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October 2, 2025 118 mins
HAPPY FRIGGIN' "A" FRIDAY EVE!!!! Lindsey Thinks Sports Are Rigged, Don't Confess Your Crimes To ChatGPT, Murdered Over Steak, NFL Rules You Didn't Know, Conspiracy Theory Thursday, Top List,  & Crazy Astronaught!!!!
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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.
Then you did it. Then you did it?

Speaker 3 (00:36):
Where you did?

Speaker 4 (00:43):
Allowed to play, Allowed to play, Come out to play,
Come to play for crystals.

Speaker 5 (01:02):
The sun is rising. God, Oh wake up, wake up now,
don't worry. We're all here to show you how jan
Witz horses raw.

Speaker 6 (01:18):
Station K and bo G Home of the Listens is
a family fee. Don't turn downtown, just wait and say
are you ready? Are you ready to jove in time to.

Speaker 5 (01:32):
Start to show crapstick a Cli about Bresco, Whisping Man,
Marny Show, Welcome to the Working Week. It's on such
a bore kick back, makes up best of it and

(01:52):
make it hardcore.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
Hang your whisby and then mess.

Speaker 5 (01:56):
Pick up your phone there line you're on the air.

Speaker 6 (02:05):
Dot time dot shows.

Speaker 7 (02:23):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Toll free
eight three three four six O K M O D.
You can also text bmms and then what you want
to say to eight two nine four five Listen online
the website that Rocks sets kod dot com. Past shows
are available on iTunes search under b m MS.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
Listen with your cell phone.

Speaker 7 (02:45):
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 nine. That's where you can hang out with
us each and every day. Good morning, Lindsay, Well, good
morning Corbyn, Good morning, Gimpy Weill, Good morning. We'll give

(03:08):
away tickets to see Ghost. They're gonna be over at
the Bok Center in February. Tickets go on sale tomorrow
at bokacenter dot com. We're gonna see what Gimpee wants
to talk about conspiracy theory Thursday. We've got top list.
This is skills everyone should learn. Top five skills everyone

(03:28):
should learn. So we'll get to that coming up here
in a little bit. Lindsey just asked me a question
and I was like, that's fun. It's one of my
favorite conspiracies. That's not on my agenda for conspiracies today,
but go ahead, Lindsey.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
What was your say that what you said to me again.

Speaker 8 (03:46):
Yeah, it was more of a comment. I'm beginning to
think more and more that sports like baseball is rigged
for money.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
Why is that.

Speaker 8 (03:56):
Well, the excuse me. Wildcard Series is going on right
now in all three games that the Cubs are playing
with the Padres are at Wrigley, so in Chicago, the
three game series, and they the Cubs won the first
game three to one, I believe, and then yesterday they lost,

(04:18):
And I just think that they should have. It would
have been easy just to win. And I think it's
a money grab because then they'll play today and probably win,
and so they just spread it out so for you then, so.

Speaker 7 (04:31):
For you, the fact that it goes three games the
full series is what makes it a conspiracy, because the
Dodgers didn't go three games.

Speaker 2 (04:39):
The Dodgers they swept them in two.

Speaker 8 (04:40):
Yeah they did.

Speaker 2 (04:42):
No, that's the counter argument.

Speaker 8 (04:44):
To Yeah, I know, but I feel like just they're
doing that just to throw everyone off. You know, they
got to have it somewhere, like someone's gonna have to play.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
So they don't catch on to the scheme. Yeah, exactly.
I've said that for years, especially about the NBA playoffs,
how they usually go you know, six seven games, simply
because I say it's for advertisement dollars, television dollars. I
don't know if Lindsay's thinking the same thing if it's
money towards you know, the teams or whatever. But yeah, no,
I've said that, and it promotes viewership of said sporting event,

(05:20):
you know, gets more people watching longer. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (05:25):
I'm beginning to maybe it's just me getting older, but
I just yeah, there it is. Yeah, I'm getting Yeah.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
Do you think professional athletes are highly competitive?

Speaker 8 (05:38):
Yes?

Speaker 7 (05:38):
I do, on a scale of one to ten, one
not being competitive, of all, ten being ultra highly competitive.
Where do you think they learn a ten? So, if
that's true the belief you just said you have, you
think they throw a game or don't compete as heavily
and maybe their most important game of their career, game

(06:00):
of their career. Yeah, yeah, you know that doesn't make
sense what you're you just said the opposite.

Speaker 8 (06:07):
I agree, But there's there's something we don't know.

Speaker 2 (06:11):
Do players get paid per game or is it just
kind of like a base sort of thing, yes, slash no. Okay,
that's like saying do we get paid per show? Yes?
But no, right right, right right. We have a salary
if you break it down per game.

Speaker 7 (06:27):
Yes, you get paid if you make the playoffs. I mean,
everybody's contract's a little bit different. Yeah, you make the postseason,
you make a certain amount of money. You may you
don't get Hey, if you go seven games or you
go three games, you don't. I can't imagine. That's I
think if there was that one in their contract, I'm
with you. I think there's something to be said about that.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
That's the only thing I can think of is like
why they would go extra games like that as opposed
to just sweeping them in, you know, the first couple
of rounds or whatever. It's like, well, hey, if we
don't go these extra three four games, then we're not
going to get paid for X, Y and Z games.
That kind of makes sense, sure, but yeah, I guess
you're right.

Speaker 7 (07:03):
If that's true too, uh huh, and every player had that,
Let's just say, then wouldn't the other team that gets
swept into try to go to a third?

Speaker 3 (07:13):
Right?

Speaker 2 (07:14):
Yeah, you'd think.

Speaker 7 (07:15):
I'm just saying that, Like, if that's true, and they're
the reason, you've already given the reason why, Right, it
goes two or it goes three, you're ultra competitive, and
if the scale's very tipped like the Dodgers game, then yeah.

Speaker 2 (07:28):
It's it's not it's going to go into.

Speaker 8 (07:31):
Yeah, it's like, here's the script, guys.

Speaker 7 (07:34):
But there's no benefit from them finishing in two other
than they get to brag and they get a little
bit more rest. Yeah, but that's it. So as a
fan who cares, yeah, I just.

Speaker 8 (07:46):
And those stands have been so full all season. It
just makes you wonder if it is if it's just
to keep it, keep that money coming in, and especially
in Chicago where they are hurting for money.

Speaker 2 (08:01):
Uh, I think they are pretty.

Speaker 7 (08:06):
But the huh, the Cubs aren't owned by the city.

Speaker 8 (08:10):
I realized that. But so then how coming into the
city and spending money, not just in the ballpark.

Speaker 7 (08:16):
So you think, because the city is in such despair
for financially, that one more game.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
Is gonna help tip the scale.

Speaker 8 (08:24):
While you're here, see some attractions and spend your money
and use our airports.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
Wild that's a wild take.

Speaker 8 (08:37):
It's just just a thought. I'm not the only one
that thinks it.

Speaker 2 (08:43):
Well, that doesn't make it true.

Speaker 8 (08:45):
I know.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
I know majority rules, man, Yes.

Speaker 8 (08:48):
Sure, and maybe and maybe just part of me is like,
come on, we're still in baseball. Let's get it over
with already.

Speaker 2 (08:58):
Huh. It goes the same amount of time every year
pretty much pretty much you GOTX amount of games and
then you got the postseason and and after the World
Series you're done.

Speaker 8 (09:08):
Well how I mean, how when did when did like
the wild cards start like they just two days ago?

Speaker 4 (09:16):
No?

Speaker 8 (09:16):
No, no, no, no, no, I mean no, no, no, years ago. Yeah,
it wasn't always. They didn't always have that. They brought
that in and it made the season that much longer.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
By three games. I know that's not that much.

Speaker 8 (09:31):
No, it's not, but it wasn't always like that. It
did extend the season by three games for at max,
four days at max. It didn't extend it that much.
October baseball has always been a thing. It's some of
the best baseball.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
In my opinion.

Speaker 7 (09:46):
I'd rather watch baseball in October than any other month.
Maybe first like April or May like first games of
the season because the weather's awesome. But fall ball is awesome,
especially when there's games on the East Coast, like the
Upper East Coast and it's snowing when they've played. That
is Oh man, that's so funny to me.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
Says here. The wild card games and the NFL started
in nineteen seventy, so that's been going on for a while.
In nineteen ninety four is when Major League Baseball started
wild card games. So this isn't anything new. It's been
going on for decades the majority of your life. Yeah, yeah,

(10:35):
which I get it. That kind of gives other teams
an opportunity to get into the finals, right, isn't that
the point of wildcard rounds?

Speaker 7 (10:41):
Well, I would argue that the statement of they want
more money is wildcard. Yeah that I'm all on board
with ye one hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (10:50):
That would make sense and also increased viewership as opposed
to you know, well, you know, we got these here's
your last two teams, have a good time. Let's drag
it out a little bit longer again, rings in more money,
more viewership. Okay, I was just looking of when is.

Speaker 7 (11:07):
The last day of the season by year, and it's
pretty almost the same, pretty much the same every year.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
Okay, so far as well, I was gonna say so
far as baseball, But really, honestly, they're all about the same.
They all end about the same time. The Super Bowl
is always played, what in February? Right, It used to
be at the.

Speaker 7 (11:32):
At the end of January, if I remember right, thirty first,
but now well not the thirty first, they don't do
it on a day of the week. No, it's on
a Monday usually, well, Sunday, Sunday.

Speaker 8 (11:42):
Yeah, it would usually fall around my dad's birthday, which
was January thirty first, and his birthday would be on oh,
on Super Bowl Sunday. Yeah, and that's how we would
celebrate his birthday.

Speaker 7 (11:53):
And now my wife's birthday falls on my around my
wife's birthday, okay, because they've been the third many times,
she is like, well, we ain't watching the Super Bowl,
and I'm like, well, you watch it right, right, right,
But the World Series is pretty much the same way.
It always falls about the same time. NBA I could

(12:17):
not pinpoint when it ends or begins.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
So far as like the actual season. Yeah, I'm not
very good with that one. Okay. Usually I want to
say that uh May May March people may maybe even
And the only reason I know that is because the
NBA Finals were going on when I went to four
ahe camp back in the uh the seventh grade. It's

(12:46):
because we'd all gather around, you know, after the day's activities,
and we'd sit in the main cabin and watch the playoffs.
So this is the regular season starts at the end
of October for NBA for NBA, okay, and go, I
know it goes through the holidays.

Speaker 7 (13:02):
We obviously know that because there's always a game on Christmas,
right and then we know after football it's on because
that's usually what we watch. And I think it goes
to like June. Okay, I think the postseason now that
would make sense. That checks out with my time. Yeah,
October through mid June, and the finals are mid June.

Speaker 2 (13:23):
Okay, I don't go. Don't know how I feel about
overlapping sports like that, because they all kind of overlap
at some point in time. NBA finals are bleeding into
regular season football, and baseball's right in there intertwined with them,
because right now we've got baseball and football going on here.

(13:45):
In a little bit, we'll have football and basketball going on,
and then hockey's in there somewhere, but nobody really cares
about hockey at all, and.

Speaker 7 (13:52):
You're not even hitting soccer right A. Golf, Tennis, NASCAR.
I guess they all just kind of overlap too. Yeah,
this is not enough time in the year. It's either
it's either you know, shortened down your season to keep
them all separated, or overlap them. And I guess if
you're a major hardcore sports fan and you like all

(14:13):
the sports, that's a dream for you. That's a dream
come true. But for me, it's like, I don't know,
I kind of like it.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
If it's like football season was X and then that's done,
Let's move on to basketball season. After that's done, let's
move right into to baseball season. Now. Yeah, no, no
overlapping at all. Whatsoever it gives you. And I guess
it's still the way it's set up. It still gives
you a continuous game, all year round, games all year round,

(14:42):
no matter what sports are. You're not even throw it
in college football. Yeah, you're not putting it in.

Speaker 7 (14:48):
College baseball or softball or any of those things. I mean, yeah,
there's always Capitalism is a thing. Yeah right, people make money.
I don't care.

Speaker 2 (14:59):
I love it. I love watching sports, it doesn't matter
what it is.

Speaker 7 (15:03):
I even I don't love hockey, but I'll watch playoff hockey.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
Right Okay, Yeah, never really got into that. I do
find myself sitting down and watching ball golf from time
to time. Sure you know, I've never gone out and
hit swung a club, hit a ball or anything like that.
On a course. But I have played many of video games, golf,
video games, and I enjoy watching And I guess maybe

(15:30):
that's also the disc golfer in me, because they're kind
of similar, you know, so far as the gameplay and
how it's played or whatever. But I enjoy there's I
remember complaining as a kid, my grandpa would be sitting
down watching golf. This is boring. Sure, you know, it's
a stupid And I guess just as I've gotten older,
like this is actually kind of neat to see them
whack the holyss out of a ball and have it

(15:52):
go three football fields down the fairway, and then some
of these amazing shots that they take, these chip shots,
you know, out of a bunker or just far away
and then sink them right and it's it's kind of impressive.

Speaker 7 (16:05):
Sure, And then put on things like the Masters, the
comb from Behind victories, the Ryder Cup, like this weekend
was awesome, the Waste Management Tournament in Phoenix where they
let the fans act insane.

Speaker 2 (16:21):
Yeah, it's there's some good golf to watch. It's always
been known as an old man sports.

Speaker 7 (16:28):
I think Tiger Woods changed that, you think, so, yeah,
yeah right, I mean he definitely said it in the now.
There's plenty of other golfers that are also really fun
to watch.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
Yeah, and they were all featured and happy Gilmore too. Yeah,
finally they have achieved some kay right, all right, we
got to take a break.

Speaker 7 (16:48):
We got tickets to Ghost who are going to be
at the Bok Center on February seventh.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
Get your tickets tomorrow morning, starting at ten am. We'll
do that. Coming up in about an hour.

Speaker 3 (16:57):
Four of The Big Man Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
Get started. It's time for news quakies, world news, local news,
and news that just makes you.

Speaker 7 (17:07):
Say, what the Here's Corbyn Gimpean Lindsay with what's going
on news Quakies from the Big nine Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
In ninety seven, five kmod.

Speaker 8 (17:16):
Shirtless dude breaks into grade school in the middle of
the night and steals food. This happened in New Hartford, Connecticut,
where a local man, Adam was Allowski, thirty nine years old,
charged on Monday with third degree burglary, sixth degree larceny,
possession of a controlled substance, and failure to keep narcotics

(17:39):
in their original container. So State police responded to a
middle school around twelve forty two am after an alarm
went off. Trooper saw a shirtless man nearby in front
of the fire department, and he had multiple skin abrasions.

(18:01):
The man, Adam was Alowski, was wearing dark shorts, one sock,
and he was speaking rapidly. Police noticed. He told police
he was walking in the woods and lost his flashlight
and his shirt. He denied being near the school. Troopers
said that they noticed an unsecured window on the school

(18:24):
property and that's when they detained him and they started
searching him. Police said they had found two types of
prescription medication in his pockets.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
Oh, fun, what do you think, gimb Oh, I'm gonna
go with some kind of oxy, some kind of pain killer.
I think I think that you said there was two
different kinds, two different Yeah, so I'm gonna go with
some kind of painkiller like oxy. And let's go with
uh some adderalls while we're at it. Yeah, because you

(18:56):
said that he was talking fast. He was a fast doctor,
talking fast, real fast and jittery rite something in that effect, lindsay, yeah, yeah, rapidly, rapidly.
So that tells me that there's some some kind of
speed involved here, adderalls or riddling, Yeah, I think so.

Speaker 7 (19:13):
Definitely some sort of stimulant like a riddling and I
think Fittnell's a solid choice.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
Ventanall.

Speaker 8 (19:18):
Okay, fentanyl, doesn't that slow you down?

Speaker 2 (19:21):
People like to get mixed up like that. Lindsay, you
get so high up there, you gotta come down somehow.
And just because he had him didn't mean he was
taking him.

Speaker 8 (19:27):
That's true. Well, your guess is as good as mine.
But it doesn't say it just says that they weren't prescribing.
But they did go back to the school and during
that search they noticed that there was recently consumed food
in the kitchen. They found additional food waste, riding utensils,
and a single black sock at the front entrance surrounding

(19:52):
a lawn chair. Troopers asked at him again if he
had been at the elementary school, and at this point
police said he admitted entering the school through a wind
and taking food, drinks, pens, and the folding lawn chair.
He is now free on a five thousand dollars bond
and is due to appear in court on October fourteenth.

Speaker 7 (20:13):
That feels like a weird charge the pills outside of
intending container, because I don't know if that's a real law.

Speaker 8 (20:19):
Maybe because they weren't prescribed to him.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
Yeah, and if you don't have him in your prescribe container,
it's a legit thing. Man, if even if they are
even if they are yours and your prescribe them. Let's
say you get a back injury and they give you
lord tabs or whatever, you have to have them in
the container, your name on it.

Speaker 7 (20:37):
Sure, no, I understand that. But I know you can
also have them on like some people have this little
pill containers.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
Huh, that's still illegal. That's that's great if it's in
your house, But if you get caught with it on
your person, like in your car walking down the road,
that's where it gets you in trouble. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (20:55):
I think you would have a hard time prosecuting that
for a lot of reasons. For the people that habitual
drug offenders, sure I get it, But for Grandma Jones.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
Yeah, Grandma Jones has got a lot of splaining to do. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (21:07):
I just think it's gonna be a hard It feels
like a ticky, tacky charge, like you're just adding it
on to punish these people even worse.

Speaker 8 (21:15):
Yeah, just because I mean, yeah, they're just doing that
because he does have the burglary in the larceny.

Speaker 7 (21:20):
Right, so they charge you for felony drug possession and
pills outside a container. They can go, well, all right,
we'll drop pills without container and you just do the felling,
you know what I'm saying, Like, it just feels like
a ticky tacky charge.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
Maybe so maybe so. Accused vandal confessed to chat GPT.
So there's a dude named Ryan Schaeffer and about three
o'clock on a Sunday morning, he decided to hit up
a Missouri State University parking lot, and in that parking
lot he went to town on some cars, shattered windows,
ripped off their side view mirrors, Dennet hoods, broke off

(21:55):
windshield wipers, and then went on home. Right. Well, the
police are called the next day, obviously all this damage
is done. They take a look at the surveillance footage
and they pinpointed this Ryan guy as the guy who
did it. So they go and they find Ryan and
they question him about it, and at first he's like, yeah,
I could totally see the resemblance between me and the

(22:16):
guy in the video. So he lets him search his
phone and apparently old Ryan here had quite the conversation
with chat GPT. They said it was chock full of typos,
which I think is hilarious. That tells me that he
was hammered when he had this conversation. But the conversations

(22:36):
go like this. He went and talked to chat GPT.
He says, how fed up am I? And will I
go to jail? And his little chat GPT conversation says,
kill I go to jail like a que This is
part of the typos, right, So I'm having to put
all this together. So chat GPT gives them some dips

(22:56):
and the potential outcome and getting caught or whatever and
being evolved into this kind of behavior, and and that's
when Ryan says, well, what if I smashed the s
out of multiple cars? And I guess that's when Ryan
got mad at chat GPT. And they say that he
became aggressive towards the chat GPT. You shut up right now,

(23:23):
I will kick yours well, kind of along those lines,
he went on to say to chat GPT, I will
kill all you efforts. It says that after he got
back to his apartment, he began to wind down and
he told chat GPT, I got away with it last
year and I don't think there's a way that they
could know my face. He says, it felt really nice

(23:45):
to f their s up. He went on to acknowledge
that he effed up all those useless efforts cars and
that the victims all deserved to get raped and murdered. God,
that escalated quickly, so he got locked up and lieu
of bond, And part of his punishment he's barred from
any premise where the primary item for sale is alcoholic beverages.

(24:09):
So he can't go into any bars. You can't go
into any liquor stores or anything like that. And he's
got to do random drug and alcohol testing. Oh, and
he is stuck wearing an ankle bracelet.

Speaker 7 (24:20):
He's still talk to chagpt of course, because he just
rolls over. Yeah, you listen to me. I can do
anything I want. I have hit so many cars and
they never caught me, So you can suck it.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (24:38):
Steak Dinner murder suspect indicted. Now this isn't clue. A
forty one year old Massachusetts man is under indictment for
murder after an argument over stakes. Andrew Ribbi Horseman is
accused of stabbing his mother's boyfriend. To death during an
argument over a steak dinner in June. The district attorney

(24:59):
said sixty six year old Paul Sirloin Paul Malu suffered
multiple stab wounds. The suspect was indicted Friday, and he'll
be arraigned in superior court at a later date.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
Is it like no rares better? No medium rare is better?
You're not my dad can't just stabs him. Maybe maybe
it was the temperature, Maybe it was the cut. Maybe
it wasn't even about the steak at all.

Speaker 7 (25:31):
No, because I'm sure Mom was like, Andrew, please come
over and meet Paul. He's been such a good partner
to me. He's not Dad, right he puts ketchup on?

Speaker 2 (25:44):
Oh that is where that's a stabblable punishment. No, come
on putting anything ketchup of all things. I mean, I
would argue heines fifty seven is worse. No, No, at
least heinz fifty seven A one one fine? Yeah, No,
it's calm down. Don't stab me, bro I'm just saying

(26:06):
they have a flavor and a taste to them. Catch up, huh.
It as flavors is good for French fries, and that's
about it. Good for French fries. I love it, man,
don't put it on your steak, y'all weirdo.

Speaker 7 (26:25):
I mean, come on, growing up, like growing up in Iowa,
people will ketch up on everything, eggs, everything.

Speaker 2 (26:30):
You're like, I've done it with eggs before. If that's fine,
you know, but you're really you're ruining a good steak man,
even if it's boot leather, well done. You should not
put ketchup on a steak.

Speaker 7 (26:47):
I mean a one. I'm not a steak sauce person.
A one superior. Yeah, it's not even close.

Speaker 2 (26:55):
There's the reason it's been around since the eighteen hundreds
or whatever it says on the bottle.

Speaker 7 (26:58):
And heine's fifty evan is. I've never understood it. I've
had it on pork a couple times, but it's not
good now.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
I have done. In college we did steak that steak.

Speaker 7 (27:11):
Night, but it was always like leather, you know, and
we would do a one and ranch mixed together.

Speaker 2 (27:17):
And who let me tell you that's not bad. It's
not bad at all that before because you get some
ranch on your salad and then you know, salad's next
to the steak, and it all kind of gets combined.
Or whatever. I get that, But.

Speaker 7 (27:30):
Is there any other sauces for steak besides commercially besides
a one and hinesides. You know, I'm not talking great
value or anything like that, right, maybe barbecue sauce.

Speaker 8 (27:43):
Maybe Moses does that. Our exchange student, he'll do barbecue sauce.

Speaker 2 (27:47):
Honestly, send him back to where he came from.

Speaker 8 (27:49):
I mean, he loves barbecue sauce.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
Well, kayin, that's the question. Whatever. We keeping the fruge.

Speaker 7 (27:56):
Pretty much, but he knows there's a spectrum of sauce, right,
like barbecue sauce is not all equal exactly.

Speaker 8 (28:05):
I'm trying to think, well, I can't think there's a
plethora that we keep in the house.

Speaker 2 (28:10):
Ye know who's got some damn good barbecue sauce? And
I discovered this recently Kinders. Kinders, if you've ever gotten
down on their seasonings, fantastic. But I discovered that they
have barbecue sauce as well, and I started getting some.
They've got a great peach flavored one. I should do
an endorsement for Kinders right now. I have I have
two bottles, well, I just ran out of one and

(28:30):
now I'm down to one bottle of this roasted garlic
barbecue sauce. They have this Japanese teriyaki.

Speaker 8 (28:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
I haven't tried it yet, but I was like, man,
this because I was a head country guy forever and
I tried this stuff. I was like, holy crap, move over,
head country Kenders is here to stay.

Speaker 7 (28:53):
Dude, everything Kenders slaps. I don't love their sauces because
they tend to eat a little sweet, but they're my favorite.
Is there uh caramelized onion, salt and pepper, okay, garlic
or excuse me, cowboy butter is the name of it.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
I found that one. I was like, what that's nice?

Speaker 7 (29:14):
And dude, they have like seasonings for like uh stoop
pot roasts and things like that. Oh boy, dude, they
have fries and they have fries in the frozen section.

Speaker 2 (29:26):
Oh and you cook the fries.

Speaker 7 (29:28):
They crisp up really nice in the air fryer and
it comes with a butter seasoning packet okay, and you
like put it in some the little thing packet in
some hot water so it softens because it's in the freezer,
and then you put it on the fries and then
toss the fries in a pan or what our bowl.

Speaker 2 (29:45):
I did not know this, yo, I did not know
Kinderhead fries.

Speaker 6 (29:48):
Yo.

Speaker 2 (29:48):
If I don't know that yesterday when I got groceries
out of looked dude, it's it's worth whatever the price is.

Speaker 7 (29:55):
They're traditional fry seasoning they have and then they have
a garlic butter one.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
Oh okay, that's a different by the.

Speaker 8 (30:03):
Way, that's a good.

Speaker 2 (30:04):
That's a good.

Speaker 7 (30:05):
Yeah, all right, we got to take a break. We'll
be back.

Speaker 3 (30:08):
More of the Big Men Morning Show is next.

Speaker 8 (30:11):
Good Morning Lindsay, Good Morning Corbyn. Nine inch Nails, we
announced it yesterday are bringing their Peel It Back tour
to Tulsa on February twenty seventh at the Bok Center
And tickets go on sale October eighth at twelve. And
you can listen to Camo d on the iHeartRadio app.
Tap that contest tab to win free tickets.

Speaker 2 (30:33):
Good morning Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbyn. You want to
win one thousand dollars. It's pretty simple. All you gotta
do is list send. You get thirteen chances throughout the day,
starting at eight o'clock in the morning. You gotta listen
for a keyword. You take that keyword, you plug it
in at the website that rockscamode dot com. Boom pal,
you got yourself one thousand dollars. It's that easy. We
call it rock the bank, be brown the world.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
Take my strong hand, give train, give train, Theron Burl,
take my trum handin.

Speaker 7 (31:09):
You are my kind of cripple GIMPI tremendous.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
I saw this on the TikTok, found it kind of interesting,
did some research on my own, thought i'd bring it
over here. Now, these are rules of the NFL that
you may or may not have known. Now, Corbyn, you
are honestly the sports expert on this show, I feel
anyway more so than I am. So if any of
these have changed, let me know. Okay, because these articles

(31:37):
like maybe a couple of years old. Welcome, But it's
the closest that I could find, all right, I didn't
want to play the TikTok video I found, so it
is here we go. So starting off with they have
a dress code that's really strict. Okay. It says here
that pants must fall below the knee, jerseys have to
be tucked in, Towels can only be placed in the

(31:58):
front of the player's pants. What's that about? Do you know.

Speaker 7 (32:01):
Do you know why, because it can be you know,
when you're running, getting a grabbed, a being in the way.
But can't they really grab on anything but be a jersey.
I've heard that they can pull hair. Yeah, but if
you're running or whatever, the idea that it's not something
to grab onto it's in front of you, it's okay.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
Well okay, so that with that with the towel, I
kind of see that if they're grabbing the towel at
the back to try to tackle you or whatever, it
could tear away. And it's kind of like those tear
away jerseys that were banned, right because it gives them
an opportunity to break away and continue to run. Yeah,
flag football, Okay, that kind of makes sense. I even
read in here somewhere that NFL players are required to

(32:42):
wear business suits outside of the stadium. Uh.

Speaker 7 (32:49):
I mean that's obviously not true because you see players
when they do the walk ins, they're not always wearing suits.
So like for the Chiefs away games, they wear suits.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
Okay, home games they don't. They just wear whatever you want.
If you want to crash up like Adam Sandler, come
on in which.

Speaker 7 (33:07):
Which has happened, Yes, which okay, I could kind of
see that, like, you want to present yourself on these
away games.

Speaker 2 (33:14):
Hey, we're in somebody else's house. Let's look decent where
we're company at this point. So I think it is.
I think it's a couple of things.

Speaker 7 (33:22):
What they do before a game is whatever, if you
wear want to wear adam saying their clothes into the game.

Speaker 2 (33:30):
Okay.

Speaker 7 (33:30):
It hardly warrants whether you're a team player or a
good teammate or good at your position. As far as
in the game, they're just wearing the required uniform. They
have a dress code, just like some businesses have dress codes.
It makes them all look uniform. If you didn't, it'd
be all over the place.

Speaker 2 (33:48):
Right.

Speaker 7 (33:48):
Players can even get penalized for wearing different shoe colors.

Speaker 2 (33:52):
I'd seen that as well.

Speaker 7 (33:54):
Coaches can get penalized for wearing the wrong hat on
the sideline.

Speaker 2 (33:57):
It has to be an nfl of fish. They have
a hat for every week, uh huh.

Speaker 7 (34:02):
And then specially we're getting into October, so this is
their cancer month if I remember right, Yeah, breast cancer awareness. Well,
no cancer, just because they didn't pay for it this
a couple of years ago.

Speaker 2 (34:12):
That's not a joke.

Speaker 7 (34:14):
Everything they do in the NFL has been paid for, Okay,
breast cancer they do the military that is paid for, okay,
so it is h They have certain ones they have
to wear at certain times. That's why the week when
they get to have their own cleats designed is such
a big deal, right, because the players get to express

(34:34):
themselves in any way that they'd like.

Speaker 2 (34:36):
I'd seen that in there as well, doing all this
research that I did. Hoodies are banned on the sidelines.
You can't wear hoodies or whatever.

Speaker 7 (34:44):
Unless it's an official hoodie that they've said you can
wear for.

Speaker 2 (34:47):
The week, right. Going on with the pink they do
that with the cancer awareness in October. I guess there
was one player that wanted to wear some sort of
pink all the way all the year round and like
remember of his mom who died of breast cancer. But
they're like, Nah, you can't do that because it's not official,
NFL approved or whatever. Yeah. I thought that was kind

(35:08):
of silly, but it makes sense. Every business has a
dress code of sorts. I mean, we're kind of laxy
Daisy around here for the most part. But I'm sure
i'd catch some flak if I showed up in my pajamas.
Maybe I don't know from who, maybe a pair of
daisy dukes.

Speaker 7 (35:26):
I'm okay with it because you want to be able
to look at any team and go that's an NFL team, okay,
And so there to me, to have a strict what
it should look like makes sense, right. UFC recently did
that a few years back, and I didn't like it
because it took money out of the fighter's pockets. But
it does look cleaner and more uniformed, looks more professional.

Speaker 2 (35:49):
Yeah, I was about to say the same thing. Not
just a bunch of hooligans out there wanting to play
sports or what right with a NASCAR on your shorts.
It says here that players aren't allowed to miss meetings
at all whatsoever. There's been players have been fined by
the league. By the league, attendance at the league events
is mandatory. It says here that a Dallas Cowboys wide

(36:13):
receiver was fined for missing both scheduled MRI and a
team meeting. Okay, I guess those are kind of important.
You know, we're getting together, we're strategizing for the week.
So if you're gonna play, you should probably be here
to know what's going on, what strategy is for the week,

(36:33):
and I'd seen in there as well, Like you can't
just call in sick, no, right, Like if you've got
a headache or a cold or whatever, you're required to
be there all right, and you've got to be like
super ill, like I have got cancer. If you want
to miss a meeting or a game.

Speaker 8 (36:53):
Or whatever, I would say, or I would think that
a zoom in would if you're under the weather, okay,
and you're contagious maybe or feeling like you're contagious, I
would think that you could zoom in to that meeting.

Speaker 2 (37:05):
Technology has advanced, well, we could do that sort of thing.
You are.

Speaker 7 (37:09):
So there's been a couple articles about how this isn't
gonna land. Well, the NFL is modern day slavery. When
you are being paid, when you are employed, they you're
their property. And so if you're sick or don't feel well,
you must report to the to the campus and see
the doctor. Let they will diagnose you, they will treat you, okay,

(37:31):
they will determine if you can practice or play okay,
which it kind of makes sense because anybody can go
to their doctor buddy and be like, hey, write me
a note.

Speaker 2 (37:41):
I've got a miss. So if you're going through the
league's position, you know at least they're like, all right, well,
doctor Jim here, he works for the league. He says,
you're sick. You can't make it. Have a nice day.

Speaker 7 (37:51):
I think it's even in the situation where like you
get you tear your knee up, you have to use
who they want you to use for the serve. You
can ask for a variance on that rule and be
allowed to go to whoever you want or get a
second opinion, but they ultimately want you using the doctor

(38:12):
they want you to use. They're footing the bill for
it anyway. And on top of that, they want you
doing rehab at the facility. They do give exceptions to
that and allow you to rehab away from Once you're
injured in like a season inde injury, you can be
away from the team.

Speaker 2 (38:27):
So like Tyreek Hill right now he ain't playing no more,
he can go and rehab somewhere else, not at the
stadium with their doctor.

Speaker 7 (38:35):
Correct, he can have his surgery, and then once he's
in rehab protocols he could do rehab probably wherever he
wanted to.

Speaker 2 (38:42):
Are their certified NFL surgeons as well.

Speaker 7 (38:48):
I don't know about certified, but they have the ones
they recommend you go to.

Speaker 2 (38:52):
These are the ones you should go to. It's not
like you can just what if you're an NFL player
and you get in a car accident or something, right,
and let's just say you broke your arm or your
leg or something in this car accident. Naturally, in any car,
in a car accident, an automobile accident, you're going to go
straight to the emergency right sure, because you're this NFL player.

(39:13):
Are they going to be like, hey, we can't fix
your broken leg right now. We're waiting for doctor Smith
with the NFL to get here so he can fix it. Yeah.
A couple things.

Speaker 7 (39:22):
One, if you're in an accident and you the next
day you feel like something's wrong, you would report to
the team facility. You would see the team doctor and
they would make the diagnosis. If you go to the
emergency room, you got to remember, emergency room's jobs are
only to stabilize you, and so if you're in a
life threatening situation, they would probably move forward, but they
would stabilize you and then you would then have to

(39:43):
go see your doctor.

Speaker 2 (39:44):
That kind of thing. Okay, I'm sure it's very complicated.

Speaker 7 (39:47):
By the way, if you're on the practice squad, the
rules probably aren't as strict if you're you're in a
car wreck and have to go to the emergency room, say,
compared to you know.

Speaker 2 (39:56):
Patrick Mahomes a starting player or something.

Speaker 7 (39:58):
And some players even rules where they're not allowed to
do certain things.

Speaker 2 (40:02):
Like drive yourself motorcycles, yeah, go jet skiing or whatever,
because they are paying them so much money, and that's
that's the company protecting their their assets. Yeah, that makes sense,
it says here. And I know this has changed over
the years, so maybe you can clarify some more, Corbin,
But end zone celebrations can't cross a line. Oh yeah.

(40:23):
I thought it was hilarious because it started off when
the TikTok video that I watch, you know, it showed
the guy dunk in the goalpost. Yeah, and you can't
do that, do that at all, whatsoever. Spinning the ball
in the end zone was another one that I saw
that you can't do. Now. I don't know if they
change that or not, but I thought one was hilarious.

(40:44):
No twerking, no twerking, no nothing sexual. That's family entertainment.
Right as they smash it to each other get dislocated
on television. Yeah, but hey, it's a family game. I
thought that was kind of funny. I mean, I get it.
You want to kind of keep it clean for everybody,
so no air humping the ball and you know, shooting
it across to the other team or whatever. But I

(41:07):
was like, okay. And then they had the other celebrations that, like,
you know, promote violence, the whole bow and arrow thing
or the finger bang bang bang bang. You can't do
finger guns in the end zone. I'm like, that's kind
of silly. I get it, but it's not like he
has a real bow and arrow. It's not like he
has a real gun. You know. The whole throat slash thing.

(41:30):
I mean, I get taunting maybe, but ah, come on, man,
isn't that a little too much?

Speaker 7 (41:36):
Again, they believe they don't want to they're a family thing.
They don't want to encourage violence unless it's apparently with
your partner. But the Chiefs player got in trouble for
the throat slash and then Josh Allen they were doing
something and he got pushed and he knew the guy
was gonna get in trouble. And so he like finger

(41:57):
ban banged and he got fined. So again, it's their job,
it's their rules.

Speaker 2 (42:04):
I think that end zone celebrations are kind of wacky anyway,
cause I'm sitting here thinking to myself, I play Madden, right,
and they get in there and do the little dance
when you do. And I'm thinking to myself as I'm
playing these games, I'm like, I wonder, and I bet
you they do if they take a day out of
the week, right, you're busy doing run plays, pass plays,

(42:27):
practicing offense and defense, kick all this stuff right throughout
the week and getting ready for game day and what
day and is there one particular day. Let's just say
they take a Thursday afternoon right to practice their in
zone celebrations.

Speaker 7 (42:44):
There's a lot of downtime during practice, okay, so you
have time to do those things. I can't stand in
zone celebrations. They've just get so out of hand. But whatever, well,
I'll come back. So I don't like those. But then
I really can't stand first down celebrations, I think, because
here's the problem.

Speaker 2 (43:04):
One.

Speaker 7 (43:04):
I understand that they're doing this because, as you pointed out,
with the dress code, there's no individuality. So you're trying
to express yourself and have a personality or a brand
or whatever.

Speaker 2 (43:14):
Right, I totally get that.

Speaker 7 (43:16):
But the problem is is when you then celebrate a
first down or a sack or anything like that, that
trickles down to now fourth graders doing it.

Speaker 2 (43:26):
Also far as like the NFL is being such a
influence on the you're highly where Yeah, you're you're lower. Okay,
I'm not diminishing.

Speaker 7 (43:38):
I'm not diminishing that an NFL player or somebody getting
a sack isn't a big deal.

Speaker 2 (43:42):
I'm not diminishing getting.

Speaker 7 (43:44):
But it doesn't need to be this whole like, first, yeah,
we know it's a first down, bro, get back to
the huddle, right, and we.

Speaker 2 (43:50):
Get a sack.

Speaker 7 (43:51):
You should absolutely be like, yes, high five, enjoy the moment.
But when you act like you're the kool Aid kid
going through a wall and like it takes all that,
you're like, what are you doing? We've seen plenty of
players celebrate and blow out a knee, right, And the
problem is that then you see these kids that are
fourth grade, they really don't know how to play, they
really don't, and they get a sell, you know, they

(44:12):
get a sack because I don't know, they're fourth graders
and they don't know how to play, and nobody blocked them.

Speaker 2 (44:16):
It's hardly the same achievement. I get where you're at,
but I think, you know, if you do something that's
pretty spectacular like that. I mean, listen, if I was
a fourth grader playing and I sacked a quarterback, that's
a pretty big deal. So I think I should be
able to, Oh yeah, if I wanted to, you know. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (44:34):
But when I see like fourth graders and I'm just
using that greatest example, they go and like get a
sack and then they like like flex like there, and
I'm like, settle down, bro, nobody blocked you.

Speaker 2 (44:47):
And the kid fell because he's scared to death, right,
squashing the kids celebrations, Man, let him have fun.

Speaker 7 (44:55):
You can have the game is fun, right, adding that
is just being pompous and bombastic.

Speaker 8 (45:02):
Keep it at the Jefferson the gritty when they want
to touchdown.

Speaker 7 (45:07):
No, no, you don't even need to do the gritty
on your way back to the sideline. That high five's work, right, Yeah,
good job man, good job. Congre Like think about that.
Every segment we like did the gritty on the way
to get our water. This is what we're paid to do.
You're paid to get first downs.

Speaker 2 (45:27):
I think we should start doing that after everything.

Speaker 9 (45:30):
I can't do the gritty, that's why you hate it
so much. Maybe last one here because we're running out
of time. I thought was interesting is players can be
fined for being overweight. Oh yeah, I did not know
that because NFL players are known to be massive human beings.

Speaker 2 (45:49):
Right. You don't see a lot of mes and Corbin's
out there on the field, right, especially your linemen. Your
linemen are supposed to be big, right, they're blocking the
players from getting through or they're trying to break through
the line to get to the other And I was like, okay,
but it says here that they can be fine up

(46:09):
to six hundred and thirty dollars for every pound over
the limit. Yeah that I think.

Speaker 7 (46:16):
What that's more of a bumper to keep people staying
in shape, focusing on nutrition, focusing on because you have
Is it an individual rule or is it like you know,
offensive lineman. This isn't like pee wee football where they
have to weigh in before every game. And you know,
if you're a certain way, you can't be a running
back and all that other jave. Right, Okay, so it's

(46:38):
more of like I don't even know if it's that
enforced anymore, but if you let yourself go, right, that
they can use that as a way to get you
coerced back in.

Speaker 2 (46:48):
Okay, So you can't be so you can be a
four hundred and fifty pound dude. You just can't be
a four hundred and fifty pound blob.

Speaker 8 (46:56):
But yeah, let's make it four hundred and fifty pounds
of muscle.

Speaker 7 (46:58):
And I would argue, well, not even that. You don't
even have to be four nure and fifty pounds of muscle.
You just have to be athletic. There's a misconception that
muscle makes you athletic. Okay, So there, uh, there's plenty
of guys in the NFL that look like you and me.
They just can run fast and can squat four fifty
and can bench pres you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (47:20):
Like they're just in shape. Yeah, And I thought it
was pretty interesting some NFL rules that I didn't know existed.

Speaker 8 (47:29):
Wasn't it.

Speaker 1 (47:30):
Brown the world take my strong hand, Give train moment,
give train the world, take my strong hand. Grain.

Speaker 7 (47:45):
You are my kind of Cripple, GIMPI tremendous.

Speaker 3 (47:49):
You tell us this Morning show. Yeah, he's coming right back.
Morning Show.

Speaker 7 (47:55):
We announced that Ghost is going to be over at
the Bok Center in February.

Speaker 2 (48:00):
We did that on Wednesday. If I'm not missing Monday, Tuesday. Tuesday.

Speaker 7 (48:06):
Tickets go on sale tomorrow at bokcenter dot com. So
we're gonna give away a pair of tickets right now
for that playing Schnip schnoptioner, a little bit of this,
a little bit of that. Current record is.

Speaker 2 (48:14):
Well, I am barely leading this one with thirteen. Corbin,
you have eleven and Lindsey has eight and last week's
Winter that's would be Lindsey.

Speaker 7 (48:24):
So Corbin and Gimpy at eight three three four six
oh K m O D eight three three four six
oh kmo D call out, decide who's going to be
your clue giver. Team that gets the most right is
gonna win those tickets to see Ghost at the Bok
Center in February, with tickets go on sale tomorrow at
ten am.

Speaker 2 (48:43):
Good morning, you're on the air. What is your name, Xavier? Xavier?
How are you friend? Good? Are you good? Buddy? Who
do you want to give clues? GIMPI or Corbin. Let's
go Gimpy.

Speaker 7 (48:54):
I'm sixty seconds on the clock. Timers starts after the
first clue.

Speaker 2 (48:58):
X Man, all right, this is a town in Arkansas,
Blank Springs. No, not Bonner, not hots. It's also a
freeze phrase used for excitement. Also the name of a
vacuum brand. Pass. Uh. This is what police use on protesters.

(49:27):
It'll make you cry. Yes, collared greens, pork chops, chitlins.
These are all forms of what. Yes, that's the second
word in this phrase.

Speaker 7 (49:42):
Day.

Speaker 2 (49:43):
There you go. U. This is the ice cream shop
that serves horrible burgers named after royalty, not the king.
There you go. This is what you put in your car.
It's a liquid to help you stop. This is Mickey.
He's a girlfriend, the animated business character. Yes, the whole thing. Yes.

Speaker 8 (50:06):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (50:06):
This is a color that's associated with a branch at time. Time.

Speaker 7 (50:10):
Time five is what I got. A nice recovery there, Xavier,
hang on the line. We'll see if that's good enough. Okay, okay,
good morning, you're on the air.

Speaker 2 (50:19):
What is your name?

Speaker 7 (50:23):
I'm sorry, John, John? We have to beat five. Are
you ready? Yes, sir?

Speaker 2 (50:32):
All right, here we go.

Speaker 7 (50:34):
When you study the area around you. It's known as
blank studies.

Speaker 2 (50:40):
Uh. If you grew up in a neighborhood, then drop
the ull here you go, yes, uh there. The opposite
of start stop yeah in a race.

Speaker 7 (51:00):
Yis yes uh black eyed.

Speaker 2 (51:06):
Yes uh.

Speaker 7 (51:07):
These are the gross vegetable that look like kidneys. They're
they're green. There you go uh blank and the beautiful italic.

Speaker 2 (51:22):
Underline and then blank blank. It's a soap opera opposite
of young.

Speaker 7 (51:33):
Yes, blank and the beautiful and the beautiful You're close.
It's a way to make fonts darker brown, darker.

Speaker 2 (51:51):
Times of John. We did not win telling you I
don't know what's going on with me this year.

Speaker 10 (51:59):
I lose my life one yeah barely XAVI you congratulations man,
you're getting those tickets to see Ghosts over at the
Bok Center.

Speaker 2 (52:10):
Tickets on go on so for everyone else Friday at
ten a m awesome. I didn't think I had that
first me neither, but you did, though, tag on the line.

Speaker 8 (52:21):
Okay, this was the card that Bourbn got stuck on
in the end, I get stuck.

Speaker 2 (52:26):
I didn't get stuck. Yeah, yeah, I think he did
everything that he could. I like the bold and the
beautiful reference the soap opera, The the When you want
to make a font darker, you would It was like
control b Ryan would make that happen on your keyboard.
I like the way you tried to get him to
say old and he had old. I was thinking he'd

(52:47):
get there if he old bald. Yeah, okay, old, all right,
what's the letter after a? All right? All right, now
put those together old. Yeah. I think he did everything
you could on that. I can't think of any other
way to describe to blankly go where no man has
gone before.

Speaker 10 (53:05):
All right, boldly, we'll take the lee off of it, right.

Speaker 8 (53:09):
Yeah, blank statement from you.

Speaker 2 (53:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (53:14):
And then this one was where Gimbi got stuck at
the end.

Speaker 2 (53:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (53:20):
This is a description of a color that is also
the first part of it. It's two words. First part
of it is a branch of the military. That's where
I was headed to and not army green.

Speaker 2 (53:33):
There you go. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (53:35):
So, and then the one he passed on when he
passed on, this is a statement.

Speaker 2 (53:41):
Of proctor would say.

Speaker 7 (53:44):
A prospector would say, when he discovers gold, where there's
gold him there heels.

Speaker 2 (53:50):
Eureka found it. Yeah, Yeah, I thought.

Speaker 7 (53:53):
Eureka springs was a good I thought it was a
good until you no, I thought it was a good one.
I mean, the vacuum one is pretty archaic, but like
the springs one, sounds good until you realize, oh, there's
a lot of springs in Arkansas.

Speaker 2 (54:07):
I did not realize that. I knew there was Hot
springs and Eureka Springs. Now I need to go to
Bonner Springs or is it Boner Springs? I don't know?
All right? The record now, well, it keeps me in
a lay with fourteen, keeps you with eleven, keeps Lindsay
with eight.

Speaker 3 (54:20):
The Big Man Morning Show returns next.

Speaker 7 (54:23):
Let's see what Gimpie has in his four by four?

Speaker 2 (54:29):
Oh oh oh.

Speaker 7 (54:32):
Well, Colvin. It says here's that Ice to attend the
Super Bowl. Ice they should be working, right, Like, what
are they? They're gonna go to the game?

Speaker 2 (54:41):
Right? It says here that Ice agents will be attending
the Super Bowl. Following the announcement that that Puerto Rican
superstar Bad Bunny will be performing at the halftime show,
the Department of Homeland Security Advisor Corey Oluwandalski said that
there is nowhere that you you can provide safe Excuse

(55:02):
me that there is nowhere that you can provide safe
haven to people in this country illegally. Last month, Bad
Bunny said that he wouldn't perform in the US on
his upcoming world tour because of concerns over ice raids
at his concerts unless the paychecks big enough. Well, you know,
less than like ten percent of civilians go to the

(55:25):
super Bowl, right right, Like it's a small they're all superlite. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (55:29):
Yeah, it's all people that are like our friends, family sponsors.

Speaker 2 (55:34):
That, people that can afford it, Richard, people that can
afford it.

Speaker 7 (55:37):
So okay, by the way, you know he's an American, right,
Bad Bunny's American says he that he's porto Rican.

Speaker 2 (55:46):
I settle my case, you're honor. What else we got here?
Walmart is removing food dies. The nation's largest retailer is
removing synthetic dies and over thirty other ingredients from its
private label. So like great value and stuff like yeah right,
not today though, no, no, no, you still got time
to get in on some of those synthetic dies. These

(56:08):
ingredients include some preservatives and pat substitutes. Robert F. Kennedy
Junior announced the plans to phase out eight synthetic food
dies in the US food supply. Walmart says the changes
will roll out over the coming month. I read twenty
twenty seven, not this year. It's going to be a
little while, not next year. Well, they've got a massive

(56:30):
supply of it's sitting in the warehouses that we got
to get rid of first. We could send them to
those third world countries like we do the losing Super
Bowl team shirts. You know what I mean. It's like,
you know, here's a Kansas City Chief shirt and a
hat and some forty Niner shirt. Yeah, yeah, I's try. Huh. Well,
the Bears haven't been there since how long?

Speaker 8 (56:51):
Anyway, two thousand and six.

Speaker 2 (56:52):
Okay, what else we got here? The US is reducing
military missions in a Rock. The Pentagon's folksmen confirmed that
the US and coalition partners are pulling its forces from
Iraq to reflect the combined success in fighting ISIS. Washington
and Baghdad made an agreement last year to reduce the
military's presence to focus on fighting ISIS in Syria unless

(57:15):
than two thousand troops are expected to be in a
Rock once the transitions are finished. And then lastly, here
Pawnee Bill Ranch to host ghost Story candlelight Tours. Pawnee
Bill Ranch and Museum will host ghost Story Candlelight Tours
on October twenty fifth. The tour will depart every thirty
minutes from six thirty to nine. Tickets are ten dollars

(57:37):
for adults, five dollars for kids under eighteen. However, it's recommended.
It's not recommended for anyone under the age of eight. Pani,
it's a good time pie.

Speaker 8 (57:47):
Hopefully you heard your very first keyword to win one
thousand dollars rock the bank. If you didn't, you've got
twelve more chances to win today. Your next chance is
at nine o'clock the morning, and we wrap up the
day at eight pm tonight. Hit that keyword. Go to
the website that rocks kmod dot com, or if you're

(58:09):
listening on the free iHeartRadio app, go to the contest
tab and enter that word online there to win one
thousand dollars. Spend it however you want.

Speaker 2 (58:20):
Good luck, Good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbin. Mudbin's
going to be at the Tulsa Theater next Thursday, one
week from today, as a matter of fact, and you
can go ahead buy your tickets right now at Tulsa
Theater dot com, or you can click on the contest
tab and sign up to win some faux free conspiracy
theory Thursday and this one the end.

Speaker 7 (58:44):
I don't know should I start with the conspiracy and
then back up my give my evidence, or let the
story blossom and then drop that.

Speaker 2 (58:53):
On you, I'll say star witch theory.

Speaker 7 (58:56):
I think sometimes they saw of crimes after and then
announce the suspect is dead. There's no way to know
if it's true or not. Okay, that's fair.

Speaker 2 (59:09):
I say that quite often that it sucks when somebody
commits a heinous crime and then opts themselves because we
never get the truth after that, if we would ever
get the truth anyway.

Speaker 7 (59:21):
I think that it's not the same as like giving
somebody an award after they're dead, Like that doesn't it
seems like you're only doing it because they're dead, right,
but because you want to find out who did it,
and if they're still alive, you want to get them.
I get that, right, So you keep solving a crime
until you go, oh, the person's dead. But sometimes I'm

(59:43):
suspicious that they go, Joe Blow did it, okay, because
then because Joe Blow's dead, and then they go, see,
we solve.

Speaker 2 (59:51):
The case because you can't prove it was anybody else.

Speaker 7 (59:54):
And I'm not saying it's necessarily a bad thing because
you give families peace. Right the story's wrapped u up,
they can finally, you know, think they can put it
to bed.

Speaker 2 (01:00:03):
Right. It's an important part of dealing with trauma. Right.
I was gonna say, like with the Kennedy assassination, Oswald
did it, you know, and before he could ever go
on trial or anything, Jack Ruby shot him dead. Well,
case closed. The guy who we said did it is
dead and now we can't take him to trial to
find out if that was true or not. Right. That

(01:00:26):
is a great classic one.

Speaker 7 (01:00:27):
There's a most recent one that triggered this again for me, okay,
and it has to do with something called the yogurt
shop murders. If you're familiar with the story, it is
incredibly fascinating. It happened in nineteen ninety one where four
girls were fatally shot and then where they worked. I
can't believe it's yogurt in Austin, Texas was burned and

(01:00:51):
got burned up, so the evidence was not really there.
There's a four pot documentary on HBO called the Yogurt
Shop Murders. It's about Jennifer herson, Sarah, a girl named Eliza,
and Amy, and it talks about the wrongful arrest of
four young men for the crime and goes into detail
about the investigation. Austin City officials found this new suspect,

(01:01:16):
Robert Eugene Brashers. He was never considered a suspect in
the murders during the initial investigation. He had no personal
connection to the city, and they believe he was a
serial killer linked to at least three other murders from
nineteen ninety and nineteen ninety eight. He also had a
criminal record, including attempted murder, burglary, impersonating a police officer.

(01:01:40):
He died by suicide in nineteen ninety nine, shooting himself
during an hour long standoff with police at a hotel
in Missouri, eight years after the yogurt shop murders. And
they finally pended on him by finding DNA in a
sink Draine, I mean not. I guess they collected it

(01:02:03):
and then tested it, and I guess they just test.
They finally got to his name and tested it and
decided it was him. Okay, and his daughter, the guy
who they say did it. His daughter has spoken and
she's which is wild. She feels like she needs to
says quote, I'm very sorry to every family member that

(01:02:26):
my father hurt. I know that it is not my
place at all to tell you I am sorry, but
someone has to be because he was not sorry for it,
and half of my DNA is the person that hurt
you the most. So I want to tell you sorry.
I'm so sorry for everything. But I'm finally glad that
you're getting answers. Very well said, nice thing to say,

(01:02:50):
and I felt like she said it in a way
that made it where it's not her right, like she's
it's empathetic right, she's showing empathy towards the victims.

Speaker 8 (01:03:00):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:03:01):
I don't know if I would say anything.

Speaker 8 (01:03:03):
No, she didn't have to, and but it felt like
she meant what she said for sure. Now maybe it's
been weighing on her.

Speaker 2 (01:03:12):
Does that take away or ease the pain of the
family or the victims, you know, the families of the
victims by by her coming out and saying my bad, sorry,
my dad did these horrible things. Does that take away
the pain?

Speaker 3 (01:03:28):
No?

Speaker 8 (01:03:28):
But I think it doesn't make them look at her
in a bad light.

Speaker 2 (01:03:34):
Well, why would they at all? Exactly, there's no reason
for them to look at her or anybody to look
at her. Maybe society cast judgment. Your dad murdered some people,
you know, but it's not like murders hereditary. I don't disagree.

Speaker 7 (01:03:52):
I think she's less unless because I haven't watched the
documentary on HBO.

Speaker 2 (01:03:57):
Unless she's in it. In the documentary, yeah, okay, And
then like and it's.

Speaker 7 (01:04:03):
Very recent and feels like she's gotta you know, because
people are watching it, and she got.

Speaker 2 (01:04:08):
To clear her name to let everybody know. I don't
think you have to clear your name. I don't think
so either.

Speaker 8 (01:04:14):
But maybe she was getting, you know, a bad publicity
from it, or or not publicity. But you know, maybe
people were reaching out to her in a negative way.

Speaker 2 (01:04:25):
It's called social media.

Speaker 7 (01:04:26):
Yeah, people reach out in negative ways, even if your
father doesn't murder people, truth, right, So I don't know
it does.

Speaker 2 (01:04:35):
That is the only bizarre part of that is why
is she saying something to me?

Speaker 7 (01:04:42):
Maybe she said a little too much Again, I thought
she did fine. I don't think there's anything prowise to
clean up from what she said. It probably could have
been shorter, like, I'm sorry for the things my father
has been found to have done your family. I hope
your family is finding peace now. Yeah, that's all you
gotta say. And even then, does she really even I
don't think she does.

Speaker 2 (01:05:01):
I don't think so either. I don't think she does.
Unless you want attention.

Speaker 8 (01:05:07):
Yeah, that could be too.

Speaker 2 (01:05:09):
That is a very strong possibility. Got a little bit
of attention from this, from the case and from the documentary,
and it's like, well, hey, how can I capitalize on this.

Speaker 8 (01:05:20):
Now that you know who I am? I'm writing a
book about it?

Speaker 7 (01:05:23):
No, I have a TikTok Yeah, right, book where it's
at Tiktoks. Where it's at right, So that's where it's at.
And I think it's a good question on does the
family accept that because they've been offered a name before
or names before that it was who it was, yeah,
only to find out it wasn't right.

Speaker 2 (01:05:45):
That's just driving more confusion within the family. Well, you
don't told me it was this, and now you give
me another name. How long is this going to last?
You're gonna give me another name in a month. You
can just let sleeping dogs lie in my opinion. Wait,
he's dead, just say it was him. There's no way
to No one's gonna come out and say they didn't, right,
And it's not like that. It's not like when someone
gets imprisoned wrongfully and then they clear their name and

(01:06:08):
they get free, they get released. Right, No one's hunting
that down. These people are dead, right, the person that
they said did it is dead. Who's going to go
and try and clear his name? And he's dead exactly?
His family maybe, but even then he's dead. What can
you do?

Speaker 7 (01:06:25):
If your dad was in a police standoff and he
ended up off in himself in a police standoff and
he had other crimes, you easily go. Now that makes sense. Yeah,
if your dad was the all American dad helped out
with the school, did all these things and gets accused

(01:06:47):
of that, I'm with you, you would go and clear it.

Speaker 2 (01:06:49):
Try, Yeah, because you've led yourself to release Dad's led
himself to be a good, upstanding citizen and now his
good name is besmirched.

Speaker 7 (01:06:56):
Right, you have no reason to believe he would have
done anything bad compared to this girl's dad, who had
a laundry list of things.

Speaker 2 (01:07:05):
Yeah, that he did that was not awesome. Yeah, but
there have been many A case is where you think
that somebody's good and clean and come to find out
they're not now leading a double life. Think about the
guy who has a two families, one in Minnesota and
one in you know, Dayton, Ohio. Yeah, ext I bet
that's more rare than we even think. Yeah, sure, probably

(01:07:28):
was the thing back in the day. You know, on
the road salesmen or whatever.

Speaker 7 (01:07:31):
You probably have a higher probability of the vasectomy not
sticking than you do of knowing somebody who led a
double life with two different families.

Speaker 2 (01:07:41):
It seems like a lot of work. Just one family
is a lot.

Speaker 7 (01:07:44):
By the way, why is that always happened on the
East Coast where they have double families?

Speaker 2 (01:07:47):
Yeah? I feel like can you tell me how that
story it's always on the East Coast?

Speaker 8 (01:07:50):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:07:52):
It's a good point because they do things differently on
the East Coast. And or you hear it's kind of like, mom,
my dad had a double life. What do you mean, Well,
apparently he had a kid before he was with my mom.
That's not a double life. No, double life is while
he's your dad, he's also the dad unbeknownst to you
to another family, right, taking some other kid to baseball

(01:08:15):
games on you know, every other week when he's out
of town for cleaning two pools, mowing to you.

Speaker 8 (01:08:23):
What on another pa.

Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
Yeah, I can't that. There's no way that's real. Yet
another thing the movies and television has led us to
believe that it's not it's it happens.

Speaker 7 (01:08:34):
And if you're you know, your parent passes away, you
hope you don't find a letter, right, right, that is
totally you're right.

Speaker 2 (01:08:40):
That's actually a conspiracy. I think.

Speaker 7 (01:08:44):
That there is no such thing as people living double lives.
That doesn't mean it doesn't happen. It means it's not
a thing though, right, it's not as common as expected.

Speaker 2 (01:08:54):
We're led to believe that. No, you know, I never know. No,
you do know, it is not that common.

Speaker 7 (01:09:00):
But as far as penning deaths are unsolved crimes on
dead people, because I think we know from documentaries that
have been done that the police are focused on solving
the crime, as they should. But that's different than saying
getting the right person.

Speaker 2 (01:09:20):
For them.

Speaker 7 (01:09:21):
As they line the stuff up, they feel like they
are getting the right person, but there's not a check
and balances, So then it's what can they prove in
court to say that person did it.

Speaker 2 (01:09:31):
That is considered the checks and balance. And even then,
it's not proving quote unquote anything in court. It's convincing
twelve people that you're right and the other side is wrong.
You're not really proving anything at all. You're just trying
to convince a group of people.

Speaker 7 (01:09:49):
Somebody texted and said the BTK killer, yeah, one hundred percent,
one hundred percent. I'm not familiar enough of what his
normal life was like to know if he was that
great of a person in his normal life, but the
dark side he had, Uh yeah, that that is considered
a double life. But I think we're talking about double
life like double families. Right, There's a big difference between

(01:10:11):
having here in the PTA and you mow the yard
on the weekends and you know your neighbors and and
you go to the football game, and then during the.

Speaker 2 (01:10:19):
Week you go on a road trip and kill people.
That's sadly, that's that that sounds easier than having to
raise two families two yards, right, yeah, Christmas like and
try to keep the other one incognito. How do you

(01:10:40):
get over everyday stress? Well, I tell you what every
other week, I'm on the road mass murdering people. That's
how I get through my days. I mean, he thought
he was doing the right thing. Yeah, sure, he thought
he was eliminating some people that needed that weren't good. Yeah,
so did Jack the Ripper. Everybody needs a whole though. Well,
Jack the Ripper's a whole other conspiracy. Right. You may

(01:11:00):
not even be real they he was around at a
time where there were no timelines.

Speaker 7 (01:11:05):
They didn't keep time on stuff, so when police reports
came in, they didn't write them down by time and
stuff like that. So they just kind of lumped all
those things together into Jack the Ripper, right, which is
crazy to think about because we've always thought he was
a real individual. Yeah, but if you go down the
evidence of why there is no Jack the Ripper, it's

(01:11:25):
wild when you're like, yeah, they didn't keep the police work.

Speaker 2 (01:11:28):
Wasn't always done the way it is today. I never
really thought about it. There, you know, multiple murder errors,
committing the same acts on the same types of people
getting lumped into just one dude because they're not really
keeping track of things the way they should, like with
Jack the Ripper. Yeah, that makes sense. You know, maybe
one person slaughter to prostitute, and the other guy's like,

(01:11:49):
you know, that's a great idea. We need to get
these horrors out of here. So he goes and slaughter
some and now it's just all one big person. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:11:58):
I mean, sadly, prostitute getting killed is an old thing. Yeah,
so it's not like it's a new thing. Leave the
prostitutes alone, man, They're just trying to make money like
the rest of us. I just we got to come
up with a different name between prostitutes and people being trafficked,
because that's the truth.

Speaker 2 (01:12:18):
There are some people that choose to.

Speaker 7 (01:12:21):
Be escorts or things like that, and then that's also
cloaked in child trafficking or sex trafficking. I should say,
right right, we've got to have a different name because
now we're lumping them together. Like I don't want to
say leave the prostitutes alone, because you know, there's some
people that are getting trafficked into.

Speaker 2 (01:12:39):
That they become prostitutes, not by choice. I think there
are some just like, oh, sure there are, but the
ones that are getting human traffick are the ones I'm saying.
I would argue.

Speaker 7 (01:12:53):
That there are more women that choose to be a
sex worker as a prostitute. Then there are dads that
lead double lives with another family. You're probably right, it
is more common. You're probably right. So we texted and
said it happens on the East coast because it's more
densely populated.

Speaker 2 (01:13:13):
Okay, sure, I'll accept that. So I'm gonna go out
to the Midwest where I can relax a little bit.
Been a nice gal named Tammy.

Speaker 7 (01:13:21):
Yeah, you're not gonna try to have a family in
a Wasso and then a family in Glenpool.

Speaker 2 (01:13:26):
Oh that's too close, man, Okay, how far? What is
the correct distance?

Speaker 7 (01:13:32):
Because I would argue the people that do it on
the East coast because it's densely populated, you could pull
it off that close.

Speaker 2 (01:13:39):
Between Oaso and glen Pool. Maybe I'm thinking you gotta
go States over And when I say states, you can't
go to the next direct state. So for us, you
can't go to Arkansas, Kansas, New Mexico, Texas, Colorado, right,
because they're just right, there's too close. You sure as
hell can't go to Oklahoma City. Do Toles Oklam a

(01:14:00):
city that's way too clear. I mean I think you
could do Colorado. It's a three hour flight to Colorado Springs, right,
twelve hour drive. Yeah, that's a long way. Man. Maybe
you could pull off different states, but definitely not same
area codes.

Speaker 7 (01:14:15):
So you can't do Dallas by your definition, that's four
hours away.

Speaker 2 (01:14:19):
That's a quick drive, man, that's not that far away.
Hence the reason why. Yeah, I think you should stay
away from the surrounding states.

Speaker 7 (01:14:28):
So for you, you got to go to Memphis. Yeah,
you gotta go to East Saint Louis.

Speaker 2 (01:14:33):
Yeah. Yeah, you want to stay, you know, anywhere eight
to ten hours away and an order for it to
pull off. I mean, if you're then you're spending sixteen
hours round trip. Well that's something you got to figure
out for you and your new family.

Speaker 8 (01:14:49):
Somewhere with a quick flight at least.

Speaker 2 (01:14:51):
You know.

Speaker 7 (01:14:52):
Here's the way I know it could work is I
know plenty of people that have they're married, they live
here and then for a week on, week off off,
they go to Houston and work. I know a lot
of people that do that, and that by place in Houston.
It's entirely possible and that arrangement to have another life.
You do have another life, but it's impossible to have

(01:15:13):
it is possible to have another family.

Speaker 2 (01:15:16):
Yeah, that's in that environment. That's thirteen hours away. Who's
going to go drive thirteen hours away to go see
If you're fooling around.

Speaker 7 (01:15:25):
Dude, a woman wore a diaper and drove across America
because she was suspicious of her man. So don't even
set it up that way. You have a point, all right,
We got to take a break. We'll be back. There
is a new actress on the scene. I don't know
if you've seen this story in the last couple of days.
It is fascinating. And her name is Tillie Norwood, and

(01:15:49):
she's an AI actress and she's about to get representation
from an agency, which I don't understand how she needs representation.
She's not going to decide whether she takes a role
or not. Uh wouldn't the people that write her software?

Speaker 2 (01:16:10):
Okay?

Speaker 7 (01:16:12):
Anyway, she has done a couple of things already, like commercials,
and apparently apparently she is even in a movie okay
that was debut at the Zurich Film Festival, and they're
saying she will be signed by an agency in the

(01:16:33):
coming months. Obviously, some people are like, this is not
a good idea. Looks like somebody, and one actor wrote,
hope all actors repped by the agent that does this
drop their ass.

Speaker 2 (01:16:50):
How gross read the room?

Speaker 7 (01:16:52):
Another one what about the hundreds of living young women
whose faces were composited together to make her?

Speaker 2 (01:16:59):
You could hire any of them.

Speaker 7 (01:17:03):
This is from the person that created Tillie Norwood to
those who have expressed anger over the creation of my
AI character. She is not a replacement for a human being,
but a creative work, a piece of art. Like many
forms of art before her, she sparks conversation, and that
in itself shows the power of creativity. I see AI

(01:17:26):
not as a replacement for people, but as a new tool,
a new paint brush, just as animation, puppetry or CGI
opened fresh possibilities without taking away from live acting, AI
offers another way to imagine and build stories. I'm an
actor myself, and nothing, certainly not an AI character can

(01:17:46):
take that craft or joy away.

Speaker 2 (01:17:50):
Okay, I get what that person says, like, Hey, this
is a new paint brush, a new tool, you know,
just like with CGI and animation and puppetry. The thing
about that is, though, is those are still human voices
getting paid to perform under those criteria. The cartoons the animation, right,

(01:18:12):
there's a voice actor and there's a voice actor. Yes,
so there still is a human element involved there this AI.
I haven't done any research into it at all. I've
seen the story. But if the face is AI, so
is the voice. So therefore the artificial intelligence in this
case has completely taken the human element out of it. Yeah. Uh,

(01:18:37):
is this the one? Hold on?

Speaker 7 (01:18:38):
Let me see if this is the one where there's
a thing where she introduces herself. That's really interesting because
she's said like she's introducing as the actress. Ah see,
there's a couple of them in here that are really fascinating.
But I couldn't find.

Speaker 2 (01:18:58):
Out that quick.

Speaker 7 (01:18:58):
But I mean, I I don't hate the idea of
this as long as it's presented.

Speaker 2 (01:19:06):
As Okay, you let everybody know upfront this is an
AI actor. I am all for AI could do some
pretty cool things. Yeah, I could brat you out for
vandalizing cars. It can do that. One could argue, it
can also catch someone vandalizing cars.

Speaker 8 (01:19:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:19:23):
Yeah, But as long as it's presenting and telling me
that it's AI, why shouldn't someone who's a human create
this and make a movie with AI and let people
decide if.

Speaker 2 (01:19:38):
It's entertaining or not. I think it's because you're taking
away from all the other actors. You're kind of downplaying
all the hard work they put in to get where
they're at. And if you do, and even if you
present it as AI, you're still taking away somebody who
really wants to act and replacing it with something that's

(01:20:00):
not real. So therefore, what's the point in having humans
around anymore?

Speaker 7 (01:20:06):
I think that is a lot of hypotheticals. I think
that why not have another medium, as long as it's
presented that this is AI, computer generated that if someone
wants to do it, let them do it. Let the
people decide if it's entertaining or not. Yeah, okay, as
entertaining as it may be or may not be or

(01:20:27):
may not. Okay, you're right, we're gonna have to decide.

Speaker 2 (01:20:30):
But in the event that it does become highly entertaining
and it takes off, and now everything we know in
television and music and movies is now done with artificial intelligence,
then there is no more human element at all whatsoever. Now,
all these actors who went to school and musicians and

(01:20:52):
stuff who paid big money to learn how to do
and what they're doing. They're stuck being car salesmen or
whatever the job may be, because there's no want or
need for a human to do these entertainment jobs anymore.
It's all done artificially.

Speaker 7 (01:21:10):
Yeah, life sucks, man, I don't tell you. Why should
that industry be less subject to being eliminated?

Speaker 2 (01:21:15):
Okay, let's use it in our scenario then, which could
easily replace the three of us with no problem. You
went to school, paid big money, worked your ass off,
and pay off your student loans because you knew you
wanted to be in radio since you were a kid. Right,
But now Ai steps in Corbyn, You're gone, Lindsey, Gimpy,

(01:21:36):
you guys are gone. We have artificial intelligence that can
do the job just as well, if not better than you,
So therefore all our hard work and our dreams are crushed. Yeah,
that sucks. I get what you're saying. Life's tough, get
over it. But don't you think in your own head
you're like, what the f dude? I worked my ass

(01:21:57):
off to get where I'm at and now I'm being
replaced by a robot and there's no need for me
anymore unless I'm in the food service industry, or I'm
gonna sell some and even then with robots coming out
the way, if the robots can mop the floors in
the quick trip, they can sell you a car just
as well. It's constantly my way pisses me off every day.
I told her to get the f out them away
and call it to see you next Tuesday. Almost kicked it.

(01:22:19):
Oh that doesn't make you look like a deranged lunatic.
I didn't say it out loud.

Speaker 7 (01:22:25):
I don't see what the difference is and what you're describing.
Then what is already happening in this industry? Uh? True,
that's that's been a fear in this industry for a
long time. People that I know that have worked hard
their whole career just get fired, Yeah, because they don't
want to pay them anymore and they'd rather pay someone
to do their job.

Speaker 2 (01:22:44):
In Eskatapa, Mississippi.

Speaker 7 (01:22:46):
So the threat of losing your job because you paid
big money right already exists.

Speaker 2 (01:22:51):
But a lot of those people that at least the
ones we know, the ones I know who have been
canned from this particular cluster, this this group, have gone
on to find the same job, same field, other company.

Speaker 7 (01:23:06):
No, that's not true at all. I know plenty of
people that have gotten fired and had to go find
a different career.

Speaker 2 (01:23:12):
There are a few of those.

Speaker 7 (01:23:13):
Yes, people are in fear of change, that's fair to say,
and there is exciting things on the other side of change.

Speaker 2 (01:23:23):
There could be, no there is, Well, we don't know.

Speaker 7 (01:23:26):
No, plenty of people have been dealt adversity in their
careers and land on the other side.

Speaker 2 (01:23:34):
Some don't. That's fair.

Speaker 7 (01:23:35):
But if you're a hard worker that got you to
where you are, you don't lose that attribute, right, you
can continue to be a hard worker, you are absolutely right.

Speaker 2 (01:23:44):
But in the field that you went to school for,
the field that you've always done, the field that you've
always dreamed of, the field that you love and then
cherish so much, you know, and then that's completely gone.

Speaker 7 (01:23:56):
Yeah, I don't like it at all. Well, that's fine.
You're definitely entitled to that, of course. But plenty of
people have that feeling and lose their job that they've
loved forever, and then suddenly they find out they're great
at X, Y Z and and thriving it and they realize, wow,
I wish I.

Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
Would have found this younger.

Speaker 7 (01:24:14):
Yeah, maybe, So it's to me, the argument you're making
is like, no one will love me, this is the
only girl I'll ever be with. When that's not true.
There's plenty of options out there. There is bountiful things happening.

Speaker 2 (01:24:27):
Yeah, I get what you're saying. But let's just say,
for example, I get the boot today, right, I'm not
going back to selling parts. I'm not going back to
working at Target. I'm not going back to work. In
the fact, all these other jobs that I've had before
I got here, I kind of like doing what I'm doing,
So I would much rather get back into this field

(01:24:50):
and stay where, you know, maybe not stay here, you
see what I'm saying, right, but stay within this, this
this environment that I'm in because because I enjoyed, I
will sure, you know, Sure, I enjoy it. I think
there's a lot of people out there that are like that. Sure,
But there's also a.

Speaker 7 (01:25:05):
Fear you have that you would have to go back
to Target, as you just said, right, So you're being
driven by fear there maybe or the fact that I
didn't like it and I know what I like and
I know what i want and I'm not settling, and
I think that might be another that might be another
angle at it.

Speaker 2 (01:25:21):
You know, some of these people who've lost their jobs
end up settling, having to find something different. And yes,
they get into it and they enjoy it, and they
may have a lot of fun, and they may be
very successful at it, but also in the back of
their mind is like, man, I really really like to
be back in radio, television, movies, whatever.

Speaker 8 (01:25:42):
If AI is going to be making movies, are they
going to charge us the same?

Speaker 2 (01:25:48):
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (01:25:50):
Somebody text in, Yeah, I don't think actors are special,
so why should they be not subject to the thing
we're all being subjected to. So that's kind of where
my is on the actor part. All right, we got
to take a break. We got to do football picks
because Gimby Steam plays tonight.

Speaker 2 (01:26:05):
Take a break, we'll be back. We got to do
our football picks for the week.

Speaker 7 (01:26:09):
As the NFL picks continue and Gimby's leading seven to
six and Lindsay and I are tied six and six.
This week's games tonight, the forty nine ers are at
the Rams and the Rams are eight and a half
point favorites. We should point out that the Logo is
definitely scheduled to play tonight, whether players are playing.

Speaker 2 (01:26:31):
Probably not. Based on the injured list.

Speaker 7 (01:26:34):
It looks like Perty is out, Mac Jones is going
to have to throw to sky More and Marquez Valdez Scantlon,
So we'll see how that plays out.

Speaker 2 (01:26:45):
But what do you got, lindsay, I'm going to take
the Rams gimby, Well, they're both three and one, we
are injured as all get out, they're playing away. I'm
still taking the Niners regardless.

Speaker 7 (01:26:58):
And then the are off, so we're gonna pick Cowboys
at the Jets. And the Cowboys are two and a
half point favorites, and they're also dealing with some injuries
where the uh seedee lamb is still out and the
Jets again the logo is definitely playing, but I don't
know how many of the players are actually playing. I

(01:27:19):
think still have still defeated.

Speaker 8 (01:27:23):
I think they've got like four or five people out
for the Cowboys. I'm gonna I'm gonna take the Jets.
They are due for a win.

Speaker 2 (01:27:33):
GIMPI one win, two losses and a tie for the
Cowboys zero to four on the Jets. I mean, on paper,
it looks like the Cowboys are gonna take it. So
they both suck ass Cowboys. I guess. I mean, I'm

(01:27:53):
taking the Cowboys on this.

Speaker 7 (01:27:56):
The Jets pass defense does not exist, and it looks
like if Dak has another week like he did last week,
they're gonna light up that Jets secondary. The Jets have
an injured running back in Berlin, so I'm going.

Speaker 2 (01:28:12):
With the with the Cowboys on that one as well.
And then Chiefs at Jacksonville for Monday Night football. The
Chiefs are.

Speaker 7 (01:28:21):
Three and a half point favorites and they're getting most
of their weapons back. We saw last week the ability
to spread out the pass existed, and of course Jacksonville,
fresh off their visit to the Bay Area, right and high.
It looks like Trevor Lawrence is finding his groove with
Travis Hunter.

Speaker 8 (01:28:41):
And so what do you think, lindsay, Yeah, I like Hunter,
but I'm gonna take the Chiefs.

Speaker 2 (01:28:48):
Gimpy, go with Jacksonville on this one any reason why
or night just simply because of their record. I mean,
they're three and one right now and the Chiefs are
two and two. I get what you're saying. The Chiefs are,
you know, they're coming back strong. But I think the

(01:29:08):
momentum with Jacksonville after their win last week is going
to continue.

Speaker 8 (01:29:12):
In this Good Morning Corbyn, Happy dirty thirtieth birthday to
porn star Tiffany Watson. See this Idaho treasure in her
mouth is the present squirtin Ain't No Joke, one in
two and Slut Challenge. She claims to have her PhD
in squirting.

Speaker 2 (01:29:29):
Good Morning Gimppe, Good morning Corbyn. You just got to
know the keywords. If you missed the one at eight o'clock,
you just got another one. That keyword is cash. You
can take it on the website that the Rockscambany dot com,
plug it in or use the iHeartRadio. Have to plug
it in that way. If you happen to miss or
don't have time now is okay because you've got other
chances throughout the day. It's typer big mad morning.

Speaker 7 (01:29:49):
Soo's top list random topics, randomly drawn with random results.

Speaker 2 (01:29:55):
Now here's Corbyn kimpi in Lindsay with this week's top list.

Speaker 7 (01:29:59):
This week's topless are the top five skills everyone should learn.
Top five skills everyone should learn what you got Lindsay.

Speaker 8 (01:30:10):
Number five Accept criticism. Learn how to accept it. It
doesn't mean that you're a bad person if you do
something wrong, or if you're not doing it right, just
accept it to move on, do better and learn from it.

(01:30:32):
It's not always bad. Nobody dislikes you.

Speaker 2 (01:30:36):
Who's criticism anyone?

Speaker 8 (01:30:38):
A boss, a friend, a partner. What if your friend
is not a good human being, then they're probably not
your friend.

Speaker 2 (01:30:46):
That doesn't that's not true. People have rough life that
you're still friends with me.

Speaker 8 (01:30:53):
But if they have a rough life, does that necessarily
make them a bad person.

Speaker 7 (01:31:01):
I'm cleaning it up. You said if they were bad people,
you wouldn't be friends with them. People can have down
parts of their life. That doesn't mean I gotta take
advice from them, but I can be friends with them.
You can be friends with matthy Bob, but don't do
what he says. Yeah, I'm a friend of mine who's
been divorced seven times. I'm hardly taking marriage criticism from right.

Speaker 2 (01:31:21):
But I'm just to your to.

Speaker 8 (01:31:22):
Your point, right, But no, like just because like if
someone like above you, your your boss, or someone is
criticizing you, don't take it as a.

Speaker 2 (01:31:34):
Oh they hate me, you know, or a coach.

Speaker 8 (01:31:38):
Or even a teammate. Number four know how to have
a face to face conversation. I meet a lot of
younger kids, like my children's friends, who you know, they
don't know how to hold a conversation with an adult
because they're constantly on their phones and texting all the

(01:31:59):
time and that's all they know. So got to make
sure we know how to hold a conversation. Number three,
learn how to catch a fish. Learn how to catch
a fish, and you'll never go hungry, which brings me
to number two. Learn how to cook. At least learn

(01:32:22):
how to boil an egg scramble. Some eggs start with eggs.
That's the simplest I feel, and eggs are a simple meal,
pretty filling. I think eggs were the first meal I
learned how to cook, and then it went up to
like mac and cheese and desserts. I don't like to

(01:32:43):
bake so much, but I will in the winter. But
but yeah, cooking. Always know how to cook for yourself.
And number one on my list is a simple skill
that you should know how to do is your own laundry.
Laundry very important. Don't expect someone to do it for

(01:33:06):
you your whole life.

Speaker 7 (01:33:09):
We're doing a top list skills everyone should learn. BMMS
and whatever that is to eight two, nine, four, five,
what do you got can be?

Speaker 2 (01:33:17):
I put budgeting at number five. Something my parents never
really taught me, but I had to learn the hard way,
and something I still kind of struggle with. But it's
something that's very important. You don't want to live outside
your means. Yeah, that's how you end up broke all
the time, or owing money or blah blah blah. You know,
so I think learning of how to budget. I've got

(01:33:39):
X amount of dollars and I need to make sure X,
y and Z is paid bills wise, you know, before
you go and spend all your money doing the fun stuff.
All right. Number four for me is basic mechanics. When

(01:34:00):
it comes to fixing your automobiles and stuff like that.
I feel like you should learn how to change a tire.
You should probably learn how to change your own oil,
change your brakes. You don't have to be able to
tear down an entire engine and put it back together blindfolded,
but if you find yourself on the side of the

(01:34:21):
road because of a flat tire, you should know how
to change it. Okay, so basic, just basic? Can you
should know how to change your windshield wipers? All right?
I can't tell you how many people I get in
their car and their windshield wipers or crap, you know,
and they don't ever change them, either out of laziness
or because they just never knew how. Granted, yeah, the

(01:34:44):
guys at the park store will do it for you,
but you should probably learn to do this sort of
thing yourself.

Speaker 8 (01:34:52):
My dad made me change my tire before I could
get my driver's license.

Speaker 2 (01:34:57):
It makes sense. That makes it great sense. Learn how
to do that stuff so you're not stuck on the
side of the road. You know, I'll just call my
dad or my brother mama. Well, what if you can't
get a hold of them right now, you're stuck there?
Matter and I'll get out because you've got a flat
tire and you don't know how to change it. It's
it's pretty simple stuff. Honestly. Number three for me is

(01:35:18):
basic handyman work as well, not basic handies, just handyman work, right,
maybe basic candies.

Speaker 7 (01:35:27):
If you're not done, it's gonna go with the basic
handy today. You should be able to change the light
bulb in your house. You should be able to replace
a doorknob maybe, you know, if that breaks. You know,
you don't have to be a master craftsman, but basic
stuff around the house. If you know, you're in a

(01:35:47):
house and you open up the cabinet door and it
falls off because the screws are stripped out, you should
know how to fix that and replace it, you know,
instead of having to spend the money for somebody else
to do it or call somebody over.

Speaker 2 (01:36:00):
It's just basic handyman stuff. Number two is hygiene. Hygiene.
You should learn how to wash your ass and other
important parts of you, wash your feet both sides. Yeah,
I've said it to my kids, and I've I've always
been that way, with the exception of Sundays when I'm

(01:36:23):
hungover and don't feel like doing anything and I know
I'm not going to get out anywhere, so i can
just sit on the couch play video games and now shower,
not burs my teeth. I know I'm not going a winter,
but brush your teeth, wash your ass, wash your feet,
wash the pits. You know, nobody likes a stinky kid.
It's what I tell my kids. That's what I had
to what I told them when they were growing up.
After now they're adults. Even then, nobody likes a stinky adult.

(01:36:46):
Nobody likes a stinky person at all whatsoever? So hygiene
important depends on what the stink is.

Speaker 7 (01:36:54):
To be honest, Well, what do you mean by that? Oh,
we can save it for Tuesday, fair enough. Number one
for me was cooking. Okay, you don't have to be
Gordon Ramsey, but you do need to feed yourself and
you'll find that. Okay, well I can't cook, but I eat.

(01:37:15):
I eat out giggy every day. Yeah, that's cool and
all that's fun. You haven't somebody else do it for you,
you lazy bitch. But you're also burning through money that
you don't really need to, you know. It kind of
goes right along with number five budgeting. Yeah, learn how
to cook?

Speaker 2 (01:37:31):
There are so many, you know, tutorials. If you can read,
you can follow a recipe. How hard is that? You
don't need to get in you know, an internet course,
you know, watch a YouTube video, get a cookbook. If
you can read, you can follow a recipe, and therefore
you can cook and you can provide for yourself, because

(01:37:52):
if you can't eat, you're gonna wither away and die.

Speaker 7 (01:37:56):
I would argue that you don't necessarily know how to
need to know how to cook, You need to know
how to warm things up.

Speaker 2 (01:38:00):
Because you can go to the girth store and buy
pre made meals.

Speaker 7 (01:38:03):
True, whether they're in the frozen food section or whether
they're in the pre made section, you can get by.

Speaker 2 (01:38:11):
You don't have to eat out all the time, right right,
So at least knowledge of how to push a button
on a microwave or turn on the stove. Yeah, I
think so, but those get old after a while and
they're not really good for you.

Speaker 7 (01:38:25):
A lot of people think they can bake because they
know how to open a Dunken Hindz box.

Speaker 2 (01:38:29):
And so we're doing our top list skills.

Speaker 7 (01:38:33):
Everyone should learn BMMS and whatever that is to eight, two, nine,
four or five number five. Learn how to set days
of the week to cleaning. So on Monday you clean
your room up. On Tuesday you clean the bathroom. On
Wednesday you vacuum. Whatever that schedule looks like for you,
because then it doesn't look like you're doing you have
to well, I can't do anything on Saturday, I gotta

(01:38:54):
clean all day. Who likes doing that? When you can
take fifteen minutes clean your bathroom on Monday and then
it's done. Fair, Just my little hack Number four, sit
in silence. Can you sit with your own thoughts? Probably not.

(01:39:15):
Number three, disable reply all. Learn that skill set.

Speaker 2 (01:39:23):
Truth.

Speaker 7 (01:39:24):
We had it this week where someone had a birthday,
and why we sent a mass email for that person's birthday,
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:39:32):
But then we got ninety five reply alls, So disable
the reply all number. Let's see that was five four
three two.

Speaker 7 (01:39:47):
Learn the difference between truth and confirmation bias. Okay, learn
what the difference between those two things are, and you
might be able to decipher who to trust and who
not to. And then number one and I can't. I

(01:40:08):
thought I would have heard it from one of you guys,
and no one. Well I heard this a lot as
a kid, but in a different tone and inflection. And
the number one skill that everyone should learn that I
don't know anybody. I know only maybe two people who
are good at it, and that is shut up. Learn

(01:40:33):
the skill to shut up in anything work. It doesn't
work so well on a radio show. It's one of
my biggest complaints. But like you told me, told to
what do they say this?

Speaker 2 (01:40:50):
The biggest.

Speaker 7 (01:40:52):
Success in a marriage is learning selection deafness selective.

Speaker 2 (01:40:58):
Yeah, yeah, that's shutting up. Nobody cares what you think Oh,
nobody cares what we think.

Speaker 7 (01:41:08):
Nobody, nobody, nobody's ever been like well, I was about
to do XYZ, but hey, saved me from a giant catastrophe.

Speaker 2 (01:41:20):
Maybe they have it. See I'm already violating my number one.
All right, what do you guys have?

Speaker 7 (01:41:25):
Bmms and whatever that is to eight two nine four
five um, fishing and boating without important life skill of swimming.

Speaker 2 (01:41:36):
That's a good point maybe, but you know, it is
what it is. It's it's criticism. We'll accept it. All right.
We got to take a break. We'll be back.

Speaker 3 (01:41:46):
If you're listening to The Big Man Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (01:41:49):
You briefly talked about this.

Speaker 7 (01:41:50):
I went down a rabbit hole during the commercial breaks,
and it's just too good to not talk about again.
And it has to do with the astronaut that we
incorrectly said drove across the country in a diaper. Oh yeah,
she didn't drive across the country. She went from Florida,
I'm sorry, from Houston to Florida, Okay. And it wasn't

(01:42:13):
a diaper, it.

Speaker 2 (01:42:15):
Was a hold on.

Speaker 7 (01:42:16):
I don't wanna, I don't want to misrepresent maximum absorbency
garments adult diapers. Yeah, I'm just being factual anyway, So
apparently she was with this guy. The relationship kind of
cooled and the guy started seeing this other girl. And

(01:42:37):
he had told, uh, Lisa nowalk that hey, this thing,
we can remain friends or whatever. But the new Lisa
was not a front fan of this. She was not psyched, So,
not even a month after he told her, she packed
latex gloves, a black wig of beab, pistol and ammunition,

(01:43:01):
pepper spray, a trench coat, a drilling hammer, black gloves,
an eight inch gerber folding knife, and other items, and
then she drove nine hundred miles in his car from Houston,
Texas to Florida to confront the new woman. Now, that
feels like maybe some of those details we didn't know

(01:43:24):
in terms of what she had on her, but I
feel like the rest of this most of us don't know.
She then decided to travel to the Orlando International Airport
and wait for her plane to touch down. The woman
went to claim her suitcase, but it was delayed. She

(01:43:44):
finally collected the new girlfriend, collected her suitcase from baggage claim,
took a shuttle bus to the parking area. While she
was in the parking area, she realized someone has been
following her. She entered her car, heard footsteps running, locked
the door. Okay, the jilted crazy astronaut lady slapped the window,

(01:44:07):
tried to open the door, asked for a ride, then
started crying. The new hoe rolled down her window a
couple of inches. This is why you should never do
this when somebody's banging on your window. Rolled it down
a couple inches, sprayed pepper spray into the car. The
new hote drove, tried to drive away, hit a parking

(01:44:28):
lot booth.

Speaker 2 (01:44:29):
She then called police.

Speaker 7 (01:44:30):
The police showed up minutes later, and they saw the
crazy astronaut lady throwing a bag into a trash receptacle
in the parking lot where she tried to get rid
of some evidence. She was arrested on attempting kidnapping, battery,
attempted vehicle burglary, and destruction of evidence.

Speaker 2 (01:44:50):
So some of that you may not know.

Speaker 7 (01:44:52):
Some of it you probably do know. But this went
on for a while, and some weird things that happened
is during her arrayment, some people showed up to try
and be a good witness on her behalf and the

(01:45:13):
two people drove t forty eight fly like jets from
Houston to the trial, which feels like not okay to
use military aircraft.

Speaker 2 (01:45:28):
To do something like that.

Speaker 7 (01:45:30):
And they went through and found some more information and
found that she had a handwritten note on a USS
Nimic stationery showing the new hose flight information and even
had some flight controller log information that listed more than
twenty four items. She had a floppy disc. This is

(01:45:52):
the weird one. A floppy disc the for the kids.
This was instead of like your phone or putting it
on the clock, you had to put it on a
thing that was like maybe three by three, maybe four
by four, and that's and it could hold like six things,
and then that's what you carried that around.

Speaker 2 (01:46:14):
Did would stop using those and like, I don't know,
late nineties, right.

Speaker 8 (01:46:17):
I was gonna say it looked like a polaroid picture,
but then you'd probably have to explain what that is.

Speaker 7 (01:46:24):
So the floppy disc contained two photographs of the crazy
astronaut lady riding in a bicycle race, and fifteen images
of an unidentified woman in different stages of undress. The
evidence dated March fifteenth and indicated that nearly all the
photographs and drawings were scenes of bondage.

Speaker 2 (01:46:48):
Okay, she's a little freaky.

Speaker 7 (01:46:50):
They also found five hundred and eighty five dollars and
forty one pounds in cash, four brown paper bags, sixty
nine orange pills that were not identify, and investigators also
found two flash drives in the car that contained family pictures,
digital movies, and NASA related material.

Speaker 2 (01:47:09):
Did you say orange PILs or orange pills? Orange pills? Okay,
I just want to make sure. I was like, why
does she have so many orange peels on her? That's weird?

Speaker 8 (01:47:17):
But likes the smell, right, keeps the urine smell away.

Speaker 7 (01:47:22):
So the X provided her with the cell phone to
communicate so they could communicate. Phone records showed that she
called him at least twelve times and sent seven text
messages the day he returned from a Space Shuttle flight,
but he didn't get them for two days later, and
then they had a seven minute conversation. During December and January,

(01:47:46):
over one hundred calls were made. It's unclear who called who,
and under questioning by NASA military investigators, the ex husband
reportedly stated that he had ended their relationship, but he
said they did have lunch once in a while. They
have a surveillance camera video that shows her at the airport,

(01:48:09):
waiting for nearly an hour in the baggage claim area,
wearing a trench coat, and then following her after she
retrieved her bags. I'm mutilating this story, but how compelling
is this and that didn't send up any red flags
at all?

Speaker 2 (01:48:24):
Whatsoever? Strange person waiting in luggage, you know, check out
for an hour or more in a black trench coat.
Never once anybody's like that. Seems weird. I need to
call someone, I hear you. But I'm being honest.

Speaker 7 (01:48:40):
I need to pay better attention to when someone's wearing
a trench coat in Florida.

Speaker 2 (01:48:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:48:48):
I know, it rains almost every day in Florida, little afternoon,
you know, ocean rain or whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:48:52):
But uh, it's too hot.

Speaker 7 (01:48:56):
If you've ever been to Florida, getting a coal burst
is not a thing. Yeah, right, And so if that's
not enough, she didn't really serve any punishment, She didn't
really get in trouble. Matter of fact, she still worked

(01:49:18):
for NASA and the government for a while, and she
eventually got demoted after the military did their investigation, and
she was basically dishonorably discharged from the military.

Speaker 2 (01:49:33):
I believe he was too, and she couldn't find another job.

Speaker 8 (01:49:38):
Well, no, I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:49:43):
I think that's insane that she couldn't find another job,
or did she not want to find another job or
was the story so big they're like, yeah, even McDonald's
won't hire you, bitch.

Speaker 7 (01:49:54):
I Well, I'm going to make a claim based off
the little investigation I did that she probably has some
sort of mental disorder that has evolved over time, because
I'm not clear hold she was when this all this
went down, But I think there's a massive mental evolution
that happens between like twenty five and thirty five. Yeah,

(01:50:18):
where I know too many people that their lives derailed
in that window, and so maybe it's gone untreated. And
the displays she shows in interviews and things like that,
on top of her search history criminally is enough to
negate her qualifications to be I mean, if you are

(01:50:43):
her level of engineering. Yeah, And I can't believe there's
no airline company that would want her employed an airport,
like an airport manager for God's.

Speaker 2 (01:50:54):
Sake, right, right, right, one of those you might be
too qualified to work at McDonald There's a Walmart greeter
stuff whatever, like you have an aviation engineering degree, why
are you doing here?

Speaker 8 (01:51:08):
If anything, if if the adult diaper industry would have
given her like nil money for her name and likeness,
and you know, just to show like, hey, you can
wear these across country like so and so, you know,
just use her picture and just pay her for that,

(01:51:30):
I would have I would have done that.

Speaker 2 (01:51:32):
So the Navy.

Speaker 7 (01:51:34):
Did their investigation after the kidnapping case was over, because
they had to investigate for they have a pretty staunch
rl about adult tree that had occurred, and so.

Speaker 2 (01:51:45):
Whatever. She was demoted all that, but she ended up
working for.

Speaker 7 (01:51:52):
Some pretty high up She got the NASA Space Flight
Metal Wow, I'm just saying that, Like she wasn't a nobody.
She worked for the Assistant Secretary of Navy. She worked
for a couple other high up groups. But and she
got married, eventually got divorced, and she has some kids.

(01:52:13):
But she's is finally working in the private sector, and
her attorney says she's doing well.

Speaker 2 (01:52:19):
Now I'm like, where is there a movie about this? Yes?

Speaker 7 (01:52:23):
Yeah, Rocketman is the name of the movie. What And
then there's a two thousand and seven episode of Law
and Order. Because Law and Order don't miss Man.

Speaker 2 (01:52:34):
Rocketman, the nineteen ninety seven movie with Harland Williams. I'm
just telling you what this says. I don't know.

Speaker 7 (01:52:43):
There's a song by Molly Lewis called road Trip that
recounts the details in early news about it. There's a
Ben Fold song called Cologne that there is about it.
There's a Austra music video called I Love You More
Than You Love Yourself that references there is a.

Speaker 2 (01:53:05):
Band leader.

Speaker 7 (01:53:08):
That has another band that has a song. There is
a play called star Crosser's Cut. The twenty nineteen film
Lucy in the Sky starring Natalie Portman was loosely based
on the story Okay.

Speaker 8 (01:53:23):
Two Elton Genre. No, that was Beatles loosing this guy.

Speaker 2 (01:53:28):
Yeah, huh, that's it's fascinating. Yes, it isn't just a
we only go oh crazy woman drop.

Speaker 7 (01:53:36):
Nope, it sounds like to me he played an active
part in like not cutting it off. No, right, he
got reassigned, he was in Florida, he developed this relationship.
That's when they kind of separated, but he never severed.

Speaker 8 (01:53:50):
Nop.

Speaker 2 (01:53:52):
It just goes to show that, you know, even the
I want to say elite in this, and I say
that because she is a very smart, bright woman, obviously
clearly book smart. Yeah, but even then they can go
a little crazy.

Speaker 8 (01:54:08):
And maybe everyone maybe she divorced her first husband for
this guy too, so she felt like.

Speaker 7 (01:54:13):
No, no, no, that was later she got married. Yeah,
I see, try and move on. Yeah, I got a
blind Hey, I got a blind date. Oh yeah, who
oh man? This girl she used to be an astronaut,
War winning she got a metal flip from NASA.

Speaker 2 (01:54:32):
I mean, awesome, dude, it's so crazy. She was in
the news. You might have heard of her. Who is
it what?

Speaker 7 (01:54:39):
Her name's Lisa. The name doesn't ring a bell. She
drove across the country in a diaper to confront her
new her man's lover.

Speaker 8 (01:54:48):
You're not telling that. You're not telling your friend that
if you're trying to hook him up.

Speaker 7 (01:54:54):
Dudes might say that. I can't imagine she would lead
with that in her profile or whoever setting.

Speaker 2 (01:54:59):
Her up, maybe saying an astronaut. I'm an astronaut, award
winning astronaut for sure, but not I drove across the
country in a diaper to go confront my exes? Do you.

Speaker 7 (01:55:12):
So you're on the date, but at what point in
the relationship do you go. So, what's the longest road
trip you've ever took?

Speaker 2 (01:55:21):
Well? Right, hey, do you want to go to Dallas
this weekend? I don't know. It's a long drive and
it's not I'll drive.

Speaker 8 (01:55:29):
I know how we could make it work.

Speaker 2 (01:55:31):
All you really need is just a pair of de pends, right,
and some snacks. We need to stop for the bathroom.

Speaker 8 (01:55:35):
I don't what's the craziest trip you've ever been on?

Speaker 2 (01:55:41):
I'm still honey.

Speaker 7 (01:55:44):
Yeah, I'm always shocked when somebody does something really bizarre
and then they find love again.

Speaker 2 (01:55:50):
As they should, as they should.

Speaker 7 (01:55:54):
However, I am confused by someone looking past that. Chris
Brown comes to mind, women that send letters to men
in jail who put their previous partners in barrels.

Speaker 8 (01:56:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:56:11):
Yeah, Well, the mentality there is I can change them,
you know that, I can change them. They they won't
be that person with me. You know. Let's take the
drug addict for example. I can change them. They won't
be a drug addict anymore when they're with me. I
can change them. I can save. That's the Captain save
Aho mentality is what it is.

Speaker 8 (01:56:34):
She was just that wronged and she wasn't letting this
man get away with it. She's like, huh uh, no way,
Well he told.

Speaker 7 (01:56:42):
Her it was over and then it was with you.
I don't think he did tell her it was over.
Else he went and dealt with him, which she did not.
She went to deal with the new lover, And that's.

Speaker 2 (01:56:53):
Just jealousy then. But if she plays a huge part
in it.

Speaker 7 (01:56:57):
But if she was unaware and he was leading her
on and he played it off like ah, she's hitting
on me, I guess him being a giant coward, because
guys do that, dude. Guys won't end a relationship. They'll
try to sabotage or whatever make you end it, right,
So it could be that as well. Very well, I'm

(01:57:18):
not trying to take any off her crazy play, but
he may have aided in that, right because to her,
she didn't think she was being crazy, right, of course not.

Speaker 2 (01:57:27):
And I think most people that do crazy X don't
think that they're doing crazy things. I think it's normal.

Speaker 7 (01:57:33):
She thinks she's protecting, if you will, her part of
the road, so you can't merge in exactly. I don't
think there's a giantly between this person and how people
drive on the road.

Speaker 2 (01:57:45):
How dare you.

Speaker 7 (01:57:47):
Turn on your blinker and you speed up so I
can't get over. What are you doing, your psychopath? I
believe in I'm a believer in action. Your actions tell
me everything. Yeah, you can tell me you've you're a
new person. You can tell me. Well, until your actions
reflect the words, then I'm gonna believe their previous actions
in your life right, because that's all we have to

(01:58:09):
base off of you. It's the truth where anybody can
move their mouth and let you know sounds come out.
Babies do it for God's sakes.

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