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October 20, 2025 111 mins
We're Back From A Really Long Weekend!!1 We Talk About The Best & Worst Parts, Somebody Broke Into The Louvre, There's A Kid IN This Car I Stole, When They're Too Busy To Take More Orders, Moose Knuckle Theft, What Wrestlers Make, Head Trauma, Jeff Hensley Stops By, & Faking Your Death Just To See Wo Would Show Up at Your Funeral!!!
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
You are about to witness as amazing Amos has coming
living one's property of all times. Yes, my bow suck
on you bow down to your master? Can you digg it?

(00:33):
Can you did it? Where you digger?

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Allowed to play? Collowed to play?

Speaker 1 (00:51):
Come out to play, Come to play. The horse, the
first the horse.

Speaker 2 (01:02):
The sun is rising God, wake up, wake up now,
don't worry. We're all here to show you how janned
Witz horses, Lass Station k and Bot Home of the
Listens is a family. Be don't turn down town tas

(01:24):
wait and say are you ready? Are you ready to jock?
It's time to start the show. Class sticks are calling
about Bristo. It's the Big Man Mary Show.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
Welcome to the work in week.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
It's on such a war kick back, makes up this
stuff in and make get hardcore.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
Here. You're with me and the NMS.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
Pick up your phone there line you're on the air, dot.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
Last last, Good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show.
Toll free eight three three four six O k m

(02:29):
O D. You can also text BMMS and then what
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Listen online the website that Rocks k m O D
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(02:50):
on that at iHeartRadio dot com. And we're on Facebook,
Facebook dot com, slash BMMS six nine. That's where you
can hang out with us each and every day. Good morning, Lindsay,
Good morning Corbyn, Good morning, Gimpy, Good morning.

Speaker 4 (03:07):
All right.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
We got tickets to give away to see the Mars Volta.
That show is Sunday at the Canes Ballroom, so it's
available at Canes Ballroom dot com. We've got best and
Worst of the weekend. What's the best thing that happened
this weekend? And the worst thing that happened this weekend?

(03:28):
After a string of bad luck, hopefully we'll get to
do Our listeners are awesome today and Jeff MS is
going to join us. Are you going through a divorce?
Do you want to go through a divorce? Do you
need custody of someone, maybe your senior parent, maybe your
brother's kid. Those are called guardianships and Jeff can help

(03:49):
with those. If you have questions on how that works,
you can get your question to a show at kmod
dot com. You can text BMMS and whatever that question
is to eight two nine four five, or you can
call eight three three four six oh k m o
d eight three three four six oh KMOD. And It's
time for the nineteenth annual Cancer Sucks Concert. It's going

(04:14):
down the twenty ninth of November at the Canes on
a Saturday. Jose Scott, the original voice is Saliva Randa
and the top two winners from our battle. The band's
contest its tickets Kaynes Ballroom dot com. If you have
a local band, submit your one song demo on the
contest page at kmod dot com, where you could possibly
win one of those two slots that is available to

(04:37):
play at the Canes Ballroom. Again that I was down
at kmod dot com. They're someone who didn't uh again
kmod dot com. So this is a really crazy story
that sent me down a rabbit hole about the Louver.
If you know what the Louver is is a famous
museum in France that holds ridiculous pieces of artwork, and

(05:01):
some guys posing as construction workers used a cherry picker
to get to a second floor window. Opened the window,
went inside, where some famous jewels were The crowned jewels,
some of them were crowned jewels from the eighteen hundreds,

(05:25):
but they left one hundred and forty three carrot diamond.
They didn't grab that. Oh you don't want to make
it completely obvious. And by the way, they then dumped
the crown not too far away from as they were
getting away. They got rid of it or it fell
out of their bag.

Speaker 5 (05:39):
I just seen a little bit of it this morning
as I was getting ready, so I didn't go into
great detail.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
Oh what they just said, you know, we don't need this.
So were they actually they were just looking for something
specific then maybe at one hundred and something carrot diamond,
but it is unclear. The police believe that it was
a collector who financed this. I mean, it feels like
that's an assumption this early in the game. But they

(06:06):
say a collector funded this type of event, and that
they left some artifacts, some things behind they didn't plan
to leave behind. They tried to burn the cherry picker
whatever it is, the ladder lift or whatever it was called.
They dropped one of their orange construction or yellow construction vests,

(06:28):
and they got away on scooters, which to me is
just so funny that you got to win, not a motorcycle,
a scooter. And I feel like that's a real distinct
thing they're saying, because I mean, a scooter does make
it like me meat right some you know euopium pus
in Gooding away not on a like high speed getaway,

(06:52):
not that.

Speaker 4 (06:53):
Yeah, they left on lime scooters.

Speaker 6 (06:57):
Yeah that go what.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
I'm under. The impressionist scooter doesn't go above thirty five
miles per hour. Okay, but that's market. I don't know,
maybe it's different.

Speaker 4 (07:08):
It's a slow getaway.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
Well, they probably had a getaway car right dis ditch,
so they ditched the scooters not too far away.

Speaker 4 (07:16):
I guess that would make sense.

Speaker 1 (07:18):
You just got to get the scooters into cover and
then come out in a different vehicle, and then there's
no way to know where you are, who they are. Yeah,
and they did it like nine thirty in the morning. Yeah,
it was about to open.

Speaker 4 (07:30):
But as early, right, that's soap palsy right there.

Speaker 5 (07:33):
Like the you got the managers, you know, you got
the employees there, they're getting ready for the day, you know,
and meanwhile you got these clowns.

Speaker 1 (07:45):
No, no, no, they use chainsaws for what to break
into the cases to get everything. Well, yeah, yeah, I'm
talking about just the cherry picker lift up there, cause
right right, you know, I hear you, right, But chain sauce,
then that's a whole nother thing then, right, Not every
chainsaw fires up on the very first pool. I mean

(08:08):
they have those battery ones. Now, Okay, I guess you're
not trying to take down a Redwood. I guess you're
right when you say chainsaw, I'm thinking somebody, you know.
But the idea that like you're going to break into
somebody's place right before opening, I think that's brilliant because

(08:31):
what your guards down? Your guard's down when you leave
your house. If you're someone who has a security system,
right but not too long before you're about to leave,
you'll disarm it, You'll get stuff. You're not paying attention
as thoroughly as you maybe normally are. And if they're
doing security about to open, they're probably having a security
meeting before they open the doors, right, Like, go team Go,

(08:55):
don't forget we're doing birthday parties on Friday, that type
of thing.

Speaker 5 (09:00):
How come that place doesn't have like fort knock styles
they do? Well, how the hell did these weirdos and
the cherry pickers and their chainsaws even get in.

Speaker 1 (09:08):
They because I think they thought this was a second story,
like the idea of someone getting up to it that
would have been seen before and they could have dispatched somebody.
Like most security nowadays is camera based, and they're sensors too, right,
so like you know, think Raiders of the Lost Arc
when you'd seal the thing and you put the sandbang
on like something like that. Think of late lasers to

(09:31):
break sensors, so they know when someone crosses a threshold
that type of thing. So at night, I bet the
security is ridiculous, yeah, to know if somebody's in a
certain area, even though even then, you know, I get
that overnight, but like just twenty four to seven, same
security all the way around, you would think, because the
number of items inside the loop is wild. It's a mass,

(09:53):
it's a mall. I mean, it's massive to go through.
You can't go through it in a day, that's how
big it is.

Speaker 4 (10:01):
Right.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
There have been eleven documented attempts I'm sorry, seven confirmed
thefts in the loop since nineteen eleven. Wow, only seven
since nineteen eleven, Well, hold on, okay, nineteen eleven to
nineteen eighty three there was only one, okay, and that's
when Theynemona Lisa was stolen, right, and then from nineteen

(10:25):
eighty three to just today there is six still.

Speaker 5 (10:32):
I mean, I've heardy good if you think about it,
after all those years, they've only had seven seven things.

Speaker 1 (10:40):
And of those things only one has ever been recovered. Wow. Yeah, yeah,
and they seem to happen. So it was like nineteen
eighty three, then nothing until ninety four, then ninety five,
then two and ninety eight and then just the one
that happened.

Speaker 6 (10:56):
It was time. It's been a while.

Speaker 4 (10:58):
I wonder if this is an inside job.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
Yeah, I mean I think any crime that involves the
theft is inside to a degree. If they got to
a guard excuse me, who's trying to make their payments,
and as a gambler, they may go, we'll give you
ten grand if you tell us, if you just look
the other way, right, I mean, then that's now an
inside job, I guess, right, right, Or like you get someone, hey,
we'll to give you ten grand if you just tell

(11:23):
us when they do their meeting and do the happy birthday.
Maybe it was you know, Frossoais's birthday and they were
eating cake, and they normally don't do that because they
have a manager who's trying to like, you know, everybody's
got feelings, right, type of security guards. No, but to me,
the idea of like, I didn't it sounds like a movie, right,

(11:47):
But I looked and this says that there are almost
fifty thousand pieces of artwork that are stolen each year globally,
and the FBI says that the art theft in this
accounts for anywhere between four to six billion dollars annually. Wow, Dan,

(12:08):
I thought it was super rare.

Speaker 4 (12:09):
Yeah, No, apparently not.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
No, it's super common and only five percent are ever stolen.
So now let's just talk business. If you have the
financial means to put something like this together, it is
worth the risk, right because you get something that is
so and those people just like love it, right, They're like,

(12:31):
I gotta have a painting that no one has. Oh yeah,
but who you're going to show that off to? Right?

Speaker 4 (12:38):
Maybe maybe some family or maybe some close friends.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
But you would think they'd be like, ah, you're not
supposed to have that van go or whatever, you know,
And then you would think that they would would turn
them in. So to me, having a a priceless piece
of artwork doesn't make any sense because you can't really
showcase it. One of my favorite art theft movies, I guess,

(13:04):
the Thomas Crown Affair with Pierce Brosnan and Rene Russo,
who looks ridiculously hot in it. He steals artwork and
it's this just answering the question. Essentially, he keeps it
so only he can see it. And people that are
super powerful and rich have no juice, right, They're like,
what's the thing that gets them going?

Speaker 7 (13:24):
Right?

Speaker 1 (13:25):
When you have millions and millions of millions and millions
and millions of dollars, what gets you excited? Nothing? But
if you go, man, I got some man, they didn't
even catch me. Like that becomes your drug.

Speaker 4 (13:36):
I get that.

Speaker 1 (13:37):
But in that movie, Pierce Brosnan has it. He steals
a painting in broad daylight in them and I think
maybe even the louver to be honest, and he just
has it displayed when he's in his office. He hits
a button and the other painting goes down and it's
right there, and he's like, and he even stole a
painting and put it back without them knowing it's this trophy. Yeah,

(14:00):
for him that feels like something. But there are a
bunch of movies about art heist movies like over fifty.
Oh yeah, Ocean's eleven obviously should be the most modern one, right,
And there are great movies.

Speaker 8 (14:18):
Yeah, there was a new one on Netflix with John
Krishinski and I believe Emily Blunt and they place is
that what they can't talk? No, No, it might not
be Emily Blunt. Actually I know it's John Koshinsky and
he is he is a thief and steals from the

(14:41):
museum that she works at. I think that was on
Netflix just recently.

Speaker 1 (14:47):
There's even some documentaries. There's some fiction ones, The Art
of the Steal Kurt Russell, Matt Dillon, The Duke, The
Maiden High with Morgan Freeman of course, How to Steal
a Million with and Peter O'Toole. I like those type

(15:11):
of movies because it seems impossible and to see it
happen like this really happened is crazy. Now they may
catch the people that did it, the actual thiefs, but
they may never share or you may never.

Speaker 4 (15:26):
Know who did it.

Speaker 6 (15:28):
Yeah, who is behind it?

Speaker 1 (15:31):
And if it takes a lot of money. I feel
like you can narrow down who the rich people are, right, right,
the people who are avid collectors, who have the means, right,
and what are they gonna do. They're not gonna talk
to you. You're not gonna go knock on hypothetically Jeff
Bezos's door. We're here to see mister Bezos.

Speaker 4 (15:55):
Do you have an appointment?

Speaker 1 (15:56):
Yeah, he's not here, right, Yeah, you can call my
attorney and set something up.

Speaker 6 (16:02):
Right, Well, you'd have to have a warrant to talk
to someone.

Speaker 4 (16:05):
No, No, not just to ask them questions.

Speaker 5 (16:08):
And now if you want to search their house, right
or you know, their property whatever, Yeah, you're gonna need
a warrant for that.

Speaker 4 (16:13):
But this is just an investigation. Nobody's in trouble, right.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
Hey, we'd like to talk to you about the theft
that happened in the louver get bent right. I got
nothing to say to you that doesn't eliminate you, but
it doesn't also make you the person.

Speaker 3 (16:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
Does it behoove you to talk to the police if
they think you're suspective of crime? Yes, but take attorney, right,
doesn't matter if you didn't do it or not take
an attorney. No, matter the crime, they will twist your
words around and make you look guilty. They're about solving
it right, making sure someone gets convicted, not about getting
the right person. You theoretically yes, yeah, and they believe

(16:50):
they're getting the right person, but no, Historically people the
wrong people get convicted all the time. But in terms
of art stuff, yeah, you think Jeff Bezos gonna be like,
I have free time, right and him going even to him,
questioning him would be an event. It would make news.

(17:12):
So it's not the If you're the investigator, you can't go, oh,
we suspect Bezos of doing it. You're gonna go, Okay, well,
let's go down and talk to him, Let's bring him
in for questioning. That would be a public spectacle that
could thwart the investigation. Not to mention the amount of

(17:33):
money if it is someone of financial stature, the amount
of money that they have to funnel hiding.

Speaker 4 (17:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (17:41):
Text here says that massive art theft may also just
be good old fashioned insurance fraud. Ensure the art for
lots and lots of money it gets stolen, insurance pays
out a lot of art dealing is money laundering anyway.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Okay, how would you know that. Now, I'm just how
would this individual know that unless you've been involved in
in the chain in some capacity.

Speaker 5 (18:03):
Yeah, well, I mean this text texts in a lot
who knows a lot about everything. So maybe maybe he's
into some things that we don't know about and probably shouldn't.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
I love the idea that someone who's got such vast
experience in all avenues including art, theft, and money laundering
listens to us. So die Hard, Yeah right, that's fantastic.

Speaker 4 (18:23):
Be my mess number one with a launderers.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
A lot of things I'm proud of with the show,
but that might be the top. I don't even know
if I like, even though we do this, I've done
this a long time, there are still things that get
me nervous. I can't imagine what art thief right, right?
Even if these are I don't even know what that

(18:45):
means seasoned robbers, the Best and the biz. Yeah, yeah, Like,
I don't even know what that means. But let's say
they are, I would think they'd still get nervous.

Speaker 7 (18:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
Movie Heat is one of my favorite movies. And the
Cop and if they have when they book their crimes,
are they you know? Planned? The event is impressive? If
that's the way it works, like I've always thought, you know,
like I'm gonna be very cliche here, but gang bangers
when they're like, hey, you gotta go and kill somebody,
they're like okay, or they're like, oh boy, I'm sure nervous, right,

(19:21):
you know what I mean? Like, oh, do hit men right,
Like for the mafia, they're like, oh boy, got a
big day to day. Imagine I imagine, so because why
you don't want to get caught. No matter how good
you are, you still don't want to get caught. So
there's still gonna be some kind of nervousness there. I
would agree. So you know, if you're nervous, it's good.
It means you care, right. But I don't know if

(19:44):
that is something they say in the Hitman world. I
don't know if the hit Man gets up and they're like, hey,
the servers are down, it doesn't matter. You still gotta
show up, okay.

Speaker 5 (19:57):
Yeah, you know, to be fair, I don't know anybody
in the Hitman in it street or you know, uh,
jewel theft, art theft industry. I don't want to know.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
No that way, if you are in my friend circle
listening right now and you are in that just don't
tell me right.

Speaker 4 (20:15):
Knowing?

Speaker 1 (20:15):
Yeah, yeah, I just don't want to know. It's like
friends that you're like, hey, I you know I cheated
on you know Gina? Right, You're like, get gig, Gig,
I just want to talk to you about it. I'm like,
I don't want to talk to you about it because
now I know. Now there's all this, I'm like, dead,
do I tell my what? Gig? And now I don't

(20:38):
know you you're bringing drama to me the same thing.
Oh man, that was work. Well I gotta tell you
I'm a hit man and we'll la la.

Speaker 4 (20:50):
I got a break into the loop.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
Yeah, I got to cut it out of town job right.
Oh yeah, we're going to I'm going to France. Oh
that's You've ever been to the Loop? Yeah? Funny you
that's where my work is. First place I'm going as
soon as I land. Oh you gotta go check out
the sites. Yes, you just got back from Paris. How

(21:15):
was it for just it was out and back right
in and out real fast. It was in and out.
It's just like a crime. Oh yeah, yeah, it was
a hit job for sure, well planned. Yeah, all right,
we got to take a break. We got tickets to
see the Mars Volta for that show Sunday at the
Canes Ballroom. We're gonna take a break and we'll be back.
Let's go ahead and do our news quickies. We do

(21:37):
these every day. These are stories you may have missed
in the news, but we cover them here. It's time
for news quakies. World news, local news and news that
just makes.

Speaker 5 (21:48):
You say, what the Here's Corbyn, Gimpi and Lindsay with
what's going on news quakies from the Big nine Morning
showing ninety seven.

Speaker 8 (21:57):
Man returns stolen car after find a toddler inside. This
happened in Brevard County, Florida, where fifty three year old
William Mulliss he needed.

Speaker 6 (22:08):
A getaway car.

Speaker 8 (22:10):
He is facing charges now after he saw a woman
go into a convenience store. She had left her car
running and he saw his opportunity. He hops in, drives off,
looks in the back seat and finds she had left

(22:30):
her one year old in the back. Surveillance video shows
William reversing back just moments later as the child's mom
ran to the car, and he then fled on foot,
but was later arrested. He now remains in jail without bond.
He's scheduled to appear before a judge in November, and

(22:53):
the Florida law prohibits leaving a child under the age
of six unattended in a vehicle for more than fifteen minutes.
The Sheriff's office said, this case how highlights how quickly
situations involving children can turn dangerous or better because he

(23:13):
suddenly had a heart and turned around and said, oh,
I don't want your kid, right, that was right.

Speaker 4 (23:19):
I probably didn't want a kidnapping charge either, exactly.

Speaker 5 (23:22):
You'll think I would think that you would already get
that charge because you took the car and there's a
kid inside, and you drove off.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
Granted you turned around and came back brought the kid back. However,
you know you still left with the child, so that
would still be considered kidnapping eilan anyway, right, and endangerment
of a minor And like I would think a bunch
of other tack ons. Yeah, yeah, people leave their car
running to go in communience stores all the time.

Speaker 8 (23:48):
Well, and I think a lot of people think that
if they have the start the push button on their
pe call and they have their keys on their person
that their car won't go anywhere. That's not true, right,
it'll it'll drive away until that car is turned off.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
Without the vehicle, I think you're right. You'd be better
off just getting out of your car locking it than
remote starting it, right.

Speaker 6 (24:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (24:12):
Do you leave your car running and going and do anything?
I have? Yeah, I'm guilty of Where do you commonly
do it? It's not for note keeping?

Speaker 8 (24:21):
But like right, usually it's been pulling into my own driveway,
running in, grabbing something, and then.

Speaker 1 (24:27):
Sure leaving more of public obviously that feels more safe
than anywhere.

Speaker 8 (24:34):
Maybe when I drive and take us kids food on
the foot for the football team, could because we're unloading
and I will put the car in park.

Speaker 6 (24:45):
And run in and run back out.

Speaker 1 (24:47):
How long do you think your car is alone running anywhere?

Speaker 6 (24:52):
From seven to ten minutes?

Speaker 4 (24:54):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (24:55):
Yeah, yeah, can be. Do you do ever leave your
car running anywhere and go leave it while you go
inside to do anything?

Speaker 4 (25:00):
Or I have before? I don't really anymore. I mean
it's been a long, long, long.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
Time, right, just because nature of you motorcycle more often?

Speaker 5 (25:09):
Yeah, yeah, mostly, but there were times in the past
before I was, you know, heavy into bikes, where I
would gas station would be the most popular spot. I'm
just running into Quick Triprial Fast, get me something to drink,
you know, and that's about it. But if i'm if
I know I'm going to be in a place for
more than, you know, a couple of minutes, then I'm

(25:30):
turning the car off and taking.

Speaker 4 (25:31):
The keys with me. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (25:33):
I mean I when I go to pick up the
kids at school for a doctor's appointment, yes, but I
feel like that's okay because there's one there's no through traffic.
It's the parking lot's pretty far in, like it's not
you can't see it from the road, like after school. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
you're probably pretty safe there. But gas stations No, No,

(25:55):
not at all. Definitely not with my kids in it.

Speaker 2 (25:58):
No.

Speaker 1 (25:59):
Crazy Three arrested in McDonald's after workers says they're too
busy to take more orders. This happens in Florida earlier
this month, about three o'clock in the morning. There's two
dudes eighteen and nineteen Pete and Nick Pete Story Nicholas Jones,
that's their names.

Speaker 5 (26:16):
But they go on the drive through, and the drive
through employees like, hey, we're too busy. To take more orders.
I guess they got a late night brush bars let out.

Speaker 4 (26:25):
Whatever.

Speaker 5 (26:26):
So the Pete Nick got pissed and they started, you know,
taking smack to the drive through workers. They threatened to
beat him, and they were waiting for him in the
parking lot. Well, I guess they got tired of waiting
in the parking lot, so they went inside the lobby,
which I maybe they do things differently in Florida. I
always thought the lobbies were closed after a certain time,

(26:48):
but apparently they got into the lobby and they was
arguing with this drive through employee.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
The manager heard Pete and Nick say something about gun
and mentioning a thirty clip and some switches. Okay, so
the drive through employee goes back to the break room,
gets his gun from his backpack, goes back. Yeah, goes
back and confronts Pete and Nick again. Well, now there's

(27:17):
a struggle and the gun that the that the drive
through employee had went off, all right, Well, shot Pete
in the neck. Damn. Luckily, Pete's gonna make it all right.
Non life threatening injuries is what they say. Well, then
the drive through employee took the hell off and got

(27:39):
out of there. Right, takes his gun with them, takes
the shells, the shell casings with him, and of course
cleaned up, cleaned up, is cleaned it all up. It
feels different. Yeah, doesn't feel accidental anymore. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (27:54):
Well see now, of course the police come out and
they're doing their investigation. They did catch it up with
the drive through employing, and he got charged with tampering
with evidence.

Speaker 1 (28:07):
That's the only charge they have listed on here for
the drive through employee.

Speaker 5 (28:10):
Not attempted murder or or discharging a firearm you know, illegally. Nope,
just tampering with evidence because he cleaned up his shells
and got the hell out of here. So far as
Pete and Nick, well they were just charged with disorderly
conduct and trespassing.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
You never know who's got a gun. No, not the
guy who's making your fries or taking your order.

Speaker 5 (28:37):
You would not expect him to go out and be like,
you know what, Yeah, I'm gonna show these some bitches
once up.

Speaker 1 (28:42):
Yeah, and I'm actually okay with that. Like I'm not
a big fan of open carry. Reason, I'm not saying
you shouldn't do it. I'm not saying they shouldn't. That's
not what I'm saying, I just think it's weird to
show it off. It is it really is. Outside of
security or law enforcement. I see these guys walking in
the quick trip and they've got or the shoulder holster

(29:03):
with their pistol in there. I'm like, you think you're
a badass RNG. You watched a lot of magnum p
I did, or you know they've got it on their
hip or whatever. You know, just out and you know
that's good. No, But I just don't. I don't see
the point in it now. I've seen like officers who
are playing clothes. I've seen them open carry, but that

(29:25):
feels like a logical reason. Yeah, they need it for
quick access. But George in Aisle three, I understand why
you're carrying. I'm not saying again you shouldn't, but typically
the people that open carry look like they would fumble
it as they got it out of the hostage. Yeah,

(29:45):
just being honest for sure, not saying I'm right.

Speaker 8 (29:50):
Now, what if they if you knew that person who
isn't in law enforcement and they're showing their they got
their gun on them, what if they said that they
worked a dangerous job, Like what if they Hey, I
work in construction, but I'm around rattlesnakes or something all day,
so that's why I carry it in case I need
it for protection.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
I would think you're a giant pussy and should get
another job. Take your shovel over there it How often
are you around rattlesnakes even in your job as a
construction person? Maybe work inside, right, if you're that afraid
that you need to open carry to kill a rattlesnake.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
We got a big job in the wrong side of town.
You know what I mean? You never know? Sure, sure, ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
It feels wild. Yes, student robbed for moose knuckles jacket
what so listen, I needed some education on this one,
because I too had that reaction when I read this story.
Criminals appear to be targeting owners of the popular moose
Knuckles jackets. It's the latest incident took place in Maryland,

(31:03):
when a high school student was robbed of his expensive
attire on Monday. There have been several incidents reported in
New York, Washington, DC, and elsewhere people trying to steal
the jackets. The jackets range anywhere between fifteen hundred dollars
and nine hundred dollars. What I got spoiler. It's just

(31:26):
a jacket. It doesn't infel flate or self drive or
text your mom when you get to the school. Like,
it doesn't have anything special about it. Logo's pretty funny though,
The logos incredibly funny. I don't know if like a
rapper created it or something.

Speaker 4 (31:47):
It was in a.

Speaker 1 (31:49):
Wrap right video or something.

Speaker 4 (31:52):
But you want one? Yeah, I'll get it. I'll get it.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
But okay, they're stealing it just because of the name,
right they have to No, I think they're still because
it's worth fifteen hundred dollars. Yeah, pumped up kicks man, Like, yeah,
you want it just for the money.

Speaker 4 (32:11):
I got a fourteen hundred dollars moose knuckle. I'll sell
it to you for seven.

Speaker 3 (32:16):
What.

Speaker 1 (32:17):
Yeah, the moose knuckle looks like it might be binoculars.
Until you know what a moose knuckle is. Tell me
I'm wrong, you're right?

Speaker 4 (32:26):
All right.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
We got to take a break. If you want more,
look for us on social media Facebook, on Facebook, dot com, slash,
bmms six nine. We'll take a break and we'll be back.
You're listening to the Big Mad Morning Show.

Speaker 8 (32:37):
Good Morning Corbyn. So the Dropkick Murphys are bringing there
for the people in the pit Saint Patrick's Day Tour
to the Canes Ballroom on Wednesday, February twenty fifth. Yes,
and if you don't want to miss the show, you
can buy them, of course at Cane's website, or sign
up to win them for free online kmod dot com

(32:58):
or become a member of the free I Heart Radio app.
Click on that contest tab and sign up to win.

Speaker 1 (33:03):
Good luck, good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning Corp. But
you want the chillis seats in the house. We call
them the silver seats.

Speaker 5 (33:09):
Teamed up the cors Life to get you four front
row seats to e every show at the Cove inside
the River Spiracina.

Speaker 4 (33:15):
How do you sign up on that?

Speaker 1 (33:16):
We can go to the website of the Rockscaemedy dot
com and sign up that way, or you can click
the contest tab right there on the iHeartRadio app. All right,
best and worst of the weekend? What's the best thing
that happened this weekend? And the worst thing that happened
this weekend? BMMS and whatever that is to eight two,
nine four five? What's the best and what's the worst?
I want to hear from you BMMS and whatever that
is to eight two, nine four five, lindsay what's the

(33:37):
best and what's the worst.

Speaker 8 (33:39):
The best was the family and I. We went with
our friend Stephanie and her son Jack. We went camping
this weekend to Fort Gibson, our normal spot.

Speaker 6 (33:51):
The weather was beautiful.

Speaker 8 (33:52):
We went out on Friday, and it was also youth
hunting season, so Kevin to the older boys hunting and.

Speaker 1 (34:03):
The exchange student yes, wow.

Speaker 8 (34:06):
And Saturday was pretty rainy and nasty in the morning,
so we kind of sat in the camper and we
played some cards and some dice games, and once the
weather cleared, I said, let's go get on the water.
Took the boat out and it was pretty awesome. I
saw a I found one of our old juglines floating

(34:31):
on the lake that we had lost, and we came
across it and I told my kiddo, I'm like, Leo,
pull it in, and he did, and he goes, I
don't think there's anything on it, and then all of
a sudden he was like, whoa, holy es, there's a
huge fish on here. And so I go up to
the front of the boat and I pull in a

(34:51):
blue cat. It was decent size, and I got the
hook out of its mouth on my own, grabbed that
thing and took a picture with it and then let
it go in the water. And it felt really good.
I felt like I was doing like what my husband
would be doing as the captain of the boat.

Speaker 6 (35:11):
And it was it was neat. And Michael, how long
had it been on the line, Oh, I'd say probably
a week?

Speaker 1 (35:20):
How did you know they were your jugs? Did they
have your name on them? Yeah? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (35:24):
And so.

Speaker 6 (35:27):
Then I mean parked the boat. Everything. It was just
it was really it was awesome.

Speaker 8 (35:32):
And my kids, the twins, were like, hey, it's nice
to know we could we could survive with just you
if we had to, Like, yeah, you'd make it. So
that was neat the worst of the weekend was getting
home yesterday and for some reason, our dog, Bernie, he's

(35:53):
about six months old now and a little over seventy pounds,
and he does not like to take a bath, but
being out camping all weekend, I knew he needed one
and I had to physically pick him up and he
scratched the hell out of my leg and it is
so it's bruised and scratched so bad, and just in

(36:17):
a lot of pain.

Speaker 6 (36:18):
That was the worst of it.

Speaker 8 (36:20):
But once he's in the tub and getting bathed, he's
like in heaven. So I don't know why he fights it.
How big he's a little over seventy pounds now, yeah,
and he's not even full grown yet, so pain in
the butt. But yeah, overall, it was just a tremendous weekend.

Speaker 1 (36:39):
Best and worst the weekend? What's the best thing that
happened this weekend? And the worst thing that happened this
week and BMMS and whatever that is to eight two,
nine four five, lindsay what's the best and what's the worst?
She just went, I'm sorry, gimpy, what's the best and
what's the worst? I guess the best part of the
weekend probably would have been Saturday. So Friday was my

(37:00):
nephew's birthday. He turned twenty four, congratulations. So Saturday, get
the whole crew together, and he wanted to he wanted
to barbecue, and so we did. My brother smoked like
six racks of ribs, right. I made two different kinds
of deviled eggs, and we you know, potato sal I

(37:21):
got all the works together, right, and we gathered over
at my the legitimate bastard kid's house, right, my old roommate,
and we partied and we had some drinks and we ate,
and then we walked over to Octoberfest because he lives
like six blocks away. Okay, talk about convenient.

Speaker 5 (37:44):
Yeah, you don't have to worry about parking downtown anywhere,
hitching a bus somewhere, Da da da da. So we
just partied there, walked on over there, hung out at
the Octoberfest for a little while, and then came back,
partied some more, and then I went home.

Speaker 4 (37:57):
All right, So that was the best part of the weekend.
I guess the first part.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
Of the weekend would have been that my girl, my
old lady.

Speaker 5 (38:03):
She she had her kids this week, so she did
not get to join us in the october Fest birthday
party festivities.

Speaker 1 (38:12):
I guess that was the worst part of it best.
Did you give any what'd you eat at the Octoberfest?

Speaker 4 (38:16):
Oh? I didn't eat anything.

Speaker 1 (38:17):
I had so much barbecue before we went that I
was fat as a tick walking through that sum bitch,
and I just had a couple of beers, Yeah, I know,
a couple of a couple of beers that they gave us,
and then that was that all right BMMS and what
was the best and worst? To eight two nine for
five bmms and whatever that is to eight two nine

(38:39):
four five. My best part of the weekend is I
think I decided on a new car what I'm gonna get,
and I'm not gonna say yet because it's not done. Uh.
And the worst part is having to go talk to
people about new cars. Bro.

Speaker 5 (38:59):
Buying a new car is probably one of the worst
things ever to do. It's never a quick process. You
literally have to clear out your entire day. Yeah, Like
when I got the bike from Route sixty six right,
two hours to see two to three hours, two to
five right, That's all it took. And I was so impressed.

(39:20):
I was like, usually when you buy a car, you're
in there for eight hours. And I was just like,
you guys solid because I didn't want to be there
for eight hours. Yeh, all day trying to buy something,
get out of town. I So I had a car
I liked and they're like, do you want to to
look at your car? And I was like sure, and
they're like great, it takes about an hour.

Speaker 1 (39:39):
And I'm like, why, I can do car Vana or
give me the vin dot com in thirty seconds like, well,
we're really thorough. I'm like, are you so annoying?

Speaker 6 (39:52):
Is this the same place that had your vehicle?

Speaker 1 (39:54):
No, that was a mechanic. That was a mechanic that
had it. Yeah, and I don't He was trying to
find it out. Finally was like, listen, I could keep hunting.

Speaker 6 (40:03):
But they never found it.

Speaker 4 (40:06):
Wow, but we're not throwing.

Speaker 6 (40:08):
Right right right right right?

Speaker 1 (40:10):
They figured it out. Yeah, it's running perfect. I'm not
alone in that, man. There's a lot of people that
do that. It's okay, yeah, it's okay, not that and
they pay me. But I used to give me the
vin dot com and they like, I don't understand why

(40:32):
they can give me a quote so fast. But at
the dealership they're like, oh, we need like an hour.
You want to get people to buy more cars, dealerships
expedite the process. Truth, there's no reason I should have
to sit there none, There's absolutely zero, no, no, I
should go, hey, this is the car I want. I
want to pick it up on Wednesday, and we should

(40:53):
be able to handle all the paperwork via email. Absolutely, absolutely,
there's no sense of sitting in a dealership all damn day.

Speaker 4 (41:00):
I want this one. This is the price that you're
gonna give it to me out or whatever.

Speaker 1 (41:03):
You know.

Speaker 4 (41:03):
You do your negotiations and then print up the paperwork,
send it to me. We're done.

Speaker 1 (41:08):
I'd test her of three cars, which to me should
be the easiest thing to do. And I showed up
at noon and I didn't get home till four. Wow,
just test driving. And I went to two different dealerships. Wow,
it should not take that long. It should have been
maybe an hour and a half. Right, it's not like
we're Gallivanton. It's a five minute ride. Yeah, I'll run

(41:31):
in your errands getting groceries and stuff like. Yeah, let
me see how this runs. When I I'm gonna leave
it run. I want to see. It's like, let me
run and get a soda. Best and Worst the Weekend?
What's the best thing that happened this weekend? And the
worst thing that happened this weekend? Worst? Worst and best weather?
Postpone the Skydiving jump uh at Annabelle's Fun Farm in

(41:52):
honor of my friend Stuby, who was the owner of
the skydiving drop zone in skyatub best part was I
was out of town until Sunday and the post bonmut.
I got to watch all of my friends skydive in
over the corn Maze cut out to look like Stuby.

Speaker 4 (42:07):
It's great. Keep rocking, Stooby, Hey, Stuoby, you you rock. Best.

Speaker 1 (42:14):
Got to celebrate my son's ninth birthday at the trampoline
park Saturday. Worst. Four days after getting my brand new
twenty twenty six car, I was rear ended in a
four car pile up on the highway. Oh, it's gonna
take months to fix. Still driving it until I get
a rental approved. It sounds like my grandpa's old rusted
Ford pickup from the eighties.

Speaker 4 (42:33):
Damn that sucks.

Speaker 1 (42:36):
Damn. Yeah, it's only new for the brief second the
four wheels are off the parking lot. Yes it after that,
it's a nothing.

Speaker 4 (42:47):
Yeah, that sure sucks though, Brand spanking new and get
rear ended.

Speaker 1 (42:52):
Best. Celebrated wife and I's fifteenth anniversary at Texas Deay,
Brazil Friday night. Worst got a nasty cold and cough
Saturday night from all the meats.

Speaker 5 (43:04):
Yeah, isn't that the place where they like just keep
bringing you nothing? But I've never been not Brazilian, But yeah,
I've heard it's good.

Speaker 4 (43:12):
I've never been.

Speaker 1 (43:13):
It's just a meat buffet.

Speaker 4 (43:16):
Ain't nothing wrong with a meat buffet?

Speaker 1 (43:19):
Yeah, yeah, I was meat sweats. I've never been someone
who loves that when they come around, whether it's that
or the the Asian restaurants where they drive the cart
around and give food. I've just never been dessert cards
and they're like, would you like me? You're like right
table side, guacam away, hard pass. I just it's just

(43:39):
not my thing. Best. I spent five days in the
Bahamas with sixteen family and friends.

Speaker 4 (43:45):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (43:47):
Worst is I'm at work, so that sucks. I mean,
if you if your choice is not going or having
to spend it with sixteen family and friends, I'll pick
sixteen family and friends for sure. Best. I got married
to the woman of my dreams. There there was no worse,
just lots of best. That's awesome.

Speaker 6 (44:08):
Good for you.

Speaker 1 (44:10):
Best my son's team football team. One worst my ex
took my son using false accusations. And the one I
was seeing is forcing me out of the apartment that
is in my name. Give me more details. I would
love to ask Jeff Finsley for you, because that seems crazy.
If I don't know how they can just take your
son yeah, they're not the one in control. I would

(44:35):
think right based on what we know. Best colts are
six and one. Worst, the weekend's over. That is not
a text you thought you'd send a year ago. Best
was the girlfriend and I got to ride motorcycles to Chili's.
Ooh was it bike night? What kind of weekend did
you have? I'm nervous to read the worst. Which chilies

(44:59):
are we talk talking about one here? Local? Or did
you make it work the ride? Like I went to
Dallas to go to Chili's.

Speaker 8 (45:06):
Yeah, okay, maybe they went to all the Chilis around here.

Speaker 1 (45:13):
Okay, yeah, good Chili Poker, Chili's Tour twenty five spoilers,
they're all the same. Well, we're gonna get a blooming
onion on this one or whatever. Chili's a bird, maybe
ribs something different, Okay, all joking aside. Chili's is pretty legit. Yeah,

(45:35):
it's it's rolling under cover right now. It is a
legit place to go and eat right now.

Speaker 5 (45:40):
I haven't been in a long time because the last
time I went it was hot garbage and I said,
I'm good.

Speaker 1 (45:47):
No.

Speaker 6 (45:47):
We went recently and we were like, wow, we need
to come back here. More often.

Speaker 5 (45:50):
Okay, Well, it has been a couple of years since
i've I've went, so maybe it's different.

Speaker 1 (45:56):
To check it out. The only time I ever eat
in a chili is when someone's like, you want to
have lunch, I'm like sure, and like meet me at chilis.
I'm like, okay, not on my top place to pick.

Speaker 4 (46:05):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (46:06):
They said the worst of the weekend was it had
to end best packers.

Speaker 4 (46:10):
One.

Speaker 1 (46:10):
Worst was cold front making me ache you're you're knee,
telling you it's cold outside? Is it? Yeah? Best my
buddy Paul won the cart race he raced in Nebraska.
Worst is he hurt the car the next day and lost.
He hurt the car, like, oh uh. Best of the

(46:35):
weekend is eating one thousand milligram edible for the first
time in a while. Worst is I'm still asleep slept
hella good last night. Bro, you didn't sleep, Hell, you
were unconscious, passed out? You time warped? Did you know?

(46:58):
In that scene? And what is the Tom Cruise movie
with the pre cogs where they predict crime? Okay, and
in the movie Tom Cruise to not get identified, he
takes a tranquilizer to the face and makes his face
sag so you can't recognize him. That's what happens when
you take a thousand milligram.

Speaker 6 (47:19):
Edible for sure. For sure.

Speaker 1 (47:24):
I started on Friday and did not wake up until today. Yeah. Worst,
I've been in a terrible headspace. I wonder why, I
wonder why. I'm no therapist, but why, but why?

Speaker 4 (47:45):
Why take a thousand million?

Speaker 1 (47:46):
Is your tolerance so freaking high that like you have
to or are we experimenting here? Yeah? Yeah, and we
know the person with this. We're not dogging you. We're
having a commerce. We're just talking about the topic of
taking a thousand.

Speaker 5 (48:00):
I took two hundred once as an experiment because I
just wanted to see what was going to happen. And
what happened is exactly what I thought was gonna happen.
I felt weird and ended up having to crawl myself
into bed and hold onto the sheets until I finally
came down. It was that bad, I said, I am
never taking that much of her again.

Speaker 6 (48:18):
How long would it take to kick in?

Speaker 1 (48:21):
Oh, it's the same amount, you know, because it was
just a single two hundred milligram gammire, right, So it
took about thirty minutes.

Speaker 4 (48:28):
But for the next three hours after that, it was
bad news.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
Man. I accidentally took like I think it was one
hundred and I had cystic fibrosis for like twelve hours.
I'm not kidding. Yeah, I looked like DJ trying to
get his wheelchair out of the trunk. Corney, all right, dude,

(49:01):
all right, we've got tickets to give away to see
the Mars Volta. They're gonna be at the Knees Ballroom
on Sunday. Get your tickets at Kaynees Ballroom dot com.
Take a break and we'll be back and see what
Gimpi has in his four x four. Well, Colvin, It
says here that Trump names new Special Envoy to Iraq.

Speaker 4 (49:17):
This is actually has a funny little twist to it.

Speaker 1 (49:20):
The announcement naming Mark Seviya, a Michigan based businessman, as
the Special Envoy to Iraq, was made on the President's
Truth social page now Saviya Savillia, whatever his name is.
His LinkedIn page shows no government experience at the local, state,
or federal level. He owns a chain of dispensaries in

(49:43):
Detroit called Leaf and Bud. Wrote on the Instagram said
that he's deeply humbled, honored, and grateful to President Trump
for the appointments. It's just like, yeah, you've got no
history of politics, but you got a couple of good dispensaries.
So he's o shated some pretty good lease deals of
some pizza hunts, right, go on, what else? Watch him?

(50:07):
Just I hope he just kicks ass. I didn't expect
that from a dispensary owner in Michigan. Yeah, what would
you say? The highlight of your presidency is oh, when
I uh now, when I negotiated a deal between Israel
and mots. It's probably what I hired that guy who
ran a smoking bud.

Speaker 4 (50:24):
He's got some good chronicle.

Speaker 1 (50:26):
But what else we have here? The Pope unveils new saints.
Pope leo Is the fourteenth has canonized seven new Saints.
The pond Tip unveiled their portrayed portraits Sunday at a
mass at Saint Peter's Square, Giggey. The new Saints include
a lay teacher from Papa New Guinea, a former Satanist

(50:50):
priest who reconverted to Christianity yeuh huh, an archbishop killed
in the Armenian genocide, and Venezuelan doctor to the poor,
and three nuns who worked with the poor and sick,
and a partridge in over ninety thousand excuse me, yeah,
and then we gotta here. Over ninety thousand pounds of

(51:14):
breakfast burritos have been recalled. MCI Foods has recalled over
ninety thousand pounds of It's Ready to Eat breakfast burritas
and ramps due to possible lysteria condamination. The Food Safety
and Inspection Service announced the recall Saturday after MCI Foods
notified the FSIS there's a lot of acronyms in here

(51:35):
of positive listeria contamination after routine testing. The recalled briti
and ramps were produced between September seventeenth and October fourteenth,
and were shipped to food service institutions nationwide, including schools
and then lastly, here Guts Church opens a new Kids
building triples the space for children's ministry. The new Guts

(51:57):
Kids Building triples the church's space for children's ministry. Inside,
kids will find video games in arcade games, a store
where they can spend their GK bucks on snacks and toys,
and outdoor activities like basketball, dodgeball.

Speaker 4 (52:11):
And whatever. Goggaball is.

Speaker 1 (52:13):
The church hopes the new space will build what they
call a generation of faith that extends far beyond. Good
morning Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn.

Speaker 8 (52:20):
Hopefully you can start the workweek off with one thousand dollars.

Speaker 6 (52:24):
Rock the Bank.

Speaker 8 (52:26):
Keyword just played and you've got thirteen chances to win
one thousand dollars. You listen for that keyword and you
take it to the website that rockskmody dot com, or
if you're listening on the iHeartRadio app, enter it there
under the contest tab to win.

Speaker 1 (52:43):
Good Luck, good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbin.

Speaker 5 (52:46):
The nineteenth annual Cancer Sucks Concerts coming up in November,
that's Saturday after Thanksgiving. And I'll tell you what if
you want to open up for Josie Scott, the original
voice of Saliva. If you've got a local band and
would like to play the Cadan's ballroom, we made it
easy having a little contest out there for you. All
you got to do is upload your one song demo

(53:06):
to the contest page right Derek Kamlody dot com and
then we'll go through them. We'll pick the top five,
and the top two out of those five will be
opening for the nineteenth. Then you will Cancer Sucks concert
at the Kynes Ballroom, Saturday, November twenty ninth A good luck.

Speaker 1 (53:21):
I found this fun article about WWE and WCW salaries
and what wrestlers make, and it's pretty fascinating because I
think you're gonna hear some of these and go okay, right, Like,
everybody knows that hul Cogan was massive, right. He was

(53:43):
making ten million a year at his peak in the eighties.
In the eighties, that's a good chunk of change.

Speaker 4 (53:49):
In the eighties.

Speaker 1 (53:50):
Absolutely Apparently the WCW gave him a three hundred thousand
dollars per appearance fee plus twenty five percent of pay
per view live game merchandise sales and a cut of
pay per view gross.

Speaker 4 (54:04):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (54:05):
His match against Sting in ninety seven got him one
point five million just for that one match, so easily
he manipulated that to his advantage as he should have. Yeah, right,
Steve Austin or stone Cold. He signed his first contract
for seventy five thousand dollars a year.

Speaker 4 (54:23):
Wow, just anything to get in, huh.

Speaker 1 (54:26):
And in ninety four he was making two hundred and
seventy five thousand dollars a year. In ninety eight and
ninety nine, he was estimated to be earning over five
million dollars a year, but in his divorce his ex
wife said it was more like twelve.

Speaker 4 (54:40):
Twelve million, okay.

Speaker 1 (54:42):
DDP Tom Dallas Page said he was making one point
two million a year in two thousand and one. Matt
Hardy and Jeff Hardy big names. Three hundred thousand dollars
a year? Really, right?

Speaker 6 (54:58):
But are they the with the clothing line as well?

Speaker 1 (55:01):
I have no idea. They're known, they're high flyers. If
that means anything to you. No, neither does the clothing
line to me. Bubba Ray Dudley and dbon and Dudley.
They were earning six one hundred dollars per match when
they were with the ECW in ninety nine.

Speaker 4 (55:20):
Really it's only six hundred bucks.

Speaker 1 (55:23):
Huh, Yeah, they were. Apparently they were making about three
hundred thousand dollars each in two thousand and one, so
like two years later Goldberg Man Telson very own Goldberg.
He was the top earner earner for WCW when it
was bought out by the WWF. His contract two million
dollars a year okay. When he signed with the WWE

(55:43):
is guarantee dropped to a million. Oh wow, okay, Chris
bin Wah, he had a killer deal. Three year WWF
deal in January of two thousand, four hundred thousand dollars.
A year later, his guarantee rose to five hundred dollars
a year, five hundred dollars thousand, say damn, that's terrible.

(56:06):
Taz Man Taz was awesome to watch when he signed
with the ww Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year, Wow, China,
Oh yeah, don't go looking for the video. Four hundred
thousand dollars a year in two thousand to two thousand
and one. Her Playboy cover remember that Yes, unfortunately got

(56:28):
her to get up to about a million dollars true
stratus right. A lot of people say she's the original
like hot Girl, the Hot Girl of the WWE. Four
hundred thousand dollars a year at her peak, Kurt Angle
three hundred, I'm sorry, three million dollars in two thousand,

(56:51):
Bam Bam Bigelow five hundred thousand dollars a year, two
thousand dollars a week in ECW ninety seven, and then
four hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year in the
WCW from ninety eight to two thousand and one. Roddy
Roddy Piper his deal with WCW in nineteen ninety six.
One million dollars a year. That's ooge. Yeah, book a

(57:12):
t man. Seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year.
Rick Flair, come on, Rick Flair, Yeah, seven hundred thousand
dollars a year. Wow. NWA's top star in eighty seven,
seven hundred and thirty thousand dollars a year as the
top guy at WCW in ninety one, and seven hundred

(57:35):
and fifty thousand dollars a year in the late part
of the nineties with WCW, and he was getting about
five hundred thousand dollars a year during his WWE tenure
according to his two thousand and five divorce.

Speaker 5 (57:46):
Wow yah, So he really didn't make that much and
he was a top notch kind of guy, sting seven
hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year in the WCW
by the end of the decade one point twenty five
he was making and he's like still wrestling right sadly.

Speaker 1 (58:03):
Yeah, he is old af Yeah, triple h was about
four hundred thousand dollars a year until he married into it,
and now that's about two million. Tory Wilson another hotty.
They're saying she after her playboy was getting a million
dollars a year. Mark Henry. He had a ten year

(58:24):
WWF deal in nineteen ninety six at two hundred and
fifty thousand dollars a year. Mike Tyson remember when he
was in on the WWF.

Speaker 6 (58:32):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (58:33):
He got three point five million dollars a year for
his appearances and enforce a role at WrestleMania. I think
that's fourteen, okay. Dennis Rodman, he was in the WCW
for a while. Yeah, tag team match with Bash at
the Beach one point five million. Brock Lessner he got

(58:55):
in a bidding war after he won his wrestling title
College wrestling title, and he signed with the WWF two
hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year. He then left
the ww in two thousand and four, walking away from
a million dollar contract.

Speaker 4 (59:10):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (59:12):
Paul Hammond five year WWF contract in the spring of
two thousand and one two hundred and fifty thousand here
an additional talent salary. Of sixty to eighty thousand when
he started managing The Big Show and brock Lessner Randy
Savage million dollars during his first WWF title reign and

(59:37):
as a headliner in ninety eight and ninety nine in WCW. Okay,
the Big Show a million dollars a year with the
WWF and WWE. He got offered in nineteen ninety nine
a ten year contract with a nine hundred and fifty
thousand dollars guaranteed base. Okay, I mean he had the

(01:00:00):
opportunity to win more or get more. Lex Luger five
hundred thousand dollars a year in WCW ninety one ninety two.
Then this salary went up to seven hundred and fifty thousand,
and then up to one point twenty five by two thousand.
Ricky the Dragon Steamboat two hundred and twenty five thousand
dollars a year with the WCW Wow. That was in

(01:00:21):
nineteen eighty nine. Uh sid vicious three year WCW contract
four hundred thousand dollars a year in nineteen ninety one
he passed that up to go sign with the WWF.

Speaker 8 (01:00:34):
So do wrestlers get paid kind of like television actors
when they sign on for a series, We're going to
give you this much per episode. Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:00:44):
I mean I think now they do some of that,
But before, back in the day, it was we owned you.
You signed a contract to wrestle for us.

Speaker 8 (01:00:50):
Yeah, and it didn't matter how many wrestling matches. This
is what you're going to get per year, right, your salary.

Speaker 4 (01:00:56):
You give you six or you could do sixty.

Speaker 6 (01:00:58):
Were right.

Speaker 8 (01:00:58):
We're like boxers, you know, they get paid for whichever
match they did.

Speaker 4 (01:01:04):
It's just the one fight they do.

Speaker 1 (01:01:06):
Yeah, okay, yeah, yeah, and cap of mind wrestlers do
about forty eight weeks a year on the road.

Speaker 4 (01:01:13):
That's a lot.

Speaker 1 (01:01:13):
Yeah. Some live out of their car. They like they
have somebody there ride with, like they have a part
like a buddy or a friend and that to help
share with the expenses. And after they stay the night
maybe in that town, and then they drive to the
next one. Even at the WWE level, Yeah, two hundred
and fifty thousand dollars a year to take that kind

(01:01:35):
of abuse to your body just.

Speaker 4 (01:01:36):
Doesn't A chair to the face, Yeah, it doesn't seem right.

Speaker 1 (01:01:40):
But it's man, you love it and you're just trying
to get to that top rung. Yeah, and I remember
when I learned because I remember I was like, Oh,
wrestling is coming to Kansas City. I'm gonna go. And
then played in the Municipal Auditorium and I was so
excited because I watched it on TV all the time.
I was so excited to go see it and when
I win, because I didn't know what it was. It

(01:02:02):
was a house show, and I didn't know what a
house show was. I thought it was just there were
the two shows they had on TV. Right, Yeah, house
show is a practice show. There's no lights, no cameras,
no glitz. You're just there to see some people wrestle,
maybe work on a few moves. They practice, and they
do two to three of those a week on top

(01:02:23):
of the live stuff. I don't know if they still
do that. Surely those wrestlers gotta get paid at least
a little bit for doing those type of events. Yeah, surely.
This is in the nineties they did they wrestled four
to six nights per week. Wow.

Speaker 4 (01:02:42):
Wow, you get one day off and it's probably like
a Wednesday or something.

Speaker 1 (01:02:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:02:47):
Someone text and asked if you had andre the giant salary.

Speaker 4 (01:02:55):
They just paid him and wine and beer.

Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
They just crushed them like a grape. Yeah. There's some
crazy stories about Andre the Giant because he was so big. Yeah,
that he would have to get two hotel rooms. Do
you know why, lindsay no, because he couldn't use the toilet.

Speaker 4 (01:03:17):
Oh, yeah, he's too big.

Speaker 6 (01:03:18):
You had to poop in the bathtub. Yeah. Uh huh.

Speaker 4 (01:03:23):
His daughter, Oh doggy, she looks doggy bad. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:03:31):
In nineteen seventy four, he was in the Guinness World
Records as the highest paid wrestler in the world, earning
four hundred thousand annually.

Speaker 4 (01:03:37):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:03:38):
For WrestleMania in eighty seven, him and hal Cogan each
earned seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars for the match,
Andre reportedly getting an additional two point fifty for doing
the job i e. Meaning losing the match.

Speaker 4 (01:03:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:03:54):
Uh. In the mid seventies, that's crazy money. Four hundred
thousand dollars a year.

Speaker 5 (01:03:59):
Yeah, I always, I guess I always expected these wrestlers
to be making way more than that. Like I'm talking
like anfl type money. Yeah, a couple of million, not
just seven hundred and fifty thousand, one two.

Speaker 1 (01:04:15):
I mean, I think you only hear the big names
and their contracts. You know, even in the NFL, A
lot of guys don't make great money. Yeah, right, And
when I understand a million dollars a year, you go, whoa,
and but a million dollars a year and you're traveling
and you've got to have you have to do off

(01:04:35):
season training that you have to pay people for and nutrition.
There's still I mean, and they you're not and you're
the only income for the home. Usually you're not. You're
not living in a you know, sixteen thousand square foot home. Yeah,
you didn't mention the rock or anything yet, have you? No?

Speaker 4 (01:04:54):
No, no, no, I was curious.

Speaker 5 (01:04:57):
Huge name, right, you would think, But it says here
in ninety six his first contract was one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars a year in nineteen ninety six, and
it's a in a later renegotiation renegotiation, he renegotiated a
deal worth fifteen million dollars annual salary plus a share

(01:05:22):
in the business's upside. Yeah, it says today he didn't
have a traditional salary because he's part of the parent
company has a deal worth approximately thirty million in stock
for his promotional and merchandising agreement.

Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
Keep in mind when we were the last guy we
had in here. They have to do certain things too.
That's not just to wrestle, right, that's if you have
to go out to Bob's drywall. You're going to Bob's drywall. Right.
Those appearance fees like the Hulk God not an appearance fee.
When you're a star, you could warrant that, but they
could make you just go oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,

(01:06:01):
part of the job, man.

Speaker 4 (01:06:02):
Yeah, you gotta go do radio, you gotta do television.
You gotta go to Bob's drywall, right.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Bob, Bob's drywall, big ring sponsor. Man. Yeah, well alright
then not alright, yes sir, all right? Crazy how much
they make because I'm not with you. You see anybody
on TV, you think they make a lot of money. Yeah,
you see anybody on TV, you think they make a
lot of money. And it's just not true, especially sports, right,

(01:06:31):
because there's so much money in sports and NFL, NBA,
even in your you know, Major League Baseball, there's so
much money involved in it. And you hear about those
particular players on those mainstream sports like that making thirty
million dollars a year whatever the case is, some ridiculous amounts.
And then, uh, you know, you get your favorite wrestler

(01:06:53):
and oh, he makes seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars
a year, which is still good money. I wouldn't. Oh,
I could plain if they wanted to pay me seven
hundred fifty thousand dollars a year league minimum eight hundred
and forty thousand in the NFL. Yeah, and if your
veganut goes up more. Yeah, but even after seven plus years,
you only get one point two and that's just to

(01:07:14):
ride the pine. Yeah. Practice squad you get thirteen thousand
dollars a week, and I know you're going, hey, that's
pretty good. I guess for eighteen weeks a year.

Speaker 4 (01:07:23):
Yeah, yeah, make you some quick money, right.

Speaker 1 (01:07:28):
This says the average overall when you remove megastars is
about two point.

Speaker 5 (01:07:32):
Eight Okay, Still that ain't bad, right. You could live
off of two point eight million dollars a year.

Speaker 3 (01:07:41):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
Again, I would think so, But that's an average. An
average doesn't mean that it's not the minimum. That's the
eight hundred and then some people that are not stars
making pretty good contracts. Right, But I think you overestimate.
You think these guys are driving bagattis and right right,

(01:08:06):
and some of them are because they're bad with their money, right,
and some of them are still driving their suburban that
they've had for twenty years.

Speaker 4 (01:08:15):
But they got the money though.

Speaker 1 (01:08:16):
Check engine light on. All right, we got to take
a break. We got news that Ace Freely passed away.
He's seventy four, and the family put out a statement.
They said in September that he was pausing his solo
tour because he had a minor fall in the studio.

Speaker 4 (01:08:38):
Oh wow, goodbye wolf Man.

Speaker 1 (01:08:41):
He was one of the founding members of Kiss. He
left Kiss in eighty two, eventually started a solo project,
which became known as Freely's Comment. He rejoined Kiss in
ninety six for a union tour, only to exit again
in the early two thousands. For Least. Cover of New
York Groove on his seventy eight solo album, was his
biggest hit. He was born and raised in New York City,

(01:09:06):
and so that was I think we were kind of
surprised by that. It actually happened really fast, because we got, oh,
he's on life support, and then like not even two
hours later, they're like, he's dead. Yeah, And I I don't.
I didn't know he was on life support. He apparently
had a blame brain bleed from his fall.

Speaker 4 (01:09:27):
Wow, what did he counk his head on?

Speaker 6 (01:09:30):
Dude?

Speaker 1 (01:09:31):
It doesn't take much. I it don't take much. People
underestimate falling. Well, when you say a minor fall in
the studio, I mean that makes me sound like made
me think he tripped over like an extension quard or
something and kind of you know, went down to one
knee and was like, no, that's fair. And minor, I

(01:09:55):
mean minor, I think would be like you think it's that,
but I think minor, Like, you know, he didn't fall,
you know, from a ladder.

Speaker 4 (01:10:05):
Yeah, sure, he didn't break any bones. I get. I
don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:10:10):
So this says people aged sixty five and older more
than one out of four fall, okay over the age
of sixty five, and falls are the common cause of
brain bleeds. It's not guaranteed after a fall. Itpends mostly
on age. There are three million emergency department visits among

(01:10:33):
older adults because of falls each year, and falls are
the most common TBI traumatic brain injury, right.

Speaker 5 (01:10:45):
Which I guess said that you still think you got
it trying to climb upon the ladder and maybe clean
the gutters out or hanging Christmas decorations or whatever.

Speaker 8 (01:10:55):
Your blood sugar can be extremely low and you are
dizzy in fall.

Speaker 1 (01:11:00):
We I'll do you one better. You lean over to
tie your shoes, your equilibrium gets thrown off, and then
you take a header. Yeah yeah, right in the corner
of the coffee table. You don't even have to see
that's a miss. You don't even have to take a
header into the corner of the coffee table, just hitting
the ground. You don't need to be high up to

(01:11:21):
get a traumatic brain injury. You don't have to be
hanging Christmas lights.

Speaker 4 (01:11:26):
Just have a soft head.

Speaker 1 (01:11:28):
You don't even have to have a soft head, This
says according to Meta analysis, older adults sixty five plus
with a ground level fall and head injury six point
eight percent head intracranial hemorrhage, and that ground level falls
account for eighty percent of traumatic and intracranial bleeding among

(01:11:53):
all desks from fall related in the US for people
seventy five plus fifty four per one hundred undred thousand. Wow, yeah,
that's a big number.

Speaker 4 (01:12:02):
I think.

Speaker 1 (01:12:05):
Falls are so common. Even a small percentage translates into
a lot of cases, so that's how common they are.

Speaker 4 (01:12:11):
They just yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:12:14):
So what I'm hearing you say is, at the age
of sixty five, just sit down, don't do anything that's
good there that sounds good, sound, don't get up, you
need something to drink, ask somebody get you something.

Speaker 4 (01:12:27):
Just sit there and behave.

Speaker 1 (01:12:29):
Yeah, but that feels like that's already happening, right that
You're like a come on, why when did I have
to start? When did you become the kid? Right?

Speaker 4 (01:12:40):
All right?

Speaker 1 (01:12:42):
Uh? People under sixty five still cause many minor head injuries,
but serious bleeding is rare unless it's a fall from
a height. Younger adults with head trauma, the rate of
a cranial bleeding on CT is usually under one to

(01:13:03):
three percent, so not very common. A larger view of
head injuries and adults, only about two to four percent
have a bleed. People under forty with a simple fall
and no loss of consciousness, the chance of a brain
brain bleed is closer too point five percent or less.

(01:13:25):
If someone loses consciousness or vomits, the chance goes up
to three to eight percent, depending on the study. So
I would imagine the NFL goes. As long as they're
under forty it doesn't matter how many traumatic brain injuries
they get. For healthy adults under sixty five, a simple

(01:13:47):
fall from standing rarely causes a brain bleed, Okay, but
it does happen. So people were, you know, obviously sad
because of Ace Freely dying. Then we get it was
yesterday that the basis for limp biscuit Sam Rivers died. Yeah,
and he was forty eight. Yeah, And I've read conflicting things.

(01:14:12):
I've read that they don't say what it is. I've
read that he had cancer, and I've read that he
had an alcohol problem.

Speaker 8 (01:14:19):
Yeah, he had a liver transplant years ago, like in
like twenty fifteen ish, I think, and because of his
drinking problem. So I'm wondering if maybe he fell off
the wagon. If it is, if it is related to
the drinking.

Speaker 1 (01:14:39):
I mean, people that die under the age of fifty
typically if it's cancer, they would tell you. Typically it's
some self inflicted type of thing, drugs, alcohol, suicide, Yeah,
something like that. It's very uncommon for a forty eight
year old to fall drop dead. Yeah, right, So there's

(01:14:59):
gotta be some of the factor going on. They don't
have to tell us all right, it doesn't matter. It
doesn't bring them back, right. I think they only do
that sometimes to try and negate their legacy or who
these people are. Right, you're like, oh, your dad died,
and you're like, yeah, he was a drug drug addict.
Can you go oh, okay, right, rather than no, your
dad died. That's tragic, yeah, right, when we got to

(01:15:22):
put some justification on it to make it sound better
or worse, Well, at least he's not suffering, right, right, right,
This text says a lot of older people take blood thinners,
which makes head bleeds worse.

Speaker 4 (01:15:35):
Yeah, that's true. I guess that makes sense.

Speaker 1 (01:15:38):
Yeah, to syrupy blood, you need to coagulate, right, it's
not coagulating enough.

Speaker 5 (01:15:49):
Start drinking more. Who needs those pills? It's an alcohol thing.
Your blood out real quick?

Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:15:55):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:15:56):
Helping my mom navigate things, the number of times she's
prescribed drugs by one doctor and then a completely different
doctor then prescribes a whole other set of drugs, not
consulting the other doctor of the drugs that they prescribed
creates a mess constantly, I.

Speaker 4 (01:16:14):
Can imagine, because not all drugs work together.

Speaker 1 (01:16:16):
Right, and doctors, maybe rightfully so have a gog complex.
They're like, wellhy know, they're not going to call another
doctor and go, well, well, I better back off my
ideas because it's so it's kind of stupid.

Speaker 5 (01:16:30):
Yeah, it wouldn't hurt anything to have a little communication there.

Speaker 4 (01:16:34):
You know, Hey, what do you what are you giving her? Well,
I'm giving her this? What do you plan on giving her?

Speaker 1 (01:16:39):
I was going to give her this until I found
out you were giving her this, and now I gotta
give her to that instead.

Speaker 6 (01:16:44):
Yeah, can we meet in the middle somewhere?

Speaker 1 (01:16:46):
Yeah, Well, and I don't even know. It's up to
you really to tell them you're taking something, yeah, right,
And if you don't, how would they know? And two
they may just look at and go, yeah, that's fine,
or maybe they don't. They don't want to look like
they don't know what you know, trasm malacapene is or

(01:17:07):
what you can be Starting something clean is right. But
so I can't even imagine you take blood thinners and
you take this and the side effect is disiness and
leaky steel and you're like, ah, yeah, it's fine. I'm
worried about your your cholesterol. I'm not worried about your
your heart. I'm not worried about your mental state. I'm

(01:17:28):
worried about your heart.

Speaker 4 (01:17:29):
Figure it out. We're just practicing anyway.

Speaker 1 (01:17:31):
That's it, right, Listen, You've said some pretty ridiculous things
to me in your life, but that's probably the one
that I was like, Eh, damn, it's the truth. It
is the truth.

Speaker 5 (01:17:43):
They'd call it the medical practice because they just practice
in who will figure it out?

Speaker 4 (01:17:46):
Eventually they won't.

Speaker 1 (01:17:48):
And then they get sued for malpractice. That's on you.
You knew they were. They were just trying to figure
it out. Can you imagine if there wasn't they didn't
have it. Call to practice and they're like doctor professional, right,
I'm a pro doctor, mar the pro I'm just going
to a practice doctor. We're like, why why? I just

(01:18:12):
want to see before I get into the pros. I
can't afford more of them pro doctors, right, crazy salary.
All right, we got to take a break.

Speaker 6 (01:18:22):
We'll be back to Morning Corbyn.

Speaker 8 (01:18:24):
Happy twenty eighth birthday to porn star Alexis Tay. She
makes Pittsburgh proud and Alexis gets nailed Handman, hookup and
Master debaters.

Speaker 6 (01:18:37):
She has over six hundred and eighty titles to her
name so far.

Speaker 5 (01:18:41):
Good morning Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbyn. You just got
another keyword to rock the bank. That keyword is check.
You can take that keyword of the website the Rocks
came with you, doctor com and plug it in, or
you can click on any little contestab right there on
the iHeartRadio WAP and you've got other chances throughout the
day as well.

Speaker 1 (01:18:57):
Kiness it all right, join us in the studio now
is Jeff Heinsley from Hinsley and Associates. Good morning, Jeff, Hey,
good morning, and Jeff is here to answer any question
you have about family law, anything that has to do
with custody or guardianship or name change, or maybe you
want to have a question about a protective order. I mean,
Jeff can answer all of these type of things. And

(01:19:19):
we got a Texas Morning that I wanted to read
to you, and it's because we do a segment called
Best and Worst and people tell us the best part
of their weekend and the worst part. In this person
said that the best was their son won a football game,
and worst was their ex took their son using false accusations,
and the girl that she he was seeing, forced her
out of the apartment, forced him out of the apartment

(01:19:40):
that's in his name. So the two there's two questions there.

Speaker 3 (01:19:43):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:19:43):
One, can somebody force you out in an apartment you
share with them?

Speaker 3 (01:19:47):
I mean typically not, I mean, especially if you're on
the least that kind of thing. I mean, you have
a right to be there. The cops can't force you
at at that particular juncture. I mean, can someone push
you out, I mean yeah, I mean they can make
threats and say all sorts of horrible things whatnot. But
when it comes from a legal standpoint, if you are
a joint tenant in some way, you have a right
to be there and don't have to leave. Now, the

(01:20:09):
flip side of that is is you got to be
careful because when you don't leave, then obviously they can
start causing problems, and you know, you may end up
with a protective order that may or may not be true.
I've seen people use pos to get people kicked out
of places even though they aren't truthful. So you got
to be careful about that too.

Speaker 1 (01:20:29):
And then the other part of that was asking about
their son, was take it they the wife took I'm
sorry the ex wife took the son because of false accusations.

Speaker 3 (01:20:40):
Yeah, I wonder what that means. I mean she did
did she just did she have a court order to
do so? I mean there's obviously more behind that. I mean,
she can't just technically walk in there and take him
and leave. I mean physically, I guess she could, But
I'm just saying, typically you have to have a court
order for that, for an emergency custody or something like that,
by making false claim to the court so you can

(01:21:01):
get an order in place that allows you to get
the kid out of the other side's control. So there's
obviously a lot more to that story. Whoever it is,
and whoever that is, please call my office. We'd love
to help you out and answer more questions about it.

Speaker 1 (01:21:13):
I mean, let's expand on that a little bit further.
When some because typically it's the mother has more custody
quote unquote than the father, are presumed right, No, No,
you've mentioned urban myth. Yeah, you mentioned that before that
that's myth.

Speaker 3 (01:21:29):
That's an urban myth. I mean that was probably true
in the fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties, maybe part of the nineties.
We've seen a huge change in that you know, the
idea that we'll mobs always get the get the custody
and dads get screwed, that's not always the case anymore.
In fact, the law has been and has changed basically
that we started joint custody in halftime and that's that's

(01:21:52):
the way it is in Oklahoma now. So that has
been a huge change here in Oklahoma, especially in the
divorce realm of So there's obviously, like I said, more
to this story as to what's going on and what
those quote false allegations were and whatnot.

Speaker 1 (01:22:07):
So what do you advise clients that have a situation
where the other party is trying to take a child
saying you did this or that, proclaiming that they have
more power in the situation.

Speaker 3 (01:22:18):
Well, I mean obviously, and this is why we encourage
people to call us. Besides, you know, hiring us is
obviously we can answer questions about what's your orders?

Speaker 1 (01:22:26):
Say, what what do you what?

Speaker 3 (01:22:28):
What you what were you originally granted? What is your
visitation schedule? Like does it say join, does it say soul?

Speaker 1 (01:22:35):
What?

Speaker 3 (01:22:35):
What do you got going on here? Because there's a
lot of misunderstandings even with people with what they're granted
in court, whether it be by agreement or by a
court order by a judge. I mean, sometimes there's some
confusion as to what's going on because of urban miss
or misunderstanding terminologies or things like that. So you know,
give us a call. We'd be happy to answer those

(01:22:56):
questions for you. Especially, I've got a situation like this
where mom's showing up and taking the kid for some
reason in some way, and we want to find out why,
what we can do to help to get that child
back and stop the harassment.

Speaker 1 (01:23:06):
All right, Jeff is in the studio to answer your questions.
A couple ways to get your question to us. You
can call eight three, three four six oh kmo D.
You can email show at kmod dot com, or you
can text bmms and whatever your question is to eight two, nine,
four or five. This is when I had held over
from last week. It says, I pay child support, but
my ex won't let me see my kid. Can I
just stop pain?

Speaker 3 (01:23:28):
The answer is no. In Oklahoma, the law has been
and continues to be at this particular juncture in time
that custody or excuse me, visitation and child support are
two completely separate issues. So even though she's not letting
you see the child, you still have to pay that
child support order and obligation or you can get in
trouble again. There's a big misunderstanding about well, I'm not

(01:23:50):
going to pay because I'm not seeing my kid. Well,
I understand where the person's coming from. I get it
from a moral perspective, get it from an emotional perspective,
but from a legal perspective, that order has to be paid,
whether you're seeing the kid or not. If you're not
seeing the child, that's why you want to call us
so we can get you to start seeing your child again.

(01:24:11):
Because especially if you're being denied and there's an order
that you're supposed to have visitation and you're being denied
that visitation, that's a contempt of citation with the court.
That is a motion to end force visitation. I mean,
there's all sorts of things we can do to get
that visitation going back. You don't have to just bend
over and take it, but you do have to continue
to pay because if you don't, then the other side,

(01:24:32):
because the order has not been changed at that particular point,
then the other side could file a contempt against you
for failure to pay your child support, and that is
a quasi criminal proceeding with a potential for serving time
in jail for unpaid child support and all that. And
you don't want to go down that road. Let's go
down the road of fixing the problem instead of just
saying to hell with the problem.

Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
They don't usually love eye for eye type of thing
happening right now.

Speaker 3 (01:24:55):
Yeah, I mean yeah, it's not an eye for eye,
tooth for tooth kind of Bible thing. It's the law
is the law, and we have to follow it whether
we like it or not. And again, if you're being denied,
don't stop paying child support, but call us and let's
solve your problem.

Speaker 1 (01:25:09):
It looks like the guy just sent an update. Ka.
He said that there is no court order.

Speaker 3 (01:25:17):
Okay, So you're dealing with an issue where there's been
no court order on child support, all right, and I
understand that you've been paying something in this particular juncture.
What we have to do is we've got to do
a paternity case now, even if you've signed the acknowledgment
at the hospital when the baby was born, even if
you're on the birth certificate in Oklahoma since November first

(01:25:38):
of twenty eleven, the law has been that only gives
you a presumption that you're the father of the child
if the child is born out of wedlock, okay, meaning
you guys aren't married. So what we have to do
with that is we have to fillo a paternity action
where the court legally finds you to be dad so
you have the same rights, and then we work on
getting that same halftime, you know, visitation, joint custody, all

(01:26:00):
that kind of stuff, so that you can start seeing
your kid on a regular basis. Now, at that point,
there'll be an official child support order in place. But yeah,
when there's no order in place, you could technically stop,
all right, I guess you could do that. It's not
necessarily suggested. And here's why. If we file a praternity

(01:26:22):
case and the child, let's say, is two years old,
all right, or four years old or whatever age, okay,
technically under the wall, she could hit you for two
years of back support. Now, if you've been paying those
two years, we're going to make sure you get credit
for all that money that you have paid. But if
you stop paying before we get an order, there's gonna

(01:26:44):
be a gap there, and you're gonna have something that
you're behind on, and we don't want that, okay. We
want you to be happy, healthy, moving forward and not
starting out behind the eight ball. So that's where that
comes from. So whoever this is, please Gorban's gonna give
our number out. Give us a call this week. I'd
love to help you out in any way we can.

Speaker 1 (01:27:01):
Jeff Finsley's in the studio answering your questions about family law.
Email dress show at kmod dot com.

Speaker 4 (01:27:07):
This is one that just came in.

Speaker 1 (01:27:08):
What can I do if my ex has moved and
still hasn't put my kids in school? She moved in
August and was at their new place week after school started.
It's now mid October, they're still not attending school. Is
there anything in my favor? Or am I just going
to be wasting my time and money trying to fight it?

Speaker 3 (01:27:26):
Well, I guess my first question is why are they
not in school? Does anybody know? And then, of course
the other part of that is is that school in
most states is compulsory, which means if you're not putting
your kids in school and sending them to school, you
are breaking the law and can be held in.

Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
Trouble with the law.

Speaker 3 (01:27:43):
For failing to send the children to school because it
is compulsory in pretty much every state. So whoever this is,
call me. I'd love to on my office. We would
love to find out more details. The main thing here
is if she's not put them in school and she's
legally required to. I mean, the first thing is is
you could call whatever school you think they'd be at
and talk to a truancy officer about getting looked at

(01:28:05):
it that way. Also, too, you could call the police
and make a reporter. Is your kids aren't in school.
They've been wherever they're at since end of August or
middle of August, whatever it may be, and it's here
it is October. They're still not enrolled. I mean, is
she claiming that they're quote in homes being homeschooled, or
that they are on some sort of online program or
or something like that. I mean, I'd love to find

(01:28:26):
out what the hold up is and why she hasn't
done it. Is there something going on? Is they're not
but you know it's a serious thing because you don't
want your kids to miss school and get behind all
because you didn't put them in school. So that could
be very serious. So please give us a.

Speaker 1 (01:28:40):
Call, where would you file in that? Because they haven't
lived in this other location long enough? Right?

Speaker 3 (01:28:46):
Well, if it depends, okay. And the reason I say
that is because are they in Oklahoma? Are they not
in Oklahoma? All right? So if you move from Tulsa
to another county, all you have to do to establish
residency in that county under the laws thirty days. So
we're past that thirty day window for a county issue,
so we can deal with it right away. Now, if
she's moved to another state, she has not been in

(01:29:08):
that state long enough to establish residency for her or
the children. So therefore Oklahoma is the controlling state. And
of course whatever county they were in is the controlling county.
So this sounds more like it's potentially a county issue
rather than across state lines. But either way, those kids
need to be in school and that's a problem. So
call us, let's get it taken care of it.

Speaker 1 (01:29:30):
And you don't want the sun to set on this, right,
I mean, that's something you want to move on. But now, yeah,
because the judge could come back and go, why is
this an issue now right over a certain duration of time?

Speaker 3 (01:29:39):
Well, I mean, whether it is or it isn't those
kids have to be in school. So let's say she
doesn't enroll them in school till next year and they've
missed an entire year. That's a problem and the court
has to deal with that simply because obviously mom is
not making good choices. Mom is being negligent in her
carebor children and not getting them enrolled in school. And
if she's not enrolling them in school, what else is

(01:30:00):
she's not doing for them? So it can be a
very big issue. So yeah, don't wait on this. Let's
let's move on it now before it gets further down
the road and the next thing you know, you're five
years down the road, not a month and a half.

Speaker 1 (01:30:11):
Jeff Finsley's in the studio from Hensley and Associate's got
some questions that are coming in via email and you
can do that too, show at kmod dot com or
call eight three three four six, Oh, kmod, this is
a great one. Eight years ago, I married a woman
that later found out she never got divorced from her ex.
Do I have to get a divorce or is was
this marriage never valid?

Speaker 3 (01:30:31):
So technically it would be considered voidable or void me
because if she is not divorced from the first spouse,
then the new marriage is just not valid. I mean,
it's just not She's gonna have to get divorced from
the first and then you can get remarried, obviously to
the new person that you've been with for eight years.

(01:30:51):
But that's why it's important. I mean, if you've got
any questions at all about, well, is my divorce? Did
my divorce go through? You know, my ex told me
that they were filing divorce papers ten years ago and
and I don't know if my divorce went through or
whatever it.

Speaker 4 (01:31:06):
Call us.

Speaker 3 (01:31:07):
I mean, like I said, I had one one time
where the guy had gotten married three different times, was
looking to marry number four and found out he wasn't
divorced from the first three. So we had to go
back and get all of the first three taken care of,
mainly because there were children involved. Of course, then we
got child support issues and all these other things. So
it was a fairly complicated deal. But for the most part.

(01:31:28):
You know, if you've got any questions about that, please
call us. We can help track that down and figure
that out for you. But yeah, to answer the guy's question,
it would be considered void because she was still married
two of the first husbands. We need to get her divorced.

Speaker 1 (01:31:39):
What about property and debt that is accumulating another messy
part of it.

Speaker 3 (01:31:43):
Well, no, not. I mean again, if if the divorce
is void, it's void. I mean it's it's anything you've
accumulated all of this stuff. I mean, it wasn't a
valid marriage.

Speaker 1 (01:31:51):
It'd be a civil suit at that time, right as.

Speaker 3 (01:31:54):
Right, right if you get if you bought a house
together or you bought a car together. I mean, yea,
at that point, Yeah, you're talking about civil issues if
you're going to go down that road. I mean, I
hope these people are happy. Let's just get her divorce
and then you guys can have a second, little fun
marriage and go on a second honeymoon and all that
good stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:32:10):
But yeah, potentially tax fraud too if they've done that
eight years idled as married.

Speaker 3 (01:32:16):
No fraud. I mean, the thing is, the thing about
fraud is they have to show that it was done intentionally. Okay,
if she didn't know. Ignorance is not necessarily something that's
going to bite her in the butt on the tax
side of things, simply because she didn't know, Okay, there's
ways that what you would need to do is you
wouldn't want to talk call and talk to a tax
attorney about those issues or your CPA or something. But

(01:32:37):
for the most part, I mean, fraud has to prove
an intention and it doesn't sound like she was trying
to intentionally deceive anybody. It was just something she didn't
she thought was taking care of him, wasn't. So you're
you're not so much in problem areas there, it's the
other stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:32:55):
Jeffer Bensley Associates is in the studio with us, and
Flat is on with us. Hey, Flat, how are you.

Speaker 7 (01:33:03):
Good?

Speaker 1 (01:33:03):
How you doing good? What's your question for? Jeff Hensley
of Hensley and Associates.

Speaker 7 (01:33:08):
So, I recently just filed for fifty fifty custody, and
I guess there was a case already committed for bat
child sport for senior care, okay, and that wasn't aware
the kids are on senior care, they had Indian Healthcare. Well,
now that I had fifty fifty custody, they're trying to
I don't know, like, is there something that I can
do to kind of go in there? And I guess

(01:33:28):
I'm asking if there weren't like seven hundred dollars a
month in child support and they're trying to say, I
owe them two years of bat child sport. But it's
been fifty fifty custees the whole time, and they're adding
in like all my bonuses and stuff. Is there like
any help I can deal with that?

Speaker 3 (01:33:41):
Well, I mean what they'll do. So there's several parts there.
Let's kind of break it down just a little bit.
Let's talk about the actual adding in bonuses and things
like that. So when you've got cases, when you've got
people that have bonus structures and things like that, and
let's say it, especially with people and commissions and things
like that, a lot of times we'll take the average
of the last three years taxes. We get an idea,

(01:34:01):
especially if your bonus is not like guaranteed or if
it varies from year to year and those kind of things.
So that's kind of how that's figured out as far
as the actual number is concerned. When we're done talking,
if you give your name a number to gimpee, I'll
have me or somewhere from my office, one of us,
give us a call, give you a call, and go
through that with the actual calculator. Because I don't we
don't have computers for me here set up to go

(01:34:22):
through that on the air. But you know, as far
as the back two years, have you been paying any
child support to her in the last two years at all?
Before all this happened.

Speaker 7 (01:34:32):
So we had a custody order that declared that we
were both making the same amount of money and we
would getting to own any child support to each other.
But I guess it's saying that that wasn't a complete
order or something like that, and I wasn't aware about
this child support getting stacked up. So they hit me
with like twenty thousand dollars and that child support. Think
they said they couldn't find me.

Speaker 3 (01:34:52):
Yeah, So the again, let's talk this week and figure
it out because you've you've got a lot of moving
pieces and a lot more and the backstory that we're
and needed to figure out and break down and find
out what county is all this in by the way,
Creek County. Creek County, Okay, Yeah, I know the DH's
attorney over there there. We can help get this straightened out.
Give your name a number, gimpee will my office will

(01:35:13):
give you a call this week and we'll get it figured.

Speaker 4 (01:35:15):
Out for you.

Speaker 1 (01:35:15):
Okay, yes, sir, thank you, hang on the line there,
flat uh. And then this is what we've talked about before,
especially when it becomes a child that's Native America and
get complicated really fast and well, so many details would
have to be explained on the air, and that's just
not the right way right here.

Speaker 3 (01:35:32):
Now, that doesn't mean don't call in. We still want
to hear you. But at the same time too, I mean,
there's this misconception about, well, the kids are in Native
American healthcare, notice my silence. And the reason I do
that is because they think that's kind of the end
all beal. Unfortunately, the state also allows them to be
on Sooner Care and Native American health It's a big
it's a big mess in my opinion. I wish the

(01:35:54):
state legislature would address it in a particular way. But
with that being said, kid can be on Sooner Care
as well as Indian Healthcare. And that's where some confusion
comes in with owing money to the state for Center
care and all those other issues. So you know, these
are complicated things, and that's why you want to give
us a call so we can help you out with them.

Speaker 1 (01:36:11):
All right, listen, these things can get messy really fast.
You don't want to go about it on your own
because you need to do it the right way so
you don't have to have it cleaned up later or
fewers down the line. Find out you're not married, make
sure you call the folks at Hinsley and Associates. They
can help nine eight three nine eight five six nine
two nine eight three nine eight five six nine two
For Hinsley and Associates. You mentioned KMOD you get a

(01:36:32):
free consultation over the phone nine one eight three nine
eight five six nine two for Hinsley and Associates. And
sometimes life is a kick in the teeth. You get
rear ended on the highway. Maybe you get charged with murder.
I don't know. You might need help in other areas
of law, and the folks at Hinsley and Associates are
set up to help.

Speaker 3 (01:36:48):
You with that too, right, So through our office in Pehusca. Alright,
and give Sam Allison a call up there. He does
a great job and takes care of our clients up there.
So anything in addition to Famuela, if you've got like Sam,
you know, or something like Corbyn was saying, any sort
of issue, whether it be car rex or something as
mundane as a speeding ticket, or something as majors murder,
or you've got a contract issue or an oil and
gas issue. We are a big oil and gas state.

(01:37:10):
If you've got anything in addition to family law, they
can help you with that up there. Don't worry, but
it's the Shoemake law.

Speaker 4 (01:37:17):
For me.

Speaker 3 (01:37:18):
It is a different name, but it is Hensley. If
you forget that, just call Hinsley here in Tulsa. We'll
transfer you up there as she can talk to Sam.
He handles all of that stuff. And I'm up there
once a week in Pasca, so I can always give
you a help with that as well. So please give
us a call and we would love to help you
with those additional issues. In addition to family law.

Speaker 1 (01:37:37):
Eight three three four three nine eight sorry nine five
six ninety two for Hensley Associates, mention kmode get a
free consultation over the phone three nine eight five six
nine two for Hensley Associates, Jeff, have a great week
you too, Thank you back. Would you want to know
who comes to your funeral?

Speaker 7 (01:37:55):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (01:37:55):
That's interesting, sure?

Speaker 1 (01:37:59):
Why not? Any reason why?

Speaker 8 (01:38:01):
I feel like for for my personal beliefs. I feel
like I would know. I would look down and see
who is there. But would it bother me to know
who did or didn't come? No, I think I would
probably be surprised, like, oh, they showed up nice or

(01:38:23):
they didn't show up?

Speaker 6 (01:38:24):
How rude?

Speaker 1 (01:38:26):
Himp? Yeah, sure, why not? I think it'd be an
all right idea, just simply to you. Gotta think of
it like this, right, what if nobody showed up to
your funeral? I mean, I think it's safe to say
one person's gonna be there because someone's got unlocked the
door exactly. Let's just say that the only people that

(01:38:47):
show up to your funeral is the people that work there.
That's sad to me, right, And I don't like that.
I don't like that at all. I have built a
lifetime of friendships and relationships and I don't expect everybody
to be there at one time.

Speaker 4 (01:39:01):
But it would be nice to you know. No, Yeah,
I don't think about it much.

Speaker 1 (01:39:10):
I don't think about it much because I feel like
it wouldn't matter, and who knows what's going on in
people's lives. Maybe they planned to go. Maybe that one
person I have, his friend, would plan to go, but
then the kid got right. So I don't know. But
a guy in India, seventy four years old faked his

(01:39:31):
death so he could have a mocked funeral to see
who would attend. At seventy four? What are you gonna do?
Be like, we're not friends now right right? What are
you gonna do? You're gonna confront them? He said he
wanted to do it to find out how many people

(01:39:51):
cared about him. That's sad, sad that he has that question.

Speaker 8 (01:39:56):
Yeah, like that's what you just said though, But no, no,
it's sad to see how many like he he has
nothing better to do than to fake his death to
see if he's really got friends.

Speaker 1 (01:40:08):
Oh, I don't think it's that. I don't think it's not.
He's bored and doesn't anything better to do. I think
when you sunset on your life, you evaluate things differently,
and you evaluate is Charlie a good friend? Is Charlie
really my friend? Let me fake my death and find out?
Have I been a bad dad that my kids don't

(01:40:30):
want to go? Right? That's what it feels like to me.
Not like man, I am tired of watching Drew carry.
I'm about to fake my death. And that's a pretty
expensive punk.

Speaker 8 (01:40:47):
Yeah it is.

Speaker 1 (01:40:49):
And how far do you go? Do you lay in
the and doesn't someone have to be in on it
at least the funeral home or do you send a
text like, hey, Bob died, We're gonna have a funeral
at Bob's house. The door'll be open, right and you
like get everything and you need you have to lay
down really quick. Right.

Speaker 4 (01:41:07):
Yeah, it is India. They do things differently over there.

Speaker 1 (01:41:11):
I'm sure, sure, sure, sure, because we do things real
normal here. Of course, I wouldn't surprise me if people
did that.

Speaker 8 (01:41:19):
Yeah here, it'll be a celebration of life. Show up,
he was cremated. That'd be one way to whoever's in
on it with them.

Speaker 1 (01:41:28):
As far as people dying and not nobody coming to
their funeral, I bet that happens a lot.

Speaker 4 (01:41:35):
And it does not negate the fact that it's sad.
It is so sad.

Speaker 1 (01:41:41):
I don't know. Let's just say your name is Mildred
and you're ninety years old. Yeah, and all your friends died,
you never had kids. Uh, yeah, you didn't go to
church because you were immobile, and the meals on wheels
person's the only one that ever came around your house.
That's a very extreme I get where you're going at.

(01:42:03):
But at least Mildred had to have at least a neighbor,
all right, somebody next door to talk to her, or
a pastor of sorts, or somebody that you know she
shot the s with out at the beauty salon while
she was getting her hair you know colored.

Speaker 8 (01:42:20):
Yeah, but would you expect your barber to show up
at your funeral?

Speaker 4 (01:42:27):
Well, it depends on how close you are to your barber.

Speaker 1 (01:42:33):
Me personally, Yes, I have known this dame for okay,
right right right for a long time. But she was
your friend before, barber. Uh no, you know, no, not really.

Speaker 5 (01:42:44):
She was a friend of an ex that you know,
and she cut my hair and then we split up,
and and I still go to her to get my
hair cut because I liked the.

Speaker 1 (01:42:53):
But you didn't know her before then? No, okay, No,
so she's not really a long you got her in
the divorce, essentially, but.

Speaker 5 (01:42:59):
Essentially, yeah, but I would still expect her and her
family to show up and pay their respects.

Speaker 1 (01:43:07):
Tens of thousands of people die in the US with
nobody to claim their bodies. One percent of all deaths
in the US are unclaimed. Now, okay, before you go
too far into that, I wonder what percentage of those
numbers ranked there are homeless people. Homeless people up friends. Yeah,

(01:43:28):
I'm sure they do. But when they die, you're your
hobo friend. Jim is not going to go and claim
your body and be like, hey, I'm here for hobo Bob.
We got to put them to rest properly. Now they
get cremated and the remains will go in a storage somewhere,

(01:43:48):
or they'll get buried in a public lot. I guess
I don't know how that works with unclaimed bodies, but
I'm just curious as to how much of those are
those unclaimed bodies are homeless people. Yeah, I think that's
just an easy line to draw. I don't know if
even if your uncle was homeless, you might be like, well,

(01:44:10):
I better, I better go get them. And I don't
know if that's a statistic they keep track of, right,
Because I always think about this about when in regards
to like people dying and nobody coming to their funeral,
one we should make it a point that if no
one claims the body, there.

Speaker 4 (01:44:27):
Is no funeral, right, But then what do you do,
what do you do with the body?

Speaker 1 (01:44:32):
Then I think they there's a certain amount of time
and then they get like mass scream rand right right right,
and then there's like probably like a mass grave scenario.

Speaker 4 (01:44:42):
One giant earn but.

Speaker 1 (01:44:43):
I earned lots money, cardboard box. I think about this
a lot when I think about that thought home. That
thought process is when my oldest was born, she spent
two and a half weeks in the NIKKO. For those
who't know, the is the intensive care unit for babies,

(01:45:04):
and babies that are born prematurely go in there, and
babies that aren't ready to leave or maybe in some
sort of medical situation going there. So for my kid,
it was she was born early, she was underweight. Because
she was born early, they have to do some things
for their skin and so it's a pretty stressful environment.

(01:45:28):
And the nurse I remember a conversation where she's sharing
with me there were two things I learned that I
was shocked by the number of women who give birth
via c section who don't get to go see their babies. Yeah,
and no one the woman gives birth by herself, there's
no family, there's no partner. And then the number of

(01:45:53):
babies that stay in the nic you and never get
visited by their parents.

Speaker 4 (01:45:58):
Yeah. I think that's even worse.

Speaker 1 (01:46:00):
Yea. So here we have an example of like to me,
that is sad. That is incredibly heartbreaking to think about.
I can't imagine what it's like for a woman to
hold a baby for nine months, even eight months, then
give birth and have to sit in a bed because
they can't walk because it was cut out of them

(01:46:20):
and they're there with their thoughts and their emotions and
their hormonal hormonal dump. That's incredibly crazy. Or a baby
whose only touch is a stranger. Yeah, and then some
never come back and get that. That happens, right, So
to correlate that to funerals, I think it's it happens all.

(01:46:45):
I bet it happens a lot. Not that. But again,
there's no funeral, right If nobody claims the body, that's it.
That's it. And if you've got people that have wronged
you in your life, I could say, he'd be like,
I'm good, Why do I need to I didn't get
along with my dad, Why would I need to go?

(01:47:06):
Then take on the cost of a funeral and the
responsibility of dealing with that, and then what sit there
by myself between the hours of one and three, because
that's when we posted it. And like, or do you
just not have I would think if your parent or
person in your life was a POS, you're not.

Speaker 4 (01:47:26):
Going to have a funeral.

Speaker 5 (01:47:29):
So this I just had to find what happens to
unclaimed bodies in Oklahoma? Right It says in Oklahoma, claimed
bodies or first held for thirty days for a claimant
such as a relative, friend, and an organization to come forward.
If no one claims the body, the Anatomical Board of
the State of Oklahoma will take possession of it for
thirty days. After this period, the body can be distributed

(01:47:51):
for use in anatomical purposes at approved institutions as medical schools,
or cremated or buried at public expense, often by a
local agency. So basically like we might have known nature
to science, but if nobody's taking bodies right now, we'll.

Speaker 4 (01:48:09):
Just put you in a public lot.

Speaker 1 (01:48:11):
Go down the rabbit hole of unclaimed things and how
the state handles it, regardless of bodies, money rights. It's wild, girl,
would you'll be You'll be horrified to find out what
they do. This is a text came and I have
a homeless friend and tried to get him to help
claim his girlfriend's body after she was hit by a
car earlier this spring. We couldn't. Only immediate family could

(01:48:33):
do it, and there's lots of hurdles. How would you
prove so? Like, my brother isn't married. He's got a
girlfriend right, right, but they've been together a long time,
they're practically married, right, So she couldn't go claim his body.
That seems wild to me. No, but you they would
have to get you or your mom to go do it,

(01:48:53):
and I so, yeah, they wouldn't be able to claim
it then.

Speaker 6 (01:48:56):
But what if you and your mind didn't exist? What
if it was just him? Do they live together? Do they?
I mean, do they file taxes together? Because something right?

Speaker 1 (01:49:07):
Then?

Speaker 6 (01:49:07):
I bet she could prove it that way.

Speaker 1 (01:49:10):
But that's not a loved one, that's not a family member.
I don't hate that rule because I think prevents just
weirdos from snatching up any dead body and doing whatever
the hell they want with it, you know what I mean?
And those people do exist, I don't know. I think
that's way less common than you know. Funeral the funeral

(01:49:33):
situation we're discussing dramatically fact like selling kidney scenario, but.

Speaker 5 (01:49:37):
Somebody they had to put that into place because something
happened to somebody along the line. Yeah, and they're like,
we can't, we can't just be giving out dead bodies
to people anymore. They last one we found, you know,
mutilated in a field, right whatever, you know.

Speaker 4 (01:49:57):
So I'm okay with that.

Speaker 1 (01:49:59):
Yeah, No, I'm good with that too, except there are
people that choose to not get married and live a
long life, whether they're the same sex or not, and
the idea that they can't then go claim to their
loved one is wild to me. Like there's my brother's example.
It's wild that she cares about him. They've pretty much
lived together, they're pretty much married, and God forbid, something

(01:50:22):
happened and she can't go better yet. I could tell her,
tell her to take a leap, right right, But surely
there's some way around that, like the courts. Let's just say,
you got, you know, pictures among pictures, among pictures of
you and this person together, of like your brother and
his girlfriend together. Well, here's a picture of us at Disneyland.

(01:50:45):
I don't think that works, man, I guess you're right.
I can have hundreds of pictures of me and Patrick Mahomes.
I ain't make it my brother as.

Speaker 4 (01:50:53):
True, especially nowadays.

Speaker 1 (01:50:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:50:56):
Yeah, I guess there's really.

Speaker 1 (01:50:57):
Nothing, you know. All right, we got to take a break.
We'll be back.

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