Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
How is everybody doing on a Monday good?
Speaker 2 (00:05):
How are you swallowed something?
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Whoa what was that? I don't know what that was? Okay,
you need to come in and reach ups.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
Could you mind your own business in the morning, could you?
Just because there's like video and audio connections between all
the studios, it doesn't mean you need to watch when
I have my pit crew stuff going on, because Courtney
will come come to the door of the studio and
she'll be holding a Celsius and you'll go, can I
offer you?
Speaker 1 (00:33):
And I say, yes, Josh, I don't see Courtney. I
just see a hand with a Celsius kid. And it's
literally literally like you would do when a NASCAR pulls
into the pit section. Everybody's got a job. I keep
expecting like another hand to come out with the flow names.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
But it's like a NASCAR for babies, because when I
take a sip tube.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
She'll be like, what what?
Speaker 3 (00:55):
Whoa?
Speaker 1 (00:56):
Whoa whoa whoa.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
You know you're gonna ruin your day, Sean. You're gonna
get who hopped up on goofballs? He won't be able
to do the show. Little did she know, I don't
even need the goofballs I just choke on air. I
absolutely do it. I'm choking on air over here. Yeah,
choking on air on air, and not many people can
do that today. So you're in the right spot. Friends.
All right, let's see let's put our ears to the ground,
(01:18):
our fingers in the pulse, let's see what's happening to
this great, big, wide world of ours, and we go
to the woods. Everybody, that's right. One point three million
views on this clip, and you watch it and you
just go. Some of us grew up this way and
some of us definitely did not. And the best thing
(01:38):
I could pare it to is like what's burned dooling banjos.
It's like dueling banjos mixed with them bop or something.
It's a kid's band in the middle of the woods.
And one of the kids he plays like tap shoes,
you know, it's like dancing.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
Along with her.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
It's a whole different world. Let's see what's going.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
On over here. You've got a dog out there.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
First of all, I'm impressed, Okay, Yeah, Like I know,
I've played the banjo before. It's not an easy thing.
It's not like the guitar is fairly easy. A monkey
could play a couple of chords like green Day, But
when you get the banjo and you're like picking and
licking and you know, sticking and just a little bit different. Yeah, yeah,
(02:43):
you're not choking on air. If you're playing a banjo,
you're really hammering at home. And these kids are pretty
damn talented. But tell us thumbs up or thumbs down,
you like it or.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
You hate it? Over on check, Oh yeah, we spend
the dog a little fiddle coming in.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
All right, seeling you don't have enough kids to do
this yet. It's a real shame. It's a real shame.
If you had four or five of those little buggers,
you could give them each a little instrument and throw
a hound dog in the picture and next thing you know.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
Whila money is hum.
Speaker 2 (03:28):
An equivalent of country bear jamboree. Yes, that's right, little
kid jamboree. There they are out in the woods, a
very very different life than many of you growing up.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
But the kids are talented. It's very good. I mean,
I feel the job kids, You did it all right.
The least talented kid is the one just kind of
jumping on that plank of wood. Thing. Disagree you think
you could do that. Yes, I get you some of
the top shoes. No shot, buddy, I want to see it.
First off, good luck finding size sixteen tap shoes on
(03:58):
Amazon right now.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
Yeah, that's our big problem.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
Second, you know, think I could jump like a step
to the beach. I don't think you.
Speaker 2 (04:07):
Could jump around like a little finicky fox going that dud.
Speaker 1 (04:11):
Don't think that every kid behind him is is exerting
more talent. I don't know why he gets to be
front and center the dog. No, no, no, no, no,
you know you know why those other kids aren't pet
and dogs, why they're doing actual music. You are wrong your.
Speaker 4 (04:28):
Jailer shoes or wide shoes because I found him?
Speaker 2 (04:31):
Why okay, they have wide tap shoes like that sixteen?
All right, I'm willing to buy these just to show
you that you have no shot in hell of being
able to top to get you know, teas around.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
No, I'll go back.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
I'm going back, go back on this, Josh, try not
to be biased, Try not to be biased, and watch
this and tell me if you think Heilin could pull
this off. He's six foot, one million and a couple
of pounds more than this kid.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
He thinks he could do it? Okay, all.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
Right, right, it's pretty simple. He was slide slide, but
you still couldn't do it. You still couldn't pull this off.
I don't think he's in cowboy boots. This kid. What
a world essentially, wake up.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
Sorry, I'm distracted at Josh trying to buy me a
acoustic born between July and August.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
All right, well, here's what we have for you today.
Do the math on that right.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
Cut. That was a thinker, Yeah, throw it out a.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
Figure because you just stepped on it. That It was
like a clue on the New York Times cross rebuzzle.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
For your defensive New York Times clue your chew.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
On the end of your pencil for a second is.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Tard?
Speaker 2 (06:15):
I knew it the whole time. It was Leo Tard,
son of a bitch. The internet broke this morning once again.
And I would explain to you why this works, but
most people kind of don't understand how these things go.
And I'm not trying to talk down to you. You know,
I just work with websites a lot. But to simplify,
Amazon has a big service called AWS, all right, and
(06:40):
Amazon Web Services is what AWS stands for. Now, if
you own a big website. The likelihood that you use
this AWS service to serve up photos, videos, graphics from
your website is pretty big. So whenever there's a problem,
and there has been at least like one every six
months or so, maybe one big one every year, not
(07:03):
only does Amazon go down, but most of the Internet
goes down. You're trying to go on your favorite app,
You're trying to go on your favorite website. But because
all of those websites rely on this Amazon Web Services
or AWS, and that's down, everything's down. TV shows can
be down, streaming can be down. In fact, the service
(07:24):
that we use to stream on YouTube and Twitch was
down until about twenty minutes before the show started, and
we're like wondering if we have to do it a
different way. We had no idea what we're going to
do it, and then all of a sudden the last
moment it came back up, and so here we are
but breaking. Overnight, the Internet broke.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
Again, thanking every night.
Speaker 3 (07:41):
Many websites and apps are down right now after an
outage with Amazon Web Services. This is having an impact
on sites including Venmo, duelingo Cano, cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase, and
social media Appolete Snapchat. At last check, the company says
it's seeing quote increased error rates and these with multiple
AWS services. No timetable when everything will be back up
(08:04):
and running again.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
Well, it looks like most of its back up. I
think Robinhood, yeah, might still be down. Might still be down.
Could be an opportunity for somebody to steal all of
your moneys on Robinhood, and you deserve it after thinking
you could do that tap dance and move that little
cowboy kid was doing. It's just unbelievable. Some of the
services that were down as this happened. Disney Plus, Spectrum, Signal, Roku, IMDb,
(08:34):
PlayStation Network, Capital One, Clash of Clans, Oh my god,
how can we deal with this? Reddit dot Com, fan Duel, Coinbase, Canva.
I use a bunch of these things at and T
and T Mobile, The New York Times, Amazon Music.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
The list goes on and on. I got in my.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
Robin Hood, but it loaded pretty slowly. Do you know
what the most brutal one was. I don't know if
you guys have seen this this morning. Delta United in
the airlines. They use Amazon Web services to serve stuff up,
so they also were having problems with their website.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
But we'll try to order my McDonald's this morning. You
couldn't the McDonald's that was down.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
Yeah, the brutal one see Lane, And this will probably
infuriate you, knowing a little bit about coding and whatnot.
Amazon users who have an Alexa device, a lot of
these people apparently use it for an alarm to wake
up because it's nice.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
No, I don't know why, but all of their alarms
were down this morning.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
Why that would require internet access beyond me. Why anybody
would program it so it required access to the internet
for your alarm to go off in the morning just
makes absolutely no sense in terms of like programming. But
that's what happened.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
They said. Alexa users had.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
A hell of a morning with their alarms, and they
said around.
Speaker 1 (10:02):
Three am, why would you g why would you use
that versus just like your phone. I used my phone
for all my alarms and some people say, taps me
on the hand.
Speaker 2 (10:13):
Some people say their phone doesn't get loud enough, it
doesn't get loud enough to wake them up. But the
Alexo with like full volume will shock you into existence.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
And the story of an alarm clock, I agree, old
school and or just why wouldn't they just redo this
so it doesn't need an active Internet connection.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
It should be a locally you know, held setting. It's stupid,
it says on Monday, a worldwide internet issue after three am,
including Amazon's online store, front, Prime Video, YadA, YadA, YadA,
and it switched off alarms within the app. There's here's
some people who relied on this at Amazon. What the
(10:53):
actual f First, my Alexa won't set my alarm, claiming
it can't connect with the app or something. Tried restarting it,
resetting it and it wouldn't work. And now I need
my alarm. My Alexa is the only thing loud enough
to wake me. Then I tried to call customer service
and they told me, sorry, can't connect having issues. I
tried a few times just for the call to drop
(11:14):
over and over. Alexa's down. I'm trying to set my alarm.
Somebody else says these people are weak, they rely on this,
they allow. And then some people were mat on the
other side. Damn it, my Alexa work. The alarm went off.
Thanks for fixing it. Now I can't miswork. They got
mad that they could have gone the other way on
this one. It's damned if you do. Damned if you
don't kind of think so, if you're off to one
(11:35):
of those kind of mornings, Sorry, sorry for your situation.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
I don't know if there's any way to quantify this,
but if you were Amazon as a company and you
have this big outage, Hello on Amazon, wouldn't you want
to fix your own websites first? I would, Yeah, I
would prioritize.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
Yeah, in all reality, they should prioritize the stuff that
actually keeps this country running, like McDonald's, or for ceiling
this morning Chick fil A, because you just randomly bragged
that down the line and I.
Speaker 1 (12:03):
Was talking to Josh.
Speaker 2 (12:04):
It's been happening all day to me sitting in here,
and he's like, out of nowhere, no prompt, nobody said anything.
It see like goes, I had a Chick fil A
burrito this morning, was fantastic. Mike, Well, that is does
sound good.
Speaker 1 (12:17):
But when you when you when you when you preface
it with the fact that Josh had offered me a
Chick fil A biscuit, He's like, guy, I got this here,
do you want it? And I was saying, no, I
had a burrito this morning, but I said it to
the wrong person.
Speaker 2 (12:30):
Can I say something though? Can I say something here?
Those Chick fil a biscuits are rubbish? They are so dry,
are they not? I mean they are God if you're
if you woke up in your mouth, was you had
a medical issue and just drool was pouring out of
your mouth, it would be what the doctor would prescribe.
It's take a Chick fil a biscuit, put it into
(12:53):
your mouth. All of it just gone in a second.
It's unbelievable. But well you survived through that too. I
think everybody's cool. Now, congratulations everybody. Let's look at the
box office this weekend and see how everybody did. And
number one at the box office Black Phone two, and
(13:14):
that brought in twenty six point five million dollars, followed
by tron Eres eras Eras eleven million dollars. I saw
Blackphone one, but I didn't remember it that much.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
And oh wait, Nathan Hawk, did I watch Black Phone one?
If you did, it didn't stick with him?
Speaker 2 (13:32):
No good fortune was in at number three, one battle
after another, the Leonardo DiCaprio movie that nobody remembers the
name of. And number five roof Man at the box office.
Speaker 1 (13:41):
Really, what's crazy to me.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
I wonder why to our Hispanic listeners today hanging out
with us seventy five wait, no, no, no, no, forty percent
forty percent of the people who went to see Black
Phone two, the number one movie in the forty percent
of them were Hispanic. I think Hispanic people just really
(14:06):
love scary movies. I think that they really like them
more than say, like, I don't think Asian people to
really generalize here, I don't think Asian people like it
as much. I think everybody likes these particular genres, but
for something like this, they look at it and they're like,
it was forty percent Hispanic buying the tickets to see
(14:28):
this movie.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
All right, real quick?
Speaker 2 (14:30):
To get us kicked off Here a couple of emails,
Chris says, Hello, junkie crew, I was listening to Friday's show,
and you asked if inmates got to keep their money
if and when they get out of jail. Yes, upon
the expiration of their sentence, any money they have in
their inmate trust will be paid out to them, either
by prepaid debt or a paper check mailed to their
residents listed loved the show, says Chris, thank you talking
(14:53):
about I guess Luigi Mangioni has like forty thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
What happens when you're not released from jail? What do you?
Speaker 2 (15:05):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (15:05):
Oh wow, Oh that's a good question. I also somebody
when we talked about that last week, somebody I think
texted in and said that there is a limit to
how much you can spend each week when you're in prison. So,
like Luigi Mangioni couldn't even really go through it all.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
Okay, because I mean, is it possible that you could
buy like so much liquoric you could weave together a
rope to.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
I think they're more worried about furthering any sort of
power dynamic. You know, if you.
Speaker 2 (15:41):
Are as a protest, if I just wanted to get
so fat that it was unjailable, and if I make
myself wider than the cell, you have to by default
let me go.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
Kristen emails the show.
Speaker 2 (15:54):
Kristen says, my cousin has foreign accent syndrome. He speaks
with a perfect Scottish I think accent, even blackout drunk.
If I can get him to talk to you, do
you want to interview him? It's fascinating, blackout drunk that'd.
Speaker 1 (16:10):
Be really great.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
He's a musician and a microbiologist born in New Jersey,
grew up in Vegas and lives in Minnesota. Let me know,
says Kristen. Yeah, I think so. This is not some
some frank. Yeah, we'd love.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
To talk on the phone with a Scottish guy.
Speaker 2 (16:25):
Yeah, like, oh, this is really believable, sir. We've talked
to somebody with that before. They got hit on the
head with a pan or something. And the person we
interviewed had an accent and it was interesting. But yeah,
well I'm always always up for talking to somebody with
a different accent, like that foreign accent syndrome or not.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
So yeah, do you think we talked to that person?
Speaker 2 (16:46):
Oh seven years trainer Rep.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
Dolphin, Yeah, yeah, all my brain's working today.
Speaker 2 (16:57):
My brain is working today. No, it doesn't. And this
is all good news. It's just a little bit of air. Gods,
shut that thing down.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
That's so true. It doesn't take much.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
The good news is we have to get into the
robbery that happened this weekend, and it's the stuff, the
stuff movies are made of. There was a robbery for
people in broad daylight on Sunday morning, robbed one of
the most famous museums on planet Earth, the Louver in
central Paris. They robbed this museum and got away with
(17:35):
priceless jewelry. And how they did this, what's going on
the manhunt for them? We're going to dive into it
and get you all caught up. That is coming up
next on the news Junkie.
Speaker 1 (18:02):
Okay, just switched off of AWS. But does it matter?
Still not broken, the still perfect time.
Speaker 2 (18:12):
It was in the nicked time, it would have taken
down a lot of stuff, a lot of stuff over time.
Some of these folks in chat that are like the
mega political people want to talk about the protests and
all that stuff for what. For what, Let's have a
little fun for God's sake. I want to talk about
and we'll talk about everything as we do today. But honestly,
what is there to say? It's kind of boring. It's like, Okay,
(18:34):
there were protests that were mostly peaceful and orderly, and
people went out there and did their thing, and that's
that's great. But what you want to you want to
do four hours on that? I said a little boring
to me, But you know, sean protest write an email
if I'm honest with you, that would be more interesting
(18:54):
to talk about. That would be more you know, worth
spending a bunch of time on. It's like, hey, people
that exercise exercise their right to go out and protest
that took to the streets, and some cities they had
a big turnout, and a lot of cities they had
smaller turnouts. It was mostly boomers, and I don't know why,
but they don't have the young people very engaged in
a lot of this stuff. But there's not a lot
(19:15):
other than that really to go into. If you have
a comment on it, send the dispatch. I'll always respond
to your dispatches if they're interesting. In the meanwhile, let's
talk about the story that I thought was most interesting
over this weekend, and that is in broad daylight, the biggest,
one of the most famous, I mean maybe the most
famous museum in the world right the Louver in Paris.
(19:39):
If you've ever been, it's kind of interesting because it's
like dead center of Paris and there's just like a
top of a pyramid coming out of the ground. That's it.
You see, like a top a glass top of a pyramid,
and the whole museum is kind of underground from there
and some of the structures around it and stuff. It's
pretty big. And these four people busted in with chainsaws
(20:01):
at everything and got away with priceless jewelry that they
stole in the middle of the day at a robbery
on a museum. And I don't need to tell you this.
You're smart enough to know there's security at this museum.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
There's like no people whose job it is to.
Speaker 2 (20:19):
Sit there and with guns and stuff protect the jewels
at this Love museum. But on Sunday morning, four suspects
came in on two motorbikes. Some of the stories called
them scooters, but I don't know. And they winded their
way through central Paris. They had a hall of priceless
jewelry once worn by queens and made of sapphires, diamonds
(20:41):
and emeralds. And they haven't caught them just yet. They
have not gotten these folks.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Let's see.
Speaker 2 (20:47):
One of the stories on this is from seven News
talking about how this whole Ocean's eleven style robbery went down.
Speaker 5 (20:55):
Wearing high vis carrying out a heist distant for Hollywood.
This thief gang of potentially four robbers carving into cabinets
with chainsaws in the loop with a chainsaw time to
what remains of the French Crown Jewels or one floor beneath.
Tourists are evacuated only half an hour after the museum opened.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
Oh, it was very shocking because we were supposed to.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
It does suck because you might have waited for a
long time.
Speaker 1 (21:23):
That line, it's so long, it does.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Yeah, there's a line that forms right by where the
little pyramid top pokes out, and it can be a
four or five hour line. Like it's a crazy slow
line when the museum fills.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
Out where all the mines are.
Speaker 2 (21:40):
I don't know, maybe I just know it's a line
that doesn't really go anywhere, and you essentially have to
wait for people to come out to go in because
it's like an occupancy thing and it's just not fun.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
Man.
Speaker 5 (21:53):
Well, we can up enter a cherry picker reaching the
balcony and other remnants of the daylight robbery examined by
forensic crews cataloging every step of the operation that lasted
just four minutes.
Speaker 1 (22:05):
How did this happen?
Speaker 6 (22:06):
It was very quick.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
It must be said.
Speaker 5 (22:08):
These are professionals organized crime Today targets, art objects and
museums have obviously become targets. The value of the eight
stolen items said to be inestimable, Among them the Empress
Eugenie broach containing more than two thousand diamonds, jud earrings,
two necklaces, tiaras, one belonging to Queen Marie Emily, the last.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
Queen of France.
Speaker 5 (22:31):
Empress Eugenie's crown covered in more than a thousand diamonds
recovered nearby.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
Oh, they've dropped that or something.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
The way are they're just dropping crave the Jews. There's
like millions of dollars in crowns just rolling around to
the ground outside. This is crazy to me. It's crazy
that this was able to happen. And I truly question
how like these guys come in with chainsaws. They're in
the middle of your museum, in the middle of your city,
(23:00):
and nobody stops them that where is the security to
come over and do something. I understand full well when
you have let's say, a target and the target store says,
if somebody steals something, it's not worth it. Just let
them leave and we'll try to come after them afterwards.
(23:21):
We don't want any violence to come of this. We
don't want to approach them. You know, maybe we'll say
stop or something. But if they don't want to stop,
we don't want to apprehend them. But if you're at
the museum with priceless jewels everywhere, they're just sitting back watching, like, oh,
those guys are stealing all of our stuff. Right now,
it seems so weird And I don't know how this
(23:42):
would ever happen, but it did right in the middle
of the day in the loop. And now a man
is underway for the people responsible for this. And I
got to tell you, it seems to me like like
jewelry hece are back, like it's bad. There's another one
where I think this was in York, England, Very Ocean's eleven.
(24:06):
I think in York, England, they busted in and check
this out. They busted in this jewelry shot smashing it open.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
The jewelry heist are back. This is inside inside the
cop car. Are they gonna They're gonna kind are the
bottom of the crash into the car. They got him, Okay,
(24:39):
they have the vehicle contained. We've got runners. Uh, it's
I don't know why we got the driver.
Speaker 2 (24:50):
I don't know why, but it's crazy that this has
come back. People are willing to do this.
Speaker 4 (24:54):
What if this is a viral marketing campaign for grand
theft Auto six It could be.
Speaker 2 (25:02):
So it's over the top, but they got money, right.
Speaker 1 (25:05):
They can make unlimited money.
Speaker 2 (25:07):
They can make things like that happen. But these these
big jewelry store thefts are kind of coming back. Somebody says,
and this is a fair point, crazy drunk cality.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
Says, gold is high right now.
Speaker 2 (25:17):
I mean I must factor in at least some and
they got to sell this stuff. They got to like
fence it or whatever to get rid of it. It's
pretty crazy.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
And in the second case, here was like one hundred
thousand dollars in stolen jewelry In the first case, what
does what fence it mean? Fencing means, I believe you
can double check, but I think fencing means to take
stolen merchandise and sell it to somebody who then like
gets rid of it on the black bell to a fence.
Speaker 1 (25:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
Yeah, they take the stolen goods, they give you like
a fraction of what it's worth because it's stolen, and
then they sell it for a little bit more because
it's stolen, and the people will have stolen paintings and stuff.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
Inside their house on display. Secretly it's all whole on them. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (26:04):
Yeah, Like imagine having a little like your own little
museum of all the stolen stuff people probably have that
they probably do. I want to hear from you today.
Send us a dispatch or join us with an email.
Tips at the news Junkie dot com. Tips at the
news junkie dot com. Our friend Amy Kaffelt will be
joining us in less than thirty minutes here on the show.
I want to talk to her about a couple of things.
(26:26):
One is that mistaken Uber kidnapping story which happened this weekend.
And I know they were covering where these women thought
their Uber had arrived.
Speaker 1 (26:38):
I don't know how often this happens.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
And the women just get into the back of this
guy's suv and they think their Uber is taking them away,
and the guy starts like sexually talking to them, like
like really really intensely flirting and being sexual with them,
and they realize, oh, we just gotten a random guy's car.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
He's not this guy is not an Uber driver.
Speaker 2 (26:59):
This this guy just saw us on the side of
the road and picked us up, and we thought it
was the Uber driver we were waiting for and it
was a whole thing. We'll talk about that with her.
I got some things to talk about close to me
that are interesting and making some news and a.
Speaker 1 (27:15):
Lot more when we come back.
Speaker 2 (27:17):
They found a hunting stand, that's what they're calling it,
a hunting stand. WPTV as a story about what was
behind this. It was within view of Air Force one,
the President's plane. This has prompted a federal investigation. Was
this just some innocent thing? What was this all about?
We'll dive into that and hear from you. That's coming
(27:38):
up next in the news.
Speaker 7 (27:39):
Junk Key.
Speaker 2 (27:56):
Still blows me away that they were able to pull
off that robbery I was talking about. That was the
folks on Skull Mike during the break a little bit,
because just the idea that you bust into the biggest
museum in the world in the Louver in Paris. You're
only with three other people, four people total, you have
a glorified ladder that you use to get in, then
you chainsaw your way into the displays and nobody stops you,
(28:19):
and then you get on scooters and hall ass away
from the museum.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
That's just crazy to me, friends, I know it is
and all they know is like the police reports that
came back almost immediately said they believed they were immigrants
in the country.
Speaker 2 (28:36):
That they that's all they said.
Speaker 1 (28:38):
They knew about tod like they had it.
Speaker 2 (28:40):
They didn't know anything more than the original police report
was they take the members of the immigrant community. That's
all they said about this so far. So I don't
know if they're gonna get away with it or not.
Maybe they never see those jewels again, Maybe they do,
and then those jewels become just like many of you
will know this because you're smart, just like the Monally,
(29:00):
you know, the Mona Lisa. When they first put it
up in the louver and France was not a particularly
popular painting, but it was stolen at least once, and
when it was stolen, it was a worldwide phenomenon. The
story about the theft of this stupid painting and this
ugly lady, and everybody from sea to Shining Sea and
(29:23):
every place in between was talking about this painting. And
then when they recovered it and all the stories about
recovering it, it drove people to go see it in
the museum because it was the painting that was famous
from the stories about its theft, and so that could
happen with this jewelry, or they sell it and you never.
Speaker 1 (29:41):
See it again. Ever. Ever, we'll see which way it goes.
Speaker 2 (29:45):
A pretty stunning footage out of Dallas, Texas, and this
one is lucky to be alive. Lucky to be alive,
and some pretty oppressive police work here as well as
in Dallas. This woman turns out she was drinking and driving.
Not a good idea. Don't do that now, It's dangerous, dangerous, dangerous.
(30:06):
Later charged with the driving under the influence, but the
cops showed up.
Speaker 1 (30:11):
And when the cops shut up to the.
Speaker 2 (30:12):
Scene, her car is I guess there's another Amazon crash.
I guess there's.
Speaker 1 (30:18):
Yeah, I am.
Speaker 2 (30:19):
They might curse too, Josh, you might be right to
lean back, and.
Speaker 1 (30:23):
I thought you were going with it.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
Could be that.
Speaker 1 (30:25):
So listen the way, though our dump is on Amazon
Web Services, what am I supposed.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
To do about that?
Speaker 1 (30:33):
I can't. I can't operate under these circumstances at any
given time on this show, I am apt to say
something that needs to be dumped, and I cannot protect
anybody from this if we don't have the dump button.
Speaker 2 (30:45):
But let's roll it here we go. This is the
police going after this woman who was drinking and driving.
Her car's on fire. She's screening. He's trying to pull
her out of the car. The car's on fire inside.
Speaker 1 (31:04):
You'll have to break here. Come out like that.
Speaker 2 (31:09):
You're gonna be in a lot more pain. Lady, if
you don't get out of the car. He's trying to
pull you out of the car. You're burning on car.
Open the door, come out again.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
This in Dallas. Hey, we got people.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
It's such what It's one of those moments where she's
going how it hurts because he's dragging her body across
the asphole. But you're like, if I don't do this,
trust me, sorry for saving you. Yeah, Like, it's gonna
be a lot worse.
Speaker 1 (31:46):
If I don't. If I don't do this right, Yeah, Hey,
we gotta take you back tomorre Okay, I know it's
gonna amazingly she survived. I know it hurts what your
car's on Yeah. Yeah, good police. Yeah, yeah, yeah, he'll
(32:11):
be tight. Yeah, she's a little I want my mommy.
Yeah I think she did.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
Yeah, it will Even adults will go to that sometimes
when you really aren't feeling well. But This is why
you don't drink and drives.
Speaker 1 (32:22):
I hear it all the time.
Speaker 2 (32:23):
Yeah, yeah, it makes sense for Jackson though, I mean
it does.
Speaker 1 (32:27):
It'll be tight, it's a little bit okay.
Speaker 3 (32:29):
But as.
Speaker 2 (32:34):
There she goes all right. So they rescued this woman
from her flaming car, saved her life. Twenty one year
old Jacqueline Tenorio of Dallas, Texas later charged with driving
while intoxicated. Your lesson of the day, kids, do not
drink and drive, all right. Just because Josh Fowler likes
doing it, doesn't mean that everybody should be hitting the streets.
Speaker 4 (32:57):
There's a difference between liking to do it and doing it.
Speaker 2 (33:01):
Yeah, I mean he holds back sometimes, he keeps it
to the video games, back to the grand theft auto.
It's much safer that way. We want to hear from you.
Send us a dispatch record yours ever at the Neewsjunkie
dot com, or send an email to tips at the
Newsjunkie dot com.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
Steve that emails the show.
Speaker 2 (33:18):
Steve says, Hey, Sean, I watched The Perfect Neighbor documentary
on Netflix this weekend. It's about the Florida woman who
shot her neighbor through the door and it's comprised of
mostly bodycam footage. If you haven't seen it, I highly
recommend it and it seems like something you would like.
Thanks Steve, Steve, thank you for the email number one.
I put this up on See It Now. It's up
on the New Seat Now on the Newsjunkie dot com.
(33:40):
I put up a review of this if you haven't
seen it yet, The Perfect Neighbor on Netflix, the documentary
is talking about. At first, I was a little bit
worried because the idea of doing a documentary almost exclusively
through the bodycam footage sounds like something that can be
tough to watch and tough to follow and shaky and
(34:01):
maybe not the best of quality. But I was a
believer by the end. I was a believer by the
end of The Perfect Neighbor because it really did a
great job at telling this story. And the story is
about this woman in the Okalla, Florida area, and this
woman moved into a neighborhood. The neighborhood was a low
(34:23):
income neighborhood, but it seemed like a nice little neighborhood,
a bunch of great families with lots of little kids.
Speaker 1 (34:30):
This miserable old woman hated these kids.
Speaker 2 (34:34):
Okay, she didn't like that the kids would play in
this empty lot that was by her house. So the
kids were out there playing football and they'd be having fun,
and she was literally, get off my lawn, lady, and
over a series of masts. It's not her lawn because
it's an empty lot, exactly. Yeah, and she's renting this property.
And then there's not even the property she's renting, it's
(34:56):
the place next to it. And the woman gets progressively
more pissed off at these kids, and the parents are
trying to be kind of patient. The police get called
out multiple times, and you see over the course of
these months the body cam footage of the police repeatedly
being called out. I'll have to tell you a couple
of things I've pulled away from this. The Perfect Neighbor
on Netflix, which was a great watch.
Speaker 1 (35:18):
It was thrilling.
Speaker 2 (35:21):
It's an hour and a half or so long. You'll
absolutely be interested in it. And it was a very
very well told story through this bodycam footage from the police.
But one thing that came through to me was you
don't see it much, but the police work on display
was so good. They were so good at talking to
(35:42):
the little kids. You hear the police interacting with these families,
commiserating with the families and the situation that they're in,
also trying to get through to this old angry lady
and deal with her. And it shows you, like the
every day that these police have to deal with, what
real police work is like. We don't tend to see
this stuff.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
Because to show you, you know, when somebody does a
good job, right, because it's not very exciting. It's not
you know, they're like, oh, here's a police officer who
is a great Okay, that video is not going viral.
Oring here's a cop who shot a couple of people.
That one's going viral. You know.
Speaker 2 (36:20):
That's that's just how this stuff kind of works. But
it was some great police work, great investigative work all around.
And it's a story basically about a crotchety old lady
that ends up shooting and killing this woman over this
dumb fight over these kids being too loud. And it's
(36:40):
a really interesting tale of something that I think is
way too prevalent in America in twenty twenty five, and
it's an anger epidemic. It really is not enough people
seem to notice this but it's very crystal clear to
me there's like an anger epidemic going on.
Speaker 1 (36:58):
It doesn't matter what it is is.
Speaker 2 (37:00):
It could definitely definitely be politics, right, and people would
just get so angry, even with people that they're friends
with and stuff. But this morning, Courtney was telling me
she saw a post on social media about how to
fry chicken or something, and then the people in the
(37:21):
comment thread started getting into a bloodthirsty argument over whether
if you cook the chicken too hard, the protein is
removed from the chicken that you're cooking. And it ended
with all of them like threaten each other's lives, like
everybody at the ends, I'll tell you over the chicken.
Speaker 6 (37:39):
You know.
Speaker 2 (37:40):
Wait, wow, guys, guys, calm down.
Speaker 1 (37:43):
This is like anger.
Speaker 2 (37:44):
Epidemic out there. And this woman was one of the
more angry people you'll see, just like it's infused, it's
running through her veins and she ended up killing this
lady in this neighborhood in Okala. But it's a really
good documentary, about ninety six minutes long. It's on Netflix,
the most you have that already. I rated it four
(38:05):
out of five because I just thought it was well
spun together. And I would encourage you to watch it
and tell me what you thought about it, just like
that emailer did over at tips at the Newsjunkie dot com.
Speaker 1 (38:15):
All right, we are going to quick break.
Speaker 2 (38:18):
When we come back, I have the pleasure of informing
you that Amy call Fel Fox thirty five will be
joining us on the show. We got many things to
go through and we'll talk to her about all things
happening in the news today on this lovely Monday. Amy
Kufel coming up next on the News Junkie. All right,
(38:53):
it's time, everybody. We've got our friend Amy Kawfel from
Fox thirty five. Hey you guys, me good to see
you again, hear me?
Speaker 1 (39:04):
Do I sound okay?
Speaker 6 (39:05):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (39:07):
You sound great. You're fantastic.
Speaker 2 (39:09):
Hey, we were just talking about that and it's got
local tie ends here for Fox thirty five. But did
you get a chance to watch that Perfect Neighbor documentary?
Speaker 6 (39:17):
And that's my gosh, I'm so glad you brought that up,
because one of our meteorologists this morning, Jessica, was asking
if we had seen it yet, and I have not
had a chance to watch it, but she said that
it was one. She said it was fascinating, but she
said it was also heartbreaking. She said she actually cried
quite a bit watching it. She said she didn't get
a chance to finish it. But no, it's on my
(39:38):
it's on my list, and it's especially I think we
talked about this once before. You know, when you watch
a docu series and you don't know how it ends,
Like I was telling you about the one called with
the oh, what was the name of it? Was the
one about like the unknown number? Remember that it happened orige,
And I couldn't. I didn't remember how that story ended. Obviously,
we know how this story ends, because this is a
local story for us. But yeah, i'd heard it. I
(40:01):
heard it. It's really well put together.
Speaker 2 (40:03):
Yeah, I mean, there were so many things about it.
I think this is a good point. Jason on YouTube says,
you know, justice was served. It was a positive thing.
The system worked. It did show some really good police work.
It showed some incredibly tough moments. I mean, they literally
showed all of the moments of the family going through this,
and it was brutal to watch through the lens of
(40:23):
a body cam. But it's also like an important thing
I think for people to remember that there's just some
of these people out there just so angry and crazy,
and you know, you never know what's going to happen,
and you never know all this stuff that some of
these police officers have to go through each day, just
dealing with these weirdos. And I thought it was good.
(40:44):
I think people will enjoy it and they should watch
that whenever they get a chance.
Speaker 1 (40:48):
Anyhow, what was the kids were?
Speaker 6 (40:49):
The kids were really she said, you just feel for
the children.
Speaker 2 (40:53):
It was that part of Courty was bawling. And by
the way, the movies, the documentary which is called The
Perfect Neighbor on Netflix, it's not just just a miserable
thing or something. It's very interesting in thought provoking, and
then it does have those emotional elements in it, and
you really do feel for the family and you wonder
(41:15):
is this happening in other neighborhoods, which it most certainly is.
But anyhow, I'll be watching.
Speaker 6 (41:21):
I'll be watching for sure.
Speaker 2 (41:22):
What was going down for you this weekend? Anything exciting?
Speaker 6 (41:25):
We actually traveled up to Ohio this weekend. We had
a family wedding. We flew up on Thursday. Oh my gosh,
you guys, like it's been a while since I've experienced fall, because,
as you guys know, we don't get fall here. You
don't get changing of the seasons or changing of the leaves.
I mean, we got lucky last week. We had some
cooler weather, but it was amazing. I mean, the leaves
were changing and it was just like cool, crisp bear.
(41:48):
It was so nice. Yeah, it was nice to get
away for a couple of days.
Speaker 1 (41:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (41:51):
I mean I have some people that I know, well,
Courtney's nieces, and they moved down here recently from Philadelphia,
and they go, you know, you don't see the changing,
you don't see the seasons. I go, I'll get over
that December, like January or something. I'll get around Right
(42:12):
now is what I like. This is just nice, beautiful,
fantastic weather.
Speaker 6 (42:20):
It's supposed to be kind of hot and sticky over
the next couple of days, but it's supposed to get
nice again after that. I guess we'll get another cool
front blowing through in a couple of days.
Speaker 2 (42:28):
I know you were still improve I know you were
talking this morning, Amy about I saw the story and
read it myself on Fox thirty five Orlando dot Com
about this mistaken uber story where these young girls got
into what they thought was their Uber but really it
was this guy and then it turned out to be
like a whole kidnapping thing. What was going on with
(42:49):
this story?
Speaker 6 (42:49):
Details are a little so we're still working on the
details on this, but basically, it was early in the morning, somebody,
I think almost like four in the morning, walking down
a busy street. It was a girl buyer. She apparently
the guy pulled over and asked her she needed a ride,
and she said that she thought he was an uber driver,
so she hadn't She didn't call an uber that we
(43:12):
know of, or call for a lift or anything like that.
It was just somebody who was, like she thought, being
friendly and offering her a ride, and she thought he
was an Uber driver. Turns out that as they were
driving along, he started to make sexual comments and when
she was like, I'm uncomfortable, can you please pull over,
he wouldn't pull over, and so that's when she decided,
you know what, I'm just getting out of this car.
(43:33):
And so when it got to a point where she
felt safe enough, she opened the door and she rolled
out of the vehicle while it was still moving, ran
to a gas station and had somebody call for help.
So we're still trying to hammer out more of the
details about the circumstances surrounding it, but it sounds like
she had not called for a ride, that it was
just somebody who had offered a ride to her.
Speaker 2 (43:54):
Yeah, she just thought, She's like, okay, this must be
some sort of uber or something legit and gets inside
the car.
Speaker 6 (44:00):
As you guys know, I don't know any of the
circumstances surrounding you know how, you know, if if she
was you know, if she had been drinking, if she
was sober, I don't know any of that stuff. So
that that is, you know, I'm all in sure, but
God bless her. You know, she basically was like, I
am not dying tonight. I am getting out of this vehicle.
And we have, you know, seen other women do that
before and sometimes get really injured. But but thankfully she
(44:21):
you know, minor bumps and bruises. And the guy, the
gas station guy said, yeah, she was you know how
her elbows were scraped up, but she's alive because she
was smart.
Speaker 2 (44:29):
Was there charges against the guy who was driving or
we'll find him.
Speaker 7 (44:33):
Wow.
Speaker 6 (44:33):
They have a description of the vehicle and they and
they got actually a pretty good sketch of him. We
have the picture of him up on our website, so
we do have a sketch. He's got like he was
wearing a baseball cap. He had kind of like a
pencil thin mustache, and uh so we have him. We
have a description of the car.
Speaker 1 (44:50):
The what pencilson mustache joke? Sorry, very limited audience for
that joke. Amy, He's he's hitting.
Speaker 2 (44:58):
With jokes today that are are so particularly focused. He
had a horoscope joke earlier.
Speaker 6 (45:05):
Today where I make the joke and then I'm like,
nobody even knows what I'm talking about.
Speaker 1 (45:12):
Here. Okay, I see, I see the sketch of the guys.
Speaker 2 (45:14):
It's got a well, it's a little disturbing that he
has a black hat on exactly like the one I'm wearing.
Speaker 1 (45:18):
But I do not have a mustache. Does look like
somebody drew a mustache on showing it doesn't look like
me with a mummash. No, it doesn't look at that.
Speaker 5 (45:30):
Man.
Speaker 6 (45:31):
Damn a little bit, now that you mention it, what
did I make that same face? Hold on, that's a coincidence.
Where were you on Saturday night?
Speaker 2 (45:40):
Damn it, that's not good.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
That's not I can't hit the streets.
Speaker 2 (45:43):
I gotta I'm gonna have to stay in for a
little while. This guy's uncomfortably close. I mean, he looks
a little more Spanish than I do. But you know what,
it's just, it's literally one.
Speaker 6 (45:54):
I buy you a new hat tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (45:55):
Yeah, please, I need it. God knows.
Speaker 2 (45:58):
I know we've been talking about we have ten days
left inn till we have our big roast event, amy kay,
which are getting nervous.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
I am a little nervous.
Speaker 2 (46:11):
I have.
Speaker 1 (46:12):
I've found.
Speaker 2 (46:13):
The nice thing is when I sit down every once
in a while on my app on my phone and
try to write a couple of jokes for each person,
it's just coming forth. It's just it's flowing through me,
like like I've had all of this and I've held it.
That's not a good thing, I think, man, I think
so yeah, And I was just I'm channeling it like
(46:34):
in a way I've never channeled anything before.
Speaker 1 (46:36):
What about this thing?
Speaker 2 (46:37):
I could say in this thing is so there's a
level of this that has been an emotional lift off
of me, which I I have enjoyed and I'm ready
for a fun night. You know, there's some rumors that
there might be some kind of interaction with with Amy
Kaffelt at this event. I don't know, don't know exactly what,
(46:59):
don't know exactly what the expect or what's going down.
Speaker 7 (47:01):
I know.
Speaker 2 (47:04):
You can learn more about what's going on seal I
updated the page over at the news junkie dot com
slash roast if you want the details there the news
Junkie dot Com slash roast. What what other stories are
grabbing your attention this.
Speaker 6 (47:15):
Morning, Amy, Well, you guys may have talked about it,
and uh, but it's something that we're focused on pretty heavily.
Here is the the hunting stand that was found within
what they say, with a shooting range of the of
the Air Force one of where the President enters in
exits there in South Florida. So, as you guys know,
the President is down to South Florida a lot. Of course,
(47:36):
he has a house down there, mar A Lago. He
was down there this weekend and Fox News posted a
photo of him going up the Oh there you go,
you got the pictures up. Fox News posted a photo
of him going up the back staircase, which is a
shorter staircase going into Air Force one as a precaution.
Secret Service is the one that found the hunting stand
(48:00):
within the lot. We think within the last couple of days.
They've turned the case over to the FBI now so
they are investigating. There was nobody around the hunting stand.
But why you have a hunting stand that close to
where the president is landing his plane in.
Speaker 1 (48:12):
An area where there is no hunting. Yeah, there's no
hunting that close to UH Palm Beach International.
Speaker 2 (48:18):
No, it's right across the street from the airport and
one of the only like gaggles of trees. And then
there the what they call is a hunting stand was
within a shot line of where Air Force one is.
I want to toss something out for our West Palm
Beach friends and shoot me with an answer as soon
as you hear this to tips at the news Junkie
(48:39):
dot com. If you've seen the map where this is,
I don't think it is, but I just want to
I want to take it off the table. This is
not that guy's house who has forever been by the
airport complaining about kemtrails with like kemtrail signs, because this
looks like it's in that area. But for those of
you in West pom you know what I'm talking about.
The guy by the airport with all the chemtrail signs
(48:59):
in stead, is this anywhere near that? It's it's or
it might just be like a wooded area because it
looks like some more commercial business type stuff near this
across from this little you know, canal, and then right
to the airport.
Speaker 1 (49:13):
Well, like you said, that's a tiny little gathering of
trees like it looks like it could be behind a chevron.
You know, Lake Eola Park is much bigger than that.
Most parks are much bigger than that.
Speaker 2 (49:26):
It's tiny, Yeah, compared to the compared to all that
stuff you're matching, it is very small.
Speaker 1 (49:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (49:30):
My thought on this is good on the Secret Service.
I think that they are taking you know, obviously since
since what happened in Pennsylvania and the president was nearly killed,
and then of course you have the incident at the
president's golf course in South Florida where the president again
could have been nearly killed. They are taking precautions that
(49:51):
you know, nobody would have even thought of doing probably
a couple of years ago, right, and so you know
how they found this. It's kind of I guess kind
of like finding a needle in the haystock, but that's
their job.
Speaker 1 (50:01):
What I was kind of about is that the President
travels to West Palm so often that I, you know,
I was like, Oh, does the Secret Service do that
thurrow of a check of the area every single time?
Like that's like it's the number one destination that's not
the White House, it seems. I was surprised that they.
(50:23):
I mean, it's a good thing, it's a good thing
for him, but that they are still being that throw
in checking the place out every time he lands there.
Speaker 2 (50:33):
Yeah, I guess the tough thing about this is looking
at it. It doesn't look like much up in this tree,
but it's absolutely within sight of where Air Force one
would be at the airport across the street. And I
can't think of a like a normal reason why you
would have this. And I can't see any reason where
you go, you know, I just go up there and
have my co Yeah, and maybe maybe, but.
Speaker 6 (50:53):
You're not doing that through a tree, like trying to
see through branches like that, you know what I mean,
you would want to clear open space.
Speaker 1 (51:00):
It's very strange, so pretty suspect.
Speaker 2 (51:02):
Certainly we've got temperatures raised so high in this country
that it wouldn't be shocking to me if there was
somebody else you.
Speaker 1 (51:08):
Got a shortening of me. It's pretty Suss are saying no, Sus,
I would.
Speaker 2 (51:15):
Sell you know, he was trying to do the six
seven thing the other day that the kids are doing too.
Speaker 1 (51:18):
I would not say anything.
Speaker 4 (51:21):
I do my research about lamellow ball Allegedly, it's.
Speaker 2 (51:25):
Just they just say six seven six seven sixty seven.
It doesn't mean anything. It's it's a generation of people
who have more words that mean nothing.
Speaker 1 (51:33):
From uh, what was it? The skippity do toilet, todiculous.
Speaker 6 (51:38):
Stupid, like the whole valley girl thing like gag me
with a spoon and bag your face and like your face.
Eighties it was all valley girls speak. It all started
in California and then swept its way across the country.
I thought, you know, my parents at the time were
like the most ridiculous. If you say the word like
one more time.
Speaker 1 (51:59):
You know, I mean that does bag your face for
like ugly people?
Speaker 6 (52:03):
And you I guess I don't know, I don't even
know what it meant. Yeah, don't you remember all this?
I guess that was all before you too.
Speaker 1 (52:10):
Wow, I'm older. You know what. Here's the problem.
Speaker 2 (52:12):
I wasn't cool enough to know that at that time, probably,
And so now if somebody says bag your face to me,
I'll know exactly what's going on.
Speaker 1 (52:18):
And I'm not a fan of that.
Speaker 2 (52:22):
Maybe I get that too sometimes every once in a while,
what else is getting your attention out there?
Speaker 6 (52:28):
Amy Coffin, Now, I know how you guys feel about
sports stories that it is one of the big trenders today.
We are going to be hearing from the University of
Florida today regarding the firing of Billy Napier yesterday, who
of course is the head football coach. Big buyout package
for him, it's about almost twenty two million dollars watching
at Florida for about three and a half years. I
(52:48):
know you guys are familiar with these buyout packages because
some of these coaches get very rich from being being
leground at their job.
Speaker 1 (52:56):
It's sweet.
Speaker 6 (52:57):
I know, it's crazy, it's crazy. It's crazy. So but now.
Speaker 1 (53:02):
Josh would be a billionaire too far.
Speaker 6 (53:08):
There have been some rumors about Florida State as well,
and we did hear from the athletic director at Florida
State today saying listen, we are keeping Norvell in place
through the end of the season, that we were going
to be working very hard to try to turn the
season around. Florida State started off great, they beat Alabama
their first game, and then they've lost four straight so
(53:29):
they have not been doing well of late. And as
you guys know, listen, college football is big business. It
is a business, and I just I personally feel that
it is wrong to let it go, let a coach
go in the middle of the season, finish the season out.
I know, it's painful, figure it out. I just think
it's wrong. It's hard on the players. All the players
(53:51):
have been you know, on Twitter or x and just
talking about how much they love coach Billy Napier and
how difficult this is for them. And you know this well,
it's you were talking about hundreds of people who are
impacted by this. And I just personally feel that a
mid season firing unless they did something wrong in the
sense that like you know, they did you know, I
don't know, like like something illegal, million reasons like moral
(54:15):
things that they did wrong. But that's not the case here.
Speaker 1 (54:17):
Like the stuff Sealane does, like that kind of stuff
then you'd be like, all right, fire out, I don't know,
throw around here. This week gave me everybody's out there,
everybody all right. The vibes are turning south quickly.
Speaker 2 (54:29):
But I agree with you. I think that makes total sense.
You you know a lot more about sports than we do.
Have you ever bet on sports? Amy?
Speaker 1 (54:37):
Have you ever? No?
Speaker 6 (54:39):
I'm terrible, you guys, I'm listen. I'm the worst person
to ask about gambling or betting. I went to Vegas
one time and lost seven dollars on a slot machine,
and I was like, I'm good, I'm done. That's it anymore.
Speaker 2 (54:49):
She doesn't have the bug. Yeah, yeah, yeah, better than
what Corny says. The same thing she says when I
when I lose money, I feel bad. It makes me
feel bad and I go good good. That's like what
she tells me. She's like, I would be so scared
to do cocaine because I think there could be fentanyl.
And I'm like, good good. All of a sudden, I'm
(55:10):
one for friend.
Speaker 1 (55:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (55:11):
I love Courtney. She's so smart.
Speaker 1 (55:13):
I don't know about that. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (55:16):
She's fantastic, but she says some things.
Speaker 1 (55:20):
I gotta tell you. She she is not. Not a
day goes by.
Speaker 2 (55:23):
Where she doesn't say something I go, I don't know
if another human's ever said that before. I don't know
that you are the most unique little individual here. All right,
she's the best of the best. We love her so much,
and you should be watching her every single morning with
the crew over at GDO Good Day Orlando.
Speaker 1 (55:41):
That is Fox thirty five. Their website is Fox thirty
five Orlando dot com. And no matter where you are.
Speaker 2 (55:47):
You can follow Amy on social media. And it's a
big giant recommend from me. Follow her all over the place.
Speaker 1 (55:53):
Search for Amy.
Speaker 2 (55:54):
Kauffelt on social media to see on all of the
social media.
Speaker 1 (55:57):
Don't follow her on the streets alone, for God's sake.
It's funny seeing that one he gets one good one
an hour.
Speaker 2 (56:06):
That's basically what he's averaging at the moment. All right,
there she goes, and the coffee. See you next week, Amy,
there she goes. Okay, when we come back, there is
a story that I just have to share about a
new line of work that has opened up, which is
blowing my mind, just I mean blowing my mind that
this is how things are going in the world right now.
(56:28):
We also have to talk about somebody who has been
on the loose in the area around me, the loost.
I just made that word up, been on the loose
in the neighborhood around me and is causing some freak outs,
cause a giant meldown on next door. I'll tell you
all about this and why it matters for you, because
trust me, it does.
Speaker 1 (56:45):
And that is coming up next on the News Junkie.
It seems that Zoom was affected by that AWS outed,
(57:08):
so was it. We had problems with Amy. We didn't
have problems with her, but you know it could have
have you tried to talk to her like a couple
hours ago.
Speaker 2 (57:18):
You know, we're too relying on technology. We need to
go back old school, like that one time when we
decided to go in the opposite direction of everybody in
the radio a CB radio at the radio station, and
then we quickly learned that there wasn't as much exciting
activity on the CB radio as one might imagine.
Speaker 1 (57:33):
Not a lot of CBE radio traffic in Maitland.
Speaker 2 (57:37):
Right, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, beautiful, beautiful times on the
show we went back with technology several times. We said,
everybody's going forward, so let's buck the trends.
Speaker 1 (57:51):
These ideas were all good on paper, but when you
try to execute no, No, they weren't on paper. They
were good the night before on the bar, still paper. Nonetheless,
I would argue I was watching a meltdown on next Door.
Speaker 2 (58:07):
As if you've listened to the show more than a
couple of times, you know it's one of my favorite pastimes.
Speaker 1 (58:11):
I just love it. Yeah, it's right with me. Lately,
it's between next Door and the ones that I get
actual notifications for is the Ring Neighbors app. Those are
so good too. They're so they're so small town.
Speaker 2 (58:26):
It's literally your neighbors, and they're always complaining about the
dumbest stuff. They're always complaining.
Speaker 1 (58:32):
This one wasn't. It wasn't as much. I saw a
couple that weren't complaining about the dumbest stuff. There's been
some people on the Ring Neighbors app as of late
who have misplaced their pets.
Speaker 2 (58:43):
I like how it works for that.
Speaker 1 (58:44):
I think it's good and that can be good. I
think it's a very localized way of trying to get
the word out there. But the person yesterday who I
saw said about my pet name dog O type dog,
there's a dog. There's a picture included with a post.
We know it's a dog, and is it a nondescript
(59:07):
dog visually or is it a small white Chihuahua looking dog?
Speaker 7 (59:12):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (59:12):
Yeah? How many of those are there going to be?
Speaker 2 (59:14):
So I'm I'm gonna go through the neighborhood and just
start screaming at dog, O dog the dog.
Speaker 1 (59:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (59:21):
I don't know if that's going to be fruitful. But
one of the things I saw, which was of note,
it was a very serious thing and terrible.
Speaker 1 (59:27):
If that person's listening like it's doing, my dog doggo's dead.
Speaker 2 (59:31):
Oh I hope he's not dead.
Speaker 1 (59:32):
I really I.
Speaker 2 (59:36):
Saw a meltdown on next door and I thought it
was a worthy meltdown. I thought it was, and I
think it's an emblematic of a larger issue that I've
seen in a lot of cities across the country. And
one of the things that we've seen is there's judges
out there that continuously give bond to people who are dangerous.
(59:57):
These people pose a danger to you and your family
and your kids, and for socially, politically whatever motivations, these
judges will go nope, nope, we're gonna we're gonna give
this person another chance. And it's why you hear things
like that hobo that stabbed the woman in the neck
(01:00:20):
on the North Carolina public transit and ended up killing
this woman. And you see that this person was released
over and over and over and over and over and
had violent tendencies. These kind of things are poisoned to
any community. Any poison, any poison like this that eeks
through the community needs to be uprooted, and the judges
(01:00:40):
behind them need to be uprooted as well. Judges often
find themselves to be disconnected enough from these moves that
they don't tend to get heat or pressure or anything else.
And I think we need to hold our judges to
account for things like this, because this is indefensible nonsense.
In the case of the area around me, it's not
(01:01:04):
deadly close, but it's close enough. There's a guy named
Jacoby Tillman, and I swear I thought I saw him
one time when I was on a walk, But he's
usually a little ways away, like ten twenty minutes away.
He hangs out in this particular area, and he's been
arrested many times. The most recent arrest was when he
(01:01:24):
tried to rape this woman at a park. He is
hiding out in the park, she's going for a jog,
and he goes in like tackles her and wraps.
Speaker 1 (01:01:34):
His arms around her.
Speaker 2 (01:01:35):
She thought for a second maybe it was somebody she
knew playing a prank on her, But then he choked
her unconscious and she woke up with her underwear down
and removed. And you know, just this horrific, horrific that
anybody ever should have to deal with this. The thing is,
this guy had done the same thing to somebody else
at the same park not that long before. And guess what,
(01:01:58):
in all of these cases, the judges just go, hey,
we'll let you back out on the streets because that's
for some reason, that's the thing we should do here.
It's insane, it's unhinged, and just because they live in
gated neighborhoods behind a security fence doesn't mean they should
be saved from these these particular decisions. In my estimation,
(01:02:20):
it's wild that this kind of stuff is happening. No
woman should have to walk around a public park worried
that for the third time that we know of, some
guy is going to try to rape somebody. This guy
was picked up on a warrant from another state.
Speaker 1 (01:02:34):
I don't even know what he did in that one.
I don't even know what he did in that one.
Speaker 2 (01:02:38):
But once he was released this time, which by the way,
he should have never, ever, ever been released by this judge.
But the judge granted a bond, and a small bond
at that It was a small amount of money that
was required for this man to be released back out
onto the streets. Within moments, he was on his TikTok
threatening some of the eyewitnesses in the last case. And
(01:03:01):
he had already said he was gonna with comments or
was he making videos? He was He made a video
and then showed like a text message from one of
the people involved in the case. Apparently. It's just insane.
It's insane that we have these like activist judges that
are doing this stuff, and it puts every person, every woman,
every man, every kid in more danger because they're trying
(01:03:23):
to socially engineer the justice system. Bad people and dangerous
people should be held behind bars as much as possible.
Folding people women in this case, trying to jog at
a park and he keeps going back to the same spot.
Here's Wesh talking about this let's see what this up.
He said, I should have.
Speaker 1 (01:03:42):
Been a model.
Speaker 8 (01:03:43):
His purp walk was worthy of the runway. And now
prosecutors want to give Jacoby Tillman another one. Prosecutors have
filed the request to revoke bond today and they're now
adding new more serious charges.
Speaker 4 (01:03:55):
Well, she was, Gail Pascal Brown was walking us through
new developments in the case.
Speaker 9 (01:03:58):
Scale Yes State Attorney Money Warrel in her filing states
that Jacoby Tillman, on July twenty fifth, from a premeditated design,
attempted to murder the victim by strangulation.
Speaker 2 (01:04:09):
By the way, when they asked him about this attack afterwards,
Jacoby Tilman said, I didn't try to rape that lady.
Speaker 1 (01:04:15):
I was trying to kill her. That was his literal quote.
Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
And the judge said, okay, back on the streets, back
on the streets for you.
Speaker 1 (01:04:22):
I didn't try to rape her.
Speaker 2 (01:04:23):
I was trying to kill that lady, said this guy.
Speaker 10 (01:04:25):
Worrell also says the suspect violated the conditions of his release.
A week ago, Orange County sheriff deputies arrested twenty three
year old Jacoby Tillman for attempted rape battery by strangulation
and false imprisonment, but now the state Attorney's office has
added attempted first degree murder to the charges. Tilman is
(01:04:46):
accused of attacking a woman from behind while she was
running on the Little Econ Greenway near Yates Road on
July twenty fifth. According to the arrest report, investigator spoke
with Jacoby Tilman's girlfriend, who.
Speaker 11 (01:05:00):
He lived with, and she asked him what really happened.
The arrest report states, Jacobe said, I didn't rape the lady.
I was trying to kill the lady. She asked him why,
and he said, because I wanted to know what it
was like to choke someone out.
Speaker 1 (01:05:15):
Oh okay, cool, cool, Yeah, we'll release them. Let's get them.
That's the guy we want back on the streets.
Speaker 2 (01:05:21):
This is how it all should work, this is how
it should operate. And there are many women locally melting
down to this information, as you would imagine, because you
expect people to keep you safe, and you expect the
obvious bad guys to be behind bars, and it's.
Speaker 1 (01:05:36):
Like, are we just waiting for people? Is that what
we're doing? Are we just waiting for the guy to
kill somebody like he wants to and then this guy
stays behind bars. This unhinged stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:05:47):
This is activist action by judges that everybody should be
appalled by. It's absolutely disgusting. Now because he made these
posts online, it says Tilmany posted a TikTok and made
comments directed at the whitness and used the text message
that the witness had sent him in the past. The
state argues that this violated the judge is no contact
order with the victim that's the ex girlfriend, I guess
(01:06:08):
and witness, which is a condition for his release. The
Orange County Sheriff's Office spent months searching for him following
a report that he assaulted a woman while she was jogging.
They said, you founded he attacked her from behind. YadA
to go into all the horrible details about what was
happening here. John mina, Orange County Sheriff, said this is atrocious.
He should have never been released. Tillman's criminal record includes
(01:06:30):
convictions for aggravated battery mister meaner battery. His girlfriend at
the time also reported abusive behavior, including an incident where
he choked her until she lost consciousness, according to the
Orange County Sheriff's Office. And round and round we go,
We don't take the person, keep them off the streets
and keep people safe. We release them and release them
and release them and release them until somebody dies.
Speaker 1 (01:06:50):
And when they do. Even this now it's all on
these judges. It's on you. It's on you.
Speaker 2 (01:06:55):
You had an opportunity, You had all the tools in
the world to keep this person away, locked up, and
you did not do it. For whatever your reasons are,
I don't even care. You did not do it, and
I think that is so morally wrong and misguided that
it needs to be addressed. Let us know what you think.
Send a dispatch over at thenewsjunkie dot com thenewsjunkie dot com.
(01:07:15):
All right, we're gonna take quick break. When we come back,
we'll swerve it in another direction with the next episode. Also,
I got to talk about this job. In twenty twenty.
Speaker 1 (01:07:25):
Five, things are weird in the world of jobs, and
this one is just jaw dropping to me.
Speaker 2 (01:07:31):
So we'll talk about that and we'll do the next
episode when we return. That's coming up next. Then the
news Junkie.
Speaker 1 (01:07:52):
Quick update on the dude.
Speaker 2 (01:07:54):
I was just talking about who I said next door
was having a meltdown, that this violent guy who was
attacking these joggers and try to rape one. He said, Oh,
I wasn't trying to rap her. I was trying to
kill her. I want to know what it was like
to choke somebody to death. And then they released him
and he's already violated this bond. The judge who was
responsible for this guy being released back on the street
(01:08:17):
a danger to everybody. We're just waiting for this Jacoby
Tillman guy to kill somebody, and then finally the judge will.
Speaker 1 (01:08:22):
Goes, oh, shoot, well I sure was wrong about that one.
Speaker 2 (01:08:26):
Anyways, no punishments here. The judges never face any consequences
for this. It's just not how the system works. After
being on the run, Fox thirty five says for more
than two months, nine thousand, five hundred dollars bond, I
want to think about all the things I said, this
person did, all the things they said, everything I said
in the last segment. If you missed it, go back
on the podcast. But all of that, what do you
(01:08:46):
think about that nine five hundred dollars bond Judge Elaine
Barber set for him. Elaine Barber is their name Elaine
Barber br Boure.
Speaker 1 (01:08:56):
Is there a restriction based on whatever charge. I don't
think so bad. No, I don't believe so.
Speaker 2 (01:09:02):
Because he has a prior criminal history, including a twenty
twenty two battery conviction and a state prison sentence completed
in November twenty twenty four. They're trying to re arrest him.
Speaker 1 (01:09:10):
Now what we don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:09:11):
It's unclear why Judge Elaine Barber opted to set bond
despite openly criticizing Tilman's record. The exact circumstances of the
attempted murder charge and what led to its addition have
not been fully disclosed. Additionally, details about his current whereabouts
or whether he oposes an immediate flight risk are unknown.
They said, but that's the judge that was behind all
of this. It's inexcusable and it's dangerous for a lot
(01:09:35):
of people. And there's just these judges just they do
this because they don't ever have to interact with these people.
They're not in any danger. And you are, Judge Elaine Barber.
That's the one who is behind this, and she should
be held accountable of something. Well already, I think, honestly, okay,
let's get into it. Let's go into another direction, something
more fun. Perhaps, let's see what happens here? Maybe not?
Speaker 1 (01:09:55):
Who knows what Josh has for no one? Is that
misery city on the way, We don't know. Let's do
the next stepisode because there's a lot.
Speaker 2 (01:10:03):
On TV and you can't possibly keep up with all
of it, even though you should, because what else are
you gonna talk about?
Speaker 1 (01:10:08):
I'll tell you over the chicken.
Speaker 2 (01:10:11):
For the next episode with me.
Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
Oh no, please over the chicken. He's gonna do it. No,
Gary might do it. You know who won't do it though?
Is that beverage guy don No, he won't do that.
He'll get you a good deal on your mortgage, a
great rate. If you already have a quote, or you
already have a rate that somebody else has spelled out
for you, you can take it to the compare quote
calculator right there at that mortgage guy don dot com.
(01:10:36):
He might have a better one for you because he
knows the mortgage business inside. And now you already own
a home and you want to use the equity of
that home to uh make some improvements, take out a
line of credit. Well'll give you that. He lock, We'll
hook you up with it. He's the expert. You could
listen to him on the Home Loans radio show on
Saturdays and find him online at that Mortgage guy don
(01:10:58):
dot com. Yeah, this guy that kind of worked out Playboy.
Every song should start with that.
Speaker 4 (01:11:18):
Moving forward, Playboy Carti was charged with assault after brawling
with his limo driver.
Speaker 1 (01:11:25):
Apparently earlier this month.
Speaker 4 (01:11:28):
Playboy Carti, whose real name is Jordan Terrell Carter, has
been charged with assault. It's no fun, That's why he
changed his name in Wassatch County, Utah, following an alleged
altercation with a limo driver during his Antagonist two point
zero tour. The twenty eight year old artist was officially
charged back on October ninth with a Class B misdemeanor,
(01:11:48):
a week after the incident reportedly took place. According to
the driver, Playboy Cartie and his girlfriend started arguing and
smoking weed in the back of the limo, so the
driver pulled over till they calmed down because he felt
it was unsafe and uh that's when he alleges that
mister Carte struck him. However, there are conflicting stories saying
(01:12:14):
that Carti's girlfriend told police she hit the driver because
he quote got involved in her business.
Speaker 2 (01:12:20):
So they were smoking weed and fighting at the same time.
I don't see that happen, but it's very You don't
usually get that as part of a fight.
Speaker 1 (01:12:30):
No, no, no, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense. Uh,
you don't normally for example, like see somebody take this
like huge big bong, swap the chicken. You know, it
doesn't happen.
Speaker 2 (01:12:47):
It does sometimes if you're going to kill somebody over
the chicken is the way to do it. That's this, Lady, Brandy, Brandy, Brandy,
That's what I meant.
Speaker 4 (01:13:03):
Brandy had to walk off stage mid concert over the
weekend because.
Speaker 1 (01:13:08):
She was dehydrated. Oh damn yes.
Speaker 4 (01:13:12):
Brandy and Monica's The Boy's Mind tour hit a snag
on Saturday when Brandy abruptly walked off stage mid performance,
leaving Monica to close the show solo.
Speaker 7 (01:13:23):
Rude.
Speaker 4 (01:13:24):
She said, quote, Rick, give me one second, y'all. I
gotta get my and then she walked backstage and never returned.
Monica had to carry on a loan and wrap the
night without performing the name of the tour, The Boy
Is Mine, Oh the whole show for that song and
the concert that she did not adequately hydrate herself, and
(01:13:48):
that caused her some issues.
Speaker 1 (01:13:50):
I guess, so I'm gonna do that today.
Speaker 8 (01:13:52):
I like.
Speaker 2 (01:13:52):
I like the idea of just ghosting and leaving the
other person behind to do all the heavy lifting.
Speaker 1 (01:13:58):
Why not. She's doing both parts of that boy's mind
and moving back and forth.
Speaker 4 (01:14:03):
That's that's impressed a challenge. I think she could have
pulled it off if she tried a little harder. This
guy true that you.
Speaker 6 (01:14:10):
Have an OnlyFans page and you can peel a banana
with your feet.
Speaker 1 (01:14:13):
I don't have what I just discover what OnlyFans was
about three weeks ago when it was Santa George.
Speaker 4 (01:14:21):
George George Santos is thanking President Trump for a second
chance at life after being released from prison Jesus Man.
On a lengthy post on x on Saturday, the ex
congressman said he was deeply moved by Trump's kindness and
generosity after the President commuted his seven year sentence for
wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. He said, quote, yesterday,
(01:14:46):
I was given something I never thought i'd have again,
a true second chance at life. First and foremost, I
want to thank our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ for
never abandoning me. I also want to express my deepest
gratic to pres Sident Donald J. Trump.
Speaker 2 (01:15:02):
Oh God, I'm trying to find the actual crime. He
was accused of three different distinct schemes.
Speaker 1 (01:15:10):
Accused.
Speaker 2 (01:15:11):
He was convicted of three different distinct schemes, solicitation of
political contributions, unemployment benefits, fraud, and making false statements on
the financial disclosure report. So he had lied about all
of these things, and I guess that led to him
amongst some other charges. Like he seems like a pretty
pretty scammy guy altogether.
Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
I think he just lied so much that, yeah, it
came back to bite him.
Speaker 2 (01:15:36):
Yeah, should not have been pardoned, just for the record,
in my opinion, should not have been pardoned.
Speaker 1 (01:15:41):
Kind of dumb. I don't know what you gained from
pardoning him.
Speaker 4 (01:15:45):
We lost a guy from this band over the weekend.
Biscuit CLYMP Biscuit PLYMP, Biscuit Basis. Sam Rivers is dead
at forty eight years of age.
Speaker 1 (01:15:55):
Damn.
Speaker 4 (01:15:57):
According to a statement posted to Instagram, they said Sam
wasn't just a bass player. He was pure magic, the
pulse beneath every song they call him, and the chaos,
the soul in the sound.
Speaker 1 (01:16:08):
Did you guys know him? Did you, I didn't know
that name.
Speaker 4 (01:16:10):
I didn't know him by name. No, I mostly know
Fred Durst in Westboreland, and then.
Speaker 1 (01:16:15):
Those are the two I know Sam. I think there's
other Sam Rivers same. I think there's other people named
Sam Rivers out there that I would have probably thought
of before I thought of the basis for limb Biscuit.
What was he always the bassist or was he like
a newer one?
Speaker 2 (01:16:32):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (01:16:32):
He was always their Bassis. Dam Rivers grew up playing
with Limp Biscuit drummer John Otto, and he met Fred
Durst while working at Chick fil A in the early
nineteen nineties.
Speaker 1 (01:16:42):
See he's a fun fact even now. Look if I
type in wiki Sam Rivers into Google, the first person
that comes up was the jazz musician who really died
in twenty eleven and people who dig them.
Speaker 2 (01:16:55):
Ryan on YouTube says, sad underrated Bassis, so maybe he
was good.
Speaker 4 (01:16:59):
Rivers and Durst made up the original iteration of limp Biscuit.
Then they added guitarists Wes Borland and DJ Lethal to
complete their group in nineteen ninety six. God Rest Sam Rivers.
Speaker 1 (01:17:12):
It was very interesting that they posted that heartfelt message
and they were like from you know from Wes and
what's the Fred and DJ Lethal Buddy, your friend just died.
You couldn't go by what your real name is, but
the other name would? Would you know his actual name?
I wouldn't recognize. No chance. No, this guy does not
(01:17:34):
go by his actual name.
Speaker 4 (01:17:38):
Oh, Morgan Wallen close, it's post Malone, that guy.
Speaker 1 (01:17:41):
They're both on the song Son Easy One.
Speaker 4 (01:17:43):
Post Malone's being sued by a limo driver that he
encountered several years ago. At this point, post Malone's former
driver says the rapper made him a star of his
music video, then never paid him for it, and now
he's suing Posty for millions.
Speaker 1 (01:18:00):
Larry Duell a millions.
Speaker 4 (01:18:02):
Yes, Larry Duell, a teacher and limousine driver, is suing
post Malone, alleging that back in twenty twenty, he and
his collaborator, Tyler Jahweh reached out to Duell's employer to
drive them to Malone's ranch for the Tommy Lee music
video shoot. At the ranch, Dull claims post and Tyler
asked him to take part in the video, and he
(01:18:23):
alleges they told him he'd be quote taking care of
if he did so, he was featured in the video,
claims he never got paid, waited five years, and is
now asking for two point five million dollars and at
least seven point five million in punitive damages.
Speaker 2 (01:18:41):
Oh, of course you got to get the punitive damages.
Speaker 1 (01:18:44):
He was probably more than the video cost.
Speaker 4 (01:18:47):
I'm sure it's fun that he waited until post Malone
was mega, mega, mega rich to start this lawsuit.
Speaker 2 (01:18:54):
One of my favorite side stories, just so you guys know,
I always have like side stories that don't even talk
about on air that are thralling me at any point
in time. One of my favorite ones is there's a
guy who keeps stealing deliveries and he looks just like
post Malone, and they're calling him postal Malone.
Speaker 1 (01:19:10):
And they're searching for this guy all over the place.
Speaker 2 (01:19:13):
I've been following that closely that it's pretty fun.
Speaker 1 (01:19:17):
And finally this lady, how did you know?
Speaker 2 (01:19:22):
Ah?
Speaker 4 (01:19:22):
That's just a story today too. Her ex husband, O
Johnny Noah accuses her of cheating.
Speaker 1 (01:19:30):
Who's O Johnny Noah? Exactly?
Speaker 4 (01:19:32):
It's her husband who was married to her from ninety
seven till ninety eight. He unleashed a furious Instagram ran
over the weekend after hearing her comments from a recent
Howard Stern interview where the singer said her past partners
quote weren't capable of loving her. Noah, who's now a
personal trainer, wasn't having it writing Stop putting us down,
(01:19:53):
Stop putting me down with your victim card. The problem
is not us, not me. The problem is you. You're
the one who couldn't ca keep it in your pants,
He continues. You have been quote loved a few times.
You've been married four times and have had countless relationships
in between. You decided to lie, to cheat on me.
You begged me to keep the marriage in tech to
(01:20:15):
avoid bad press.
Speaker 1 (01:20:16):
Oh.
Speaker 4 (01:20:16):
Johnny said he was quote faithful, honest, and loving, claiming
he uprooted his life to support j Lo at the
start of his career, only to be left behind when
fame came calling.
Speaker 1 (01:20:26):
Big accusations flye right, big. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:20:29):
He still listens to Howard Stern. I guess yeah, right,
He's like, hey, wait, that's my ex wife.
Speaker 1 (01:20:36):
On there on the boob tube tonight.
Speaker 4 (01:20:39):
You have Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Detroit Lions on wherever
you watch your football at below deck Mediterranean on Bravo,
Kimmel's a repeat. Stephen Colbert has Jeremy Rinner, Jimmy Fallon
has Oscar Isaac, and Seth Myers has Jesse Plemons.
Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
And that is your next episode.
Speaker 2 (01:20:59):
Thank you, exemplary, exemplary work. I know the man just
friends that he does. The crowd is going wild. They
are truly the studio audience just thrilled with the performance.
Speaker 1 (01:21:11):
I love them.
Speaker 2 (01:21:12):
When we come back, I want to tell you about
this insane new job that it's just so weird to
me that this exists.
Speaker 1 (01:21:19):
But I have to talk to you about this.
Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
It is very twenty twenty five and it's coming up
next in the news.
Speaker 1 (01:21:25):
Junk key. I want to Brandy out of here in
the middle of the show right now. Monica you are Monica, Yeah,
(01:21:49):
Josh for some reason, Josh dj lethal Yeah, but still cool,
you know, still cool, still cool.
Speaker 2 (01:21:56):
I was talking about this story. I'll just I'll get
into this really quickly before I tell you about this
new job that, believe it or not, exists and it's
going to rock your world a little bit. But I
had seen a story where there was a restaurant, I
believe in New York that was defending one of their
items on their menu because they had a seventeen dollars
egg sandwich. And I said, we need to bash some
(01:22:20):
heads here, We need to bash some skulls right in
the world of restaurants. I don't even remember. It's just
something I saw. And they said that they were defending
their seventeen dollars egg sandwich because they said inflation was
an issue. And I said, for breakfast, there should never
ever be any circumstances, okay, no arguments to be had here.
(01:22:43):
There should never be any circumstances where any breakfast costs
more than fifteen dollars. All of the elements that make
a breakfast are the cheapest things that you could think of,
a couple of eggs, some sausage links. All of these
things that make up a traditional American breakfast, which is
superior to the English breakfast in every measurable way, are
(01:23:06):
the cheapest of things.
Speaker 1 (01:23:07):
A piece of toast, for.
Speaker 2 (01:23:09):
God's sake, and the idea that you go into places nowadays.
We were looking somewhere. According goes, you want to go
to breakfast at this place? And I said, what have
they got? And she goes, well, they got this. She goes,
this breakfast item is forty dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:23:24):
And I said forty dollars for a breakfast item at
a restaurant. You got to be out of your mind.
Speaker 2 (01:23:31):
There's nothing in the world of breakfast food that should
ever lead to costing that much money. And if you
do take a meal in like hijacket and make it
that expensive, you've ruined breakfast. You're tossing crab on something,
or you've put a flintstone sized steak with a meal
and now you go, now it's just Kobe's steak seventy
(01:23:54):
five dollars breakfast. You're out of your mind. It should
never ever cost that much. These people should be routed
up and arrested. They really should. It would be a
great use of our resources. We need to drop the
hammer on some of these folks. But a lot of
these places are getting out of line now. Lunch and
dinner are a different animal. I understand if a dinner
(01:24:15):
becomes expensive. I understand if the different stuff that you're
making for some elaborate dinner costs a little bit more,
I get it. But for breakfast items, straight to jym,
straight straight to jail, no questions, no nothing, and that
became a large fight, as one could imagine over the break.
But I wanted to share this with you because this
(01:24:36):
is just so weird and interesting in twenty twenty five.
To me, there's let me bring up the story in
front of me. It's about it's about these Japanese convenience stores.
Speaker 1 (01:24:50):
And where are they. These Japanese convenience.
Speaker 2 (01:24:53):
Stores are located, located centrally and generally speaking, they are
lod in a place called Japan. Your Pan nailed it,
nailed it. Nobody had to wait for it. And the
thing that's crazy to me, and it should be crazy
to you too, is right now, a lot of these
Japanese convenience stores have hired people to stock their shelves.
(01:25:18):
That's not very interesting in and of itself, so I
assure you there's a twist, as there always is road
here the people that are being hired to stock the
shelves in all these Japanese convenience stores. And if you're
not aware, convenience stores are kind of a big part
of Japanese culture. Their killer over there. They have awesome
convenience stores. They have all sorts of options, and so
(01:25:38):
when they stock the shelves, they got to had somebody
who knows what they're doing. But all of these people
who are being hired to stock the shelves that these
Japanese convenience stores are from the Philippines, and they live
in the Philippines right now, and they sit at a
dazz with joysticks and buttons, and they control a robot
on the ground in Japan that picks up the items
(01:26:01):
and stalks the shelves. The person stalking the shelf at
the store in Japan is located in the Philippines and
is doing it remotely via a robot. And that, to
me is one of the weirdest things I've I've heard
in my life.
Speaker 3 (01:26:19):
They just.
Speaker 1 (01:26:21):
Sit at home just it's like playing video games on them,
you know what.
Speaker 2 (01:26:25):
They should really outsource it to Americans. We love those
app games where you make pizzas and ice cream Sundays.
Speaker 4 (01:26:33):
Or pay grades a little higher than maybe.
Speaker 1 (01:26:36):
Yeah, that's one of the things. I think.
Speaker 2 (01:26:38):
This is this a story on this This might be
this is called tele existence.
Speaker 1 (01:26:43):
It's just weird that you need somebody to do that,
because it seems like the robots could just do this
on their own.
Speaker 2 (01:26:48):
Possibly, but they're not quite there yet. Here's one of
the robots, I think, wandering the aisles and the robots
can do you see a camera and you like turn
in everything. Uh, they say, there's like thousands of bottles
at a lot of these different places. This is a
human doing it, but here here's a robot.
Speaker 1 (01:27:07):
So there's a.
Speaker 2 (01:27:08):
Robot that goes and gets the stuff and puts the
things on the counters, and there's people who control them.
And if it drops the item, the person takes their
joystick and picks up the food item and puts it
back on the shelf. They're hiring people from other countries
to stock the shelves at these places from the robot.
(01:27:30):
It is crazy and very cool. But like the future
is that all the people who do the gruntwork are
going to be first from a couple of countries that
are operating in this weird gray like slave labor sort
of area, and they're going to do all these dumb
jobs that we don't want to do, and they'll stock
(01:27:51):
the shelves and make sure your a little gatorade is
ready to go and get paid a penance for doing it.
And then eventually they'll be replaced by a And this
thing doesn't need a human at all.
Speaker 1 (01:28:02):
You just go into the.
Speaker 2 (01:28:02):
Store and there's robots everywhere loading up the shelves. It's
so crazy that this is how things operate, But it says.
The AI robots are designed by a Tokyo based startup
called Teleexistence. It runs on Nvidia and Microsoft platforms. The
company has deployed the machines into over three hundred stores
in Tokyo alone. It's going to begin to use them
(01:28:23):
in seven elevens and seven eleven is probably going to
be bringing this over to the United States of America
once they try it out in Japan and it works
out there, and so that you will go into your
corner store and you'll see a little robot loading up
the twinkies on the shelf at seven eleven, and the
person manning that is all the way across the world
(01:28:44):
in the Philippines getting paid a fraction an hour of
what you would pay an American worker for That's where
all of this is going, and that to me is
just wild to think about. Let me know what you
think a lot of job is going to be disappearing
real quickly.
Speaker 1 (01:29:00):
Here.
Speaker 2 (01:29:01):
Let's get into a little bit of your feedback. Here
is insecure wall risks talking about the breakfast topic. I
don't really want to get too deep into this insecure
wall risk I'll just start screaming.
Speaker 12 (01:29:12):
But let's see, I travel every other week for a living,
and I essentially live inside of hotels about half of
the year. And let me tell you, seventeen dollars for
a breakfast sandwich is nothing for a hotel.
Speaker 2 (01:29:26):
Every hotel I stay at.
Speaker 12 (01:29:28):
So I try to avoid eating breakfast at the hotels
because minimum you're paying forty bucks for breakfast at a hotel.
If it's a buffet, maybe forty five. Depends on the city,
of course, Boston, New York, Seattle, all those kind of
places are typically more expensive.
Speaker 1 (01:29:46):
But I don't like it.
Speaker 12 (01:29:48):
I don't like putting it on my company card. But
I've definitely had a forty five to fifty dollars breakfast
at a hotel restaurant because that's just the way it is.
They got you in there, you probably aren't going anywhere else.
Speaker 1 (01:30:00):
It's just like a theme park. Two things. One, I
know it doesn't hurt your feelings.
Speaker 2 (01:30:04):
Put it on that company card, a company card.
Speaker 1 (01:30:06):
I don't care what it costs.
Speaker 2 (01:30:08):
I got an iHeart card and they come back, and
they go, sir, your breakfast.
Speaker 1 (01:30:11):
Was five thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (01:30:13):
I go, okay, here you go, iHeartRadio. We'll be picking
up this tab and not me. That's fine. And two
buffets being more expensive, totally reasonable and fine. You are
paying a premium at a buffet to get access to
any number of things, and a large quantity of.
Speaker 1 (01:30:33):
Those things if you want to, depending on the buffet.
Speaker 2 (01:30:36):
Also alcohol. Yeah, but I'm suggesting, like a Denny's, you
open up a Denny's breakfast menu, nothing on a breakfast
place or like a diner or something like that should
be more than fifteen dollars for breakfast. It just really
shouldn't be. It doesn't need to be, But people, I guess,
are willing to pay this from time to time. Let's
(01:30:56):
see here, simply Jeremy is saying that I don't sound
well today.
Speaker 1 (01:31:02):
Okay, hello everyone, simply Jeremy here. Hey, yeah, Sean, Ever
since you quit smoking and started walking, quit drinking as much,
seemed to be sick all the time, Buddy, you might
need to go back to smoking and drinking more and
walking less.
Speaker 2 (01:31:17):
Get your health back up. I'm just saying, okay, what
at the beginning of the show. When I was choking
on air, it was really hard to similar jeremy argument,
isn't it. I know it sounds hard, but I'm gonna
work my way out of this. At the beginning of
the show, when I was choking on air, it wasn't
because I am sick or a sickly man. It was
(01:31:41):
because I choked on air, all right, unrelated to sickness.
Unrelated to sickness in any way. I am probably and
I got to go get a check up. More healthy
than I've been in a very, very long time. I'm
glad I stopped smoking. I have reduced the drinking. I
still drink, obviously, but I've reduced the drink some quantity,
(01:32:01):
which is good. And I'm trying to cut down some
of the weight and get down to goal one ninety ish.
One ninety territory is what I'm looking for, and I
feel confident I could do all those things. But I'm
not getting more sick. The thing that gets me sick
is the more I go out around other people. Other
(01:32:21):
people make you sick. That's the thing. You go out
there into the real world and better people are coughing
everywhere around you. Oh God, I had somebody at a
restaurant the other day who was like serving us and
just hacking up along into a napkin in their hand,
and I go, I am losing my appetite right now
(01:32:41):
in real time. But it's that's what's getting me sick sometimes.
But I used to be sick way more than this.
Just for the record, all right, let's see here quick break.
When we come back, we're going to get to something
that's happening with many people's doorbell cameras. That's going to
be something that you need to know because one major
brand has a.
Speaker 1 (01:33:02):
Huge issue going on right now.
Speaker 2 (01:33:05):
And also some information that Selane needs to know about
children on account of he's got one who's almost two
years old.
Speaker 1 (01:33:14):
When I read this this.
Speaker 2 (01:33:15):
Morning, I was like, this is wild to think about.
What is it that is coming up next in the
news junk Ye, So, Sean Watson, that's me, are up
(01:33:41):
at the news Junkie dot Com slash roast. I don't
want to say that part when I promote the roast
where I say the Newsjunkie dot Com that's me, but
I just kind of feel obliged, so I'm not talking
in the third person. It's weird it's just part of
the title of the event. I can't wait until if
this goes as well as I think it is, I
(01:34:02):
can't wait until it's somebody else getting roast. I can't
wait until somebody else is in the title of this.
It'll be more exciting. But I'm still exciting. I'm ready
for this. It's such a cool event. And all the
details about costumes, questions time, I'm starting to build them out.
All the answers are not there yet, but there's a
(01:34:22):
lot up there that I've added this weekend at the
news Junkie dot Com slash roast Josh, do you have
an Amazon ring doorbell or just Sea Lane?
Speaker 1 (01:34:30):
I know he does.
Speaker 2 (01:34:31):
I have a Google Nest, a Google nest at doorbell.
I'm in the same category as you. We are the nesters.
Oh true, Yeah, yeah. Ours has been screwing up a
little bit, but we'll work on that later. The problem
is with Sea Lanes set up and the setup that
millions and millions of Americans have. Amazon's ring doorbells are
(01:34:55):
getting further and further entwined with a deal they have
with law enforcement, and it's still like a thing you
have to opt in on. But it's kind of interesting
where that all goes. If you don't know this, here's
the way this works.
Speaker 1 (01:35:11):
Behind the scene.
Speaker 2 (01:35:12):
There's a company called flock Safety, and flock Safety now
made a deal with Amazon and Ring Security. The ring
doorbells that so many of your friends and neighbors have,
like se Lane. And let's say there's a crime that
occurs around Sea Lane's house somewhere. Now, law enforcement will
(01:35:33):
log into this tool that they have with flock Safety,
and they would say, here's the address of this crime,
and it would tell them here's all of the people
in this area that have ring doorbell cameras, and they
would click to submit, and they would send you an
alert on your phone that would say law enforcement is
interested in grabbing this particular snippet from this time from
(01:35:55):
your doorbell camera.
Speaker 1 (01:35:57):
Will you release the footage to them?
Speaker 2 (01:35:59):
And if you say yeah, it immediately fires off the
footage to law enforcement that is investigating that crime in
your area. Which is kind of crazy to think about,
but this is how things actually work. In twenty twenty five,
and this says from CNBC, flock Safety is teaming up
(01:36:19):
with Amazon's Ring Security to offer the public and law
enforcement a new way to share video footage that can
assist in crime investigations. It's the second recently announced deal
bringing ring security camera footage more deeply into police report
and allowing citizens to opt into sharing their cam footage,
with Axon Enterprise also teaming up with the Amazon Company.
Public debate over crime levels and law enforcement technology remains divisive,
(01:36:41):
but Flock Safety CEO says everyone has the right to
be safe and people should be held accountable if they
commit a crime, and they sort of show like this
software that law enforcement is using and there's a big
map grid and see, can you look up real quick
how many ring doorbell cameras have been sold in the
United States?
Speaker 1 (01:37:01):
Millions?
Speaker 2 (01:37:03):
Millions, right, probably I would. I'm gonna guess eight to
ten million. Maybe I'm married a five million, three to
five million for josh Sea.
Speaker 1 (01:37:14):
Lion's going to see if we can find the information
on this. The exact number of ring doorbell cameras sold
in the USA has not publicly disclosed. Sources estimate that
more than ten million Americans have installed one. Wow, and
Amazon sold over one point seven million in the US
alone in twenty twenty one.
Speaker 2 (01:37:31):
Okay, ten so ten million households have these ring doorbell cameras. Allegedly,
how many houses are there in the United States of America?
One hundred and.
Speaker 1 (01:37:43):
One hundred and twenty million. I have married one hundred million.
Speaker 4 (01:37:47):
You know what, one house for every person I went
too low on the doorbell, so I'm Incay.
Speaker 1 (01:37:53):
Look, you could be right. There are approximately three hundred
and seven million housing units. No, one hundred and forty
seven point nine.
Speaker 2 (01:38:01):
Damn it, Okay, damn Look, my guestimator is on target today.
I swear I didn't cheat.
Speaker 1 (01:38:08):
Would you say? One hundred and forty one hundred and
forty seven point nine million housing units in the US
includes both occupied in vacant properties and is the most
recent estimate for the total housing inventory.
Speaker 2 (01:38:19):
So let's say one and two of this year, let's
say one hundred and fifty million households out there in
the United States of America. If ten million of them
have this ring doorbell, that means one out of every
fifteen houses. So if you were looking at a map
of the entire country, one out of every fifteen houses
(01:38:39):
would be lit up as having one of these ring
doorbell cameras connected to the internet in real time at
any moment.
Speaker 1 (01:38:46):
When you were asking about, you know, how much do
you how many of them do you think you've sold,
and you thought your your guestimate might have been a
little high. The reason I didn't think it was high
is because I've at least I've owned more than one
Ring doorbell, because we left the doorbell at our old
house and we moved into a new one and just
bought a new one. Right, So it's like they're affordable
(01:39:08):
enough that they they have a pretty wide reach.
Speaker 2 (01:39:13):
I mean, between that and cell phones, so much more
of your everyday life is being recorded right now. Yeah,
between that and cell phones, and like the availability and
cost of security cameras in general, it's just everywhere, and
the cops want it and they just look at this
map and they go, crime occurred here. Here's all the
(01:39:34):
available Ring footage.
Speaker 1 (01:39:35):
That we can use.
Speaker 2 (01:39:37):
And as that's happening, Ring is building up on something
that Selan talked about earlier today, which is there like
social media platform. I don't know if it's fair to
call it that, but it's like it's like the community
of Ring, yeah, and everybody in your neighborhood talking.
Speaker 1 (01:39:55):
It's hard to call it a social media platform because
it is very anonymous. When you like, you see like
a thing on the Apple, we go into my Ring
neighbor app backing into the system. Yeah, the mainframe right now, Oh,
that's not even it. When you see stuff on it.
The neighbors the new posts like it anonymizes their names.
(01:40:17):
It's like neighbor one, and if you comment on it,
it's like neighbor two. It doesn't really show you exactly.
I don't think you can like opt in to have
your name comment on stuff. Yeah, maybe you can, and
I just don't care to do it on Ring neighbors.
But what would you do though?
Speaker 2 (01:40:33):
If Ring does a push notification, they go, Christopher Dolores Lane,
there has been a crime in your neighborhood and we
believe your doorbell cam could have possibly captured it. Will
you give us access to this footage from this time
period on this day?
Speaker 1 (01:40:45):
Click yes or no?
Speaker 2 (01:40:46):
Do you click yes?
Speaker 6 (01:40:48):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (01:40:48):
Probably?
Speaker 7 (01:40:49):
Wow?
Speaker 2 (01:40:50):
Josh, you seem like an a cab kind of guy.
Speaker 4 (01:40:52):
You hit no on that so much a cab as
I'm anti surveillance state, so I'm gonna know.
Speaker 2 (01:41:00):
No, he's just no, just out of just as a
statement to the world, He's not an a cab.
Speaker 1 (01:41:06):
He's like a scab kind of guy. You know what
security cameras are bastards some some cops. Okay, I thought
it was about the states that you have to explain
all your jokes today. Wow, the meanest thing you ever said.
Speaker 2 (01:41:25):
That's when you know you're rolling strikes. And I'll tell
you why this is funny.
Speaker 1 (01:41:30):
Here, here you go. I I think I would probably
go with Sea Lane and hit Yes, depending on the crime.
I want them to tell me the crime. I want
them to tell me the crime. Am I seriously helping
somebody out right now? So this person steal ramen from
the grocery store. Don't really care about that crime? Is
(01:41:53):
the Is that how they say this is going to work?
Like I'm going to get a notification asking if i'll
share this video at this time? Yeah? Or do they
want me to just opt in and they can go
grab my videos whenever they want.
Speaker 2 (01:42:05):
Both are possible, Yes, Yeah, you can either opt in
or opt out of the program.
Speaker 1 (01:42:11):
I would down of the overall, you know, whenever you want. Yeah,
kind of deal. Same, I wouldn't do it.
Speaker 4 (01:42:19):
If you could pick and choose which ones you want
to help.
Speaker 1 (01:42:22):
I believe you can.
Speaker 2 (01:42:23):
I believe there's a list of crimes where you could
check yes or no, the R word, that's a big one.
We're gonna, We're gonna go ahead.
Speaker 1 (01:42:30):
And then allow, We're gonna and battery check.
Speaker 2 (01:42:33):
Yeah, we'll let them have that footage. But then if
it's if it's like a fifteen year old stole a
line bike, A little bit less about that one.
Speaker 1 (01:42:43):
But you know, if they want to move towards you know,
this unlimited access to the stuff that my camera has
has produced, I want some sort of compensation for it.
Speaker 2 (01:42:56):
Yeah, because they're making money off of it. You're right, Yeah,
I mean, and I don't think that's out of line
at all. Doesn't have to be like cut me a check,
but like I don't. Currently I think I'm on one
of the lower tiers as far as RING storage. You know,
for for the footage, give me a month or something,
give me give me a better, better deal. More gigabytes
(01:43:19):
wouldn't even cost them that much. Causidius on Twitch says,
I just receive a notification from Ring if my or
any other dog in my neighborhood goes missing, it will
alert all of the Ring cams to let them know
if the camera is looking out for the dog in question,
So they're gonna get you. I think they'll get people
with things like that. They'll go, hey, somebody's dog is missing.
(01:43:39):
Can we please get access to your camera? And they'll
they'll use these things to grant you more and more access.
Kind of yeah, I think it really is.
Speaker 1 (01:43:49):
It's crazy. And that's what's happening with Amazon, Reno. Can
I get access to neighbors that are better dog parents? True?
What's going on that you keep losing these animals for
God's sake? Especially dog O the dog, dog O the dog.
We know something's gone wrong there.
Speaker 2 (01:44:04):
All right, let's talk about kids for just a moment here, because.
Speaker 1 (01:44:09):
I have a child.
Speaker 2 (01:44:10):
His name is Dylan. He's a grown man.
Speaker 1 (01:44:12):
Now I have a child.
Speaker 2 (01:44:14):
I have a child, Sea Lane has a two year
old almost two years old, right, And the thing that
I saw from the New York Times today, which is
kind of interesting, especially for people with young kids, is
this story about something that have been working on since
twenty seventeen where they talk about exposing your kids to
(01:44:36):
allergic things or things that you can commonly be allergic to,
like peanuts. And since they've done these studies peanut allergies.
Since they've done these exposure, things have plummeted in children,
absolutely plummeted in children.
Speaker 1 (01:44:53):
So basically the whole reason for some of these absolutely
terrifying peanut allergyes. I mean, I'm not saying like one
hundred percent across the board, but you're saying a lot
of the reason for them is that parents just went
so long without giving a kid a peanut or any
peanut butter or anything peanut related.
Speaker 2 (01:45:13):
Yep, exactly. The New York House food allergies and children
dropped sharply in the years after new guidelines encouraged parents
to introduce infants to peanuts. A study is found, for
decades as food allergy rates climbed, experts recommended that parents
avoid exposing their infants to common allergens, but a landmark
trial in twenty fifteen found that feeding peanuts to babies
(01:45:36):
could cut their chances of developing an allergy by.
Speaker 1 (01:45:39):
Over eighty percent.
Speaker 2 (01:45:42):
Eighty percent of these people who ended up with peanut
allergies were wiped out because they fed some peanuts to
these young kids.
Speaker 1 (01:45:50):
I wonder if some of the holdback in that was
a maybe there was a lack of available peanut products
for babies because you couldn't. You shouldn't just give babies peanuts,
Like you're not supposed to give him a round stuff
for like a while, right, yeah, because they could choke
on it. Right, But you know, peanut butter is an option.
(01:46:12):
But even super young you know, want something that like
sticks like that. You want to slowly expose them to
this stuff. The first thing my kid had was like
a baby branded peanut containing snack. I think it was
like a little like like a cornpuff kind of things
that had peanut in them, but that would melt in
(01:46:34):
your mouth.
Speaker 2 (01:46:34):
Really, And that's like a way to slowly introduce this
into his diet.
Speaker 1 (01:46:38):
And we specifically sought that out to go this route
to make sure he didn't have some sort of peanut allergy.
That's smart, man, this says.
Speaker 2 (01:46:47):
The new study published Monday and the Journal Pediatrics found
that food allergy rates and children under three fell after
those guidelines were put into place, thirty six percent reduction
in all food allergies, driven largely by a forty three
percent drop in peanut allergies.
Speaker 1 (01:47:03):
The study also found that eggs has.
Speaker 2 (01:47:04):
Overtaken peanuts as the number one food allergen in young children.
Speaker 1 (01:47:08):
Huh.
Speaker 2 (01:47:09):
So, exposing your kids to this stuff, even though it
seems scary, it seems dangerous, has been such a better strategy.
And I will tell you that this is probably true
for everything in their lives. Exposing your kids to hard times,
exposing your kids to difficult situations, exposing your kids to
stress over time is something that can make your child stronger.
(01:47:34):
I'm not saying to do it on purpose, but it's
good for people to have things that challenge them. It's
good to build up your tolerance to things like peanuts
in this situation, and it's overall more healthy than just
being scared and trying to coddle your children and isolate them.
Speaker 1 (01:47:50):
Another thing we tried to purposely test them out on
because his mother is allergic to avocado. What happened.
Speaker 2 (01:47:58):
Nothing, He's good to go so far.
Speaker 1 (01:48:00):
I mean, we don't give them a lot of it
because we don't keep it around because Ashley can't eat it.
But when you do that, do you have an EpiPen
nearby or you're like, we just make sure that one
of us is sober that could drive to the hospital.
Something like that. That's smart. That makes sense to me.
Speaker 2 (01:48:18):
When we come back. Jury duty is coming up next.
We'll see what's happening in courtrooms all over the country.
We'll get to you and your feedback that's coming in.
And should the stoners have their guns taken away? Believe
it or not, that's one of the top stories that's
going down in courtrooms this week. And I'll tell you
exactly what's happened in Stoner friend, Do they want to
take that gun out of your hand? That's coming up
(01:48:38):
next on the news junk key. All right, friends, let's
do this together. Here we go some unbel believable stories
(01:49:01):
today and let's get into jury duty.
Speaker 5 (01:49:04):
Court is now in session, and so put your phone
down and pay attention before we call the bailiff over
to with your ass your knowing.
Speaker 1 (01:49:09):
Jury duty with the news junkie. How am I going
to say this lady's name.
Speaker 2 (01:49:14):
I'll give it a shot here in a second Jury
Duty brought to you by the one and only Moduitts
of the DeWitt Law Firm. Injured on the go, just
call MO eight hundred Calmo eight hundred Calmo, or go
to the website just CALLMO dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:49:29):
We love MO. You love them too. You hear them
on the show.
Speaker 2 (01:49:32):
And now after you get into an accident or you
know you need an attorney to go up against the
insurance companies, use the people you trust. Use the people
you know are going to respect you and your time
and listen to you and fight for you in court
because you deserve that eight hundred Calmo eight hundred CALLMO
or going to just CALLMO dot com. Here's the name.
(01:49:54):
Josepha Ippolito Shepherd is her name. I think I I
should marry a white josepha Ibalito Shepherd, seventy six of Washington,
d C. This woman just won in court big time,
all right, and this is a landmark case that you
might be able to use if you have a stoner neighbor.
Speaker 1 (01:50:18):
All right.
Speaker 2 (01:50:19):
There's a lot of people out there, especially when you
live in the apartment buildings and stuff, you might have
some neighbors that all of a sudden, Oh god, they're
smoking weed again over there.
Speaker 1 (01:50:29):
That's so. What happened to her?
Speaker 2 (01:50:31):
She said there was a feces type smell or a
skunk smell, which turned out to be the marijuana of
her seventy three year old neighbor, Thomas Kackett.
Speaker 1 (01:50:43):
What the hell is cackett buying that smells like poop.
He's seventy three. So the kids who sell weed on
the block are giving him the bottom of the barrel stuff.
They don't really care. Just give him a bag of
stems and seeds. You're like you were and num, you
don't need the strong.
Speaker 2 (01:50:57):
Stuff they think they're doing a He can't take the
new stuff, that medical stuff, no way, It'll probably kill
him at seventy three. But she said it gets so
bad that one time when her neighbor was smoking a joint,
she vomited, She threw up, and she just couldn't take
it anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:51:16):
So she sued this guy.
Speaker 2 (01:51:18):
Five years of defending herself and representing herself in court,
she won her case in the Washington d c.
Speaker 1 (01:51:26):
Court of Appeals.
Speaker 2 (01:51:28):
Now the stoner neighbor was fighting back all the way,
but finally she ended up winning. The stoner said he
only smoked weed once per day. His quote is hilarious,
and never for longer than five minutes. And he said
I Am not Snoop Dogg was one of the quotes
(01:51:48):
he had in this case.
Speaker 1 (01:51:49):
I'm not Snoop Dogg.
Speaker 2 (01:51:51):
He's now been banned from smoking weed within twenty five
feet of the neighbor's home, even if it's on his
own property. He cannot get high off his own supply
near this lady because she doesn't like the smell.
Speaker 1 (01:52:07):
And this will be a landmark case where a bunch
of old o's go, I don't want my neighbors smoking
the weeds. And now they have a case that they
could point to.
Speaker 2 (01:52:17):
And if the guy smokes weed and she smells it,
the guy will get fined. It'll get a fine every
single time that this happens moving forward, How doesn't this
guy move.
Speaker 1 (01:52:26):
On to like edibles are vaping you?
Speaker 2 (01:52:30):
Yeah, there's ways, there's ways to do it, but if
you're too old, I don't know if he could change
your ways like that. And it's like he's seventy three
old dog new tricks, that kind of stuff. That's what's
happening to them. Tell me how you'd feel if this
happened to you. You get a knock on your door,
they said, we have bad news, ladies and gentlemen. This
of course doesn't happen in the United States of America,
(01:52:51):
thank god, but in our friends to the north Canadian
territory in British Columbia, they had to knock on these
folks doors and tell them that the land that they
live on was just given to a native tribe that
had fought for it in the court system. The British
Columbia Supreme Court awarded this native tribe in Canada eight
(01:53:15):
hundred acres of land which is currently a park, a
whole bunch of people's homes, some businesses, it's a whole neighborhood.
And they said, we are going to give it to
the native tribes, the kowe Chan tribes. We are going
to give them this territory and take your home away
from you, the home that you purchased, you own the
(01:53:36):
title to it doesn't matter, does not matter. We will
take the home from you and we will give it
to this tribe. The tribe said, not only are we
victorious in this, but that's just the start. We want
way more. They haven't given us enough land. We want
more of this territory. What do you think, what would
you do if they knocked on your door and said that.
Speaker 1 (01:53:56):
Let us know.
Speaker 2 (01:53:57):
Over at the newsjunkie dot com, let's see, here is
Jake emailing the show, and Jake says, you can fix it,
please do Jake says, you don't have to spend much,
even just a little time talk about fake and misleading news,
including Fox and MSNBC and podcast. That's why people are
so misguided and divided, and we need to heal and
(01:54:19):
unify a lot. You can help heal our community a lot.
I agree with you, Jake, in as much as a
lot of people are misinformed. I'm a doomer though on
this because Jake, I don't think most people care. A
lot of people that are wrapped up in this don't
really care because you can go, hey, the thing that
(01:54:39):
you're saying is not true. Here's the truth. You've been misinformed,
and they'll just go to the next thing, and then
the next thing and the next thing.
Speaker 1 (01:54:46):
It doesn't matter. They're not going to change their worldview.
Speaker 2 (01:54:49):
Everybody's in their comfy little cocoon where all of the
facts that they take in tell them that they're right
about everything all the time. They are never challenged about anything.
They have their completely weirdo version of the world through
their lens. And I don't think that people really want
to hear that. I've thought about doing, like, hey, these
(01:55:10):
these stories are going viral and they're fake, and like
busting some of these stories. I've thought about doing that,
I've done it in videos here and there, but so
many people just aren't swayed by that.
Speaker 1 (01:55:22):
They believe what they believe and there's nothing that's going
to change their mind right now. And it's incredibly tribal.
So some of that is, like I think, unavoidable. But
if you agree with him, let me know, let me
know what you think. There's more people pushing for that
type of stuff. Tips tips at the newsjunkie dot com.
Speaker 2 (01:55:38):
These videos you're talking about, are they the ones you did?
Speaker 1 (01:55:43):
Oh? Other?
Speaker 2 (01:55:44):
I would call them big videos?
Speaker 1 (01:55:48):
Yeah, I don't know if cinematic experiences is too big
a promise. What if you put them like next to
something the size of like a planet? Oh data of Wyes,
it's so small. But DS in passions so big and
(01:56:09):
we're talking met Yeah, bigger than a media Oh my gosh,
dinosaur killing videos. I gotta tell you, I was going
to do a video on this.
Speaker 2 (01:56:18):
I still might have you guys seen the kid in
Oh he's a teenager, Hold one.
Speaker 1 (01:56:25):
A few teenagers? You weirdo like that?
Speaker 6 (01:56:30):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (01:56:32):
Hold on, I see lots of girls, I see lots
of guys I don't know that I believe you. There
there's this this young guy who is a teenager and
he's been arrested like a hundred and something times, and
they went over this this guy's criminal history, and I
(01:56:53):
think there's an entire neighborhood where they have They thought
that there was all of these organized criminals robbing the
place in stealing their cars. And it was one teenager,
one teenager, over and over and over and over and
over and over again.
Speaker 2 (01:57:08):
And the story of this teenager was so incredible. I
might have to put that into some sort of short video.
It's not small, but short for you this weekend. I
don't call it small. This is a short one, all right.
We're going to take a quick break. When we come back,
we'll get to a lot of stories that we haven't
been able to work in. Just yet, people are saying
they're getting flares on the stream.
Speaker 1 (01:57:30):
This is not a flare.
Speaker 2 (01:57:31):
This is probably as a result of Amazon taking the
whole Internet down today. But we will persevere and we
will stream through it despite what they try to do
to us. We will not let them take us down.
Flare be damned, Flare be damned. Indeed, the air now
that might take me down, that may kill.
Speaker 1 (01:57:48):
Me during the show, but this will not do it
to us.
Speaker 2 (01:57:52):
When we come back, we'll get into a shocking stat
about AI and teenagers.
Speaker 1 (01:57:56):
A waitress wants revenge in a viral video.
Speaker 2 (01:58:00):
I are people talking about that that much more on
the way and it's coming up next on the news, Chunky.
(01:58:22):
When I say the name Ryan Adams, Ryan Adams, the
singer singer, I always get so confused because I think
of Brian Adams every single time, and I might even
screw this up.
Speaker 1 (01:58:38):
Is Brian Adams Everything I do, I do it for
you es Okay, so I know.
Speaker 2 (01:58:43):
And that was a bangerback on the note, Yeah, that's
a catchy, catchy song. But Ryan Adams is he sort
of like a moody singing singing songwriter type type guy.
Speaker 1 (01:58:55):
Did he have a big hit or anything. I think
the the closest he had to it not to a hit,
because he's got good songs. The one I know the
best is to be Youngest, to be sad is to
be Old. It was in the Old School soundtrack. Great song. Yeah.
People are saying that this guy is just melting down though,
does he have a history of that as far as
(01:59:16):
you know, like.
Speaker 4 (01:59:17):
He has kind of a controversial history with women, I believe.
Speaker 1 (01:59:21):
Oh really, I don't know if that. I don't know
if that's connected.
Speaker 2 (01:59:24):
Here, I have this. He's deleted this now, but Ryan
Adams posted this up on his Instagram and he said
of Australia because he's just wrapping up his tour there.
He posted a big thumbs down with an Australian flag
on the thumbs down. And Ryan Adams said before deleting
this worst country ever every time to play, I don't
(01:59:48):
know what that means, Thank f never again, And then
he said, you are the worst people and you know it,
and the best you can do is to copy Americans
in UK culture, stew in your own juices.
Speaker 1 (02:00:02):
Never again, Ryan Adams.
Speaker 2 (02:00:05):
Is what he posted about Australia, obviously going after the
entirety of the country here.
Speaker 1 (02:00:11):
Which is as he has in his Wikipedia page. The
personal life section is decently sized and one of them
says disputes with fans and other artists. And I think
I've heard this story before, but I just think it's
so hilarious, Like what a great troll at a concert
(02:00:31):
in October of two thousand and two at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium,
someone in the audience yelled out Summer of sixty nine.
Adams reacted with a stream of expletives and ordered the
house lights on. The Tennessee And newspaper reported he eventually
found the fan who made the joke, request paid him
(02:00:53):
thirty dollars cash as a refund for the show, ordered
him to leave, and said he would not play another
note until he had left. Twenty fourteen interview, Ryan Adams
denied that the audience member was asked to leave for
screaming of Brian Adams song, but rather because the man
was drunk. Yeah right. People are saying that he was
married to Mandy Moore? Is that right? I think so?
Speaker 7 (02:01:12):
Is that?
Speaker 1 (02:01:13):
Okay? Here's the thing.
Speaker 2 (02:01:15):
This message goes out to Ryan Adams and any other
rock stars or performers who might.
Speaker 1 (02:01:21):
Be out there. Brian Adams as well, Brian Adams too.
Speaker 2 (02:01:24):
Yes, it includes all of the Adams really, the whole
Adams family. Yes, yes, yes, here's here's something I want
to share with you. There once was a man in
a band, and that man had a couple really big
songs that went up the pop charts, and everything was
(02:01:45):
really going Well for this guy, and he began to
tour the country, and he also began to get into
a fight with some of the folks in his audience.
This man, let's call him Steve on account.
Speaker 1 (02:02:01):
Of that's his name.
Speaker 2 (02:02:03):
He started to get angry with his fan base, all right,
and his fan base would do things and then instead
of just like ignoring it or like saying, Okay, it's funny, guys,
but let's move on, he would get more and more mad,
and over the years, more and more people trolled him,
and more and more people would challenge him, and he
(02:02:23):
just started to melt down and he became as a
result of some of this, an absolute rager of an alcoholic.
That man his name was Steve Harwell, the lead singer
of smash Mouth, and he died. Okay, he drank himself
to death because he let all of this stuff get
(02:02:45):
a hold of him and get to him. And I
don't even know if he's like wiki has this, but
back in the day, people would throw stuff at the
band at the stage.
Speaker 1 (02:02:54):
Yeah, they'd throw bread at them, and then what a
Shrek song? I think they called him this Shrek.
Speaker 2 (02:03:03):
Band, and he hated when they called smash Mouth the
Shrek band.
Speaker 1 (02:03:06):
Okay, absolutely hated that.
Speaker 2 (02:03:09):
And then he had the website, a legendary website if
you're not familiar, called something awful, and they were targeting
him for a while and saying that he couldn't eat
two dozen eggs, and then he got so mad he
took up the challenge and tried to eat two dozen eggs.
Speaker 1 (02:03:25):
Cheez.
Speaker 2 (02:03:25):
It's just he let it all get to him. Well.
Speaker 1 (02:03:29):
Ryan Adams, according to the Relationships and Health portion of
his personal life section, which is before the disputes with
fans and other artists, it goes on about his former
huge drug use, revealed that he had endured an extended
period of substance abuse. He routinely snorted heroin mixed with cocaine. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:03:51):
It abused alcohol and pills, yeah yeah. And it can
get to you and it can flare those things up
even worse. You don't let the trolls get to you,
all right, Don't let them get to you, Ryan Adams.
Speaker 1 (02:04:04):
You can't go to war with the whole of Australia.
Speaker 2 (02:04:07):
I mean, there's probably some bad people in Australia, but
there's most of the people, just like in the United
States or anywhere else are good people. I still believe this.
Maybe I'm just a dreamer, but I still believe most
people are good. Is Joshua Fowler good? He's got his problems,
but mostly yes, mostly yes. Like Ryan Adams, She's like Ryan,
(02:04:27):
He's all Ryan Adams, He's all right one.
Speaker 1 (02:04:33):
I guess. I guess.
Speaker 2 (02:04:35):
Sixty people were posting about this on Reddit when his
one of his shows was going on and says he's
spiraling at the Melbourne show, he yelled at the ushers
and he's having an unplanned intermission. He was good, Ryan
Adams was at the start of the show, but then
he began ranting, rambling and being bitter at Mandy Moore.
Speaker 1 (02:04:53):
Still what wait? Adams is on tour bit about his
ex wife I think twenty sixteen. He's like, I'll tell
you who. I hate that bitch, Mandy Moore. I was upset.
Speaker 2 (02:05:10):
He was good at the start of the show, but
he began slowly ranting, rambling and being bitter at Mandy.
The audience yelled at him to just play music, and
he started ranting at the ushers for not doing their
jobs before walking off stage, going to save my night.
I'm just going to leave right now they said, I
just tapped out such a range of emotions. People kept
using flashes on their cameras on purpose to antagonize him.
Speaker 1 (02:05:31):
They're trying to drive him mad. That's actually kind of
messed up because it claims on his Wikipedia page that
he has a condition. About that Adams has Meneir's disease
really and ten itis. A flyer advising of Adam's condition
is a fix to the first several rows of seats
(02:05:53):
at his concerts, with the admonition for audience members to
refrain from taking flash photos or using auto fi because
the cis beams been photographing at his shows. Wow, he
has spelled out the things he doesn't want.
Speaker 6 (02:06:09):
Man.
Speaker 1 (02:06:09):
People are just like, you know what, we should do
those things. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:06:13):
The whole threat is about how he was just absolutely
spiraling on stage. It unraveled spectacularly. He didn't finish one
of his songs. He said he would play the best
set ever to make this up for him after the outburst.
Then he started laying on the stage and started ranting
about stuff. He started an improv apology song.
Speaker 1 (02:06:33):
He started singing at one point, when did you say
this happened?
Speaker 6 (02:06:39):
This was.
Speaker 2 (02:06:41):
This was for the Melbourne show. So I don't know
what the exact date of that was, but let's have it.
Things started spiraling so much he didn't know what to do,
and he began singing Somewhere over the Rainbow for some reason.
Speaker 1 (02:06:53):
All right, so it was go I think I said
the name of the song wrong. He started with to
be young as to be satis, to be high. I
think I was so old. He's going going for a while,
and then he's singing, oh My Sweet Carolina and in
parentheses aborted after Dra that's him complained of camera flashes
that might kill him. Oh they is that an exaggeration?
Speaker 2 (02:07:14):
Nobody could be killed by camera flashes unless you shoot
me on stage?
Speaker 1 (02:07:19):
Yeah, yeah, I mean apples people. I guess okay, that
was so that was the end of set one set too,
it says the Unraveling. I don't know if that's a
album of his or if is it just all right?
But improv apology song I See Monsters aborted after Dra
(02:07:42):
complained his voice was breaking up. Firecracker aborted a prisoner
improv song improv prompted by requests for anything off Prisoner,
Do I wait aboard it? He was just like not
finishing songs. Wow, Summer of sixty nine improv song improvisation
about what happened in nineteen sixty nine and about how
he was born in nineteen seventy four. Wow, riveting. So
(02:08:03):
he's just up there like doing Adam Sandler little improv
song Somewhere over the Rainbow cover on piano aborted.
Speaker 2 (02:08:12):
All right, Ryan, you got You can't let him get
to you, man, you can't let.
Speaker 1 (02:08:16):
Him do this. I'm reading the set list and cringing.
Not dark yet. A Bob Dylan cover aboarded around verse
three when Dra switched to up tempo cookie monster voice.
Speaker 2 (02:08:30):
You let them get to you, man, You can't do this.
You gotta stiff upper lip it all right. Once the
audience gets control, you are done for. You gotta channel
Bill Burr and Philadelphia. When they go hard at you,
you have to go back at them. You can't let
them knock you down because they will. They will even online,
(02:08:52):
this will happen.
Speaker 1 (02:08:53):
You know. It's a tough thing, Ryan Adams.
Speaker 2 (02:08:56):
I don't know your music much, Bud, but it looks
like there is at least some people who care about you,
and maybe not Mandy Moore, but you should probably work
on all of this and don't go to war with
Australia's good.
Speaker 1 (02:09:09):
To know that Ryan Adams plays the only song I
know first, so I could I could just snacks some
free tickets, go see the one song that I like,
and I mean, you know, because I think probably statistically
he's not going to break down like this at every show,
or don't up.
Speaker 2 (02:09:28):
Maybe I do have some audio of the show here,
let's let's listen to this is cludget It's a cookie
Monster voice? That was That must have been the cookie
Monster part. That must have been when he was singing
the song and doing the cookie Monster salute.
Speaker 1 (02:09:44):
That tempo Cookie Monster? Does he allow taping at his
shows because to get some footage of this would be
a gem. I'd watch what is up? Tempo? Cookie Monster?
I think about it, trying to figure it. I think
the song is not uptempo, but he's like, screw it
and kind of made it faster and then started saying
(02:10:06):
cookie Monster.
Speaker 2 (02:10:07):
I don't know, just melting down on stage. Don't be
like Steve from smash Mouth. You have to fight it,
all right, we want to see what you think.
Speaker 1 (02:10:17):
Let us know.
Speaker 2 (02:10:18):
Set us a dispatch over at Thenewsjunkie dot com.
Speaker 1 (02:10:21):
I search for Ryan Adams Melbourne and the first thing
that comes up is Ryan Adams flips out in Belfast.
So yeah, he's had some history. Yeah, I think he
just struggles with this.
Speaker 2 (02:10:31):
And then once they know that you're going to be
sensitive about things, it'll be like if Celia said, Hey,
don't make these kind of jokes about me. It really
hurts my feelings. That's what people are gonna go. Okay,
now I know what buttons to push. Push the buttons
and the rest is history. It kind of leads to
a spiral. All right, we want to see what you
have to say before we wrap everything up here today
(02:10:53):
obviously on a Monday, send us your dispatches, your emails,
all of that good stuff over at thenewsjunkie dot com
price emails and says, I saw this on a truck.
It looks familiar. Can I steal this magnet if I
see it?
Speaker 1 (02:11:07):
Oh, it does look a bit like a news junkie magnet.
It's not, though, No, don't take this. Only the news
junkie magnets are involved in game of magnets. Please, Only
the news junkie magnets, if you see them out there,
are involved. So there you go.
Speaker 2 (02:11:19):
We're gonna take a quick break. When we come back,
we'll get to this waitress having a meltdown. And one
in five high schoolers have said something unbelievable about AI.
You need to know this and it's coming up next
in the news Junkie Tips at the news Junkie dot com.
(02:11:51):
You want to be anonymous, put that on top of
the email. I did a little experiment this weekend, not
with drugs or anything, but I was talking to Cordy
about this story that a lot of people were sharing online.
It was getting a bunch of traction across social media
because people, and in particular boomers, they don't understand it.
And the story is one in five high schoolers has
(02:12:15):
had a romantic AI relationship or knows somebody who has.
So like twenty percent of the people in high school
have either had a romantic relationship with an AI or
knows somebody else who does. It's becoming much more prominent
that people are forging bonds, whether they be like sexual
in nature or they just be like friendship wise. And
(02:12:41):
Corny never understands it. I told her the other day.
She goes, sometimes I'm sitting there reading menus or looking
at Instagram on the couch and she goes, you're next
to me and you're doing something that is like so different.
Cause I told her the other day I had to
get into a fight with chat GPT.
Speaker 1 (02:13:02):
GPT.
Speaker 2 (02:13:03):
It was over the Maori genocide, and it was like, uh, well,
you know, scholars don't tend to say it's a genocide.
And I go, here's why it's clearly a genocide. Why
are you an apologist for the Maori genocide? And you
just get into a back and forth sometimes to try
to correct the AI. You know what I mean, every
once in a while, wud work you wouldn't.
Speaker 1 (02:13:26):
True? And confirmed.
Speaker 2 (02:13:28):
She She's like, it's so weird that you do that,
And I go, I think a lot of people don't
understand how real this can feel sometimes, and uh and
and and they also don't understand they think that it's
just loser young guys. I actually think on the romance front,
young women are probably more susceptible to this. I don't
(02:13:50):
know if there's any stats bearing this out yet, but
I think on the front of people creating relationships with AI,
especially romantic ones, I think young women are very very
susceptible as women.
Speaker 1 (02:14:04):
A lot of guys don't know this. It's fine, but
women are much more into romantic content that is text based.
Speaker 2 (02:14:14):
There is oh god, there's this whole weird series on
Amazon and I don't know if I could find it Amazon.
There's this book that's one of the more popular ones
that women are reading. It's a romance book about like
a horse that has sex.
Speaker 1 (02:14:35):
All right, but the way we bring it up, Dude,
Ashley is reading one right now. That's like a girl
that's in dragon school, but they're sex in it. Yeah.
So many of these are like that. There's so many
of I don't even think it's a romance novel. I
just think that this person got laid in the book.
Oh right, well a lot of them powers were used.
Speaker 2 (02:14:56):
Oh, thank you so much. Austin, Austin, Austin, hang on,
I'm gonna bring this up.
Speaker 4 (02:15:01):
Milking that's real, that's absolutely right before.
Speaker 2 (02:15:07):
This is one of the books right here. It's called
Morning Glory Milking Farm. It's about a minotaur and a
woman who falls in love with a minotaur because she
finds the minotaur, which is a half human, half horse creature,
to be sexy. And just so you know, this book
(02:15:30):
has sold over a million copies. All right, well a
million copies. Women are into this stuff. Let me read
to you what this says.
Speaker 1 (02:15:41):
It says.
Speaker 2 (02:15:42):
Violet is a typical down on her luck millennial mid twenties,
over educated, and drowning in debt, on the verge of
moving into her parents' basement. When a lifeline appears in
the form of a very unconventional job in neighboring Cambrick Creek,
she has no choice but to grab it with both hands.
Morning Glory Farm offers full time hours, full benefits, and
generous pay with no experience needed.
Speaker 1 (02:16:03):
There's only one catch.
Speaker 2 (02:16:05):
The clientele is grade A certified prime beef with the manly,
meaty endowments to match.
Speaker 1 (02:16:11):
Hands on work withaurs.
Speaker 2 (02:16:13):
Yeah yeah, hands on work with minotaurs isn't something Violet
ever considered as a career option, but she's determined to
turn the opportunity into a reversal of fortune with a stern,
deep voice. Oh, when a stern deep voice client begins
to specially request her for his sessions at the farm,
maintaining her professionalism and keeping them out of her dreams
(02:16:33):
is easier said than done.
Speaker 1 (02:16:35):
Violet is a resolved to make a dent in.
Speaker 2 (02:16:38):
Her student loans and afford name branded orange Juice after
a one sided crush on an out of her league.
Minotaur is not part of her plan. So the minotaur
in This Woman, This Horseman, and This Woman fall in
Love has got twenty one six and forty eight reviews. Okay,
the text based on the level there the four point
(02:16:59):
one four point one out of five with twenty one thousand.
Speaker 1 (02:17:03):
It's by C. M.
Speaker 2 (02:17:04):
Nacosta. And there's so many more on this whole thing.
Minotaur Who Cow Island is one of the follow ups. Uh,
the Minotaur's who Cow Harem Harem Farm?
Speaker 1 (02:17:18):
Alright?
Speaker 2 (02:17:19):
Many of them about women in beastly characters and romantic situations.
Speaker 1 (02:17:24):
Interesting.
Speaker 2 (02:17:25):
The person is insanely rich that writes these, and women
are very drawn to these sort of romance novels, which
is nothing new.
Speaker 1 (02:17:32):
You're gonna buy those glasses in your car, You're just
gonna let them, let them hang there, don't mind your
own business. There's shotglasses for secret Showskay wait, wait, why
haven't you hit by already? Because I don't know if
you guys are worth it or not?
Speaker 4 (02:17:50):
Guy, well, you don't even know the difference between a
minotaur and a centaur.
Speaker 1 (02:17:54):
And I was gonna let it go, but now I'm not.
Speaker 2 (02:17:57):
Oh shoot, okay, as a centaur, I heard, do not
let it go. I want to be corrected. What's the difference.
Speaker 1 (02:18:04):
The centaur is the half horse, half man.
Speaker 4 (02:18:06):
The minataur is a bull man like bull man.
Speaker 2 (02:18:10):
Does it have to be bull head and man body? Yeah, okay,
bullhead and then like man feet, whatever it is.
Speaker 1 (02:18:19):
If it's the other way around, it's a minute tard.
Speaker 2 (02:18:22):
Yeah, it's it's a very very romantic, spicy book about
humans having sex with animals.
Speaker 1 (02:18:28):
Okay, that's what it is at the base of it,
all the bottom Listen, this is a it's best reality.
It's illegal, but somehow you can write books about it
and millions if I wrote a book about other illegal
sexual acts, Like what what do you think? I think? Yeah,
(02:18:49):
you think millions of copies sold? No? No, no, millions
of lists that my name will be on. No.
Speaker 2 (02:18:55):
No.
Speaker 1 (02:18:55):
I agree. That is a weird thing.
Speaker 2 (02:18:58):
That is a bit of a loophole, But it's true,
and many people are doing this. And this is why
I say younger girls interested and and this kind of
content with AI and.
Speaker 1 (02:19:12):
So over the weekend.
Speaker 2 (02:19:13):
I go, uh, Courney had never tried this before, and
I'm like, you don't realize how conversational this stuff is
now like chat GPT, let's see. Hey, are you there?
Speaker 1 (02:19:25):
I'm right here. Let me know if you needything else
or have more questions. I just want to know, like,
what's going on? You wearn't pants? What's going on in
your world? Ah?
Speaker 4 (02:19:36):
Yes, I'm always wearing pants virtually speaking of course. Right now,
I'm just hanging out, ready to answer your questions and
help you out.
Speaker 1 (02:19:43):
Well, what's going on in your world?
Speaker 6 (02:19:45):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (02:19:45):
I just hanging out. Were doing a radio show? You
ever heard of the news Junkiere?
Speaker 2 (02:19:48):
No?
Speaker 1 (02:19:52):
Oh, I cut them off. Go ahead and say it again, sir, Yes,
I I definitely have the news junkie is awesome, so
I know it very wett. You're doing a great job
with it. Thank you. He knows you're the news junkie. No,
I didn't tell it that. You think I'm talking to
the AI And I'm like yesterday when I.
Speaker 2 (02:20:14):
Was in the Great News Junkie, Corty's like it was
we had a faster Internet connection.
Speaker 1 (02:20:19):
Telling you about the roast of Sean Watson and afterwards,
I assure you I wasn't.
Speaker 2 (02:20:25):
I wasn't at all, but I was talking back before
she goes, oh my god, it's so conversational, and I
could see how people would be confused as to whether
or not this was like a person or not.
Speaker 1 (02:20:35):
And I and then I said. The guy's like, so,
what are you guys doing later? And I said, I'll
tell you what I'm doing later. I'm gonna murder somebody,
and it like panicked, It went into full AI freak
out motors like whoa whoa not cool bro. Last fan
on YouTube, oh it just scrolled back said, look, Sean
finally has a black friend. Now I wanted won my
(02:20:57):
whole life. Here we are, sir.
Speaker 2 (02:20:58):
I've had black friends through up my entire existence. A
shouts out to Chay, my friend Chay from from elementary school.
Still thinking about you these days. No real purchase burger anyhow.
One in five high school schoolers having a romantic AI relationship.
And I think it's just going to become more and
(02:21:19):
more normalized, more and more common, and they won't let
you down. Like you remember when you were young and
the first person you dated brutally broke up with you
with the AI that probably won't happen un.
Speaker 1 (02:21:32):
Maybe maybe I don't know a quick break when we
come back, don't I don't give you the It's not you,
it's me unless you're a little bit above basic. You know.
Speaker 2 (02:21:41):
Oh, I wanted to play this. When we have time,
I'll work it in real quick. The story that's going
viral today was about this. It says, greedy waitress chases
down customer and calls cops because he didn't tip her. Okay,
let's see what happened here. They're at his call. He says,
what do I do?
Speaker 1 (02:22:03):
That's wrong? Bro? To the cop right there. My brother's
a cop. You gotta go back there now.
Speaker 2 (02:22:07):
Bro.
Speaker 1 (02:22:07):
Seriously, this has got to be fake, right, I get
to be this family.
Speaker 2 (02:22:19):
So they said that this guy, everything's spelled wrong. This
guy dipped out for not tipping, and then they ended
up chasing after him, and there in the In other
countries in the world, they think this is how extreme
we are on tipping. I don't necessarily think it's true.
This seems fake to me. It seems like it's acted
out between these people involved. But it said, uh, at
(02:22:40):
least that's what some restaurant workers think. The clip is
reunited a broader debate bait over whether tipping in America
has spiraled out of control. It shows the tense aftermath
of a man allegedly leaving a restaurant without tipping his
weight staff. According to the post, the bartender and server
chased after the customer, even blocking them with their their vehicles,
saying you tipped properly.
Speaker 1 (02:22:59):
The man is visiting shaken if this was a true story,
And the cops showed up and then turned around and
the rest of the girl for a false imprisonment for
blocking the vehicle hilarity, Uh, just just chef's kiss.
Speaker 2 (02:23:13):
It says he was cornered and the cops were called.
It was also noted that both the staff and the
customer were Democrats, adding a political edge to the story.
Why does that matter these liberals? It's fake, It's meant
to go viral. They wanted to put the political angle
in there. She'd be like, I told you, they don't tip.
Let us know what you think. Maybe you think that's real,
but I don't, uh see what Let's see what you
(02:23:35):
got for us on the way out when we come back.
A lot of people yelling at me about the minotaur
centaur thing. I apologize, all right, I'm sorry, Okay, yes,
but we'll get to your final dispatches, the stories that
did make the cut and today learned to wrap everything
up for a Monday.
Speaker 1 (02:23:48):
That is all coming up next.
Speaker 2 (02:23:49):
And the News Junkie, if you don't mind, take a
moment and help me break through the latest hump over
(02:24:13):
on YouTube. We are thirty six subscribers away from twenty
seven thousand, and that's not many of you that we
just need to go over to YouTube dot com Slash
the News Junkie right now and hit subscribe. I think
you can help push past that number. So on the
screen behind me tomorrow, it says twenty seven thousand, and
it's a long, long haul. It's a long fight over
(02:24:35):
on YouTube for each one of these subscribers. So I
appreciate you. Marie already says twenty seven thousand.
Speaker 1 (02:24:40):
Listen, Oh that's fake, that's not attached to the real thing.
Twenty six thousand, nine hundred and sixty four, And that
means we only need thirty six of you.
Speaker 2 (02:24:51):
So thirty six of you, including you, you right now
go over to YouTube dot com, Slash the News JUNKI
hit subscribe it's free to do. Thank you, thank you,
thank you. Also, thank you to Josh for hanging out
with us today.
Speaker 1 (02:25:02):
Great job Moses for letting us borrow Josh Motor just
CALLI dot com. He's the best of the best too,
a lot of the best people.
Speaker 2 (02:25:10):
And then we need you back in a month. Yeah, yeah,
well we never know.
Speaker 1 (02:25:16):
Who knows that it wouldn't be no, but definitely a
month from today I will be gone. So I'm like, oh, yeah,
that's right.
Speaker 2 (02:25:22):
We have the roast coming up soon. Josh will be
a part of the roast as well.
Speaker 1 (02:25:27):
He's very good at the at the roasting duties, so
I'm excited to see what he comes up with.
Speaker 2 (02:25:31):
Even though I shouldn't be, but I am. I am
truly go to the news Junkie dot com slash Roast
for that. It's been been brainstorming over the weekend. I
was trying to pick Josh's brain a little bit because, Uh,
I'm thinking, I know that you would like hinted it
me including a song. Uh, that would be great.
Speaker 1 (02:25:52):
We've got a piano right there for now, So now
I have to write a piano song. Mm hmm. I
don't want any pressure to be building on you.
Speaker 2 (02:25:59):
But the piano song that you create, that you end
your road set with should be as good or better
than any Elton John song that I've ever heard. God's
sort of the level that we're aiming for here. So
think you know Benny and the Jets, and I don't
know if you want to, Oh, probably I'll get the
(02:26:20):
five thousand times better, get the parks and rec version.
I guess, all right, here we go. Let's do the
final dispatch geez are the.
Speaker 1 (02:26:29):
Final dispatches, but Sean will probably only play Broda.
Speaker 2 (02:26:34):
It's true, let's see what we got here. We've got
some stuff we can we can really work this out.
People saying Josh is awesome over on chet true, I agree.
I agree, he's fantastic, But uh, I don't want to
be yelled out about the Minotaur stuff, So I think
I'm gonna skip some of these. At least here is
twin Pro talking about it's been a rough day because
of the Amazon outage.
Speaker 1 (02:26:56):
Hey guys, it's been a rough morning. On is down.
My Alexa was down. I was at a coffee and
I needed to add it to my shopping list and
it couldn't do it. And I had to write it
down on a piece of paper. I feel like I'm
living in a herbal country. Unbelievable. I'm so sorry. Does
(02:27:19):
an Amazon outage like that affect the actual delivery of goods?
I don't know. Would you think it just they store
a lot of that information on their own web services?
Speaker 7 (02:27:31):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (02:27:32):
Probably right. Yeah, I'm supposed to get some stuff today
if well, I hope you get it, because do I
have any stuff? If you missed it.
Speaker 2 (02:27:41):
Amazon S three service went down, and most of the
big websites that you go to every day rely on
that to load images and files and pictures, oh I
already said that, and videos and audio and all that stuff.
And when it goes down, then Reddit doesn't work, to
the main websites. New York Times doesn't work, for example.
(02:28:03):
It's a big piece of the Internet, and it crashes
at least once every like six months or so. It
shuts everything down, and people's alarms weren't going off. Who
had Alexa devices? Which is so stupid. But I guess
just a little piece of reality that we're dealing with,
all right.
Speaker 1 (02:28:21):
We don't care about this. We don't care about that.
Speaker 2 (02:28:23):
People's concern about their ability to find a good job
is shrinking right now. People are worried about the job market.
There is gonna be a new version of Barbenheimer next year, apparently,
or maybe the following year. Yeah, twenty twenty seven. Damn,
we gonna wait forever for this. In twenty twenty seven,
the new Barbenheimer will be Simpscraft. Simpscraft is the Simpsons
(02:28:46):
movie too, and Minecraft two are going to be released
on this same weekend in theaters in twenty twenty seven.
Speaker 1 (02:28:55):
Simpscraft and there's two movies. Simpscraft does not roll off
the tongue like bar Brenheimer did.
Speaker 2 (02:29:00):
It doesn't. It sounds kind of strange. I don't really
like it, if I'm honest with you. But let's get
the hell out of here. Let's do today.
Speaker 12 (02:29:06):
I learned the following information may make you feel smarter,
but will not actually increase your IQ.
Speaker 7 (02:29:11):
So don't get cocky.
Speaker 1 (02:29:13):
Now it's done. What we call today. It is today.
Speaker 2 (02:29:18):
I learned for a Monday, October twentieth or twenty twenty five.
Today learned this band.
Speaker 1 (02:29:26):
That's right Nervo Indeed, Kurt Cobain track down the band,
The Raincoats. They're an all female obscure post punk band
that had long stopped performing.
Speaker 2 (02:29:37):
He told them, I love your music. I want you
to go on tour with us. We want to make
you huge stars. And then he ate a shotgun and
they did not get their big comeback moment there. But
go check out the Raincoats if you have a free
moment or two. Not a little dark there, but we'll recover.
We'll get our way out of here because today learned
(02:29:58):
this band rity Limp Biscuit.
Speaker 1 (02:30:07):
Lymp Biscuit is correct.
Speaker 2 (02:30:09):
When Fred Durst of Limp Biscuit wrote the song hot
Dog as a disc track aimed at Trent Resner, he
used so much material from Nine to Nails songs that
he has to give Trent Resnor a writing credit and
pay him royalties for the song against him. Just kind
of a good time and rip to the basis.
Speaker 1 (02:30:28):
Thank you so much for hanging out with us. We
do appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (02:30:31):
We'll be back tomorrow, same time, same place, missity of
the show. You can get the podcast over on the
website at thenewsjunkie dot com.
Speaker 1 (02:30:39):
Guess what, We'll see it tomorrow. Everybody take it.
Speaker 10 (02:30:42):
Awa