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December 16, 2025 33 mins
He just had to respond, didn't he?
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vordiez. Conan O'Brien's name has been dragged into all
of this Rob Reiner stuff. And here's why. As a
devote of Conan O'Brien, I've always liked that guy, and
I've heard over the years about his annual Christmas party

(00:21):
being just a great time. It's a who's who of
Los Angeles Hollywood based comedy and so you're hanging out
there and Martin Short and Tom Hanks, Adam Sandler, they're
all hanging out there and it's a great time. A
lot of Saturday night live people and kind of people
in that atmosphere. Well, that party was this past Saturday.

(00:44):
I didn't get invited, but heard about it. And here's
what we're hearing about it now. One of the invited guests,
or I should say two of the invited guests, were
the Reiners, Rob and Michelle Reiner, and according to sources
who tell among others TMZ. So I suppose you could

(01:05):
take this with a bit of a grain of salt.
The Rihins asked their host, Conan O'Brien, do you mind
if we bring our son. He's been having some troubles lately.
By lately we mean the last twenty years or so,
and we wanted to keep an eye on him. This
is something you say about a nine year old. Their

(01:29):
son is thirty two, so they're concerned enough about him
that what they don't want to leave him home alone.
He's thirty two, So they said, we you mind if
our sons it's Nick and Conan. You know what's he
gonna say? Now, I don't want the kids here. He's

(01:52):
thirty two. So Conan is of course like, yeah, I
would love to have him. We'll see you guys on Saturday.
So all three of the Rhiners show up at Conan's party.
Sources say Nick Reiner was acting anti social and downright creepy,

(02:14):
freaking everybody out, acting crazy. He kept going up to
people saying are you famous? Are you famous? Are you famous?
And at one point he goes up to do we
know who Bill Hater is? I hope for your sake
that you do. Like a lot of people who have
been on Saturday Night Live the last twenty years, I

(02:35):
immediately see a new SNL cast and I think these
guys are terrible, And then it takes me a long
time to warm up to him. And sometimes it's not
till after they're gone. Bill Hater is one of those guys,
one of the funniest people in the history of SNL. Yes,
that's saying something. Also, the TV show Barry Fantastic Skeleton

(02:56):
Twins is really interesting film. I love Bill Hayter. So
Hater is talking to somebody, doesn't say who, But here
comes Rob Reiner's son Nick, up to this conversation, and
Bill's like, hey, buddy, you mine. We're kind of having
a this is a private conversation, and Reiner just froze

(03:18):
and stared at them before finally storming off. And now
Rob is noticing what's going on there with his son,
and he and his wife pull him aside and they
get into an argument that's so loud that pretty much
everyone's hearing this shouting match between Rob and Michelle Reiner,
Rob and his wife and their son Nick. They leave.

(03:44):
Rob Reiner apologizes to everybody was embarrassed about this. Yeah,
I mean, all of this is so heartbreaking, but even
without going into what happens next, and I think at
this point you know what happened next. The next day,
Robin Michelle Reiner have found murdered their son, the afore

(04:07):
mentioned Nick Reiner is accused of killing them. It's sat
up to that point that you've got a man who's
seventy eight years old, who's trying to have some fun
with his friends that get together, and also trying to

(04:30):
have a relationship with his son. This is a man
with a history of addiction. He's spoken publicly about being
in rehab and substance abuse problems since he was a teenager.
His dad put together a movie, and Nick collaborated with
his dad. I don't know what level of collaboration. Probably

(04:53):
there was money involved, so he was like begrudgingly able
to do this. This was a movie ten years ago
called Being, which is based on his son, and Robin said,
it's the most personal thing I've ever worked on, And
it just sounds to me like I don't know these people. Yeah,
I like, I love Rob Reiner's movies. I don't know

(05:14):
these people. But I think we all kind of know
these people, don't we. Maybe you've been on one end
of the spectrum, either as the parent or as the
rebellious youth that took a long time to finally allow
someone somewhere in the relationship to pull their head out
and start mending some fences that have long since been

(05:37):
broken and burned. It's amazing when you have a parent
who's still trying to have a relationship with the kid
and trying everything. We'll do the tough love. All right, Fine,
you're not gonna live by my rules, then I guess
you're not going to live in my house. And the

(05:57):
kid runs off and you've gotta let him go. Now,
how many of us know or have been someone in
this relationship? So, no, I don't know the Wriners. I
don't know these people. I talked with his I've talked
with Rob a couple of times, talked with his adopted

(06:18):
daughter once. I don't know these people. But boy, we
we know people like this, or we have been perhaps
you had some of this in your family. It's it
is so sad to think about a father forget the
ages seventy eight thirty two. You when you've got a

(06:42):
person who just for whatever reason, is emotionally and criminally
stunted and you're still trying, like that's my son. It
breaks my heart when I start thinking, this is something
I always trying to do with all these stories, and
try and put myself in one's shoes. When I put
myself in the shoes of a father who's dealing with

(07:04):
this with a kid breaks my heart. Thankfully, I'm not
And anytime I think about what would it be like
if my son who again, this is where I remind
my wife, Yeah, my son refuses to clean up after himself.
It's and he's not defying about it. I think he's

(07:27):
just got a bad case of the dumbs. When it
comes to when you put something down and it's trash
or it needs to be put in a drawer or
something like that, what you do is you put it,
then you put it away. And I'm constantly saying, son,
here in the refrigerator, you've got four open beverages, all

(07:52):
of them about half full. I think maybe this is
just an interesting concept. Maybe try finishing one of these
drinks before you move on to the next one. Or
this one only has about two SIPs left in it.
Let's just down that thing right now. Surely you can

(08:13):
bring it within yourself to finish the rest of the
whatever blue drink this is. I don't think he's not
doing it to be defiant. I think the kids got
of the screw loose where other people then don't just
leave stuff lying around, and this, by the way, is
the worst behavior we have from our son. Yes, we

(08:36):
are not only lucky, we are incredibly blessed. And when
I think about if my son were suddenly in and
out of whether it's substance abuse, facilities, jail, cop cars,
homeless shelters, whatever, my house, staying with friends, not knowing

(08:57):
where he is, I could absolutely myself as a seventy
eight year old father, still trying to save my son.
So we're bringing him to a party, now, Is that
the best idea? I think it's pretty obvious with twenty
twenty hindsight and someone who it's described here. I don't

(09:22):
know what further this means, but the New York Post
had reported that Nick Reiner had a history of violence. Again,
I don't know what that means. I believe that if
his parents felt he was potentially homicidal, that they probably
don't take him to a party. The whole thing is

(09:49):
just so so sad. Now. Conan O'Brien hasn't commented, Bill
Hayter hasn't commented. President Trump did, though, oh, President Trump did.
We'll address that coming ou up here in just two minutes.
Scott Voices News Radio eleven ten kfab, do you want
to wade into this Trump comment on Rob Reiner at all?

(10:13):
Are you going to leave me hanging out here to dry.

Speaker 2 (10:16):
The What I would like to say is that when
you were growing up, your mom said that if you
can't say anything nice, don't say anything at all. Now
he has strong feelings, yes, or had strong feelings about
Rob Reiner, so he probably wasn't going to be able

(10:37):
to say anything nice. So he probably shouldn't have said
anything at all. Now. Having said that, that comes that
happens on both sides. As we all know, we had
horrible things said, not just about Charlie Kirk, although that
was the most recent, but leaders said horrible things. So

(10:58):
I understand and always will and they still I understand
the the anger about what Trump said. I wouldn't have
said anything like that myself, but you gotta, I mean,
do you do tip for tat? I don't know. He
should have just kept his mouth shut, That's what I
have to say.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
Yeah, here here are some of the obvious things. There
are a number of people who really really don't like
when President Trump does something like this, and I'll read
you his his full tweet. I kind of tried to
characterize it earlier, and I'll read you exactly what he said.
And there are a lot of people who don't like

(11:38):
it when he does stuff like this. Now, no one
who didn't vote for him is looking at this, going, hey,
good for him, he's standing up for himself. No one.
So now you've got the people who voted for Obviously,
you got the people in this country who say they
can't stand anything President Trump does, no matter, no matter

(12:00):
what it is, especially this, but no matter what it is.
So now you got the people who voted for Trump
or even tend to support him, even though they might
not have been fully enamored enough to vote for him.
They generally are like, yeah, I like that he's cracking
down on this and trying to do something about that
gas prices are low, you know, And many of them

(12:21):
don't like it when he does stuff like this. Now
you've got that little sub section of people. And I
fall into a sub section of that sub section, which
is I would prefer the president not say stuff like this.
But I can't expend a lot of emotional energy wringing

(12:44):
my hands about it, cause I don't even remember what
I talked about two three weeks ago. It seems like
I just had this conversation where Trump went after somebody
in another rather tasteless manner, and I said, is it too?
Has the president ever apologized for anything? That? What a

(13:04):
tremendous opportunity to apologize and say yeah, I didn't need
to say that sorry and actually mean it. And I said, also,
I'd like to ride a unicorn today. These are just
two things that I want not Neither of them are
going to happen. Both of them stand the same chance
of happening. Why would I sit here and go, boy,
I hope I get to ride a unicorn today. It'd

(13:25):
be so much fun. It would be so fun. Do
I hold on to are there stirrups? Or do I
just hang on to his horn? You know, boy, I'm
really think about this all day. It's not gonna happen.
And that's the same thing here with looking at something
that Trump does and go, I wish you wouldn't do that.
Great you can. You can wish in one hand and

(13:45):
in the other and see which one gets filled first.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
Something else. My mama told me, yes.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
So I am not going to expand a lot of
energy on some of the stuff. Doesn't mean like i'
will with it. I'm not, but I said what I said,
move on now, I will at least point this out.
This is not from the Let me start making excuses
for the president. I'm not doing that. I'll just point

(14:14):
this out though. So let's see, I'm about fifty years old.
Trump is about thirty years older than me. So when
I was growing up, it was one after the other,
stand by Me, Princess Bride, when Harry met Sally sleepless
in Seattle. A few good men later, I'd be introduced

(14:36):
to something I missed being too young when it first
came out. This is spinal Tap, which, by the way,
I watched most of it again last night and really
tried to watch Spinal Tap two. The end continues, it's
not good.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
Is it that bad?

Speaker 1 (14:52):
It's not that bad. I mean it's in the same
vein as this is spinal Tap, which is it's slow
and re ridiculous. I tried to watch it when I
was a kid, and I didn't get it and kind
of walked away, going, I don't see why this is
so great. It took me years to get it, and

(15:12):
I really really like it, but it is it's a
slow burn on that movie, and that's part of what
makes it funny. So the only thing I really laughed
at loud, laughed out loud at at Spinal Tap two
the end continues, is.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
Is this a spoiler?

Speaker 1 (15:34):
No? Oh shoot, there's a David Saint Hubbins, Nigel and
then who's the other guy with the mustache. I can't
think of the character's name. Oh shoot, anyway, he because
we're looking right at the beginning of the movie to
see what Spinal Tap has been doing over the years,
and he has been leading an orchestra for some bit

(15:55):
of performance art which is really really dark music. And
it's called Hell to Pay, except it's hell to Pay
like a hair piece and it's just pictures of demons
and Satan's wearing really bad two pays hell to Pay,
And I thought, all right, that's funny.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
That's funny.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
That was the only thing in the first forty five
minutes before I finally like, I must see what's going
on in the football game that I laughed at.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
That's a little bit of cheech and chong vain to it.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
Yeah, Derek Smalls, thank you Jason Bernsteel for the win.
He just texted me. Yeah, Derek Smalls that was pretty good.
And they're interviewing all the drummers from Chili Pepper's and
Metallica and Questlove and all this stuff going, Hey are
auditioning drummers. They're like, yeah, we'd love to, but we
don't want to die. So anyway, where was I saying? Oh? Yeah,

(16:52):
when I grew up, it was all this stuff. I mean,
it could have been any one of these things. Princess
Brian alone, I'm in so immediately, I'm hooked. I love
Rob Reiner because of all the entertainment he gave me
now over the last ten years, including in two appearances
on this program. He espouses some political views that are

(17:15):
different from my own. And okay, he's not a member
of Congress, he's not a governor. He's Marty de Burgie,
so he doesn't he thinks Trump and Russia colluded. Thanks
for letting me know. But boy, that Princess Bride was funny.
What did you think about Billy Crystal in that? Oh

(17:36):
he made me laugh. He made us all laugh. All right,
there was Rob Reiner. But see that's a condition and
a symptom. I think of how I grew up and win.
Donald J. Trump didn't grow up having an affinity for
these movies. I'm sure he knew that many of them existed.

(17:56):
I don't think Trump was spending a lot of time
in the eighties and nineties watching these movies. So what
does he know about Rob Reiner? A guy who nineteen
times a day over the last ten years has been
calling Trump unfit to be president, a criminal colluding with
Russia who should be in jail, and a war criminal.

(18:20):
So it suffice it to say Trump takes these barbs
pretty personally and does not have the same affinity with
Rob Reiner. So if Trump had some personal feelings about
all of this on that level, I get it. Now

(18:41):
we finally get to what Trump said, which, again I'll reiterate,
doesn't need to be said, certainly not in this way.
So here's what Trump said yesterday. A very sad thing
happened last night in Hollywood. Rob Reiner, a tortured and
struggling but once very talented movie director in comity star,
has passed away together with his wife Michelle, reportedly due

(19:05):
to the anger he caused others through his massive, unyielding
and incurable affliction with a mind crippling disease known as
trump derangement syndrome, sometimes referred to as TDS. He was
known to have driven people crazy by his raging obsession
of President Donald J. Trump, with his obvious paranoia reaching

(19:27):
new heights as the Trump administration surpassed all goals and
expectations of greatness and with the Golden Age of America
upon us, perhaps like never before, May Rob and Michelle
rest in peace. The thing that Trump said that I'm like,
come on, man, was that Rob Reiner and his wife Michelle,
as he puts it in his truth Social Post quote, reportedly,

(19:50):
they passed away, reportedly due to the anger he caused
others through his massive, unyielding and incurable affliction with a
mind crippling disease known his Trump derangement syndrome, sometimes referred
to as t DS. So now what Trump is suggesting
that someone killed Rob Reiner because he was driving everyone crazy,

(20:12):
saying tell you another thing about Trump. He's a war
criminal coludo with rush Putin's pen and bye bye, like
someone's like I've had enough and therefore it's okay or
understandable to kill him for that. Now, the parallel here
is everyone lost their ever loving minds understandably when social

(20:36):
media erupted with joy after the murder of Charlie Kirk,
and so many people understandably so said, I can't believe
all of this, this hate, or at least people just
needing to let you know that they're not bothered that
Charlie Kirk died. I don't think anyone should die because

(20:57):
of their political beliefs. But I'm not losing any sleep
over this because Charlie Kirk said, And you're like, so,
you're not a fan of Charlie Kirk, This didn't impact
you personally, all right? Put your Facebook down and going
on about a couple of days until that wave passes
where you just feel the need to let someone know
that you don't care all that much or that you're

(21:19):
happy about it. And people are like, these people are
are creatures of Satan, These are terrible people. Why would
you can't bemoan and denounce the people spiking the football
in the way of Charlie Kirk being dead and then say, well,

(21:40):
you know, Rob Reiner was a huge lefty and you
know Trump is Trump's just being a brawler. Again. I
would prefer that the president not take that road, But
as I said earlier, I can also prefer to ride
a unicorn home from work flying. In my world, a

(22:01):
unicorn only flies, right, I mean trot's and all that,
but it also flies. I am thinking of pegasus, but
unicorns they fly too, right, Yeah, this is a flying unicorner,
and I want to ride one home from work because
I don't like waiting in traffic. And both Trump apologizing
for this and me writing a unicorn home stand the

(22:24):
exact same chance of happening. I can either get fully
vested in the emotional energy about neither of these things happening,
or move on now. I will say this before I
fully move on here. Rob Reiner was recently asked what
he thought about the assassination of Charlie Kirk. Rob Reiner

(22:46):
is a huge political lefty and he was talking to
Piers Morgan and Pierre said, what's your reaction to the
assassination of Charlie Kirk? And Rob Reiner said, quote, I
unfortunately saw the video it and it's beyond belief what
happened to him, and that should never happen to anybody.
I don't care what your political beliefs are. That's not

(23:07):
acceptable there, that's how it's done. Now you've got the
media giving license to yet another series of stories where
the media loves to do this bipartisan outrage to what
President Trump's response was to Rob Reiner's murder. Yeah, you

(23:29):
know what bipartisan outrage means, right, that's where every single
Democrat hates it. And they found the usual Republicans who
also hate everything that Trump does, always Thomas Massey, now
lately Marjorie Taylor Green, and Nebraska's second district Representative Don Bacon.
I presume C and N quickly reached out to Congressman

(23:52):
Bacon because they know he's a reliable voice who will
say as a Republican things against President Trump, which Gon
Wristhon Bacon did. He says, quote, I'd expect to hear
something like this, this is the Trump comment. I'd expect
to hear something like this from a drunk guy at
a bar, not the president of the United States. Can

(24:12):
the president be presidential? And the media says bipartisan outrage
to the rest of the Republicans aren't taking debate, They're
deflecting and saying this is a time when our thoughts
and prayers are with the Reiner family and his friends,
and maybe everyone should go watch Sleepless in Seattle, where

(24:37):
he and Tom Hanks are doing Carry Grant impersonations. Hey, Diane,
I had him on the show a couple of years
ago and did that his Carry Grant voice for him,
and he gave me a polite chuckle. Hey, Diane, take
a look at these swatches. Anthony Geary passed away too,

(25:01):
and we noted earlier that I think the actor's name
is Peter Green also died Zed from Pulp Fiction, Zed's
dead baby? Whose motorcycle is this? It's a chopper? Baby?
Who's chopper? Is this? Zed? Who's Zed? Zed's dead baby?
Zed's dead? That's the bring out the gimp scene. One
of those guys is Zed. Zed's dead, and now the

(25:24):
actor's dead too. He was also the bad guy in
the Mask with Jim Carrey.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
How many times do you have to watch a movie
to be able to quote these movies pulp fiction as
much as you do, you've never seen it. Okay, do you.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
Mind getting my wallet out of that bag? How do
I know which one is yours? It's the one that says,
all right, I can't do that line, but I don't know.
It depends. Some of these lines are indelible. Pulp fiction
is full of them. So Zed died. Anthony Geary has died.

(26:00):
Better known to soap opera fans, especially of Lucy Chapman's vintage.
Did you watch all of that The General Hospital? Luke
and Laura.

Speaker 2 (26:11):
Dramm one hundred? Yes, And that's the kind of stuff kids.
You don't know how rough we had it. If we
missed it, we missed it.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
Yeah, I'll wait for a rerun.

Speaker 2 (26:23):
Especially with soaps.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
Here's another eighties movie reference. What's a rerun? What movie?
Deep cut line?

Speaker 2 (26:32):
But I'm gonna go with the uh Jaws.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
It's back to the Future our next guest Jaws again
the seventies, Back to the Future in ninety eighty five.
Anthony Geary, the actor who played Luke on General Hospital,
started on that soap opera in nineteen seventy eight as
what was supposed to be a short term character. They said,
we're gonna sign you for thirteen weeks. This is the character,

(27:00):
and then you'll be abducted by UFOs and forced into
weight loss clinics or whatever they would do. By the way,
I have to ding that otherwise someone's gonna yell at me.
There's another eighties movie reference. UHF weird Al Yankovic. I'll
move on. So Anthony Gary was cast on there in
nineteen seventy eight for thirteen weeks. In nineteen eighty one,
the episode in which his Luke married Laura played by

(27:23):
Jeanie Francis, drew approximately thirty million viewers to that daytime
soap opera episode of General Hospital, which is still a
daytime record.

Speaker 2 (27:37):
And that's one of the few that are still on
every day that is actually still on.

Speaker 1 (27:43):
I was today years old, and maybe it sounds familiar,
but I don't know. I'm reaching deep into the recesses
of my what's left of my brain, But I think
I was today years old when I learned and how
their storyline started. Do you know how Luke was introduced

(28:05):
in the show, and specifically I mean.

Speaker 2 (28:06):
Urah, Yeah, he's somewhat if I think you're talking about
what I think you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (28:11):
Yes, he assaulted her.

Speaker 2 (28:13):
He was a nightclub owner.

Speaker 1 (28:15):
Yeah, he he forced himself on her, a plot that
both stars later condemned and people are like, how can
you hey, it's a soap opera, an assault that turns
into this beautiful romance and a and a wedding is

(28:37):
not the craziest plot arc in any soap opera.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
So well, nobody ever mentions poor Scotty her husband.

Speaker 1 (28:46):
No one ever thinks of poor Scotty. Was she married
at the time.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
Yeah, oh, he had his heart broken.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
See, I didn't know any I didn't know any of
this stuff.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
It's a soap opera. Yeah, she has to be.

Speaker 1 (28:57):
Married, sure. And then she was giving birth to her
great great grandfather's baby or something weird like that soap operas.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
No, she lost her mind. She disappeared and lost her mind,
and then they found her and she came back and
didn't know it. You know. It was one of those things.

Speaker 1 (29:15):
Yeah, I was more young and restless, not the soap opera.
I was myself young and restless. So he and actually
was on the Young and the Restless. Before landing the
general hospital job, he'd done a lot of guest spots
on All in the Family with the afore mentioned Rob
Ryiner his meathead Partridge Family Streets of San Francisco. They're like,

(29:38):
all right, we're gonna make you this character. Everyone's gonna
hate you and then we'll probably kill you off. Nope.
Nineteen eighty one Daytime Soap opera record thirty million people
watched Luke and Laura get married, and he left the
show in nineteen eighty four to really start his career
and no one heard from him again.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
Yeah, they didn't go so well.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
I'm gonna go make movies, said David Caruso. For response
to this, the actress Laura Jeanie Francis had said, he
spoiled me for leading men for the rest of my life.

Speaker 2 (30:18):
That is crazy considering what he was doing the first part.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
Yeah, oh I know. Well, yeah, again, they didn't right
the show. They were just actors happy to be working.

Speaker 2 (30:29):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
I didn't realize this either. I guess Luke came back.
This sounds familiar. Luke came back to General Hospital in
the nineties and was there until he retired in twenty fifteen.
That's right, Okay, well there, now we have it. Luke
Spencer Anthony Geary actor is dead at seventy eight. Died
Sunday in Amsterdam from complications following surgery last week, or

(30:52):
as soap opera writers would say, boring, It's not how
a soap opera character dies and then as brought back
to life and then killed again.

Speaker 2 (31:04):
You say you don't watch one.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
More Hollywood based story. James Cameron is the newest member
of the one billion Dollar Club. This is His net
worth is one billion dollars, which puts him in a
small club of billionaire filmmakers. Lucy, can you name any

(31:27):
of the others on this short list? There are only
four others on the list. These are filmmakers who have
a net worth of at least one billion dollars? Can
you name any of them?

Speaker 2 (31:38):
Oh? I thought you were gonna tell me what they were.

Speaker 1 (31:39):
I am, but I'm checking first here.

Speaker 2 (31:41):
Jackson.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
Wow, that's a really good one. I would not have
gotten that one. But all those Lord of the Ring movies. Yep,
he's on there. Uh guy, Ritchie, no, what he should be.
Have you seen Bullet Train?

Speaker 2 (31:52):
Huh?

Speaker 1 (31:52):
Brad Pitt, Oh my gosh, do yourself a favor and
watch Bullet Train eight times in a row. Is so
much fun now. The other one's pretty easy. George Lucas
and Steven Spielberg. Oh, the last one on the lists,
I'm like, really, Tyler Perry, Oh, yeah, that.

Speaker 2 (32:05):
Doesn't surprise me at all.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
I guess making eighteen movies a day would add But
who's watching this volume? Yeah? I guess I'm gonna put
address on and be this this old lady character. Larry
Johnson with the Charlotte Hornets did that thirty years ago.
He's not worth a billion dollars, all right. And finally,

(32:31):
I hope Dylan Rayola finds what he's looking for there.
This is my I. We did so much commentary on
that throughout the morning. I will post some of that
on the Morning News podcast link at kfab dot com.
This show goes on the Vorhees podcast link at kfab
dot com. I am now split between two podcasts and

(32:52):
the six to ten shift here, meaning now I get
to say Glenn Beck Show is next for an hour,
temporarily to get us through the holidays. This is not
a long term show in this hour, but I do
hope you enjoy it next and I'll talk to you
tomorrow morning right here
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