Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Dude, Erotic City was so much cooler than Atomic City.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Oh dude, so right. I've been saying that for years.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
People have people will argue with me about this, but
where would you rather go hang out with? Bono?
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Or? Don't even know how they can make an argument
over that from it. I mean, it's just obvious to everybody.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
Prince hung out with all these hot chicks. Bono just
hung out with the Edge. You want to hang out
with a guy named the Edge?
Speaker 2 (00:23):
No? No, you want to hang out with Sheena Easton?
You know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Most of the chicks Prince hung out with were babes,
with the exception of Shenead O'Connor.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
They were fantastic. Was she.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Oh my gosh back in the talk about she thinks
she still looks like that?
Speaker 3 (00:38):
Or what?
Speaker 2 (00:39):
Oh yeah, because bag don't cry? Yeah, why is that?
What are you guys doing that we're doing? Well?
Speaker 1 (00:46):
She's uh am I allowed to answer that question.
Speaker 2 (00:50):
Yeah, what does it.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
Y'all do that we don't do? That makes you guys
age better? This is y'all stuff. Yeah, what is it
you guys are doing?
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Guys? What does it use?
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Well, that's Upper coast guys. Hey, you guys, I'm Midwest.
We just say you guys. Oh okay, yeah, I'm not
Upper East Coast. That's a little too Yankee as Ewans
feels more like a Nebraska ish like like Midwest, but
country bumpkin Midwest, you know.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
Which also helps if it rhymes with stuff like doing
what you into doing? Yeah, what Ewan's doing.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
The only problem with that part of the Midwest, while
generally it's the same values as the South, that's where
the worst food is when you're in the Midwest. If
you want the good food, you have to go towards
the cities like Saint Louis has got toasted ravioli.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
They even have Marti Gras there. It's just cold out.
It's not really Marty Grass. Well they've been. It is
having a birthday besides Brian Cranston, the legendary Walter White
from Breaking Bad, who is in fact sixty nine years
old nice as of this morning. Have I told you
my Brian Cranston story. It's short. I met him after
(01:53):
mouth saw it and it's short. Yeah, that's what I mean. Yeah, No,
we're all in the men's room together or or did
he just show it?
Speaker 1 (02:02):
It was twenty years ago. He's doing a promotional tour.
He was about to announce Breaking Bad. He had just
finished doing Malcolm in the Middle, and he told us
all about his new show at this radio station up
in Chicago, and none of us thought. He was like,
what is it. He's like, I'm a meth dealer and
I have cancer, and we all looked at each other.
Speaker 2 (02:18):
He was a science teacher. It sounds terrible. He was
a science teacher, becomes a meth dealer, he's got cancer,
and then things get out of hand.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
Billy had Have you never seen Breaking Bad? I bet
I've seen it. Okay, well, anyway, happy, probably happy. He's
sixty ninth.
Speaker 2 (02:30):
I can't remember, because I did see that long where
the lawyer who does all kinds of wacky stuff, and
he was Breaking Bad's lawyer, so I might have seen
Breaking Bad too. I don't better call Sauw that. Yes,
that's all. He was. Funny man.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Very rarely is the spin off better than the original.
Remember that time he was asking the guy in court.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
He's on standing. He's like, uh, and do you recognize
the man who robbed you? Is he here in court today?
They go, yeah, he's right there, and he points to
him because he's sitting at the defendive table. Yeah, sure,
obviously he's like, he's right there. You're sure that's the man.
And it wasn't too dark, you know, you didn't need
glasses and no, that's him. Sure, Like, well, that's odd
because the man that robbed you, or at least is
(03:09):
accused of robbing you, is actually sitting back there in
the back of the an. Oh boy, they just lost
their mind. But he was right. You misidentified the subject.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
Bro, But I saw goodman. He's a good lawyer, Cole Saul.
Everybody needs two lawyers like that. You need one lawyer
that does everything by the book, straight laced, clean cut,
and then you need a guy that you call when
you need to hide a hooker's body.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
You know, right, you know what I mean. He'll help
you with the shovel, that's what he does, you know.
Speaker 4 (03:34):
So.
Speaker 2 (03:35):
Brian Cranston sixty nine. I guess we covered all that.
Other celebrity birthdays. Laura Preppleton, she was in that seventies
show and then not to be typecast. She was in
Oranges of the New Black. Okay, I guess both. Yeah,
I know who she is. She's forty five today, Jenny
Fisher was Pam from the office fifty one, Peter Sarsgar
(03:57):
fifty four, Rachel Weiss five today, she's very good. Wanda Sykes,
who cares? Taylor Dane sixty three? Could she possibly pout anymore? Wow?
I don't think so. Laura prop naked a lot. I
like that, dude, We have that a lot of stuff.
Hold that thought. Lynn Swan seventy three and Franco Harris,
(04:21):
both born on the same day, who were on the
same team. Is some super Bowl thing. Although Franko Harris
is no longer with us, some super Bowl today would
have been his birthday, born in nineteen fifty. Willard Scott
also no longer with us, born on this date, nineteen
thirty four. Today is sock Monkey Day. It's also National
(04:42):
Cereal Day. So have you some thos? What'd you call
the turks and cockos? Turks and caicos?
Speaker 1 (04:51):
It's yeah, Cocos is a cereal you put you put
that in your mouth, whereas turks and kekos is an island.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
Ye. And then tomorrow's celebrity birthday, My goodness, James Vanderbeek
and Freddy Brinn's junior both having birthdays tomorrow The Beak
forty eight, Freddy forty nine, Aiden Quinn not bad himself.
He's sixty six years old tomorrow. Nice Gary Newman of Cars,
you know Cars, sixty seven.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
You know he does like hardcore goth music. Now he
went in the other direction. Gary Newman.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
Mickey Dolans from The Monkeys will be eighty years old.
He's still with us, and so I guess that makes
him the last one? Is he the last one? I guess? Oh?
An Alan Hale, junior skipper from Gilligan's Island Tomorrow his
birthday as well.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
There's no way that guy is still alive. That guy's dead
is Oh, yes, there's no way. And then Sunday, let's
see if anybody here ever heard of Emmanuel Lewis from Webster.
Speaker 2 (05:53):
Yeah, obviously I'm related to him. Yeah. Juliette Binoche is
her birthday. Cato o Klan, the most famous of our celebs,
will be sixty six on Sunday. I feel like you're
kind of a Cato Kalen kind of guy. I'm sorry.
Why is that?
Speaker 1 (06:08):
Well, because you hang out with us and we're more
notable and accomplished, but slightly more controversial, you know, feels
both kidding. Yeah, exactly brought a dog. Yeah, you brought it,
you schooled me. Yeah, you're like the Cato Kalen to
mister O's Oh ja wait wait a second, wait, No
that's what I like.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
No, that's not right. Never will he slay with the
white ladies.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
And the white bronco bro I always wish I could
drive one of those.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
Sunday's also Mickey Gilly's birthday, not that he's with us
anymore either, but born nineteen thirty six. Okay, so there's
that little situation. More like Kato Kalin. As far as
I know a lot of celebrities good hair, and I
have great hair, and I don't generally, you know, talk
(06:53):
about what I know about celebrities, I keep my mouth closed.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
And you know who to call when people want to
party after the bar close wink, wink, nudge nudge, cinnamore.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
How about this day in history since you just sponsored
Oh yeah, it's brought to you by Home. Well, law Tigers,
you've hurt of law tigers. I'm sure. If you're a
motorcycle rider and you don't know about law Tiger, you
best get to know about law Tiger.
Speaker 1 (07:15):
If you're a motorcycle rider and you don't know about
law tigers, you'd probably ride a scooter, probably especially on
National Cereal Day.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
It's the new.
Speaker 4 (07:22):
Breakfast cereal that will make you get up and go,
go go.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
New breakfast Blocks.
Speaker 4 (07:28):
It's sugar cubes rolled in frosted flakes and then covered
with melted Reese's peanut butter cups. My teeth are getting
sensitive just talking about my new breakfast Blocks. Look for
Pegleg the pirate on the box. Are I just lost
part of me leg eating breakfast Blocks? Don't forget the
type two diabetes causes blindness, But don't worry because you'll
(07:49):
love the smell and taste of new breakfast Blocks.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
Part of this nutritious breakfast.
Speaker 4 (07:54):
Just make sure you eat the toast, bacon, eggs, cheese, pancakes, fruit, vegetables,
orange juice.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
And milk, and don't have a cereal. Thank you. The
reason it's National Serial Day. This day, one hundred twenty
eight years ago, doctor John Kellogg served the world's first
Cordon Flakes to his patients at a mental hospital, Battle Creek, Michigan.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
Okay, okay, I've done a deep dive into this before,
so no you have. It's a fascinating story. John Kellogg
is actually not the guy that you think he is.
It was his brother who sold it. John Kellogg was
this guy that was obsessed with He was obsessed with
fecal matter, and he was also obsessed with self pleasuring.
He thought that this. He was very anti masturbation, couldn't
(08:37):
stand it. And he was a Seventh day Adventist in
Battle Creek, Michigan of a physician, devout religious fanatic, and
people often incorrectly think he was the guy that did
the cereal. It was his brother. His brother was like,
you're crazy, but you're onto something with the cereal.
Speaker 2 (08:55):
Yeah, that might be good. Yeah, anyway, forty years ago today,
eighteen eighty five, we are the word. Oh God, I
hate it.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
We are the children least upon the globe today. What
was the band called we Are the World? There was
a name for the band, the whole, the whole.
Speaker 2 (09:14):
Everybody in the music industry saying on that song, no,
they called themselves something.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
What the hell was it? Oh, it's bothering the crap
out of me. I guess it doesn't matter.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
I should know this, but I don't.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
It was like USA for Africa, Oh, I used to
have a shirt that said USA for USA.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
And it would really piss people off. Boy, there you go.
Speaker 1 (09:31):
I'd wear that around and they'd be like, oh, you what,
you don't like Africa. I was like, no, I just
you know there's Africans in America.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
I was one of them early ones that fought against
black lives matter. Huh No, I thought the same thing.
No globalism, all lives matter of some foolishness like that.
How could that be controversial to say that I don't understand.
I get that, all right. I got a few on
my list, but not a lot. Are you done? Because
I think I'm way done. There seems to be some disagreement.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
About when Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone, because that
was on our list yesterday, and yet here I am
looking at it with today's date.
Speaker 2 (10:05):
Sometimes he patented other things, like the phonograph and things.
You know, different guys. I'm businessing Bill, all these different guys.
There were a lot of patents going on back in
the day, all right today.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
In nineteen twenty three, Robert Frost published Stopping by Woods
on a snowy evening.
Speaker 2 (10:21):
Oh I love it. That's one of my favorites. That's
the best. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
When I hear that song on the radio, I'm just like, yeah,
pump it up, Robert Frost again.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
And when do you do a little of it? Can't
he Oh you do it pretty well singing a little
of it for my favorite.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
I mean really, I think the best stuff that he
did was probably Stairway to Heaven was good, and then
obviously Misty Mountain Hop was a good one. I think
a lot of people agree when the Levy breaks, but
Rocky Mountain High, No, it's a different band.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
No, I don't know who this guy is.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
Robert Frost played bass or guitar for led Zeppelin. Anyway,
today in nineteen sixty five, that's when sixty years ago today,
sixty years ago today, Bloody Sunday, peaceful Civil Rights March
met with violin. Today was the day that happened. Oh no,
and you two wrote this horrible song about it. Everybody
(11:06):
hates it. That's worse than the actual event.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
Yeah, it was terrible that.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
I always thought that Boomtown Rats song I don't like
Mondays that was so much better. This is just a
better song than Sunday, Bloody Sunday. You know what, I mean,
crank this up because nobody likes Mondays. People hate it.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
They was weird. Yeah, I like every day. I'll wake
up today.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
In twenty ten, Katherine Bigelow wins Best Director for uh
now do.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
You think you pronounced that? Don't even Catherine. I don't
even know Catherine. Who is she? She's the director of
the hurt Locker.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
They made a movie called hurt Locker. Yeah, this was
all way before you, uh developed your adult brain. Hurt Locker, Hurtlocker.
What was it about?
Speaker 2 (11:51):
Nothing? Wasn't about nothing? Hurt Locker, hurt Locker. We don't
have time for all this barely newer. Get it, Get it, gentlemen,
this is a disc judge good, we talk about something
besides yourself. Walton and Johnson Radio Network.
Speaker 5 (12:07):
In the nineteenth century, masturbation was a public health crisis. Well,
at least that's how some Christian fundamentalists viewed it. Anti
masturbation crusaders blamed self gratification for a list of ailments,
including blindness, infertility, epilepsy, insanity, and a fondness for spicy foods.
That last one actually came from one anti masturbation crusader
(12:29):
in particular, an American doctor named John Harvey Kellogg. That's
the Kellogg had a lot of ideas about the relationship
between diet and masturbation. He thought the urge to self
stimulate or self pollute, as he called it, was related
to eating meat and seasoned foods.
Speaker 2 (12:47):
Really, that's why we had to have cornflake, something brand
and healthy.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
He gave it to his patience, and then his brother
looked at him cross eyed and said, you should just
sell that at the store to people.
Speaker 2 (12:58):
You shouldn't. It's good bread, fish food. It's not. The
rest is history. That's how they say.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
They thought that self love was caused by meat and
spicy foods.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
I don't know if they're right or wrong, but I
got to tell.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
You, just speaking for myself here, that would explain a lot, Yes,
it would.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
Yeah, And I just I heard from some of my
friends out at the Purgatory that we've made over the years.
While we take the show on the road occasionally we
do have friends to get our Rocky Mountain high on Hi.
They've got ten inches in the last twenty four hours.
They are so lucky.
Speaker 1 (13:34):
Wow, ten inches. That seems like a lot, Yes, it is.
Why did you say it like that? Why did you
say it like that? What did I say? I said,
ten inches is a lot of snow. What are we
talking about here?
Speaker 2 (13:46):
Yeah, well what are we talking about? I don't know.
They got twenty five inches this week, so yeah, two
extra feet of snow this week for powder play. You
can stay on beast, all right? So we both agree
twenty five inches is too much?
Speaker 5 (14:03):
Right?
Speaker 2 (14:03):
No, a lot too much.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
It's just a lot, Okay, it could be troubling, totally
unrelated to what we're talking about. A Starbucks manager says
he was just fired for being heterosexual.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
I thought he said he got fired for being straight. Fired.
That's the same thing. But if he said straight. If
he said straight, then that's what he said. If he
said heterosexual, then I stand corrected.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
I'm reading a report that says heterosexual in the headline.
The author's name is Justin Roclick.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
You think he's lying. I think he might be mistaken. Okay,
so you saw the news story. Here's the gist of it.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
This guy worked at Starbucks for a long time, and
now he's suing the coffee house chain for discrimination, retaliation,
and intentional infliction of emotional distress because.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
He gets fired.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
He says, his boss is ignored the extreme and outrageous harassment.
He claims he's suffered on the job because he's a
straight guy.
Speaker 2 (14:54):
Well, so he reacted to the harassment and that's what
he got fired for. But he says that they should
have understood because I guess gay people were being mean
to him.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
Christopher Thavanisen is a heterosexual, gender typical man from Rochester,
New York. He claimed supervisors at his location treated him
in a materially different manner than employees who were not
heterosexual and or gender typical men.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
That's how the lawsuit's written.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
And the suit, which was served on Starbucks right just
like a week ago and the last month, describes the
forty seven year old as a model employee who performed
the essential functions of his employment in an exemplary fashion.
But the lawsuit contends his LGBTQ plus coworkers created a
hostile work environment due to his gender typicality and sexual
(15:44):
orientation and.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
Higher a weird world. Now we can't just say the
guy was a dude, he was a man. Now you
have to say he was typical of his gender. Yeah,
oh good, Yeah, my life is so different from this. Yeah,
and as it should be.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
Remember that art exhibit we were talking about on the
show the other day about like what where there was
a naked guy and a a naked woman standing in
the entrance and you had to squeezed between him to get.
Speaker 2 (16:08):
To the other. Yes, I do.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
And I had pointed out how there was a conversation
on the internet about whether what was gay or facing
the guy or facing the girl when you walk in,
And we were talking about at the gym yesterday, and
halfway through the conversation we all looked around, like, I
wonder if this is making people uncomfortable. And here this
guy at this Starbucks, his life is exactly the opposite.
If he were to sit around and have a conversation about,
(16:30):
you know, like whose boobs were the biggest or whatever,
that would have been the thing that would have upset
his coworkers. Yeah, boy, I am so glad you're the
odd one out here.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
Mister Cunning's just all turned around backwards, now, ain't it?
Speaker 1 (16:42):
It really is now to speak Hey, by the way,
you asked that question earlier about the eighty seven thousand
dollars cheeto at the auction block.
Speaker 2 (16:49):
It did sell.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
The report I saw wasn't clear, but someone did pay
that much for it, Cheetah.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
It was an auction, so I assumed at some point
somebody was gonna win. I just didn't know if that
was the final bid.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
Pokemon shaped cheeto eighty seven thousand dollars, not.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
Just any old Pokemon. It was a charge aarn, my god, man, Charzard,
I mean, not peaked what it is. Pikachu maybe, but
you know, act like you do because it's cool. It's
hip with all the youngsters. All right, you can no
longer publicly trade Walgreen stock. They just made a deal
to go private. I never was.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
Walgreen's Boots Alliance will be taken private by Sycamore Partners
for ten bills ten billion dollars, the first closing out
nearly a century of trading on public markets for the
US pharmacy giant, a century of trading. Walgreen stock has
existed for over one hundred years, and now it no
longer exists, and the price is a fraction of the
(17:40):
one hundred billion dollars the second largest US pharmit chain
was worth a decade ago. The fortunes collapsed as drug
margins fell in consumers turned to cheaper rivals like Amazon
and Walmart to fill their prescriptions.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
It is what they do. You can get them on Amazon.
Now they're hitting you it at yout It.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Does feel weird going in. Have you been in a
CBS or a Walgreens lately? I don't know when it happened,
but at some point, very recently or maybe not very recently,
that become a dated business model. I'm the only one
in the Walgreens and I live in a crowded part
of the city. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (18:11):
The last couple of times I've been in there, it
was mostly for entertainment purposes. I was in the makeup
aile and then I noticed some guy just walking out
the door with an armful of stuff, and I looked around.
I was like, there's an off duty police officer working
in security. He didn't get up out of his evil
on his little stool. He didn't get up. The lady
behind the counter, she just looked over at the door
(18:33):
where the guy just walked out without paying. She's looked
over and like shrugged her shoulders. Like him again, So
I asked her. I was like, what's the deal with
him just leaving with this?
Speaker 1 (18:43):
He comes in every day, he comes in every day
and get stuff and just leaves. You know, I don't
know why am I not just walking out without paying too?
I gotta imagine that security guard was probably having a
stool problem because he didn't need enough kellogg cereal.
Speaker 2 (18:59):
That's probably his biggest problem. Yeah, it makes sense. Are
you so gay for space?
Speaker 1 (19:04):
Now?
Speaker 4 (19:05):
The Walton and Johnson's show presents gay for space?
Speaker 2 (19:09):
So gay for space?
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Homer around it, mister Kenneth, look's heterosexual compared to how
you feel about space? Around here for yourself, and it's
brought to you by my Legacy video dot Com.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
It's the website where you can go and get a
legacy video made for yourself. It'd be my legacy video.
Imagine if your dad was I don't know, say Elon Musk.
Speaker 1 (19:31):
Boy, If my dad was Elon Musk, I would quit
this show right now. Yeah, I know, I would be
just driving around. Could you imagine if you had all
that money, you could do anything you wanted.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
But imagine if you didn't know what your dad was
all famous for and he died and he's no longer
with us and you don't have it, wouldn't the legacy
video really be handy? Why wouldn't you just read his
Wikipedia page.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Okay, imagine he was Elon Musk, but not that was famous.
Oh well that kind of changes the whole thing, really exactly.
It still sounds like a great Servicelegacy video.
Speaker 2 (20:00):
How do I find him on the internet? My Legacy
video dot Com? You have to type that into the search. Yeah,
like with a keyboard. Yeah, all right.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (20:08):
Megazella has caught talking to your phone. Look, I'll do
it right now. My Legacy video dot Com goes right
to it. It worked, son of a gun? How about that?
All right?
Speaker 1 (20:19):
Megazea has caught the super heavy booster.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
Did you guys get a chance to look at this yesterday?
I missed it. This was pretty cool stuff.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
Space ex booster caught by a tower after the Launch'll
we put it up on the screen host everybody.
Speaker 2 (20:31):
Can described it. They said they just parallel parked a building.
Look at how awesome this is. It's like a It's
like a skyscraper. Bro, this was super cool. It comes.
Speaker 1 (20:45):
It looks like it's like this long spherical It looks
like the thing that you fell out of your It
looks like the thing that fell out of your luggage
at the airport that one time.
Speaker 2 (20:54):
Mister Kenneth remember than that though, Yeah it is.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
Look at that and look at how the fire kind
of moves around and right to steer it in. Oh yeah, bro,
And then make Azilla closes.
Speaker 2 (21:04):
And then they clamped down on it. Oh dude, that's
some guysn't really getting paid for this stuff. I told
you it is really cool. Look how cool it is, bron.
It looked like they just ran the video backwards and
we fell for it. That's exactly what it liked. It
looks like it took off. But then they just reversed
the video and we're like, wow, look at that, and
they're just laughing at us because we fell for it.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
So the booster did exactly what it's supposed to do.
But the rocket broke apart and fell to the earth.
The part that was still up in space. It was
that over the Bahamas. It blew up and rained debris
down and they had to close some Florida airports for
a while. Fortunately, Bahama's not even in a real country.
Nobody cares about that. Just go inside the resort for
(21:46):
a couple hours. That people who live there don't matter.
And so then the other news was the airports right
which probably really upsets some people. I don't know if
you've ever been to the Miami Airport, but it is
one of the most likely places to watch a fist
fight if you're at an airport.
Speaker 2 (21:59):
Drew, that's true, and that's usually a good time.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Something about the Memphis Airport, the Atlanta Airport, the New
Orleans Airport. I don't know what it is, and the
I don't know why those airports are so prone to violence.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
We should we should probably look into it.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
And the Baltimore Airport. Something about those specific airports. I
don't know why, Memphis, Baltimore. Anyway, we'll see if we
can figure it out.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
You know, we may be here all day trying to
figure this kind of stuff out, but we work hard
so that you don't have to. We work hard. Oh yeah,
I know he's right. We were that men are trash. Yeah,
but they also say that. Wilton and Johnson Radio Network