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November 5, 2025 • 151 mins
The worst moment ever on the show, a basketball game gone wrong, the UPS plane crash details, interesting election exit polls, touching the Mexican president, the new viral cheesy TV show, New York vs Florida, the Vampire Wife verdict, murder hornets attack a man and his son and so much more!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
How is everybody doing on a Wednesday? Nice decent? Okay,
we got to get to him. There's a lot of
stuff to talk about today, obviously, everybody. This morning, the
whole inbox was full of people sending different angles of
that ups plane crash from yesterday afternoon. It was Have

(00:24):
you seen the one? We'll show it later, obviously, but
have you seen the one of the guy in his
delivery truck. No? Oh my god, dude's like in his
delivery truck and it's like a massive missile has landed
behind him or something. God, it was freaky. So we'll
talk about what went down there, all of that good stuff,
election stuff, all the rest. Will have fun today. Of course,

(00:44):
on a Wednesdays, we sift through all things viral on
planet Earth. Speaking of that, let's put our ears to
the ground, our fingers on the pulse, let's see what's
happening in this great, big, wide world of ours, and
we go to the world of basketball. Everybody, that's right,
Lobe trotters, you know, basketballers, shooters and hoopers unites, Because boy,

(01:08):
do I have a story for you. And when it
comes to sports, not only do I love basketball, not
only do I love women's basketball. But women's college basketball
is something I never watch, so I didn't see this,
but it seems like a blast. All right, we have

(01:28):
two teams playing here. One is CSU Northridge, I am
not familiar. Bethesda University is playing them. And here's the thing. Okay,
Bethesda had a bit of an issue, the Bethesda women's
basketball team. They all had the flu, or at least

(01:49):
that's their excuse for why you're seeing seventy two to
zero on.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
I mean, at some point I know that it's not
involved in college drools.

Speaker 1 (02:00):
Throwing the towel. It's like, come on, coach, please, So.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
Who was in I mean, they had enough players or
they only had two players.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
I don't know exactly how many players they had, but
they the story says, And you guys could look up
Bethesda basketball and probably find some more details, but the
story suggested that they had the flu and they were
battling some things and it was so bad that it
was seventy two to zero in the third. All right,
CSU Northridge is beating Bethesda seventy two to zero, and

(02:30):
when they finally scored a point.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
Here outdoor's largest victory in program history.

Speaker 4 (02:36):
Oh my, goodness, you sent victory in. Yanne Moreo gets the.

Speaker 2 (02:40):
Three pointer program of this entire crowd in the Premier
American Credit Union Arena is clapping for them.

Speaker 1 (02:48):
Finalbody excited. They find it seems like the crowd had
the flu too.

Speaker 4 (02:52):
H Graham.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
Seventy two to three at this point.

Speaker 4 (02:58):
Oh my god, so bad.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
So five players the uh you know, played because of
the flu and the ending score.

Speaker 4 (03:08):
I don't know if you've mentioned this, are you ready
to mention it?

Speaker 5 (03:11):
You know?

Speaker 1 (03:11):
If all I have is where they were with four
minutes left in the third quarter this women's basketball game
that was pretty one sided with seventy two to three.
So where did they end one.

Speaker 4 (03:20):
O three to thirteen?

Speaker 1 (03:22):
Oh god, ah mighty that stuff. It's it's got to
be hard to have the flu and play basketball. Yeah,
it's like you're you're just dragging.

Speaker 2 (03:34):
I mean, the flu makes your body hurt and your sweating,
and you don't know where you are for two days.

Speaker 1 (03:40):
Your mind is not there. That's one of the biggest
problems with the flu. Your mind is like probably fifty
percent brain power and then you're just throwing the ball up.
And I love that they finally got one in there though,
and congratulations. What was that final score again? One twelve, Yeah,
one o three to thirteen. A little of a blowout

(04:00):
in the world of women's basketball. Don't get the flu.
Everybody be careful. You hear anybody making any noise out
there on the streets, You duck, you move, you get away.
I'm doing it all the time now I'm out in public,
I hear.

Speaker 6 (04:14):
I wonder how many games they have in their season,
because you know, like when when Opening Day of baseball
happens and your team loses, everybody's like, well, you know.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
There's just one hundred and fifty six more of these.

Speaker 6 (04:27):
Yeah, opening Day for for Bethesda.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
You know, maybe we just want to sift that one.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
So many games typically includes around thirty one or thirty
two games, followed by the conference and postseason tournaments, so
we can.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
Forget about this at some point. Well, you know that's all.
That's as many turnovers as they have. That's like, I'm
sure there was some garbage ass show that was done.
I did in January, and when I finished it, I
was like, terrible, terrible.

Speaker 2 (04:58):
But the next game they have to win, because every
time you google it, you're going to.

Speaker 1 (05:06):
See that you're going to need to do something else
crazy to get some attention. Yeah, it might be green
dil doos round two, or you're gonna have to really
shock everybody. I don't know.

Speaker 6 (05:19):
Looking at that crowd, they were like, the whole crowd
is clapping. I'm like, yeah, you get a green dildo
on the court on that same you know exactly who
threw it.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
Speaking of green dil dos, love your shirt today looks fantastic. Yeah, beautifulness,
just beautiful. I have questions. I have questions, and one
that is lingering about the elections last night is this
somebody explained this to me because I know it's not right. Okay,
I know it's not right, but I'm a dummy, so

(05:53):
I need this explained to me. Here we go. On
the prediction markets before the election was all counted and
the polls were closed, you could vote or like invest,
bet on Jorn Mom Donnie to win or lose. Right,
And if you bet for Mom Donnie, the guy who

(06:14):
ended up winning the mayor slot in New York City
as anticipated, if you bet ten thousand dollars on him
to lose, you would win one hundred and seventeen thousand
dollars right, because it obviously was very much favorite to win.
So if you would have bet on Mom Donnie to
lose yesterday and bet ten thousand dollars, you would have

(06:35):
possibly one one hundred and seventeen thousand dollars. Now, stay
with me, right, you would have put ten thousand on lose,
could have won one hundred and seventeen thousand. If you
put a hundred thousand on win, you would have won
one hundred and eleven thousand dollars. That's free money, is it? Not? Right?
Because if you lose, if he loses, you get one

(06:57):
hundred and seventeen thousand, right, and if he wins, you
get one hundred and eleven thousand dollars either way.

Speaker 4 (07:05):
Are these screenshots shown?

Speaker 1 (07:07):
No? No, no, this is somebody posted this on Twitter
that I'm looking at here. No, do you think I
bet on this? Nod, I'm not betting on politics. I'm
not betting on politics now orever. But if you would
have bet for him to lose or win, the same
amount of money was in play and you would have won.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
Uh yeah, okay, I have to bow out and be
an observer for.

Speaker 1 (07:29):
This ten thousand dollars Sea Lane on a no vote
would bring you one hundred and seventeen thousand dollars. I
think that's the money you could have won. Yeh yes, yes, right,
he didn't win, yes, right, so you could have won
one hundred and seventeen thousand if he didn't win, or
you could have won one hundred and eleven thousand off
of one hundred thousand dollars if he did win. You

(07:50):
could have vote. Bet on both sides of that and
one do you understand them? Mat there?

Speaker 5 (07:54):
Now?

Speaker 4 (07:54):
I kind of want to bet on politics.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
If he doesn't understand it, comes like that, okay?

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Or what? All right? Explain it to me like I'm five, Okay,
let's see. I know what you're gonna say. You have
one hundred thousand dollars, Christopher. Okay, If you put the
one hundred thousand dollars yes on mom Donnie to win
the election, one hundred thousand dollars in, you will win
one hundred and eleven thousand dollars. All right. If you

(08:21):
put another ten thousand dollars for him to lose and
that wins, you will win one hundred and seventeen thousand dollars.
If you bet on that lost, no but if you
bet on both, that's one hundred and ten thousand dollars
and both of them pay out more than one hundred
and ten thousand dollars. Do you follow what I'm saying it?
Or is this still? Yeah? I guess okay, all right,

(08:42):
I'm gonna try that. I get it now. I'm explaining
it like you're three. I get it now. You bet
on both of them. Boy named Chris has one hundred
and ten dollars, you bet four and against. I'm a
free money. I'm a free free money. I'm take any cents.
How does that because you have to bet on both?
I get it, you know, I forget it. Forget it.

(09:05):
I thought you were saying.

Speaker 6 (09:06):
I thought you were saying, no matter which one you
bet on, you would get No, you would get money,
but not that you had had to bet on both.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
If you bet on both, you automatically, you automatically win
because you would risk one hundred and ten thousand dollars
bet some money last night. Then that's what's the seconoint.
It can't be right though, it can't be right. It
must be that there's like there's too many like is
there so many fees that would make it, so you lost,
because otherwise, why wouldn't everybody with one hundred and ten

(09:34):
thousand dollars bet on yes and no and then no
matter what the outcome is, you still win.

Speaker 4 (09:39):
Here's a deal.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
You're still in the positive statistically.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
We have someone who has a gambling addiction that listens
to the show. So please send a dispatch and explain
this to everyone.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I could say, I'll post this up
on See It Now, all right, and you got to
help me make sense of this.

Speaker 4 (09:58):
Oh it's like we're five. Please.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
Uh, I'm getting a screenshot of this and I'm going
to post it up on See It Now, and I
need a gambling professional of some sort to tell me, Hey,
here's why this actually doesn't work, because otherwise you could
just bet yes and no on stuff, and if you're rich,
you just make money. But maybe that's the secret to life, right, Uh,

(10:21):
the secret to life is hold on? How does this work?
The secret, delfe is, once you're rich, you could just
bet on things and then whether they win or lose,
you still win. The rich people win. It's just as
easy as that, I guess. All right, it's up on
on See It Now over on the news Junkie dot Com. Sorry,
it took Sea Lanes so long to understand that is
just very very I had to just swop you and

(10:43):
still doesn't understand it. Understand it? Tell me how I
don't understand it? Five times to explain it to you?
If you understand it, Yeah, you need to explain it.

Speaker 2 (10:54):
You were asking questions. Both of you shut up for
a moment, please, Okay, go ahead.

Speaker 1 (10:59):
I am saying saying that I understand that if you
were to bet on win and lose and spend this
amount of money, no matter what, whether win or lose,
you would still come out positive. I don't understand how
that makes any sense.

Speaker 6 (11:15):
It's because two different betting sites are offering two different odds.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
Okay, this is worse. This is worse. This is worse
than the doomsday clock. This is worse than the the
What we're going to do instead is focus on something
else here. Right last night, there was an election. A
lot of people voted in New York heard they even
bet on it. Some of them did. Some of them did,
And they asked the folks afterwards, like what was going on,

(11:43):
how you're feeling about stuff? Why did you vote the
way that you voted. NBC News did what's called an
exit poll. I think most people know what an exit
poll is. I'll probably explain it to ce Lane here,
maybe successfully, maybe not. But an exit poll is when
you're exiting the polls and they asked questions and they say, like,
what was it that you were voting for? What was
motivating you? How important was this? How important was this?

(12:07):
And here's what NBC says of people's vibes yesterday. In
these elections across a handful of states. In the first
major election of President Donald Trump's second term, voters in Virginia,
New Jersey, California, and New York City are expressing dissatisfaction
with Trump and with both political parties. According to early
results from NBC News, most voters are dissatisfied with the

(12:30):
way things are going in the country today, and they
express concern over this simple stuff. Imagine that, folks, the
simple stuff financial issues and the economy almost always top
of the list, because people care about their lives and
their moneys. The governor's races in New Jersey and Virginia,
as well as a closely watched mayor election in New
York City, and the redistricting ballot measure in California highlight

(12:53):
the first big election of Trump's second term. And so
they said, you know, how are you feeling about how
Trump is doing across these states? Not great forty three
percent prove in Jersey, forty one in Virginia, no surprise,
twenty nine in New York City, thirty six in California.
And interesting tidbit is how did the voters see According

(13:14):
to NBC News, the Democratic and Republican parties beyond views
of the president. Neither Republican nor Democratic Party is seen
in particularly positive terms among voters this year in Virginia,
New Jersey, in California, more voters expressed unfavorable than favorable
views of the Democratic Party. Views of the Republican Party

(13:34):
are not quite as negative, but still not seen in
favorable terms by a majority in any state surveyed. Nobody
likes these people. Nobody likes them across the country. Voters
picking new governors in Jersey and Virginia also express concerned
about way things are going in the country, and sixty
five percent in Jersey said they were angry or dissatisfied

(13:56):
with the direction of the country. Virginia sixty three percent
saying that it boiled down to the economy on a
lot of stuff, and people talking about the government shut
down and who they blame and all of those different things.
If you were watching some of the coverage, which is
probably only a tiny percent of you last night, let
us know what you thought of it. Send in your
dispatches over at thenewsjunkie dot com or email tips T. I. P.

(14:21):
S At the Newsjunkie dot com. We go over to
a couple of those emails very quickly. Tom emails tips
at the news Junkie dot com about rehooterization, which for
those of you who don't know, was something was discussed
on the show yesterday. Apparently the original original og owners
of Hooters have repurchased the restaurant as some of the chains,

(14:44):
and they said they wanted to make it more modest,
although modest to them was just getting rid of the
new like black Hooters outfits with the sort of ass
wedgie thing going on, which didn't.

Speaker 4 (14:55):
See for it to come back to boobs, it seems.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
Going back to the or shapes and.

Speaker 2 (15:02):
So no, it's not crazy, but there was, you know,
the but had a phase for a second there, so
this kind of makes sense.

Speaker 1 (15:10):
I don't know if it's a wider movement against the
ass and back towards the Hooters or or what this means,
but that's what Tom is emailing about. Just so you know, hey, junkies,
I live in the villages and they just opened up
brand new Hooters out here about three months ago. Yeah. Wow,
I reported on that a few times. That's true. My
wife and I were talking about this with the bartender

(15:31):
and we asked how it was going at his location.
She said that this location is constantly busy and doing well.
They explained how there were rogue franchisees that changed the
uniforms and even changed the menu at some Hooters. You
would not even recognize that you were in a Hooters anymore.
She explained how the original owners were going to take

(15:51):
full control of the remaining locations and change them back
to the original menu, et cetera. This reminds me of
the Alehouse in Cocoa Beach. They used the exact font
as Miller's Alehouse. Isn't that the weird thing? Aren't They
like ale houses everywhere and Miller's ale Houses everywhere, like
none of them are.

Speaker 4 (16:06):
Necessarily Yeah, And then as I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
It's not though, isn't it? Isn't it not?

Speaker 6 (16:14):
Like I think maybe you could make the argument that
you can't. It's like the term ale house is too generic.

Speaker 4 (16:21):
But Mills is the franchise.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
Miller's Alehouse is the company, right, Okay, Okay, they said
they use the same exact font as Miller's aale House,
So that's what we thought it was. We knew that
we made a mistake when the bartender told us they
don't have zingers, no singers.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
Okay, well, then burn the place of the ground, because that's.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
The whole point.

Speaker 6 (16:41):
Who would want to work at a place like that
that is pretending to be something else and doesn't have
any of the trademark things. Who want to work somewhere
the where they constantly have to tell people, no, we
don't have zingers, No, we don't have zingers.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
Don't you feel like they would have something very very like,
we don't have zingers, but our blingers are us fantastic,
You're gonna love them. It's like we don't have the
bluemin onion, but we have the blue Man.

Speaker 6 (17:07):
Now there was another place that had an onion that
had to have a different name. Ahoy, other textings are
awesome blossom, awesome blossom blossom.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
Yeah, but if you don't have you know, if you
don't have singers, you better give it a real close name.

Speaker 6 (17:21):
So people know what's going on, like like somebody has
a Bang Bang shrimp and the others like we've got
dynamite shrimp exactly.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
Yeah. She tried to explain how they want a lawsuit
to use the font, and it pissed off patrons when
they realized they'd been dupe. Same thing. What's happening with Hooters?
Love you guys, says Tom. Thank you. Tom. Fill Up
emails tips at the News Junkie dot Com about a
show on HBO Max. He says, my wife and I
have been watching this show through its first two seasons.
Season three was just released and in the opening minutes

(17:50):
of the show, we saw Amy Kawfell and Brooks Garner
right away. If you haven't watched this series, it's amazing,
says Space Coast native. I don't know mentioned the show
Space Coast native HBO Max show, you guys have been watching?
What is the show he's talking about? Season three? Has
got our friend Amy Kaufeld that.

Speaker 4 (18:10):
Was obviously a documentary series short.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
Yeah, like about a news story or I think I
saw I think I saw Amy and one.

Speaker 4 (18:18):
Of these Anthony.

Speaker 6 (18:21):
The Casey Anthony docu series that's not a but that's
not on a season three right now, somebody's gonna know it.
And if we had three seasons of Casey Anthony series.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
We're out of content. And I think somebody had maybe
messaged me about this previously and said it was some
sort of weather thing, like uh, somebody says eye of
the storm. That might be a crazy drunk cat lady,
because uh.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
Brooks was in that tornado. That was the holding that
went viral earlier this year. All of them were, but
Brooks is the one who went viral for it.

Speaker 4 (18:59):
Even want to go interview like.

Speaker 6 (19:01):
Last yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, they were talking about it
on the show.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Yeah, I think that's what it must have been, because
you have to say it's the eye of the storm
where they had the March twenty twenty five tornado. So yeah, yeah,
that seems like that's what it was. Fred Amy and
that one. All right, we're gonna take a quick break,
very busy show today, as busy as can be. We
are busy bees, and we'll get into a lot including
this UPS plane crash. Last four emails in my inbox

(19:26):
all about this plane crash yesterday. People wondering what the
hell happened and you know, how could a crash like
this occur? And what happened in the neighborhood where this
went down? If you haven't heard about this, it's crazy
and a good time now to pop on the stream
on the video side if you'd like, we'll put it
up on see it now of course too for those

(19:47):
of you listening, but YouTube and twitch dot tv, slash
thenews Junkie, YouTube dot com, Slash the news Jumping Junkie.
Not the news jumpy that's different. Just a guy jumping
the news junkie on YouTube. You can check us out
during the show today. So we'll get to the UPS
plane crash next, and this controversy over Tom Brady cloning
his dog. What the hell is going on?

Speaker 7 (20:07):
It's coming up next in the news Junkie.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
I want to talk right now if you don't mind
about the thing that's number one in the inbox today,
and that is this UPS plane crash in Louisville, Kentucky.
And it is just, I mean, it looks fake, gnarl.
It's insane. I was saying Sela and that it looked
like Michael Bay was on the set of a film
and they decided to recreate a plane crash, and then

(20:49):
everybody watching it was like, no, this is overkill. Nobody's
gonna believe that a plane crash looks like this.

Speaker 2 (20:55):
Yeah, they like their budget was insane because of how explosive.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
This was, but it really happens. It's real. One thing
that I should kind of lay down here before we
get into some of this, and you could watch the
show over on YouTube dot com slash the News Junkie
or search for the News Junkie on YouTube. Also, I'll
be putting the footage that we watch here as always
up on see it now the section of the website

(21:19):
for folks to see the visuals that we talk about
on this here show. But you need to know one thing.
When you hear a plane crashing like this, it is
a very large plane. You can picture like a plane
that you might fly on going from one destination to another.
But there's sort of another world up in the air

(21:40):
where it's these cargo flights. It's you know, ups fed
X and those.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
Youngest one make big money, but it's all hours of
the night and everything you can see behind you empty
except no passengers.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
Yeah. Yeah, it's just like loaded up with I guess
your your off that you've ordered on Amazon, you know,
deliveries that are headed across the country, and that's what's
in these planes. And right off the jump at this
airport in Louisville, Kentucky, they knew there was some sort
of accident, something went wrong this plane sea lane. See

(22:15):
if you could find the detail on the speed and altitude,
if you search X you'll find that. But I don't
believe it ever got over like two hundred feet or something,
which wow off that Yeah, like it it may maybe
it was. I don't even think it was two thousand.
I don't even think it was two thousand. I think
it was literally that low. It's like it never really

(22:35):
got very airborne, and then it just crashed into this
residential neighborhood. But here was the earliest piece of this
damn doing so much aircraft from the departure, all right,
accident on departure, he said, There was an accident on departure,

(22:58):
says air air Traffic. And when they say departure, they
mean like not far from the end of the runway.
In this case, this thing did not really get that
high up there.

Speaker 6 (23:09):
No, it reached a maximum altitude of one hundred and
seventy five feet above ground level.

Speaker 1 (23:14):
Oh wow, that's got nothing.

Speaker 6 (23:16):
The highest recorded ground speed was only about two hundred
and fourteen miles an hour.

Speaker 1 (23:21):
And yeah, what causes you to crash in that situation?
Something flying into the.

Speaker 4 (23:27):
Engine of the mechanical right.

Speaker 6 (23:29):
One of the videos that I saw when it was
first breaking, and like literally I hadn't even gotten any
notifications from any of my news apps yet, I was
just seeing it on like Twitter and threads and stuff
showed the plane looking like it was attempting to climb
as it was taken off, and one of the engines

(23:50):
was already on fire. So my standard videos show the
aircraft taking off with its number one left engine engulfed
in flames. That's the video that I saw that got
cursed lot in it, But I'm sure there's a a
centered version somewhere. The aircraft made a sharp descent to
the left seconds after becoming airborne, impacting the roof of
the ups Supply Chain warehouse.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
So it hit it's a building. They crashed and exploded
a plane and they crashed into the ups building.

Speaker 6 (24:20):
Supply chain warehouse, rolled on its longitudinal access and impacted
right wing facing up landing your extended before plowing through
a semi truck parking area.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
Yeah, if you'd like to say that, let's pause for
a second. Semi truck parking area. Look at this, dude.
All right, I'll put this up on sea it now
for everybody, because it is incredible. This guy is in
the seat, the front seat, driver's seat of his semi
truck and he has, you know, no idea. He's kind
of just doing some starter paperwork. Brace yourself for this.

(24:51):
He's cruising right. It's just sitting there in the parking lot.
Oh my god, Oh.

Speaker 4 (25:03):
My god. I'm not saying this. I mean that's insane.
That looks like movie.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
It looks like AI or something. This guy is sitting again.
I'll put this up on ce announcement. You can get
a look at it here whenever you have a chance.
But he's just sitting in the driver's seat of his
semi Is that what we're sitting up top is what
he's looking at? Right? Because correct, Yeah, when you're when
you're in a semi truck, for safety, and insurance purposes

(25:33):
and stuff. They have one camera showing him behind the wheel,
and then the other cameras pointed the other way, so
out the front of the cab of his semi he
just looks up and notices a massive plane crashing and
reacts to it. That's how does it have? How much fire?

Speaker 8 (25:51):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (26:00):
And you could I can imagine he's what maybe two
hundred yards away, So he's so we got to be
healing that, right, you gotta be feeling that immediately we saw.

Speaker 4 (26:09):
That RV fire.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
We were certainly very far away. I would say maybe
almost the same distance, if not. That driver is farther,
and we felt the heat from it. So with that,
he absolutely does.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
Yeah, Oh that's now it's lable.

Speaker 6 (26:23):
It says in the Wikipedia page, which I'm sure is
constantly changing, that there were no where did I leave off?
It was not carrying hazardous cargo, which I think is
a little weird to say because all planes carry fuel
and this one was headed to Hawaii, so it was carrying.

Speaker 1 (26:44):
A lot of fuel. Yeah, and it was. It was
just just taking off for Hawaii. So it's straight up
full of all that.

Speaker 2 (26:50):
What they're saying is like it didn't have barrels of
chemicals that upon being yeah, lit up, we have to
evacuate within a five mile radius.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
So right now, Jeffrey is over in Chat and Jeffrey
said his daughter was in the evacuation area around where
this UPS plane crashed, and I had seen it. Was
it shortly after the crash they said, don't go outside,
turn your air conditioners off. Okay, because the air they
were worried about, like maybe that's just from the jet fuel,

(27:18):
you know what I mean. But they were worried about
people getting just poisoned.

Speaker 6 (27:22):
Because I knew there was a sheltering place. I hadn't
heard the air conditioned thing. Which at some point I'm like,
where's this Dallas, Houston, Dallas, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (27:34):
No in Kentucky. Oh, Kentucky. Yeah yeah, this happened in Louisville, Kentucky.
Oh yeah yeah, Kentucky UPS crash. All right, I'm putting
this up on see it now because you absolutely have
to take a moment of your time today and take
a look at this particular video. I've got more for
you over on YouTube dot com slash than news Junkie.
But that's real, I mean, that's absolutely real. The guy

(27:55):
that's the most real reaction you could ever have. He's
going from chilling not to get my drive on on.
Here we go to what is that? What is that? Oh? Wow?

Speaker 4 (28:08):
That fireball?

Speaker 1 (28:10):
Fireballs are crazy nuts. I think I think maybe it's
like an attack.

Speaker 6 (28:18):
I mean it looks like a movie because I think
maybe my screen was a little blurry the first time
you played it. But I just saw like the plane's
wing pointing up in the air, headed sideways, you know
what I'm saying, Like, yeah, that is uh remember Air
Force one?

Speaker 1 (28:36):
Yes, the movie. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (28:37):
I recently watched a YouTube video where somebody like was
dogging on the graphics for that because they were so old,
and it was like, we could really redo these plane
graphics so it would look more realistic.

Speaker 1 (28:49):
And it's like that's what he came up with, somebody
said the trailer, So I take it no survid check
it out on see it now. That's insane. Yeah, I
mean it is absolutely from another world. And that's not
the only view of this. There was so many more.
Here's a I mean, just just the screenshot from this

(29:12):
give it a second. Here you can see the plane
flying in at this unbelievable angle where obviously something has
gone wrong. Right here, it says Worldwide Services. This is
the UPS plane coming in about as hot as it can.
Brace yourself, Ricko.

Speaker 4 (29:32):
That this is so unreal. That's so crazy, Logan.

Speaker 1 (29:37):
That's the sound of a full of fuel plane hitting
the ground and just ain't nothing left. And unfortunately your
packages are going to be late. If you were waiting
on this particular flight. That ain't good. But that's how
it went down. I think I got maybe one more.
I'm not sure. No, I will say I got something

(29:57):
for later on this too. But it was just a
very shocking moment. At least seven people are dead, the
people on board, of course, the crew is no way
that we're gonna survive this. And then the area where
they hit, which was like commercial slash residential on the ground,
fireballs everywhere. This happened well, taking off from the UPS
distribution hub in Louisville, Kentucky, leaving a trail of flames

(30:21):
near the runway. This airport is the Muhammad Ali International Airport,
with three hundred or so daily flights like this. For
the people who were killed out of the seven were
on the ground, and they say three hundred or so
daily flights like this are we talking ups flights or
just in and out of the whole airport in general.

(30:42):
I don't know. Look up Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport.
It just says the facility there, So I think it's
that facility. I think it's ups World Port specifically, I
think may have that many flights flying all around. And
as Seeland said earlier, this particular one was about the
head to Honolulu, which is probably meaning it was completely
topped off. Yeah, something to behold there. You go, let

(31:04):
us know what you think. Go over to the website
and send a dispatch or an email tips at thenewsjunkie
dot com. Some people responding to this, and I'll take
I'll take some of these emails and some of these dispatches.
We'll get to those. Next. We've got to talk about
Tom Brady and the clone dog thing. It's weird. It's weird.
We just need to mention this. We need to go
into it, talk a little bit more about the election

(31:26):
results last night and somebody who was killed in an
incredibly bizarre way. That's all in just the next little
bit here on the show, and it's coming up next
in the news junk Ye it's the worst moment in

(31:54):
the history of the show. What happened with trying to
explain the election bet thing and having people just completely
question marks, question nobody but this and this. I was like,
you asked for people to explain it to you. No, no, no, no,
But people who don't they they're not understanding, They're not understanding.
I can't get the point across in radio form, in

(32:15):
broadcasting form, So I just I have to give it up.
I think there's somebody who said over like a whole
spreadsheet on this, and they were explaining what I'm talking about.
And in a nutshell, if you add one hundred and
ten thousand dollars and had bet last night one hundred
thousand dollars on Mom Donnie winning, you would have won

(32:37):
over one hundred and ten thousand dollars. And if you
bet ten thousand dollars on Mom Donnie losing, you would
have won over one hundred and ten thousand dollars. So,
no matter what would have happened in the outcome, with
your one hundred and ten thousand dollars spent, your income
back in would have been over one hundred and ten
thousand dollars, meaning you would have profited. So it's kind
of like free money, right, but this is impossible to

(32:58):
get across. It's feel like I'm okay, okay.

Speaker 6 (33:03):
What was not immediately clear was that you were betting
on two different sites offering different odds.

Speaker 1 (33:11):
Uh or were those are? Those were both from Calshi,
one with Calshi and one was polymarket. Okay, it said
that in the tweet that you showed. Uh, well, it
doesn't matter. It's still the same thing. It's just two
different sights. So you're placing the bet on. Yeah, but
it's great. Don't weigh in. You have no idea what's
going on, zero clue.

Speaker 6 (33:27):
It makes less sense when you when you think of
it as just one site, like why would one site
give you money no matter what?

Speaker 1 (33:34):
That's what That's what it sounded like at the top
of the show. Well, either way, if you're betting out
the money and you could win on both sides, that
that's not a thing that comes up, like let's say
an NFL football right, there's no way that you can go, Hey,
if I do this and do this, then I win
free money no matter what. The outcome of this is.

Speaker 6 (33:51):
No, not typically, but that's just I don't know how
these uh side bet sites, these these like betting markets
or whatever they're calling them to not be gambling. How
they're making their odds, And I think it has to
do with how many people are gambling on them. It's
not like when you just go to Vegas and they

(34:11):
give you here's your odds.

Speaker 1 (34:14):
Yeah, but there's not a person coming up with that, right,
is like an algorithm. It's got to be an algorithm.
I would, I would, I would hope, I would think
snoop frog on chat. You don't get it, You're not
you're not understanding gas CNJ Forge. Yeah, I think you
you get it. But we're gonna leave it right there.
I'm gonna leave it right There's a math on the radio.
Too hard doesn't work. People just falling off in droves.

(34:34):
I don't want to do that to you. We'll get
to you in your dispatches here momentarily. Also emails coming
in tips at thenewsjunkie dot com. Thank you for all
the feedback. Yours could be next if you want to
be anonymous, put that up on top of the email.
Let's see what we had here. A couple of things
we'll get into last night a little bit more in
just a moment I did want to share, and we're

(34:57):
gonna have to wait for that. There is a moment
at this going viral today that I wanted to work
in very quickly because this is like, this is a
second or third of these incidents I've seen like this.
The president of Mexico, Claudia Shinebaum was her name is
her name. She was out on the streets, you know,

(35:18):
doing the whole thing, glad handed people, meeting folks, and
some dude that got right up next to her started
grabbing on her and like trying to kiss her. And
and this is not like some one off thing. I've
seen all these events that should definitely have really really
good security recently where there's seemingly no security. These people

(35:42):
are international leaders and stuff. When the story came up
about Trump's plane, Air Force one at Palm Beach International
Airport and they're being a like random hunting stand in
the woods within shot of this, the craziest thing to
me was nobody discovered this For a couple of months.
There was just like a hunting stand in a tree

(36:03):
within shot of the President's plane, and we're like, the
security apparatus is nowhere near as good as we often
think it is. We watch the movies and think things
are secure, but in real life they're not. They're just not.
And this president of Mexico, this woman wandered through the
crowd here she is just so you guys know, all right,

(36:25):
guy puts his arm around here so already, like the
security should not let people go up to a president
and put their arm around the president. This guy is
not her buddy, her pal or whatever. He just goes
up next to our streets and he slides in, puts
his arm around her. Now he's sitting her. Oh my god.

(36:47):
And then finally they grab him. He's got his hand
around her.

Speaker 9 (36:49):
He can't do it.

Speaker 4 (36:54):
That's horrible security.

Speaker 1 (36:56):
And the guy does come The security guy does come
up to him eventually kind of put him in his place.
But this guy was so close, my god, just put
his armor on her and starts and then he puts
his hands like up over her breast, on her, on
her outsound like this is a president of a country. Dude.

Speaker 2 (37:16):
Have you ever seen the compilation of Messi, the you know,
best soccer player in the world, his security guard.

Speaker 4 (37:22):
No, no, the moment, it's fascinating.

Speaker 2 (37:25):
The man should be playing professional sports, because if a
fan runs on to the field, they could be five
years old or thirty five years old. His security guard
is there immediately and trucks them. No one is touching
that man the same Beyonce's I'm like totally blanking on
his name, but has been her security guard for years,

(37:46):
and it's like you even look, wow, trust me, I
will get the lashings after the show. But here it
comes to a president and that's their security detail.

Speaker 4 (37:58):
There's my shoe here.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
The dude like got his arm around her and then
like and kissed her on the neck and was like
he has his face right by like kind of sniffing
her hair.

Speaker 6 (38:08):
I don't think I could poke Donald Trump on the
shoulder like like just without like a stern talking.

Speaker 1 (38:14):
To it at least. But look, we've had moments on
this show where we talked about remember when he went
to the restaurant in Washington, d C. And the protesters
were like right across the table from him. Yeah, they
didn't do anything, but it showed you that there's like
a security issue with so many of these people.

Speaker 6 (38:28):
I feel like with protesters, they want something to be
done to them sometimes. Yeah, so it's like what you mean,
Like it's like a really fine line, Like all right,
they got want to be tackled. They got into the restaurant,
and you know if if the security tries to shoot
them out, they're like, whoa, whoa, my First Amendment here,

(38:49):
or you know, they get close enough and if security
like you know, pushes a whoa, whoa, you're touching me here?
You know, like other than this is just like passers
by fans almost this. I mean, this guy looks like
he's a fan on a.

Speaker 1 (39:04):
Cav Dude, some rando guy goes up. She's the president
of Mexico for God's time.

Speaker 4 (39:10):
Mind you, if he didn't do that but instead shanked
her in the neck, then it's over.

Speaker 5 (39:14):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (39:14):
Yes, And this is Mexico, right, I mean Mexico, great country,
Mexico City, beautiful city, all this stuff, but Mexico dangerous
country with cartel violence, political leaders. There was just an
assassination of a political leader in Mexico. Well it's like
a week. Within a week, there was just a political
leader that was assassinated. And this guy could have done

(39:36):
god knows what. Yeah, but Kevin saying, you would think
with all the assassinations in Mexico. The security would be
tight unless you know something we don't know. She seems
to be comfortable out here on the streets, so that's crazy.
I'll put it up. I'll put this video up as
always over on See it now, Like, do you think
she's protected? I don't know. I'm just I think she's
being too risky. No matter what, that's really really dangerous.

(39:59):
She might not feel a pressure within the Mexican public
right now, but all it takes is one lunatic and
one creeper in this case, I guess. So we'll put
that up. You can take a look at it. Turn
the break on see It now. We come back, we'll
talk about Tom Brady cloning his dog, which is just weird.
We have to get that out there. More updates from
last night's election at some point on the show today.

(40:21):
The next episode is rolling through before too long, a
lot on the way, and it's coming up next in
the news chunk key. I'm just saying it definitively. You

(40:45):
guys can do whatever you want with it. I don't
care really, but cloning your dog is weird. Cloning your
dog is weird. You shouldn't clone your dog. It reinforces
a really stupid idea. Tom Brady is just doing it
to promote his dumb business that he's an investor in,
and everybody who gets involved. Yeah, he's got a dog

(41:07):
cloning that business that he's that he's invested in, Colossal Biosciences.

Speaker 6 (41:12):
I think they do more than just cloning, but I
think the cloning part of their business, like fund some
of the other sides, you know, also big checks from
Tom Brady, but fund some of the other sides of
their business. Like one of the things that they said
they did was like de extinction, like Jurassic Park kind
of stuff.

Speaker 1 (41:30):
And we've talked about this company on the show.

Speaker 4 (41:32):
Before, didn't we talk to someone.

Speaker 1 (41:35):
Somebody who worked there, But maybe you're not there, But.

Speaker 2 (41:37):
We definitely talked to somebody who cloned pets because the
cat was behind us that was technically a clone.

Speaker 1 (41:43):
Yeah, and people do this all the time. It's becoming
more and more common. It's very expensive still, but rich
people will be like, I love my dog so much.
And in Tom Brady's case, he had a dog called
Lua and he loved his dog, but the pit bull
mix died twenty twenty three. He took a blood sample
before his dog died and they cloned his dog. So now.

Speaker 6 (42:08):
Like a mutt like that, if you were to clone
like a pure bread like you know, it's gonna get
a little dicey when we start doing horses and try
to get him in the derby, you know, because right
now the sperm is the most expensive, you know, part
of the horse. Once it wins the Kentucky Derby or

(42:29):
or the trifecta what is that.

Speaker 1 (42:33):
Crown?

Speaker 6 (42:33):
Yeah, the sperm becomes very expensive. Because they want to
breed more of these horses, they can just clone them.

Speaker 1 (42:41):
You know. That's true. That's that's true. But I think
the order of events for some of you people who
care about these types of things will probably be adopt,
then shop and then whatever this is, this this thing
yere like his pit bull mix, which every with her
in the United States of America is full of. I

(43:02):
think seventy to eighty percent pit bull mixes. Just grab one, Brady,
grab one and love it and have some fun.

Speaker 2 (43:08):
I mean, obviously he's an investor, but for anyone like that,
it has been well known, Like Barbi streisanded this many
years ago.

Speaker 4 (43:15):
I even feel like her cloned.

Speaker 2 (43:17):
Dogs are at the end of their life, and it
was very clear that while you can have a perfect
clone DNA wise, it is not the same personality.

Speaker 1 (43:28):
No, the craziest thing is and some people don't seem
to get this just yet. And it buys into a
worldview that in some ways I don't totally believe. But
it shows you that when you have a dog, you
have your dog in front of you, like my dog
Lady is a cavalier King Charles Spaniel. And I love her.
I love animals, I love her and I fear the

(43:52):
moment that something happens to her down the road. But
I would never clone her. And here's why. She is
more than just DNA. She is an animal that reacts
in the way she reacts, has the looks that she has,
and is like there is a special magic to her,
a special soul like magic that your pet has that

(44:13):
makes them them. It's the inner thing that makes them
them all right, And all of the cloning in the
world cannot reproduce that. And I'll point you for probably
the fifth time to the This American Life television show,
which I think used to be on either Showtime or HBO.
And there was the man who was in love with
his bull. Yes, a big, big cow, big longhorn cow

(44:38):
or something. Loved it and got into this program because
his cow died. His bull dyed, and he loved it
so much. He skinned the thing and kept it and
missed it some much. And they cloned this bull that
used to hang out in his house, used to be
his buddy is pal. They'd kind of nuzzle up together.

(44:58):
He cloned the bull, and the bull that they clone
attacked in multiple times. It was a brutal beast of
an animal. It's not the same same DNA baby, but
it ain't the same thing. There's a magical genes sequah
that is who we all are in our personality. It's
not clonable. That's why you can have, you know, identical

(45:19):
triplets or something, and they all have somewhat different personalities.
With animals, you can clone them in a high mind. Yes,
it's not the same though, it's just not the same.
Tom Brady cloned his dog Juny from his pet Lua,
who died in two thousand and twenty three. Why do
not give it the same name? If you're going to

(45:41):
it's gonna be the same dog. Yeah, I just but
it's not. It's like I think people shouldn't get this
in their head that you can have something forever, because
you can't. And I don't mean to wax nostalgic with you,
but here's the deal. That's why it's beautiful. That's why
having your dog is beautiful. That's why having your partner

(46:03):
that you're in a relationship is beautiful because you can't
ever recreate it. You have it now, and when it's gone,
it's gone. There's no bringing that magic back. Almost makes
me believe in a god. Almost.

Speaker 6 (46:16):
You just unlocked a memory in my head when you
said two, as in, just adding two to the end
of your dog's name when you get a new dog
like the Simpsons, Is that what they did?

Speaker 1 (46:27):
I think they did Santa's Little Helper ball too or something.
I knew a family many moons ago that did this
with their pet, but it was literally the perfect name
to add it to to and their dog's name was Rocky.
When Rocky died and they gotten new dog, they just
named it Rocky too.

Speaker 2 (46:47):
Honestly, what they have one to two more dogs that
they could probably get, probably.

Speaker 1 (46:52):
On Apollo by now, right right. I understand the desire
to do stuff like this. I totally get it, but
I think there's so much more value in just having
your next experience with your next pet and not trying
to relive that one that you love so much. It's
just a waste of money. It's an attempt for Tom Brady,
who's already a weirdo, to do more weird things. And

(47:16):
so now the latest thing he's done is cloned his dog.
And I just think the pet cloning is weird. And
by the way, if you want to ask before, I'll
get ahead of you before you even ask. I think
human cloning is weird too, And I don't think we
should do it all right. I don't think any of
this stuff is a good idea. I think no, just
because we can do stuff doesn't mean we should do

(47:38):
stuff right, ye know.

Speaker 6 (47:42):
But so the article that I read, I think yesterday
said that they had like successfully.

Speaker 1 (47:49):
Cloned uh some wolf, that dire wolf for something. Is
that extinct.

Speaker 4 (47:57):
Mammoth too?

Speaker 1 (47:57):
Dire wolf? Wolf? Oh, these are weird looking? Is an
extinct species of canine?

Speaker 4 (48:04):
Yes, yeah, with muscle and on it.

Speaker 1 (48:09):
This is just a skeleton. The skeleton version is all
we have because the animal hasn't been seen for a
very very very long time, but they're they're trying to
bring this sucker back. Did you say they did sea line?

Speaker 5 (48:30):
Did they?

Speaker 1 (48:31):
I'm going to find it because now I need to know.
I mean, I know they've found like some DNA stuff
from them, so maybe it's possible. But these animals, we
just have to ditch the idea that we can recreate
things you'll never be able to I don't think. I
think that is what makes up what we call personality.

(48:52):
Personality is such an interesting word. Personality is the way you,
as a human being, interface with the world. I don't
know if that's the official definition, but that's the definition
in my head. Your personality is the way that you
interface with the world, and that isn't in your DNA
and that cannot be replicated, all right.

Speaker 6 (49:13):
Cloning pets controversial topic done by celebrities, pet lovers, blah
blah blah.

Speaker 1 (49:19):
A lot of people think it's morally wrong. Colossal.

Speaker 6 (49:21):
The company bills itself as a de extinction company that
aims to bring extinct species back to life. It has
focused on trying to return the wooly mammoth, the Dodo bird,
and the Tasmanian tiger, and it announced in April that
they resurrected the dire Wolf, an animal that was extinct
for roughly thirteen thousand years and best known for its
presence sun Game of Thrones.

Speaker 1 (49:43):
But is this one of those things where it's like
a pig organ transplant, where you go, we did it.
The person dies like, I'm kind of wondering, Like it
resurrected the dire wolf.

Speaker 6 (49:54):
How if it's been extinct for thirteen thousand years, meaning
we only have bones, you don't have any pictures of it,
just maybe some artists renderings of what they think this
ugly thing might have looked.

Speaker 1 (50:06):
Like, how do we know if they got it right?
We don't. It's like the dinosaurs. We don't. We don't.
And that's kind of an argument, honestly, for letting them
do this so we can just solve that problem and
then instantly kill all of them. I think a bunch
of you this is the t rex. Take a pictures
and a three and a two ups playing right into

(50:29):
the side of it. Take it out. I, for the record,
do not want your betting math dispatches. I just want
to tell you I don't want them. I do appreciate momanji.
This is the only one I'll play because he understands
what's going on here. But that's it. That's the only one, I.

Speaker 10 (50:48):
Guess, hope, because of do them? Well you too, So
you're talking about the midding. What you're saying is if
you have ten thousand and you bet against him for
him to lose, to get one hundred and seventeen, that
means you're winnings one hundred and seven thousand. Now, if
you have one hundred thousand and you bet for him
to lose, that means your winnings will be seventeen thousand,

(51:08):
well ten thousand, really, so you still have to put
it in one hundred thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (51:12):
Your winnings a ten thousand. Thanks, he gets it, he
gets it. We don't need that, no more introspection.

Speaker 6 (51:17):
You could win seven thousand dollars no matter what if
you put in the nice little chump change of one
hundred and ten thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (51:26):
It's not the best return on investment, I admit that,
but it's a surefire bet when you use these different
betting sites and bet for it against. Like if there's
a football game going on and I could bet for
the Giants and against the giants. Oh shoot, if there's
a tie, other than the fact that they're being.

Speaker 7 (51:45):
Why do you do that?

Speaker 1 (51:46):
Well, slim margin, you're oh shoot, there's a tie, which
is not as slim a margin as what I'm about
to say. But your oh shoot, there's a tie is
the same as the comment or on the tweet that said, well,
you know there's third party candidates, right.

Speaker 6 (52:00):
You're like, what come on, but they're not somebody from
the Final flight party is gonna win.

Speaker 1 (52:06):
Yeah, I mean, we know old Curtis Sliwaw was was
not going to be the victor. He's more likely again
than he was to win that election. Probably that that
very well could be the case. We've got a bunch
of clips on the election. We'll get to at some
point in time. Uh, And we got a lot of
your dispatches coming in, so thank you for that. We

(52:26):
don't need any more, though, I want to repeat, we
don't need any more on the topic of gambling math.
That's it, all right, don't need it, don't need it
at all.

Speaker 11 (52:35):
Here, Oh god, this is why this is, this is
this is why seeled okay, Sean, the reason why that
betting strategy doesn't theoretically work is because there's five other
people in the election as well.

Speaker 1 (52:46):
What happens if one of them wins. They weren't gonna win.

Speaker 4 (52:50):
What happens.

Speaker 1 (52:53):
Wouldn't be set up like that if there was any
chance that they were gonna win, there wasn't a chance.
It's like, never mind, never mind, I can't, I can't
bring myself to it. Here's Rain talking about cloning dogs,
which is much more interesting. Let's see, I would clone
my dog because I love her so much.

Speaker 12 (53:10):
She's like fifteen or sixteen years old.

Speaker 1 (53:12):
But man, we.

Speaker 2 (53:14):
From Michel here in Rolando when she was nine and
she was a puppy mail dog where she was just
pumping out puppies and she has been thee beest dog.

Speaker 1 (53:24):
But the only reason I would clone her is because
I want to see what she would be like as
a puppy if she never went to a puppy mill
and never had a puppy mail dog's.

Speaker 6 (53:35):
That's one of the things I thought of, Like, I've
never seen Lexi as a puppy puppy.

Speaker 1 (53:39):
Carl isn't Carl just like Oh is a puppy.

Speaker 4 (53:44):
That's very sweit of you to say, But no, he's seven.

Speaker 1 (53:47):
I don't want to stereotype, but all Carl's kind of
look the.

Speaker 4 (53:50):
Same, all right, Have you seen a Yorky puppy?

Speaker 1 (53:53):
Yeah? Parents? Oh no, I actually haven't.

Speaker 2 (53:55):
My parents had, you know, puppies, and they Yorkies and
and yeah, I absolutely wish I would have seen Karl
as a puppy, because I got him when he was rescued.
Him is four or five years old. I think they're
not his exact age. But seeing Yorkie puppies, my god,
the joy it brings.

Speaker 6 (54:13):
I would rather just like a time machine or some
sort of other technology to see like as a puppy,
maybe just AI, because I don't really feel like spending
fifty thousand dollars just to see my beloved dog as
a puppy and then have to raise.

Speaker 1 (54:27):
It again as a puppy and and potty trainer and
all that very true. I'm all right, all right, here's
here's a Yorkie puppy. Let me see if this convinces me.
Oh wow, oh my god, oh my god.

Speaker 4 (54:39):
And Carl would have that, but like ten times bigger ears.

Speaker 1 (54:43):
It's so little, this dude.

Speaker 4 (54:48):
So aggressive.

Speaker 1 (54:49):
It sounds more like a velociraptor than a puppy dinosaurs again.
Baby Oh, let's oh.

Speaker 6 (54:56):
I can just see like you mentioned the adopt, don't
shop movement, and they would they would need a good tagline.
But could you imagine somebody being so proud that they
shopped and didn't get a clone, like I went for a.

Speaker 1 (55:13):
Shoppy, not a copy. Oh, son of a bitch. I
was trying to think of one of those I was
when I said adopt, adopt, don't shop, then you know,
going to some sort of breeder, and then the third option.
Good work on that clone. It is better. Everything's better
than cloning. Don't clone your dog or your family member,
or you're going to be disappointed. I just really think

(55:37):
that you're going to be disappointed. We're gonna take a
quick break right now. That's what we're gonna do when
we come back. We have so many things to work
into the show today. There's a viral story about a
vampire wife gone wild that we have to work in.
We'll get into some of the nitty gritty on the
political stuff for a bit here or there, and people
may be headed to Florida or not. More about the

(55:58):
Louver heist right in particular, when we come back, I
want to talk about a police chase that ended in
the most disturbing way I think I've heard of in
a while. And it's not with a police shooting. It's
the place that this particular person decided to take refuge.
Wait until you hear what happened in this story, otherwise

(56:20):
you're not going to believe it. It is coming up
next on the News Junkie. Obviously, I was saying earlier

(56:43):
after the election, they asked people like, hey, you know
what what drove you? What did this? What did that?
And a lot of people said the economy. It's a
big deal, you know, the economy and this people still
think stuff is expensive. So I have been on the
show doing my best to try to tell you about
things that are good signs and things that are good
options when it comes to deals out there, And for me,

(57:04):
watching all the companies start to get more competitive for
your business to try to get you back in their
stores is a good thing overall because it'll bring costs
down and that's a hard thing to do. And then
we had the Walmart Thanksgiving Dinner option, which was a
really great deal like fifty bucks or something. The publics

(57:25):
won yesterday that we talked about for Thanksgiving, which I
think was sixty dollars or somewhere around that. Still a
great deal or maybe was it cheaper? I forgot Aldy,
but yeah, was this a skull thing? I don't remember
a public No, no, no, the public's Thanksgiving thing forty dollars.

(57:46):
The Amazon, Walmart publics are all offering Thanksgiving dinner starting
about forty dollars.

Speaker 6 (57:51):
Really because I think the difference with the publics one,
which is why people a lot of people go towards
that is because everything has already cooked.

Speaker 1 (58:01):
Yes, yeah, what a dream.

Speaker 6 (58:03):
So like with the with the ald one or the
Walmart one, you're still having to prepare this turkey and
make the sides and do and that I think that's
a little bit what you're saving the money for. But
with the public's one that I've had, you know, I've
known a handful of people who have gotten this for
Christmas or Thanksgiving and it's really just heating the turkey

(58:26):
back up and all the sides are good to go.

Speaker 1 (58:29):
Anybody could do it, right, That's that's fantastic For some people.
That might be perfect as low as forty nine dollars
for them. Target says, hey, hold my beer. We can
make this a little crazier. This is a good one
upsmanship to have, you know, for the people. They are
saying we can do it cheaper. Target has just announced
their Thanksgiving dinner deal is under twenty dollars, will feed

(58:55):
four people, according to Target, and they said everybody has
a turkey sub. You get Goodn't Gather, which is Target's
own brand, and you get a turkey. It's seventy nine
cents per pound, which is a pretty good deal. You
get a turkey, potatoes, cranberry sauce, stuffing, gravy, and bread
along with it, and that is less than twenty bucks.

Speaker 4 (59:17):
Man, I wonder if they're gonna limit on how many
you can purchase.

Speaker 1 (59:20):
Probably I wouldn't be surprised if they put some purchase
limits on it now.

Speaker 4 (59:24):
That would be possible them for the year.

Speaker 1 (59:27):
I feel like a lot of people are doing more
limited Thanksgiving meals as opposed to like these huge, huge
get togethers. Maybe politics has blown it up a little bit,
maybe maybe other things. Maybe things are too expensive, but
it's gotten a little bit out of hand and people
are slimming down. It's getting to be more intimate gathering
of people for Thanksgiving. This will be perfect for some

(59:49):
of you. Twenty bucks at Target take advantage of these deals.
It's a super smart idea. But that's twenty bucks for
four people. That's five bucks a person. It's still like,
I think, a dollar more than the Walmart. But if
you only have four people, it would be a good option.
If eight people, I don't know what the average is.
The average might be closer to eight people the average

(01:00:10):
Thanksgiving style meet up. Maybe it's closer to that. So
they're hitting the nail on the head. But this is
a good option for four people at least. This is
not a good option for anybody. This is just overall
a very bad idea. And I'm going to bring this
story up because when I saw this, I couldn't believe
it and I had some questions. I have some questions
for those of you who work in this area. There

(01:00:31):
was a police chase in Los Angeles, as there often is.
The cops are chasing this suspect, all right, and the
cops are trying to find this man. It's seven point
thirty in the morning and he's on the move. He
doesn't have a lot of options, so he hides and
the one place that he could find to hide in

(01:00:53):
this neighborhood he was in in LA was underneath the
tent and inside a fumigated home in Los Angeles, and
the cops gathered outside, and I could share this with
you some of the footage the cops had, like the
whole swat response to people in like all the big
armored vehicles, and they're outside and they're trying to talk

(01:01:16):
to this guy, and they're like, dude, please just come out.
You've been in there for hours. You're inside a house
with a tent on it that is being fumigated. I
don't know what that exposure can do to you. But
even as dumb as I may be on this topic,
I know it ain't good. I know it is not
good for you to be inside one of these tents.

(01:01:37):
Here's the cops talking to him for three hours. Better
there for over three hours. I think about what that's
doing your body. There's a reason why he can up
a house again. No one goes in all those cous
He said, you've been there for over three hours. There's

(01:01:57):
a reason why they tent up these homes. There's all
these toxic fumes. Think about what it's doing to your body.
He did get out alive, so I guess so, yes,
you you're literally killing yourself staying in there, he says,
of this suspect who took up a hiding spot inside

(01:02:18):
a tented fumigated house for hours. And I've always thought
about running inside one of those. I've always thought about it,
but I've that's got to scramble your brain. It's got
to be bad. And like I've we did a thing
one time. We had a dog named Axel and three roommates,
one dog. Not an internet video, but three roommates, one dog, Axel,

(01:02:43):
and Axel picked up a mighty case of the fleas
because he had three twenty somethings taking care of him
who weren't great with dogs at the time. And so
we we go, what do we do here? And we've
got like some of the bombs and put them around
the apartment, and you just hit the button, sh you know,
and it goes off and then you run out of

(01:03:04):
there as fast as you can. But then we all
forgot like a thing or two and had to wander
back into the smoke fumigated apartment and one second, one
second in there, you go, ah, not supposed to do this, I.

Speaker 4 (01:03:21):
Mean it must have hurt the man to breathe or
even open his eyes.

Speaker 1 (01:03:25):
Oh boy, I would think. So let's let's see here, old.
Let me ask Tnjai where this would actually go if
you were inside this thing? Uh, if you were inside
a house that was being fumigated underneath the tent, what
kind of damage could that do to you in three hours? Tnji?

Speaker 13 (01:03:42):
That's oh, man, being under a fumigation tent is no joke.
The chemicals used can be extremely toxic, and just three
hours could lead to serious health issues, including respiratory problems,
neurological damage, and death. Even's really dangerous to be in
there without proper protection, so it's best to stay far

(01:04:02):
away from fumigated areas until it's completely safe.

Speaker 1 (01:04:06):
True. Yeah, I mean you could die. You could die
according to that. I don't know if that's an exaggeration.
Folks who work in this business, have you ever been
exposed like this? What are the risks that you know?
Tips tips at the Newsjunkie dot com. What were gonna
say that?

Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
When I got my house tended not too long ago,
I kept my cameras on. I don't have to shut
off the power, so watching them go through and double
checking everything.

Speaker 4 (01:04:27):
They had full gas masks on.

Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
Oh really all of it? Yeah, did it look like
I think it did? In there? Was it like all
completely all like smoked out looking?

Speaker 4 (01:04:36):
Not really really, I.

Speaker 2 (01:04:37):
Was like waiting to see the haziness of it, but
they didn't need to. I think for the most part,
that's why they have the tent, because they can just
put out the poison without having to warn anybody with
the smell or haziness of it all.

Speaker 1 (01:04:52):
Not a good thing for your bra the bug, and
not a good thing for the human body. But if
you have experience, let us know tips at the news
junky dot com. Not necessarily hanging out in there, but
well maybe who knows, we'll get some more of you.
Your dispatches are on the way here momentarily on the show.
Many people talking about cloning pets will take those comments,
for sure. Many people talking about the betting question, we

(01:05:16):
will not take those comments, absolutely not. Sorry, going to
dismiss that. You can come back with something else on
the dispatch side, but we will get to your feedback
as the show rolls on. When we come back the
next episode with Sabrina.

Speaker 9 (01:05:28):
What's coming up on the next stepisode, what's coming on
the next stepsterde Soldier Boy is back in the headlines
for cranking yet another product that is ripping off that rival.

Speaker 2 (01:05:41):
Hoe, the ex manager of Guns N' Roses, is switching
the jungle with a civil courtroom and welcoming the entire
band to it.

Speaker 4 (01:05:48):
Plus, if you thought NFTs were dead.

Speaker 1 (01:05:51):
You are wrong at you.

Speaker 4 (01:05:52):
I'll find so much more coming up on the next episode.

Speaker 1 (01:05:55):
And that is coming up next on the news, Chunkie.

(01:06:15):
I'll put these dispatches on ice and emails as well
for a moment, but then we'll we'll kick them open
and see what we got. As far as the second
half of your show, with some of your reactions, we'll
get into some stuff happened in New York City and
the Lusiah Sheriff weigh in on the election and stuff,
and we'll spin into a bunch of other directions with
like a crazy vampire lady. But right now, let's do

(01:06:38):
the next episode, because there's a lot on TV.

Speaker 14 (01:06:41):
You can't possibly keep up with all of it, even
though you should, because what else are you gonna talk.

Speaker 1 (01:06:45):
About on and on and on?

Speaker 4 (01:06:49):
My mom died?

Speaker 5 (01:06:50):
You know?

Speaker 1 (01:06:50):
Okay, shut up? Nothing nice. It's time for the next
episode with Sabrina Hey small weed, hold up.

Speaker 2 (01:07:07):
The next episode brought to you by that mortgage guy Don.
That mortgage guy don dot com. That's his website. That's
where you get the process started of refinancing your beautiful home,
perhaps buying your first dream home. You have a business
and you want to expand that bad boy. Work with
that mortgage guy Don, because not only is he an expert,
he is your friend. He has your beck and when

(01:07:28):
it comes to those big life decisions, got to work
with someone you could trust.

Speaker 4 (01:07:32):
So go to that mortgage guy Don dot com.

Speaker 1 (01:07:35):
Don't miss the voco. Pay that mortgage guy Don dot com.

Speaker 2 (01:07:42):
Seventy years ago, nineteen fifty five, doctor Emmett Brown invented
the future capacitor.

Speaker 4 (01:07:53):
That is correct.

Speaker 2 (01:07:54):
He stood on the edge of what to do what
and then this happened toile it to six o'clock.

Speaker 1 (01:08:02):
Yeah, and he fell back and hit his head. Yeah,
And that's when he had the idea for the flex capacitor.
Well done. Isn't there another timeline Sea Lane where it's
like he actually was knocked out cold? The whole time
is an old one. All of back to the Future
is a dream. This is like a fan election. Sounds
like a definite fan fiction.

Speaker 2 (01:08:20):
Yeah, they have this theory the anniversary, because that's the
date Marty travels back to in the Dolorean. In the
original Back to the Future, the flex capacitor is what
makes time travel possible.

Speaker 1 (01:08:35):
Great Scott.

Speaker 2 (01:08:36):
Now we move on to twenty twenty five, and we
now have a former manager of this group.

Speaker 4 (01:08:45):
You're all gonna die.

Speaker 2 (01:08:47):
I die, I mean get sued because he's big mad
for the band.

Speaker 4 (01:08:53):
Blocking of all things is memoir now.

Speaker 2 (01:08:59):
Alan nivin Niven is his name, the former manager of
Guns N' Roses. He's suing the band for trying to
block him from releasing his memoir, titled Interesting Sound and
Fury Rock and Roll Stories, was set to be released
this past July July twenty twenty five, and then pushed
back to September. Then the delay came amid rumors that
illegal team representing Axel Rose that man loves try to

(01:09:22):
delete stuff like his fat pictures on the Internet. They
were working to block the book being shared. It is
now expected to be shared in March of twenty twenty
six and remains available to pre order online. Attention has
been there between Nevin Niven and Rose since the nineteen nineties,

(01:09:42):
goes all the way back to ninety one, where I
guess allegedly Axel Rose refused to continue to work on
the GNR Use Your Illusion albums if that man stayed
on as their manager, so he has.

Speaker 4 (01:09:55):
All the juice, all the tea.

Speaker 1 (01:09:57):
He probably does have some good story.

Speaker 2 (01:09:59):
Now d this because this is not the first time
we've had a tell all book. How was this going
to hold up in court? Because clearly we've had stuff
that's been released, Kevin Federline being the latest, a lot
of I don't know, not positive things about Britney Spears,
but that certainly wasn't blocked.

Speaker 1 (01:10:17):
So what how would this.

Speaker 4 (01:10:19):
Hold up in court?

Speaker 1 (01:10:20):
The only thing I think that could hold it back,
and we have to ask Moses about this, is if
you had some sort of agreement to not publicly speak
about these things or tell these stories. Otherwise you have
all of the rights to your own stories and experiences
in life.

Speaker 6 (01:10:35):
They can't stop you from that. I mean, they're going
to try and say they're going to sue you and
prove that it didn't happen. But how do you prove
something that back my thing? Is if he parted ways
with them during usuier illusion. How is this a tell
all you got caught off?

Speaker 1 (01:10:50):
Yeah, tell a little bit.

Speaker 2 (01:10:53):
So they said at some point that he had enough
of the public comments because they had obviously split ways
in their early nineties, that he started to do some interviews,
and he also claims that Slash emailed him personally to
say that he should set the record straight and that
he's allowed to say what he wished. He also, in

(01:11:16):
an email, consistently encouraged me to get the book finished.

Speaker 1 (01:11:19):
Questions for you. I just when you said, Slash, this
came to mind. Do you guys think if for a
million dollars somebody played the sound of three different people talking,
could you tell me which one was Slash? Nope, I
would guess, though I'd like to have had that million dollars. Yeah,
I like, I don't know when I see people who

(01:11:40):
I came up. Like, we all know who Slash is,
we all know very particular work, But I don't know
if I know what he's said to me. If you
walked in here without the hat on, I wouldn't know
who it was.

Speaker 4 (01:11:50):
Little you did not not at all? What if he
had a very high pitched voice that would really throw lush.
You ready for a guitar? Sollo eh.

Speaker 2 (01:12:00):
If you don't want to be in the rock and world,
rock and roll world, say that twelve times fast. You
could be part of this world Pokemon because good god.
The Pokemon Pocket app has now become the highest grossing
Pokemon mobile app, but also earned itself in its very
first year one point three billion dollars.

Speaker 10 (01:12:24):
Woo.

Speaker 1 (01:12:25):
All right, yeah, and there.

Speaker 2 (01:12:27):
Is not like Pokemon Go where I feel like we
all tried it when it came out during COVID.

Speaker 1 (01:12:33):
You around there, Yeah, yeah, I think so. I thought
it was before people go back to it.

Speaker 2 (01:12:38):
But this is Pokemon Pocket app where you just I guess,
collect digital trading cards. Wait a second, what does that
sound like? NFTs is what they're being compared to. According
to a report from Nintendo Life, Pokemon TCG Pocket app
brought in the one point three billion I told you
about its users buying card, which led to it becoming

(01:13:01):
the highest earning Pokemon mobile app in the franchise's history.
For those unfamiliar, it mirrors both the card trading game
where you can rip open packs while chasing down rare cards,
and also has a battle function. When you get those
rare cards, you can either compete against other humans or
an AI computer to achieve status and prizes, and then

(01:13:22):
you also give it your debit card information. And thus,
of course one point three billion dollar franchise is born July.

Speaker 1 (01:13:30):
Twenty sixteen, by the way, for Pokemon Go, that's when
everybody was going nuts. Wow.

Speaker 4 (01:13:34):
But I guess it was very popular. I remember walking around.
I just thought it was during COVID because that's all
we really could do to get outside.

Speaker 1 (01:13:40):
It was big from twenty sixteen to like twenty eighteen,
and you had like hundreds of millions of people using
it around that time.

Speaker 2 (01:13:50):
And I'm sure in just a couple of years, this
guy right here will come up with his very own,
not copied at all Pokemon card. But in the meantime,
he's all up in this home and has launched his
own handheld console and it's now being accused.

Speaker 1 (01:14:06):
Well, the first one was a top accused.

Speaker 4 (01:14:09):
Of ripping off a rival. It's called Soldia game flip.

Speaker 2 (01:14:13):
If you want to pull up a picture of it,
it looks familiar that I feel like you can't help
but say he's ripping.

Speaker 4 (01:14:21):
It off, but he can't.

Speaker 1 (01:14:23):
No, I don't see any no zero.

Speaker 4 (01:14:29):
It's obviously just Soldier Boy. Can't even he doesn't have
dot com Soldier boy dot nat.

Speaker 1 (01:14:35):
The similarity between this and a game Boy, I just
that know.

Speaker 2 (01:14:40):
The ultimate handheld gaming console endorsed by Soldier Boy. According
to the description, designed for gaming enthusiasts who crave high
quality performance on the go, andy we copy it. This
sleek device combines cutting edge technology with a robust library
of retro and modern games, offering an unparalleled gaming experience.

(01:15:00):
The problem but unparalleled, it's very paralleled, yeah, as a
matter of fact.

Speaker 1 (01:15:04):
And they don't own those games, do That's the problem.
They're not paying any sort of license. I don't think.

Speaker 6 (01:15:11):
I can't imagine when they release these things and they
sell them in the malls too, where it's just like,
here's a two hundred and thirty five and one handheld game.
The problem is not that it looks like a game Boy,
because it really doesn't look that much like a game Boy.
But the problem is if it comes loaded with copyright
righted software that nobody's getting paid for.

Speaker 4 (01:15:29):
Yeah, I'm sorry. The problem is the price. Did you
also see that one and thirty six dollars. Yeah, that's
a hard no for me.

Speaker 1 (01:15:37):
Can't you get these for like one hundred bucks? These
all like handheld things?

Speaker 4 (01:15:41):
Now, mind you?

Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
Not the first time that he has been accused by
retro hardware company Retroid for ripping off their Retroid pocket
Flip two handheld. The website seemingly lifted images straight from
Retroid's website, and I said, it is Soldier Boys so
his direct.

Speaker 1 (01:16:00):
Oh yeah, that's that's the pocket Flip too.

Speaker 4 (01:16:03):
Yes, So there you have it, my friends.

Speaker 2 (01:16:06):
And back in twenty twenty one, Soldier Boy announced that
he was the new owner of Atari, and they quickly
denied that.

Speaker 4 (01:16:12):
They said, we have nothing to do with the Soldier Boy.
So he keeps on going. No one is stopping him,
so why.

Speaker 1 (01:16:18):
Not hold on? First of all, yes, you're one hundred
percent right, the pocket Flip Too looks exactly Come on,
Soldier Boy, flip what.

Speaker 4 (01:16:27):
Do you think man?

Speaker 1 (01:16:28):
But the pocket Flip Too is two hundred and eighty
nine dollars on Target's website, and the Sojia Boy, I
think is four hundred and thirty six.

Speaker 6 (01:16:36):
I mean, if they're celebrated at Target, maybe they are
paying for some of those some of the games that
are on there or the games that are on there
are kind of JANKI.

Speaker 1 (01:16:45):
Yeah, it could be. I am.

Speaker 2 (01:16:47):
I really want to know if anyone has bought from
Soldier boy don Net that one and just wasted so.

Speaker 4 (01:16:53):
Much money on the Boop toube.

Speaker 2 (01:16:56):
We've got the following the streaming premiere of The Fantastic
Four First Steps on Disney Plus, we have Tyler Perry's
Finding Joy on Amazon, Survivor, The Floor of Chicago med
and All the Chicago's Golden Bachelor as well. And you
can catch Jennifer Lawrence on Fallon follow your Dreams of
You on Instagram at Sabrina Ambra.

Speaker 4 (01:17:15):
Most importantly, stay with me America.

Speaker 1 (01:17:18):
Smoke weed every day. Thank you, Sabrina. The show that
is kind of grabbing the Internet, taking the Internet by
storm this week. Nobody wants look up this name because
I know the name Ryan Murphy. What's Ryan Murphy from?
What do I know that guy? From creating? He made
this thing called All's Fair? Season one of All's Fair,

(01:17:40):
which is just getting drilled by reviewers. It's got a
zero percent.

Speaker 4 (01:17:44):
Ryan Murphy's Monster Glee Nip Tuck.

Speaker 1 (01:17:47):
Is he all got? All's Fair has Kim Kardashian, Mersey,
Nash Naomi Watts, Glenn Close. It's got all these people
and it's so easy. I don't know if you've seen
any of the clips of.

Speaker 2 (01:18:02):
This, Oh God, but this is the guy who was
behind you know, the most recent like the My God
Menanda's Brothers.

Speaker 1 (01:18:11):
Yeah, all right, I watch that. It is so bad.
It's so bad. Here's an example.

Speaker 9 (01:18:15):
What do you know, I have been investigating Jason all
of his Shenanigans.

Speaker 1 (01:18:25):
Do not like it. Pen wig, this might blow it back,
she said, Pin your wig homegirl, because this might blow
it back. Dramatic, cheesy, over the top. Somebody says it's
actually a masterpieces to.

Speaker 4 (01:18:43):
Be a little satirical though, because he's done.

Speaker 1 (01:18:45):
That it it's like a successful a female divorce lawyer,
law firm, and it is cheesy. Man. So some of
the clips I've seen are like, wow, all right, congrats, Okay,
quick break. When we come back, we're going to get
into the Volusia County Sheriff talking about the election for

(01:19:05):
some reason. We've got updates on the Louver heist, some
pretty crazy twists on that one, and a father and
son in the most bizarre story we've had all day
without a doubt. That is coming up next on the news. Chunkie,

(01:19:38):
the sheriff of Alusha County, Florida, Mike Chitwood. You might
have heard of him. He has a post that's getting
a bunch of attention today. After the elections, then after
the mayor of New York was announced, the winner of
the election is that guy, the socialist dude zo Ron
Mom Donnie has expected he won and by the way,

(01:19:59):
he q one by more than the second two combined.
So even if Curtis Sliwa would have stepped out of
the race and one hundred percent of his votes would
have gone to Cuomo, Cuomo wouldn't have won. He would
not have won the election. So there was a pretty
decent margin there for Zorram Mamdani. But sheriff of Chitwood

(01:20:22):
in Volusia County in Florida was like, hey, New Yorkers,
who are seeing the results of this election, you could
come to the state of Florida. And so there's literally
a discussion like are there going to be people because
a poll, one poll in particularly said like ten percent
of New Yorkers said they would flee if this dude
won is it gonna happen or not. I would be
skeptical of that for a bunch of reasons, one being

(01:20:45):
I think a lot of those people already left New York.
I think they already moved outside of New York.

Speaker 4 (01:20:52):
I would assume the same thing.

Speaker 1 (01:20:53):
I think that like a lot of the people who
were dissenters have moved away outside of the folk Like
you can see who voted for who, And the map
I looked at was like Cuomo's votes are all in
like Lower Manhattan in the Financial District and these areas,
and then up around Central Park it's where all of

(01:21:13):
like these old left wing rich ass New Yorkers are
and they all voted for the left wing guy. And
then Brooklyn and some of these other neighborhoods where they
were promised a whole bunch of stuff. The world in
the city of the city at least is going to
get a whole lot cheaper. But Mike Chitwood said this
to those folks who might be leaving, if you're a

(01:21:34):
New York City resident or a great NYPD officer unhappy
with the results of tonight's mayoral elect she's offering land
En jobs. YEA, the police officers because in his past,
Mom Donnie had a lot of pretty anti police defund
the police, Todd commons he's started to walk those back

(01:21:56):
a little bit. But like I think, people will present
a version of themselves to an election and then kick
it up once they win the vote sometimes, so I
wouldn't be surprised if you rolled back on some of that.
But Chitwood says to my NYPD friends, if you want
to come work in an organization that is cutting edge,
innovating every day, a place where you're appreciated by the

(01:22:17):
community and supported by the elected officials, then check out
the Volucia Sheriff's Office and take a look at how
we're getting the job done. To business owners looking for
a safe, growing community, a great environment to do business,
and a fantastic place to raise your family, take a
look at Volusha County. To all New Yorkers if you're
looking for a better quality of life, from education, to

(01:22:38):
the outdoors to the beautiful weather, check out Vaalusha County.
We're open for business. Tonight's election is not the end.
It could be the beginning of a new life, says Chitwood.

Speaker 4 (01:22:46):
But what a vast difference Manhattan is from Deltona.

Speaker 1 (01:22:51):
Uh God, what's the biggest place in Vlusha?

Speaker 2 (01:22:54):
It's not so said Daltona, isn't it Daytona Beach, de Land, Deltona,
Newsarna Beach, Orange City Port.

Speaker 1 (01:23:00):
Orange, Daytona would be the biggest. I guess out of
that that's such a difference. I'm a fan. I love Florida.
I'll take Florida over New York every day. Sorry New Yorkers, Sorry,
I mean outside of New York City. Beautiful place, our
Albany friends, Oh god, gorgeous, gorgeous people listening in Buffalo,
gorgeous territory over there. I'm from Vermont, not far away. Hi,

(01:23:21):
my name is Sean. But New York City now too
many hobos pooping in boxes. The whole thing's a mess.
And Joshua who was the top comment that says Mike Man,
we have no more room here literally, So New Yorkers,
I want to hear from you. What are your reactions?

(01:23:41):
Are you're planning on are you planning on moving going
to Lusia County perhaps Floridians? What do you think? Do
you think we'll see a big response here with people
who are trying to get away because they think the
economy will have more issues as a result of the
new mayor. I'll tell you again, most of those people left,
I think number one and number two. What you're about

(01:24:02):
to discover is the lack of power that a mayor
of a city actually has over anything more broad than
things like the rent control stuff that Mom Donnie wants
to do. That he can probably pull off. The rest
you have to ask everybody in the capital to fund,
and it becomes a very hard thing problem being. If

(01:24:23):
somebody does that, they'll be like, I could really give
you all the things I promised if I just had
a little more power, and then a little more power,
and then we had just a little more power, and
then ultimate power is what is sought of the case,
absolute ultimate power. But NYPD officers are they going to
be leaving and heading out of New York? I have

(01:24:44):
no idea, but we'll see what you have to say
about that. Sent us a dispatch over at thenewsjunkie dot com.
Here was mom Donnie very quickly after he was announced
to be the winner of the election. Ran a great campaign.
Whether you like them or not, very much. Seemed to
me to be like Bernie Sanders vibes that's what I got.

(01:25:05):
You know, if this guy like off of the supporters
that he built up in his whole world.

Speaker 4 (01:25:11):
So here is.

Speaker 1 (01:25:15):
Why the phones out Let skip past the music blasting
as he goes up to the stage and get to
him responding.

Speaker 5 (01:25:25):
Here.

Speaker 1 (01:25:25):
This was his victory speech in New York City. Thank you,
my friends. Well they're happy.

Speaker 15 (01:25:42):
The sun may have sat over our city this evening.
But as Eugene Debs once said, but do they even
know too? You can see the dawn of a better
day for humanity. For as long as we can remember,

(01:26:04):
the working people of York have been told by the
wealthy and the well connected that power does not belong
in their hands. Fingers bruised from lifting boxes on the warehouse.

Speaker 1 (01:26:17):
Floor, Bruce fingers, palms.

Speaker 15 (01:26:20):
Callous from delivery by candlebars, knuckles scarred with kitchen burns.

Speaker 1 (01:26:26):
These are not ruins that have been allowed to hold power.

Speaker 15 (01:26:30):
And yet over the last twelve months you have dared
to reach for something greater.

Speaker 1 (01:26:37):
There he has. This is him in New York City
to his supporters after he learned that he won, which
was pretty quickly. It wasn't a long time before they
called it for him.

Speaker 4 (01:26:47):
But it's from the other two sparty No, I guess weird.

Speaker 1 (01:26:51):
I think Cuomo. I think he like conceded but was
not very happy.

Speaker 6 (01:26:57):
As a last mild the one commission race in Orlando
where that lady was trying to get back her seat
after being accused of elder abuse, I think she refused
to concede. It is oh big shocker.

Speaker 2 (01:27:15):
And the thing is, though, is that when interviewed about
she's like, all of y'all calling me for fraud and
for elder abuse. Well, clearly some people know my name,
and that was her reasoning for not conceding. I'm like,
I don't think those are positive points.

Speaker 1 (01:27:33):
Yeah, she from a distance, I don't know about her
very much, but she seems like not the greatest, not
the greatest. But in this case, I think at least
everybody acknowledged that he was the winner. And now good
luck to you. We'll see how it all plays out.
I got a couple more clips on that and some
of the response. But let's see, let's go over to

(01:27:53):
you really quickly and get some of your feedback today
on what's going on on the show. Come on, when
you send that's going to it's almost going to get you.
John almost going to get you a frownie face for
multiple dispatches in a row, but I'll give this time
to Let's see, Bruce Traveler is talking about cloning, So

(01:28:16):
the cloning aspect.

Speaker 8 (01:28:17):
First of all, Sean, I agree with you, and people
need to understand that it's the experiences and the upbringing
and all of that that makes you you, your pets,
them and et cetera.

Speaker 1 (01:28:29):
And once it's gone, it's gone.

Speaker 8 (01:28:32):
You know, just because it has the same DNA doesn't
mean it's going to be the same person or same animal,
ain't dad. Yeah, going back to this American life story
real quick. It's funny you mentioned it. It was the
first thing I thought of. But then Celane mentioned the
naming thing. The bull's name was Chance, and of course
second Chance.

Speaker 1 (01:28:52):
He's right, that was it. It was Chance, the bull
that that old man fell in love with, and then
his bull that was hanging out in his house them
it was his best buddy. Chance the bull died and
then the cloned one was second Chance, and then the
name hated him. Second Chance gored the guy multiple times,

(01:29:13):
and he's like, what's going on? This is my pal?

Speaker 4 (01:29:15):
Don't see wait though?

Speaker 2 (01:29:16):
Ten twenty thirty years from now when they have the
cloning capabilities and then the AI being able to gather
all the information and makes you know, perfect personality.

Speaker 6 (01:29:28):
My question is if if the cloning thing, like they
want to have the same dog or whatever, and the
personality is not going to be the same because I
had a different upbringing. You know, there's a lot of
different things about it. Are the markings going to be
the same, Like what about the dog will be the
same besides just the dal of the source code?

Speaker 1 (01:29:49):
So you're saying you got dalmation one and you clone it,
do you get spots in the same place on dalmation two? Yeah?
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:30:00):
I mean, well, if it's not going to look the
same and it's not going to act the same, what
are we spending our money?

Speaker 1 (01:30:08):
This is the equivalent is it not? Of an identical twin? Right?
So a twin of a human would be almost a
fact simile, okay, very very similar in appearance. So maybe
maybe the spots and stuff would be the same.

Speaker 10 (01:30:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:30:21):
So my younger siblings identical twins, but they were also
considered mirror twins, so they have the same DNA, but
one's left handed, the other one's right handed. Oh really,
there's other mirror things that.

Speaker 1 (01:30:35):
I'm of mirror mirror twins before. That's interesting.

Speaker 4 (01:30:39):
You know what twins are weird that much. The twins
are wild.

Speaker 1 (01:30:43):
Everything's about it is weird because it's just like you're
you're used to seeing one person and not somebody who
looks exactly like them or has all those weird twinsy things.
But I would still say in almost all cases where
they're not meming it up identical twins, you will find
that they have different personalities, different personas, even if they

(01:31:04):
like experience all the same things in life. That's why
I know a lot of you are saying, like the
nurture side of things, and you can't just clone somebody
because they're not going to be the same because they
didn't have the same experiences. I believe it's beyond that.
I'm not making a religious argument, but I almost am.
I'm saying that it's beyond If you have two things
that grow up in the same kind of spot, with

(01:31:24):
the same natural forces on them and the same experiences
in life, I think there's still different people because there's
another internal thing that you cannot clone that makes us US.
It's the individual, little core at the center of all
of us. And I think that is the most interesting
thing about life, if I'm honest about Let's see what

(01:31:45):
else we have here. Here is a here's your local
long gude.

Speaker 16 (01:31:54):
Good after morning junkies. Hey, we made it to the
Roast last week. Man, what a good time. Oh good,
absolutely hilarious.

Speaker 1 (01:32:03):
Shout out the.

Speaker 16 (01:32:04):
Sea Lane Man, thanks for coming out and hanging out
with us after the show.

Speaker 1 (01:32:07):
That was awesome. Man, nice to see it.

Speaker 16 (01:32:09):
Great to finally meet you on this invitation to New Yorkers. Man,
as a native Floridian, I think we got enough here, man,
I think we got enough people here. With the people,
we're not building up our infrastructure to maintain all this growth.
We should close Florida.

Speaker 1 (01:32:30):
No, no, you guys, look, we need people. We need
people to be a strong state. And if we get
people to move from other states to our states, that's
more money in our state. We don't have free loaders,
but we do want hard working good Americans at least
I want that. I know that there's a thing with
Florida's and New Yorkers, and I don't want to fight

(01:32:51):
the audiences because we're in both areas. I know that
that's the thing, but I think that there we could
we can find a way to get along. I think
we could sort this out. I'm not trying to be
positive Sean today, I want to do too much of that,
But I do want to tell you I think we
could sort it out. One more for now. Here is
John the exterminator, who would know more about the criminal

(01:33:12):
running into the tented house. This this is good. Let's it.

Speaker 17 (01:33:15):
Yeah, Sean, running into a fumigated, tented place, that's always
going to be a bad idea. Some of the chemicals
that we use, it can a thousand percent kill you
if he's been in there for hours. I'm guessing it
wasn't something.

Speaker 1 (01:33:29):
Maybe it was.

Speaker 17 (01:33:31):
Maybe California's got to use different kind of chemicals, but
some of the ones that we use, yeah, to kill you.

Speaker 1 (01:33:37):
Emergency room is going to be the best case scenario. Yeah,
I mean it's meant to kill. Meant to kill smaller
things of course inside the house when you're fumigate, but
not good for even larger things like human beings. You're
not supposed to be in there. Speaking of humans, an
American teacher and his son have died while in Southeastern Asia,

(01:33:58):
they were in Laos. May've heard of Laos, beautiful country.
It's still a country where like Cambodia, you can do
some wild things as a taurus. Like in Laos and Cambodia,
you find the right spots. You can throw a grenade
for fifty bucks. That's they'll let you do it. That's
you know, that's freedom. That that is The freedom to

(01:34:18):
throw a grenade for fifty bucks is something to be lauded.

Speaker 6 (01:34:21):
They have their own tongues. But do you have to
throw it like over a cliff or down a bit
of ways? Because what if you're a terrible what if
you have a really bad throw and you shank it?

Speaker 4 (01:34:30):
Yeah, I've seen some of those first pitch moments and
on that with a gnade.

Speaker 1 (01:34:35):
Right, I'm not going to say I'm not worried about it.
I'm not going to say like you let it go
and then it it doesn't do what you want to.
That would be freaky. But that wasn't what took out
this American teacher and his son. They actually both ended
up dying all right during this trip to Laos. Dad
is forty six years old, son just fifteen. And the

(01:34:59):
thing that took them out. It's actually in the studio
right your studio. It's in my studio. The thing that
took them out is in my studio right now. It's
not Forrest working on editing the ROAs. It's not that
he's not the one who took out these two. It's
something else. And we'll get into the crazy details on
this in just a moment. We'll also injury dude. He

(01:35:21):
get to this vampire wife attack, which is one of
the wilder stories of the day we've been talking about.
Twins can join. Twins will make their way into the
show before too long. It's a busy Wednesday, and we
got all sorts of viral twists and turns for you,
and that is coming up next in the news junk key.

(01:35:55):
This is something that I thought was gone in the
news headlines. I thought we weren't even talking about this anymore,
but it came up, so we might as well work
this in. I I'll have to give me a second here,
blab for a second because I didn't grab it. I'll
have to go get the thing that killed this American
teacher and his son.

Speaker 4 (01:36:12):
I mean, you're being very nonchalant.

Speaker 1 (01:36:13):
Are you gonna die when I might. I'll grab it,
carefully grab it. I will very carefully grab this thing
that killed the American teacher and his son.

Speaker 4 (01:36:25):
Yeah, no problem. Do you know what's in.

Speaker 1 (01:36:27):
There on a shelf? I already know what the thing is.

Speaker 4 (01:36:29):
It is kind of like, uh, I have no idea.

Speaker 2 (01:36:32):
It's been a minute. Is it the shelf that was
behind like what where the garage door is? Or is
it that tiny one with the old radio.

Speaker 1 (01:36:41):
No other side, with all the old trunkets on it.

Speaker 4 (01:36:45):
It's a boob. It's that a squishy stress ball boob,
isn't it.

Speaker 1 (01:36:49):
It is right here in my hand. This is the thing.
This is the thing smaller that killed this American teacher
and his son that I thought was was done, I
thought would not be in the news anymore. But I
have no idea I can safely hold it because it
is encased in a hornet. A murder hornet is what

(01:37:14):
killed this man and his son, and this is literally
one of him. M Yeah, they got hit by a
massive swarm of them. They were they were messing around
with this tree and they were trying to get down
and there was a massive swarm of these murder hornets,
just like this one. They were ziplining right like, they
just like zipline straight into him. I guess. So they

(01:37:36):
ended up like trying to get down out of a
tree at some point, but they were ziplining and last
which I'm sure was beautiful, But these guys are very dangerous.
That's a big gas wasp. It's pretty big. It's about
I would say two inches tall. These things, they're pretty impressive.

(01:37:57):
Oh god, a little freaky, but still enough. There is
a stinger. Yeah, it's not very big. It's like the
head of a needle, but it's enough for these particular
murder hornets to do damage. And that this father son
duo out there ziplining, like Celian said, ended up getting attacked.

(01:38:17):
Their whole bodies were covered in spots. It was just
absolutely painful. And you can't even imagine you die.

Speaker 2 (01:38:26):
Oh I mean, I'm asking something that shock heart. Do
murder hornets actually kill you?

Speaker 1 (01:38:35):
They could? You probably freaking out and your heart blows up.

Speaker 2 (01:38:38):
So primarily through multiple stings that deliver a large potent
dose of venom, which can lead to anaphylectic shock, cardiac arrest,
or work in failure. I feel like and or is
the proper sentence, Well, a single sting is unlikely to
be fatal for a healthy adult.

Speaker 4 (01:38:55):
They have the allergic reaction they had.

Speaker 2 (01:38:57):
So many of them is deadly because it can neurotoxins
and compounds of damaged tissue.

Speaker 1 (01:39:03):
I keep in mind Daniel Low and the father forty six,
Cooper O and the son fifteen. So there are these
These are not like extremely old fragile people. It's just
the murder hornets got one again. I thought these things
were were sunsetting out there, but they're they're back lying.

Speaker 2 (01:39:20):
And wait, zip line company, want a double check where
your lines are going before sending people on that.

Speaker 1 (01:39:27):
We don't even have those here, do we. I don't
think we have murder hornets some other one you have,
you know in your hand?

Speaker 4 (01:39:34):
Can they have like a migration every once in a
while or is it the African.

Speaker 1 (01:39:40):
There was the reason why we're talking about this, folks
is for a while it was one of these big
viral narratives, and we were chronicling all these stories of
the murderer hornets flying around all over the place, and
they they were talking about we found one in Seattle,
we found one here, we found one there, and then
all of those stories died off, and unfortunately for these folks,

(01:40:01):
they still had them in lause. I guess it was
still a problem for them over there. Yep. Now now
they have unfortunately died, so we shall see. Here is anonymous,
a couple anonymous emails that I want to get to.
This one is from somebody who says, for the love
of all things holy, keep me anonymous. Okay, all right.

(01:40:24):
I used to work at SDF as a tech for
the Plane Agency, and I've worked on equipment on some
of these planes. This is the west runway and the
longest one at the airport where this plane crash. The
UPS plane is talking about. The plane was able to
clear the blast fence south of the runway and crossed

(01:40:48):
one of the roads nearby, but it hit something called
Dixie Warehouse, or it used to be called Dixie Warehouse.
One of the videos from the perspective of the UPS
tug showed the plane cartwheeling. It did look like it
was kind of cartwheeling at the time of impact there,
which is no good to say the very least. It
had to cross grade lane before it hit a petroleum

(01:41:08):
recycling facility. There are multiple recycling facilities and other industrial
businesses in the past. Path this ups plane crash took place.
You have a petroleum that doesn't sound like it probably
added to the cloud. Sure, so I had to as
big as that explosion was. This happened during rush hour too,

(01:41:28):
and it's a two lane road all the way south.
He said. It would be a miracle if it didn't
impact it. Put a lot of perspective for me personally.
Wait for it because I used to work on the
roof of the warehouse as a lot of the approach
lights are on top of it, he said, So him, Yeah,

(01:41:48):
that's freaking. That's got to hit you in a very
very weird way. Uh Kimi Anonymous says this person at
tips at the news Junkie dot com. Hey, gang, cloning
and artificial insemination are not allowed in the orough Bred
horse racing. Cloning is allowed, though, and polo horses. Aldolfo
Combiaso cloned his favorite polo horse, Quota Terra, fourteen times

(01:42:12):
and he swaps them during a game. Is that true?
That's wild?

Speaker 4 (01:42:16):
If true, is that why you're anonymous?

Speaker 1 (01:42:20):
Fourteen times? Quarter Tero is the horse? He said?

Speaker 4 (01:42:25):
And this is all online information. I flag on the field.
I don't understand why you have to be anonymous.

Speaker 1 (01:42:31):
Well, I think maybe for other reasons they want to be.
But horse travels is true or not? This is three
am I getting? Oh no, No, this says six cloned horses.
This from twenty sixteen help ride or win prestigious polo match.
And then this is years later he's got fourteen clones.
Oh wait.

Speaker 6 (01:42:47):
And then this person said that artificial insemination is not allowed,
isn't isn't that why the sperm is so.

Speaker 1 (01:42:54):
Expensive? They said, artificial intemination is not allowed. Hold on,
let me go back. Artificial and sem and cloning are
not allowed in thoroughbred horse racing, but it is allowed
in polo horses.

Speaker 2 (01:43:05):
Right, every time in horse races they want the sperm
of the winning horse. And then that not involve artificially inseminating.

Speaker 1 (01:43:16):
Uh yeah, I mean I guess it's it's I guess
it's artificial insemination. If you're taking it from one and
ramming it into another.

Speaker 6 (01:43:22):
Maybe they're not taking it from one and ramming it
into another. Maybe they're taking that horse over there, getting
them good and drunk.

Speaker 1 (01:43:30):
Could be saucing them up and getting them ready to go,
you know, just putting on some slow jams. Okay, all right,
thank you for the email. You could be anonymous to
put that on top if you'd like to. Tips at
the news Junkie dot com. Tips at thenewsjunkie dot com.
A lot of people with updates on the ups plane crash.
I think we've covered that mostly. If you missed it,
go back on the show. I'll give you something else

(01:43:52):
here for a second, because this is kind of an
interesting little story in Texas. Some former can join twins.
All right, former conjoined twins are now in the news
and it's because they have uh decided to after their surgery.
Pop back up, hang on. ABC News has been on

(01:44:13):
their own worst websites.

Speaker 4 (01:44:14):
They want to be back together.

Speaker 1 (01:44:16):
Oh hold on, compete. So they now are years after
being separated, these former conjoined twins. You can take a
look at them here. Oh wow, this is when they
were conjoined. Obviously, it shows him to the hospital.

Speaker 4 (01:44:29):
I thought for sure at the shoulder. This is a
this is different.

Speaker 1 (01:44:33):
Yeah, they're there. They were conjoined down the middle.

Speaker 4 (01:44:35):
Gods in twenty sixteen. They were born conjoined at the pelvis.

Speaker 3 (01:44:39):
Their separation required a groundbreaking twelve hour separation surgery at
a hospital in Corpus Christi, Texas.

Speaker 2 (01:44:46):
Watching there's a picture of all the doctors praying, which
I feel like is not.

Speaker 4 (01:44:55):
Very good to hear right before you're going into the surgery.

Speaker 1 (01:44:58):
Well, these are delicate surgery. They were connected at the abdomen,
and they had their own arms and legs and stuff.
And I'll tell you what they're doing now just a
second here.

Speaker 3 (01:45:05):
Again, but now nearly ten years later, the girls are
doing a lot more than walking.

Speaker 4 (01:45:11):
Oh yeah, competition.

Speaker 1 (01:45:16):
Their routine tells the story of their.

Speaker 3 (01:45:18):
Lives, from the music to the final pose, a reference
to their very beginnings and their journey has been a
long one. After the surgery, the family lived Donald House
for more.

Speaker 4 (01:45:28):
Than a year as the girls were covered. One was
just about it.

Speaker 1 (01:45:32):
I don't know why one is much shorter than the other.
One is like bad legs, I guess, But they look
totally normal. Would you ever think like two young normal girls.

Speaker 2 (01:45:43):
Seeing like pre surgery. Oh, I thought for sure their
legs wouldn't be any good chair. I mean, they're jumping
around and doing cheer. It looks like perfectly normal.

Speaker 1 (01:45:54):
Man. Maybe that is that must be one of the
more successful removals of conjoined twins in history work. I
guess so the pr of the right thing. I think
the doctor was like, I got this right down the
mid out. No no, no, no, no, that's it's a
little off. Looks.

Speaker 3 (01:46:11):
One is a bit shorter than the other, who quickly
became their family.

Speaker 1 (01:46:15):
I'm not gonna forget this because the people here always uh,
we're there for us. When we cry, they cried with us.
We never fell alone. Wow, these two are now part
of their their cheerleading team and they're competing as cheerleaders
a decade after being separated from being conjoined twins.

Speaker 4 (01:46:38):
That's crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:46:39):
What a world we live in here, What a time.
So yeah, science can do some pretty astonishing things, and
now they're utilizing their own bodies separate from one another
years later. Maybe mix all the stories together before you
know it. Okay, quick break. When we come back. We
got jury duty. I promised you this vampire wife story,
which is such a weird journey. We will go down

(01:47:02):
that route and see what happened with this vampire wife
with a Samurai sword. And an update on the Louver
Museum robbery, which is just it's got me shaking my
head a bit today. Why wait to hear the newest
bombshells in the Louver robbery that's coming up next in
the news. Chunkie, I did notice something yesterday. It's so

(01:47:38):
funny to me, how I know. Obviously America is very
divided politically. We have the fringe people, the very political
people who try to inject politics into everything, trying to
make everybody's lives more miserable. And they can't be won
over by much of anything, logic and just explanations. It
doesn't matter. It's a team ideology and they're drinking the

(01:48:02):
kool aid until they flop on the ground, right, And
I see that kind of stuff. But then I see
there are some things that were up yesterday in the
elections for votes where I go, how could anybody even
be against this? Who are the people against this? And
I didn't look up the full thing. I texted you
about this yesterday, Sea Land, But there was one thing
on the ballot in New York that was like ditching

(01:48:25):
all of the printed paper maps and creating a digital
version of all of the New York City maps that
they then build on as a huge interactive digital map
that is their future, as opposed to all the stupid
printed maps that they have up all these places. I
was like, who's the person who's not for that? Who's

(01:48:48):
the person who's not like we want to improve on
the technology that will help everybody navigate the city that
we all live in together, Like, who's the person we
can't even get together on simple things sometimes that should
have been one hundred percent approved? All right, unless I'm
missing something crazy in that. I don't know if you
found that celing, but I'm looking right now. Let's see

(01:49:10):
NYC votes dot org ballot proposal. There's number five.

Speaker 6 (01:49:14):
I think, yeah, it was okay what you'll see on
the ballot so that this is one of those dot
org websites that's trying to kind of simplify everything for you.
All right, So consolidate Borough Boroughmap, office and address assignment
functions and create one digital city map at Department of

(01:49:34):
City Planning. Today the city map consists of paper maps
across five offices. So yes, yeah, they're taking five offices
and consolidating them into one. No leaves in place five
separate map and address assignment functions administered by Borough President
President offices.

Speaker 1 (01:49:54):
Now, for the record, I guess the people who work
in those offices might be less excited about this. Correct,
but and it passed, I believe, but it I was like,
but only like seventy five percent? Yes, yeah, Like, well
what are the other people who are again? I want
the I want the maps to be in four different locations.
I like it to be like a treasure hunt when
I want to do some work on my house. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:50:15):
This definitely seems like they've been doing this the old
way way too long. So what the proposal means? The
city map and they capitalize this when I say city map,
C and M are capitalized. The city map legally defines
street names, width and lines. Currently, it's managed by five
topographical bureaus in each borough president's office and not reading

(01:50:39):
that wrong, five bureaus and each borough president's office. The
city map consists of eight thousand paper maps.

Speaker 1 (01:50:48):
That's crazy, Like why what do you want that to
be one digital thing that you everybody can access then
you can go.

Speaker 4 (01:50:55):
And search within.

Speaker 6 (01:50:56):
I would be curious, very curious how many cities are
still doing it like this because this sounds like something
that hasn't been changed in a lot of places.

Speaker 4 (01:51:04):
Is very expensive to change. It can't be this is a.

Speaker 1 (01:51:06):
Red tape thing that's what it is. This is like
one of those things where it's red tape and you know,
we've got to go to this office and do this,
and this is it. Give you looked at these maps,
it wouldn't be like reading a street map that you
would get directions on. It would be like the uh,
it would be very geographical. There a lot of mathematics
in there.

Speaker 6 (01:51:28):
The proposal would require the Department of City Planning or
the DCP to consolidate these separately maintained paper maps into
one centralized and digitized city map.

Speaker 1 (01:51:39):
And then it's pretty obvious. Yes, if you had to
vote for GPS on your phone or tripticks and then
there's still not not everybody's voting for GPS on your phone.
You're like, what the hell we can't get together on
this thing? This is This seems like an obvious thing.
Bdmx con says they don't want the city to take
it from the borough. Closer to the are to the constituents,

(01:52:00):
the better. That's not true, just by default, the closer
things are to the constituents, the better. No, it should
everything should be modernized. Everything should be modernized.

Speaker 6 (01:52:10):
Depends they don't want, you know, like people in one
you know, part of the city making decisions for them,
you know, for way across the way.

Speaker 1 (01:52:20):
Yeah, I don't know. It seems like a no brainer
to me. But anyhow, when I see that in these elections,
I'm like, why would Why wouldn't everybody at least be
on the same page for that one thing? Thousand paper
maps is wild. It seems like a nightmare. Here we go,
let's do jury duty. Court is now in session, so
put your phone down and pay attention before we call

(01:52:40):
the bailiff over to with your ass. You're knowing jury
duty with the news Junkie. Jury Duty brought to you
by the one the only Mo de Wits of the
DeWitt Law Firm. Injured on the go, just call MO
eight hundred, CALLMO eight hundred, CALLMO, or go to just
CALLMO dot com after an accident. I want you to
reach out to MO because he's going to help you
out so much. He's the best of the best, and

(01:53:04):
he's going to be the person who guides you through
this whole process. A Jack on YouTube says, don't forget
to press like, please don't listen to Jack. Thank you Jack.
We need to keep the channel alive because YouTube is
in a rotting process. YouTube is rotting off the vine.
Twitch is rotting off the vine. But maybe we'll be
a beautiful fruit in the middle of all that that
blossoms into something new. Over on the streaming side of things,

(01:53:27):
check us out. If you haven't ever before, go to
YouTube dot com Slash the news Junkie as we do
Jerry Duty. A nude driver is in trouble because I
guess that's frowned upon these days. Can't be driving around
naked doing donuts in a parking lot, stunt driving naked
in the church parking lot is I guessed against the

(01:53:47):
law somehow. In South Carolina's Low Country, officers responded at
ten forty five to a report of a nude man
driving recklessly on Nesbit Avenue. When they arrived, officers found
empty beer can tire marks consistent with the vehicles spinning
in vehicles, and then they found the man who was
with his horn blaring, blocking traffic, wearing only underwear in

(01:54:10):
a tank top, and he had a blanket wrapped around him.
He smelled in mud this is going to freak you
out a little bit. I know it's going to shock you.
He smelled strongly of alcohol At the moment I was
going to say feces.

Speaker 4 (01:54:25):
Yeah, I would mix both, maybe.

Speaker 1 (01:54:27):
A scale and white powder that tested positive for cocaine.
Was along with him?

Speaker 2 (01:54:35):
Or do you make the decision not to go hang
out or go out to a bar, and said, strip
off your clothes, put a towel around you, and do donuts.

Speaker 1 (01:54:44):
Behind his own supply, one other person with him, totally
by himself, when the world is just not giving you
the winds that you're looking for. You said, I need
I need a couple of wins today. I gotta get naked.
And I got to drive around town and added up
with him in some cuffs and fortune for this gentleman. Meanwhile,
there is a vampire wife story that I was teasing.

(01:55:07):
Let me see is there a report on this, because
it's so weird, this vampire wife story. This is like
the whole newscast. Hang on, Let's see if I can
find it here. This was a woman in California. They
call her the vampire wife, and she had a samurai's
sword in her hands. And this is a woman who

(01:55:28):
used the samurai sword to murder her wife and brutally
attack her mother in law. Has been sentenced to thirty
five years to life in prison. That is the sentence
handed down. Responding deputies with the La County Sheriff's Department
arrived on the scene to find the victim's mother waving
them down as she walked in the street, blood visible
to her right leg and hands carrying a katana sword.

(01:55:50):
As this all went down, she immediately laid down the
sword in order to do so. And I said, this
woman had attacked both of them, and they called her
a vampire lady. This late, well, how absolutely she was
trying to use the sword and trying to suck as
much blood from the people she was attacking as she could,

(01:56:12):
like a vampire. She was enjoying seeing the blood coming out.
There was no regret at all, acting like a vampire.
That is weird what happened.

Speaker 4 (01:56:23):
Would love some background or a psychological This.

Speaker 1 (01:56:27):
Is the Samurai sword lady here. This is her on
the street as the police approached, and she sliced and
diced a little bit at the.

Speaker 4 (01:56:35):
Toime, like blue dry her hair.

Speaker 1 (01:56:37):
She's out there in her skirt, but this was after
doing some vampire stuff. But she was found guilty and
the Samurai sword vampire attacks. She's gonna be behind bars
for a while, it seems. And the update on the loover,
I'll hold that back. We'll give it to you when
we come back. Plus a story about McDonald's that will
probably grab some of you by the shoulders and shake
you a little bit, and a man with a shovel

(01:57:00):
all coming up next on the news junk Kie, a
grab bag segment has arrived. We've got some ground to cover.

(01:57:23):
First things first, if you hear the keyword, make sure
you're playing along. Friends. We're making winners out of you
out there just for listening to this station. You hear
the keyword thing and it tells you what to do,
and you do it. And guess what. The longer that
goes on, the more like weeks go by and stuff,
the more people go, I'm not gonna do that anymore.

(01:57:44):
And then the pool of people who participates dwindles, and
then you have an opportunity to just pop up and
grab that money. Make it yours baby. So listen for
those keywords. Okay, listen for those and participate on this station.
See somebody that responded about the horse artificial insemination topic, right, Yes,

(01:58:04):
I wanted to clear clear things up. We try to
if I mess up anything out here, corrections are always welcome.
I don't want to screw things up. I want to
fake news.

Speaker 6 (01:58:12):
Well we kind of we kind of got there on
our own, but somebody confirmed that, yes, the you don't
pay for just a vial of the winning horses sperm.

Speaker 1 (01:58:22):
Just for the record, there was a reason why we
were talking about this. Cloning was in the news. Tom
Brady cloned his dog sperm with somebody. Somebody anonymously emailed
the show and said, hey, in the world of horse racing,
you cannot clone any horses and artificial insemination is banned.
And Seiland was like, wait, hold on, I thought every year,

(01:58:44):
we say it every year on like the seventh or
eighth of May whatever.

Speaker 6 (01:58:48):
We come back after the horse race, the Kentucky Derby
has been run that you know, now the horse with
the most fa most expensive sperm in the world. But
it's not the sperm or the the the the semen
of the horse that you're buying. It is, but you
you're paying a stud fee, like we said, and you

(01:59:08):
do have to actually take the horse over there, and
you know, the horse gets a lot of action, it's
physically happening.

Speaker 1 (01:59:14):
Yeah, So it's.

Speaker 2 (01:59:17):
Keep the horse going until baby made or there's no
you know, we have to ask anonymous.

Speaker 6 (01:59:24):
Those are breeder questions because I know that I've heard
of the idea of a stud fee before for other
things like dogs and stuff. If you want to, you know,
if you have like a pure bread dog and you
want to make some money breeding. I don't know if
if it's like until we get babies or you pay
by the try, you know, so they don't have so

(01:59:46):
much time on their hands, right, they.

Speaker 2 (01:59:47):
Can't just sit there for so My parents used a
stud to to breed one of their dogs, but for
you know, their own puppies. The only thing I remember
was the dog was definitely at their ho else for
a couple of days. The breeding process was traumatizing, and
it's just a lot with dogs, especially they get stuck.

Speaker 4 (02:00:07):
It's weird.

Speaker 2 (02:00:08):
But the agreement was that the stud mama and papa,
like the humans, got first pick of the litter.

Speaker 1 (02:00:17):
Yes, I've heard this before. Yeah, yeah, it could be
a weird world. It's like I told you, guys, the
one time Courtney and I were walking around the neighborhood.
A couple of blocks away, some guy in a van
pulls up and rolls down the window and he's like
hey man, and I go, hey, it's like the beautiful
dog and I said, thank you, sir. It's like this
Mexican dude, and he's like, will you stud your dog

(02:00:41):
to our dog. It was like it was trying to
do a dog hook up in a van in the
middle of the street. In a van. He's like, we
want your dog to have sex with our dog. And
because we have a cavalier too, and I'm like, oh
my god, it's weird, man, But I heard if you
do that, like Sabrina said, the process is way more traumatic.

Speaker 2 (02:01:02):
So how about the last time I want to go
visit my parents, the random dog that like came up
to there, it's Priscilla.

Speaker 4 (02:01:10):
She's part of the house now. She was in heat.

Speaker 2 (02:01:13):
And then one of the puppies not old enough to
get the balls trapped but was old enough to breed.
And my I just remember my mom screaming like come
help me because they were stuck together. Oh and I
was like, okay, do you have a flashlight And my
dad pulls out a headlamp, uh huh, And there it

(02:01:34):
was with a strapped my forehead trying to be like,
all right, I don't know if there's anything.

Speaker 4 (02:01:39):
How does this work? I closed my eyes, I can
see it all vividly and guess what puppy was born.

Speaker 1 (02:01:45):
It's not romantic, it's not.

Speaker 2 (02:01:47):
It's very awkward and weird and bless everyone who does
like does it for a living?

Speaker 1 (02:01:53):
I don't know. I saw a video called mister Hands Dad.

Speaker 4 (02:01:59):
Those human thought bonies so cute.

Speaker 1 (02:02:04):
Okay, I will just wander off into this for a second,
and I promise we'll get back into the show. Wouldn't
it be hilarious if that wereked? If if human.

Speaker 4 (02:02:13):
Head on horsebody?

Speaker 1 (02:02:14):
Yes, the bigger animal controls the body outcome and the
smaller animal controls the head outcome. As I see it,
So if you were mister Hands in it it was
a human man and a horse, it would be just
a human head on a.

Speaker 4 (02:02:29):
Horse exactly so not even like abs that you see.

Speaker 1 (02:02:32):
No, yeah, the horse's neck is exactly the same, and
just the head on top of that.

Speaker 4 (02:02:39):
The reality is the guy died, did he not?

Speaker 1 (02:02:43):
Mister Hand's guy died yep, and his friends ditched him
at the hospital. They For those of you who don't know, Yeah,
there's there's a wiki for this, I think, right, mister
hands wiki. Yeah, here we go. It's it's called the
Unimclaw horse Sex And if you were really looking for
something to read whilst on the toilet this week, I

(02:03:06):
can recommend nothing better than the unim Claw e n
um Claw what your sex case?

Speaker 4 (02:03:12):
That's like thirty years old, is it not?

Speaker 1 (02:03:14):
Two thousand and five when they went down? Yeah, it was.
It was one of the most red stories of the
Seattle Time.

Speaker 6 (02:03:25):
Imagine everybody who contributed a story to the Seattle Times
in the year two thousand and five, but.

Speaker 1 (02:03:31):
The most red story was the enom Claw horse sex case.
Was the man who tried to put twenty pounds of
stuff in a five pound bag and learned what happens
when you do that? Yeah, but that's yeah, that's that
is true. That is true, and the film the whole thing.
So if you don't anyhow wouldn't it be wouldn't it

(02:03:53):
be a thing? Though? If if humans could pull that off?
And like your friend goes, I swear to god, I
didn't do anything with that donkey, and then you look
over and the donkey has the same exact head as
your friend, and it's just all out there and all
the cross of species, all the beautiful things.

Speaker 4 (02:04:11):
Oh they had to have tried that without publishing any sort.

Speaker 1 (02:04:14):
Of Oh, just naturally. It's happened over the years.

Speaker 4 (02:04:19):
O're the wiki page.

Speaker 1 (02:04:21):
Mister Hans was an engineer who worked for Boeing. Yes, yes,
these guys were smart guys, but they were just they
had a particular thing. They were into cross species stuff.
And I heard, you guys are gonna look down on
me for that, because you're gonna start thinking things. I
heard an interview with one of the guys who was

(02:04:43):
involved in the mister Hands video. I am a man
of deep Internet lore, all right. I am from the
underbelly of the Internet, and the underbelly of all these
videos is where I come from. And I heard an
interview with one of the guys who was involved in
the mister Hands video, the famous mister Hands video online,
and he was one of the most bizarre people I've

(02:05:03):
ever heard speak in an event. You don't he calls
humans two footers and other animals four footers, and he'll
be like, I don't get along well with two footers.
I only my friends and my lovers are four footers.
And or maybe if two leggers and four leggers. I

(02:05:24):
don't know one of the two of those. I don't
need to know anymore. I think I know too much already.

Speaker 4 (02:05:29):
I just I want to be a final one for
the people who are hearing about this for the first time.

Speaker 1 (02:05:34):
Yeah, I mean, the internet's a weird place. The world's
a weird place. You start to learn about things like that.
Next you learn about your lemon parties, you learn about
your Chris Chans, you learn about these things that happened
out there on the internet, goatsies, you learn about your gootsies.
And young kids. I don't want you to hear this
show and do bad things, but I think it is

(02:05:58):
kind of a rite of passage that younger people should
also know the viral shock videos of old eighteen they
have to turn. Yeah, once you turn eighteen, then you
you watch those videos and you now, oh, okay, I.

Speaker 4 (02:06:13):
Know it's email us anonymous, and yeah, share your story.

Speaker 1 (02:06:17):
No video though, please just save me on that one.
Over at McDonald's, they have huge third quarter sales coming
in thanks to some great cheap deals that they've been
doing that has been huge, including their big macmeal, their
sausage McMuffin meal. Those were massive for them in the
third quarter, bringing them seven point eight billion dollars. So

(02:06:41):
the monopoly had any hand in this. I don't think
they're there yet. I think I don't think in that
quarter the monopoly is gonna be the big factor. That's
still going on now, right, I think so, yeah, yeah,
So I think that will be in the fourth quarter
for McDonald's. I believe this is July through September. That's
what the sales are based on. And McDonald's announced these

(02:07:02):
and surprisingly snack wraps have been absolutely massive for them.
I don't have to worry about that because Courtney makes
homemade snack wraps and they are the greatest thing that
any human has ever made in a kitchen ever. She
makes fancy up, uplifted, upscaled looks like, is it no?

(02:07:25):
I still I can't say improved on snack wraps that
are They're so good, they are so incredibly good. I
guess they're working for McDonald's two on their end. The
whole business models is shape it up for them grab
bag segment. Moving along, there's a couple of other things
I wanted to hit on. At the Louver. They now
have they're continuing to search for the one hundred plus
million dollars in gems that were stolen from the Louver

(02:07:47):
in broad daylight by a bunch of Dodos, and they
now have announced I don't know why this is surprising
to me at all that it appears there might have
been some additional security issues at the most popular museum
on planet Earth, the museum that houses famed things like

(02:08:09):
the Mona Lisa, for example, in Paris, not too far
from the center of Paris, and the Eiffel Tower and
all of that stuff. One thing that they have found
in this investigation after this robbery at the Louver is
that the security system password may have been a little

(02:08:30):
bit weak. The security system password for the Louver was
Louver numbers no lu Vre. That was the password to
the security system. The system at the Louver. The core

(02:08:51):
system was protected by a video surveillance server that had
the password louver. And then if you wanted to get
further into the system, they used software called Tales tales
THHA l e S and the secure password to that
to get deeper down into the loop security system. The
sales password was tales, so uh not exactly the most

(02:09:16):
secure thing in the world. This was kind of a joke.
It is not exactly what the movies showed us going
under the lasers and you know, using people from Cirqute Sola.
None of that was needed. Actually, just a couple of
dodos and the password that was the most obvious one.
That's what leads us there. And finally for the grab
bag segment. It was announced late yesterday Brendan Fraser and

(02:09:41):
Rachel Wise have been announced as returning for the new
Mummy movie Baby and I think Ready or Not. The
directors of Ready or Not, which was a fun movie
if you haven't seen it, The directors of Ready or
Not are the ones behind this reboot of Mummy. Okay

(02:10:01):
with Brennan Fraser.

Speaker 4 (02:10:02):
What was the one that involved Tom Cruise.

Speaker 1 (02:10:05):
The Mummy there? Yes, No, that was another series of
Mummy movies that did not do well. Or maybe it
was one with Tom Cruise, I'm not sure. Didn't perform
as well as they wanted it to. I think they
are going to consider the stuff that was in that
movie and making this new one. But this should be interesting.

(02:10:26):
I mean, I love the ride so much that I'm
glad it'll have some new movie content to be associated with.
So that's what they announced yesterday. Brendan Fraser and racial
Rachel Wise. I think is how you say her name,
but I might be saying that wrong. We'll return for
a new The Mummy movie, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
When will it be out? I have no idea, but

(02:10:48):
Radio Silence is the company behind it. They're known for
the Scream movies and for several other recent hits out there.
Sean Daniels and he did Scream five and six, which
were boring. Abigail he did which was pretty fun to watch,
and a couple other things. He he I think is
working on some universal monster stuff, which is interesting because

(02:11:10):
I saw the preview for this new Frankenstein. Honestly, I
think it looks kind of cool. This new Frankenstein is
coming out this week on I believe netflixing the monster stuff.

Speaker 6 (02:11:23):
I would be down with that because I don't know
that I've seen, like sat down and watched the whole
any of the original Frankenstein stuff.

Speaker 1 (02:11:31):
I haven't.

Speaker 6 (02:11:31):
I just had to know about Frankenstein. I know that
whenever we call the monster Frankenstein, people correct us because
it's doctor Frankenstein. Yeah, it was doctor Frankenstein's monster. Yep,
that's true, but they just call him the monster. I think, yeah,
in the in the book at.

Speaker 1 (02:11:48):
Least from Merrisha. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (02:11:50):
I haven't read any of the books, don't know any
of that other stuff, and so it would be good
to connect with some of that material and kind of
know about it.

Speaker 1 (02:12:00):
We're rebooting it. And I also like Brennan Fraser. I
think he's cool. Over on Twitch. He says the Mummy
movies are really great. The kiddos may be the perfect
age for them right now. I love the Mummy. They
should make a ride out of it at Universal. Kevin,
I have good news for you, good good news indeed,
and it's a fun ride, even after all of these years.

(02:12:21):
All right. That actually the one other thing I'll force
into this because I think it's kind of an interesting conversation.
The La Times had a story in their business section.
Mostly The La Times is full of garbage, but this
was kind of interesting. And they had one of their
writers NILESH. Christopher or Christopher Nilsh, I would imagine, and
this person went over to India to document the rise

(02:12:44):
of something called AI arm farms. Okay, and in India
people are getting paid to do something, and they're told
to wear this and they put a little GoPro on
their head, and then they're told to do what they're
normally doing anyways. So like this is a woman who
folds clothes and she puts a GoPro on her head

(02:13:07):
and records herself as she's slowly folding articles, and she
will take it, lay it down softly, very carefully, and
then she will fold the items that she's looking for.
People are doing the same thing with GoPros on their head.
They're knitting, they're sewing things, they're creating things, they're working
on all sorts of things. But just like it's kind

(02:13:28):
of weird in the workplace to have to train your replacement.
They're doing this to train AI how to do all
of these activities that they're working on. That little neo
robot's not going to learn everything on its own. Bingo, Yeah,
and Neo needs to power up. He's still got somebody
behind the scenes controlling them with strings basically. Right now,

(02:13:51):
like just like chatting with chat, GPT and those other
large language models, it seems really advanced until you run
into something that you're like, oh, wow, AI is not
good at understanding blank. And so when you're thinking about
it in terms of completing tasks like this woman, uh,
you know, folding clothes like this, making sure it's perfect.

(02:14:13):
And then we watched that neo robot that did it
and just did a piss poor job at folding that sweater,
and they were like, yes, I guess this is good enough, like.

Speaker 4 (02:14:22):
A fitted cheap because they.

Speaker 1 (02:14:25):
Need these facilities in India, they say, they call them
arm farms AI arm farms in India where young engineers
strap go pros to their foreheads and fold laundry or
pack boxes or do other things to teach humanoid robots
how to do these chores at the future.

Speaker 6 (02:14:41):
But what I also realized, like the current like chat, GPT,
Google AI, the stuff that we use on a regular
basis does not have a firm grasp upon is the
idea of syllables in the English language.

Speaker 1 (02:14:54):
Yeah, yeah, I mean all of these things they have
to learn from what in many humans exactly as.

Speaker 4 (02:15:02):
A human to be given a video and get the
idea this.

Speaker 1 (02:15:05):
But this is the video. This is the human creates
the video that then is fed into the AI to
teach it how to do these things to replace us.
Is that a sellout thing as a human to be
teaching the AI that's going to take away all of
these jobs. It's a company called object Ways. They sent
two hundred towel folding videos to a client in the

(02:15:26):
United States. The company has more than two thousand employees.
About half of them label censor data from autonomous cars
and robotics, and the rest work on a generative AI system.
They said they are doing things involving arm reaching fingers,
gripping fabric, sliding, folding closes, tagging towels, doing all of
these different things to teach the AI to replace us eventually.

(02:15:49):
That's I know you need some money, but that's some
sellout material right there. They're really just giving it up
to the overlords, the AI overlords. So let us know
what you think. Send a dispatch over at the news
Junkie dot com. When we come back, we'll get into
a man with a shovel who's made his way into
the news. More from it, yesterday's election outcomes that might
be worth mentioning and Oreo has a terrible idea and

(02:16:12):
all of that is coming up next on the News Junkie.
The person that you are, I'm sure you have some

(02:16:34):
sort of really valuable opinions in there, and I'd love
to hear those, so send an email or a dispatch.
Dispatches you can record audio and video on the news
junkie dot com. Email tips tips at the Newsjunkie dot com.
This is a story that's kind of bothering me, and
it's because it's about a guy, a husband who got
into it with his wife, and that can be a

(02:16:56):
bad idea in and of itself, but this case gets
worse because this husband was talking to the police after
his wife jammed an eight inch knife in his eye,
after she's stablishing the censored version of this, and she's

(02:17:17):
she's next to him as this is going on, why
did you stab him? For God's sake? And he keeps
playing with the knife. The cops will stop talking.

Speaker 4 (02:17:25):
I'm still not feeling well. Look at the.

Speaker 1 (02:17:28):
Blur is so enormous coming up this guy's head.

Speaker 4 (02:17:30):
I'll put this up on all eight inches to go
into his eye, not.

Speaker 1 (02:17:35):
All the way in, but pretty close, pretty close to it.
As this guy's just sitting there talking along, Hey, is
there audio to this that He's probably a different language,
so we're not gonna be able to hear, what the
hell have you done to him? Don't touch the knife.
Don't touch the knife. He's we've called an ambulance. Why
did you stab him, Lisa? Why did you stab him?

(02:17:57):
For God's sake, he's bleeding. Okay, don't you want to
think about that man sticking with me like it's sticking
in his eye socket? Right now? I will put that off.
I know, I know, just when you think like if
you're like, my relationship has problems if you think about

(02:18:21):
like this, yeah, but like you know your eye right.

Speaker 6 (02:18:25):
And then eight inches back, Yeah, that's your dead, that's
deadly that's going in there.

Speaker 1 (02:18:31):
Yeah, I'm putting this up right now. I'll just put
a stabbed in the eye because that makes a lot
of sense. Honestly. That's that's what it is. That's ale
I didn't want to use and the thing that I said,
but I had no choice.

Speaker 6 (02:18:48):
Still, I saw that I was heading yea seventy miles
an hour for that pun and could not swerve.

Speaker 4 (02:18:54):
See it now unless that guy you have to see it.

Speaker 1 (02:18:57):
Check it out over on the news junkie. All right,
let's get into a couple of emails here. Somebody sending
in radar image of the ups crash. I did see that.
It's it's always a weird thing when there's a plane
crash or an explosion that's a large explosion. Sometimes it
will actually show up on a radar sweep the like
smoke from the explosion, quite the plume. Yeah, and it was.

(02:19:22):
That's how big this explosive cloud was that it did
actually show up on that and a lot of other
people sent in many different food rash from them. No,
I think I might actually hang on, Oh, this is
a screen recording. Hang on, let me pull this up
sea Lane because they did send across this. Yeah, this
is the graphic. Oh, that's it. That's why you see

(02:19:43):
like a massive, a massive cloud pop up as if
it's a huge storm in Louisville, Kentucky. But it's not
a storm. It's a huge plume of smoke from the
plane crash that happened right outside of Louisville. That's what
is popping up on this Pretty crazy, actually, I mean
it's amazing even more people weren't killed in this incident,

(02:20:04):
and we forget about this world of people who are
flying around all over the place, but they're not in
flying cockpits of planes. Full of people that are just
commuting from place to place. They're just flying your stuff.
They're flying your stuff from place to place. And that's
what was happening. In this case. It was an UPS plane.

Speaker 6 (02:20:21):
I know this is really low on the priority list
for them because they just lost uh you know, human pilots.
They have a lot of damage on the ground that's
both both to them and both to and also to
the other surrounding buildings that weren't theirs. But do you
think that people whose packages were in that plane, like

(02:20:42):
if they check their tracking numbers right.

Speaker 1 (02:20:44):
Now, would know problems. Oh, they were all scanned in
at the facility. They might have been scanned onto the airplane.

Speaker 2 (02:20:52):
I mean UPS tells you what the area they're in. Yeah,
it might just be that meter right in the middle.

Speaker 1 (02:20:59):
If you're right now, you might see that this sucker
is stuck in Kentucky and not going anywhere. Somebody else
in in a photo dispatch of what it would look
like if if a horse and me got together, very weird.
You can see that on you submitted dispatch. A lot
of mine gosh, in a world of AI advancements, this

(02:21:23):
person has not used any of them. I have decided
to go pretty old school and just copy paste. Doctor
Rob is going to talk to us about growing up
on a farm. Let's listen in a good afternoon news junkies.

Speaker 14 (02:21:36):
Hey, long ago, when I was working my way through
fake medical school to become a fake doctor, I worked
for an old man who grew up on a farm
at a beverage warehouse.

Speaker 1 (02:21:51):
Yeah, and he told the group of us, he goes,
show me.

Speaker 14 (02:21:55):
A boy that grew up on a farm, the head
and bang of she okay, and I'll show you a liar.

Speaker 1 (02:22:02):
I don't want to know if this is true or not.
I don't know farm life enough.

Speaker 6 (02:22:05):
I don't want to know farm life enough.

Speaker 1 (02:22:07):
I grew up in the woods, basically in a place
called the acreage, and I don't know anything about that.
But we'll just leave it there. We'll leave it right
where it is now. Meghan with a story. Hopefully this
is something different, a different topic, Hey, junkies.

Speaker 12 (02:22:25):
So my parents used to breed Irish setters, and we
were lucky enough to have both the male and the female,
so we didn't have to worry about finding a stud
for our girl. But the most traumatizing part of all
of it, out of the four litters that this dog had.
She was nice enough to give birth on my bed
one night.

Speaker 1 (02:22:45):
Oh, I was asleep and.

Speaker 12 (02:22:48):
I woke up to a soaking wet mattress and fine
brand new puppies.

Speaker 1 (02:22:54):
Nine.

Speaker 12 (02:22:58):
Hope you have a great day, Happy Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (02:22:59):
Yeah, I look how at the end, She's like, honestly,
it was kind of cool. I mean, it's kind of
cool because you've got nine little puppies. Roll over and
smash one of the puppies. Nine more roll over on
this soaking wet mattress, which was inevitable. She definitely caught
some of that. I can't do it all right. Uh well,

(02:23:21):
I got more from you here as we wrap things
up here on a Wednesday. But we'll get to those
final dispatches. Of course, we'll do the stories that didn't
make the cut. And today I learned to wrap everything
up for a Wednesday. All of that on the schedule
in the amount of time that we have left, and
that is coming up next on the News Junkie. Thanks friend,

(02:23:55):
it's been a blast. Hanging out with you is just
the highlight of my day. And we'll do it all
over again tomorrow. You just tune in right here. The
same way you did this time, and we'll roll through
everything going on viral in the world in twenty four hours,
and I look forward to it, honest to God. But
for right now, it's time to do the final dispatches.
So here goes. These are the final dispatches, but Sean

(02:24:19):
will probably only play one man. No guarantees, no guarantees.
Let's peak around in here in the final dispatches. Maybe
we'll do one, maybe we'll do more. I'll refresh for
the latest. This is uh, not going to do that one.
An old story from Rick gi Us up junkies. Hey Rick,

(02:24:43):
From Frank Gay, Oh yeah, hey, my benditos. You guys
ran a story about a year ago about a guy
guys arm chopped off or bitting off. It's about the
bar here now and that's where it happened. Oh really,
I me get back down. Let me laying, guys. We'll
be careful out there. I guess this is where somebody

(02:25:05):
got their arm ripped off by a gator out there
in the real world. Be careful, please. This is the
last one I think we're going to do today.

Speaker 9 (02:25:13):
This is.

Speaker 1 (02:25:16):
Let's go to Jay Ryan. Hey news junkies. I hope
you're having a wonderful day. You too.

Speaker 5 (02:25:22):
I just got done interviewing at Northwestern University for their
Masters and Counseling program. It is the number six program
ranked in the country for counselors. I just need some
good vibes. I did all the things I'm supposed to.
My TV is amazing, I've done a bunch of advocacy
work on paper, I am a fantastic candidate, and the

(02:25:46):
interview just tells whether they liked me as a person
or not. So either I'm gonna be excited or I'm
gonna go cry because they hated me. Sure, so, yeah,
good vibes, and I'll update you guys in two weeks
when I found out good luck friend, good luck two.

Speaker 1 (02:26:00):
That was a long time wrong. Please be sweating a
little bit from that for sure. All right, that'll do
it for those Let me just see if I need
to read. Now we're good on emails, and now we'll
get into the stories that didn't make the cut. In California,
man's in trouble. He had a shovel and that leads
to him being behind bars for a while. A thirty
two year old Santa Paula California man was arrested for

(02:26:23):
attempted murder with a shovel and a knife, and a
thirty year old Santa Paula man was hospitalized with head
injuries and stab wounds for being on the other end
of the shovel in the knife. As you might imagine,
six forty five pm this all went down, they started
to get into it with each other. One man said
I'll be right back, came back with a shovel in
one hand and a knife in the other and started

(02:26:45):
to attack his pal. The rest is history. They end
up in one in hospital and one behind bars, at
least for the time being. That's what friends of Basically, yeah,
I saw this going world today. This young girl I
talked about going to h Mart recently, the like Asian supermarket,

(02:27:05):
and this would have probably scarred me for life. This
young girl super cute, right. They bring her to the
Asian supermarket and have all these big tanks. They have
all these big tanks with like huge fish that you
can buy for dinner, and lobsters and crabs and all that.

(02:27:26):
She's having fun looking at them. All the fish are
right there ready for you to grab and eat and
cook it home. It's a lot more tank.

Speaker 4 (02:27:35):
Oh my came out of no where.

Speaker 1 (02:27:42):
The fish flopped out of the aquarium at the Asian Market.
Maybe you should get to keep that fish. This is
so fit. It's a bit of a big fish. Get him, Tom.

(02:28:06):
I would have been scarred for life.

Speaker 4 (02:28:09):
And that's how vegans are born.

Speaker 1 (02:28:11):
Yeah, yeah, I don't know if I could eat this thing.
Mom and dad, what is this? I'll put this up
on see it now. For those of you that will
just wallop to this little girl, hang on, I can
do this real time. Yeah, she she's all right, but

(02:28:32):
she will never forget this moment and this fish, it
won't be something that she forgets any time. Would react
to that if if history is any prologue for this
sea lion Jack would be incredibly scared and start crying.
And then afterwards, when you showed him the video of it,
he would laugh, yeah, hysterically.

Speaker 3 (02:28:54):
And just.

Speaker 1 (02:28:56):
Girl hit by fish is over there for you to
see the vision. We'll over on see it now. Take
a peek that's up on the news junky dot com.
Click the menu, click see it now, and bam, you're
watching what we're watching dropping down those barriers just like that,
all right that, I'll have to do it for today.
It's been good to hang out with you, but now
it's time to get out the way. Let's do today.
I learned the.

Speaker 14 (02:29:17):
Following information may make you feel smarter, but will not
actually increase your IQ.

Speaker 1 (02:29:21):
So don't get cocky.

Speaker 12 (02:29:23):
Now it's done.

Speaker 1 (02:29:24):
What we are come today? Learn it is today I
learned for a Wednesday, November fifth, twenty twenty five. Can't
believe that today I learned this movie right here, that's right,
The Wizard of Oz. It was a box office success
when it was first released in nineteen thirty nine, but

(02:29:46):
not really in the long run, because it resulted in
a net loss of over a million dollars for MGM,
because even though it made over two million dollars big
at the time at the box office, it costs three
millllion dollars to make the movie back in the day,
expensive to do all those you know, early effects. I
guess you could say, all that yellow paint for the breast, right, yeah,

(02:30:10):
you got the witches in there. By the way, our
friends at Universal who invited us out recently to go
to their parks and do Halloween hornets and stuff, they
have a whole thing for Wicked. That's a museum of
you know, like on display all the stuff they were
wearing in the Wicked movie, the first one.

Speaker 2 (02:30:28):
To that, and I mean it looks incredible. Also, courses
that they have playing.

Speaker 4 (02:30:40):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (02:30:41):
Yeah, they're really good. And they have the actual screen
used stuff on display as they're so tiny, so tiny
to learn this lady right here the Escape the Peanut.
So why did I think you asked a different question?
I said this lady, and then I try to correct myself.

(02:31:04):
Rupert Holmes, the man who sang sang escape the Penia
Colada song, said he had never tasted a penia colada
in his life. Now he regrets going to bars and
getting noticed because it annoys him when people send over
penia coladas to the Pina Colada song. Guy, thank you
so much for hanging out with us. We do appreciate it.

(02:31:26):
We'll see you tomorrow, same time, the same place. Mistudying
the show. Get the podcast on the NEEWS junkie dot com.
We'll see light. Everybody in the watch to me say,

(02:31:48):
it sounds like
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