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.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Yes, my bow suck on you bow down to your master.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Then you did it.
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Then you did it?
Speaker 4 (00:36):
Where you did? Allowed to play, Allowed to play, come
out to play, come to play.
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For Crystal wos.
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The sun is rising God, Oh wake up, wake.
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Up now, don't worry.
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We're all here to show you how. Jan Witz Hols
Raw Station k m bog Home of the listens.
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It's a family bee.
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Don't turn downtown, just wait and see.
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Are you ready?
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Are you ready to jove in time to.
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Start to show crapstick a clabout, briscome whisping man, Marny Show,
Welcome to the working week. It's on such a bore
kick back, makes up best of it and may get hardcore.
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Hang your whisby and then mess. Pick up your.
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Phone there line you're on the air.
Speaker 1 (02:16):
Dot good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show told
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(02:39):
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(03:00):
BMMS sixty nine. That's where you can hang out with
us each and every day. Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning, Corvin,
Good morning.
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Gimpy, Well, good morning.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
We've got tickets to see Seether with Daughtry as they
will be over in Rogers at the Walmart Amphitheater on
October twenty second, which is very soon. We've got best
and Worse the weekend. What's the best thing that happened
to you and the worst thing that happened to you? Hey,
and Jeff Finsley will join us. You've got a question
about divorce, custody, guardianship, name change, anything like that. He
(03:33):
can answer it. He'll be in the studio at nine
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(03:55):
you can call at eight three three four six oh.
Speaker 8 (03:59):
K I'm od boom boom.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
I got a lot going on over here, man and
age from the band age, which is different than the
ideas thing. And the Nineteenthdaniel Cancer Sucks Concert is gonna
be Saturday, November twenty ninth that the Canes, Josie Scott
in the original voice of Saliva, Miranda, and the top
(04:23):
two winners from our Battle to the Band's contest will
be playing. Make sure you visit Keynesballroom dot com to
get your tickets. If you have a local band, you
can submit your one song demo on the contest page
at kmod dot com so you can just put your
(04:44):
It has to be clean, by the way. If it
has profanity in it may be a great song, but
I'm not.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
Editing in for you.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
No, there's no need for us to just download win
app or some other free thing and bleep out the
It's not that.
Speaker 8 (04:58):
Hard figure it out.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
And it's just because I don't want to get fined,
because they love to pass those fines onto the employees
now right, times are a tough. Diane Keaton died, which
I thought was interesting. I knew she was older, but
I didn't see her as somebody who was in Danger
of the Grim Reaper.
Speaker 3 (05:21):
No me either. Sad it was a bummer.
Speaker 1 (05:25):
She was what seventy nine I think is what I saw.
I mean, I don't know if it was a bummer.
I haven't seen her in anything in a long, long, long, long,
long long time.
Speaker 9 (05:39):
I think the last thing I actually saw her in
was a Justin Bieber music video. Really, she was a
huge Justin Bieber fan. She loved him, and when he
found out about that, he put her in one of
his music videos as she played the mom in one
of his songs in a video.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
Yeah, sure, okay, yeah, I apparently she was. She's been
really sick, but I can't find out what she was
sick with. And one of the most interesting things about
her is, besides she was in a Justin Bieber video,
is that she never married, and she was married to
some she dated some really high profile people. She never
(06:25):
married at all, was never never had kids. She adopted kids,
but she never married and had kids. She dated Warren
baby Woody Allen. Woody Allen says the Any Home Movie
was basically basically written in part four Diane Keaton and
she dated al Pacino, which al Pacino like.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
Apparently they went back and forth, and she founds.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Like ye yo, eser, get off the pot, and he
was like, see you, and he says to this day,
she's the one that got away.
Speaker 8 (07:02):
Wow, okay.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
And she adopted two kids.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
She did a lot of producing and directing and writing
in the back in the in the back scenes of
TV shows. She did a documentary on death because she's
so intrigued by the idea of heaven.
Speaker 2 (07:22):
She did interior design.
Speaker 1 (07:24):
She like celebrities would buy homes from her because she
would go in and remodel them, and apparently she was
so good at it. Yeah, all these things. I was
gonna do the whole like, what's her best movie? But
a lot of them we haven't seen, just being honest,
a lot of them. First Wive Club isn't the best
movie she's ever made. The Steve Martin movie, not her
(07:48):
best Father, Yeah, not a good movie. They're great movies,
but not not her best movies at all.
Speaker 8 (07:57):
She was.
Speaker 10 (07:59):
She is really good the girly movies. You know, you
don't see her in any.
Speaker 8 (08:03):
Like type movies. You have rom coms, you know, chick flicks.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
I mean in our time, yes, but I would exactly
call the Godfather that no, true. And you know, you
say Diane Keaton and she you should instantly have an
image of what she looks like, at least her pantsuit. Yeah,
and she deliberately did that, even if like characters weren't
written that way.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
She would defy the director and show.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
Up with that wardrobe and he was like, this is
what I'm wearing a lot of khaki because she wanted
to be like, have that identity. You could see her
on screen and know exactly who she was as an actress,
which I think is fascinating. The thing for me when
seeing Diane Keaton died, which is this is gonna be
really bizarre statement. Maybe is that after people that I know,
(08:51):
you're like, oh they're dying, that they like they're all
gonna die right right, undefeated to death is But when
you see someone you watched in movies, like Michael Jackson
dying is a surprise, Matthew Perry is a surprise. But
that doesn't feel like they lived their life. This feels
(09:13):
like she ran the course and this is it.
Speaker 10 (09:15):
Okay, I get what you're saying. Yeah, it died at
an old age, very successful career. Sean Connery, I think
is another one that falls into that category red.
Speaker 2 (09:24):
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Speaker 1 (09:27):
And when you see that, you're like, oh, like she
allegedly dated counter Reeves.
Speaker 2 (09:31):
That means watch out county, Like you think he might
be next.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
No, I don't know if he's next, but he's sixty
two and not that that's old, right, but I think
once you arc over sixty five, right, right, I mean,
we don't let anybody over fifty five. You gotta be
over fifty five, right.
Speaker 10 (09:55):
It's talking with my old lady about you know, I'm
getting to that point where I got to tell my kids, like,
you know, death plans and stuff like that. She's like,
is there something you're not telling me? And I'm like, no,
everything cool and grate as far as I know. But
you know, I've seen so many people die at such
a young age that it's come to my realization that
anything can happen at any point in time. She's like,
(10:16):
oh yeah, I was like, yeah, take my parents, for example,
my almost fifty five when she died, and my dad
was in his early sixties. This is just kind of
riding around the corner for me.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
Isn't it weird?
Speaker 1 (10:27):
How like when your parents die like at whatever age
and short of a surprise death, you go, oh, like,
h yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:35):
Let's run in a family.
Speaker 10 (10:36):
Yeah, well, I know, I mean, anything could happen, and
I hope to make it into the eighties, nineties, the
Centurion mark. But the realization is is it may not happen.
It may not happen, you know, and that sucks. So
you start kind of looking at things a little a
little differently.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
So when you think about that idea of telling your kids,
do you mean like sitting them down and going, here's
what dad wants or writing it out being like there's
a piece of paper on the refrigerator on the side
with underneath a a I don't know whatever.
Speaker 10 (11:08):
Magnet right right, it's a combination of the two. And
it's a flash drive more so than on a piece
of paper, you know, it's it's a flash drive a.
Speaker 8 (11:15):
Favorite thing that you know.
Speaker 10 (11:16):
They need pictures, music, passwords, passwords, stuff like all the
important information you know, and yes, a document showing like, hey, go,
this is the information you need insurance and stuff like that.
And then it's a matter of you know, sitting them
down being like, hey, all right, here's the deal. I
can die at any point in time, and when that happens.
(11:39):
Here's your flash drives, you know, and how you can't
really keep them from opening it up, you know until then.
Speaker 2 (11:44):
Which, oh, like you're gonna give them each a flash drive?
Speaker 8 (11:47):
I mean what else am I supposed to do?
Speaker 10 (11:48):
I mean, put it in a safe deposit box and
be like when I die, go to the bank and
you know, get get get to the manager and he'll
have the key that you know.
Speaker 2 (11:58):
Yeah, I don't think it works that way. I don't
know that works out or whatever.
Speaker 10 (12:00):
So yeah, yeah, it'd be best to be like, here
you have it, and there's three kids, three flash drives.
In case one of them loses it, they've got backups.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
Yeah, yeah, there's no right way to do it.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
I'm just curious.
Speaker 8 (12:14):
Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 10 (12:16):
I go by because my my folks are buried at
Memorial Garden factor here on a memorial, right fifty personal memorial,
And I ride by, and every time I gotta get
in there, I gotta get in there. I gotta see
how much this little piece of land's gonna cost me
and give that move and just yeah, stuff so the
kids don't have to worry about because I went through
all that with both parents, and I don't want them
(12:37):
to have to worry about going through all that. So
if I can make everything easier for them than just
you know, plug and play, it won't be done. So
when you hear GIMPI endorse the cemetery, you know.
Speaker 8 (12:48):
What it is.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
You know, you know he got a good.
Speaker 8 (12:52):
It's not a bad idea.
Speaker 10 (12:53):
Honestly, they don't really have commercials for cemeteries now.
Speaker 1 (12:57):
Funny thing about cemeteries and funeral homes. They don't need
to advertise, right.
Speaker 10 (13:03):
I don't know if I was If I was a
cemetery or funeral home, I would totally start advertising.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
Okay, I'll take it. What would your marketing angle be?
Our plot of land is better than the other guys?
Speaker 2 (13:15):
Yeah, pretty much. Basically, why get buried in your backyard
when you can go to Memorial Garden Cemetery and you
could live amongst the likes of Sam Kinnison and Leon Russell.
Speaker 1 (13:27):
I mean, the idea of toting the other famous people
that are in there. Sure, yeah, but you're never going
to be near.
Speaker 2 (13:33):
Them, no, no, but you know I just happened to
be there.
Speaker 8 (13:37):
You know they're in there.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
Do cemeteries go?
Speaker 1 (13:40):
Yes, we got whatever, Sam Kinnison And then they go
the plot of land next to them was nine hundred dollars.
Speaker 2 (13:47):
But now I wouldn't doubt it. I wouldn't doubt it,
and you know people be paying that one. I could
be buried next to Leon Russell on.
Speaker 9 (13:57):
They had like celebrity row.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
What's the threshold for celebrity?
Speaker 3 (14:02):
Then?
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Does your wife get to be next to you, or
your husband or your kids because they're not celebrities?
Speaker 9 (14:07):
No?
Speaker 8 (14:08):
By proxy?
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Now this prime real estate?
Speaker 1 (14:12):
Literally, Yeah, I don't know what your marketing would be
for a cemetery of funeral home. Sure you could teut
the celebrities, but that's subjective, right. Some people might go, well,
I'm not you know, I don't want to be buried
there with that provocative Sam Kinnison.
Speaker 2 (14:27):
Right, start yelling at me on the other side of
his grave.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
I don't need to in the afterlife being yelled at
from above, people doing their Sam Kinnison impression.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
Right, we don't let the weeds overgrew it or cemetery.
Speaker 3 (14:41):
Right, the grass is always green here.
Speaker 1 (14:45):
Yeah, I don't know. Okay, let's okay, I'm gonna go
a different angle. How do you decipher whether a cemetery
is a good one? To be buried at because that's
really only at the time you pay for it.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
Anything can happen the next day.
Speaker 8 (15:02):
That is true.
Speaker 1 (15:03):
That it's like your mechanic, right, Like they have a
longevity as being now. They could you know, fall apart
or die or not show up for work one day,
just like anybody else. But they have a credibility to upstand.
I don't know if cemeteries have credibility.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
You're in the ground, that's what matters. I mean, that's
a great slogan too.
Speaker 8 (15:24):
Yeah, put it on a bumper.
Speaker 10 (15:26):
Sticker, take care of what matters, right, Yeah, you're right,
because anything can happen.
Speaker 8 (15:32):
I mean, look at that what.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
There's that cemetery admiral in Harvard. I think that like
they had to like move a bunch of bodies because
of flooding and stuff like that. Okay, I believe, so
that would be one thing I would look at me, like,
what's your flood zone?
Speaker 8 (15:48):
Like over here?
Speaker 10 (15:50):
Am I gonna have to worry about my loved one
coming to the surface when during a hard rain or something?
Speaker 1 (15:58):
I don't know, uh, I mean do they take on
that cost or does it passed.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
On I received, I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
And there's probably a number of people in the cemetery
that no one has visited for a long long time.
But then they're tasked with keeping you know, it maintained.
Speaker 8 (16:19):
Because that's the job. That's their job.
Speaker 9 (16:22):
We maintain the sites. Even if you don't want to, I.
Speaker 2 (16:26):
Know, we'll look after your mom because you don't want to.
Speaker 3 (16:32):
Yeah, even if you can't you don't want to.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
Do you rent, then make sure you bury with us?
What that makes it sound like I can get kicked
out of my plot at any point in time. I mean,
if you rent, like you rent, you don't want to.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
You know, you have the right to bury your family
members on your land.
Speaker 2 (16:49):
But if you rent a house.
Speaker 8 (16:50):
Yeah you can't really do that.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
Well you could, but I don't going back to visit
would be awkward, right, Sorry to live here or my
parents used to live here fifteen years ago, dads in
the backyard.
Speaker 8 (17:04):
What if I just stop in and say I right?
Speaker 1 (17:07):
Funeral homes, same thing, like you just go and like
when GIMPI did? I imagine you just knew the one
you wanted to go to because of somebody told you
something or you saw something online.
Speaker 8 (17:17):
Right, I've used it in the past, have used it
in the past.
Speaker 10 (17:20):
I was like, Okay, well, I know these are good people,
good company from my past experience, so let's.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
Go ahead and then do these guys again.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
When you say, and I'm not saying they weren't good company,
good people, what are those boxes checked mean?
Speaker 10 (17:39):
I think bedside manner, for lack of better terms, is
a good one. You know, you don't want somebody that's
just it's all business here. You know, they're going to
be compassionate, you know, I think help you through the
because that's a difficult time for anybody to go through,
(17:59):
especially the person who has to do all the planning
and everything. So to have some kind of compassion there,
I think is one checkbox.
Speaker 8 (18:06):
Uh.
Speaker 10 (18:07):
Cleanliness I think is one. But the fun thing about
that is is like it's when you clean up your
house for when company's coming over.
Speaker 2 (18:14):
Yeah, just shove everything in one room. As long as
the living rooms cleanly good, right, you know, so you
really don't know what's going on in the bag, but hey,
the parlor looks good.
Speaker 10 (18:22):
For the office is looking real nice. You know, it
doesn't smell like a rotting corpse in here. So we
got that going for us. Yeah, stuff like that.
Speaker 1 (18:31):
Yeah, there's no hitting agenda there, no, but you don't
go the things that matter.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
You don't go. Hey, can I see where the body's stored?
Speaker 1 (18:41):
How many? How many do you have a day? How
many funerals will you have in a day? Like, I'm
not gonna have to compete with another family, right, Like
the people that come, they're gonna fight, right, right.
Speaker 2 (18:51):
You don't ask those questions.
Speaker 8 (18:52):
You just assume the smiths are coming in, do you right?
Speaker 1 (18:55):
I'm so sorry, Everything go good. Yeah, We're gonna need
to hurry this up. I'm so sorry, but we need
to hurry this up. I know it's hard, but we
need to move along.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
You just stop crying for a second.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
You have at three o'clock.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
Yeah, I know. You stay as long as you want.
You just have to smoove out to the lobby, right, No,
no camping.
Speaker 10 (19:18):
Right, this ain't a party, man, Come on, let's and
the food in the restaurant industry, it's called table turns.
Speaker 8 (19:26):
Right.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
But you don't ask those questions. And why would you?
Speaker 1 (19:29):
You just have an expectation that they would be, you know,
be human, and I would imagine they are. But you
don't ask to see their certificate to prove that they're
registered with the state, right that they've been Ah, I'm
guessing inspected.
Speaker 10 (19:43):
Right. How many stories have we read where multiple bodies
have been found, like in a funeral home, right, that
haven't been taken care of, they've been stored or whatever.
And it makes you wonder, like, did those families already
pay and they already have the funeral, they already put
box in the ground. Meanwhile the body that they thought
was in there is just rotting in a basement.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
Who do you think regulates the funeral industry in Oklahoma?
Speaker 10 (20:13):
The Oklahoma Bureau of Funeral Homes and Crematory You're not wrong.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
The Oklahoma Funeral Board, which makes sense, but usually you
think can fall under like I don't know, Health and
Human Services.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
I don't know they used to.
Speaker 8 (20:28):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (20:29):
They just delegated. They're like, a that's too much, too much.
We got we got.
Speaker 10 (20:32):
Kids we're trying to deal with and dead people. Hey,
we're going to make a new board. Y'all's in charge
of the dead folk.
Speaker 1 (20:39):
I want to know how much is a funeral license
in Oklahoma just to like put.
Speaker 2 (20:44):
One on or to like to have well, funerals.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
If you have the business right, you have to have
a license to run a funeral home. And so I
want to know how much does a license cost, because
I want to think it's not.
Speaker 10 (21:00):
Cheap, right, you want to think that, But I mean, listen,
if a dispensary license is only a couple of thousand
dollars to start up a dispensary, surely a funeral home
license isn't that much money.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
Okay, So the requirements to get a funeral license in
Oklahoma you must be at least twenty years old.
Speaker 8 (21:23):
Oh that's good.
Speaker 10 (21:24):
Yes, what's real wrong with having a young kid? You know,
take care of your business.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
I mean, you probably don't like some twenty year old
telling you what to do at all, right, much less
what to do with your loved one in the afterlife.
Speaker 9 (21:40):
But if they're professional and educated in.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
It, I'm glad you brought that up, Lindsay, because the
next one is be of good moral character.
Speaker 8 (21:47):
Who the hell gets to decide that.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
You may be? You may this is the operative word.
Speaker 1 (21:53):
You may be denied a license if you have been
convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor related to the
funeral service, fraud, or unfair trade practices.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
May is the key word there.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
And you must graduate from the American Board of Funeral
Service Education.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
Do they have like a trade school for that?
Speaker 1 (22:14):
Yes, yes, apparently, and you got to, of course complete
your apprenticeship.
Speaker 2 (22:20):
It's a one year apprenticeship.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
Do they make Is it like the tattoo industry when
you have Do you know anything about apprenticeships in the
tattoo industry?
Speaker 2 (22:28):
It's pretty hilarious.
Speaker 8 (22:30):
Do they do that? Like you got to?
Speaker 10 (22:31):
Basically you're getting haste pretty much. Hey, listen, you know
morticians got to have a good time too, ma'am.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Okay, you must assist in in baal means to get
your en balmer's license, and you must to have must
have done at least.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
Twenty five times.
Speaker 8 (22:48):
Wow, okay before you can go out on your own.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
Twenty five.
Speaker 10 (22:52):
I'm pretty good with that number. Yeah, twenty five is
a lot.
Speaker 3 (22:56):
Man.
Speaker 10 (22:56):
If you do anything twenty five times, you're like, all right,
I got this.
Speaker 2 (23:00):
No, that's true, except we're not baking a cake.
Speaker 8 (23:02):
No, you're just baking.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
You're taking well, No, it's an involvement. You're taking care
of my loved one. I just you know, don't the
doctor is what I think of. I hope they've done
things more than twenty five times before that's my turn.
Speaker 10 (23:15):
Everybody's got to do their first one sometime. Not only
you may be the first one. There's literally there's nothing
you can do at that point if you are their
first patient.
Speaker 9 (23:27):
But at least with the doctors you're assisting in the
surgeries or you know what I mean, are shadowing.
Speaker 2 (23:32):
You're a part of it for a while.
Speaker 3 (23:34):
Yeah, yeah, but.
Speaker 10 (23:36):
You still got a branch out on your own sometime. Yeah,
when the nerves kick in.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
Yeah, that's when you first time I ever flew by
myself down to McAllister, I almost crash the plane. So right,
twenty five embalmings. You could probably do that in two weeks,
you think, So.
Speaker 3 (23:52):
Oh, that's a lot.
Speaker 8 (23:53):
That's a lot of it.
Speaker 2 (23:54):
A lot of people don't.
Speaker 9 (23:54):
I don't know how long it takes for one, the
process of one.
Speaker 2 (23:58):
I think it only takes day, couple hours. Maybe, I
don't know.
Speaker 10 (24:03):
I know a former mortician who that's what he did.
He did all that stuff, go pick up the bodies,
do the embalming. I'm gonna have to ask him.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
This is in Tulsa County, they're approximately one hundred and
thirty four deaths per week. Okay, so you could easily
get that means I could be running my well, I
gotta do a one year apprenticeship, but to be an
a bomber, I could start doing it on my own
and in a week. Yeah, it just feels like there
should be a longer training process than that. It's it's
(24:33):
more challenging to get your to get your weed card.
Speaker 10 (24:38):
It says it takes about two to four hours for
an embalming, and embalming typically takes two to four hours,
but the duration can vary significantly depending on the body's
condition and the extent of preparation needed. Yeah, you can
crak out in an eight hour work shift. I mean
you could do anywhere from from two to four bodies
a day.
Speaker 1 (24:58):
Isn't it funny how when we think of somebody training
or learning a new craft or skill, but they get
fully involved and go, you know, twelve hour days just
grinding it out, right, You go, yeah, good for you, man.
But when you hear about someone learned to being a
balmer and they grind it out from six am, you.
Speaker 2 (25:16):
Kind of go, whoa pump the brakes there? Text back
a little bit.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
All right, we have to take a break. We are
going to give tickets away to see See There and
Daughtry as they're going to be at the Walmart Amphitheater
and Rogers on October twenty second. We got to take
a break and we'll be back. Time for news quikies.
These are stories you may have missed in the news.
We cover them here and put a a little bit
of the story on our Facebook page.
Speaker 11 (25:43):
It's time for news quakies. World news, local news and
news that just makes you say, what the Here's Corbyn
Gibean Lindsay with what's going on News Quakies from the
Big Mad Morning showing ninety seven five AMoD.
Speaker 9 (25:56):
True time bank robber arrested after his mom turns him in.
This happened in Tampa, Florida, where Aaron Spencer, who's thirty
three years old, was arrested on Thursday after he walked
into a truest bank on Memorial Highway around one ten
in the afternoon. He demanded money from the teller while
(26:18):
suggesting he had a gun. He then left on foot
with the money and threw away the clothes that he
was wearing in a nearby parking lot. Later that afternoon,
around four thirty eight pm, his mom called the police,
saying her son had just robbed a bank and she
(26:38):
was bringing him to the sheriff's office to.
Speaker 3 (26:40):
Turn him in.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
Do you have him by the ear?
Speaker 3 (26:43):
Most likely?
Speaker 9 (26:45):
He was arrested around five forty five that evening. He
gave back the stolen money. He was charged with robbery
with a firearm while wearing a mask. He was already
out on bond for another bank robbery that happened back
in April.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
I told you if you did it again, I know right.
Speaker 3 (27:05):
You already paid off your your car loan. You don't
need any more.
Speaker 1 (27:09):
Good for her for turning them, I agree for sure.
Some may see that is not being loving or my kid.
I'd hide him. You're you're enabling at that point. I
guess you're an accomplice at that point. And you get
in trouble.
Speaker 2 (27:26):
And I ain't about to go to jail for you.
Speaker 8 (27:29):
You want to make stupid decisions, have at it.
Speaker 7 (27:31):
I'm out.
Speaker 3 (27:31):
You get a job.
Speaker 1 (27:33):
You always talk about, not you royal, You talk about
I'll do anything for my kids. You really mean ellipsis
except jail, Because you bring jail into that conversation immediately
it's like hot potato, No.
Speaker 10 (27:47):
Not for me, Dairy Queen Blizzard helps end armed standoff.
So there's a dude, he's forty. His name's Elijah Reagan,
and I guess he decided to shoot off a mortar
show like fireworks, not like you know, wartime orders, but
a firework in his apartment which went through the ceiling
and then set his apartment of fire and damaged eight
(28:07):
other apartments, right, and they had to evacuate like dozens
of people. So he hops in his car and he's
hauling ass. He's getting out of there. He calls his
estranged wife and says, I bombed my apartment and that
bad people.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
Were after him.
Speaker 10 (28:23):
So now Elijah here, who had been smoking meth by
the way, you don't say right, He is on a
high speed chase with the police in his twenty twelve
Kia Sedona. Ooh yeah, and they ended up boxing a man.
(28:43):
So inside his keya Sedona, he has a shotgun, some
bottle rockets, fire logs, and lighter fluid and they got
him in the middle of the highway, boxed in and
now it's negotiation time. And he had said something about
a dairy queen blizzard. So the police go to the
(29:05):
dairy queen. They get him a blizzard, They get him
a hamburger, they bring it back. They delivered to it,
deliver it to his car, keep him by. He's in
the middle of the highway at this point in time. Right,
they bring it to him via a tactical robot. So right,
here's your order. Anyhow, Eventually, after hours of a little
standoff there, they ended up getting him and they took
(29:27):
him in for pellini, arson and eluding.
Speaker 1 (29:32):
How about break the cliche, meth head, Why you gotta
have a minivan?
Speaker 2 (29:39):
How else are you gonna haul out all those calic converters?
Speaker 7 (29:42):
Man?
Speaker 1 (29:42):
I mean it's just so rah be original, huh right,
because I was trying to remember what that car looked
like and immediately populated.
Speaker 3 (29:52):
I went down.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
Come on, like when you have an like when you
have a an RX seven, you get rid of that
to get the minivan or a Fiat well Fierra.
Speaker 10 (30:07):
Fiero trading in your trans zam. Yeah, when you when
you finally got a lot. I've got a wife and kids.
Can't be driving away. Can't put a baby in the
back of a Fiero.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
My wife and I were talking about getting a new car,
and I don't care what car I drive. Do I
have some things i'd like to have, yes, but ultimately
I just need transportation. And so I was like, hey,
I'm thinking about a minivan. She's like, no, you're not.
Like what's wrong with that? She goes, We're not going
to have a minivan. I'm like, it makes practical suits.
Speaker 8 (30:36):
There used to be a time where everybody's driving a minivan. Man.
Speaker 10 (30:39):
I learned to drive in a mini van, so did I? Yeah,
the old Dodge caravan, the boxy ones too.
Speaker 2 (30:44):
Yeah, we never had a van.
Speaker 3 (30:45):
Chrysler Town and Country is what I?
Speaker 2 (30:47):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (30:47):
Yeah, yeah those were popular.
Speaker 3 (30:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (30:50):
Our neighbors had a Mark three van and I was like,
that's so cool. It had a like polstered seats and
captains chairs, table couching.
Speaker 8 (30:58):
It cool.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
Man sittence for releasing noxious gas cloud in store. A
man is getting five to fifty years in prison for creating.
Speaker 2 (31:09):
A gaseous gases cloud.
Speaker 1 (31:12):
To distract store employees in Michigan while he walked out
with over one thousand dollars in merchandise. This sevened in
September of twenty four, when thirty nine year Alex Wooho
Jones released what police called a noxious gas in the supermarket,
smelling strongly of chlorine, before going to steal thousands of
dollars worth of merchandise. The incident left four people hospitalized.
(31:34):
Johnson plgged guilty to placing an explosive device with intent
to alarm, two charges of retail fraud, and being an
habitual offender for an incident. You still know they have cameras,
right yeah.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
I get the idea of like, oh, a distraction camera.
Ruhs uh. They're kind of everywhere nowadays.
Speaker 1 (31:55):
Think of Mark Sanchez that story. Years ago, we wouldn't
have all these camera angles, right you. You would just
hear the story and it'd be that one person's account
over another.
Speaker 10 (32:10):
But now you got cameras everywhere. Everybody's got a camera.
Everybody's quick to whip it out so they can they
can go viral on their TikTok page.
Speaker 1 (32:20):
The I think it was Tulsa Police put out a
photo of or maybe it was maybe it was a
wasp of a murder suspect from Florida that's been seen
here in Tulsa. That that's crazy, unbelievably wild cool.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
I think that's cool. I remember, you know those flock cameras.
Speaker 1 (32:40):
They caught a guy who had been killing people in
Illinois and he fled and they caught him on a
flat flock camera here.
Speaker 8 (32:48):
Yeah, their story.
Speaker 1 (32:50):
I have police friends tell me stories of like they
follow a guy unbeknownst to the criminal, and like they'll
go to the bar and they just walk into the
bar and surprise.
Speaker 8 (33:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (33:01):
Yeah, was that the one, the one you mentioned from
Florida to Chilso. Is that the one that they released
over the weekend?
Speaker 8 (33:08):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (33:08):
Yeah, that who was seen at the mall?
Speaker 2 (33:10):
Yeah, so he was seen. I thought it was the Walmart,
but yeah.
Speaker 9 (33:13):
Yeah, there was one seen at Woodland Hills Mall.
Speaker 8 (33:16):
Well, I mean, listen, criminals need new hats too.
Speaker 2 (33:20):
Right, and you knew iPhone cover right? Phone case?
Speaker 8 (33:24):
You need a gold chain that'll turn your nick green?
Speaker 2 (33:27):
Do you need some sort of fake sunglass rip off?
How about a.
Speaker 10 (33:31):
Little miniature drone to play with while you know, trying
to pass the time away?
Speaker 1 (33:34):
That'll break right? All right, we got to take a
break and we'll be back. I had made a prediction
that Mike McDaniel would be out by six games. Yeah,
as the Dolphins head coach. And yesterday they lost again.
I'm not trying to steal sports from Lindsay, but they
lost again, and you it looked like they had the win,
(33:58):
to be honest, and then they lost twenty nine to
twenty seven. Right, so now they're one in five and
the reports are that there was no one that showed
up to the game yesterday. I looked it says attendance
with sixty five thousand, which is about capacity of hard
Rock Stadium. It shows pictures online of the anthem and
(34:23):
it looks like half full, which I don't know if
that is an appropriate time to evaluate whether the crowd
is packed or not. And then afterwards, Tua made some comments,
and to me, this is probably the biggest indicator, which
they've been saying for a couple of weeks, on why
he's going to get fired. Not only are they not winning,
(34:44):
but he's Tua has said that guys aren't going to meetings, okay,
and there's no repercussion for that, and yeah, that makes
sense if you are someone who I would think you
have to show up. He said, quote, we have guys
(35:04):
showing up to play our only meetings late Guys not
showing up to player only meetings. It's a lot of
things that nature of that nature we got to get
cleaned up, is what he was quoted as saying.
Speaker 10 (35:16):
I thought you had this like mandatory you had to
show up for those people.
Speaker 2 (35:20):
Be people. How do you corral.
Speaker 1 (35:25):
A star talent and maybe they're not a name, but
they're still playing in the NFL, which is like top
two percent of football players in the world or some
crazy number, and they're being paid a lot of money.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
How do you corral them? You don't.
Speaker 1 (35:38):
And I would argue if Tua is the one saying this, yo,
you're a captain.
Speaker 8 (35:44):
You need to get them together, round them.
Speaker 1 (35:46):
Up, I would argue the coach either hasn't empowered Tua
or doesn't land of the coach. Yeah, the coach should
have the authority, but ultimately Tua can go to his
peers and be like, show up.
Speaker 2 (35:59):
You want to win games? Show up? Right?
Speaker 10 (36:02):
So as he checked out just as well as the
rest of them, then if that's the case, then he
ain't got no right to say anything.
Speaker 2 (36:10):
He's just pointing fingers as far as I'm concerned.
Speaker 1 (36:12):
Yeah, now, maybe there's some parameter that we're not aware of,
but I just I personally see captains on football teams
as almost like assistant coaches, right. I see them as
guys who are expected to toe the line and keep
people going and motivated. Likewise, if players aren't happy, I
expect captains to be the ones to communicate that two coaches.
Speaker 10 (36:35):
I think then if that's the case, like like the owner,
the head coach, all the heads of the of the
team need to get together and like have a meeting
and be like, hey, everybody be at this meeting mandatory regardless.
Speaker 2 (36:52):
If you're not here, you're off the team. Have a
nice day.
Speaker 10 (36:55):
And then when you got everybody in and you're doing
this meeting, it's like, all right, guys, as the owner.
Speaker 2 (37:01):
Y'all need to get your rest together. Yeah, I ain't
messing with us anymore.
Speaker 1 (37:07):
I think you're I think there's a high possibility this
morning we're gonna hear that he's gone.
Speaker 2 (37:14):
Okay, which if that's the case, I mean, yeah, you're
won one in five.
Speaker 8 (37:18):
Is that what you said? Yeah? One? And yeah yeah, and.
Speaker 2 (37:22):
You can go, well, we almost beat the Chargers. Okay
almost isn't though, but then you had your quarterback at
a podium not going.
Speaker 1 (37:29):
Man, we played good. It just we couldn't get it
done this week. No, you had them going, no, man,
we're a mess.
Speaker 8 (37:36):
We at least he's speaking the truth.
Speaker 2 (37:37):
Sure, yeah, he's get up there and light everybody right.
Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn.
Speaker 9 (37:44):
I can't think of a better way to start off
the work week then with free money. Listen, you've got
thirteen chances to rock the bank today, starting at eight
o'clock this morning, one thousand dollars could be yours. When
you hear that keyword you enter it's for your chance
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or if you're listening to us on the free iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 3 (38:07):
All you gotta do.
Speaker 9 (38:08):
Is head on over to that contest tab and enter.
Speaker 3 (38:10):
That keyword there as well.
Speaker 9 (38:12):
You've got thirteen chances from eight am all the way
up until eight o'clock this evening.
Speaker 10 (38:17):
Good luck, Good morning, can be well, Good morning Corbin.
The nineteenth annual Cancer Sucks Concerts going down November twenty
ninth at the Canes Ballroom. Josie Scott, the original voice
of Saliva, is headlining. If you have a local band
you want to enter the Battle of the Band's contest
that we're having.
Speaker 8 (38:34):
Well, you can do that.
Speaker 10 (38:34):
Just hit up the contest page the website the Rockscamody
dot com, submit your one song demo and if you
are one of the top two bands, well you could
be You could be opening for Josie Scott at the
Cancer Sucks concert. Get your tickets at cancers or kines
Ballroom dot com.
Speaker 1 (38:51):
All right, time for best and Worst the weekend. What's
the best thing that happened this weekend? And the worst
thing that happened this weekend? Best and worst? Bmmass and
whatever that is to eight two, nine four five textures
to us so we can read it on the air. Lindsay,
what's the best and what's the worst?
Speaker 9 (39:06):
Well, yesterday was an amazing day, but I have to
say that the best of the weekend was probably homecoming.
On Friday night, Union took on Norman North and one
fifty one to thirty, and it was amazing.
Speaker 3 (39:22):
It was fun. It rained during the game and we.
Speaker 9 (39:26):
Thought, oh, it's just a little pop up storm, it'll pass.
But it rained really hard on us, and so much
that we had to get up and take cover because
it was coming down so hard and I did not
have my umbrella with me. But that was it wasn't
a bummer. It was kind of exciting and fun and
you know, just thrilling. I hadn't had a little down
(39:49):
being caught in a downpour like that in a long time,
so it was it was just a good, good game,
exciting fun to watch. And then the worst part of
the weekend was waking up Saturday morning to my girlfriend
Kim calling me saying that she wasn't feeling great and
(40:09):
she had tested positive for COVID. And then I was like, oh, no, well,
I hope you're feeling better by Wednesday because we're supposed
to go together to the pay Com Center to see
Steven Nix. She's my date, so hope you're better by then.
And uh because to me, it's like, oh no, you
have a really bad cold right now.
Speaker 2 (40:28):
She could just say she doesn't want to go. She
didn't have to go to that.
Speaker 9 (40:33):
She's been looking forward to this forever, so yeah.
Speaker 2 (40:38):
Maybe she got a better offer.
Speaker 3 (40:40):
Huh.
Speaker 2 (40:41):
Well, I'm just you can laugh at him, but people
do weird stuff.
Speaker 9 (40:46):
No, this is like her her dream concert. She's an
even bigger fan than I am. So yeah, that's sample
from the show looking forward to Yeah, so I hope
she's feeling better.
Speaker 1 (40:59):
By the best and worst of the weekend. What's the
best thing that happened this weekend? And the worst thing
that happened this weekend? Bemmss and whatever that is to
eight two nine four five gimb what's the best and
what's the worst?
Speaker 9 (41:09):
Man?
Speaker 8 (41:10):
I have to say, yesterday was the best.
Speaker 2 (41:11):
Yesterday was my oldest grandson's birthday, and we got all
the family together, so all my kids, both grandkids, they
you know, my kids had their friends there, so it's
it's always good to get.
Speaker 10 (41:25):
Everybody together like that. My brother was there, my old
lady was with me, my nephew. It was a great time.
Went out to Chandler Park. They brought in a bunch
of dominoes, so we ate some pizza and watched him
open up his gifts. I thought, you meant like bones,
like no, no, no, no, no, no not yet, not
not yet, not until they're older.
Speaker 2 (41:42):
But it was it was really good. You know, a
little windy, but other than that, it was a really
good time. Two out there three three, four four. That
cat's four years old now, wow.
Speaker 8 (41:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (41:53):
And then his little brother, old Tommy boy, he's gonna
be two this year. So, uh, that was that was
the absolute best.
Speaker 10 (41:59):
The worst part of weekend I guess would have been
it would have been late Saturday, early Sunday morning. So
my old lady, she's a photographer, and she had a
wedding to shoot up in Manhattan, Kansas exactly. It's a
long asshole. And so she goes up there to do
her work, and then I'm here doing my thing throughout
the day, and and I go home and watching TV,
(42:23):
and I fall asleep on the couch. Well, apparently late
it was like ten o'clock or something like like that.
She had hit a coyote on the way home and
cosmetic damage done to her car right, busted up the bumpers,
you know, broke the windshield, washer reservoir.
Speaker 8 (42:46):
Right.
Speaker 10 (42:46):
But she called me panicking and freaking out right naturally. Well,
I was past, I was done. I was asked out
on the couch right, And I did not get the
call until I woke up like shortly after midnight on
the couch, checked my phone because my phone was on
the charger in the kitchen. I get in her look
and had two missed calls and team messages. I was like, ah,
(43:07):
damn it. So I could not be there for her
in her time of need, even though there's nothing really
I could have done, but you know, except for talker
through it, but it still sucks. Should have been there,
should have had my phone next to me. I am
a failure of a boyfriend.
Speaker 2 (43:21):
Ah, someone else just got to be a nine China armor, right,
Best and worst of the weekend?
Speaker 1 (43:27):
What's the best thing that happened this weekend? And the
worst thing that happened this weekend? Bmms and whatever that
is to eight two nine four five. Best of the
weekend would have to be that we got to put
up some Halloween decorations and stuff like that, which is
always fun and my kids were really excited. It was
probably the quote scariest decorations we've ever put up. Uh,
(43:48):
And so that was awesome. And then the.
Speaker 2 (43:50):
Worst part of the weekend.
Speaker 1 (43:51):
Who I got a couple but last night going to bed,
the toilets started backing up again.
Speaker 8 (44:00):
Wow, And I thought you had that fixed.
Speaker 2 (44:02):
I thought I had it fixed.
Speaker 1 (44:04):
So I think I'm gonna have to take the toilet
off and snake it from the toilet, which is something
I didn't want. It is not a big deal. But
it's just something I didn't want to do. Yeah, you
have big trees around your house.
Speaker 10 (44:19):
I was thinking, maybe there's some roots that are causing
your pipes did not work properly.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
But I mean, that's entirely possible for a route to
be snaking into the house underneath the house.
Speaker 8 (44:29):
But no, I live in.
Speaker 2 (44:31):
A fifteen year old neighborhood. The biggest tree is maybe.
Speaker 1 (44:36):
I mean, I have a tree in my front yard,
but it's like maybe, I don't know, fifteen feet high.
Speaker 10 (44:43):
Not that big, not big enough to be having roots
that hadn't been sitting there for the last hundred years
or whatever.
Speaker 2 (44:49):
And it's sixty yards from the house.
Speaker 1 (44:52):
Yeah, so the chances of it going underneath the house
to where the line is I don't see that. But hey, man,
never know. It's all the massive turg again, not me
blaming all the kids, No, it is. It's their toilet.
They're the only ones that use it. There's some giant
glob of toilet paper, right.
Speaker 10 (45:13):
I was about to say, maybe there's stuffing something down.
They're toys or paper towels, whatever.
Speaker 2 (45:18):
Entirely possible. Damn.
Speaker 1 (45:21):
So I had to turn it off, and then I
couldn't sleep because I was worried it was gonna get worse.
Speaker 2 (45:24):
And you know, sewage in the house is not awesome.
Speaker 3 (45:28):
No, not at all.
Speaker 1 (45:30):
Yeah, so that's the worst. The other worst part, my
car's back in the shop again, no kidding. Yeah, so eh,
one hundred and ten thousand miles, since you know, it's
the life of one hundred and ten thousand mile cars.
Speaker 9 (45:42):
So you got it back on Friday and now it's back.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
No, I didn't get it back. They were supposed to
get it back. And they're like, we're going to keep
it longer, which tells me they're on an expedition.
Speaker 10 (45:52):
Or they're just trying to take you for what you get. Nope,
this guy's got money. Let's hold it here for a
little bit longer.
Speaker 8 (46:00):
Sure.
Speaker 1 (46:01):
I try to be nice to people that do service
right and people that have never done me wrong.
Speaker 2 (46:05):
I'm like, hey, whatever, you, I trust you.
Speaker 1 (46:08):
And it feels like every time I say that to
these people, that's when things go south. Right, You're like, ah,
I don't know about you guys. Maybe I'll just start
saying that. I'm just trying to be nice, Like I
get it, you're doing something I can't do. I'm appreciative,
but now I need to be like, well, however, we'll see.
Speaker 9 (46:28):
Or maybe do you think maybe it's possible that they
haven't even looked.
Speaker 3 (46:31):
At it yet.
Speaker 1 (46:32):
Oh I know that's what happened because I text the
guy and was like, Hey, just want to know where're
at always looking at it?
Speaker 8 (46:37):
Now?
Speaker 3 (46:37):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (46:38):
Is he you've had it for four days? Okay, sure,
I'm sure.
Speaker 1 (46:43):
I'm sure they're doing their best. That's the best and
worst for me being mass in what years?
Speaker 8 (46:50):
Is to eight?
Speaker 2 (46:50):
Two, nine, four five?
Speaker 1 (46:51):
Best dinner with friends at Chever's Worst pulled over on
the way home one hundred yards from my house and right,
would you get Did you get in trouble?
Speaker 2 (47:02):
Were you speeding? Uh? That place is supposed to be
Good's supposed to have good desserts. I've never heard of it.
Speaker 10 (47:08):
It's on Cherry Street, a cozy point tablecloth restaurant turning
out comfort fair. Yeah, it's a chain.
Speaker 1 (47:17):
Best got both seedews running after months worth of waiting
for parts. Worst being went out on the trailer pulling
it to the lake. Oh, Barry went out.
Speaker 8 (47:27):
That sucks.
Speaker 1 (47:29):
Got it just in time for that fifty degree weather
we're gonna get next week Get best, nice kid free weekend.
Worst took too many edibles and couldn't watch TV without
laughing or crying.
Speaker 2 (47:41):
That's awesome, No kids, How much is too many?
Speaker 10 (47:46):
I mean, it depends on who you are, But I
I learned that two hundred milligrams in one setting at
one time is too much for me.
Speaker 2 (47:55):
Sure, That's why I want to know, Like, how much
is too many for you? Me? Fifty? Right?
Speaker 1 (48:00):
Fifty and I've got down syndrome? Best got to hang
out with my wife and binge some TV.
Speaker 2 (48:07):
Worst?
Speaker 1 (48:08):
Why is it ninety degrees in mid October? Remember when
kids had to wear coats over the Halloween costumes? Get
off my lawn? Yeah it's We went to a game
on Saturday and I had to have an umbrella. It
was so a pouring sweat. Yeah, and there was no wind,
you know, like this dumb Best didn't have to work
all weekend. Worst only had three dollars to work with
(48:29):
all weekend. Uh Best, My daughter had homecoming dance at Jinks.
Worst ohu O low line sucks. Best of the weekend
having uh fourler days off, getting to go hunting, having
four days off, getting to go hunting with my cousin
(48:49):
and getting to see my daughter. Worst of the weekend,
it's coming to an inn and I didn't get a
deer dot dot dot yet. Best of the weekend Baker
and the Bucks win. Worst the weekend forty nine ers lot.
I'm so sorry for you. Best of the weekend. Vacation
up in Colorado in the mountains, wonderful. Want to move
there now? Worst coming back to Oklahoma and going back
(49:12):
to work. This like, I love going to Colorado, and
every time I go to coloradom like, this is amazing.
I would love to live here. But when you move there,
you don't live at a resort exactly. You have to
live in a house in a neighborhood. And it's like
going on vacation New Mexico. Every time we're like, this
is awesome, we should move here, And then what I'm
not living at the resort. I got to live in
(49:33):
a you know what I mean? Right, And it isn't
the same. It's like you go to the Dominican Republican
You're like, I wouldn't live here. Go to the Dominican Republic,
not at a resort, right, It's a step up from Haiti.
Speaker 8 (49:46):
Go to the other side.
Speaker 2 (49:47):
Of the island.
Speaker 8 (49:48):
I funnel that.
Speaker 2 (49:50):
Best I was on call, got no calls.
Speaker 1 (49:53):
Worst was tire went out on the girlfriend's car and
had to spend money on tires. Best that was we
got to take the family since Cincinnati for hockey tournaments
to Cincinnati four hockey tournaments. Worst as they got their
butts spanked the entire weekend. Best got turnout for tribal ceremony.
Worst bulbs I ordered won't work. Flower bulbs are like
(50:16):
light bulbs.
Speaker 8 (50:17):
All right.
Speaker 2 (50:18):
And then okay, one hundred milligram is what the edible was.
Speaker 1 (50:22):
Yeah, that could be too much. Good for you, man.
We've got tickets to give away to see Cither and Daughtry.
They're gonna be at the Walmart Emphtheater and Rogers on
the twenty second. Get your tickets tickets dot com. We're
gonna take a break and we'll be back.
Speaker 8 (50:36):
The big Man Morning Show reader.
Speaker 2 (50:38):
What Gimpie has in his four x four well.
Speaker 10 (50:41):
Cop and it says here that the first seven hostages released.
Pamass has released the first seven hostages as part of
the newly negotiated piece to deal with Israel. Some twenty
of the forty eight hostages are believed to be alive.
They were taking captive more than two years ago when
the Palestinian Listennian militants attacked Israel, triggering a devastating war
(51:03):
in the Gaza Strip. The remaining hostages are expected to
be released shortly.
Speaker 2 (51:08):
Yeah, they have not. That's been updated. They have released
all a live hostages. Good congratulations, man.
Speaker 10 (51:15):
What else we got here? Former President Biden receives radiation.
Speaker 8 (51:19):
Therapy for cancer.
Speaker 10 (51:21):
Old JB's undergoing radiation therapy for prostate cancer. A spokesperson
for Biden said that the new phase of treatment is
expected to last five weeks. He was diagnosed with an
aggressive form of cancer in May, and last month he
also had skin cancer treatment known as most surgery. Yeah, yeah,
(51:45):
the former president, I don't think that's what it is,
but yeah, anyhow, and he said he's doing well.
Speaker 8 (51:54):
What else we got here?
Speaker 2 (51:55):
Illinois Governor Prinsker speaks out against troop deployment. Illinois go
I'm an JB. Pritzke as pushing back against President Trump's
consideration of invoking the Insurrection Act Now. He said the
Democratic governess said there was no ground to use the
nineteenth century law.
Speaker 10 (52:13):
The Insurrection Act would allow active Duty troops to be
deployed in US cities. It was last used during the
nineteen ninety two Los Angeles riots. Trump told reporters last
week that it's been invoked before and added, if the
Governor of Illinois can't.
Speaker 8 (52:28):
Do the job, will do the job.
Speaker 10 (52:32):
And then lastly here, the Greater Tulsa Area Indian Affairs
Commission to host the ninth annual Native American Day celebration
to date, the Greater Tulsa Area Indian Affairs Commission will
host the ninth annual Native American Day Celebration at dream
Keepers Park at nine am. The theme for twenty twenty
five is from Trails to Triumph, which is aimed at
(52:54):
celebrating the legacy and cultures of Native people in the
city of Tulsa, the state of Oklahoma, and the overall country.
Speaker 8 (53:01):
The event will feature several.
Speaker 10 (53:03):
Native tribes including the Muscogee Creek Nation, O Sage Nation,
and Cherokee Nation, as well as acknowledgments from city and
tribal leader.
Speaker 3 (53:12):
Good Morning Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn.
Speaker 9 (53:13):
It's spooky season and you can sign up to win
a four packup tickets to the Halloween Festival at the
Castle of Muskogee. It's going on now through November. First
go to the website at Rockskmody dot com. Or if
you're listening to us on the free iHeartRadio app, go
to that contest tab to sign up to win there
as well.
Speaker 2 (53:32):
Good luck, Good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbyn Zeku.
Octoberfest is happening this week and it's go start on
Thursday and go all the way through Sunday, and you're
gonna get your your wainer dog races and of course
your your mouthful of sausage. Yes, you can get all
your info at Tulsa Octoberfest dot org.
Speaker 1 (53:53):
So there's a story in the news about Arby's being sued.
Speaker 2 (53:59):
I like Garbie me too.
Speaker 1 (54:01):
They just announced they have steak bites that look delicious. Okay,
gladly see what that's about. And who doesn't love their
roast beefs. Their French dips are really good. They're curly frieser.
I got no, I got no beef with their beef.
You're not mentioning the market fresh sandwiches. Yeah, I gotta
be honest, that's not on my radar there. But people
do say they're good. Yeah, they rubens huh, no complaints
(54:24):
from me, and you might know that their slogan.
Speaker 8 (54:27):
Is we have the meat.
Speaker 1 (54:30):
Yes, yeah, And so a lawsuit has been filed against
Arby's for allegedly deceiving its customers that they.
Speaker 2 (54:39):
Do not have the meats. Okay.
Speaker 1 (54:43):
They're claiming that Arbies engages in widespread, systematic campaign of
deceptive advertising. It comes to the quantity and quality of
meat and several of its signature sandwiches. Says the brand
is misleading customers, enticing them to pay for a product
that is significantly less.
Speaker 2 (55:01):
Than the advertised. According to the.
Speaker 1 (55:03):
Case, Arby's is falsely advertising both the quantity and quality
of meat across its advertising channels, including store menus, drive
through displays, and on the chain's website, and in featured
photos on third party fast food delivery apps.
Speaker 2 (55:19):
I thought it was pretty common knowledge that the picture
in that you see at the restaurants and on the
commercials and all that stuff is not what you're getting
in your bag. I'm so glad you say, yeah, yeah,
I know that is a marketing photo. Yeah, and it
will be much more smashed than that. Yes, they said that.
Speaker 1 (55:37):
The suit alleges that the sandwich is featured in Arby's
ads contain at least one hundred percent more meat than
those purchased in stores, which the Planiff argues is false advertising.
Arby's achieves this hyperbolic effect through several deceptive techniques, such
as placing all of the meat at the front of
the sandwich during photo shoots, are using other props to
(56:00):
exaggerate portion sizes. Consumers are lured into purchasing overstated menu items,
expecting a large, meat packed sandwich, but instead receive a
product with significantly fewer ingredients, and consumers allege that they
would not have purchased Arby's sandwiches at full cost, if
at all, had they known exactly what the sandwich looked
(56:22):
like and how much meat it contained. So you're like, well,
I wouldn't have ordered an eleven inch sandwich it said
foot long?
Speaker 2 (56:32):
Why would I waste my money on eleven inches?
Speaker 3 (56:34):
Say?
Speaker 2 (56:35):
That's pretty much what they're saying. Is that the way
you guys hear it too?
Speaker 10 (56:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (56:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (56:39):
Also says that the company show sandwiches with meats that
look like rare roast beef when the products from the
fast food chain are actually fully cooked. Well fully cooked
meat may seem like a major red flag in terms
of health hazards. Arby sandwiches don't feature rare roast beef
as advertised. Thus the sandwiches failed to meet the quality
standard depicted the promotional materials. Arby's has filed in motion
(57:03):
to dismiss this in saying case claiming the photos amount
to non actionable puffery. The court rejected the company's argument
rule in that the featured photos do not consist of
subjective statements of opinion. I am busy, and I will
say I'm not as busy as probably a lot of you,
but I feel I'm busy. I don't have time to
(57:25):
worry about the puffery of a meat sandwich.
Speaker 10 (57:32):
If they were consistently getting sandwiches with no meat, I
can see where you have an argument. Yeah, you're giving
me just vegetables between bread. I did not want this.
I wanted him and turkey or or roast beef.
Speaker 8 (57:46):
But come on me.
Speaker 1 (57:49):
Not the first time restaurants have been sued for deceptive
miss if you will. Burger King got accused of exaggerating
the whopper size. Yeah it's not I don't know what
whopper is in terms of measurement.
Speaker 8 (58:09):
Waiting a quarter pound, right, quarter pound beef?
Speaker 6 (58:12):
Right?
Speaker 1 (58:12):
Okay, but that's not a when you go, well, that's
a whopper, right, you think rather large? But I guess
I just never connected that to the burger, you know.
So they got sued for that. Taco Bell had a
class action lawsuit saying their crunch raps Mexican pita photos sorry,
Mexican pizza photos overstate their fillings.
Speaker 10 (58:35):
Okay, so they're saying that the the fillings and the
picture are way more than what you get in real life,
much like what the Rby's person is saying here, yes, right, okay, yeah, okay, okay.
Speaker 1 (58:47):
Subway, they remember, they got sued because their tuna wasn't
one hundred tuna.
Speaker 3 (58:54):
That sounds awful.
Speaker 1 (58:57):
Can you imagine being that diehard of a tuna head
to be like I like the tun of sandwiches, Subway,
it's mostly dolphin. They also got sued, like I mentioned,
for having eleven inch sandwiches but promoting it as twelve inch.
There was a settlement that was achieved in that one
(59:18):
McDonald's and Wendy's Burgo Burger Food Burger photo suits same thing.
They were dismissed in twenty twenty three buffalo wild wings.
Remember this, I remember this is a great one for
boneless wings.
Speaker 2 (59:33):
Oh, yes, they're not really wings. Yeah nuggets. Spoiler, buffalo
wings aren't wings. No, nor do they come from buffaloes.
Speaker 1 (59:48):
That one was continuing on. In twenty twenty four, Starbucks
got sued for deceptiveness, saying the drinks that were named
for fruits lacked those fruits. Starbucks got sued again for
underfilled lattes that got dismissed. Panera for their unsafe caffeine
(01:00:14):
levels of lemonade.
Speaker 2 (01:00:15):
You might remember that from last year. Oh yeah, they're
electric lemonade, I think is what they called it.
Speaker 8 (01:00:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
Chipotle got sued. They paid six four point five million
dollars to accettle claims of a non GMO that misled
customers PF changs. They got sued over their crab mix.
(01:00:41):
Now real crab was a crab with the K Yeah yeah,
red lobster for a sustainable lobster shrimp in early twenty
twenty four, and it was dismissed because of the brankruptcy
and everything else. Twenty five Carolina Rust Carolina restaurants got
(01:01:01):
sued for misrepresenting imported local.
Speaker 8 (01:01:04):
Shrimp okay, imported local.
Speaker 2 (01:01:09):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (01:01:10):
Sorry, they import the imported chip shrimp they labeled as local. Okay, okay,
I know when I go to eat sushi here in Tulsa,
it's imported exact.
Speaker 8 (01:01:24):
Yeah, we're in a landlocked state.
Speaker 2 (01:01:26):
But I could see in South Carolina you might get
away with that, right right, my uh.
Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
I didn't care. But when we went to golf shores,
they have these little like places where you can go
and get seafood. Like they're not like restaurants, they're live
seafood places, so you can go in and get like
shrimp or whatever.
Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
They'll even boil it for you if you want. Nice
And I don't care if they bought that at the
grocery store. I don't care as.
Speaker 3 (01:01:54):
Long as it tastes good.
Speaker 2 (01:01:57):
Okay.
Speaker 10 (01:01:58):
That's the key in almost everything here. It shouldn't matter
if it's imported or little whatever. You eating it, right,
it tastes good, right yeah?
Speaker 8 (01:02:08):
Yeah, shut the.
Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
Hell off for me though, Like eating the shrimp at
the Ocean is just I'm, you know, win in Rome
type of thing.
Speaker 8 (01:02:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:02:16):
It's like if I go to Maine, I'm having lobster
and I don't even really like lobster lollied to lobster sandwich.
Are those things called the lobster sandwich things? Okay, yeah,
lobster yeah yeah. If I go to Alaska, I will
eat salmon.
Speaker 8 (01:02:29):
Yeah yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:02:31):
Going to New England gets you some clam chack.
Speaker 1 (01:02:34):
Absolutely, yeah. It feels fitting and not anybody am I
going to go? Well you listen here, pf changs. This
is I've been to Asia. This is not how Singapore
does their noodles. Right, I've been to Asia, not a
lot of lava cakes.
Speaker 10 (01:02:54):
It makes me wonder if these people are just I mean,
clearly they're just doing it for a paycheck, but like,
are they sitting down like just figuring out any way
that they can get these companies and then get them
to pay.
Speaker 1 (01:03:09):
Maybe I think, Okay, you know how we talk about
dating and Gimbi and I have advised guys you got
to shoot your shot. The more shots you shoot, the
higher probability of hitting a target. And I would argue
this is probably some of that too, with attorneys putting
together class action lawsuits in hopes that they get settled, yeah,
(01:03:31):
just to see what sticks. And let's say they do
ten in their lifetime. But one settles for six point
five million, Right, that feels like a win across.
Speaker 10 (01:03:42):
The board because the attorney's going to get a big
chunk of that. They get half, uh huh, and they
you know, depends on how many partners, how many people
are working in the office. They got to split that
up very minimal ways, right, as opposed to the consumer
who's like, hell, yeah, I want it on this class
action lawsuit eight rbs within the last six months, you're
(01:04:02):
getting a dollar and a half maybe.
Speaker 2 (01:04:05):
Which is ridiculous if you asked me, But I mean.
Speaker 1 (01:04:10):
They're playing the long game. They're they're like, well, we'll
take four losses and get one win. Yeah, So we
don't care because most of the time you're gonna settle.
Speaker 8 (01:04:20):
Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 10 (01:04:21):
And if you think about that, like one law office
takes a class action lawsuit and gets a settlement for
six million dollars, well they're getting half of that. They
those guys are set. They just made three million dollars.
And it's not like they have a lot of sources
(01:04:41):
they have to pay, right, so they're really just raking
in the cash.
Speaker 8 (01:04:44):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:04:45):
Let's just say they'd spent one point five on staffing
that case.
Speaker 8 (01:04:50):
Legal fees and all that stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:04:51):
Yeah, they do that twice a year.
Speaker 1 (01:04:55):
That's a pretty good no phone ringing, yeah work right, No, like, hey,
will you represent me?
Speaker 2 (01:05:03):
Hey I murdered someone, nothing like that, right, Hey it's hey,
I'm going on vacation in Fiji. I'm just guessing that
this is how that works. Like you play the odds man,
you see what happens.
Speaker 1 (01:05:14):
Makes sense because you you there's no way all these
lawsuits are people going through coca Puffs are not made
with cocoa or puffs. Puffs are a bird, right, So
like fruit loops, there's no fruit in these loops.
Speaker 10 (01:05:32):
That's why they had to change it to two o's
and not a ui, you know, because there's no fruit.
Speaker 8 (01:05:40):
There's no fruit. It's fruit.
Speaker 2 (01:05:46):
There's no do in this mountain from a mountain in
this right right Listen, there's no pebbles and fruity pebbles.
Speaker 8 (01:05:52):
Either or fruit right.
Speaker 12 (01:05:57):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:05:57):
Maybe there's an argument like, hey, if you're not using
those things, there should be an asterik or something. Okay,
you know, cereal's not real, right right, It's not real food. No,
so you kind of already have an assumption that it's
not real. It's not real but they use real fruit. No, no,
(01:06:18):
even dehydrated fruit.
Speaker 8 (01:06:20):
I'll give you that. With like pop tarts and stuff
like that.
Speaker 10 (01:06:23):
You know, you could have the illusion that it is
real fruit jam that's inside of your your pastry.
Speaker 2 (01:06:32):
But for the most part, it's all just flavoring and
sugar syrup.
Speaker 1 (01:06:36):
Yeah, it's it's syrup concoctions can unless I see chunks
of fruit.
Speaker 2 (01:06:41):
If it says.
Speaker 1 (01:06:43):
Pop tarts made with strawberry preserves, right, or marmalade, then
maybe I'll buy that. But to get mad at zema
that there's no beer in it, it feels silly.
Speaker 10 (01:06:58):
Yeah, but it's an easy lawsuit because you said you
said there was real fruit in here.
Speaker 2 (01:07:05):
You said, we've got the meats. Well, this isn't enough
meats for me, sir.
Speaker 1 (01:07:13):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:07:14):
I did get a fifty dollars check for a class ass.
I just got one too, Did I forget what it
was for? Though I remember cell phone?
Speaker 3 (01:07:22):
Was it a cell phone?
Speaker 2 (01:07:23):
It might have been.
Speaker 3 (01:07:24):
I thought you had mentioned it.
Speaker 2 (01:07:26):
Maybe it might have been.
Speaker 1 (01:07:28):
I'll be honest. Anytime they're like, hey, you might be eligible,
I sign up. Wait, you might as well, yes, and
you're going, well, it's only five dollars. Yeah, but if
I do ten of those in a year, that's fifty
dollars I didn't have and I know you're gonna fifty dollars.
Speaker 8 (01:07:42):
What can that buy?
Speaker 2 (01:07:42):
Well, bitch, it's fifty bucks.
Speaker 8 (01:07:44):
That's a thing.
Speaker 2 (01:07:45):
Yeah, it's called mini Mikels.
Speaker 8 (01:07:48):
Make a muckle right.
Speaker 9 (01:07:49):
I'd gotten one from the jewel brand, the Vape Jewel,
and it was a little over one thousand dollars.
Speaker 7 (01:07:57):
What.
Speaker 10 (01:07:57):
Yeah, I've never heard anybody getting that much from a
glass action. See yeah, wow, well I how'd that work?
Speaker 8 (01:08:03):
I went why it was from.
Speaker 9 (01:08:05):
When they had their flavored pods and they had gotten sued.
And at the time when they had first come out,
I was I subscribed as a member and gotten my
jewels sent in directly to my house. And when they
did their class action, I was like, yeah, I'm gonna
sign up for that, and boom, I got a check.
Speaker 3 (01:08:25):
I didn't think it was going to go anywhere.
Speaker 10 (01:08:27):
And the only thing I've been a part of, I
guess was a Sylvania light bulbs and like every if oh,
for like a couple of months, once a month, they
would send me a check for like fifteen dollars twenty
dollars and that went on for a while.
Speaker 8 (01:08:45):
I enjoyed those. Man, you open up the.
Speaker 10 (01:08:47):
Mailbox, boom, who's not broken anymore? Taking mine light bulb
money and go buy some cigarettes.
Speaker 1 (01:08:54):
I would think if you get one thousand dollars check
for a class action that is a I would be
surprised if that was I would be surprised if that
was non taxable.
Speaker 3 (01:09:08):
I don't know. That was like three or four years ago.
Speaker 2 (01:09:11):
Okay, and you better if you claim taxes.
Speaker 3 (01:09:13):
I don't think I did. I don't think.
Speaker 6 (01:09:15):
I X me.
Speaker 3 (01:09:16):
Yeah, I wonder, I wonder what.
Speaker 2 (01:09:20):
Uh turbo tax didn't alia? Yeah, no, she just didn't
fill that out. Do you have any other income that
you got throughout the year? No, no, why would you
exactly because you don't.
Speaker 1 (01:09:32):
You might not remember. You wait for them to go
here's your you know your form? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I
don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:09:39):
I'm sure it's fine. I'm sure it's fine.
Speaker 10 (01:09:41):
You're not going to do prison time over your thousand
dollars jewel check. As long as you don't brag about
it on the air. I think that's finely all right.
Speaker 2 (01:09:48):
We got to take a break. We'll be back.
Speaker 1 (01:09:50):
Liz came out of the top diners in the US.
What are the parameters to call something a diner? Would
you say, what's your guess?
Speaker 3 (01:09:58):
A bar, a bar top like you can sit at
the at the bar.
Speaker 2 (01:10:01):
Okay, like on a swivel stool.
Speaker 8 (01:10:02):
Yeah, like at the waffle house.
Speaker 2 (01:10:04):
Yeah, Okay, I got that.
Speaker 8 (01:10:06):
Okay.
Speaker 10 (01:10:09):
Uh, for some reason, somebody walking around looking like Elvis
or Marilyn Monroe is coming to mind, okay, or some
kind of retro decur I guess might be an easier
way to put that.
Speaker 3 (01:10:26):
Maybe breakfast all day.
Speaker 8 (01:10:28):
Okay, Okay, I don't hate that.
Speaker 1 (01:10:30):
So this says for it to be a diner, it
is about layout and vibe, menu, service and history.
Speaker 8 (01:10:38):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:10:39):
So layout, long counter with stools, booth seating along the sides,
an open kitchen or grill where you can see food
being made.
Speaker 2 (01:10:48):
And usually they're small and open for twenty four hours.
Speaker 8 (01:10:51):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:10:52):
Menu breakfast served all day, classic American comfort food, big menu,
usually with pictures. Waite staff knows the regulars, no reservations
or anything like that. So the list came out of
the top diners at least according to surveys right in America.
Speaker 2 (01:11:13):
And who do you think was number one Denny's.
Speaker 10 (01:11:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:11:17):
Number four was uh.
Speaker 12 (01:11:19):
Denny's in five states. Apparently, you say, I hop, but
I hop doesn't have a bar for you to sit at. Well, damn,
neither does Denny's, do they? I mean has been it's
been labeled as a diner.
Speaker 1 (01:11:32):
I don't think it has to, right. I think that's
just the cliche. Okay, But I agree with what you're saying,
which is why I'm bringing this up. So wait till
you hear some of these. I'm just like, no way,
some of these you're not going to know. But huddle
House is on here. I don't know what huddle House is.
Bob Evans. I wouldn't call Bob Evans a diner, no,
(01:11:53):
And I.
Speaker 9 (01:11:53):
Think huddle House is it's like a it's famous, like
an egg place. It's like a chicken house type.
Speaker 1 (01:12:01):
Number eight Cracker Barrel, not a diner. I don't consider
it a diner either, restaurant. But they do serve breakfast
all day.
Speaker 10 (01:12:10):
Yeah, and maybe that's the number one thing that you have.
As long as you're serving breakfast all day or day,
you're good.
Speaker 2 (01:12:17):
Number seven black Bear Diner, Yeah, black Bear's fine.
Speaker 1 (01:12:20):
Yeah, I've been there a couple of times. Yeah, it's
it feels overwhelming there. I always feel like it's too busy.
Speaker 2 (01:12:26):
I had, uh it was it Christmas Christmas dinner there
last year. Yeah, Friendlies is on this list. I don't
know what that is.
Speaker 1 (01:12:35):
Waffle House at number five, Okay, I consider that that
sounds legit, that makes sense a diner.
Speaker 10 (01:12:41):
They have the open kitchen, they have the bar to
sit there, they have the kind of really checks all
the boxes.
Speaker 8 (01:12:47):
Compared to some of the other ones that you talk.
Speaker 2 (01:12:49):
About, Denny's number four, Perkins at number three, Oh yeah,
really is that there?
Speaker 8 (01:12:55):
Perkins still around?
Speaker 2 (01:12:56):
Yeah, just not here.
Speaker 3 (01:12:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:12:58):
Up North, Perkins and by Evans and Cracker Barrel all
feel the same to me.
Speaker 2 (01:13:02):
Okay, I would.
Speaker 9 (01:13:05):
I would think Perkins is a little bit more dinerish.
Speaker 1 (01:13:08):
So how's that different from Cracker Barrel or Bob Evans
because I feel like they're all kind of this. The
only difference is they have pies. That's right, and maybe
that's it.
Speaker 8 (01:13:18):
Waffle House don't be serving no pie.
Speaker 9 (01:13:20):
No, but waffle House definitely has that diner vibe with
the countertops.
Speaker 12 (01:13:24):
No.
Speaker 2 (01:13:25):
No, we've established that we're talking about the other thing,
the pie. You're getting that waffle house is not the
pie you want.
Speaker 1 (01:13:31):
Number two first watch. Gotta be honest. It only was
recently I realized that was a chain.
Speaker 3 (01:13:36):
I didn't same.
Speaker 9 (01:13:37):
I didn't know that they were a chain. But man,
is it delicious. Oh I will I will wait. I
will wait my twenty to thirty.
Speaker 2 (01:13:44):
Yeah, you and everyone else, Yes, I willan there once.
I haven't been back since.
Speaker 1 (01:13:49):
I do not wait for breakfast places because it's just breakfast,
all right.
Speaker 2 (01:13:55):
There's nothing magical happening there.
Speaker 3 (01:13:57):
Oh, they're juice bars. Is very good?
Speaker 9 (01:14:01):
Say more, Well, you can go they have mimosas they
have You can have your alcoholic beverages there. But when
I when I go there, I would rather go healthy
and do their their juices because they are better than
I can make it home. They are better than anywhere
I've ever had. And I just, oh, I've made the
(01:14:23):
right choice. I've made a healthy decision going there. They
are delicious.
Speaker 2 (01:14:28):
You think they're squeezing them for fresh or juicing them fresh?
Speaker 3 (01:14:31):
Yeah, at least it tastes you think doing that.
Speaker 10 (01:14:36):
I do.
Speaker 2 (01:14:37):
I don't think you can.
Speaker 3 (01:14:39):
Watch them make them.
Speaker 1 (01:14:40):
They're like cutting darge. Okay, Yeah, I just don't wait
for I don't care what's great. It's breakfast, it's eggs. Yeah,
there's nothing great happening here. You don't have the inside
track on making good eggs now.
Speaker 10 (01:14:55):
But I mean some places serve like a chicken fried
steak with your eggs, or like a pork chop or
steak and egg.
Speaker 8 (01:15:04):
Okay, you know now, I think that might separate. You're
right though, eggs or eggs or eggs or eggs.
Speaker 1 (01:15:08):
Hash browns or hash browns or hash browns. Yeah, as
far as I'm concerned. Uh, this says huddle House is Denny's,
just with a different name.
Speaker 8 (01:15:17):
Okay, I've never never heard of it.
Speaker 1 (01:15:19):
Huddle House is just a richer version of waffle house.
Number one on this list was I Hop Okay, which
uh we go to? I Hop mostly because you never
have to wait, right. My kids love eating breakfast for dinner,
so makes it an easy go to. And then I
usually am like, what am I getting here?
Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
I guess I'll get breakfast pancakes.
Speaker 10 (01:15:44):
Yeah, yeah, you kind of do feel weird going into
an ie hop and ordering a burger?
Speaker 2 (01:15:49):
What do you think they're like?
Speaker 1 (01:15:50):
Their BLT is pretty solid. What do you think their
best thing? Is there at the end.
Speaker 3 (01:15:55):
Yeah, that isn't breakfast.
Speaker 2 (01:15:57):
That isn't pancakes.
Speaker 3 (01:15:59):
Oh maybe French toast.
Speaker 9 (01:16:03):
I don't think I've ever had anything that wasn't breakfast.
I've never been there.
Speaker 2 (01:16:12):
Why wouldn't you.
Speaker 1 (01:16:13):
It's the International House of Pancakes. They're crispy chicken strips. Yeah,
those are pretty good. They're chicken fingers. I mean they're
they're bread, just like your your chicken fried steak. There's
there's a little bit of a deviation.
Speaker 8 (01:16:27):
Yeah, but I don't know.
Speaker 10 (01:16:29):
Some some people they're breading is a little bit different,
a little more pepper. Yeah, some of them it's a
little more bland.
Speaker 2 (01:16:36):
Same with fried chicken.
Speaker 8 (01:16:37):
I guess.
Speaker 2 (01:16:39):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:16:40):
You know, their omelets are fine. I don't know if
their omelets are any better than anywhere else.
Speaker 8 (01:16:44):
That's really the only thing I ever get when I
get there.
Speaker 2 (01:16:47):
Was it there? Colorado omelet? Yeah, you can get a
Colorado Almont pretty much everywhere. It's all pretty much the same.
Speaker 9 (01:16:55):
But isn't there is there no cheese on a Colorado omelet.
Speaker 1 (01:16:59):
I know there's onions and maybe pepper. So I'm the
wrong guy to ask. I'm a mushroom meat type of
Alma guy.
Speaker 9 (01:17:11):
Yeah, I'm like throwing extra cheese on any of my omelets.
Speaker 2 (01:17:15):
Right, it's a breakfast Encelada for me. I want cheese
in it.
Speaker 10 (01:17:20):
Colorado Almonds, got a lot of cheese on it, Bacon,
shredded beef, pork, sausage, ham, green Pepper's onions.
Speaker 1 (01:17:27):
Shut a cheese served with Corbyn. Shut your slut mouth.
Breakfast is the goat. I'm not saying breakfast isn't good.
I'm just saying it's pretty much the same everywhere. Yeah,
I love breakfast, hash Browns, breakfast burritos. Who what's the
Mexican place that's got all over town that we talk about,
(01:17:50):
Kabbers or whatever it is.
Speaker 2 (01:17:52):
Oh yeah, I forget the name of it.
Speaker 1 (01:17:55):
But they have a great breakfast burrito and they're they're
all over the place. Katrina's Katrina's.
Speaker 12 (01:18:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (01:18:10):
Yeah, I've never been. I've only heard good things about them.
Speaker 1 (01:18:13):
Though it ain't fast. Yeah, but their breakfast burrito is
a ten. I can't speak to everything else.
Speaker 9 (01:18:19):
They're a sada asada burrito is good.
Speaker 2 (01:18:23):
Yeah, just food in general, Mexican food.
Speaker 1 (01:18:29):
I saw this great meme our video of a girl
and she's apparently married to a Mexican man and she's
eating a a torta and somebody had made a comment
on her, and she was replying to the comment of
because she couldn't get a white guy, and She's like,
what are you talking about? I'm eating a torida? Have
(01:18:50):
you ever had an enchilada? Have you ever had asada?
Speaker 4 (01:18:56):
What?
Speaker 2 (01:18:56):
Am I gonna go have? Meat loaf? I don't be
knocking a low man.
Speaker 1 (01:19:01):
I'm just saying like, she makes a pretty good point. Right,
what's your go to comfort food in Mexico?
Speaker 2 (01:19:08):
Muh torda?
Speaker 10 (01:19:09):
Right?
Speaker 2 (01:19:09):
Okay, you got me done. I'm in all right. We
gotta take a break.
Speaker 8 (01:19:15):
We'll be back.
Speaker 2 (01:19:19):
The Big Med Morning Show returns.
Speaker 1 (01:19:22):
You got a question about divorce or custody or guardianship
or anything like that, make sure you get your question
to us. A couple of ways to do that BMMS
and whatever your question is to eight two nine four five.
You can email show at kmod dot com or you
can call it eight three three four six oh kmo
D Good morning, Lindsay.
Speaker 9 (01:19:39):
Good morning Corbyn, Happy Dirty thirty to porn star Paisley Porter.
See this Southern Cali girl in by any means necessary,
mouth huggers and sexsomnia. She's been a best Body Built
for Sin Award nominee.
Speaker 10 (01:19:57):
Good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning. Corby's got an the
keyword to rock the bank. Take that keyword plugging on
over the website of the Rocks Chemdo dot com. Or
you could do it on the iHeartRadio WEP. But Eve,
it's bills And if you missed.
Speaker 2 (01:20:07):
It, what okay, because you got plenty of other times
throughout the day to get that keyword in. All right,
join us on the nine. On the line right now
is Jeff Hensley from Hensley Associates.
Speaker 1 (01:20:16):
Good morning Jeff, Good morning corn And any question you
have about family law, divorce, custody, guardianship, anything like that,
he can answer it. I wanted to start because do
you remember Eddie Winslow from Family Matters.
Speaker 2 (01:20:29):
He was just arrested for crossing Yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:20:32):
I just saw that on the news.
Speaker 2 (01:20:33):
Yeah yeah, it's a crazy story.
Speaker 1 (01:20:35):
So, uh my question for you for those who are know,
he was arrested trying to cross the border into Mexico
for past do child support. He says he was on
his way to Tijuana to help build some homes for
the homeless and to speak encouragement to the homeless people
in that area, not which doesn't. That of course came
from his attorney, but I'm curious. That seems kind of
(01:20:57):
crazy that would there be a federal warrant for past
child support.
Speaker 2 (01:21:01):
Jeff, Is that how that works?
Speaker 6 (01:21:03):
Well, it wouldn't be a federal past to child support war.
What it was is that was a state warn't. It
was out for his arrest for failure to pay. I mean,
they have a similar system that we do in Oklahoma,
which requires a appearance and a contempt and things like that,
and so he basically didn't pay and failed to show
up at a hearing, so they issued a bench warrant
(01:21:23):
for his arrest, and then of course he tries to
sneak across the border to do whatever he's going to
do in Tijuana to get away from the child support,
and so they nailed him and he's going in So
you know, Oklahoma doesn't work that way. There's not just
things a federal warrant for child support, but there definitely
are state warrants, So you got to be careful even
(01:21:44):
when you're crossing the border.
Speaker 1 (01:21:46):
They can activate those warrants well, and he's apparently habitual
for his third time over the past ten years, he's
gotten in trouble for not playing the part of being
involved in the child support situation.
Speaker 6 (01:21:59):
Yeah, it's pretty you know, that could be common too.
I mean a lot of people that do this once
end up doing it more than once. And we see
this a lot with celebrities. Actually celebrities that don't pay
their child support. Of course, usually a lot of times
are paying very large amounts. Of course that it also
fluctuates based upon the amount of work they do. And
I don't think Eddie Winslow that guy. I don't think
(01:22:22):
he's done anything of anything in the last real twenty
years that I'm aware of.
Speaker 1 (01:22:26):
I was on a soap opera, but who's counting, and
he was of the Voice of Jazz and Transformers. Come on, man,
all right, Jeff from his Sorry, Okay, Jeff from Hensley
Associates is on with us. If you have a question
about custody or guardianship or name change or anything like that,
Jeff is here to answer it. And this question, says,
(01:22:47):
is the text when we got my daughter and her
partner are struggling with addiction, and I'm worried about my
grandkid's well being. They've been living with me off and on,
but now I think I need to step in permanently.
How do I start the process of getting custody?
Speaker 6 (01:23:01):
Sure, So in that kind of situation, we would definitely
do a guardianship. I mean, if mom and dad are
both drug users and they are abusing, especially if they're
around the child, then yeah, we would move in on
an emergency guardianship and pull that child out of the
situation and then give it to Grandma, who is the
one that I think is the one that's writing in.
The thing about that is too, is that guardianships in
(01:23:23):
Oklahoma are not meant to be permanent in the sense
that it allows them, the parents to try and get
on their feet. So if they've got drug addictions or
whatever it may be, there's going to be requirements for
them to do certain things before they could get the
child back, such as, you know, stable housing, stable employment,
clean drug screens for a year, things like that. So
give us a call whoever this is, and we can
(01:23:45):
definitely help with that emergency guardianship.
Speaker 1 (01:23:47):
Jeff Hensley from Hensley Associates is with us. If you
have a question about divorce or custody or guardianship. A
couple of ways to get your question to us email
show at KMOD dot com, Show at kmod dot com,
or you can text bmms and what I that question
is to eight two nine four five are our favorite
call at eight thirty three four six Oh, KMOD. This
one uses a term I know is not a common
(01:24:09):
term for Oklahoma, but people using way. I'm thinking about
moving out of state for a new job, but we
have joint custody. Will I get in trouble if I
move with my son?
Speaker 7 (01:24:18):
Well, it depends.
Speaker 6 (01:24:20):
The reason I curb it that way is because number one,
is there an order in place? I mean, if there
is an existing order there is, at least in Oklahoma,
there's a relocation statute that kicks in that says that
if either party is going to move more than seventy
five miles from the jurisdiction jurisdiction being whatever county your
order is out of, then there are certain things you
(01:24:40):
have to do, and of course there's certain notices that
have to be given certain specifics, and of course the
other side has thirty days to respond once you formally
serve them the right way, So they do have a
right to object to that joint custody is hard at
least if you have a fifty to fifty split time share.
And the reason being is because the person moving has
(01:25:02):
to show to the court that the move is in
good faith. In other words, you're moving for a job,
you're moving for a spouse because their job is moved,
or whatever it may be. I mean, you can't just say, well,
I'm moving to Florida because I like palm trees, that
sort of thing. So if the move is in good faith,
that person moving has to prove that. If you're then
the burden flips to the other side, where the other
(01:25:24):
side has to show the court that the move is
not in the child's best interest. So, in other words,
with the fifty to fifty timeshare, the problem you run
into is is you're removing the child from everything they've
known and we'removing and could potentially cause damage to that
relationship for the person that they're seeing fifty percent of
the time. So those are kind of the issues that
(01:25:46):
we deal with when we're dealing with relocation.
Speaker 7 (01:25:48):
But that's that's how you would do.
Speaker 6 (01:25:49):
If there's an existing order, we'd have to look and
see and a force gift proper notice and look the
other side have time to object and.
Speaker 2 (01:25:55):
Whatnot is good faith? Would that also be Hey, my
girlfriend friends moving and I want to move with her.
Speaker 7 (01:26:02):
That is allowed now.
Speaker 6 (01:26:03):
That did not used to be allowed, but the law
excuse me, the case a lot changed on that a
number of years ago, and that is allowed to move
for those reasons now.
Speaker 7 (01:26:13):
In the old days that wasn't the case, but now
that is allowed.
Speaker 2 (01:26:19):
Jeff Finsley from Hensley and Associates is on with us.
Speaker 8 (01:26:21):
Do you have a question?
Speaker 2 (01:26:22):
I want to hear it? Eight three, three four to six.
Speaker 9 (01:26:24):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (01:26:24):
KMOD is the phone number. You can text BMMS and
whatever the question is to eight two nine four five,
or you can email show at kmod dot com. This
one says, is there a way to get my ex
wife off the deed to my house? She left me
last March. I'm sorry she left me last March, got
divorced and haven't.
Speaker 2 (01:26:41):
Seen her since. She's on the deed but not on
the loan and I pay the mortgage.
Speaker 6 (01:26:47):
So what should have happened is is she should have
signed a quick claim deed so at the end of
the divorce. Usually what we like to do with it
is is when they're signing the divorce decree, we like
to have that quit claim ded in there to sign
at the same time that we don't have these issues
when people disappear into the ether. But essentially, she's gonna
have to sign a quick claim deed to get her
name off of the deed. What that is is you're saying,
(01:27:10):
I bequeath or I am giving up, I quit my
claims to the house and am giving over all of
my interests in the house to the other person.
Speaker 7 (01:27:18):
So that's what a quick claim deed is, and that's
what he needs. Whoever this is, give me a call.
Speaker 6 (01:27:23):
Let's see if we can track her down somewhere and
get that quick claim deed signed for you so we
can get her off that deed for you for your house.
Speaker 2 (01:27:31):
Jeff Finsley's with us from Hensley and Associates.
Speaker 1 (01:27:33):
This question, I think is really fair and probably people
get curious about in the first couple days of the
process of getting divorced. Does my wife and I have
some joint cards and loans, sorry, joint credit cards and loans?
Speaker 2 (01:27:46):
How does the debt get split in a divorce? As
it always fifty to fifty.
Speaker 7 (01:27:50):
So in the state of Oklahoma.
Speaker 6 (01:27:51):
The split or the term that we use is called
equitable division of the assets and the debts.
Speaker 7 (01:27:56):
Now, equitable typically means fifty to fifty in our state.
Speaker 6 (01:28:01):
There are exceptions to the rules, but they are very
rare exceptions, and I don't talk about them much simply
because we would be talking about dealing with somebody who's
maybe multimillionaire or billionaire kind of status kind of deal. Otherwise,
it's all fifty percent of the debts and assets. Now,
what we typically do and is required under state law,
and it's a new law that went into effect last year,
(01:28:23):
is that we've always had temporary orders that we have
to do. In other words, once the divorce is filed,
what has to happen is is there has to be
a hearing called a temporary order hearing, because when you
first file for divorce, there are no orders whatsoever into
who pays what temporarily, who's going to be in the house,
who's not, all those kind of things. So we have
a temporary order hearing that lays out and defines all
(01:28:46):
those terms. Well, now, the law says that that hearing
has to be heard within ten days of filing of
the petition.
Speaker 7 (01:28:53):
For divorce.
Speaker 6 (01:28:54):
The reason that's important is is because we are having
some counties, especially the larger ones, that we're delaying these
hearings several months rather than right away, and it's important
to start dividing that stuff up right away so there's
no confusion as to what's going on. But a temporary
order hearing is how we define that for a temporary
(01:29:15):
division of those things. That is not necessarily what mean
what will happen at the very end, but if something
gave the parties something to go on to begin. But yes,
equitable division typically means fifty to fifteen in the state
of Oklahoma.
Speaker 1 (01:29:27):
Jeff Heinsley from Hensley and Associates has join us. He
handles family law cases and that's the questions he's here
to answer. Do you have a question about divorce or
custody or guardianship, name change, adult guardianships, adult adoptions? All
those are questions he can answer right now. A couple
ways to get your question to us email show at
KMOD dot com, text bmms, and whatever your question is
(01:29:47):
to eight two nine four five are called eight three
three four six oh KMOD. This text says, during my marriage,
my husband created a pension I'm sorry, received a pension
through his job.
Speaker 2 (01:30:00):
Do I get any of that?
Speaker 6 (01:30:01):
He says, no, Well, we'd have to look at specifically
what the pension is and more importantly, did he.
Speaker 7 (01:30:10):
Get that pension?
Speaker 6 (01:30:11):
In other words, did he build up that pension or
earn that pension prior to the date of marriage or
was it during the marriage that it was built up?
And said he received it during the marriage, but did
he do the work to receive that pension prior to
the marriage? Same thing with four one ks. If you
have a four one K and you head into a
marriage and it's it's you know, you haven't co mingled it.
It's been sitting there this entire time, and then you
(01:30:35):
get divorced. You know, there's there's issues of not being
able to access that simply because it wasn't something that
was part of joint industry during the actual time of
marriage itself.
Speaker 7 (01:30:45):
So you know, whoever this is, please give me a call.
Speaker 6 (01:30:48):
There's more specific questions I'd like to ask as to
about the pension time frames, all that kind of stuff.
But typically, you know, if you build the if you
earn the pension and it goes into effect later on,
I mean you'd be entitled to some of that, but
tensions are very different in how we handle them, especially
when we're talking about things that you know, tensions don't
(01:31:09):
exist much anymore. There are some industries that still have them,
very few most people have switched over to four.
Speaker 7 (01:31:16):
One ks and things like that. So again, whoever this is,
please give me a call.
Speaker 6 (01:31:19):
I've got a few more specific questions I need to
ask before I can give a good straight answer on
that for you.
Speaker 2 (01:31:24):
We've got three texts waiting and these are all pretty good.
You're going to love them. Jeff.
Speaker 1 (01:31:29):
If you got a question for Jeff, get yours to
us the show at kmod dot com as the email address.
You can text BMMS and whatever your question is to
the phone number eight two nine four five, or you
can call it eight three three four six. So kmod
this says, me and my wife have eight kids. When
I divorce her, am I going to be able to
survive after paying child support?
Speaker 10 (01:31:49):
Well?
Speaker 7 (01:31:50):
That depends.
Speaker 6 (01:31:52):
The reason I answer it that way is obviously that
child support is dependent upon numbers. And what I mean
by numbers is is what is your pre teen income
for both sides, and of course what the time split is.
I mean is it where are we going to have
a fifty to fifty times split? Is it going to
be you know, standard visitation. I mean, there's all sorts
of factors that go into it. Do you pay insurance
(01:32:13):
on all of those eight kids? If so, you're going
to get credit for all the insurance money that you
pay for them to have health insurance?
Speaker 7 (01:32:19):
Of course, is their daycare involved? Is or not?
Speaker 6 (01:32:22):
I mean there's a lot of factors involved into whether
or not one would be able to quote survive it.
And of course you know the court is going to
look and say, well, you chose to have eight children,
and so therefore, no matter what you do, you're going
to have to pay for those eight children, whether you
like it or not. So, I mean there's a lot
(01:32:44):
that goes into these things, and like I said, specific
numbers dealing with insurance and time and everything else. So
potentially you might survive it, but again it all depends
on all those different factors. And of course you know,
in the long run, birth control is much cheaper than
and expensive child support down the road, So things to
(01:33:06):
think about.
Speaker 1 (01:33:07):
I have a question on that, expanding on that idea
and if is it realistic for like this individual who
says they're going to get divorced, they have eight kids,
and let's say when they're together, they you know, kind
of pass on some things because there's not money. Could
the lifestyle change for one of the parties and he
(01:33:28):
have to pay more? So, like, because they're not together
and she wants the kid to do piano lessons, does
he now have to pay for it? If even though
that maybe when they were together they would have not
because they couldn't afford it. Is he going to get
pushed outside of his income to pay for eight kids?
Speaker 6 (01:33:46):
Well, so, first of all, things like extracurricular activities are
not required under a Clams state laws. So in other words,
there's no law that says that parents have to pay
certain amounts of money for extracurriculars, because that's exactly what
they are.
Speaker 7 (01:33:58):
They are extra.
Speaker 8 (01:34:00):
Okay.
Speaker 6 (01:34:00):
Child support goes to cover necessities typically, you know a
lot of people don't don't realize that child support covers
things like paying rent on a house or mortgage, or
electric or gas or water or sewer, or paying for
car insurance or you know, paying obviously paying for groceries.
All these things that go into it is all what
(01:34:22):
child support is for it's not just about oh, it's
spent only on the kids. I mean, it's for amenities
for the kids as well, things that are required to live,
not extracurriculars. So he can't He's not going to be
required to pay extracurricular activities because that's not required on
Oklhoma state law.
Speaker 7 (01:34:38):
There's no law that.
Speaker 6 (01:34:39):
Says that kids get to do extracurriculars and parents have
to fund it in a divorce situation. So if mom
wants to put them in those things and he wants
to contribute to it, that's his prerogative. That's his choice,
but he's not going to be required to do it.
And of course, you know, as far as income is concerned,
he's only got so many dollars that he may and
(01:35:01):
the computation takes all that into account. So when looking
at it, that's why we need to know specific numbers
and if he's paying insurance and all these other things,
because at the end of the day, you know, he
will have some left over. I just don't know how much.
And that's something we got to sit and figure out.
And whoever this is, please call me and let's do it.
What if by putting actual numbers on the paper.
Speaker 1 (01:35:21):
Jeff Finsley from Hensley and Associates is with us this
question says, my father told us he owed back taxes
he passed away. We hired a tax attorney to look
into this, and she said that you couldn't find anything.
I know, he didn't pay it off completely before his death.
What should I do next?
Speaker 6 (01:35:37):
Well, I mean, typically the tax attorneys, at least the
ones I know, do a very thorough job of making
sure that there if there are any back support that's
owed to this to the government. In other words, they
typically have access to database and the IRS and things
like that for.
Speaker 7 (01:35:56):
Tax information to find out if there is anything.
Speaker 6 (01:35:59):
Oh so, I would be very surprised if that individual
is wrong, but you're always welcome to seek a second
opinion from a different tax advisor that has access to
that information to make sure that that is the case.
I guess my first question would be for whoever this
is is, I know your dad said he had back
tax as idiode, but do you have any proof of that?
(01:36:22):
Were there any statements that you found when going through
his stuff when he passed away? Did you does he
have any letters from the IRS? I mean there's a
lot of brown work that needs to be done. And
if they have something that shows that he owes, great,
then obviously give it to the tax attorney and they
can contact the rs and deal with that. But otherwise,
you know, those tax attorneys typically have pretty good resources
(01:36:44):
to find out if somebody owes or not.
Speaker 1 (01:36:46):
Last one here for Jeff Hensley of Hensley Associates. Why
does divorce have to be so confusing?
Speaker 8 (01:36:51):
Sorry?
Speaker 1 (01:36:51):
Why does divorce have to be so difficult and confusing?
Why can't two people just go to the courthouse, sign
a paper and be done.
Speaker 6 (01:37:00):
Because unfortunately, people and emotions get involved, and that's when
things get heary. It can be a simple process, Okay,
if the two parties truly agree to everything, all we
really need to do is file a petition and then
draft a decree and get things done. But I will
tell you, in doing this for almost twenty years now,
all right, in dealing with thousands of clients and thousands
(01:37:23):
of people, that that's not always the case. I mean,
there's always some sort of emotion or feeling or something
that goes into the dwarves. Typically, especially when we have
children involved, it can get very high emotions and very high.
Speaker 7 (01:37:40):
Anger and frustration and all sorts of feelings.
Speaker 6 (01:37:42):
And so it's typically the people involved in the case
that can make things drag out rather than the court
system itself. Now, I'm not saying that our system's not broken,
but i can tell you that I've had I've had
some divorces to be very quick and very simple because
the party's actually along, they actually agreed on things and
actually did what was best for their family, as opposed
(01:38:04):
to I've also had cases it end up fighting for
years over some of the littlest things like ice cube
trays and Walmart dishtannels. So it really can be a
simple process, but it depends on the people involved.
Speaker 2 (01:38:18):
Look, going through a divorce can be challenging.
Speaker 1 (01:38:21):
Going through a name change, you think would be easy,
but you need to make sure you have someone that
knows how the system works correctly and accurately, and that's
why you need to hire the folks at Hensleyan Associates.
They'll help you navigate the system the way it should
be so you can get this done as expedient as possible.
And if you have a question about something you weren't sure,
you should call in. He does offer a free consultation
(01:38:42):
over the phone you just mentioned kmod called nine one
eight three nine eight five six nine two eight three
nine eight five five six nine two for Hinsley Associates
and you can talk to Jeff and get a little
consultation there. And if you find yourself in other areas
of the law, Jeff can help with that too.
Speaker 6 (01:38:59):
Absolutely so through our office in Bahaska, we do anything
in addition to family law we can help with.
Speaker 7 (01:39:05):
So give Sam Allison a call up there. It's the
Shoemake Law firm.
Speaker 6 (01:39:08):
If you forget the name, just give us a call
at Hinsley and Tulsa and we'll get you transferred up
there to talk to Sam. But anything in addition, so
if you've got something as mundane as a speeding ticket
or something as horrible as a murder charge, and.
Speaker 7 (01:39:22):
Everything in between. For criminal cases, we can help you with.
Speaker 6 (01:39:24):
If you've got any land disfus contract disputes, one of
the things we do a lot of is a lot
of pre nups. Additionally, if you've got a probate issue,
just like the person that was asking about the taxes, okay,
we can help the probate issues when someone passes away.
If you need a will or a trust drawn up
for those things. We can help with that as well.
So anything an addition to family law. Give Sam a
(01:39:46):
call or call us at Hinsley and we'll get you
hooked up with that office up there.
Speaker 1 (01:39:49):
Okay, n Night five six nine two for Hensley Associates
nine eight three nine eight five six nine two. Jeff,
have a great week, he too, Thanks a lot, Take
a break and we'll be back. They fired the Penn
State head coach and they have to pay him fifty
million dollars fifty I don't see how this isn't out
(01:40:16):
of control and to for me, like in my head,
it's wild to fire him. I know they are not
having a good season, but we're just barely into it.
How many losing seasons besides this one? How many losing
seasons do you think he had and his tenure as
the head coach?
Speaker 3 (01:40:36):
Zero?
Speaker 1 (01:40:38):
Kimpy, I'm gonna say three. He had one and it
was the COVID year. I think that gets a pass. Definitely,
it's not awesome, but I think that that gets a pass.
And when you see what his record is year over year,
so last year thirteen and three year before ten and
(01:41:01):
three year before eleven and two, so he got better
every year.
Speaker 2 (01:41:06):
I'm going backwards.
Speaker 1 (01:41:07):
Twenty twenty one, seven and six, okay, yeah, yeah, twenty
twenty four and five, COVID year, twenty nineteen eleven and two,
twenty eighteen, nine and four, twenty seventeen, eleven and two,
twenty sixteen thirty to eleven and three, and then he
started at Penn State at seven and six one year,
and then seven and sixty een. So overwhelmingly, overwhelmingly he's
(01:41:31):
a winning coach. So not only do you get Gundy,
who's fired gets paid fifteen million dollars and maybe his
trending down. Sure, you fire your most winning as coach,
then you fire your coach who's pretty much except for
one season, provided you a winning record.
Speaker 3 (01:41:51):
Right now?
Speaker 1 (01:41:52):
Did he provide a national title? Did he constantly provide
big ten titles?
Speaker 12 (01:41:56):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:41:58):
But also Ohio State?
Speaker 8 (01:42:00):
Right right? Was this coach showering with the kids?
Speaker 1 (01:42:04):
No, so you have improved dramatically, nor was he putting
his head in the sand about it?
Speaker 8 (01:42:09):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:42:10):
Right right, So to me, it's crazy that they fired
him again. I understand they're not winning, but he could
turn it around easily. I said, maybe next year if
you have the same thing going on as you are
this year. Okay, but you're right.
Speaker 2 (01:42:27):
This guy's track record has proven itself time and time
and time again.
Speaker 1 (01:42:31):
The only thing that I can think is that they
there's another problem, like you've worn out, you're welcome. Yes,
you're winning, but you've worn out, you're welcome. I think
that's probably what happened with Gundy, right. We now have
a reason, yeah, to let you go, but to pay
someone fifty million dollars to not work here anymore? How
(01:42:53):
did this become a thing? How did this become a thing.
They need to just get together and stop doing this
makes no sense. And he's not the only one. Jimbo
Fisher got fired in twenty twenty three seventy six million dollars,
damn right, Gus Malzon twenty one million, Tom Allen fifteen million.
Speaker 2 (01:43:18):
Current ones that are in place.
Speaker 1 (01:43:20):
Kirby smart if it's not gonna happen, but if he
got fired from Georgia one hundred and eighteen million dollars
buy out.
Speaker 2 (01:43:26):
So these guys are just really good at negotiating their contracts.
Speaker 1 (01:43:29):
Yes, Kaitlin Deborr Alabama replaced Nick Saban seventy million dollars. Wow,
to be told not to work here anymore? Right, I
don't think that sinks in to you're not good at
your job. We would we have a philosophical difference, right, severance,
(01:43:50):
I get that it doesn't need to be that much.
How much of their is their annual salary?
Speaker 2 (01:43:55):
Oh, that's a good question.
Speaker 1 (01:43:58):
I'm gonna guess Kirby smart Art is thirty million, Okay,
I'm looking uh oh, thirteen million.
Speaker 2 (01:44:07):
Thirteen million? And how much are they giving him if
he gets fired?
Speaker 1 (01:44:10):
But he has a ten year contract and that's probably
where it's at because you're taking that money, right, Well,
I get thirteen million dollars a year, and then you
got to multiply it over the ten years.
Speaker 8 (01:44:24):
They're actually coming out.
Speaker 10 (01:44:26):
These schools are actually coming out cheaper by paying them
fifty million dollars thirty million dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:44:32):
But if you year in year eight of your ten
year contract and they have to pay you one hundred
and eighteen, they're not making out right, right, Dabo Sweeney
heat Some people are saying he's on the hot seat.
Sixty million dollars, listen, a million. I get, yeah, but
these are you don't ever have to work again. This
is it's disgusting, to be honest, it is. It's really embarrassing.
(01:44:57):
And I think there's state schools should not be allowed
to do this because tax dollars fund them. I know
they make money off TV and some other things, but nonetheless,
sixty million dollars for sucking.
Speaker 9 (01:45:11):
And not even sucking that pad, it's not even that bad.
I mean, yeah for Franklin, yeah worth finishing off the contract.
Speaker 2 (01:45:25):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:45:27):
I just you go, hey, we're gonna call it at
the end of this year. Yeah, turn it around, or
we're gonna call it. And here's the other thing. It
used to be when coach was fired, players could enter
the portal immediately.
Speaker 2 (01:45:39):
That rule no longer exists. They don't.
Speaker 1 (01:45:41):
You can't enter the portal until they hire a new coach,
and it's for only fifteen days, so players are stuck there.
From what I understand, Well, there used to be a
time when you get fired, you didn't get nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:45:55):
I think that's the way it works. And now it's like, yeah, okay,
well here's fifty million dollars.
Speaker 8 (01:46:01):
Have a nice day.
Speaker 1 (01:46:02):
If we were to get fired, if we well, hold on,
if we were to get fired, I don't know if
we get anything.
Speaker 2 (01:46:08):
If we were let go.
Speaker 1 (01:46:11):
Right, like like like Leger cuts, Yeah, you maybe get
a severance package, right, right, but.
Speaker 8 (01:46:18):
Let go firing essentially the same thing. But I get
what you're saying.
Speaker 10 (01:46:22):
If we did something wrong that warranted us to get
fired from the company, right, we wouldn't get another of them.
Speaker 2 (01:46:29):
Or they just don't renew the contract.
Speaker 8 (01:46:31):
Right, you get zero.
Speaker 2 (01:46:34):
Uh, And I'm honestly okay with that.
Speaker 3 (01:46:38):
I want my dollars.
Speaker 2 (01:46:40):
I do too.
Speaker 1 (01:46:41):
There is no way even if you said one year
of salar, you can fire me, but you have one
year of salary, They go, no, right, that's not I'll
put the robot on exactly. Yeah, Yeah, there's no way
any I don't know if any of our jobs. And
to be honest, none of these guys are that great.
(01:47:01):
They're good coaches. Sure, anybody would love to have Kirby Smart,
anybody would love to have Dabo Sweeny, right, right, But.
Speaker 2 (01:47:10):
There's no way that they're worth that.
Speaker 3 (01:47:14):
No, and he'll never have to work again.
Speaker 1 (01:47:17):
Right, They don't have to. No, you don't have to
do anything that is generational money.
Speaker 10 (01:47:25):
Yeah, unless you live in some big, extravagant lifestyle. And
that's why, that's why you ask for so much. Well,
my wife she needs four cars and two houses. Her
hair is really expensive to get done.
Speaker 1 (01:47:41):
Yeah, you still don't need it. Yeah, we wonder why
college is so expensive. I agree, nine seven eight seven. Yeah,
it's disgusting. Okay, you can't be disgusting with how much
you want your buyout to be. Be real, be honest.
Don't go ten million that you would never get ten million.
(01:48:02):
You're never getting paid ten million in this job. Oh okay,
So if they let us go, what our buyout? What
would you like your buyout to be? Like an honest,
real answer?
Speaker 2 (01:48:15):
What do you think? Uh?
Speaker 3 (01:48:20):
Three hundred thousand?
Speaker 8 (01:48:21):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (01:48:22):
How far into this contract are we right now today? Okay,
I look at it his tenure and not the contract,
but I hear.
Speaker 10 (01:48:30):
You, yeah, yeah, yeah, I get you. Uh, well, that's
a good one. I was thinking about three to four myself.
Three to four hundred thousand, yeah, which is not realistic
at all whatsoever, But that's what that would be nice. Yeah,
(01:48:52):
considering tenure, considering you know, contracts, all the all the
job that goes in there.
Speaker 8 (01:48:58):
I think it's I think that it's a good number.
Speaker 1 (01:49:02):
How about you Yeah, one year salary, Yeah, that's fair,
end bonus, whatever my bonuses would be.
Speaker 8 (01:49:10):
That's the fun thing, right, Like you got it.
Speaker 2 (01:49:12):
Whatever my my W two was last year, Right, that's
what my biot should be.
Speaker 8 (01:49:17):
That's fair, that's fair.
Speaker 2 (01:49:19):
But the thing about it is, it's like, you know, well,
those remotes and those bonuses, those are guaranteed.
Speaker 8 (01:49:23):
You know, your your your base rate, that's what you're getting.
Speaker 1 (01:49:28):
But to see, there's no argument there, there's no counter
argument there. You can't go, well, you're losing out and
you're putting out what your biout should be, and I can't.
Speaker 2 (01:49:37):
I don't even know how you negotiate.
Speaker 1 (01:49:39):
Like if you're Kirby Smart or whoever, do you go
do you go, well, I'd like to take this job,
but I just don't have faith that.
Speaker 2 (01:49:48):
You're gonna gonna fire me right away.
Speaker 1 (01:49:50):
Oh no, no, man, we want you know, like, is
it they're just that desperate, They're like they're just like
vomiting all over the table.
Speaker 2 (01:49:57):
Whatever it takes.
Speaker 10 (01:49:57):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, maybe we should work on that. Come
next round of contracts, be like, all right, here's the deal.
I'm gonna sign this, but in the event that you
let me go I need twenty three million dollars. They
will laugh us straight out the building.
Speaker 2 (01:50:15):
Already already deal. All right, we gotta take a break.
Speaker 8 (01:50:19):
We'll be back.
Speaker 2 (01:50:22):
You're listening to the Big Mad Morning Show.