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January 22, 2025 102 mins
HUMMP DAAAAYYYYY!!!!! We Talk Nuts, Giving Yourself A Vasectomy, LIndsey Explains Why She Was Out, When Drive Thru Monkeys Attack, FIB News, Should High School Criminals Still Be Able To Play Sports, & Elephants Aren't Human!!!!
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
You are about to witness as amazing Emo has comes
in living Man's property of all times. Yes, my bow
suck on you bow down to your master. Then you

(00:32):
did it. Then you did it?

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Where you did?

Speaker 3 (00:43):
Allowed to play, Allowed to play, Come out to play,
Come out to play.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
The crystal wos.

Speaker 4 (01:02):
The sun is rising. God, Oh wake up, wake up.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
Now, don't worry.

Speaker 5 (01:13):
We're all here to.

Speaker 4 (01:14):
Show you how Jan Witz horses Raw.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
Station k m o G.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
Home of the Listens is a family.

Speaker 6 (01:22):
Be don't turn downtown, just wait and say.

Speaker 4 (01:28):
Are you ready?

Speaker 1 (01:29):
Are you ready to jove in time to.

Speaker 6 (01:32):
Start to show crapstick apl about Fresco, Whisping Man Marny Show,
Welcome to the Working Week.

Speaker 4 (01:47):
It's on such a bore kick back, makes up the
offing and they get hardcore. Hang your whisby and then mess.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
Pick up your.

Speaker 4 (01:57):
Phone there line you're on the air, dot time dot SA.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six O k m o D. You can
also text bmms and then what you want to say
to eight two nine four five Listen online the website
that Rocks k m o D dot com. Past shows
are available on iTunes search under BMMS. Listen with your
cell phone. Get the iHeartRadio app available from the app

(02:45):
store your cell phone provider. More on that at iHeartRadio
dot com. And we're on Facebook, Facebook dot com, slash
b m MS six nine. That's where you can hang
out with us each and every day.

Speaker 5 (02:59):
Good money, Lindsay, Good morning, Corbyn.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
Good morning, Kimpie, Good morning. We've got tickets we're gonna
give away for the PBR that's this Friday at the
Bok Center. Tickets available bokcenter dot com. See what Lindsay
wants to talk about. We've got our top five songs today.
A very disturbed individual has sent in the top five
songs about being horny and when you hear the list,

(03:28):
maybe you was what come to the same conclusion as well.
And don't forget Craft Cancer is happening on April fifth.
It's our annual pub crawl we participate in to fight
cancer Day. Drinking never sucks and when you can attribute
it to a good cause, well that's a win for
all of us. Boom and you can put together your

(03:49):
own team right now at Craft Cancer dot org. Really
Bird pricing ends at the February twenty fourth date, and
then registration in general ends on March twenty fourth, and
soon you'll be able to sign up to be a
part of our team. But don't wait because when we
do our team, it's too late to sign up for
your own team. So make sure you get signed up

(04:11):
if you'd like to put together a team. Crawlford Cancer
Dot O r G.

Speaker 5 (04:17):
Hi Lindsay, good morning, Corbin, how are you good? Good?
I'm good. I'll talk about where I was.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
We said it yesterday, so we've told everybody where, so
you're holding that for your segment.

Speaker 5 (04:31):
I'm gonna talk all about it.

Speaker 1 (04:33):
Nuts nuts. I can't wait to hear how nuts it was.
I'm more of a pistachio guy. Still does same love
almonds occasionally. Good. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (04:47):
Have you tried the spicy ones?

Speaker 1 (04:49):
No? No, I don't like. I don't like coated things
like that and the film on the fingers, yeah he doesn't.
I just want my salty nuts, the all with salty nuts,
even the ones that well, you don't like the coated ones,
but even the salt and nuts, they're still coated with salt.
But that's just salt. There's not some weird powdery film

(05:11):
to accumulate a flavor right right, some other kind of
film to get the powder to stick to it.

Speaker 5 (05:16):
Actually took video of my kid over the weekend. He
did the Carolina Reaper nut challenge and.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
We care, I need more context. Carolina reaper nuts.

Speaker 5 (05:26):
Yeah, there's peanuts that are covered in Carolina reaper pepper
and it's no. Yeah, he did it.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
So you went and bought Carolina reaper nuts.

Speaker 5 (05:37):
No, a friend of mine had some, so she gave
me a couple of them. And you can't even hold
them without either gloves on.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
Yeah, they're Carolina reapers. And so you forced your son.

Speaker 7 (05:49):
No.

Speaker 5 (05:49):
I asked him if he wanted to do it, because
he loves spicy, he loves hot stuff. So I mean,
I think lately he's put hot sauce on just about everything,
and when he cooks he uses pepper flakes and everything.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
Yeah, that's different.

Speaker 5 (06:01):
Show me if you can do this, and he was like, oh,
I'll totally do it.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
Have him put franks on a powdered donut and see
what he thinks and not that pass dramatic difference between
chili pepper flakes and franks and Carolina reaper right right.
One of those three is known as the hottest stuff
in the world.

Speaker 5 (06:21):
Yeah, and I mean the the nut itself was bigger
than my thim my thumb. Now, so it was a
good decent size.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
And at first, well that's a that's a good size.
But it's a peanut with flavory with the powder on it, right.

Speaker 5 (06:40):
Okay, yes, coated heavily, So.

Speaker 1 (06:42):
The size of the peanut kind of is irrelevant. It
doesn't weigh in more or less to the intensity.

Speaker 5 (06:49):
Well, the bigger the nut, the more coding it gets.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
Yeah, that's kind of where I was at on that
makes sense.

Speaker 5 (06:56):
Yeah, so he lasted without drinking a glass of milk,
probably just under two minutes.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
Yeah, not the same as the Carolina readiper.

Speaker 5 (07:08):
But but he didn't get sick, which was great.

Speaker 1 (07:12):
The death Nut challenge. You can get that on Amazon
for thirteen dollars. I think that's what maybe ask Kicking
Reaper Pepper, honey peanuts. Yeah, the idea death nuts. It's
a movie, Lindsay old promoter. Yeah, I don't get buying

(07:33):
stuff like that.

Speaker 5 (07:35):
No, I don't either. I wouldn't do it. But someone
was like, hey, we don't need her and her husband
love them. She's like, they're really not there. She's like,
they're bad, but if you have a tolerance for heat,
you can take it.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
So that's why she's giving them away. Yeah right right,
they're so. I don't know about you and your house,
but things that I love I don't nor never Yeah, nuts,
it just keeps popping up. Well, it's probably all the
other times you've looked that up, right, not searching for
the actual legome or whatever. Right, yeah, yeah, I'm not

(08:14):
a Now. I like like chili crunch and I had
that what chili crunch? I've never heard of this? Come on? Well,
can I be uh crunch oil? Yes, it's called chili crunch. Okay.
It comes at a little jar and you put it
on like eggs or sometimes it's on sushi. It's common

(08:35):
in like ramen and bowls, not not not package like
when you go to a store a restaurant that makes ramen, uh,
and you can put it on a lot of stuff.
It's freaking delicious. There's this old British filler on TikTok
that uses something like this. It's not pop Toad's hot
chili is what he says. Does it just like that? Too?

(08:57):
Pretty good? I found I've ran down the end and
for longest time, that's all that would pop up, is
this cat putting weird stuff in this Popatones hot touch chilli.
And it's different things, whether it's like a big mac
or you know, a piece of fried chicken and you
start off, we got Kentucky fried chicken adding some Poppatones

(09:19):
hot chili. Are are you just stuck in an ad? Yeah,
I don't know what it is. Keep saying it over
and over. Feels like an ass. That guy. It is
different videos of him putting this different foods in this
hot chili. And he would take like regular like like
jolopeno peppers or chili peppers, like the actual vegetable and
dip it in that chili are and sit there and

(09:41):
eat them and then pour it all in and like
pour it inside and just go to town on it.
And I'm like, no, thank you, that's too much spice
for me. What's the verdict? When he puts it on
those things, he handles it like a chance, like he
likes it. He says yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, which okay
if you don't have like any nerves in your yeah, right.

(10:01):
But it's not like it's not like a Carolina reaper
it's just like some crunch of cooked ChIL, garlic and chili,
and it's it's quite tasting and got a little crunch
in it. It's so good. It's so good. So I
like stuff like that. I like kimchi. I don't put
like I don't get kimchi at the grocery store because
every time I get it and then put it in

(10:21):
food at home, it doesn't taste like it does when
I get kimchi something in a restaurant, and like mister
Kim's Downtown. The restaurant they have a kimchi fried rice
that is cooked in wagou lard. It's so freaking good. Yes,
it's delicious, and that's got kimchi in it, and I

(10:44):
love it kimchi fries from Lone Wolf Bondmes. But when
I get kimchi at home, it is not the same.
So I like some spice, but I don't like Carolina
reapers are Hey, let's just make my mouth then my
butthole burn.

Speaker 4 (11:00):
Ye.

Speaker 5 (11:00):
Kim Chief for me is like one of those things
where if I'm at the grocery store and I see it,
especially if I'm grocery shopping hungry, which you shouldn't do.
It's one of those things where I'll see it and think, oh, yeah,
I want this, and then when I get home, it
sits in my fridging, goes to waste.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
Well, it's for minutes, so it'll last for a long
time for sure. The death Nut Challenge, at least the
one I did, was meant for two people, but by god,
it was worse coming out than going in. That's why
I don't. Lindsey tried to get me to do that
one Chip Challenge thing one time, and it's not you know,
I can handle the initial let's eat it, let's let

(11:38):
it rest, let's burn her mouth, that will pass.

Speaker 5 (11:41):
Yeah. Kevin did that one and he at work, I guess,
and he said it was grossy.

Speaker 1 (11:45):
Yeah, it's the passing. In the aftermath that I told her,
I was like, no, I don't want my whole fire. Well,
I kind of. I don't know if the show does,
but I kind of have a rule that if people
we've done you've been admitted into the hospital for things.
I kind of feel like that's pass for me and
the number of people that have done the one Chip
Challenge that had to go to the hospital, right. The

(12:06):
Cinnamon Challenge as well, right, I've never done the cinnamon challenge.
We've done the cinnamon challenge on the show, but I've
never done it. My daughter wanted to do it because
she saw She's like, let's do this. I'm like, that's
bad news. You don't want to mess with that, you know.
Oh why well, I mean you can inhale it and
it'll get into your lungs and blah blah blah, you know,
severe medical issues. She's like, it'll be fine. So she

(12:26):
takes this big old honking tablespoon full of you know, cinnamon,
and and does it and lasted maybe a couple of seconds,
blew it out all over the place. And I was like,
that was a big mistake. And I just look at it.
I'm like, I only there was somebody who could tell you.
But sometimes you gotta let those kids learn on a own.

(12:47):
It's true. If it means a trip to the hospital,
if I know we're going to go to the hospital
or something, I'm stopping it. I'm not letting. I'm not
going to try and let a trip to the hospital happened. Right,
that's one expensive challenge, just a prove it, say something.
So if I'm like, hey, let's not jump off the

(13:09):
roof of the house. Yeah, I'm gonna be like, yeah, no,
we're not doing this.

Speaker 5 (13:13):
I saw a video yesterday on reels and it was
this toddler and he was on the couch and he said, Mom,
I can do a double backflip off this couch. And
she goes, please don't, please, don't, okay, but don't hurt yourself.
And I'm thinking, my whole he's gonna go to the hospital.
He's gonna break his neck. So he just jumps off,

(13:36):
lands on his feet, doesn't do a flip, but he
does a double flipping her off with both birds. I
was like, eh, good one. But thank god he's not
in the hospital, because I would have not if I
would have been that. Mom been like, no, you absolutely
cannot do that.

Speaker 1 (13:50):
You didn't see that coming from the very beginning. Huh No,
I didn't. Actually I knew exactly what was gonna happen too,
and I hadn't seen that one. It's the oldest trick
in the book for mom. I'm all four of them like, hey,
you gotta be willing to let kids break their arms.
But when there's clear like hey, you could get a
traumatic brain injury. I learned something from the Twelve Monkeys,

(14:13):
like it's not a good the movie or the one
jumping on the bed, jumping on the back. Yeah, the
doctor told them they still continued, right, got down a
last damn monkey? Yeah, yeah, not a good mom right, questionable. Yeah,
So I've tried to not go to the hospital. I'm

(14:34):
I'm good with like an urgent care. I'm good with
a cast a traumatic brain injury, I'm out on yeah.

Speaker 5 (14:41):
Same.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
I want to take care of my kids till they're eighteen, right, well,
I mean a traumatic brain injury, you could take care
of them for the rest of the live past eighteen,
That's what I'm saying. I only want to take care
of them until they're eighteen. After that, you got to
go find someone else. Get you, man, why somebody that's
gonna take care of because I'm out. I'm only on

(15:03):
the contract till eighteen. I'm th eighteen. You're on your own.
You gotta start figuring out. I mean there's we can
can we can revise the contract for short periods, but
two years at three maybe, and then occasionally when you
get divorced, right, gotta start all over. Yeah, all right,
we got to take a break. We got tickets to PBR.

(15:24):
We're gonna give away the PBRs this Friday at the
Bok Center, Telsa.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
This Morning Show, The Big Bad Morning Show, The a
Zonic Continuus next ninety seven KMOD.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
Good morning, It's The Big Bad Morning Show. Nine four
six oh k M O D. You can also text
bmms and then what you want to say to eight
two nine four five. News quickies are stories you may
have missed in the news, but we cover them here
and put a link on our Facebook page at Facebook
dot com slash bmms six ' nine. Let's go ahead

(16:07):
and do that right now. It's time for newsquakies, World news,
local news and news that just makes you say, what
the Here's Corbyn Gimpion Lindsay with what's going on news
quaggies from The Big Man Morning Show. In ninety seventy five, AMoD.

Speaker 5 (16:24):
Surgeon performs vasectomy on himself as a gift for his wife.
A plastic surgeon from Taiwan, his name is chen Winong
made men of the World wins after giving himself a
vasectomy on camera, as seen in an Instagram footage video
with over four million views. He says it was a

(16:46):
strange feeling to touch and suture my own Urethra, declared
the Chap doc. In the AI translated caption of the
nail biting clip, which he uploaded to the platform for
educational purposes, he says, I am really brave, he replied
to the viewers on Instagram. The father of three had
decided to get snipped as a gift to his wife

(17:08):
to ensure that the couple didn't have any more children.
Vasectomy has a low risk of problems and can usually
be performed in an outpatient setting under local anesthetics. However,
unlike most patients, doctor Chen decided to go the DIY
route for his prophilactic procedure. The unconventional tutorial shows the

(17:30):
man in his chair performing the operation on himself as
he casually talks viewers through the process. It's like he's
doing a makeup tutorial. After applying anesthetic cream to numb
the genitals, the fully conscious doctor Chen carries out the
self surgery using a scalpel and surgical clamp. And while

(17:51):
the procedure looks excruciating, the surgeon only visibly displayed discomfort
one time, leaning back in his chair in apparent pain.
He then gathers as tools and resumes the operation. Usually
they say vasectomes take between ten and thirty minutes, and
his took twice as long since he performed it on himself.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
I don't know if I believe this one, because I
don't believe anything on the internet.

Speaker 5 (18:19):
Well, he did say that there was a urologist who
would have taken over if anything went wrong. It was
being overseen by him.

Speaker 1 (18:29):
Sure, but he's a plastic surgeon, not a urologist.

Speaker 5 (18:33):
True, maybe he was at one time that type of surgeon.

Speaker 1 (18:37):
And sure maybe he watched the YouTube video.

Speaker 5 (18:39):
Plastic surgery is where the money's at, so I'm going
to do that instead.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
It's weird rationale you get to sometimes, but you don't
see anything. No, did he use a mirror? That's the
part I don't understand as someone who's had that. Do
you like you're not? You don't want to sit up
of numbing cream? I got shots. I got shots, that's plural.

(19:10):
So I don't know if a numbing cream would do it.
It would the surface, right, He'd have to endure a
lot of pain, for sure. I'm still I don't see
how he even with a mirror, right, Because like let's
say you're laying down, you got your legs up right,
and you gotta look. You gotta get to the groundel

(19:32):
area because that's where the opening goes to.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
That.

Speaker 1 (19:36):
Yeah, okay, Well not okay either, which were sack And
then I guess he could be done. I'm not trusting
myself to give myself a v sectomy. I mean also
that that's not his field. That's weird. Why would he
feel the need to do an educational video on that

(19:56):
when that's not his field? Good point for Instagram likes. Yeah,
So therefore, for me, based on just that a little weird,
a lot weird barista attacked and bitten by a pet monkey.
So this comes out of Alabama, Mobile, Alabama, where earlier
this month, the young barista is working at the Starbucks,

(20:18):
mind her own business, trying to get some cash, right,
and this lady pulls up to the drive through orders
her coffee, gets to the window, and she rolls down
the window and out comes this pet monkey from her car.
This lady brought two pet monkeys to the Starbucks. So
one of the pet monkeys jumps out of the car
into the drive through window and then latches onto the

(20:38):
arm of the barista and then starts gnawing on her hand. Oh,
and then the monkey climbs up the woman's arm onto
her head and starts biting her head and her ear. Well,
luckily another employee there was able to grab the monkey
and then throw it out the window. I think it
was hilarious. The monkey then got back into the car

(20:58):
to which it came from, and then the owner drove off.
Now the police get called, the health department gets notified
about the monkey bite, and the police say that this woman,
the monkey's owner, could be facing charges.

Speaker 5 (21:12):
I could be, should be. I think should be absolutely
one hundred percent bringing two monkeys because she doesn't want
to leave one at home.

Speaker 1 (21:21):
To get lonely.

Speaker 5 (21:22):
But then, I mean, are they not on a leash?

Speaker 1 (21:26):
I guess not. Do you keep your monkey on a leash?

Speaker 5 (21:30):
I don't keep a monkey at.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
All, But of people I know that have monkeys, it
feels like fifty to fifty I see among leashes. Same
way with dogs. I mean, I think dogs is probably
more in the seventy percent tile. I hear you there
are people cats Cats never go on a leash. No,
I'd say it's in like the ten percentile.

Speaker 5 (21:50):
I've seen it, But I mean from where I'm from,
it's a law to keep your dog on a leash.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
It's a law here, yeah, I would assume, So that
doesn't mean people. It's also a a law to not
speed just because there's a law.

Speaker 5 (22:03):
Done me. That's just Oh, the horror, the fear in that.
Poor barista, I can't imagine.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
Woman arrested after crashing stolen vehicle while nude. Thirty seven
year old Indiana woman is facing several charges after she
was arrested when she crashed a stolen vehicle Sunday evening.
Police identified her as Michelle oh Reeves and said she
was nude when she crashed the vehicle. She was arrested
after a homeowner called police to say she was inside

(22:35):
the home taking a shower and did not live there.
Reeves allegedly stole the vehicle from a nearby driveway when
it was idling, and then hit a basketball hoop and
a tree before going into the home. Not worth the
look up, by the way, go ahead and tell you that. Yeah,
you hear nude and you automatically think Margot Robbie, Yeah
for sure, but no you get Mama Junis too. Yeah, yeah,

(22:57):
definitely someone who's ringing a bell on a solved salvation
army bucket over eight. All these stories are on our
Facebook page, Facebook dot com, slash BMMS six nine.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
Tulsa's Morning Show continues next with a Big Man Morning
Show on.

Speaker 7 (23:11):
Tulsa's rock station ninety seven KM.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six oh kmod can also text emms and
then what you want to say to eight two nine
four five. A lot of talk in the last couple
of days about the chiefs and their rough favoritism that happens.
That's a fun narrative that people like to go with
because they can't accept good and uh. Somebody went through

(23:49):
and went through one hundred pass attempts and found out
the number of times that roughing the passers called by
quarterback Patrick Mahomes on one hundred passes zero point sixty
three six percent. Okay gets called roughing the passer. Russell Wilson,

(24:10):
then Baker Mayfield, then Kirk Cousins, then Deshaun Watson, then
Jared Goff and then Josh Allen at point ninety three Wow.
So in that stat if those are accurate, then that
means Patrick Mahomes is the seventh sixth on that list
with Josh Allen, who nobody ever talks about them getting

(24:32):
any favoritism, right, gets it called more often now. Some
people are saying that it's has to do with how
quickly you passed. Patrick Mahomes has way more pass attempts,
and so that's set's kind of washed out a little bit.
And some people are saying how long do you hold
on the ball, and you know, all these X quantifiers,
but it feels like time and time again, the information's

(24:54):
out there to prove that that narrative of the Chiefs
get more benefit from rest than anyone else is just
it's just not accurate.

Speaker 5 (25:04):
It's just fun to say for the haters.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
Yeah, I guess, I guess it's a weird thing to
go with, right, Why not just say you don't like them?
I'm sick of seeing them win because the reps have
always been are a part of the game, right, I
think you're gonna get calls your way sometimes some days,
sometimes you're not. Do they inherently go, hey, we did

(25:30):
a rough in the passer here, let's do let's do
a holding call to even it out. I would like
to think not. I can't believe that would be on
Day three seminar or whatever in the book.

Speaker 5 (25:43):
On Saturday's game when they made a call and you
could hear Troy Akeman go oh, come on. I think
everyone watching the game in my house at least said
it at the exact same time as Troy.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
Which one are we referring to?

Speaker 5 (25:55):
Oh, when he was going down and the two players
came in and hit each other, Yes, and Mahomes was
between them. Yes, And that to me didn't look like
it was anything.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
Yeah, it's one hundred percent of penalty if you lead
with your helmet. Hitting is not the point. It's also
mentioned that Patrick tries to draw the penalty out of
him one percent, like stop is short before going out
of bounds, running out of bounds, trying to draw somebody
to hit him out of bounds to get that penalty
one hundred percent. Well within the rules though, right, I agree,

(26:28):
And I think when you are a quarterback and you
run in the open field, you are now not a quarterback, right,
You're now a runner, but well within the rules. So
is he dumb or smart? Pretty smart using the rules
to his advantage. Are they going to.

Speaker 5 (26:46):
Change those rules?

Speaker 1 (26:47):
Probably? Not, because when you have a half a billion
dollar employee, right, you're going to do all you want,
all these extras taken, and it makes a compellingness, It
makes it fun. Let's go and see what lindsay. As
for Balls to the Wall sports.

Speaker 5 (27:14):
One of the best head coaches in the NFL is
staying in Minnesota. The Vikings inked and extension with Kevin
O'Connell yesterday. The team didn't reveal any contract details, except
to say that it is a multi year extension. The
Purple hired O'Connell after the twenty twenty one season, and
Minnesota has made the playoffs in two of his first

(27:34):
three years. The Vikings went to fourteen and three in
twenty twenty four and are thirty four in seventeen. Overall,
under O'Connell, he also has the fourth best winning percentage
among active head coaches. The new contract will go into
effect after the twenty twenty five season.

Speaker 1 (27:50):
Yeah, that makes sense, he should.

Speaker 5 (27:54):
Yeah. Patriots are rekindling a relationship with an old friend.
According to ESPN, the Patriots are hiring longtime coach Josh
McDaniels to be their new offensive coordinator. Hooray McDaniels returns
to coaching after serving as the head coach of the
Las Vegas Raiders for parts of two seasons. It was

(28:15):
the second time McDaniels was let go from being a
head coach, after also failing to make it out of
a second season with the Denver Broncos back in twenty ten.
This is the third time McDaniels is returning to New England,
the franchise he broke into the NFL with in two
thousand and one under Bill Belichick. McDaniels has never worked
with first year Patriots head coach Josh McDaniels. No, no,

(28:43):
that's a typo.

Speaker 1 (28:44):
Yeah, Ron Burgundy right, good here, So, yeah, they just
hired the former Titans head coach.

Speaker 5 (28:51):
There we go. Yes, yes, so never worked with him.
It'll be a first. Is that a good fit? Josh McDaniels, I.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Mean, is great off it the Cordner. He's a horrible
head coach, but he's a great offensive coordinator. Yeah, we'll see.

Speaker 5 (29:04):
And that is your balls to the Wall Sports. I'm
Lindsay at ninety seven to five KMO.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine to one,
eight four six oh KMOD can also text BMMS and
then what you want to say to eight two, nine,
four five.

Speaker 5 (29:31):
Good morning Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn Rock. The bank is
back and it's happening at eight o'clock this morning. Listen
for that keyword for your chance to win one thousand
dollars when you hear it, enter it online at kmod
dot com. If you want a thousand bucks, maybe buy
some new fishing gear or get a new phone. Anyway,
you got until eight o'clock tonight to win, is well.

Speaker 1 (29:53):
Good luck, Good morning, gimpie, good morning. We got the
annual Crawl for Cancer coming up April fifth. You can
form your own team and join us for an afternoon
of day drinking. Get all the info at crawlfurcancer dot org.
You see what Lindsay wants to talk about.

Speaker 8 (30:08):
Linen Linsen, Linzen ln Dshy Lindsey, Lindsey, Lindsey dsby Linncy.

Speaker 5 (30:26):
I'm sure you finished before me. When was the last
time either of you were in a courtroom?

Speaker 1 (30:36):
Last year? Year before last, April fifteenth, twenty ten, for
what divorce? I'm guessing the time. I don't know, divorce.

Speaker 5 (30:48):
How about you gimpea oh okay.

Speaker 1 (30:51):
Stuff with the divorce anyway, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (30:53):
I have been in the courtroom a total of four
times now. They are very intimidate, I feel like and
I the last time I was in I think the
first time was probably a class field trip. And the
last time I was in before yesterday was back when
I got arrested for a fake ID and the thought

(31:19):
of going made me nervous. But I thought, you know what,
just overcome your fear, just do it.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
Why don't tell everybody why you want to go.

Speaker 5 (31:28):
So two weeks ago I was pulled over in a
work zone for speeding going five miles over the limit,
and I wanted to contest it. And after I thought
about it, I thought, oh, just pay it and move
on with my life. However, read I had many emails

(31:51):
from people saying, no, you can go, and since you
have a clean driving record, if the officer isn't there
in court, they'll just nix it and you'll walk out
of there free and not have to pay. Okay. And
then after speaking to an officer friend of mine, she
had told me that, yeah, that's you can walk in

(32:13):
and say I don't know if his radar was calibrated,
and nine times out of ten THEYLLIA will dismiss it,
especially if the officer isn't there, And she said, and
I doubt there's probably a ninety percent chance that he
won't show up, since you know, you didn't have any
additional fines, like not having proof of insurance or anything

(32:38):
like that. So I said, okay, great. So I thought
about it. I talked to Kevin about it, and he said, yeah,
you should go for sure. I said, you should go
fight it since day one. So I go in. The
courthouse opens at eight am.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
Were you in Tulsa County or Broken Air, broken Arrow?

Speaker 5 (32:56):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (32:57):
City court? Right right right, yeah?

Speaker 5 (33:00):
And I walk in shortly after eight and I'm standing
in line with a few other people and an officer
looks up and says, ladies, you're going to have to
go back to your car and put your purses in
there and store them. I know, okay, weird, And so
I do that. I come back in. I have to
get back into line.

Speaker 1 (33:21):
And it was into the courtroom or is this like
to enter the building where they check you and you
go through a detector and stuff.

Speaker 5 (33:27):
Yes, going through the detector. And so I'm in line
and the officer there's checking my keys because that's all
I had to put in the thing in my wallet.
And he says, are you here to just pay your
fine or do you want to go to court? I said,
I'm going into the court to contest it, and he said, okay,
good luck. I walk in and you're greeted by another

(33:50):
officer who checks you in and I sit down. There's
already like probably ten people in there. And they said, well,
we do this on a first come, first basis. I said, okay.
I had questions. I was like, do I like go state?
Where do I stand when they call my name? He's like,
go up to this podium right in front of the

(34:10):
judge and you'll be directly speaking with him. Okay, Well
I didn't know this, but I'm sitting there and there's
a prosecutor in there and she goes, or at least
she works for the prosecutor's office, and she runs down
the list of everyone that's in court. And as you
come up and talk to her, first.

Speaker 1 (34:28):
How did they have your name? What do you mean, well,
how do they know who's there and who's not?

Speaker 5 (34:33):
They call your name, so whatever is written on your ticket, so.

Speaker 1 (34:37):
They call everybody's name the ticket that was issued that
they had to show up that day if they wanted
to contest correct, So there was a lot of people
not showing up. I'm guessing.

Speaker 5 (34:46):
No they were. I mean for as long as I
was there for about an hour, I don't think any
of the names that got called didn't show up.

Speaker 1 (34:54):
Hmm.

Speaker 5 (34:55):
Yeah. So I go up, but I'm talking to her
and she said to me, are you paying this today
or I said, well, I'd like to contest it, and
she says okay. And then I explain myself to her, said,
you know, I know there was no construction workers out.
I drive this road at least four times a day

(35:18):
every day, and I don't know if his radar was
calibrated or not. And she says, okay, Well, if you
want to contest it, you can do so, but then
the judge is going to set a new trial date
for you. I said, really, I thought I was under
the impression that it could just be dismissed today. She goes, Now,

(35:39):
it used to be like that, but it's not anymore.
You will have to set a new trial date. I
said why. She goes, well, that gives the state and
the officer time to prepare for a case. So then
then you will be fined for the court.

Speaker 1 (35:58):
You pay court costs, you're not fine, do you pay?

Speaker 5 (36:01):
You pay the court fees and yeah, and the ticket
if you are found guilty of it. So I'm sitting
there thinking, oh my.

Speaker 1 (36:07):
Gosh, yeah, if only people wreck like told you that, right.

Speaker 5 (36:14):
So I go up. He calls my name and he
was very he was very nice. I mean he know, yes,
the judge got it. There was like three people in
front of me, and I go up and the first
guy had a couple of guy before me. He had

(36:36):
like no proof of insurance, expired plates running down. So
they were up there for about twenty minutes and he
finally decided like, yeah, I'm gonna take this class to
drop my fees down by a bunch, YadA, YadA YadA.
I go up and he says, are you paying this today?
I said, well, I would like to contest it, but
I don't want to miss another day of work to

(36:58):
come back for a trial. And he says okay, and
he goes, well, I I'm sure you have a good excuse,
but I don't want to hear it, like, so, do
you want to pay today or would you like it?

Speaker 1 (37:16):
I was because no one's ever used the line of
I don't want to pay it and I don't want
to take another day off. Right, Judges are awesome that way.

Speaker 5 (37:23):
I said, well, I said, considering that the ticket is
about three days worth of food in my house, I'm
going to have you extend it for me. And he said,
all right, very well, I can do that. You have
a great day, and I was. I walked out. I'm like,
why did I just say something to him?

Speaker 1 (37:41):
Like you know?

Speaker 5 (37:42):
But here's why? But he would have just shut me
up and hadn't.

Speaker 1 (37:45):
He literally told you he didn't want to hear excuse.

Speaker 5 (37:47):
I'm not because he's like, because you're not contesting it.
So there you go.

Speaker 1 (37:53):
So what has extended mean?

Speaker 5 (37:55):
You get timed? You don't have to pay it today? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (37:58):
Right?

Speaker 1 (37:58):
They could be like another thirty day something like that
with the cash.

Speaker 5 (38:03):
And when I did ask what if I did pick
a trial late, They're like, oh, you'd be looking at
somewhere on April or or May.

Speaker 1 (38:11):
I know.

Speaker 5 (38:13):
I'm not. I'm not messing with that. So I walk out.
I call Kevin. He's like, are you kidding me? They
didn't even want to hear you. They wouldn't even let
you speak your side. I'm like, no, times are changing,
because if I want to, you know, set up a
court date, I can do that. So he was, I mean,
he was going off like not on me, but at

(38:36):
the situation over the phone. And then later he texted
me he's like, I'm sorry. He's like, I'm sorry that happened.
Sorry you had to waste your time, But it's all
good whatever, I'm going back. I wish I would have
just said, all right, I'm just gonna pant and going.
But at the same time, I did face right, Yeah,

(38:57):
but it was good for me to go in and.

Speaker 1 (38:59):
You know, experience.

Speaker 5 (39:01):
Yeah, I feel like process, Yeah, I feel like that
for sure.

Speaker 1 (39:05):
All court processes are the same. They all suck, Yeah,
they really do. U.

Speaker 5 (39:10):
Instead, I wish I, uh would have probably taken today
instead of yesterday because it's my twins' birthday and it's
a damn good thing I bought their gifts ahead of time,
because now I have to write a check for one
hundred and five dollars to the city. So there you go.
I mean, it was again worth the experience.

Speaker 1 (39:30):
I think, honestly, like it just no silver lining.

Speaker 5 (39:35):
I love it right, Yeah, sure, yeah, still sucks. And
I was thinking too when I kept hearing people go, well, yeah,
I didn't have insurance on me blah blah blah blah blah,
and I thought I didn't even I wasn't even asked
for my insurance when I was pulled over initially.

Speaker 1 (39:51):
Yeah, because they could check it. They see in the system,
and when they check those other people in the system,
they see that they don't have insurance. That's why they
get a citation and you do not.

Speaker 5 (39:58):
Yeah, and that's a big fun and that's like three
and seventy dollars.

Speaker 1 (40:02):
Oh yeah, get your license suspended too.

Speaker 5 (40:04):
Yeah. Yeah. There was one guy in there who was
paying for license suspension, insurance and tags. And then he
said what can I do to make this lower? Like, well,
you can get your license within the next two weeks,
and they're He's like, I'm going right now. As soon
as I leave this room, i am headed that way.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
You mentioned that this there was nuts. What was nuts? Uh?

Speaker 5 (40:27):
The just the amount? Well it was. What was weird
for me was while the judge is up there speaking
to whomever's up front, the officer is yelling at the
at the crowd sitting waiting their turn, like no cell phones,
almost like interrupting, and it seemed off to me.

Speaker 1 (40:44):
Yes, right, because they don't allow that. They don't want
that in the courtroom. Yeah, and yet people don't listen
and they do it anyways, So don't play candy carrash
while they're waiting for their turn.

Speaker 5 (40:53):
And no chewing gum. You cannot chew gum in the courtroom.
Didn't know that. And if you had it, there's a
garbage can up here, come spit it out. About six
people did that As.

Speaker 1 (41:03):
Someone who loves crime stuff like on TV. Have you
ever watched a courtroom drama?

Speaker 5 (41:08):
Yeah, but it's TV.

Speaker 1 (41:10):
I mean they have those type of things happen in that.

Speaker 5 (41:12):
Yeah. Right, I've never seen anyone have to spit out gum.

Speaker 3 (41:18):
For it.

Speaker 5 (41:20):
I mean that to me was a little weird.

Speaker 1 (41:22):
What's a respect thing towards the job? GUS doesn't want
you up there smacking your gum while you're trying to
plead your case. Right, did you dress up?

Speaker 5 (41:30):
I wore sweater and slacks, okay, so semi yeah? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (41:35):
Uh what time were you done?

Speaker 5 (41:38):
I think I walked out of there at ten oh four,
ten o five something like that.

Speaker 1 (41:44):
Yeah, we started at eight o'clock.

Speaker 5 (41:46):
Yeah. Yeah, I got there at just after eight, and
I probably they didn't start. They were supposed to start
at nine. They didn't start until probably like seven after for.

Speaker 1 (41:59):
My ref and should this happen to me and I
decided to contest it, do you have to be there
at eight? No?

Speaker 5 (42:06):
But it is based on a first come for services.
So if you want to be quick, get in there,
get it in and out right, then I would say
show up when they open for sure. So there you go.
Don't bother contesting because you'll probably lose like I did.

Speaker 1 (42:26):
Well, you didn't lose.

Speaker 5 (42:27):
I didn't win.

Speaker 1 (42:28):
You didn't contest.

Speaker 5 (42:30):
I mean that's true.

Speaker 1 (42:31):
You folded and nothing I folded. I fold. Nothing changed.

Speaker 5 (42:34):
Yeah, unless you yes, unless you're prepared to go back
to court, don't even contest it, which you probably.

Speaker 1 (42:42):
I was gonna say. You probably could have set another
court date and then showed up to that one officer
probably would have showed up and you would have gotten off.

Speaker 5 (42:48):
But you know, I think they would have shown up
because they let him know that it's happening.

Speaker 1 (42:53):
Yeah, but you know life, I know.

Speaker 8 (42:57):
Lens and Thensen, Lens and Thensen, d s Y Lindsay Lindsey, Lindsey.

Speaker 5 (43:10):
N D s y Mancy, how dare you finished before me?

Speaker 1 (43:18):
Elsea's Morning Show?

Speaker 2 (43:19):
The Big Man Boarding Show. The assault continues next thirty
seventy five GM O D.

Speaker 1 (43:35):
Good morning, It's The Big Man Morning Show. Nine one
eight four six O K M O D. Can also
text BM mess and then what you want to say
to eight two nine four five. The PBR is going
to be at to be Okay Center Friday. We have
a pair of tickets. Let's play a game and we're
going to play pick the flip. Current record to pick
the flick is well, I have one and Lindsay has

(43:59):
one on and you got none last week's winner, I
mean Lindsay. So it's gonna be Corbin and Gimpia. Nine
one eight four six oh kmo D nine one eight
four six oh K M O D. Call up. Decide
who's going to be your clue giver. Whoever gets the
most rank when he tickets to the PBR at the
bok Center this Friday. Nine one eight four six oh
K M O D. Good morning. You're on the air.

(44:21):
What is your name, Marcus? Marcus? How are you today?

Speaker 7 (44:26):
Doing?

Speaker 3 (44:26):
Good?

Speaker 7 (44:26):
Good?

Speaker 1 (44:26):
Marcus? Who do you want to give clues Gimpier Corbyn
Corbyn sixty seconds are on the clock. Timer starts after
the first clue. Are you ready? Yeah, here we go.

Speaker 3 (44:39):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (44:39):
This is the movie about mister Rogers with Tom Hanks
as mister Rogers. It's also the name of the song
mister Rogers would sing when he took his shoes off,
Welcome to the neighborhood. No, no, it's a question. You're close. Yeah,

(45:02):
I keep going through it. It's a question you would
ask someone what a beautiful day in the neighborhood. No,
if you live next door to me, you are my neighbor. Yeah, okay,
I said my Uh. This is an animated Pixar movie
with Mike Wazowski. They do the dream. Yes. Uh. This

(45:28):
is a movie about a tiny infant in charge. Correct. Uh.
Sylvester Stallone Vietnam bet yes, pass. This movie is about
a board game. They remade it with the rock. Robin

(45:48):
Williams was in the original. Yes, Stephen King movie about
a clown. Yes. Uh, time five is what we got?
Might be enough for the win. Hang on the line, Marcus, Okay, okay,
good morning, good morning, you're on the air. What is

(46:11):
your name? Good morning, Marcus again. Oh, you can't go
twice Greedy? Good morning, you're on the air. What is
your name?

Speaker 4 (46:25):
Trap?

Speaker 1 (46:26):
Travis? Turn your radio on? You and Gimbi have to
beat five? Are you ready? Yes, sir, here we go.

Speaker 3 (46:34):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (46:34):
This is a double pointer. When you get when you
ask your woman to marry you, you are now what engaged?
There you go. That's the last word of this movie.
And a number greater than four, one more than four
is what?

Speaker 5 (46:50):
Five?

Speaker 1 (46:51):
All right?

Speaker 7 (46:51):
Five engagements?

Speaker 1 (46:52):
Okay, we're very close. Now twenty twenty five is what? Yeah,
twenty twenty four and then the blank is twenty twenty
five next year. You got the year right, So you
take five year and engagement, but put it all together.
Five you're engaged. There you go. Oh, this is an
old school Christmas movie. Every time a bell rings, an

(47:15):
angel gets its wings. It's a wonderful life. This is
a movie with Jesse Spano from Saved by the Bell
where she goes to yes, Nicholas Cage and what's his
nuts a John Travolta. Yes, this is a Bradley Cooper movie.
Some people confuse it with the Football movie because the

(47:37):
last word is what keeps? You know? All these things
that they do in this particular thing. What's the opposite
color of gold time time time?

Speaker 8 (47:45):
Now?

Speaker 1 (47:46):
Oh I got four now my first double point double
pointer however, so.

Speaker 5 (47:52):
That would have tied you guys. However, on this he
said engaged, and it was you that said, well you
got engagement.

Speaker 1 (48:00):
It's fine, But I literally I don't care. It's not
tied because I had a pass and I said one
of the worst. Because everybody, hang on the line. Man,
you're gonna get those tickets to see the PBR's gonna
be at the Bokay Center on Friday. So talk to

(48:23):
Gimpy here in a second. Okay, all right, John, because everybody.

Speaker 5 (48:29):
This was the one that you passed on, Corbyn that
I passed on.

Speaker 1 (48:34):
Double pointer. If you're not blank, your last because I've
never seen this particular movie before. When your girlfriend you
get married, she becomes your what okay, and if you've
been divorced before, she is now your ex and you
have several of them. Yeah, I only passed on this
because I wasn't sure the person would get Diane Keaton

(48:54):
Goldie Hawn. It's a group of divorced women who get
together to create an organization to deal with their xes. Yeah,
it's a good yeah.

Speaker 5 (49:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (49:05):
Sisterhood movie, it sure is. Yeah. The one that I'm
I messed up on where I said part of the word.

Speaker 5 (49:10):
Ah, that would have been.

Speaker 1 (49:15):
Well, I need to see it. Lindsay, you were on
the right track with this man. The theme song to
mister Rogers. Usually this line is the very last line
in the song when he sings it as he's putting
a shit on and changing the into the Cordigan sweater.

Speaker 5 (49:30):
Yeah. And to say the question was great, I thought
it was a great.

Speaker 1 (49:35):
Not good enough?

Speaker 5 (49:36):
Yeah. Uh.

Speaker 1 (49:38):
And then the one GIMPI ended on this one right here. Yeah.
Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, they both have some personality disorders.
Robert de Niro is the dad the big Jets football fans. Yeah,
gold Yeah, only seen that movie one time. I don't
think I fell asleep through most of it. It's a

(49:59):
good movie. Sure it is for me, for me all right.
The record now puts me in a lead with two
keeps Lindsley with one, keeps you dead, last one none.

Speaker 2 (50:09):
The Big Mad Morning Show returns next Tulsa's Morning Show
ninety seven five KMOD.

Speaker 1 (50:26):
Good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show nine one
eight four six, oh kmo D. You can also text
BMMS and then what you want to say to eight
two nine four five. Let's go ahead and see what
GIMPI has in is four by four. All Corvida says
here that Mexican president calls for cool heads. Mexican President

(50:47):
Claudia shinbaumb is urging cool heads to prevail as President
Trump threatens big tariffs on Mexico. The fears, the scent,
The fears sent the value of the Paeso to draw
up by six tenths of a percent. Yesterday, Trump said
that he plans to impose twenty five percent tariffs on
Mexico and Canada, possibly by February first. Shinebaum, who has

(51:11):
said that she wants to work with the Trump administration,
said she's waiting for Mexico's foreign minister to open formal
talks with incoming US Secretary of States. Marco Rubio says
here that Netflix is raising their subscription prices. The streamer
announced yesterday the standard plan without ADS is increasing by

(51:31):
two dollars and fifty cents, making its seventeen ninety nine
a month. Its ADS supported tier will go up one
dollar to seven ninety nine a month, and if you
have the premium tier with four simultaneous streams, well that's
gonna go up two bucks at twenty four to ninety
nine a month. I'm just looking because I don't even

(51:53):
know what tier I have, right, and I feel like
it just went up. I think it did, like last
next year, I.

Speaker 5 (52:02):
Drop down to the basic plan with commercials seven ninety
or what yeah, yeah, and the ads really aren't bad.
I think if you're watching an hour show, you might
get four ads, but they're like fifteen seconds or the
longest I've seen is thirty seconds.

Speaker 1 (52:18):
Does it do like it will do if you're liking
watching a video on YouTube, where like it just inserts
the commercial in the middle of dialogue or something in.

Speaker 5 (52:27):
The middle of dialogue, like it wait, it's a commercial point, Yeah,
it's Yeah. It does a decent job of not interrupting
a huge scene, you know.

Speaker 1 (52:37):
Because that's one of the things I hate about YouTube
is you'll be watching something and then all of a
sudden it injects a commercial, like what's this?

Speaker 5 (52:45):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (52:45):
How long til people realize they're just watching regular TV?
You know? I think people you've got the streaming services
because you're like, oh, man, TV commercials and we don't
do them with all this. Well, now you're just watching
regular TV, and you match that with all the other
stream services you have, you might as well just go
ahead and be paying for regular satelliteer cable. Right. My
wife and I have this conversationation all the time because

(53:07):
we have Hulu, we have Netflix, and we have Amazon,
and we have Max and we have Apple TV. And
Amazon's already included in delivery.

Speaker 2 (53:16):
Right.

Speaker 1 (53:17):
Max is included because of our cell phone. Apple's included
because we have an iPhone. So I'm really only paying
for Hulu and Netflix. You might want to go and
check your bank statements when it comes to the Prime
Video because I thought the same thing. In the beginning,
you were given prime video with your prime delivery service.
Now they're two separate things, and you're getting two separate

(53:37):
Mine's not okay, mine's not I pay a yearly fee
and then that's that. Oh okay, so that's probably where
you got the deal at then doing a yearly fee.
Oh and we have Disney, but that's part of my Hulu.
I have thew Disney ESPN package.

Speaker 7 (53:47):
Right.

Speaker 1 (53:48):
But in the beginning, it was about money saving right,
and then also no commercials. And now they've realized now
we'll just people are trained, and so now it's no
more of the commerci Yeah, but I might have to
cancel Netflix. It's awesome because even if they play it
like a football game on it, I'll just get it

(54:09):
for that month and then cancel it, right, or you
get the highlights somewhere else. TikTok, yeah, wherever the case is.
I feel like, if there's a situation where I'm gonna
need to watch a lot of TV, I could cancel
Netflix and then if you know, I break my neck
and I'm bedridden, I'll just pay for that month, right,
cancel any time they say yeah, yeah, yeah, there's no

(54:29):
need for that. It's ridiculous. They just keep raising prices
and raising prices and raisin prices. What else we got here?
The FDA approves Johnson and Johnson nasal spray to treat depression. Yep,
they spray it right in your brain.

Speaker 5 (54:44):
Right.

Speaker 1 (54:45):
What it is. It's just liquid cocaine and it's treating
your depress You don't feel depressed because you all suited
out on liquid cocaine. For the record, it is not
liquid cocaine. We don't know. No, it's not. If you
read the side effect, it's not cocaine, right, because they're
going to list the side effects of may possibly sell
your body and steal VCRs to get what I'm saying

(55:07):
is it doesn't have the attributes that go along with
people that use cocaine the side effects right, right, Hey,
cocaine without the bloody nose. Whoo. Anyhow, the spray called
spru Spravato is the first ever standalone therapy for treating
major depressive disorders that fails to improve with standard drug regiments.

(55:29):
The FDA green light means Spravato, which has been used
since twenty nineteen along with an oral medication, can now
be used by itself. And then lastly, here the Ann
and Henry Zorro YMCA opens up in West Tulsa. Who
the YMCA Greater Tulsa opened its fifteenth facility called the

(55:49):
Ann and Henry Zorro YMCA and West Tulsa. This new
facility has two endoor soccer fields and a third sports
court where people can play pickleball and volleyball and dodgeball
and basketball, but not indoor football or whiffle ball for
that fact, eh the YMC a lot of things you
can't do right. The YMCA also has an obstacle course

(56:13):
called the Hive for children ages eight and oldered exercise
on The new facility is located at nine oh nine
West twenty third Streets.

Speaker 5 (56:33):
There have been some arrests in at least one of
the high profile Applete home burglaries that made news over
the past few months. Four men illegally in the US
from Chile were arrested during a traffic stop in Fairbourne, Ohio.
The car they were driving had Florida tags and was
pulled over after a lane violation on I seventy and

(56:54):
three of the four men allegedly gave fake IDs to
officers during the stop. A search of the car revealed
two automatic center punch tools, the same tool identified as
being used to break glass and inner homes. Inside the car.
We're also an LSU T shirt and a Bengals hat,
both believed to have been stolen from the home of
Joe Burrow. A search of phones also revealed that at

(57:17):
least one of the four men was in close proximity
to Joe Burrow's home on December ninth when the robbery
took place.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
This is a very interesting story. I think we've known
for a while. That's why when it happened to Mahomes
and Kelsey, they were kind of The FBI was involved
because of they believe that it's this crime ring and
maybe these people are a part of it. But I
don't know if a hat and a shirt makes them guilty.
I could be wrong. I don't know anything about police work.
It feels like in Ohio, a Bengals hat isn't the

(57:51):
red airing?

Speaker 2 (57:52):
Now?

Speaker 5 (57:52):
Could they DNA test the hat against Joe Burrow and
see if that's his hat that he's worn.

Speaker 1 (57:59):
Maybe he's got like a strand or to a hair
left in there. It feels I don't know if they
do that for me if my hat got stolen.

Speaker 5 (58:06):
Sure not Joe Burrow, that's.

Speaker 1 (58:08):
True, but he shouldn't get special privileges that way from
the police. Uh. Now if it says to Joe, welcome
to the team, right or property of Joe Burrow? Yeah? Yeah?
And if these individuals are the ones that broke in
and they they didn't take like I don't know, a jersey,

(58:29):
an autographed jersey of his that he's had signed by
other athletes or whatever, it feels like they're not good
criminals and they only took a hat and a shirt.
I hope there was more thing value they took than
just those two things.

Speaker 5 (58:46):
The rest of the stuff they have locked up in
storage ing it somewhere.

Speaker 1 (58:49):
I'm sure well they rated a hotel is where they
found these individuals. The story is really fascinating and these
people are the ones probably. I'm just saying that the
new store going like they got a hat and it
said the Bengals crime salved feels a little wild.

Speaker 5 (59:11):
And that's your balls to the wall sports. I'm Lindsay
at ninety seven five.

Speaker 1 (59:24):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show nine eight
four six, okmo D You can also text bmms and
then what you want to say? Day two, nine four five,
Good morning Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn.

Speaker 5 (59:36):
We still have Theory of a dead Man tickets to
give away and you can buy them, but why not
just sign up to win them at kmod dot com.
That show is a Saturday night, February eighth at the
Tulsa Theater.

Speaker 1 (59:50):
Good morning, Gimbie Oil, Good morning Corbin. You got a
pretty cool thing from Metallica here. We want to send
you in a friend to go watch Metallica from the
snake pit. Gonna hook you up. You pick the city,
I'm gonna give you hotel, air fare and pit tickets.
Of course, you can get all the details of the website.
The rocks kmod reading fill in the blank news. I'll
read part of a headline, leave part of it out.

(01:00:11):
You've got to guess what the blank parts should be first.
One more teens. More teens say they're using chat GPT
for blank More teens say they're using chat GPT for
blank homework seems legit.

Speaker 5 (01:00:27):
Or dating profiles.

Speaker 1 (01:00:31):
Okay, I don't know. I can see that. You just
have them type up something for you, and you know
I have the chat GPT do it for you on
a dating profile. Saves you from having to do all
the work and think about yourself.

Speaker 5 (01:00:44):
What about maybe college essays?

Speaker 1 (01:00:47):
Okay, almost, I think it's homework. A poll from the
Pew Pew Pew Research Center found the number of teens
using chat GPT for their homework is rising. The survey
reported twenty percent of students ages thirteen to seventeen are
turning to chat GPT for their help. That's twice the
amount from twenty twenty three students. Comfort with using chat

(01:01:10):
GPT varied for different assignments, with fifty four percent using
it to research new topics and eighteen percent saying they
use it to write essays. I would counter argument this
with get on board educators, right, yeah, figure it out,
because remember when you had a watch that had a

(01:01:32):
calculator on it and they're like, ah, yeah, and then
you had the Ti eighty five's calculators and they're like ah,
and then when you had your iPhone they're like, ah, right,
there's always going to be something. I get the obstacle
how hard it is to figure it out, but right
it's almost like if they didn't do it, they're like, well,

(01:01:54):
why are you being resourceful?

Speaker 2 (01:01:56):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:01:56):
Right right, you think they'd be able to figure it
out by reading it and be like this isn't your
own words?

Speaker 5 (01:02:02):
Some of us, a lot of teachers that I've spoken
with can't say that they can tell and they will
get called into questioning for it.

Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
Some will even put in the instructions, uh, because people
are just copy and paste in the instructions that's chat
GPT as. They'll put some instructions in text that you
can't see, so like white or whatever, and then when
you paste it into chat GPT, it kicks out an
answer with this like safety net in it. Next one,

(01:02:30):
Progresso releases soup flavored Blank. Progresso releases soup flavored Blank.
One of the things I love about doing this is
the quick shift. Yeah uh coffee creamer. Ew. They'll make
good soup. I mean yeah, It's not a giant leap
anything soup flavored other than soup, which is gonna be

(01:02:51):
ice cream soup flavored ice cream. I can't wait for
a nice cold bowl of Ministro chicken noodles. Nothing soup.
Progresso is introducing a new way to enjoy soup. The
company released its first ever limited edition soup Drops candy.

(01:03:17):
Progresso says it took the beloved flavors of our Progresso
chicken noodle soup and packed them into a fun, savory candy.
It's sold exclusively on progressosoup drops dot com for two
dollars and forty nine cents per can.

Speaker 5 (01:03:34):
If they would have released, say, crackers, soup flavored crackers,
I might try that, how but candy no.

Speaker 1 (01:03:43):
Mm hmm. And does that fill you up? I mean
it gives you the flavor like Yeah, this is a
great taste. Great, I feel like I'm eating soup. But
does it fill you up? I mean, YouTube are sitting
there not even acknowledging the occasional desire you have for
the flavored chicken noodle soup.

Speaker 7 (01:04:05):
Never.

Speaker 5 (01:04:06):
Never, I say, it's probably not gonna fill you up,
but it's probably gonna give you soup of breath. That's
about it.

Speaker 1 (01:04:12):
What's soup breath?

Speaker 5 (01:04:13):
I mean, what bad breath. Whatever you're eating, it's probably
just gonna leave that taste in your mouth.

Speaker 1 (01:04:22):
FDA approves sale of blank. FDA approves sale of blank.

Speaker 5 (01:04:29):
Hmmmm, another weight loss shot.

Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
Yeah, right, horse meat. I wish really you try it.
We're one of the only countries that doesn't eat horse. Instead,
they get thrown in the ground. Just go to waste,
waste and glue, right, dog food.

Speaker 5 (01:04:52):
FDA approves soup drops.

Speaker 1 (01:04:56):
The FDA is authorizing zin nicotine patch pouches to be sold.
This comes after the agency said they conducted an extensive
scientific review on the pouch is safety. The agency said
it found the pouches opposed a lower cancer risk than
cigarettes and other smokeless tobacco products, and also found it
could help cigarette smokers trying to quit. Zen exploded into

(01:05:19):
popularity in recent years after going viral online. I thought
they were already legal. I did too, right, They sell them,
They sell them in the stores. So I've heard good
things from people about Zen. You know, friends of mine,
they use it, and it's like, yeah, I use it
and cut out cigarettes, and now I'm just hooked on
Zen instead everything Zen. State Farm canceling blank Jake, Yeah, Jake,

(01:05:46):
or like Jake. Their partnership with the Chiefs. Oh, I
mean they don't have a partnership with the chiefs. They
have a partnership with Pat two players, Patrick and yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:06:03):
Maybe they're canceling fire insurance or hurricane insurance, earthquake insurance.

Speaker 1 (01:06:10):
Right, anything that you can be covered by a State
Farm is canceling. It's Super Bowl ad this year because
of the wildfires in southern California. The insurance company, which
has faced criticism for not renewing some policies because of
fire risk, says it is instead focused on helping customers
impacted by the fires that have left thousands of homes

(01:06:32):
and businesses destroyed. A spokesperson said the company has already
received thousands of claims. Uh. Yeah, but what'd you do
with the money that you spent for that? Detroit Public
Schools Community District to blank students for perfect attendance. Detroit
Public Schools Community District to blank students for perfect attendance,

(01:06:55):
Throw a parade, pizza party, pizzas. No, they're not gonna.

Speaker 5 (01:07:02):
Punish perfect for perfect attendance, They're gonna celebrate you.

Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
It's like, listen, we're known to be slackers and y'all
are ruining that's for us. You're ruining our reputation. So
either start missing school or you're gonna have Saturday detention
for the next six years.

Speaker 5 (01:07:18):
They're gonna give them a day off for perfect attendance.

Speaker 1 (01:07:22):
Detroit School District is paying students to show up for class.
Officials at Detroit Public Schools Community District say high school
students who get perfect attendance will be paid two hundred
dollars every week. What officials say the initiative is being
put in place to combat chronic absenteeism. Students are eligible

(01:07:43):
to receive up to one thousand dollars if they don't
miss any class in five different two week periods between
now and March twenty.

Speaker 5 (01:07:51):
First, okay, first, that's awesome. Second, where's how money coming from?

Speaker 1 (01:07:57):
And what?

Speaker 5 (01:07:58):
I don't know what the education system is there in Detroit.
I mean, clearly it's a huge problem with kids missing school.
What a great incentive. That's a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (01:08:09):
You're paying kids to show up. They're not learning, that's
my that's the other side of that coin. It's exactly
what's happening. You know, you're just paying them to show
up to be in class so they can make their mark. Right. Look,
our attendants was perfect, right. What are the kids actually
going to be learning or are they going to be
sitting in there screwing around just to collect a check.

(01:08:29):
I mean, I hear you. I think there's some hope
that just showing up, even if you increase it by
a small percentage of education by just showing up, then
it's worth it. I think that's the mindset. But I
think you're onto something is that they may show up
just to collect the money, right, I mean, you show
up to work to collect the money, exactly right, So

(01:08:52):
it's not a far leap. I'm not a fan of this.
I think it sets a bad precedent, right because it
starts with Detroit and all the other schools kids are
going to get mad. Well, the kids detruit are getting paid.
Help come us here in Connecticut getting get paid. I
was thinking about this this morning because they were talking
about one of the governors in one of the states
and raw Raw about banning cell phones in school, which

(01:09:14):
I do think is a good initiative. There has not
been this much discussion about advancing education systems, about anything
that there is on this stupid phone topic. Again, I'm
not saying it's not a bad idea, but I wish
there was this much more diligence on talking about the
just jet like absenteeism, right right, yeah? Uh. Some forty

(01:09:41):
ones Derek is it will be the lead singer of
Some forty Ones Derek will Be and his former blank
are suing each other. Some forty one lead singer and
his former blank are suing each other.

Speaker 5 (01:09:53):
Former drummer right for manager maybe even or maybe it's
not someone with that has to do with the band.
Maybe it's his former butler or driver or tour manager.

Speaker 1 (01:10:10):
Some forty one lead singers got a butler? Yeah, come on, i'ming.
Some forty ones front man and former manager are embroiled
in a legal battle over the lead singer's detailed alleged

(01:10:30):
verbal and sexual abuse by the manager in his memoir.
The manager has filed a libel suit against him, seeing damages,
while the lead singer has counter suit for defamation. The
allegations in the book claimed that the manager groomed and
abused the lead singer when he was eighteen. The accusations
in it are mind blowing, leading to a strained relationship

(01:10:53):
between the two. Both parties have issued statements regarding the accusations,
with the lead singer challenging the manager to settle them
in court. The legal proceedings are ongoing and the manager
has been suspended from his work with the Algoma Conservatory
of Music pending an internal investigation. So crazy list of

(01:11:14):
accusations he's got in this memoir. He would not think
the memoir of the lead singer of Some forty one
would be so riveting, but it's quite fascinating. By the numbers,
here are the five most influential blanks of all time.
By the numbers, Here are the five most influential blanks
of all time. Presidents, I don't want to say rock bands.

Speaker 5 (01:11:38):
Ooh, I like that.

Speaker 1 (01:11:39):
I think rock bands musicians. I think that falls under
as well, But I mean, you're right. It could be presidents,
could be actors, it could be cars, it could be thumbles.

Speaker 5 (01:11:54):
Right, influential NFL players coaches.

Speaker 1 (01:12:01):
Chris Reva, an indie musician and Audio Mac project manager,
conducted a study in December analyzing the most influential rock
bands of all time. Using data from Wikipedia. He identified
four hundred and seventy nine mainstream rock artists and tallied
mentions of their influences across nearly five hundred Wikipedia pages.

(01:12:21):
In a ranked list, the top five bands were The
Beatles with two hundred and ten mentions, OOO, led Zeppelin
with one hundred and fifty one, the Rolling Stones with
one hundred and forty six, U two with one hundred
and thirty nine, and David Bowie with one hundred and
twenty seven. Music impact can be a bit subjective, but

(01:12:42):
according to Riva, the Beatles were number one. Here quote
the Beatles are not only more influential than the Rolling Stones,
they're the most influential rock band of all time, he says.
According to his methodology, Blank postponed Las Vegas residency after
Drummers Brush with Death. Blank postpone Las Vegas residency after

(01:13:07):
drummers brush with Death.

Speaker 5 (01:13:10):
Oil boy. I'm not sure who has a new residency there.

Speaker 1 (01:13:16):
Where has an old residency? You two, That's what first
one it comes to my mind is you two. Yeah,
but I don't know if that's it or not.

Speaker 5 (01:13:27):
Who's had a brush with the death from death?

Speaker 1 (01:13:31):
Yeah, brush was he did. He's fine now though, I
don't know if something happened in the eighties.

Speaker 5 (01:13:40):
Last year he was mugged on the street.

Speaker 1 (01:13:42):
Was it a armed robbery? He got strong armed? I
heard he came up short right, And when they caught
the fugitive, the fugitive said it wasn't me. It was
a little one afternoon. Scorpions were planning to celebrate their
sixtieth anniversary with the Las Vegas residency in February. Unfortunately,

(01:14:03):
the celebration is getting postponed as drummer Mikey d recovers
from sepsis, which left him hospitalized over the holiday. So THO, no, no, hesepsis.
It's infection of the blood, incredibly dangerous. A lot of
people die from it. The band says their residency will
be pushed back to August of twenty twenty five. Iron

(01:14:24):
Maiden frontman Bruce Dickinson finishes thirteenth and prestigious Blank Tournament.
Iron Maiden front man Bruce Dickinson finishes thirteenth and Prestigious
Blank Tournament.

Speaker 5 (01:14:37):
Songwriting tournament.

Speaker 1 (01:14:39):
Golf Tournament's first thing that comes to my mind. But
but you know about Bruce, he's a pilot, right, so
maybe there's this tournament to like fly around the world
the fastest or in the quickest amount of time, a
flight simulation.

Speaker 5 (01:14:50):
Maybe like they do this golf thing. Yeah, yeah, is
he a golfer though said golf came to mind.

Speaker 1 (01:14:57):
I mean there's not a lot of tournaments, you know,
celebrity tournaments. Who got their pickleball, That's true. Iron Maidens
Bruce Dickinson recently competed in the Circuit European Fencing Tournament
in Great Britain in the Veterans category. Dickinson, who first
started fencing as a teenager, finished thirteenth out of thirty
one fencers in the category. The musician, who has many

(01:15:20):
interests outside of music, including acting and aviation, tease that
the band will be doing new things on their upcoming
Run for Your Lives tour in twenty twenty five, which
will mark the fiftieth anniversary as a band. The tour
will feature special set list of songs from their first
nine studio albums and will run through twenty twenty six.
Dickinson also mentioned that parts of the world they can't

(01:15:41):
reach in twenty twenty five will be visited in twenty
twenty six. That's fun. The most popular blank around the world.
The most popular blank around the world.

Speaker 5 (01:15:54):
Food item songs or ice cream, movies, cats, most popular pet.

Speaker 1 (01:16:04):
Okry, most popular cars, cakes, they can't go wrong with
a good gig, most py dessert Okay, dessert, meatloads you want.

Speaker 5 (01:16:21):
To stay with pets.

Speaker 1 (01:16:22):
Pilot is the top dream job of people around the world,
according to new research from Rimmelty. The financial services company
analyzed global Google search trends in one hundred and eighty
six countries over the past year to find the careers
people would most like to have. Coming in second worldwide
is attorney, while here in the US the number one

(01:16:43):
dream job is radio flight attendant. Really, I get that
you get to travel a lot. Everybody, Oh, but you
gotta deal with people being entitled on like the worst
way right right. That's why being a pilot would be
way cooler and better than being a flight attend but
to be a pilot on an airline takes a long time.

(01:17:04):
Where you could be a flight attendant probably you know
within you know, the first batch of training. Yeah, okay,
I agree, Like going to travel would be spectacular dealing
with people in the air Sit down, sit down, This
is loot of me, right, get the doctape.

Speaker 5 (01:17:26):
And if you're a flight attendant or even a pilot
and you have a sleepover somewhere at.

Speaker 1 (01:17:31):
A sleepover like they'll get together.

Speaker 5 (01:17:35):
In some city. Does the airline take care of their hotel? Yes,
that's nice.

Speaker 1 (01:17:39):
Yes they stay in a airline hotel. Yeah, yeah, they better.
They're making them travel far away. They even have sleeping
quarters on airplanes for employees. Wow. Cheap and easy ways
to boost blank today, according to Science. Cheap and easy
ways to boost blank today, according to Science.

Speaker 5 (01:18:03):
Boost your energy mood was the first.

Speaker 1 (01:18:07):
Thing that came to my mind. Mood energy, science, boost morale, sleeping.

Speaker 5 (01:18:17):
Company morale.

Speaker 1 (01:18:20):
We all know that a pizza party is what does
that boost your company morale? If the dreary, freezing weather,
our post holiday blues have you feeling down, there are
some scientific back quick fixes to help you feel happier today. One.
Being active, even if it's for just ten minutes, can

(01:18:42):
improve your mood. That one minute you do in the
toilet while your wife's with the kids don't count. And
spending outside in the environment like going for a walk
can also help your mood even better. Taking a short
power nap can boost happiness to and so can plain
music that makes you feel good.

Speaker 5 (01:19:03):
Says nothing in there about nasal spray, though, huh boost
your mood?

Speaker 1 (01:19:08):
What blank predict will happen in twenty twenty five? What
blank predicts will happen in twenty twenty five? What doctor expressionals? Athletes? Nerds?
Nerds like that?

Speaker 5 (01:19:28):
What scientists? How about geologists?

Speaker 1 (01:19:38):
Okay, how about astrologists? Yeah? I like that. New research
from IPSOS reveals that events Americans think will most likely
happen during the year ahead. Extreme weather events tops the
list at sixty six percent of people predict there will
be more of them in twenty twenty five. That's followed
by higher inflation, with fifty nine one percent believing it's

(01:20:01):
likely to increase this year. Some other ones that are
on here. Your personal data will be leaked on the internet,
Immigration will increase, Unemployment will be higher four day work
week will become unlikely, population will fall unlikely, people will

(01:20:23):
become more tolerant unlikely. Uh yeah, and the rest of
all other stuff that nobody cares about. Women will be
paid the same as men equal. I think you'll stay
the same, no changes. All right, we got to take
a break. We'll be back. Good morning. It's the big

(01:20:57):
mad Morning shown So kmod. You can also text BMMS
and then what you want to say to eight two
nine four five. So somebody texted about this and I
saw it and I hadn't got into it, but we
can get into it now. Apparently, two kids that play
basketball at Wilson High School in Henrietta were arrested earlier

(01:21:21):
this month accused of robbing a convenience store in Jinks
And they were armed and had coverings on their face
and they were arrested. But they have ankle monitors, but
they're still playing basketball, and so there's pictures of them
playing basketball and you could see their ankle monitors and
parents are very frustrated with this.

Speaker 5 (01:21:41):
Yeah, I would be why absolutely, because if you how
you act outside of the court or outside the football field,
is how you represent yourself on the field or on
the court, sure of course. So if you're getting in
trouble with law enforcement, then yeah, you should be suspended
from your team.

Speaker 1 (01:22:01):
No matter what.

Speaker 5 (01:22:01):
Don't tolerate that, no matter what. I mean, they have
ankle monitors. Yeah, they don't let them play for bad grades.
Why would they let them play for trouble with the law?

Speaker 3 (01:22:16):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:22:16):
Well they've only been charged.

Speaker 5 (01:22:19):
H Yeah, still while you're yeah, wearing an ankle monitor.
And how do they even get permit? I guess because
they can go to school. They're allowed permission to go
to school, and that's on school property. But if they
have a traveling game, are they allowed to go and

(01:22:39):
play too?

Speaker 1 (01:22:40):
They're not playing in Europe right, No, but they are
playing out of town or towns. And typically when you're
on probation, you're not supposed to leave town at all.
What's what You're not supposed leave to state? Okay, I
don't know what's your What are your thoughts on this
can be? I'm agreeing with Lindsay on this one. I
don't think those kids should be allowed to play. Honestly,
I don't think any body professional or minor at all.

(01:23:02):
If you're in trouble with the law, you don't get
to play. We've got too many professional athletes that go
out there and break the law and continue to play
because other professional athletes, they've got millions of dollars blah
blah blah. Meanwhile they're causing car accidents, drinking and driving,
kidling people, you know what I mean, beating the crap

(01:23:23):
out of their girlfriends or wives or whatever, and they
get to go right onto that field or onto that
court and continue. No, you're grounded. You don't get to
do anything extra.

Speaker 5 (01:23:33):
Right, that's a really bad example.

Speaker 1 (01:23:35):
Yeah, it makes true. Anybody believes that. Well, you know, listen,
I'm the sports king. I can do whatever I want
and not get in any trouble. There's no repercussions for
my actions. Yeah, I mean there's repercussions. You could be
facing criminal or legal problems with in the court system, right,
civil or criminal. Now, to me, it is an issue

(01:23:57):
when it at the professional level of employer employee, right,
And it's not as just because they're of a high
calib proposition. The rules legally are the same and then
they can Now your boss can fire you for those things, right,
and at this collegiate level, I'm sorry, at the high
school level. This is odd, don't I wouldn't want If

(01:24:19):
I was the coach, I wouldn't let them play. But
it is up to the coach. It's up to the
school district. Even at the college level, if something happens,
at least according to the article, if something happens on
the OU football team, it's up to the coach if
there should be additional punishment outside the law. And that
is stupid. Yeah, you broke the law. You need to

(01:24:41):
go ahead and be punished. And I get you're a
star player, fantastic, You're great. Oh man, that is amazing.
But you fed up, and this is the punishment. This
is part of it. You don't get to play.

Speaker 5 (01:24:53):
I think a good coach would say that.

Speaker 1 (01:24:55):
If I went out and got what did these kids do?
What are these kids? Oh, there's an important attribute you
have to put on this armed robbery. So if I
went out and committed armed robbery and I get locked up,
But now I'm released and I'm on house arrest because
you know, we're waiting for a court date to come around.
Should I still be able to come to work? Do

(01:25:16):
you think I would still have a job. They probably
fire me in a heartbeat. Because we don't need that
around here. I would, Well, you can't be that's an opinion, right,
there's no facts behind that, right. And in this scenario,
I'm a believer and somebody's texas in two that it's
just a charge right now, right, it's not. It's not
a conviction, get it. And we are so quick to

(01:25:38):
punish people on charges and kids make mistakes. What if
this is the thing that gets them stays, keeps them
out of trouble. Fantastic. They learn their lesson because they
don't get to play their game anymore, and that's what
caused them to learn their lesson. I lost everything because
I wanted to go out and commit armed robbery. Yeah,
and but it doesn't it doesn't work that way. People

(01:26:00):
don't go, well, I learned my lesson, so I won't
ever do it again. The usually the mindset, uh is well,
I'm already in trouble, I might as well just keep
doing it. Maybe fifty to fifty percent of the time. Sure,
I'm not going to give you the whole thing. But
there's been plenty of people that I know. Hell, I'm
even one of them that's gotten in trouble, you know,

(01:26:20):
And it's like, you know, okay, I'll learn them a lesson.
I'm not doing that again at all, whatsoever.

Speaker 5 (01:26:25):
I absolutely believe in second chances.

Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
So except in this scenario, I get it.

Speaker 5 (01:26:31):
A charge, but you're not playing, you can still come.

Speaker 1 (01:26:34):
Well, then you don't believe in chance, you don't will still.

Speaker 5 (01:26:35):
Come to practices and play in practices, So you don't
you know, get bad at playing or whatever, forget your
your skill set, but you're not playing in any games.

Speaker 1 (01:26:46):
That's not a second chance.

Speaker 5 (01:26:47):
You're benched until this is because.

Speaker 1 (01:26:50):
That's not a second chance, lindsay, Yeah, in a way
it is because and again they're charged, they're not convicted,
so you're punishing them for a charge.

Speaker 5 (01:27:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:27:00):
Well, and we're using this in the broad scope, not
just once and.

Speaker 5 (01:27:03):
Once it's over, once the trial is over, and if
it's cleared or whatever, then I will allow you to
come back and play.

Speaker 1 (01:27:10):
I like this one. I got in trouble for smoking
weed when I was sixteen the summer before swim season
in the fall. I wasn't charged with anything, but I
got a quote talking to by the dare officer. Then
I was suspended from the first three meets that swim season.
But had to be at all three meets sitting in
my sweats on the side. Why can they play again?

(01:27:30):
That's what your coach or your administrator decided, and I
think every coach and every administrator across the board should
do that exact same thing.

Speaker 5 (01:27:39):
They should fall in line with the school policy. You know,
as far as grades go, a school can dictate whether
or not you're going to play. If you're failing. If
you have failing grades, you're not playing. Yeah until your
grades come up.

Speaker 1 (01:27:52):
Yeah, but that might be a policy of the school
that if your grades aren't good, you don't play.

Speaker 5 (01:27:59):
Yeah, It's true, and a lot of like the outside leagues,
will go by what the school says, even if you
aren't even if it's a sport that's not a school sport.
If your grades are bad, coaches want to know and
they will keep you from playing.

Speaker 1 (01:28:16):
To me, the grades and a criminal thing are not
the same. They're completely different reasons to not let somebody
play or play. But to me, the biggest ops no
one would know that this person in trouble if it
wasn't for an ankle bracelet. Right, You don't know who
your kids playing against, You don't know who your kid's
going to school with only because the ankle monitor is

(01:28:39):
the only reason anybody knows this. Right to me, until
they are convicted, they deserve grace.

Speaker 5 (01:28:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:28:52):
Going to jail, Yeah yeah, that's not how it works.
It's a charge, So you get charged with something, you
don't spend a night in jail, not automatically, not on
every single crime. So I think I think it's okay
that this is happening. If they get convicted, completely different game.

Speaker 5 (01:29:12):
I think the coach, though, too, by letting them play,
is putting their reputation at stake as well. Oh that's
the school that lets kids.

Speaker 1 (01:29:21):
With right you know, damn hardened criminals out there playing
basketball the charge. It's not because you charges them. It
doesn't make you a criminal.

Speaker 5 (01:29:30):
This text guilty until proven innocent.

Speaker 1 (01:29:35):
Yeah, that's the way we operate in this country. Wilson
is a tiny high school. What if the team can't
play without the tude, they can't field a team.

Speaker 5 (01:29:43):
Well, then they let their team down.

Speaker 1 (01:29:44):
Yes, and then the team has to forfeit every game
for the rest of the year because or go to
punish all the students. Make a god, they didn't do anything.
What's the lesson for the other students don't be committing
armed or off, and you'll get to play a game. Right,
All that hard work means nothing now. Oh and you

(01:30:04):
you're jeopardizing your chance to go to college. That's terrible.
Take it up with those two. That doesn't make it
better though. All right, we got to take a break.
We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (01:30:14):
You're listening to the Big Mad Morning Show. This is
Tulsa's Morning show. Ninety KMOD.

Speaker 1 (01:30:31):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six oh KMOD. Can also text bmms and
then what you want to say to eight two nine
four five sort of read this quick text. What if
you're falsely accused, you should be punished until proven innocent.

(01:30:52):
My two cents, So you don't believe in the constitution,
You're innocent until proven guilty by the constitution. Let's see
what lindsay.

Speaker 5 (01:31:01):
As for balls to the wall sports, Ohio State football
is losing its backup quarterback to the transfer portal. ESPN
reports that Devin Brown has signed with Cal. The QB

(01:31:23):
officially entered the portal early last month, but stuck with
the team through the Buckeyes national championship went over Notre
Dame Brown was the eighty first overall ranked recruit in
ESPN's three hundred and four twenty twenty two and lost
a competition against Kyle McCord. Entering the twenty twenty three season,
the red shirt sophomore threw for three hundred and thirty

(01:31:43):
one yards to go with three touchdowns and an interception
in nine appearances this past season. A few years ago,
Madden created an Aaron Glenn Ultimate Legends Player with a
ninety seven rating according to NFL Media. The Jets hope
to keep Glenn from exiting the building when he conducts
his second interview to be the team's head coach. The

(01:32:04):
dealers not done and still some particulars remain. If it
doesn't happen, the Saints want to talk to Glenn in person.
Glenn played for the Jets from ninety four to two
thousand and one before finishing his fifteen year career with
the Texans, Cowboys, Jaguars, and Saints. His time with coach
Bill Parcells, who arrived in ninety seven and who signed

(01:32:24):
Glenn to the Dallas roster in two thousand and five,
should not be overlooked when it comes to tying Glenn
to the Jets. Parcells has a separate connection to Mike Tannebaum,
the former Jets GM who's running the search for a
new coach and general manager in New York. As one
source observed, don't underestimate the influence of Parcels on the situation.

(01:32:45):
The news will come to the dismay of former Jets
coach Rex Ryan, who has been using his bully pulpit
to aggressively politic for the job. The potential hiring of
Glenn also points to commander's assistant GM Lance Newmark as
the next Jets GM. Given you Mark's history with the Lions.
Another possibility at JAM would be current Lions executive Chris Spielman.

(01:33:07):
And that is your Balls to the Wall Sports. I'm
linked in ninety seventy five.

Speaker 1 (01:33:20):
Good Morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Nine one
eight four six kmod I got something from the well,
this is silly files. I'll read the headline and then
you can evaluate for yourself. And now there is elephants

(01:33:41):
can't pursue their release from a Colorado zoo because they're
not human, according to a court. I thought we all
already knew, right. I want to know how they wrote
the brief they wrote the brief they can't the trump

(01:34:02):
Well no theyir lawyer did not. They get ahold of lawyer.
A group argued the elephants born in Africa have shown
signs of brain damage because the zoo is essentially a
prison for such intelligent and social creatures known to roam
for miles a day. Now, I do agree that elephants
might be the most intelligent animals on the planet. They

(01:34:24):
are fascinating. Yeah, and when you are up next to one,
they're just pure presence is inspiring. They are amazing creatures
that could easily crush anything in their path. Oh yeah,
and they're just chill. They're just chilly. See the video
on the internet of how an elephant scratches its belly. No,

(01:34:46):
I just sicked it to you. Guys, five elephants out
of Colorado Zoo, since they're not human, do not have
the legal right to pursue the release, according to the
Colorado Highest Court. The from the Colorado we got plenty
of time to deal with the Supreme Court follows a
similar court defeat in New York in twenty twenty two.

(01:35:08):
Because there's a president apparently from an elephant named Happy.
At the Bronx Zoo in a case brought by animal
rights groups. Rulings in favor of the animals would have
allowed lawyers for both Happy and the elephants at the
Cheyenne Mountain Zoo and Colorado Springs Missy Kimba, Lucky, Lulu,
and Jambo Jamboo. Do you think at one point Lulu

(01:35:32):
was like not Jamboo all right to pursue a long
held legal process for prisoners to challenge their detention and
possibly be sent to live in an elephant sanctuary instead.
The Colorado court said its decision does not turn on
our regard for these majestic animals, otherwise hear me out. Instead,

(01:35:54):
the legal question here boils down to whether an elephant
is a person, the court said, and because an elephant
is not a person, the elephants here do not have
standing to bring habeas corpus claims, you don't say. The
animal rights group that tried to win Happy's release, the
Non Human Rights Project, also brought the case in Colorado.

(01:36:18):
The group argued that Colorado elephants born in the wild
in Africa have shown signs of brain damage because the
zoo is essentially a prison for such intelligent and social
creatures known to roam for miles a day. It wanted
the animals released to one of the two accredited elephant
sanctuaries in the US because the group thinks they can
no longer live in the wild. The zoo argued moving

(01:36:39):
the elephants and potentially placing them with new animals would
be cruel at their age, possibly causing unnecessary stress. It
said they aren't used to be used to being in
larger herds, and based on the Zoo's observations, the elephants
don't have the skills or desire to join one I
either old, we don't want to be around, all right,

(01:37:01):
get off my lawn. Well. Welcoming the court's decision, the
zoos said it was disappointed there had to be a
legal fight over the issue, and include and accuse the
organization of abusing court systems systems to fundraise. It seems
the real goals to manipulate people into donating to their
cause by increasingly Puppula's publicizing sensational court cases with relentless

(01:37:26):
calls for supporters to donate. The Non Human Rights Project
said the Lates ruling perpetuates a clear injustice and predication
and predicted future courts would reject the idea that only
humans have a right to liberty. As with other social
justice movements, early losses are expected as we challenge in

(01:37:47):
entrench status quo that has allowed Missy, Kimba, Lucky Lulu,
and Jambo to be relegated to a lifetime of mental
and physical suffering. I don't know if they suffer.

Speaker 5 (01:38:01):
I don't either.

Speaker 1 (01:38:01):
I never know. They can't talk to us and tell us.
It's just like they can't file court, right, So it
is what it is. Sorry, Jambo, you're stuck. I always
think about when you see like a bird get hit
by like a truck or something, you know, and they're
like more than one's flying, Yeah, the other ones get sad.

Speaker 5 (01:38:24):
Right, Well, no, because the robots they're going, they're going
so fast and then all of a sudden they look.

Speaker 1 (01:38:28):
Back, like where's Jambo? Yeah right? How far down? I
don't know, man, I just thought it was with you are.
Like when you know they they go on their little migrations.
Do they go Have you seen right?

Speaker 5 (01:38:46):
Hum I lost?

Speaker 1 (01:38:48):
Frank? No, they just bang someone else, right. They literally,
as far as we know, show no missing, no depression,
quote unquote, No, they don't show grief. Some animals show grief, right,
but not a lot of them. I don't know about you.
I haven't seen a an alligator sad. No, what where

(01:39:12):
do think the good alligator tears from? Man? Come on? True? No,
I don't think they have to do with the equal
to an alligator's grief. Listen, they get sad just like
the rest of them. What was that on the water? Boy,
they're always angry because they got all those teeth and
not a dentist. Yeah, yeah, here we go, Here we go,

(01:39:36):
Here we go. Crocodile tears comes from the ancient belief
that crocodiles shed tears when they attack and eat their victims, so.

Speaker 5 (01:39:44):
They feel a little remorse for it.

Speaker 1 (01:39:46):
I'm real sorry, gotta eat.

Speaker 5 (01:39:51):
I'm just.

Speaker 1 (01:39:53):
My wife gets that way when she's angry. Oh boy,
she don't shed a tear though. It's more like fire.

Speaker 5 (01:39:59):
Yeah, a magnet that says I'm sorry for what I
said to you when I was angry.

Speaker 1 (01:40:05):
Crocodiles shed tears to keep their eyes lubricated when they
spend time out of the water. Okay, because you got it.
That makes more sense, Like they got to get out
of the water to bite you.

Speaker 5 (01:40:14):
I guess right, right.

Speaker 1 (01:40:16):
Crocodiles may also shed tears when they are on land
for a while, or when they hear that Glenn Campbell's
song it is a sad song. The idea is the
phrase refers to insincere or inauthentic remorse or sympathy. Yeah,
it compares the crocodile's behavior to people who desire or
cause the death of someone, but then publicly for you. Yeah.

(01:40:38):
So it isn't about like real grief. No, I'm real
sorry to do this. Yeah, I mean, this show's amazing.
All right, we got to take a break. We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (01:40:54):
More of The Big Men Morning Show is next.

Speaker 1 (01:41:16):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Lindsay, what'd
you learn today?

Speaker 5 (01:41:21):
I learned that with all my court experience, I'm basically
now a lawyer. And I also learned that Johnson and
Johnson are fighting depression with nasal spray, because nothing cures
sadness like the feeling of inhaled pool water.

Speaker 1 (01:41:36):
Gimp. What'd you learn today? I learned that we let
our athletes get away with way too much. I also
learned that Corbyn likes is nuts salty. I learned that
Johnny Cochran over here went to court and decided to
negotiate down to an extended payment plan. And I also
learned that the only club that Gimby was aware of
was Majestic. It's Corbyn saying, make sure that dishwashers loaded, like, yeah,

(01:41:58):
it's stop tracking daddy. Can I get a call.

Speaker 2 (01:42:11):
With the.

Speaker 1 (01:42:14):
Brow Yeah? Now what the hell lay.

Speaker 3 (01:42:20):
It?

Speaker 1 (01:42:20):
To make some noise interpassword Corbyn new messages. The Big
Mad Morning sho would like to take a minute to
thank troops from Oklahoma and all over the United States.
These soldiers have sacrificed. Give the Big Mad Morning Show
before you the back like the total douchebags that they

(01:42:40):
are total douchebag bag, little incomplete douchebag. We honor and
respect you. We honor and respect you. We honor and
respect you, less Rock and all. I'm blessed Tulsa.

Speaker 5 (01:42:53):
We try to bully

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