Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vordies. Today's program is brought to you by an acid,
lots and lots of antacid, an entire bottle of antacid,
not uncle acid. I've heard of boys and berries, but
I've never heard of girls and berries ant acid, uncle acid.
I tell you what, I feel better, and the humor
(00:23):
has gotten so much better too than it was an
hour ago, right, Lucy, Yes, thank you?
Speaker 2 (00:29):
All right.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
First, before we get into this book review in just
a moment, a recommendation about a book that I have
not read yet, I'm gonna still recommend it. First, going
back to our friends at the Los Diablos Motorcycle Club
Los Diablos Spanish term. It means the Diablos. I took
(00:52):
French in high school. The Devil's Motorcycle Club. This is
a little biker bar near about twenty fourth and Ams.
And apparently you know how most bars have to either
shut down or stop serving at was at two am?
Speaker 2 (01:13):
Is that at two am?
Speaker 3 (01:14):
Two am?
Speaker 1 (01:15):
Yeah? The only thing I'm drinking at two am is
a little bit of water after I've gone up to
use the restroom and try and go back to sleep
or life fitfully awake for a couple more hours. I know,
but two am is when my brain says, hey, are
you sleeping? Yeah, leave me alone, And then it just says,
are you ready to go for that thing next March?
(01:35):
And you're like, all right now, I'm up. I don't
I don't even know there was a thing, but stupid brain. Anyway,
these guys go way past two am, three am, they're
still open, they're drinking, they're fighting. Four o'clock in the morning,
they're drinking, they're fighting. They're inside the bar, they're outside
the bar, and apparently it's just it's just biker gangs.
(01:56):
They just hang out there to drink and fight and
everyone's it's a while. Guy gets shot and that's why
we're talking about this. One person was killed over the
weekend at Los Diablos Motorcycle Club. And now we got
the story here from k EETV Newswatch seven that in
the last how long here, since twenty nineteen, last five years,
(02:20):
there have been one hundred and fifty five calls to
nine to one one from people in the neighborhood complaining
about that biker bar. For all the fighting and the
shooting and everything else that goes on there. Now it
is a rough place once we heard about this incident
over the weekend, we surreptitiously. Is this illegal to do
(02:44):
in a private business? We had our microphones there. News
Radio eleven ten kfab microphones were on the scene to
hear a guy get roughed up after he touched someone's motorcycle.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
I see kill him. I say, we hang him, then
we kill him, I say, we stop him.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
See oh man, And it just got really rough from there.
I tell you that's what happened at Los Diablos Motorcycle Club.
This just the other night, rough place. Thank goodness for
that jukebox. Otherwise that guy would have been killed, so
(03:37):
he was let go. No, that actor is actually dead today,
murdered by the Lost Diablos Motorcycle Club. If I don't
ding your eighties movie reference for this segment of the
radio program, people are gonna lose their minds. Lucy, you
want to take an unreasonable stab at what movie?
Speaker 2 (03:57):
That was?
Speaker 3 (03:59):
Three Musketeers, Three Amigos.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
I mean no, it's Peewee's Big Adventure.
Speaker 3 (04:06):
You didn't see that, and you close well aware of
the fact that I've never seen that.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
I my brain refuses to acknowledge some of the things
you tell me just because I get that, I already
feel bad enough for your life, Lucy. I was your weekend.
Speaker 2 (04:21):
I painted a plant. I painted my tomato plants. It's
just so sad it worked all weekend and painted a
tomato plant.
Speaker 3 (04:30):
It's much sadder when you say it, though I don't.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
I sat around not watching some of the greatest movies
of all time.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
I remember being a kid.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
You have a camera in my house my mom.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
I was hanging outside with my friend Damon on a
perfectly good summer day, and my mom said, you guys
want to go see a movie? And, being kids were outside,
We're like, we're playing in dirt. Why were we going
to go inside and see a movie? She said, But
it was so rare that this kind of thing would
be offered up. We're like, okay, And she took us
to go see Pee Wee's Big Adventure. And I'm watching
the first five minutes of this movie, and even as
(05:08):
a little kid, like ten years old, I'm thinking, this
is stupid? Is this all?
Speaker 2 (05:16):
This is?
Speaker 1 (05:17):
Why does my mom hate me? And then it quickly
turned and became something I don't think. I blinked for
the next hour and fifteen minutes I was so infatuated
by the brilliant comedy from Paul Rubins and Tim Burton.
What a great movie. Pee Wee's Big Adventure. Anyway, back
(05:39):
to Los Diablos Motorcycle Club, one hundred and fifty five
calls from the neighborhood brought police to the club's address
in the last five years. Let's see here, one hundred
and fifty five. Six were for shootings, five were four
reports of shootings. Others include a couple of calls for assaults,
only two in five years, ten for crowd complaints, eighteen
(06:02):
for noise complaints, nineteen for disturbances. That's it's like a
hundred calls.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
For what.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
Parking someplace they weren't supposed to.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Anyway.
Speaker 3 (06:16):
It sounds like people want to call the police about
this club, but they don't really want to call the
police about this club.
Speaker 1 (06:24):
I don't know that any of the calls came from
anyone at the club.
Speaker 3 (06:28):
I would assume not.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
I mean, it seems like we're not going.
Speaker 3 (06:32):
To call the police on themselves. Hey we got a
noise complaint where right here?
Speaker 1 (06:35):
Well, a guy might call the police going, hey, I'm
getting assaulted in here. Okay, that might be someone might
call the police and go, my buddy is over here
getting assaulted. Doesn't sound like anyone inside the bar is
calling the police. And sometimes you just go into a
place and you know, tonight I might get in a fight,
I might get shot, or I might have to fight someone.
(06:58):
I might have to shoot someone. And that's apparently what
the patrons of Los Diablos Motorcycle Club have decided. I
don't know that anyone's in there going. I heard that
there was a delightful place that you go in here
and eat fried chicken and see raccoons. Wrong biker club.
That's the Alpine Inn. It is a great place where
(07:20):
bikers go and get food before they go to this
other place and just fight each other all night. Hey,
on Tuesdays there's karaoke. That's where we strangle someone with
the microphone cord. After they went up there and two
guys sang, can't we try? By Dan Hill and Vonda Shepherd,
where did these references come from? One of the most
(07:43):
truthful duets in all of music history. Where she's Vonda
Shepherd's trying to tell Dan Hill about her feelings, and
he replies with how did I know. I wasn't listening.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
How did I know?
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Oh, He's like, I don't know. Why are you telling
me this? Now? Love that song?
Speaker 3 (08:07):
Didn't you see it in all the sandwiches I made?
Speaker 2 (08:09):
That's right? How did I know?
Speaker 1 (08:13):
So these guys just show up just to fight and
maybe get shot a little bit. So apparently the story
here from k e TV News Watch seven is people
in the neighborhood who want to shut the place down.
All right, let's examine that. Where do these people go
if you shut down the biker bar where they go
(08:34):
in there to maybe do a little fighting, little drinking,
little shooting, a little stabbing. Where do they go? They
go to the place next door, and then they go
to someplace else, or they just cand of hang out
in the street in front of your house. This seems
to be the place where biker gangs go to maybe
kill each other a little bit once in a while,
not a lot. Six times in five years, that's like
(08:59):
basically one a year. It's not that it's not that
big a deal. Where do you want him to go?
Right now? West South Omaha. They're all like, you know what,
keep them over there, keep keep the biker bar over there.
Sometimes it's best just to look the other way. Yeah,
maybe there's a place down the street where people get
(09:21):
a little bit shot.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
All right, don't go in there anyway.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
It's something the police have to deal with. And now
there's something else the police have to deal with, which
leads me to today's book recommendation. Omaha Police Chief Toad
Mater has written a book, Lucy. It's yeah, it's a
coffee table book. It's just shirtless pictures of Omaha Police
(09:50):
Chief Tod.
Speaker 3 (09:51):
Mad Nope, nope.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
Sold, sold, sold, that's just me buying them. He's Oh,
you're I'm not saying Nope, I'm not going to buy it. Nope,
you're not going to be roped in. Dude, I'm not
gay or nothing.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
Yeah, I know you're not.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
But Van Halen's a pretty sweet rock band. And Omaha
Police chiefs Tash Mater has got the dreamiest eyes I've
ever seen with what right up there with Rob McCartney.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
Rob McCartney and Chief Hanson.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Yeah he's a he's a sheriff. But whatever.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
Yeah, that's what I said, right, Sheriff Hanson. I implied it.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
Yeah, it was it was implied. Thank you for that.
So yeah, it's just it's just shirtless pictures. There's one
picture in there of Omaha Police Chief, Chief touch Matter,
where he's wearing some really tight jeans like the cover
of George Michael's Faith album. What He's just wearing some
really tight jeans and he's shirtless, and he's looking back
(10:59):
over his right shoulder, and the caption is get a
little behind in your work. All right, I'm going to
read from the press relief release about this book what
this book is about. But based on the title of
(11:21):
this book, which, by the way, the book title is
Synergy of Influence, it seems like that's the title of
a late night Cinemax movie.
Speaker 3 (11:37):
The story is just getting better and better, Synergy of Influence.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Chief Toad Schmadern, one of the longest serving major city
police chiefs in the United States, proudly announces the release
of his new book, Synergy of Influence, Synergy of Influence, Synergy,
starring Emmanuel leg Stockings. Throughout his tenure, Chief Taschmatter has
(12:14):
led the OPD through major incidents I understand incidents, a
rising major incidents, including two serial killer arrests, civil unrest
requiring the National Guard to intervene public corruption, scandals and
(12:35):
high profile arrests. Busty McGill stars in the new Cinemax
movie destined to be a classic. That's right, Busty McGill,
the Pride of Ireland. She puts the d's in Dublin. Girl, Yeah,
(12:57):
don't step on my punchline. She puts the d in Dublin.
Busty McGill and Todd Schmoter in Synergy of Influence, now
available where you get your books, and also after ten
thirty at night on Cinemax Stock forties News Radio eleven
(13:19):
ten k fad. Can't wait to read that one. That's
gonna be I'm going to read that's bedtime story material
from my kids right there by the way. It is
a it's a real book by Todd Schmater. That's not
at all what I portrayed it to be. I'm saying
that so he doesn't punch me in the face. The
national media now looking at story here in the Washington Post.
(13:43):
The national media now looking at the United States Senate
race that apparently is getting really really tight here in Nebraska,
if the national polls are to be believed. Preston Love
Junior is up thirty points on Senator Pete Ricketts, and
that just seeing if anyone's paying attention. No, oh no,
(14:03):
they're not even close there. And that's part of what
leads me to be a little dubious about what's going
on here in this other race. And this is what
the Washington Post is writing about the Senate rate between
deb Fisher, Republican incumbent, and Dan Osborne, a union guy
(14:24):
who stood up to Kellogg's and said, Kellogg's, tear down
this cereal box. And Kellogg said, all right, we'll put
you guys. We'll get you a real fall in line
with your demands, dan Osborne and your union confectionery workers
there in Omaha. And then first chance we get we're
(14:45):
leaving Omaha. Good luck hanging out, good luck finding something
to put inside that Kellogg's plant. So Kellogg's is leaving
Omaha here in a couple of years. That means you're
probably looking that. I think probably by October of twenty
twenty six, the Kellogg's plant there about ninety six in
(15:07):
f streets. That'll be a spirit Halloween. I don't know
if Dan Osborne and his union workers will be working
there at the time. I don't know, maybe, but that'd
be a scary haunted house. Haunted house called scabs. So
you got to get through the picket line and try
and get to work like I got to feed my family.
Speaker 2 (15:28):
I'm not, you know, like.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
You're not getting in there and going to work making cereal.
And then you actually you have to sign a waiver
because the scary picketers out front will touch you hard
in the face. That'd be a fun haunted house, wouldn't it.
So dan Osborne stood up to Kellogg's, and Kellogg's then
(15:49):
stood up to Omahan and said, all right, well, I
guess we're not in Omaha anymore. Dan Osborne literally taking
jobs away from Omaha, Nebraska. Dan Osborne for Senate. So
he's now an independent candidate for Senate. And as we've
learned and talking to Dan Osborne over a couple of
(16:09):
times here in the past several months, is that Dan
Osborne's a likable guy. He's a good dude. I like
dan dan Osborne has some conservative thoughts that are gonna
be too much for liberals to vote for him, And
he's got some liberal thoughts that are and donors who
(16:30):
are going to that are gonna be too far left
for conservatives.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
To vote for him.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
That's why I'm not sure that any of this about Oh,
dan Osborne, he's ahead of deb Fisher in this race.
I don't know if that's true unless Nebraska really is like, hey,
we just we're tired of deb Fisher and we kind
of like this guy. He's new, he's a different maker,
he's an outsider. He's gonna cauc us with the Democrats,
(16:56):
and Democrat hasn't won statewide office in here since Beny.
Is that true? Think about it? Yeah, I think that's true.
We'll just go with that. So I don't know. And
if it's true, I mean if all the Democrats are lying,
because they'd have to write all the Democrats would have
to vote for dan Osborne, which would mean then all
(17:19):
those Democrats are going to vote for Preston Love and
that Senate raise against Pete Ricketts. But you don't hear
any stories about Preston Loves gaining on Pete Ricketts because
it's not happening. So what we're to believe all the
Democrats are voting for Dan Osborne, and a lot of
Conservatives they're voting for a guy who's called Bernie Sanders,
(17:42):
you know, one of the greatest politicians of our time
or whatever.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
He said.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
He was a Bernie Sanders guy. So this is enough.
Some conservatives are like, yeah, you know whatever. I don't
know that I'm buying it. But the story here in
the Washington Post says Republicans are starting to spend money
in Nebraska to try and prop up US Senate incumbent
Republican deb Fisher. Here's the funny thing to me, though.
(18:10):
The story here in the Washington Post says a political
science professor at the University of Nebraska Lincoln said state
voters are more independent than recent election results might indicate. Quote.
The people of Nebraska see themselves as the salt of
the earth, blue collar and so when you have someone
who is that, I can certainly see why that kind
(18:33):
of candidate would be immediately attractive.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
Unquote. Wow.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Who is this political science professor at UNL who duped
the Washington Post into thinking that he was just an
outside observer as to what this situation is in Nebraska.
His name is Ari Cohen. Ari Cohen is a super
left of left, progressive, miserable, angry, left leaning social media
(19:05):
junkie who just tweets against Republicans. Tweets against Trump, tweets
against Pillin, tweets against whatever Republican is out there. This
guy is so far left. He's one of these who
operates this you know, blue whatever the heck is a
site seeing the scene Red Nebraska is the website that
(19:29):
he's a part of. It's just a bunch of angry
liberal liberals trashing conservatives in Nebraska.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
This guy is.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
Not an He is a political science professor at UNL.
But he's not to be like, Oh, I'm just a
just an outside observer here looking at this race bull.
This guy is so far progressively left. But that's uh,
that's how this is made to look. In the Washington Post,
(19:59):
the story that says Osborne, a steam fitter and union
leader in Omaha who led a strike against Kellogg's in
twenty twenty one. Let's see, does it say where Kellogg's
then told Omaha to go cornflake themselves. Nope, they didn't
mention that Kellogg's is leaving Omaha as a result of
the strike led by Dan Osborne. A lot of people
(20:21):
are wondering where to get this book, as Omaha Police
Chief Todd Schmater's book Synergy of Influence, which has its
own soundtrack when we mentioned it in a small Midwestern town.
It's one man against the seedy underbelly of Omaha's crime syndicate.
(20:46):
One man and his woman. Boobs Macintosh and Todd Schmater
star the Scottish Heart Throw's.
Speaker 2 (21:01):
Back in Time.
Speaker 1 (21:04):
And Todd Schmater star in the new Cinemax film Synergy
of Influence. Synergy of Influence, Energy of Influence Tonight on Cinemax. Yeah,
I can't wait. That's gonna be a really great book.
(21:25):
See they're already making it into a movie.
Speaker 3 (21:28):
Has he called you to complain yet?
Speaker 1 (21:31):
Let's check my text messages. No, he's fighting crime, He's not.
Speaker 2 (21:35):
All right?
Speaker 1 (21:35):
All right, it's a real book, Yes it is. I
don't know that it's a love story. I just the
title Synergy of Influence. I just I hear that, and
I think Sherylyn Finn. There's a reference that'll be lost
on many of you who are hoping to get into
(21:57):
heaven someday.
Speaker 3 (21:58):
I'm thinking I might be glad it's.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
One of those late night, blonde, bombshell Cinemax chicks from
the nineties.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
Ah.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
Yeah, good stuff. And so we got a lot of
people emailing excited about the new book and apparently corresponding
movie that Brett is looking at the Lost Diablos motorcycle
bar we were talking about earlier, and he said, it's
a lot like rather than the two ancient Chinese gangs,
(22:29):
it's two ancient biker gangs it Lost Diablos, and then
has a link. He says, there's an eighties movie reference,
which is a shame you never bring up. He's referencing
Big Trouble in Little China. It's true. I don't quote.
I'm trying to think if I use any quotes from
(22:50):
that movie.
Speaker 3 (22:51):
Is that Kurt Russell?
Speaker 1 (22:52):
It is Kurt Russell. The only quote that comes to
minus just him saying Jack Burton, you know, when talking
about himself and the third person telling stories. But Brett
as a fellow fan of Big Trouble in Little China,
I will tell you I made last year my then
let's see, thirteen year old son watched that movie with me,
(23:17):
but I spared him because he's like, I don't understand,
this is dumb. I just fast forward into all the
fight scenes and at the end, especially with some of
the sci fi stuff that happens with some of the
Karate guys like the guy who swells up so big
he explodes. My son was like, this is so weird.
(23:38):
I'm like, I know, isn't it great? I don't think
my son thought it was great. I don't think he
went to his friends and said, guys, I only just
heard here's a movie we all have to watch together,
Big Trouble in Little China.
Speaker 2 (23:54):
But I liked it all right.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
The latest here from Florida. Don't worry Florida as Hurricane
Milton is now on its way to Tampa as a
category five hurricane, and there's even conversation that it could
reach category six status one. Problem, there's no such thing
as category six. Cat five is the highest. There's no
(24:21):
such thing as something higher than category five. Apparently you
have a really strong category five hurricane. But we still
got about a day and a half isshu until this
would potentially make landfall on the Gulf coast of Florida.
Hopefully it calms down. Did anyone think about telling Milton
to calm down? Just pass your nineties movie reference for
(24:47):
this segment of the radio program. I wonder if the
people of Florida are happy about the Yahoos and Omaha
making office space references.
Speaker 3 (24:56):
My guesses maybe because they're pretty good.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
Yeah, But do you think the people of Florida, you know,
they see a headline like, oh, a tornado just hit Nebraska,
They're like, of course it did. Then that happened, like
every day must be Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
Yes, you know.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
So I'm not being if we named our tornadoes, I'm.
Speaker 1 (25:17):
Not being cavalier about the danger that this storm poses
to Tampa, a community. I really like, I have very
fond memories of being down there and playing golf during
a tropical storm, which is one hundred percent true. I
was down there in twenty twelve for the Mitt Romney
Republican National Convention. That day one of the convention that
(25:40):
Monday was stormed out as there was a tropical storm
really close to getting hurricane status, but at that point
it was really strong winds and rain blowing sideways with
the winds was like forty to fifty mile per hour winds.
And I said, I've played golfing worse than this, But
(26:00):
because everything was rained out, I was like, there's a
really good golf course near here. I'm gonna go check
it out. And I went and checked out in this
brook and they said as I tried to get into
this private club that was housing people from various states
delegations who were in Tampa. They said, we're not letting
anyone in today without a tea time. I said, tea time?
(26:23):
Is the golf course open for golf? And they said sure.
I said, can I play golf? And they said sure.
So I rented some shoes and a set of clubs,
bought a couple of golf balls, went out and played
golf in a tropical storm. Shot eighty three went plus
(26:45):
one through the snake pit. Scott, is there anything else
you'd like to tell us about the hurricane? Yes, for
the people in Florida who know that this storm's a
little different than the one I just described. Used to
hurricanes down there, This one, on top of the last
one Helene, in the same area is something that certainly
(27:07):
has the entire nation watching with interest and in some
cases horror. But don't worry Tampa. A sarcastic don't worry
Tampa when you get hit again. FEMA has the resources
and the money to help you. Well kinda. According to
(27:28):
The New York Times, after Hurricane Helene, didn't even hear
about Tropical Storm Debbi in New York flooding and landslides
in Vermont, tornadoes in Kansas, a wildfire and Arizona. Did
this all just happen in the last week. There weren't
tornadoes in Kansas last week anyway, This is what the
(27:52):
story is saying. The agency says that they got FEMA
representatives stretched to the limit, and if Tampa ends up
completely underwater, we only have about nine percent of personnel available.
So that's what your tax dollars are helping out with.
(28:14):
This is certainly going to be the site of the
worst active disaster in the country tomorrow night throughout Thursday,
and FEMA's like, eh, we'll get to it when we
get to it. We got people in Springfield, Ohio that
needs some help putting cats on rotisseries. We've got to
allocate money and resources there. So it's raining in Tampa.
(28:38):
What do you want us to do about it? We're FEMA. This,
by the way, is the same administration, the Biden Harris
administration that you'll recall made a prisoner swap for Britney Griner,
a WNBA basketball player who isn't even who doesn't even
(29:01):
try to be Caitlin Clark. She's this whole other player
I thought we only cared about one. But Brittany Grinder,
a WNBA basketball player, went to Russia, had some marijuana
in a vape pen. Russia said time for you to
go to a Russian prison, and she said for reels,
(29:23):
and that's what happened. And so they put her in prison.
And America said, we've got to get this basketball player
who hates America back. We'll do anything, and so in
exchange for a basketball player, we gave Russia an infamous
murderer arms dealer named Victor Boot, aka the Merchant of Death.
(29:46):
We remember this, right, this is the trade that President
Biden made. Well, here we are not quite two years later,
and Victor Boot has not seen the error of his ways.
According to the Wall Street Journal, old Merchant of Death,
Vic has been personally brokering the sale of weapons to
Iran and the Iranian backed hoo the rebels of Yemen
(30:10):
to attack Israel. So let's see here. Iran gets a
bunch of money unfrozen by the Biden administration, embolden to
whether it's the houthis hamas Hezballah, emboldened to attack Israel.
That's because of what Joe Biden and Kamala Harris did.
(30:31):
And then we also released the Merchant of Death to
sell them the weapons to act as the go between
between Russia, Iran and terrorist organizations in the Middle East.
Yet Chuck Hagel, who admits that Kamala Harris is very
weak on foreign policy, still says he thinks that she's
(30:51):
the best candidate for America and the world because he
doesn't like Donald Trump. All right, but we've got a
situation in Canada as well, Lucy, I tell you, no
one has time to sleep anywhere at any time. They
just picked up a serial killer in Canada. Apparently Canada does. Oh, Ontario,
(31:21):
Niagara Falls area. Is that so we just picked up
a serial killer in Canada killed three people in three days.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
Is that?
Speaker 2 (31:34):
No?
Speaker 1 (31:34):
That well this according to the police up there. That
means because it involved random targets that would be the
mark of a serial killer. But we arrested her. You
don't get a lot of serial killers who are women,
that's true, which surprise. And she's thirty years old and
her name is Sabrina And I'll spare you guys the
(32:00):
internet search. No, she's not hot. See, this is the
biggest difference, as they try and blend the genders and
the biggest difference between men and women. First of all,
do you know how easy you would be for a
woman to be a serial killer? You know, some guy
approaches some woman and it doesn't matter how good looking
(32:22):
he is. He's like, hey, come with me, coming back
with me down this dark alley or into this van,
or come over to my house. Most women are like,
I don't know. That sounds like a bad idea. A
woman is even barely registers on the you know, as
like a three and a half out of ten. It
(32:43):
could be like, come with me. A guy's like, all right,
let's see where this leads. You have any idea how
easy it be for a woman to be a serial killer.
Speaker 3 (32:50):
That's exactly what happened with Lizzie Bordon.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
That's not so I mean, it's so bad that they
said they picked up a thirty year old woman named
Sabrina for me to still serial killer. And the first
that I thought was is she hot? And the answer
is no, not even close, not even close. And she
killed a couple of guys and a woman allegedly, So
(33:16):
you don't get a lot of serial killers that are women.
But this just goes to show you Kamala Harris is right.
Women can do anything. It's twenty twenty four. Scott Voices,
News Radio eleven ten Kfaby