Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
You are about to witness amazing Emo has coming.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Living one's property of all times.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
Yes, my bow suck on you bow down to your master?
Can you digg it?
Speaker 1 (00:33):
Can you did it?
Speaker 4 (00:35):
Where you did?
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Allowed to play?
Speaker 5 (00:46):
Allowed to play?
Speaker 6 (00:51):
Come out to play, Come out to play.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
The post horse.
Speaker 5 (01:02):
The sun is rising, God, wake up, Wake.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
Up now, don't worry.
Speaker 5 (01:12):
We're all here to show you how Jenno Wiz horses,
Glass station k and Bote homers. This is It's a
Sam Musby. Don't turn downtown.
Speaker 3 (01:23):
Tass wait and see.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
Are you ready?
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Are you ready to jove?
Speaker 5 (01:30):
It's time to start to show plasticks a clbout Blasco.
It's a Big Man Marny show. Welcome to the work
and we it's all such.
Speaker 7 (01:47):
A war kick that makes up thatsop.
Speaker 5 (01:51):
It and make his hardcore. Hang you whisby and then
mess pick up your soul dead line.
Speaker 8 (01:58):
You're on the air.
Speaker 4 (02:18):
Last year.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Toll free
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M O D.
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You can also text b m MS and then what
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(02:50):
we're on Facebook, Facebook dot com slash b m MS
six y nine. That's where you can hang out with
us each and every day. Good morning, Lindsey, Good morning, Corvin,
Good morning, Gimpy, what hell? Good morning? We got tickets
to see the Mars Volta that shows Sunday at the
Canes Ballroom. So what Gimpy wants to talk about? We've
(03:12):
got conspiracy theory Thursday top list, the top five most
memorable movie quotes. Hey not five most memorable movie quotes.
And it's time for the nineteenth annual Cancer Sucks Concert
that is Saturday, November twenty ninth that the Canes Ballroom.
(03:33):
Gets your tickets at Canesbaroom dot com for Josee Scott,
the original voice of Saliva Randa, and two winners from
Our Battle, the band's contest that is all to raise
money for Cancer Sucks. And it's a good way to
spend day Friday after Thanksgiving Saturday, Saturday after Thanksgiving. Thank
(03:54):
You even says it.
Speaker 9 (03:56):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
And the way you get to play on the stage,
he's got to enter a one song demo at kmod
dot com and then we will judge them any genre.
The only real rule is it's got to be clean. Deep.
Speaker 8 (04:14):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (04:14):
I should probably mention this as well. If you're going
to submit a band's one song demo, make sure it's
your band. I'm remembering. Okay, go ahead, make sure it's
your band. Make sure it's a local band. Here's the dildo, bro.
I was going through submissions, you know, downloading. I haven't
listened to anything yet. I'm just getting him in a
fold or preparing. Right. Somebody had submitted Daughtry. It's a
(04:39):
great choice. Yeah, not local, okay, nor do I think
he's available to play? No, And somebody also submitted, and
this is a totally different person. So two different people
submitted and one other one was falling in reverse. So
we got Daughtry and following verse, both of them solid choices. However,
not local bands, probably not available. We're looking for local bands, right.
Speaker 10 (05:02):
They just didn't understand the assignment, I guess not.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
Or they're just our listeners and that's the way it is.
Either way, local bands It doesn't have to be from Tulsa.
It could be a Wassa, Bartlesville, Oklahoma City. Hell am,
I even take somebody from Arkansas somewhere, you know. But
the fact of it is, it has to be somebody
that's not I don't know a major band that we
(05:25):
play here on kmod constant. Yeah, and you have to
submit the band as it's your band, a member of
the band or management team. I guess something to that effect. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
but like, don't put in, oh, Metallica, Well, yeah, fantastic.
Speaker 3 (05:41):
We can't do that.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
They're not gonna win. No, I don't know if Lars submitted,
if Lars lives here, Yeah, right, submitted and be like, hey,
I got a band Metallica we would like to play.
I might consider it, might come on, probably more than
likely come on, But I don't want to overshadow. Josie Scott,
the original voice of Saliva, who is headlining the Cancer sucks.
Speaker 10 (06:05):
Contol with it, he thinks, So he'd be like, can't
bring him along for sure?
Speaker 1 (06:12):
Well kmod dot com is the place to do that,
and we can't wait to hear all the submissions. There's
this awesome story about a family. Sorry, my computer wants
to do things on its own. Now tell me about it.
They were boating last Friday in their old thirty foot
(06:34):
pleasure boat, right, and so that's got like a cabin
in it, things like that. And they were anchoring between
Cape Cod and Martha's Vineyard. And then on Monday night,
just this past Monday night, they were anchored, their boat
caught caught on fire. Their dog woke them up in
(06:55):
the middle of the night. They then obviously jumped off
the boat vat swam to shore. It's not clear how
far they swam, but they didn't know where they were.
They didn't have their phones, of course, they didn't have nothing.
And they found a barn and stayed in a barn.
(07:18):
Then the next day a relative was expecting them back
never heard from them. They called the authorities to let
them know that, hey, these people went on a boat,
we haven't they're not back. Something happened Wednesday morning. The
Sun was walking along the shore found their marine radio
(07:41):
had washed ashore, which allowed him to send a May
day call to the coast Guard. The Coastguard found them
on Nashan Island and then airlifted them out to get
medical care. Tour in stable condition. One has severe burns
and had to go to a special burn hospital. Wow.
(08:02):
Now the water in that area is about sixty degrees.
That's still lower than your body temperature. Ten to fifteen minutes,
things are going to start feeling weird. You're going to
be struggling, maybe your speech won't work. You feel real cold, right, Definitely,
(08:22):
an hour in the water, it's not going to be awesome. Yeah,
it's not quite Titanic cold, but it's not, you know,
as warm as it is if you were swimming at
the lake or your bathtub. Right, And as a core connection,
it was twenty four degrees when the Titanic water. Yike,
that's one minute. So it's only ten times more cold,
(08:43):
which is a lot, but also not you always you know,
I always think about Titanic being like so like extreme. Right,
So it was cold. It's unclear how far they had
to go. The dog didn't make it. That woke them
up and saved their life. And and yes, that's the
saddest part of the story, lindsay the dog sacrifice yeah
(09:05):
himself to say, well that's their gomly cats don't do that. Nope.
Although I have seen a lot of videos on the
TikTok lately of cats like warding off intruders and other
animals saving babies and stuff like that. AI Anyway, so
they I guess the island was kind of not inhabited,
but they were at this house or this barn that
(09:27):
looked like maybe it was a vacation place and no
one was in at the time. And so my thought is,
when you get to shore, I can't imagine the chaos
and the feeling. Once you get to shore, it's the
middle of the night, you're not really sure what island
you are on. You don't have a flashlight, you don't
have your phone. Yeah, and there's no lights on because
(09:49):
it's you know, maybe there were. But you go to
what you're building, it's a barn. You're like, okay, JC
could do it. I could do it. Yea yeah, and
you lay down, try to fall asleep. There's no way
you fall asnow, not immediately, that's for damn sure. Maybe
just from sheer exhaustion, right, you know, swimming back to
shore and the hiking it took to get to the
(10:12):
barn that you found. It looked like maybe it was
one hundred feet from the shoreline. The barn was Yeah,
maybe two hundred How far was the boat from We
don't know, We don't know. And that's that's that right there,
I think is where most your exhaustion would come in
just swimming back in that cold water, and whether trying
to get to land. Open water swimming is really difficult.
(10:33):
It is not like swimming in a bathtub, sorry, swimming
in a pool, right, same thing, just bigger basically, And
I agree your adrenaline would be pumping. But swimming is
not easy. And if somebody was couldn't swim or wasn't
a good swimmer, you probably have to help them a
little bit. Yeah, not to mention obstacles in the water,
(10:55):
if there are any. Yeah, And who's to say that
they thought of or had time to get life jackets?
Doesn't sound like it before, Yeah, doesn't sound like it.
And who's got time to go up under the bench
and grab them exactly right in a closet with the
brooms right, And as.
Speaker 10 (11:13):
The parents on board, their minds are not just thinking
about getting to shore, but they're thinking about the safety
of the family.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
So there's only one other kid on the ship, Well.
Speaker 10 (11:26):
That's what they're thinking about. Getting their child to Sure,
it's unclear how.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
Old he was though, right, whether he's old enough, just
not that they wouldn't be thinking about him last, but
you tend to not worry as much. Sure, if they're seventeen, eighteen,
nineteen twenty compared to six, Right, are your points taken?
Speaker 10 (11:42):
Yeah, I'd be constantly looking behind my shoulder making sure
they're keeping up with me. So I think by the
time you do get to shore, you are so mentally
and physically fatigued that it's like sleepy time.
Speaker 1 (11:53):
I don't know. I would feel like i'd have to
stay away because I don't know where we are. I
don't know who could show up.
Speaker 10 (12:00):
That is a great point too. I feel like I
would be that way too, but I don't think I could.
I could physically do it. Eventually, you'll just you're gonna right,
It's gonna take over.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
So then sunlight comes up, You're all right, there's a house.
Still don't know my orientation. Sun came up over here. Okay,
I think I know generally where we're at. We gotta
find some food. Do you break into the house. I
would knock on the door first, Yeah, yeah, no, if
it's clear no one's there, Yeah. If there's clear no
one's there, then absolutely I'm breaking into that house and
(12:32):
leave a note. I even leave a note, they'll get
over it. You're gonna miss a few apples, maybe a
pie or something to that, whatever can goods that they
have in there. But if they're not there and you're
breaking in just to stay, get in there, yeah, go in. Yeah.
Speaker 10 (12:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
And if I own that property, you're probably well, you're
well off anyway. Yeah, Cape Cod Area, Las Vineyard, So
you would probably I would amain and you go that's fine, Yes, well,
how can I help? A true dick would have been like, hey,
I'm pressed and charges because you stole my green beans
and broke into myuse. I'm sorry if I were dying, Yeah,
(13:14):
press charges the dagon go where I'm not parsking. Yeah, yeah,
And I would imagine there's some form of communication in
the house. Maybe maybe because landlines aren't really a thing anymore,
some people have them, that's true, mom, you know, but
for the most part everything's cell phone. But at least
that gives you some kind of better shelter than a barn,
(13:38):
something that at least you know, you're used to. People
are used to being in a house and some medical attention.
I would think that'd be in there, and some a
first aid kit. Yeah, and maybe there's not good cell
service out there.
Speaker 10 (13:52):
Yeah, but maybe there is a computer. Maybe there's a
last hook up.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
Yeah, that's all good and gravy. But what if this
is one of those vacation houses where you know, we
disconnect the power when we're not there. Yeah. Yeah, I
don't know if they do that in the Northeast where
it gets really cold and they don't want their pipes freeze.
But maybe I don't. I don't know how that works, right,
I don't have a vacation house. Don't either, I don't know.
I don't want one. I don't want to vacate. I
don't want a second home. I don't want a vacation house.
(14:18):
I can't keep up with my current one, right right,
I would just make my vacation house my primary docile.
I want to I want to live on the lake.
I like to have a house on the lake. That'd
be great, But you're right, two houses is too much,
So let's just make the lake house the primary domicile.
I know it sounds awesome, And yeah, maybe you can
hire someone to take care of it. That's two yards
(14:40):
to mow when things like that toilet backed up for me,
like that two toilets back, right, that's two paint updates.
That's two sets of bed sheets. That's two washing machines. Roofs,
two roofs that hadn't be repaired, through air conditioners to
water heaters. Oh my gosh, all that's stuff. Houses are expensive.
(15:02):
Two houses have to be ridiculously expensive. Yeah, but if
you've if you've got cape cod money, Martha, you ain't
more sure about it, or family maybe those family, yeah,
passed down. But yeah, I see your point. You're absolutely right.
But I if you're there and you see they have
can sardines or in the freezer they've got sea bass,
(15:27):
are you thawing out food to eat?
Speaker 10 (15:30):
No, I'm gonna head for the sardines right away. I'm
I'm starving. I'm gonna go just directly for the sardines.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
Sure, but once you because they were there over thirty hours. Yeah, yeah,
the can of sardines and a family of three at least. Yeah,
you'll get one diny fish, and you'll get one dining fish,
and I get one dining fish. I'm just saying, are
you a good guest. Do you not take the best stuff?
Do you drink their black label? Yeah? Yeah, I'm going
(16:01):
for whatever they have, whatever provisions that they have.
Speaker 10 (16:04):
Yeah, you just survived in your death experience. You owe
it to yourself.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
You'll get over it that I drank your Johnny Walker
blue because I needed to survive after all that. Papa's
a little stressed and I need to drink.
Speaker 10 (16:19):
Right, sen me a bill.
Speaker 1 (16:20):
If you would keep cheaper liquor in your your vacation home,
maybe we wouldn't have the drops cheap liquor in the
vacation home. Right. I'm not a brown water guy, but
I am one hundred percent confident I'm drinking here blue label. Yeah, yeah,
if anything for just a little slight hydration. Yes, that's
a great excuse. Yeah, oceans out there. You can't drink
(16:45):
ocean water though, Okay, right, if you were in a pinch,
it wouldn't be great for you, right, every little bit
of work. But yeah, I'm totally getting down on whatever
you have.
Speaker 10 (16:56):
In there, absolutely, and I would clean my mess up afterward. Words,
because I am a good house guest.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
That's kind of the least you can do. Yeah, yeah,
you don't even though you took refuge in their vacation
home or whatever. Yes, make the bed, clean up your mess.
Don't leave bottles laying everywhere, right.
Speaker 10 (17:17):
I mean after sleeping in the bed. I'd probably even
wash the sheets and everything for them so.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
They don't have to do you tell the coast guard
hold on, I gotta finish putting sheets on the bed.
You're not gonna be the best guest.
Speaker 10 (17:29):
Treat it like it's an Airbnb.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
Are you? Let's I was looking for like the expensive,
the top whiskeys. I guess it's not even the most expensive.
It's just top. It's like forty five dollars, fifty two
dollars for horse soldier. But that's not that's not top show. Yeah,
what's that Popovich? That Poppa doctor Papado or whatever that is?
Oh Poppy van Winkle Pop van w Yeah, which apparently
(17:56):
is not. It's just lbs. But uh, even if they
had that, I'd be like, if it's open, I'm gonna
drink it. I don't know if I'm cracking the seal.
I don't give a damn if it's not opened or not.
I just survived swimming from the ocean, getting my family
in here. I lost my dog, I lost my boat.
I am cracking that son of a bitch. I don't care.
(18:16):
The entitlement is really wild, like using that entitles you
to other people's stuff. I think in the emergency situation, yes,
but it's not open. There's like, there's plenty of uh
of black velvet open. Okay, Well we didn't say that, now,
did we. I think that was I'm sorry. I thought
that was implied there's other liquor choices because I was
(18:37):
assuming that this is the only bottle that they have.
They only have one bottle of a twenty five year
old Scotch in there, and it's not open. But yeah,
so if there's other choices, yeah, I might get something different.
I'm not gonna believe that. Guy'd be like, well, listen,
after those bottles that were already opened or finished and
(18:57):
I'm still drinking, then, oh yeah, so you drinking all
the why not? Why the hell not? You know you're there.
You might as well make the best of the situation.
Let's get tanked and wake up tomorrow with a hangover
and get saved.
Speaker 10 (19:10):
I don't hate that.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
I don't know. You're severely burned. You need to have
your wits about you. Maybe you shouldn't get intoxicated. I
don't know. You're severely burned and in a lot of pain,
and there's no painkillers around. How you're gonna numb it's
with all the alcohol that they have in there. And
if they ask questions, sorry, third degree burns here kind
(19:33):
of needed to deal with the pain somehow. But you
know what, my bad.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
Have you ever had some degree?
Speaker 1 (19:39):
Right? Exactly? Yeah, That's all I can think about, is
like the survival part of that, and how far would
you take it? Yeah, as far as you need to, man,
because you don't know how long you're gonna be stuck
in that situation. You don't know that the coastguard is
gonna be there the next day. You don't know that
your son took a stroll and found the radio. Until
you find the it's a completely different thing. And even then,
(20:02):
you know, you don't know when the coast guard's going
to get there. If you can reach somebody, I think
because of where they were at they were still on
in US territory, that the likelihood someone's going to hear
the Mady Day is super high. It's not like you're
in the middle of the Atlantic, right and I know
those radios still go very far, but till you find
(20:24):
the radio. I agree, you're going, Hey, we can't go
very far from where we're at because you'd have to
I would want to explore. It's one of those things
where you're you're like, oh, man, I don't see anything,
and then there's a major road like a block away, right,
there's a casino on the Yeah. Yeah, is that in
Harold and Kumar?
Speaker 3 (20:42):
And then like, w where are we?
Speaker 1 (20:44):
And then there's like a casino, Like what if one
of you has to go to a burn unit. You
weren't making the bed and cleaning up one hundred percent? Yeah,
if he had he severe like apparently like bad burns
and you can die, Like the infection you get is
mostly kill you. Yeah, so there's no way unless they
(21:04):
cleaned it with you know, Papa van Winkle exactly.
Speaker 10 (21:07):
That's what you're using the alcohol for.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
Yeah. Sure, but the amount of pain I.
Speaker 10 (21:13):
Was gonna think of the amount after the salt water
hits it too, the.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
Burn, the adrenaline, you would cover that up. You're right,
it would be painful, but the adrenaline. But that adrenaline
is going to stop eventually. Oh yeah, No, there. They
were in discomfort for sure. Yeah, just a wild story
of survival that that I heard this morning. That just happened,
like they just got rescued yesterday. Well that's good. At
(21:38):
least they didn't have to spend days, weeks, months, years
on an island. Girl a beard, it's a friend of Alleyball. No,
I hear you, exactly steal some dead man's shoes, kept
cut off the toe so they could walk. I hear you.
We've got tickets to Mars Volta. We're gonna give away.
We're gonna see what Gimbi wants to talk about. We'll
be back news quickias about this time. So let's see
(21:59):
we'll get.
Speaker 11 (22:03):
It's time for news quakies, world news, local news and
news that just makes you.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
Say, what the Here's Corbyn Gimpion Lindsay with what's going
on news quakies from the Big nine Morning Show. In
ninety seventy five, kmod.
Speaker 10 (22:15):
Police search for older man accused of stealing seventy four
hundred dollars he found on the side of the road.
And this happened in Maine, and it was a week
long man hunt headed by the Kennebunk Police Department. It
was sparked when cain of a big dummy driver mistakenly
(22:36):
left the hefty watt of cash on the roof of
his car. This was on October fifteenth. The driver had
just sold a car for seventy four hundred bucks in cash,
and he was apparently so distracted by his own elation
that he left the money on top of his vehicle
and started up his car and drove off, and somewhere
(22:59):
between the sale of his car and home, the cash
flew off the top of the car, flopped onto the
side of the road, and there were photos from the
police department. The seller didn't realize that the money had
flown off until he got home later that evening to
(23:20):
take the.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
Money out of the ATM right and put it in
my pocket, And before I pull away, I'm like, where'd
I put the money? Duh, you're gonna leave it on
the top of your car? Come on, exactly. People seen
plenty of videos like I don't put anything on the
top of my car. The idea of you think it
won't happen to you is crazy. Also I can't reach it,
But like the idea that you think it won't happen
to you. People put the phones up there. It happens
(23:42):
all the time.
Speaker 4 (23:43):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 10 (23:44):
So later that evening, two men are captured on a
dashboard camera collecting the money on the side of the
of the road. An older male dressed in a solid
blue shirt, brown pants, and a baseball hat allegedly had
scooped the abandoned cash into his arms and made off
in a dark gray Honda CRV. And then the second
man in the photos was actually the father of the
(24:08):
cash is rightful owner and they had explained that he
his heart was in the right place. His kid called
him and told him what had happened, and so he
went to the scene and he was like looking, and
unfortunately the other guy was there first, so he was
trying to collect what he could. He didn't want to
have an altercation with this guy, sure, right, So a
(24:29):
spokesman for the police department told the main news outlet
that the alleged thief could face criminal charges because there
was no finders keepers precedent on the money. Apparently, apparently,
in Maine, main law is bizarrely strict about lost items,
(24:50):
with processes in place for reporting lost and found goods
worth as little as three dollars I.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
Know, but it's cash, So how do you prove it
it's that person's He's just and you're like, well, he's
told him the other how do you know he's not
making it up right right the fire? How do you
know the other person didn't get it in an illegal way?
And they're they're not going to come forward when the
other one's like, hey man, I have sold a thing. Now,
they could probably verify some of that stuff, but ultimately,
(25:20):
how do you prove cash is yours? It's not like
a check that has your name on it or a
money order. If they have video of it flying off.
Speaker 10 (25:28):
Of his car, yeah, then okay, yeah, which they have video.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
Of people picking it up, yes, not of it flying
off his car. There's no video of it in his possession.
Speaker 10 (25:40):
Yeah, they would. I guess they would have to contact
the person that he sold the car to. But yes,
I did give him seventy four hundred dollars in cash.
I bought the car from him. Maybe he could he
maybe if he saw him place it on his vehicle.
Who knows.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
I homie ain't playing that, Like, I don't believe in
that Facebook stuff like selling cars and just asking for trouble.
Speaker 10 (26:05):
Yeah, it's it's an alleged Class C crime that could
land the man behind bars for up to five years
with a five thousand dollars fine.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
No way, they'll never be able to prosecute that. There's
no proof he found it on the ground. So what
is he supposed to do if he finds anything else?
Leave it?
Speaker 10 (26:25):
You're supposed to report it now that.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
I believe, but again you'd have to prove it's not
his right. But the fact of it is that it
is money that this guy found. Doesn't matter whose it is.
According to their laws, if you find something, you're going
to have to turn it in. No, I dropped it.
Speaker 10 (26:41):
I'm just picking it up, right, So they say that
you're supposed to call and turn it over to the
town's clerk within one week. The finder must also tell
them where it was found and post some sort of
notification about the unclaimed item in a public place. And
then if it's not claimed, then there's a finer's.
Speaker 1 (27:02):
No, I get it. They still have to be able
to prove he knew it wasn't his. That's the challenge.
And how much money was it?
Speaker 10 (27:10):
Seventy four hundred, so.
Speaker 1 (27:12):
I'm seventy four hundred dollars flies off my car. I
go back to pick it up, and I see someone
else picking up part of my seventy four hundred dollars.
I'm not confronting them. I'm not calling the police, right then, sus.
Speaker 10 (27:24):
Yeah, a little bite, very.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
Interesting, right, I'm just saying, if I have seventy four
dollars and you start picking up, I'm like, hey, man,
I know that's mine. It flew off my car.
Speaker 10 (27:35):
I just sold.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
I just sold it forever. Tupperware whatever, a lot of supperware. Yeah, whatever,
But I don't know, you know what I mean, Like,
you're gonna be like and he was like, I didn't
want to confrontation, bitch, I want a confrontation. You're stealing
my money. Right, Well, wasn't it the dad of the
dude who lost the money?
Speaker 10 (27:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (27:54):
He went back to try to find it and wanted
to avoid confrontation. Yeah yeah, yeah, I'm just no way. Yeah,
I'd have done the same thing if it was my kid.
I'd been like, hey, bro, that's my kid's money. Yeah,
or I'm calling the police, Hey, some money flew off
my car and trying to pick it up. Another gentleman
here is picking it up. Right, and he won't give
it back. Yeah, that's all you gotta do. Yeah, the
confrontation doesn't have to be fisticuffs, right right, let's police
(28:15):
handle it. That's kind of what they're there for. Yeah,
but he didn't. This was after the fact, sus interesting,
son shoots man hooking up with his mom. This comes
out of when a man's mom or his own mom,
his own mom. Okay, yeah, because that's a good question,
the son's mom. So mom's got a new boyfriend and
(28:35):
son didn't like it regardless, all right. So it comes
out of Pennsylvania where the mother of a twenty four
year old guy named Dylan Lang, she has a new boyfriend.
His name's Robert, and apparently they went out did some drinking,
and they came back to the house. Now, now Dylan
and his mama live in this house with other relatives,
So you know how awkward it is to be having
(28:57):
sex when you're living with your relative. Right, So mama
and old Bobby here, we're in the driveway and in
Bob's truck here banging away after they went out drinking
that night. Well, I guess Dylan found out what was happening,
and he grabs his gun, and he goes outside. He
confronts him and there's a they're arguing back and forth.
(29:20):
Dylan pulls his gun out, sticks it to the back
of Bob's the back of Bob's seat to see that
Bob's sitting in right, and Dylan's mom is.
Speaker 7 (29:28):
Like, do shit, Dylan, stop here, like the crazy.
Speaker 1 (29:32):
Anyhow, Dylan pulls the trigger pop pop twice, shoots the
back of the seat and ends up getting Bob in
the chest. Right, Bob dies right there, right. He tried
to take off but didn't really work out, ends up
kind of rolling into the yard or whatever. And so
of course the police come out. They tell him what's
(29:53):
going on, and now old old Dylan here's looking at
charges of criminal homicide, aggravated assault, and reckless endangerments. You're
not my dad, right, god dang, man, stop hurting my mom?
Speaker 3 (30:09):
Well what about dad? Mom?
Speaker 1 (30:10):
All right, what are you doing? He's twenty four, twenty
four years old together.
Speaker 10 (30:15):
Pro out of her basement.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
It's my mom. Yeah, you'll never be my dad, Papa.
You're like god, dang, they say. When the emergency crews
got there, they found old Bob in the front seat
of his truck, pants around his ankles, two holes in
his chest. Not funny but kind of. Honey, it's terrible,
it's terrible. Yeah, but at least he died doing what
(30:38):
he loved exactly. Dylan's mom, Gosh, it doesn't matter, Dylan, right,
you may have killed him, but he was banging your
mom absolutely. And you know what, Mom is going to
find a new boyfriend now because you shot the old one.
So somebody's PTSD from that, right as the woman?
Speaker 10 (30:58):
Yeah, oh yeah, maybe does she forgive her son?
Speaker 1 (31:04):
I mean yes, dot dot dot. That doesn't mean you
get I still you're my kid. I love you no
matter what, but you're going to jail. Your heart was
in the right place, No, your mind was not. Your
heart was not in the right place now that you
were thinking only of you, because now your mom is traumatized.
(31:26):
Now your mom also has something that doesn't have somebody
she potentially looked like. You don't want your mom happy now,
hear me out, Maybe just maybe. Dylan was in the
house watching TV and he heard noises from outside, sounded
like his mom was in danger, but it was the
(31:50):
sweet sounds of passionate truck love that and he rights
out there trying to protect his mom right from getting hurt,
and he ended up. You just can't. It was just
a bad, bad situation, A little confusion on Dylan's part.
No crocodile caught with spear in its head. A crocodile
(32:11):
with a spear sticking out of his head has been
caught and is on the road to recoverty covery. Florida
Fish and Wildlife officials say it was first spotted over
the weekend in the Florida Keys and was trapped Monday.
Veterans at Zoo Miami have taken possession of the crocodile.
They've removed the object, along with a bullet that was
in the croc's head. The goal is to release the
(32:33):
federally threatened species. The hunt continues for the person who
injured the crocodile. It feels like that's okay, but yeah,
I get it, it's a threaten animal. You can't. You
can't do that, Joe. But like, it's not like a
squirrel's annoying, and you could probably shoot a squirrel, but
ultimately just ignore it. It'll go away, right the crocodile. No,
(32:55):
you're not shooting a crocodile. No, maybe I don't know, Oh,
I don't know how that works out, you know how
like whether they say but I think it's like there's
a black bears. You try to get real big of
tall and make as much noise as possible that scares
them off. Yeah, yeah, this is a crocodile like work
the same way. No, I don't know, no, no no.
(33:15):
I love those videos though. Or someone's like dup and
dupin to come around the corner and there's a croc like, hey, yeah,
I want to get big and tall. After I crap
my pants. Listen, I am not getting big and tall. Right,
that's the.
Speaker 3 (33:31):
We'll be back.
Speaker 10 (33:31):
Good morning Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn. Nine inch Nails at
the Bok Center on February twenty seventh. You want to go,
simply follow us on Instagram at nine seven five kmod
to win yourself some free tickets.
Speaker 1 (33:46):
Good luck, Good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbin. The
nineteenth annual Cancer Sucks Concerts coming up November twenty ninth,
that's the Saturday after Thanksgiving and we're going to be
having Josie Scott, the original voice of Salava, headlining. And
if you have a local band and you would like
to open up for Josie Scott. Well, that's pretty simple. One.
Make sure you're goddamn local. Let's get that out of
(34:07):
the way, all right. We don't need major bands uh
being submitted, but regardless, you can submit your band's one
song demo at the website that rockskmudy dot com and
then we'll pick the best five and out of those five,
the top two will be opening for Josie Scott at
the nineteenth Annual Cancer Sucks Concert. Good luck, see what
Gimpie's gone?
Speaker 11 (34:27):
Crown no world, Take my strong hand, give train moment,
give train no world, take my trum hand, get all
my trainin cue.
Speaker 10 (34:43):
Here comes the cripple train.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
So clanker music has gotten out of control, and I'm
not exactly hating it. All right, If you don't know
what clanker music is, that's AI music. Okay, I just
cover that term from my older brother who discovered that
term from a young kid that works with him, calls
it clanker music. I'm like, that's a real thing.
Speaker 6 (35:07):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
Listen to what this says. It's a slur for robots
and artificial intelligence, so I can hurt a robot's feelings,
I guess by calling it a clanker because it's just
a back I guess. So.
Speaker 10 (35:19):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (35:21):
There was some broad that was hosting SNL Amy Polar
whatever her name is, Yeah, and she was just recently
a host at SNL. She was talking about that AI
actress that's looking for an agent. Yeah right, and she
goes on to say, I've got one thing to say
(35:41):
to you AI actress. Boop boooop whatever. I thought it
was kind of funny regardless. So this stuff has been
popping up a lot on my My for You page
on the TikTok, and I thought i'd share it. And
these are these are very popular songs. You will know
these songs, but they're they're made a eye has turned
them into different genres of music. For example, this first
(36:05):
one that I want to play here is a blues
version of Alice in Chain's Rooster. And again I'm not
exactly hating it. Okay, So where's we'll take it from
the top here. Here's here's a blues version of the
Rooster from Alice in Jans. Listen to this, I'm like, okay,
(36:48):
I mean this sounds like every blue song I've ever heard.
You found a way, Yeah, it's okay, but you don't
like that one. No, it's just it's a blue song.
And then he's just using the lyrics. It sounds nothing
like an Alison change. You know what I'm saying. It's
there's no difference except he's it's a blue song and
(37:09):
he's just using the words. He could do the same
with you know in Tonight Okay, right, like he could
do any song and you'd be like, it's the blues
version of Metallica. That is true. Here is uh, well,
that's another blues one. I don't want to go with it.
Maybe it's different, Maybe it's different. Fine, let's go with
(37:30):
Chop Suey. Then from Sons of System of a.
Speaker 4 (37:34):
Down the scars, the fade away, the shake of the scar.
Speaker 3 (37:48):
Wa do leave the keys upon the tap.
Speaker 1 (37:51):
I get what you're saying, Corman. You know it's a
blue song. All blue songs kind of sound the same.
But again, I'm not hating these, Yes, but if it
had like a the more of a bassline and it
stopped in an uh phonetic harmonically sounded like it, you go, okay, okay,
So let's try this one man. This is a this
(38:12):
is a rock version of in syncs Bye bye bye. Okay,
all right, so here here's here we go. I'm not
(38:42):
a big fan of M sync, but I think this works.
Speaker 10 (38:45):
It sounds like an eighties hair band.
Speaker 1 (38:47):
That's what they're going for.
Speaker 10 (38:48):
Yeah, like Jeff Leppard.
Speaker 2 (38:52):
I'm doing this tonight. You probably gonna start bye Hello
this cam you dunnestly when you want believe.
Speaker 6 (39:09):
So now it's time to believe. And Megan alone, I
know that I can take no Lord, it ain't know.
I want to see you out that dupe baby.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
So as a as a non fan of end singing
in that particular song, I'm like that works man, that
works really really well. Uh here is uh a soul
version of Shaggy's It wasn't Me Now? Soul blues? Are
they the same? Could be? But nonetheless I was like
(39:49):
this kind of workout.
Speaker 12 (40:11):
Honey came in and she called me right hand to
creeping with the girl next door. Cause it is we
were both but naked banging on the bathroom floor. How
could I forget that?
Speaker 8 (40:22):
I given her an extra key all this time she
was standing there, she never took her eyes off me.
All your king grand a woman Knoxes to your villa,
Tristasahana witness wife and clean puny pillow. You better to
watch about before she turned into a killer, before you
win the situation. Got to call a pena to be
a true player, your alph and off for play. If
(40:43):
you say and not convinced to say again, never admit
to a word when she.
Speaker 12 (40:47):
Make her clean and you tell a baby no way
but to come upon the cause he wasn't saw me
plunging bunny over.
Speaker 1 (40:54):
Yeah, that feels close to the song. Yeah, yeah, and
it works again works. And the thing about a hi man,
I'm just like it's gonna get to a point and
I think it might have already that you won't know
what's real and what isn't anymore. Here is I didn't
expect gimb to be doing an AI segment in a
good way, right, They just come popping up and I'm like,
(41:18):
this is awesome. So I've gathered a whole bunch of them.
Just bookmark them, and that's what we're working with here.
So this is lim Biscuits rolling, a nineteen sixties soul
version of rolling.
Speaker 13 (41:33):
All right, paper, keep on rolling, David, You know what
time it is, Ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 3 (41:53):
Chuck the stuff I want to keep on rolling.
Speaker 1 (41:59):
Yeah, this feel it's like it's still being sold. But
it kind of you hear that you instantly recognized the song. Yeah,
even without the lyrics. Yeah, what else do we have here? Okay,
So there's a lot in here that I'm like, I
can't play because like it's got n w A in here,
boys and hood I can't play that on the radio,
(42:20):
But I can play afromance, uh, because I got high.
Now this is a another Motown version of it.
Speaker 14 (42:37):
I'm gonna clean my room. Oh my god, Hi, I'm
gonna get up and find a broom. My room still
missed up.
Speaker 1 (42:58):
It only works out much like some of the other
soul ones that a lot of them, they said, But
this is a I that we're working with, So it's
just taking whatever it is. Let's see here is I
wanna hope that this work out. I'm in love with
a stripper. But it's the rock version, eighties rock.
Speaker 15 (43:41):
Who got the body of got it? Got his butter
beeking brown? A. See girl, she's coming down from a seal.
Speaker 3 (43:53):
Yeah, you know what she'd do. She's doing that right now.
Speaker 4 (44:00):
I need to get her over.
Speaker 3 (44:02):
To my cribbon.
Speaker 1 (44:03):
Do that.
Speaker 3 (44:03):
Nothing because I'm in love with the stream.
Speaker 1 (44:09):
Some one probably might be the best one yet. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I'm like that works, and I'd like to hear an
actual band. Do these, like you know, covers or whatever?
Uh does it matter to you? Like like which? If no,
does it matter to you if they did put that
out and it wasn't a real band?
Speaker 6 (44:27):
No?
Speaker 1 (44:28):
No, I don't think it does to me either, No,
because it still sounds good. Okay, I've got a couple
more here before we get done. This is Sublimes Santa
Ria as if it was a fifties do wop.
Speaker 7 (44:43):
All right, cool, I don't practice Satya.
Speaker 3 (45:00):
I got no crystal ball.
Speaker 14 (45:02):
Well, I had a million dollars, but I spend it
all lot.
Speaker 4 (45:08):
If I could find that lit up.
Speaker 3 (45:11):
And that Sancho that she's found well.
Speaker 2 (45:14):
At pop Up Captain Sancho and that slepper down.
Speaker 1 (45:23):
Oh baby, Yeah sounds like it's a It's not my favorite,
but I'm like, all right, that's kind of groovy here
and all right, So my last one here was posted
from our boy Josie Scott, the original voice of Saliva,
who was going to be performing headlining at the nineteenth
(45:44):
annual Cancer Sucks Concert coming up November twenty ninth at
the Kynes Ballroom. Get your tickets at Knesballroom dot com.
Uh he had posted this one. This is an AI
version of always Okay.
Speaker 9 (46:20):
I.
Speaker 3 (46:22):
Oh voice say, don't be so blind.
Speaker 4 (46:25):
It's telling me all these things.
Speaker 3 (46:27):
That you would problem.
Speaker 9 (46:29):
There hid the mile, want and know and desire and
by the reason you read the reb the reason you cried.
Speaker 3 (46:42):
Balling all balling alway. I just can't learn about you?
Why can't cut off you? I breathe and whe you
what can't.
Speaker 2 (47:01):
Now?
Speaker 1 (47:01):
I don't know if Josie is going to be performing
that song exactly like that the seven that would be
amazing goes Soul version Josie, I know you're listening. Brother.
If you guys can practice and pull that off and
play it Saturday, November twenty ninth at the nineteenth Annual
Cancer Sucks Concert, I'm sure people would love it. I
(47:24):
think that if they did that, like just started, like
even when a few bars in, Yeah, that would be hilarious.
It would be I wonder what it's like to have
it write a song, perform it for so many years
and then here in a different way, right, that's like
you're like wait, wait, wait a minute, that works.
Speaker 10 (47:41):
Why didn't I think of that?
Speaker 1 (47:42):
Yeah, clanker music. It's gotten out of control, but I'm
not hating it.
Speaker 11 (48:00):
World takes my shrom han, get on the give train, Alma,
give train around the world.
Speaker 7 (48:08):
Take my shrum hand, get on my.
Speaker 1 (48:18):
The Big Mad Morning Show returns. Mars Volta is going
to be over at the Canes Ballroom on Sunday. We've
got tickets. Let's play a game. It's Thursdays, it's Wednesday,
it's Thursday, so give me a minute.
Speaker 3 (48:35):
It's a day.
Speaker 1 (48:37):
Schnip Schnapschner. My age is definitely shown this week, Schnip Schnapschner. Uh.
Current record is I am leading with fourteen, and Corbyn
you have twelve, and Lindsey is dead ass last on
this one with eight. Last week's winter that would be you,
so uh, Lindsay and GIMPI eight three three four six
(48:58):
oh K m O D eight three three four six
oh K M O D call up, decide who's going
to be your clue giver. Whoever gets the most right
is going to win those tickets to see the Mars
Volta and the Canes Ballroom on Sunday eight three three
four six, Oh kmo D Good morning you're on the air.
What is your name? I don't blame you.
Speaker 10 (49:21):
Good morning, you're on the air.
Speaker 1 (49:22):
What is your name?
Speaker 5 (49:24):
Jake?
Speaker 3 (49:25):
Jake?
Speaker 1 (49:25):
How are you? Buddy Good, Lindsay or Gimpy Hi, Gimpy.
Speaker 2 (49:31):
Let's win this.
Speaker 1 (49:31):
Come on, Jake. Sixty seconds are on the clock. Timer
starts after the first clue. Here we go, all right, Jake,
you take xanax or volume for this medical condition, anxiety depression.
That is correct. Uh. Some girls spit, other girls do this. Yep.
Corn album, blank, the leader sala yep. Uh. It puts
(49:56):
the lime and the blank. It's a fruit that hangs
from a tree. Yes. Yes, when your muscles tense up,
you have a blank in your leg.
Speaker 10 (50:07):
Charlie horse cramp.
Speaker 1 (50:08):
There you go.
Speaker 9 (50:09):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (50:09):
This is a product played on the boob tube that
is made by the people who make the iPhone. Oh
Apple TV. Uh. This is a spray that you spray
on roaches. Brand name right. Yep. This is what you
go to court when you sit down with eleven other
(50:30):
people and tell if they're guilty or not. Jerry, Jerry
got it. You got it? Not conditioner, but the other
stuff you put in your hair to wash amboo. Yep.
Speaker 9 (50:39):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (50:39):
This is what you get to get the fat out
of your body. It's a plastic spa. There you go.
Speaker 3 (50:45):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (50:45):
This is a condition when you are freezing cold yet time.
Ten is what you got pretty good, man, So hang
on the line. We'll see if that's enough to win
those tickets. Right, all right, Lindsay is stressing on Good morning?
(51:06):
You're on the air. What is your name, Nate? Nate?
How are you, buddy?
Speaker 8 (51:12):
I'm doing well.
Speaker 1 (51:12):
How about you?
Speaker 2 (51:13):
Guys?
Speaker 1 (51:13):
Good? You need to be on your game.
Speaker 2 (51:14):
Man.
Speaker 1 (51:15):
Ten is the number to beat with, Lindsay, Are you ready?
Speaker 3 (51:19):
I'm ready as we'll ever be.
Speaker 10 (51:20):
All right, here we go, all right, Nate, change the
air blank in your home every month? Filter Yes, uh,
these are not pants. They are cut off at the
knee usually and they have check about what kind they
have pockets on the sides. Cargo yes, say both words. Yes,
(51:46):
uh huh. Not a broom, but this one gets wet
to clean your floors mop. Yeah, a money back. This
comes with a money back.
Speaker 1 (51:57):
What guarantee? Yes?
Speaker 10 (52:00):
Uh blank Ugly it was the name of a movie
where the girls danced on the bars. It's also yes,
uh huh uh. After you're a freshman, you become a.
Speaker 1 (52:11):
Sophomore.
Speaker 10 (52:12):
Yep, I blank allegiance.
Speaker 1 (52:15):
Pledge.
Speaker 10 (52:16):
Uh huh. You use this to see into the sky
at night. Yes, uh, you might live in this if
it's raining a lot, you want to move out of a.
Speaker 1 (52:30):
One time time time time. So it was going to
be close enough. I'm so sorry, take so much, man,
He no worries you guys to congratulations. Man, you're gonna
(52:50):
get those tickets to see the Mars Volta. That show
is Sunday over at the Canes Bar Room. Everybody else
can go to knesboom dot com to try and buy
their tickets. Hand on the line, Okay, this is the
one she ended on. Yeah, she was on the right track.
If you live by like a lake or something of
that effect, they might say you live in this particular
(53:11):
type of area where water takes over a little too
much food zone. Yeah, he got he got it right
at the end. Yeah, because he wanted just still say
it after we said time. Yeah, you you started slow,
but you totally picked up pace. I thought you were
gonna catch him. I was a little nervous there.
Speaker 10 (53:31):
Yeah, but how many how many did we get?
Speaker 1 (53:34):
Eight? Yeah, yeah, so you were two away. Yeah, cargo shorts,
honey up, I know, yeah, Adam Sandler, he was all
the time. I thought you were basketball shorts. Yeah, I
think cliche. I think people think of our cargo shorts.
But sure, listen, I didn't play a little. I know,
(53:54):
all right. The record now that keeps me in the
lead with fifteen, keeps you with twelve, keeps Lindsay with eight.
You're listening to the Big Man morning. Now, though we
got to see what's in Ghippes four by four. But
it says here that the White House East Wing being
demolished to make way for Trump's ball room. Trump said
(54:16):
yesterday that he was teared down the entire East Wing
to make space for his ninety thousand square foot ballroom.
He downplayed the significance of tearing down the historic structure
that held the First Lady's office. What was she need
an office for anyway? I mean, I hear you. But
also the First Lady's Wing, which is what's being destroyed,
(54:38):
has historic value, and women first ladies have always played
a historic role. I mean, there's this thing called the
Betty Ford Clinic. I don't know if anybody's heard of it. Yeah,
amongst other things. There's still a kitchen in there, so
they'll be all right regardless Bikamo dot com. He's calling
it a very small building that was never thought of
(55:00):
as being much. Trump's also said the construction of the
ballroom was now projected at a cost of three hundred
million dollars. That's up from the two hundred mil estimated
that he gave earlier in July. Small three hundred, yo,
I'm spending two in a million. I better get a
knife set when it's done right right. It's not the
square footage, it's just what's going inside. Yeah, it's the size,
(55:24):
it's not what you what else we got here. Musk
says that Tesla robotaxis will be unsupervised by year's end.
The CEO made the claim on an earnings conference call yesterday,
and said that self driving taxis will expand to up
to ten metropolitan areas by the end of the year
(55:45):
and that safety drivers will be removed in two months
in Austin, Texas. Now. Some of the new markets include Florida, Arizona,
and Nevada. Oh yeah, any problems come up, the scot
might as well pultry or it's going to have to
happen sometime anyway, right, Yeah. The person in charge of
the SS Titanic was like, listen, we haven't had a
boat sinking like for it'll be fine. We don't need
(56:08):
somebody watching for whatever. What else we got here? Study
shows that ketamine. How many challengers we've sent up to space?
Speaker 4 (56:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (56:15):
How many of them actually blew up? Who cares that
they're shross? That's fine, it is what it is. Hey.
Study shows ketamine is safer testing chronic pain. While not
FDA approved for that use, new research by the Cleveland
Clinics shows that people who got low dose ketamine that's
my Cleveland impression reported and improvement in their chronic pain
(56:38):
quality of life. The Cleveland Clinic looked at data from
more than a thousand people with chronic pain for their study.
No serious adverse effects were reported during the study. And then, lastly,
here Toulsa Council votes to extend curfew for one year.
During its meeting yesterday, the city council voted in favor
(56:58):
of extending the curfew you until October twenty twenty six.
The curfew prevents miners from loiter ring downtown between nine
pm and six am on Friday and Saturday nights, a
change from the previous ordinance which included thursdays as well.
The new curfew ordinance takes effect immediately. I saw this
(57:19):
and I was thinking about, how do you argue to
take it away because at some point they're going to
right because it's miners, right, it's anybody under eighteen short
of a concert. What is an seventeen year old need
to be downtown for. That's a very good question. So
as someone who would litigate for it, what do you say,
(57:40):
like to say that we should keep it down there
that would know that seventeen and unders should be allowed
to go downtown at you know, in the wee houts
there have human rights too, and they deserve to be
out as late as they want. That's what somebody who
would be against the curfew and a pretty good argument, Yeah,
and a pretty good argument rather than you know, going well,
some of you are choosing not to parents.
Speaker 10 (58:01):
So good morning, Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn. Hopefully you heard
that keyword to rock the bank. It was money. You
enter it online at kmod dot com or on the
contest tab if you're listening to us on the free
iHeartRadio app. You've got twelve more chances throughout the day
to win one thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (58:19):
Good luck, Good morning, can be well, good morning, Corbin.
You want the Chillis seats in the house, We got them,
call them the silver seats. We turned up the cours
line to hook you up with four front row seats
to every concert and every show at the Cove inside
the River Spirits Casino. How do you win? Simple? You
can hit the website that rockskmod dot com sign up
that way, or if you're listening on the iHeartRadio app,
(58:40):
you can just click on that little contest tabby and
sign up there. Good luck. All right, it's time for
some conspiracy theory. Thursday, and I am watching a TV
show called Slow Horses. If you don't know this show,
it is a TV show about m I five agents
that failed out in some capacity, so maybe they're gambling addicts. Well,
(59:05):
you can't just release these people with all this knowledge
into the public, so they have them go to this
place called the Slough House, and it is where these failed.
They still do some things occasionally, but they don't they
don't like do real stuff, but they end up doing
real stuff type of thing, right, it's pretty good TV
show if you're unfamiliar with it. This season they're doing
(59:28):
a thing called the multi stage destabilization theory. Okay, what
that is. It is a way to or it's a
process pushed through phases for a slow erosion of stability,
rapid disruption and collapse of a state. Okay, okay. So
(59:53):
in one of them, they have a thing called blind
Your Enemy. That's one of the episodes, and this terrorist
group tricks them to take one of them. They say
they've infiltrated the system using a keyword. They use the keyword.
It then blinds MI five like disables all their computers.
They're now blind blind your Enemy type of thing.
Speaker 6 (01:00:15):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:00:15):
Some other parts of it have to do with political
and psychological warfare, where you create a subversion of ideological
thoughts and feelings coming from this tracking and it can
lead to a public crisis and it can cause inter strife.
Speaker 10 (01:00:36):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:00:36):
Yeah, And they use a lot of metaphors across the
board they use they weaponize politics with conspiratal claims. Right. Again,
this is a TV show, And I'm going to give
you example of something interesting. I don't know if it
falls into this, but it's fascinating. Do you guys know
(01:00:59):
what a ring that's what's on your doorbell? Yeah? Yeah,
some people have them. Maybe you have a different variation.
Maybe you have the Google version, maybe you have the
security company that you pay they provide the camera. There's
different types, but Ring is the top tier, if you
will of it. They definitely own the brand, and they've
advanced it a little bit to the point where they
(01:01:20):
have something called what's it called. It's called Secret Search
I think Search Party, and it is an AI power
tool that allows your neighbors to use your ring camera
to see if your dog is got like the cameras
see the dog. Yeah. I don't know if I like
(01:01:41):
that or not. We'll come back to that. I don't disagree. Now.
It probably doesn't say I can get into your camera
and look at all your footage, but you can goo
here's my dog, search other ring cameras to see if
the dog was there, and they give me just that video.
Maybe they're still they haven't really completely unveiled it yet,
but I'm that's what I'm guessing. It's something like that,
(01:02:02):
or hey, the ring camera clicked on found him in
these spots, okay, type of thing, which I can understand
from finding a dog standpoint, that's incredibly fascinating.
Speaker 10 (01:02:12):
But if it's but if it works for a dog,
why wouldn't it work for Because like my house camera identifies,
Like if you were to come to my house, if
I programmed your face in there anytime you came, then
it would say Corbin's at your front door. So why
wouldn't it do that for your your child or something?
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (01:02:30):
Yeah, I mean I have mine doesn't do like Corbin,
but it go It can recognize difference in a car
and a and a person. So like that's what I like.
I'll get alerts that says, hey, AI Intelligence human on
your property, okay, or AI Intelligence car on your property
or sometimes I'll even get him where AI Intelligence human
(01:02:53):
motion near property? Right, So that type of thing I get,
But it never goes like Allison's in the driveway. That
would be awesome. But getting back to this, the idea
that you can use AI to search other things has
(01:03:14):
created a scenario that police departments and cities are giving
ring cameras two community members in high crime areas to
help fight crime. In Ohio Columbus, Ohio, they are giving
more than seven hundred households ring cameras across ten Columbus
(01:03:39):
Ohio zip codes with the highest crime rate. The pilot
project is funded through as an organization called the American
Rescue Plan, which will help equip lower income households living
in high crime areas with cameras. The camera equipped door
bells are an easy to trent to crime and package theft,
especially important during the upcoming holiday season. The program can
(01:04:03):
give a families peace of mind, reduce stuff to high
crime areas, and cut down police calls for service. It's
a win win for families and public safety. They said
they'll do this seven hundred cameras across the ten zips.
Households can enter for a lottery to get one in
their zip code. Okay, they know that there will still
(01:04:24):
be crime that happens. They admit that there's no doubt
that you can't stop crime. It's impossible to stop it,
but they say that you can deter right. It might
bring it the rate down a little bit because people
be scared. I want to get caught on this ring
camera and the police are going to access it, which
(01:04:45):
the police can access it anyway via a warrant. You know,
let's say murder happens in the neighborhood and they're looking
for the getaway car. You know, hey, you got a
ring camera. We see you got a ring camera. We're
gonna need your footage. Here's warrant.
Speaker 10 (01:05:01):
Does a ring camera have to be hooked up to
Wi Fi the Internet?
Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
Yeah?
Speaker 10 (01:05:05):
Yeah, So what if these cameras though, I mean, they
say they're going into low income housing, what if they
don't have internet?
Speaker 1 (01:05:14):
Yeah, I'm sure that's a requirement to be eligible for
the program, right, have wireless internet access in their home
is one of the requirements. So good point.
Speaker 10 (01:05:27):
Yeah, it's a great idea as opposed.
Speaker 1 (01:05:31):
To privacy advocates and civil rights groups are highly concerned
about this, citing concerns about privacy and creating a private
surveillance network, which is what I'm trying to get to
with this, The idea that they can create a private
network of cameras and if AI can get it, and
(01:05:54):
you've said, yes, make this public, they don't need a
search warrant, right right, right, And if that's the case,
then it can be hacked by anybody, and then anybody
can get in and see what's going on on your camera. Yes.
So I have had camera systems that have been publicly
(01:06:19):
talked about being hacked. I've never had that problem. Okay,
I'm not saying it doesn't happen. I know people that
have the same cameras I have. They've never said it happened.
So but would you know would the would you would?
Speaker 7 (01:06:34):
Hope?
Speaker 1 (01:06:34):
I guess the company, the security company would let you know,
hey we've had a breach, right, but would they? Would they? Really? So?
I don't know. It depends on how sophisticated the hack is.
I'm sure there's a way to not to go in covert.
But like, we have some software here at the station,
and any but time somebody logs into it, I get
(01:06:55):
an alert, an email alert says somebody a new authorization
has happened, Right, So I would imagine because I have
that like on my ring camera too. So if someone
logs in and says, hey, there was a new log
into your ring, unless you know how to work around that,
which I'm hackers are pretty smart, yeah, then yes, but
also no, to your point, right, that's kind of what
(01:07:18):
scares me about smart homes. If you know what I'm
talking about, Wi Fi controlled locks on your doors and
the wi Fi controls your lights in your house and
your appliances and all that smart homes. Right, those can
be hacked at any point in time. You think it's great,
you're saving time and money. Hey Google, lock my front door?
(01:07:41):
You know, Hey, shut up. I didn't ask you. I
was just saying, but so so with that, you know,
I shut up. Nobody asked you you did you actually did,
and I guess I did. But so anybody could hack in.
Say you've got those locks, those types of automated locks
on your doors, anybody can hack into it and unlock
(01:08:01):
your house and get in and rob you blind. Yes,
except they would need to get into your white like
they'd have to get under your WiFi. And if you're
doing extra security rather than just your company router, that's
also another one. I don't know anybody that has had
that happen to them. I'm saying it doesn't happen. I'm
just saying it's not something that nobody's talked to me
(01:08:23):
about it or encouraged me in the little nerd circle.
I run around it. But how does this fall into
the multi stage destabilization frame? Well, it creates social erosion, right,
it makes people their trust level drops, you start becoming
suspicious of people. They control information, they normalize monitoring, they
(01:08:48):
normalize the idea that you are in danger. Yeah, and
that's one part of that theory that they're getting you
to not trust people, only trust them they will help you.
It's fascinating thought process. That's not the only city that
(01:09:13):
has distributed cameras. It's also in Ohio. Four hundred cameras
were put out city wide. Kansas City is talking about
doing this with the ring cameras. Cameras. Yeah, Oh, the
destabilization thing would be they wouldn't share that. Oh, of
course they wouldn't share that. They're no, that would cause
mass chaos. Well, there's plenty more that's causing mass chaos
(01:09:35):
in this world. Truth. I don't have a problem with
like the flock cameras that we have here in to
and it's helping. Yeah, it's track down murderers and you know,
criminals and stuff like that that's on the highway. I
got no problem with that. I'm not doing you know,
you see what I'm saying. But when it comes into
your house, you expect some level of privacy in your house. Yeah,
(01:09:55):
well this isn't this would be in the part that's
public of your house on the outside. Yeah. Yeah, either way,
it's still a part of my house.
Speaker 15 (01:10:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:10:06):
Well okay, nerd talk. If they have access to your
camera and it's connected to your internet, they now have
access to your internet. Yeah right, spoiler, they already have
access to your internet. Okay. So here's here's an I
der for you. Instead of distributing ring cameras and putting
(01:10:27):
them on people's houses where the government now has access
to this sort of thing in these high crime areas,
why not just put cameras up on like the light
poles you know, around the neighborhood. It serves the exact
same purpose. You know, you're looking for criminals, you know,
or even people in the private sector. You know, I
lost my dogs. Yeah, you can access those cameras that
(01:10:50):
are on the public property. It's not on your house, okay,
it's on a telephone pole that's sitting on the street corner.
I think that'd be a lot better and people will probably,
I feel anyway, would take to that a little bit
easier than Hey, I'm going to put this camera on
your house and then we have access to it anytime
(01:11:11):
we want. The reason that they don't do that is
because then the government is doing it. It's in your
face the government's doing it. I mean where this the
ring cameras are. It's a private company giving the cameras
to people asking for them, aware that this is what
(01:11:33):
they're using it for. Okay, I get what you're saying.
For me personally, I would be much happier letting the
government put a camera up in my neighborhood to track
crime that way via telephone pole as opposed to you
on my.
Speaker 10 (01:11:51):
House, they feel But those people that are asking for it,
they feel like they're getting personal security.
Speaker 1 (01:11:57):
Well, if you live in a crime, high crime neighborhood
and you want to who doesn't want Nobody wants crime
in their neighborhood, right, absolutely, Even the people that live
in high crime areas are like they're not psyched.
Speaker 10 (01:12:07):
And I could hear the people saying, like that camera
on the street pole, that's not going to get to
my house. I'm all the way at the end of
the street, or you know, I'm sandwiching between two houses.
It's not going to see my front porch.
Speaker 3 (01:12:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:12:19):
But much like these ring cameras, it's the same thing.
You only get what's in front of your house, maybe
a wider angle where you get a couple of extra
maybe fifty one hundred whatever foot on either side. So
you're having to put multiple cameras on these houses. You
could do the same thing through the neighborhoods by putting
multiple cameras because there's more than one light pole in
(01:12:42):
your neighborhood, you know, there is, you know, So you
put one here and one down over there and one
over there, and it's covering all angles. Yeah, and it's
not an invasion of anybody's privacy. And I get it.
You know, these people are asking for it, they're signing
up for it, they know what they're getting themselves into.
Well why even mess with all that when you can
(01:13:02):
simply just you know, get them together on a town
hall meeting. All right, people love you know, Aspen, this
is what we're going to do. Are you for it?
Yay or nay? And then go about it that way? Yeah,
Because again, this is private company with private citizens choosing
to be a part of a private network. Somebody texted
(01:13:25):
and said that they work in a specific IT field,
and I know for sure major companies have back doors
that police can access your profiles and accounts any time. Example, Facebook, Instagram,
and Ring et cetera. If that's true, that would be
a violation of the constitution. So if that's true and
(01:13:46):
you know it, you know the company, those companies are
violating a the right to privacy, then you should whistleblow it. Yeah,
that's a massive scandal. Well, you know it's happening. I
don't know what's happening. Maybe I'm suspicious it's happening. But
if you, as an individual know for sure that the
(01:14:08):
company is violating American citizens right to privacy a constant
you know, part of the country, then you should be
a whistle blower instead of you putting your head in
the say and going, well, then that makes you complicit
in the violation of other citizens' constitutional rights. I'm sure
(01:14:29):
you wouldn't mind cameras from the government. Come on, gimpy
or COMMI gimpy, Uh, leave the gun, take the canoli
at somebody's top list that they're getting in on. Early
I thought the same thing, all right, huh it director
here used to work in cybersecurity. The wireless door locks
are the most dangerous and easily accessible things if someone
(01:14:51):
knows what they're doing, Okay, that's fair. Uh, my house
is accessible to a hit man if he knows what
he's right. Any See, if someone knows what they're doing,
there's no security right exactly. So that scare tactic of
it's the most accessible if someone knows what they're doing
(01:15:13):
applies to everything, right, not just that door lock. The
cameras that are normally hacked into are ones that aren't secure,
such as off brand cameras that you just put up
in your house, webcam, or even cameras on your TV.
That's a fun thing about this, Like we buy this
stuff from these companies from the Internet, and we expect
(01:15:33):
them to be just fine, but we don't know who
and that what they're doing. They just say, all right,
you're safe, but we don't know who's monitoring it. We
don't know if they're using it selling our You get
what I'm saying, right, It just doesn't It doesn't make
any sense. Listen, is this this is a whole now
(01:15:54):
turning someone You can't be a whistleblower when you're in
the IT world. They will snuff you out. Literally. The
government does a lot of shady stuff that a lot
of us can't tell you about. We know about it.
But if we open our mouths and our family, our
family and our families, families will be killed. Settled down, Yeah, suicide,
(01:16:15):
self inflicted gunshot, wound to the back.
Speaker 10 (01:16:17):
Of the head, breaks went out, settled down.
Speaker 3 (01:16:22):
Hey, this conspiracy theory Thursday, mate.
Speaker 1 (01:16:24):
Now I know, but come on, I've never heard like, well,
our hands are tied. We we have to be complicit
in the violation of other citizens' constitutional rights. That's a
that's a wild argument, a wild text to sit in.
Because if you do know, I now have your number,
(01:16:44):
if that's a real phone number. Sure, it's not a
viohilation of privacy. When you sign up for a private
party company and the terms and agreements, just like your
internet at home Cox Communications, it states it blaantly as day.
That is true. Nobody ever reads those terms and conditions
at all whatsoever. They're too long, and it's just like
(01:17:07):
click click click, Yes, let's hurry up and get this
set up.
Speaker 10 (01:17:09):
Print is too little.
Speaker 1 (01:17:11):
It doesn't matter how big the print is. You won't
read it because you're trying to get it downloaded. Right,
give me my Bravo. All right, I'm trying to watch
Real Housewives. All right, We're gonna take a break and
we'll be back.
Speaker 3 (01:17:24):
You're listening to the big mad mournation.
Speaker 1 (01:17:26):
Death conspiracies, ironically after what we just talked about. One
of them has to do with the American chest grand
master Daniel Norditzky. He died unexpectedly at twenty nine, and
the cause of death has not been made public. He
(01:17:47):
has been accused for months that he cheated in online chess,
and according to his mother, he was tormented by it.
Quote there was nothing more important to Daniel than his
dignity and his name as a chess player, which someone
who does cheat will say to protect themselves, right. I
(01:18:10):
don't know if he did or didn't, but because he
said that hardly abstains him from doing it. You cheated,
I didn't cheat. I would never uh prove it. There's
been no official forensics or cause of death. There have
been some ideas that maybe he was bullied, like what
idea like I don't bully is sometimes is used too broadly,
(01:18:33):
but like they wouldn't leave him alone about it, And
maybe he did it and couldn't deal with the pressure
and decided it was over, or maybe he didn't do it,
didn't feel like he could prove himself that he didn't
prove he didn't do it and went out this way,
or maybe he did it and the Chess world did it.
(01:18:56):
If you don't know about the Chess world, they do
some pretty crazy things. They may be nerdy, but there's
a dirty side of their nerdy. They're usually pretty connected,
especially on the Russian side. Yeah, right, yes, So there's
that death, which is crazy, right, And then this has
(01:19:17):
been covered up in the news. But a thirty year old,
thirty one year old woman died at Disney at Disney World. Oh,
and I would have thought something like this would get
more attention, but it hasn't. So the part that's crazy
is that this was a This was a she was married,
(01:19:40):
she was thirty one, And they say the case is suicide,
which always makes me sus But she apparently traveled alone
from Illinois to Orlando on October fourteenth. A relative is
concerned that she couldn't be reached. Later hours later, her
(01:20:06):
body was found at the dessert at the resort. Now,
the apparently she got hit by a montrail. Monrail got
a while and they weren't They thought maybe she got
hit by it. Now apparently they're saying that she she
(01:20:28):
jumped out.
Speaker 10 (01:20:29):
Witnesses saw it happened.
Speaker 1 (01:20:30):
I'm sure there's cameras. They're not saying, but they're saying
it is suicide. Well, she was pushed.
Speaker 10 (01:20:40):
Disney pays a lot of money to keep their keep
things like.
Speaker 1 (01:20:43):
That out of the media, and understandably, it's supposed to
be family place. We don't want deaths here unless they're natural. Uh,
this happened at the contemporary resort. It's the a frame
looking building. If you're familiar with the resorts that are
around Disney World, it's like.
Speaker 10 (01:21:03):
The original resort.
Speaker 7 (01:21:04):
It's awesome.
Speaker 1 (01:21:04):
And the monorail goes you see it outside and goes
through the hotel in the middle like you see it
outside him. But then you're in the lobby, you see it.
It's there too. I don't know. I've never been. And
there have been other deaths there or near that property
in recent years a lot, but this one is different,
just because it happened with the monorail situation, and there
(01:21:28):
are reports that say suicides are common at the property
than any other death. And I'm not sure why you
would go there to do it. Well, I mean, it's
the happiest place on earth. That's what they say. So
like you, you're not feeling like yourself, and you go
there because you're like, well, I gotta get happy, and
(01:21:49):
you get there and you're like Nope, still the same
person pretty much, and then you.
Speaker 10 (01:21:56):
Not even the happiest place on earth can change my mind.
Speaker 1 (01:22:00):
The Initially when I saw this story, I'm like, are
you so much of a Disney fan that that's you
go there to do it? Her name is Summer, so
that tracks, but like you, you have to do it,
you have to if you want it in your life,
you have to do it at a Disney resert because
you're such a Disney fan. That's the way I read
the story. That's the way I interpret That's the way
(01:22:21):
I connected all those other ones. Now, sometimes when they're
like near the resort, I'm like, ah, I don't know
if that means anything. Could have been a homeless person
or somebody down their luck and that's just where they lived, right, Well,
this person traveled from Illinois to Florida, Yes, to kill themselves,
but what if.
Speaker 10 (01:22:41):
It wasn't What if it was she accidentally stepped in
front of it. What if she was on her phone?
Speaker 1 (01:22:47):
You know, nobody knew where she was. She left unexpectedly.
I doubt she was playing wordle and then just stepped
in front of it.
Speaker 10 (01:22:57):
I mean, you said she was thirty years old. She's
an adult. She can go places on her own.
Speaker 1 (01:23:03):
That's true. Well, she I believe she was married and
she just disappeared. That's not normal. Now, there is one
piece of evidence that I have not disclosed yet that
will probably be the reason why this happened. There were
posts on her social media ten months ago that she
(01:23:27):
was pregnant, and there's no word that there is a baby, okay,
And when somebody loses a baby before it's born or
right after it's born, it's devastating to them and it
makes it probably impossible to feel like you can live
(01:23:47):
if you're not getting help or you don't have a
good supports system around it. And so to me, it
sounds like that might be connected to what happened. She
was so distraught, couldn't hand herself, didn't probably didn't know
what she was doing. Probably maybe she didn't go to
Disney thinking that was gonna happen. And then that's the
(01:24:10):
part that's so tough about people that kill themselves is
there's no context, right even if they leave a note,
there's gaps. If they leave a note and they're like,
I haven't been happy, you go, what happened? Why were
you not well? Were they not happy? They're still not context?
Speaker 10 (01:24:27):
And when were they not happy? Why didn't we see this?
Everything seemed to normal.
Speaker 1 (01:24:33):
Yeah, to travel seventeen hours to kill yourself doesn't make
any sense. I mean, she could have gone on a plane,
all right. Even to travel a few hours via a plane,
you still gotta get there. You gotta get a taxi
or a rental car uber. Maybe even it just doesn't
(01:24:55):
make sense to travel all that way just off yourself,
no matter what the situation is. Maybe she did have
a miscarriage, maybe it was still born, whatever, But to
have that in your head, be like, oh this sucks.
I hate my life. I can't perform, I can't produce
a baby. I am going to travel to Florida, to
(01:25:16):
Disney World, to be exact, just so I can kill myself.
I won't ever be able to get to take my
child there, So you see what I'm saying. It just
doesn't make sense why. I think. I feel most people
would do that in their home state, Maybe not so
much in their hometown, where they're where they live, but
(01:25:37):
somewhere relatively close. Yeah. I don't ever underestimate someone in
a dark place. Uh yeah, I get what you're saying.
I do. You're using rational thought, and when someone's in
a dark place, there's no rational thought. No, but if
you're that dark, in that dark of a place, you
(01:25:59):
just to do it wherever. It doesn't matter, do it
at work. Again, you're using rational thought for this person,
that would be the rational thing for them.
Speaker 3 (01:26:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:26:08):
Maybe. So you're in a dark place, that's there's no explanation.
You're literally believing your mind. You're believing your mind is
tricking you into things, thinking that if you go there,
maybe you have a closer connection to this lost child.
If that's what happened, your mind is a cunning salesman. Yeah,
(01:26:34):
you're right, anything's possible. I've known lots of people who
have taken their own lives and then they haven't told
me the reason why they did it, you know what
I mean. So I don't know. Maybe you're right there,
It just seems very far fetched for that to happen.
I personally feel if you're going to do it, you're
gonna do it wherever. You're standing.
Speaker 10 (01:26:55):
Maybe she thought it would make her happier to be there,
and then she was there and saw all of.
Speaker 1 (01:27:00):
These families, underestimating that there be Yeah, text coming in.
How much money? How much of the media Doesessn't the
own easy to cover up? Not mentioned when you own
the media? Yes, they own a large portion ABC, ESPN.
So you can haunt the happiest place on earth in
your vintage clothes. Excellent point. If you can't are gonna
why not go there? Right? Why not? If you're gonna
(01:27:21):
haunt a place, why not go there? It's awesome and
you don't pay right, you get to ride all the rides.
She could have been trying to get a fat check
for her family. Usually life insurance won't pay on a suicide.
No bestivacation. My parents took me on. Yeah, yeah, do
(01:27:42):
you come Jude for you? You're there with your family,
like you went there. You go there with your family,
you're staying in that hotel and that happens. Yeah, you're
traumatized for sure. It's hard to even if you don't
tell the kid, you're like, hey, we're not talking about this.
It's hard to compartmentalize that and then get on Space Mountain.
Speaker 4 (01:28:03):
Yeah is it?
Speaker 1 (01:28:05):
I can't understand if you see it happen that that
might be difficult. You might not want to carry on
with your vacation if you physically saw with your own
eyes this lady jump in front of the train, or
somebody hanging themselves from management, whatever the case is. But
if it's just hearsay, it's say when you see the
police and they've got an area accordinged off and yeah, yeah,
(01:28:27):
yeah you see all that, You're like, oh man, that's crazy.
I wonder what happened or or maybe you do find out.
I just I don't know. Maybe it's just me probably
I think, I think, and I would hope more people
have the thought process of empathy. Yeah, I think about
that person, like what what would make someone do that?
Or maybe because you wouldn't all the details, what would
(01:28:48):
make someone hurt another person here? What would make somebody?
What about their family back home? That to me, that's
I think a lot of people should think that way more.
What good is it going to do? Get putting in
present in the moment instead and knowing bad things happen
(01:29:09):
and can and will happen, and that you have to
be present and be where you're at. Yeah, I can reminded.
I get that. Yeah, everybody knows bad things happen. I
don't think that happened and will happen. I don't think
some of a lot of people. I Okay, take me
because I'm probably the least empathetic in the situation right
now that yes, I know bad things can't happen. I
know bad things do happen. I know that somebody can
(01:29:31):
get mad at somebody at Disneyland, pull a knife out
and stab them right there in the line while they're
waiting to get on the ride. But at the same time,
I'm like, well, that sucks, and I feel for their
families and all that. But I mean, do I need
to sit here and let it ruin my time to
ruin my vacation. You can sit there and ponder on it.
You can think about things and not let it ruin it. See.
(01:29:55):
I think that's where you're going, is that you're saying
that when you have those thoughts, it ruins things, rather
than you can think about it and go wow, okay.
But we were talking about, oh if that happens to
you while you're there on vacation, and maybe we just
didn't get to that point, it's like do you stay
you know, or we didn't get to that part. Yeah, yeah,
maybe that's what I just jumped ahead at. It was like,
(01:30:16):
I'm not leaving. I paid good money to be here.
Do you expect a return of your money? A refund?
I wouldn't know why. I'm just asking the question, you know,
I don't know. Maybe again, if you know it happened
in front of you, even then, I wouldn't expect a refund,
you know, or any kind of compensation. Listen, I know,
(01:30:39):
we just listen, Johnny. I know we just saw somebody
get obliterated in front of the monorail. But I need
to put on a happy face right here because we're
getting on. It's a small worlds.
Speaker 10 (01:30:52):
Can I buy you a balloon? Will that make it
make you happy?
Speaker 1 (01:30:54):
He feels a little different when you're at the I
don't know if it's that that happens to Disney when
the Transformers guys, you know, heckling you right after you
just watch somebody get, you know, treated like a bug
on a windshield. It's all curry, Tommy. At least you
didn't jump in front of a tree. Get over here, Tommy,
what are you gonna do kill yourself?
Speaker 10 (01:31:15):
It's now the most somber placed Hunnar for.
Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
Some take a break, we'll be back.
Speaker 10 (01:31:20):
Good morning Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn. Haley Hill, porn star,
is celebrating her twenty eighth birthday Today. You can watch
this sexy serbian inn we Girls and Nylons, ass Traffic
twenty eight and but Hole Bandits. In addition to occasional
naughty behavior, she enjoys animals and funny people.
Speaker 1 (01:31:44):
Good morning Gimpi, Well, Good morning Corbyn. Hey, remember if
you've got a local band and you want to open
up for Josie Scott, the original voice of Saliva at
the nineteenth annual Cancer Sucks Concert that's happening at the
end of November. We do have a contest up. It's
on the contest page at canewudie dot com. Upload your
one demo and then you'll get thrown into the mix
and the best five will be chosen and the top
(01:32:05):
two will win and open up for Josie Scott. That
deadlines in just a couple of weeks, so get your
submission in. Good luck.
Speaker 11 (01:32:14):
It's cyberbic Mad Morning Show's top list random topics randomly
drawn with random results.
Speaker 1 (01:32:20):
Now here's Corbyn, Kimpi and Lindsay with this week's top list.
This week's top list is the most memorable movie quotes,
What's Yours? BMMS and whatever that is? To eight, two, nine,
four to five Your most memorable movie quotes? What do
you Got?
Speaker 10 (01:32:37):
Lindsay all right, coming in at number five, which triggered
this list for me as Stay Golden pony Boy. When
I was at the Outsiders at the PAC, I felt
like we were waiting for that line, and of course
they say it, and that's just one of those most
memorable lines, Stay Golden pony Boy. Number four You're Gonna
(01:33:01):
need a bigger boat from Jaws, And we quote that
line a lot when we're out fishing, more so probably
when we would fish on Lake Michigan, because you're reeling,
going to fish for so long, and you really, until
it comes to surface, you don't know how big it
actually is going to be, So the longer the time
(01:33:23):
you are spending reeling it in, say you're gonna need
a bigger boat for this one. Number three Asta Lovesta Baby.
Not my favorite, but I feel like it's used a lot,
very memorable. Number two Nobody puts baby in the corner.
(01:33:44):
Dirty Dancing one of my favorite films.
Speaker 1 (01:33:47):
Never support that movie. I know somebody praying on children, yep,
but hey, listen, it was a different time, Corbyn. It's
a different time.
Speaker 10 (01:33:57):
And then the number one movie quote most memorable, and
it's said a lot in my friends group and in
my house is did we just become best friends? From
step Brothers?
Speaker 1 (01:34:14):
All right, we're doing top list and it is the
most memorable movie quotes? What do you got? GIMPI? Number
five on my list. There's a snake in my boot
toy story. Anytime I get a chance to say it
for whatever reason, whether I see you know, toy story,
(01:34:35):
costume or toys or just in general snakes boots, I'm
in it. There's a snake in my boot. Number four
for me. Don't forget the namaise that comes from the
classic movie Short Circuit. I believe it's Short Circuit two
(01:34:57):
to be exact. Wow, when Johnny five is putting together
all those little Johnny five robots in the factory, the
little warehouse factory that they have, and he's sitting there
putting together and he's singing Aretha Franklin r ESPCT find
or don't forget the nainnaise that has stuck with me
since the eighties. It should probably be fig higher up
(01:35:20):
in the list, but it's coming in at number four.
Number three. Most memorable movie quote for me, and I
do say it whenever it's appropriate. Houston, we have a problem.
From Apollo thirteen. Usually if anything goes awry, Oh, Houston,
(01:35:42):
we have a problem. If it's number two is one
that I've been saying a lot lately. See, I'm playing
Red Dead Redemption again, playing online with my friends. It
makes me want to get us. I'm watching people playing.
It makes me want to play.
Speaker 3 (01:36:00):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:36:00):
You see those videos on the TikTok. You're like, I
want to be a cowboy again. So I jumped back
into it. And so I'll be sitting there playing with
my buddy do Doo doo dooo head, you know, and uh,
we gotta go over here and get a bounty from
Valentine or you know, Blackwater or whatever. He'd be on
the road, and I'm like, I'm not taking no road
(01:36:20):
because it's it's not like Grand Theft Auto where you've
got skyscrapers and buildings. It's in a Western game. So
it's wide open spaces. So I get to say to
him roads, we're going, we don't need roads, and we
just take off across the plains, do what we gotta do,
galloping on our horses. Sometimes sometimes we're on the same horse.
(01:36:43):
Sometimes I love that. Sometimes he's the driver, sometimes I'm
the driver. It's a it's the relationship that we have.
Doo doo, and I, uh, how many kills do you have? Oh?
That game? Oh, I don't know if that gives you
that stab, but it's a lot. It's a lot because
(01:37:05):
I am what they call a legendary bounty hunter. Yes,
I paid for the license, not like actual cash, but
I earned enough in game gold to get that legendary status.
And sometimes sometimes like this morning or was it yesterday,
there was this gal that I had to go get
and she was just sitting on the side of a mountain, right,
(01:37:26):
hanging out mining her own business, right. And there's other
times where I go and I have to go right
to camp, and sometimes there's you know, a dozen bad
guys along with the one person that I've got to
go find. So I don't I couldn't tell you exactly.
Maybe those stats are out there. I don't know. But
I can tell you it's been a lot. How many
times have you died? A lot? A lot? I try
(01:37:50):
not to, but it happens. Sometimes you get surrounded right
by other villains when especially doing these bounty hunter jobs.
There's been times that I am minding my own business
because you also get to hunt animals. Right. So I'll
be looking for a squirrel or a raccoon, or or
I'm looking for a particular plant or something like that,
(01:38:12):
and out of nowhere, I get mauled by a bear.
Or I'll be riding my horse through the swamp and
a goddamn cougar a panther will jump up and rip
me off of my horse and maul me to death, right,
real Oregon trail stuff. Yeah, it's bad news, man, bad news.
Speaker 2 (01:38:28):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:38:29):
And like when you go and hunt somebody, are they
real players? Or they are they? Now? Those are just
NPCs when it comes to the bounty hunter stuff. Yeah,
they're just NPCs. Now. Here's another thing that pisses me
off are the real players Because I am playing online
and there's you know, people from all over the country
and world that are playing right along with And it
happened to me just the other day I'm looking for
(01:38:50):
a particular artifact, right and I'm in this hotel in
this western town and I'm searching around. I'm looking. I'm like,
I can hear it. I know what's around here. Out
of nowhere. The son of a bitch that plays somewhere
else I don't know, comes into the hotel that I'm
at while I'm searching around minding my business, blast me
with a shotgun right there, and I'm like, you, son
(01:39:12):
of a bitch. So then I go back, and then
we get in this nice little fight, and eventually I
end up. You know, I can't compete, so I'm just
gonna go ahead and get the hell out of here
while I can. But yeah, it's those other or I'll
have to like take supplies from one side of the
world to the other. And they're like, oh, it's gonna
shoot you just for fun. I'm like, bro, why you
(01:39:32):
gotta troll me? Man, I'm just trying to just try
to play again. So people just trolling is what's happening. Yes,
it's like GTA, but it's western. Yeah. The guy who
does trolling online, he rage beats people and they get
so mad. It's awesome. Oh yeah, I can understand why
(01:39:53):
doing our top list. These are our top five most
memorable movie quotes. I tried to do someone I number one,
sorry take away, that was number one for me. No,
that was number two, number one, and I get to
say it. I did. I said it just the other
day when I met up with some friends playing some
disc golf. I hadn't seen him in a long time.
His name is Chuck. He goes in for a handshake.
(01:40:15):
I said, brothers don't shake hands. Brothers got a hug,
and then we brought it in. That's my number one
from Tommy Boy. So I tried to do something a
little different. I tried to not pick ones that I
say a lot, but ones that are My hope is
I'm gonna say them and people will finish them. Oh
that's the thought I had here. So I didn't go
(01:40:37):
with the one lighters like, here's looking at you kid.
Number five. Do you expect me to talk? No, mister Bond,
I expect you to die. Okay, do you know what
movie one of the James?
Speaker 15 (01:40:52):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (01:40:52):
Yes, good job, good job number four? Utah, give me two.
Speaker 10 (01:40:58):
Top Gun.
Speaker 1 (01:40:59):
Nope, I have no idea, John, Oh, I know point
break correct garrib Bucy saying that to Johnny Utah, yeah, hot.
Speaker 10 (01:41:08):
Dogs or they were some sort of sandwich.
Speaker 1 (01:41:14):
Number three, surely you can't be serious. I am serious,
and don't call me Shirley. It's number three. Number two,
I'll go with this one that I have written up here.
Oh that's not it. Come on, uh no no?
Speaker 3 (01:41:37):
Uh oh wait?
Speaker 1 (01:41:39):
Was she a great, big fat person? Ah?
Speaker 9 (01:41:41):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:41:45):
And then number one of my most memorable quotes that
I tried to make longer than the word is say
what again?
Speaker 3 (01:41:53):
I dare you?
Speaker 1 (01:41:54):
I double dare you. M efforts say what one more?
Goddamn time? I love it? Does he look like a bitch?
Doing our top list most memorable movie quotes? Frankly, my dear,
I don't give a damn yes. Do you feel lucky? Punk?
(01:42:15):
Like one of your French girls from the movie Titanic?
I am your father? Another one, Hey you guys, or
more appropriately, hey you guys. That's right, this one. Number five.
I have to come here to chew bubble gum and
kick ass, and I'm all out of bubble gum. Number four,
(01:42:38):
I'll be back. Number four is the number five? Is
that supposed to be Daison confused? No, it's dayson confused,
he does drink beer and kick ass?
Speaker 10 (01:42:48):
Right this That one was actually texting twice from the
They Live with Roddy Piper.
Speaker 1 (01:42:55):
Oh the movie is They Live? Yeah? Sorry, if I
did know that. Number four, I'll be back. Number three,
are you not entertained? Number two say hello to my
little friend. And number one inconceivable bumblebee tuna, your balls
(01:43:15):
are showing. Oh I love that. Excuse me, sir. One
of the most memorable movie quotes is from Men in Black.
Interesting and it really explains a lot about humanity.
Speaker 3 (01:43:27):
Quote.
Speaker 1 (01:43:28):
A person is smart, people are dumb, panicky, dangerous animals,
and you know it. Fifteen hundred years ago, everybody knew
the Earth was the center of the universe. Five hundred
years ago, everybody knew the Earth was flat, And fifteen
minutes ago, you knew that humans were alone on this planet.
Imagine what you'll know tomorrow. Man. I was just telling
my kid that yesterday.
Speaker 10 (01:43:46):
I quote to them, Yeah, I remember the scene.
Speaker 1 (01:43:50):
Sure, what do we get for five dollars? Anything you want? Yeah,
I'm surprised Gimby didn't pick five hundred dollars. Oh yeah,
I totally forgot about that. I could have picked so
many dude, where's my cars? Right, bubba boy? Right? So
(01:44:11):
many good ones. Me squozye me scoozy.
Speaker 10 (01:44:14):
I was thinking of ones from Friday, and but he
can't go through with them because of the the bad words.
Speaker 1 (01:44:24):
You got fired for stealing boxes on your day off.
How the hell you get fired for stealing boxes on
your day off?
Speaker 10 (01:44:32):
M yeah, not the out man.
Speaker 14 (01:44:36):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:44:37):
Another one I love a lot is uh uh you
can Uh, I'll give you my cheeseburger. I got these cheeseburgers.
Oh yeah, come on, man, I'll I'll give you my cheeseburger.
And then he kills him and takes a cheeseburger.
Speaker 4 (01:44:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:44:57):
Any society. Uh yeah. There's so many good movie quotes.
I don't think there's any that aren't worth saying. We
got to take a break and we'll be back. More
of the Big Man Morning Show is next. I really
enjoy these segments I'm about to do. Some of you
probably don't, but I recommend you get your own show. Then,
(01:45:19):
fair enough. This one is it's a two parter. This
one's called hey, that's an excuse, okay, okay. And then
the last couple I have are damn nice. So that's
an excuse. Finish the job. Son not remorseful for killing
father because he owed him five thousand dollars. Oh that's
(01:45:42):
an excuse. Yeah, money, bitch, five thousand dollars. You want
to find that on that lot. I feel like it's
got to be more than that to kill You're dead. Yeah, Oh,
it depends to some people. Five thousand dollars. There's a
lot of money, you know what I mean? So I
would agree that, like, typically, yes, have to be more
than than five thousand. But maybe they grew up in
(01:46:05):
a poor family.
Speaker 10 (01:46:06):
I think I think we're missing It's not about the money,
it's about the principal.
Speaker 1 (01:46:11):
He owed me, right, Yeah, if I killed my parents
for every time they owed me money, I would have
been dead a long time. Well. Yeah, next, one teacher
emptied twenty one round forty caliber clip into his brother
was angry at him for leaving his family and not working.
I mean, that is an excuse. God damn. Yeah, twenty
(01:46:35):
one rounds forty caliber. God damn.
Speaker 10 (01:46:39):
It's about the principle.
Speaker 1 (01:46:41):
Is there anything left of his brother after he was done? Wow?
But it's his brother, It's not like it was his
sister and it was redemption.
Speaker 3 (01:46:49):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:46:52):
Yeah, I don't understand that one at all. Okay, we
agreed twenty ones too much? Right? What's an acceptable amount
of bliss to put into your brother for leaving the family, right,
for leaving his family and not working? Okay, I need
to know why did he leave? He just like, screw you, guys,
I'm out of here. I mean, why does anybody leave?
(01:47:15):
They're not happy? Usually they needed milk. Well, okay, but
he's not working. I was thinking if like the brother
was the provider, right, right, then that would be an
excuse to go ahead and put a round or two
or twenty one in him, be like, you're leaving us,
we're here with nothing. But the brother wasn't working, So
(01:47:36):
there goes that theory. Yeah, to me, why somebody's relationship
doesn't work is always usually I think, pretty petty. Yeah,
short of cheating, molesting children. Yeah, obvious crimes usually like well,
they wouldn't let me go to the mall, huh right,
(01:47:58):
stay out later, didn't have friends or yeah, whatever, do
what you want. Who cares? Next one itching to show off.
Porsch driver blames her bootant heels for mowing down man
on first date as he strolled down the sidewalk. So
the belief is is that she was trying to show off.
(01:48:19):
Uh huh, so she floored her portion, it got out
of her hands. If you know what I'm saying, Think
of like this hot, skinny woman running with a great dane, right,
just too much power for that gu yep, and she
ran him down and blamed it on her shoes.
Speaker 10 (01:48:35):
Huh yeah, biton's.
Speaker 1 (01:48:39):
Yeah. I mean, I'm sure the heel, they're really tall heels,
I'm sure. Yeah, But slippery on that surface of the
accelerator yet, why not? That's an excuse. Yeah. She also
had a point three zero one. Oh that's blood ac
for those who don't know. All right, man shot three
year old in the back with laser sighted handgun because
(01:48:59):
the toddler's dad part too close to his vehicle. Oh
my gosh, it's an excuse. Yeah, the segment is called
it's an excuse. It's not called rational. Yeah, listen, somebody's
got to teach that guy lesson. And if it's at
the cost of his would you say, five year old
three year old, then so be it. Yeah, two, you're cheating.
(01:49:21):
It's also a three year old. Come on, man, he's
not running far. It's not like he's doing the zig zag, right,
I don't know. They keep running and falling down, running
and falling down. You're like, God, damn it, you are
making it hard to get a beat on you kid. Yeah,
full disclosure. The kid wasn't you know? It was in
the car. Yeah? Oh, then it was his poor aim.
(01:49:42):
Then I think he was naming for the dad the laser. Yeah, yeah,
dad who forced disrespectful twelve year old to write I
will obey, then beat him until he was brain dead.
Well that's an excuse. Hey, he solved one problem, right, kid,
ain't listening? You got still you gotta beat some sense
(01:50:04):
into him. Last two I have here are just bad.
Speaker 10 (01:50:11):
Hold on the others.
Speaker 1 (01:50:12):
Weren't man found lying a top girlfriend he stabbed to
death before he called nine to one one to say
he now wanted to kill himself. Okay, killing your partners
one thing. Yeah, but then to lay on top of
the that's.
Speaker 10 (01:50:29):
I'm sorry, I'm sorry I had to do it.
Speaker 1 (01:50:32):
Yeah maybe, I mean, I'm sure you had some remorse
going there. He knew that he did wrong? Or was
he trying to have sex with his dead girlfriend? See,
we don't know what they mean by lying on top
of her. Yeah, he was covered in her bloody And
I would imagine if you stab somebody multiple times, you
(01:50:52):
will be covered in their blood. Yeah.
Speaker 10 (01:50:55):
Crime of passion turned remorseful.
Speaker 1 (01:50:59):
When people use the word crime of passion, it makes
it's almost like it makes it sound like an acceptable
form of violence. It wasn't think clearly all it's acceptable. Yeah,
it was seeing red right, Oh he's blind. Rage, she's
on a period. Settled down. Twelve year old boy came
home from school to an empty apartment after his parents
(01:51:19):
moved without telling him.
Speaker 10 (01:51:21):
Oh my god, dude, I laughed out.
Speaker 1 (01:51:25):
Loud when I read that headline. That feels like a movie.
Speaker 10 (01:51:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:51:29):
Yeah, here, I am bitching because my parents went to
Disneyland without me. Right, they could have just up and moved.
A Texas boy returned home from school to find that
his mother and her boyfriend moved out of the house
without him. Uh. The two were sentenced on Friday after
police responded to a call about a twelve year old
(01:51:49):
boy the woman's kid, who came home to find an
empty apartment with his family gone.
Speaker 9 (01:51:57):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (01:51:57):
According to an arrest aff and David obtained by the
tea station, The boy went to his neighbor's house showed
the neighbor the vacated apartment. When police arrived and spoke
to the boy, he apparently told them that his mother
and the boyfriend had mentioned that the family would be
moving at some point. You can't say he didn't get
advanced and notice then, right, come on, I mean, it's
(01:52:19):
it does sound like they intentionally did it. But maybe
what if they were like, hey, he forgot they moved,
like today's the day. Maybe they forgot to tell him
today was the day. Maybe that they were in the
last body of the last let's get this last one
done before little Bobby comes home. Right, they didn't make
it back in time for sure. Maybe he just wished
(01:52:40):
that they weren't there anymore.
Speaker 10 (01:52:41):
Right, Yeah, this is his name, Kevin. Maybe or maybe
just maybe he was supposed to wait for them at
school and not ride the bus home. And he and
that's why he got left, because he didn't listen to instructions.
Speaker 1 (01:52:59):
I'll go ahead and finish this story now. According to
the affidavit, they told the police that the boy's uncle
was going to be picking him up from the home.
They did not provide information about how to contact the uncle.
Police eventually got a hold of the boy's uncle and
he told police he was unaware of the arrangement. Here's
where it's good. Police then spoke to the man the boyfriend,
(01:53:21):
and he complained at length about the girlfriend's twelve year
old son. Court to the Affidavid Child Protective Services also
contacted them to obtain a current address. They refused to
give it. They reportedly refused to provide one. When the
neighbor who took the boy in spoke with police, he
said that the two had kicked the boy out of
the house in the past. Reminder, he's twelve, so in
(01:53:46):
the past. I doubt it was in the last nine months. Right,
one time when I was eight, they tried to kick
me out. Oh, my parents kicked me out when I
What could an eight year old possibly be doing that?
He deserves to get kicked out of the house. Yeah,
leaving markers uncapped on your couch.
Speaker 10 (01:54:05):
Too many legos. You're stepping on too many of his legos.
He probably doesn't even have legos.
Speaker 1 (01:54:10):
Right, I'm drawing on the walls you mentioned markers. Kids
liked to do that, you know, they like to draw
on the walls. They like to draw on the furniture.
They like to draw on everything. Yeah, you know, so
maybe they ruined something that was quite expensive, and it's like,
you know what, you want to draw on the walls.
Get your own goddamn house. Get out of mine.
Speaker 10 (01:54:30):
He needs too much help with his homework.
Speaker 1 (01:54:33):
My daughter, my oldest, when she was one two two,
I was walking by the hallway, sorry, at the end
of the hall, just drawing on the wall marker. I
laughed so hard. That's funny to me. Oh you didn't
think about kicking her out?
Speaker 7 (01:54:53):
Huh No No.
Speaker 1 (01:54:55):
I took a video and laughed so I could show
my wife. H I was like, what are we doing?
She's like, I'm drawing, dummy.
Speaker 10 (01:55:04):
Yeah, what does it look?
Speaker 1 (01:55:05):
Doesn't this look like a house? A huge canvas? Man?
Speaker 3 (01:55:08):
Let me use it.
Speaker 10 (01:55:09):
I remember being in older than two, doing the same
thing because I wanted my mom to see me drawing,
because I wanted her attention. She was she worked from home,
and I just I wanted her attention, so I knew
how to get it. I knew her catching me drawing
(01:55:29):
on the front door, who would get her attention?
Speaker 4 (01:55:32):
And it did.
Speaker 1 (01:55:33):
They got their attention, all right? The hell out of
my hand.
Speaker 10 (01:55:36):
It was wait till your father gets home.
Speaker 1 (01:55:38):
Oh yeah, listen, we encouraged a lot of drawing. I
hardly gave the rule of not the wall. You know
what I'm saying. We put paper in front of our
kids from them from like all the time. Yeah, and
they just scribble, scribble. But I never went, hey, not
the wall, not the couch, not the refrigerator, at the
door and at Florida. Yeah, so come on, we expect
(01:56:00):
them to know.
Speaker 9 (01:56:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:56:02):
And so I just got the paint and I'm like, here,
you help me clean. We got to cover this up,
don't We don't draw on the wall, because look, now
we got to do this, and that was that kicking
your kid out? Right? Now? Get they've both been charged
with abandoning and endangering a child without intent to return,
without intent to return. What do you think the like
(01:56:29):
the punishment for that is, uh, five years, probably not
five years, maybe maybe two years and three.
Speaker 10 (01:56:40):
Probation, Yeah, one to three.
Speaker 1 (01:56:42):
Should every crime that involves a child be a felony?
Speaker 6 (01:56:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:56:46):
I think so too. Yeah, I think so too. I'm
trying to think of a crime against a child that
wouldn't you know what I mean? Children are innocent. California,
child abanonment as a felony is punishable up to six
years in state prison. Minnesota, child abandonment can be a
(01:57:07):
gross misdemeanor, stupid nst one year, our felonies five years.
In Oregon, abandonment of a child under fifteen years old
is a Class C felony, and some states list finds probation,
termination of parental rights, and other consequences for it. Just
(01:57:30):
living at different times. I remember old timers me like
I left. I left my parents' house when I was
fourteen years old. I've been on my own since I
was fourteen or whatever. I can't do that anymore. In Oklahoma,
it is a felony if a parent or person entrusted
with a child under ten years of age because eleven's fine,
dis deserts the child, or takes the child out of
(01:57:51):
state with intent to wholly abandon punishment one year in
prison up to ten years. Like take them out of
state to Holy Battle, like you're dropping off all on
a back road. I think it's more of like, hey, Lindsey,
watch my kid and you take my then you decide
to go get a sixer up in Kansas, gotcha, and
never came back. Yeah, I was hoping there would be
(01:58:14):
like a real diligent, like or not diligent state. That's like, ass,
it's five hundred bucks. What do you got on you? Right,
we'll be back.