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October 28, 2025 • 27 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vordy.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
I have two different stories from the Omaha World Herald.
I want to get to both of them, completely different.
But I'm only telling you about the other one because
I don't want to completely turn you off when I
tell you this isn't me. I didn't come up with this.
This is in the newspaper. It's news. Here's the headline,

(00:23):
don't want elicit sex parlors in your town. Here's how
one city kicked them all out.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Is this part of the announcement tomorrow?

Speaker 1 (00:36):
Sorry?

Speaker 2 (00:37):
I should have done page break new topic, don't want
elicit sex parlors in your town? All right, I'll ask
the question, what if you do want I'm just saying,
you know, we have some in Omaha, right.

Speaker 4 (00:51):
We're a big enough city that, yeah, I'd be surprised
if we didn't.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
I don't want to treat this story like a joke. No,
because the there will probably be some elements of it.
I won't be able to help myself. But at the
root of all of this, it's not like the women
who are in there are like have you ever seen
the movie We Are the Millers?

Speaker 1 (01:17):
I just caught it. Oh yeah, I just caught the
beginning to get that again.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
The other day where Jennifer Aniston this is the start
of the movie, is working at a gentleman's club and
the owner says, oh, hey, by the way, we're gonna
need you to have relations with the customers, and she's like, well,
I'm not gonna do that. And then one of the
other dancers comes up, Hey, did you hear the good news?

(01:40):
We get to have sex with the customers.

Speaker 1 (01:42):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:44):
It's not like the women in these parlors are like
that very eager dancer. In fact, in many, many, many instances,
so far from it. These are women brought here against
their will, trafficked because they've been made to feel this

(02:06):
is their only worth. Don't you dare leave under threat
of violence? This it's you know, when you think about
how awful the existence is for these poor women, you
wonder how any guy can be like And I'm inclined
to look past it for the next twenty minutes. It's disgusting.

(02:33):
So when towns are saying we've got to get rid
of this stuff, one of the big ways they can
do it, And I'll give you the story here. It
talks about how it says, here's how one city kicked
them all out. It's the quaint New England town popular
I think if I'm not mistaken for two things. Derry,

(02:55):
New Hampshire right off I ninety three is home to
poet Robert Frost. Nothing Gold Can Stay? What a great poem.
And I'm an uncultured boob, and I really really like
that one. Home to poet Robert Frost. And do you
also know and I think this is true, what Derry,

(03:18):
New Hampshire is famous for.

Speaker 1 (03:22):
Probably beautiful leaves.

Speaker 2 (03:24):
And also isn't that the scene from the setting from
it Stephen King's it penny Wise clown? Well, I just
know that because they just did kind of a like,
here's the backstory on penny Wise the clown. What's he
doing in the sewer? Why does everything float down here?
All your questions will be answered. It's a new series

(03:45):
on one of the streamers called Derry d E R
R Y. So causes me to assume we're talking about
the same place, because all is Stephen King stuff. That's
all New England stuff. Anyhow, Dairy New Hampshire, they said
the first massage parlor popped up right off a busy

(04:09):
retail strip off the interstate. The police captain was curious
whether anything weird was going on in there when the
windows were covered with garbage bags for curtains, because you know,
regular blackout window coverings not enough. We're putting garbage bags
up here.

Speaker 3 (04:30):
Sounds very hasty.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
That's a classy joint. I'm gonna go get me a
massage today. You know where it's a good place to
get a massage. Oh, I know this fantastic massage therapist,
board certified massage therapist. She has thumbs of steel, she
can work out all your pressure points. She's great. Yeah,
what's she run? Well, it's gonna be a couple hundred

(04:52):
dollars for an hour. Wow, that's pricey. What about that
place I saw off the interstate with garbage bags in
the windows. Oh, they'll take whatever you got and it's
not a massage. Oh okay, great, do that. So after
that place failed to get shut down, several other parlors open,
same place.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
In the vicinity.

Speaker 2 (05:13):
Yeah, same town, same garbage bags. I don't know about
the garbage bags. So this is a town of approximately
thirty four thousand people, and suddenly they had six massage
parlors that the police said were ced. Is it possible
all six of them are Is it possible that one
of them is like, look, I'm a legitimate business owner. Y,

(05:36):
So I don't know.

Speaker 3 (05:37):
They had six at the same time.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
Yeah, and you know why. I mean, you can look
at this in a lot of different ways. One of
the reasons why they kept having the parlors is because, well,
not probably not here right off the interstate, but there
are probably some men in the town going, I'm going
I got a fantasy football meeting with the guys. You

(06:01):
had a fantasy football meeting last night. Well, there's a
game again tomorrow. They got Thursday night football. Now, we
got a lot of stuff we gotta do, very busy.
So this would be the men menfolk who are not gentlemen,
who are frequenting the parlors.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
Also, the.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
Drivers gets lonely out there, and when you've got apparently
a bought a bunch of online advertisements going, hey, if
you're heading up the east coast, make sure you stop into.
Any name I could come up with for this particular
type of business would be not something I think even

(06:45):
I would say on the radio. Can't say any of those.

Speaker 4 (06:50):
But they're advertising, Yeah, they're advertising, and they're advertising the
illicit behavior.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
Yes, I mean some of these ads though, I mean
pump and pantry is a legitimate there, that's the one
I'll say. So they have these all over the place,
and here's someone with this nonprofit group that's trying to
eliminate them. Across the country. They say that these illicit parlors,

(07:24):
they say, now outnumber McDonald's restaurants. Well, that's no way, that's.

Speaker 3 (07:31):
No, there's thirty four thousand people there.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
No, they're talking about across America. They say there's more. Oh,
there's more illicit parlors than there are McDonald's in America,
which frankly gives me a horrible idea for a business model.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
It's all about Yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
It's bundling. It's what it is.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
No, Okay, how is this continuing?

Speaker 2 (08:02):
Because they oftentimes try and go after the workers who
are there against their will, you're kind of going after
the victims, which are also the perpetrators in this instance.
Then they also go after the johns, and it's kind
of difficult to get them unless you have a sting

(08:24):
operation with the owners of the parlor, and they're not
going to do it because they're in on it. So
it's kind of hard to do all of this, and
so how is this town of Dairy, New Hampshire dealing
with it. They're doing like they're basically annoying them out
of town. A lot of licensing agreements and moral clause.

(08:48):
You can't have a license to operate massage parlor if
you've been arrested for this or that or whatever. And
then really one of the big things they're doing is
just appealing to the landlords. And look, you are the
owner of the strip mall. A strip mall has a
cell phone store, a CBD shop, a massage parlor, a

(09:11):
sandwich restaurant shop. You've got to kick out the massage
parlor otherwise, otherwise we're gonna make your life real business
to do business in this town. You've got a strip
mall with five businesses in there, You've got to pull
the license and pressure this particular renter to get out
of there. Otherwise we're not gonna let you do business
with the other four and doing the number the landlords

(09:34):
are like okay, And so their landlords are basically cutting
off leases for these businesses.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
But why are they signing them in the first place.
You're signing a lease for a massage parlor in a
strip mall.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
Because there are legitimate massage parlors and strip malls. You
don't need a bunch of space. Well, you're gonna have
massage parlor the size of a Walmart. It's a massage
parlor superstore. So you only need so much space. I mean,
you go get your hair cut in a in a

(10:07):
strip mall. You go get a sandwich in a strip mall.
These businesses don't need a lot of space. You go
pick up a phone in a strip mall. So yeah,
this is it's a parlor. Like we have three people,
We've got these rooms, and we have certified legitimate massage
therapists here. But in some places and you don't know

(10:28):
which is which. You go in there and it's it's
Some people actually go in there because I think they
really want a massage, and then they're proposition and they go, hey, no, wait,
what do you think? I was like every other guy
that comes through here. I feel really bad for everyone

(10:50):
involved in the business of massage. I feel bad for
the victims who are trafficked and forced to do this.
They're not enjoying them. I know you're very full of
yourself and you think everyone wants some of this. They don't.
They're just trying to survive. And I feel bad for

(11:10):
the legitimate massage therapist because then there's also guys, because
if it happens once, or if it happens to a
buddy of theirs, they're like, you won't believe it, dude,
I went in there. Next thing, you know, I got
this going on. Bata boom bat a bang. I tell
you what, it was great.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
You know.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
So then that guy gets in his head like every
woman doing legitimate massage therapy is a sex worker. And
so then now they start asking, hey, how about a
little something you know at the end of the the
ending here, and they're like, sir, I am a board

(11:49):
certified massage therapist. I went to school for this. I've
dedicated my life career on this. I've managed to alleviate
chronic pain from people's lives may and restore their ability
to do the things they love. Why in the world
do you think I'm gonna take all that training and
risk going to jail just to smack around your peen.

(12:13):
If you want that, go to the business down the street.
It's it's literally in the slogan of the business. Stop
by happy endings. We'll smack around your peen says it
right on the sign out front.

Speaker 1 (12:29):
There.

Speaker 3 (12:30):
Stay well, I.

Speaker 4 (12:31):
Could see where they would need to really get some
licensing changed and make them answer some questions.

Speaker 3 (12:38):
If that's the name of the facility, I know.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
Stay out of those places. You listen to me, Andy,
Everyone knows the guy. Now here's the other story in
the paper, this completely different Stu Pospistle, fantastic sportswriter. Uh
is going to solve the high school football problem in
in Nebraska, and by jove he may have done it.

(13:05):
I'll tell you what his plans are next.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
Scott News Radio eleven t KFAB.

Speaker 2 (13:11):
If there's one thing I'm really tired of hearing, it's
Lucy Chapman just carping on and going on and on
on about how are we going to fix high school football?
I mean, what's going on here with these lopsided games,
teams having to forfeit are thoughts, games not getting you know,
do you got teams not coming out of the locker
room at halftime going.

Speaker 1 (13:29):
We can't take it anymore. The beating is relentless.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
Which, by the way, is also a slogan for a
parlor down the uh, it's it's it's just NonStop. How
are we going to fix high school football? Stupaspissele aka
Stewie Pop, sports writer for the Omaha World Herald and
the darn Fine American says, all right, if the NSAA,

(13:53):
this is the governing body for high school sports in Nebraska,
is not going to and I understand they're looking at it,
but if they're not going to just do common sense
here's how it works, then I will. He's divided up
Class A and some High B football teams into three tiers.

(14:17):
The district play, which features Millard South whooping up on
Benson every years. That's all going away. The districts aren't
working anymore, just because we set these districts up in
the seventies and they're like, well, this is how the
town goes. That's back when when kids went to their

(14:37):
neighborhood school. Now you got recruiting. It's treated like a
professional sport, and apparently we're not going to change any
of that, so we can at least blow up the districts.
Here are my three tiers where you would play people
within your tier and maybe very rarely, like a Tier
one would play a Tier two A two would play

(14:58):
a three, but you're not gonna have a one play three.
Here are the teams. Do you want me to work
my way up or down?

Speaker 3 (15:04):
I don't know. You kind of already lost me one.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
This is for you, all right.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
So here's basically let me put it in this way
where we now we have Class A, Class B, Class C.
Now he's like, it's it's basically, here are the top
tier football programs, and they should exclusively play each other
and maybe rarely uh A top tier two. Here are

(15:31):
those teams west Side, Miller South, Elcorn South, Carney, Omaha
North Prep, Bennington, Papelon, La Vista, South, Central, Elkhorn, North, Bellevue, West,
Lincoln Southeast.

Speaker 3 (15:46):
Who's left?

Speaker 2 (15:47):
If you just there's a lot of schools around here.
Hold on, So those are the teams in Tier one.
If you're thinking of a wait of saying Bennington and
Elcorn North, those are Class B for now. They're moving
up to class Should they move up fast enough to
be in Tier one and play Millard South and West Side.
That's one of the issues I have with this list.

(16:09):
But Stewie Pop is on the right track here. I
think the first thing, what Bennington and Elcorn North would
have going for him. That maybe Buyna Vista and Benson
don't is players who would be like, that's fine, let's go.
We'll play Millard South right now, which is part of

(16:30):
the moxie. You need not to say Benson doesn't have moxie.
At least they played in this game. Changed the rules
to play in this game. But at least they played
against Millard South and got crushed. So Tier one West Side,
Millard South, Elcorn South, Carney, Omaha North, Prep, Bennington Papellion,
le Vista South, Central, Elcorn North, Bellevue West, Lincoln Southeast.

Speaker 1 (16:52):
Tier two.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
Papio Papellion, La Vista, Millard North. I'll pause while all
of the pre Mustangs go. Wait, a day will have come.
We're not in Tier one, We're miller North. But I
know I surprises me too. And if Millard North or
Millard West wants to be up into Tier one, how

(17:14):
about this play better? You can get up.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
You can get up.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
That's why I say occasionally a one could play at
two like Millard South, Millard North. They gotta play each other, right,
they gotta play Millard West.

Speaker 3 (17:30):
No nothing else, just an exhibition game.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
Prapio. South's gotta play Patio. There's no exhibition games in.

Speaker 3 (17:35):
Football, just no, not yet there might have to be.

Speaker 2 (17:39):
So Tier two's Papio Millard, North, Lincoln East, Lincoln, North Star,
Millard West, Omaha, Westview, Columbus, Norfolk, Fremont, Lincoln, Southwest, Lincoln Northeast,
and North Platte. There's your Tier two. Who's left to
Lucy's question, Tier three South Sioux City, Lincoln High Burke

(18:02):
just to not even that far right, not even that
long removed from their state football championship, which shows how
much we have decimated these schools. Yes, Burke didn't they
just win the championship and was at twenty eighteen twenty nineteen.
So Burke is now Tier three. South Sioux City, Lincoln
High Burke, Grand Island, Lincoln, Standing Bear, Brian Buyna, Vista,

(18:28):
Bellevue East, Bellevue West is a Tier one, Bellevue East
is a Tier three. What happened to the chieftains? What
happened to the chieftains? Like I said, you can move
up play better? Who's left? Omaha South, Benson Northwest, and
Lincoln Northwest. So Stupaspissel says, here's how we fix high

(18:54):
school football. I might move a couple of teams from
tier to tier, but if this is a take it
or leave it, take it, this has to happen. The
fact that you've got Millard South playing exclusively Cupcake High

(19:14):
if that team even decides to play, is asinine, and
you wonder, like, how come the high school fans don't
come out and watch the game because it's a joke
and it's not funny. So high school football playoffs start
on Friday. Millard South, the fourteenth ranked team in the country,

(19:37):
goes into the Nebraska State High School Football Playoffs as
the fourth seed in Class A. How does that work?
Because they've been playing Cupcakes, they're still the favorite to
win this thing. But west Side says at Prep says,
we'll play him anyway. We're good with it. Let's go.
They got that moxie too. We'll see how it goes.

(20:00):
Very interested to see what happens this year. By the way,
where are the Greta schools in this one? Who do
we miss? Where's Gretona? I don't know, Hey, Stu, you
forgot the Greta schools. Oh I forgot the Gretna schools.
Once they made that split and added the new one.
They both went Class B. That's why they're not in
that plan. Well good, We'll have to continue to try

(20:22):
and save high school football in the state. For another day.
Because good morning, I'm Scott Boor. He's there's Lucy Chapman.
It's a pleasure to welcome on here someone who has
one of the more recognizable faces in American television. You
know him, you love him. He's here now from Fox News.
Brett Behar joins us here on news radio eleven ten

(20:44):
kfab Brett, good morning.

Speaker 5 (20:46):
Good morning, Thanks for having me on.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
What do you like more being a Fox News chief
political anchor?

Speaker 1 (20:52):
Or?

Speaker 2 (20:52):
Let's see here, six time New York Times best selling author.

Speaker 5 (20:59):
You know what, it's a tough question to answer. I
love both of them.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
You know.

Speaker 5 (21:02):
One of them I am covering day to day, drinking
from a fire hose, covering stuff that's happening in real time.
And the other one, I'm a reporter of history and
uncovering little jewels and nuggets that I think put the
reader in the room in our history. And I've really
fallen in love with that process. This is my sixth

(21:26):
presidential biography, and I think it might be the best.
I mean, Teddy Roosevelt jumps off the page, and it
was really a joy to write.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
This is one of my very favorite American presidents, right
up there with President Reagan. Why did you choose to
profile Teddy Roosevelt.

Speaker 5 (21:43):
Well, as I said, he's anecdotes are really rich. He's consequential,
our twenty sixth president. He was our youngest president at
age of forty two. The stories are really rich. But
each one of these books that I've written about kind
of has a soda straw look at a moment in
time that maybe history overlooked or was undercovered in the

(22:05):
big span of looking backwards. And I think that this
was Teddy Roosevelt and his wish that his legacy be
that America is on the forefront in the world, that
America is a global leader at the turn of the century.
At the time, there are other countries that were kind
of taking the baton and running, and he said he

(22:26):
wanted to put America on the map. So he does
that by engaging and as president, reaches out to two
warring countries, Russia and Japan, that are fighting over territory
and it's getting intense and it might devolve into a
world war, and he telegrams and writes to the leaders
of Russia and Japan and says, I want to host

(22:46):
a peace negotiation in the US. And he's really persuasive,
and he gets the delegations to come to Portsmouth, New Hampshire,
and he sets up all the logistics and the different
spots and the meeting places, and he shuttles between the
delegations and after intense negotiations for several days, they get

(23:08):
a peace treaty and Russia and Japan stopped their war,
and Teddy Roosevelt has what he wants. America is on
the map in the world stage, and he receives the
Nobel Peace Prize. It was a big moment that kind
of was overlooked in his history.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
The book is called to Rescue the American Spirit, Teddy
Roosevelt and the Birth of a Superpower. The author Bret
Baar of Fox News with Us here on eleven ten
kfab when you have law about President Theodore Roosevelt that
includes whether this is low or fact, stuff like, all right,
give me my horse. I'm going to go out there

(23:44):
and say you are going to build this railroad, and
you're going to do it now. To, Hey, who else
should be on Mount Rushmore?

Speaker 1 (23:49):
How about me?

Speaker 2 (23:50):
Put me on there? When you have that kind of
attitude surrounding a president, and it's hard not to draw
conclusions to President Trump.

Speaker 1 (23:57):
Don't you think?

Speaker 5 (24:00):
Yeah? I mean, I think there are similarities. You know,
they're both larger than life. They both you know, use
the press to their advantage, but also rip the press.
Teddy Roosevelt called the press muckrakers, and but yet had
reporters with him all the time. When he's building the

(24:22):
Panama Canal, he's got reporters as he's he's putting on
the boots and slopping through the mud and getting in
an excavator as he's charging San Juan Hill with the
rough riders in the Spanish American War. He has co
opted the New York Times guy to be embedded with him,
which is why we have very detailed notes and stories

(24:43):
about their exploits. So both of them knew the press,
both of them were had an attempt to assassination. That
they survived. Both of them are kind of tough to
pin down as far as what they're going to do. Ideologically,
Teddy Roosevelt was definitely a conservative and Republican. He believed

(25:05):
in capitalism, but he wanted capitalism to be for everybody.
He wanted to fight for the small guy. He's a
labor president. He's the first president that gets involved in
a labor dispute and a coal mining strike in nineteen
oh two. So you can't pin him down. And I
think the best part is that Teddy Roosevelt was called
a human cyclone. And I can tell you from ripping

(25:28):
up a rundown on a news show six times during
a day, President Trump can do a little human cycloning too.

Speaker 2 (25:36):
It's quite a comparison between the two presidents. But you
look at Teddy Roosevelt's life, sickly kid, a privileged New
York aristocrat, and then here comes this rough rider, rugged president.
It's all documented in this book that you have to
pick up to rescue the American spirit Teddy Roosevelt in
the Birth of a Superpower. I'd be remiss here, Brett,

(25:58):
in our last minute together, because we have so many
listeners here in agg country very concerned about the President's
Asia trip, more so on the soybeans and potential meet
front than on TikTok. What do you think is this
a consequential meeting. When you got Japan, you've got China,
South Korea, maybe North Korea. Is this a pivotal meeting

(26:19):
or is this Hey, we've agreed to the framework for
a trade agreement, which we've heard a thousand times.

Speaker 5 (26:25):
No, I think this is the big deal. I think
this is a really consequential moment. From everything I've heard,
the groundwork is set, the blueprint is set, and the
two leaders meeting together is going to seal the deal.
So I expect to hear big news on a lot
of different fronts already. There's been substantial news on the

(26:46):
trip that the White House has kind of dribbled out.
But I think once this meeting with President Hijinping happens,
the dynamic is going to shift, So expect big things
in the next day or so.

Speaker 2 (27:00):
Bear always a pleasure seeing you on Fox News Channel.
Great to have you in the program. Thank you very
much for the time in the new book. Scott Boys
Mornings nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven ten KFAB
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