Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
And it is friends a Share the Show Tuesday, well simply,
but it means you share the show some way, somehow.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
You could do it by hitting the like button if
you're watching on YouTube. You can do it by just
telling a friend, telling a co worker about the show.
You do it by posting on social media. Hey guys,
if you don't know about this show, I think you
might like the news junkie.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Here you go. It's to share the show Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
How's everybody doing on a Tuesday?
Speaker 3 (00:33):
It was good? And then I just watched a video
that's terrifying. What did you watch? Watching be heading videos
on a Share the Show Tuesday.
Speaker 4 (00:42):
I'm sharing them just you know, the hit the send
buttons and andcend I always love with us.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
Still have the share icons next time, you know what
I mean?
Speaker 4 (00:50):
Or the porn with the you know like this on
Facebook on LinkedIn sare share this one?
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (00:56):
Sure No.
Speaker 4 (00:58):
A good friend of ours whose kid is a little
bit older than Jackson is going through swimming lessons and
sent like the video of them.
Speaker 5 (01:07):
Just like, oh when they shove the kit into the pool.
Speaker 4 (01:09):
Flipping the baby, you know, face down in the water.
Speaker 3 (01:14):
My wife's like, I couldn't even watch that one.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
I was supposed to take Jackson to do that, so
which means I have to do it. I got a
lot to be the one that's in person. Gonna have
to watch them just shove him in.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
The pool and be like, all right, now, turn on instinct. Now,
how do you think you're going to take this selan?
Speaker 2 (01:31):
You're watching little Jackson and he's struggling, but they're telling you, no,
don't do anything.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
You have to let him struggle a little bit.
Speaker 4 (01:38):
I mean, I just know that if anything goes wrong,
paycheck pay check, no, maybe, yikes.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
He's gonna be great. He's gonna be great. He's gonna
be great. When you have a massive half a million
dollar RV and a private jet, I should know that
something went wrong with the.
Speaker 3 (02:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:04):
I mean.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
I was talking actually with this about swimming and stuff
with Courtney yesterday when we were chatting headed over to
Epcot and we were talking about how there was a
billboard up and I've never seen this before, but there
was a billboard up along the hallway and she said,
is drowning like the word electrocution? Like electrocution applies that
(02:25):
the person died? And I said, I think so. I
think drowning applies that the person has died as well.
And she said, you know, the sign said how many
kids had died in the state of Florida in the
last year from drowning.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
And it's crazy, you.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
Know, You're like, damn, you know, you look at that
and you think, holy cow. And so much of that
is from kids who who never learned how to swim,
you know, like no matter where they are, they might
be surrounded by water everywhere. And she said, do you
think they should require people in school to be able
to swim? And I said that might be difficult, but
I really think it would be in any state where
(02:59):
you have that much water around you, I think it
would be an incredibly good thing.
Speaker 4 (03:03):
Like in Pe or something that they had, like swimming stuff.
Speaker 5 (03:07):
Sure, thank if you can replace one dodgeball game with
some basic swimming lessons or how to at least shred
water get to the side in case you find yourself
in a drowning situation, I'll take it.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
It might be an insurance thing or I you know,
I don't know what would be stopping them from doing that,
but I think would be good.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
I do.
Speaker 2 (03:29):
All right, let's put our ears to the ground, our
fingers and the pulse A see what was happening in
this great, big, wide world of ours And we go
to you knew it friends, the McDonald's Impact Summit twenty
twenty five.
Speaker 3 (03:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (03:40):
Oh, I wasn't invited.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
That's so weird. You should have been, though.
Speaker 4 (03:44):
I mean, if I go on my app and see
how many points I have, I should be able to
trade that in for an invite to the Impact Summit.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
You ever been in this situation I know you have
ahead of asking you, I just know.
Speaker 3 (03:57):
I mean, I think I did this yesterday.
Speaker 2 (03:59):
Where you're your partner is talking to you and you're
only half paying attention, and then so you start answering,
and in the middle of answering, you're trying to figure out,
like what was.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
It they asked me to begin with? Why? Like as
you're talking, you're like, why am I talking about this
right now?
Speaker 4 (04:15):
Like this is like a Michael Scott Like sometimes you
start a sentence you don't know exactly know where it's
going to go.
Speaker 3 (04:21):
You just keep talking, you just keep going.
Speaker 2 (04:23):
And I feel like Trump, from time to time, we'll
do this at these events. And for some reason, he
was speaking at the McDonald's Impact Summit for some reason.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
Yeah, he's a McDonald's guy.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
He's big in a McDonald so I guess that's why.
But he was up there and then in the middle
of his speech, I think he realized he had veered
way too far off course.
Speaker 3 (04:43):
So let's see, let's listen to him.
Speaker 6 (04:44):
You know what they want to sugar and the nice
I said, you got to go to sugar. Just like
I said, why is the Gulf of Mexico called the
Gulf of Mexico. I said, we're changing the name and
now it's the Gulf of America. Has nothing to do
with McDonald but maybe it does because it's very nice.
Speaker 5 (05:04):
Cycle.
Speaker 3 (05:04):
We have ninety two percent of the shoreline. They have
eight percent.
Speaker 6 (05:08):
I wouldn't say I made a lot of friends in Mexico,
but they still like me.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
I don't know how you veer off on the Like everybody,
we're here to talk about McDonald's.
Speaker 4 (05:16):
I don't want to know what the I want to
know how far he veered. Like all I heard was
something about a little bit of sugar, and then you
think of the name.
Speaker 5 (05:24):
Yeah, all of America, And I mean, the only way
to bring it back is like some places in Mexico
have French fries, but not as good as McDonald's.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
I guess I would say he was starting in this
territory where it was like the McDonald's type corporations haven't
been able to use real sugar in their drinks, and
they want to bring the sugar back. I don't know how,
you like, hop, skip and jump all.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
The way around, but you know what, they want to sugar.
They want the sugar.
Speaker 6 (05:52):
I said, you got to go to sugar, just like
I said, why is the Gulf of Mexico called the
Gulf of Mexico?
Speaker 3 (06:00):
I said, which.
Speaker 5 (06:03):
He does.
Speaker 6 (06:03):
Now it's to go of America. Has nothing to do
with McDonald's. But maybe it does.
Speaker 3 (06:07):
Maybe it does.
Speaker 5 (06:08):
I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (06:10):
I don't know if I can if he's.
Speaker 4 (06:11):
Been yelling a lot behind the scenes or something. He's
not on the horse side.
Speaker 3 (06:16):
I think he talked.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
He's the only man who talks like ten times more
than I do. He just he talks a lot, and
he just kind of kept going at this thing. The
McDonald's impacts someone. I've got another clip of him. Let's
see what he's saying.
Speaker 6 (06:26):
Here doing honest, beautiful hard work and happy family sitting
down to a really great meal, Because no matter who
you are, everyone loves something. At McDonald's has always something
to have. I like the fish. I like it was.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
He the fish?
Speaker 3 (06:56):
Was that maybe the fish cooking or.
Speaker 5 (07:00):
More time?
Speaker 3 (07:00):
He said, I like the fish.
Speaker 6 (07:03):
The fish, I like it the.
Speaker 3 (07:10):
S a little more.
Speaker 5 (07:15):
Do you understand that? Yes?
Speaker 2 (07:17):
I guess if you're ever gonna get McDonald's to make
a change, there's no better place than this. If you're
in the president of the United States, you're like, guess what,
you guys don't have enough tartar sauce.
Speaker 5 (07:26):
On Somebody now introducing a pint of tartar sauce.
Speaker 3 (07:30):
While we're retooling the filet fish.
Speaker 4 (07:32):
President Trump, could you not only focus on the tartar sauce,
but the fact that they put a half a slice.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Of cheese on it? Well, what do you want? A
full slice? Is a full slice kind of improve it?
Speaker 5 (07:44):
I would like.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
Full slice of cheese. It's you know, in a way,
it's a very bright move. If you're gonna get change
made and you're a McDonald's power user, the only way
to get it made is to speak right to the
executive you're like, look, here's the deal, right.
Speaker 3 (07:58):
I like the fish.
Speaker 5 (08:01):
I like it. I still don't get it.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
You could do a little bit more tartar place.
Speaker 6 (08:08):
I hate when I said you have any you understand that, Yes,
he understand.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
Got it fixed, just like that baby, more tartar sauce
on all those things.
Speaker 3 (08:18):
I will never ever be the guy.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
And this is something that crosses all bounds of poletric politics.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
Excuse me, I.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
Will I will never ever be the guy who who
eats a fish sandwich at a fast food place.
Speaker 3 (08:33):
I just don't even if they.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
Play a wall full slice of cheese, not changing my mind,
more tartar sauce, not changing my mind.
Speaker 5 (08:41):
You do not so thrown when you see a Long
Drawn Silvers like that entire place is based on fast
food seafood.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
I'll tell you this, And this is always concerning to me.
I have yet to see a Long John Silvers where
the entirety of the name lights up at night on
the sum It's either John Silver's or Long John or like,
some portion of the light of that restaurant is always
(09:09):
burned out. And that makes me wonder. It does make
me question things at least a little bit.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
But that fried battered dip fish is so good. You
like it?
Speaker 7 (09:19):
I like, I like the fish. I mean, come on,
I mean you have fish sticks growing up. I did,
but that was frozen. There was something to that, but
we made it in our own oven. And also I
didn't really have a choice.
Speaker 5 (09:35):
But when it comes to like driving up or going
to the counter and saying I would love a delicious
insert seafood here super fast, I can't do it.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
It's just everything else is better to me.
Speaker 2 (09:46):
Like the quarter pounder is really good, man, I like
the other things you've made.
Speaker 3 (09:50):
For so long. I guess they've made this long too.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
But there they go, big changes on the way for
the fileo fish, big changes at McDonald's, think.
Speaker 5 (09:57):
Like forever ago.
Speaker 4 (09:59):
I was the the only one that was disappointed when
we had McDonald's like deliver a bunch of stuff to
the radio station, and they was like they were doing
this big promotion chicken nuggets stuff like that, and I
guess if they ran out of chicken nugget boxes, they
put them in a bunch of fialo fish boxes and
then they put a sign out there. Somebody dropped a
(10:21):
sign down because they like figured maybe people would be
deterred by the presence of the fialalo fish boxes. He says,
I was, and it says in all caps, these are
chicken nuggets.
Speaker 3 (10:31):
And I went, damn it, come on, this was this
was the mecca for it was a mecca mecca for
just a second here and now it's it's chicken nuggets.
Speaker 2 (10:43):
Well, we'll see if you get your changes there over
at McDonald's. Everybody, good luck to you while we take
on the day here with I woke up, I start
getting show prep flowing, and I swear to god, I
don't think I was exaggerating. At least a third of
the Internet was down east, like a third of I'm
pull it up when I'm doing show prep. I'm doing
(11:04):
like twenty to twenty five to thirty tabs at a time,
and I have all these big groups of bookmarks that
I use every single day to search for everything viral
going on to bring it to you each day. And
today is like half, maybe maybe a third, of the
tabs just weren't working. There was an outage from something
called cloud flare.
Speaker 5 (11:23):
And those of you don't know about.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
Internet websites and stuff don't know about this necessarily, but
cloud flare is a website that a lot of other
websites used to stay online and kind of like when
the Amazon Web Services shut down happen.
Speaker 3 (11:38):
There's a problem with Amazon.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
Web Services, and it's like the backbone of the Internet
is out. You tried to access Oh, I don't know.
There was like so many websites this morning. They were down.
They were absolutely down for quite a long time, and.
Speaker 5 (11:52):
They saw this happen. My girlfriends were computer. Then she's like,
can you come in for a second and chat shibt's
not open it? Oh yeah, chat gbt was there, and
it was like unblock cloud Flare. Yeah, And so I'd
go into the settings when I allowed everything and I said,
I don't know, I can't do this right now, but
I hope it works. So instead I've allowed all of
(12:14):
the third party cookies to just swim in her computer,
not knowing there was a complete shutdown.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
That what you're talking about is the exact message that
most people were getting. It says unblocked cloud Flare when
you try to go to any number of major websites.
Speaker 4 (12:27):
Oh yeah, there was this whole like this is your
fault kind of thing to it. Whereas like your settings
are bad that's why you can't do this, and it's like, no,
there's no cloud flare.
Speaker 2 (12:36):
Right at somebody else's problem. I don't know who's but
somebody else's problem. But it went on all over the place.
People were saying was a hack. What's going on here.
We'll look into more of what happened and took the
internet down this morning and who was responsible. We'll get
to you and your feedback. Got a lot of stuff
coming in already here on a Share This show Tuesday,
a lot to talk about, including they have just gone
(13:00):
full while wild West on cable news. Now they're just
they don't care, they're just cursing and they're allowing it.
Somebody a guest asked to curse on television. He said,
can I curse? And I said, yes, go ahead do it,
and then they curs. That's that's where we're at. That's
where things have arrived. We'll explore that. We'll get to
the update on the mysterious cruise ship death. A whole
(13:22):
lot of the way and it's all coming up next
on the news. Chunky the website is up as far
(13:43):
as I know. I thought it was taken down with
the rest of the Internet. This week, like the entire
Internet was down. Everybody's waking up trying to go to
chat GPT or any number of news websites or Canva
where you make images, and all of these websites that rely.
Speaker 3 (14:02):
On a particular piece of the backbone.
Speaker 4 (14:03):
If you want to ask Chad GPT how to use canva,
forget it too bad.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
It's not gonna say anything. It's gonna say we're down
right now. For hours on end, they cripple the Internet again,
and then we think, is this some sort of hacker.
Is it China? Is it the Russians? What's going on here?
What's causing all of this stuff? I love how people
think this way because it is kind of glorious. Whenever
there is an outage like this, people go, well, it
(14:29):
must be like a movie. There's a room somewhere code
is flying by and some hooded man, you know, it's
like typing away.
Speaker 5 (14:38):
At the keyboard planet.
Speaker 3 (14:39):
He's hacking the planet, as it were.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
And they're like, who is the person or what is
the country responsible for this? Like it's some boiler room
full of hackers.
Speaker 3 (14:49):
It's not. It's just the Internet how it works. Now.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
All of these websites are reliant on two things for.
Speaker 3 (14:56):
The most part.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
One is this cloud flaw website, which provides services that
keep websites on the Internet, and the other is Amazon
Web Services or AWS, which also keeps websites on the Internet.
So if you want to keep spammers and all these
different people away from your website, you'll use one of
these services.
Speaker 4 (15:15):
But the difference is like a lot of the websites
live on this Amazon server, whereas Cloudflare just connects people together.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
Yeah, it's like it's like you go to the Internet
to get your destination, Like you type in Sean dot com.
Speaker 3 (15:32):
Or I could just say the news junkie dot com.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
You type in the news junkie dot com and the internet,
you know, registrars go where are you supposed to go
for this? And oftentimes before you go to say CNN
dot com or something, it will bring you by this
Cloudflare website or Amazon or whatever to determine if you're
a hacker or not.
Speaker 4 (15:50):
So last time, it was like if the Internet is
in this warehouse, and the warehouse is Amazon, that went down,
there's nothing inside it. Cloudflare is the highway that takes
you to the warehouse. That highway was just backed up,
you know, sixteen car pile up. Nobody's getting anywhere big time. Yeah,
so then you can't do anything. You can't chat GPT.
The internet is shut down. Home robots are just backfiring.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
I'm sure. Let's see what they.
Speaker 8 (16:15):
Said about before you head to work, especially if you
work at an office. Cloud Fair is reporting out like
x and some video games, Spotify and chat GPT. Now
cloud Fare is an structure platform that supports you.
Speaker 5 (16:27):
So much cloud Yeah, correct thing.
Speaker 2 (16:33):
Yeah, they got two things wrong on the graphics. Because
here's what happens. Nobody in the news understands how this
crap works.
Speaker 5 (16:40):
They don't have.
Speaker 4 (16:40):
Websit to be fair, their spell check spellcheck uses cloud Flare.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
Maybe it does might need this.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
And they said cloud Fare on the graphics or most
of the graphics. So this poor guy, he doesn't understand
how the internet works.
Speaker 8 (16:55):
And including tools to protect websites from cyber attacks and
to keep them from upper under heavy traffic. And websites
have been working or some of these websites have been
working spot spuddily around this morning. You got it has
identified an issue and is working on that.
Speaker 3 (17:10):
Face this morning.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
This guy, he feels like the type of dude, I've
done this before myself. You finish a sentence explaining something,
and in your head, you're already going please.
Speaker 3 (17:20):
Nobody asked me a question about this. I have no.
Speaker 5 (17:25):
Very loud tie and that's all I got.
Speaker 3 (17:27):
I can't I tell you how this works.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
The best way I could say it is if we
use like a Hollywood lot as the example of a website,
and before you go out of the Hollywood lot, you
have that little security gate and you stop and tell
the person while you're there, and then you know, if
you're good, the gate goes up and they let you in.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
Well, cloud Flare is that.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
Gate, and the gate is broken, and when the gate
is broken, you can't get into the website. And it
took down like a whole giant chunk of the Internet.
So I had everybody freaking out and reporters kind of
struggling to figure out, Hey, how exactly do I cover
all of this? But we're going to continue to see
this kind of stuff. We're going to continue to see
like a big chunk of the Internet go.
Speaker 3 (18:07):
Down from time to time.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Twitter went down entirely as a result of this for
hours on end this week and it's going to keep
happening until we diversify things a little bit more on
the Internet, which I don't even know if that's going
to happen. I just I don't know if that is
at all possible. Another thing I want to share with
you here, and we'll get into your dispatches and emails
and all that in a moment, but there is a
(18:31):
story about a guy who I think is getting a
bad rap here.
Speaker 3 (18:35):
Now I'm not into this, it's not my thing.
Speaker 2 (18:38):
It's not something I would do. But we all know,
and we've talked about on this show before that if
you have somebody that you love and they're dying, you
can cryogenically freeze that person. You can do it, like
it's not cheap, it's not common, but you can cryogenically
(18:58):
freeze somebody that put you in like a deep freeze,
and then they hope that eventually they can not only
cure whatever disease you had, but then they can like
put your head on a robot or something.
Speaker 5 (19:10):
Does it look like it has been shown in the movies,
I mean pretty much awesome powers is what I'm referring to.
In my head. It looks like that in real life.
Do we have any pictures of it.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
There's no like window into the things where they cryogenically
store people, like on Futurama, there would be like a
clear area and you'd see the head or something. I
think also to her point, you're not in a like
block of ice, right, You're just like you're in a
chamber or drawer or something.
Speaker 3 (19:41):
If it wasn't being used.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
To cryogenically freeze people, you would think somebody was making
beer in it.
Speaker 5 (19:46):
That's what it looks like.
Speaker 2 (19:47):
It looks like big like beer equipment kind of stuff.
And this guy is fifty seven years old. His name's
Gue Jung Min, and his wife had lung cancer, poor thing,
and his wife passes, and he makes the decision to
cryogenically freeze his wife's body with the hope that in
(20:07):
the future she could be revived and they could cure her.
And now he's found a new partner and he's going
to get remarried or he's gonna get married to somebody else,
and people are coming after him saying, well, what are
you doing here? You can't properly represent this person you've
cryogenically frozen. If you've fallen in love with someone new,
(20:27):
you can't.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
Do that, you're a bad person.
Speaker 2 (20:29):
And he's facing a backlash for finding love as his
wife is stored at negative one hundred and ninety six
degrees right.
Speaker 5 (20:38):
Now, I man should have added that to the vows.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
Now, I think there's no chance to bring into these
people back to begin with. But I like you, if
you had somebody who he loved and they died and
then years and years and years and years past and
they were criogenically frozen.
Speaker 3 (20:54):
I think you should feel free to date and.
Speaker 4 (20:57):
Marry and have said it's dead to us part they're dead, yeah, yeah,
And if.
Speaker 2 (21:01):
They cryogenically bring them back, then you can have an
awkward conversation, so then you can be like, oh my god,
it could be a little weird. But I think that
that will be something that that people shouldn't go against.
What do you think? Let us know, Send us a dispatch.
Respond to the show with your audio or video dispatch
at thenewsjunkie dot com.
Speaker 3 (21:22):
Right now, the.
Speaker 4 (21:23):
Thing I wonder the most about the cryogenics is how
much does it cost to keep somebody frozen this long?
Speaker 3 (21:28):
Like a lot? Like refrigeration ain't cheap, no, no, no,
you have you're.
Speaker 5 (21:34):
Paying some sort of yearly fee.
Speaker 4 (21:36):
I'm sure to keep this person on ice and when
the money runs out, do these people just like turn
off the freezer, unload the body and.
Speaker 5 (21:51):
Of it.
Speaker 3 (21:52):
They just put them on your doorstep?
Speaker 5 (21:54):
Is there? How long is that subscription for?
Speaker 9 (21:57):
What?
Speaker 5 (21:57):
If you don't.
Speaker 3 (22:00):
Costs? Here we go.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
Whole body cryo preservation is one hundred and fifty to
two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (22:08):
That's your whole body. That's like the whole shebang.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
Neuro which is just your head in your brain, which
is what I was talking about before. Just your head
in your brain is eighty to one hundred and twenty
thousand dollars. And then membership fees are around seven hundred
dollars a year.
Speaker 3 (22:24):
That is less than I thought it was than I thought.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
Yeah, I mean it's a lot upfront if you're going
to do it that way, but then you know you've got.
Speaker 3 (22:32):
Maintenance and stuff. You have annual maintenance.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
One hundred to five hundred dollars per year. Is there's
premiums over the life of all of this stuff. Membership dues,
which seems so weird. You could be in Arizona or Michigan.
Those are the two main places where they'll put you.
Speaker 5 (22:49):
How many people are frozen?
Speaker 3 (22:50):
Right now we.
Speaker 2 (22:52):
Know how many total people are frozen, and.
Speaker 4 (22:57):
I want to know what the protocol is and who's
are you? Have you already paid for the end of this,
like if it doesn't work out, like you do a
first and last month's kind of thing where where when
you run out of money, that last month goes to
taking the body out, cremating it and disposing of it.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
It might it could be there.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
Are roughly five hundred to six hundred people worldwide who
have been cryogenically preserved, which.
Speaker 5 (23:24):
Is kind of crazy lower than I thought.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
Yeah, that's that's worldwide, that's globally. I'll see how many
just in the US because obviously five hundred to six
hundred in the entire world.
Speaker 4 (23:37):
Well that's a good question because they mentioned Russia as
one of the places you can get this done because
it's cheaper and less regulated, which.
Speaker 2 (23:45):
Really so it's just willy nilly over there a little
bit Dave's garage. You just go over there and he's like, look,
this is just as good as al Core Life Extension Fund.
Speaker 3 (23:54):
That Kremlin cryogenics get it right.
Speaker 2 (23:57):
About three hundred of them are in the United States Erica.
According to this here tips at the news Junkie dot
com Tips at the news Junki dot com. Brad emails
the show Hollywood. Brad is talking about how I was
questioning on the show last week. I said, is it
weird if I put myself as an executive.
Speaker 3 (24:14):
Producer of the Roast?
Speaker 2 (24:16):
And Brad says, hey, Sean, regarding your question of whether
you deserve an EP credit, in my opinion, you deserve
at least the EP credit, if not the producer credit,
which is a bigger credit. I had no idea he's
saying that the executive producer credits are not as big
as the producer credit. If this hadn't come from Hollywood, Brad,
I would be questioning it, Yeah, because executive producer sounds
(24:39):
like the main producer. Executive producer credits are given out
like candy.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
On most shows.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
There'll be credits for like ten or fifteen executive producers,
but only one or two producers, which is how you
know they're actually in charge. EPs or executive producers are writers, actors,
and people who own the production company. Most of them
do exactly no producing. The producer is the one that
Shepherd's the show from pre production to post production and
(25:05):
everything in between. Just my two cents based on all
the shows and movies I've worked on, says Brad.
Speaker 3 (25:09):
Very interesting.
Speaker 4 (25:10):
That's sort of similar to what we talked about a
little bit last week, where all of the people with
EP credits are usually like either put up money for
it or it was part of a deal. And I've noticed,
and this is super annoying to me because I think
skip intro should mean skip the damn intro, skip every
(25:32):
part of the intro. If I hit the button, I
want the show to start. And lately I've been noticing
shows where you skip intro and they show you like
the last ten seconds of the intro, and all the
people with executive producer credits the still roll. So really
one of the shows that has a pretty lengthy ish intro,
(25:53):
not as bad as The Morning Show because that one
takes forever. That's like Orange is the New Black length
of intro. But you hit skip intro and only Murders
in the Building goes to, you know, the last ten seconds,
and Steve Martin, Martin Short, Selena Gomez, all executive producers,
all of those run. You still get to see them. Wow,
(26:14):
even though you were supposed to have skipped this.
Speaker 5 (26:16):
I want to see them acting, So what is the
point of that?
Speaker 2 (26:19):
But they want the on screen credits. I wonder if
that's like a labor dispute. I wonder if there was
like a labor dispute where they said, no, technology now
is taking away our credits from this and people are
skipping right by that. I never even thought of that
until you said that. But that's interesting, Brad.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
Let us know. Maybe Brad knows about that.
Speaker 2 (26:37):
He's our Hollywood guy and email tips at the news
Junkie dot com if you can give us a little
more insight on this, or to.
Speaker 3 (26:44):
Take a quick break.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
When we come back, we have to get into the
new finally, Finally, we'll get to this at the top
of the hour. Updates actual information on how that eighteen
year old girl died on the cruise ship. There's been
so much speculation, but now we have some information coming out,
so we'll get to that at the top of the hour.
We've got a bunch of other things to talk about
(27:07):
throughout the course of the day today, including they're just
openly cursing on cable media. Now, I got clips galore
and we got you as well along for the ride
and to share the show Tuesday, and that is coming
up next on the News Junkie. It wasn't just the
(27:36):
Newsjunkie dot com that was down today, was all sorts
of different outlets that were down as a result of this,
and perhaps there were some other things going on. But
the website's up and running. You can join us with
a dispatch. Send your video or audio dispatch right now
at thenews junkie dot com. All right, makes me shake
just thinking about it. We'll get to those dispatches here
(27:56):
in a moment. I see so many stories every day
that are in did to turn me against gen Z.
Gen Z, don't worry. It's not gonna work. Okay, it's
not gonna work. They're not going to turn me against you.
I know you got plenty of things to complain about.
I know the old o's have made the houses more expensive.
I know that the job market kind of sucks out
(28:17):
there for you.
Speaker 3 (28:18):
I know that.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
It's not as easy to be a young person. All right,
I feel you, I understand you. I also think you're
out of control, and it is because of a story
that came out this weekend the Morning Brew, which is
a good email to keep up with if you want
to follow what's going on in the news and you
don't want a bunch of really partisan nonsense. They're pretty
(28:42):
good at the morningbrew dot com, I think. And they
had a story out about gen Z and one thing
that they're really into.
Speaker 3 (28:50):
I guess here's what it says.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
It says gen Z would love to eat dinner right
next to you in the name of human connection. Really
associate gen Z with human connection that much? But you know,
here you go. Young adults embrace the divisive trend of
communal dining this year. Don't be surprised if they revive
hitchhiking next. The Reservation Company survey ofs one thousand people
(29:15):
who eat out in the United States said ninety percent
of gen Z diners say they like sitting at shared tables,
compared to just sixty percent of baby boomers and others.
Among fans of communal dining, sixty three percent side of
the possibility of meeting new friends or crushes as a
major draw. I gotta tell you, I don't know if
(29:35):
it's because I'm not really looking for new friends and
crushes or what, but I am beyond boomer in this category.
Speaker 3 (29:43):
I hate communal dining. I don't like I've.
Speaker 5 (29:47):
Evidently done it once. I mean, from what I understand,
it's like, you know, the lunch room essentially like.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
The Savannah place you talked about.
Speaker 5 (29:56):
So that was the one time I did it, and
I've got to say it was great. But I was
also at a table of eight. Six of us came
together and there was a couple.
Speaker 4 (30:07):
Right, so you guys were you guys like had the
majority of the table.
Speaker 5 (30:11):
You're older, like, we just love seeing friends like this.
We're gonna tell our kids about it. But that was
about it.
Speaker 4 (30:17):
See, I don't mind it, but pretty much the only
place I do it is is it like a Hibachi place,
Kobe or a Benny Hannah is the only place.
Speaker 2 (30:27):
That's that's different though? Is it not like that is
made to be a little social interacting with entertainment experience,
but also the things that you listen that in that
article that people like it for where they're like I
could meet new friends or maybe a crush. I do
not think of that part of community, like the communal dining.
I don't think of any of that, Like I've never
(30:47):
even when I was single thought like maybe I'll meet
my crush while during the onion volcano.
Speaker 5 (30:53):
You know.
Speaker 4 (30:54):
Time, It's mostly it's more like meeting vacation friends, like
I'm never going to see these people again, especially if
you go to the one like for us in a
more touristy area, it's likely they are on vacation, so
you're definitely not going to see them. But I don't
think I've ever like had any interaction like that at
(31:15):
a more communal table and thought, I'm getting this person's number.
Speaker 5 (31:19):
When you kind of get that without the food per se,
when you sit at the bar next to somebody a
little bit, yeah, time sometimes you don't.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
This is weird to me because it's so many, like
think of younger people like twenty something in below. Ninety
percent of gen z or say they like sitting at
shared tables in these restaurants. They want more restaurants to
go to this shared table format, which can have an
impact on you.
Speaker 3 (31:44):
At some point in time, you go.
Speaker 2 (31:45):
Into Applebee's and it's all a big giant shared seating
thing because they want to bring a gen z right
and Boomer is only sixty percent of them like this,
I am I must be in this, this fringe minority
on this all of my experience like this. I had
a guy I sat down to next to in the
last couple of weeks. All right, if you met me
in the last couple of weeks, it wasn't you. I
(32:06):
promise it wasn't you. And this, this guy sits down
next to me. I'm, of course sitting next to Courtney.
We're always chatting. We are always in some sort of
conversation and that'll never end. But the people always try
to sit down next to us and they'll try to
engage in some sort of conversation.
Speaker 5 (32:23):
Which is fine.
Speaker 3 (32:24):
Like if you see me out in public, don't.
Speaker 2 (32:25):
Be scared of me. Come up and say hi, I
appreciate it. All that stuff right has happened a lot
is of late. I appreciate it's lying, it's not I'm
not lying.
Speaker 3 (32:33):
I love it.
Speaker 2 (32:34):
People come up, they say hello, everything's good, unless you're
really drunk. That's always the most awkward encounter. This guy
the other day though, communal sitting. He's sitting next to
me at the bar and he taps me on my elbow,
like elbow to elbow, and he kind.
Speaker 3 (32:49):
Of leans in and I have no idea. Who this
guy is? No idea? And he goes, oh, god, my
wife is such a bitch? Am I right? Oh?
Speaker 2 (32:57):
And that's his awkward. My wife is sitting next to him,
and I go, I don't know you. I don't know
your wife. I'm not going to get into some conversation
about whether or not.
Speaker 3 (33:08):
She's a bitch. I have no I don't want to engage.
Speaker 2 (33:12):
So I go, oh, man, that's crazy, And then I
physically turned my entire body towards Courtney and just like
directly talk to her.
Speaker 5 (33:19):
So let me guess they didn't take that in though
no language. There are some people wheres like you can
be completely turned around and they still want to chat.
Speaker 2 (33:31):
I've seen a little bit of that too, but these
people were fine. Once like I turned over and started talking,
it ended the occurrence.
Speaker 3 (33:38):
And I'm sure there were plenty of nice.
Speaker 2 (33:39):
But like for me, there's so many situations where you
go to a restaurant, you sit down at a communal
table or like a big picnic.
Speaker 3 (33:46):
Table or whatever. It's awkward.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
It is awkward, and I don't know that I'm gonna
meet somebody and be a pal with him. I would
love that. I would love to be oh man, you're awesome,
and then make a best friend out of it. But I,
generally speaking, do not like that at all. But I
feel like, according to this data, I'm absolutely in the minority.
I'll go to the survey, the actual data and see
(34:10):
what it says.
Speaker 3 (34:11):
But anyhow, let us know how you feel about that.
Speaker 2 (34:13):
Give us a dispatch with your thoughts over at thenewsjunkie
dot com.
Speaker 3 (34:19):
All right, let's see what we got here.
Speaker 2 (34:20):
Lots of you are chiming in today and many of
you are sitting in these dispatches. Here is let's see
people talking about cryogenically frozen people. Let's go to this
one first. Here's Taz talking about this new rise and
interest and like eating with all these strangers.
Speaker 10 (34:39):
What's going on, news junkies. Hey, as far as that
communal dining, there's a pretty cool place over on Eye
Drive called oh Yeah, where it's communal dining. And then
they get up on the tables and dance, and everybody
else gets up on the tables and dance. It's a
pretty fun time. But just to go out for a
normal dinner in new communal dining, don't know about anyways,
(35:01):
have a great day, guys, I get the.
Speaker 3 (35:02):
Draw at a place like that where everybody is like
belly dancers, everybody's signed open, throwing the napkins.
Speaker 5 (35:09):
And then have you being just by yourself. Every time
I've gone OPA, it's like with twelve other people, it's
a party.
Speaker 6 (35:17):
You know.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
It's one of those places where you go in and
they go, what are you guys celebrating today?
Speaker 5 (35:20):
At birthday?
Speaker 2 (35:21):
And if you're not celebrating anything, you feel like you
feel weird because you're not celebrating something, like they're gonna
shame you, Like, yeah, these guys are just here to eat.
I mean I've gone to Melting Pot and made up
birthdays before just because they're like, what are you guys
here to celebrate?
Speaker 3 (35:37):
Like it's my friend's birthday? Yeah, it's just a Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (35:43):
Yeah, Well they're going to their own melting pot and
I'm going to my melting pot in sort of a
virtual thing. It's anti communal eating.
Speaker 4 (35:51):
It's like, uh in forgetting Sarah Marshall when what's his
nuts is like the host he's at the host stand
and he just wants a table for one. He goes, God,
what's it a table for one?
Speaker 11 (36:04):
Here?
Speaker 5 (36:05):
Ended up getting drunk and finding new friends.
Speaker 3 (36:08):
I'm not saying that can't happen. It can happen. It
does happen.
Speaker 2 (36:11):
But if I have the choice, I want a nice,
little private table so I can enjoy whatever I'm enjoying
and enjoy the service and all of those things. I
don't necessarily find myself to be the person who's like, oh,
hell yeah, we sit down with a big table full
of other random people. That sounds fantastic. That is worse
than the vibes you get at a Thanksgiving meal where
(36:33):
you don't really know anybody.
Speaker 5 (36:34):
Uh huh.
Speaker 2 (36:35):
You get invited to somebody's Thanksgiving meal and you're like,
and my advice is to say no, Just say no,
don't go to them. That's what I'd say. But let
us know if you are against this, for this, what
your thoughts are. Send a dispatch over at thenewsjunkie dot com.
Speaker 3 (36:52):
All right, let's see.
Speaker 2 (36:53):
Uh, somebody's chiming in about moving and TV credits. They said,
what I can't understand is why so many movies and
TV shows waste the first few minutes of the show
when you can really grab the viewer, wastefully listing all
the executive producers, hair and dress designer, screenwriters, all of
that stuff. No one cares about those credits until after
the movie, when you might want to check out who
did what. I absolutely agree with you number one, But
(37:17):
number two, I really think this is like a possibly
a lobbying thing within Hollywood where they go, no, we
deserve credit because while we the viewer don't care. I
think a lot of these people who take part in
these productions go, if it's popular, I want some casting
person or some executive who's working on another production to go, oh,
(37:40):
here's who is involved in this, and if I want
to make something good like this, I might want to
hire that person or that actor.
Speaker 4 (37:47):
Also, I would argue the idea of the extra long
intro is more of a problem on streaming only platforms
as opposed to your old way of watching TV, where
it just comes on. Maybe maybe if you're trying to
get somebody hooked in, it comes on after the thing
you were watching before, and you just take a couple
of minutes to see if you're gonna like this thing.
Speaker 2 (38:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (38:07):
Also, typically with brand news shows, I think it happens
like the at least the first episode. It's not as bad, right, Yeah,
I think that there is something that pushes the actors,
the people who worked hard, worked hard on these productions,
to want to make sure that they get that focus
and that attention. Anybody else chime in tips of the
(38:28):
news junki dot com.
Speaker 2 (38:29):
If you want to be anonymous, put that on top
of your email or fire off a dispatch for us
at the Newsjunkie dot com. Right now, I've got this
audio of Trump calling possibly calling somebody a piggy. But
we got to hear that. We got to enhance. Listen,
zoom in see what was really said? Did Trump call
this reporter a piggy? We'll get to that eventually when
(38:51):
we come back, though, I want to finally shed some
light on this eighteen year old girl, Anna Kepner.
Speaker 3 (38:58):
I never know what to say. Eighteen years old? Is
it like, is it normal to say eighteen year old girl?
Still that teen year old woman? She's going to say
a woman.
Speaker 2 (39:07):
Yeah, she's a high schooler, which is she's eighteen, but
she's still in high school. And she died on this
carnival cruise ship. And there have been so many rumors
about this eighteen year old What happened? How she died
on this cruise speculation everywhere. We finally have some information
(39:27):
and we'll get to that. It's pretty explosive and it's
coming up next on the News Junkie.
Speaker 3 (39:49):
Find out all about the show.
Speaker 2 (39:50):
You can subscribe to secret shows if you're feeling crazy,
and you can also set us a dispatch, so I
want to hear those real quick. Here, send yours now
at the news Yunkie dot com. So people on chat
were trying to fight over the idea that I thought
this was a little weird that this girl who died
on this cruise ship mysteriously was eighteen but still in
(40:11):
high school. And that's because most kids, if you're eighteen,
you're like at the tail end, you're the very tail
end of high school. It all depends on when you
start high school. But if I hear that there was
like an eighteen year old girl and she was on
a cruise, I'm thinking, well, maybe she's already graduated, you know,
maybe she's already moving on with their life. Maybe she's
like partying before she's getting ready to go off to
(40:33):
college or something. And you know, I just I thought
of it makes her seem younger, to say, eighteen year
old and still in high school, which I obviously is
some portion of kids in their final year. Well I
remember lots of people were eighteen obviously, but you know, yeah,
not too much older.
Speaker 4 (40:49):
I graduated at seventeen. But it was because like I
started school early, and I went to a private school,
like I went to like a church school, and then
continued private school because we had that cutoff date thing
where they said, no matter what your you know what
test scores you might have had, you have to start
kindergarten at this point. If you have if you were
(41:11):
born before this day or.
Speaker 5 (41:12):
After this day. Yeah, well I was.
Speaker 4 (41:15):
I was on whatever side of the cutoff day that
they wanted me if I went to public school to
repeat kindergarten. And my parents were like, hell no. So
I graduated at seventeen. But if if I had gone
by like the norm of the county at the time,
I would have graduated at eighteen, and I would have
been eighteen for probably a handful of months, maybe half
(41:38):
a year.
Speaker 5 (41:39):
You had almost a cool older one and get SIGs
for everybody or something.
Speaker 3 (41:42):
Sure not to be labor at the point at all here.
Speaker 2 (41:45):
But before we get into this woman dying on this
cruise ship, and finally some information coming out as to
why this eighteen year old died. When I was saying earlier,
I was like, do I call her a girl or
a woman? She's eighteen years old. I feel like you're
a woman at eighteen, I guess, like.
Speaker 3 (42:03):
Legally still a teenager. You know.
Speaker 2 (42:06):
I wouldn't call people in a high school women, you
know what I mean. Like if somebody was like, these
these are eighteen year old girls at the local high school,
I would be like, oh, these are girls.
Speaker 3 (42:15):
I wouldn't be like some of these women at the
high school.
Speaker 5 (42:18):
I know it's high school women. It would be strange.
Speaker 2 (42:21):
It feels uncomfortable for some reason, and maybe it's not,
but I just anyhow, that's kind of going.
Speaker 3 (42:25):
On behind the scenes as we talk about this.
Speaker 2 (42:27):
But we do have some information now, some shocking details
coming out about this Florida high schooler who mysteriously died
on a carnival cruise. And they've posted all of these
last final like social media posts that she has. Here
she is on the ship. Here she is singing along
(42:49):
to some song on social media. Here she is, you know,
like the final posts that they do before she ended
up dying. And as I said, when I hear somebody died,
so he's on a car cruise and they ended up dying,
I almost always think that the person went overboard. I
almost always think that the person was either drunk or
like maybe somebody dropped them or something. In this case
(43:12):
is like, what's happening here? Her body was still in
her cabin, So what does this mean? And then the
FBI is investigating this eighteen year old who died on.
Speaker 3 (43:21):
The cruise ship.
Speaker 2 (43:22):
Now they are confirming, according to a couple of news outlets.
I don't know if they're right about this, but they
are confirming at a couple of news outlets, that she
was indeed found stuffed in a blanket under a bed
on the ship. Geez, Now that doesn't seem accidental, right,
(43:43):
Like if you are found stuffed underneath the bed, wrapped
in a sheet, someone else said that somebody killed you, right, Like,
there's no other way.
Speaker 3 (43:52):
I wouldn't go.
Speaker 2 (43:53):
I'm going to take a bunch of drugs and roll
up like a burrito and put myself underneath my bed.
Speaker 3 (43:57):
I don't think so.
Speaker 5 (43:58):
I will play a little bit of the uh suss
devil's advocate, But we've had this conversation where it was
the lady in Philly who stabbed herself like thirty times.
Uh huh, And most of the people were like, you
can't stab yourself that much if you're right, Ryana. So
is there a possibility that if you want to end
(44:19):
your life that you can wrap yourself off before?
Speaker 2 (44:22):
Wow, that anything's possible. Let's see what else we're learning here.
Anna Keepner eighteen, died on a cruise in international waters
between Mexico and Florida on November sixth. She complained that
she didn't feel well and she went to her cabin
after dinner on the ship. So it's like a day
at sea on this cruise, she says, as she's eating,
I don't feel well.
Speaker 3 (44:41):
She goes back to her cabin.
Speaker 2 (44:43):
The next day, when her dad and stepmother gathered the
family for breakfast, they noticed that Kepner was missing. At
about eleven am, a maid reportedly found Kepner's body stuffed
under a bed. According to this, she was found wrapped
in a blanket and covered with life jackets. We were
there as a family. Everybody was questioned. Everybody came off
(45:06):
that ship. I don't know who they were looking at
or what their investigation is the FBI hasn't shared anything
with me yet, said the father. I would imagine they're
going to be in contact with me about it, but
I know as little as anybody else. He continues to say,
I have no idea what's going on right now. We're
just trying to sit and wait for answers. But if
they are truly confirming that she was wrapped up like
(45:26):
a burrito, got life bests on to that this is
a reporter on Twitter, but it comes from the Daily Mail.
Speaker 3 (45:34):
The Daily Mail was one.
Speaker 2 (45:35):
Of I think two outlets that ran with the story
that they were confirming this is. The New York Post
has this too. I'll try to find some others that
are a little less silicious, I guess. But a Florida
high school cheerleader who died in a carnival cruise ship
was found by a maid wrapped in a blanket and
stuff under a bed, according to a report. Anna Kepner
was on the sixth day Caribbean cruise. Two sources told
(45:59):
The Daily Mail that the high schooler from Titusville, Florida,
was wrapped in a blanket, covered in life jackets and
shoved underneath the bed when she was found dead, all.
Speaker 4 (46:07):
Right, just quickly pointing out on the side here When
I google her name, three different news outlets use the
word team. I haven't seen girl or woman. Maybe there's
just like, let's stick with teen. That's kind of in
the middle. Yeah, it's not weird either way.
Speaker 2 (46:25):
Yeah, yeah, so yeah there are I've seen the same
thing you're seeing right now. They're confirming it one news outlet.
Remember that could be nonsense, but they're suggesting that this
person was found by a maid wrapped in blankets under
the bed.
Speaker 3 (46:39):
Is early. We don't know enough information, but that seems
a little murdery. That seems a little bit murdery to me.
Speaker 2 (46:47):
So interesting story, lots of twists and turns, and we'll
see if we get any other updates on all of this.
Speaker 3 (46:54):
Let's see what you got tips at the news junkie.
Speaker 2 (46:56):
Dot com and as sport says, happy to share the
show too.
Speaker 3 (47:00):
Well, Hello to you.
Speaker 2 (47:01):
My wife and I were on a cruise a few
years back to Alaska and we went and ate at
a restaurant on one of the ports.
Speaker 3 (47:07):
As we walked in, we gave our name.
Speaker 2 (47:09):
The lady asked if we wanted to do the family
shared dining experience and we didn't know what that was,
so we said no, but we asked what is it now.
I'm not sure if it's communal dining or not, but
they basically get four couples that do not know each other.
You all sit at the same table, and you often
agree upon one entree, two sides in a dessert. No,
I'm not picking dinner with strangers, no way. Basically, each
(47:32):
person has the same exact meal and talks as if
they were with real family members.
Speaker 3 (47:36):
We thought it was weird anyways, we.
Speaker 2 (47:38):
Didn't want to try it, but they said it was
a good market for their tourists. Keep up the work,
says Sport. Thank you for the email. I'm not sure
where everybody lands on this. I just am firmly in
these random, pushed together people and have a meal together things.
It could be interesting, but it's kind of like it's
(47:58):
a crapshoot, like your airplane seat. I have had people
who have sat next to me on flights over the
years who were cool. I had a couple of people
who I would start talking to and then I'd put
down whatever I was doing. I'd spend the rest of
the flight talking to that person because I thought they
were interesting and they were asking questions about where we
were going, and I was familiar with the place we
(48:19):
were going.
Speaker 3 (48:20):
And it's great.
Speaker 2 (48:21):
But mostly, think about the last five flights you were
on the person next to.
Speaker 3 (48:27):
You really brighten your day?
Speaker 2 (48:29):
Do they really add to the experience. It's like that,
but you're just eating dinner and that just seems weird
to me. But the story says that gen Z in particular,
kids who are scared to pick up the phone half
the time, don't really want to talk to people, do
want to eat communally with other people. So interesting. Nonetheless,
thank you to Sean for the gifted sub. The Secret
(48:51):
Shows sub Over there on the newsjokiy dot com, somebody
grabbed that. While you can get that and make it yours,
let's get to the audio of try talking on Air
Force one.
Speaker 3 (49:01):
Let's examine this.
Speaker 2 (49:03):
People are saying that Trump told the reporter to quiet Piggy.
Quiet Piggy is what the quote is. The problem is,
it's always hard to hear stuff on Air Force one.
So I'm gonna bump this up as much as I can,
and I want to see what we were saying here.
Apparently this this reporter was getting a little tense back
(49:26):
and forth with Trump, and this female reporter was cutting
in here and there, and so I guess you didn't
like that. But did he say quiet, Piggy? Will try
to determine Listen it.
Speaker 5 (49:37):
If you're gonna find out what you know?
Speaker 12 (49:40):
He was making a click spec to the head apartment
that they're spaking of those.
Speaker 2 (49:45):
People KP obviously very loud, airplane, air force one, et cetera,
et cetera. He's talking about the release of the Epstein
file stuff.
Speaker 3 (49:55):
You know that was a big story this week.
Speaker 2 (49:57):
This is the part where he allegedly calls the reporter
a piggy.
Speaker 3 (50:09):
No idea, no idea.
Speaker 2 (50:10):
I heard quiet, for sure, but I don't know what
that next word was.
Speaker 5 (50:15):
It's her name Peggy, by any chance.
Speaker 2 (50:17):
That's a good question her Actually her name is super important.
If you guys can find out what the reporter's name
was that he was talking to, that's important to this.
Speaker 3 (50:24):
But I got to bring it back a little further.
Speaker 2 (50:28):
He definitely said quiet and pointed on her quiet something.
Speaker 3 (50:38):
And they're saying piggy, and a lot of the reports
about it, if it's piggy, it sounds like you said
it piggy.
Speaker 2 (50:45):
Well, see, I honestly hear a c before it. I
thought he said comedian. I thought he said that. Listen
to this again. With that in mind, it's very hard
to hear. I can't really get much of anything about it.
Speaker 3 (51:01):
No idea, no idea.
Speaker 2 (51:03):
I bet a lot of reports say that he said
piggy to this person.
Speaker 3 (51:06):
Do we find a name on there?
Speaker 5 (51:07):
No, So I'm just looked up USA Today's story on it,
and Jennifer Jacobs is a CBS News White House reporter
also part of the gaggle or social media posts. It
shows Trump calling on a Jennifer for a question, shortly
before turning to the other reporter, the other reporter and saying,
(51:29):
according to Jennifer, quiet piggy.
Speaker 2 (51:31):
Well, we know he didn't say, Jennifer. That was definitely
not one on Jennifer.
Speaker 5 (51:36):
Maybe, Jennifer CBS.
Speaker 2 (51:39):
Maybe I could find some some better audio of that.
I'd love to hear if you have like a better
quality version of that.
Speaker 3 (51:44):
Love that handsome.
Speaker 5 (51:45):
Sorry, Yeah, so it looks to be it was Jennifer
Jacobs from from Bloomberg that was.
Speaker 3 (51:51):
The person who was talking back and forth.
Speaker 5 (51:52):
At Bloomberg's Catherine Lucy.
Speaker 2 (51:56):
Okay, I mean, I'll bring it back up. We'll go
over this again here. I'll try to find better audio.
Hit us up with your reaction tips tips at thenewsjunkie
dot com in just a moment. When we come back,
we'll get some more of that. We'll get to a
teacher who is freaking out. Why is this teacher saying,
what's going on with the kids? Question mark question mark
(52:17):
wait till you hear her complaints, and I think they're
pretty important.
Speaker 3 (52:20):
That is coming up next in the news junk key
Share the show. What does that mean?
Speaker 2 (52:42):
It means that you take a link to the podcast
or like the YouTube channel and you send it along
to a friend, or you go to the news junki
dot com slash share. You'll see all of our social
media profiles and you just follow along over there whomever
you'd like to follow any of those things, or just
tell somebody about the news Junkie radio show.
Speaker 3 (53:01):
That'd be great.
Speaker 2 (53:02):
I'd love it if you did that and report back
with the dispatcher.
Speaker 3 (53:05):
Email telling me how it went. Maybe they just started
yelling at you.
Speaker 2 (53:08):
I got this teacher who was freaking out about a
lot of the students in her classroom. There's more and
more of these every day. I will tell you there
are a lot of interesting reasons to peruse like these
weird subreddits. But one of them that I follow pretty closely,
and I don't think it's like the perfect example of
(53:30):
what life is like for a teacher, but our slash
teachers on Reddit dot com does highlight a lot of
teachers struggling with how absolutely stupid a lot of the
students in their class are these days. How a lot
of the kids don't know how to do this simplest
of things. They don't know how to read, they don't
know how to write, they don't know how to do simple,
(53:51):
simple things. They don't know how to read analog clocks.
They don't know how to read analog clocks. They don't
know how to as a teenager, in some cases tie
their shoes.
Speaker 3 (54:02):
I mean, I don't know what to tell you.
Speaker 2 (54:05):
Some of these situations, it's the parent's fault. Mostly it's
the parent's fault. Some of these situations, the kid is
just lazy and the parent lets them be lazy. And
we watched the docu series over the weekend, Let me
See New Orleans.
Speaker 3 (54:20):
Kid killed dad.
Speaker 2 (54:22):
It was about this young guy in New Orleans and
the son killed his father in the house. The son
got into an argument. He was seventeen years old. I
think it was New Orleans. Maybe it wasn't, but the
son was seventeen years old and he it was in
Baton Rouge. That's it Anthony Templet And the Netflix series
(54:47):
on this that was out a couple of years ago
is called I Just Killed My Dad.
Speaker 3 (54:51):
Now, it started straight forward. It is right to the point.
Sea Land.
Speaker 2 (54:55):
Yes, it's right to the point, and so is the
docu seri over on Netflix. It starts out with a
nine to one one call where he's like, Hey, this
is my name. I'm just calling to tell you I
just killed my dad. What happened, Well, we got into
a fight and I shot him a couple of times,
and this whole story plays out. And the story is
not super relevant to what I'm saying. Just if you
(55:17):
want to watch it, go watch it. I Just Killed
my Dad. But in it you learn that this father,
when the son was five years old, he took the
son away from the custody of his mother, and the
son was somewhat of a missing kid at the time.
Oh so it's complicated, but the kid was basically a
(55:39):
missing kid. He took this five year old away from
his mother, and then he didn't want to get caught
with this five year old that was his son, so
he didn't enroll him in school.
Speaker 3 (55:52):
And Courty and I were.
Speaker 2 (55:53):
Talking about this because after this kid shoots and kills
his father, he's in the police interrogation room and he's
speaking with him, and you really quickly learn that though
he's seventeen, he's dumb, incredibly dumb, doesn't know very basic things,
doesn't understand simple sayings.
Speaker 3 (56:13):
They asked him, can you write, and he goes, I
can write. I can write every single letter in the alphabet,
and it's because the only.
Speaker 2 (56:21):
Thing he could write was all of the letters. He
can't write like sentences and words and stuff. And it
turned out that his father, because he didn't want to
get caught with his son, that he had basically kidnapped.
The father never enrolled him in school, and Courtney and
I were talking to I was like, this is seriously
one of the most unforgivable forms of child abuse. To me,
(56:45):
if you take a child and you do not give
them access to education from all of the research, that
I have seen over the years. There is almost no
way to undo that.
Speaker 4 (56:58):
He doesn't know how to write any words, but he
does know how to shoot a gun.
Speaker 2 (57:03):
Yes, yes, yeah, he knows how to shoot. That is problematic.
But it knows how to play some video games but
doesn't know simple stuff. Wasn't socialized with other kids, what
didn't have all these experiences that is huge. Okay, Like,
there's a one famous story about this young girl named Jeanie,
and I don't even know if you could find this
(57:24):
sea Lane. I think they called her like the Firal
child or something.
Speaker 5 (57:29):
What A Mama was based on.
Speaker 3 (57:32):
Maybe I don't.
Speaker 2 (57:33):
Know if that's I haven't seen what you're talking about specifically,
but the one I'm talking about.
Speaker 4 (57:37):
Is like Genie the wild Child or something. Yeah, Susan M. Wiley,
but they spell it Genie like like you would rub
a lamp and get a Genie.
Speaker 5 (57:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (57:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (57:46):
And the basic story you could give me the details
there if you don't mind, se Lane, but the basic
story was something like this, this couple that was too
incredibly limited in function auto people had a child so
they could barely take care of themselves. But then they
got pregnant and had a child, and this young girl,
(58:08):
Genie was the child, and they just put her in
a room.
Speaker 5 (58:11):
The whole time. God, at twenty months old. Yeah, it's
when it started. And that first paragraph is just so
telling on wiki. It's it began keeping her in the
locked room. During this period, he almost always strapped her
to a toilet or bound her in a crib with
her arms and legs immobilized.
Speaker 3 (58:29):
Yeah. Yeah, and that's how she grew up. So she
never had a chance.
Speaker 2 (58:34):
She didn't get socialized, she didn't go to school, she
didn't learn, she was isolated in this room. She didn't
even get to talk to her parents, who were barely
functioning to begin with. And once that happens, once you
get out of those developmental years, you can't just go
back and fix it. It doesn't work that way. It's
one of the weird things about humans. If we don't
(58:54):
learn how to read and write and do all this
stuff by a certain age, it is incredibly difficult to learn.
Speaker 3 (58:59):
It afterwards, very very very very hard.
Speaker 2 (59:02):
Now these kids don't have basic skills. The teachers are
complaining about this, like there's one in particular, it's.
Speaker 3 (59:07):
Going viral this week.
Speaker 5 (59:09):
She said.
Speaker 2 (59:10):
The kids don't know how to tie their shoes in
teenage years. Sometimes the kids don't know any math, they
don't know they don't know how to read in a
lot of cases, yet they continue to get passed from
grade to grade to grade like somehow that's.
Speaker 3 (59:26):
Going to solve things.
Speaker 2 (59:27):
If kids don't pick up these basic skills, they are
done for. The genie thing is the most radical representation
of that. This kid in Baton Rouge another like radical
version of what happens when you don't get sent off
to school and learn stuff.
Speaker 5 (59:39):
I mean, if you're not willing to teach your child
that which is awful, you shouldn't have a kid. No,
it's a peal that it happens in twenty twenty five.
Is there not even a slight chance of them learning
this stuff by showing them the YouTube video of it
giving them some sort of educational person despite them being
(59:59):
on TV. It's a direction they can head or that's
just that's what you said.
Speaker 2 (01:00:05):
Yes and no, it's not to say that it's impossible
from all this stuff that I've ever seen on this,
but imagine this. Imagine you're in that house. You're in
the unfortunate position of this genie girl, you don't know
enough to know that you need to go on the
internet and educate yourself. Right, you don't even know that
you need to educate yourself. So when you don't learn
(01:00:25):
that part, you're not able to go fill in all
of these blanks in your own life, even though all
the information is out there. You really stunt yourself. You
become like a child for the rest of your life.
And it looks like more kids in these earlier grades
are doing that. But the story of what's it saying
on the Wikipedia pages like Jeanie the wild Child or
anything like that, her feral child, Genie the Feral Child.
Speaker 3 (01:00:47):
It's absolutely wild to see this. She might still be alive. Yeah,
I think she is.
Speaker 5 (01:00:52):
Seeing that as well. He became a warden of the
state at thirteen, and then they said they just have
born either she's sixty seven and sixty eight, but no
one knows where it is.
Speaker 3 (01:01:04):
Here she is. She's just like a young girl.
Speaker 2 (01:01:06):
She's thirteen years old or something, and she doesn't look
too different. But when they first met her, I think
there's stories of she was a crawling around on all
fours and stuff. She was as if she and that's
absolutely abusive, that anybody would ever do that to her.
A couple of documentaries out there about her. I don't
remember what the one was called that we ended up watching,
(01:01:27):
But this is what happens when kids don't learn this stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:01:30):
It is very very important that we make sure that,
oh see, some of these photos are so interesting of her,
like this is.
Speaker 2 (01:01:39):
In the hospital yard a few weeks after her admission,
displaying her characteristic bunny walk like she walks like a
like a rabbit kind of with her hands out in
front of her and walks around. Her motor skills were weak.
She could neither stand up straight nor fully straighten any
of her limbs. She had very little endurance. So these
kind of things happen. This is what happens if the
(01:01:59):
kids don't learn stuff at a young age.
Speaker 3 (01:02:03):
And her life was obviously completely derailed as a result.
Speaker 5 (01:02:06):
Of that Belco shoes the whole time I met.
Speaker 3 (01:02:08):
Probably probably yeah, yeah, yeah, and uh, I mean, it's
just astounding what can happen in these cases. But go
check that out.
Speaker 2 (01:02:17):
If you have some toilet time with your phone and Wikipedia,
Genie G E n I E. Feral child, that's what
you're going to be looking for.
Speaker 3 (01:02:23):
Them. Let's see what you got for us.
Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
A lot of dispatches coming in today, so we want
to take the temperature and see what's happening where you are.
Let's start with a couple of emails very quickly. Somebody
says a Kurt in Fact says, have you ever been
to a New York City deli? The now closed Carnegie
Deli was all long communal tables, says Kurt. Yeah, I
think Kats is a little like that, though not along
(01:02:47):
the way communal.
Speaker 3 (01:02:48):
I think Cats is just a bunch of tables.
Speaker 2 (01:02:51):
Lots of tables together, but you're like, you're pretty packed in.
It's a small place, so maybe just kind of feels
more communal. But you're saying Carnegie Delli was all along
communal tables, and that's what they did there. There's somebody
commented on two people who ate together there the what
was that you know at the Carnegie Delhi? Who's a
(01:03:12):
bowser from Seanan and Arthur Finds and knew it. I
knew I was wandering into some sort of lyric. I
didn't know it was going to be what's his name,
Adam Sandler, Yes, the Sandman Tips of the News. Jukie
dot com and somebody emails about this mystery death on
the cruise ship of Anna Kepner, wrapped in a blanket
and covered in life jackets. Sounds like one of her
(01:03:34):
siblings did it and was hiding her body, like when
your mom tells you to eat your lima beans and
you spit them out and hide the napkins so she
doesn't find it. Whoever did it wasn't mature enough to
cover what happened, even if it's determined to be accidental,
says this particular person. Obviously all speculation there. I want
to see some more details on this. I really would
be interested in learning a bit more about that. Here's
(01:03:57):
Insecure Walrits talking about the communal die.
Speaker 13 (01:04:01):
Here in Nashville, where I live, there is a restaurant
called Monel's and it's just about as family style communal
dining as you can get. You show up and whatever
table is open next.
Speaker 3 (01:04:10):
They have big tables.
Speaker 13 (01:04:11):
They're kind of like picnic style where you sit on
either side. They have a few big ground ones, but
most of the table seat like ten to twelve people,
and you show up and when there are ten to
twelve people in line, they take you to a table
and there's no menu. Every day they have like three
vegetables or five vegetables.
Speaker 3 (01:04:28):
They have three different kinds of meat.
Speaker 13 (01:04:29):
You know, they've got a full spread, and they bring
to the table this massive bowl of each dish with
a big spoon in it, and you just pass it around,
you pass it. You're at Linda's house for Thanksgiving dinner
and everybody just talks to each other. And as much
as I do not like sitting with other people and
the whole communal dining aspect, I've never had a bad
experience there. It's just about as southern as you can get,
(01:04:52):
and it's pretty good. Anybody ever comes to Nashville, you
got to give it a try.
Speaker 2 (01:04:55):
Yeah, I think it helps if it's a place where
it's established and the clientele is good.
Speaker 3 (01:05:03):
That's everything. It depends on that.
Speaker 2 (01:05:04):
It's like anything else, the clientele is everything, because if
you get a bunch of weirdos, it's not going to
be good. It's like they opened a diner in town
a while ago, twenty four hour diner. I was so
excited about it, and then they hired a bunch of
heroin addicts and stuff, and very quickly the whole experience
is ruined by people nodding off in the middle of
taking your order, which literally happened to me at this
But so it's about like the folks who are in
(01:05:27):
this shared space with you.
Speaker 3 (01:05:29):
If you have a great table, that would be cool.
If not, it would be awkward.
Speaker 2 (01:05:33):
Here's AJ Soup celebrating having gone to disc camp for
this weekend for friends Giving.
Speaker 3 (01:05:39):
Here's AJ Soup.
Speaker 14 (01:05:40):
Hey there, junkies, video disc We share the show Tuesday.
As everyone heard yesterday on the show, this past weekend
was our sixth biannual discamp meet up Nice, where members
of the official News Junkie discord server came together to camp,
hang out, dance and party at our amazing friends Giving
(01:06:01):
themed event. This was the largest gathering we've had so far,
with ten weekend campers and a half a dozen additional
friends joining us on Saturday for friends Giving Dinner.
Speaker 5 (01:06:12):
Nice and what a dinner it was, with.
Speaker 14 (01:06:14):
The star of the show being eight delicious eighteen pound
turkey that we roasted over our very own campfire, fixing too,
stuffing gravy pit.
Speaker 3 (01:06:25):
Yes, that's pretty cool looking and a fool And what's
about communal?
Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
This is the News Junkie communal out there, all having
a big gorgeous thanks to spread, all of.
Speaker 3 (01:06:35):
Those campsites look nicer than Swilly's setup that he was
sent in a picture of yesterday.
Speaker 5 (01:06:42):
I know, wok a picture of a homeless camp right.
Speaker 2 (01:06:45):
Before well, wherever they're staying here looks gorgeous.
Speaker 3 (01:06:49):
This is pretty nice, rolls.
Speaker 5 (01:06:51):
In green bean castrole.
Speaker 14 (01:06:53):
We also shared some amazing gourmet desserts and s'mores around
the campfire.
Speaker 3 (01:06:58):
Nice.
Speaker 14 (01:06:58):
Oh yeah, And of course we had the open bar
and an amazing bartender always even distilled some very strong
alcohol right at the campsite, which we were, of course
very responsible, maybe not so much and sewn we even
danced and sang along to Kocomo in your honor.
Speaker 5 (01:07:15):
Ah, look at that.
Speaker 14 (01:07:16):
Overall, the event was a huge success and we hope
it will keep growing in the future. So thank you
once again, bodies to Sean, Celane and Sabrina for bringing
together this community of fans. We hope to meet even
more of you at discamp in the spring.
Speaker 3 (01:07:32):
Nice.
Speaker 2 (01:07:32):
How cool is she? That's so great? Aj Soup, thank
you so much for that. I'm glad everybody had a
good time out there. It looks like an absolute blast.
Is a good place to meet people, not at community tables.
Every once in a while you just meet them online,
I guess. And though some of them might be weird,
most of them are very, very very cool. Over on
the News Junkie Discord, get the link dive into the
(01:07:53):
always moving chat room over there and just entire social
world of the News Junkie Discord the links at the
News junk When we come back the next episode with Sabrina.
What's coming up on the next ste episode From the.
Speaker 5 (01:08:09):
Next episode, Oh, Sharon Osborne is setting the record straight
on the money raise at the back to the beginning concert.
It looks like someone has to go back to math class.
The Plaza Hotel in New York City is allegedly giving
you the chancel about your Kevin McAllister and home alone dreams.
Plus Paris Hilton is catching hot for a claim that
is not realistic at all. Well, that's so much more
(01:08:31):
coming up on the next episode.
Speaker 2 (01:08:33):
And that is coming up next on the News Chunkie
(01:08:53):
to the next episode in just a moment, and after that,
Sea Lane has done the audio work. He has taken
the audio where somebody said Trump called somebody a little
piggy or something.
Speaker 5 (01:09:06):
Shut up Piggy or.
Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Something like that, and why he's quiet Piggy, quiet Piggy,
and he's isolated it and gotten rid of all the
other noise, so we can try to see what was
actually said there. We will investigate the audio a little
bit further in just a bit.
Speaker 3 (01:09:21):
Right now, let's get into it.
Speaker 2 (01:09:23):
Let's do the next stepisode, because there's a lot.
Speaker 3 (01:09:26):
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 5 (01:09:31):
I don't want to sit next to no damn baby.
Speaker 3 (01:09:34):
It's time for the next episode with Sabrina.
Speaker 5 (01:09:37):
Hey, hold up. The next episode brought to you by
that mortgage Guy Do on that mortgage Guy don dot com.
That's where you get the process started of refinancing, buying
your first stream home, deconsolidation, reverse mortgages that can be
(01:09:59):
a lifesaver for people over the age of sixty two
and a fixed income, and many other things that could
be confusing on your own, but not when you're working
with that mortgage Guy Don. You go to the website,
click the button says compare, compare your quote, or if
you got a question, direct access to the man. Himself
that mortgage guy don dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:10:17):
Don't miss the boot contain.
Speaker 5 (01:10:20):
Mortgage guy dot com. Sixty years ago, nineteen sixty five.
This item right here, it's the one song I could
find about it from family Guy. It's not it's not
that one.
Speaker 3 (01:10:35):
They're not auction that off, I think.
Speaker 5 (01:10:38):
Sixty years ago nineteen sixty five. You're hinted, not butter.
Have you have a boots butter.
Speaker 3 (01:10:44):
On a popstart?
Speaker 5 (01:10:47):
Pop tart is right, and it was on this day
that pop tarts were created. But that's not what they
were first called. Wait wait, wait, there was a remix
for it too.
Speaker 2 (01:10:59):
I remember this from the stupid Jerry Seinfeld.
Speaker 5 (01:11:02):
That's right, So I will take six points up on
the board if you could tell me the original name
of pop tarts.
Speaker 2 (01:11:11):
That movie didn't stick with me, guy, post frosted, frosted
Buddies or something.
Speaker 4 (01:11:16):
There's posters in the name, right, No, No pocket pals, Okay.
Speaker 5 (01:11:22):
Breakfast it's not the city.
Speaker 3 (01:11:28):
Country pocket town Breakfast Town country tree.
Speaker 5 (01:11:33):
Pocket square squares is correct? Who country squares? It was
a long shirt. Yeah, I'm proud of you. When the
company accidentally tipped their hand, Kellogg's ran with it. Capitalized
on the sixties vibe and soon debuted pop tarts, and
they were flammable at the time as well, pop tarts
(01:11:55):
that didn't originally have frosting. That didn't come until nineteen
sixty seven when toaster stable frosting was invented.
Speaker 2 (01:12:04):
So let me let me ask you a question here,
and there's no right answer, but it is very controversial.
What is better the pop tart or the toaster strudle?
Which pop tart s'mores? She says, I.
Speaker 3 (01:12:20):
Don't even know if I've had a toaster strudle.
Speaker 5 (01:12:22):
Really, you have to do the work right.
Speaker 2 (01:12:24):
It's one where you get the little the little icing
on the side, and if you don't have the icing,
it's like garbage.
Speaker 4 (01:12:30):
Yeah, I mean it looks kind of the same. I
would say pop tart, I just go. But I am
I'm saying that from a place of ignorance, because I
really don't think I've had a lot of toaster strudles.
But I used to have the pop tart was like
my go to breakfast.
Speaker 5 (01:12:44):
And didn't even toast it sometimes.
Speaker 3 (01:12:45):
And like my early teens, middle school, maybe everybody's had one.
Speaker 2 (01:12:51):
Honest to god, the more you guys say your parts
here a straight out the box strawberry pop tarts.
Speaker 3 (01:12:57):
Pretty damn good. Yeah, that's what for breakfast, raw dog.
Speaker 5 (01:13:01):
And according to family Guy, you could put butter on it,
be delicious. Can't put butter on this though. Things got
a little bit weird, that is correct.
Speaker 3 (01:13:11):
You can't kill man, you can.
Speaker 5 (01:13:13):
And I have a show in Estonia that was supposed
to be played by this group right here. It has
been canceled.
Speaker 3 (01:13:25):
That's bad.
Speaker 5 (01:13:25):
Yeah. Fred Durst, I guess at some point called putin
a quote great guy with clear moral principles and supported
Russia's annexation of Crimea, Crimea, Crimea, Crimea. Yeah, it was
supposed to be in Estonia and May thirty first the
gig got canceled. I'm guessing May thirty first of twenty
(01:13:48):
twenty six. And the reason is that it all came
back that at one point Fred Durst was a big
poutin fan back in twenty twelve. What Fred married a
woman from Crimea, and after Russia annexed the region from
Ukraine in twenty fourteen, he came out in support of it.
He even held the Babannar show that said Crimea equals Russia.
(01:14:12):
So there you have it. He also described Putin as
the great guy Clermo principles, nice person. Estonia's foreign ministry
says those who justify Russia's aggressia and the occupation of
neighboring country are not welcome in Estonia.
Speaker 3 (01:14:26):
Okay, I see what's happening.
Speaker 2 (01:14:27):
This happened, Well what happened It seems to me is
like he met some woman.
Speaker 5 (01:14:32):
Did they did?
Speaker 3 (01:14:33):
They say they were married?
Speaker 5 (01:14:34):
It was back in twenty twelve. So here's this is
all together, Like.
Speaker 2 (01:14:38):
This is a controversial world, which is why you end
up with this this particular spot. But Crimea is a
portion that used to be Ukraine that the Russians basically
annexed and took over. And then all the people there
they like imported a bunch of Russians, so they're Russian people,
but they're from Crimea. So they have like very strong
opinions against Ukraine. And if you're dating or marriag worry
(01:15:00):
to one, you might you know, be pulled along in
that direction, I would think.
Speaker 5 (01:15:03):
And if you break up justin Timberlake has a song
about it. Probably yes, this gal right here is also
stay In some interesting facts and that has some fat
quotes on each side.
Speaker 3 (01:15:16):
Of the word Harris Hilton, let me know if.
Speaker 5 (01:15:20):
You agree or not. See Land, I'm getting the vibe
that you maybe saw the story.
Speaker 3 (01:15:25):
No, no, no no, I was going to say Selena.
I did not recognize the song.
Speaker 5 (01:15:28):
Oh Selena is dead.
Speaker 10 (01:15:32):
I know.
Speaker 3 (01:15:32):
That's why I thought it was weird.
Speaker 5 (01:15:33):
Paris Hilton's getting ripped apart for claiming in a new
interview that she is self made. O Cam, give me
a second here, forty four year old heiress to a
massive fortune because her papa was the Hilton Hotels and
everything that's under That also claims that she worked hard
(01:15:55):
for everything she has achieved. Dollar success has nothing to
do with her wealthy relatives, at least according to her. Now,
she's currently in charge of her own business, eleven eleven
Media Make a Wish company, which calls itself a global
I'm sorry, and global media content company and platform.
Speaker 3 (01:16:12):
That sounds almost like entertainment seven twenty.
Speaker 5 (01:16:14):
One billion dollars really and employees twenty five people.
Speaker 3 (01:16:20):
Isn't this sort of like this is like a chicken
or the eagg thing to me?
Speaker 2 (01:16:23):
Because would we all agree that Paris Hilton she did
make a lot of money for herself. She did like
make she has big companies and stuff and clubs and
makeup and buy whatever else she's involved in. But I
guess the problem would be if she says she was
self made, people would go, well, if your last name.
Speaker 3 (01:16:42):
Wasn't Hilton, you wouldn't have been able to do all
of this.
Speaker 5 (01:16:44):
This is true, But would you have these companies if
it wasn't using that notoriety at the time. I build
what she have now.
Speaker 2 (01:16:54):
Because what made her famous was her being on that
show with Nicole Ritchie.
Speaker 5 (01:17:00):
Yes, I think, I mean a little bit and the
horn thing, But then again, I mean she's also there's
a lot of people who love her products and her stuff.
I'll never for get in high school, like friends of
mine who waited hours just to meet her because she
had just come out with that line of makeup or whatever.
(01:17:20):
Ye DJing.
Speaker 4 (01:17:21):
But would they have been doing that if not for
all the attention she got from the show and being
this like you know it girl.
Speaker 5 (01:17:29):
So here's the thing. So should she be getting the
flack that she is or is she technically self made
after the fact, because had she not made anything of herself,
she'd still be loaded, right self made?
Speaker 4 (01:17:41):
I think just sounds like rags to riches, and there
were never any rags.
Speaker 5 (01:17:45):
Moist towlets that are slightly cooled and handed to you
on a silver platter and then riches or something like that.
Speaking of riches, we're now getting the clarification on the
big concerts and concert of mister Ozzie Osborne. Remember that
number that was thrown around about how much they made
(01:18:08):
for charity.
Speaker 3 (01:18:09):
Yeah, I don't remember how much it was, but it
was a lot.
Speaker 5 (01:18:11):
One hundred ninety million dollars, right, And that was a
social media post by Tom Morello, who curated back to
the beginning the name of the concert.
Speaker 3 (01:18:20):
Wasn't a lot of it attributed to the streaming numbers.
Speaker 5 (01:18:23):
Yeah, they were saying the one day metal extravaganza accompanying
livestream raised one hundred and ninety million dollars for charity. However,
Jan says not so much. She is clarified also saying
one ninety is ridiculous. It's more of eleven million. Still great,
(01:18:46):
oh okay, but a vast difference from one hundred and
ninety million our dollar.
Speaker 3 (01:18:50):
At the time, that sounded like a lot of money.
Speaker 5 (01:18:52):
Yeah, So it went to Kier Parkinson's Birmingham Children's Hospital
and Acorn Children's Hospice and and did raise eleven million,
but with the costs because we paid the cost of
bringing everybody in, everybody out, accommodation everything. No one got paid.
Nobody asked for a penny. They gave their time to efforts.
(01:19:13):
Oh god, they were so generous.
Speaker 4 (01:19:14):
They funded all the bands being there, but none of
the bands profited off of it.
Speaker 5 (01:19:18):
Correct, and eleven million went to the two charities, So
I n went but one ninety Where did that come from?
Speaker 4 (01:19:25):
Leading up to it, there was a controversy there that
they were like a band that we're not naming has been,
you know, removed from contention for this concert because they
wanted money for it, and who was it?
Speaker 3 (01:19:39):
Sharon didn't want to pay them.
Speaker 5 (01:19:40):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (01:19:40):
I don't know if they ever revealed who it was.
It was Ozzy Osbourne. Yeah, that's the twist. It was
him himself. My god, I want big money.
Speaker 5 (01:19:48):
On the boob Tube. We got Dancing with the Stars.
It's Prince Tribute night Coast to Coast Tuesday on NBC
Center Stage. Calm down to the CMA Awards on ABC
and you could at Ariana Grande and the Snowcaps on
Balain Father dreams of Me on Instagram at Sabrina Abra.
Most importantly, they with me America.
Speaker 3 (01:20:10):
Thank you, Sabrina.
Speaker 4 (01:20:11):
Did you see, Sabrina that Ariana Grande is hosting SNL
after the Thanksgiving break?
Speaker 3 (01:20:16):
I did see your musical guest share. Oh it's a
time with Wicked, right, but.
Speaker 5 (01:20:23):
Really so it should be out by then. I think
it's gonna be uk or zo.
Speaker 2 (01:20:27):
Yeah, because Fandango said that new Wicked movie has the
fastest selling pre sale tickets of the year so far, so.
Speaker 3 (01:20:35):
That's going to be everywhere for a little while.
Speaker 2 (01:20:38):
I don't know if I could deal with too many
of the interviews between the two ladies in this.
Speaker 3 (01:20:44):
A lot to unpack.
Speaker 2 (01:20:45):
Everything seems so tragic, Like every interview is someone online
somebody said every interview with Ariana Grande and Cynthia Revo,
they said, every interview sounds like they just witness a
pack of pitbulls attacking a child and they're now trying
to explain it to the media. And I was like,
(01:21:06):
it's it's all very like heavy, but I never know
what the hell's going on, but it's all very heavy.
Speaker 5 (01:21:12):
What was the one where.
Speaker 4 (01:21:13):
They used a phrase that we didn't even really know
what exactly it was like holding space. They were holding
space for you. And she's like, I've I didn't hear
that before.
Speaker 2 (01:21:25):
Rachel says, oh my, I have two Sorry. Rachel says,
I have zero desire to see Wicked. I think you're
going to be in the minority for women on that movie.
That's that brings in big female numbers. Man, some of
the ladies love Wicked, and it'll it'll do quite well
in the theater. Sea Lane enhanced and enhanced the audio.
He's enhanced the audio everyone, so we can see now
(01:21:48):
if we can see a little clearer now that you've
enhanced it and you've heard it yourself, do you think
it's more clear what Trump said to the reporter or No.
Speaker 3 (01:21:55):
It's tough.
Speaker 4 (01:21:56):
It's tough because I think I have the same opinion
that I had when we had the unenhanced audio. Then
if you were calling somebody a piggy, that's not how
you say it.
Speaker 3 (01:22:09):
Yeah, I don't know. I mean, we'll hear it. We'll
hear it together.
Speaker 4 (01:22:15):
What I say, I have another I have another idea
of what the word could be and it makes just
as little sense as some of the other ideas we've.
Speaker 2 (01:22:23):
Had, So that doesn't surprise me at all that it
would just be out of left field, that would that
would that would be totally I mean, I would expect
that here. But we'll examine the audio we enhanced, enhanced,
and now we'll see what it sounds like.
Speaker 3 (01:22:34):
That's coming up next and the new use junk key.
Speaker 2 (01:22:53):
We'll get into this audio we're enhancing and enhancing to
try to determine what was actually said in this all
in just a moment here did Trump say that somebody
was a pig? That he said quiet Peggy? Or was
it something else entirely? Only one way to find out
We must enhance. We must listen in with our critical
(01:23:14):
ears attuned.
Speaker 3 (01:23:15):
To what was said.
Speaker 2 (01:23:16):
And then everybody will probably just follow their political lines
to determine what was actually said. But we'll see maybe
some minds are changed as we examined that audio in
a moment. But a couple of things I wanted to
work in. We were talking during the break about the
number one movie this week in the country, number one
movie this week as they get ready for all these
(01:23:36):
big fat movies that are going to kick out all
these in the top spots like Wicked. You know, Wicked's
gonna be big, but right now it's now you see
me three? Now you see me? Now you don't? Yes, yes,
And there's famous people in it. Jesse Eisenberg as one.
I don't know who else Isn't.
Speaker 5 (01:23:57):
It was that Kevin Spacey thing too.
Speaker 4 (01:24:00):
No, No, Morgan Freeman has been in them. I don't
know if he still is. Who's the Hulk.
Speaker 2 (01:24:10):
Mark, some of the guys, Woody Harrelson, Yes, a magician.
And it's gotten a bunch of these things. But the
thing I know this is me being particular and almost
of you don't care about this.
Speaker 3 (01:24:24):
It did okay, it was still number one. Dave Franco's
into two.
Speaker 2 (01:24:28):
That's I mean, there's some big names, some big names,
but I hate that they made a movie about magicians.
And as dumb as this sounds, they're not real illusions
because if you're making a movie about magicians, you can
just have him do whatever you want to and then yeah,
there's no limitations of the world that there would be
(01:24:49):
if you were an actual magician. And I said, the
movie The Prestige is in every way a better magic movie.
Speaker 3 (01:24:56):
Than any of these Now You See Me movies.
Speaker 6 (01:24:58):
And.
Speaker 4 (01:25:01):
Most people seem to agree. I love the prestige. I
love the prestige. I like it better as a magic movie.
We talked about this yesterday because I think, uh, we
recently just rewatched all the Now You See mes? Uh
did you really like for a random reason?
Speaker 3 (01:25:16):
Interesting?
Speaker 4 (01:25:16):
My wife likes them. I like watching them. I think
they're terrible movies. I don't think they're that great, but
I still like it. It's it does it doesn't like
put me out like watching other crappy movies.
Speaker 3 (01:25:29):
Does.
Speaker 5 (01:25:30):
What is it a song? I feel like when I
watched it, the first one was in theaters and I
was in high school? Was it is it?
Speaker 2 (01:25:37):
Is it a situation where you go, is it the
best movie? No?
Speaker 3 (01:25:41):
But was it a fun ride? Yes? Like that kind
of thing? Yeah, kind of.
Speaker 4 (01:25:46):
I mean some of it, Like you said, the fact
that the tricks that they do can't actually be performed
a lot of them does sort of take you out
of it.
Speaker 2 (01:25:56):
I know most people don't care about that. They're like,
you can't do It's not real, Sean, it doesn't matter.
It's not real.
Speaker 5 (01:26:02):
Well, you're saying, but no one's attempted any of the
things that they did in the movie in real life,
even with the illusion and magic is Sabrina.
Speaker 2 (01:26:10):
They're just not They're not limited to anything. Like if
you made a movie and you're filming yourself and you go,
I'm gonna take a thousand birds and turn them all
into frogs, and now I'll make them into a smoothie,
and like, you couldn't actually pull some of this off,
but you don't have to worry about that because it's
a movie.
Speaker 4 (01:26:28):
And I don't know why, but I for some reason
it was part of the prestige that was a little
bit like that.
Speaker 3 (01:26:34):
It was technically yeah, it was like a lot of
parts of that where oh that didn't take me out
of it, though, because I love the prestige so much.
Speaker 2 (01:26:40):
Don't spoil it. Don't spoil it for her. It's one
of those things where if you know the.
Speaker 3 (01:26:45):
Thing, oh oh.
Speaker 2 (01:26:49):
And then it like ruins the entirety of the movie
for you. Don't spoil it for Let's go into the
audio here, let's go.
Speaker 5 (01:26:55):
Into the audio.
Speaker 2 (01:26:56):
I have the original and a lot of the stories said, Hey,
there was a question from a reporter on Air Force one,
and the reporter was kind of going back and forth
with Trump, and Trump said, quiet Piggy. That's what the
claim was of a lot of these articles. But it's
(01:27:17):
so hard to hear what the hell is going on?
Speaker 3 (01:27:19):
It's like a what was it Yanny Laurel thing? Where
are you?
Speaker 12 (01:27:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:27:23):
You put your ear to it?
Speaker 2 (01:27:25):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:27:26):
What am I hearing?
Speaker 2 (01:27:27):
Did he actually say? I don't know if this matters
at all, but the reporter is not fat?
Speaker 3 (01:27:31):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:27:31):
I does she have a weird nose?
Speaker 3 (01:27:37):
He Jennifer, No, it was clear.
Speaker 5 (01:27:40):
Jennifer Jacobs is who was one of the first reporters
that was there that tweeted about it. But I think
it was Clarence Something that was the reporter. He was
allegedly calling Piggy.
Speaker 3 (01:27:51):
All right, let's listen it. Let's see what was said.
Speaker 5 (01:27:54):
Plenty of JP.
Speaker 2 (01:28:04):
That was it quiet? And then the people said it
was quiet Piggy. But the audio is so loud, the
playing noise is so loud. We brought it into our
patent pending expert Audio Isolation booth enhanced, Sea Line enhanced
and enhanced.
Speaker 5 (01:28:23):
This was used a lot in CSI Miami, but that's
what we did.
Speaker 2 (01:28:28):
This was all of our budget for the entire week though,
so we can't really do much more.
Speaker 5 (01:28:32):
Can anyone get me a ride home?
Speaker 2 (01:28:35):
This is not this is really bad for the bottom line.
But we have the enhanced audio via AI right in
that scene, I've isolated it. Here goes listening.
Speaker 5 (01:28:49):
Sea line. That's the wrong side. I played the.
Speaker 3 (01:28:55):
Isolated just the plane audio I did.
Speaker 2 (01:29:00):
Both of you were really I was trying to listen
so hard. I wanted to hear.
Speaker 3 (01:29:05):
I want to know what was going on. Is it
a piggy or is it not a piggy.
Speaker 5 (01:29:08):
Here's the other track.
Speaker 12 (01:29:10):
With respect to all of those people that didn't, including
JP Morgan Chih Yeah, Jennifer, it.
Speaker 3 (01:29:22):
Still sounds a little like piggy.
Speaker 5 (01:29:23):
It sounds else could he be saying? How about that?
Speaker 3 (01:29:26):
Okay? So I googled because my problem with piggy is
it sounds like he says piggy. It's like not how
you say it. I was like, what else could it be?
Speaker 4 (01:29:36):
And so I I googled quiet McGee.
Speaker 5 (01:29:42):
And there are actually some people arguing online on whether
he said piggy or McGee.
Speaker 3 (01:29:51):
They're like, could you have been saying McGhee?
Speaker 5 (01:29:54):
But the person who pronounces words differently.
Speaker 3 (01:29:58):
Why would he call the person.
Speaker 4 (01:29:59):
Mcg is the person's name, and that's why I asked, like,
maybe there is an old saying, you know.
Speaker 5 (01:30:05):
Quiet McGee.
Speaker 3 (01:30:07):
All right, let me see.
Speaker 4 (01:30:08):
I feel like I'm really stretching for for trump beer,
which I want to hear.
Speaker 5 (01:30:13):
You want to hear it again?
Speaker 11 (01:30:14):
Yeah, now I hear quiet McGee a little bit, but
there's no way.
Speaker 3 (01:30:27):
But now that I've listened to it, I kind of
hear Piggy more. I don't know what it is. It's
just the way you say piggy is weird.
Speaker 5 (01:30:33):
Dude said anything.
Speaker 3 (01:30:36):
I don't know if the reporters spoken out. Maybe they
don't want to make their word. They'll get like booted
off Air Force one or something.
Speaker 4 (01:30:42):
One of his suggestions from Google's AI mode said this
could come from Classic radio, where the phrase quiet McGee
appears in a script for the episode of the classic
radio show Fibber McGee and Molly Oh Glorious. In the
episode from October twenty eighth, eighteen forty one, called Fibber
(01:31:02):
Meets a Racketeer, the character Missus McGee, Molly tells her
husband Fibber McGee, to be quiet.
Speaker 5 (01:31:09):
Yeah. I don't know if that's it.
Speaker 4 (01:31:10):
Either well, I mean it did air five years before
Trump was born, So it's probably not quiet McGee, it's
probably piggy.
Speaker 2 (01:31:18):
Has there not even been a response from the White House?
Speaker 3 (01:31:21):
I guess, I guess they have them, they even had
a chance to ask them. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:31:26):
The thing is, I think they're all the reporters are
still like quietly going who's gonna be first, Who's gonna
be first to ask him?
Speaker 3 (01:31:33):
But the thing that swerves me is like Piggy just
doesn't make sense. Like there's not a big fat woman
in front of him, There's not a big fat person.
They're all like regular ass reporters.
Speaker 5 (01:31:43):
What's an easy go to insult for women?
Speaker 2 (01:31:48):
Use? I don't use piggy, but and I wouldn't call
like normal people piggy.
Speaker 3 (01:31:54):
But maybe you just winging it. I I really don't know. McGee.
Makes no sense.
Speaker 5 (01:32:00):
So Catherine Lucy has been determined as as the target.
As the target, it's Bloomberg's White House correspondent. They she
started to ask. I mean a lot of people are
now picking up that it was quiet Piggy at least
going with that. Obviously it's hot.
Speaker 4 (01:32:18):
Most people are straight up reporting that it was quiet piggy,
like the headlines, like all these articles are just saying
that it was quiet piggy.
Speaker 5 (01:32:28):
According to the Guardian, when asked about the incident, Lucy
directed the Guardian to a spokesperson for her news organization. Okay,
so she Getsberg News did not respond to request for comments.
Speaker 2 (01:32:41):
But if she leans on it and she goes, yes,
he called me a piggy, how dare he blah blah blah,
she would probably be worried that her access would get
revoked and she wouldn't be able to be in the school.
Speaker 3 (01:32:53):
She's being a real piggy about this, Yeah, a regular piggy.
Speaker 5 (01:32:56):
Here we got I'll throw this into the mix here
there saying the insult is familiar for Trump, as he
called Alicia Machado, who won Miss Universe in nineteen ninety six,
miss piggy and told her to lose weight.
Speaker 3 (01:33:11):
Oh, I thought you were going to go to mother
from no, no, no, Because Trump says a lot about Rosie
O'donnald on the fat front.
Speaker 5 (01:33:21):
Oh she's a fat pig.
Speaker 3 (01:33:24):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:33:24):
He really went in on Rosy O'donald, and he certainly
said a lot of things. He's not above calling somebody
fat or like a hog or something. Just that this woman,
unlike Rosie o'donald, is not fat.
Speaker 3 (01:33:37):
She's not a fat woman. So who the hell mos?
Speaker 2 (01:33:41):
But that a lot of the reports are straight up
saying that it was quiet Piggy.
Speaker 3 (01:33:44):
I can enhance some more here, please please do.
Speaker 4 (01:33:47):
Yeah, all right, hold on, now, let's just do Piggy here,
all right, and then I'll crank that up as hard
as I can.
Speaker 5 (01:33:57):
All right, Yeah, yeah, peg.
Speaker 2 (01:34:05):
I don't know, man, there's a weird thing right before
it that seems like you wouldn't say that if you're
gonna say piggy, which leads me to the McGee. But
there's no McGee's out because that's the wrong emphosis on
the wrong salabo.
Speaker 3 (01:34:17):
That's true. That sounds like piggy.
Speaker 5 (01:34:19):
Hold on, it.
Speaker 3 (01:34:25):
Sounds the same, Piggy.
Speaker 5 (01:34:26):
Will we get better microphones on air Force one?
Speaker 2 (01:34:29):
One time there was one outlet that was doing this
and we listened to their audio from air Force one
and it was like crystal clear.
Speaker 3 (01:34:36):
They did a great job. Have the capability they do,
the technology exists, can like record an album on a
plane and it doesn't even sound I heard I heard
a person the other day. I don't know who they were,
so please don't come after this at all. I heard
somebody online who goes to places and protests and stuff,
and uh, you know the people that go around and
(01:34:57):
they ask all like the protesters questions with micro phones
and whatnot. It was somebody who does that, and I guess.
Speaker 5 (01:35:03):
To troll them.
Speaker 2 (01:35:05):
People go up and blare loud copyrighted music so that
the person can't use the video of them owning all
the reporter types and she said, this doesn't work. It
doesn't work anymore, and it played the clip like they
stripped all of the copyrighted music they were playing out
of it, and you couldn't really hear it.
Speaker 4 (01:35:24):
So there was an episode of thirty Rock where Tracy
Jordan was pissed that like Liz Condom into doing this
reality show, but realized that they couldn't use any of
the footage if he sang copyrighted music, so he was
just complaining to her, but it was all in the
tune of Uptown Girl, so that they couldn't.
Speaker 3 (01:35:43):
It was so so good, you know. I saw people
fighting online. Big fight, very.
Speaker 2 (01:35:50):
Big fight, and it was actually one of the more
heated combos i've seen somebody said there's a reason and
why thirty Rock holds up after all these years, and
Parks and Rec has aged like a glass of milk.
(01:36:10):
I don't think Parks and Rec is aged poorly, but
I think the idea was that Liz Lemon, who's the
head of the thirty Rock crew, is not a great person,
but is aware that she's not a great person, and
they were trying to say that Amy Poehler, and I
think it's because she was just like a happy, go
(01:36:32):
lucky thinks everything can be solved by the government, like
pie in the sky positive person. That maybe that made
her like a bad person or something. I didn't really
understand it that much because I thought I think both
of these have aged very well. I think they're both
genius comedies by some pretty brilliant women.
Speaker 4 (01:36:51):
I saw a post about thirty Rocks personally where it
was like, why is this show trying to gaslight us
into thinking that Tina Fey is this ugly hag the
whole time? Like, yeah, there's so many jokes about her
being like not attractive at all, and.
Speaker 3 (01:37:06):
She's a good looking woman. Yeah, yeah, the thing Tina
Fey is brilliant.
Speaker 2 (01:37:11):
But both Tina fe and Amy Poehler in terms of
female comics, probably two of my favorites. I think I
respect them both immenseally. I think they're very, very funny,
very interesting people, and I've heard interviews with both of
them where I find them be interesting. I also find
it very interesting that Tina Fay in a world where
for so long, victimization of yourself was rewarded.
Speaker 3 (01:37:36):
Oh god, was it? Just make yourself a victim.
Speaker 2 (01:37:38):
You can work yourself out of any situation, and you
just you know, you tell everybody, Hey, you know, here's
I was a victim, So here's you know. Don't don't
think about this thing I've said. And Tina Fey, when
she was a kid, was attacked in her own front
yard by some random crazed hobo dude. And she barely
(01:37:59):
ever tells story. She has a scar on her permanent
scar on her face.
Speaker 3 (01:38:02):
I didn't know it.
Speaker 2 (01:38:03):
Yeah, there's a true story she was. I don't know
all the details on it, but she was. You might
be able to look up her wiki and see if
there's anything about this.
Speaker 5 (01:38:11):
She never talks about the book, but does she not
like to talk about her outside of that.
Speaker 2 (01:38:15):
Like she doesn't make it a key part of her identity.
But some crazed dude went up to her, as I recall,
on her front yard and slashed her face open for
no reason at all, absolutely no reason at all, and
just scarred her physically and mentally as a child. And
she never made it like this big part of her identity,
(01:38:38):
which I don't know. For some reason that always resonates
with me. It's the person who's like not trying to
get everybody to feel sorry for them. Then I go, oh, god, man,
that must have sucked. Is there anything about it on
her wiki page? Sea Leonard? No, no, no, really, I
have to find that. But there was something about that.
Speaker 4 (01:38:54):
Oh wait, it was in personal life. She has a
scar a few inches long on the left side of
her chin and cheek, was caused by her being slashed
in the face by a stranger while she was playing
in the front yard of her house when she was
five years old in nineteen seventy five.
Speaker 2 (01:39:05):
Jesus dude, five years old, man crazy. Okay, We're going
to take quick break. We'll take your thoughts on everything
we've talked about so far. Today we got more of
your emails coming in.
Speaker 3 (01:39:16):
We have a person who's issuing a warning to every
single one of you, Well, every single one of you
that has one of these in your house, and trust me,
you have one of these in your house. Do you
want to heed the warning?
Speaker 2 (01:39:28):
That's what we're gonna find out, because that is coming
up next in the news.
Speaker 3 (01:39:32):
Chunky, if you.
Speaker 2 (01:39:49):
Know anybody with ADHD, if you know anybody who is
on either vibans or adderall, And he said, well, they've
been a little more scouted brained as of late.
Speaker 3 (01:40:01):
What's going on here? Why?
Speaker 2 (01:40:03):
Why are you unfocused in such a strong and obvious way.
This week, I will tell you that there could be
an answer for this. A quiet twenty twenty five FDA
recall may finally explain why so many people have been
saying they're adderall or vivants suddenly feels like it's not working.
Speaker 3 (01:40:23):
And the Panama, Oh, hold the phone. They're freaking out
about this.
Speaker 4 (01:40:27):
They're quietly recalled, so they're just selling people placebos.
Speaker 3 (01:40:33):
They may have been for a while. The FAA FDA
initiated a recall.
Speaker 5 (01:40:36):
On god Praise Extended Release List.
Speaker 2 (01:40:41):
Dexymphetamine diamesulate, a generic form of vivants, which is similar
to adderall, two days later, they listed the class to recall,
which means the faulty medications do not pose a serious
health threat, but may cause temporary effects. The testing found
that certain bottles of generic vivants could not pass a test,
(01:41:03):
meaning they did not dissolve properly in the body. The
pills were not releasing enough of the actual medication to
do anything. So people were taking their ADHD pills and
everything was normal.
Speaker 5 (01:41:14):
You had them.
Speaker 2 (01:41:14):
They all looked the same, everything seemed the same, but
the coding on the pills was different.
Speaker 3 (01:41:20):
It didn't dissolve in your.
Speaker 4 (01:41:21):
System, for coding was too strong, so it was still
in there.
Speaker 5 (01:41:25):
Yeah, so if you have.
Speaker 4 (01:41:26):
These pills, they would be better if you crushed them.
Speaker 3 (01:41:32):
Probably, yes, I would.
Speaker 2 (01:41:34):
I don't want to recommend that necessarily, but you're not wrong.
This may be coming as a bit of a relief
to those with ADHD, according to The Daily Dot, who
could not understand why their medication suddenly seemed to stop
boosting their concentration like it used to.
Speaker 5 (01:41:48):
So was it just generic Vivance. That's a different chemical
makeup than your generic adderall.
Speaker 3 (01:41:54):
This says Adderall or vivants. This is what the story.
Speaker 2 (01:41:58):
I'm looking at says they pulled certain batches of a
generic version of Vibance uses an adderall alternative.
Speaker 3 (01:42:05):
That seems different though.
Speaker 5 (01:42:06):
Yeah, Vivance is a different chemical makeup like that.
Speaker 3 (01:42:09):
That crazy word you just read famine salts.
Speaker 5 (01:42:13):
It's yeah, mphetamine something like that. And then I had
also seen the recall was for extended release, so the
pills itself where you know you've had extended release stuff
like sure, yeah, you know it's supposed to dissolve. And
that makes sense with the statement you made afterwards. I
don't know instant release was affected.
Speaker 2 (01:42:34):
Well they I guess they made it just too the
extended release was too strong.
Speaker 5 (01:42:39):
Your adderall was perfectly in concentration. And by that I
mean you poop.
Speaker 2 (01:42:43):
So extended that you you pooped it out, all of it.
Vivance is a popular option. I know there's a lot
of people on Vibance. I've heard of people taking Vibance
and swearing by vibence.
Speaker 5 (01:42:54):
HiT's different.
Speaker 3 (01:42:55):
Yeah, people compare it to that limitless drug. You remember
that movie.
Speaker 5 (01:43:00):
Yeah, Bradley Cooper.
Speaker 2 (01:43:03):
Bradley Cooper, I started taking this drug that made his
brain so smart and really really work to make him
a genius. People compare it to that, but it wasn't
quite working for some folks who were taking in here
in the last couple of months.
Speaker 3 (01:43:16):
So if you've had an issue, maybe you know now.
Speaker 2 (01:43:18):
I hate to be the one to bring you that information,
but here I am now I want to. I don't
know if this is bad news, but it's just news
I want to share with you regardless before we get
to your feedback here. There's a lot of these stories
coming out and it's probably the thing I hate the
most about gen Z. Earlier I went on to defend
for the million time your generation, and I think you
(01:43:42):
guys are fighting through some tough stuff. You're fighting back
from the millennials, who were.
Speaker 3 (01:43:49):
Definitely the worst.
Speaker 2 (01:43:50):
All right, I find myself as a member of the
millennial generation technically, but they're.
Speaker 3 (01:43:56):
Definitely the worst.
Speaker 2 (01:43:57):
They were the most brain rotted generation. Over therapy speak
induced conversations most common in these groups. There was like
so many things that went wrong with the millennials, and
I think gen Z bucked some of those things, so
I give them credit for that. However, gen Z keeps
(01:44:21):
helping the old does make a point against them when
they do stuff like this.
Speaker 3 (01:44:26):
For instance, this time.
Speaker 2 (01:44:27):
It's about a guy who said, hey, you gotta know
that there's some dangers happening here. And they said, I
took a camera and I put it inside my dishwasher,
and after seeing what actually happens inside your dishwasher, I
got to warn everybody, you need to be careful here.
Speaker 3 (01:44:48):
You need to be careful of what You never.
Speaker 5 (01:44:50):
Dishwashers in general, Yes, you never.
Speaker 2 (01:44:54):
You would never have known what was going on inside
these dishwashers.
Speaker 3 (01:44:57):
It is absolutely it's unbelievable.
Speaker 2 (01:44:59):
To him, and I thought to myself, buddy, what did
you think happened inside the dishwasher?
Speaker 5 (01:45:06):
Shut There was little people with tiny little sponges that
carefully washed all of my dishes.
Speaker 2 (01:45:12):
The person says in the first video, the dishwasher cleaned
several dirty plates, but something grim was found. There was
brown water being sprayed onto the dishes before pooling at
the bottom of the machine. The narrator of the clip
explained the thinking by saying, I put a camera in
a dishwasher a few months back, and tens of thousands
of people commented with a concern of the not so
clear water.
Speaker 3 (01:45:33):
Color.
Speaker 2 (01:45:34):
Bro got the dishwasher hooked up to his septic tank.
Somebody said, thank you for helping me show why handwashing
is the best, and on and on and on it went.
Speaker 5 (01:45:43):
And it's just like so.
Speaker 2 (01:45:45):
Many of these other things because people don't know how
dishwashers work.
Speaker 5 (01:45:48):
Yeah, Also, did that dude clean his dishwasher, because you
do have to clean the filter every once in a while.
Speaker 2 (01:45:56):
The dishwasher just blasts every everything in it with a
whole bunch of.
Speaker 3 (01:46:01):
Really hot water for a while, so it fills.
Speaker 15 (01:46:04):
Up with all the crap that's from all those plates,
and it swings them around and the water gets gross
in there, and then you know, abbits, it lands on
the bottom and it goes and filters out of the dishwasher.
Speaker 3 (01:46:16):
How the process works. How it seems like this person
does not at all wipe his dishes.
Speaker 5 (01:46:22):
But but it says that you're not supposed to. That's
actually better to just i mean, chunks them all. I've
heard professionals that it they if you leave your dishes
like that. What we're looking at here is what has
not been rinse whatsoever. And also I don't understand what
(01:46:44):
food that could be.
Speaker 3 (01:46:45):
Yeah, and that looks like it painted on them, doesn't it. Well,
one person had the peanut butter and the other person
had the jelly.
Speaker 6 (01:46:50):
Right.
Speaker 5 (01:46:51):
It gives the dishwasher and the dishwasher soap that you're
using more to grab onto versus rinsing it so there's
nothing on it, and it's gonna kill all the you know.
Speaker 2 (01:47:04):
I was always told you put the actual food in
the trash can, and then you wash the dish off
as best you can, and then you put that dish
for the final clean and the dishwasher.
Speaker 3 (01:47:17):
That's what my mom always said.
Speaker 2 (01:47:18):
But I didn't have the internet back then, so she
might have been wrong about that. But this is just
how dishwashers work. Is the same thing as when somebody
was working at an air bread and they said, you
guys aren gonna believe this. All the soup is in
bags back here. Yeah, that's how restaurants work. That's how
these chain restaurants work. Everything's in a bag or a
(01:47:38):
microwaveable thing, and you're the first one to discover it
all of a sudden. I guess when you pop it
up online, I'll let us know what you think. Send
a dispatch over at thenewsjunkie dot com. This is Ryan
who says it her on YouTube if you take a
small bowl and you turn it upside down and put
half a cup of chlorox in it, it will sanitize
(01:47:59):
your dishwase.
Speaker 3 (01:48:00):
I do that once a week and then I clean
the filter.
Speaker 2 (01:48:03):
And a lot of people have said, I've never used
a dishwasher in my entire life.
Speaker 3 (01:48:08):
My god, I feel for you.
Speaker 5 (01:48:10):
You're missing out time.
Speaker 2 (01:48:12):
That dishwashersren't even that expensive, man, you live in that
life like your way back in the fifties or something.
Speaker 5 (01:48:20):
Dishwashers like that you could put right on top of
the counter, like the Cuic of dishwashers. Yeah, anyone can
have a dishwasher now.
Speaker 2 (01:48:29):
I don't know why you would not have a dishwasher
in twenty twenty five, but I'm willing to hear your argument.
Speaker 3 (01:48:34):
I don't get what Raan is saying.
Speaker 4 (01:48:35):
You take a small bowl and turn it upside down
and put half a couple of clorox in it. Why
wouldn't you just put the bowl right side up and
put so that holds the clorox.
Speaker 5 (01:48:43):
That's true, because it just doesn't have pods to clean the.
Speaker 4 (01:48:46):
Yeah, you just buy the dishwasher cleaning pods and run
it to run it run it bear.
Speaker 3 (01:48:51):
I never know what the right answer is. I just
do what I'm told.
Speaker 2 (01:48:54):
I do what I'm told around here, I clean the
dish off I put it in, But I understand what goes.
Speaker 3 (01:48:59):
On in there's water flinging around.
Speaker 2 (01:49:01):
Everything gets cleaned off, and then at the end it's
hopefully brilliant.
Speaker 4 (01:49:04):
Because if you put stuff, you put your dishes in
there and there's crap stuck to it, if the soap
in the water don't get it off, then the dry
cycle is going to just like take it keat it
on there. So there's this like you know, gross uh,
you know, leftover food jerky, just like and now it's
(01:49:24):
nicely being dried that on to your plate and I
just have to run it again, exactly.
Speaker 3 (01:49:30):
I absolutely disagree with this.
Speaker 2 (01:49:32):
Kevin on YouTube says cleaning your dishes before you put
them in the dishwasher is like wiping your before you
go to the bathroom.
Speaker 3 (01:49:40):
Yeah. Oh no, no, I've heard.
Speaker 5 (01:49:44):
I mean I haven't had like that phrase exactly, but
I have heard, especially with the newer models, that you
do not need to rinse off your plate. You don't
have to clean your plate before going to the dishwater.
Speaker 4 (01:49:55):
For me, I've heard that that's not about the model
of dishwasher, but I think the soap people that tell you, like, no,
you need the dishes to be dirty so that the
soap is more effective.
Speaker 3 (01:50:07):
All right, let's see hold on, say Tnjai saying, let
me fire this up and ask here in a moment
when we're talking about dishwashers. Right now, Tnjai, if you
have a dishwasher and you're going to put your dishes
into it, do you wash the dishes first and then
put them in it?
Speaker 2 (01:50:24):
Or are you supposed to just put them in with
whatever you know food is on there? After you throw
the food away.
Speaker 16 (01:50:30):
It's best to scrape off food scraps. But you don't
need to pre wash the dishes. Modern dishwashers and detergents
are designed to handle the mess. Just load them up
and let the dishwasher do its job. Pre Washing can
actually hinder cleaning because the detergent needs some residue to
work affected.
Speaker 2 (01:50:50):
Okay, all right, but doesn't that mean that more stuff
is going to get stuck in your like the the system,
the filter and the pipes and all of that stuff
down there.
Speaker 3 (01:51:03):
All right, Thank you, tan j.
Speaker 4 (01:51:04):
To take sure that was on the page you that
looked like a little more than some residue.
Speaker 2 (01:51:08):
It was filthy and some tests or something or we're
gonnake a quick break. When we come back, we'll hear
from you. We got jury duty on the way. A
teenage girl claims she was strip searched over and over
and over at her high school. What's the story here?
This is a weird one. We got to figure out
who's telling the truth. We'll do that together. It's coming
up next on the News Junkie. I think the topic
(01:51:47):
that's gotten the most emails at least is this communal
dining thing, where the story said that gen Z, despite
all their social issues, actually loves, like ninety percent of
them love a communal dining experience. They sit down and
it's like big tables and you mix over with other people,
which is just a nightmare for me, But I guess
it's popular with other people. Anonymous says the tips at
(01:52:08):
the news Junki dot com. My girlfriend and I went
to the closing night of a very popular mom and
pop Italian restaurant. The line was out the door in
the wait with something like two hours. A waitress asked
us if we'd be willing to eat with another couple
and get seated early. We did that and had a
wonderful time meeting and talking to a random couple. It
actually made the night even more fun. This person says, yeah,
I mean, I probably would have said no to that personally,
(01:52:30):
but I see people who draw the line even further sometimes.
I went to a place this weekend. Let me see
what the name of it is. Shout out to this place.
It was very very good. I'm a big fan. Not
everybody is, but I'm a big fan of Hawaiian food.
I love me some Hawaiian food. And there's a diner,
a Hawaiian diner. Moa Kai Moa Kai is the name
(01:52:53):
of this place, and Courtney had us go there this
weekend and so good, like really place. If you haven't
been there, you live here in town, go go there.
It's a awesome little diner with tons of charm, a
bunch of Hawaiian people that are running the place.
Speaker 3 (01:53:10):
Very very very good.
Speaker 2 (01:53:12):
We got lucky and when we shut up, one of
their few seats in the diner was open, so Courtney
and I got a little table to ourselves, but there
was six or seven bar seats open, and I saw
so many people show up and they said table for two,
and they said, well, we don't have any tables right now,
but you can sit at the bar.
Speaker 3 (01:53:30):
If you'd like. And they go, how long is the wait?
Speaker 2 (01:53:33):
And they'd say about thirty to forty five minutes, Okay,
we'll wait. And I always when I hear that, I'm like, damn,
I would in a second, I would go to the bar.
Speaker 3 (01:53:42):
I'd go to the bar right now, I'm sitting there.
I'd be fine eating at the bar.
Speaker 2 (01:53:46):
But there was multiple couples that came in afterwards and
they were like, Nope, they're so hesitant to the communal experience.
Speaker 5 (01:53:52):
They don't even want to eat at the bar.
Speaker 2 (01:53:54):
At one of these places, they have to talk to
somebody different.
Speaker 5 (01:53:57):
I guess so they you know, it's very interesting that
gen Z or majority whoever answered this survey was like,
we love the communal part of it, but fly on
the wall moment. Would it be like, you know, laughing
and getting to meet each other and exchanging contact information,
or you had one time where you shared a table
(01:54:18):
with somebody and every other time it's going to be
awkward silence. Like on the bright line, there's seats in
which there are four. You know, so the last bride line.
When I went to Miami, I met two awesome gals.
We were laughing, joking around, talking about things exchanged Instagram.
The right line before that, I could not get off
(01:54:41):
of that train faster with the creep that was sitting
across from me. Yeah, it depends, like there's communal moments
I do not.
Speaker 3 (01:54:47):
Want, And it also depends on what conversations come up,
kind of like the Thanksgiving table, because if you sit
down and you're like, hey, everybody's kind of cool and
you're chilling, and you're like, what do you guys think
of this political thing?
Speaker 5 (01:54:59):
Yeah, well yeah, let's talk about Gazza like it's I.
Speaker 2 (01:55:05):
Don't know that that might swerve you in some sort
of direction that makes it bad. I mean, I guess
I should support anything commutal at all in twenty twenty five,
just that people are really to hang out with each
other that I'll keep off of the supported list.
Speaker 3 (01:55:19):
But here we go. Let's do jermy before it is
now in session, to put your phone down and pay
attention before we nobody they lives over to whip your ass.
You're no injury duty with the news junkie. It's got
to be somebody out there. It's a big world. The land.
Speaker 2 (01:55:35):
Support a couple of couple of bug chasers out there.
I'm sure that are like, Yeah, I'm into it, man,
I'm into it. I remember being young, you think that
things are so different when you get older, and like
technology has made everything so different. Not really in so
many ways. All of the same things happened. They just
(01:55:55):
happened like offline. So bug chasers was this story that
came up when I was young in the nineties when
the AIDS eponemic was bouncing off.
Speaker 3 (01:56:06):
That's what I thought you were talking about.
Speaker 2 (01:56:08):
And and they would say, all these people are out
there and they're bug chasers, and they are so interested
in getting HIV or AIDS that they're actively trying to
find it. And people like my dad or mom would
be like, oh my god, there's why would anybody do this?
Speaker 3 (01:56:22):
Why wouldn't we do that?
Speaker 2 (01:56:23):
And as an adult, I'm like, this is like four people.
This is like a handful of weirdos who for they
probably have other mental issues or whatever.
Speaker 5 (01:56:32):
And then we often see this moms like.
Speaker 3 (01:56:35):
Sean, don't become a bug chaser, don't be a bug chaser.
Speaker 5 (01:56:37):
Sean everybody chasing bugs, you have to chase the bugs.
Speaker 2 (01:56:42):
Yeah, I think that the we so often we have
like radical representation in the United States of America, and
you start to think something as commonplace when much more
and the people, the response of normal people is as
normal as you would expect it to be. All Right,
Jerry Dudey brought to you by the one the only
motivate of the de Witt Law Firm.
Speaker 3 (01:57:01):
Injured on the go, just Callmo. Speaking of Hawaiian food.
Speaker 2 (01:57:04):
Mo's in Hawaii, Hawaii this week me the just CALLMO
Law firm been locked up in Hawaii because bus Decker
was there like the week before, and now Moses is
in Hawaii and taking a well deserved vacation here. But
even though he's there, they they're ready to get you
started right now. If you've had an accident, it doesn't matter.
(01:57:25):
The balls keep rolling whilst they're gone. And Mo de
Witt is always taking calls, always in the loop of
what's happening, so he'll know your case, whether from Hawaii
or the United well the rest of the United States,
the contiguous United States of America.
Speaker 3 (01:57:41):
You understand what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (01:57:43):
He will understand exactly what you're you're saying in your case,
eight hundred Callmo eight hundred Camo or go to just
Calmo dot com. I know Hawaii's the state. Please save
your emails, all right, Please save your emails. I got
to get to this story about you. Do you want
to leave this country, you can go to Puerto Rico.
Speaker 3 (01:58:01):
Uh, we speak American in this country. Right.
Speaker 2 (01:58:04):
It's all on the same line of things that people
say that are generally stupid. I assure you I know
that Hawaii is a state. Just just for the record,
here's our story.
Speaker 3 (01:58:14):
A teenage girl big headline here was repeatedly strip searched
at a Brevard County high school, according to a lawsuit.
Speaker 5 (01:58:25):
Now by whom.
Speaker 2 (01:58:26):
A couple of things that surprised me. A lot of questions,
including that one that come to mind. But are high
schools even in the business of strip searching? Or would they?
I would think that they would call in the police
to do something like that, I've sounds like a terrible idea.
Speaker 3 (01:58:44):
If they are doing it. Let's see what the story says.
Speaker 4 (01:58:47):
Closest I think that I came was when you had
to take off your shirt for that that.
Speaker 5 (01:58:53):
I hate.
Speaker 3 (01:58:54):
It was embarrassing. It was embarrassing for.
Speaker 5 (01:58:58):
Me take your pants off with that.
Speaker 3 (01:59:01):
I don't remember. We might have I just remember how
for sure I did not have to take my pants off.
I was a joke.
Speaker 5 (01:59:08):
Does someone take off your pants when you're a little kid?
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:59:12):
Probably.
Speaker 2 (01:59:13):
A lawsuit filed this month takes aim at the Brevard
County School Board alleging that a student had been strip
searched at this high school several times last year.
Speaker 3 (01:59:22):
Okay, so far, so not good.
Speaker 2 (01:59:25):
The lawsuit itself says the school board has attempted retribution
against the student and her family after her parents filed
complaints following harassment at the hands of a fellow student.
In addition, accusations arose last year thanks to a school
official school official posting that the teen identified only as
MD because they're underage. Obviously, they said the teen had
(01:59:45):
become pregnant and had been molested by her adopted father.
According to the lawsuit, the complaint alleges repeat strip searches,
false molestation, accusations, a pattern of racial discrimination, retaliates, and
defamation at this school in Brevard County, Florida. Now MD
and her father are accusing the district of violating their
(02:00:06):
civil rights, including unconstitutional search and seizure, negligent supervision, and
emotional distress. The school says this is not true. They said,
this is an allegation that's currently the subject depending litigation.
While we cannot comment on the specifics of the case,
we want to make it absolutely clear for our public
schools does not strip search students. That's what I thought
(02:00:27):
the schools wouldn't be in the business of that. I
wouldn't think that's terrible to get into. We've never conducted
strip searches and we never will. The safety, dignity, and
well being of our students remain our highest priority, and
in the lawsuit they detail this whole thing exat For
one hundred and fifty seven days, MD and other students
were called misogynistic and racial slurs on a nearly daily
(02:00:50):
basis by a fellow student. The school did nothing to
correct his behavior. Then MD fathers fillowed an incident report
about the lack of action to protect his daughter. Then
they followed to complay with the US Department of Education.
She continued to be harassed for unknown reasons by students
and staff, like why randomly would all these people just
be going after this person, and then they talked about
(02:01:12):
the false accusations against the father, and then strip searches.
In September October, our daughter was made to lift her shirt,
pull out her bra and shake in front.
Speaker 3 (02:01:21):
Of a man in the room.
Speaker 2 (02:01:23):
I don't know if i'd call that a strip search,
but I get what they're saying. According to the lawsuit,
MD began showing signs of trauma and anxiety and re
entered therapy, and on and on they go about these
like alleged strip searches. When the school says this never
ever ever happened, and I'm scrolling for days here. The
complaints go on and on and on and on over
(02:01:46):
the course of several years, this parent going after the school,
so the school so far saying nothing to it. The
teenage girl and her family saying she was reportedly strip
search by Bervard County High School.
Speaker 3 (02:02:00):
Lawsuit. I'm sure we'll sort all of that out, all right.
Speaker 2 (02:02:03):
We got to quick break when we come back, though,
I got to continue on with jury duty because you
may remember the story of the guy who was an
off duty pilot who was in the cockpit of the
plane who freaked out and tried to cut off the engines.
He pulled like this emergency thing to try to cut
off the engines in the plane. We talked about that
story at the time, and now this person has been sentenced,
(02:02:25):
and I think you'll be very surprised at this sentence.
What happened that's coming up next in the news junkie.
(02:02:49):
I'll tell you what made me feel so old this weekend.
Nothing has done as much damage to me in this
way as watching the Warp Tour or on YouTube this
weekend and thinking, oh, I remember when I used to
go to this thing.
Speaker 3 (02:03:06):
And there was no YouTube.
Speaker 2 (02:03:08):
There was no YouTube, there was no live streaming, and
I'm watching it now I go, oh God, I wouldn't
go anywhere near this now I would either. There was
the crowd was massive, Oh my god, all of these
people outside Camping World Stadium who were there to watch
(02:03:29):
all of these bands, including friends of the show.
Speaker 3 (02:03:31):
They had to remember who played in front of I
don't know a zillion people.
Speaker 2 (02:03:37):
The crowd as far as you can see it, I think, God,
I don't know how I ever wanted to be in
a crowd like that.
Speaker 3 (02:03:43):
I don't know how I ever wanted that to be
a thing. But man, did I feel old watching some
of that. Some of that it was it was interesting
for a couple of reasons because.
Speaker 2 (02:03:52):
Some of it was the bands are now old, right,
so you watch like Bowling for Soup play or Courtney
has been calling them this weekend because she doesn't know
the name of the band bowl of Soup.
Speaker 3 (02:04:04):
She has repeatedly called the band bowl of Soup. Bowl
of soup.
Speaker 5 (02:04:09):
People are age love soup. So there's that.
Speaker 2 (02:04:12):
And I was going to correct her and be like,
what are you talking about? Why would a band be
called Bowl of Soup? But Bowling for Soup isn't that
much more? Doesn't make that much more sense, I guess.
But they're old now.
Speaker 5 (02:04:25):
There are so many of those bands. Is like it's
their twenty year anniversary of a particular album and not
their first one, which.
Speaker 3 (02:04:31):
Is so wild.
Speaker 2 (02:04:32):
Yeah, I mean the Beach Boys who were just in
town were playing songs.
Speaker 3 (02:04:37):
You have to remember this.
Speaker 2 (02:04:38):
From nineteen sixty two. That is crazy. That is what
sixty three years old. The songs that they're playing, that
would be the equivalent of a band that has a
hit song right now playing that in twenty eighty eight.
Speaker 3 (02:05:00):
I don't like that number you just said, that's twenty eighty.
Like that number you just said.
Speaker 2 (02:05:05):
That's the comparison of how that would be over time.
And as I was sitting talking to Courdy about this,
I said, you know, the one thing that I probably
wouldn't believe the most if I went back, see like,
give me a date on umbop when when?
Speaker 3 (02:05:19):
What year was it when Umbop came out? Post twenty
ninety seven? Seven?
Speaker 2 (02:05:25):
All right, if you would have gone back to me
in nineteen ninety Ael watch fourth nineteen ninety seven, if
you go back in March of ninety seven to Shaun
and I'm sitting there watching MTV and I'm watching Umbop
from Hanson, and you said, Hey, in thirty plus years,
these this little brother band will still be playing that
(02:05:47):
umbop song and people will still.
Speaker 3 (02:05:50):
Be lapping it up. They will still be loving it.
Speaker 2 (02:05:53):
They'll be over the moon about I would have never
believed you, but here we are. That's kind of crazy
to consider.
Speaker 4 (02:06:00):
Or if you told me that, like, hey, one of
your really good friends who was in your wedding will
still be playing umbab on jukeboxes when you guys go
to bars, but instead of putting the money in the
jukebox and typing in the code for UMBAP. She's going
to pick up the phone that you carry with you
at all times and connect to a much more advanced
(02:06:23):
version of AOL uh huh, and just tell the jukebox
to play it over the internet.
Speaker 3 (02:06:29):
You never believe that. You never believe that, and you
were right to not think that would be true back then.
Speaker 2 (02:06:34):
But here we are, my God, all right, leftover injury duty.
Let's talk about this because this seems like not big
enough of a punishment to me.
Speaker 3 (02:06:42):
Let me give you the.
Speaker 2 (02:06:43):
Details the case you don't remember this story. There was
a pilot, he was off duty at the time. He
was a former Alaska Airlines pilot, and this guy was
on this particular flight where he stopped in the middle
of it.
Speaker 3 (02:07:00):
The cockpit jumped up.
Speaker 2 (02:07:01):
And pulled on these two releases that will shut off
the engines to the plane mid flight, and the other
pilots go, what are you doing man?
Speaker 3 (02:07:12):
And they start struggling with him, and.
Speaker 2 (02:07:15):
They subdue this pilot, this off duty pilot, and they
get him away from these handles so that they're able
to safely land the plane. But it would have cut
off the engines and could have killed everybody on board.
Speaker 3 (02:07:29):
Now we learn what.
Speaker 2 (02:07:31):
Happens to this guy, and it's worth throwing in there
that this off duty pilot had also gone to this
event where they were celebrating the death of a friend
and they all took psychedelics. They took mushrooms, correct, So
he took mushrooms a couple of days before this, and
then he was still kind of wonky from the shrooms
and on the plane just went up and tried to
(02:07:53):
stop the engines because he was freaking out.
Speaker 3 (02:07:56):
They gave him no jail time, no prison time.
Speaker 2 (02:08:00):
A federal judge said no prison time for a former
Alaska Airlines pilot who had taken psychedelic mushrooms the day
before or days before he tried to cut off the
engines of a passenger flight in twenty twenty three, and
the sentenced Joseph Emerson to time served and three years
supervised release. And they said they wanted a year in prison,
(02:08:21):
but his attorney sought probation. They said pilots are not perfect.
They're human, they're people, and all people need help sometimes.
He was subdued by the flight crew after trying to
cut the engines of this Horizon Air flight from Washington
to San Francisco. The plane was diverted and landed in
Portland with more than eighty people. He was desponded over
a friend's recent death and had taken psychedelic mushrooms about
(02:08:43):
two days earlier. Had not slept in over forty hours.
He said he believed he was dreaming and trying to
wake up by grabbing two red handles that would have
activated the fire suppression system and cut fuel to the engines.
He did spend forty six days in jail, but they
did not give him. The judge did not give him
any prison time. Let us know what you think about that.
(02:09:03):
If that's enough or not for you, send us a
dispatch over at thenewsjunkie dot com right now.
Speaker 5 (02:09:10):
All right, let's see what we got.
Speaker 2 (02:09:12):
Many many people reaching out, and Casey says the tips
of the news junky dot com. My son takes Vivans,
but his insurance doesn't cover the generic. Was it just
a generic that was affected by this? I don't have
the official FDA thing.
Speaker 3 (02:09:28):
It seemed like it was just the generic and it
was the slow release.
Speaker 5 (02:09:33):
But I can look it.
Speaker 2 (02:09:33):
Up, all right, So it wasn't adderall, it was Vivans,
but it was the generic slow release. We believe of
Vivans that there was a problem.
Speaker 3 (02:09:45):
And it wasn't working for people. It was the stuff
that was on it slow release was not working well.
Speaker 4 (02:09:51):
It was working too well, almost like they weren't properly
dissolving during lab testing. And so your son, if he
was taking this generic one which was recalled by Sun
Pharmaceuticals Industries, was the ones that weren't working. But if
your son wasn't covered under the generic but wasn't of
the name brand, which sounds weird, then he probably is good.
Speaker 3 (02:10:16):
Yeah, he should be good to go.
Speaker 2 (02:10:17):
I think another big story that made the rounds on
All Things viral this weekend. I don't know if you
guys talked about this at all yesterday, but it's kind
of popping off on a bunch of social media platforms
and it's definitely annoying. There's a level of annoying about
this already. The well, here's Fox News talking about this.
Speaker 3 (02:10:40):
This is what started on your financier.
Speaker 17 (02:10:41):
Bill Ackman has some advice for you young men having trouble
of approaching young women.
Speaker 3 (02:10:45):
He says, here's my advice.
Speaker 17 (02:10:47):
I would ask may I meet you before engaging in
further conversation.
Speaker 3 (02:10:51):
I almost never got to know.
Speaker 2 (02:10:54):
So this is this politician dude online and he was
talking about young men finding get difficult to meet young
women in public.
Speaker 3 (02:11:02):
And so if we come to a woman and say
may I meet you?
Speaker 2 (02:11:06):
And he said, I would ask may I meet you
before engaging in further in further conversation, he said, I
almost never got to know. Maybe it's just the wording there,
but going up to a human and saying may I
meet you?
Speaker 5 (02:11:25):
That's weird.
Speaker 3 (02:11:26):
That's very weird, weird.
Speaker 2 (02:11:28):
It's a weird way to phrase it. And I've seen
some people. I don't know if I could play any
of these may I meet you. I've seen some people
trying this out on the streets. They just go up
to people and they randomly asked them may I meet you?
Speaker 3 (02:11:42):
In public? And it hasn't worked all that much. I
almost never got to know, he said, he never has.
Speaker 2 (02:11:52):
Yeah, hold on, should I search attempt because I did
see a lot of the videos going viral where people
were trying this out and they up and go may
I meet you, or m I my is what they're
shortening it to. I can't find the clips right off
the hip here, but I saw a couple of people
recording themselves. It did not wait wit Mostly they were ignored.
Speaker 4 (02:12:14):
The guy that shared this, like the guy that suggested this,
is a billionaire MAGA donor, and he's giving young men
advice on how to meet people.
Speaker 2 (02:12:23):
I think, so wait, find out that the dude's name
is what do you okay? An Bill Ackman is The
guy's name just went very very viral over the weekend
and people were going out and trying it. As I said,
he's an activist investor. He endorsed Trump in twenty twenty four,
(02:12:44):
but he's a long time donor to Democratic candidates and organizations.
So I guess you could, you know, take your pick
there if you want. He's a big money guy, But
he said, guys who are struggling with connecting with women
mostly because young women and young men are on complete,
letely different planets politically and otherwise. Right Mars and Venus,
(02:13:04):
they're beyond Mars and Venus for like eighteen year old
well maybe not eighteen, I would go a little further,
early twenties up to thirty something, men are on a
completely different planet than women.
Speaker 3 (02:13:16):
Their very same age.
Speaker 2 (02:13:17):
Politically, it's his generalization, of course, but it is a
lot of truth to what I'm saying right here. So
he goes, well, if you want to meet people, you
go out there and say, may I meet you?
Speaker 3 (02:13:28):
And billionaire?
Speaker 2 (02:13:30):
Sure, let's see it doesn't mind. Yeah, I thought that
I don't mind at all? May I meet you?
Speaker 3 (02:13:36):
See if you could find anybody trying that out seeling,
because I can't bring it up anymore for some reason,
I'm just getting memes crazy, like eight thousand versions of
this where it's somebody at some game and the guy's
trying to talk.
Speaker 2 (02:13:49):
To the woman and she's giving him the stop talking
to me hand. But I don't think this will work,
however viral it may be going right now, let us
know what you think. Send a dispatch over at the
news junk.
Speaker 4 (02:14:01):
He said, it inevitably enabled the opportunity for a further conversation.
I met a lot of really interesting people this way.
So he's not even talking about in a romantic setting,
just like a way to meet people in general. I
think the combination of proper grammar and politeness was the
key to its effectiveness. You might give it a try,
and yes, I think it should also work for women
(02:14:23):
seeking men as well as same sex interactions. Just two
cents from an older, happily married guy concerned about our
next generations happiness and population replacement rates.
Speaker 2 (02:14:34):
Maybe it's the may I meet you part that gets
me the most. It like, why not say hey, my
name is Sean, how.
Speaker 3 (02:14:42):
Are you good?
Speaker 2 (02:14:43):
Good to meet you, or anything beyond that. Oh, this
is somebody trying out. Please stay by the dump button
dump because this is in a New York City transit
it it's on the subway where somebody's gonna try it to,
So this might not go.
Speaker 9 (02:14:57):
Well attaching ladies of New York City.
Speaker 3 (02:15:01):
May I meet you?
Speaker 9 (02:15:05):
Bill Lackman just tweeted that simply resulting women approaching me,
especially on moving trains, like this, should there be a
line that forms, please line up?
Speaker 3 (02:15:18):
Single is currently lining up? Just so you know, yeah,
some of it's New York City because that's just kind
of goes. People say stuff all the time, weird stuff
all the time.
Speaker 5 (02:15:36):
Hey, well, there's a video dispatched challenge, may I meet you?
Be discreet with the you know video or put selfie
style so you know they don't automatically think you're making.
Speaker 2 (02:15:48):
A bit, But why do people have to make stuff
so weird, like literally just talk to people just.
Speaker 3 (02:15:55):
Like about a drink.
Speaker 2 (02:15:58):
Yeah, I mean maybe it's like in some circumstances that's
gonna be weird.
Speaker 5 (02:16:03):
If they're not.
Speaker 2 (02:16:06):
May I Meet you does seem very much out of
like the Middle Ages.
Speaker 3 (02:16:12):
It's not landing with me. How is he not cursed?
Speaker 9 (02:16:18):
Nobody's once again? May I meet you? Bill Ackman's advice
clearly was awful.
Speaker 3 (02:16:28):
It didn't work out. He tried it, he gave it
a shot.
Speaker 4 (02:16:31):
I think that there's always a hesitance whenever you hear
somebody speak up in a subway, because it could be
like you know those guys, those rappers or singers that
as soon as those doors close and everybody's trapped in there,
like all right, I'm gonna sing a song for my
new album and if you like what you hear, if
you just throw me a couple of dollars, I'm gonna
come around with my hat and you're just come on, man,
(02:16:54):
I'm just trying to get to I'm just trying to
get under the ground to the next place I want.
Speaker 5 (02:16:59):
To go to.
Speaker 3 (02:17:00):
You you may not know I'm yeah, now, mind.
Speaker 5 (02:17:03):
You if you're going to do the cool dancing things
or do the flips and stuff, take my money, you
have my attention. Well, you're just.
Speaker 2 (02:17:09):
Going to get their attention just from the impressive moves,
not from it, Like may I meet you? Is probably
the weirdest thing you can say before you start talking
to somebody. That's not expletives that, that's not like, you know,
some really aggressive move. Just go up to somebody and go, hobo,
(02:17:31):
how are you today?
Speaker 3 (02:17:33):
Hey? How are things going? What you're drinking there? What
do you do with it? Just speaking the human beings?
Speaker 2 (02:17:39):
It's a lost art, but that one doesn't work so well,
at least not for this person.
Speaker 3 (02:17:45):
Let us know what you think.
Speaker 2 (02:17:46):
Send your dispatches over on the newsjunkie dot com and
tips of the news junky dot com for your email
side of things. They were supposed to vote on this
Epstein thing today. I don't know if the vote has
actually happened yet, but it looked like it was going to.
Speaker 5 (02:17:57):
Right now, Is it really?
Speaker 8 (02:17:59):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (02:18:00):
So we've got thirty eight ya's for the Republicans, forty
eight Democrat total eighty six. What does envy mean?
Speaker 3 (02:18:12):
No votes?
Speaker 2 (02:18:12):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (02:18:13):
No votes?
Speaker 5 (02:18:13):
A lot to go so about three hundred and forty
five votes to be accounted for.
Speaker 3 (02:18:19):
I think it's going to pass because even the President
was like, yeah, let's just do it. Let's just get
this done.
Speaker 5 (02:18:24):
There's a there's a timer. Was that typical? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:18:28):
I mean yeah. Is this just on CNN? Are they
just broadcast.
Speaker 5 (02:18:31):
Time remaining ten minutes and twenty some odd seconds?
Speaker 2 (02:18:34):
Are they talking about it? Yeah, let's peak in. Let's
just see what they're saying. It's going to pass. There's
no way it doesn't pass. Too many people now that
support it. So we're finally going to get all these
documents and stuff.
Speaker 16 (02:18:46):
Supporting this, and this vote was taking place as we
keep our eye in it all Yea's no nays.
Speaker 3 (02:18:52):
Look, the optics aren't great. I mean.
Speaker 17 (02:18:53):
Trump has been on many sides of this issue, but
the one most recently has been against releasing and the
Epstein files, and he wanted to move on.
Speaker 3 (02:19:02):
He needs two thirds.
Speaker 17 (02:19:03):
Frustration and sort of bewilderment it why his party would
not move on from this. But it's almost as though
he wasn't paying close attention last year during the campaign.
Speaker 3 (02:19:12):
When has anybody had all voted against it or no, no, no, Okay,
we got we got like eleven minutes or so, I
think ish maybe less than that until the vote wraps up.
Speaker 5 (02:19:23):
So we'll keep an eye on this.
Speaker 2 (02:19:24):
We'll tell you if it passes, and then we'll see
what happens after that.
Speaker 3 (02:19:27):
But it's definitely an interesting thing going on out.
Speaker 2 (02:19:29):
There in the world, and we'll see what you think
about it quick break. When we come back, we'll get
to cursing on cable TV. We'll get to a story
that really grabbed my attention, some good news for Sea
Lane and all of that.
Speaker 3 (02:19:43):
He's coming up next on the news. Junkie posted May
I Meet you In the accompanying picture is a book
(02:20:05):
called Autism and How to Flirt With Girls?
Speaker 5 (02:20:10):
Fairly accurate. Yeah, I guess so I have been. I
used the brick to watch all of these votes come
in and where we are now. So right now we
have not voted yet at one seventy seven seventy six
excuse me, but for one second, there was one nay
and it just disappeared. Oh really, yeah, there was one
(02:20:32):
day Republican and it disappeared. Now it's I guess I
don't know what happened, but YID six.
Speaker 4 (02:20:40):
President Trump actually emailed all the Republicans and told them
to vote YA today. Then he hold the plug on
cloud Flare so that they didn't get it.
Speaker 2 (02:20:49):
Yeah, this is what's true, is that now it's going
to get enough votes and then it's going to go
to the Senate, and then probably the Epstein files are
going to be released, which should have just been done
at the beginning, like, yeah, well, as much as you can,
I wouldn't want them to not redact some some underage
(02:21:10):
girl's name who was abused by Jeffrey Epstein or something,
but within reason, I would want it to be as
redacted as unredacted as possible. And that would have just
been the move right off the jump. That was the
smart thing to do. But now I guess we're finally
going to get there. We'll keep an eye on that.
Speaker 3 (02:21:28):
I guess.
Speaker 2 (02:21:28):
There was an incident with Trump at the White House
with the leader of Saudi Arabia. He's with Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammed Ben Solmon and and they do they do
a fist pump. Let's let's bring this up together and
listen in here. Oh that was.
Speaker 5 (02:21:51):
Trump.
Speaker 3 (02:21:52):
Doesn't give a fist pump.
Speaker 6 (02:21:54):
I grabbed that hand I don't give a hell with
that handspin.
Speaker 5 (02:21:57):
I grabbed that I don't give a hell. Give a hell.
Speaker 2 (02:22:02):
So they he did a sean here, which was he
went to go to the leader of Saudi Arabia and
like shake his hand or grab his hand in some way,
and it just fell apart miserably.
Speaker 3 (02:22:12):
It did not Trump doesn't give a fist pump. I
grabbed that hand. I don't give a hell with that hand. Spin,
I grabbed that hand either buddy, buddy over there in
the White House.
Speaker 5 (02:22:31):
These two uh.
Speaker 3 (02:22:32):
So he sprayed him with the uh. He gets everybody
with it all the way. It's just a couple couple
dashes for you. I don't give a hell. He's just
letting them fly out there.
Speaker 5 (02:22:43):
I don't give a hell.
Speaker 3 (02:22:45):
I told you.
Speaker 2 (02:22:46):
On cable News, they are going wild, hog wild with
the curse words. Even now when when a guest on
cable News goes, oh, I was going to curse, and
now they're just saying.
Speaker 3 (02:22:57):
Go ahead, good, go for it. That's where we're at
on cable news.
Speaker 2 (02:23:03):
First they were just doing it because it became part
of the news, and now it's like, you go ahead,
no big deal.
Speaker 16 (02:23:10):
But I'm not going to I'm gonna just say he's
full of it.
Speaker 3 (02:23:13):
Number one, This is cable you can cost.
Speaker 5 (02:23:16):
I'm not going to do it, but I am going
to say that he is full Okay, I'm gonna do it.
Speaker 11 (02:23:19):
He full of she Because here's the thing.
Speaker 3 (02:23:21):
Number one, there was.
Speaker 2 (02:23:23):
So many moments for Jake Toopper to get out of this,
and she's like.
Speaker 3 (02:23:26):
I'm not gonna do it.
Speaker 5 (02:23:27):
I'm not gonna do I'm not gonna do it.
Speaker 2 (02:23:28):
I said, yes, he is that, go ahead, this is
cable you can cuss, and then boom, she drops the
S bomb on there. But like at the beginning, she
was going, I'm not gonna do it, but I'm.
Speaker 16 (02:23:39):
Not going to I'm gonna say he's full of it.
Speaker 3 (02:23:41):
Number one.
Speaker 5 (02:23:42):
This is cable you can cost.
Speaker 17 (02:23:44):
I'm not going to do it, but I am going
to say that he is fully Okay, I'm gonna do it.
Speaker 5 (02:23:47):
He full of she.
Speaker 2 (02:23:49):
At some point, you go, I was just given permission,
so y gonna do it.
Speaker 5 (02:23:56):
Yeah. It was the t word that one hurricane broadcast.
Speaker 3 (02:24:01):
If I'm given permission to do it on cable news,
I'm gonna curse. I'm absolutely gonna curse. You can choose
your own adventure.
Speaker 2 (02:24:08):
If you'd like, let's go over to you tips of
the news Junkie dot com, Anonymous says, on a planet
to Chicago, I will be downtown around the Navy Peer area.
Give me a go to restaurant or bar that was
your favorite.
Speaker 3 (02:24:21):
May I meet You's got bad news? Boy.
Speaker 2 (02:24:27):
That depends on a lot of stuff, Anonymous. If you're
looking for just something really really simple. Number one, get
away from Navy Peer because Navy Peer in downtown Chicago,
as anybody who's ever been knows, is like dumb tourist zone.
So get away from that. Go to the Tribune Tower
and then go underground. There are steps that will bring underground,
(02:24:49):
and then you'll get to the real.
Speaker 3 (02:24:52):
What is it The Billy Goat Tavern?
Speaker 2 (02:24:54):
The real Billy Goat Tavern, which is a gritty spot
where you can get some good cheeseburgers on a grill
that's cooked like millions and millions of cheeseburgers. That place
became famous from a Saturday Night Live bit. You know,
no cheeseburger, No cheeseburger. You haven't seen it if you
haven't watched Saturday Night Live. In the seven He's like,
I haven't but juice I was man aware of this,
(02:25:16):
So Billy Go Tavern underneath the Tribune Tower basically is
a really really great spot. But Chicago is full of
a lot of really great neighborhoods that have good food.
If you want pizza, I used to go to a
place called Peace piec. One of the ones I could
recommend if you really want to go to someplace that's
(02:25:36):
solid is the Girl in the Goat. Go to the
Girl in the Goat and you will have a good meal.
I guarantee you you'll enjoy yourself. From the giant Bean,
the Navy Pier is literally like almost this is the
same area.
Speaker 3 (02:25:51):
Basically, Grant Park is where the silver Bean is.
Speaker 2 (02:25:55):
And then you for good luck, you got to Are
they still into that conspiracy that somebody's living inside the
thought as.
Speaker 3 (02:26:03):
A small child or something.
Speaker 2 (02:26:07):
Yeah, they said for a while there was a conspiracy
that there's somebody living inside the bean sculpture in Chicago,
which is a fun, fun conspiracy to believe.
Speaker 3 (02:26:15):
In Seiland, good news for you, Yes, work this in
here we go. Good news for you.
Speaker 2 (02:26:20):
The Federal Aviation Administration has said they are lifting all
restrictions on commercial flights now at over forty major airports
in the country.
Speaker 3 (02:26:30):
Sea Land is headed over to New York City. So
the lead story yesterday it.
Speaker 2 (02:26:34):
Okay, clear things up in New York, Chicago where this
other guy's going to Los Angeles and Atlanta. Those cutbacks
on flights from the FAA, and now the government's open.
Speaker 3 (02:26:44):
Now things are flowing.
Speaker 2 (02:26:46):
Now people are showing back up at work for their
their gigs, and apparently everything will be well, hopefully.
Speaker 4 (02:26:52):
The person who needed to hear that the most was
really just my wife. Yeah, just as I was going
through some of the things, I just showed it to
our was like, look, you're good. Everything, We're good, We're
gonna be fine. She was getting a little panicky. Well,
you know, we had these reservations at fourish. Oh yeah,
and if if things.
Speaker 3 (02:27:09):
Get too delayed, where you're going reservations wearing per Se.
Oh that sounds like one of the clubs in New
York that the guy on SNL would say, like, the hottest.
Speaker 2 (02:27:21):
New everything is per Se.
Speaker 3 (02:27:25):
This guy and then he's a guy from MTV. He
would always say, Shoot, I can't remember it.
Speaker 2 (02:27:32):
Was Stefan was his name, Yeah, Stefan New York's hottest
new club.
Speaker 3 (02:27:37):
Is per Se and fairies neat then a laundry.
Speaker 2 (02:27:42):
List of weird things that happen at per Se, and
why Sea Lane just has to go there.
Speaker 5 (02:27:47):
It gives me pause when you say per Se. You
take a second, You're like, are you doing a joke
or something? But per Se you were telling me yesterday
Sea Lane.
Speaker 3 (02:27:55):
Thomas Keller Group. It's uh, this is not a cheap play. No,
it's not at all.
Speaker 5 (02:28:01):
You know where you're going to get.
Speaker 3 (02:28:03):
I don't think you choose.
Speaker 18 (02:28:05):
I think it's one of those places that you just
like hand over a bunch of money and they're like,
here is something that you've never seen before, foam.
Speaker 5 (02:28:16):
And like what.
Speaker 3 (02:28:19):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (02:28:20):
The main dining room tasting menu one guest, one thousand dollars.
That's not the one, now, well, you guys, are GA's
not the one we're doing.
Speaker 4 (02:28:31):
What does it costs for lunch time they're going to
I don't know, the main dining room two hundred and
twenty five dollars.
Speaker 2 (02:28:41):
You know, it could be that it's a three Michelin
star restaurant.
Speaker 3 (02:28:46):
This is a fancy place, for god's sake.
Speaker 4 (02:28:48):
Yeah, I gotta get a I gotta pack a suit okay,
and I think I need another button down, a different
credit card. Ye, just the deposit wanted to display on it.
Speaker 2 (02:29:03):
Just the deposit to get your spot at this per
se place is one hundred and fifty dollars each.
Speaker 3 (02:29:08):
And that's not even like the full meal.
Speaker 4 (02:29:10):
That's why we didn't want our flight to be aft up.
Speaker 3 (02:29:13):
Damn.
Speaker 2 (02:29:14):
Probably delicious though, right, boxes, I don't know, you know,
I hate when expensive places make you feel bad about
taking to go.
Speaker 3 (02:29:23):
I should be even more allowed.
Speaker 5 (02:29:25):
Right As a matter of fact, I'm going to be
taking whatever you have in the bathroom and this cloth
napkin because of how much I've paid for the spill.
Speaker 3 (02:29:32):
We oftentimes they give you like little goodie bags and
stuff on the way out, but you feel shamed if
you want to take your meal with you.
Speaker 5 (02:29:37):
You shouldn't.
Speaker 4 (02:29:38):
We talked yesterday about this vegan restaurant that was catching
a bunch of flat because they started serving meat. And
they were inspired by the fact that eleven Madison Park,
which had gone vegan for like four years, had been like,
all right, you know, we're alienating too many potential customers
here Gon, We're gonna put meat back on the menu.
(02:29:59):
And they thought we could do that too, and it
turns out that they can't. But eleven Madison Park is
another one of those restaurants that we kind of looked
at and went.
Speaker 3 (02:30:07):
Maybe chick got for me. I want something good for
that much money for God.
Speaker 5 (02:30:14):
So that was our whole thing before.
Speaker 4 (02:30:16):
Was that in years past, when we've gone there and
my wife wanted to go to like a really fancy
dinner or something, eleven Madison Park was on. It was available,
but it was like, we can't really justify spending this
much money on vegan food.
Speaker 3 (02:30:33):
That's too much. I mean, it's too much.
Speaker 5 (02:30:36):
Anyway.
Speaker 2 (02:30:36):
Somebody's saying, I can't picture Sea Lane into place like this.
Speaker 3 (02:30:40):
What's that supposed to me? Why not he goes to
fancy restaurants?
Speaker 5 (02:30:44):
The guy and you need to get so many points you.
Speaker 2 (02:30:49):
Should proably not wear You should probably not wear that shirt.
Speaker 3 (02:30:52):
I mean I would take off the motion my most shirt.
Speaker 5 (02:30:54):
No not if he has a good slipping fall there too.
Speaker 2 (02:30:58):
Get one of those classier shirts that you got in
that clauset of years.
Speaker 3 (02:31:00):
I think that'll work. We don't even have a class
of your most shirt there. You go perfect, all right?
Speaker 2 (02:31:06):
When we come back final dispatches stories that didn't make
the cut, and today I learned to wrap everything up
for a Tuesday that's coming up next on the News Junkie.
Speaker 3 (02:31:29):
Right now, you.
Speaker 2 (02:31:30):
Can simply go over to the YouTube and hit the
up vote. If you'd like, go over to YouTube dot com,
slash the News Junkie, hit the upvote, hit the thumbs
up button, whatever you want to call it.
Speaker 3 (02:31:41):
That's one way to do it.
Speaker 2 (02:31:42):
Or you could just follow us on social media the
Neewsjunkie dot com, slash share, and a lot of other
options to share the show. Just tell somebody about the
News Junkie radio show, live streaming podcast.
Speaker 3 (02:31:53):
We appreciate it. Oh my god, we are way way, way,
way way behind. Let's get the hell out of here.
Let's do today Alerted.
Speaker 2 (02:31:59):
The following information may make you feel smarter, but will
not actually increase your.
Speaker 3 (02:32:02):
IQI, So don't get cocky.
Speaker 12 (02:32:05):
Now.
Speaker 3 (02:32:05):
It's done for what we call today.
Speaker 2 (02:32:09):
It is todaylor Free Tuesday, November eighteenth, twenty twenty five.
Today learn this product right here. Legos Legos is correct. Yes, Indeed,
researchers discovered that a single two by two Lego brick
can handle eight hundred to nine hundred and fifty pounds
(02:32:31):
of force in a hydraulic press before breaking. Pretty impressive
for one lego brick. That is two of your moms
right about that lego brick right before it just completely explodes. Today,
learn there's something called demon face syndrome, a terrifying condition
caused by a brain injury which causes you to perceive
(02:32:51):
your facial features as distorted, stretched, and demonic. That is,
freaking your own facial features, Yours and other people's could
be everybody and Taylor and this band right here, shut.
Speaker 5 (02:33:06):
To what's right? Three three is correct.
Speaker 2 (02:33:09):
Indeed, they have a thing that they do. They make diamonds.
Their fans make diamonds. The three oh three guys, Yeah
this and diamond Dallas Page. The famed wrestler sued both
jay Z and three oh three for copyright infringement over
that diamond cutter hand gesture.
Speaker 3 (02:33:27):
Uh he lost both the case. Sorrybody and it didn't
work out. Thank you so much for hagging out with us.
Speaker 5 (02:33:34):
We do appreciate it.
Speaker 3 (02:33:34):
We're back tomorrow, same time, same place. Listening of the show.
Get the podcast at the news junkie dot com.
Speaker 5 (02:33:39):
We'll see you tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (02:33:40):
Everybody shot well shut.
Speaker 5 (02:33:57):
Shut.
Speaker 3 (02:34:00):
You don't trust me,