because it's illegal.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
No, I mean, it's illegal if you get caught, if
you Well, I'm just saying the reality is there are
some parents that say, well, my kids are gonna be
doing it anyway. I'd rather haven't do it in my
own home. But beday and all that stuff. Look, some people,
some kids have cooler parents than my kids. Have right,
my kids, once in a while get a little sip
(06:44):
of They've grown quite fond of mimosas. And what does
that mean? What it means every once in a while
they get a little sip of a mimosa. Get like
on New Year's Eve, a little tradition is ninety seven
and a half percent orange juice and a percent champagne.
Except for one occasion when at a family gathering, I
think my son was over served in the mimosa and
(07:07):
was face down on the carpet.
Speaker 2 (07:08):
Oh boy.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
But unless Job Protective Services is listening, in which case
I made that story up. I make up a lot
of fun stuff.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
I'm just saying that if it's illegal there sometimes you
need to have something illegal because.
Speaker 1 (07:21):
There are well the illegality, sure, but the illegality is
is okay, So I let my kids. Let's say I
let my son have a beer, you know, it's time
for you to have your first beer. And then he
shot guns it like in vacation. So that's yeah, it's
it's illegal. But the only way that it ever ends
(07:42):
up being illegal is if that next unfortunate step happens,
which is now he goes driving and gets caught Okay,
now everyone's in trouble. So I don't know how we
got kind of sidetracked on that. And I'm not saying like,
it's all right, let your kids drake as I always say,
I'll screw up my kids. You screw up your kids,
(08:04):
That's what I always say.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
But do we want as a society, do we want
an army of children that are five and six years
old being exposed to nothing but nonsense, nothing but ai
lies in the and just nonsense.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
If you raise them, if you raise your kids to
be so dead it you know their their brains are
hooked into the eye whatever iPhone, iPad and all that stuff,
then great, and more job opportunities for my kids, who
have certainly had some of that in their lives. But
there have been limits to video games, to screen time. Yeah,
(08:44):
we're those parents. We're not puritanistic about it. There'll be
a lot of parents that would look at this and go,
I can't believe you let your kids do any of
this stuff. And like a lot of parents, you're more
strict with the first one. By the time the second
one comes along, you're less strict. And if you end
up having a third, that kid gets caught in a
bear trap every other Tuesday just because you're like a
figure it out, you know, that's kind of how that works.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
But I'm just saying, as a member of society, if
we if I had the opportunity to maybe cut down
a little bit on the crazy my kids getting nothing
but a steady diet of the Internet from age five
to whatever.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
Okay, if you have bad parents who are letting their
kids drink, smoke, watch.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
X rated movie, rather deal with those kids and because
at least they're not antisocial.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
And be on all the social media stuff, if that's
how the parents are. And now Australia jumps in there
and goes, hey, look, do you want the dingo to
get your baby? No, we're shutting down the dingo app.
There probably is one, and we're shutting that down. Okay,
So now the parents are spending are not the kids.
They're spending more time in the house with bad parents,
(09:55):
and they can't be whisked away to what fun stuff
might be on TikTok because some of that stuff's fun
on there. There's a lot of fun on some of
these social media platforms. You're kind of you get exposed
to what you click on and what you watch. That's
why it always fascinates me. And people are like, I
can't believe that this social media allows it. Then don't
(10:16):
watch it? Do I have to think of everything. Now
here's on type of video. So that's today in Australia.
If you are listening to us via our iHeart Radio app,
I think your kids will still be able to listen
to us on iHeartRadio anyway.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Can't say they are.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
To tell everyone that your mom is Lucy Chapman. A
lot of doors open except Lucy's. You're not allowed back
in the house. A lot of the videos that people
are watching are featuring something really fun to watch, and
you think, oh man, this is great. But if you
do that here in Nebraska, in really most any place,
(10:58):
you could be arrested for doing it to someone who's
breaking the law against you. I'll explain next. Scott Boys
News Radio, eleven KFAB. I don't know what angers me
more the fact that Gary is leaving, or he's so
darn happy about it. He's prancing and skipping up and
down the halls here this week, last week, three more
(11:21):
shows big guy. Yeah, we'll show him because Gary has
committed to filling in for me when I'm hosting our
morning show here. So guess who's gonna be sick on Monday?
Wouldn't that be funny? Hey? Sorry, Gary, I'm gonna call him,
calling him at nine fifty eight Sunday night. I got
(11:42):
a reminder on my phone. Man, I can't do it.
Can you fill in? Ah? Man? That'll be funny, that'd
be great. There's Lucy Chapman. I am Scott Vorhees. This
is News Radio eleven ten kfab Have you been watching
these social media of porch pirates having glitter bombs blow
(12:04):
up all over them? The video after video caught by
some of these doorbell cameras of there's a package there
from Amazon or whatever on your doorstep, and then we
wait and here comes someone sneaking up there. Some lady
comes running up there, looks around, comes up, grabs the package,
(12:24):
starts running down the sidewalk, and then someone detonates the
glitter bomb and the box explodes into the paint, glitter,
beautiful explosion. Person gets covered in paint and glitter and
sometimes in the video they go back up to the
doorbell camera and they start yelling at the homeowner, how
(12:46):
dare you you and me, you know, and everyone laughs
about this, like I can't believe how indignant these guys are. Well,
it turns out you were not allowed to do that.
You could be liable if someone who is thieving from
you gets hurt and you set a booby trap that
injures them. That's on you. Experts say, funny videos, You
(13:11):
can't do it.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
That is such a load of.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
Yes, yes it is. That's why. Here's what the police say.
If you really want to go out to the porch pirates,
you can put a GPS tracker in there, or you
can literally put a load of what Lucy was about
to say in the box that way later. Yeah, they
get in their car and they go, let's see what
this is and they open it up and there's a
(13:36):
big pile of stink in there. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
I could do that and make it really easy to
open so that they could do it while they're driving.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
Now, you don't get the right you don't. You don't wow,
you don't get the joy of seeing the expression on
their face like you do with the doorbell glitter bomb.
But I'm just saying, if you do that and someone
gets hurt, you have to pay for that. Libel as
a homeowner, which I agree with Lucy, That's stupid. Scott
(14:05):
Voy's Mornings nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven ten
kfab