Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
You are about to witness amazing Emo has something living
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The first wor.
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Time, Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Toll
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Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning, Gimpy Will, Good morning. Tickets
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(03:19):
to talk about. We've got fill in the blank news.
We've got our top five songs special one that Gimpi's
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Puffer or Puffer Peter, never know what's the first name.
(03:48):
It's also a male porn star who's birthday. He only
does a certain kind. There's a certain genre.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
He tried to cross over. This didn't fit, You're right,
didn't feel like normal. Right. Yeah, He's like, I'm out.
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Of my place unless China is involved, not the country,
why not? I and the Nineteenthdaniel Cancer Sucks Concert is Saturday,
November twenty ninth at the Canes Ballroom. Josie Scott in
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(04:25):
band will be on the stage. See we're doing a
Battle of the Band's contest and the top two winners
from our Battle of the Band's Contests morning show.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
Show did it again? I call you, Brittany. I even
made a note anyway as you were Sayingncert. Yeah.
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So, if you have a band you'd like to open
for the Cancer Sucks concert, make sure you go to
kines I'm sorry, to our website chmode dot com and
enter your one song demo. Very easy to do, super easy,
way more easy than it used to be for us
to do. We had to create a Gmail oh wow, yeah,
(05:10):
because the company couldn't help us that way. But we're
all good now. This husband and wife got in trouble
for leaving their baby unattended on the beach in Texas.
It's a really fascinating story because people became concerned because
(05:31):
their baby was underneath a tent on the beach, and
witnesses said the baby had been alone for nearly an hour.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
It's a while, especially for a baby, and.
Speaker 1 (05:45):
You're going award to the parents abandoned.
Speaker 4 (05:47):
No, they had their other three kids and were enjoying
the beach and went for a walk while the baby
was napping along the beach, which is what people do. Sure,
and beach goat and beach goers already getting concerned. That's
when they contacted the police and when the firefighters arrived,
they obviously checked.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
On the baby. Baby was fine, nothing wrong with it.
Speaker 4 (06:12):
The couple admitted to placing their child under the tent
for a nap before leaving. Security footage reviewed by investigators
confirmed the pair had been gone for nearly an hour
and left their cell phones behind with the baby. Oh okay,
there's an emergency. The baby can call somebody, right, that
makes sense. Yeah, I'm not sure why that's a necessary
piece of information. Both were charged arrested in charge with
(06:35):
child neglect without great bodily of harm, which is a
third degree felony.
Speaker 2 (06:40):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
Maybe sorry, this was in Florida. It was a Texas
couple in Florida.
Speaker 2 (06:44):
Okay, maybe they thought that if they left their cell
phones behind, people would know that they were coming back.
Speaker 1 (06:49):
Well, what they should have done. I do that when
I eat at a table, right, and I just go
to the bathroom, I leave my phones. I'm like, ah,
I'm not done, don't tell you. Just put the baby
in a shoe so that way nobody messes with it,
because that's the safe place for everything. When you're at
the beach. No one ever looks there. Oh no, not once.
Speaker 4 (07:08):
The other part of the story that's come out that's
fascinating is the person, the woman part of this who
was arrested is been noted as one of the forty
under forty list of up and rising people in the
medical industry in Texas.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Oh wow, so definitely, definitely, definitely should know better.
Speaker 4 (07:28):
The Florida Department of Children and Families took custody of
the couple's four children wow, until relatives could come to
collect them while they're on vacation.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
So, I mean, should they have kept the other three?
Should they have kept all of their kids?
Speaker 4 (07:47):
I'm not no, I'm not saying that they were wrong.
Speaker 2 (07:50):
It's just.
Speaker 4 (07:52):
It's not the intent isn't malicious, No, it's not. It's
not like you know, the people that were high and
then go inside and forget that their baby's strapped in
the car seat. That is malicious. You are will you
intently took a drug that altered your mindset in your state,
knowing that it does that. This was they were trying
(08:12):
to be a family and went for a walk. They
didn't They said they didn't know they were gone that long. Which, sure,
you're on vacation, you're in la la land.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
You know nothing. You're not thinking straight because you're on vacation.
You're relaxing and chilling out.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
So what I'm hearing you saying is your vacation brain
is just the same as the I got high and
left my baby in the car brain.
Speaker 4 (08:36):
I'm not saying because you know you weren't thinking straight.
Speaker 2 (08:39):
No, not necessarily high brain, but you don't think of
anything going wrong when you're on vacation.
Speaker 1 (08:46):
Yeah, when you're high, you don't think of anything at all,
you know what I mean. So basically it's the same
thing there. I don't think either one of them, the
high brain or the especially these people will just I
don't think they did anything on purpose. Obviously they they
as a parent, we're all parents here, so let me
(09:07):
ask you, would you lead how old was this baby? Again?
Six months? Six months old? So as all of us
being parents, would you guys have left your six month
old baby on the beach under an umbrella or a
canopy or whatever, alone while you and your other three
children went for a stroll looking at seashells and dolphins.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
Well when you say it like that, no, okay, let
me rephrase that.
Speaker 1 (09:34):
Then, would either of you have left your six month
child alone anywhere? No? For an hour? You say, that's
what this report says. Yeah for now? Yeah, so I
know I wouldn't. If I wanted to go for a
walk with the other three children and have a nice
little family beach time. I'm taking that baby who will
(09:56):
stay asleep as you carry them, because that's what babies
do do some most of the time. Either way, if
it wakes up, oh well, that's part of being a parent,
you know what I mean. So to leave them behind
and be like, oh, well, they're six months old, it's
not like they're really going to run.
Speaker 2 (10:12):
Off, right. One of those parents had a fear of fomo,
fear of missing out, and they were like, I want
to take the kids for a walk and go find
some seashells, but I want to come too. Well, then
come on, babe, you'll be fine, you know what I mean.
It was like it just feels no, that was completely
the stupidest decision ever to leave that baby by yourself.
(10:34):
They should have just waited until it woke up and
gone as a group. Otherwise this is splitsville. This is
where mom takes one takes the kids or dad and
one stays.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
With the baby.
Speaker 4 (10:46):
When my oldest was first born, we bought these special wipes,
so like if they're binkie fell on the ground, you'd
wiped it off, right, h I mean really like in it.
Some would probably argue to in it right, like very like,
(11:06):
don't do this, don't do that. Right, You're very protected.
Most parents are very protective about their firstborn child. With
my second one, eh, right, right here you go, right,
this is their fourth. I'm not defending them. I'm just
saying I agree. I would like to think I wouldn't
do that either. But as we do, as we have
(11:28):
more children, you tend to let your guard down more
and more.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
True. I feel there's a difference from letting your six
month old sleep on the bed while you are in
the living room watching TV or cleaning or whatever, and
then going for an hour long stroll on the beach.
Speaker 4 (11:50):
Well, they didn't go for an hour long stroll. In
their mind, they went, they just went for a little
walk away from the area. To them, they probably thought
they were still super close. I don't think they're like
the babies asleep, let's let's go as far away as possible. No,
But that's the that's the implication when you say they
went for an hour long stroll.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Yeah, the fact of it is they were gone for
at least an hour. That's what witnesses say. And we've
all taken a stroll on the beach before you get
to walk in, and you just keep on walking and
you look back and you think you're closer than what
you are, right, but in reality you're not. It's that
long walk back. You're like, god, damn, we went a
lot further than I thought, you know. And either way,
(12:31):
you know there's babies there by itself. Any weirdo could
have walked by, seen a baby, snatch it up and
say you're coming with me? Yeah you know what I mean.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
Yeah, but you know, much like your phone with your shoe. Hm,
it isn't like they left have been a running car
outside a convenience store.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
True.
Speaker 4 (12:51):
Yeah, yeah, I'm not defending them. I'm just saying it
does feel a little bit different. What do you think
the punishment is in the state of flo Florida for
child neglect without great bodily harm, which is a third
degree fellony. What do you think the punishment is.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
Up to.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
Two years in jail.
Speaker 4 (13:13):
I'm gonna say ten years and a fifteen hundred dollars fine.
The fine maximum up to five thousand dollars, and it
is a level six on the offensive severity scale, and
you can get up to five years in prison for
(13:34):
going for right exactly, for trying to have some family time,
well almost all family time for the most part.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
I mean it was an oops. Probably it's not the same.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
That's a big oops.
Speaker 3 (13:48):
No.
Speaker 2 (13:48):
I mean the baby, Oh.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
Right, got it.
Speaker 2 (13:54):
I don't love that one as much.
Speaker 4 (13:56):
I mean she's under forty, so if they have three
doom like what once every five years?
Speaker 1 (14:04):
Maybe. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (14:06):
We were talking about Gordon Ramsey yesterday on the podcast,
and I was thinking about that later yesterday and having
a kid at fifty or fifty six, I'm like, who dog, Oh.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
God, just starting over now at forty five sounds miserable.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Oh Like, someone please leave me on the beat for real.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
I'll be fine, I promise. The irresponsible. I mean, he'll
be seventy four when that kid's eighteen. Yeah, it'd be
cooking up a mean oatmeal. There's a high probability he
will not teach be teaching that kid how to drive now, or.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
Walking them down the aisle.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
I mean, you know, walkering right maybe right, wheeling maybe possibly, Yeah,
that's definitely the older siblings. Or they'll probably just get
him in a class, you know, like you know, some
kind of driving school. And and they're a local.
Speaker 4 (15:01):
I mean a lot of people do that. A lot
of people don't want to take on the stress of
you know, parking lot training.
Speaker 1 (15:07):
That's terrible. Man. Ah, come on, man, yeah, sure, yeah,
you could pay somebody else to teach your kid how
to drive. But there's the fun, the excitement, exact mind it,
you know behind you know, you white knuckling the dashboard
and stomping on that imaginary break as your kids trying
to learn how to drive. It's an adventure.
Speaker 4 (15:29):
I don't think my parents took me to a parking
lot to learn how to drive. And I so at fourteen,
you could have a moped so you were driving on
the street right, and then you could then get a
learner's permit at fifteen, and my parents occasionally would let
me drive from the top of the street. Matter of fact,
(15:50):
one time, I, you know, one of the first times
I was went down from the street it was like
maybe a quarter of a mile, not very far, and
went down the street, did fine, went to pull into
the driveway, and you know, I went perpendicular in the driveway.
Somehow I did a complete circle and was no longer
parallel into the garage or with the driveway. I was perpendiculous.
(16:14):
I was a cross and the car stops. My dad
looks at me. I obviously have realized what has happened,
and my Dad's like, what happened?
Speaker 1 (16:25):
I don't know?
Speaker 4 (16:25):
Of which my response was, what do you mean what happened?
Why didn't you tell me anything? You're supposed to be
helping me, right.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
I learned on the the backcountry roads of New Kirk, Oklahoma,
old Dirk Gravelly ones that were a lot of fun. Yeah,
you learn how to control real easily and real quickly
on those old dirt roads.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
I learned in the cemetery. Yeah, for the most part,
we it seems wild. Yeah, it was they I guess
our face all of our me, my cousin, We all
learned to drive in the cemetery.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
I guess. I mean, you don't have to worry about
hitting any of us these tombstones, right, it's not even
much of a road in it now, maybe I'm thinking
more rurals. There's not much of a road now over
here off fifty first and Memorial. There's obviously roads in
that cemetery.
Speaker 2 (17:19):
Yeah, yeah, they were in ours as well.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
They're not four lane, they're not even really two lane.
You kind of got to move over off into the
grass to let somebody pass by.
Speaker 4 (17:27):
Yeah, I'm thinking of like the one in the Wahsaw
off seventy six, of the one out in Sperry on
your way to Tall Chief, like right.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
It's like the gravel's barely there. Yeah, all right.
Speaker 2 (17:38):
It was either that or when my grandmother would let
me drive her car to work. She would because I
was living with her when my parents were building a house,
and she would let me drive to work and she
would come back and get me later on. And so
my grandma taught me. She was so patient, it was awesome.
And she didn't actually learn how to drive until she
(17:58):
was thirty six or thirty seven years old.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
So she was a Nube too.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Yeah. Yeah, she was afraid to drive forever.
Speaker 4 (18:06):
Yeah, I don't. I mean my I remember the drives
from the top of the street. But ultimately I learned
how to drive in high school because we had drivers.
That was a part of the school curriculum. We had
a driver's at department, and we had simulators and we
had an area with we drove at the time, brand
New Grand Priest, Pania, Chevy, Grand Prix, pontea g Prit
(18:32):
kind of small cars for not at.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
The time, or were they the grand Ams? They were
kind of there were more big sedans. Oh yeah, Grand Prix.
I was thinking Grandam are the smaller ones. Yeah, but
you're right. Grand Prix Ours was an old ass God.
It was like an eighty six Crown Vic, a boat
of a car, and they'd load it. It'd be the
driver whoever's learning how to drive that day, right, and
(18:56):
then coach the teacher. Yeah, and then there was usually
at least two others students in the back seat. Yeah,
and we just cruise around and coaches like, do whatever
you want. I mean, we're teaching how to drive. So
if you want to go to Sonic, go for it,
you know what I mean. So he just let his
cruise around and do whatever and you know, correct us
(19:18):
when we needed to. We never got on the highway though.
It was always stuck to the city streets. I was
thinking about that.
Speaker 4 (19:27):
I think most problems with people that drive is they
don't know how to accelerate, start accelerating, or break correctly.
And I feel like when that time teaching my kids,
I think I'll just be like, we're gonna learn the
sweet spot of the break and how to find it,
how to hear the breaks, kind of going in and
out to know you are. That's where the sweet spot
(19:47):
of the break. That's how I learned to drive a
stick is I had to before I could do anything.
I had to learn with the sweet spot of the
clutch was. And once you learn that, driving the stick's easy.
Oh yeah, it's nothing. And getting out of first gear
is the hardest part, you know, but you are absolutely right.
You dump that clutch so many times and with you know,
new drivers, you know, you don't know how that break
(20:10):
feels exactly.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
You just mash on it. That's when everybody goes flying
through the windshield. Yeah, And then same way with the
guess you mash on it. But that's that's why they
have those courses. Yeah, but around here, you pay for
them outside of school.
Speaker 2 (20:25):
Yeah, I wish they did. Apparently they used to have
them here in school as a class, but no one
wants to to teach it anymore.
Speaker 4 (20:34):
Well, it's not that, but probably don't want to fund it.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
Don't want to fund it. They could realize that there
was a liability there, maybe an accident or two during
drivers at class that cons to be like, Okay, we
can't do this. I don't know, I'm just speculating.
Speaker 2 (20:47):
I did.
Speaker 4 (20:48):
But I feel like in public education, sex said, learning
to drive, balancing a check book. These are all things
I feel like are really practical. Yes, rather then sorry, geometry,
life skills, Yeah, that's advanced learning if that you needed
in your career. Yeah, I don't want to hear from
(21:09):
the math teachers use druma troupe.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
I get it.
Speaker 4 (21:11):
I'm not saying basic geometry. I'm saying in depth geometry.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
Yeah, and it's and driver's ed. We've looked into it
now because you know, Marcus just turned fifteen, so we
can take it and it is nu exactly it is.
I think the cheapest course that you can get the
least expensive is three fifty three fifty bucks.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
Yeah, that's what I was looking at when my oldest
was learning how to drive. He's twenty two now, but
it is about that much. And I said, I ain't paying.
I'll teach you how to drive my damnself. And you
know what we did? What how long is that? For?
Three fifty how many weeks?
Speaker 2 (21:49):
It's two days in a classroom, so like you could
do it on a weekend, and then it is I
want to say, eight hours behind the weir ruction and
behind the wheel.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (22:01):
I always feel like and this isn't a knock on
people that do this, but I always feel like people
that teach drivers ed is what Santa's do in the
off season. You don't really know anybody, like I know
people own driving schools, sure, but you don't know anybody's
like I'm gonna quit my job and start a driving school.
(22:22):
It's my passion is usually do it out of necessity
and it can't be awesome.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
No, I'm sure it takes somebody with a lot of
patients to teach those courses, much like you know special
ed teachers.
Speaker 4 (22:38):
You have a lot of patients. I think No, I
think it's different. This special d is that is about
love and about empathy, right, being a part. No, I
think that's why they do it. I think that's the
whole thing. There are plenty of special ed teachers that
aren't patient. We read the stories. But driver's said, I
don't know anybody who's like I've always wanted to be
(22:58):
a you know what, I'm quitting my job. Oh man, congratulations. Yeah,
I'm gonna go into business for myself. Really, what are
you gonna do? I'm going to be a driver's ed teacher.
What's your first thought?
Speaker 1 (23:08):
You go? Good for you? Right right?
Speaker 4 (23:13):
Yeah, you don't have one, and you don't exactly know
anybody who owns a driver in school, who goes to
Fiji every day, no or everything.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
I'm surprised they don't because of the price is hurt.
Speaker 4 (23:24):
They probably have to carry insurance. Yeah, and I gotta
be honest. I think for private instruction, I don't think
three fifty is that crazy. Of the things that cost
for private instruction, I don't think three fifties that crazy.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
The most expensive is a grand I've heard that.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
Yeah, Okay, my.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
Father in law was a Driver's Ed instructor when he
retired from teaching.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
Okay, and that makes sense.
Speaker 2 (23:44):
Yeah, And he did that for a few years. And
it used to be when he was when he was
in the school system, coaches, like you said, coaches would
get paid extra to be a Driver's Ed teacher and
it was great. And then when they took that program
out of this school and it was retirement time, he thought,
I was pretty good at this. I'll continue it because
(24:05):
he was bored, right, he needed something.
Speaker 1 (24:07):
To do instead of being a greeter at the Walmart.
I'm just gonna do what I know to do, and
let's teach.
Speaker 2 (24:12):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
So somebody texted in and said, and we got to go.
Speaker 4 (24:15):
But if you're classified as homeless while in school, you
get Driver's Ed for free.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
I did not know that.
Speaker 2 (24:21):
Kick my son out.
Speaker 1 (24:23):
Well, how do you prove you're homeless?
Speaker 2 (24:24):
Right?
Speaker 1 (24:25):
Okay, let me see. Do you have an electric build? Nope?
Speaker 4 (24:28):
Well, I mean I think you show up in a
in a with a stick yeah, with your sticking.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Bindle five o'clock shadow, all right, and your cigar. It's
never made sense to me why hobos had cigars. They're
not cheap. No, they just find him on the ground. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (24:47):
Yeah, we had a local highway patrol who retired after
twenty years and now he's a driver's ad teacher.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
Okay, that makes sense.
Speaker 4 (24:55):
I don't know if that necessarily makes him a great driver, right,
but yeah, you gotta keep can I guess?
Speaker 1 (25:01):
All right?
Speaker 4 (25:01):
We got to take a break. We got tickets to
the Mars Volta we're gonna give away.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
We'll be back.
Speaker 4 (25:05):
Quickies are stories you may have missed in the news.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
It's time for news quakies, world news, local news and
news that just makes you say, what the Here's Corbyn
Gimpian Lindsay with what's going on news Quakies from The
Big Man The Morning Show.
Speaker 2 (25:19):
In ninety seventy five, Texas Corrections officer fired for smuggling
chicken wings to inmate. This happened in Travis County where
Amos and nyan Way, who's twenty five years old, was
arrested on misdemeanor contraband charges after he smuggled chicken wings
(25:41):
into jail for guess how much fifty dollars?
Speaker 1 (25:45):
Okay, I know.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
I'm I'm confused as to how an inmate even gets
fifty bucks, but he did court.
Speaker 4 (25:54):
Documenty, do people still not understand this jail is another
like country, It's like another culture.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
Right.
Speaker 4 (26:02):
They have hierarchy, they have politics to a degree, there's commerce,
it's it's a it's a living place.
Speaker 2 (26:11):
Yeah. The court documents revealed that officials discovered the scam
while monitoring an inmate's phone calls for an unrelated incident.
The inmate told a relative that the corrections officer Nyanaway
had provided him with chicken wings after he sent the
officer money on cash app and specifically agreed to supply
(26:33):
him with Habanero mango chicken wings from wingstop.
Speaker 1 (26:37):
Yeah, for the payment. It's good choice.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (26:39):
And surveillance ones. Those aren't dry ones, right, those those ones?
Speaker 1 (26:42):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (26:42):
Yeah. Surveillance video shows him receiving a food delivery, eating
some wings himself, then placing others on paper towels and
handing them to the inmates. Yeah. The arrest affidavit notes
chicken wings are not provided or authorized to be provided
inmates under Texas Penal Code thirty eight one one four.
Speaker 1 (27:06):
Makes sense, Yeah, bones exactly. Tournament the weapons, yeah, so
tiny little weapons, tiny little delicious weapons. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
I wonder if they would have been the nugs if
he would have got a lesser charge.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (27:23):
It doesn't It depends on what Texas penal code for
one four one zero four says. Yeah, but if it
says nugs or breasts or whatever, Uh, it's still smuggling
either way.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
Yeah, exactly. That's that's where it's at. It's contraband not
allowed in the prison system. You get blowney, not wings.
Speaker 4 (27:45):
I wonder though, in can can guards bring food to prisoners?
Apparently not well, but wings are prohibited? Right do they
list every food item under the sun?
Speaker 1 (27:57):
I think it would be a blanket of you can't
bring no outside food or drink aloud? You see that
like at places you know, be Okay Center, stuff like that,
no outside food or drinks allowed. It's probably yeah.
Speaker 2 (28:10):
And the member in the movie Green Mile when he
heals his uh he had a bladder infection, and so
he gives John coffee cornbread and the other officer you
can't do that, and he was like like, yeah, just
I can.
Speaker 4 (28:28):
So this says that some facilities allow outside food for
special events like a family visitation day or religious holidays,
but even then staff don't deliver it. It goes through
screening and must be approved in advance.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
Right, it's all because people were putting files in case. Man,
you can't do that anymore. It's the silliest thing ever.
Now they're doors right, I'll see your wings smuggling and
raise your gold panties. Four people arrest it in Tokyo
while trying to smuggle gold powder in or underwear. So
(29:04):
they say this, this, this thirty four year old guy
named Massa Muri Nisha Mura Uh is the is the
mastermind behind all this, all right. So what he did
is he recruited three women in their twenties and thirties
to wear this underwear that had eight kilos of gold
stashed in them. Okay, they say the gold's worth about
(29:26):
six hundred and fifty thousand dollars and they're gonna take
it from Hong Kong to Tokyo. And they say that
they did it to try to avoid paying taxes on it,
all right, So customs picked up on it. They followed
them from Hong Kong to Tokyo. The women apparently all
(29:47):
three knew each other, got the panties from this other
dude in Hong Kong. Again, mister Massa Muri Nishimura is
the one who got the panties to the guy, or
at least set that part of it all up anyway.
So the women they put the underwear on, they try
to go through customs. They ended up getting popped there
(30:07):
in Tokyo, and they say that they got busted obviously
for smuggling, and that they were trying to do it
to evade taxes, which would have been about nine point
eight seven million yen. Damn, that's a lot.
Speaker 4 (30:26):
It's howso movie Lendsy's going to promote funeral homeworker crushed
to death by burial vault. It's happened down in Dallas
where firefighters had to help a employee who was pinned
from the waist down under one of those concrete vaults
outside the Wrestling funeral home cemetery and crematory. The vaults
(30:48):
are made of concrete and they protect the caskets in
elements from elements after their burial. Responders needed hydraulic spreaders
and air bags that are usually used in like car rex,
you know, to help get the person released from underneath
the concrete vault. He was rushed to the hospital with
serious lower by bodily injuries. He died later that day,
(31:11):
but he at least he died doing what he loved.
Oh no, that's probably not that.
Speaker 1 (31:15):
At least he does.
Speaker 4 (31:16):
It's convenient now, right, Yeah, there's no transportation cost for
picking up the body.
Speaker 1 (31:21):
Exactly, throw him right on him here right.
Speaker 4 (31:23):
All these stories are on socials. If you won't look
for it, we're gonna take a break and we'll be back.
The Big Med Morning Show returns that morning.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
Lindsay, Good morning, Corbyn. If you didn't win the Mega
millions last night, it's okay. You've got thirteen chances to
win at least a grand today. From eight am until
eight pm tonight, you can rock the bank. When you
hear that nationwide keyword, enter its online kmod dot com,
or if you are a member of the iHeart Radio app,
(31:55):
you can also enter the word there as well. Again,
that first word is coming up at eight o'clock this morning.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
Good luck, good morning, gim be well, good morning Corbin.
And I can't believe I forgot to say it's earlier,
but happy anniversary, thank you, Yeah, thirteen years here on
KOD today.
Speaker 2 (32:11):
Congratulations, but hey, listen.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
The nineteenth Annual Cancer Sex concerts coming up in just
over a month. November twenty ninth is when that's going
down at the Canes Ballroom starring Josie Scott, the original
voice of Saliva. Now, if you want to open up
for Saliva Josee Scott, the original voice of Saliva. You
got a local band, we do have a Battle of
the band's contest going on. You can submit your one
song demo right there at the website dot rockskmod dot com.
(32:36):
That deadline's coming up in a couple of weeks. You
got like two and a half, So get your s
together and submit your demo. Good luck. Lynsen Linzen Linsen Linzen,
lndsc Y Lindsey Lindsey Lindsey NDS What man, check my poop?
Speaker 2 (33:07):
What kind of a woman would you say you are
married to.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
And would never answer that question?
Speaker 2 (33:14):
Would you consider her a guy's girl, a girl's girl,
maybe a girly guy? Like what kind of a person
personality wise? Like Kevin used to call me, He's like,
you're you're you're like a girl's guy. You you can
be one of the dudes, hang out with one of us,
(33:36):
but you're full of girl stuff Like Okay, he's like,
you like to dress up, you like to put on makeup,
go out, have a good time, but you can also
put on a baseball cap and watch sports, hang out,
tell a dirty jokes a lot.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (33:54):
I never loved this because it's so subjective, like a
guy like, if you do all those things but don't hunt,
are you a guys guy? If you don't tell a
dirty joke?
Speaker 1 (34:07):
Are you a guys guy?
Speaker 2 (34:09):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (34:09):
Right, If you're a little sensitive and share your feelings,
are you a girly man nancy boy?
Speaker 2 (34:15):
Yeah, well there is, there's a difference between them all.
A girl's guy qualities is the male version of a
girl's girl.
Speaker 1 (34:25):
Huh yep, say it again.
Speaker 2 (34:27):
A girl's guy is the male version of a girl's girl.
It's a man who respects, understands, and supports women. Not
in a performative way, but naturally. He could be the
gay male friend, but doesn't have to be gay. It's
the guy friend who isn't trying to sleep with her.
Speaker 1 (34:49):
And I trying to. I misunderstood what I thought.
Speaker 4 (34:57):
Well, maybe it was just like a partner, but when
you added the whole like they don't want to have
sex with them, Yes, they do.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
That was one of the biggest argument. When my husband
and I first started dating. He had asked me why
why weren't we friend Why we didn't hang out in
high school or anything? And I said, I know, because
it's weird because I had more I felt like I
had more male friends in high school. He goes, he
didn't have friends. They weren't your friends. They wanted to
(35:28):
sleep with you, because that's what guys do. They just
want to sleep with you.
Speaker 4 (35:33):
I had a friend, we were close, and I wasn't
attracted to her. Uh huh, but if the opportunity would
have presented itself, you would have. Yeah, where I think
girls don't think that way.
Speaker 2 (35:49):
No, we think that you're genuinely being our friend.
Speaker 4 (35:53):
But with that being said, you cross a point where
you're like, well, we're friends, we should try this, right,
the girl's still awkward.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
And weird yep, and the friendship ends.
Speaker 1 (36:04):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (36:04):
They say that a girl's guy has is the vibe
with them is safe, feminist, learning, emotionally intelligent, and empathetic.
They are genuinely comfortable around women. He feels natural in
female company, not flirty, just comfortable. He can hang at brunch,
(36:28):
bridal showers, or a group chat full of strong opinions
without being weird or defensive.
Speaker 3 (36:35):
To me.
Speaker 2 (36:36):
If they're not really trying to sleep with you, my
gaitar would be going off.
Speaker 4 (36:42):
I don't know why it's got to have a label
to try and diminish it, like you're just being a human.
Speaker 2 (36:47):
Sure time, I would think that because every man that
I like what you guys just said, know they're trying
to sleep with you.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
Are you a girl's guy? I think is what it
was called.
Speaker 4 (37:04):
If I go to brunch with my wife and I
get along with everybody, it can talk to talk and
hang out and do I want to sleep with them? No,
I'm being supportive right right? Or you're gay or I'm kid.
Speaker 2 (37:19):
Uh. They say that the girl's guy was raised with
or close to women. Many girls guys grew up with sisters,
single moms, or strong female role models. They learned early
to listen and understand women's perspectives. They listen, they validate
and try to understand rather than fix a female's problems.
(37:42):
He can say I get why you feel that way
and mean it. They have a safe energy about them.
Women trust him. You can leave your drink with him
and not worry about it.
Speaker 4 (37:54):
Oh god, yeah, that's a leap.
Speaker 2 (37:57):
Yeah it is.
Speaker 1 (37:57):
We may want to have sex with you, but we're
not all good. I wanna drug you to do so. Yeah, don't,
We're not all Bill Cosby. That is a wild connection. Yeah,
who authored this?
Speaker 2 (38:10):
This is from a website called the everygirl dot Com.
Speaker 1 (38:16):
Really you don't say it reads a little bit like
some beach read right, like guys are they're gonna drug
you if you leave your cocktail with them.
Speaker 2 (38:27):
I think every every female has a friend who and
if they aren't this girl the girl's girl, they all
know one, and they can point them out in their
female group. A woman who genuinely supports and uplifts other
women any chance they get. They're loyal, they're nurturing, community minded.
That is the definition of a girl's girl. They hype
(38:49):
up other women, compliment a stranger's outfit in the bathroom
like it's her job. They celebrate, They don't compete, they
see They see other women's win as motivation, not a threat.
They are emotionally fluent. They know how to listen, validate,
and comfort without judgment.
Speaker 4 (39:09):
So I don't know a single woman that does what
you just the sentences you just finished. I don't know
a single individual.
Speaker 2 (39:23):
Who who doesn't do who comforts without judgment.
Speaker 4 (39:27):
No, the emotion part, you read that they handle their emotions.
I don't know a single individual.
Speaker 1 (39:34):
That does that.
Speaker 2 (39:37):
It's a tough one.
Speaker 4 (39:39):
Damn here impossible.
Speaker 2 (39:40):
Yeah, the other attributes I can see clearly, and I
see it in a lot of my girlfriends.
Speaker 1 (39:49):
Come on, I'm sure you have great friends. It's not
a statement about that. It's women are very caddy. You're
very caddy. Yeah, So it's just a women trait. So
women are all feministic until we talk about Jada Pinkett Smith, right,
So yeah, keep her name out you. I'm just saying,
I'm just saying.
Speaker 2 (40:11):
No, I agree. I agree with that. The pop culture
example of the girl's girl is Taylor Swift.
Speaker 1 (40:20):
And you made a funny face. I mean, you had
a loud face just now.
Speaker 2 (40:24):
I mean she did have the uh, the look what
you made me do? And that that when that album
came out, it was supposed to be negative towards I
think what Kim Kardashian she said that. I don't think
she had to. I think others said it for her.
Speaker 1 (40:41):
I'm just saying.
Speaker 2 (40:42):
And she was in the video.
Speaker 4 (40:43):
Wasn't she Well, are you have the video for her song?
Speaker 2 (40:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (40:48):
She was?
Speaker 4 (40:48):
She in the video for her song. I'm just saying
that that sounds like an interpretation.
Speaker 1 (40:54):
I don't like using her as an example or celebrities
in general, because it's all a persona put onto the public.
We do not know who or how these people are
behind closed doors exactly when when the cameras aren't rolling.
You know, we just don't know. She could be a
total and I bet you she is to see you
next Tuesday.
Speaker 4 (41:16):
It's like saying Ross Geller is David Swimmer, right right,
there's no way to know that.
Speaker 1 (41:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (41:24):
A guy's girl a woman who mostly hangs or connects
better with men, often known as one of the guys.
The vibe is chill, low maintenance, bro energy, but still feminine.
Speaker 4 (41:37):
When I meet a girl and somebody goes, oh, you'll
love her, she's a guy's girl.
Speaker 1 (41:42):
I'm like, Eh, that means she likes to take and
my experiences anyway. That's the way. It's always been a
bunch of slutty horrors bitches.
Speaker 4 (41:55):
Really, He's usually been some sort of compensation from some
psychological events in their life.
Speaker 1 (42:00):
Sho they love that male attention. That's why they are
a guy's girl. They have a word for they have
a title for that.
Speaker 2 (42:13):
Yeah, so they say that. In the pop culture example,
they give Mila Kunis, Jennifer Lawrence, Cameron Diez as being
the guy's girl. They enjoy guys stuff, sports, video games
are just talking smack while watching television.
Speaker 1 (42:33):
We don't how do we know that?
Speaker 2 (42:37):
Don't know that about that. I mean we've seen them
at like sporting events and things like that.
Speaker 4 (42:42):
So what I know plenty of girls that go to
sporting events just to be with their partner, and they
don't know a look about sports other than there's a
ball on the field.
Speaker 2 (42:50):
Right. It says that they have no fake front. They're
comfortable showing up in a hoodie or in full glam.
They say what they mean and they don't expect mind reading.
I mean, I kind of consider myself a guy's girl,
but I except for the straightforward I the mind reading.
(43:11):
I feel like my husband should be able to read
my mind sometimes based on how I'm acting. It's just me.
I think that's just the girls.
Speaker 1 (43:23):
That's not you, that's your species, Yes, thank you, that's
that's not that's not awesome.
Speaker 2 (43:29):
I know, I know it's not I know.
Speaker 4 (43:31):
I've never liked when people give themselves titles like I'm
a I'm a i'm a I'm a bro, I'm a
guy's girl or a girl's guy or whatever. I'm like
you want to be that titles are earned. You can't
give yourself a title.
Speaker 2 (43:51):
A guys guy man who embodies traditional masculine interests. They're straight?
Does that mean hey, yeah, what are the traditional masculine interests?
Speaker 1 (44:03):
They enjoy hunting and fishing and eating meat and making
things out of wood and steel, riding horses bareback right,
wrangle some cattle. Sure. Yeah, I know plenty of guys
that are quite alpha and don't do any of those things.
Speaker 2 (44:23):
Well, and their vibe says they're straightforward, loyal, sports talk
and bear at the bar, energy, likes stereotypical guy stuff,
sports grilling.
Speaker 1 (44:36):
Competition, that's not one thing.
Speaker 2 (44:40):
Well yeah, loyal to his boys values, brotherhood, will do
bros before hose, will risk a dispute with a woman
out of respect to his men. I don't think that's
a guy's guy necessarily. He won't sleep with his buddy's
ex girlfriend.
Speaker 1 (45:00):
That is bro code. Sure. Wow, that doesn't make you
a guy's guy. That just makes you someone with.
Speaker 2 (45:06):
The morals right, a decent person, not really emotional. The
only emotions he experiences are bro emotions. Admired for being
solid or reliable, can dip into toxic masculinity if not
emotionally aware.
Speaker 1 (45:29):
See this is why I don't like this.
Speaker 4 (45:30):
You're dogging that personality, and some would if you were
making a movie about that type of character, sure you
would put that in there. But plenty of people I
know that are like that aren't necessarily toxic men or
dip their.
Speaker 1 (45:46):
Toe in it.
Speaker 2 (45:48):
Yeah, this is the gay guys street guy, the definition
the street dude. Every gay guy adores. They're confident. They're
unbothered by flirting. They're comfortable in queer spaces. Their vibe
is confident, immune to awkwardness. Gets hit on at a
(46:11):
at a pride parade and takes it as a compliment.
They dress well without overthinking it. They enjoy compliments that
aren't cringey. They stand up against homophobia from other guys,
and they might dance at the gay bar without over
(46:32):
explaining themselves. They consider in the pop culture example, Paul Rudd, Pedro,
Pascal Channing, Tatum, and Harry Styles. Okay, sure, the straight
guy's gay guy. This is the guy, the gay guy
(46:53):
with no gay superpowers. He's just your friend who happens
to like girls, also known as the boring gay friend.
Maybe he grew up around people who didn't quite get it.
Maybe he doesn't like dumb questions. But this is the
friend who doesn't talk about his dating life. If you
had to guess that he was gay, you just can't tell.
(47:13):
He's a guy, guy who likes dudes.
Speaker 1 (47:16):
Gay.
Speaker 2 (47:17):
Yeah, he likes sports, he likes Joe Rogan, and he
likes daring men. He's athletic. Not only does he watch sports,
but he's done a few triathlons and runs a few marathons.
He's irritated by the gay community. He's proud to be gay,
but going to the Pride parade gives him a headache.
Speaker 1 (47:39):
Gay yeah, you know, gay people don't look like movie cliches.
Speaker 2 (47:44):
Right right, They're not all queer eye for the straight guy.
Speaker 4 (47:47):
And just because you like something doesn't mean you have
to completely be involved in every movement movement that goes
with it.
Speaker 1 (47:54):
You city sellsage.
Speaker 2 (47:55):
Yeah, there's the uh, gay guy, straight girl, straight woman
who's basically part of the gay friend group. She knows
every lyric to a Beyonce song. She is the queen
of Sunday drag Brunch and fiercely protective of any of
her gay friends. The examples are Liza Minelli, Lady Gaga,
(48:17):
Kelly Clarkson.
Speaker 4 (48:18):
You mean defender of people, right right?
Speaker 2 (48:22):
Yeah, the they've defined the lesbians lesbian the girls girl
of queer women, builds community, mentors baby gays, and defends
all things gay. Yeah. Their vibe is calm, confidence, emotionally stable,
(48:42):
owns power tools and crystals. That's gay, and gives great
breakup advice.
Speaker 1 (48:51):
Yeah, domb Yeah.
Speaker 2 (48:54):
They say that a lesbian's lesbian might have played rugby
in college and supports all women's sports, and most female
Philadelphia Eagles fans are lesbians lesbians.
Speaker 4 (49:06):
All right now, I'm on board.
Speaker 2 (49:10):
Right. They said that lesbian's lesbian will move in on
the second date. They're ready to commit to a long
term relationship with a woman very very quickly. There are
examples Rosie O'Donnell and Ellen DeGeneres.
Speaker 4 (49:26):
Does it describe the man who overcompensates his personality so
people don't think he's gay.
Speaker 2 (49:33):
Let's see the gay guy's gay guy. Possibly he's out,
he's proud, he's funny, he's funny, he's on point.
Speaker 4 (49:41):
No, No, the guy who you don't know is gay,
so he over compensates his male personality to hit all
the tropes so people don't think he's gay.
Speaker 2 (49:50):
Yeah, right, right, right right.
Speaker 4 (49:53):
M's working on with wood and you know, working on
cars and eating steak.
Speaker 1 (49:57):
Yeah. So see the game. Yeah, go go Chicago, Way
to go Bearday Hey.
Speaker 2 (50:06):
Now Philly anyway, what are you guys? Guy? Are you
a girl's girl? I'll put the list up on my socials.
Speaker 1 (50:18):
Lindsay Lindsen Linsen, Linsen, l A n d sc Y
Lindsay Lindsay Lindsay e n d st Y Linnsey check
my food. If you're listening to The Big Man Morning Show,
(50:41):
play a game. We got tickets to give away.
Speaker 4 (50:46):
The Mars Volta is going to be at the Cans
Ballroom on Sunday, and it's Wednesday, so that means pick
the flip. Current record is.
Speaker 1 (50:54):
Well, sir, I am leading with seventeen and Lindsay has twelve,
and you grin last week's when it was would be me.
So your choices are Corbin and Lindsay eight three three
four six O kmod. Let's go ahead and go to
the phones and get our first contestant. Good morning, you're
on the air. What is your name, Hannah? Hannah? How
(51:16):
are you today? Good? How are you good? Hannah? Who
would you like to give? Clues?
Speaker 4 (51:21):
Lindsay or Corbin h Lindsay Lindsay. Sixty seconds are on
the clock. Timer starts after the first clue.
Speaker 1 (51:31):
Are you ready? Sure? There we go?
Speaker 2 (51:36):
Okay. This was a book turned into a movie. Angelina
Joe Lee plays an officer and Denzel Washington is in
the hospital and he's helping her figure out who uh
the killer is.
Speaker 1 (51:55):
Unbroken? No, but.
Speaker 2 (52:00):
Okay, Uh, let's see your body is made up of
how many of these uh they're white, they're inside your body?
What are they? Throw me up, throw me up? Give
a dog a yeah, uh huh uh huh uh huh.
(52:22):
And if you are a stamp blank a hobby yes, yes, yes, yes, okay.
This movie was Ben Affleck and his wife went missing
and it was also a book recent and and she
wasn't actually missing. She ran away and she comes back
(52:44):
and she murdered girl. Yes, uh, this is Eddie Murphy
plays kind of like Dracula. Another word for Dracula.
Speaker 1 (52:52):
He was what.
Speaker 4 (52:54):
A what time?
Speaker 1 (52:57):
Time?
Speaker 2 (52:57):
Time?
Speaker 1 (52:58):
All right?
Speaker 4 (52:59):
Listen, Hannah, you got two? That might be good enough
for the win. Okay, okay, I think she has faith.
She clearly doesn't know I have five. Good morning, you're
on the air.
Speaker 1 (53:10):
What is your name? Hey, Danny, you and I have
to beat two?
Speaker 4 (53:15):
Are you ready?
Speaker 1 (53:18):
Let's do it? All right? Here we go pass.
Speaker 4 (53:24):
This is about the Mexican Latino singer for her president
of her fan club.
Speaker 1 (53:31):
Correct.
Speaker 4 (53:34):
Adam Sandler movie about golf.
Speaker 1 (53:37):
Happy Gilmore. Correct. This is a movie about a tiny mouse. Correct.
Speaker 4 (53:45):
This is an m Night Shyamalan movie where they live
out in the state park. No one can leave. They
have these monsters.
Speaker 1 (53:53):
Correct.
Speaker 4 (53:54):
Also an m Night Shyamalan movie. Mel Gibson is in it.
Water is the non Correct.
Speaker 1 (54:02):
This is a movie with.
Speaker 4 (54:05):
The kid from Napoleon Dynamite and their ice skaters.
Speaker 1 (54:12):
Correct.
Speaker 4 (54:14):
This is uh see Michael, I can't remember his name.
Speaker 1 (54:20):
It's a play. Ah doesn't matter.
Speaker 2 (54:23):
Man.
Speaker 1 (54:23):
Six is what we got.
Speaker 4 (54:24):
Congratulations awesome, So congratulations man. You're getting those tickets for.
Speaker 1 (54:36):
The Mars Volta.
Speaker 4 (54:38):
That show is at the King's Ballroom. Sunday hang on
the line.
Speaker 1 (54:41):
Okay, and you got it. Good job, buddy, I have about.
Speaker 4 (54:47):
Ah Hannah two was not enough girl. Thank you so
much for playing.
Speaker 1 (54:52):
Bator.
Speaker 4 (54:55):
This is the one that Lindsay ended on.
Speaker 1 (54:57):
By the way, why you didn't pass?
Speaker 4 (54:59):
I don't know understand.
Speaker 1 (55:00):
There's no way too much time on that.
Speaker 4 (55:03):
Uh yeah, this is a pretty I know this should
be a double pointer. It's a pretty obscure movie. One
of the burroughs of New York. If you come from
this borough, besides Queens, you're pretty tough, or believed to be.
And this is the mythical creature from Transylvania, right right right,
he likes to count. Tom Cruise played one Suck your
(55:26):
Blood vampire.
Speaker 1 (55:28):
In Brooklyn.
Speaker 2 (55:30):
And this one for Corbyn a double pointer.
Speaker 1 (55:36):
O see Lindley Okay, I can't remember.
Speaker 4 (55:39):
He's got like a three part name and I can't
remember his name.
Speaker 2 (55:43):
John Yes played basically a spoof of Johnny Cash. Am
I right there?
Speaker 1 (55:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (55:53):
Yeah? Don't run? But blank and not soft? Opposite of soft?
Speaker 4 (55:58):
Is Isn't this like a spoof of the of the
Walk the Line Johnny Cash? That's where I was trying
to get to, Yeah, walk hard the Dewey Cock story.
All right the record now.
Speaker 1 (56:08):
Well, that keeps me in a lead with seventeen, keeps
Lindsay with twelve, but congratulations moves you to six.
Speaker 4 (56:14):
Kimpy has in his four x four el Kholemna.
Speaker 1 (56:17):
Says here that the shutdown may impact SNAP soon. Millions
of the poorest Americans will soon be impacted. If the
government's shutdown doesn't end, funding for SNAP food assistants may
run out soon. The acting administrator of SNAP says the
program won't have enough money by the end of the
month if the shutdown continues. Over forty two million low
(56:41):
income Americans use to SNAP. Some states, including Texas and Pennsylvania,
have already warned that they will not be distributing SNAP
food assistance if the federal funds dry up. It says
here that gold price plummets as investor's profit off of
record highs. Gold hit an all time peak Monday at
(57:02):
nearly forty four hundred dollars an ounce. Wow, yeah, as
investors by precious metals in times of economic uncertainty. Yesterday
gold dropped over five percent, its steepest decline in over
five years. Silver and platinum prices also plummeted.
Speaker 4 (57:22):
Typically when gold drops Bitcoin goes up, and it did
spike yesterday for a short amount of time.
Speaker 1 (57:28):
Oh, so did you make millions of dollars? Made? Two cents? Probably? Yeah,
Well keep on trying. What else we got any? Trump
seeks money from the DOJ for investigating him. He says
that he's owed damages for two investigations, the alleged Russia
Interface UH interference in the twenty sixteen presidential election and
(57:49):
the FBI search of his Mara A Lago home related
to the handling of past by documents. He is reportedly
seeking two hundred and thirty million dollars as compensation. He
did note that it's an odd situation where people within
his own administration would be approving the possible ayouts. Oh
(58:09):
and then lastly here a law banning cell phone use
in school zones and construction zones begins November first. A
new Oklahoma law that'll make it illegal for drivers to
hold or use a cell phone while driving through active,
school or contruction zones House Built twenty two sixty three
goes into effect November one. Drivers can still use hand
(58:32):
free devices such as Bluetooth, Apple CarPlay, and Android Uttu
phones cannot be held in the hands for any reason,
such as talking, texting, or navigation violations carry the same
penalties as Oklahoma's texting while driving law, oak law or
excuse me. Officers cannot inspect or seize your cell phone
without a warrant or probable cause of another offense.
Speaker 4 (58:54):
Yeah, this feels logical. I think everybody knows this, But
sometimes women be crazy.
Speaker 1 (59:04):
What you don't say, men be crazy too, But a
man could never pull off what I'm about to tell you.
Speaker 4 (59:13):
This twenty two year old woman told her family that
she was pregnant. She even told the baby's father that
she was pregnant. She even had all the things that
grow that happened when you have a baby, a baby shower,
a gender reveal, and then and I'm gonna send you
(59:38):
the picture. She had the baby, she had the bump,
she had everything. And then she posted a photo of
her newborn baby, Bonnie Lee Joyce, that was born on October.
Speaker 1 (59:54):
The tenth. Something right about that baby.
Speaker 2 (59:57):
That's not a baby, that's a.
Speaker 4 (01:00:01):
Yes, that is a doll.
Speaker 1 (01:00:06):
She had boasted images and scans and even claimed tests
had defected detected that the baby had a heart defect.
Cousins claimed she gave birth alone and promptly started showing
off the newborn. Obviously, when the mom found the doll
in her bedroom. Ah, when the mom found the doll
(01:00:27):
in her bedroom, that's when the mom was like, something
is not right here, because her mom's a real genius.
And I'm going to show you a picture of her
with her baby bump, and I think just by the
picture of her baby bump, you can tell something is
not right.
Speaker 4 (01:00:48):
She made an apology, and she defended those she'd fooled
into believing that the doll was real. She says, quote
and everyone else's defense. The doll could move, you could
change the facial features, arms and legs. You could feed
the doll, making it pee or pooh. So when no
one is close to the doll, it does look real.
(01:01:08):
No one was looking at my baby excepted to be
a doll. These dolls were on about US two two
thousand dollars each. They're called reborn dolls. They're hyperrealistic baby
replicas that are often used as a form of therapy
for those who are struggling with infertility, infant loss, or dementia.
Oh Wow, they become part of a costplay type of
(01:01:32):
trend that is happening more and more in recent years,
even going as far as trying to breastfeed the doll,
and she apologized saying that she was so sorry. Quote,
I wasn't pregnant, there was no baby. I made it
up and kept it going way too far. I faked scans, messages,
a whole birth story, and acted like.
Speaker 1 (01:01:52):
The doll was a real baby. So she knew what
she was doing was wrong. She was just doing it
for attention.
Speaker 2 (01:02:00):
Yeah, did she ever say why she did it?
Speaker 4 (01:02:04):
No, But I can I think there could be a
couple of things going on. She could have maybe thought
she was pregnant and then wasn't right, because some girls
get like a feeling and then they take a test
and it says it is, and then it just says
it isn't later, or she goes to the dog.
Speaker 1 (01:02:21):
Right. It's very complicated, yea.
Speaker 4 (01:02:23):
So maybe there was something like that, and she carried
some sort of guilt, or she had already told some
people and felt like she was there was shame if
she would have came back and said because that maybe
she made it as a joke and got some attention
and was like this feels like a good drug and
then kept the bit up and then it spiraled out
of control, and she probably like, I'm going to end
it today, and then you know, people were really nice
(01:02:44):
to her, and then she was like, ah, I'll do
it tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:02:50):
I don't know if she was like, you know, mister beans,
twiddling her thumbs like I need attention. Right, maybe she was,
But ultimately I don't think that the motivation when something
like this, when this type of elaborate lies happened, it's
because it's spiraled out of control.
Speaker 1 (01:03:07):
Right.
Speaker 4 (01:03:08):
What I don't understand is her boyfriend never went with
her to a doctor. The mother never went with her
to a doctor appointment. Usually first time grandma's are very excited.
Oh yeah, very excited. We'll move heaven and earth to
be as much, sometimes too much part of the process.
Speaker 2 (01:03:26):
Right.
Speaker 4 (01:03:28):
So to me, it's a giant surprise that nobody, nobody
put their hand on the baby to feel the bump.
She go to elaborate schemes to make some sort of
tube that like kicked the side of her you know,
hodgepodged balloon bump that she made.
Speaker 1 (01:03:43):
I don't know, yeah, well.
Speaker 2 (01:03:45):
Or maybe the relationship with her boyfriend was on the
outs and she was thinking this could save.
Speaker 4 (01:03:51):
It maybe, and then she was like, oh, I'm in
too deep. Yeah, I can't go back now.
Speaker 1 (01:03:58):
Yah right yeah, even that bump looks you can tell
clearly something right there.
Speaker 4 (01:04:03):
Yes, just the way she's standing, You're like, that makes
no sense, right, And the other part of this is
that the insult it is to people that have had
a baby and lost a like had a stillborn or
something like that. Ran it's so wild and people are going,
(01:04:26):
you know, all in this woman's deranged.
Speaker 1 (01:04:30):
I don't think it's that easy.
Speaker 4 (01:04:32):
Well, I mean she might be. She does kind of
got a little crazy look in her eyes. But whatever,
only because you know what she did, right, and at
least she didn't have a go fundme, right, that is true.
Speaker 2 (01:04:47):
But she did have a baby shower sure, and a
gender reveal. So did she return the gifts that she received?
Speaker 4 (01:04:54):
I mean, she doesn't need them, right, so hopefully she
donated them.
Speaker 1 (01:05:00):
Your friend, does this? Are you mad? Are you dumb?
Being friends? Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:05:10):
Why? I'd have to know why she did it?
Speaker 1 (01:05:12):
Okay, what would be a reason.
Speaker 2 (01:05:17):
That's something inside her brain is not working properly, Like
it's a spoiler. Yeah, right, I think it's forgivable.
Speaker 4 (01:05:31):
Will you'll continue to be friends with her? Yeah, and
the next time she says she's getting married or having
a kid.
Speaker 2 (01:05:38):
Right, I'll definitely question that. I wouldn't believe it right away,
I'm sure.
Speaker 1 (01:05:43):
But how do you question that? Right? She showed photos.
Speaker 4 (01:05:47):
Yeah, it's not like one of her friends was like, hey,
it's all made right.
Speaker 2 (01:05:54):
Or maybe they did. Maybe someone did question it behind
her back and they just didn't say it to her face.
Speaker 4 (01:06:00):
I mean that's what you would do, right if you like,
I don't think you know Meredith is pregnant, right, you'd
be like, we can't say anything. Can you imagine being
pregnant and someone going, you're not pregnant, You're lying. I
cannot not pregnant, You're just fat?
Speaker 2 (01:06:14):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
I have the scans? Who scans? Were they right? I
mean you could get you could pull that off the internet. Yeah, okay,
you can get pictures of sonograms off the internet or
you know your friend's Facebook feed.
Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
Hell A, I could probably generate one for you.
Speaker 4 (01:06:34):
And then all it takes is that that photo type
paper that they have at the boom. You got one
Amazon Personalized pregnancy prank Customize ultrasound. Oh god, thirty nine bucks.
Get it here by Halloween.
Speaker 1 (01:06:51):
That is wild. Well I know what I'm doing for
Halloween this year. There is more than one, dude. This
might be a praying for your brother for me, for
my brother. Yeah, to let him think that I'm having
a baby.
Speaker 2 (01:07:09):
Yet it didn't take right right.
Speaker 1 (01:07:12):
Also, he's listening right now, so spoiled. Damn it.
Speaker 4 (01:07:16):
Maybe my little brother because I don't think he listens.
How funny is that?
Speaker 1 (01:07:22):
Right? So on the show.
Speaker 4 (01:07:32):
The person before you, they we said they were telling
us something about their life, and we were like, you
might be pregnant. We bought a pregnancy test. She took
the test and when she put it down for a second,
I picked it up and made it a plus and
put it back down.
Speaker 1 (01:07:50):
It was not a digital one. It was like the
thing and we were like, how long do you have
to wait? You know? And then when she looked at it,
Oh god, that was fantastic. That was a fantastic day.
Corman and his magic tricks. He got a sleight of
hand and it was such a crude plus yeah, yeah,
(01:08:13):
it was like you can clearly see it was done
with a big pen. But to keep the studio dark
you could really tell you know, and and that no,
you're right, the old studio we would keep really like
no lights on. It was fantastic, probably one of the
best pranks be done. Yeah, but did you get the
(01:08:37):
ultrasound thing? Oh? Oh, that is commitment.
Speaker 4 (01:08:41):
But this is I think having the ultrasound pictures is
the only way a guy could pull that off, and
it would be short lived.
Speaker 1 (01:08:49):
Do guys? I I did not go around and show
off the ultrasound pictures, you know when when the babies
were when we found out we were having them, Right,
do guys do that?
Speaker 4 (01:09:02):
I think in the time when you your kids were
preg when you were a girl was pregnant and you
had your kids, I think to you to get a
copy to carry around. No, But I think in modern
times it can be on your phone or on your
social media.
Speaker 1 (01:09:16):
Yes, okay, I guess maybe if it's your first one,
you might be super excited and proud want to show everybody.
Speaker 4 (01:09:24):
I think I had mine on my phone, but I
didn't show. I mean, I didn't go hey, hey, Yeah,
I just I think that's more of a lady thing,
a gal thing to do, more so than a guy thing. Yeah,
For me, it was like, hey, I don't you know,
I don't think it's my business to be shown off
the inside of my wife's belly.
Speaker 1 (01:09:39):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:09:39):
Someone text in and said, yes, I'm done being friends.
Every woman I've known that has these reborn dolls actually
use and treat them like real babies. It was so
bad with a longtime friend of mine. She was taking
it to the gas station in restaurants, trying to convince
people it was real, too much therapy for me, Like
this is a thing.
Speaker 1 (01:09:59):
Like, yeah, there's a lot in that text. You're right,
Lindsay the fact that you said I've known every woman
I've known as in more than one and two.
Speaker 4 (01:10:10):
I would argue it is bizarre. But I would argue
at a animalistic level, in the brain of a female,
you might feel the need to do that, like it's
a It's like how women just want to hold a
baby where they're like forever, Like I love the smell
of babies, Like once you eat horse meat, then you
(01:10:32):
love you know what I'm talking about, Like there's just
that thing that happens. I think I could see that connection.
I'm not saying that's what's happened. I'm like, I could
see that connection of it, like it's just gone too far.
And again, if you've lost a baby, I think that's
a whole other thing.
Speaker 2 (01:10:47):
Yeah, I wow, taken it to the gas station restaurants.
Speaker 4 (01:10:54):
Yo, I'm done if that happens. We're not friends. We're
not friends. That is that's like faking you have cancer. Right,
you are tricking me into an emotional state for your
personal game. That's not okay, it is forgivable, but it's
forgivable away from me.
Speaker 2 (01:11:11):
Yeah. In high school, we there was home ac there
was a sociology class and in that class, some kids
at some schools had the babies that pretend babies.
Speaker 1 (01:11:22):
But they were clearly fake.
Speaker 2 (01:11:24):
Correct. We didn't have that. We had to take care
of an egg.
Speaker 1 (01:11:28):
Yeah, yeah, we did that too. Yeah, weak a flower
and the ones that do that with the with the baby.
Everybody knows that. That's the like the class thing. You're not,
you know, showing up to school suddenly with a bump
and then the next day you have a bag of
flower or a thing from weed from we meet the
Miller's all right, we got to take a break. We'll
be back rush for the big Med morning show.
Speaker 4 (01:11:51):
Is that do you remember when Suzanne Sommers died and
her husband said he was working with somebody to create
an a I clone.
Speaker 1 (01:12:01):
Of her, Yeah, a sex doll of his deceased wife.
Speaker 4 (01:12:08):
He's fifty five. I'm sorry. They've been together. They've been
together fifty five years. And he says that you can't
tell the difference now that could be attributed to maybe
the last part of her life she was immobile.
Speaker 1 (01:12:25):
Nope, right, old leathery.
Speaker 4 (01:12:28):
I find it hard to believe you can't tell the difference,
he says. Obviously, Suzanne was greatly loved, not only by
her family, but by millions of people. One of the
projects that we have is a really interesting project called
Suzanne's AI Twin. It was it's Suzanne, and I asked
(01:12:48):
her a few questions and she answered them, and it
blew me and everybody else away. When you look at
the fish, the finished one next to the real Suzanne,
you can't tell the difference.
Speaker 1 (01:12:59):
Well, hold on the fake one next to the real one,
the real one. You do not.
Speaker 4 (01:13:08):
You are not putting the fake one next to the
real one one. It ain't gonna look like what it should. No,
I'm looking at the doll he's got here. It looks
nothing like her, nothing at all. I mean, blonde hair,
pale skin. That's about as far as he goes, not
even her and her younger years.
Speaker 1 (01:13:31):
In her chrissy years.
Speaker 4 (01:13:33):
Is the one where they're sitting in the bed.
Speaker 1 (01:13:35):
This is the one. It's like, it's just a side
by side, right, It's got him and the actual Suzanne
Summers looks like he's holding her at a at a
red carpet thing. Then the doll next to her looks
like is where they made it? If that's the one.
It doesn't look anything like her at all. I mean
(01:13:58):
I can't. Rarely do these ever look.
Speaker 2 (01:14:03):
Like it.
Speaker 4 (01:14:04):
Rarely they don't look anything like them. Even the AI
generated holographic whatever, Yeah, they don't look anything like it,
And so I find it hard to believe. Now, I
do think that if they could figure out a way
(01:14:25):
to make them look very real, that the sex industry
would make so much money.
Speaker 1 (01:14:34):
Oh yeah, I mean they already have body parts of
your favorite yeastar, right, So how awesome would it be
to have an entire doll made to look like Alexis
tex Hold? Hold the phone. You see the doll? Now,
hold the phone? Have you seen this?
Speaker 4 (01:14:55):
Lindsay, no, hold the Okay, Lindsay, sometimes I'm very like
I'm too much right. I get that that my self
awareness is good. You tell me if I'm overreacting, Lindsay
that that doesn't look anything like Suzanne and her husband,
(01:15:16):
the widow may have dementia.
Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
Yeah, he's got dementia. Hey, you're absolutely right, not overreacting
at all. You can absolutely that it looks nothing like her.
Speaker 4 (01:15:33):
No, it doesn't, not even in her younger years. Maybe
her extremely younger years when she was like twelve, but.
Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
It looks like it looks like one of those brats doals.
Speaker 4 (01:15:48):
I think it looks like I'm trying to remember the
name of the actress. Now it looks like Mina Savari,
the actress from American Beauty. Okay, little bit, I think
the young version, not now, not now, But this looks
it's almost like the company came to this man and
(01:16:10):
we're like, we know your lost listen, we have this
new technology where we can recreate it a look just
like it. And the guy was like okay, And the
president of the company went back and was like, guys,
we're getting the funding.
Speaker 1 (01:16:22):
It's going good. And then day ten they were like sir,
we can't know, and he's like, listen, just just do what.
Just get it. Make it look like a girl he'll
never know.
Speaker 4 (01:16:33):
Give it blonde hair and a big bust.
Speaker 2 (01:16:35):
It looks like it looks like the AI version has
resting bitch face as well. And Susan Clummers never had that,
like that was never her and.
Speaker 4 (01:16:48):
I doubt she ever did the the eyeliner thing lines
out to the side that is the trend.
Speaker 1 (01:16:53):
Now that I do think she did do that, maybe,
but maybe the AI and this doll is so advanced
that this doll knows exactly what's about to happen to her,
and she's not looking forward to it, and that's why
she's got that disgusted look on her face.
Speaker 4 (01:17:12):
This feels like they're taking advantage of this guy.
Speaker 1 (01:17:14):
They totally are. They are one hundred percent and it's
said it's set on a couple of different levels. It's
sad that the company is taking advantage of this old man.
It's sad that this old man misses his lady so
much that he's willing to go to this length instead
of just letting her go and moving on with his life,
(01:17:34):
that he has to make a sex doll for all
intentsive purposes. That's exactly what it is. But that doesn't
mean he's using it as a sex doll. Dude.
Speaker 4 (01:17:46):
I saw a picture of him at it like a
like they were wishing her happy birthday and she's dead
and like he's being held up like he isn't frey all.
Speaker 1 (01:17:56):
Well either way, it's still sad that he's got that
mental state to where like this is this is his
best option.
Speaker 2 (01:18:02):
This is a closer replica of like Alicia Silverstone in Clueless.
Speaker 4 (01:18:07):
Okay, somebody text in the doll looks like it has
down syndrome.
Speaker 1 (01:18:11):
I don't. Wow, damn it. Yeah, I see it now.
I see it now. Maybe not downs, but there's some
kind of sense I can't help, but yeah's got it.
Speaker 2 (01:18:26):
In the other picture, I might see it.
Speaker 4 (01:18:29):
What's a big old for he yo, he's eighty nine?
Speaker 1 (01:18:33):
Yeah, yeah, poor guy.
Speaker 4 (01:18:35):
He's not having sex with this. He probably you know,
thinks he's going to, and then uses it as a pillow.
Speaker 2 (01:18:43):
He makes it a cup of coffee and sits with
it at the table.
Speaker 1 (01:18:47):
He talks.
Speaker 4 (01:18:48):
I'm glad they can't do this. I'm glad they cannot
replicate it perfectly because If that were the case, what
would stop Frank from getting an AI doll that looked
like Gimpy's girlfriend or anyone else?
Speaker 2 (01:19:02):
Right? Or yeah? Or Sharon doing it for Ozzie.
Speaker 4 (01:19:08):
I mean a widow thing.
Speaker 1 (01:19:09):
I get.
Speaker 4 (01:19:09):
That's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about getting
somebody you don't have a relationship.
Speaker 1 (01:19:14):
Yes, right, Let's just say, for example, I go on
the internet, I go on social media, I find a
picture of Corbyn's wife, and then I send it to
these guys and say, hey, make me a sex doll
using this picture. Right here, I'm right here with you.
I think if you limit it to porn stars, then okay,
it's fine. In my opinion, it's fine if they're porn stars,
(01:19:38):
any other actress or actor or just random citizen. I
am not. I don't think it's okay.
Speaker 2 (01:19:45):
If you did that. If you made the AI version
of his wife, would you tell him about it?
Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
What do you mean if if I personally, what do
you mean if I went Oh, and okay, you're saying,
if I went and got an AI version sex doll
of Corbyn's would I tell Corbin about it?
Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:20:02):
No, no, right, But what if you took pictures of
it and then put it online. I'm like, why are
you with GIMPI in bed? Right, I'm just we're just
using an examples, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, but it feels
like maybe the thing is they asked him, hey, what
age do you want? And he picked a teenage girl.
Speaker 1 (01:20:24):
That's what it looks like.
Speaker 4 (01:20:25):
It looks like a teenage.
Speaker 2 (01:20:26):
Girl, Like maker is if oh, I can't even say
it is if if we had a daughter together, what
she would look like?
Speaker 1 (01:20:33):
I'll go old Woody allen on right, Yeah, that would
be worse. That was a tactic that was that would
be worse to me.
Speaker 4 (01:20:41):
The idea that if you could do this with your
partner and you get to pick the age, what age
are you picking? Are you picking he's eighty nine, she
was seventy six? Does he pick seventy six year old version?
Or do you pick you know, a wedding day version
of your partner?
Speaker 3 (01:20:57):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:20:57):
Well, this ain't wedding day. Wow, I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:21:00):
Maybe it was a different time maybe in Utah.
Speaker 1 (01:21:02):
Yeah right, I personally would probably go with my most
recent one because that's the one that you know, that's
the one that passed. You grew old with this person.
You didn't grow young with this person. You didn't Benjamin
Button with this person, You know what I mean? Yeah,
but usually most people would say they looked their best
(01:21:24):
on their wedding day. That is true, just like I
say this about ghosts. So why I don't believe in ghosts?
What version of the ghost shows up? Yeah, it doesn't matter.
They're all wearing colonial clothes anyway, That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (01:21:38):
And when you go to heaven, is it my dad
my like what last time I saw him because he
wasn't in great condition? Or is it young spy dad
that I never met?
Speaker 1 (01:21:49):
Right? I would bet he'd like to be young spry, right,
I would.
Speaker 4 (01:21:54):
I don't want to go to heaven is like, you know,
can't stand up and takes ten minutes to get bomb the.
Speaker 1 (01:22:00):
Ground And what are you doing on the ground anyway?
Speaker 4 (01:22:03):
I'm just saying that, like, I'd rather be the young version, right?
So do you you don't get I don't think you
get the old version of your partner. I don't know,
so weird, so weird. It looks nothing like her, So.
Speaker 2 (01:22:20):
For him to be having this now because of him
missing her, I don't think that's it. No, because he's
dating her friend.
Speaker 1 (01:22:30):
He doesn't know it though. The story just got a
little more twisted.
Speaker 4 (01:22:38):
I think they came to him, they gave him some
money to do this, and he went, Okay.
Speaker 2 (01:22:43):
He's now dating Joanna Cassidy.
Speaker 1 (01:22:46):
Okay, I don't know who that is.
Speaker 2 (01:22:47):
She was a former co star of Suzanne Summers.
Speaker 1 (01:22:50):
Okay, so what of what? Yeah? See my point?
Speaker 2 (01:22:54):
Like it? She looks they look very similar. She this,
this Joanne Cassidy in this picture looks more like Suzanne
than the AI doll.
Speaker 1 (01:23:06):
Apparently this dame was in Blade Runner and who framed
Roger Rabbit? And don't tell mom the babysitter's dead. And wow,
she's been in a lot of things. Okay, bam, Bryan
Brooklyn came up twice today. All Right, we gotta take
a break. We'll be back.