Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kellyon demand from KFI AM six forty.
Let's find out what's going on inthe world of social media. It's the
viral Load with Tiffany Hobbs. Let'sfind out what's going on. Hi mo,
Hi There Tiffany. We have ahero, a champion, a buttload
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of money. The best way Ican put it, how much is a
buttload? A buttload A lot morethan a regular load and smaller than a
ton. But it's a lot.It's a lot. We're talking a lot
of money here, big butts Okay, and then we also have a letter
from flight attendants talking about how theydon't make any money. Let's get into
it all right. In Las Vegasthey have public transit. We've talked a
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lot about public transit here. Thisisn't a story of a stabbing or an
assault, but it is a storyof a little boy who mistakenly got on
a public city bus instead of hisschool bus. This kid is about five
years old, and the reason weeven know about this story is because it
went viral due to someone recording thisinteraction. Here's what happened. A little
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boy got on a bus. Awoman on the bus. A passenger noticed
that something was off, something wasa miss. She's observing. She was
very observant, which is a goodthing to be, and she noticed that
this little boy had on a backpack. The backpack looked to be something for
a four five year old. Again, she's taking mental notes of all of
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this and noticing this is a littlekid. He was alone, so she
starts scanning the scene on the bus. She doesn't see a guardian. She
doesn't see anyone with this kid.So she goes to the bus driver and
she motions for the bus driver tolisten. She suggests that the bus driver
may be radio into dispatch and saythat there's this unattended kid on the bus,
a little kid at that he's standingthere, he has his backpack.
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He looks to be a little nervous, like any five year old standing on
a city bus might be. Thebus driver tells this woman essentially, leave
me alone, get out of myface, sit down, lady, let
me do my job. The ladydoesn't back down. She insists that this
bus driver maybe call the police.She's like, something's wrong here. This
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kid shouldn't be on the bus.The bus driver gets a bit more belligerent.
All this is recorded, and hesays to her basically, shut up,
sit down. I'm taking this kidto the last stop, if that's
where he's going. The last stopat this point is two hours away from
where they're at. What they're inmetropolitan Las Vegas. Okay, so things
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are already kind of hairy. Sothe lady again doesn't back down. She
insists. She says, call thepolice. Now people are paying attention,
and people start chiming in, Hey, you know what's going on? What's
going on? She decides to takeit to take matters into her own hands.
She calls the police. She tellsthem that there's this unattended kid.
They say, we'll meet you atthe next few stops. I gotta jump
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in. The bus driver didn't makeany effort to engage the child, no
effort to engage the child. Saidthat children in fact ride for free.
So this kid is not breaking anylaws. He's just another passenger. Leave
him alone, lady, let usget where we're going. The police end
up meeting the bus. They takeeveryone off of the bus, They go
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to the child, They talk tothe bus driver, They talk to the
woman, and the woman again tellsher story. The police are able to
determine that this kid is in factunattended and has mistakenly gotten on this city
bus. They're able to make contactwith someone identifying themselves as the kid's mother.
The mother says, oh my god, he was supposed to get on
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the school bus. He didn't.No, mom wasn't home. He bus
is a bus, A bus isa bus. This little kid is eager
to get to school. He's newto school. Lot of issues with this
story, of course, but hegets on the wrong bus. He gets
on the city bus. The othervery disturbing thing that the woman noted in
her follow up video, she wasbasically interviewed, and that's what went viral
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as well. She says that otherpassengers on the bus started to suggest that
they take the kid. Hey,I'll take the kid with me. I'll
take the kid. Oh no,no no. But fortunately she was there,
and again this entire interaction went viral. The clip went viral. Thankfully
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this woman was in fact observant,she was insistent, and this little boy
was returned home to his family,safe and sound. Okay, the obvious
thing which just jumps out of me. If this is a five year old
it's a new city or new situation. There is no one seeing this child
onto the bus. You had afive year old just standing at a quote
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unquote but stop and was just goingto get on and manage it by him
or himself. Yeah, it's thereagain a lot of issues with this story,
many of which can be picked apart, and we can talk the parenting
or lack thereof. Fortunately, thiswoman, a grandmother, had the wherewithal
to see that something was wrong andto step in for this kid. Here's
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another situation where someone stepped in butat the wrong time. So there's a
woman. She's running a marathon.She's been training. This is what she
does. She's a personal trainer.This marathon is a half marathon, so
thirteen miles or so, and she'sin Brazil where she lives. Again,
she's been training for this. She'srunning the marathon. You see the video
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of the finish line with this bigribbon across the finish line, and this
woman is running, running, running, She's clearly in first place, and
just before she breaks through the ribbon, a man appears from the sidelines,
holding and basically pulling three small children. He takes the children, puts them
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right in her path so that shealmost runs in to them. Why would
he do that, I'll tell you. In a moment, she is able.
This woman is able to in herstride run wide, break wide,
essentially avoiding the children, avoiding theman. She doesn't stop at all,
and she bam right through the ribbonfirst place in the marathon. She stops,
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she's leaning over, catching her breath. She hugs the second place winner.
They're celebrating. We find out laterthat the man was her is her
maybe this husband and these are herthree children. They were trying to greet
her at the finish line or something. He thought it was a good idea
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at that moment, just before shebroke through the ribbon, to put their
three toddler aged children in her path. Not only would that be a distraction,
but that's a liability for all therunners who are coming behind them.
He completely tried to steal her shine, tried to upstage her in that moment
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with the children. At least,that's what the internet is saying. They're
very, very upset with him,saying that he didn't want her to have
her moment. See that didn't botherme. I didn't think of it that
way. I thought it was like, look, you are imperiling runners Ela,
and you are possibly getting your wifedisqualified. If they thought that,
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well they're with you, so you'redisqualified. Right. That's probably the more
logical, less polarizing stance to take. But we're talking about viral stories.
We're talking about the Internet. Sothe Internet has taken the stance of saying
that this man was attempting to stealthe shine of his wife again, let
her have her moment. Why wouldyou put the children there thinking that she
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would stop in that moment, embraceher children and forego the wind. Yeah,
that doesn't make sense. Well,you know, we men can be
very stupid at times. Not allthe time, but a lot of the
time. The Internet seems to thinkthat it is the majority of the time.
I won't fight that. I mean, so I look at Mark and
Steph and it's like, that's probablymost of the time. I just want
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to see if you guys were Wait, that's all it's lated with mo Kelly.
We'll have more of the viral loadwith Tiffany Hobbs and just a moment.
If I am six forty life everywhereon the iHeartRadio app, you're listening
to Later with Mo Kelly on Demandfrom KFI AM six forty and it's The
Viral Load with Tiffany Hobbs, Parttwo. Before we get into it,
Mark, I just want to makesure that you weren't sleeping in there because
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I'm somehow boring you, but moreso because you're so overworked in that news
booth. Oh no, the loadlady would never bore me. You're the
load lady. Oh my gosh,that's the viral loads. The load finally
got it off. Finally got it. You were holding that one for about
six months, only responding in kind. All right, next story. It
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is prom season. Did you goto your prom? Mo? I did
not? You did not? Idid not. I've never been to a
high school problem. Okay, wellI did, a lot of people have,
and as of maybe the last fiveyears, proms were always kind of
modest. You might spend some moneyfor a tuxedo or a nice dress.
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You might rent a car or geta hotel room for the night. That
wasn't me. But I have nopoint of rus. You have no point
of reference. The bar wasn't superduper duper high. Now it is.
And that is a direct correlation toCOVID. The class, the graduating class
of twenty twenty four is experiencing theirprom and many of them have posted about
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their proms. Those posts have thengone viral because of the nature of how
much has been spent. In Miami, there's a high school called Northwestern High
School that is known for how muchmoney people spend on proms. They are
extravagant, everything from renting the mostaga expensive sports cars or luxury vehicles,
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to horse and carriages to extremely expensivegowns like weddings. If not more so,
this particular class of seniors has outdonethemselves and they have gone viral to
the tune of four million views onTikTok for a compilation video of essentially their
greatest hits from their most recent prom. What happened was this prom showcases these
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seniors and it's largely captured by aformer student there who's now a teacher.
Her name is Taysha Bryant. Andwhat Miss Bryant captures is Lamborghinis. There
are Lamborghitte, Mercedes, Benzes,BMW's Rose Royce's nineteen sixties classic Rose Royce.
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By the way, there also wasa Tesla cyber truck with two police
escorts driven by, or at leastwith inside of it two students. These
students are stepping out again in themost extravagant of outfits, and four million
people have seen this video. Thisis what my father told me thirty years
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ago, because he was commenting aboutproms and what they were doing back in
the nineteen eighties, and he thoughtit was getting out of hand in and
he said, well, if you'redoing this now, what do you do
when you get married? What isthere left for you to celebrate? And
how do you celebrate it? You'redoing all this in high school. He
was saying that in the nineteen eighties. I don't know what he would say
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about today. He probably would beaghast. Because there's one woman and she's
not from Miami Northwestern High School,but she is from Philadelphia, and she
went on the tamarn Hall talk showand she shared how her daughter this year,
her daughter's prom cost her sixteen thousanddollars. Oh, the parents are
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just the idiot. You know thatthe kids can't make the parents do that.
That's the parents trying to keep upwith the Joneses and try to send
a message to the other parents inthe neighborhood, and they probably can can't
even afford their house. Note therationale this woman has is that her daughter
didn't experience a lot of what studentsconventionally are usually do four years ago during
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eighth grade graduation because of COVID.So she wanted to make up essentially for
what the daughter lost, and essentiallyovercompensate would probably be the better word for
what the daughter did not experience.Then by spending multiple thousands of dollars on
this plant, say that for tuition, assuming that they're going to college,
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you know, it's problem. Hopefullythere's hopefully there's college in their future,
you know, if you're going tocelebrate this moment and there is a future.
Okay, I know, get offmy lawn. I know, I
know, I know I'm signing old. But still, and I do know
teenagers culturally spend certain cultures spend alot of money to mark the transition from
one era to the next. Kinsignettasare very popular, multiple thousands of dollars.
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But it hadn't yet made it fullyto prompt and now this seems to
be the status quo. It's madeto problem, I think, and this
is a function of the social mediageneration. Yeah, all the pictures and
the cars and CNBC. You haveto see NBC and I cannot imagine being
a teenager now and also feeling thatinadequacy potentially if you don't live up to
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all of that hype. I amso glad that I am too old for
peer pressure. Last story not asfun as the former stories. Downright sad
if you asked me. An employmentverification letter sent by American Airlines has shed
new light on what flight attendants aredealing with when it comes to their wages.
This letter was sent out to theflight attendant as essentially like an assistant
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or a help a for when they'reapplying for housing, apartments, loans,
anything like that. It appeals toa lender asking for consolation or understanding because
a flight attendant's projected annual salary isjust above twenty seven thousand dollars, which
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is above the medium as far aspoverty, but well below what many people
would consider to be a comfortable costof living. What does that break down
to. I don't know if theybreak it down to an hourly wage.
They do get paid hourly, andsome are just above minimum wage. And
the thing about their hourly wages thatI found out through this story that went
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viral because it was shared all overReddit, is that a flight attendant's hourly
wage starts when the cabin door closes, and when that cabin door opens,
they don't get paid for anything outsideof that. It's basically just the flight
itself, just the flight itself.So yes, so they're trying to get
money in different ways and do thatover time, but any type of they
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have to get some sort of stipend. When they're having layover in a different
city or they're staying overnight, there'sa benefits package. There are some incentives
to being a flight attendant. Butstill, when you think about the median
salary, the starting salary for aflight attendant on American Airlines, it's poverty
level and the CEO, in contrast, is making four point one million dollars
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per year, which is multiple,multiple, multiple times what these flight attendants
are making. So this union thatreleased the letter represents twenty eight thousand flight
attendants from American Airlines and it saysthey're now working on their first new contract
in five years. So all ofthis has been shared all over social media,
with flight attendants weighing in about whatthey're dealing with economically, the strife,
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the poverty, and how their jobsjust aren't worth what was said to
be the glitz and glam when theyfirst applied. Well, all I know
is working as a flight attendant postpandemic. Post pandemic is nothing like pre
pandemic with these idiots on those planes. Idiots, what you're what you're dealing
with for minimum wage? Absolutely not. When I was growing up, I
had some friends who were flight attendants, even my young adulthood, and they
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did appreciate the access to travel,to travel around the world. But now
I don't know of anyone who wantsto do that job. Not worth it,
Not worth it. You're dealing withpeople who are off their rock or
off their meds, off their everything. So fifteen sounds like working for Metro
who said that six forty we're gonnatalk about roaches when we come back.
(16:37):
Yeah we are, we are.It's a real scientific story. We need
to cover it. Great. Yeah, We're life everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
You're listening to Later with Moe Kellyon demand from KFI AM six forty.
We all know that cockroaches are expertsat surviving indoors hiding in the walls,
but it didn't start out that way. There's a new study which has
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used genetics. I guess it's liketwenty three and meters for cockroaches, and
it's charted cockroaches. They're spread inmigration around the world, from Southeast Asia
to Europe and beyond. The findingsspan thousands of years of cockroach history and
suggests that cockroaches may have traversed theglobe by hitching a ride with another species,
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namely people. But that kind ofmakes sense because how are they going
to get from continent to continent unlessthey're on like a cargo ship or you
know, in the botwels of ships. German cockroaches are the most popular,
I believe in Los Angeles. Howdo you know that? Sure? I
live in Koreatown and you know whatthat is. I live in Korea Town,
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and I'll say it probably this doesn'tmean I have them, but it
means I've stepped over. Researchers analyzethe genes of over two hundred and eighty
cockroaches from seventeen countries and six continents. They're everywhere, with the exception of
Antarctica. I guess they confirmed.Here you go. The German cockroach,
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a species found worldwide, actually originatedin Southeast Asia and it likely evolved from
the Asian cockroach about twenty one hundredyears ago. How they know this,
I don't know. It's just interestingto me. Scientists have long suspected that
the German cockroaches Asian origins, sincesimilar species still lived there again twenty three
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and me ancestry dot com for roaches. The research was published on Monday in
the journal Proceedings of the National Academyof Sciences. The cockroaches, according to
the study, managed their way aroundthe world via two major routes. They
traveled west to the Middle East aroundtwelve hundred years ago, possibly in soldiers
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bread baskets, and they may havestowed away on Dutch and British East India
company trade routes to get to Europeabout two hundred and seventy years ago.
And this is according to scientists reconstructionand historical records. Once they arrived,
inventions like the steam engined engine andindoor plumbing likely helped the insects travel further
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and get cozy living indoors. That'show they made the transition from outdoors to
indoors where they are most commonly foundtoday, not my house, hells No.
Researchers said, exploring how cockroaches conqueredpast environments may lead to better pest
control. And if you hadn't noticed, modern day cockroaches are pretty difficult to
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kill. They evolve quickly to resistpesticides. I could have made a really
important, inappropriate joke there, butI'll refrain, Well, there you go
everything you ever wanted to know aboutcockroaches and how they made it around the
world. It's always interesting. WhenI was growing up, I had friends
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who lived in different neighborhoods, andfor me, cockroaches were just kind of
a it was just understood. Youknow, you'd go over too her friend's
house, you'd see ants on occasion, you see cockroaches. Me, I
freak out with cockroaches. But itwas just growing up. It's like,
yeah, okay, there's another roach. Because you lived in certain areas,
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you have to deal with roaches,period, point blank. Now it's like
my wife, she used to workfor this company. I don't know if
I can say the company, Idon't know, but she worked for a
company. Well, I'll just sayshe worked for Ecolab, and she would
go into different businesses and tell thesebusinesses, hey you have a pest issue,
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or hey you can't store your foodhere. Hey, if you do
this, you're going to get aB or a C on your health grade.
For restaurants, if you wonder howdo they prepare for that, well,
that company eco Lab. They wouldgo in and tell you all this
stuff that you're doing wrong. AndI learned a lot of things from my
wife specifically surrounding that. Like ifI go up to a restaurant and i'm
let's say, if you're around back, you're parking around back, and if
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you see a lot of cardboard boxesin the back around the trash cardboard boxes
close to a restaurant, that's usuallya dead giveaway. There's probably a roach
infestation. It's like or a vermininfestation. If you could peek in the
back and you see that there aretrays which are on the ground or low
to the ground, much more accessibleto roaches in vermin, that's probably a
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place you don't want to eat.It's one of those things where I learned
too much and it makes it difficultfor me to eat a certain places I
have driven up and turned right aroundand left, because you can't unlearn certain
things. Like if I drove upto a restaurant and Mark Ronald was in
the back, I turn around.Why did I know that was coming?
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I think like an old married couplenow, and I can tell when you're
about to honey, it's only becauseI love you. Well, I knew
that. Everybody knows that that cardboardone though. That's that's true, that's
for real. I wow, becauseyeah, I've seen that a lot.
Yeah, and I've gone in becauseI didn't know. But now if they
don't break down their boxes and theyjust have boxes sitting out there, that's
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it's an invitation and a likely acceptedinvitation that the roaches are in the restaurant.
The upshot of your whole story isthat you might as well just now
accept your cockroach overlords, because there'sno defeating them. Oh no, they'll
be here long after the nuclear holocaust. They're gonna outlast us, that's for
sure. Absolutely absolutely. I don'tknow if that's good or bad, but
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they're better than us in many ways? Are they some good eating? Though?
Because we're gonna have to transition tosome bug food too much longer.
Look, you've seen the movie orTV show snow Piercer. Yeah, yeah,
I don't do insects. I no, I refuse. I would rather
starve to death then eat a bug, any bug. I don't eat ants.
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I don't do crickets. Crickets aresupposed to be tasty. Yeah,
Twallas eating cricket cookies. He's weirdlike that though. Do you remember that
story that we talked about a coupleof months ago about cockroach milk? Yeah,
we did that story. Yeah,yeah, you know. I didn't
know that it had memory glands,had a little tiny milking stool, microscopic
bucket. I didn't know that cockroacheshad an utter. I didn't know that.
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But now I feel like I'm alittle bit more intelligent to know that
they have milk. Milk it verycarefully. What kind of cereal would that
go with? I don't know.I don't know. I guess it's not
dairy. At least you done?You're done there? Seven? Can I
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go to break now? Yeah?I'm done? Now? Okay, can
you get George Norri on the linefor me? Please? Absolutely? Is
that asking too much? Now?There's a man who loves a nice classic
cockroke, cockroach milk. You almostgot yourself in trouble. Yeah, stay
on that dump button just made thepromo. No, no, no,
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no, no, that didn't happen. Oh yes it did. We got
to take to prove it. Rollback that tape. Roll it back,
We'll ask George nor when we comeback. No, No, let's make
a fresh start after the break,can if? I am six forty years
(24:37):
later with mo Kelly Live Everywhere onthe iHeartRadio app. Coming up in just
moments, we'll be coast to coastam with George Norri And I'm pleased to
let you know he's going to joinus right now, reluctantly. But I
will no tell us how you reallyfeel. All that's good. Hey,
By the way, I have afriend of mine and married a wonderful woman
from Thailand, and she heard allthese cicadas and said to him, we're
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going to have a great dinner tonight. Oh could you imagine eating those things?
No, I don't want to imagine. I refuse to eat insects.
Don't blame you. I don't blameyou at all. You need the right
sauce. What's wrong with you?Mark? No, I was having a
very private conversation with my friend Georgehere, and you wanted to talk about
(25:26):
sauce on the show that I wastalking about. Go ahead, George,
ancient aliens and mysteries or other things. I gotta get out of here,
ye, George, before we go. You might have heard Mark Ronner talk
(25:47):
about how Apple Music has released thislist of best albums of all time,
and obviously there's some recency bias init, but there were ten albums and
Apple has this inaugural one hundred bestalbums list was started with a ten day
countdown last week. And if youknow the list, you know that there
(26:10):
is a lot of discussion. Iguess, h Mark, do you have
the list in front of you?I don't, but it's okay. I
can start at number ten and workour way up. Stephan, just give
me a drum roll if you've gotone, handy. Okay. According to
Apple Music, these are the tenbest albums of all time. Ready,
these aren't my choices. This isaccording to Apple Music. I don't know
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what their metrics are. I don'tknow how they quantify this. I don't
know if it's just people streaming musicor with everybody high. I don't know.
Coming in at number ten. Ofthe greatest albums of all time according
to Apple Music is Beyonce Lemonade.Sure right. Coming in at number nine,
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Nirvana's never Mind Not smells like teenSpirit. I don't get it.
This is just whoever happened to bearound the office. I think it's album.
It's album. Yeah, okay,look I'm just reading it. Coming
at number eight, Amy Winehouse Backto Black, Number seven, Kendrick Lamar
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Good City, Mad City. That'sthe seventh greatest album of all time of
all time? Sure yeah? Numbersix. This is the only one that
I agree with being on this list. Actually one of them. Stevie Wonders
Songs in a Key of Life thatis one of the greatest albums of all
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time. No argument here, Noyeah. Number five, Here comes the
argument, Frank Ocean Blonde and it'sbetter than Steven One is the Key of
Life? Yeah, Bless their Hearts? Not Coming in at number four,
(28:18):
Prince in the Revolution Purple Rain.I will hear that argument. I will
hear that argument. I said,I will hear the argument. I say
I would agree with it fair enoughfrom a popularity standpoint. Yes, it's
one of the most successful music soundtracksas a body of musical work. It's
not even Prince's best Friends. It'snot even coming in. Number three.
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I'll allow it. The Beatles AbbeyRoad, I'll allow it. I'll listen
to the argument again. I thinkthey're better Beatles albums out there, but
I'll allow it. Number two MichaelJackson Thriller. It's the best selling album
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all time, but it's not hisbest album. No, And I don't
think it's the best musical album inthe annals of history. Yeah, it's
up there, it's up there.Put its away. I put it at
number ten if I really sat downand took my time, if you did
it, yeah, i'd probably Icould probably think of nine albums I think
which are better. Off the Wall. Hello, that's my favorite Michael Jackson
(29:32):
album that you know when you talkabout rock with you girlfriend, don't stop
to you good enough? Yeah?Those people who are too Michael Jackson.
The popularity of it, Yes,that's I think one and number one album
music. That's the album of alltime. Laurren Hill, The Miseducation of
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Lauren Hill. I can name twosongs maybe three off that album. It's
the best album she ever did.It's not in the top thirty. I
can name all the songs and it'san amazing album and I'll die on that
hill, but it's not number one. Lauren Hill has literally had two albums.
She had The Miseducation of Lauren Hilland then she had the re Education,
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which was the live version. Iwas like, she didn't have that
many albums, right, No,no, no, two, actually one
and a half because again the secondone is the same album, it's just
live. Was she late for thatalbum? Don't? Oh, that's wrong.
I've never seen her live. Irefuse to see her lives and I've
(30:37):
seen her life twice and the Fuji'sshe gives a phenomenal she does if she
shows up within three hours of starttime. And I'm not exaggerating. That's
that's fair. Yeah, that's fair. You're not lying worth it? Okay?
All right? Well those are thetop ten albums according to Apple Music.
I guess no, no to thetwenty one year old put this list
(31:00):
together to Apple Music. Well,I don't know if it was based on
songs or albums which were streamed onApple Music or what. I don't know.
That was my question. Is itbased on streaming or just popularity like
you were saying, yeah, Idon't know, because there's no metric that
I can think of that would putLauren Hill at the top of any all
time list. I'm telling you,someone who went to Coachella recently and loved
(31:25):
when Lauren Hill came out with hernephew, you know, at Coachella,
saw that. Put this list togetherthe following Monday. Right here we go.
The process started several months ago whenApple Music's editorial team of editors and
music experts air quotes including people Idon't know some global creative director and lead
anchor for Apple Music, and EbroDarden, the global head of hip hop
(31:48):
R and B. Is that hebrofrom New York. Yeah, okay.
Generated generated a list of candidates fromthe past sixty five years, but they
basically left out a lot of thebest music from the past sixty five years,
and validates the entire argument absolutely absolutely. How the hell are you gonna
put Frank Ocean album that came outseven years ago? Never Mind good Night,
good Night, I Gotta go,I Gotta go between Cockroaches and never
(32:12):
Mind. KF I Am six fortyWe're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
Well, at least you've decided tolisten to Kofi see you're making progress.
Ki and the kost HD two LosAngeles launy Live Everywhere on the radio AP