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October 21, 2025 • 153 mins
A huge surprise reveal in a news report, the White House is being demolished, an Atlanta airport shocker, the Thanksgiving STEAL, a shocing blind item, more details on a controversial judge, a woman shoots a creeper, an update on the museum robbery, don't steal my Funko Pop and so much more!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Here it is friends, A share the show, choose da
s I mean you share the show. That means you
tell somebody something who was jumping radio show, let me
dreamer podcast. That means she's in the damn really just

(00:25):
took it all out of me. There, quick break, quick breaking,
and just a moment. Let's do to that learn tom
twister I did for the second line of the intro too,
I was like, I was trying to read my My
handwriting is criminally bad. It really is. I should be
you is concerning. It's so bad. I mean it should
be like a television game show that you're like, can

(00:47):
you read Sean's writing?

Speaker 2 (00:49):
What do you move that?

Speaker 3 (00:50):
Now?

Speaker 1 (00:52):
People like though white Horse is demoized the most shocking
blind them a scene Diddy today like, what what's happening
on this show? No idea, no idea ever. But here
we are friends. We got a lot to get to
want to share the show Tuesday. We love you, we
appreciate you, and we're getting ready. We are nine days

(01:15):
away from the event. Dylan, who is supposed to be
taking part in this roast, he gives me a call
this morning and he's like, emergency and I'm gone what's
going on? And he's like, I'm in so much pain.
My my teeth, they're they're killing me right now. And

(01:38):
he said he's got like, what's it called, You're a no, no, no,
the old one's coming out. He needs a teeth OUTO. No,
it's not a teeth. The automy. You guys both know
what I'm talking about. You have to get on removed.
I never wisdom tooth, did wisdom teeth. He's got impacted
wisdom teeth. And uh, it's hard for me to think
of him having any wisdom at all. So I didn't

(02:00):
even didn't take that buddy, take that little guy. Are
you rusting him now? Because he's not participating anymore? No
participating in that sentence. H yeah. He So he calls
me and he's like, my wisdom teeth, they're absolutely killing
me right now. This is bad. And uh, I said okay,

(02:24):
And so he ends up going and they said, yep, yep,
you gotta get you gotta go get surgery. And they
sent him the bill and it's like five thousand dollars. Oh,
they got it. They'll get you because you're it's it's
one step above even bringing your pet to the vet.
And the Vet's like, actually, it's a doc electomy we

(02:45):
got to do. It's an emergency DOC elected me and
it's four billion dollars. You're like, do it, doc, you know,
you know that's fine.

Speaker 4 (02:50):
Just give me two seconds to apply for a new
credit card that if they spend that much money, I'll
get the extra travel miles.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
And the debt isn't that bad.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
They got a little like little little set up right there,
sign up for financing.

Speaker 5 (03:03):
They offer him the chance to go under. No you
don't have to.

Speaker 4 (03:11):
Well, may I suggest, Dylan, if you're listening, go under?
Because I did try the Twilight and which you're like
on the gas and you're laughing and making fun stuff
and then that doctor is using all of his body
weight to take out It was horrib Wait.

Speaker 1 (03:30):
Wait wait wait wait wait wait, what kind of savings
are we talking about here? Because I don't know.

Speaker 5 (03:40):
I think they they gave me like a whole rundown
of what my teeth needed, and it's a lot and
uh deep cleaning, which like they have to do two
different days because they do one side one day and
one side on the other day. They can just clean
the whole thing in one day. I don't know if
that means they're lazy or my teeth are that dirty,

(04:02):
like like we can't get that deep and just just
one consultation is.

Speaker 4 (04:09):
The worst because they're like, all right, we're gonna shout
some numbers to a computer, and if you have a
one or two, that's fine, but five or six very bad.

Speaker 3 (04:18):
And it's five five bleeding, bleeding five five, and then
one too.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
So two Sea Lane shows up and they got somebody
with uh, you know, eye protection and preyer.

Speaker 5 (04:33):
Right to the mouth ready to go. They said, you know,
you're wisdom teeth. They need to come out. And so
here's the price with that. But if you would like
to be under for this, it's like nine hundred more dollars.

Speaker 1 (04:46):
Oh my god.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
Do not be awake for it, Parish.

Speaker 1 (04:51):
Can I just go and just get the go underpart?
No other stuffy.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
I do believe if there is a dentist that listens
to the show, that I have no problem with it.

Speaker 1 (04:59):
What are you gonna Jackson? Yeah, yeah, I I a
little propofall push you know what I mean? That sounds
real nice.

Speaker 3 (05:05):
Don't just stick out his wisdom teeth at the roast.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
I'm a little worried about all this. He's obviously worried about,
you know, pain and the stuff he's encountering. But hopefully
all goes well with him. So keep him in your
thoughts and prayers as we go to this. Let's put
our ears to the ground, our fingers on the pole,
so let' see what's happened to this great, big, wide
world of ours. And we go to Channel four in
the UK. Now, over here in the United States we

(05:29):
have like our ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, you.

Speaker 5 (05:32):
Know, right, and they're a different number wherever you're depending
on where you live.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
In the UK, they have the BBC, they have gb
I think it's more like a cable thing over there,
and they have Channel four is one of the big ones.
And Channel four was doing a documentary and at the
end of it they had a moment and it really
got a lot of people in a surprised mode. And

(05:58):
I want to tell you this, this is just just
get used to it, Betty, this is it. Let's tune in.

Speaker 6 (06:06):
AI is going to touch everybody's lives in the next
few years, and for some it will take the jobs
true furth enter workers, customer service agents, maybe even TV
presenters like me because I'm not real Jesus in a
British TV First, I'm actually an AI presenter.

Speaker 1 (06:25):
She's been doing the whole thing, she did a whole documentary.
And then at the end they're like, guess what I'm
not and they get you. They get you at the
end with the lady who was hosting the whole thing
has been AI the entire time, and we're cooked.

Speaker 5 (06:44):
Were Do you think that the British people watching this
were as surprised as maybe an American person who may
not pick up on the nuances of a British accent
being fake.

Speaker 1 (06:57):
Oh that's a good question. I don't know. If somebody
was British, maybe they'd be like a little more skeptical.

Speaker 4 (07:02):
For me, I was like that it seems like a
real the AI is using your voice than they are
using a legitimate British accent orally.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
But Celen's question, I think, is is it easier for
like Americans to tell AI of an American in Brits
to tell AI of a brit because we're like, there's
so much more familiar with the language and the little
ins and outs. That's probably true. Let's see what else
she says. Some of you might have guessed.

Speaker 6 (07:29):
I wasn't on location reporting this story. My image and
voice were generated using AI.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
I don't like it. I don't like it. Nothing's real anymore,
nothing's real. Nothing is real except for propofile. Ghost of
Melbow on YouTube says propofol is great, totally understand why
MJ was hooked. Let's not do that. Let's not know.

Speaker 5 (07:53):
When I had my when I was in in the
doctor's office and I needed an endoscopy and and I
was like, how does that work? And my doctor, who
was kind of a smartass, was like, well, you know,
you're going to have to go to the surgery center
and they're going to give you one of two drugs.
One of them is the one that killed Michael Jackson.

(08:13):
He just said it so matter of fact that I was.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
Like, all right, is that how their commercials go? You
see the couple walking the King of Pop. Michael Jackson
was an idiot. He was clearly dumb, obviously because what
he didn't realize. And a single truth in life is
that you don't need prop a fall to sleep if

(08:36):
you're having sleeping problems. A really healthy addiction to alcohol
just solves all of those issues.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
But I didn't want the headache in the morning.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
He would have been bloated and like a fatterer.

Speaker 4 (08:47):
Michael Jackson, he would have absolutely let go a blanket
off that balcony.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
Though. Tell you what, probably probably what we have missed
blanket though, that's the question you have to ask at
the end of the day. No shock, what a shocker
that that name did not stick for that kid. Unbelievable.
We're looking at the White House and it used to
look well, you know, like the White House, but now

(09:14):
it's demolished. They're demolishing the White House today. I've seen
some of this footage. A historic house is disappearing. They're
just it away.

Speaker 7 (09:24):
It has begun making way for President Trump's new two
hundred and fifty million dollars ballroom. Thanks Roosevelt constructed the
primary structure of the East Wing in nineteen forty two.

Speaker 1 (09:35):
I must say, construction is out of control. It is
out of control. Do you construction, people, is not a
personal thing. It's just out of control. The idea that
a ballroom a ballroom which is essentially four walls, right,
isn't the whole point of a ballroom that it's just
a big open area.

Speaker 4 (09:53):
You put chairs in it and stuff chandily or windows.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
I mean it doesn't even have like as much furniture.
I guess it has more chairs, but it's a ballroom.
A quarter billion dollars for a ballroom. This has got
me scratching my head, like when I saw how much
they paid on Camping World Stadium in town, and then
how much they paid to fix it, and how much
they want to fix it again, And I think, how, how,

(10:21):
how not even a roof on this place? At least
the White House has a roof on it. But two
hundred and fifty million dollars for.

Speaker 7 (10:28):
A ball room, and it's long served as the main
entry point for guests and tourists.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
It was designed as a graceful.

Speaker 7 (10:35):
Passage towards the White House credens so lined with portraits
of first ladies and frames to the south by the Jabman.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
It does a little bit beyond it's historically it is,
it's a little outdated, but they have smashed this son
of a bitch. The entire side is like pulled in
and they got like demo crews completely ripping this thing
to shreds. Right now, I think, here, yeah, here's here's
a good show.

Speaker 8 (11:00):
Of it.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
Just the White House is demolished. Man, the whole the
backside of this sucker is really just completely demolished. And
I guess they're starting from scratch there. But when I
look at it, I go, I mean, there's there's homes
around me that are probably not too far off in
size from what this ballroom is going to be. See like,

(11:21):
how many square feet? Is this White House ballroom going
to be? Half a quarter billion dollars?

Speaker 4 (11:29):
I know a guy, it's all there. I mean, I mean,
you know, a guy to demolish and build. But that's
all the interior stuff we gotta do. I'll find better.

Speaker 3 (11:38):
So are we doing that UFC fight? Is this why we're.

Speaker 5 (11:43):
The new White House ballroom is planned to be approximately
ninety thousand square feet with a thousand with a final
seating capacity of up to nine hundred and ninety nine.

Speaker 3 (11:53):
They're so setting it up for the UFC fight.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
I'm sorry, I'm sorry, quick retraction if we could, if
we can just yeah, yeah, that cotraction retraction. I do
not have houses the size of that around me. There
are not ninety thousand square foot houses around me. Just
for the record, that's that's very, very, very attraction and
and I wouldn't even want to live in anywhere near

(12:18):
ninety thousand square foot place. But that's big.

Speaker 5 (12:20):
The initial plan was a ballroom about the size to
accommodate six hundred and fifty people. They revised it to
accommodate up to nine hundred and ninety nine. Don't know
why they didn't just go for the full thousand.

Speaker 3 (12:32):
Yeah, you know, square when the fire gets involved.

Speaker 5 (12:36):
Maybe that is The ballroom intended to hold host large events,
state dinners that currently require tenants on the South Lawn,
and it's expected to be completed before January twenty twenty nine. Wow,
takes so long too, I mean, come, n is a
lot of square feet.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
I don't care. I saw a thing in China where
they're printing three D houses in a lunch break.

Speaker 3 (13:03):
Man build that new bridge in two years.

Speaker 1 (13:07):
Yeah, an astonishing feat. And I don't Maybe we need
the Chinese to come over. I don't know what's going
on with the construction industry. Tell me what the big
scam is here, let me know. Okay, Well, we'll see
what you have to say about this and so much
more on the show today. But when we come back,
we'll get into they stopped a guy who was planning
on attacking the airport in Atlanta, an airport that many

(13:29):
of you have been to. And there's footage of like
them encountering him and the body cam footage. I got
all sorts of stuff on this that will excuse me
talk about in due time here on the show. And
we'll also get to Ditty this news and is it true?
Is it fake news? Worth putting a spotlight on it
to see what's happening. Is Trump actually considering freeing Ditty?

(13:53):
Is that actually true? Or is that is that nonsense?
We'll find out it just a bit on the show.
I got emails coming in in a whole lot more.
I want to share the show Tuesday, and that is
coming up next on the New US Chunky. This was

(14:21):
unbelievable and a very very close call apparently at the
airport in Atlanta. Everybody's been to the damn airport in Atlanta,
I think at some point in time for sure.

Speaker 3 (14:31):
I think I've gone twice this year to be yours.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
Yeah, it's one of the biggest and busiest, I believe
in the United States. It's it's like a big hub, quite.

Speaker 4 (14:40):
Chaotic, like if you're there after, I don't know, twelve am,
you're gonna get one TSA agent.

Speaker 1 (14:47):
Yeah, yeah, one hundred people online. I've also been in
that situation where you go to the Atlanta airport and
they go, you just got a switch planes, no big whoop,
And then you get off and they go, you have
fourteen minute to get to the other gate, and it's
all the way across here, and you're like, ah, you
jumping on trams and stuff.

Speaker 4 (15:06):
When you look ridiculous because you don't want a full sprint,
but you're also doing this weird jog where everything's juggling.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
It is not great. And it almost got worse, much
worse yesterday because there was a mass shooting that was
averted literally at the last minute at this airport that
you've probably been to in Atlanta, and I would just
it was breaking across all of the major news outlets
yesterday and I said, how did this happen? And how

(15:33):
did they just barely stop this? And the details are
actually pretty stunning. We'll get to that in a moment.

Speaker 9 (15:40):
Breaking right now out of Atlanta, our Fox affiliate reports
police have stopped at potential mass shooting at the busiest
airport in America correspondent Medicine Scarpoena reports she's live in Atlanta,
horse Madisines.

Speaker 1 (15:51):
What's up? It is the busiest airport, Yeah, I mean
this was a place that was going to be absolutely
full of people.

Speaker 3 (16:01):
Just was there yesterday?

Speaker 10 (16:02):
Oh? Really?

Speaker 1 (16:03):
Really? Oh my god, it's freaking too wild. Yeah, it
was yet. Do you know what time yesterday she was there?

Speaker 4 (16:10):
I think I don't know, I have to double check,
but certainly in the afternoon, early evening.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
Okay, because it was nine am. It was like right
after nine am that this guy was arrested and he
went to the airport and he was so close. And
I'll tell you how they figured this out at the
last minute here in just a moment.

Speaker 11 (16:25):
Hey, John, Yeah, we're getting all this information from Top
five Atlanta, from sources inside this in Atlanta Police Department.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
But we're learning that a.

Speaker 11 (16:33):
Convicted felon was allegedly planning to shoot up the Atlanta
Airport today, the world's busiest airport, armed with an AR fifteen,
and that suspect reportedly did get inside the airport.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
Awesome, just all of the awesome here. So we have
a convicted felon who has a long history of mental
illness and AK forty seven. Apparently those things all together awesome.
Just it's all working as intended. Where did this gun

(17:06):
come from? Is question number one, But there's a lot
of other stuff to go over here. I know that
he arrived at the airport. And then here's here's the kicker.
His family had called nine to one one and said, hey,
we believe that our loved one is headed to the
Atlanta airport right now and we think that he's going
to try to shoot the place up. And they said,

(17:28):
I'm sorry, what And they said, yeah, he's a mentally
ill person and he's armed with an assault rifle and
he's headed to the airport in Atlanta right now. And
they go okay, And you can even see and the
surveillance footage you can see him pull up and he
gets inside the airport. He gets inside the airport actually

(17:50):
after he pulls the truck up and just ditches it
and ends up in the like what do you call it,
not the terminal area, but like baggaging and stuff it
into the ticketing area is bonkers. Uh huh. Yeah, And
if you think about it, that that's it's not that crazy.
Like you could pull up a car and walk into
that spot. There's no security before that, at least not yet.

(18:12):
Well there was for quite some time after nine to eleven.
You would come in and they'd search underneath your vehicle,
and you know, after some bombings at different airports, the
would look underneath your vehicle. But this guy just marched
his way into the baggage section of the airport, and uh,
this sim right here. I guess it doesn't appear to

(18:33):
have a weapon in this picture. There's no way he's
got a he's hiding a gun, I don't think right here,
because he's just got his you know, polo shirt on,
and he kind of goes up to the counter. They
are going up to it. What are you? What are
your reasons at the airport right now? Oh what? She goes,

(18:57):
what are your reasons for being at the airport right now?
Let me try another body cam video? And and he goes,
why I'm just here, I'm just here?

Speaker 12 (19:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (19:06):
What about you?

Speaker 12 (19:06):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (19:07):
Yeah? Which, okay, what she asked you? Why you're here?
Are you flying somewhere? You're picking somebody up? What do
you got going on? This is all a little bit suspect.
What are you? What are your reasons at the airport
right now. Oh, I'm just here. I'm just here. I
kind of called you. I got drop by drop.

Speaker 3 (19:29):
Okay, we're just looking.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
We just have a situation going on. Oh you're welcome.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
They didn't say thank you, sir. He says his name
is Billy.

Speaker 3 (19:49):
Is a guy named Billy.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
Okay, so she's actively saying now to the people on
her comms, is a guy named Billy here. I wonder
if they're going to come back and be like, yes, Billy,
that's him. Grab this guy, that's your guy.

Speaker 3 (20:05):
We have hands and he's behind the battery.

Speaker 1 (20:13):
Oh, I got him down.

Speaker 4 (20:18):
The yells coming from a man who was planning on
shooting everybody is wild.

Speaker 1 (20:24):
I know that you're hearing this and hearing him screaming
out in pain. They are doing nothing to him. He's
simply lying on the ground right now, and one officer
has a hand on his wrist.

Speaker 4 (20:33):
That's bizarre to me. That is going to be nonchalant
with a plan of a mess shooting.

Speaker 1 (20:39):
This guy is like, this is Billy Cagel, forty nine
years old. He showed up at the airport just after
nine am. He live streamed on social media that he
had plans to go to the Atlanta Airport to shoot
it up. Caego's family said they heard about the threats
and heard about him posting them online. They notified the
police they had passed run ins. He's a previously convicted felon. Again.
Not sure why a convicted felon with the history of

(21:00):
mental illness had an assault rifle, a semi automatic rifle
on his person. I guess, but I guess, I guess
that was indeed the case. See what if he says
anything else, there's one thing, Give him a phone, give
him my phone. So they cuff him up. He's a

(21:20):
large man, so they had to use two sets of
cups cuffs on this guy to get all locked in.
He had charges that were criminal attempt to commit aggravated assault,
terroristic threats, possession of a firearm during the commission of
a felony, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
Where was the firearm in his truck? They said he
was going in to scope it out, and then he
was going to go back to his truck to get

(21:42):
the weapon and then start shooting. I guess if that's
the way this was going to go at least that's
what the threat was in close call. Unbelievable. Unbelievable. So
a couple of things. One, why does this guy have
a gun? Why do people in this position tend to
get guns? Why can't we solve that weird conundrum? Where
did this gun actually come from? Two? Kudos to the family.

(22:05):
All right, kudos to the family for keeping an eye
on this, for seeing that their loved one did something,
and for stepping up and calling the police and trying
to put a stop to this, because so often that's
not the case. And then the family's like, well, what
are we suposed to do? He's out of control. We
couldn't stop him. He's on your responsibility now, and now

(22:26):
this could have been help a lot worse. It just
really really could have been. Forty nine year old Billy
Joe Cagele arrested at the Atlanta airport after those threats.
Some emails coming in. Let's get to those real quick
tips at the news junkie dot com and Lorie emails
the show. She's talking about crazy playlists. This is where
I said on the show that you should never be
ashamed of your playlist, no matter what's on it, no

(22:48):
matter what is on it? This was after there was
a leak's website that was going to expose all these
famous people for their hidden secret music playlist. Call it
Panama Panama Playlists. The Panama playlist was what it was called.
Laurie says, Hi, my favorite radio crew. Regarding playlists, my

(23:11):
boyfriend makes fun of me all the time. For mom,
I do have some separated into categories, but my main
list has everything from Alice in Chains, Black Sabbath, Ozzy, Nelly,
eminem to Half Breed by Share, Delta Down, Billy, Don't
Be a Hero, Olivia Newton John. She said that she

(23:34):
just mixes them all up like that. Why is he
making fun of you, Laurie. That's fine, You're allowed to
do that.

Speaker 4 (23:39):
Now, let's see your boyfriend's playlists yourself.

Speaker 1 (23:43):
If you're making a playlist and trying to be cool
while you're making it instead of actually making a playlist
of stuff that you genuinely like, like I would go
out of Let's see Cruel Summer into Fat Joe Still
don't want to be a player the remix and I
would not feel bad about that I have.

Speaker 4 (24:05):
There's a certain playlist that you could see what you
actually are listening to on repeat constantly, and I have
come on Utah Shovels and Rope, which is like Americana
that goes into Chickenhead Project Pat three six Mafia that.

Speaker 3 (24:20):
Goes into rhythm is gonna get you, Miami Sound Machine.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
Oh yeah, the rhythm is gonna get you.

Speaker 3 (24:25):
Oh wait, oh way.

Speaker 4 (24:26):
So I think that having an eclectic taste of music
is nothing's to be ashamed of.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
It's not only nothing to be ashamed of, it's normal.
Everybody likes different stuff. I heard somebody say one time,
like there was a conversation going on near me and
they go, I like rap, and the other person's like,
I like rock, wow and a party.

Speaker 3 (24:45):
Where are you at?

Speaker 1 (24:47):
I'm simplifying the conversation just so it makes sense in
this particular instance. And when I thought about that, I
was like, literally, no one is like that. You're just
not You're not like, well, I only like this little
box of things and I do not go outside of
that box ever. And these are the only things in
the world that I find like pleasing to my ear. Drums, No,

(25:07):
listen to the weird stuff and the good stuff and
never feel bad about it. LORI thank you for the email.

Speaker 5 (25:12):
You guys ever make one of those music festival posters
that's based on your history.

Speaker 3 (25:17):
I think we all did a couple of years ago, right.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
Yeah, I did mine. Mine changes all the time. Though
I know everybody's gonna say Dave Matthews is in the
top of years, but I bet it's not at all.

Speaker 5 (25:26):
I bet it's Billy Joel. I'll go with let's see here,
I just did it. Dave Matthews Band is third tier
on the first night of the festival. Billy Joel is
second tier. The headliners are going to blow your.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Mind, all right? Who we got Ice Panda.

Speaker 5 (25:47):
Leslie Odom Junior from Hamilton, who I'm actually going to
see in December.

Speaker 3 (25:54):
Anniversary pressient for we will listen to Judge.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
Yes, that's Tuesday's headliner.

Speaker 5 (26:00):
But then, because you know, when you have these, uh,
these playlists like or these albums where there's a bunch
of different people, Wednesday's headliner is lin Manuel Miranda, okay,
and Thursday's headliner is Aqua.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
Because you can you run a retraction. I got we
gotta run a retraction. Retraction about what you should be
ashamed in some cases of the playlist that you create
on social media.

Speaker 5 (26:25):
These are a playlist. These are just like from the history.
It's Taylor Taylor Swift got to bump up because we
were in the car for a while and Ashley was
listening to the new album on my phone. I was like,
you're gonna mess up my algorithm. Here, Lorii finishes the email.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
She says, also, I had to quit the ed geen
thing by episode two. No, nope, she said, love.

Speaker 3 (26:49):
Do you get to see the kitchen table scene?

Speaker 1 (26:52):
That's Lori there. Let's go over to Jay to tips
at the news Junkie dot Com. He says, podcast listener
here listening to yesterday's show talking about all the people,
including high schoolers who fall in love with AI. Can
you imagine what's going to happen when they pair AI
with those real doll sex dolls. We are cooked, says jay.

Speaker 13 (27:13):
I.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
I don't know if they're working on that. They probably are, right,
the real doll people. It's probably something that they're They've
got a tech team over there. I'm sure they're working on.

Speaker 4 (27:21):
They're working on a flashlight probably five ten years ago
that can be controlled.

Speaker 3 (27:27):
Based on what you were watching, I guess those are
the very weird, uh, you know Electronics show that they
were doing it at.

Speaker 1 (27:34):
But yeah, I wouldn't want it to talk to me.
I don't know. I don't know. It's like I wouldn't
want to have some.

Speaker 5 (27:40):
Well that's a window into your sex life that we
didn't really need to open.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Well, you don't have to read anything into it. I'm
just telling you, No, I don't need to have communication.
He doesn't want talking, zero talking. I mean, I talk
to my partner, Courtney. She's lovely, she's the best. I
talked to her all the time about all sorts of things.
We have lovely, amazing conversations. I talk into a microphone

(28:06):
a lot, and that seems to be good enough for me.
I don't need a whole lot more. I don't need
to be how you doing today?

Speaker 12 (28:13):
A doll?

Speaker 1 (28:13):
Oh? Yeah, really, I haven't clean cleaned you out in
a while. I like what you call it. I I'm
just making it up, all right. I don't know, because
I would never do with that. It's Oh, it's weird. Okay,
give us your thoughts on that. We'll whip check in
with you in just a moment here on the show.
I have some pretty awesome updates on those people who

(28:35):
robbed the Louver Museum in Paris. There's a really interesting
play by play of how this went down from the
New York Times that I want to just briefly read.
We have an update on the guy who I said
was released by this judge, This judge who absolutely needs
to be if not even just like bounced out now
because this judge is unelected. I'll explain to you why

(28:58):
why I'm saying that. But the judge that let this
violent man back onto the streets before the state stepped
in and some other folks tried to stop this guy.
We got an update in the story I was talking
about the man who attacked the jogger in just a
little bit too. And Trump and the the Diddy rumors
that are floating around. Is that fake news? We'll discuss
all of this and whatever's on your mind. Send your

(29:19):
dispatches at the news Junkie dot com.

Speaker 12 (29:22):
That is coming up next on the News Junkie.

Speaker 1 (29:41):
Welcome to another edition of Sean is completely and totally
out of touch. I am your host in a different direction.
Where do you think I was heading?

Speaker 5 (29:52):
Welcome to another edition of Sean is completely and totally right,
And you are all.

Speaker 1 (29:59):
I'm glad you both mentioned that, because I am generally
speaking pretty right about things. But this is me saying, like,
I know what your reaction is gonna be already. I
know there's a lot of people out there. You know.
One of the things I said on this show that
triggered more people than anything else. You guys probably didn't
even connect with this. Well. One of the things that

(30:20):
triggered a lot of people was when I said, if
there's a cruise ship with the cheapest deals, I don't
want to go on that cruise ship because like when
you let in one level of poor people and when
it goes too low, there's problems there. Okay, And it's
just true. You might not want to hear it, but

(30:42):
it's just true. Like if you have theme park A
and theme park B, and theme park B is like, hey,
our prices are a little bit higher. We want to
make sure, but he has a great experience, and theme
park B is like five dollars for a ticket. Everybody,
you're gonna find some absolute pieces of work at the
five dollar place. And it's not because they're poor, but
for some of them, it's why they're poor. Right, It's

(31:03):
like a whole formulaic thing that leads to the outcome
of oh, yeah, that's right, you're just maybe not the
best of the humans among us, right, So people get
really sensitive about that. But one thing I think is
just absolutely true is in a world where people often
complain about things being more and more expensive, and you're right,
you know, a lot of stuff is more expensive. It's

(31:24):
there's some prices coming down, but use some things could
be more expensive. I see so many things where I go.
If people shop smart, there's so many great deals. Still.
I can't tell you how many people. For those of
you not in Florida listening to the show, I'll tell
you every time, just so it makes sense. But our
publics is our grocery stores. For a majority of people,

(31:44):
we go to publics. I mean there's other grocery stores too,
but it's the big one in the Southeast, And people
will complain all day long online especially publics is so expensive.
I don't want to go to publics. Publics is so expensive,
And I'll go Corney goes to publics, Courtney nails Bogo
deals and comes back and spends like maybe one hundred

(32:05):
dollars a week and we get crazy, good, delicious fresh
stuff because you're smart about it. You gotta be smart, okay,
be smart about how you're spending your money. And so
I present to you today. Is this a good deal
or a bad deal? Oh friend?

Speaker 3 (32:22):
Is this a good deal or a bed?

Speaker 1 (32:28):
That was a whole song? We go over to Walmart,
and I gotta tell you, I I'm ready to hear
the argument against this. Sean, you're out of touch. You
don't know what you're talking about. I'm ready to hear
your argument against this. I think I have steelmanned myself here.
Walmart today has launched what they're calling the twenty twenty

(32:48):
five Thanksgiving Meal Basket. We'll feed ten people at your Thanksgiving?
Is that an average Thanksgiving person size? Ten people?

Speaker 12 (32:59):
Get that.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
I've been to some bigger ones. I didn't ask that.
It's not the question. I would say, yes, ten Thanksgiving.
Maybe we can get.

Speaker 3 (33:09):
Your immediate family. Then, you know, ten seems doable.

Speaker 4 (33:14):
Some smaller families might have grandma's, grandpa's involved, So ten
seems average to me.

Speaker 1 (33:21):
Let me go to Ai. Let me see what they said.
Tji will tell me the answer to this question. Hopefully,
praise Godjai. What is the average amount of people at
a United States Thanksgiving meal.

Speaker 14 (33:34):
All right, The average number of people at a United
States Thanksgiving meal can vary, but it's typically around ten
to twelve people.

Speaker 1 (33:41):
Perfect.

Speaker 14 (33:41):
Of course, it depends on the size of the family
and the gathering.

Speaker 1 (33:45):
Of course, I understand that, but tennish, tennish people, ten
to twelve people. Walmart has announced the Thanksgiving Meal Basket.
Here's what we got. The basket contains over twenty items,
some canned, some pre made, some fresh. Includes a turkey
you got a whole ass turkey, potatoes, stuffing mix, fried onions,

(34:06):
pie crust, macaroni and cheese, and lots of other ingredients.
The bundle is intended to feed ten people a Thanksgiving
meal for under for under forty dollars. Is that not
a banger? Banger?

Speaker 3 (34:22):
I'm curious how they did this.

Speaker 1 (34:26):
I'll tell you how they did it, and see like
to tell me I'm wrong about this. But my theory
on this is, I think one of the things that
happens is people get these dumb premium turkeys instead of
just the basic bitch ass turkey. Get a regular turkey.
Don't get a turkey that's too big for everybody. Get

(34:46):
a regularly nice sized turkey that didn't go on jogs
while listening to classical music. Maybe this turkey lived a
tough life. This turkey went on cheap cruises, so to speak. Right,
this turkey didn't live the most blessed life. But in
the end, it's so much cheaper than everything else.

Speaker 3 (35:06):
Sure, it's cheap, but if it's going to taste like crap,
that's what it's a little bit more.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
It's a butterball turkey. You've had butterball turkeys, I know,
but you've had a butterball turkey before. Butterball turkey is good.
And the turkey doesn't even know what brand it is.
They the turkey indeed does not know what brand it is.
And at some point, you know, you can get your
free range turkey, you can get your never frozen fresh turkey,
you can get all you can spend a lot of

(35:31):
money on a turkey. At some point, it is going
to come down to how you prepared it. Yes, I agree,
So it's going to come down to how you cooked it.
Did you overcook it, did you did you stuff.

Speaker 5 (35:47):
It, or did you you know there's any different any
number of different methods you could have used and it
if you f that up and have a dry, gross
ass turkey, it doesn't matter what brand it is, right.

Speaker 1 (36:00):
Yeah, and you could butcher anything. You gotta be smart,
you gotta know what you're doing. But I say, in
a world where everybody's complaining about all these prices that
are skyrocketing, and again I understand that things are or
more expensive and they used to be. I get it.
I'm with you, but there are still some pretty stunners
out there as far as deals go. Is that not
a good deal? I think it is under forty bucks,

(36:21):
under forty dollars a great deal. Thanksgiving meal basket ten
people at Walmart. I think it's back. You asked how
they did this, and it has.

Speaker 5 (36:32):
Let's see two, four, six, eight, ten, fourteen, fifteen items
are listed on this list that the meal includes. Of
that two for six, eight of those are great value
brand that is Walmart's in house brand.

Speaker 1 (36:50):
Okay, so saving money, that's one of the ways they're
saving money.

Speaker 5 (36:55):
One of the things that's on here that's a little
more of a popular brand as of late that I've
seen kind of blowing up in the spice aisles is Kinders.

Speaker 1 (37:05):
Kinders.

Speaker 5 (37:06):
You may have seen it the logo is like an
all black bull's head, and they have a lot of
different spice blends in the spice isle. They're kind of
pushing themselves up into the ether of the grocery stores lately.

Speaker 4 (37:23):
Hinders, I know, I've heard of it. It's a little
bit more expensive or.

Speaker 5 (37:27):
No, it can be depending on what you're getting. I
wouldn't be surprised if they ran a deal with Kinders,
probably to get all it is is a bag of
Crispy Fried onions to go on top of the stuffing,
name brand stuff that's not great value, stovetop Butterball, Campbell's
cream of mushroom. You know, they just got a lot

(37:47):
of cheap stuff. Oh, great value dinner roles. That's nine things.

Speaker 1 (37:51):
But it's called shopping smart. It's called actually shopping smart
and seeing who's willing to take a hit. Because Walmart's
probably even taking a hit on this. They're probably not
making much profit off of it. They think that they'll
bring you in and you'll buy some other crap at
their Walmart.

Speaker 4 (38:05):
They're also hoping you're gonna get it now because probably
a lot of people wait until the week before and
that's when the prices really go.

Speaker 1 (38:13):
No, they want they want to do like pre order stuff.
But I mean this is good. I say, it's go
check it out. Let us know. If there's something you
take issue with, please do let me know.

Speaker 5 (38:21):
One one can of Campbell's Crew and mushroom, two boxes
of stove top. Here it is right here, just for
the record, Yeah, that's what we're looking at. The Kinders
is off to the left there above the cranberries. That's
the thing that I was telling you about. That was
the one that stuck out as being something that I
wouldn't have guessed being nothing looks.

Speaker 1 (38:38):
Like really cheap, gross stuff. Everything looks fine.

Speaker 5 (38:41):
No, fresh recid potatoes, fresh cranberries. Is there a bag
of carrots there? I believe so yeah, right, I don't
see that there on the menu, but or on the
oh great value baby carrots.

Speaker 1 (38:54):
Yeah, yeah, so it is out there for those of
you are a little bit on a tighter budget. Just
no that that can do you good from Walmart for
twenty twenty five.

Speaker 5 (39:03):
Not the love of my god, dispatchcock that turkey, please
excuse me. The least you could do just squish it down.
That's not what's well. You push it, you know, squish yeah,
as well. That's eye squish. It is my tactic.

Speaker 1 (39:16):
When we come back, we'll hear from you and see
what you have going on. We'll get to this update
on the Louver and the jewelry heist. Some of the
details coming out now. It's sounding even more and more
like an Ocean eleven thing, but also like the French
security guards really suck at their job. Wait till you
hear how this all went down. That's coming up next.
And then to use Junkie. Many things to get into today,

(39:55):
including this whole ditty rumor thing. Is that fake news?
We'll talk about that. I wanted to talk about the
outrage that has been building a bit about this guy
I talked about yesterday. This is a dude who was
out on this trail and attacked some poor woman. And
after he attacked this woman, she was knocked out cold

(40:17):
by him and choked out. And then she woked up
with her underwear missing and some other stuff gone. And
I believe she had been violated by this monster, this lunatic.
And the judge sees this guy, goes through his history,
sees that he has a long history of doing this stuff,

(40:37):
that he also choked out his girlfriend. That he said
he wasn't really trying to rape the lady, he was
trying to kill her. Said that he wanted to charge
right there, Yeah, for sure. And he said he wanted
to know what it was like to choke somebody to death, right,
said all of these things, and it just it does.
It's it's infuriating because it's so clear to anybody paying

(41:00):
any attention that this is a person who is absolutely dangerous,
right yet you know, out on bond. Yes, And then
the judge ended up looking at this case and said, oh,
your background is I believe the judge's quote was your
background is appalling? Appalling, I think was the quote from
the judge. And okay, by the way, I'm going to

(41:21):
let you out on a nine thousand, five hundred dollars bond. Now,
for those of you who are keeping score and paying
attention or know how this kind of stuff works, you're smart,
I know you do. When somebody has a bond, said
it nine thousand, five hundred dollars, that means they have
to put up the equivalent of nine hundred and fifty
dollars to get out of jail. All right, Maybe they're
they can use something for collateral if they want to,

(41:42):
they could use a damn scooter for collateral. Probably nine
hundred and fifty dollars is all you need to bond out.
This is also a guy, the person in question here,
whose name is Jacoby Tillman, who should be left behind
bars for the remainder of his life to rot and
be away from any other human beings because he is
about a forty IQ monster who is simply just trying

(42:06):
to wreak havoc on any women in particular that he
comes into contact with. And these judges that in so
many cases either live in neighborhoods where they feel like
they're beyond the reach of any of the bad decisions
they make, like the judge Elaine Barber right from Florida's
ninth Circuit, the judge who made this decision knowing that

(42:27):
this person was an appalling and violent person, or or
they don't care. Sometimes they don't care. Maybe she didn't care,
Maybe she shouldn't really give a damn. I just want
to do this because I can say, at the end
of the day, I feel like I've done something good.
And Elaine Barber sends this guy back out, this guy
who's known to be violent. They were just waiting for
him to kill somebody, and then everybody go Judge Barber.

(42:50):
By the way, Judge Barber in office didn't even win
an election to get back in the judge ship in
I think it was twenty they called off the election.
They canceled the election on November three, and she won
reelection by default for this court, so she received zero votes.

(43:11):
Cool to stay in office, Judge Elaine Barber. And she decided,
for whatever social engineering issues or whatever, her or reasoning
was that this person that's insanely violent to women and
to really anybody that he's near, who wants to kill somebody,
has said they wanted to kill somebody, should be out
on the streets for a bond of well just nine
hundred and whatever eighty dollars or five ninety nine and

(43:33):
fifty dollars in cash or or trade, if you will.
And everybody started to freak out, including me, because I
think this is insane. I can't imagine that this poor
woman who is the most recent to be attacked by
this guy, I can't imagine what she feels like or
what anybody in her life feels like. And how thrown

(43:53):
away you feel when this happens to you in the system,
and it's wrong, and these judges should these decisions. Okay,
I mean that. I mean that to my core. These
judges should fear how people react to stuff like that
soluely and if.

Speaker 4 (44:09):
It's going to be like, well, we had fifty other
cases that day, so I just am going through the
motions because I'll tell you, at least Central Florida, I
thought there was gonna be a little bit more concentration
on the details when it comes to bonding out these criminals,
like violent criminals. But watching down in Miami Dade, it's

(44:32):
like you don't even know what's happening. There is through
and through and through, and yet some of the judges
still take the time to say, hey, couldn't help, but
notice that you have a tendency for years to be
extremely violent and what you did is a non bondable offense.
I'm gonna make sure you're in jail so you don't do.

Speaker 1 (44:51):
A B and C.

Speaker 3 (44:52):
But this judge just ignored it nothing.

Speaker 1 (44:55):
She ignored it. She ignored the fact that he was
a flight risk because he was trying to leave the
state of Florida to go to the state of Texas.

Speaker 3 (45:02):
Everything victims or witnesses rather.

Speaker 1 (45:05):
And I know this may strike some of you as
maybe harsher or whatever, but I don't care. This is
what I do. I just have to tell you what's
on my mind. This guy, Just so we're all in
the same page, everything that he is accused of doing
and quite obviously did in other cases is fifty times

(45:27):
worse than anything that did he did. Okay, what this
guy did is the most horrific stuff you could imagine
to a poor woman who is going around this jogging track.
He's clearly a violent predator of a person. He clearly
was trying to flee the state. He clearly needs to
be put away. Everybody with a brain knows it. But

(45:48):
the judges just make these decisions and they're like, well,
that's my good deed for the day. And then nobody says, hey,
Elane Barber, you're responsible for this stuff. You're responsible when
something bad happens. And finally, I guess the state must
have got involved. They said they revoked the bond for
this guy because huge shocker. He got out after posting

(46:11):
nine hundred and fifty dollars, and when he got out
on the streets, he immediately took the TikTok and started
threatening the witness, who was apparently his ex girlfriend, and
started sharing messages with her, which is a violation of
the bond agreement. And now they're saying, not only are
they going to bring it back in, but they're going
to up it because he said he didn't try to

(46:32):
rape the woman, he wanted and wanted to kill her.
They're adding a murder charge and attempted murder charge onto
this attack. And it says in addition to the current charges,
Tilman has a history of legal issues, including a previous
aggravated battery case in twenty twenty two, an arm burglar
case in Voluca Countyary failed to appear for three hearings.
Again failed to appear three times. She let him bond
out for less than one thousand dollars. It's insane. It's insane.

(46:55):
This is the stuff that these judges do because you
probably don't even care about them, You probably don't vote
for them, you don't do anything. I can tell you
with all the certainty in the world, I will be
watching Elaine Barber. I will be watching for a Lane
Barber's election. If she doesn't step down before that and
I will be telling anybody who is willing to listen
to vote for anybody other than Elane Barbara because we

(47:16):
have to care about the safety of our communities. We
have to care about these weirdos who keep releasing people
who are routinely violent, like it's some sort of game
to wait until they murder somebody. It's insane, unacceptable, unacceptable,
and I don't even know. I can't tell Celan, I
asked you to look this up earlier because you had
seen that the bond was revoked. I don't even know

(47:38):
if he's currently behind bars.

Speaker 5 (47:41):
They're a hearing this morning, so I can't tell where it's.
Court minutes comments, media present for this case. State's motion
to revoke bond is here by granted. Bond is revoked,
the defendant is remanded into custody.

Speaker 1 (47:54):
Okay, so they've got him remanded into custody until they
make this other decision, I guess. And unless we have
another Elaine Barber judge who wants to inject themselves into
this again and.

Speaker 5 (48:05):
Say, well, here's what we should really do with this
guy different, there's no Elaine Barber on.

Speaker 1 (48:11):
This thy insane. It's crazy to me that this stuff happens,
and it's in every major city. I don't know how
these people work their way through the system that are
so eager to support the bad guys over the good guys.
I know you think it's not true sometimes, but I do.
I think you can literally settle people into categories of

(48:32):
good guys and bad guys. And when you repeatedly attack
women and promise that you want to see what it's
like to choke one of them ounta and kill them,
and you've already choked two of them out, I'm comfortable
putting that person in the bad guy category. I guess
Elaine Barber, the judge, is not, but it's good to
hear at least that this person is behind bars for

(48:53):
right now. We'll see what happens moving forward. Give us
your thoughts. What do you think about this stuff? Not
enough people focus on these kind of things. It's just
you don't even know who the judges are around you.
I don't. As much as I follow all this uff,
I know every single judge that's around me, but I
want this one gone now. We'll see what you think.
Let us send us a dispatcher and email tips tips

(49:14):
at Thenewsjunkie dot com. Kay emails the show and says,
the same judge gave a man probation after pleading guilty
in a preschool child molestation case. Mangets probation after pleading
guilty in preschool child molestation case. This says earlier that morning. Okay,
wearing a smile and no handcuffs. Here's the dude in question,

(49:36):
all right, wearing a smile and no handcuffs. Jeriko Hamilton
will walked out of jail a freeman Tuesday night. This
was in twenty nineteen. Earlier that morning, Circuit Judge Elaine
Barber sentenced him to fifteen months of probation and required
him to register as a sex offender. Hamilton done around
the daycare center as mister j was accused of molesting

(49:57):
a four year old during nap time. According to an
arre staff of David reviewed by WKMG, the victim brought
the incident to his parents' attention when he told them,
mister Jay, and I won't even read this to you. Okay,
I'll let you see it if you want to over
on the stream, but I don't even want to say
this out loud. Mister Jay does something to me at naptime.

(50:21):
Other parents later came forward claiming Hamilton had chart targeted
their children as well. He pleaded guilty to three counts
of lewd conduct on a child in March. As as
part of the plea deal agreement, prosecutors agreed not to
pursue charges for other accusations made against him. His probation
could be terminated after ten years if he doesn't violate
the terms of the plea deal. So there's the civil
cases and stuff. But the judge gave him not a

(50:44):
second of jail time, gave him fifteen months of probation,
and he walked free after pleading guilty and attacking these
little kids at a preschool because of the same judge.
You know what I mean, you know what. I've tried
not to lose my mind here, but it is so
crazy that this kind of stuff seems to happen regularly.
Let's keep the bad guys in prison. It's not a

(51:06):
radical idea, for God's sake. Mike emails tips at the
news Junkie dot com. He says Trump tearing down the
East wing of the White House, which is currently going on.
There's a big demolition going on over there, is typical
of the Palm Beach mentality, shots fired palm beachers. I
see it all the time on this island. Mike says.
They buy a multi million dollar property and then tear

(51:29):
down the entire thing and build something different. Only problem
is Trump doesn't own that property. In the American people
do pretty tacky, says Mike. I didn't realize just how
big that damn room was till Seilan said somebody reached
out to him and said it was two acres in size,
which is songers big. It's like massive. Uh the more

(51:52):
more than two acres, just just that one, that one
particular room. So there you go. More emails coming in
if you want to be anonymous, put that on top
tips of the news, chunky dit. We're also following the
robbery that went down and heist, I guess is a
more fun name for it. It happened at the Louver,
the museum, famous museum in Paris, France, and they knew

(52:12):
that like four people went in there. They climbed up
a ladder. They were doing the act like you belong thing.
They were wearing like these security vests and stuff. They
went up a ladder onto this second story or third
story thing. Then they went into the area where these
these incredibly valuable historic jewels are being held in the louver.

(52:34):
They took a chainsaw and cut open the secured display
the whole while the people at the louver were going,
we must keep all the folks who are here safe.
We got to keep everybody safe, and nobody was apparently
running over to stop them from doing this, and this
is what they do in France, like, oh wait, we
got everybody safe, and I want everybody to be safe,
by the way, but can we maybe try to stop

(52:55):
this while it's happening. Nobody ran there, so they finished
up what they were doing with the chainsaw, took all
the these jewels out millions and millions of dollars worth apparently,
and even dropped some of them on the way out.
They found one on the like the sidewalk. They got
on some scooters and they hauled ass and then mixed
back into a polite society ishue in Paris. I'm seeing

(53:17):
they use a disc cutter, which it's a grinder.

Speaker 5 (53:21):
Like almost like an angle grinder. It's it's a bit
smaller than a chainsaw, so I'm probably a little easier
to conceal.

Speaker 1 (53:28):
So don't picture like chain pictures.

Speaker 5 (53:30):
Don't picture the guys that Halloween hornized likeinging, you know,
but still, you know, I got a child one, a
little small hand, old thing, and they chopped into the
display and got these these jewels.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
I do have more details that won't happen here, and
I'm gonna give you those a little bit later. I
got a lot of your feedback coming in, so we'll
work that in as well. And a bunch more coming up.
Plus what's going on is did he gonna be free?
Question mark? Or is that not true? Plus a meltdown
at the airport wait to you hear this that's coming

(54:05):
up next on the news Junkie. At first I pushed
this away as a stupid ass idea, but I kind

(54:28):
of get it now because what I saw. There's a
big publication called Business Insider that was pushing this story
today and yesterday, and they said we want the iPod back,
and they're saying we want a non internet, non phone,
none of that stuff old school. They don't make it anymore.
Music plan iPod only.

Speaker 3 (54:51):
Okay, and they have to make something like that.

Speaker 1 (54:54):
I mean, it's not a no. Apple doesn't. I'm sure
there's some MP three players out there still, but almost
all of it was replaced by phones and the idea
of the iPhone or excuse me, the iPod.

Speaker 5 (55:10):
When the iPhone was released shortly thereafter, the new iPod
was basically an iPhone that wasn't a phone, you know,
like it just like they called it the iPod Touch.
It still had apps and stuff. Yeah, it still had
other things, But at first I thought, who the hell
wants this?

Speaker 1 (55:26):
What do you need this for? Then the argument was,
if you have a kid and you want to give
them something, you could give them a music only device
and that way they can't get onto the internet and
get in trouble. And during the break we're thinking, somebody mentions,
can you just do that with an old phone? Like,
couldn't they just make an app that got rid of
everything on your phone? Accept the ability to just play

(55:48):
music and if you didn't have some sort of password,
you can't get anywhere outside of just like one music player. Right,
seems like that would be a way to fix this.
Other people are just doing something that, honest to god,
I've seen more frequently as of late, and that is
other people are saying, I want to ditch the new
and get back to the old and I don't know

(56:10):
Celanot Sabrina if you've seen this, but I have seen
a bunch of people out in the wild with old
school digital cameras.

Speaker 3 (56:19):
Again I see it as well, wandering around and they're
selling them too.

Speaker 1 (56:25):
Sure, yeah, but I mean I look at it and
I go, why, I have a fantastic quality faux our camera.

Speaker 4 (56:36):
Look to you know, not digital. I'm sorry that the
old school analog look to it. Mind you, you can
do that in post as far as like you know
that that sound you would get from vinyl. They want
to do it with the footage coming out of these
digital cameras.

Speaker 1 (56:51):
Uh huh. But I think I think they want like
the tactile thing too. They want to like hold the camera.

Speaker 4 (56:57):
I'm not opposed to holding a camera in that sense
where you finally, because I saw one that came up
that looked like out of the eighties as a TikTok
advertisement where you look into the people and now it
looks like that footage that was the.

Speaker 3 (57:14):
You know theme song the beginning of the Wonder Years.
That kind of vibe. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it
looks awesome, and I guess maybe the footage would look
different if you're holding it in a different way. But
then you have to go to a computer and plug
it in and then upload it and then do all
that and format it properly.

Speaker 1 (57:36):
Is everyone really gonna do that stuff? I've seen some
people want this sometimes. I think it's an aesthetic thing
that like, I'm the person who's walking around with a
digital camera now, which makes me want to go and
get one of those old school cameras where you hold
the huge flash in your right hand. If it breaks
the ball, each time you have to replace the ball,
I have to have my subject stand still for eight minutes.

Speaker 5 (58:00):
Just just a very basic search for MP three player
on Amazon, you can get sixty four gigabytes for thirty
three bucks. Say still make the same amount of space
for thirty bucks thirty bucks here. This one has bluetooths
as well. They even have little screens to navigate. Yeah,

(58:20):
they're pretty easy to get.

Speaker 1 (58:21):
It looks like, yeah, the story says I want the
iPad back, iPod back, and this person was doing a
direct reach out to Apple and suggesting, hey, there, so
do you. Apparently it says I want the iPod back,
and so do you. And it says people are in
parents in particular, are wishing for a non internet, non
phone device for tweens and kids to listen to music.

(58:43):
It sounds like they have it. They have it like
Sea Lanes send. You could get that stuff already or
do it with an app or yeah, I don't now
more interested in the people going back to older but
still digital technology, because that does seem to be a thing.

Speaker 5 (58:56):
But this one here on Amazon on twenty three dollars
or twenty one with a coupon that looks like one
of the old tiny iPods.

Speaker 1 (59:08):
Really, you know, it's just one way to do it.

Speaker 5 (59:10):
I'm just kind of it doesn't have the same like
click wheel or anything, but it's got the old iPod.

Speaker 1 (59:16):
Look, they were bulky back in the day.

Speaker 5 (59:18):
And the one of them here as still has Bluetooth
and Wi Fi and has apps on it. So that's
kind of defeating that purpose, But that is what they want.
A bunch you could choose from.

Speaker 1 (59:29):
Yeah, over this real quick. We'll get to your feedback
on that. Maybe you want that, maybe you want things
to go back in time. You still want digital tech
for some reason, but you don't want everything to be
on your phone. Let us know. Tips of the news
Junkie Die Commerce Center Dispatch and the story that's getting
a lot of attention. I got a theory behind what
happened here. TMZ pushed out late last night exclusive Donald

(59:53):
Trump considering Diddy commutation this week. And this would be
the Trump administration and freeing Ditty on the charges that
he's been convicted of, and it would be of some
effort because I guess did he has I don't remember
what he said, but I think Diddy had issued some

(01:00:13):
level of support for Trump. But over the years he
has not been a Trump fan, and I feel like
that may come into play. George Santos, of course, his
sentence was ended and he was let go despite his
corruption by the Trump administration, and they're like, look now
he's considering a Diddy commutation this week. Here's what I
think is going on here. I think TMZ said, let's

(01:00:37):
just roll the dice, let's just throw this out there,
and everybody gobbles it up. Literally, everybody picked it up.
I can I could search for Diddy. Well, it's not
like TMZ has any hurt for clicks, do they? Yes?
In this day and age, Yeah, because there's so few
people going to websites anymore. Here's the news wire. Diddy

(01:00:58):
could be released this week if Trump commutes his sentence.
White House denies report. Now these are starting to come in.
There was what will will Trump commute Sean ditty Comb's
sentence amid rappers pardon request. TMZ reports Donald Trump considering
commuting Didty sentence. The White House says no truth to
this at all, completely fakes, zero truth, and they are

(01:01:21):
not considering in the slightest doing this. I think TMZ
rolled the dice and they were like, let's just run
this story and they'll well, we'll get a bunch of
press out of it, and we'll let them deny it
and we'll go, well, we want some sources. We're suggesting
that this was going on. Yeah, Tom told me, my
friend Tom, but just in case, just in case, this
is a horrific idea. And I think that's one of

(01:01:43):
the reasons why they started pushing the story out there.
Worston Santos, I would say, oh, yeah, nobody likes Didty
Santos is at least a freak show, lying, corrupt, freak show.
But at least he's a freak show who didn't physically
hurt anybody or abuse people. Nobody likes Diddy. It should

(01:02:04):
remain that way, and it seems like fake news to me.
It seems like the TMZ just ran with us, and
it looks like it's being denied, at least so far
by the White House. But we'll take your thoughts on
that too. Send a dispatch over at thenewsjunkie dot com.
Here is a sweaty armpit guy wants to talk about
that Walmart deal. I think it's a good deal. Less

(01:02:25):
than forty bucks Thanksgiving meal for ten people. That's not bad.

Speaker 15 (01:02:29):
What's up, knees, junkies. I'm gonna let you in on
a little secret about Walmart. I heard you talk worried
about the accent deal. Boy, Me and family probably won't
be jumping on that one. But Walmart's big secret is
they will take an item that they are prepared to
lose about less than ten percent margin on, and they'll
put it right next to another item where they're making

(01:02:50):
thirty forty fifty percent margin profit.

Speaker 1 (01:02:53):
I'm want to stop you on account of the accent,
but you're not wrong. Yeah, you are right about that.
That's the tactic. They have lost leaders, and I mean,
I don't know if this is everybody does. Is it
still the case that the console makers lose money on
like PlayStations and Xbox It could be, It would make sense.

Speaker 5 (01:03:12):
I mean, wouldn't we say that Meta loses money on
the initial sale of just straight up like a quest.
I think you're getting it. You're getting it at a
very low price because what's in it for them is
the data that comes with it, because you have to
attach it to your Facebook account for it to be viable.

Speaker 1 (01:03:36):
I think, so, Yeah, I might be wrong, but I
think that's the case.

Speaker 5 (01:03:39):
And then you take a look at console makers and
you go, like the Nintendo switch To, and that costs
however much, it costs a.

Speaker 3 (01:03:46):
Couple hundred dollars more than the first one.

Speaker 5 (01:03:49):
Yes, but then the games for the Nintendo switch to
are sixty seventy dollars I think seventy. Said recently, there's
now a game that if you include all of this,
it's like the first one hundred dollars game for.

Speaker 1 (01:04:04):
At which I'm surprised that is just the first, right,
But the.

Speaker 5 (01:04:07):
Game doesn't even include any sort of physical medium, Like
even if you buy the game, it's like.

Speaker 1 (01:04:12):
It's still going to make some other versions.

Speaker 5 (01:04:14):
It's more or less. No, I'm saying it's more or
less a QR code. Oh, you're right, so that you
download from their servers and you need some sort of
storage to put that on.

Speaker 3 (01:04:25):
It's very true to the last time.

Speaker 4 (01:04:27):
And I think it was with the first Nintendo Switch
that I had to go to a store and I
got something physical, including disc and the equipment that was
attached to it was that exercise game.

Speaker 1 (01:04:38):
And yeah, but that was it.

Speaker 4 (01:04:40):
Any other game you would Last of US two and
the remaster was.

Speaker 1 (01:04:45):
And they're not cheap anymore. Now they're not cheap anymore.
As far as I recall, somebody's saying the measurements must
be off about the White House. Let's go over to samuel.

Speaker 16 (01:04:55):
In hotels and convention centers for a very long time,
and and foot ballroom is pretty normal for a bigger place.

Speaker 1 (01:05:04):
The place I was at was very good sized.

Speaker 16 (01:05:07):
Our largest ballroom was fifty five thousand square feet, but
it was kind of outdated. And right now they're adding
on to that hotel and adding something bigger. So in
a ninety thousand square foot ballroom, you should be able
to do about twelve thousand people seated theater style, which
is just Rose and Rose and Rosa chairs. Why they're
saying only nine hundred That doesn't seem like very many
banquet style where you had like six foot rounds, you'd

(01:05:29):
be looking at like six thousand to seven.

Speaker 1 (01:05:30):
This guy knows his banquets.

Speaker 16 (01:05:32):
Yeah, two thousand square footballroom, if that's true, is a
very very good sized ballroom to just be tacked onto
the White House.

Speaker 1 (01:05:39):
Yeah, that's what they're working on right now. That's why
the thing's been demolished. They're taking an excavator to the
side of the White House.

Speaker 5 (01:05:45):
There is perhaps the ninety thousand square feet is not
is maybe an all encompassing number and doesn't represent one ballroom,
maybe though, like the whole area, and then it includes
that to the whole construction project.

Speaker 1 (01:05:58):
We'll see what we can find. I was wrong, and
you know, maybe we'll take that. Can't trust anything these days.
When we come back the next episode with Sabrina, what's
coming up on the next episode, I'll tell you right now?

Speaker 3 (01:06:12):
And three two, what's coming.

Speaker 4 (01:06:14):
Fulltapode Smashing Pumpkins are diving into the smoothie world?

Speaker 3 (01:06:22):
Is a vampire?

Speaker 4 (01:06:23):
Dateline feels the need to chime in on viral drama
that has no one calling for them to chime in
on and file this under show your age when slipknot
never owned slipknot dot com, but now they might all
that so much more coming up on the next episode.

Speaker 10 (01:06:39):
And that is coming up next on the News Chunky.

Speaker 1 (01:06:59):
Just not nine days away from the big roast event.
We had a meeting about that today. Got some more
details for your forthcoming for those of you who are
going get all the details that I've put out there
on the website now at the news Junkie dot com
slash Roast thenews Junkie dot com slash Roast. But there
are more details that are coming up this week and
then obviously we'll get into full on preparation for this

(01:07:22):
next week. It's going to be an awesome event of
funny of that, we've got some real funny people coming
together for a night of you wearing costumes, are dressing
up and taking part in this awesome roast event. It's
an exclusive event and you can check it out at
the Newsjunkie dot com slash Roast. All right, let's get
into it. Let's do the next step episode.

Speaker 12 (01:07:44):
Because there's a lot on TV and you can't possibly
keep up with all of it, even though you should,
because what else are you going to talk about?

Speaker 1 (01:07:49):
Well, how are you doing today, doll? Oh yeah, really,
I haven't clean cleaned you out in a while.

Speaker 12 (01:07:54):
It's like what you call it, It's time for the
next episode with some brita.

Speaker 1 (01:08:00):
A small hold up.

Speaker 3 (01:08:10):
The next episode brought to you.

Speaker 4 (01:08:12):
By that mortgage guy Don, that mortgage guy Don dot
com and of course the Home Loans radio show and
double of course, he is one of the great sponsors
of the Halloween roseye, so a big shout out to him,
Thank you so much for being an awesome sponsor. He'll
be there that night watching the big cookout, so be

(01:08:35):
sure to get all the information and your tickets before
time gets away from us and you're the square instead
of being there. It was a mayor fifty three years ago,
nineteen seventy two.

Speaker 17 (01:08:46):
This song right here, Oh my dingling yep, your Dinglings
became Chuck Berry's first number one record.

Speaker 4 (01:08:57):
Congratulations And twenty two years ago into two thousand and three,
this I imagined would be a world record, but no word
from Guinness at this point. On this day, a guy
named Kirk Jones became the first person to survive going
over Niagara Falls without safety devices, so he was charged

(01:09:21):
with the legally performing a stunt on this day and survived.

Speaker 3 (01:09:25):
So congratulations to Chuck Berry and Kirk.

Speaker 4 (01:09:29):
For some reason, Dateline was like, you obviously wanted us
to chime in on drama that has nothing to do
with us, And here we are after Kristen Bell made
what some are calling an inappropriate murder joke to celebrate
her anniversary.

Speaker 3 (01:09:47):
Did you guys discuss this yesterday?

Speaker 15 (01:09:49):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:09:49):
No, no, I saw it, but we didn't talk about it.

Speaker 3 (01:09:51):
I think it's all too much.

Speaker 5 (01:09:52):
I didn't see the part that was inappropriate. I know
I saw that she forgot her anniversary.

Speaker 4 (01:09:57):
Forgot her anniversary, and then said something in the caption
whatever their their years were, said I that Dax Shepherd
had said, I would never kill you. A lot of
men have killed their wives at a certain point, even
though I'm heavily incentivized to.

Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
Kill you, I never would. So what's a joke?

Speaker 4 (01:10:20):
But now has limited her comments as getting a lot
of flak online, and Dateline decides to comment with screenshotted.

Speaker 3 (01:10:33):
Because they're gonna be in date Line with Deck's murders.

Speaker 1 (01:10:36):
Dan stupid, you gotta do the right thing like Dateline
and fully monetize every murder you can come across.

Speaker 4 (01:10:47):
A lot of people, though, are loving what Dateline commented,
remarks like Dateline for the win best comment Award, you
win the Internet Today.

Speaker 3 (01:10:57):
Dateline and Savage.

Speaker 1 (01:11:00):
Were these like people who worked at Dateline who were
posting this.

Speaker 3 (01:11:04):
Very likely, very likely.

Speaker 4 (01:11:06):
But you won't be able to comment on it anymore
because Kristen has limited the comments on that.

Speaker 3 (01:11:11):
Damn because we can't do a joke or something like that,
if you want. Speaking of Benjamins, that I did write
that after I had the story about Pete Diddy possibly
being out of jail.

Speaker 4 (01:11:27):
But speaking of Benjamin's I have nothing to do with
that first story. I now have a list of all
the actors who got paid to do nothing.

Speaker 3 (01:11:36):
Don't you love this? Ready to feel poor?

Speaker 1 (01:11:38):
I'm not going to sign up for that.

Speaker 4 (01:11:41):
Oh, here are some lovely examples of things you can
sign up for. Ving Raims made It reported seven point
seven million dollars for what amounted to a thirty nine
second cameo A.

Speaker 1 (01:11:55):
Mission Apostles ghost protocol. How many million dollars? Uh?

Speaker 4 (01:12:00):
Just a cool seven point seven million dollars for thirty
nine seconds.

Speaker 3 (01:12:04):
Right, what do you I mean? What is that a
millisecond at this point?

Speaker 1 (01:12:09):
Right? Because it's a it's a good payout for sure.

Speaker 4 (01:12:12):
Samuel Jackson made around two million to three million for
the Marvel movies, even when he was just in a
single end credits scene.

Speaker 1 (01:12:21):
All right.

Speaker 3 (01:12:22):
Michael Keaton was paid two million dollars for a cameo
in the Backgirl movie that never got released.

Speaker 1 (01:12:28):
Oh, I forgot, I didn't know he was in that, yeah,
b man.

Speaker 3 (01:12:33):
Benicio del Toro got five million dollars for a movie
called American Gangster and he was not even in it.
The movie got delayed and then he was replaced, but
he had a pay or play deal meeting and got
paid no matter what. Sean Connery got paid two hundred
and fifty one thousand dollars for a single day of filming.

(01:12:55):
Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves, originally requested one million dollars,
but he took the half million just in case.

Speaker 4 (01:13:01):
Jared Leto got seven million for Suicide Squad, which means
he earned a million bucks.

Speaker 3 (01:13:07):
For every minute of screen time. Do you want to
make you going? We we over how much money they
make a lot?

Speaker 1 (01:13:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:13:16):
So much Meryl Streep three million for five minutes on
Mama Mia. Here we go again.

Speaker 5 (01:13:21):
If she got three million for that, what's she getting
for like the longer work she's doing.

Speaker 1 (01:13:28):
Do you know what the murder for? They're paying her
so they can go featuring Meryl Streep and it will
literally sell like three million dollars worth of ticket.

Speaker 4 (01:13:35):
We'll show that part on the trailer and so we
know that people will hope how much time that she's singing?
And then this five minutes in? Was it the whole
deal with Drew Barrymore and scream was that they had?

Speaker 3 (01:13:47):
She was all over the trailer and then do that
she got killed almost immediately.

Speaker 1 (01:13:52):
Famously, you'll recall they did that with a lot of
those later Bruce Willis movies and when Bruce Willis wasn't
God why and they'd go starring Bruce Willis and he's
on the cover and he's doing it, and then in
the movie he's only there for like twenty thirty percent
of the movie.

Speaker 4 (01:14:09):
God damn, would you watch the movie with Chuck Spadina.

Speaker 1 (01:14:13):
I don't know who's that.

Speaker 3 (01:14:15):
That's actually what Keanu Reeves would have been named.

Speaker 1 (01:14:18):
But under Blue, Under blue like for.

Speaker 4 (01:14:21):
Some reason, I have collected quite a bit of stories
about what the stage names would have been, and thank
god Keanu Reeves went with Keanu Reeves instead of Chuck Spadina,
so he.

Speaker 5 (01:14:34):
Briefly entertain the idea of going, you know what instead
of calling me Keanu.

Speaker 4 (01:14:40):
It sounds like it should be on a can of tuna.
But Chuck Spadina would have been his name because his
middle name is Charles and Spadina is the street he
grew up on.

Speaker 3 (01:14:49):
That is the format for your porn name.

Speaker 5 (01:14:51):
I thought, uh, and I think there's a pet name
in there somewhere. And then then later on the rumor
is that that's how we all find the don't censors
to your secret question.

Speaker 1 (01:15:02):
That's a fishing tactic. Don't do it.

Speaker 3 (01:15:04):
Whoopsie this guy right here, he wasn't a fishing tactic
when we did it in grade school.

Speaker 1 (01:15:09):
Leonardo DiCaprio, that is correct.

Speaker 4 (01:15:11):
Two points for Sean. And that almost was not his
name as well. He almost went by Lenny Williams.

Speaker 1 (01:15:19):
That's not cool, that's awful. His father stepped in. Not
as bad as Chucks Padina.

Speaker 3 (01:15:24):
Lenny Williams is I think just as bad I think
it's that's my Opina.

Speaker 4 (01:15:28):
His father stepped in to stop that from happening. Leo's
agent thought his real name sounded too ethnic and that
he would never get hired, but he went with Leonardo DiCaprio.
Here are some other two ethnic air quotes. Names of
the actors you know in Love.

Speaker 3 (01:15:50):
Rita Morena was born Rosa Delores Alviro Marcano. Are you
wondering who Rita Moreno is.

Speaker 1 (01:15:59):
I've heard it before. I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:16:01):
Bruno Mars, Yeah, I've heard him. Peter Jeane Hernandez. Give
it up for Peter. Christina Milian was supposed to be
Christine Flores. James Rode. I'm not familiar with James Rode.

Speaker 1 (01:16:18):
You know, it's funny. When people came into Ellis Island
in by the millions, the move was to make them
sound to take their names and change them to make
them sound like mundane American European names so they would
mix in with everybody else. And now, especially in the
world of Hollywood with celebrities, you want to do the opposite.

(01:16:38):
You want your name to, you know, stand out, the
Guy Fi effect exactly. You want to be something that
people like, Oh, that's different. What is that?

Speaker 4 (01:16:48):
Also, this group right here revealed that one of the
MEMBERSLC that Lisa left Lopez was supposed to be the
tea word for boobs Less Crew, so she was supposed
to ben her Yeah one basically itty bitty.

Speaker 1 (01:17:13):
What booby communities. I can only say so much around here.

Speaker 3 (01:17:17):
The other name was Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:17:19):
She was supposed to be the t Less Crew and
t boz would call her president. But thank god everyone
went with their original names right. And thank god that
one guy took slipknot dot com because this is news
to me. An anonymous cyber squatter has owned slipknot dot
com since two thousand and one, and they've had to

(01:17:42):
use slipknot one dot com until last week.

Speaker 1 (01:17:46):
I thought they could sue for that.

Speaker 3 (01:17:47):
They are they're suing.

Speaker 1 (01:17:49):
Is that what they're doing? A cyber squad anything? Because
the person could just say that it's like a nodding website.
We teach you all the best. Yes.

Speaker 3 (01:17:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:17:58):
They fouled a lawsuit under the Anti CyberSquad and Consumer
Protection Act, also alleging trademark infringement an unfair competition after
twenty four years. Good luck on the move tube, We've
got Dancing with the Stars. The series premiere of Coast
to Coast Tuesday don NBC. You can catch Wife Swap,

(01:18:19):
the Real Housewives edition on Bravo, and Charlie.

Speaker 3 (01:18:23):
Pooth will be on fallin. Follow your dreams of me
on Instagram at Sabrina and bro. Most importantly, stay with
me America.

Speaker 1 (01:18:30):
Smoke weed every day. Thank you, Sabrina. Back in the day,
well not even back in the day, this has been
going on for a long time. I was from time
time going to get Newsjunkie dot Com. I think I
mentioned this four way back when. And instead of thenewsjunkie
dot com, you know, cleaner, Facebook's time drop then drop

(01:18:51):
the it's cleaner. And I was like, well, what do
they want for in The person who owned it saw
that I was associated with iHeart even like way back then,
They're like, okay, it's part of this corporation, and they said, yeah,
we've got news Junkie dot Com and we'll sell it
to you. I think the first first amount they told
me they'd sell me news Junkie dot Com for was

(01:19:11):
one hundred thousand dollars. I believe they said one hundred
thousand dollars and I go kiss my ass. It's not
worth it. I have the news junkie. I'll take it,
just fine, everything's gonna be okay. It's it's in the
name anyway, so I'll take it. And then I think
that they came back at one point in time They're like,
we were looking at offloading some domains. So if you
were interested in getting newsjunkie dot com, still we can

(01:19:34):
offer it up to you for eighty thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:19:36):
Well cool eighty.

Speaker 1 (01:19:38):
I mean, really, I think that whole world has collapsed
because at the beginning, no one wanted anything but a
dot com. You did not want dot net. You look
like a loser with a dot net. Now nobody cares.
It could be dot ai, dot whatever, No one give me.

Speaker 4 (01:19:53):
Honestly, you could just connect any link to a photo
and do you have people clicking that so that takes
over any sort.

Speaker 1 (01:20:02):
Of it doesn't. It doesn't matter as much anymore. I
mean it see like goes to like dot party websites
every once in a while. I think it's weird though
to some of those on it. Besides, I wouldn't go
to the kuomber dot parties.

Speaker 5 (01:20:18):
For instance, I read one of my one of my
torrent sites as an adult.

Speaker 1 (01:20:23):
Lol. Now yeah, nobody cares.

Speaker 12 (01:20:25):
It doesn't matter.

Speaker 1 (01:20:26):
It's just connected to the Internet and it works all right.
When we come back, what are the most one of
the most brutal blind items I've ever seen revealed? And
this is a famous, famous website where they do these
blind items. They tell you, hey, here's this mystery item,
and then they reveal eventually who the people were. And

(01:20:47):
when I saw this one, my jaw hit the floor,
and I want to think, I want to see what
you think about this. I want to see what your
level of judgment is on this particular celebrity. That bombshell
coming up next the use junk kie. Let me tell

(01:21:18):
you about a news source. Lots of news sources out there.
Every day. I have probably four or five hundred different
sources that I look at to try to see what's
going on, aggregation websites with tons of other links on there,
and I just try to scrape the internet for everything
that is the pulse of the world. Early on Reddit,

(01:21:40):
there's a redditrones and all of the different locations where
this show is broadcast, of course, and one of the
things I tend to look at, even though I don't
use them much on the show. Is a blind items
website called Crazy Days and Nights, and Crazy Days and
Nights is run by a lawyer out of Los Angeles.
I believe it's been around for a very long time.

(01:22:03):
People deep in the industry and in Hollywood follow this
blog in a world where no one cares about blogs anymore,
very closely, because the blind items on this website Crazy
Days and Crazy Nights are almost always true. They're almost
always accurate, and even if it's something outlandish. For instance,
they were the first people to say there's a certain

(01:22:24):
two and a half men actor who might have HIV
and people were like, what, get.

Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
Out of there.

Speaker 1 (01:22:31):
And then like a year later, Charlie Sheen wasn't that kid?

Speaker 4 (01:22:36):
Now was it them or was it Desmois that would
take those blind items and then do the reveal without.

Speaker 1 (01:22:44):
Oh what they do? Crazy Days and Nights does the
blind items revealed, and they revisit some of the stuff
that they posted, and they go, here's the answer, and
they tell you the answer. And in this case, when
I saw this, I was like what And I want
to know what you think about this? It says the
wife of this permanent a list actor is trying to

(01:23:09):
negotiate a payout so she can divorce him and marry
somebody else. All right, So I mean, I said, well,
that's not that crazy. There's a lot of people in
Hollywood have fake ass relationships that are over and they're
pretending it's not.

Speaker 3 (01:23:22):
And what's the payout?

Speaker 1 (01:23:23):
This guy's a permanent A List actor. This woman wants
to get paid so that she can leave and move on,
to divorce this guy and marry someone else. So mostly
I don't have a lot of controversial things in mind.
I just think this is probably happening all over Hollywood.
For all I know. This is Dak Shepherd and what's
his wife's name, Great Kristen Bell. It's the two of

(01:23:45):
them fighting over who knows. Not that either one of
them are A List actors, I wouldn't think. But it
said the wife of this permanent A List actor is
trying to negotiate a payout so she could divorce him
and marry someone else. And as I've told you, I
will lend some credibility to the sources on this website.
They are usually very good and very accurate. They revealed it,

(01:24:08):
and they said, the wife of this permanent a list
actor is trying to negotiate a payoff so she can
divorce him and marry someone else. Emma hemming. You might
not know her name, you might not know her by
emma hemming. Well you might know her a list actor
husband that she wants to divorce from so she can
marry somebody else. Bruce Willis, Oh, that's a little rough there,

(01:24:39):
they were.

Speaker 4 (01:24:39):
I mean, she's claiming got a bunch of flak four
putting them into a home.

Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
Yeah, yeah, and understanding that like he has that aphasia
like dementia condition, he's not going to recover from this.
And they're revealing her as the person who's trying to
just get out of this. She's done with it. She
wants to divorce him so she can move on with
her life and marry somebody else. And when I heard that,
I was like, of all the people, this seems like

(01:25:04):
the worst one that could be. Like, I hate to
say it, but it seems like you should stay with
your husband until he dies. It seems like, I I
know that's just me being like an old fashioned person,
you know, to death, do his part and all that stuff,
But it seems like you should at least stay with
your husband until until he dies and then then then Mary,

(01:25:29):
and you're not even staying with him. It's in a facility.

Speaker 5 (01:25:32):
Now, some people who have not really really adhered to
that mentality. Was it was it Larry King or Rush
Limbaugh that had a wife with cancer and was like, bye,
oh that was Nute Gingrich. I think you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (01:25:47):
Yeah. They was once the Speaker of the House in Washington,
and Nut Gingrich had a wife that had cancer. And
the allegation, I don't know if it was true, was
that he gave her divorce papers in the hospital under
a hospital and you just think, hey, this is way
more brutal than when somebody tells you can you believe
my girlfriend broke up with me via text message? And well,

(01:26:10):
you fell in love with somebody, you married them. They
got a debilitating disease, and you cannot wait until you
get away from them so that you can marry the
next person. They're not even with it. I don't know
if this is true, but I'll float this out there

(01:26:30):
somebody who has any parents or any loved ones that
have suffered from dementia or aphasia in particular, because that's
what we know. Bruce Willis has right, Are there ever
moments far into it where just like that, things kind
of pop back in?

Speaker 4 (01:26:50):
I think, because that does happen, Obviously we're going to
wait until we hear people that have experience with it.

Speaker 3 (01:26:56):
But I wouldn't be surprised.

Speaker 1 (01:26:58):
I know, you know, I've from much experience on my
part that when people are dying, they often have a
rush of like all of a sudden, they come back
to and they're very coherent. And I've seen this happen
and it's crazy, it's unbelievable and weird. But with aphasia
or dementia, if there were moments like that, then I

(01:27:18):
imagine Bruce Willis, who worked his whole life to create
this career, who was trying to stack money at the
end by doing all these embarrassing movies that he didn't
want to do so that his family would have enough
to be financially secure after his passing, who was putting
himself last even when he knew things were about to

(01:27:38):
go south. And I picture him at this facility that
you've checked him into, and that's fine, I get it,
But then he sort of like whips it forward and
comes to for a moment and goes, where's my wife? Oh,
oh she's Oh she's married somebody else. Oh okay, I'm
still alive. I'm still alive in here. That seems insane

(01:27:59):
to me. I don't know if that happens. I don't
know if he would ever have a moment where he
would realize it. But it seems a little bit mean,
if I'm honest with you.

Speaker 4 (01:28:09):
We found out with this prognosis that he had been
dealing with it for quite some time, Like everything kind
of just the puzzle pieces were aligned.

Speaker 3 (01:28:18):
Once it was announced that he was dealing with.

Speaker 1 (01:28:20):
Us, it gets worse.

Speaker 3 (01:28:22):
So the family has been dealing with it for quite
some time as well.

Speaker 1 (01:28:27):
Yes, and they knew all this was coming.

Speaker 4 (01:28:29):
I am totally on the fence with this kind of
piece of news, especially not being confirmed. But if it's
been for the last ten years, and if she wants
to marry somebody else that she has been out of
this for quite a little bit, you don't, again, Hollywood,
you can marry somebody after a year. It seems like

(01:28:50):
we found someone who was completely cognitive and was like.

Speaker 1 (01:28:54):
Seelan, how old is emma hemming? Because is she like
so old that she's like, well, I've got to move on.
I don't have a lot of time left. The clock
is ticking. I want to have like forty seven okay,
forty seven, she's not that old. She's not that old,
but much you can play. And I am the person
who who is this celebrity. Recently, I believe it was
Colin Farrell who had announced that his son, who is

(01:29:18):
very disabled and not somebody who can function on their own.
He has significant developmental issues and requires full time care.
And Colin Farrell talked about how him and his wife
had his son moved to this facility for full time care.
Then he visits his son and he tries to spend
time with him and whatnot, but he thinks that the

(01:29:40):
best experience for the time that his son has is
in this full time care facility. And people will be like,
oh my god, how could you do that. You're not
going to take care of your canon. Like I get
that sometimes it's better. Sometimes it's better to have the
care facility to take care of them. But the thing is,
it would be like saying, Okay, my son needs help,
so I'm gonna bring him to this care facility, but

(01:30:02):
I want to go marry this person in California. So
I'm gonna move and I'm gonna leave the state that
my son is being cared for in. I can't wait,
you know, I must go. I have to get away
from the scene of the crime here.

Speaker 4 (01:30:15):
So she said back in early September that she was
already considering divorcing him. Really, yeah, consider divorcing actor before
dementia diagnosis, which I thought it was before September of
twenty twenty five.

Speaker 1 (01:30:28):
But okay, so, she said she considered this beforehand.

Speaker 4 (01:30:30):
I found my marriage was crumbling or calling the events
leading up to diagnosis. She thought her husband's sudden shifting
mood was just something that happens in couples, in long
term relationships.

Speaker 1 (01:30:42):
Let's see, it just seems a little cold. By the way,
you can and have moved out. You can and will
probably get money from Bruce Willis when he does not
too long from now die. All you have to do
is just be with the other guy and just wait
and you guys, test out your relationship, kick the tires

(01:31:05):
a little bit, make sure everything's fine. Don't don't try
to get out of this before the die.

Speaker 3 (01:31:10):
Another dies.

Speaker 1 (01:31:11):
Yeah, yeah, I mean I think it seems more rude
to divorce and get the money, payout and go marry
somebody else before your dying husband actually passes. Then to
just be with somebody else and still be like a
figure in his life, and like say, okay, I want
to do like a weekly visit or whatever. Everybody would

(01:31:33):
understand that. I understand that you have things you need
fulfilled in your life. I get it. I understand that.
What do you think? Let us know, send a dispatch
or an email dispatches. You can record video already. Dispatches
over on the website the Newsjunkie dot com emails. It's
tips of the news Junkie dot com. If you want
to be anonymous, please put that up on top. I
wanted to read you a little bit of this here.

(01:31:56):
Hang on. This was about that love the museum in Paris,
the actual arrest there. The New York Times article about
this that I saw today was really really interesting. I
think this is it here. The search is on for
the Louver jewel thieves. Here's what to know. And they
kind of had a punch by punch on this that

(01:32:18):
I thought was good. The police in France were racing
against time as they searched on Monday for four thieves
who carried out a daring heist at the Louver Museum
in Paris, aware that the chances of recovering the stolen
Jews jewels risk diminishing every hour. No stolen Jews as
of ye. The robbery on Sunday. The robbery on Sunday

(01:32:40):
stunned France and has raised uncomfortable questions about security at
one of the world's most famous cultural cultural institutions, which
remained closed on Monday. By the way, they should have questions.
There is no security. These people just went in, cut
out the multimillion dollar jewels and left with them on scooters.

(01:33:01):
You don't have security. You were just praying and hoping
that nobody would steal your stuff.

Speaker 5 (01:33:05):
In nineteen ninety eight, when the leshimmen, the Severi painting
by Camille Corot was stolen and.

Speaker 1 (01:33:13):
Has not yet been found.

Speaker 5 (01:33:16):
At the time, the Louves director Pierre Rosenberg warned that
the museum security was quote fragile unquote.

Speaker 1 (01:33:25):
Yeah, he's right, he was right about that night. Much
about the heist remained unclear, but the authority said that
organized crime was most likely involved and investigators were looking
into how the museum's alarm systems functioned. Many are now
worried that the thieves, ignoring the jewelry's historical value, might
break the pieces apart to sell the stones on the
black market and melt down their precious metals for sale.

(01:33:47):
This morning. The French people, for the most part, feel
as though they have been robbed. Darminn In. Yes, you
you should feel that way because France is not secure.
You have let your country go to well, you have
no security at your main museums like this. They made
it way too easy for these people to swing in
and do this, in the same way that when the

(01:34:09):
Notre Dame burned, it was our church that was burning,
even if you weren't Catholic. Such an incredible jewelry robbery
at the Louver looks bad. We cannot completely secure all locations,
he said. But what's certain is that we have failed. Yeah,
you could say that. Here's what we know about the
robbery and the search for its perpetrator, says The New
York Times. Officials said the robbery began at nine to
thirty am broad daylight on a Sunday, when four thieves

(01:34:32):
arrived at the southern corner of the loof with an
electric ladder mounted on a truck. Two of them wearing
yellow safety vests, rode the ladder to the museum's second
floor Apollo Gallery, which houses France's collection of Crown jewels.
So they came in this like little ladder truck thing
and they brought it up to the second floor. Working
Thirty minutes after the love had opened, the two masked

(01:34:54):
thieves used power tools to break through a window at
nine thirty four am. I read it.

Speaker 5 (01:34:59):
I read a French article about how this went down,
and at least translated to English it it used the
term angle grinder.

Speaker 1 (01:35:08):
Okay, so they had an angle grinder that they use.
It's been four minutes so far, by the way, that
this break in is going on. Lourie Macaw, the Paris
prosecutors said the thieves who entered the gallery did not
appear to be armed, so they didn't have any guns
or wore weapons of this year.

Speaker 4 (01:35:22):
Made it look like it was Ocean's eleven all over.
It made it look like they were part of the
crew was supposed to app.

Speaker 1 (01:35:28):
They threatened five of the museum's security guards who were nearby.
The guards ran. They quickly evacuated visitors who are already there.
The thieves cut into two display cases and grabbed some
jewels before quickly editing. Exiting through the broken window. They
tried to burn the bucket of the electric ladder that
carried them up, and then they fled on motorcycles. By
nine thirty eight, they were gone eight minutes, eight minutes.

(01:35:52):
We watch Oceans eleven and we go, look how clever
they have to be. We need a hackerman, We need
a bucket, We need a big bucket. We need somebody
could fold themselves up in a suitcase.

Speaker 12 (01:36:05):
And.

Speaker 1 (01:36:07):
Man, we need all of these things. No you don't.
We just need to walk in and pick out what
you want and steal it. They'll let you take it.
That's what happens. They took eight pieces of precious jewelry,
including a royal sapphire tiara necklace, matching earring, royal emerald
necklace and its matching earrings, a tierra and brooch approach
worn by Empress Eugene, Empress Eugene wife from Napoleon the Third.

(01:36:33):
But then they dropped one item. Authorities recovered that it broke.
It as three and fifty four diamonds and fifty six
Emeralds on it. I mean it was it's yeah. Yeah.
They just they just went in there. They went in
while the place was open, all the security guards were there.
They didn't have any guns, they didn't have any knives.
They just said to the security guards back up, and
they go okay, okay, we that are scared, and they

(01:36:55):
backed up and they let them take all of this stuff.
This is like a perfect allied for France in general
right now. This is a perfect allegory for what's happening.
You have to defend your stuff, You have to take
care of things, You have to defend stuff that might
even not be yours.

Speaker 3 (01:37:11):
Well, nobody had stolen it for all these years.

Speaker 1 (01:37:14):
All you had to do was some sort of security,
and nothing happened.

Speaker 4 (01:37:18):
They did ask some sort of security. They ran after
being threatened to get punch.

Speaker 1 (01:37:22):
Yes, and they had two alarms going off on the
display case and on the window. Security guards said they
followed this proper security protocol, which is to protect visitors
from harm and call the cops. Nobody was hurt during
the robbery, and they said, are there any leads? They're
not ruling out any hypotheses at this point in time.

(01:37:43):
The speed of the heightst suggested that thieves were experienced,
but it's unclear who they might be working for, so
they have no clue. They thought initially and they still
think that this may have been some immigrants working with
organized crime who popped in, stole this stuff, and probably
made off with a whole bunch of money. It's crazy, man,
People are robbing places and nobody even has to have

(01:38:03):
a gun anymore. You just go to Disney Springs in
a scuba Steves dude, and you take what you want. Baby.
What a time to be alive kind of Let us
know what you think. Send a dispatch over at thenewsjunkie
dot com. All right, when we come back, we got
to get into the story of a United Airlines flight
that had a very very scary moment in the sky

(01:38:25):
and what hit them, Well, nobody would have expected that
it would have been this, but we'll tell you what
that was. It's coming up next in the news Junkie,

(01:38:51):
cool or scary, We shall discuss. We got you coming
up next on the show, and that's via your dispatches.
Thanks to everybody who sent those three. I want to
hear from you as well. Send yours over at thenewsjunkie
dot com, a video or audio dispatch, or email the
show tips at the news Junkie dot com. Before we
get to some of those emails, a United flight was

(01:39:11):
cruising along. It was going to Los Angeles, California. May
have heard of it, and this United Airlines flight had
to be diverted to Salt Lake City because something smashed
into the windshield. Which is scary if it's in your
car and you're just cruising along, But imagine being at
thirty six thousand feet in flying at five hundred miles

(01:39:34):
per hour. Yeah, you better win that battle. That's a
little scary.

Speaker 3 (01:39:38):
Is there a crack in the windshield?

Speaker 1 (01:39:40):
It was apparently space debris that hit this United Airlines flight.
They think that it was this smart weather balloon that
was way up in the air and that had some
sort of issue and then came down and collided with

(01:40:01):
the windshield of the plane at thirty six thousand feet.
The windshield smashes and injures the pilot who's probably just
watching some cartoon on Netflix or something on his iPad.
If the stories we hear about pilots are true, and
it probably freaked them out. Like I can't even imagine.

(01:40:23):
The company United says we're working closely with the FAA
on this matter. We immediately rolled out changes to minimize
time spent between thirty thousand and forty thousand feet. These
changes are already live with immediate effects. Additionally, we're further
accelerating our plans to use live flight data to autonomously
avoid planes, even if the planes are at a non
standard altitude. We're also actively working on new hardware designs
to further reduce impact, force, magnitude, and concentration. That's the

(01:40:47):
people that's to believe.

Speaker 3 (01:40:48):
In they get injured.

Speaker 1 (01:40:50):
The pilot got injured because well, it only says that
the windshield cracked, so I don't know it.

Speaker 3 (01:40:57):
Got injured from just flailing and probably hitting.

Speaker 1 (01:41:01):
Can you imagine?

Speaker 4 (01:41:02):
Because I thought if the window had opened that that
at thirty thousand feet you're getting sucked out.

Speaker 1 (01:41:08):
I think so, yeah, And I don't know just how
strong that whole setup is, but I mean, obviously it
didn't break. Because of this, it's kind of astonishing, to
be honest with you, that it wasn't even worse. But
it does say that the pilot was injured. Maybe you
guys could find out why this pilot was hurt. It says,

(01:41:29):
injuring the pilot and causing it to crack at thirty
six thousand feet, Windborne Systems that's the company behind this,
says we're going to stay out of thirty thousand to
forty thousand feet airspace. Okay, maybe you should. Maybe that's
a good idea. That seems like a bit of a problem.

Speaker 3 (01:41:44):
I'm trying to go through these ads right now, but
all I'm saying is like it may have cracked it,
but where is the part and why he got hurt?

Speaker 1 (01:41:53):
Is I bet it just scared him into a heart attack.
It would me. But we'll see if you find anything
else that to let me know as we talk about
this before we rip into some of your emails. I
put a video out on this not too long ago,
just something I was working on. I didn't think it
would take off. It didn't really take off, but I
thought it was an interesting topic. Nonetheless, because Miami has

(01:42:15):
launched this police car that they were showing off, they
said this is going to be the future of police
and a lot of people were kind of freaking out
about this. I don't blame them, and it has a
cute little name. It's called the PUG, but it's really
the future of policing. And for me, well that's just

(01:42:40):
the thing. See Len, this is the story about what's
happening with this new Miami Dade sheriff vehicle that's autonomous.
You don't need anybody in this one just drives along.
It could deploy drones. It can scan everybody's license plate
around them. It doesn't even need a human. It's only

(01:43:00):
about two hundred thousand dollars to buy these, and ten
years down the road, you're gonna have half as many
cops and twice as many well many more than twice
as many of these. But are you do you think
this is cool or do you think this is scary?
Let us know. Let's go over to the story from NBC.

Speaker 13 (01:43:17):
Please say this is the future of law enforcement.

Speaker 18 (01:43:21):
This vahicle is gonna give us touch points for the
community that we have never had before.

Speaker 13 (01:43:25):
If you look past the flashing lights and logos, it's
clear this is no ordinary police PUG. This prototype SUV
was designed to launch a drone, read license plates, and
send live infrared video back to HQ, all without needing
a police officer behind the wheels. Criamy Dad Sheriff's offices.
This is the nation's first autonomous police vehicle.

Speaker 1 (01:43:46):
By the way, one of my favorite things is they
put a thing because they can do this with no cop.
They put a picture of a cop on the.

Speaker 3 (01:43:54):
Window that has two microphones.

Speaker 1 (01:43:57):
It has microphones and it says two comms video link
between the person reporting and the nine to one to
one call center. And there's a button on the side
of the automated you know, police vehicle, and you could
talk to somebody and be like, hey, we got a problem.
You have like a communication back and forth that's hey, there,
I got some issues here, and you can you can

(01:44:19):
report whatever crimes you see.

Speaker 4 (01:44:20):
I guess to the waste of taxpayers money, it's not
it's not actually going to be a waste of money
that's gonna get smacked down because you know, a cop
is going to be way.

Speaker 1 (01:44:30):
More expensive than two hundred thousand dollars. Like, so, is
it a waste of money because you could replace a
bunch of cops with a bunch of autonomous vehicles that
could just cruise around and handle this. To me, it's
that who's accountable? Who do I go after? If I
just don't feel like the car with a robot driving
it was mean to me. If I feel like it

(01:44:51):
wasn't justice that I got. There's not even a cop
for me to go after. Not that that works all
the time, but that's what we got here. It's just
like a picture of a cops vehicles of funding from you.

Speaker 5 (01:45:01):
Is a robot driver going to make decisions based on
the severity of the incident or I mean, you could
stop a robot car by just standing in front of it.
You've seen all the stories about it, or by just
smacking it if you're walking by. Hey, what's to stop

(01:45:21):
people from just doing that? To interfere with this little
pug thing moving around?

Speaker 1 (01:45:26):
Here's the thing he lay And they tell you right now,
we have no plans to use this without an officer
behind the wheel.

Speaker 5 (01:45:32):
And we don't have any plans, then why tell us
there doesn't need to be an officer behind the wheel.

Speaker 1 (01:45:37):
They have all of these plans, they're just not telling
you about them yet. They won thousand want to use
these RoboCop policing lab.

Speaker 9 (01:45:45):
We're ultimately trying to do this and give the sworn
officers the capability to make the best decision out there
for now.

Speaker 13 (01:45:51):
Miami Dade will essentially take the vehicle on a pr
junket seeking community input before it regularly patrols neighborhoods, and
then when that arrives, designers say, this vehicle will offer
a lot.

Speaker 1 (01:46:03):
They don't need to be focused on driving and looking
for animals, children, pedestrians. Yeah, the road. That's I love
how they stuff like that. That's it doesn't it doesn't
have to be focused on animals or pedestrians. It it
can just drive around because it's autonomous. Yeah, and it
never takes a sick day. And once you buy it,
you don't have to pay it anymore and you don't

(01:46:25):
have to pay a retirement for well, one of them.
But where we got one, we're going to have a
whole fleet of these things driving around every neighborhood, scanning
every license plate, catching all the people on camera, trying
to find the purpse. And then they'll have like one
fifth as many cops that rush to the scene when

(01:46:47):
it discovers something bad.

Speaker 4 (01:46:49):
I thought they can scan plates without a probable cause
or something like that.

Speaker 1 (01:46:53):
The old David. They do. They do all day long.
They do. They're talking about plates just for.

Speaker 3 (01:47:00):
You know, Okay, so what was the David says, something
that we dealt with the key years ago.

Speaker 1 (01:47:04):
Just search somebody like personally putting their information in to
try to find stuff about them for your own personal reasons.

Speaker 3 (01:47:12):
Okay, So now that if you see them on the streets, if.

Speaker 1 (01:47:14):
You're driving around the streets, they'll scan everybody's license to
see if your registration is active. They will scan it
to see if you have any warrants against you. They'll
do all of that stuff. This is the future and
it's creepy as hell. Tell us what you think, send
us a dispatcher and email over to tips at the
Newsjunkie dot com. We'll rip into some of those. We'll

(01:47:34):
get to jury duty, all of that plus the dumbest
story of the day. Without a shadow of a doubt,
we'll rip into this and slice it up a bit.
That's coming up next in the News Junkie Bag that

(01:48:03):
we're putting together for you, hooky goodie bag. We'll be
presented to everybody in attendance in just nine days at
the Roast of Sean Watson, the Halloween Roast of Me,
which is gonna be at Judson's Live, a beautiful event
it's it's been a huge success so far and we're
excited for it. And if you want to learn more
about the event, go over to the news junkie dot

(01:48:24):
com slash Roast. The venue is already talking about next
year with us, and I'm like, I don't know, we
haven't seen it. Whether this is gonna break up the
band chickens Man, I don't know what's gonna happen here.
It could be good, could be bad. I think it's
gonna be funny as hello. So if you want to go,
go over to the website thenewsjunkie dot Com slash Roast,
brought to you by Just called mo dot.

Speaker 5 (01:48:46):
And that mortgage guy Done who just signed on, He's
gonna be there hanging out with us.

Speaker 1 (01:48:51):
Very excited for that. That's exciting. Love it. You're gonna
have that Morgan him die Boy in the house. Oh,
I don't, I don't dare I don't. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:49:04):
Wants fair game.

Speaker 1 (01:49:05):
I know everybody is fair game technically, but I feel
like I want to go after people who get a
chance to have the microphone a little bit. And Oh,
I don't know. If I go after him, he's going
to go after me, and then who knows what he's
going to say.

Speaker 3 (01:49:20):
You're going to be a renter before the end of
the night.

Speaker 1 (01:49:23):
That might be good, though, that might that might be interesting.
The news junkie dot com slash rose thanks to just
call Moo dot com and that mortgage guy don dot com.
This story is the dumbest story of the day, without
a shadow of a doubt. And the story is supposed
to be from the world of science, but most of
science is dumb in twenty twenty five, and the story says,

(01:49:44):
males advertise their fighting ability through their walking style, and.

Speaker 3 (01:49:51):
You guys are screwed.

Speaker 1 (01:49:52):
All I can tell you, as in as a man,
does that mean we also advertise our lack of fighting ability?
Like even if they say subconsciously you're advertising your fighting
ability through your walking style, I think guys just walk
I really don't.

Speaker 4 (01:50:10):
I mean, if it's based on in between commercials, Sean
just kind of paces around and never gets to the
actual fight.

Speaker 1 (01:50:17):
I don't. When I'm walking out on the streets, I
don't go it must look like an ape walking around
must fighting stance? Like how weird? That's weird. Nobody's doing
that and I'm not even doing it unconsciously. The only
thing I do is I often go, oh, man, you
got to straighten yourself out. So I'll be I'll be

(01:50:37):
like waiting somewhere, and when I'm standing, I'll go, oh,
i am hunched over, and I'll straighten myself out and
I'll go perfect.

Speaker 4 (01:50:44):
Part two seconds and then all of a sudden, your hunch.

Speaker 1 (01:50:47):
Yeah, I'll over it again at a.

Speaker 4 (01:50:50):
Picture of me taking a nice seat after you know,
the sun had been a blazon upon they come out
with Pride Parade here in Orlando, and it was a
quick side view and I'm like, Jesus Christ Sabrina. Yeah,
it's top quasi moto two point zero, straight up.

Speaker 1 (01:51:08):
You only think about it every once in a while.
When you do, you go, oh god, I look like
an idiot right.

Speaker 3 (01:51:12):
Now, and you feel every crack in your spine because
you've been something like that for four years.

Speaker 1 (01:51:17):
But I don't ever even subconsciously. And I know what
subconscious means. I just I'm aware enough to know what
would be happening in my subconscious as well. I am
not trying to advertise my fighting skills by how I'm
walking now.

Speaker 3 (01:51:29):
By walking You do talk about it quite often about
fighting people.

Speaker 1 (01:51:33):
My fighting skills only when I need to. I think I.

Speaker 3 (01:51:36):
Would beat up a bunch of kids.

Speaker 4 (01:51:38):
I would beat up this old person if they came
at you first. I could beat up John Cena if
he was asleep.

Speaker 1 (01:51:44):
No way, Oh what do you mean by happening Mike Tyson?

Speaker 4 (01:51:49):
I could beat him up now, not in his crime,
but I could beat him up now.

Speaker 1 (01:51:54):
No, I could legitimately beat up Mike Tyson. Absolutely, I could,
one hundred percent. I could beat up Mike Tyson. If
I need you to find out something for me via
a quick Google search, look up what is a fatal
dose of ketamine? How many? How many milligrams is a

(01:52:15):
fatal dose of ketamine? All right, this is the important
information that we're looking for. Let's see. I'm then might
get a little bit scared that you're looking this up, But.

Speaker 3 (01:52:29):
That are your targeted outs are gonna be a little
bit different, probably.

Speaker 1 (01:52:33):
All k hole ads from here.

Speaker 5 (01:52:34):
Generating for a while, providing information on fatal doses of
substances is not possible because it could not be used
because it could be used in a harmful way.

Speaker 1 (01:52:41):
Wow, gotch I just realized what it sounds like. I'm googling. Yeah,
it does.

Speaker 4 (01:52:48):
Yes, But let's say, let's say forty milligrams of ketamine
is a fatal dose.

Speaker 1 (01:52:56):
If you give Mike Tyson thirty nine milligrams, just one
milligram shy of a fatal dose, and he's like, I
could beat him up. I could beat him up.

Speaker 4 (01:53:06):
I feel like it does a lot of drugs. It
probably doesn't do anything for him.

Speaker 1 (01:53:09):
He would still be on the verge w wobbly, get
in there, but I would need that help from the keademine.
I really would. Let's get into this. Here we go, friends,
it's time let's do jury duty.

Speaker 18 (01:53:22):
Or it is now in session to put your phone
down and pay attention before we call the bailiff over
to whip your.

Speaker 1 (01:53:27):
Ass, your knowing jury duty with the news junkie, Bring it, Tyson,
all right, bring it. If we set this up down,
he's going to be really put off by the drug
part of it, but otherwise he'll probably be okay.

Speaker 5 (01:53:41):
The definition of the lethal dose LD fifty is the
amount of drug that results in death in fifty percent
of experimental animals tested. Let us dark Gable, I'll determine
the oral ketamine safety ratio for rodents as twenty five
and estimated that the median lethal dose averaged at eleven
point three million gram IV or six hundred and seventy

(01:54:02):
eight milligrams for a seventy kilogram human, which is about
one hundred and fifty four pounds thousand.

Speaker 1 (01:54:08):
Put it up at a thousand milligrams academine for Tyson,
and he'd be like.

Speaker 3 (01:54:14):
Injured on the go or injured while trying to fight
Mike Tyson.

Speaker 1 (01:54:17):
Just Camo. He would be like, in uh, what's the
movie where Will Ferrell gets darted in the neck? O?
Will Ferrell darted? And that would be my moment, Jerry Dudey,
brought to you by the one the only motive of
the Duit Law Firm. Injured on the go? Just call
MO eight hundred, CALLMO eight hundred, Call MO, or go
to just Calmo dot com.

Speaker 5 (01:54:39):
I don't know why, accident. I don't know why, but
you just said Will Ferrell gets darted in the neck.
In my head I saw Will Smith and I was like,
now I do remember Will Smith getting darted into Not yet?

Speaker 1 (01:54:49):
No, it could be when he comes back to the
Grammys or what was it the Oscar? Is that one
that that happens. Just CALLMO dot com. Just CALLMO dot
com or eight hundred call MO. Oh what do you
do here? There was a man at a store in
Compton in the Los Angeles area. And inside this store,

(01:55:11):
a guy started freaking out and he was attacking everybody.
The man then started groping the female customer. He's groping
her and he's becoming verbally aggressive. He's throwing and damaging
merchandise in the store and touching all over this woman.
He said, I will kill everybody in this store right now.
And the woman shot him and killed him. And now

(01:55:36):
they're wondering whether or not they should charge this woman
with a crime here. That's all he said. The guy
was in the middle of a complete meltdown. And I
will give you the story from the La Times. It
says a woman shot and killed a man who groped
and attacked customers inside a Compton's store. Officials are asking
witnesses to come forward. There was an emergency call. They said,

(01:55:57):
they didn't name the store. They said identified man entered
a store following a female customer. The male groped the
female customer, which prompted the store's employees to ask the
man to leave. The man responded by becoming verbally aggressive,
throwing and damaging merchandise in the store. Officials say the
employees and customers then noticed the man had an object
in his hand they believed to be a knife. They

(01:56:19):
say he threatened to kill and harm everybody in the store.
According to authorities, a second customer entered the store. Fearing
for the store employees, herself, and other customers, she pulled
out a personal firearm and fired a warning shot at
the man. The man torn a turn toward the armed customer,
and she made a move towards him, and she said
she feared being attacked, fired a second shot and struck

(01:56:42):
the man, fatally shooting him. I see no problem here.
I mean, what are you gonna do. There's a man
on the loose, if he has a knife, he's threatening
everybody in the store. He's saying he's going to kill
all these people. A woman shows up, she fires a
warning shot for God's sake, and then everybody's surprised at

(01:57:02):
the Vietna. You shoot the guy, all right, Fine by me.
But they're now trying to find more witnesses to see
if there should be charges against the woman. What do
you think. Let us know at thenewsjunkie dot com. Some
more details on that tree stand, that hunting stand that
was found about two hundred yards away from where President

(01:57:23):
Trump's plane lands at Palm Beach International Airport. Details coming
in now saying that it's probably been set up months ago.
For months, this tree stand was just sitting there within
a couple hundred yards or a driver shot with a
golf club of a plane that carries the president of
the United States of America. We still don't know who

(01:57:44):
put it there. We still don't know what they were
trying to do, and they're still investigating. At least they
opened up all the streets there, including Southern Boulevard, because
that is nightmare sitting.

Speaker 5 (01:57:55):
Is it possible, and I've seen some pictures of this thing.
Is it possible somebody was living up there for a little.

Speaker 1 (01:58:01):
Bit beautiful buck around. It's not possible. The other thing possibly?
All right, quick break, when we come back, everybody is
mad at Jimmy Johns, And I'm gonna tell you why.
Maybe you joined this crusade. And we got a ton
of emails to get through. People got thoughts, they got

(01:58:22):
things on their minds. Well, let's let you get it
off the thing. Let's let your your emails. The emails
are coming up next in the news, chunk key. I

(01:58:48):
wanted to share something with you because I thought this
was funny. Excuse the landscaping crew in the background momentarily here.
Bad timing, bad timing, But it's just a fact of life.
I want to to ask you a question and then
tell you a story, because it's just the way I
like to do things every once in a while around here.
But would you rather have more smart devices in your

(01:59:11):
house that you rely on or less smart devices in
your house that you rely did you rather have your house?

Speaker 3 (01:59:18):
Are they working more properly?

Speaker 1 (01:59:19):
Well, just just generally speaking, you know, I need to
go any dip, But would you rather have more smart
devices or less smart devices? Because there's always going to
be the potential that they are working correctly or not
working correctly no matter what they are.

Speaker 3 (01:59:32):
I will go with more. My final answer are no details.

Speaker 1 (01:59:35):
Sea lands obviously going to be a more.

Speaker 5 (01:59:39):
Although I did go looking for a light bulb yesterday
because I have some light bulbs that I need to replace,
and the first worldest of first world problems, I could
only find light bulbs that were smart, and I was like,
this is for an outdoor patio light that just turns.

Speaker 3 (01:59:57):
On and turns of smart.

Speaker 1 (01:59:58):
Man, I don't need colors.

Speaker 5 (02:00:00):
If I wanted to be smart, I'll replace the the
switch exactly, I'll replace because I have plenty of smart
switches if I want to replace that. I don't need
this light to be smart. And I could not find
a dumb light to save my life. And I was like,
this is a really stupid problem to have.

Speaker 1 (02:00:16):
There is nothing dumber than some of the new smart
stuff in my opinion. And I'm gonna explain to you
why I'm talking about this. Courtney is very much we
want less smart devices in our house. She doesn't care.
I like to set up all this fun stuff and
automate things and build zones and hosts software that can

(02:00:37):
control everything from there with it able to wherever. And
she's like, nope, I want a car that has buttons
and knobs. And she does not want wherever she can
to rely on that kind of stuff.

Speaker 4 (02:00:49):
Set up the bedroom where I say, Alexa, turn on bedroom.
Both lamps on each night stand turn on or turn
off at a certain time.

Speaker 3 (02:00:56):
If we don't say, it'll turn off.

Speaker 1 (02:01:00):
Four times a week.

Speaker 4 (02:01:01):
I'll go turn on bedroom and Nichole's lamp is off
because she manually turns it off.

Speaker 1 (02:01:07):
Oh just too alexer turn off.

Speaker 4 (02:01:11):
It's called nicky lamp as well. But no, she's right
there with Corney. Like doomsday preppers.

Speaker 1 (02:01:17):
People sometimes want less of these smart devices. Now to
their points. We talked about this Amazon crash that took
down a bunch of the Internet this week. Everything, and
if it didn't affect you, well good for you. You probably
have less of those smart devices. But if it did
everything from your morning alarm on an Alexa device that

(02:01:41):
wasn't working when this hard thing happened to somebody emailed
hang on, Ceilian, let me get this because this was
somebody talking to to Selane saying that Celane asked whether
or not there was an outage from deliveries, and they
said this was John who said, hope Celane got his
package yesterday. But I delivered for Amazon Flex. I got

(02:02:03):
sent home on both routes that I have because the
warehouse was closed all day because of the Amazon outage.

Speaker 5 (02:02:09):
Yeah, I did have a delay of something, and I
think it's actually supposed to be delivered today. But Pithenberg
text me and was like, last time, there's one of
these hues out huge outages. And he was still at
Amazon before he became postal Pisenberg. I think he said,
we were pretty much shut down for half of the day. Yeah,

(02:02:30):
that's what happens.

Speaker 1 (02:02:31):
The world stops in some quarters because there's been an
Internet outage and Amazon Web Services or AWS and behind it.
My favorite thing that has come out about this is
some of you want everything to be smart, and you
want your beds to even be smart, and some of
you have a bed called Sleep eight. Have you guys
ever heard of this? Sleep eight? It's the number eighth

(02:02:54):
after sleep. This is why this is my favorite story.
The Amazon Internet sage's oh wait, no, there's okay, sleep
and then the number eight. Altogether. The Amazon outage that
took down the Internet yesterday affected two thousand dollars smart
sleep beds, with some of the customers left stuck in
an incline position or with overheating mattresses because of the Internet.

(02:03:17):
That sucks. I could just it should it should work
that way. It sucks. They designed these things so stupidly
that they require the Internet to have access to the device,
and they said that there are beds. They couldn't go
to sleep because their beds were stuck in an incline position,

(02:03:38):
or the heater that was on was stuck on. And
how smart is that? All Right? That doesn't seem like
a really, really great thing.

Speaker 5 (02:03:45):
I think that person typed it wrong. I think it's
supposed to be eight sleep eight sleep. Yeah, because the
eight sleep is a fully immersive COOLi and heating comfort
ranging from fifty five degrees to one hundred and ten,
adapting in real time to keep you and your partner
in deep sleep longer. They call it a pod, even

(02:04:07):
though I think it's a bed, or maybe that's a
pod that controls it.

Speaker 1 (02:04:11):
Yeah, that's it. It's eight sleep, yeah, because people were
responding on it would be great if my bed wasn't
suck in an inclined position. Dude to Amazon outage, Come
on now, mine is still not working and went super
haywire and it seems to be turning on and off randomly.

Speaker 5 (02:04:24):
That's what I think is dumb about some of these
things and the way that they're designed is that the
thing that's much more common than Amazon's servers going down
is your internet going out. So I think that there
should be so long as for this, I mean, I
think it's so long as your power still on. There
should be a way to recline decline that bed. You

(02:04:48):
should be able to adjust it without needing the Internet. Now,
where this may have gotten agreed, where this may have
gone wrong is if it's using like this, This is
making me dizzy, just watch and this sof and umber.

Speaker 1 (02:05:02):
It was just very distracting. Grandpa stumbled on a website
with automated videos over there.

Speaker 5 (02:05:07):
So if it's using like some sort of Internet or
AI to kind of monitor you and keep you comfortable,
and then it had to pause in the middle of
that at three am because aws went down.

Speaker 3 (02:05:20):
A horrible way to wake up in the middle of
the night is being launched upright fire hot on all
your body stupid.

Speaker 1 (02:05:28):
So why would this work this way? There should be
a way to.

Speaker 5 (02:05:33):
Have like a localized control of that thing, or there
should be god forbid, a fail safe.

Speaker 1 (02:05:40):
If the Internet fails that it goes all.

Speaker 5 (02:05:42):
Right, We're going back to just regular old bed with
a regular old temperature.

Speaker 1 (02:05:47):
Yeah, imagine that. The eight Sleep Company reminds me of
the dunder Mifflin website in many ways because they have
features that you just don't need, and it says eight
sleep can let you add friends who are also eight
sleep users to sleep network. The eight sleep service includes
features that require the collection of specific location data, including

(02:06:08):
GPS signals, device sensors, Wi Fi access points, and cell
tower IDs. Why you're a bed, All I need is
for the bed to be at a nice cool temperatures.
Be a bed and bed it up. That's all I need.
This is why people and I think you're right. Those
of you are saying less smart devices. I think you're

(02:06:29):
on the right track, because this is quite stupid.

Speaker 5 (02:06:31):
Now, if I were to do any smart devices that
had to deal with my bed, there are some pressure
sensors that you can put under where you sleep that
would control like a variable in your automation software, basically going,
this person is in bed or this person isn't in bed,
and let other things make decisions based on whether or
not I'm in bed. Oh okay, So say both Ashley

(02:06:56):
and I are in bed and some lights get flickered
somewhere or some motion censors go off, and it's at
a certain time at night. You go, hey, both of
us are in bed. That probably means that the person
doing that is somebody that shouldn't be around, and maybe
it should alert us because it's Jack.

Speaker 3 (02:07:14):
Robbert just gets into your bed and it's like, oh,
they have one of.

Speaker 1 (02:07:17):
Those projecksons practicing for his loover robbery.

Speaker 5 (02:07:21):
And but there's stuff like that where I think, you know,
making the whole house smarter and letting everything work together
can kind of be cool. But I don't really need
the bed to move.

Speaker 1 (02:07:34):
It's just like we were saying yesterday though, like the
Amazon speaker having an alarm, it's great, totally makes sense.
Some people like to use that to wake up. But
the idea that that breaks if the Internet goes down
or if somebody god forbid didn't pay their Internet connection
fee or something. It's the dumbest design I've ever heard of.
It shouldn't require that. It doesn't make any sense. I

(02:07:55):
don't think people are losing their mind.

Speaker 5 (02:07:58):
It's so dumb that I wonder if it was just
a very small amount of people who had problems with this,
and were they describing something incorrectly like We're like, were
you not able to set an alarm while the outage
was happening because they couldn't send your voice to the
server to figure out what you said. And that was

(02:08:20):
one of the things, Parson what it was like. But
that's still stupid. It's still stupid. But there should be
enough that you could do locally. But like if the
idea was you already had an alarm set, like say
you have an an every day morning alarm, same time
every day, and that didn't go off because the internet
was out because the server was down.

Speaker 1 (02:08:41):
That's real dumb. That is quite dumb. Is this dumb?
The question is one that many people are asking right now,
many people who are mad at Jimmy Johns to go
after the Johns, Jimmy John's. And it's all because of
this woman who's TikTok has gone viral and she has

(02:09:03):
a Jimmy john sandwich in her hand and she unrolls
it and they said, it's so pathetically small, so unbelievably
embarrassingly tiny, that Jimmy John's should absolutely have a come
to Jesus moment here as a company that they can't
be selling these things for ten dollars. It is not

(02:09:24):
very order the slim Did you order a little John?

Speaker 3 (02:09:28):
That's exactly what it comes like.

Speaker 1 (02:09:31):
It does It doesn't even look like there's anything on this.
It looks like it's yeah, it looks like it doesn't
have lettuce.

Speaker 3 (02:09:37):
Or it is tiny, but they have a snack portion.
It's probably in second buck still.

Speaker 1 (02:09:41):
But this sucker says ten. It says the woman n
wraps a ten dollars Jimmy John sandwich in the past
of your seat, when as she sees the contents, she says,
I want my money back. I can't believe this. This
costs ten dollars, no way. And the picture in the comments,
people were absolutely melting down at Jimmy John's. That's why

(02:10:02):
we go to Jersey Mikes. They were saying, that's why
we go to Jersey Mikes. That does everybody know what
Jersey Mikes is? Everybody have a Jersey Mikes. It's a
sub above. Yeah, the nationwide thing. I would guess they
would be. I would think at this point in Tom,
but I don't know. All right, let us know what
you think and we'll take some of your dispatches. I
promise some email. So let me see what we got here.

(02:10:23):
Here's lethal to tips of the news Junkie dot Com
about Bruce Willis. His wife needs to stand by him
until Bruce Willis passes this over the possible story that
maybe Bruce Willis's wife is looking to end the relationship
even though he's got the aphasia stuff and he's kind
of in a facility and whatnot. She wants to end

(02:10:45):
her relationship with him and go get married to somebody else.
She doesn't want to wait. His wife needs to stand
by him until he passes. But she might think it's
okay to bail out with DEMI or to me. I
don't know how he said still being around to pick
up her shortcomings. Whoever is going to marry her better
watch out. She'll do the same with her next husband.
What else do we have? Amy says, I agree that

(02:11:07):
fake news is a huge problem for our society, and
I wish that more news sources is what try to
address this. I tend to think a good segment of
people are being misled in forming their views, and having
more sources providing a balance and factual perspective are needed.
She's talking about somebody's claim yesterday that I should do
a segment talking about fake news. I don't know that

(02:11:29):
that's two people. There's two people on board. Here's somebody
else Anonymous saying this is almost exactly like the Bruce
Willis story. A Texas woman divorced her husband to become
his guardian. Now she cares for him with her new husband.
Oh that's a little awkward, actually, This Texas woman divorced
her husband, says CBS News to become his guardian. Now

(02:11:50):
she cares for him with her new husband. And I
don't know if he doesn't know what's going on, I
guess it's not that big of a deal. See what
else we have? Anonymous says, My sister had frontal lobe
dementia like Bruce Willis. For years, we used to think
she was just being silly, and we called her Betty
crazy Betty. In fact, she was always a free spirit.

(02:12:13):
Her husband of over twenty years had left her over
bad reactions a few times for a week, but always
came back. Finally we found out what was causing this
with an MRI. She was too much for him to
handle alone, and she was placed into a home. He
was loyal to her and visit her several times a week,
even when the last couple of years she didn't even
know who he was.

Speaker 3 (02:12:31):
Okay to say, all those weeks that he left her
by herself.

Speaker 1 (02:12:34):
Uh, it doesn't mention that I guess she was better
off then to say all this. He fell in love
with another woman during this time, somebody who understood the situation.
They ended up moving in together prior to my sister's passing.
He never divorced her and took care of her till
the end. We all supported that my sister had died
years before. She had no idea who any of us were.
We were glad he was able to find some happiness

(02:12:55):
during this horrible disease. I agree Bruce's wife can move
on with her life, but can wait for is passing
to get remarried, says anonymous. Thank you, great email, much appreciated.
One more, this person says, what's up? Happy? Share the
show too? Is that hey, who put up a stronger
resistance against the robbers? These security guards at the Louver

(02:13:15):
or the workers at the Disney Scuba diver robbery. It
doesn't seem like it's that hard to commit a robbery
and get away with it nowadays. Keep up the work,
says this person is many ten to two tips at
the Newsjunkie dot com. Let's get your email in now.
We still got to talk about this fight. Delta flight
attendant fight. We need to get to a tropical store Melissa.

(02:13:36):
Is this going to impact you? Will discuss that as well,
and that is coming up next on The News Junkie.

(02:13:59):
Good Soul. I need your help. What I need from
you is for you, if you're over on YouTube to
just like that video. It ain't tough to do. In fact,
it's quite simple. Just click that like button. If you're
not a subscriber, click subscribe. Thanks to everybody who subscribed yesterday,
by the way, and it's a place that I plan
to continue to invest time and effort in. I'm going

(02:14:20):
to work on another video this week, and if you
want to subscribe to stay on top of all of that,
go to YouTube dot com Slash the News Junkie. But
for share the show Tuesday, just clicking that like button
or just telling a friend is plenty enough to spread
the word about the show. Tropical Storm Melissa is forming
as we speak. It is not looking good over there

(02:14:44):
in the Atlantic for the hurricane season. It's the thirteenth
name storm of the season. But I will tell you
the shield is still functioning. We are good to go. Sorry,
everything that is headed our way, it will smash some
of the other places. But then when it gets to

(02:15:04):
the East coast of the United States, it's like a rocket, shit, man,
it just sends it right back out to sea, and
it looks like we'll be clear from Tropical Storm Melissa
very much in this same way. Good news for most
people on the East coast of the United States, bad
news for people who want some excitement in the world
of meteorology, because it's been a pretty boring weather season,

(02:15:24):
hurricane season, whatever you'd like to call it. A couple
of things to work in. Have I even done any dispatches.
I don't know. I feel like it might be a
good time to work in some of those. Not this
one that says Courtney is right yet again, though that
one will not make the cut.

Speaker 3 (02:15:39):
I'm not sure.

Speaker 1 (02:15:43):
We'll see maybe no smart devices yet it is actually
it is on that front, and she might be right
about that. But I saw a story this morning when
I was waking up going through stuff, and it said
that there was a woman in Jersey who had been
attacked by a coyote. And this woman was outside. Obviously
be weird if this happened in the living room or something,

(02:16:04):
but she was outside and she got attacked by a
coyote and blew down the other two houses. And they
were very, very very worried about this happening to other
people in the area. And I got to tell you,
this was interesting to me because I just saw a
mega fight on next door, as you know, great source

(02:16:25):
of drama. Love it, love it, love it. And on
next door somebody did this effort post that was TLDR.
You know, it was very very long, and it said,
stop complaining about the coyotes. The coyotes pose zero danger
to you and your family. The coyotes are simply a

(02:16:47):
part of nature and it is us, the humans who
are infringing on their way of life, and they will
run away from you. They will never pose you any
sort of harm or danger. Submit to that person that
this woman just got attacked by coyote.

Speaker 3 (02:17:04):
And I remember, I'm pretty sure I had text both
of you guys first. But it was like five am.

Speaker 4 (02:17:09):
I'd woken up very early and saw two coyotes walking
right in front of my house. I had posted on
next door to give warning because there are a lot
of neighborhood cats or outside cats, and one of the
first comments from ring neighbor two four seven was like
it's not their faults. Yes, major bah blah God, Okay,

(02:17:32):
go ahead and invite them into your backyard.

Speaker 3 (02:17:34):
See what they do to your animals.

Speaker 1 (02:17:35):
There are a couple of worlds that are like this
one seems to be this coyote one. If you talk
about coyotes online, like somebody talking about a coyote being
roaming around the neighborhood doesn't mean they want to exterminate
all the coyotes. They're just saying, hey, if you have
a cat that's outside, maybe we hope it doesn't get
murdered today. It's like it falls into the category of

(02:17:57):
the adopt, don't shop people sometimes times political people, the
very political people. With everything, it's just got to be
this whole, big, dramatic to do. It's all a lot.
I feel like we should have at least some sense
of fear for the coyotes and especially with our animals,
because they are indeed killers. And this woman was attacked

(02:18:21):
the New Jersey. I guess she's gonna be okay, But
she was in the backyard with her dog when the
animal ended up pouncing on her and going after her
and the dog. And it can happen. These animals get sick,
they get hungry, they get a little desperate out there.
Next thing you know, you're on the other side of
that bite. Somebody sent through this. I guess Trump yelled

(02:18:43):
at a photographer at the White House. Let's see what
happened here, It says Trump yelled at a photographer for
bumping into a mirror. Let's listen it.

Speaker 19 (02:18:51):
Marines lots of other military equipment. They're big orders of
our great military equipment. We are the best equipment to
hear in the world by far. And oh, you gotta
what shed?

Speaker 1 (02:19:02):
What shed?

Speaker 19 (02:19:04):
You're not allowed to break that. That mirror is four
hundred years old. The camera just hit the mirror. Yeah, yeah,
I just moved it up a special from the vaults
and the first thing that happens to camera hit shot.

Speaker 1 (02:19:18):
Hard to believe. I like, out, there's a guest at
the White House. I don't even know who it is.
I think it's the Prime Minister of Australia and he's
trying to bring him into it. He's like hard to believe,
isn't it? And the Prime Minister Australia is like, I
don't know if I want to get into this whole
mirror thing.

Speaker 4 (02:19:39):
Donny got that reverse laugh and he's like, let's even
get another one.

Speaker 3 (02:19:44):
I didn't know what to say.

Speaker 1 (02:19:45):
What an idiot? Into the stuff they got? They got
a lot of gold in the Oval office now or
wherever they are here. I don't know if this is
like a different room.

Speaker 3 (02:19:55):
I heard they're, you know, renovating everything.

Speaker 5 (02:19:58):
That's probably part of the price house for the new
thing for the new building is all the gold.

Speaker 1 (02:20:04):
Yeah. Also, what did they say that was going to
be done? They're renovating the White House, doing this ballroom?
This shit.

Speaker 8 (02:20:11):
Nine twenty twenty nine. What the hell, man, that's insane.
Why do things take so long these days? Jesus I
did that does seem a little egregious. But I don't
know if if this is a government red tape kind
of thing that has to happen. I did see that
the ninety thousand square feet was an overall encompassing kind

(02:20:36):
of thing and not just one ballroom. I think it's
a section of the area.

Speaker 5 (02:20:41):
I don't know that we have like a blueprint that's
been released or anything, so I'm not sure what exactly
they're doing.

Speaker 1 (02:20:47):
Two hundred and fifty million dollars. It better be nice, man.
We all better get access to it, right, That's what
I would. Yeah, you know you used to be able
to just walk right into the White House knock on
the back in the day. Yeah, you used to hello.
In the early eighteen hundreds, the way things were set
up was anybody with a complaint could basically just walk
to the White House. How many times did you go,

(02:21:09):
I was not alive and you would just say, you know,
to whoever whomever was in charge of the time, saxpar
here move. If it was let's say it was the
late seventeen hundreds, you'd be like, hey, George Washington, I
got I got a real beef. I got a beef
for you here. I got a real problem. You'd be
able to saunter up in the White House, all right,

(02:21:30):
all right, don't come at us. Don't come at us
with George Washington was never in the White House? Was
it was the White House not built well Wash the
Capitol was probably in Philadelphia, it was yeah, yeah, you know,
you get the idea.

Speaker 4 (02:21:44):
But they all kind of knew each other in the town.
Anything from you know, far away states. You had to
write a letter and put it on a pony.

Speaker 1 (02:21:50):
I thought, was it like Air Force one where the
previous house was just called the White House two or
only this one in Washington, I don't know what the
one in Philadelphia was no reason. You think he used
to just be able to pop in. And the problem
was they stopped allowing that in the eighteen hundreds because
people started getting drunk and just showing up at the
White House, you know, the Capitol. They show up at

(02:22:13):
the Capitol of I want to talk to the president.

Speaker 4 (02:22:15):
You go, oh god, I think we should take down
this ballroom and make a beggar.

Speaker 1 (02:22:21):
He's drunk again. We got to do something about this.
Save the four hundred year old mirror. It's a real catastrophe.

Speaker 3 (02:22:27):
You know, it's four hundred years old.

Speaker 1 (02:22:28):
That's what he said. He's the guy putting the stuff
in the room. He's in the room where it happens.
So I'm gonna yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:22:34):
The vault just has little tags on everything like hard
Rock or Planet Hollywood and just says how old it is,
how much it costs much nice.

Speaker 1 (02:22:44):
I want to go shopping down there. I want some
cool stuff for the studio. Maybe, oh, let's work in one.
Two dispatches. Maybe here's the one that says Courtney was
right yet again, what.

Speaker 20 (02:22:55):
Up news junkies, Hi, Sean, You're talking about the smart devices,
and I got I agree with Courtney. I hate smart
and powered devices for the fact that where I live
power goes out often enough to where we have a
home generator. It's not an automatic one, so I have
to go start the generator. Every time I've had to

(02:23:17):
start the generator, I'm sitting on the couch in the
reclined position. By the way, the couch is electric. We
couldn't get an analog couch. It had to be electric,
and I'm always reclined and I have to go start
the generator. Not only that, all these stupid ass lights
are always screwing up when the power goes out and

(02:23:38):
they're going in full you know, epilectic mode has to
spend hours resetting and rezoning all these lights.

Speaker 1 (02:23:46):
I hate them.

Speaker 18 (02:23:47):
I truly hate where we're at. I want stupid buddy.
I'm first off the couch thing. I have that same problem.

Speaker 5 (02:23:57):
If my power goes out and I'm in the reclimb position,
I have to roll over to the side that's not reclined.
I've done it and then kind of get off of that.

Speaker 1 (02:24:08):
So I get you there. But you know it's twenty
twenty five. Get you one of those switching things, you know.

Speaker 5 (02:24:16):
Get an electrician out there that can automatically start your generator.

Speaker 1 (02:24:20):
Oh yeah, I can't. Don't you have a solar thing
or something.

Speaker 3 (02:24:23):
He's got a generator, he has a generator or what
if you don't have either of those, then it is
a bitch to restart everything.

Speaker 1 (02:24:30):
Yeah, of course we need smarter smart stuff. Then if
it's not going to be smart enough to adapt with.

Speaker 3 (02:24:35):
The issues and the troubleshow Alex loves telling me that
they've got the new Alexa coming out. Don't you want
to try it for free? Don't you want to try
free early access? Everyone can access it. We're going to
charge you.

Speaker 1 (02:24:49):
If it was ten times smarter than current Alexa, I
wouldn't want it. That's still so dumb. It's such a
You guys are Alexa haters.

Speaker 17 (02:24:56):
Man.

Speaker 1 (02:24:57):
I have every.

Speaker 3 (02:24:58):
Alexis everywhere for me.

Speaker 1 (02:24:59):
I have no choice.

Speaker 3 (02:25:00):
I'm not going into Google homes.

Speaker 1 (02:25:02):
Alexa might be fifty IQ. If that not even twenty IQ,
Alexa might be twenty IQ on a good day, chat
GBT up there you can ask it some actually significant
difficult questions you ask Alexa.

Speaker 3 (02:25:15):
And it's like, I go, Alexa, turn off TV and shees, hmm.
There's five devices that have TV in it. I don't
know what one you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (02:25:22):
Stupid, She's stupid.

Speaker 4 (02:25:24):
In sure, did turn off Sabrina's couch lounge. This is
where I want the TV fire, TV M. I don't
understand what you're saying. The weather outside's good, not raining.

Speaker 1 (02:25:36):
It's not smart enough. It doesn't until you get all
figured out. My Alex is fine. No, because you're only
asking stupid questions. Maybe that's what it is. Yeah, I'm
not saying you're stupid. I'm just saying that questions are
not like sophisticated. You heard You're like, uh, what's the
When was Coca Cola invented? Alexa answers questions Coca Cola

(02:25:59):
was in Vanda. Why would I ask Alexa when Coca
Cola was invented? A stupid question. I don't know. I'm
asking questions to Alexa and it has no idea what's
going on. It's like, I'm not smart enough for this.
I might as well ask Jackson. Jackson would nail me
back with an Answer'd be like, I want to be
the right answer. White House used to be in Washington, DC,

(02:26:19):
and then it was in Philadelphia. Dummy backwards, shut up.
You know what I meant, said a lot of things.
Let's take a quick break, let me come back, final dispatches,
stories that didn't make the cut, and today I want
to wrap everything up for eight Tuesday that's coming up
next on the News Junkie. I just want to take

(02:26:52):
a moment. We try to do this every once in
a while, just to be appreciative and thank you for
listening to the show. Thank you for being part of
every thing. If you're somebody who submits dispatches and stuff,
thank you for doing that. Certainly, if you're somebody's coming
out to the Roast event, which is coming up in
just nine short days, friend, just nine days away, and

(02:27:15):
thanks to our sponsors, just callmo dot com and that
mortgage guy Don Awesome. Awesome to have them on board,
and I'm excited for everybody. Everybody's getting costumes ready or
fancy outfits if they're not wearing costumes. We got all
of our people on board. We want to keep some
of this a secret so you have some surprises when
you're sitting there at the venue. And I could just

(02:27:38):
guarantee you that you're going to laugh your ass off.
We're gonna get brutal, and we're gonna have a great,
memorable night. And it's so often a thing that with Halloween, adults,
especially adults with kids without kids, you don't get much
going on. You don't get a lot going on. It's
all for kids stuff on Halloween. This is something for you,
and it's next Coasdad. This is an adults event next Thursday,

(02:28:02):
and it's the Halloween Roast of Yours truly Sean Watson,
and we're going to film this whole thing and then
release it as a special afterwards. Everybody in attendance will
get access to watch the special afterwards, which is going
to be super cool. Let's see what we got here
on the way. We got a little bit of time
right ceiling. Yeah, we're good. Anonymous emails tips at the

(02:28:26):
news Junkie dot Com. Anonymous says, good morning junkies. Hope
you guys are having a great Tuesday. Thank you. Just
want to let you know I received some mailbox money
from the Facebook privacy payout. I got thirty five dollars.
I know it's not a lot of money, but I'm
thankful love listening to you guys, Wiggle Wiggle pop pop.
Thank you for that email I got eight bucks. I

(02:28:47):
don't think that. I don't believe.

Speaker 5 (02:28:51):
I had to email them because I had the wrong information,
so I changed my address on it, but then I
couldn't change the I gave him the wrong Venmo. I
don't even know why that was stupid. Don't be sorry.

Speaker 3 (02:29:05):
The Star is going to do a lot thirty eight bucks.

Speaker 1 (02:29:09):
Anonymous email tips at the news junk dot com. Do
you think possibly they're planning on renting the new ballroom
at the White House as a revenue stream. It wouldn't
surprise me for your wedding there. I don't believe, so roast.
Nothing's impossible and that'll do it for right. Well one more,
Big Mark says, good afternoon, Sean, Sabrina and Celand. I

(02:29:30):
have a friend that was actually in the loop when
the robbery happened. Whoa he said. The robbers threatened the
security guards with purple nurples and Indian burns. Big Mark,
I don't know. Well, just got a little exciting. I
think that might have been nonsense, but there you go.
Let's get the stories that didn't make cut. A Delta

(02:29:51):
flight attendant be rated as Southwest Airlines gate agent. You
could see this video going viral today. It was during
a heated exchange at the Atlanta air and they said,
this is ridiculous. This is the worst airport. You make
Southwest look horrible. Your customer service is ridiculous. They were
fighting with each other, the competing airline agents. A teacher

(02:30:13):
called the cops after one of her students told her hello,
Kitty Funko Pop from the classroom. Some people were upset
that you followed the police report, but she said, today
it's my Funko Pop. Tomorrow it's my laptop. I can't
let the kids steal this stuff. Very true, very very true.
And Biden quote rang the bell after completing his radiation

(02:30:33):
therapy for prostate cancer that they've been treating. He says,
rung the bell. Thank you to the incredible doctors, nurses
and staff at Penn Medicine. We are so grateful and
obviously Biden fighting cancer there and that news just coming out.
Well about the treatment part. Let's get the hell out
of here. Let's do today. I learned the.

Speaker 16 (02:30:49):
Following information may make you feel smarter, but will not
actually increase your IQ, so don't get cocky.

Speaker 1 (02:30:56):
Now it's done. What we call today it is today
learn f eight Tuesday, October twenty first, twenty twenty five.
Today learned this television program that's right, Wheel of Fortune.

(02:31:17):
When Wheel of Fortune first aired in September of nineteen
seventy three, the contestants would go up and try to
earn the money for prizes, and instead of showing them
the prizes that were available, they said, what prize do
you want? And then they saw if they could get
enough money to get the prize, and they said they
wanted this. Seems like that's right kind of lazy, honestly,
if I'm.

Speaker 5 (02:31:38):
Is still loving watching more AI videos of Bob Barker
giving away stuff to people that they just can't use.

Speaker 1 (02:31:48):
Today learned. With a population of thirty three thousand, six hundred,
San Marino is the smallest country by population to have
won an Olympic medal. Only five athletes for San Marino
were sent at the twenty twenty Olympics and three of
them won medals. Out that and finally, today learned this
band right here Jet is correct. The band Jet, their

(02:32:09):
second album was rated a zero point zero double buck
shot out of ten by Pitchfork magazine and lou of
writing a review. They just posted a YouTube video of
a monkey urinating into his own mouth on their website,
which honestly a little bit brittle, got a little painful. Yeah,
not sending that all right, Maybe I'll send it. Well.

(02:32:31):
We'll be back tomorrow, same time, same place. Thanks for
ragging out with. If you're mistening to the show, get
the podcast link over at the news junkie dot com.
We'll see you tomorrow. Everybody I said, are you gonna

(02:32:59):
be my girl?
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