All Episodes

October 15, 2025 89 mins
HUMP DAAAAYYY!!!!! D'Angelo Is Dead, Fortune Tellers Charged With A Scam. Returning What You Stole, Watch Out For That Solar Panel, Unpopular Opinions, There's A New Drug You Don't Wanna Try, & Things A 10 Year Old Should Know!!!
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
You are about to witness amazing Emo has conding living
One's property of all time. Yes, my bow suck on
you bow down to your master? Can you dig it?

(00:33):
Can you did it?

Speaker 2 (00:35):
Where you did? Allowed to play?

Speaker 3 (00:46):
Allowed to play, allowed to play.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
Come to play.

Speaker 2 (00:59):
The story first, the sun is rising God, No, wake up,
wake up now, don't go.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
We're all here to.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
Show you how the wits horses last station. K m
moot Homophostens is a family.

Speaker 1 (01:21):
The don't turn Downtown TuS.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
Wait and say are you ready?

Speaker 4 (01:28):
Are you ready to jove in.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
Time to start to show class sticks the client about Prisco.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
It's a big Many Marty show.

Speaker 2 (01:44):
Welcome to the organ week.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
It's all such a gore kick back, made up best
of it and make it hardcore. Hey you're whisby and
then mess picked up your phone there line you're.

Speaker 4 (01:58):
On the air.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
Last week.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
Good morning, it's the Big Man Morning Show. Toll free
eight three three four six Oh k m o D
can also text BMMS and then what you want to
say to eight two nine four five. Listen online the
website that Rocks kmo D dot com. Past shows are
available on iTunes search under b m MS. Listen with

(02:46):
your cell phone. Get the iHeartRadio app, available from the
app store of your cell phone provider. More on that
at iHeartRadio dot com. And we're on Facebook, Facebook dot com,
slash b m MS six y nine. That's where you
can hang out with us each and every day. Good morning, Lindsey,
Good morning Corbyn, Good morning, Gimbe Well, good morning. Tickets

(03:10):
to Seether, We're gonna give those away coming up at
seven thirty. Seither and Daughtry are gonna be over at
the Walmart Amphitheater in Rogers on October two. Two. See
what Lindsay wants to talk about, Film the Blank News
and her top five songs today. Top five songs about

(03:30):
hands from listener Filangis, which you would think is not
a deep bench, but you would be wrong. There are
a lot of songs about hands. We'll get to that
coming up here in a little bit roll news. Yesterday,
Broke Covet somebody that I'm gonna guess fifty minimum fifty

(03:55):
percent of our audiences made out to one of his songs,
and that is de'angelo died. Yeah, yeah, maybe even Bang two.

Speaker 5 (04:05):
Definitely definitely made out too, You're right, possibly made sweet
Sweet Love.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
I mean you the thing about D'Angelo, When you would
be playing D'Angelo, you would think you were like making
sweet love, but you were not. Oh no, you weren't
even close to making sweet love. I always forget the

(04:40):
name of his song every time, for no other reason than, uh,
it's just not a it's technically it's not even the
title of a song. No, how does it feel? Is untitled? Yeah,

(05:00):
it's called untitled, So that's unclear of whether it's untitled,
like there wasn't a title or there, like D'Angelo, what
do you want to call this song? And they go
he goes untitled? Okay, he said on titled do I
just write on titled down? I don't want to call
it nothing. Yeah, and he is credited with the uh

(05:24):
neo soul, R and B movement that took off after
that song. And yeah, Brown Sugar was the album that
was on. But I don't know if there's another hit
song that I can think of from him? No, no, not.

Speaker 5 (05:43):
I mean it's been twenty five years, maybe oh more
than that, right about thirty thirty years, as I've listened
to some di'angelo.

Speaker 4 (05:52):
Did he become a preacher? I think he?

Speaker 1 (05:55):
I don't think so.

Speaker 4 (05:56):
I thought he became a minister.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
Too, maybe after his hit song as Damn Mother. Ever,
this is not all of the song. You may be
confused with mc hammer because he did become a preacher.

Speaker 4 (06:11):
Oh did he? I know Michael Jordan?

Speaker 1 (06:12):
Did he?

Speaker 4 (06:13):
Ye pray?

Speaker 1 (06:16):
He was known as the sex symbol too, which he
hated it.

Speaker 4 (06:22):
Yeah, he did not like it.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
Well, you shouldn't be posing on your album covers with
your six pack on, your shirt off, sweaty, sweaty, with
that V down there by your cronchel area. Get in here.
Only someone who's sexy says that type of thing.

Speaker 4 (06:38):
Oh, the burden made him uncomfortable.

Speaker 1 (06:41):
Oh the burden. How did he manage it all those years?
I'm sure it never gave him any advantages with the ladies. Uh.
He had pancreatic cancer. You know why I saw that?

Speaker 5 (06:56):
Of course I automatically thought of your dad, I'll think, right.
But then of course it went straight into myself, and
I'm like.

Speaker 1 (07:04):
I got fifty one, six years away a year for me? Yeah,
ain't that far away? No? No, pan, grand cancer is nasty,
man like, Usually you find out you have it way way, way,
way too late. Yeah, And I don't think a lot

(07:27):
of people knew that he had pancreatic cancer.

Speaker 5 (07:31):
No, the at least the article I've read that said
that he kept it to himself, which I think there's
a lot of people that do that.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
Yeah, when they find out they've got the big C.

Speaker 5 (07:44):
It may tell your family, but it's not going to
come out publicly, I guess unless you really want the attention.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
I mean, Chadwick Boseman did that, right, Black Panther did he? Yeah? Okay,
he filmed the movie or the set was the second one,
and then he died shortly after it, and they're like,
he had cancer, Like, no one knew. I kept it private?
Yeah yeah, yeah, Yeah, I thought you may come out
publicly with it. I was like, I don't remember that happening,
but yeah, which I get it. Man, that's a pretty

(08:15):
big deal in your life. And once you say something
like that, people look at you a little differently, start
treating you a little different from and if you want
to just live a quote unquote normal life, it makes sense. Yeah,
but then people start seeing you wither away and you're like,
something a rank here, what's going on? Not that it shouldn't,

(08:35):
but people it seems that when someone gets diagnosed with cancer,
it becomes their identity. Not by their choice most of
the time, but you know when they have it, anytime
someone is around them or their family and friends are like,
how's it going, Yeah, how's the fuck? How's the fight
that you're gonna lose?

Speaker 4 (08:52):
Right? Or Hey, I saw Cheryl the other day. Oh
did you know she has cancer?

Speaker 1 (08:56):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (08:57):
I didn't know? And then that's all you know Cheryl
for right.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
That's not for me. Honestly, I think if it comes down,
when it comes down, I'm gonna be one of those
ones that just keeps to myself. I clearly obviously would
let my family know, maybe you guys, but I'm not
gonna go on air or social media and announce it
to the world. And not that there's anything wrong with
I know there's a lot of people out there that do.

(09:23):
A lot of my friends on Facebook have said that,
you know, they're going through it and they're going through treatments,
And for me though, it's just I'm good. Yeah, I
think it's certain people you should tell. You probably should tell, like, hey,
I got to miss some work right for a week
because I'm getting chemo and it's gonna mess me up

(09:46):
and you're like, okay, yeah, that makes sense. Hey, but
don't tell anybody. And sometimes managers by that, and sometimes
they don't, right, because it's they got free will. What
do you think the percentage of people in the US
is that get diagnosed with cancer at some point in
their lives? What do you think the percentage is?

Speaker 4 (10:08):
Thirty eight percent?

Speaker 1 (10:10):
Did you look it up? Because that's pretty odd to
hit thirty eight percent.

Speaker 4 (10:14):
I don't know. I was gonna say thirty three percent.

Speaker 1 (10:17):
You didn't You said thirty eight Oh yeah, thirty eight percent?

Speaker 6 (10:20):
Yes, really, yes, yes, dam she's got this weird thing
I told you last week mans letter. Yeah, well, I
mean she's just she's clairvoyant and she's like in people's
heads and she doesn't even know it.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
Right, No, no, she's not. Because there's many times I'm like,
why are we still talking about this?

Speaker 4 (10:37):
Right?

Speaker 1 (10:37):
Why have you not gotten this? It's selective clairvoyance. Sure,
they do.

Speaker 4 (10:43):
Say that everyone is born with a bit of clairvoyancy,
especially scorpios.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
Stop it, stop doing that. Now we're back to what
are we doing? They go, there was a story yesterday
from a former NFL player. Yeah, here it is Nick
Mangold and he played for the Jets as a center.

(11:14):
He's part of the Ring of Honor. He played for
Ohio State, sorry, the Ohio State. And he went to
Facebook and Instagram or whatever yesterday to ask for people
to see if they can be a donor for him

(11:35):
because he needs a kidney transplant, which I get that right.
The Jets even posted it to their social media, and
he was telling me he thought he knew he was
diagnosed with something, but he thought he had a lot
of time and apparently not, and now he needs a

(11:55):
transplant and encouraging people to go to this website that
want to donate, put his name in and his birth
date to see if they would be a match for him,
which I get. I am not gonna if you've been
lucky enough to have the platform because of your sports
associations to put a big solicit out there. Okay, I

(12:18):
could see how someone who doesn't have that opportunity feels
cut and lined. Yeah, but it made me go down
a rabbit hole of how many people do you think
are on the kidney transplant list? Like worldwideer just America.
I think it's just an American list. Okay, Well, what
do you think if you get this number right, I'm

(12:40):
going to be so pissed off. You have to be
looking these up.

Speaker 4 (12:45):
I want to say, like forty nine thousand.

Speaker 5 (12:51):
People, Okay, forty nine thousand, that's it, out of the
three million people that are in.

Speaker 4 (12:57):
America, probably one hundred and forty nine thousands, and it's.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
It's about a million people, if not just over That
feels like an alarming large amount. Yeah, when you say
that number out loud, it is a big number.

Speaker 5 (13:12):
However, compared to the three million people that are, you know,
in the United States, and I think a million of them,
it's just a third of the population.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
It's not that much. Yeah, I just don't think a
third of the population. Like if I would have been
guessing the number, I wouldn't have guessed a third of
the people need a kidney transplant. I don't know anyone
that knows, not that I know everyone, but I've met
some people, right, I get Christmas cards. Eighty nine thousand
people are on the kidney just the kidney transplant list.

(13:44):
And of those, how many do you think are not
going to get a kidney I would think a lot.

Speaker 4 (13:49):
Yeah, probably twenty of them not having matches maybe due
to their age they passed before they find okatch.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Okay, So what I gave you was a stat in
twenty twenty four, right in twenty twenty two that forty
four hundred people were removed from that transplant list because
they died before getting one. And then also theyar forty
five hundred people were removed because they'd become too sick
to be removed. So now we're about nine thousand people

(14:30):
a year come off the list for either they're too
sick or a year, and we're still at that number.

Speaker 4 (14:37):
A friend of mine in Indiana spent fifteen years on
the donor list. He was on dialysis pretty much his
entire life and was married three children after his oldest
turned I think twelve. His youngest was a the two

(15:00):
or three years old he got he finally found they
found him a match. He was off dialysis for a
year and was in a car accident was killed by
a drunk driver.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
Yeah, because life don't stop, man.

Speaker 6 (15:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (15:17):
Yeah, walking your Doggie from the movie You get killed
walking your Doggie.

Speaker 4 (15:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (15:25):
Yeah, it's fun though. You only need one kidney to
function and live. And That's where I'm going with this.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
Yeah, it's literally, the easiest one to donate you as
a donor could be on you know, be in the hospital,
like maybe a week, not in the hospital, be out
maybe a week maybe, right, but they go in get
it and you give someone a chance to get hit
by drunk driver, right or go to another birthday. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (15:50):
Yeah, if everybody in America donated at least one kidney,
that list at that eighty nine thousand people would could
be zero, could be zero just on the kidneys. Now,
there's of obviously other organ donations that need it out there,
but you kind of need.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
Those, right. You can't just donate your heart to somebody
and expect yourself to keep on living, but you can
with the kidney. Well, And the number one people reason
people don't is a they don't like medical treatments, right right,
you know two you you might be like, well I
might need it, and or you go three, someone I

(16:28):
love might need it. Right, But what you got to
understand is just because you have one and you have
loved ones, doesn't mean yours would mix it with theirs.

Speaker 4 (16:35):
Right, you have to be a match.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
So it's I that is ultimately stops me every time
when I think about doing it. Is that you might
need it or somebody you love me need it. Yeah,
that makes sense. There's nothing wrong with being greedy or
selfish with your own organs. However, you just said it yourself.
You know, Hey, you know, we might not even be

(16:59):
a man match for a relative, but you can be
a match for a perfect stranger. Allow them to live.
And if you believe in karma, I kind of think
that's one of the ultimate you know, good things gonna
come back at you. You may not, you may not.
You may just negate some of the bad that you've
done in your life because you've donated a kidney to

(17:21):
a total stranger. But okay, so you go to the
you go to the PJS uh huh for the gates
and he's there. He's looking at his clipboard. What gets
crossed off the list because you donated a kidney? Wow,
what's the Like, we're talking what thing did you do? Yeah,
we're talking like what embezzlement below?

Speaker 4 (17:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (17:43):
Simple assault? Yeah, simple assault.

Speaker 5 (17:45):
I think you know, unless you hit a woman or
a child, then then that stays on the list regardless. Now,
but I think if you, like, if you got mad
at somebody and threw your cup of soda at him
that would come off the list.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
I just think about like when you play a video game,
and you know, the meter changes on certain things you do,
whether not necessarily you're good or bad, but when you
get hurt or whatever, they need food and then it
fills back up. And so in terms of getting in
the pearly gates, does that change? Like how much does
that help her? It doesn't hurt you, obviously.

Speaker 5 (18:23):
I'm currently playing Red Dead Redemption online kind of went back,
you know, because call of duty get pissed me off.
And you can be a good or a bad person
in this game, right, and the deeds that you do
is what sways that bar.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
It's the exact same thing you're talking about. Not so
much help, but you know your morality or whatever. So
let's just say you've robbed a bunch of trains and
you've killed a bunch of people in a small town
and you stole their goods. You are now an asshole
and your bar is in the bad person. But you
go around, you start helping strangers, you start donating more,
and it brings that bar back on up into good standings.

(19:00):
And I think, at least my opinion anyway, it's kind
of the same thing that is here a moment when
he goes fine, I guess or sorry, I'm doing like
every seventh person.

Speaker 5 (19:16):
No, maybe it's a percentage thing forty nine to fifty
one sort of thing.

Speaker 1 (19:21):
Like if I put money in the boot for the
firemen and I give a kidney, that's pretty good, that's going.
It would negate some of the bad that you've done
in your life. I don't know. Just because I wanted
to empty the coins out of my car hardly makes
me a good human being. A Listen, you did it.
You didn't have to do it. You could have simply

(19:44):
taken those coins in your car and your cup holder
and put them in another jug number. That's true, But
you also could have not thrown pastas and got in
charge with the salt. Right, it's the ebb and flow
of life, man, Or it could just be flow. It
could just be good, so you could just do good stuff.
You could. However, most people don't. Yeah, bood thing annoys me.

(20:10):
I get it. You're using like I'm a fireman. Who
are people that jeopardize their life multiple times a day
for crazy events in life? And then they're You're like, oh, okay, yeah, no,
I'm gonna donate because you're standing there. But here you
But on the other side of the coin, you have
people that probably are famished that you judge because they're

(20:33):
groat groty right, wearing a yellow vest.

Speaker 5 (20:36):
You're like, yeah, that's why you treat them equally, and
you just steer straight ahead and do not make eye
contact the hobos or the fire fighter.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
I'm on the phone. I'm on the phone.

Speaker 5 (20:48):
I start fumbling around in your car, you know, Yeah,
turn the radio up, counting the change that you're not
going to give them.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
Yeah. I can't imagine the fireman like doing it either.

Speaker 5 (20:59):
No, like, hey, here's a sticker, but they got to
do something to raise money, and.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
You know who gives all the time, ladies. Yep, yeah,
I mean yeah, I.

Speaker 4 (21:13):
Actually put out more calendars.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
I'll buy those, sure, sure, because if we did women
calendars of police with female police officers, you'd be like,
that's good too. They actually do here in town. They do. Uh.

Speaker 5 (21:30):
They were part of the Crewed Roundup motorcycle rally a
couple of years back, and I'm pretty sure they still
have the calendars available. But it was the women of
fire women firefighters of the Tulsa area and uh there
was one fiery redhead I remember.

Speaker 1 (21:50):
Yeah. So like you can go on Amazon and get
the sexy women police Officer calendar, but these these women
aren't police officers. No, they're not wearing a police uniform model.
It's leather and barely covers the regime that they're obviously
not a police officer. Twelve bucks though for a twenty
twenty four calendar. Who buys that?

Speaker 4 (22:12):
No one wants the last year.

Speaker 5 (22:14):
Okay, here you go, Tulsa Metro. Women on Fire is
what you're looking for now.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
I know about the female fire one because they were
doing it to raise money because there's certain fire equipment
the general right, the general fire equipment that is issued
doesn't really fit women right correctly right now. I don't
know what they were particularly raising money for, but I

(22:43):
know that they were out there hustling their calendars and
they hot, they hot, well they're on fire. Well yeah,
by calendar, yes please? How much hmmm, twenty dollars for
twenty twenty six Oklahoma woman on Fire calendar? Women on

(23:05):
fire not women actually ablaze, right, just so get that clear. Sorry,
I was looking at their Instagram. Yeah, it's not working
for some reason.

Speaker 4 (23:21):
When do you buy a calendar, do you instantly go
to your birthday month and.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
See that every time? Yeah, you have to, Well mine's January,
so yeah, everybody goes to my month first? Is January?
You hope it first? All right, we gotta take a break.
We got our top five songs tickets to see that
we're gonna give away. We're gonna take a break and
we'll be back. It's time for newsquakies, world news, local

(23:48):
news and news that just makes you say, what the
Here's Corbyn Gimbean Lindsay with what's going on? News quagies
from the Big Man Morning showing ninety seven five.

Speaker 4 (23:58):
Fortune tellers charge merged with six hundred one thousand dollars scam.
This happened in Pennsylvania, where a couple of fortune tellers
have been hit with multiple felony charges. Gina Marie Marx
and Steve Nicholas have been accused of running a psychic

(24:19):
scam that allegedly scammed victims out of more than six
hundred thousand dollars From a pair of female victims, the
Montgomery County Detective Bureau says one of the victims reached
out to Jinkintown psychic Visions for a reading over the phone,
and allegedly Marx and Nicholas somehow managed to convince the

(24:42):
woman that she was plagued by a powerful curse that
was keeping love and happiness out of her grasp and
that her marriage, business, and happiness would be destroyed if
it wasn't removed. And over the next eleven months, exhorbs,
exorbit sums of money, and luxury goods were demanded for

(25:05):
the cleansing. And now the second woman was asked for
increasingly personal items and details about her life, and those
items were then allegedly used against her under the threat
of reputational damage and personal repercussions unless financial instructions weren't followed.

(25:25):
So the mystic duo has a preliminary hearing scheduled in
court for October twentieth.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
What are you doing?

Speaker 4 (25:33):
Yeah, And I thought that when if you called those
phone phone lines or whatever, there was also a recording
that says it's for entertainment purposes and that covered them.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
One. I wouldn't know, I've never called one. Two. I
don't think that's an industry regulated by the state or
federal government. Now, maybe there's been a judgment in certain
states and they've done that. But I think that's pretty
much consumer like, that's just capitalism, like, right, you're taking
those chances in your own hands. Yeah, And even if

(26:12):
they did, that doesn't mean somebody isn't corrupt, right. But one,
if you're gonna do it, why would you do it
over the phone that you're not They can't read you
through the phone, exactly, Miss Cleo did it. If they
could do it, If they could do it, I am
not a believer. If they could do it, they wouldn't

(26:32):
be able to do it through the phone. They would
need to be in proximity of you or at least
see you. Maybe. I don't know how it works.

Speaker 4 (26:42):
I agree. I see the lives like on Instagram of
the tarot card readers that go live. Yeah, and they
have people like you know, given their names and they'll say, oh,
well okay, i'll see you ask me a question, and
they'll ask and they will set up for hours and

(27:05):
I'll you know, scroll through and then scroll through back
and they're still on there.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
Sure, And I don't.

Speaker 4 (27:11):
Know how they I mean, I guess they're making money
on their their lives.

Speaker 1 (27:15):
Hope is an addictive drug. And if you do this
and it gives you happiness, you're like gives you hope
and maybe at a time in your life when you
don't have any Okay, I get it, but then you
just start getting feeding off it. That's what televangelists are
the same thing. They're just feeding off hope people that
are in desperate, dire situations. And to answer your point,

(27:39):
like how are they making money? They don't need to
make a lot, They just need to make enough. And
if they do it and make a couple hundred bucks.

Speaker 5 (27:48):
Right, if you're charging twenty dollars a pop, right, twenty
five dollars a pop, you can get a couple of
people in a day. You only have to work for
maybe a couple of hours, and you got your rent paid.

Speaker 4 (27:58):
Right.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
Where would you think is asper area in this community
that's doing well so far? As like location like Jings,
Ye see a lot of psych there, a lot of
side of the road. No where do you see them
over there by the old station in areas that are

(28:23):
considered poverty almost low income communities. Wonder why well I
smell a business opportunity and going to Jinks to open
up a psychic shop. I'm not saying there aren't. I'm
saying typically they are in areas that are. They prey
on people that need hope. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 5 (28:45):
I will cater to the housewives of Jinks in South
Tulsa and Bixby, the ones that are at home, the
state home moms, right, the kids are at school and.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Sharp Ay moms. Yeah yeah, except they don't have enough
money after their botox parties until I come along. You
don't need botox. They don't trust some nobody to just
give them a reading. They'd much rather have a nobody
give them botox. Right, that's what happens. I mean, listen, now,

(29:19):
we're coming up with all kinds of ideas. It could
be a tarot reading, fortune teller, botox all in one.
I think you're missing a giant opportunity of a Tarot card, bowtox,
happy chef, tupperware, uh, some sort of weight loss thing,
and dildo party yeah, and mimosas. Let's just throw it

(29:41):
all in one shop, ladies. We got everything you need, right,
You just need momosas as the hook right right at
Freeman mimosas that gets them in every time. Yeah, especially
with that Kirklands bubbles. All right, woman returns ancient relic
she stole. This comes out of Geminy, where a gal

(30:03):
stole the top of an ancient column from Olympia.

Speaker 5 (30:06):
Fifty years ago. Damn, fifty years ago. Now this, this.

Speaker 1 (30:11):
Column topper is about nine inches high gigody and thirteen
inches wide. Oh my kitty.

Speaker 5 (30:18):
And she took it from the Leonidian, which I guess
is a guesthouse.

Speaker 1 (30:24):
Fourth century BC is how old this rock is. And
she held on to over fifty years. And I guess
she had been seeing lately like other people who stole
relics and artifacts and stuff have been returning them. And
she's like, well, I'm gonna get on this train. Maybe
it's one of those like we were talking earlier, doing

(30:44):
some good to negate the bad that you've done, kind
of get that karma, that morale level, moral level back
up right right, And so she did. She took it
to the University of Munster delicious cheese, by the way,
and then they're like, all right, well, thank you very much.
And then the university went and took it over to

(31:05):
somebody in Greece, not just like random citizen or whatever,
but the Greek culture minister is where they took it to,
and that minister or ministry praised the woman's sensitivity and courage.
I still get in trouble. You should, even though it

(31:26):
was fifty years ago and you returned it, you should
still it's not a library book, right, library book. I'm like, yeah,
that makes you had twenty five years okay, right, but
it's an ancient rock. It's easy to forget that. You've
got grapes of wrath and it's slip, you know, in
the couch cushion. Right, you ain't losing this. No, that
has been a conversation piece in your house for fifty years.

(31:47):
Oh what's this rock you have here? Let me tell
you that is the topper of a column from ancient
room wild Greece, Olympia.

Speaker 4 (31:58):
Yeah, it's a bragging right like you. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
I always think about artifacts like that if they were
like could talk and they go, Man, We've done all
this stuff. I've seen people tortured, murdered, killed, and now
I'm sitting on this mantel. Yeah. Not fair. This is
where I'm retiring. H Right, solar panel falls and kills woman.
This takes place in Brooklyn. She's dead after the solar

(32:22):
panel fell on her Sunday. The seventy six year old
woman was just five blocks from her house taking a
little walk and the wind picked up, grabbed the solar panel,
flew across the air, popped the woman. She laid on
the ground unconscious. They came and got her, took her
to the hospital. She was pronounced dead. Now, it should

(32:46):
be fair to say that they are dealing with some
uncharacteristically high winds right now. They're saying anywhere gus between
forty five and seventy miles per hour.

Speaker 5 (32:55):
So is this from the same area the woman with
the plank and the post malone? Is it from there?

Speaker 1 (33:01):
That's in Utah? Okay, I was just curious.

Speaker 5 (33:04):
I mean, that's twice that somebody has died from some
random object being flown in their direction.

Speaker 1 (33:11):
I wonder how many objects people die from flying objects
a year? Oh, that's yeah. I'm gonna say forty five
hundred people.

Speaker 4 (33:24):
Oh, I'll say eleven hundred. Not no, not even that's high.
I'll go with I'll say sixty five.

Speaker 1 (33:40):
I'm having a hard time hitting it because they think
I'm I'm asking about birds.

Speaker 5 (33:47):
Oh, just random objects. A solar panel, a playing from
some scaffolding or whatever, air conditioners falling off of a
building and yeah, no, yeah.

Speaker 1 (34:02):
Because we live in a cartoon shade. Yeah, this says
about in twenty twenty one, there were two hundred and
twenty seven deaths due to struck by falling objects. Labor
and Statistics says anywhere between five fifty and six hentred
deaths per year from being struck by objects. Okay, not
a whole lot, but still not in the thousands. No,

(34:24):
not in the thousands. They're still investigating to see if
there's some sort of bad behavior that you know, menacing behavior.
But they say it just wasn't secured. I mean, I've
seen people just lay solar panels down, right, so maybe
it was that. All right, we got to take a
break and we'll be back. Rush Fur of the Big

(34:46):
Bad Morning Show.

Speaker 4 (34:48):
Is that Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning Corbin. We want
you to rock the bank. You've got thirteen chances to
win one thousand dollars. All you gotta do is listen,
which you're all already doing. And eight o'clock this morning
is your first opportunity to put one thousand dollars in
your wallet. When you hear that keyword inenter its online

(35:09):
at kmod dot com, or if you're listening to us
on the iHeartRadio app, head on over to that contest
tab and enter it there for your chance. You've got
thirteen of them all in all, So eight am all
the way up until eight pm tonight.

Speaker 5 (35:24):
Good luck, Good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbin. You
got the nineteenth annual Cancer Sucks concert coming up in November,
November twenty ninth, to be exact, Josie Scott's the original
Voice of Saliva, is going to be headlining. And if
you have a local band and you would like to
open up for Josie Scott, well, it's pretty simple to
get in on that.

Speaker 1 (35:42):
We called our Battle of the Band's contest. You head
on over to the contest pages the website at the
rockskmod dot com. You submit your one song demo and
then we will pick those at the end of the
contest and the top five is going to be played
on our top five of the top two bands are
going to be opening for Josie Scott. Good luck. All right,
let's see what lindsay. Let's talk about.

Speaker 7 (36:02):
Lensen, Lensen, l n d S. Why Lindsay Lindsay Lindsay
and d S.

Speaker 1 (36:15):
Why Mency.

Speaker 4 (36:23):
I saw a list of some unpopular, non political opinions.
I thought we could see if we agree or disagree
with some of these. Some of them are pretty simple,
Like pumpkin spice is the absolute worst flavor.

Speaker 5 (36:42):
I don't think it's the absolute worst flavor, but I
mean it's all right. I guess I think there's worse
things flavored than pumpkin spices.

Speaker 1 (36:53):
Yeah, it smells. It smells like fall. It's it's no
different than pumpkin pie.

Speaker 4 (36:57):
Yeah, I I I enjoy it maybe twice in the fall,
like a pumpkin spice a latte. I can handlem maybe
twice in the fall, and that's it. I'm good. Once
or twice, I'm good. I've gotten my fill. I don't
like the candles. I don't need to go out and

(37:18):
buy those. But yeah, definitely not the worst flavor out there.
Making the bed is a pointless chure.

Speaker 1 (37:29):
No, absolutely not right.

Speaker 4 (37:33):
It says you're just gonna mess up the sheets again
in the morning, So why waste your time?

Speaker 1 (37:39):
No, I get that, I get that you're gonna die.
Why eat white healthy?

Speaker 4 (37:42):
All right?

Speaker 1 (37:42):
Exactly, You're gonna die. Yeah, here's my cell on why
you should make the bed. Of course you hear people go,
you know all leaders make their bed in their first
day or some stupid thing like that. Uh, life is
a constant kick in the balls, and why not you
know every day you've accomplished something. I don't believe in manifestation,
but I do believe in talking to yourself, like you

(38:04):
can do something, and why not start with the success, right,
right right. I look at it as a it's a
form of self care. You may not take care of
yourself a lot, but making your bed every day is
there's a correlation in my life when things are chaotic.
My house isn't clean, my bed or my car isn't clean,
like I can draw the line, and when it just

(38:28):
probably feels more chaotic than it actually is. But so
I get the bed. So when I go into my bedroom,
but I'm like nice, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4 (38:36):
When you come into your room and it's made, it
looks nice. It does. It's a weight lifted off my
shoulder when I.

Speaker 1 (38:42):
See it, it feels good.

Speaker 4 (38:43):
It does. It feels good, and it's nice getting into
a made bed. S'mores are overrated. You can burn yourself
and they get you sticky.

Speaker 1 (38:59):
I would agree with that. I don't hate that take
they're delicious. You know that's not the question, right. I
do think there tend to be a little overrated, and
you it's like eating crab. There's so much work and
you can get messy and you're saying a marshmallow falls
in the fighting eye. Okay, I just don't like being

(39:19):
sticky afterwards.

Speaker 4 (39:22):
I'm torn because I think that they like when you
said the crab meat. It is a lot of work,
but I feel like it's so worth It depends on
how much you love them, because it is not something.
It is s'mores. They if someone says to me, hey,
we'll have s'mores this weekend by the fire, I look

(39:43):
forward to that because it's not something that is like
an everyday thing. So for me it's I would look
forward to it, So for me, it's not overrated because
it's not an everyday thing. I prefer cold weather to
hot weather.

Speaker 1 (40:02):
I mean, I could agree with that. You can only
take so many clothes off before you're just naked. Hot.
You can always always, always put more layers on. Yeah,
I don't like sweating.

Speaker 4 (40:12):
Oh. I prefer the hot weather over the cold weather.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
You prefer sweating.

Speaker 4 (40:17):
Yeah, I'll just either turn up the turn down the
air conditioning, or hit up the lake rather be in
the sunshine.

Speaker 1 (40:27):
That's not the question because you can also turn the
heat up in your house, right, or take a warm
shower or something.

Speaker 4 (40:33):
Right. But it's saying cold weather to hot weather.

Speaker 1 (40:36):
Right, So hot weather, you're using parameters to argue for
hot weather that you're not using for cold weather.

Speaker 4 (40:43):
Yeah. I just prefer the hot.

Speaker 5 (40:46):
And even if you go out to the lake, you know,
I almanna jump in the water. You're gonna get out eventually.
And then you're hot and you're sweaty and you're sticky.
It's going back to being sticky. I don't like being sticky.
And the number of bug just as higher.

Speaker 1 (41:01):
And you smell.

Speaker 5 (41:03):
When people sweat, they smell. You don't sweat a lot
dur in the wintertime, so people are smelling a lot fresher.

Speaker 1 (41:10):
Yeah, because the layers keep all that stinking keep it
in there. I'm okay with it.

Speaker 4 (41:14):
Well, this one says these are these are unpopular non
political opinions. Sweating isn't gross.

Speaker 1 (41:26):
Says somebody who sweats a lot. I guess I don't know.
Sweating is gross no matter how you look at it,
it's gross. Hug a sweaty person, Tell me you don't
peel yourself back and.

Speaker 4 (41:36):
Go, oh yeah, you don't want to sweat necessarily, or
a hug a sweaty person.

Speaker 1 (41:42):
You don't want to shake a sweaty palm, No, sweaty hand,
you don't want to do that. Sweating is disgusting, but.

Speaker 4 (41:49):
It's I don't necessarily find it gross. It's also natural
and right, still gross, so is vomiting. But if you
see a woman in sweating after a workout, do you
find that gross if you're just looking at her asterisk?

Speaker 1 (42:06):
Yeah? Yeah, if she looks like Sidney Sweeney and she's
wearing leggings and sports bra, okay, mama June, right, so
the same outfit, that's a that's an asterisk question. Overall,
I think sweat as a sweaty person, sweatings gross.

Speaker 4 (42:27):
I enjoy looking for new jobs.

Speaker 1 (42:30):
The hell says that, right. I like the job hunting
process dot dot dot of interviews and things like that,
But looking for a job is not awesome. I guess
if you're doing it for fun. Who does that for fun?
Weird people play you know good God right right? Hey,
we're gonna go to the bar today. You want to

(42:51):
join us? Nah? Man, I'm gonna go out and have
some extra fun. What's that look for new jobs? Hey? Man,
We're gonna go on a brewery tour.

Speaker 4 (42:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (42:58):
Well, I'm gonna go hunt for jobs, good luck dorks
and not take them right? You know? Im mad? I'd
be if I was interviewing somebody and they're We're like,
you're the perfect great, thanks so much. This was fun,
But no, I just do this for fun, right, Oh God,

(43:22):
I like.

Speaker 4 (43:22):
The lake better than the ocean. I can agree with that.

Speaker 1 (43:27):
Tweaches their own. I prefer the ocean over a lake,
but there's not many oceans where we're at right now,
so kind of stuck with dirty lake water. Yeah, I'll
take the ocean. They're both a push to me, but
I'll take the ocean.

Speaker 4 (43:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
Lake lakes are muddy, rarely clear around here. Snakes are
in them. I know snakes are in the ocean too,
but not as much as in the water. Moccasin, yeah,
brandom alligator.

Speaker 4 (43:57):
Yes, fluffy towels do not dry you properly?

Speaker 1 (44:04):
Maybe not, but to feel good? What are you the
towel police. They're great, especially when they were warm.

Speaker 4 (44:11):
I can't stand a fluffy town. I don't like new,
fluffy towels. I would prefer an old, worn down. I
agree with this unpopular opinion.

Speaker 1 (44:22):
I know.

Speaker 4 (44:25):
I know why because I feel the same way. They
don't dry you properly.

Speaker 1 (44:30):
Neither does an old towel. That's why you get new ones, right, No, the.

Speaker 4 (44:34):
Old ones they do. They soak up that water almost instantly.

Speaker 1 (44:38):
Hold on, are you are you saying old ones like
back in they don't make good towels anymore. Old ones
like you've had for a while.

Speaker 4 (44:45):
That you've had for a while, like they're they're just
they've been not like you like used for a week
at a time. But I'm saying like they're just, Oh,
I've had this for years. It's broken in, it's absorbent.

Speaker 1 (44:58):
It's like a woobe sort of thing. I've had it
for so long, I'm comfortable with it.

Speaker 6 (45:03):
I like it.

Speaker 4 (45:04):
Yeah, no, because I believe me. I have some that
have that need to be replaced, for sure, But they
are just absorbent. But every time I buy a new
fluffy towel, that is my biggest pet peeve about them.
Is that, Ugh, they're not absorbent enough.

Speaker 1 (45:23):
Do you wash them first?

Speaker 4 (45:24):
Yeah, of course, of course, but that fluffiness, it just
feels like they're not absorbing the moisture right away.

Speaker 1 (45:32):
Do you like new socks? I do.

Speaker 5 (45:36):
I consider that the same things. Yeah, there's a great
feeling about it. You put those new socks on, You're like, oh,
my feet feel fantastic.

Speaker 1 (45:45):
I mean, the socks aren't there to absorb water, but yeah,
I've never had a problem with new towels not being absorbent.
It feels good on your skiin Is it like dramatic,
like the difference between how much water.

Speaker 4 (46:03):
It can be? And it's probably a brand thing. It's
probably a brand thing.

Speaker 1 (46:08):
I'm gonna have to pay attention. I don't know if
I've used a talent been like wow, this is just
not working, because I typically keep using the talent until
I'm dry. Yeah, right, huh.

Speaker 4 (46:18):
Unpopular non political opinions, Vanilla is better than chocolate.

Speaker 1 (46:29):
I want to say yes because the option of toppings
is more wide Now. You can definitely put toppings with chocolate,
but for some reason they taste better with vanilla. The
like or let's use oreos as an example. Pressed oreos
and ice cream to me is like one of the
best mixes. Right, yeah, uh, you can definitely do it

(46:53):
with chocolate. It just isn't as good as it is
with vanilla.

Speaker 4 (46:56):
I agree with that. I prefer I prefer a vanilla
cupcake over a chocolate cupcake. If I'm eating ice cream, though, yeah,
I prefer vanilla ice cream over chocolate ice cream. But
I'll put like chocolate syrup on my vanilla ice cream.

Speaker 1 (47:14):
And that's the thing. You guys are putting stuff on
top of it when it comes to toppings, and you know,
just universally, you know accepted, Yeah, vanilla is better. You
can put more on it, you could do more with it.
But when it comes in rod dog, just raw dog,
straight flavor wise, which is how I understood the question.
Just straight flavor wise. That's why they say this is

(47:37):
so vanilla. Stop being so vanilla. It's just blad right
in the middle, you know, so flavor wise, at least
for me. Anyway, chocolate, whether it be ice cream, cupcakes, whatever,
not topping it, putting anything on it. Just give me
a bowl of this ice cream. What kind of vanilla too?
Because there's whatever that white one is with the specs.

Speaker 4 (47:57):
In it not good vanilla bean. Yeah, I don't like
that one.

Speaker 1 (48:01):
Homemade va the homemade vanilla one is.

Speaker 4 (48:03):
Uh, that's money. Yeah, beer tastes weird out of a can.

Speaker 1 (48:13):
What do you think, KIMPI, I don't think so. I
don't think so. It depends on the age of the beer.
But that happens with anything.

Speaker 4 (48:21):
Sure, I don't agree with that one either. Hmmm. I
prefer to be naked with socks because my feet get cold.

Speaker 1 (48:31):
Then you're not naked, right, Yeah, to me, naked's nothing. Yeah,
I'm not a big barefoot guy. But when I'm not
wearing clothes, I usually ninety nine percent of the time
do not have just socks on. Right. It just looks weird,
even like in a sex scenario, my socks are never on.

Speaker 4 (48:53):
Same and if I'm naked in bed, I would definitely
wouldn't be having I don't with socks on, even if
I'm if I'm wearing pajamas, I'm not wearing socks because
I do not wear socks in bed. I can't stand
too and if my feet are cold, I'm not even
putting socks on.

Speaker 1 (49:14):
I'd put a bit about it.

Speaker 4 (49:15):
Yeah, it's probably put a pillow down there on top
of my feet, if anything. Yeah, uh hm, it's better
for some couples not to have children. Say that again,
it's better for some couples not to have children.

Speaker 1 (49:37):
Why, I'm not sure how to have an opinion on that.

Speaker 5 (49:39):
Yeah, I personally think everybody should have kids when it's
their time, when they're ready for it, or.

Speaker 1 (49:47):
If they're not. Yeah. Yeah, I think kids bring such
a joy to your life now and a lot of
stress that goes with it as well. But there's such
a joy that goes with it when you're watching them
just being themselves, or watching them grow, or you know,
watching them do some kind of activity. You know, it
takes you back to when you were that age. Sure. Yeah,

(50:10):
I would argue that having kids in a world where
everything has a character limit or you need instant gratification,
is good because kids are long term projects, oh layed gratification.

Speaker 4 (50:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (50:26):
I mean there's moments of awesomeness, of course, but you
have to be committed to the long term.

Speaker 4 (50:31):
Sure, people need a license to have kids.

Speaker 5 (50:39):
That goes right along with people that shouldn't have kids. Yeah,
I mean, I don't know, are there bad parents out there?

Speaker 1 (50:46):
For sure? Do they intend to be bad parents. I
don't think they do. I just don't know if they
know any better. Like I read this article this morning
about a woman who took her kids of the fair
like eleven or fourteen, and then went into the bathroom
to do drugs, and that's where somebody found her, you know,
in the stall had needles and it was a cellophane

(51:07):
and foil all around. Or come to find out, she
was shooting a fentanyl and xanax or whatever. You know.
Should she have kids? I don't know, But those are
those Those like that are decisions that that person decided
to make that they made instead of spending time with
the kids at the fair, decided to go an overdose
on some painkillers in the bathroom.

Speaker 4 (51:27):
You know.

Speaker 1 (51:27):
So if you eliminate these horrible decisions that people make,
it's not that bad. I think there's a difference between
a horrible decision like what you're describing and beating the
s out of your kid. Yet, yes, you are right
still the decision that they made, I know, but one
is menacing and violent towards others, where drugs is a
selfish thing. I get what you're saying, I really do,

(51:50):
But again, you made the decision to hit your kid.
You made the cautious decision to be like, I'm gonna
beat the s out of this kid for whatever they did,
spilling milk on the counter or whatever, when you could have,
you know, made the decision not to. I don't think
anybody it's not hereditary, right, It's not in your genes.
It's not genetic to be a child beater. It's a decision.

(52:13):
I disagree, it's his. It is data shown that people
that were beat are typically more more often abusers. That
is not genetic. That is a product of your environment.
And because your parents were assholes doesn't mean you need
to follow that change. Sure you know genetics, blue eyes,
stuff like that.

Speaker 4 (52:36):
Money can buy happiness, right, I totally agree money can
buy happiness. I think whoever says money can't buy happiness
is someone who's never had money.

Speaker 1 (52:50):
Okay, or or they you know, they they they did
have money, and the stuff, the the items they purchased
didn't fulfill them, fulfill their soul or spirit or whatever.
So I get what they're saying when they say money
can't buy happiness. But I'm with Lendsay, I disagree. I
disagree because money could buy you a lot of happiness.

(53:12):
It could put pay off a lot of debt that
you have that's causing stress and drama in your life.

Speaker 4 (53:18):
You know.

Speaker 1 (53:19):
It could buy you a boat to go out and
have fun on the lakes, buy you a motorcycles, whatever
the case is. So I think I think it can.
It may be temporary happiness, but it's it's happiness. More
money definitely buys you more opportunities. I don't think it
buys you happiness. You think it does because you equate
happiness with buying things. Not you roy you right, And

(53:42):
I think that when people make a statement like those
who say money don't buy happiness are crazy or never
had money or whatever, is just a way to like
further push the idea that money you need to get
rich to be happy, and that's not true.

Speaker 4 (53:59):
But even if if it's not even buying things, just
having it, just being comfortable, like not worrying about.

Speaker 1 (54:10):
You know, I get that. Yeah, but when you win
a million dollars, let's just say you don't you're not
responsible with it. If you have a big debt and
lots of bills. When you win the lottery or an
influx money, you suddenly just aren't good with money.

Speaker 4 (54:23):
Right, Yeah, uh, there's no worse chore than folding laundry.

Speaker 1 (54:31):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (54:32):
Scrubbing toilets is pretty bad. I don't find it to
be that bad scrubbing toilets forbbing laundry.

Speaker 1 (54:37):
Scrubbing toilets, I mean one that's you know, been speckled
a few times and you know, yeah, piss all over
the bottom. Don't find it that it takes two minutes,
that is true, but it's still disgusting. I'd rather fold laundry.

Speaker 4 (54:49):
I do hate cleaning the toilet upstairs if the kids
haven't done theirs in a long time, like the right.

Speaker 1 (54:56):
Way you mean you were away? Yeah, thank you, But
fulling laundry does suck. It feels endless.

Speaker 4 (55:04):
I don't mind folding laundry because I use the time
to catch up on one of my shows, you know,
and I'll just more my time. I don't mind. And
then one more prisoners get a better deal than most citizens.
Free room and board.

Speaker 1 (55:24):
At the expense of your freedom. Absolutely not, absolutely not.
Who wants state issued bologney? Right? Who wants to pay
overpriced for you know, snacky cakes? Right? Who wants to
wear the same orange pajamas every day. You can't tell

(55:44):
me people in prison have a better because they get
to have toilet wine, you know, or constantly looking over
their shoulder for this with the sisters. Are changing your
moral compass to survive? Right?

Speaker 4 (55:56):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (55:56):
Yeah, I kind of like it on the outside. I'm
very happy here.

Speaker 4 (56:00):
Yeah, exactly unpopular non political opinions. There you go.

Speaker 7 (56:05):
Linsen Linzen, Linsen, Linzen, l A n d sc Y
Lindsay Lindsay, Lindsay n d sd Ynnsey.

Speaker 1 (56:25):
Let's play a game. It's Wednesday, so pick the flick.
Current record is well, so I am leading with sixteen
and Lindsay has twelve and you, well, you have five.
It's not an actual five, but I hear you that's

(56:45):
the score. It's five. It's a five. Last week's winner
was that would be Lensay. So you need to give
us a call at eight three three four six O
K M O D call up. Decide who's going to
be your clue giver. Whoever gets the most right is
going to win those tickets to see Cither with Dauntrey
at the Walmart Namphatheater on Augas October twenty second, tickets available,

(57:09):
AMP tickets dot com eight three three four six oh
K M O D. Good morning, you're on the air.
What is your name? Okay, good morning, you're on the air.
What is your name? Good morning, you're on the air.
What is your name? EJ? How are you today?

Speaker 4 (57:32):
I'm good?

Speaker 1 (57:32):
How are you good? Who do you want to give? Clues?
Who did we? Some are the options? Get be you
gimp or myself yourself?

Speaker 4 (57:41):
All right?

Speaker 1 (57:41):
Sixty seconds are on the clock. A timer starts after
the first clue. Are you ready? Sure ness? Here we go,
h double pointer.

Speaker 4 (57:51):
This has.

Speaker 1 (57:53):
Elizabeth Shoe Uh, and it is about the kids who
are a uh no, that is not right. Who is it?
When the opposite of alive alive is die death? There

(58:20):
you go. Opposite of father, mother, person who looks after
kids when the parents are gone, babysitter Okay, so blank lie,
blank me a lie, tell me a lie. Don't tell

(58:43):
mom the babysitters dead? There we gosh, yeah, we can
go ahead and correct each other if you'd like, while
we're doing this to just waste time.

Speaker 6 (58:53):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (58:53):
This has who Angelina joel Lee and she's in a
crazy ward and she threatens to put the he in
her neck opposite a boy.

Speaker 2 (59:06):
Girl.

Speaker 1 (59:07):
And when I'm talking and then you try to start talking.
Two is what we got? Not not looking good, DJ,
But people have one with two before? Okay, sure, all right,
hang on he sounds so deflated. Good morning, you're on
the air. What is your name? Steven? You and Gimpy

(59:29):
have to beat two? Are you ready? Yep? Here we go,
all right, Steve.

Speaker 5 (59:35):
This is an old sixties movie with Jack Nicholson. He's
in the Crazy House.

Speaker 1 (59:44):
What is no? No, that's a hotel. This is where
he is actually in like a mental ward. What is
that little bird in the clock that makes the sound?
There you go? So that's there you go? Uh. This

(01:00:04):
is a movie about people who are half people half fish.
What is a person who is half person half fish?

Speaker 4 (01:00:16):
There?

Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
This is Jim Carrey where he has something on his
face and he turns into this weird kookie superhero p
A Rtie. Why because I've got you? He said it,
Lindsay Tom Cruise and they sit down and have a
talk with a guy like Dracula. What is Dracula? What

(01:00:42):
do you do when you sit down and ask so
many questions? That's called a what interview with doesn't matter
how congratulations you one. You're getting those tickets to see
Ceither and Daughtry, and you need to hang on the
line so you and Gimby can rejoice. Oh man, DJ,

(01:01:03):
we didn't get it done. Girl's all right. Maybe next time,
have a great day. Yeah, I've never seen this movie.
I would have done the same thing you said, More
nighted with Angelina Jolie and a pin in the neck.
Maybe I've seen it. I don't think I have, though,
but yeah, what's the opposite of the boy? Okay, when

(01:01:25):
we're we're talking and then you talk over me, you
have just what my conversation?

Speaker 4 (01:01:31):
Yeah was one of also Okay, yes, yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:01:36):
Girl interrupted as the movie. Yeah, it's never been a
widely known movie, but it's really good. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:01:44):
I think I think she won uh Ken. Yeah, which
Angelina I believe, or maybe it was maybe both of them,
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
Yeah, it's a good movie.

Speaker 4 (01:01:57):
Yeah, and then he got all of his interview with
Vampire the Last But I was trying to think if
this was actually the when he said the mask, if
this was actually the Jim Carrey movie.

Speaker 1 (01:02:13):
Doesn't matter. I just got to give him say, what's
on the car? I know, I know. So yeah, there's
the mask with Jim Carrey and then there's the mask
with Share and Sam Elliott and uh, this this is
this is cold, this is hot? Hey rock? Can we

(01:02:33):
go to a Can we go to a Dodgers game?
That's a great movie. It's a fantastic movie, fantastic with
the who's is small? What's the big guy that?

Speaker 4 (01:02:43):
Uh man?

Speaker 1 (01:02:44):
What's his name? That they he dies?

Speaker 7 (01:02:46):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:02:47):
Does he die in that movie? And they go to
his funeral?

Speaker 4 (01:02:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:02:51):
If I remember right, because they're yeah Dozer, Dozer because
he's as big as a doser. Yeah, Berkeley is his name? Yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah yeah. Uh what year did that movie come out?
What do you think? Lindsay?

Speaker 4 (01:03:03):
Eighty seven?

Speaker 1 (01:03:05):
Okay, I was going to say eighty four, Okay, okay, yeah,
nineteen and eighty fives? Oknference, all right, Well the record now,
well it keeps being a lead with seventeen, keeps Lindsay
with twelve, keeps you with fine, all right, let's go
ahead and see what's in Gimpe's four by four. Well, Colvin,

(01:03:26):
it says here that Senate rejects GOP funding measure once again.
The Senate has rejected a Republican back spending measure that
would have ended the government shut down. It's the eighth
time lawmakers have turned away a bill that has already
been approved by the House. It comes after President Trump
said earlier in the day that he is in the
process of closing programs popular with the Democrats and we'll

(01:03:50):
release a list of those programs on Friday. Democrats remained
focused on healthcare issues and want Obama Care subsidies to
be extended. This shutdown is now the fifth longest in
US history. It says here that Walmart owed an open
Ai partnership for shopper experience. The integration of chat GPT

(01:04:16):
will allow customers to plan meals, restock essentials, and discover
new products through chat based interactions. Walmart and open AI's
collaboration comes as part of the retail giant's broader strategy
to incorporate AI into its operations while catching up with
the competitors. Open ai co founder and CEO Sam Altman

(01:04:38):
expressed excitement about the partnership and highlighted its potential to
simplify everyday purchases. I'm telling you, man, it's coming where
you'll just walk around and based off where you're at.
They go, hey, last time you bought some mustard, Deanie mustard.
It's been a month, right, right, Nope, still got the
same mustard I had three years after Right, it's expired
in my friends? What else we got here? Some protein

(01:05:01):
powders contain high lead levels. Consumer Reports says it analyzed
it aintallyzes twenty three protein powders and shakes and found
more than two thirds had more lead and a single
serving than what its experts say is safe to consume
in a day. The FDA has no oversight over supplements

(01:05:22):
like protein powders. Consumer Reports is asking the FDA to
set strict limits. Yeah, any of those, any supplement, there's
no guidelines, but you take it. You're like, oh, I'm
going to work out beef up and well, now you're
just pumping yourself full of lead. You're not pumping iron.
You're pumping yourself. Well, let's take an iron supplement. And

(01:05:42):
you know you're all worried about what's China doing, but
they'll poison your body. Right, how many people do you
think die on the globe every year from lead poisoning?
I thought we had it on control, you know, with
lead based paint and toys and stuff. But I don't
know one hundreds sixty three. I've been pretty off all morning.

Speaker 4 (01:06:02):
All right, I'm gonna say even less than that and
say eighty five.

Speaker 1 (01:06:09):
Globally, there are one point five million deaths to lead
poison in the US, where there's some more intense guidelines.
They say there's only been two hundred from it for
about a ten year span, for a twenty year span.
Does that include people who get shot? No, I don't

(01:06:31):
think they die from lead poisoning. They die from being
shot with lead. What else we have here? Oh? Also
doesn't include you know Karen Smith, who I stabbed with
the number two right right? So many kids get stabbed
with pencils every day. You're like, oh God, yeah, this
is it. I'm gonna die. Go. Wead some paint chips,

(01:06:54):
you'll be all right. Lastly, here, Cherokee Nation celebrates grand
opening of Indian Child Willpice Intallic Wall. The forty thousand
square foot building will house one hundred employees the AICW.
It provides a variety of protective and support services for
Cherokee children in their families. The Cherokee Nation Principal Chief
Chuck Hoskin Junior said, this new facility will allow staff

(01:07:17):
the ability to do what they do so well. So
there is a new flesh eating zombie drug that mummifies
people that use it. Okay, it causes their limbs to
auto amputate. I have a picture of it as it's

(01:07:39):
starting on this individual. Huh. It exposes tendons and bones,
wounds that attract maggots, a false foul smell from the
dead tissue. So it's a new drug that is an
animal tranquilizer called xylazine, and it is apparently working its

(01:08:01):
way across the US. It's known as trenk and it's
an illegal sedative often mixed with fentanyl to enhance the high.
In twenty twenty three to thirty percent of fentanyl powder
samples and six percent of fentanyl pills tested by the
DEA were contaminated with xylazine, which is this flesh eating drug.

(01:08:24):
In Philadelphia, which is known as apparently ground zero for
this drug, it was involved in thirty eight percent of
all unintentional overdose deaths. In terms of frequency. According to
somebody on the ground there, we're seeing patients with xylazine
related wounds. Five years ago, we didn't see any Now

(01:08:48):
we're seeing the larger university hospitals around the Philadelphia area daily,
if not weekly, these patients, these type of patients with
these types of problems. This drug apparently has been around
for decades. It was developed in Germany in nineteen sixty
two to lower blood pressure, but it was found to
cause severe side effects. You don't say, I don't like

(01:09:13):
the idea of like them saying a drug like this,
which the side effect is your arm auto amputating, that's
not a side effect, that's a problem. A side effect
is if I eat dairy, I have to go to
the bathroom.

Speaker 5 (01:09:27):
Right Well, they say with drugs, a lot of them
least anyway, these side effects are worse than what you're
actually getting treated for. My questionnaire is, did we not
learn anything from crocodil, like ten, thirteen, fourteen years ago?

Speaker 1 (01:09:42):
I think you probably need to remind people it come
out of Russia and it was a drug that people
would shoot up or whatever, and it turns your skin
into like a crocodile, real scally, real hard, real scally,
and you know, the it's pretty hardly, and people died
from it.

Speaker 5 (01:10:00):
It was a big deal about, Like I said about
ten fifteen years ago, right when I started working here
is when it started coming up, and it was it
was flashing the pan and I didn't hear anything more
about it after about maybe six months. But the fact
of it is people start making these weird synthetic drugs
like this, and then you get this or crocodile skin.

Speaker 1 (01:10:25):
All right, I remember that, be up? Why why? Because
you get high? The whole reason people are taking this
drug because apparently Finanel's high is short lived compared to
other opiods. Huh, So xylazine is added to prolong the high.
Within a few minutes of injection, the drug releases the muscles,

(01:10:46):
relieves pain, and triggers a zombie like trance. And you,
if you have not seen the pictures of this happening
on the streets, it's wild. When you see it, you
will go what is happening. I'm gonna send you a
picture so you guys, I'll send you a couple so
you can see what it looks like. I mean, they
definitely look like zombies as they are going through it,

(01:11:09):
and I mean they people just look like they're in
a trance. Yeah, oh yeah, very much like a zombie.
Because there's a ton of videos of people using it
for propaganda one way or another, but without citing the
real situation that's happening. And when you see it, it

(01:11:34):
is Yeah, they look like zombies. They look like they're
not moving right. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:11:37):
I've seen a lot of videos like this second one
that you had sent, and I didn't know it was
from this particular flesh eating drug that you're talking about.
I just assumed it was from fentanyl, shooting up opioids,
stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (01:11:55):
I've seen a lot of videos like that. People will
be just standing there on the reat like this, or
or maybe they're in the the convenience store trying to
get a gatorade or something and they're just just out.
I wonder if it's like an example of the being

(01:12:16):
in the matrix and this is just a what's there
called the uh non uh non play non pc n
PC that didn't get the update. Yeah, I could see.
That's what it looks like. I could see. Yeah, especially
the one I just sent you. Oh okay, let me

(01:12:37):
check a cane. It looks like they're just like, oh,
they didn't get the update, and they forgot what they
didn't program this one with something to do now that this.

Speaker 4 (01:12:47):
One of the woman in the grace what pants or
the yoga pants? Yea, stretching, That's.

Speaker 1 (01:12:54):
What I was thinking. She doing yoga, huh. And the
fact that the cameraman zoomed in on her buttious, right,
but it's terrible shame. Drugs are bad.

Speaker 4 (01:13:05):
Yeah, And the and the video before that one, the
other two beating up on each other. I mean, I
feel like I've seen maybe that drug is here, say
that security. I feel like I've seen someone like that

(01:13:25):
around Tulsa, And you.

Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
Know, could be that could also be the myth that
you're seeing as well, because long term meth usage will
cause you to act like the people in the first video.
Not so much like this, but definitely in the the
first video, they're going a little crazy, moving real erratically,

(01:13:48):
start beating on each other.

Speaker 4 (01:13:50):
And yeah, I mean these ones just hanging there but
their bodies just slumped over.

Speaker 1 (01:13:58):
Yeah, that's a shame. That's a terrible shame, to be
honest with you, because this gal in the last one
you sent with the yoga pants and a sideboo hanging
out just looking at her, look at her, compared to
the ones in the second video, you know, where they

(01:14:18):
look homeless. They look like junkies. Whatever picture of a
homeless junkie you have in your mind, that's what they
look like. And this gal here looks like you know
a pt sorry pta mom, you know that, you know,
dropped the kids off to school and went for a
little jog on skid row. I mean, yes she is skinny,

(01:14:40):
and yes her clothes are clean, but beyond that, we
don't know anything about her physique or sure face could
be pocketed out, true, she could have no teeth, yeah,
fake boobs, and what you're saying is also possible that
she could you know, be going to get a hit.
That's the thing is you people would be surprised who
uses rugs? Yeah, yeah, that's terrible man. Only because she's

(01:15:04):
good looking or she looks like she's got a great body.

Speaker 5 (01:15:07):
No, just the fact in general, man, you have to
let their life go like that person or a person
a text in uh, like flakka and bath salts, all
these synthetic drugs that are people are making just to
just to get high.

Speaker 1 (01:15:19):
Well, the problem with comparing this to that is that
would just knock you out. These people are like moving
and are humped, lunked over and out like they look
like they're moving and stuff right right right where basalt
would just put you out right. I don't know. I
thought basalt make you eat the face off of someone.
That never happened. That story never happened. Go do your

(01:15:45):
research on it. I don't know. I'm sticking with it.
It's enough to make me not want to do it.
People cite that story all the time, and they they
think that that really happened in it was in Miami,
if I'm not mistaken. Uh, the guy ate the face
of somebody. Uh, okay, I don't remember that. I thought

(01:16:07):
it was like, yeah, the cannibal attack is what it
was called. Rudy Eugene attacked Ronald Popo, a homeless man.
He was found naked and biting Popo's face and broad daylight.
When police arrived, he refused to stop the shot and
killed him. He did survive, but lost most of his
face and I. Early reports blamed bath salts, but toxicology

(01:16:29):
test later found only marijuana in his system. Oh wow,
that's fun. I've never taken bath salts. I don't know
anybody who has. I don't know how long the bath
salts stay in your system. Is it quick like that,
you know, because marijuana stays in your system for quite

(01:16:50):
some time because it's mast soluble, right, it absorbs in
your fittiness. Yeah, I don't know about I know cocaine
will run through your system pretty quick. So maybe bath
salts is the same thing. I'm not saying that you know,
you're right, wrong or whatever. I'm just saying I don't know.
This says the detection window is one to three days, Okay,
So if like they're stocked up on dead bodies trying

(01:17:14):
to do these Autopsi's like, you're right, and it's like
we'll get to him eventually. Well, by that time, the
bath salts have dissolved and he doesn't have anything in
a system except for the weed that he smoked along
with it. Yeah, hair test up to ninety days, So
I don't know how they do it. Yeah, I guess
if they get a little backed up because it's you know,
holiday rush, maybe they only do hair tests.

Speaker 5 (01:17:33):
Maybe, So I don't know. Yeah, that's still insane, though,
I'm good. See, it's it's stories like these that make
me not want to do any of that.

Speaker 1 (01:17:41):
Let's do something a little subjective, as in some of
us are going to agree on some of these and
some of us aren't. And these are the things that
a ten year old should know. Ten things a kid
should know by the age of ten, Okay, the first

(01:18:03):
one write and mail a letter, yes or no, lindsay.

Speaker 4 (01:18:09):
Write half of that, maybe not mail it, but write
one for sure.

Speaker 1 (01:18:16):
Okay, gimpy, yes, one hundred percent.

Speaker 5 (01:18:19):
You should be able to know how to write a
letter and fill out an envelope and where the stamp goes,
and put it in the mailbox, all by the age
of ten.

Speaker 1 (01:18:28):
I don't know writing. I agree. I'm just going with
what the present was. And I don't know if mailing
letter is that important. Not in today's modern world, right
you don't. Nobody mails off a lot of letters, but
it would help in case. I don't know, the Internet
goes down and goes away. That ain't happening. You say

(01:18:50):
that now, yes, but you ain't happening. I think you're
gonna see the evolution of the post office and mail
go away. Yeah, maybe so, I think you'll see maybe
once every so often there's some things that have to
go through the mail, But ultimately I don't know. It
ain't that hard put a stamp on it. That's the
end of it. Most a lot of envelopes come even
self addressed writing a letter sure thinking about managing their time,

(01:19:16):
that my ten kids should know how to do this.

Speaker 4 (01:19:21):
Hmm, what is ten fourth grade? You got a lot
of homework in fourth grade? Yeah, I think they do so. Yeah, Okay, manage.

Speaker 1 (01:19:31):
Your time, yes, GIMPI get your responsibilities done? Yes?

Speaker 5 (01:19:37):
Stress over managing your time? No, I think if you're
taking away their ability and their chance to be a kid, yeah,
I can't. I'm sorry. I can't go out and play
because I've got home or to do in chores to do,
and da da da da da da dah, you know,
and I've got to get it all done before mom
gets home.

Speaker 1 (01:19:56):
I don't think so. I kind of in between both
of you. I think, yes, Ghibbi's right, I don't want
to make you stressed about it. But also we need
to start figuring out, Hey, if you want to go
to the party, you've got to get your stuff done first,
regardless of what that looks like. So yeah, I think
it's important to learn that, Hey, there's some priorities wrapping

(01:20:18):
a gift, uh, like the way that I would do it, no,
but what does that mean? How do you do it?
Do you do it some crazy way? She's better than everybody.

Speaker 4 (01:20:34):
Else, not necessarily, but if it looks like, you know, like.

Speaker 1 (01:20:43):
Like a ten year old wrapped it.

Speaker 4 (01:20:45):
Right, like getting out Christmas wrapping paper and you know,
and how do they know to fold the corners perfectly?
You know, I don't expect them to do that. But
wrapping a present, yeah, not just stuffing it in a
gift bag.

Speaker 1 (01:21:04):
Yeah, you presented it though, like they needed. They're not
going to do it like me, like they need to
do it like you. Right, Is that what you mean?

Speaker 4 (01:21:10):
Yeah? No, they don't need to do it like how
I okay?

Speaker 1 (01:21:13):
Right?

Speaker 4 (01:21:13):
But yeah, wrap a.

Speaker 1 (01:21:14):
Gift, GIMPI I think they should.

Speaker 5 (01:21:17):
I think there's a lot of thought and personality that
goes into wrapping a gift, and I think the lazy
person puts it in a bag.

Speaker 1 (01:21:27):
Okay, So I think it's.

Speaker 5 (01:21:29):
Important for those kids too, at ten years old, to
at least know how to wrap a present.

Speaker 1 (01:21:34):
Yeah, one hundred percent. It's something you're gonna do probably
for a while, say thank you and receive a compliment. Yes, yeah,
I don't see how that's even a question. Cook a
meal for themselves. Yes, what are we talking meals? Right?

Speaker 5 (01:21:54):
I mean when you say there's there's a difference between
cook and prepare right. You can make a peanut butter
and jelly sandwich.

Speaker 1 (01:22:01):
A kid can do that. Do I trust a ten
year old alone in the kitchen with a stove, frying pan, grease,
stuff like that, not unsupervised? So as I was doing
it well before the age of ten, um, I guess
I could say, I say, yeah, basic stuff. You're not

(01:22:22):
asking him to cook you up a steak medium rare,
but you could. You should be able to know how
to at least heat a boil of water and boil
a pot of water or something for some ramen noodles. Yeah.
For me, I'm hung up on the cooking word, like
can you make something to eat? Yeah? And I'm not
just talking about opening a lunchible right right, Like can

(01:22:43):
you make a sandwich, bowl of cereal?

Speaker 4 (01:22:46):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (01:22:46):
Something like that? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (01:22:49):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:22:50):
Speak up? Oh god?

Speaker 4 (01:22:53):
Yeah? Yeah? If someone, if you if you see something,
say something type of thing, or if you need help
with something, yes, speak up.

Speaker 1 (01:23:06):
That's fun because I took it as kids are quiet talkers,
and it's like, huh, speak up. That too, you know,
the actual volume of their voice, and I feel that
they should. Uh yeah, I am a big believer in
making my kids order for themselves. We go to the

(01:23:27):
doctor on the way, we talk about it, and I'm like,
you need to tell the doctor what the issue is. Like,
You've got to start learning your your voice. This one,
budget money by age ten.

Speaker 4 (01:23:45):
It's a nice thought. Ah, I'd love to believe that,
but I don't think it's realistic.

Speaker 1 (01:24:01):
So where are you with it? Budget money yes or no? No,
GIMPI plant the seed and teach them. Start teaching them
how to budget, yes, But to add more stress to
them to learn how to budget, I think again, that's.

Speaker 5 (01:24:21):
That's too young. Ten is too young. You can start
teaching them. Kids don't get a lot of money anyway.
It's not like they're out working a forty hour week
and then they have to take their paycheck and then
split it up amongst all the bills and still have
food money left over for food, you know what I mean.
But you can start teaching them with the little things.
So it's a it's kind of like a push for me.

(01:24:45):
Maybe yes, start teaching them. Know they shouldn't know it already.
And I think that's what this whole thing is about.
Should they know it already? Right, Yeah, I'm with you.
I am not a believer in you've got to have
it figured out, but we need to be starting to
work on it. And to me, budgeting money or learning
how to budgeting money isn't necessarily you can't buy that

(01:25:08):
lego set if you don't have money.

Speaker 1 (01:25:09):
Too bad, so sad it's Hey, this is what the
electric bill looks like. Look how much it costs mom
and dad have to save money to do this. It
can look like that too. Hey, we don't have enough
money to go out because you wanted to. We put
a pool in the backyard, you know, things like that.
We just went to Disney. I think budgeting could look
like a bunch of different ways. And they don't have
to sit there and separate quarters right with their ebush

(01:25:33):
and they're right the poker dealer's hat, pencil behind the
ear tie loosely smoke Field another one on this list.
Find their way around?

Speaker 4 (01:25:49):
Yeah, yeah, they should know some landmarks. You're driving in
the car, you know, you know your way to school
by ten nate walking in the neighborhood, you know your
way to your friend's house.

Speaker 5 (01:26:04):
Yeah, gimpe, Yeah, I would agree. They should know their
way around, even if it's just a small area. They
should know their way around school. They should know their
way around the neighborhood to get to the park and
then back again. Should they be able to drive me
from here to Owasso because I drank.

Speaker 1 (01:26:20):
Too much at the ten ten years old? Probably not,
but at least know where they're at and how to
get around in any situation, maybe the mall or something
like that as well. Yeah, I look at a little different.
I don't care if you know how to get to
school or things like that. For me, it is do
you know how to find ways around? So, like we
go to the mall, we come in, I'm like, what

(01:26:40):
door did we go? Where's our car? Do you remember
which way? Where? Where the exit was? When we go
on a walk, and I'm like, do you remember the
way back to the house you lead?

Speaker 4 (01:26:50):
And do you know your address?

Speaker 1 (01:26:52):
I don't care about again, I don't care about that.
It is about can you figure things out right? It's
not necessarily you know, oh yeah, if I go up here,
it's a left right or hey, when we get to
grandma's house, what is something we see when we get
to grandma's house. Oh, equip trip. That's for me, like
being able to get around right right, react in case

(01:27:15):
of emergency. This is something they say a ten year
old should have figured out by age ten. These are
ten things a ten year old should have figured out
by the age of ten.

Speaker 4 (01:27:25):
Yeah, I think, yeah, that is that's a good one
to know. Have a game plan in case of an emergency, yes.

Speaker 5 (01:27:35):
GIMPI yeah, because anything could happen at ten years old.
Some parents leave their kids at home by themselves, you know,
and if something happens, they need to know go next door,
call blah blah blah, how to dial nine, whatever the
case is.

Speaker 1 (01:27:54):
I think that's kind of important to have. Yeah, I
kind of have the theory. If they're practicing in the school,
you better have one at home too, so and not
just hey, what do we do if there's a fire?
That's right, you get out. Well, you need a little
more details in that, because it's not going to be
as easy as that. And we've even gone as far
because I'm an insane human being as like role playing it,

(01:28:18):
like turning the lights off in the house and like
get out of the house right and it goes back
to me for that, like finding direction. Can you oh
this is the door, Oh this is the couch type
of thing, and it doesn't They don't have to be
good at it. By the way, that's not the goal
bird Box, your kids bird Box. No, No, that's totally different.

(01:28:38):
That's something our parents do. Okay, I'm talking bird Box
that movie with Sandra Bullock or whatever, and they put
the blindfold them and they got to figure their way around. Yeah, yeah, No,
I've never done that, but we do play a game
with like a nerf game, a NERF gun game where
the person with the nerf gun puts on a blindfold

(01:28:58):
and then everybody else has to You can't hide behind something.
You have to hide in plain sight. Took it off,
you can see you, and then they have to try
and find you and hit you with the nerve cut
based on the sounds that you make or whatever.

Speaker 7 (01:29:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:29:10):
Yeah, it's awesome. My kids love playing it because I'll
be like right next to them when they start and
then they just walk away. Now if they decide to go,
you know, to the right, because once you, as the hiders,
find your spot, you can't move.

Speaker 4 (01:29:29):
Oh, not at all.

Speaker 1 (01:29:30):
Nope, Nope, that's cheating. Sounds like a hoot. It is awesome,
and you can't do like multiple rooms. It has to
be like one big room. It's awesome. Yeah, I've never
called it that, but I'm gonna start calling it that.
Game

Big Mad Morning Show News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

It’s 1996 in rural North Carolina, and an oddball crew makes history when they pull off America’s third largest cash heist. But it’s all downhill from there. Join host Johnny Knoxville as he unspools a wild and woolly tale about a group of regular ‘ol folks who risked it all for a chance at a better life. CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist answers the question: what would you do with 17.3 million dollars? The answer includes diamond rings, mansions, velvet Elvis paintings, plus a run for the border, murder-for-hire-plots, and FBI busts.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.