All Episodes

March 17, 2025 63 mins
Quite a weekend for the Trump Administration and those trying to stop them.  We discuss before turning our attention to Omaha's ridiculous ranking among the best cities for St. Patrick's Day.
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vordiez.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
There was a great social media post over the weekend
and it came from none other than the President of
El Salvador, Naib buch Kelly. President Naib bu Kelly just
had one quick message on social media and that message
was oopsie too late. This is after President Trump rounded

(00:29):
up a bunch of Venezuelan gang members he had already
previously had an arrangement with El Salvador to take Salvadorian
MS thirteen gang members there, and then President Trump said, hey,
you got any more room now? El Salvador probably enjoys
some of the money they're getting to house these guys

(00:52):
outside of US borders. So when President Trump said, yeah,
I've got two hundred and sixty one illegal aliens come
in your way, some of them are Salvadoran MS thirteen
gang members, About one hundred and one of them are
Venezuelan gang members. These are bad, bad dudes. You want them?

(01:16):
President Al Salvador said absolutely, And so they were put
on a plane and they were sent to El Salvador.
A US District judge named James Boseburg ordered an immediate
stop to this deportation of criminal gang member drug pedaling,

(01:37):
human trafficking, murdering thugs. These they rap sheet on these
guys includes kidnapping, sexual abuse of a child, aggravated assault, prostitution, robbery,
aggravated assault of a police officer. And so we round
these guys up. They're in the country illegally, they shouldn't
be here. And I'm sure that there were people in

(01:58):
the communities that where they were taken from. I don't
know if it was all Aurora, Colorado or what, but
I'm sure that there were people in these communities, probably
good people, who had escaped the areas where these guys
ruled as thug gang members. They'd escaped, whether they came
to the country legally or illegally, they got here to

(02:20):
America and they said, thank goodness, all of those criminal
gang member thugs are behind us. And then here come
the thugs, and now they're in these communities and they're
basically treating areas of America or apartment complexes in Aurora,
Colorado in America as their own brand new turf. And
all these things are happening. The abuse, the drugs, the assault,

(02:44):
the human trafficking, it's all going on here. And these
people who want to live free and they want to
live safe. Suddenly see Immigration and Customs enforcement come and
round these guys up and get them out of the community.
Can you even imagine how good that must feel. Think
about your worst neighbor, no problem for me. Yesterday morning,

(03:11):
five point thirty, and a dog is just out there
in the very cold night last night, two nights ago,
just out there barking, barking, barking. Five minutes go by,
ten minutes go by, fifteen, twenty thirty minutes go by.
This dog is just out there, howling and barking. I

(03:31):
imagine someone let the dog out and then fell back asleep. Well,
it was hard for anyone else to sleep. I was
getting up anyway, But this dog is just out there barking. Now.
Can you imagine Immigration and Customs Enforcement, along with the
ASPCA and the Humane Society suddenly show up the best

(03:52):
Friend's Animal Network. I'll show up there and take this
neighbor into custody, put the dog inside, and take the
neighbor outside, put them in a wagon and send them out.
And you'd be like, yes, I don't know who's going
to take care of that dog, but that's great. That's
the first thing I can think of when I think
the bad neighbors, and I suppose that murdering Venezuelan gang

(04:15):
members are probably just a little bit worse for a
neighborhood than someone that leaves their dog outside barking all
morning all night. Think how good it must feel to
get these criminals out of your community. They shouldn't be here.
They have no legal status in this country. They're breaking

(04:37):
laws every single day, and now, based on the promise
of the man who was elected and has only been
in office now for a very short amount of time,
they're rounded up and you're getting your neighborhood free of them.
How good that must feel.

Speaker 3 (04:54):
It sounds like there was somebody who wanted them to stay.

Speaker 2 (04:56):
And then you hear about US District Judge James Boseburg saying,
you put those criminal gang gang member, drug trafficking, human
trafficking thugs, you put them back in those communities. How
dare you? What authority are you using to get criminals
out of this country? So the judge is saying that

(05:21):
the president's effort to deport gang members under the Alien
Enemies Act is illegal.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
And.

Speaker 2 (05:32):
I don't know, he might have a point. He might
he might have a point here, and here's why, because
the Alien Enemies Act of seventeen ninety eight generally has
allowed deportation of enemies to America during wartime. Well, the

(05:55):
president has declared an emergency on our border and an
invasion of illegal immigrants. But Congress hasn't declared war. You
know why, because Congress never declares war anymore. So the
judge is like, wait a second, this act has been
used during declaration of war. We have no declaration. We're

(06:19):
not sure that you can do this, So I'll give
the judge some credit. I don't think he was saying,
these criminals deserve to be here. Make sure you bring
them back here and you give them phones. I don't
know that he was saying that, but it's interesting to
note no other judge was saying that, either over the

(06:41):
weekend or previously. Now here's the funny part. This judge says,
I order an immediate stop to President Trump's efforts to
deport horrible, murdering, drug trafficking gang members. Well, it turns out,
as that order came down, the plane taking these guys

(07:05):
to l Salvador was already over international waters.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
Oh no, oh no.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
And it turns out well, this judge thinks he might
be the president of the United States, he's not the
president of international waters. And so you as a district judge,
suddenly you're like, hey, turn that plane around. Planes like,
I'm sorry, I can't hear you. We're over international waters.
You have no jurisdiction. And then to further pylon, here

(07:37):
comes the social media post by Naib bu Kelly, the
president of l Salvador, who just said, oopsie too late,
and that was it. Now that's that's funny. I know.
There are suddenly all these people that want to say, well,

(08:00):
wait a second, we think the president has overstepped his balance.
That's why we have checks and balances, and we think
this judge had a point. Maybe he did, But suddenly
all the constitutional scholars didn't have absolute jack crud to
say during all four years of the Biden administration, when
our nation was under assault from people who had no

(08:22):
status in this country, who were swarming in the illegally,
who were taking advantage of precious resources that Americans don't get.
These guys are coming in here and they were getting
access to money, to education, to healthcare services, putting strain
on public safety, treating our neighborhoods in America as Venezuelan

(08:46):
gang turf, and no one did anything even though we
are under a constitutional crisis by all of the illegal immigration,
and none of these guys who are suddenly constitutional experts.
What's going well? You know the Alien Enemies Act of
seventeen ninety eight. Who this is only something should be
used during wartime and we're not a war ride now.

(09:09):
They didn't say anything about the constant invasion under President Biden,
So spare me the constitutional crisis. And while we're just
not sure this is the right thing for the president
to do. See that kind of thinking needs to be
there for all presidents and all actions. And I'm just

(09:31):
wondering which American is trying to bring Venezuelan gang members
MS thirteen ringleaders, abusers of children. Who's actively trying to
bring those people back into this country and for what reason.

(09:56):
President Trump spoke out about this on social media as well.
I'll tell you what he said next.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
Scott Voice News Radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 2 (10:06):
President Trump responded to the great social media post by
the President of El Salvador as a US district judges
like you bring those criminal gang members who are in
America illegally and now being deported to El Salvador. You
bring them back to America for the benefit of who
in America, for the benefit of what in America? Because Trump,

(10:30):
that's why, oh good reason, bring the trend the Aragua
aliens back to this country so they can continue to
terrorize and sell drugs and murder people and all the
rest of this stuff. And it turns out when the
order came down, the plane taking them to El Salvador
was already outside of American territory over international waters. And

(10:53):
as the president of El Salvador said, going on social media,
Nae bu Kelly said, quote, see too late. These are
third graders. The world is run by third graders. And
I'm not saying that as necessarily always a bad thing.

(11:17):
Third graders have a very you ever, if you have
a kid.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
Here's the part of the show where Lucy says she's
glad she doesn't have kids.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
Well, all right, So if you have a kid, or
if you were a kid, and I think most of
you probably were a kid and someone wrongs you in
third grade, you get this very fierce sense of right
and wrong, and that's where you get the phrase that's
not fair. You know these kids that say that's not fair,
and you look at it and go, well, life's not fair, kid,

(11:51):
And think about how that must be internalized by a
third grader. Wait, everyone agrees that what's happening here isn't fair,
but we're all just gonna let it happen. Maybe third
graders should run the world. They understand what's not fair,
They understand a difference between right and wrong. Why it
be another year or two before they're committing very heinous

(12:15):
criminal acts in our streets and being coddled by the
Nebraska legislature. I mean, so, as third graders, that's probably
the last line of innocence, and we should tap into
that more and put them in charge. That's not fair er,
oopsie too late. President Trump responded to that on Truth

(12:39):
Social and said, quote, thank you to l Salvador and
in particular President Bukelly for your understanding of this horrible
situation which was allowed to happen to the United States
because of incompetent Democrat leadership. We will not forget these
monsters were sent into our country by Crooked Joe Biden

(13:01):
and the radical left Democrats. We've seen videos now on
social media of these migrants arriving in Al Salvador and
being booked into a terrorism confinement center. They'll stay there
for at least a year. They were going in there
getting their heads shaved, so they got a free haircut.

(13:22):
They went into this thing saving twelve bucks. What's their problem?

Speaker 3 (13:28):
And a shave for some of them.

Speaker 2 (13:30):
Oh yeah, they got shaved. It's another twelve bucks. It's
got a haircut costs more than twelve but I know,
but there's a great Adam Sandler bit. It's gonna be
a haircut. You're going in saving twelve bucks. Sorry, that's
exclusively for fellow Adam Sandler fans.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
Ding.

Speaker 2 (13:48):
So these guys are walking in with their hands behind
their either their backs or their necks as they were
rounded up into prison cells, getting all shaved and put
into their cells. These are guys who just a few
days ago were the kings of the Aurora, Colorado apartment complex,
going door to door with assault rifles. There's no such

(14:11):
thing as an assault rife. Well it is if you're
an assaulter going door to door with rifles they planned
on using for purposes of assault.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
And using your money on debit cards.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
Oh yeah, brought here given resources that you're not getting,
getting the phone, getting their kids in school. Do they
need to have a health check up? Nah, just bring
them in school. And my goodness, you look at the
landscape here where so many people there are some states
right now or communities saying we're going to stop processing

(14:44):
illegal immigrants into our schools. We don't have the resources.
The teachers are overworked, they don't speak eighteen different languages.
This is a problem for our schools. And people are like,
how dare you? Like, well, for what purpose are you
arguing in favor of this? How does help out anyone?
The taxpayers of this community, the children of this community,

(15:04):
the teachers. Is that we always say we need to
stand up for We're standing up for these teachers. We're
standing up for these kids. We're standing up for the taxpayer.
And people are like, no, why because Trump? That's why?
Where's this other story where oh the argument that comes

(15:25):
over and over again that Trump and Elon Musk are
coming after social Security. Let's address that.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
Next Scott Voice.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
There's Lucy. I'm Scott. This is News Radio eleven ten KFAP.
Quite a weekend for the Trump administration. They started off
the weekend bombing the hoothy rebels a wave of air
strikes against them in Yemen, and this was directed at
Iran because let's look at the let's look at the

(15:54):
facts here. President Biden gave Iran unfettered access to hundreds
of millions of dollars, and then terrorist groups suddenly got
an influx of cash. Some of them, let's call them Hamas,
which I know on some college campuses they're very, very popular.

(16:18):
So they're not gonna like this. Hamas got this money
and used it to kill innocent Israeli people in Israel
in October of twenty twenty three. Well, the Houthis are
right there with them, and they've also gotten an influx
of cash provided by the Biden administration via Iran. So

(16:38):
now Trump comes in there and says, yeah, Iran needs
to get these guys, these houthy rebels, needs to get
them here in order, because right now these guys are
attacking ships in the Middle East, which they have. They've
been targeting international commercial shipping in the Red Sea, and

(16:59):
they've even launched missiles and drones at Israel since the
Hamas attack October of twenty twenty three, in a show
of solidarity against Israel in the Middle East. So they're
doing all of this with money granted to Iran via
President Biden. Biden, of course, learned from his boss, President Obama,

(17:21):
who gave Iran an aircraft carrier full of money during
the Obama administration. Well, Trump has come out here and said,
all right, these hoothy rebels and Yemen, it's gonna be
a bad weekend for you. So weekend strikes killed at
least thirty one people and wounded over one hundred. As
he was telling Iran, get these guys in line, otherwise

(17:44):
you're going to get more of the same. That's one
thing the Trump administration did over the weekend. They also
deported the Venezuelan gang member illegal immigrants to El Salvador.
We've been talking about that throughout the morning. The President
of El Salvador goes on social media, as a US

(18:05):
judge is like, bring those murdering, drug trafficking, human trafficking,
abusingg criminal gang members back to this country. And his
order came while the flight was in mid air, so
it was left to the president of El Salvador to respond,
and he goes on social media and he posted a

(18:25):
screenshot of the court order and then just said oopsie,
too late, which is hilarious. This is something else that
Trump did over the weekend. And he just announced that
he's going to speak tomorrow with President Vladimir Putin as
we are getting closer to ending the atrocities in Ukraine. Now,

(18:50):
as all this is going on, what are Democrats doing?
Democrats were fighting with other Democrats because they wanted Some
of them wanted the government to shut down. Others said,
if the government shuts down, then Trump can use all
these executive powers during a shutdown to do anything he wants,
and we can't have that. So then they started fighting
with each other. Democratic parties favorability rating has just crashed

(19:14):
to an all time low, according to both a CNN
and an NBC News poll, as Americans say, we don't
know what you guys are doing. We sent you a
message in November, you haven't heard it, and now you're
fighting amongst yourselves and you're you know, President Trump's actually

(19:34):
doing stuff to make themselves a to make our communities better,
to get rid of gang members and illegal immigrants, and
they're looking to cut all this different costs from government
and eliminate fraud and waste and the Democrats are sitting
there holding ping pong paddles at the president's speech and

(19:57):
after the speech, seven percent of voters in an NBC
poll have a positive view of the Democratic Party. CNNs
slightly higher at twenty nine percent. This is a twenty
point drop since when Biden was inaugurated in January of

(20:18):
twenty twenty. Since CNN began polling people what do you
think of the Democrats in nineteen ninety two. This is
the lowest favorability rating for Democrats in the thirty three
years of this poll. And as this is happening, the
governor of Minnesota, who happened to be on the ticket

(20:41):
whatever you call that ticket between Kamala Harris and Tim Walls,
a ticket that was forged from votes. No, all right,
well they were put, they were installed, they rose to
the level of the Democratic Party presidential ticket. They lost.
And now Governor Tim Walls of Minnesota, Nebraska native, is

(21:01):
coming around to districts controlled by Republicans and he's trying
to have a little town hall like. Okay, Governor Tim
Wallas has all the answers, and he goes and starts
listing all the problems Trump's gonna cut social Security. He's
gonna cut Medicare and Medicaid. And then he says, now,

(21:27):
I don't have the answers about how to deal with
the President and the Republicans. If I did, quote this
is what he said in Des Moines over the weekend.
He said, quote, if I did, we wouldn't be in
this gosh darn mess unquote, only he didn't say gosh
darn So that classy statement there by the governor of Minnesota.

(21:55):
So people showed up there, about thousand people in Des
Moines about the same I think in Omaha here over
the weekend to hear Tim Walls and Walls is saying like, well,
these guys are going to cut social security. They're you know,
that's what they're gonna do, all right. This argument has
also come up in the Arizona senator who's looking to

(22:19):
I guess sell or dump off his tesla. The argument
of social security has come up in this fight as well.
Mark Kelly, senator from Arizona, had recently gone to Ukraine
to quote show solidarity for the Ukrainian people. He posted
this the other day on social media. I said, and

(22:43):
he said, I just left Ukraine. What I saw prove
to me that we can't give up on the Ukrainian people.
Everyone wants this war to end, but any agreement has
to protect Ukraine's security and can't be a giveaway to putin.
Let me tell you about my trip and why it's
important we stand with Ukraine. So that's Senator Mark Kelly
on ex Twitter the other day, and Elon Musk saw

(23:07):
it and responded, you are a trader? Was it appropriate
for Elon Musk as well? Elon Musk can say whatever
he wants, not just because he owns Twitter ex Twitter.
I think the phrasing you are a trader comes as
the president of this country is negotiating a peace deal

(23:30):
between Russia and Ukraine, and he's got Russia at the table,
and he's got now Ukraine at the table. And so
here you got a senator who's going and working to
undermine the President of the United States, which, as Elon
Musk and Trump sees, it, would continue the destruction of

(23:50):
both Russian and Ukrainian lives and continue this war in
Ukraine that America has spent hundreds of billions of dollars
on with it's no end in sight until Trump's now
trying to corral things. So Mark Kelly goes over there
to undermine what the President's doing. So Elon Musk called
him a trader. Well, Mark Kelly got him. Mark Kelly,

(24:15):
Senator Mark Kelly says, you know what I'm gonna sell
my Tesla? He said, it's a little jankie and it's
kind of cheaply built on the inside. Plus every time
I get in this car in the last sixty days
or so, it reminds me of just how much damage
Elon Musk and Donald Trump are doing to our country,
talking about slashing Social Security, cutting healthcare benefits for poor people,

(24:40):
for seniors. It's one bad thing after the next, and
I think it's time to get rid of it. Elon
Must turned out to be a jerk hole. Again. I'm
changing the language here. Elon Must turned out to be
a jerk hole. And I don't want to be driving
a car built and designed by a jerk hole. That's

(25:01):
what he said the other day. So he can sell
his car if he wants to. I don't care if
he sells his car. I think if you're interested in
getting a Tesla based on all the people who just
a few years ago before he got all maga, they

(25:22):
were all buying Tesla's and saying this, Tesla's are great cars.
Elon Musk is a genius. He's trying to help with
climate change, and he's created this wonderful car. We love
this car. And then Elon's like, you know what, I
think I like Trump And they're like, you know what,
forget the climate change and clean air and water. We

(25:44):
don't care about any of that. We ha Leon Musk. Therefore,
we hate this car. So if you're looking to get
a Tesla, all these Democrats who'd bought this thing in
the last couple of years and now they're looking to
sell it, you could probably get a really good deal
on a Tesla if you're in the market. There are

(26:06):
some people Dave Nabtey talked about this Saturday morning here
on eleven ten kfab on his program. There are some
people who are buying Tesla's just to destroy them. Elon's like,
I get paid either way, right, yep, Okay, it's your car.
They're spending seventy five thousand dollars to buy a Tesla

(26:28):
just so they could beat it with baseball bats.

Speaker 3 (26:30):
There can't be a lot of that, probably not a lot.

Speaker 2 (26:32):
But there are other people getting arrested going to Tesla.
There's really not such thing as a Tesla dealership, right,
you have to order it directly from Tesla.

Speaker 3 (26:41):
I don't know. No, you've got to be able to well,
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
I mean there's wait right right, I know. Anyway, there
are people who are finding them out and vandalizing them.
Like somehow that gets back at Elon Musk like the
car is already sold, or insure it doesn't hurt him whatsoever.
But the argument here about well, Elon Musk and Donald

(27:05):
Trump are talking about slashing Social Security, cutting health care
benefits for poor people and seniors. Is an absolute lie.
First of all, Trump has said over and over again,
we're not cutting Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Well, Elon
a right, here's what Elon Musk said, quote the waste
and fraud in entitlement spend. He didn't say so called

(27:31):
entitlement spending was wasteful and fraudulent. He said the waste
and fraud in entitlement spending, which is most of the
federal spending is entitlement. So that's like a big one
to eliminate. That's the sort of half trillion, maybe six
to seven hundred billion dollars a year, unquote, so he
wasn't saying entitlement spending is one of the biggest parts

(27:55):
of federal spending, so we need to stop the entitlement spending.
He said, we need to stop the waste and fraud,
which could be between a half to three quarters of
a trillion dollars every single year in waste and fraud.
The White House has put out a message on this

(28:16):
in the past week and said the US Government Accountability
Office estimates taxpayers lose as much as five hundred and
twenty one billion dollars annually to fraud. Most of that
is within entitlement programs such as Medicare and Medicaid. Over
the past two decades, the federal government has made an
estimated two point seven trillion dollars in improper payments, the

(28:40):
majority of which come in the form of payments to
deceased individuals or those who no longer are eligible for
government programs. The Social Security Administration made an estimated seventy
two billion dollars in improper payments between twenty fifteen and
twenty twenty two, and the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare
Services estimated it made one hundred and forty plus billion

(29:02):
dollars in improper payments in twenty twenty four alone. Elon
is talking about the waste and fraud within Social Security, Medicare,
and Medicaid, not cutting your Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid,
helping the program become more solvent and less of a

(29:23):
burden on taxpayers by eliminating the waste and fraud. And
so when Mark Kelly or Tim Walls or the rest
of these guys say, well, they're talking about cutting your
Social Security. Yes, if you've been dead for thirty years,
you're probably going to have your Social Security cut. Something
else that President Trump did over the weekend he declared void, vacant,

(29:46):
and of no further force or effect, the pardons that
Sleepy Joe Biden gave to the Unselect Committee of Political Thugs.
This is Trump's words on social media and many others,
declaring them void because of the f the fact that
they were done by autopin. This is after the Oversight
Project suggested that an auto pin had been heavily used

(30:10):
during the former president's White House tenure, especially there at
the end. He didn't actually sign these. Trump is saying,
I don't know. It's up to a judge decide whether
they are actually valid. So something else Trump did over
the weekend, Well, the rest of us were watching basketball
and enjoying the weather, which I hope you can do

(30:30):
this week as well. Maybe not enjoying the weather on Wednesday,
but I don't think it's going to be as bad
here in the Omaha area as points north of here.
We will talk about this ranking here by Omaha, because
I'm just not lost on me that it is Saint
Patrick's Day to day by golly, by gosh, and Omaha

(30:51):
ranks very high in a national Saint Patrick's Day ranking. Really,
we'll talk about that and a lot more coming up
after a fox kfab news update next right here on
news radio eleven ten KFAB. Happy Saint Patrick's Day from
all of us. News Radio eleven ten kfab. Whether this
is an event you celebrate as a true Irish heritage

(31:14):
who we celebrate the great Irish Saint Patrick who was
not Irish by the way peoplesh I think so, yeah,
he was. He was held captive in Ireland is my understanding,
and came out and said, you know what you people
need Jesus and started to try and bring Christianity to

(31:36):
the Emerald.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
Isle and snakes instead.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
Yeah, well, and there was some stuff with snakes or what.
I'm not really sure, but whether you celebrate this as
a day of Irish heritage and you don't like the
fact that it has become amateur hour for drunks all
across the world, or you love the fact that it's
a day where you can start drinking first thing in

(32:00):
the morning and no one really thinks anything of it.
However it is, or if it's just Monday to you,
We're so glad that you're with us here on news
radio eleven ten KFAB, I I like Saint Patrick's Day.
I'm wearing my green shirt today. Lucy is wearing her

(32:21):
green but admitted on kfab's morning news that she forgot
it was Saint Patrick's. Dane is wearing a green shirt
by accident.

Speaker 3 (32:27):
It's not bright green, so you know, it's only kind
of half green.

Speaker 2 (32:29):
Yes, but it is green.

Speaker 3 (32:31):
It is green.

Speaker 2 (32:31):
What color is it?

Speaker 3 (32:32):
It is green?

Speaker 2 (32:33):
Green. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
It ain't easy being green.

Speaker 2 (32:36):
No, it's not. Kermey said that. So where what do
you think about Saint Patrick's Day. I'm I can already
put words in your mouth. But we'll see what you say.
Maybe you'll surprise me.

Speaker 3 (32:49):
I think I actually did this very very short story
on kg R, which is not a story. It's true.

Speaker 2 (32:56):
Yeah, but that's not KFAB. So no one listens to
that station and tell us so we can actually hear
wound me. Are you guys playing sunglasses at night right now?

Speaker 3 (33:06):
Maybe?

Speaker 2 (33:08):
All right? What's up? By the way, I KGr is
a sister station of ours, and I was thoroughly enjoying
the nine eighty three countdown yesterday morning, hosted by Casey
Caseum on ninety nine point nine.

Speaker 3 (33:20):
Kg OAR always a lot of fun.

Speaker 2 (33:22):
Love the Ksey Caseum retro countdowns.

Speaker 3 (33:24):
Do you remember the first time you went out on
a Saint Patrick's Day? I think most people do because
they make the tragic mistake.

Speaker 2 (33:33):
I don't know if it was the first time, but
it probably what I think I was sixteen, oh, because
I know I was driving, and so I was kind
of I was going around, but I wasn't drinking or
anything like that. We were just I don't remember what
the heck I was doing. I just know that I
came there was oh my gosh, what was the name

(33:55):
of that place? There was an Irish pub and somewhere
near like night what would be just west of ninetieth
and Center, and there was a great Irish pub right there,
and there was a guy. And I lived in the area,
so I was, I think, probably coming home pretty late

(34:16):
at night, and there was a guy staggering along Center Street.
So I pulled over and said are you good? And
he didn't know stuff from page five, So I said,
tell you what, because he was going to get hit
by a car. He was staggering in the road, and
I said, do you need to ride somewhere? Against my
best judgment, and so he poured himself into my truck

(34:37):
and he's like, yeah, I don't live too far from here.
And I proceeded to take him from ninetieth Ish and
Center clear over near like seventy something in Harrison Street,
and he was walking the wrong way to where he
thought he was going.

Speaker 3 (34:54):
So he finallyfriend, he doesn't so he he he said,
this is it.

Speaker 2 (35:01):
Whether it was or wasn't. I deposited him out of
my vehicle and he left it relatively free of secretions.
And so that was the one that he wasn't a hitchhiker.
But I always figured I probably saved that guy's life.

Speaker 3 (35:17):
That's a great deed that you did.

Speaker 2 (35:19):
So that was probably the first time I was out
driving on Saint Patrick's Day.

Speaker 3 (35:23):
I was twenty one, Yeah, twenty one. All my friends
were going out. I worked with older people. It was
back in the hospital days, and we went I I
can't remember where it was, but I couldn't figure out
why nobody wanted to drink their complimentary shots of cream dement.

Speaker 2 (35:45):
Here.

Speaker 3 (35:45):
I'll take it, I'll take it, I'll take it. Yeah,
there was a large party.

Speaker 2 (35:50):
Yeah, so you were just drinking cream dement all night.

Speaker 3 (35:54):
Well not all. Oh no, it didn't last all.

Speaker 2 (35:56):
No, that's me. That's the kind of thing you drank
as a kid twenty one still care. Yeah, and you
don't realize how much alcohol you're taking in until suddenly
it just hits you. Taking it out, the full force
of Trump hitting the hoothy rebels with intercontinental ballistic missiles

(36:17):
is suddenly like, oh, I can't feel my face.

Speaker 3 (36:22):
Yeah, and that's not pleasant, shall we say? Coming back?
And I did not celebrate go out and drink it
on Valentine or vala Path. I don't think I did.
If I did, it was many years. I was into
my thirties, but I did go to the turning of
the River one year in Chicago. I was there.

Speaker 2 (36:43):
So where do you think Chicago should rank in the
top ten cities for Saint Patrick's Day in America?

Speaker 3 (36:51):
I don't know, because we didn't do much other than
go to the river and watch it turn green. There
were places that you could see lines of people trying
to get into bars. I'm not a line standard, so
I don't know because I can't say that I ever
that I actually did anything up there other than that.
So I would say they would rank higher than twelve

(37:13):
for sure. Seven. Boston's got to be right there.

Speaker 2 (37:18):
Boston's one. I would think Chicago would be two or
one A, and then New York could be right behind it.
So this is the And by the way, Tom says,
that was Patty Murphy's. They're off of about ninetieth and
and the name sounds it sounds right.

Speaker 3 (37:34):
I think it's before my time.

Speaker 2 (37:35):
Well, it was still there when I was twenty one,
because we used to go do some stuff in there
for the old rock radio station I was on, and
that was a fun place to kind of hunker down
on Saint Patrick's Day.

Speaker 3 (37:45):
I don't think I ever graced the doorway.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
Yeah, Boston comes in number one in the wallet hub
ranking of best Saint Patrick's Day cities. Wallet Hub is
a website that only ranks things, and that's the only
time I ever hear anyone ever talk about the website,
and it's usually radio idiots.

Speaker 3 (38:08):
So right, yeah, that's true.

Speaker 2 (38:12):
If not for wacky radio guys, you would never hear
about wallet Hub. But it's like, all right, we just ranked,
and of course they've got to rank these things in
such a stupid way that causes people to talk about them.
Because let's be honest. If I saw Boston wan Chicago
to New York three, then I wouldn't even think anything
of it. But it's got uh let's see here, it's

(38:38):
it's bigger cities. I didn't dig down far enough to
see whether O'Neill was on here, but these they're not
big big cities.

Speaker 3 (38:45):
Yeah, but O'Neill becomes a very large city over Saint
Patrick's Day. I've been to that once celebration.

Speaker 2 (38:51):
I've seen the shamrock in the road after the celebration,
but I've not been in O'Neill for Saint Patrick's Day.
So these are the it's about like Irish tradition and
the weather and the cost of you know, how much
you can do all this stuff, the safety of doing

(39:12):
this stuff. And so they do the ranking on these
four things, Saint Patrick's Day, traditions, costs, safety, and the weather.
Boston comes in number one. Number two Reno, Nevada. Reno, Nevada.

Speaker 3 (39:30):
That's weird.

Speaker 2 (39:32):
This is a community that they get on there because
they have an annual Leprechaun crawl and that's kind of
a big event there in Reno. And also it's on
there so that people will talk about the wallet Hub
survey and mentioned the website. Number three Savannah, Georgia. They
say it's the nation's seventh old is Saint Patrick's Day

(39:54):
Parade and they'll have half a million out of town
ers in Savannah, Georgia for Saint Patrick's Day.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
You know why No, because one of the main dishes
that they serve at that time is green peaches that
they die. The peaches creen is made up, but.

Speaker 2 (40:11):
It's a really good idea.

Speaker 3 (40:14):
Okay, they put green cream on their peaches.

Speaker 2 (40:17):
Number four Santa Rosa, California.

Speaker 3 (40:21):
Huh, number Northern.

Speaker 2 (40:24):
Number five is Wooster mass I think they get credit
for the burn off of what's going on in Boston.
Number six, Chicago, number seven, New York City, and then
it goes Henderson, Nevada, Buffalo, New York, and Pittsburgh, and
then you get to number twelve Omaha, Nebraska. Omaha, Nebraska

(40:45):
is not that far behind Chicago and New York. Omaha.
We ranked very high. And how much it costs to
celebrate Saint Patrick's Day?

Speaker 3 (40:56):
What how is that possible?

Speaker 2 (40:59):
I know, we think things are expensive here and then
we go to a bigger city and we're like, this
is crazy. I'm not paying this for this. So we
ranked number fourteen in the country and costs we ranked
number fifteen. And Saint Patrick's State traditions. What is our
Saint Patrick's state tradition?

Speaker 3 (41:16):
The parade?

Speaker 2 (41:16):
We have a parade that's never on Saint Patrick's Day.
In fact, this week or this year, it wasn't even
this past Saturday, it was the Saturday before. We talked
with our friend Chris from the Ancient Order of Hibernians
and he said, well, you know, we try and do
it at a time that's easy for more people to
go be a part of two Saturdays before Saint Patrick's Day. Look,

(41:39):
I love I love me the Hibernians, and they do
a great job with the parade. But I always ask him,
is there is there any reason why we can't do
the parade on Saint Patrick's Day? Kansas City had a
huge Saint Patrick's Day. They're not even in the top ten.
And then Overland Park, I think comes in eleventh, and

(42:00):
the parade isn't in Overland Park. It's in downtown Kansas City,
or at least it used to be. It's been a
while since I lived there, but man, that was a
great time. So what is Omaha Saint Patrick's State tradition?
We have a parade somewhere within the vicinity of March seventeenth.
We had a nice event yesterday. The Shriners had a

(42:23):
big fundraiser with corn, beef and cabbage and all the
rest of that stuff. But that was yesterday. So today,
you know, let's engage in the great Omaha Saint Patrick
State tradition of what exactly.

Speaker 3 (42:35):
There's a lot of bar crawls, I.

Speaker 2 (42:37):
Know, but they're everywhere has got bar crawls. Why do
we rank so high in Saint Patrick's State traditions. When
Omaha doesn't have a Saint Patrick's State tradition? Are we
still out there drawing a shamrock outside of Barrett's. I
don't think they do that anymore.

Speaker 3 (42:55):
I don't think. I don't think there's too much traffic now.

Speaker 2 (43:00):
Is Barrett still there? Did they?

Speaker 3 (43:02):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (43:02):
I should probably know Forrey either open or close that place.
But what is our Saint Patrick's State tradition? Here? We
go into some pubs and we get drunk. Yeah, but
so does everyone? Right?

Speaker 3 (43:14):
Yeah? I don't know what they did this year because
it's on a Monday, so maybe they did it over
the weekend. But I know that Omaha seems to be
much bigger for these big tents. Outside of the of
the bars, these big celebrations, there are a lot of oh, go, well, yeah,
Clancy has something to do with Lancy's.

Speaker 2 (43:35):
Gonna have I'm sure they'll have the tent out. They're
not going to need it today because it's so nice. Barrett's,
by the way, is still open. My apologies to Barrett's.
I'm a West Omaha guy, but I used to go
down try and get squeezed my way into Barrett's. On
Saint Patrick's Day back when I was in my twenties
and it was impossible. Barrett's is on Leavenworth at about

(43:56):
like forty second ish. But yeah, Clancy, they're gonna have
a lot of fun. I imagine that, you know, those
dives in the Old Market are going to have a
great time. I mean there will be a lot of
people having fun this afternoon and this evening. But I
wouldn't say that what Omaha does is any different than

(44:18):
what des Moines does.

Speaker 3 (44:21):
That's probably true.

Speaker 2 (44:22):
People get together in an Irish pub and they'll have
a few drinks, brazenhead classies. I mean, they're all great places,
too fine. Is that still a place people? Well? But
did they move out? We see this is where I thought.

Speaker 3 (44:37):
That they closed and it became a dancing place.

Speaker 2 (44:40):
See that sounds familiar. But maybe this is when I
show how lame I am. Yeah, yeah, two fine permanently closed,
all right, two fine.

Speaker 3 (44:49):
Irishmen, two fine ladies, Yeah ladies.

Speaker 2 (44:54):
Yeah, it was just one guy. He put on a
few pounds since they couldn't call it two fine irishmen.

Speaker 3 (45:00):
Get that gosh, just down to one stand.

Speaker 2 (45:05):
And no one wanted to go see one fine irishman
that's stupid. But you get two and then we rank
very low on weather. But that's going to change today.
The weather is perfect today. And we also rank really
low on safety. It says safety, it says safety and accessibility,

(45:25):
accessibility to what, Hey, I have a hard time getting
someplace where I can get shot. Well, I think that
we don't get We don't get shot in Omaha.

Speaker 3 (45:33):
I think it's I don't think it's getting shot. A
lot of the fun, very traditional bars like Micflies on
Center or Barretts as you just mentioned, or Clancys when
Clancys was on seventy second, where else was Clancy's Anyway,
they've been around.

Speaker 2 (45:50):
Well it's one hundred and sixty eighth in Center.

Speaker 3 (45:52):
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So some of these really fun, popular
bars are right next to busy streets and maybe they
weren't I'm assuming they weren't initially, but they're next to
these really busy streets now and people just come barrel
it out of the doors, and maybe that kind of
safety well, because we've seen it happen, I know, especially

(46:13):
in Benson.

Speaker 2 (46:14):
I would not be surprised if I try and squeeze
my way and let's say Clancys one hundred and sixty
eighth in center, very small parking lot, and lots of
other shops there as well, who would also like to
do business today. So if you're going to get a
haircut or pizza or whatever, they're like, well, these spots
are for our business. People either choose to adhere to

(46:35):
or ignore those directions. So then now you're like, there's
a big, big parking lot across the street, and that's
Lifetime Fitness and Rockbrook Camera and all those businesses over there,
and so people will park over there, and then they'll
just they'll try and safely cross the street over to
Clancys to get in to Clancys. Maybe they're not as

(47:00):
careful several hours later coming out of any place. Not
suggesting that anyone's been. I'm not suggesting anything other than
people need to take care of themselves. And you know what,
uber is a wonderful thing. You don't want to come
staggering out of any place and they start trying to

(47:21):
cross busy streets, let alone to get back to your
car you're planning on driving. So I mean, that's that's
Omaha Saint Patrick's day. But I wouldn't say that that's
a tradition that sets us apart any place else and
has us in the top twelve best Saint Patrick's Day
cities in America. I'm just saying we could do more

(47:45):
here in Omaha. What do he wants to do a
parade on Saint Patrick's Day? For starters, Marley Bone was
the bar that painted the big shamrock on the street. Yes,
thank you. I had incorrectly given that to Barrett's Barley Corn,
not Marley Bone. That's my confusion, and I think that

(48:09):
I've been thinking that wrong for the last twenty five years.
I'm Scott Vorhees. There's Lucy Chapman. Both Bryce and Charles
say that Savannah, Georgia has a fantastic Saint Patrick's State tradition.

Speaker 3 (48:22):
Did they mention anything about the peaches.

Speaker 2 (48:24):
No, You're the only person that said something about green peaches,
which is probably not a thing but should be. Savannah
ranks number third in Saint Patrick's State tradition, behind Reno,
Nevada second, and Boston is number one. Speaking of Boston,
they're celebrating because Conan O'Brien, a Boston area native, has

(48:48):
been named again the host of the Academy Awards for
next year because they had great social media buzz where
they had good ratings, and and that is where. That
is why Conan O'Brien got the nod again to be
the host of the Academy Awards, which I know will

(49:10):
be a controversial statement when I say, I love Conan
O'Brien and I can't wait to watch him again next year.

Speaker 3 (49:15):
I wish they'd bring Ricky Gervais back. That's never gonna happen,
Never gonna happen.

Speaker 2 (49:21):
Guy goes up there trashes Hollywood, and they're like, we
don't want him to do that anymore. We also have
basketball this week, and congratulations to I mean not that
it's a surprise, but to Creighton and Omaha for getting
an invitation to the Field of sixty whatever we're calling

(49:45):
it these days. I don't know why I'm still seeing
some people say it's sixty eight teams. It's not sixty
eight teams. It's a field of sixty four. And then
there's two playing games or are there four playing games now?
And I do missed them because I don't care.

Speaker 3 (50:01):
Oh, there's sixty four games.

Speaker 2 (50:03):
No sixty four teams that go into the bracket, all right,
So now Lucy, just don't don't even try to understand.
Everything's fine. Okay, are you sure you're good? Yeah, everything's
going to be fine. But there was a I bring
this up because on I was kind of hoping we'd

(50:23):
get a foot of snow on Wednesday, just so I
could say, oh, no, are you because I like, oh no,
I have to stay home and watch basketball day on Thursday, Okay,
if I must. I wanted people to have that option,
and I guess we can take the option. But there
was a great story. I saw it on the Omaha
World Herald's website, where it was a bunch of pictures

(50:47):
of hoop it Up. They're going back to July of
nineteen eighty nine, when Omaha started our own three on three. No,
we didn't start our own, but we did the Omaha
of Hoop it Up, which was a three on three
basketball tournament that began as a street tournament in Dallas
in nineteen eighty six, and within just a couple of

(51:09):
years it expanded all across the country. And so the
first Hoop it Up Omaha event was in the streets
of downtown in July of nineteen eighty nine. I would
have played in it a couple of years later, and
I was just some scrawny high school kid and we're
playing against I'm like, who is this grown man? They said,

(51:33):
he's a Husker running back. It was George Tola, who
not only was a Husker running back, but he was
a non traditional student Husker running back. Like Georgia Tola
was like twenty six years old, he was easily ten
to eleven years older than us. We were just getting
destroyed by these guys, but it was fun, and then

(51:57):
they it all kind of stopped doing it. I think
when we played it, we played it at Xarbon because
they did it downtown. Then it was at Xarbon, then
it was at Oakview, then it was at Bluff's Run,
and they've tried to move it around a little bit,
but I think that hoop it up left us for

(52:19):
the same reason that we probably don't do the Saint
Patrick's Day parade on Saint Patrick's Day, and I think
it's also the reason why we also do a really
bad job in showcasing the Class A state basketball tournament.
And I'll explain this after a Fox News update next.

Speaker 1 (52:37):
Scott Bodes News Radio eleven ten Key Fad.

Speaker 2 (52:43):
I'm Scott Borhees here with Lucy Chapman, and the other
day it was Dion. Hey, everybody, this is Deon the Wanderer,
and especially you, Sue. This morning I made you pancakes.
There we go. Dion made pancakes for runn around. Sue
the Wanderer made pancakes. So anytime we have one of

(53:05):
our favorite guests make us pancakes, usually the line is,
good morning, honey, I made you pancakes for breakfast. We
have we will recap who said that within a similar genre. Now,
who's in a similar genre to Dion? I went back
to legendary hit makers from the sixties who have been

(53:27):
a guest on this program, and I only have a
few who have done that and made us pancakes because
I forgot maybe I wasn't having celebrities make us pancakes
when I talked to Ringo Starr. So, for example, had
he done that, he's in love pancakes. You know, that's

(53:49):
that's how That's what I would I had him to do,
but I wasn't doing it at that time. So had
Ringo Star made us pancakes, he would be in here,
but he didn't, so he's not. But Mike Love is
Ruba chamake.

Speaker 1 (54:03):
A ohoh, I want to make is some pancakes.

Speaker 2 (54:07):
Yeah, that's the Beach Boys pancakes. That's fantastic. William Lee
Golden of the Oakridge Boys, they go back to the sixties.

Speaker 1 (54:16):
Good morning, sweetheart, I've made your pancakes for breakfast.

Speaker 2 (54:21):
Great voice right there. And Poppa Mama pancakes and one
of the great pinups of the Age of the sixties
Life Garrett no Chuck Grassley, Good.

Speaker 1 (54:33):
Morning, I made pancakes for you, honey.

Speaker 2 (54:37):
That's all I got of people who are legendary hit
makers back to the sixties who have made us pancakes.
I also pulled this one out because I don't know
what else I would use it. The Irish tenor Daniel O'Donnell.

Speaker 1 (54:53):
Good morning, honey, I made you pancakes for breakfast.

Speaker 2 (54:56):
Pancakes. See that's good. Saint Patrick's date pancake right there,
Daniel O'Donnell, great Irish tenor. A little class on.

Speaker 3 (55:05):
This program from time, you know it could use some yeah.

Speaker 2 (55:07):
From time to time. So all right, Lucy, you've been waiting.
I said a moment ago that I think things could
be a little better around here, if not for people
like Lucy making the rules. I just look at three
different things we've been talking about today, or one, I
guess I'll interject that I hadn't yet mentioned. But historically

(55:32):
on this program, anytime I say like, oh, there's gonna
be a fun festival and it's going on, you know, downtown,
Lucy's like, well, try not to get shot.

Speaker 3 (55:41):
I never said that. Oh yeah, I have never said
try not to get shot.

Speaker 2 (55:45):
All right, let's let's watch the reaction. Omaha ranks very
high on cities that are very safe, considered very safe.
Seek see. You think you think.

Speaker 3 (55:57):
It's a lot safer than a lot of other cities.

Speaker 2 (56:00):
You think that as soon as you walk out anywhere
in Omaha, you're gonna get shot and stabbed and set
fire to And you're only yeah, and you're only slightly
more safe in your home. But then people are like,
what are they doing in there? And what are they
got in there? We'll just go in there and we'll steal,
and then we'll shoot you and stab you and set

(56:21):
fire to you. I mean, that's what Lucy thinks. And
there are a lot of people, let's call them moms,
who think that it's all very, very dangerous out there,
because every once in a while you get a big
group of people and they get in fights, and sometimes
people you know, brandish a weapon. All right, fine, so
that happens. But I can make a decision as to
how much of how much I want, how much danger

(56:48):
I want to subject myself to, based on what's going on. Like,
if there's a big event and I want to be
a part of it, I'm willing to realize sometimes when
you get a giant crowd of people together and you
infuse alcohol and all the rest of it, it sometimes

(57:09):
can get pretty ugly. But if it's something I want
to do, I'm willing to roll the dice a little bit.
You got to live a little bit, right, because if
good people don't go out, then the terrorists win.

Speaker 3 (57:21):
Wait did you put yourself in ye?

Speaker 2 (57:23):
Good people? I am good people.

Speaker 3 (57:25):
I have never not gone to something simply because of
where it was or what it was and fear of
violence or fear of crime. That has not kept me
from anything.

Speaker 2 (57:37):
No, you don't go to anything for other reasons.

Speaker 3 (57:39):
Well, yeah, that's the thing. I just don't go to anything.

Speaker 2 (57:41):
So I look at three things here and I think
that it's people who think that if we get a
bunch of people together, it's going to be dangerous and
someone could get hurt. And that's why we don't have
Three things I'd like to see. Number one, the Saint
Patrick's Day parade on Saint Patrick's Day.

Speaker 3 (58:00):
Do you think that's why they're not doing it on
Saint Patrick's State?

Speaker 2 (58:02):
I do.

Speaker 3 (58:02):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (58:04):
If you get it now, people are gonna be just
going out there and they're gonna be staggering around on
the streets, and they'll be driving drunk and all the
stuff they're gonna do today anyway.

Speaker 3 (58:13):
Yeah, actually that makes sense.

Speaker 2 (58:14):
I have a parade and at least you can focus
some of the drunken idiots in like ten city blocks.

Speaker 3 (58:26):
You'll keep them all together. That's your your plan. Yeah,
that's your solution.

Speaker 2 (58:31):
Yeah, so that's that's one. I think. It's like, well,
we can't have a St. Patrick's State parade because then
you're gonna have a bunch of people down there and
they'd be drinking, they'd be public drunkenness, and people just
be urinating on kids and it's to be terrible. So
that's why we can't have that. The other thing is
I just mentioned how with March basketball coming up this week.
The Omaha World Herald's got a great story on the

(58:54):
old Hoop It Up tournament here in Omaha that we
had so much fun doing in the nineties. Well, sometimes though,
games to turn into fights. Oh and sometimes the fights
would get bigger and uglier, and you get into the
nighttime and some people are like, I don't feel safe
down here. There's a bunch of basketball players down here,
AKA black people are gathering and they're playing loud black

(59:16):
people music, and it's very, very scary to some people,
and so they're like, well, we shouldn't do that because
someone might get shot. Even though I don't remember anyone
ever getting shot, I remember lots of shots against me
when the teams i'd play and Hoop it Up treated
me like I was basically a tackle dummy. They're like,
all right, this we can score on this kid at will.

(59:39):
So hoop it Ups is great.

Speaker 3 (59:41):
Well, that's too bad that that went away.

Speaker 2 (59:44):
And then the Class A State basketball final. For the
last several years they've been playing it at either like
eleven in the morning or in the case of this
past Saturday, one o'clock in the afternoon. Congratulations to Papillion
Levista South. This is I think I'm right in saying

(01:00:06):
this their first state championship. They beat west Side. There's
a great game, what an incredible third quarter by west Side,
but ultimately the rally came up short. And the Titans
of Papillion Levista South are your state champions. And they
were cutting down the nets and everyone was really excited.
The time was like two forty two PM and there

(01:00:28):
was hardly anyone in the West Side student section. And
this is probably a way some of the lawyers and
whiney cry babies and moms and Lucy's of the world
wanted to see it because if we have the state
basketball tournament at night, now you're gonna have all these
kids out there, and they're probably gonna be underage, drinking,

(01:00:49):
and they're probably gonna be fighting, you know, like Prep
was yelling at Central, and Central's yelling back at Prep
and Bad Blood and now they go on the parking
lot and they start fighting each other because the sun's
and that means people could find it as a license
to fight. But if we do it at one o'clock
in the afternoon, then the bad people won't show up
and we won't have those problems. So we'll do the

(01:01:09):
state tournament basketball championship at one o'clock in the afternoon
or eleven o'clock in the morning. And it's just stupid.
It's not a showcase, a primetime showcase that maybe you
get some more people at.

Speaker 3 (01:01:24):
You just want to go out and party when your
team wins and have some beers, and that's why you're mad.
Don't lump me into not wanting to go to the
basketball tournament's tournament because of crime or I might it
might be scary. No, you can lump me in because
I don't want to go. I don't care. I'm night

(01:01:44):
o'clock at night.

Speaker 2 (01:01:45):
I'm not specifically saying you because have you ever been
to the state basketball tournament?

Speaker 3 (01:01:51):
Uh No.

Speaker 2 (01:01:53):
It's people like you though. Let's say, like, oh, why
do you keep it because because you always say like, oh,
Omaha is not a safe play. People think Omaha safe,
but it's not safe, and people people believe you when
you say that, and people like you think if you
get crowds of people, it's not gonna be safe. These
are the same people who are out there saying super

(01:02:15):
spread our event. Anytime someone tried to do something during COVID,
They're just like, Oh, this is all dangerous. People just
need to stay home all the time. Just stay home,
don't go do anything. We can't have basketball tournaments or
nighttime showcase of basketball events, or Saint Patrick's Day parade
on Saint Patrick's Day because there'll be too many people
out there and someone could get hurt.

Speaker 3 (01:02:37):
You are really painting me in the wrong picture.

Speaker 2 (01:02:43):
Then prove me wrong, say that we should do all
this stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:02:47):
I think that if you want to go and do
stuff in the evening, events like that, then you should
go talk to the school district and see why are
we not doing this in the evening. Maybe there are
too many games that they've got to get in. Maybe
the championship game can be in the evening. Maybe they
can be talked into that. Don't sit here and make
it my fault that the basketball tournamentship tournament, tournamentship tournamentship tournament.

(01:03:15):
Don't make it my fault that it's played during the afternoon.
I have nothing to do with it. And it's not
because I think that the city is dangerous.

Speaker 2 (01:03:22):
It's the same mindset, isn't We can say this over
and over again, and we're gonna come to the same
conclusion that you're wrong, your your's your fault, that we
can't have nice things.

Speaker 1 (01:03:34):
Scott Voice News Radio eleven ten kfab
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.