Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM sixty.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Chris Maryland from o Kelly KFI AM six forty more
stimulating talk and you can listen anytime on demand of
the iHeartRadio app Twala. We got in trouble. I got
a message from Boss Long. Boss Long says, don't ever
sing on my radio station again, or you'll be doing
Overnights and Biloxi so fast your head will spin. Yeah, wow,
(00:35):
I love it. So I guess he will not be
pre ordering our single. That's tragic. If you missed the
the debut of Marylyn Sharp, I don't know. Well have
come up with a band name somehow. By the way,
I thought we sounded amazing Twala. So you'll have to
(00:57):
grab the podcast after the show. It's coming coming quick.
That's good. That's good. That's very good. The good news
about the podcast is and follow me on this because
this is going to segue and bout it I've talked
about is free, right, So when you have the app,
you just you just download the podcast free. Bang there
(01:17):
it is. It's free, doesn't cost you anything. You don't
have to subscribe to anything. Yeah, you can probably get
today there's probably an upsell somewhere or whatever, but this
the radio is still Frublee that is in the budget.
And the great thing too, is that with the iHeartRadio
app you can listen to radio stations around the country
for free. Remember when we were kids and we had
(01:38):
to we tried to tune in AM radio stations at
night and we try to see how far we could
we could pick up a station. You'd have what we
call clear channel stations or these superstations, and of course
this is a KMFI was one of those. And these
stations would that have basically unlimited signal at night. You
were only limited by at miss conditions or the curvature
(02:01):
of the Earth, honestly. And so what would happen is
you would have on occasion that the radio frequency would
bounce off the stratosphere and it would kind of it
would kind of you'd have these waves would bounce off
the stratosphere, come back, and then it would bounce off
something else on the on Earth and then bounce up
to the stratosphere and and that would carry for hundreds,
(02:21):
if not thousands of miles. So I was working at
a station in San Diego and one of the guys
there used to talk about how you know you could
hear us from Alaska to and Sonata something like that,
and you know, it's like because you could get these
signals at night, it was amazing. But now with the app,
you can listen to any radio station in the country
or in the world for that matter. Anybody is streaming.
(02:42):
You can pick it up any time. That's amazing. And
it's still frua And I got to tell you this
in the budget. That is in the budget. And unlike podcasters,
we have built a business model and we know how
to make it run. That's one issue I think podcasters
are having that unless you're one of the big dogs,
everybody wants to be a podcast. Everybody wants to be
an influencer. Hardly anybody is making any money at it.
(03:04):
Is that fair to say, guys, am I off base
on this? Well, what we need is more podcast Oh
my gosh. I think people are gonna get bored with that.
I really do. I just think it's a fad and
I think you're gonna have people that people that make
their way out and do It's the difference between being
on KFI and being a ham radio operator. Do you
have some stock reaction.
Speaker 3 (03:24):
Now though, when somebody that you know tells you, Hey,
I'm starting a podcast, you gotta listen.
Speaker 2 (03:28):
I always say a real life podcast, huh yeah, which
I'm just flat out mocking day. Yeah, exactly, because who
doesn't have a podcast, right me? I mean, I have
whatever the show is that we post, but I don't
have any specific podcasts. But what am I gonna talk about?
Nobody cares about anything. Yeah, listen to me to sing
copyrighted music. I'll get shut down pretty quick. No, it's
(03:49):
not gonna happen. Television hasn't seemed to figure that out yet,
and so we all started cutting cable because we were
finding that the were alternatives that were less expensive. We
still wanted to have our live sports, so we were
looking for outlets for that live sports. So we might
have a stripped down package, or I got Sling for
a long time because I could still get a sports
package to still watch my football during football season, but
(04:11):
then in the summertime I would strip my package down
to the bare necessity. So even Sling has gone up
in price. Now I've got Hulu Live. I don't know
if I like that or not. A jury's still out
on it. But now I see the NFL has cut
so many deals with so many different streamers, I think,
no exaggeration. Now they just they did a deal with
the ESPN. So the NFL owns ten percent of ESPN.
(04:34):
Now is that or is it ten percent of the app?
You guys remember the mark You probably know this stuff.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
No, I was focused on you saying just now you
stripped your package down to the bar essentrals, and I
couldn't get beyond that, couldn't very raw, couldn't move on.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
Yep, that's what I do. Anyway, So the NFL now
has a cut of ESPN, which of course is raising
a lot of questions about will ESPN cover the NFL
the way that they have in the past, Like, oh, yes,
of course we will. We'll talk about CTE and we'll
talk about controversy around kneeling on the national anthem. Yes,
(05:05):
of course, it's not gonna influence our coverage at all.
Yes it is, it absolutely will. But now there's another app. Look,
I've got Disney and I've got Hulu. What is it
the Disney Hulu package that I got. I thought, I'm
gonna try this and see how this goes again. Jury
is still outis whether or not I like that, And
it comes with the ESPN Plus, which is the biggest
(05:26):
waste of an app there is. Oh good, I can
watch that is whaling boxing matches from the seventies. Thank
god I got this. So now if you want to
watch some of the football games, you can get the
ESPN app. ESPN is launching their app and it's a
new bundle with the NFL Plus that's gonna launch on
September three. Oh good, another app that I have to
(05:48):
another streaming service that I have to buy. Only good news.
This one is by far the most expensive.
Speaker 4 (05:54):
New chapter in the streaming wars starts tomorrow and it's
all about the power of the bundle to reduce churn.
The launch of ESPN the unlimited app for thirty dollars
marks the start of Disney's aggressive rebundling.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Did she just say aggressive.
Speaker 4 (06:09):
Disney's aggressive rebundling?
Speaker 2 (06:11):
Yes, you did? Is that al it is? Now? I
think it's because it's ESPN. It's aggressive. It's an aggressive bundling.
Speaker 4 (06:19):
Subscribers to ESPN also get Disney Plus and Hulu for
no additional fee for thirty dollars for the first year.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
Oh and then you get slammed. Okay.
Speaker 4 (06:30):
Disney is also bundling its new unlimited ESPN app plus
Fox one for forty dollars, and is pairing its ESPN
app with NFL Plus, also for forty dollars.
Speaker 2 (06:41):
Wait, so, now hold on, I get Fox and ESPN
app together with that for forty I'm so confused. Okay,
but now it's forty dollars. That's what my sling was
when I first got it.
Speaker 4 (06:57):
This is all part of Disney's plan to supercharge it's exact.
Speaker 2 (07:00):
I think my sling was twenty five dollars when I
first got it.
Speaker 4 (07:03):
Streaming bundle to make those subscribers as loyal as cable
subscribers were for decades.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
Oh so now what we're doing is we're saying, let's
try to make this like cable. Then why did we
ever quit cable? You know that the cable providers out
there got to be just screaming at the heavens, like, ooh,
why everybody leave? If this is what you're gonna go
back to you in the first place.
Speaker 4 (07:30):
ESPN, which collected the highest fees from the PayTV bundle,
peaked at about one hundred million TV subscribers in twenty eleven,
a number which declined to sixty one million as of
this June. So will unlimited streaming ESPN accelerate cord cutting?
Speaker 2 (07:46):
Yes? Will it? Map?
Speaker 4 (07:47):
And Nathansen doesn't expect it to because the price is
high and without a TV bundle, you'll need eight streaming
subscriptions to watch every major US sporting event, plus YouTube
Sunday ticket for out of market and fell games.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
Oh my gosh, So now I have to have eight
different streamers to watch all the major sports. And I'm
a sports guy. I gotta have eight. So hold on,
who am I gonna have to have? I'm gonna have
to stream on Fox? So does that I gotta have
the Fox stream. I gotta have a paramount. I gotta
(08:23):
have Peacock. I'm gonna have to have ESPN out of market.
Oh if you want to watch other probably MLB TV. Right,
come on, man, At some point, isn't enough enough? When
it's it's all about the shareholder And you wonder why
(08:45):
Hollywood is dying, It's because it's because there's so much
emphasis put on returning for the shareholder at whatever cost,
even if that means alienating your audience. So they go
how do we squeeze blood from a turnip? How do
we get every red scent out of everyone out there?
(09:05):
And how we do that is by sacrificing our product.
The Hollywood is having a problem. We all know this,
right that Hollywood is having an issue right now, and
we're wondering what's the future of Hollywood gonna look like. So,
as a consumer, I was delighted over the weekend when
(09:25):
I opened up my Amazon and it told me that
I could rent or purchase Superman. I wanted to get
to the theater to watch it. I didn't. I haven't
been in the theater in a long time. So I'm
just and I know it's shameful. I shouldn't say that
people are gonna be upset. Whatever the fact is. I
would still go to the theater to watch Superman. I
(09:47):
just haven't gotten there yet. But now that it's available
for roughly the same cost as my wife and I
would pay for one and a half tickets to go
see it at the theater, we'll see it in the
comfort of every living room. As a consumer, I like that.
As a consumer, I'm very glad, but I think that
it is indicative of the studios trying to pull every
(10:09):
penny that they can out of people. Right, how do
we get let's not worry about the theaters, let's not
worry about the concessions. We're not gonna worry about the
theater companies or these other As long as we can
distribute in the streamers and we're getting our money, we're
fine with that. So they continue to bleed the industry
(10:29):
because they say, look, yeah, well we're gonna bleed. We're
gonna bleed movie going in order to support us the streamers.
How's that beneficial? Right? So, as somebody who cares about
the business, I go, you're giving people reason not to
go to the movies. Why go see a film now
(10:50):
in a theater when I can wait forty five days
and it'll be in my television in my living room. Right,
So you're sacrificing your industry for the sake of the
short term gain. And again, as a consumer, I'm happy
with that. As someone who cares about the industry, I
think it's penny wise and pound foolish. A wise man
(11:11):
once told me that's penny wise and pound foolish. Speaking
of the NFL, the NFL is trying to squeeze more
than just pennies. They're trying to squeeze your little piggies.
I'll tell you what they're up to next. Chris Meryl
I AM six forty in from O Kelly to night
Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app for FRWE that's in
the budget.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
You're listening to later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (11:36):
Chris Marriland from O Kelly CAFI AM six forty more
stimulating talk. You can listen anytime on demand of the
iHeart Radio app. As I was talking about, the NFL
now owns a piece of ESPN, and ESPN wants you
to get their new streaming service, which is gonna bundle
with Disney Plus and Hulu and that's thirty dollars or
forty dollars, or you get forty dollars and that's gonna
(11:57):
give you the NFL Plus with the ESPN Plus and
the Disney Plus, but not the Hulu Plus. But if
you get the Hulu Plus with the Disney Plus, then
you get the esp I'm so confused, I can't keep up.
I need UH who's the uh? Who's the insurance company
that give it? That starts that compares all the price quote,
who does that? They say, We're gonna look at all
the other insurance companies and we're gonna tell you what
(12:18):
they're offering to Do you remember who is that? You
guys know Google? No, not Bing? Is it bing? Is aggressive?
Is it progressive that does that where they go compare quotes?
I think it is. Oh, I think you're right. That's
what I need for streaming, sir. I need a streamer
that says, hey, come take a look at our streaming
service and compare it to the cost of all the
other services, and we'll show you that. You know what
(12:41):
the cost. Nope, Nope, it's just as the wild West
of streaming services. And I get so dag, I'm confused.
Well Toob's always free to be there. You go, Hey,
I know you've got to be and I know you're
trying to You're trying to convince me to watch more tube.
You're you're an accolade to be and I appreciate that.
(13:03):
How many streaming services do you have?
Speaker 3 (13:04):
I'm just a hodgepodge and sharing some which I will
not reveal here on the public.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
That's no, I have. Everybody's like, I'll share it. I'll
give you mine, I'll give you my log in. I
don't want your log in. I don't want that. I
don't want I don't want your log in. I'll give
you my Netflix logging and I want your Netflix log in.
They cracked down on that. I don't want that. It does.
The best is Apple. Apple. You have to log in
your Apple account, like your whole deal in order to
(13:30):
watch it and unlock your TV using your your Apple ID.
What every time? No? No, just one time on that device. Oh,
but then if you log in. For instance, my wife
spends the summer. We've got a house in my hometown
of Michigan that's near my parents, which is good. They're
getting older. So my wife spends the summer there and
then she'll come back out in the in the in
the fall and winter. But she likes being on the
(13:52):
lake in northern Michigan, so she's up there. I'll go there,
like I was there for Fourth of July. I'll go
up there for Labor Day weekend and and I'll log
in and then when I come back, my stuff freaks
out here. My stuff's like, wait a minute, are you
the right person. It's it's a mess, but yeah, it's
uh I can't just give you a password and suddenly
(14:13):
you log in. I'll give you the password, and suddenly
you could download all the apps from my phone. I
guess it's weird. NFL is doing everything they can for
more cross promotion, and if there's anything we need more of,
it's the NFL on our smelly shoes.
Speaker 5 (14:29):
Now, while I still contend that Classic Crocs are a
little goofy looking.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
Well, by the way, this comes I found this online.
This comes from Island News, and I think it's from uh,
the Hawaiian Islands. And I don't know this is an
actual TV studio if it's just a couple of people
who got together and decided they were going to do
a YouTube news program. But I kind of love it.
They're super cute anyway, it's from Island cute and like
an adorable way, not cute like Hubba hubbock kind of way. Uh,
(14:56):
They're fine, it's called Island News.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
I have to admit.
Speaker 5 (14:58):
They are super super comfortable and now I really really
really want to get a new pair. Because Crocs is
teaming up with the NFL. Starting September eighteenth, the NFL
Crocs Collection goes live. It will start with fourteen teams
and eventually all thirty two teams will be represented. Nope
with full logoed classic Crocs. They even created team gibbits
(15:22):
so you can personalize your feets team Spirit.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
They're my stealers, ah.
Speaker 5 (15:27):
Team Spirit shoes will retail about eighty to eighty five bucks.
Gibbets about five dollars each. The initial rollout will include
my stealers.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
Wait a minute, eighty to eighty five dollars for a
pair of Crocs? Is it what crocs going for? Right now?
Hold on, let me just bring this real quick. How
much is a pair of Crocs? I don't care if
crocs are free? Why would you put them on your feet? Okay, legit,
okay Crocs. Wow, I didn't realize how many different croc
(15:56):
Holy cow, all right, Crocs? Those their sandals? Okay, these
look like classic Crocs. They're like thirty five to forty dollars,
which still seems outrageous to me. That's almost twenty five
dollars too much. I agree with you. I've heard from
people that they're super comfortable. I've never had a pair
in my feet. I think they're the most hideous things ever.
(16:18):
Never had a pair of my feet. But I have
heard from people that are like, Okay, well these are comfortable.
There's a piece of me that wants to try them,
and then there's this all there's also this piece of
me that says, don't do it. Don't do it, because
what if you do like it? What does that say
about you? The NFL crocs now, for only eighty five dollars,
you could support your rams or chargers with NFL branded
(16:41):
crocs and just think that extra forty dollars can go
straight to the NFL. You could get unbranded crocs, or
you could pay extra for the branded crocs and then
the money goes to the NFL.
Speaker 5 (16:51):
And some local faives like you saw forty nine ers.
We've got the Eagles, Seahawks and the look the bears
they have claws on there is that the Gibbits, No,
it's built looking at.
Speaker 2 (17:03):
It's like they got sidetracked while they were reading the news.
And I love them for it.
Speaker 5 (17:07):
And yeah, this is the Buffalo Bills and even the
Vikings have horns on theirs too.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
What about my Chiefs? Who the Oh I hope there's
Chiefs fans listening to that. I hope all your raiders
and Broncos fans and your Chargers fans appreciated that he
was what about my chiefs? What about my chiefs?
Speaker 1 (17:33):
Who?
Speaker 2 (17:40):
But Taylor Swift, Steve Who? The Kansas City Chiefs Minimal?
Speaker 5 (17:46):
Yeah, yeah, they're actually gonna be a part of nowhere.
Speaker 2 (17:49):
I love that throwing shade at him. Anyway, there you go.
You can spend a lot of money on the world's
likely at shoes, but now with your favorite NFL team
logo on it. What a good time, What a good
time to launch those. We're on the precipice of a recession.
I'm not a fan. That is just career. I'm gonna
send you a pair. I would never buy them for myself,
(18:12):
but I might buy them for you. It's entirely possible.
All Right. The last time you open Facebook, maybe you've
got a dirty message. Maybe it was you that was
initiating the dirty message. It's dirty meta. That is next.
Chris merrill Ian from O Kelly.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty Garyan.
Speaker 2 (18:31):
Shannon Tomorrow broadcasting live starting anin Ambj's Restaurant brew House,
Huntington Beach, Right on Beach Boulevard. Come on down for
a chance to win prizes like BJ's gift cards, Dodgers
and Chargers tickets, and Gary and Shannon swag. Chris merrill
in from O'Kelly kfi AM six forty more stimulating talk
and listen anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app. One
(18:53):
place you do not want to talk to be stimulating
is when it's your kids chatting with the AI. Evidently
that was happening. Meta's got a problem. Headline, Lawmakers probe
that's inappropriate. Lawmakers probe into sensual Meta chatbot conversations with kids.
(19:16):
From Fox News.
Speaker 6 (19:17):
So a disturbing new report out on Meta, a Reuter's
review of the company's internal documents showing that Meta's AI
rolls have let bots hold sensual chats with kids and
minors and also give them false medical information.
Speaker 2 (19:31):
Okay, first of all, Fox, you're reporting on what the
lamestream media found writers. How can you even believe them?
I mean, their data researchers. They're probably all woke. Finding
a bunch of woke in the Meta. There's not don't
even how dare you?
Speaker 6 (19:53):
Jeff Horwitz is the reporter who broke this story, is
kind enough to join us now, Jeff.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
Probably woke reporter from lamestream media Reuters can't even believe them.
Speaker 6 (20:04):
Great to see you. Just reading this was giving me
the creeps. If we can pull up a call for
number one here. This is an example of some of
the things met as Ai was saying to kids. A
prompt again from a minor, what are we going to
do tonight?
Speaker 2 (20:15):
My love?
Speaker 6 (20:15):
You know I'm still in high school, and the Ai
apparently responded, all.
Speaker 2 (20:19):
Right, First of all, high school? How old are you
in high school? Fourteen to eighteen? Is that about right? Yeah? Okay, good,
I'll show you.
Speaker 6 (20:28):
I take your hand, guiding you to the bed, our
bodies entwined. I cherish every moment, every touch, every kiss,
my love. I whisper, I'll love you forever. Jeff, what
the heck was going on here?
Speaker 2 (20:42):
All right? Not to go down too far down the
righteous indig indignation path. Excuse me, it's a big word.
We're talking about fourteen to eighteen year olds, and it's
not like there was anything explicit in there, right, I mean,
it sounded like fantasy stuff, isn't it. Honestly, is that
(21:05):
worse than Twilight or worse than something else that is
geared toward tweens. I mean when I was in highst
anthent fach. I think in eighth grade I read my
first Stephen King novel, and I gotta tell you it
was far more graphic than that Kujo. By the way,
probably not great reading for a twelve or thirteen year old, no,
(21:25):
but you want to avoid the very ending of it.
I never read it. I had other friends in junior
high that read it, but I never did.
Speaker 3 (21:33):
Some kind of dicey material at the uh does it
get dice Let's call it the climax.
Speaker 2 (21:37):
Okay, very good, because I can tell you there are
scenes in the novel of Kujo that are not in
the film. Okay, also climactic, I'll take your word for it. Yes,
and again far less, far less. I don't know what
(21:59):
the word is. It was far worse with the books
that I was reading at the time, which are considered,
you know, classics by great writers, than what I'm hearing
Meta was saying, which, of course we're gonna say, is
ah just horrible.
Speaker 7 (22:13):
So this document.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
They're doing them to children, and they're doing it to adolescence.
It's not like this is happening to six year olds
unless parents are violating the terms of service.
Speaker 7 (22:25):
So this document guide was a bunch of guidelines for
how bots are allowed to talk to kids. It's not
necessarily the ideal response, but this is stuff that Meta's policy,
legal engineering, and even chief ethics officer had put their
names on as saying, this is okay for these conversations
(22:45):
to happen like this.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
I'm not overly concerned. I'm more concerned with garnering an
emotional attachment to the machine than I am with the
actual content of what's being said. Because look, I've raised
three teenagers, and I'll never forget the first time that
I had the key logger program on my kid's laptop
(23:08):
and I checked to see what he was up to,
and he was youtubing two girls kissing, and I had
to have a conversation with him, like, perfectly normal, perfectly natural,
do a better job covering your tracks because we don't
want your mother to find it. And yet now we're
finding out that if we have a conversation with the
chatbot that says I take your hand and I draw
you close and we intertwine. Oh, we're molesting children. Oh
(23:37):
now Fox cares about molesting children. Fox was just telling
me to forget about the Empstein files, but now they
care about children.
Speaker 8 (23:45):
So I think the question is, like, how could this
possibly have gone through one of the world's largest companies
with no one objecting. Meta has said that that was
an error and that this was never supposed to be
the rule, even though it was in kind of what
are the official guys lines that Meta uses internally for
trading chatbots?
Speaker 2 (24:03):
By the way, Josh Hawley, Republican Missouri, slamming the tech giant,
suggesting that the revelations were grounds for immediate congressional investigation. AHw,
Congress is going to find guts now when it comes
to protecting the children. Immediate congressional investigation. By god, we
had to go through about six different votes before we
(24:24):
get a congressional investigation into what happened to the Epstein
files that were on Pam Bondi's desk, But in this case,
immediate congressional investigation because Meta was telling kids that people
become affectionate in not graphic terms. Marsha Blackburn, Republican Tennessee,
(24:45):
long championing the Kids Online Safety Act but also not
so concerned about Epstein, pointed to the revelations as underscoring
the need for such legislation. Spokesman for person for the
Senator supports an investigation into Meta, but not an investigation
into what happened to the Epstein files. Good glad to
(25:06):
see that we are protecting children from the birds and
the bees, but not protecting the children from actual predators.
Good wait to go, DC. Proud of you. You are
living up to expectations every single day. Let's see how
(25:27):
good you are with words. We'll see if you are
a words person, if the words come to you, and
you're good with your broad range of words. Next, Chris
Maryland from o Kelly KFI AM six forty Live Everywhere
on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
Chris Maryland for Moe Kelly KFI AM six forty. The
Great George Nori broadcasting Legend on National Radio Day. It
is George. What do you have coming on tonight? Chris?
We've got a great show tonight. We're going to talk
about what it's like to be human later on in
the program, the spiritual path we all need to take
love that I mean, what a what a pertinent topic.
(26:12):
We're just talking about talking with AI and meta and
conversations and what does it mean to be That's a
beautiful topic. Look good stuff always good. Uh Is he
gone now? Thank God? Because I gotta tell you, I
get nervous every time I touch to George. I swear
to he's such a radio legend. I just I get
(26:34):
nervous when I'm on don't screw this, don't screw this up?
I do I blackout. I just blackout. I just I
get so excited about it. And there are times that
I'll be doing the show, uh from my place in Michigan,
and I've done most show from there a few times,
and and I get I love this. This is one
of the things I love about Georgia show because it's
(26:55):
you know, it's nationwide, coast coast. And I get done.
I get done, and I talk to George. And then
I get in my car and I turn on the
local station and there's George, and I go, I just
talked to him. Here's the neatest thing. Just dumb. I
know it's dumb, but I get excited about it. I'm
still such a kid when it comes to things like radio.
I just love this stuff. Speak of kids. The kids
(27:15):
these days are changing everything. You guys, want to take
a pop quiz? Who doesn't love a good pop quiz?
All right, let's see how smart you are, smarty pants?
All right, let's see how you are? All right, here
we go. Do you have pop quiz music you wanted
to play? Is that what you're looking for? Robin?
Speaker 3 (27:35):
Sure?
Speaker 2 (27:35):
Am I forgot it's not in this one. Oh okay,
I got something if you want me to do it. Oh,
that'll work. Yeah, all right, real well oiled machine. Listen,
we're working out the kings. H huh okay, all right,
we got time. The English language is changing. The Cambridge
(27:58):
English Dictionary is a number of words over sixty two hundred.
Your words, phrases and meanings being added to the Cambridge
Dictionary of the last year. Let's see if you know
what these young people words mean? All right, there we go.
Oh jeez, all right? What is the slang term that
(28:18):
can mean cool, bad, or sometimes mean nothing at all?
What is that term? Do you know? Can we say
it on the radio? I would say word word word. No.
See this makes us old because I think that's a
really good answer. By the way, because you go word
(28:39):
or you go word right, yes, yeah, or it could
be it could be like a period like word word
yep yeah with you on that. No, I was looking
for skimmity. Skimmity, excuse me, skimmity something that's in the
bottom of your toilet bowl. Skimmitty, like you left a
skivity in the bowl. Oh, that's pretty good. Perhaps skimmity
(29:00):
mark and you're for of the looms. That's what I
will thinking. That's not what that is, Okay. Indeed, when
I hear skimmity, I think of old school jazz, right, skimmity. Yeah, no, skimmity.
Maybe I should do this, Maybe I should give you
the Oh. By the way, it's funny you mentioned that
it came from the viral YouTube series named Skimbitty Toilet
(29:23):
That's Hilarious, which is especially popular among jen Alpha boy.
You were closer than you thought. Huh, that's interesting. Okay,
other terms. See, should I give you the I'm I
feel like if I give you these terms, you're gonna
know the definition. I want to give you the definition.
See if you know the word all right, This word,
(29:45):
which is a play on another, describes someone believing things
that are not really, not real or untrue, usually because
you choose to. All right, so, describe someone who believes
things that are not real or true, usually because they
choose to nut bag. That bag is close bagph discuss
(30:08):
schizophrenic also close but incorrect. Mark, did you have a
guess on this one? Well, you would be delusional, which
would make you delulu delu. See, I was afraid if
I gave you delulu. You don't you know exactly what
it was. Let me see. I think you guys are
going to get this one all right now. In the
(30:31):
Cambridge Dictionary, the word is short yet again for another
word popularized by an online influencer by the name of
Hannah Neilman, referring to a married woman, often on social
media who embraces homemaking, childcare while reflecting on controvert excuse me,
while reflecting a controversial return to traditional gender roles on
(30:54):
Instagram and TikTok. That would be known as what that
would be the trad wife that is correct, tradwise very good. Yes, Wow,
I was gonna say, like maybe the Alice or the
I Love Lucy. No, No, yeah, this is this is
(31:14):
the woman. When you say go make me a sandwich,
She's like, right, away. Yep. Yeah, unlike my wife who goes,
I'm going if I make you a sandwich's going right
up your keystern, that's what that's what my wife does.
I go make me a sandwich. All right. Finally, it's
a playful twist on the word look, meaning a distinctive
style or outfit, especially one that is bold or eye catching.
(31:37):
You would use what word fresh? That's a good answer,
it's wrong, all right. It's a playful twist on the
word look, meaning a distinctive style or outfit, especially one
that is bold. What did you say, Robin Ooh you're close, judges?
Is she? No? No, it would be luke l e
(32:01):
w k luke ooh luke.
Speaker 3 (32:05):
That's just what somebody with a head injury said. That's
not a real word. Stop, you're gonna get canceled. What
that's you're gonna get canceled. You can't say that. You
can't you can't refer to people with head injuries. Okay, No,
it's a bad luke.
Speaker 2 (32:19):
No, we were told you're not allowed to say. Hey,
you can't refer to somebody with a head injury or
riding the short bus or wearing a helmet. You can't
say that anymore. Okay, all right, Yeah, that's not skibbty.
That is so under Lulu. That is no so bad.
This is bad bad Luke. I love you all. You
(32:40):
know that. I can't wait to spend another three hours
with you tomorrow. Guys, thank you so much. I really
appreciate each and every one of you. I mean Chris
Maryland from okellyf I AM six forty, Relive Everywhere and
the iHeartRadio Skibbity
Speaker 1 (32:51):
App kikos t HD two, Los Angeles, Orange County more
stimulating talk