Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
Scott Vordiez jurors were sent home.I'm a little surprised in this trial.
This is supposed to be the mostimportant election of our lifetime, and we've
got one of the major players inthis election who could potentially see jail time
as a result of what these jurorsend up doing in this trial in New
York, and they're not being sequestered. The judge sent them home last night
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and instructed them don't read any newsreports, don't search for information online,
don't turn on the TV and watchthe news, don't talk to your friends
and neighbors about the case. Howand if they can do that, what
a luxury. The jury began theirdeliberations in the hush money trial involving former
(00:50):
President Trump yesterday morning at about twoo'clock Omaha Council Bluff's time. They sent
their first note to the judge.And it wasn't the same note that you
would send to the judge. Thisnote asked to rehear four pieces of testimony,
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three from the former publisher of theNational Inquirer and one from former Trump
guy Michael Cohen. And you think, well, why don't they just look
at the transcripts jurors aren't given thetranscripts, so okay, So then they
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asked to rehear some of the testimony. Is it on videotape? No?
Well do they get a transcript?No, someone has to go in there
and read it to them like theirchildren gather around kids. I'm going to
read to you the testimony from formerNational Inquirer publisher David Pecker. Stop snickering.
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They have to read it to them. They Is this a typical situation?
Because maybe I watched two much LAlaw whatever s for you. I
don't know that any of this istypical. But well, that's true.
But does the jury normally, inmost cases get some transcripts that they can
look through when they need to.I will plead ignorance on that case.
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Apparently me too. I would thinkthat you would try and make this as
easy as possible, especially when you'redigesting several days worth of testimony, and
in each day it was several hours. We noted yesterday that the prosecutor in
this case took five hours to wrapup his case before resting, and then
the judge shut things down for theday. And then the next morning they're
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like, all right, here's abunch of instructions, which is, by
the way, fifty pages of legalinstructions. I bet they have that to
look at. No, they don'teven get that. No they don't,
because that's another thing they asked for. Yes, they wanted to rehear the
legal instructions the judge gave them yesterdaybefore sending them in. Like, all
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right, now, you have allthe information you need. Me your head
is swimming. Let's just think aboutthis jury of our peers for a moment.
You know that someday when you're triedfor any of the various crimes that
I'm sure you will commit, andI don't blame you for any of them.
I'm talking to you specifically, LucyChapman, at some point, I
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have no doubt Lucy will burn thisplace to the ground. The best we
can hope for at the time isnot to be in the building when she
does it. We're buddies, right, Can you give me a heads up?
Give me a heads up before youburn this place to the ground.
Buddy's safe in my world. Okay, here's how it's gonna work. I'm
such a pacifist, I don't evenknow how you could make a joke about
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it. Yeah, here's how it'sgonna work. Lucy's gonna be in the
middle of a time Saver traffic reportand just about the time she says,
well, things are looking pretty goodaround Omaha, however, and that's when
someone's gonna come barreling into the Timesavertraffic center, turn the lights on,
bring a bunch of smelly, perfumedfood in, and start yelling curse words
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in the background while she's live onthe air. And that's when Lucy's going
to say, that's a look atyour roads. I'm Lucy Chapman with a
smile in her voice. She's gonnaturn her microphone off, and then she's
going to burn this mother down,and no one's gonna blame you. She's
like, I don't know how manytimes I have to tell these people.
So when you finally go to trial, this jury of your peers is going
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to be a bunch of people whoare too stupid to get out of jury
duty. Right now, I imaginethat's how it works, because I've talked
to a number of people, soof you. So have you you over
there? Hey? Yeah, typicallyyou did too. You've all talked to
people that said, yeah, Igot called in for jury duty. I
got out of it. I don'thave time to waste for that, like,
oh, you know, time todo your civic duty. I've only
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been called for jury duty once,and the night before I was supposed to
go in, they said, nevermind, I'm willing to do it,
and I will be that guy thattakes it very seriously. It'll be an
eleven to one hung jury. Andit's like, we're not a hung jury,
it's just that guy I won't stopasking questions. I don't think going
forward from this, I don't thinkyou're gonna need to take any jury duty
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seriously based on what this judge istelling them, basically saying, yeah,
find them guilty of something. Idon't care what. Right. Well,
that's how all this started, youknow. They looked from the FAISA corn,
the wire tapping to all of thisstuff. They have just identified a
suspect and so we'll find the crime. But this jury of your peers,
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who are Donald Trump's peers, notRobert de Niro, who are his peers?
People who have been president and arealso titans in business and entertainment,
who are a jury of his peers? He doesn't have any peers Ronald Reagan.
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Well right, Reagan didn't you know? He had the president and the
entertainment, but he didn't have thebusiness stuff there. And as Lucy pointed
out, I'm gonna double check that, Lucy says that Ronald Reagan is dead.
I just saw him at Shields.He was hitting on a bench out
front. Are you sure that he'sI just saw him. He was getting
some socks, some athletic socks.A jury of his peers. So we
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got this jury of people too stupidto get out of jury duty, who've
been given hours and hours per dayof several days of testimony, fifty plus
pages of legal instructions. Someone hasto read to them the testimony of some
of these people. No wonder theydidn't come back with the yesterday urse.
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We're watching the news here today tosee if they do anything. Trump yesterday
said Mother Teresa couldn't beat these charges. I imagine there were probably a few
people on social media who pointed outMother Teresa was never charged with any of
this. I admit I'm not completelyup to date on every part of Mother
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Teresa's biography. I don't know everydetail of her life. I know probably
by as much as the common personas to what mother Teresa did and who
she was. I don't remember herbeing accused of paying hush money to cover
up sleeping with a porn star.I don't remember that. I'll ask her.
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I just saw her at Shields theother day. She was on the
ferris wheel. So as we lookat all this, we got the former
president saying, which hunt they're lyingto you? This is all which hunt?
That all they want to do islie to you, and so forth.
I like to take a look ata variety of reporting in all of
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this, and I saw one righthere in our very own local newspaper.
It's called the Omaha World Herald.Now this is not a story from a
reporter with the Omaha World Herald.This is just one that's published quite prominently
on their website, and I imagineit's in the print edition as well,
though I don't get a chance totake a look at it, as Gary
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and Jim steel it every morning.So that's fine. I look at the
online version. It's more up todate. The headline voter outreach groups targeted
by new laws in gop led states, it says voter outreach groups targeted by
new laws and gop led states arestruggling to do their work. So we
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have some groups out there just tryingto get people to register to vote,
make sure you have all the detailsabout how to vote. But it's Republicans.
These new laws in states led byRepublicans that are like, no,
no, we don't want you toout there assisting voters. Now, I'd
never seen in the local paper anystories about crime and immigration problems, workforce
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participation, all of these are goingthe wrong way and Democrat led states or
anything like that, and it's neveranything like that. So we have a
voter outreach group of several of themtargeted by new laws and gop led states,
and this makes it difficult for themto do their work. So I
start reading talks about during the presidentialelection of twenty twenty, there was this
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group. They hired more than onehundred people to go door to door as
well as attend festivals, different eventsparties to help register voters in Florida.
Florida's a gop led state. Whatdid Governor DeSantis do? Did he tell
him, hey, you can registerpeople to vote, but not any of
them quias did he do that?Because I guess that's what he hates down
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there. I always hear that,but this year their efforts are much different.
A state law passed in Florida lastyear forced them to stop in person
voter registration. It forced them tocut staff, which led to a significant
drop in funding, and they're justnot sure how they can go out there
and help voters this year. Thisguy, the director, says a tremendous
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impact on his ability to host events, go into communities to engage directly with
potential voters, says. Florida isone of several states, including Kansas,
Missouri, and Texas, where Republicanshave enacted voting restrictions since twenty twenty one
that created or enhanced criminal penalties andfines for those who assist voters. Criminal
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penalties and fines for those who assistvoters which have forced some voter outreach groups
to cease operations while others have greatlyaltered or reduced their activities. DeSantis imposed
a fifty thousand dollars fine against someof these third party voter registration organizations.
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Wow is this so? We havethe accusation that Republicans are stopping, presumably
now Democrat groups from doing voter drivesfrom going door to door or attending festivals
or different events to help register votersacross Florida, force them to stop in
person voter registration, cut their staffsignificantly. Wow, what did he do?
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Here's what the law says. Finally, one to three, four,
five, six, eight paragraphs intothe story, the story says the Florida
law signed by Republican Governor Ron DeSantislast May and posed a fifty thousand dollars
fine on third party voter registration organizationsif the staff or volunteers who handle or
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collect the forms have been convicted ofa felony or are not US citizens.
It also raised the fines the groupscould face and reduce the amount of time
they're able to return registration applications frompreviously fourteen days down to ten days.
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So we've shaved four days off ofgathering all of these registration applications and turning
them in for whatever reason, they'dtaken them from fourteen to ten days.
This shouldn't be a problem, butI guess it's creating a lot of problems
for their staff since apparently this grouphad a lot of staff members who were
felons and or in this country illegallyor not US citizens. What they're saying
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is and then the next one ofthe next line says, these are parties
actively working to suppress the vote,particularly in black and brown communities. All
right, so saying you can't havethese third party voter registration organizations. Some
of the other state laws in Kansasor Texas say you can't impersonate like official
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county election workers. You can't impersonatethem. That apparently is wrong. And
you can't have staff members out therecollecting potential sensitive information of voters during a
registration drive who are felons, oryou can't have people influencing the United States
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elections who are not in this countrylegally. And these groups are like,
well, how are we supposed todo any of this? All of our
people are illegal felons. And finallyyou get way down in the story and
you find out that these people arecrying about, well, where there forced
us to stop in person voter registration? No, they didn't nowhere in the
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story to say that anyone was forcedto stop in person voter registration. As
far as cutting staff, yes,if you're felon or in this country illegally,
which means you shouldn't be meddling inAmerican elections. You hear that Russia,
You hear that Florida. So thisis right there, big time on
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the Omaha World Herald website, againan Associated Press story not written by the
World Herald, but published by theOmaha World Herald, and again the headline,
voter outreach groups targeted by new lawsand gop led states are struggling to
do their work. None of thesestates targeted liberal voter outreach groups. This
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applies to all voter outreach groups.And if you're struggling to do your work,
maybe don't have so many felons.If you want to work around a
bunch of felons, then run forCongress. So when President Trump is out
there saying it's a witch hunt,they're all lies. They're all out to
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get me, some people are like, Oh, that's just a bunch of
yappin. He's all he does isyap. That guy is a grade A
yapper. And then you actually lookat how some of the reporting is done
in this country. In this nationalstory, if it was picked up by
the World Herald, it was pickedup by a lot of newspapers, and
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people see a headline read the firsthalf of the story and go, Wow,
these Republicans are evil. They don'twant anyone to go vote. I
guess that's what those Republicans are allabout. All right, enough politics for
now. Here's what's coming up onthe program. And about an hour and
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fifteen minutes from now, I've gota southern roots rock band playing live in
the studio, A six piece southernroots rock band playing live in the studio
on these airwaves, and we'll streamit live on Facebook. Wow, a
six piece ban You must have areally big studio. We do not.
I have no idea how this isgoing to work. I hope I'm sitting
(16:27):
on Brian Eckleberry's lap when he comesin here and does this. So that's
coming up after ten thirty in theZonkers Custom Woods inbox, Patrick emails and
says as far as Trump's comparison betweenhim and Mother Teresa, saying, Mother
Teresa couldn't beat these charges. AndI said, I don't remember Mother Teresa
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being accused of these things. Patrickstrains me out, Scott, that's just
how effective mother Teresa was at coveringthings up. You've never heard of Mother
Teresa with an adult film star becauseno one has ever heard the real story
of Mother Teresa. The Clintons areamateurs compared to m T. Thank you
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Patrick. I didn't know if anyonecould go darker than me today by even
suggesting that. But Patrick's taking astep further and in an impressive way.
And I'm here for it because Isaid, I said, there's no way
I'm doing this on the radio.And so now I'm going to tell you
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what I decided not to do onthe radio, just because I still really
want to do it. I gotand I'm telling you ahead of time.
This is all total just stupid,dark humor. But I saw the story
about the twelve year old Omaha girlwho competed again this year in the Script's
National spelling Game, and unfortunately shedidn't win the thing. She got knocked
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out. And I saw that todayand come in here and go, wow,
you know, way to represent Omaha. But going in there and losing
the spelling Bee, I didn't realizethey let dumb people in the spelling Bee.
Your word is disappointment. I canuse it in a sentence. You
know, I'm just trashing this sweet, incredibly smart twelve year old girl.
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No, no, I never dothat on the air. That's that'd be
terrible, but it was kind offunny to me and me alone. But
I don't. I don't do stufflike that on the radio just because people
hear that and they believe me.Guy in the radio is trashing that poor
girl. What if she was listeningall the twelve year olds. Yeah.
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In fact, I met some nicepeople last night who were out on a
walk with their teenage grandkids in thisinstance, and they were like, you
should listen to them, which Ijust have to sit there. Yeah,
no, no, no, Thegrandma and grandpa said you should listen to
him on the radio. And Ijust sit there with a forced smile on
my face going through this, goingthey're not going to listen. They're just
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not And then I heard the thingthat I hear from teenage. I have
two teenagers, so I usually theconversation is one of these friends of my
daughter says, my dad said,he listens to you on the radio.
I will tell your doubt. Thankyou, And then they try and feign
some kind of conversational point about youknow, what do you talk about when
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are you on the radio? Whatstation is it? And it's by the
time I get to it's eleven tenam, I hear. I don't think
my car gets AM radio, atleast I've never tried. So while I
appreciate the efforts, it's not goingto go anywhere. About the time those
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kids start listening to what we're talkingabout here on the AM radio is either
because they were inflicted to do thisstuff by their parents driving around and somehow
got hooked, or they start gettingpaychecks in their twenties and they look at
how much taxes was taken out andthey look at some of this stuff going
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on in society and go, I'moutraged. Where is an outlet from my
outrage? AM talk radio. Let'sgive it a try, and here we
are. Now we'll talk about somecrime. Omaha police. The story from
k e TV News Watch seven saidrobber has used a hatchet and a machete
when they went into a factory forcannabis. Those are two different tools.
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That's the name of a store,a cannabis factory down near thirteenth and Pierce.
Oh. That was here, yeah, just south of the thirteenth of
Pacific. This was here yesterday afternoon. The guy with the hatchet jumped over
the counter to steal as much ashe could. The guy with the machete
was manning the door. Both suspectshad their faces covered. Well, thank
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goodness, COVID nineteen is still anissue in our society, and I'm so
glad that at least two people aretaking it seriously. You know, it's
not an issue among thieves. Well, they had their faces covered. I
imagine it's because they're like, we'regoing to come in here and if we
have to, we're going to hackyou. We're going to hack you up,
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but we're not going to give youCOVID because I have a duty to
society to protect you and others.Yes, did anybody check to make sure
that that wasn't an assault machete oran assault hatchet? It was a high
capacity hatchet. Oh okay, wellthat should be banned. Police said.
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Waden was wearing a plaid shirt andblue jeans. Has anyone seen Larry the
cable guy? Wait? Did ithave sleeves? Yeah, if it had
sleeves and it wasn't cable. Butand the other guy was wearing a black
shirt and tan shorts. Wait asecond, I have a black shirt and
tan shorts. No other details onthese suspects and once again we have suspects
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who don't have skin color, haircolor, eye color, they don't have
approximate height or weight, telling youwe've got weird jelly people out there committing
crimes. Weird, faceless, shapeless, bland colored jelly people. Say,
if you have information that can helpOmaha police find the suspects, call crime
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spot stoppers. Well how about askingthe people at the store. They have
more information than I do. Iknow as much as you do. Hearing
that I wasn't there, I don'tknow. But if you were in the
area yesterday afternoon, it doesn't evengive a time, so you don't even
know. Like, oh, Iwas in the area. I was eating
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to Cassio's and I saw two guysrunning down the street with their arms full
of bongs and machetes. Should Ihave called police about that? It did
seem suspicious at the time I was. I saw these guys stealing from a
place that sells him and related productsbecause I was visiting my mom. There
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we go, I see what youdid. Thank you. Waiting for their
recognition. It's the buy your mom'shouse thing, even though that's a difference
to anyway. Fox News updating justa moment. Family of a man who
was shot and killed by security hererecently outside of a Lincoln bar says their
fight for justice isn't over. Wedon't know why he had to do this.
(23:34):
Of course, talking about the guywho shot him, I'll refresh your
memory. We'll talk about this next. Scottes there you know it NewsRadio eleven
ten Kfab Wilford emails here. Scottikfabdot com says, every time I see
someone wearing a mask, I wantto run up to them, rip it
off their face and scream at themit's over. You're not going to die.
(23:59):
I I don't. I mean Istill look at them and go,
well, that's one way to liveyour life. But that's it. I
don't let it get to the pointwhen I start yelling and mask ripping.
But Scott, we still have somethingon the way. COVID twenty four probably,
but also bird flu. Yeah,bird flu has moved into beef.
(24:22):
I don't know what these animals aredoing. Well, it's moved into people
too, like three people and howmany of them are dead? Did you
see that? The The latest studyis that the PRC I always get that
mixed up with the other test PRC, PCR, Yeah, PCR test that
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they have now said it did notdo anything, it was not accurate,
So there's that. Yeah, yeah, this would be the perfect time to
throw in a couple of quick storieshere that I really didn't want to talk
about today, but oh sorry,no, no, no, I feel
motivated to do so now just becauseit's been eating at me. And this
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is another one that involves disclaimers.Now, whereas the previous one I thought
was funny, there's nothing funny aboutthis. And I just look at this
and it makes me absolutely sick.Now, the nice silver lining here is
that out in West Omaha, theOmaha West Optimist Club is honoring a kid
who a few years ago, atthe age of eleven, took his own
(25:30):
life. And they've created a littlelibrary, one of those little free library
things out there in the street corner, and they're doing it in honor of
this young man because he loved toread. Eleven years old. And a
story says, this was one fromKMTV three News. Now, because you're
wondering why did an eleven year olddo? This story says, when COVID
(25:55):
nineteen hit, all his activities stoppedand this young man began to feel ice
at home, so that July,the eleven year old took his own life.
Now, I'm not minimizing the veryreal feelings that a lot of people
had during those early months of COVID. They were isolated because they were forced
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to be. You couldn't go visitfamily members in assisted living or in the
hospital. He had to stay awayfrom Grandma and grandpa, even in their
own homes. There was a lotof people trying to get together and driveways
and things like that. That wastrue in March of twenty twenty, in
April of twenty twenty, and maybeeven a little bit of May because they
were out of school. So thereare still some people. If you know
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what we were doing in July though, that summer, our kids were playing
all over the neighborhood together and theywere back to Little league baseball. It
was stupid little league baseball, Like, well, no one is allowed to
sit within three feet of someone elsein the outfield. What about a play
at the plate, Oh, youcan go crashing into him, but we're
not gonna make the picture and thecatcher, or we're not gonna make the
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batter and the catcher stay six feetaway. From each other. That's hard,
you know, but they were stilltrying. I mean, if it
was isolation in the summer after allof that. And this is where I
start getting nervous, because someone's gonnahear me blaming the family. I'm not.
I'm still giving grace to the family. They may have had circumstances with
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health issues in their family that causedthem to want to take this very seriously,
because at that time, we stillhad very little information, and some
people had decided one thing for theirlives and others had decided something else for
their lives, and the whole thingis just really, really sad. But
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there was still so much opportunity tolook at what happened to this young man
and say, all right, let'smake sure that we're not causing worse problems
by trying to fix what we perceivedto be a problem here on this front,
by causing worse problems for more people, by making the cure worse than
(28:11):
the issue. In other words,why am I just hearing about this kid
now? I mean, it's probablybecause you weren't allowed to say any of
this back then, all right,And if this story had come out back
then, maybe it did it probablywould have come out like, well,
this wouldn't be an issue if someof you anti vaxxer maga people would just
(28:33):
do what you're supposed to do,put a mask on and not go out
and all the rest. So gotto fight about everything. So silver lining
a nice thing they're doing for thiskid. That's so sad, and boy,
there's a lot of really young peoplemaking that decision not in their clear
mind. If they had clear mindabout it, they'd never do it.
(28:56):
I just heard about one of mynieces friends, just a couple of weeks
shy of her fourteenth birthday, madethe same decision. You just wish you
could tell these kids, like,look here, in a few years,
whatever it is that you're dealing withright now is not going to be anything.
And a few years after that it'sgoing to be even less. And
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a few years and at some point, maybe it's a decade, maybe it's
twenty years from now, you're goingto look back on the hopelessness and despair
you feel right now and you're probablygonna laugh at it if you can just
power through. I don't know.That is a message that needs to be
set at every aspect of everybody's lifebecause and that was what we were talking
(29:38):
about the other day, that kidstoday are not they're not learning how to
deal with stress. And you cansay you can hold on and it will
get better, absolutely one hundred percent. Whatever's happening now, it's gonna be
nothing in the probably near future.But if you don't learn to deal with
stress, because you're always going tohave stress always. So along those same
lines again, this is another storyI wasn't going to talk about in this
(30:02):
segment, but it it ties in. We have a story here. This
one from WWT cites the National Centerfor Missing and Exploited Children. They're seeking
the public's help and finding a missingteenager from Bellevue, a seventeen year old
girl named Haley. She left herhome in Bellevue on May fourth. Described
(30:22):
as five feet tall, ninety pounds, blue eyes, hair that's naturally brown
but maybe died blonde, and authoritiesbelieve she might be in Omaha Council Bluffs
and there's pictures of her. Hername is Haley. Just look up you
know, lost Bellevue teene. Buthere's the thing about this girl. I
sometimes in situations like this, Ido a little extra digging. This is
(30:45):
not the first time this girl hasrun away from home. In fact,
there was social media posts from fouryears ago and I don't know which member
of her family posted this on hersocial media mark my words, I will
find you, Hailey. You can'trun away your whole blanking life. Family
(31:07):
member was crying, way to go, you heartless little girl. And your
grandpa has cancer. Wow. Anotherpost on here where are you? Haley?
This isn't a game. You needto stop misleading everyone into thinking you're
a victim. One of Haley's friendssaid, maybe that's why she left because
of the way you're acting. Iwish I wish her the best. Yeah,
(31:34):
she's got some situation there, allright. Speaking of families in anguish,
I always give grace to families inthis situation. They lost a loved
one, and no matter the circumstances, they are allowed to feel the way
they feel, and they can goto the media and make comments like I
(31:57):
don't know why this security had toshoot this guy. Why didn't he fire
a warning shot? That is forpeople who aren't in a situation where they're
grieving the loss of a loved one, that is a really dumb thing to
say, and if you were everin that situation where you honestly feel it's
(32:19):
either my life or his, You'renot going to fire a warning shot.
This is not what the training isyou count. You don't fire warning shots.
You don't shoot the gun out ofsomeone's hands. You don't shoot their
pinky toe off unless you're in themovie Harlem Knights. You don't try and
shoot the tires out of a car. This is stuff from TV. So
what happened? Uh, there's thedate on this? Was it just last
(32:45):
month? The Royal Hookah Bar andLounge on O Street and Lincoln. Middle
of the night in Lincoln, groupof people got into a fight. Security
guards outside of the bar intervened.This is when this guy who is now
dead, grabbed the security guard's riotbaton, handed it to a friend,
(33:10):
and then started to fight like throwfists with the security guard. During the
confrontation, the security guard's handgun fellon the ground. That's when this guy
went for the gun. The securityguard had three guns on him. He
(33:35):
used one of them and shot andkilled this guy. The update on this
is that the Lancaster County Attorney's officedecided not to file charges. They said
an investigation, because this is allon video. I've seen the video.
It is as far as what I'veseen on the video, it is as
(33:55):
I described, not as the securityguard described, not as the dead guy's
friends described. It is what I'veseen in the video is what I described.
Guy goes with a gun after alreadyfighting with the security guard. It
wasn't like, oh, hey,you dropped something, let me pick that
up for you. They were alreadyfighting. He'd already grabbed one of the
security guard's weapons, gave it tohis friend, and all this is happening
(34:16):
in very, very quick time.So that's that's unfortunately what happened. Well,
the family wants to know why awarning shot wasn't fired, why the
security guard kept firing, Well,because he was shot three times. Two
(34:40):
wasn't enough, four was probably toomuch. And so now they're gonna say,
well, the justice system failed us, and we're still grieving, and
we're gonna try and take this toa higher power. Well, that videos
out there, good luck again thisfamily. They can say anything they That's
(35:00):
why we don't let grieving family membersgo into the county Attorney's office and go
We're going to make a decision asto whether or not charges are going to
be filed here. That's why wehave a sober third party doing that.
Update to a story from last week, there was a fear that people living
under the eighty fourth and Grover Bridge, like under the overpass, had been
(35:23):
washed away by the flood. Sodangerous situation, and a lot of people
said, wow, we got peopleliving under bridges and homeless en campas.
Maybe we should do something. Yes, we've been talking about it four years.
But in this situation, the citysaid, all right, you don't
have to go home, but youcan't stay here. We ain't got a
(35:45):
home, we're homeless. So theysaid you have to clear out by yesterday,
and starting tomorrow the city's going togo in there and clear it out.
But something very strange happened between theflood at this particular location Tuesday,
when everything and maybe everyone was washedaway, and then early this week that
(36:07):
homeless encampment grew families. People inthe area. Business owners said, we're
seeing more people here in this homelessencampment than ever before. Apparently it suddenly
was like, hey, there's noone living under there, go and people
started going to this place. Thenis a potential danger of losing your life.
(36:28):
A six piece Southern roots rock bandperforming here in our studios, on
this radio station and on a Facebookstream on Kfab's Facebook page after ten thirty.
What I don't know is how we'regoing to accommodate. I see keys
here. I know there's going tobe some sort of drum obviously, guitars
(36:49):
and vocalists, and we don't haveroom for six people. Well, we'd
have to be seven people, haveto be eight people in this studio.
Well, how many chairs do youneed and how many do you need to
be moved out of there? Wellwe'll figure that out here in a little
bit. I've given them popsicles,so they're all they're all, Yes,
they're all doing okay over here.They've all got their popsicles, Thank you
very much, Lucy Chapman, doyou know whose responsibility it is. Let's
(37:13):
say you're sitting there in your home. It's three o'clock in the afternoon,
so you're already two and a halfsheets in to just a standard you know,
Thursday afternoon, and suddenly there's acrash against your roof, your fence,
your car, all of the above. Your neighbor's tree has just suddenly
(37:39):
lost a huge limb or two andit's fallen on your property, and it's
damaged your property. Whose responsibility isit to pay for that? I had
this actually happened to me once thisthis did happen. It fell the neighbor's
tree fell on my fence. Well, we never got the fence fix.
(38:00):
If that tells me anything. Ibelieve it was. I believe was there.
It was their fault. As faras the insurance company goes, Nope,
Well it's been a while. MaybeI forgot. No it is.
It's your fault. But it's notmy tree. I know it's not.
This gets into every once in awhile. It's probably a pretty good idea
(38:22):
to get to know your neighbors alittle bit, because I try and be
a decent neighbor. And this,this almost happened at our house a few
years ago. We had a bigold Linden tree out in our front yard
that was lost during one of theseveral hurricane durratio things that we have here
(38:43):
in Omaha now, I don't know, half dozen times a year. This
one took out that tree. AndI always said, if this wind blows
that tree down, I'm buying myneighbor a new truck, because it's going
to land on this truck. Thisparticular night, we found out that it
can land within about four inches ofhis truck. Missed it by that much,
(39:07):
so he got scratched. No,it didn't even touch it. But
if that had happened where it feltand smashed his truck, it would have
been on him, like, sorry, this is a you know, tough,
tough break. You're gonna if youwant to get your car fixed and
(39:28):
pay your insurance to ductib and allthe rest of it, that's all on
you. Now, he could sueme, but he'd have to prove that
I knew that it was a dangeroustree that was in danger of falling down,
and I purposely put it there inhopes that it would crush his truck.
I mean, it'd be a problem. Now, let me tell you
what I would have done in thatcircumstance. I would have said, jare
(39:51):
Bear. His name's Jeremy. I'venever called him Jerbar, but in this
case, in this case, yeah, you know, he just lost his
truck, jare Bear, I'll payfor your insurance deductible. I would have
done that. I'd had no obligationto do. So, Oh do I
have that kind of money? Ido not. I work in radio.
(40:12):
I would have given him some likepasses to the taste of Omaha and a
radio station hat and yeah, andI would have and I would have paid
his deductible. Like what is yourdeductible? Is it five hundred dollars?
Thousand dollars? What are we talkingabout here? I would have paid it
because that's what a decent person does, now, I, you know.
(40:35):
And as soon as I say that, I'm like, I shouldn't have to.
I didn't do it on purpose.It wasn't my fault. But see
here in lies the issue. Andthis is what happened to Cindy and Pete
the story this week from WOWT sixNews. Cindy says, and this is
a quote from the TV report quote, I was sleeping and I was scared,
(41:00):
aired crapless above me, I feltthe ceiling shake, and I heard
two large booms unquote. So colorfullyput, Cindy, what happened. Branches
from a large limb penetrated the couple'sroof during the storms here Friday morning where
we had tornado forest winds, straightlined tornadoes. Well do they think of
(41:23):
next, So the insurance company says, yeah, will you know, obviously
you got damage here where. Here'swhat we feel your roof needs to be
replaced. Here's what we're gonna payyou minus your deductible and of course depreciation.
And that's when you argue, likedepreciation, there's nothing wrong with this
roof. I don't care if it'seight years old. It's a good roof,
(41:45):
you know, hey' that's the that'sthe battle you fight. Meanwhile,
it wasn't their tree. The trunkof the tree is located on the other
side of the fence in the neighbor'syard. His name is William. I
don't know if it was Mike mcnihythat went over and said knocked in his
door. If you look out thepeople and Mike McKnight is there, don't
answer it. That is not goingto end well for you. I mean,
(42:07):
unless like he's got like a beerand a pizza or something. But
that might be a trap. MikeMcKnight. If he's on your doorstep as
a business or homeowner, don't answerthe door. He's gonna get you.
But he declined to answer any questionsfrom WWT six News asking if the responsibility
(42:30):
for the tree is he is his? So of course Cindy and Pete say
that's not fair. But here's thething. So let's say, in your
instance, Lucy, you had atree limb or the whole tree fell down
(42:52):
and damaged. Well, no,I'm thinking about it. Since the fence
never got fixed it, that isprobably what happened. It probably landed on
me to pay for it. AndI decide not to fix a fence.
Okay, right now in your backyard, back in your back in your backyard,
there's a demolished fence back there thatstill hasn't do you wonder why your
dog keeps running away. It's myold house. I don't live there anymore.
(43:13):
You just like, oh, thepart of the fence is gone.
Let's just go. Let's just move. Are we selling the house? Nope?
Just pack up whatever can fit inthe bag. Let's go. Lucy's
filling a hefty trash bag full oflike pictures and keepsakes. Just go,
just go, just leave it.We don't need it. The part of
the fence is gone. That's gonnacost literally dozens and dozens of dollars to
(43:37):
fix it. Just vacate the premises. We're out. But until the tree
damaged your fence. I bet youliked that tree. I bet that you
were enjoying maybe some shade or somebeauty, or at least not having to
look into the bathroom window of yourneighbor's, you know, caddy corner from
(43:57):
you, because that tree provided somelevel of protection. You couldn't look at
them, they couldn't look down atyou. But that's how it goes.
You know, if you got atree there, if it's not on your
property, you still enjoy the estheticquality of it, perhaps some shade,
certainly the visualization that provides some privacy, both for you not looking in someone
(44:19):
else's window or them looking at you. I don't like all their leaves in
the fall. When I don't havetrees, you get birds. Birds.
Birds add to a nice quality oflife. You have birds, the birds,
squirrels. You never looked at thattree and said, oh, look
the leaves are changing colors, andthen you're like, wait a second,
it's July. Oh it's the emeraldash borer. It's all changing to ashen
(44:39):
blackish brown. Are you suggesting thatfor my entertainment purposes? I have to
pay for this tree just because I'mentertained with it. I have three trees
in my backyard. While Scott,you must have a big backyard. I
don't unless you're saying I got bigbutts and I cannot lie, in which
case I do. But in mybackyard, for some reason, they packed
(45:02):
three pretty big trees back there.Yeah, raking is a lot of fun.
Ask my son. I don't doit anymore. But you know,
my neighbors every once in a whileleaves fall on their property. I have
gone over into Jerebear's yard and I'veraked up some of the leaves from my
tree. I have done that.It's not that big a deal. He
(45:23):
was carping and I said, I'lltake care of it. He's like,
no, no, I was justjoking, like, oh no, no,
I don't want to put you out. I'm out there doing that.
So you know, I didn't chargethem. You know, they get shade,
they get privacy, they get theesthetic beauty of these trees. I
don't charge them for it. Idon't come over and say here's your portion
(45:44):
of what I'm charging you to lookat my trees. We're not going to
pay it. Well, then stoplooking at my trees. You know that's
how it works. And if atree limb. But here's the other part
of that. If you've got alimb and it's not your tree, but
it's hanging over into your property,you can cut off that limb. You
(46:06):
can. Yeah, once it getsinto your property, that's yours. Can't
say or do anything about it.You can cut that limb off. I
don't think you can go into theiryard to do it. You can cut
off the part that is hanging inyour yard. I got some projects tonight.
I have dreamt about going around theneighborhood with a machete hearkening back to
(46:30):
a story in the last hour orsome guy with a machete and then another
guy with the hatchet robbed a cannabisstore. I thought that stuff is illegal,
hatchets and machetes. Yeah, inthat instance for purposes of robbing the
place. There was gonna be three, but he got high. That's right.
(46:51):
I was gonna rob that store,but then I got high. I
was gonna grab a chainsawn go,but then I got high. Ah Da,
people don't know what I'm doing rightnow. I don't know what I'm
doing right now. Why should youknow? Where was I? Oh,
I've dreamt about going around on awalk and a nice like last night.
(47:14):
How nice was last night? Hownice? Perfect? Absolutely perfect? I
bet you didn't go outside for anyof it? Me, yeah, oh
yeah, I was said outside,I'm staring at my tomato plants, wondering
why they are dying. I juststare at them. They're shy. Quit
staring at them. They have performanceanxiety. They're very wilty. I'd like
(47:37):
to grow right now, but shewon't stop looking at me. So I
was outside. I want to goaround the neighborhood with some clippers or some
sort of machete or something and justwalk on the sidewalk and if you're one
of those dirt bags whose tree limbsare hanging down over the sidewalk to where
I got a duck down, orI got to walk into the street or
(47:59):
go into the yard whatever to getaround them, especially kids riding bikes.
You're up a little bit taller,and they're you know, getting decapitated by
these trees. I want to goout there with the trimmers and just hack
away your limbs. Kick I'm notgonna leave them on the sidewalk. I'm
not a monster. I just kickthem into your yard let me know when
you do that, because I willbe filming you and walking behind you,
(48:22):
watching this and keeping it all forposterity. As far as I can am
concerned, I can do that allright. You've got your limbs hanging down
on the sidewalk and it's messing upmy hair as I try and walk under
them. You know, it takesa lot to mess up this hair.
Then I'm gonna whack away at yourtree limbs. So this is an issue,
(48:44):
especially now with all these storms we'vehad. People are like, well,
I've got damage from your tree.Are you gonna pay for it?
No? I didn't do it,And them's the brakes. Is it fair?
I don't know. That's how itgoes. Speaking of complaints around town,
(49:05):
stop me if you've heard this one. It is now summer season in
Omaha. Don't start emailing me youSolstice dorks summer ninety front. Yeah,
thanks, after Memorial Day. It'safter schools are out at summer and people
are complaining about the amount of roadconstruction around town. Why don't they do
(49:27):
this in the winter? Well?Is there more this year than normal?
Let's discuss next. Scott got thisemail unsigned sent to Scott at kfab dot
com. I love emails like this, says says Scott. I have to
admit something to you. In thepast, I very often didn't like your
(49:50):
rambling and comments on your show andhonestly found it nonsense needless talk. However,
I have now become I'm so cynicaland crazed at this current government administration
through stupid rules and regulations, needlessprice hikes on food sold that tastes like
complete garbage now, and medical fiascosthat caused our entire country to hunker down
(50:13):
and look like damn fools that Iappreciate your rambling and cynicism and random blathering
more than ever now, and I'mright there with you on most every comment,
signed a lifetime kfab listener and middleaged small town husker girl who just
wants to be able to afford groceriesand a new pair of shoes. Well,
(50:37):
the price of groceries is down,That's what I heard yesterday from people
don't actually go out and buy groceries. I appreciate that email. It's not
that my random blathering and nonsense talkgot better. If anything, a team
of research scientists have determined that ithas gotten worse. What's changed your standards?
(50:58):
Perhaps I think I wore you out, and that's fine. I'll take
it as a win. Now,regarding the tree situation story we have all
the time around here. The treeis on your neighbor's yard, A big
tree limb falls, in this case, punctured their roof. That's impressive.
That's a big old tree. Limbwas very strong winds actually punctured the roof.
(51:22):
As Cindy says, I love whenquotes like this end up on the
news. You know, the JohnNicely's face, he's like, are we
saying this on the news? Shesays, quote, I was sleeping and
I was scared crapless. Unquote washe didn't say it? Did he?
She did? No? No,no, John Nicely didn't. That'd be
funny, though, John Nicely,with his handsome, sculpted looks, has
(51:45):
to read that quote, I wassleeping, I was scared crap Well,
I imagine some people would have probablygone the other way when they felt the
ceiling shake in her two large booms, large limb penetrated the couple's roof.
But it was on their neighbor's property. But it's not his fault. Now,
(52:10):
sharing email says, now, itdepends on whether the tree is alive
or dead. We had this happenearlier this spring. Our neighbor's tree fell
on our car. Because the treewas deemed dead, our neighbor's insurance paid
for the damage. If the treehad been alive, it would have been
on us. Because a live treecoming down is an act of God.
(52:30):
I don't like that phrasing, likeGod's just sitting there going, I'm bored,
and you're just kicking trees down intopeople's property. You know, as
he is the father, he doesn'thave God's dad sitting there going. Come
on, find something else to do. You're just you clean up after yourself.
I don't want to. You know, if any of this is blasphemous,
(52:52):
let me know now. Story herek E TV News watched seven with
the good weather. Lately, peopleare getting outside and hitting the road.
Get your motor runing. Constant constructionmay make for some slow going and then
(53:13):
it starts talking to neighbors all overThis is mostly West Omaha for the people
here complaining. A new project atMillard Avenue closed from U Street to one
hundred and forty fourth Construction set tolast through August Q Street and one hundred
and forty fourth real mess, saidthis person one hundred and ninety second in
Dodge. Yeah, the construction atone hundred and ninety second in Dodge is
(53:37):
a weird one. And maybe it'sjust because most of the time that I'm
out on West Dodge near one hundredand ninety second, you got the barrels
on the side of the road,and you got all the signs up saying
slow down construction zone. You gotto go four miles per hour through here,
and cops are just there pulling peopleover left and right. But I'm
looking around going but there's no constructionright now. The evening, they're not
(54:00):
out there. That's when I goout there. My son's got basketball practice
Tuesday Thursday nights out that way,so we're out there pretty late, and
I always slow down. But whenyou say there's nobody out there, they're
not working. But there's no barrels, Yeah, there blocking lane. No,
they're on the side of the road. Huh. Do I still have
to slow down if it's not anactive construction zone? Good question. I'm
(54:22):
guessing I probably do, but Ido. I'm the only one who does.
And when I say slow down.What I mean is I slow down
to what the appropriate speed limit wouldnormally be for that stretch of road,
meaning I was going over the recommendedspeed limit. Now I've slowed down to
the recommended speed limit, which isstill fifteen miles per hour higher than what
(54:44):
they want me to do through thatconstruction zone. I feel like I've probably
done my best civic responsibility here.And then you know, you get into
midtown Omaha, Maple Street's all shutdown and Benson, you got to go
through the neighborhood, which is sometimesfun if you go a block north or
south on Maple. I saw anew house yesterday I'd never seen before us
(55:07):
Like that house is great, andthey're looking out there going now all this
traffic is being diverted down our quietstreet. So yeah, it's a headache,
But is it more so than normal? It doesn't look like it to
me. This the shutting down oftwo lanes and squeezing everything down to one
lane, which they did last weekon four to eighty and then last night
(55:30):
on West Dodge. I think theovernight stuff doesn't count because there's not a
lot of traffic. It's not reallyaffecting too many people, and it's not
closed, it's not overnight though itwas eight o'clock last night. Well,
I think that there is more,but I think the perception might be there's
more because of the main arteries thatare really affected. Like if you're in
the south part of your south ofI eighty forty second, guys, you've
(55:54):
got lane restrictions there and Norton,yes, and northbound is closed down at
forty second for bridgework bridge work againthat we just built. Yeah, sixtieth
you've got construction there at I eightymostly coming from the south or coming from
the north heading south. And thenseventy second you've got construction there that's completely
(56:15):
shut down, right so you can'teven get to the interstate from south of
it barely. So that might bethe perception. But you're the one who
looks at all of this every singleyear. Is this more than normal or
is this just normal? It looksto me like it's normal. I think
it's going to be normal. Iremember telling you once, not that long
ago, probably last summer, thatI had five pages of construction, and
(56:37):
I think that's about what I've gotright now. You know my plan for
this, just take the construction cruiseand have them all attack one location at
a time. Just hit it hard. Bang we go knocked it out.
Where are we going now? Overhere? Go over there, Bang,
you knock it out. You don'tneed to shut down twenty seven different sites.
(57:00):
Just tack them all one at atime. The roads aren't gonna open
up and swallow us whole, exceptof course, for the think all a
thirty third cast. All right up? Next Fox News Update, the forecast,
Sports Update, and then yes,we've decided to let a six piece
southern roots rock band perform live hereon the air in our studios. Watch
(57:22):
Kfab's Facebook page. We'll be streamingit live on there as well and on
the air for you. Next ScottBoyes News Radio eleven to KFAB. I'm
streaming this on my Facebook link,Scott Vorhees on Facebook. If you're on
Facebook and we're not connected on there, then what are you even doing on
Facebook? So you can track medown on Facebook? And I think we've
(57:43):
got kfab linked. If not,I'll share it on there a little bit.
But what are we doing? We'vegot a six piece southern roots rock
band here in the studio. You'regonna meet these guys, we're gonna hear
about their gig tomorrow night, eighto'clock. It's slowed down in just a
minute, but I think think weshould start with some music. P Ladies
and gentlemen, please welcome Southern nights. Ready o to. I got out
(58:23):
the road, keep on high,and I'm down to keep on mine and
look on one more asum a dollar. But I'm not gonna let on catch
me. No, not gonna leton catch that midnight ride. And I
(58:55):
don't hold the clothes I wear readand the roller goes home forever, and
I got one more server dollar.But I'm not called it on catch No,
(59:15):
I'm not call it on catch amidnight ride. Come on, boys,
give him some guitar. Oh butI gone by the cornal carry some
(01:00:07):
old bed. I'll see share andI got one sue a dollar, but
I'm not calling it. Don't catchme, No, not call it.
Don't catch that midnight ride, orno, I'm not call it. I
(01:00:30):
don't catch me, no not anI don't catch that midnight ride, or
no I'm not called I don't catchme, No not call I don't catch
up min ride or beautiful guys,awesome, thank you so much Southern Nights
(01:01:10):
right here live on news radio eleventen KFAB. Thanks for having us introduce
the boys here. That is Eckthat's Brian Eckleberry right there. Welcome back
to KFAB. Brian former employee here, a guy who's worked at every radio
station in town. He is anabsolute radio icon, as in, I
(01:01:31):
cannot believe that you've survived in thisbusiness. I cannot believe they hired this
guy. Hey, please tell meabout this group here. So before I
introduced the guys, Southern Knights wasstarted because my wife, Anette, who's
not here, she's the other member, but Charles Schwab does not understand southern
(01:01:52):
rock and they would not let hergo. I don't understand it. We
should do this on location as Swab. Yeah, yes, she said,
honey, you're always out with ourband. You're doing weddings, you're doing
all that stuff. You're doing justinTimberlake. And I see the look on
your face sometimes, why don't youdo a southern rock band? And her
idea was genius. But you're gonnago ahead and grow the mustache, you
(01:02:15):
might as well implement it. Mightas well do it. And she was
right, man, and this isthe most fun and I think you ask
every member of this band, thisis the most fun we've ever had in
any band ever. So it wasa great idea and it pays tribute to
the classics of southern rock. ABros. Alman Brothers, Marshall Tucker Band,
(01:02:35):
Molly Hatchett. I mean, it'sgood stuff, man, and it's
hard not to love this music.And people recognize the music. You know.
Sometimes when you do these tribute bandsand you maybe focus on one group,
you know, it's tough because they'relike, oh, you got another
deep album cut there, do you? Oh, don't know it? Right.
We don't have to do deep albumcuts. We just do all the
(01:02:57):
classics of southern rock. Little everybodyknows Skinner, you know, everybody knows
it. So then the thing wastrying to find the right musicians and we
definitely did that first on banjo andguitar. This is Matt Manning over here
in the hat. Yeah, forhold your hat real close to microphone so
radio listeners can see it. Therewe go, that's not he actually did
(01:03:17):
it, all right, So dude, I think I think you just found
this guy, and you're like,well, we got to do something with
this. You know, he's gotthe hat, the sunglasses, the hair
and the beard. It was justit's like you are a Southern rock band
personified. I love it. Thatis fantastic. Yeah, that's awesome.
So who else we got here?Chris Shram on guitar, very good,
(01:03:43):
Omaha guitarist, on percussion, MichaelPahato he does percussion with us. On
the bass, Ezra Broderson he's overthere and on the satsophone and flute and
keyboards and vocals. He's the utilityguy. Stan Harper, who you probably
know from Finest Out Joe Blue House, so we're very lucky to have him.
(01:04:04):
And then of course Annette, mywife, who is not here today.
She's the eighth member there. Yeah, it's it's fun because you guys,
I see you guys. Oh ohmy gosh. I would be so
he be so mad at me becauseI love him so much. The star
of the show and the biggest partof this was finding the right drummer,
(01:04:26):
and we definitely found that with TravisMusney. He couldn't be with us today.
But there's no room for a drumkid. There's barely room for a
flute in here. At this point, Travis, he doesn't know what you
look like, so don't take thatpersonal, buddy. But yeah, there's
no room for drums in here.Yeah. Well, I love this because
I recognize you guys from playing ina lot of different bands. And sometimes
(01:04:48):
you'll see that it's a kind ofan incestuous local music scene where you got
the guitarist from this band also playswith that gun and sometimes the background guy
on this one fronts his own bandover here, and so you go around,
you're like, I recognize these guys. So it does get a chance
for you guys to perform a lotof different genres, though with Southern Nights
(01:05:09):
here it is one specific genre,one specific genre, and one that as
a boy that was raised in Savannahand fell in love with Nebraska, it
is such a pleasure to bring someof the music of my childhood to the
Midwest because I love Nebraska and nowI love the music I'm doing in Nebraska.
So go what do we call ourselves? Corn dogs? Cornhusker and bulldogs.
(01:05:32):
Go corn Dogs Tomorrow night slow Downis where the show is. Yeah,
and you guys got to get inand out there. Don't tear the
place completely apart because We're in thereSaturday night for the Mustaches for Kids stash
bash, So it's going to bea big weekend to slow Down here.
But Tomorrow night, eight o'clock show, doors open at six thirty thirty.
Find Southern Night's band on Facebook,Yeah, Southern Nights Band, or you
(01:05:56):
can go to the Slowdown dot com. They've got tickets there too. We
get one more song out of you, guys, We would love to do
it. You out in the streets, all right, So one more here
from Southern Nights Tomorrow night, eighto'clock hit Slow Down, ladies and gentlemen
once again, especially if those watchingon Facebook, where I know the audio
is not pristine because of all that, but it's just fun to see these
(01:06:16):
guys. Please welcome one more timeSouthern Nights. No we're doing. Can't
you see there a little discussion asto which song is gonna be here?
(01:06:41):
All right? Here we go.Flute on Camfa, Come on, Mike,
(01:07:34):
gonna take a free tem down atthe station. Long and the dog
can wear ankles, Gonna climb mountain, the highest mountain, jump on.
Nobody gonna you can't just ship?Can't you see what man? Mama she's
(01:08:04):
been doing to me. I can'tunderstand. Can't you see? Can't you
see? Old can't you see whathell wama sheen doing to me? What
I'm going up? Find me ahaul in the wall now I'm gonna crawl
(01:08:28):
inside and down. It's my oldlady. She's a mean old lady like
Lucie. She never told me togo bye. Can't you see? Can't
you see what man waman she ain'tdoing to me? Can't you see?
(01:08:57):
Can't you see my bad warma she'sbeen doing to me? I need some
guitar right well, I'm going tobuy a ticket now as far as I
(01:09:32):
can, and I ain't never comingback until the Huskers start winning. Gonna
ride a southbound oh the way tojoege and now till the train runs out
of track, Sit along a hardCan't you see? Can't you see what
(01:09:56):
the warmer she's been too hood tome? Can't you see? I didn't
you see what warmer it's been doingto me? I almost a dress.
(01:10:56):
Southern nights right there, and there'salways it's always good night for Southern nights.
Tomorrow night slow Down is the show. Dowri at six point thirty,
show at eight o'clock. That isSouthern Nights on Facebook, Facebook, dot
com, slash Southern Nights band guysawesome. Thank you all so very much.
Thank you. Scott Scott Voices morningsnine to eleven, Our News Radio
(01:11:18):
eleven ten KFAB