Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I'm gonna be honest with you. I was not paying attention.
I didn't. Also, it's it's a holiday basically, sorry, everybody
lighting up everybody.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
The song ended and I looked at I was like, oh,
we're supposed to talk three minutes.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Ago, Well here we are. I was talking ive again.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
We were talking on our Thanksgiving plans off the air,
and it was fat and seeing Foreigner.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Boy, this is gonna be something.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Huh wait, I'm sorry, the classic rock band besides.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
All the new balloons. The ninety ninth annual makes the
Thanksgiving Day Parade will feature Foreigner. I thought that really
stood out as an oddoty oh just like the kids
loved Foreigner?
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Oh yeah, did they? Was Sabrina Carpenter not available?
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Or well they did get that, Cynthia verro Revo woman
and little John.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
Little John for the middle aged black people and a
Foreigner for the baby boomer whites.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
You gotta have the K Pop demon Hunters there because
the kids really all do just eat that up.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
I'm sorry, there's a there's a K pop group called
the Demon Hunters.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
Well, it's the voices from a made up band for
a movie, k Pop Demon Hunters it's a movie animated,
and so they have bands. The boy band are the Demons,
and this is the way it was explained to me yesterday, this.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
Is what they sound like. Weirdly, we have this I'm
learning about them now. We have them in the system.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Not a real band, it's a you know, it's a
band put together to voice for the fake band kind.
So there's the boy band, which are the Demon Hunters,
and the female band which shows up to defeat the Demons.
And from what I hear, both of these fake bands
(01:47):
for a cartoon movie are charting. They're like, you know,
like top of the charts, wildly famous. I don't keep
hop with it, obviously, but I just tried about all this.
I got to visit my granddaughter yesterday, who is normally
in Boston, but if she's in the Woodlands this week,
and I heard all about k pop. Really it's the thing.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
Yeah, a couple of weeks ago, you remember we heard
that for the first time in twenty years or thirty years,
there was no rap songs on the top forty And
now we learn there's an animated Korean heavy metal band about.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
This is what it sounds like.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
Would you have thought if I told you it was
a boy band from Korea, which you told me. It
sounds like a nineties metal group or something. Yeah, sounds
like Disturbed or like corn.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
And the animation is those you know, those big eyes. Sure, really,
especially the girl band, really skinny, skinny girls with the
big faces and the big eyes, and it's just, you know,
weird looking. It's a little bit alien ish.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
Yeah. Do you think there's something I mean, it's called
demon hunt, so to ask if there's something demonic about
it would be cliche. But well, I guess they're hunting
demons girls, so by default it's anti demonic.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Of course, theoretically at first it has to be demonic
so that they can go anti.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
Are they fighting demons with the power of Christ or
I don't think so. As a Catholic who has spent
years saying the Saint Michael's prayer, I feel like exorcisms
are kind of our thing.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
And you guys, I mean the power of Christ compels you. Yeah,
so that sort of thing. But I didn't hear that
in the movie. I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 (03:32):
So now K pop is culturally appropriating white Catholics.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
Pretty sure they're rounding up our children with their with
their k pops singing and their demon chasing. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
See, that's where I'm bothered by this. Guys, my culture
is not your costume. How do they explain? Yeah, that's right,
isn't it? Does this mean I can dress up like
a culturally insensitive Korean?
Speaker 1 (03:57):
How would they dress? I don't know for sure. That
culture appropriation thing is awkward. I've thought about this yesterday
because we've been told now since Montdami eats with his hands.
He uses his fingers to eat rice and other things,
and there have been multiple videos of him doing it,
and I don't think he's from a place where they
normally do that, So he is appropriating somebody's culture to
(04:20):
make it look like he has his own.
Speaker 2 (04:22):
Yeah, I don't like that either. You're a rich guy
from New York City, you shouldn't be eating with your
hands and then telling me that that's an example of
anti white colonialism.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
That just seems stupid. And the reason it's anti white
colonialism is because apparently the white oppressors wherever they showed
up back, you know, many years ago, forced the inhabitants
of the land, the natives there, to start eating with utensils, forks, spoons,
(04:53):
things like that. That is our way of appropriating their culture,
apparently to our.
Speaker 2 (05:01):
There's a video Steve and I are watching on the
screen right now of an Indian girl in her I
mean Indian American I'm assuming looks like she's in her twenties.
And she is in a restaurant with a very large
green leaf that is a plate the.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
Green leaf food is served in the big leaf on.
Speaker 2 (05:19):
The leaf is a pile of rice with sauce, and
she's eating with her hands, and the camera pans around
from her to her white boyfriend and he's doing the
same thing.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Now, I some people are grossed out by this and bothered.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
I fully embrace this as something I want liberals to do.
If you didn't care about the border, if you're a
rich kid, you didn't care about the economy, you live
in a gated community, you don't care about gun rights,
you don't have a lot of opinions, you don't care
about the First Amendment. We now have a polarizing issue
for people who just don't want their hands to get
sticky while they're eating. That's right, Oh, I don't. I'm
(05:54):
sorry you're saying. If I use a fork, I'm a republican.
But if I if I don't mind having st sauce
all over my fingers while I eat rice and a
strip mall, that makes me a democrat.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
Here's where I thought it got a little awkward. For
cultural appropriation, if you're trying to avoid that sort of thing.
We as white people, forced the people that were here
before us to use forks and spoons, So that's bad.
Obviously you have to stop using forks and spoons.
Speaker 2 (06:22):
Makes sense, Yeah, but if we started using chopsticks cultural appropriation? Right,
So they don't want us to eat with their fingers
because that's appropriation.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
That's an African thing or something South ASTI that's right out.
And then of course forks and spoons are now racist.
So basically white people don't eat. Okay, if you don't eat,
you won't be accused. I'm okay with being called racist.
But can we take this one step further? If the
people on the left don't want to use forks and
(06:53):
knives because that's an example of white colonialism oppressing them, really,
doesn't this logic also apply to toilet paper, tampons? Yeah,
I think it kind of, does, I mean the medicine? Sure? Yeah,
we forced our damn white people, American English medicine on
people alcohol swabs?
Speaker 2 (07:11):
Where was that invented? Look, if you're in the doctor's
office using an alcohol swab before you get stuck with
a needle, that such privilege. Yeah, that's a white that's
just white colonialism. What antibiotics? Oh, come on, that's the
white man oppressing. But you shouldn't be taking antibiotics. Sept
that's the white man forcing you to take.
Speaker 1 (07:28):
That tail and all. Oh, euro colonialism pre early rises.
What it is? You know what today is Bolton and
Johnson Radio Network.
Speaker 2 (07:43):
Wait, my bad, I forgot. This is a rapie song,
isn't it?
Speaker 1 (07:47):
Yes, Yes, that's exactly what's wrong with that song?
Speaker 2 (07:50):
Is it?
Speaker 1 (07:51):
Man?
Speaker 2 (07:51):
We should have put on Nicki Minaj. Well, actually, Cardi
b something a little more appropriate, you know, my.
Speaker 1 (07:57):
Bad, much more appropriate for all ages.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
President Trump has pardon two turkeys, but only after they
poured money into his crypto company. Well, of course, just
warming up. Sorry, we're we're kidding. Actually it was very
funny yesterday.
Speaker 1 (08:12):
I felt like he maybe stayed on too long, you know,
because I listened to it in the car. There's a
long ride, and he just went on and on and on.
At some point it's like leave them Ont and more Don.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
We were in here doing my afternoon show yesterday, me
and Jesse Peyton, the comedian, when when the pardon happened
live on TV? And so Trump comes out and says,
Trump pardons gobble and waddle or h and Jesse, who
has something of a sophomore ex sense of humor, well
not that I don't or you for that matter, could
not contain himself.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
He's like, I'm sorry the turkey's name gobble. I'm like, Jesse,
why is that funny to you? And he just I
was like, what is it about the word gobble that's
so funny? Jesse? It reminded him of his of his
date the night before he started making ganging noises. Yeah,
first you gobbled, then you waddled, Jesse, wasn't that the
(09:08):
name of your ex girlfriend? Nice? What is it about
that noise that men like so much?
Speaker 2 (09:15):
Quickly changing the subject, the Pennsylvania Governor has signed the
Crown Act to Protect Natural hairstyles.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
I thought they already did this on a maybe not
the Was it a state by state now or is
that how we have to do that?
Speaker 2 (09:28):
It started in Texas with Sila Jacksonine in her triple
Crown weed. The crown quite important one time somewhere, I
don't even remember. It was several years ago. It wasn't
that long ago, but it wasn't like yesterday. Some woman
got told by her boss that her hair wasn't appropriate
and her hair was shit a weave, it was unbeweevable.
(09:50):
And so then the uh the low step to and
they were like, hang on, you know, black beauty standards
don't have to adhere to whites Tobi and I was like,
all right, we all agree with that, And I thought
that didn't they already I think that a federal law.
Now the state of Pennsylvania stepped in and said, well,
just in case it happens and they get rid of
it on a national level, yeah, the Federal Crown Act.
(10:11):
If something is already a federal law, why does it
need to be a state law? Like, you know, I
don't get that. I don't we already already protected by
the federal government. But just in case Donald Trump won't
protect your afro.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
You got to watch them.
Speaker 2 (10:25):
Where are all these people that are being oppressed for
having an afro? By the way, I'll stand in solidarity
with them. I'm sure if we can find them. There's
not a single news story about that today. No, the
government moves at the speed of glaciers. So I'm gonna
climb out on a limb here, and I'm gonna guess
there was probably several years ago a case like this,
and that's how long this bill's just been floating around
(10:46):
in Pennsylvania. Whatever the state capital is a Pennsylvania, I
don't know.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
I never been there. I'm never gonna go.
Speaker 2 (10:53):
What is it. It's not Pittsburgh, is it Philadelphia? Probably Philly, Scranton,
Let's go to Grand everybody.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
I don't want to call it Wednesday mom Day. Well
too bad. That's what we're calling it. Maham maham mom Day.
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