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November 7, 2024 140 mins
HAPPY FRIGGIN' "A" FRIDAY EVE!!! Can Penn State Handle The CFP, A Cyclist Got Hit By An Ambulance And They Charged Him For The Ride To The Hospital, Accidentally Shooting Yourself In The Ass, Asphalt Kills, Biggest Payouts From Lawsuits, Conspiracy Theory Thursday, Top List, & We Talk With Cody Canada Of Cross Canadian Ragweed!!!
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
You are about to witness as amazing Emo has comes
in living Man's property of all times.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Yes, my bow suck on you bow down to your master.
Then you did it. Then you did it?

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Where you did?

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

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The crystal wos the.

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Sun is rising God, Oh wake up, wake up.

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Now, don't worry.

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We're all here to show you how. Jan Witz horses Raw.

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Station k m o G.

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Home of the Listens is a family.

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Be don't turn downtown, just wait and say.

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Are you ready? Are you ready to jove in time to.

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Start to show crapstick apl about Fresco, Whisping Man, Marny Show,
Welcome to the Working Week.

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It's on such a bore kick back, makes up the
offing and they get hardcore.

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Hang your whisby and then mess pick up your.

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Phone there line you're on the air.

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with us each and every day. Good morning, Lindsay, good morning,
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(03:06):
Big Day, Big Day on the Big Man Morning Show.
Big We're gonna do our top list, of course, like
we always do, and this today it's the top things
you should never mess with. This is inspired by Jason Kelson.
You just don't mess with a giant lineman and call

(03:28):
his brother names your phone smash. So top things you
should never mess with. We'll get to that coming up.
We're gonna talk espionage on conspiracy theory Thursday.

Speaker 9 (03:40):
See we give me on's to talk about.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
We get tickets. We've got tickets to see Primus Plus
for in Perfect Circle one show they're playing together on Thursday,
May first at the Bok Center. Tickets availablet Bokcenter dot com.
And I'm not I don't want to say it because
I don't want to jinx it, because that is a
natural thing that happens on the show Real But Cody
Canada is scheduled to meet with us today on the air,

(04:06):
which you will get the privilege of listening on. So
we'll talk to him about his thoughts on Israel and
how to fix the war in Ukraine and some of
the other issues going on in the world. His name
is Canada. I would think he a what's that move?
He's got some global knowledge. So again that's coming up

(04:27):
later this morning. So this year, the college football playoffs
are a little different. They're going to have twelve teams
in and not only that, the first round of play
the teams that are in the top I think like five, three,
eight If I'm not Missie.

Speaker 9 (04:42):
Get to decide where they're playing.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
That's cool. So they can play in their home stadium,
they can play at an NFL stadium, they get to choose.
Could they go overseas if they wanted to? I don't
think so. I think there's son of a scheduling limitation.
I think it's just an assumption. You would be like, hey,
we want to in Fiji. Yeah, that makes sense. I
mean with with a lot of football being played in
London and in Germany, you know, professional ball I figure

(05:06):
that might be an option for these kids. And if
I was one of those students, I'd be like, now,
let's go to Germany, let's go have some fun. Well,
and actually even Michigan has been playing in Ireland, yeah,
and Notre Dame has been. Yeah, both of them have.
If I'm not mistaken, to try and help with recruiting, yeah, yeah,
So that that would be a cool option. I think, Yeah,
they're not doing that, not with something so important, right,

(05:29):
And so a lot of speculation because penn State's doing
so well and that they'll be there in that top
five area where they get to decide where they play.
And for those that know, where the Nitney Lions play
is a massive stadium. It's huge. It might be one
of the biggest college football stadiums. And whether they can

(05:50):
hold a playoff game because it's in State College, PA,
which geographically probably.

Speaker 9 (05:56):
A lot of not a lot of people know.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
Very few people probably can point out we're filled Helfian
and Pittsburgh is on the map in the state. But
those two big cities that you know are ears of Pennsylvania.
State College is straight in the middle, straight in the middle,
and it's three hours and something to Philly. It's two
hours and something to Pittsburgh, so it's not really convenient

(06:20):
to a big city, not like say still Water, right, Norman, Right,
And so people are going they don't have the hotels.
The stadium isn't prepared for a game in January, which
I don't know what the differences between December and January
and Pennsylvania, but thirty days, I guess can make a

(06:42):
massive difference. And so people are speculating that they cannot
handle a game so much in fact, that the university
has moved graduation December graduation so that hotels don't get
snatched up and could be in the way of people

(07:02):
coming in to see the game, right, And I find
this incredibly bizarre. They host games all the time, people
come in all the time. They can't hold more people.
Are they just expecting a massive influx of people to
come in, It would be it would be a big deal, right,
unless they're has because they don't have to provide It

(07:23):
isn't a neutral site, so they don't have to provide
fifty percent of the tickets to the visitors. So I'm
not sure. Anyway, this university is like no, it's fine,
Like we're totally prepared for this. I think, if anything,
winter's maybe the best argument. And some crazy snowstorm in Pennsylvania. Again,
I'm not familiar with the weather patterns in January at

(07:45):
State College PA. But I would think that is a
fair concern, and so I did some comparing. Now, Apparently
how big State College Pa is is quite shocking because
I I went to school in a pretty small town, Maryville, Missouri,
twelve thousand people when school was in session. Yeah, it's

(08:09):
not a big school two hours north of Kansas City,
and it wasn't and it was fine.

Speaker 9 (08:16):
Right.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
Still Water is twenty eight point three square miles. That's
how big it is, right, which doesn't really when you
say it out loud like that doesn't seem that big.
I always thought it was twenty three miles is not
that much.

Speaker 9 (08:32):
No, No, it's not.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
In comparison, Tulsa is one hundred and eighty six square miles, right, right,
that's I'm trying to show how big something is. East
Lansing thirteen point six Michigan State University. Right, State College
Pa is four point five Oh boy less timey wow,

(08:56):
very small? Yeah, So go everybody converging onto that one spot. Yeah,
that's gonna suck. But they've got areas outside of that, surely, surely.

Speaker 9 (09:09):
No, not really, because again it's in the middle of.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
The states, right, so it's going to be a dry
There is nothing near there. Now, calm down, Knitney Lion
fan ain't dogging on you. We're just talking about it. Yeah.
The stadium holds one hundred and six thousand. It's a
massive standiud Arrowhead Stadium holds seventy nine eighty one something
like that. Okay, Kansas City Place, Jerry World I think
is one hundred and one. Jerry Ward is a huge stadium, massive,

(09:38):
so they clearly are capable of holding people. Their record
attendance is one hundred and eleven thousand when they played
Ohio State just this last week. That's a lot of people. Yes,
So it just goes to show that people are willing
to travel, do whatever it takes, you know, just to
watch the game.

Speaker 9 (09:57):
Yeah, yeah, they'll be fine. And all that being said.

Speaker 2 (10:02):
State College, Pa, where the Nitney Lions play, is a
true college experience. You go to the small town. Everybody
converges on it. Right.

Speaker 9 (10:10):
It isn't like, and I'm not taking away from Norman
or any.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
Of these other schools usc but there's no big city
to prop you up. Yeah right, people are only going
there to that game. That is it maybe to eat
at the famous place. If you've ever gone to Stillwater
for a game. It's kind of a pain in the ass, right,
because it's so small and this is ridiculously small, and
people don't care. They still go.

Speaker 9 (10:34):
One hundred and eleven thousand go into a game at Arrowhead.

Speaker 2 (10:39):
We gimbe you went to a game and at the
NFL stadium, so you can nan Stadium stadium. How crazy
was that? Just getting it?

Speaker 9 (10:46):
Just the amount of people It was crazy, dude.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
Finding parking, I mean, if you want to get anywhere
close to the stadium, that's out of the question unless
you want to pay out the ass for it. So
we ended up parking down to Nashville, which was insane
in itself. Bro, so many people just downtown waiting for
the game, partying or whatever. And then so we walked

(11:10):
a couple of blocks to where we needed to be.
The stadium was. It was sold out, full packed stadium.
There's still a lot of people there, sure, And they
don't have a dedicated parking lot. They have some parking,
but not enough for everybody. No, so you really have
to scrounge to find a spot down here. Yeah, and
they have the backup of the whole city of Nashville, Yeah,

(11:32):
which is massive. Yes, planted right in the middle sixty
nine thousands. How much that stadium haltz really Wow, so
a little bit less, a little bit more than half Yeah, crazy,
So why are they freaking out? Then? I think it
might be a little bit of They're in the middle

(11:53):
of it's a very unique setup compared to nowadays. Yeah,
And so I me, I never doubted it for a second.
I mean the idea that you know, Penn State, biggest stadium,
crazy football easy, one of the top five college football experiences.
Go to a game at Beaver State like it is
a huge sport nerd thing to be a part of

(12:16):
white outs all that stuff. And so to me, I
was like, yeah, of course they're going to be able
to handle it.

Speaker 9 (12:23):
I never doubted it for a second.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
And then you say and you're like, okay, well, weather again,
weather may be the only concern. Right, I'm looking at
the map. There's plenty of towns around State College that
people could stay at, you know, being as that that
place is so small. They don't have to go to
Philadelphia or Pittsburgh. You know, Hell, Hershey's not that far away,

(12:47):
allen Toown's not that far away. Even then, just the
small towns that are around it, you know. Yeah, the
state capitol isn't far away, but also not big either,
right right, Yeah, there's plenty of room. Maybe fine, it
will be fine. It's hardly the biggest crisis we're dealing with.

Speaker 8 (13:06):
I wonder how much they jack up their prices.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
For like hotels, Yes, in general during that time. You know,
I've never been overly concerned with that because it's supplying demand, right.

Speaker 9 (13:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (13:18):
Now when it's ridiculous, like six seven times more, then
I'm like, oh, that's stupid.

Speaker 9 (13:24):
But of course they should charge more. There's a demand
for it.

Speaker 2 (13:27):
Yeah, I'm okay, But when you start, you know, gouging people, right,
it's going to cost you eight hundred dollars for one
night at a motel six yeah, you know, yeah, that
hardly is logical. Now if their rates sixty and they
charge two hundred, you're like, okay, yeah, yeah, no, it's
they're playing in the championship. They're playing for the championship. Yeah,

(13:48):
it makes sense. It makes sense to me. But when
you pay six hundred, I'm like, oh, okay, it's a
motel six.

Speaker 9 (13:54):
You better do more than leave the light on.

Speaker 8 (13:56):
Exactly.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
The thing is, though people will still pay that. Some
people would still pay that rewardless. There are some people
that that is there. They like to use the my
blood runs blue, like because Nitney Lyon and you're like, yeah, okay,
it'll be fine, it'll work out. Yesterday I went to
the new Dick's Sporting, his house of sport. It was awesome,

(14:18):
by the way, but as I was leaving, going down
seventy first, I there was obviously there's so many people
pitching for money. Tell me about it. It's crazy how much.
And I was thinking as I was waiting and the
person had their sign right at my window and I
just eye straight ahead. That's all you can do. Well man, Yeah,
it's a very bizarre experience. But I was thinking two things.

(14:42):
One on their sign they had their cash app. Bitch,
if you can have a cash app, that means you
got a phone. Absolutely, and you can get a phone.
Oh it's one of those Obama phones. I didn't pay
for this, Yeah I don't. Maybe I guess you clearly
could afford a p coaster board and some marker.

Speaker 9 (15:01):
But nonetheless, I was in New York.

Speaker 2 (15:03):
Guess how many people I saw with signs soliciting for money?
Six zero zero. Now I saw homeless people. Yeah, I
saw vagrants right right. I saw a guy on the
subway who clearly didn't have a home, or that was
a warm place out of the rain. I don't know.
I'm not saying they didn't exist, but there was nobody

(15:25):
soliciting for money. So, okay, soliciting i e. Holding up
the cardboard sign or let's say street performers or you know,
you don't have to be dressed as Spider Man or whatever.
Maybe just a guy with a guitar or or you know,
a guy with a couple of five gallon buckets and

(15:45):
some drumsticks. You see what I'm saying. Yeah, that's that's
essentially it's the same thing. But you know, they're more.
I think they're performing. Either they're providing a service. Yeah,
if you're performing entertain that's completely different. Now, then, the
only person that I'm recalling, even in times like There's two,
there's a the Naked Cowboys, a famous Times Square person.
He's not naked by the way, yeah, thank god, like

(16:08):
a brief. I wouldn't even call it an underwear, like
a like a like like a French bathing suit. Speed. Yeah.
I didn't see that anything in Times Square, not one thing,
not even Spider Man, not even Spider Man right, not
Micky Mouse there was I didn't see anybody. The only

(16:28):
person I saw was a guy performing at the John
Lennon tribute thing in Central Park, the Imagined thing, And
he was really bad, like not good. And then when
we would play and finish, wouldn't sing the whole song,
wouldn't sing all the lyrics. It was bad, off key,
it was not good. But he was the only one

(16:49):
performing Beatles songs right there. He would gaslight the crowd
for not clapping. Wow, here working hard, you guys can
at least clap for me, that type of thing, which
I'm like laborating real just because you asked for it.

Speaker 9 (17:08):
It's not like you're a pilot that just landed the
plane right right.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
The But I didn't see anybody knowing, So I'm like,
why and why why aren't we just saying.

Speaker 9 (17:17):
You can't do that here?

Speaker 2 (17:20):
So far as like city government, yeah, I would agree
one hundred percent. Why are we just I understand there
may be a little bit perpetuating the problem by incarcerating
or charging them or whatever, but the reason that's happening
is because there is no punishment. I don't know if
you've noticed this or not. And I just noticed this
the other day traveling down seventy first Street. I was

(17:41):
on my way home, but close to and I believe
it's close to one sixty nine where you see a
lot of the uh, homeless people or beggars because I
don't know if they're actually homeless or not, but they
are out there begging for money. Right. But there's a sign,
a metal sign the city had put up that was
like an alternative to giving yeah, texting or something, yeah,

(18:04):
texting money or you know whatever, you know, donate to
this or whatnot. So I was like, all right, well
that's all good and gravy and all, but where does
that money go to? At least when you're giving it
to the hobo on the side of the road, you
know that person's getting it, No you don't, I mean,
there's hitting it in there hand. There's a pimp scenario
that exists in that world too. Maybe so maybe so

(18:25):
I don't know. To be honest with you, I'd say,
if it's a city sign, there's a city connection of
where it's going and accountability and both people can go
and be like, hey, I need to borrow five dollars whatever,
or it funds shelters and things like that. I'm with
you one hundred percent. We should there should be a
way that we can just not have that happen, because
it honestly has gotten out of control. The amount of

(18:48):
begging in this city on the on the street corners,
I feel has gotten out of control. That's how that
one person died over here, uh huh. And it's not
just on seventy first Street. It's all over town, all
over town, and it's it's just like, oh god, okay.
I'm not saying like this isn't a I don't have
empathy for people in hard times.

Speaker 9 (19:09):
That's not what I'm talking about.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
I'm saying, how do you not how do you go
to the biggest city in the world where people or
there's tourists everywhere and there's not one right, and then
you come here and it's completely like run rampant. Well,
somebody's got a law that lacks it. Now, maybe there is,
and just not in the places that I went. I'm
not gonna be oblivious to that, right, But if you're

(19:31):
gonna the reason they're at seventy first and one sixty
nine is because there's people stuck out of red light. Yeah,
and it's a high traffic area. So there's high traffic
areas everywhere. If not everybody that does that is of
dire need. No, No, it's not. Some of us just laziness.
I don't want to work, and why work if I

(19:52):
get if I could get other people to give me money,
I just need a little bit. I just need enough
to feed me. Maybe a bottle of booze or whatever
that you want, and that's that. And I can understand
a politician's desire to not rock the boat, but why
not have a hard stance on it and curb that

(20:12):
and then money that is dealt with trying to deal
with those people. I can't believe one of the mindsets
to try and solve it was make them buy a vest.
What are you talking about? Some of these people are
wearing Nike New Balances and Nikes.

Speaker 8 (20:25):
Right, and it's obviously not The vest isn't helping much.
It's obvious. It's still dangerous for them to be out there.
We just saw it a few weeks ago.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
Yeah, with that car plowed through some people. Yes, trying
to solicit for money. Yes, just gone, like not even
one conversation about, right, not like maybe we need to
fix this.

Speaker 9 (20:42):
Let's put a no, you can't be in the street.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
Or are they not doing that for the one time
when they're trying to sell the daily onions or something.
I don't know this tech, says guy with the cash
app on his sign has been there for seven months,
says every day. His sign says he is in need
of seventy five bucks to put a roof over his
three kids for the night, and he starts his job
in two days. He's also wearing new shoes. He isn't homeless,

(21:06):
he's a fraud. I think what you mean is clean shoes. Okay,
you might not know if they're new. What's the tag
on them? Right, I'm just saying that, like, and seventy
five bucks. If he's staying at a hotel every night
for seventy five bucks, let's maybe let's give him a
course on finances, right, Yeah, the amount of money that
they make you would be surprised. Maybe they wear new shoes.

(21:28):
I don't know. I'm just making a point of that.
You can't make that assumption. That's a leap. This person says.
The difference is here panhandling is profitable. New Yorkers are
assholes and probably panhandling is not worth it there. Yeah,
I don't know. This is gonna be a news flash
for you. One zero zero nine. You're an asshole. People
are assholes everywhere. Yeah, absolutely true, absolutely, And nobody nobody

(21:51):
told me to f off when I was there. When
I got in cabs and everything, there was no rudeness.
People are just focused on doing their own thing. Yeah,
ain't nobody got time for that. That's the way I
interpreted it. I got in cars and people would merge in.
Wouldn't be a big deal here. Someonean's to merge in,
and it's like, you know, someone's taking your land from you, right,

(22:14):
and that could be I mean, that could go a
couple of different ways. You live here, right, you see
it all the time. You were just visiting there, you know,
and the driving is driving. The people in the cars
don't know if I'm visiting or not. That is that
is true, But maybe it happens more often and you
just didn't catch it on you know, a catch a
case of it that day or those days that you

(22:35):
were there. Okay, the sample size I took right, right,
and the sample size I take here. It happens a lot,
but it is the same everywhere it is. There are
little niches of society that maybe are little things we
do different. I grew up in Iowa. I've lived in
Kansas City. I've lived here, and everybody says the same thing.

(22:56):
They're just really nice there.

Speaker 8 (22:58):
Oh, I think people are a lot nice are here
than growing up like within the Chicago area northern Indiana,
I think people are way nicer. How far is where
you live by travel time to Chicago forty minutes?

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Forty minutes? And what is it the attribute that you
feel like people are nicer here? Oh?

Speaker 8 (23:20):
Traffic wise, I feel like they do let you in
more so here in lanes You're not getting that in
Chicago you're get flipped off.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
And by your own statement, huh, you don't like letting
people in when they're trying to merge over Oh, I
do You've said you don't like that?

Speaker 8 (23:40):
I don't, but I do. I will sure, Okay, Yeah,
I I but when I moved here, I was like, what,
everyone is so friendly?

Speaker 9 (23:52):
I could like, I'm not saying people here aren't friendly.

Speaker 2 (23:55):
I'm saying that they're no more less or more friendly
than anywhere else I've lived. It's pretty flat across the board.
Lived in New York, I'm sorry, lived in Kansas City,
lived in Iowa, lived here, lived in San Francisco. It's
pretty across the board. There's pockets of douchey. Yeah, small pockets.

(24:16):
Sure depends on how dirty the area is, yes, uh,
But in terms of the people panhandling, I don't know why.

Speaker 9 (24:25):
They just make a hard and fast rule. It ends
it's over.

Speaker 8 (24:28):
Yeah, it needs to be.

Speaker 2 (24:29):
You will be arrested. Right, you are now trespassed from
I don't know how you you can't trustpass somebody from
public land, I guess, but it's ridiculous. And then there's
another one a mile like not even a mile, like
a block later. Yeah, well, I mean on the brighter
side of life. New Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols says that

(24:51):
he wants to get a handle on the homeless situation
here in town. Save that line again, Yeah, he wants
to get a handle on a situation. He wants to
get a handle on it. The didn't say solve, didn't
say fixed, didn't say removed, didn't say end. I said
he wants to get a handle on his campaign. ADS
says that he wants to fix the homeless situation. So
I say have at it. If he should do it,

(25:12):
you know, maybe he will create the programs and the
laws or whatever. I don't know how it all works
out or whatever can can create. Maybe he can do
something to actually fix it and we can get it
under control.

Speaker 8 (25:23):
This tech says that now that Tulsa made panhandling illegal,
the fire department can't do fill the boot to collect
for charity anymore.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
Yeah, I understand.

Speaker 8 (25:32):
Yeah, is that the same thing?

Speaker 2 (25:33):
Though, I feel there's a difference between firefighters in the
intersection with the boot collecting money to help raise money
for their causes right as opposed to Joe Schmoe with
a cardboard sign that he used a piece of charcoal
to write on. I think there's a huge difference. Maybe,
but you just why because of what they're wearing. You

(25:55):
trust that organization. Uh. I always feel like I've God
I donate, So, yeah, they're firemen and women like it's
a really great organization. Say what you're gonna say, gim
V I said, I don't. Yeah, I get it. I'm
not built that way. And so and then I donate
and then what I have to have this, I get this.

(26:16):
I usually do it until I get the sticker. They're
like taking notes where I see you. I know where
your house is. That's ever on fire. We're not. Yeah,
good luck getting out of your car. All right, all right,
we gotta take a break. We got Big Day. Cody
Canada is supposed to visit with us. We got Topless,
we got conspiracy theory. Thursday. We'll be back Tilsa's Morning.

Speaker 3 (26:37):
Show, The Big Man Boarding Show. The assault continues the
next twenty seventy five.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Four six
of Kim Hot. Those quikies are stories you may have
missed in the news. Let's get him out.

Speaker 7 (27:11):
It's time for news quakies, world news, local news and
news that just makes you say, what the Here's Corbyn
Gimpian Lindsay with what's going on? News quakies from the
Big nine Morning Showing ninety seven five.

Speaker 8 (27:21):
Kmod ambulance hits cyclists then charges him for a ride
to the hospital. This happens in Oregon to seventy one
year old William Host. He's suing Columbia River Fire and
Rescue for nearly one million dollars, claiming an ambulance driver

(27:42):
for the company left him with the outrageous bill of
nearly two thousand dollars and also permanent injuries and roughly
one hundred grand in medical expenses. So William was peddling
through the tiny town of Rain and Organ near the
Columbia River in October of twenty twenty two when the

(28:05):
big red ride plowed him while trying to make a
right turn, crushing him under the wheel of the ambulance.
The driver, who was going between two and ten miles
per hour, only hurt a thump, then stopped and rushed
William to the hospital. According to the lawsuit, the crash

(28:26):
left him covered in blood, destroyed his bicycle, and caused
him long term injuries such as decreased range of motion
and reduced grip. To add insult to injury, the ambulance
company later sent him a bill for a little less
than nineteen hundred dollars for giving him a lift to
the hospital.

Speaker 2 (28:47):
It's a lift Yeah.

Speaker 8 (28:49):
William is now demanding nine one hundred and ninety seven
thousand dollars for pain and suffering, along with payment for
medical bills. UH Columbia River Fire and Rescue declined to
comment on the lawsuit.

Speaker 9 (29:08):
I understand his frustration.

Speaker 8 (29:09):
Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
Absolutely should sue them, definitely, But you should also get
build for using a service.

Speaker 9 (29:15):
It's not their call to give you a free ride.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
But if it was the same ambulance that hit you, yeah,
I mean that's just we'll just call it even. But
they don't get to make that call.

Speaker 8 (29:28):
It feels like he didn't have a choice. He's underneath
the vehicle. They're gonna pick him up, put him in
the car, and take him to the hospital.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
Yeah, no, if you there are some situations where you
don't get a decision on whether you're the ambulance kutu
or not. Yeah, but how did he end up underneath
the vehicle? If it was only going ten miles an hour?

Speaker 9 (29:45):
How did it end up?

Speaker 2 (29:45):
How did all that chaos happen after with a slow situation. Well,
I mean he's still getting hit even at ten miles
an hour, could knock you off your bike, agreed, I
was on my bicycle this is shoot when I was
twenty as a matter of fact, and I'll was on
my bike going through a WATSA is going through an intersection,
and this lady had turned right on the red so

(30:06):
she was at a full stop, right, yeah, and then
turned right on her red as I was entering into
the intersection, and she hit me so less than how
even less than two miles an hour, okay, and it
caused me. She hit me enough to where I flew
up into the air off of my bike. Right, I

(30:26):
looked down. I had enough time. This is how high
I flew in the air. I had enough time to
look down, watch both of my shoes fly off of
my feet, say oh s, and then hit the ground. Okay.
And that was from that was from a stop. Yeah.
So at ten miles an hour, Yeah, it could still
do some damage. You don't think it does because oh

(30:47):
it's just ten miles an hour, right, still do some
damage and cause you to be penned underneath this ambulance.
He should absolutely sue them, he should absolutely get his
medical expenses paid for. But you should not be shot today. Like,
I don't know how the ambience world works, but I'm
just gonna say assume you to transport somebody, there's paperwork
you fill out because of the liability of having somebody

(31:09):
in the rig, right, and then you turn the paperwork
in and then the billing person just processes the bill.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
Right.

Speaker 2 (31:15):
I think I get what you're saying, and I feel
like there could have been like an incident report. This
is what happens. The supervisor should have been called to
the sea. Absolutely, absolutely, do the proper paperwork, go through
all the motions like you're supposed to. But take that
incident report and the bill, you know, and then the
supervisors say, yeah, we're just gonna go ahead and we're
gonna call it even on this one, even Stevens, Yeah,

(31:38):
I don't disagree. That's one hundred percent how it should
have worked. But you and I both all three of
us know, especially in today's world, you put in a
ticket for something to get dealt with. Sometimes it just
doesn't get dealt with, or it just doesn't right, That's
all I'm saying. A lot of ambulance worlds are pretty corporate. Yeah, right, right.

(31:58):
For sure, man who actually shot himself in the ass
is to be arrested comes out of Kent, Washington, where
there's a dude, he's forty three, and he goes inside
this gas station. This happens on Sunday, Okay. So he
goes to the gas station and he goes back to
the store, probably get himself a mountain dew or something.
I don't know, but anyway, so he's in the store

(32:20):
and his gun falls out of his waistband and he's like, oh, no,
my gun. So he picks up his gun and he
tries to put it back in his waistband and then
accidentally shoots himself right in the ass. And he falls
to the ground and he's like, oh, holy crap. And
he gets up and he goes and gets in the
car that he was in, and the lady that was
driving the car takes him to the hospital. Right, So

(32:42):
he goes to the hospital and he tells the people
at the hospital that he was shot by a stranger
at the store. Of course, gunshot wound. Police get involved.
Police go back to the gas station. They look at
the surveillance video. They see this guy shoot himself in
the ass accidentally, and they do some more investigating. All right,

(33:02):
we'll come to find out this cat is a felon
and that gun that shot him in the ass accidentally
was a stolen gun. What who'd have thought anyway. So
they go back and they're like, all right, after you
get out of the hospital, we're gonna take your ask
to jail. He's looking at three additional felony counts as

(33:23):
soon as he's released from the hospital. And I guess
the lady that drove him to the hospital turned the
gun into the police said that he had kidden it
in her car. Yeah, so I don't know if you
knew the lady or not. I just assume that he did.
It's interesting to think about, you know, helping somebody in
a dire situation transport. Oh, I ain't putting somebody bleeding

(33:44):
in my car, No, no way. You know how hard
blood is to get out of Right to me, it's
not that I just don't want them dying in my car.
I feel like, if there's that kind of urgency, let's
get an ambulance there.

Speaker 9 (33:55):
I'll apply pressure to the wound.

Speaker 2 (33:57):
I'll gladly get involved, right, but getting you in my
car and now we're driving and I'm supposed to like
what put on my hazards and speed like I don't know, man,
And then you're gonna hide a gun, and then I
got to check my car to make sure you didn't
hide any drugs or weapons in my car. So when
I get pulled over and they're like, who's is this,
I don't know what's your car?

Speaker 8 (34:16):
Yeah, now you're an accompliced to a crime.

Speaker 2 (34:18):
Oh god, yeah, I thought of your brother on this story. Gimpee.
Oh thanks, hold on.

Speaker 10 (34:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (34:26):
Man crushed to death by hot asphalt in workplace accident.
Well Jesus christ Man. A man in Jackson, Mississippi, is
dead after he was buried under hot asphalt. It happened
Monday morning. Forty one year old man was repairing a
dump truck. She's a nice lady at a construction site
when the hydraulics malfunctioned and the dump truck and the

(34:47):
dump trunk dropped hot asphalt on top of him. First
responders arrived to try and pull the man from the
hot asphalt. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Yeah,
asphalt runs what three hundred degrees when it's in the
back of the truck.

Speaker 9 (35:03):
All I know is it's steaming when they put it
on the concrete.

Speaker 2 (35:06):
So I wonder if it really malfunctioned or maybe there
was something the farious going on every time with you
man clockwork, or maybe maybe not even nefarious, like an accident, right,
you know, Tony's under here fixing the truck or whatever,
trying to and then you've got Javiero over here leaned

(35:28):
up against the truck, accidentally hits the lever that causes
it to go up and lift and then dumped and
berry Tony underneath the as possible. Also could have just
been a malfunction. Also could have been just that, mate. Uh,
all these stories if you want to read that one

(35:48):
at least I put it up on the Facebook page
at Facebook dot com slash bmms six nine The.

Speaker 3 (35:52):
Big Med Morning Show returns next Tulsa's Morning Show ninety KMOD.

Speaker 2 (36:17):
Good Morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one
eight four six oh kmod. You can also text BMMS
and then what you want to say to eight two
nine four five seea Lindsay. As for Balls to the
Wall sports.

Speaker 8 (36:45):
The Browns aren't sure if Deshaun Watson is going to
be part of their future. General manager Andrew Barry told
the media on Wednesday they want to get their star
quarterback healthy first, then everything else will be dealt with.
At a later moment. Shatson ruptured his achilles in a
Week seven and had the lowest quarterback rating among qualified

(37:05):
passers before the injury. The Browns traded three first round
picks to the Texans for the twenty nine year old
back in twenty twenty two, and gave him a two
hundred and thirty million dollar fully guaranteed contract.

Speaker 2 (37:19):
Yeah. There's no way they're going to talk about they
have to pay him no matter what. So if you
read a storyline that's like he's going to be back
next year, yeah, because they're paying him.

Speaker 8 (37:28):
Yeah, aside from injury. Was he a huge mistake?

Speaker 9 (37:33):
Absolutely, Yeah, big mistake.

Speaker 2 (37:36):
Huge. I mean if it didn't pay dividends, which it
has not, then you can easily say it was a mistake.

Speaker 8 (37:42):
A defensive player on the Lions is apologizing for his
actions last weekend. Brian Branch told the media on Wednesday
that flipping off the Packers crowd at lambeau Field isn't
something he wanted to show. The defensive back chalked up
the incident as a heat of the moment, Jess sure
that promised it wouldn't happen again. Branch was ejected from

(38:04):
the game after delivering a late hit and was seen
giving the crowd the finger as he walked off.

Speaker 9 (38:13):
Here's what's gonna happen.

Speaker 2 (38:14):
You're gonna go to the podium today and you're gonna apologize.

Speaker 8 (38:17):
Yeah, one member.

Speaker 2 (38:19):
Of this that's a better result, like answer, like situation
for him to deal with than your boy from the
bearers who decided to yap at the at the fans
at the Redskins fans, thinking he had it all wrapped up,
and it ended up his boy caught the game winning
touchdown past that hail Mary. He got demoted from being
a starter and decided he didn't like it, didn't participate

(38:42):
all week, he might get kicked off the team, damn.
So going to the podium to apologize is a pretty
great punishment.

Speaker 8 (38:50):
Absolutely. That's your balls to the wall sports. I'm Lindsay
in ninety seven to five km ODI.

Speaker 2 (39:06):
Good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six, oh kmo D Can I also text
BMMS and then what you want to say to eight two,
nine four five, Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning Corbin.

Speaker 8 (39:19):
Free money coming your way in less than an hour
from now, Rock of the Bank at eight o'clock this morning,
your first of thirteen chances to win one thousand dollars.
Listen for that keyword, and when you hear it, enter
it online at kmod dot com. You've got until eight
o'clock tonight to win one thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (39:38):
Good luck, Good morning, Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbin. If
you want to see you tick on Alabama later on
this month, we call it Crimson Cream and show we're
gonna hook up with tickets to the game, a cooler
ful of free beer, and a whole lot more stuff
just to win at the website that rocks chemod dot com.

Speaker 1 (39:54):
Be brown World, Take my strong hand, g give train Holm,
give train around the world, take my trull hand.

Speaker 3 (40:05):
On the.

Speaker 11 (40:08):
Looking by the learn I can't press the fire button
and jump at the same pay.

Speaker 2 (40:13):
Remember what was it Tuesday? I think it was a Tuesday.
We talk about that guy downtown, the guy ran over
by the bus right right and sucks for that guy,
sucks for his family terrible. And then I made the
comment of how I like secretly want to get hit
by bus or like a Walmart truck or something for
the payout, which it kind of coincides what I got

(40:34):
to talk here with Lindsey story about the guy who
got ran over by the ambulance and they ended up
charging him. So doing some research whatever, I found the
ten biggest personal injury settlements in history fun and one
of them. As I was reading this, I was like,
holy crap, Yeah, that person deserves to get paid out.
So we'll just take it from the top here, Number one,

(40:55):
two hundred and six billion dollars for the Tobacco master
settlement agreements. Okay, that feel So that feels different because
it was a class action, right, Still a massive amount
of money by states, right, So it wasn't I was like,
I thought individual but okay, right now, that's a massive amount. Yeah.
Nineteen ninety eight, forty eight or forty six states rally

(41:16):
together against America's four largest tobacco companies to recover the
cost of caring for lifelong smokers. Now, it says that
the suits also saw punitive damages for big tobaccos deliberate
misleading advertising, and unethical business practices. The jury decided that

(41:36):
they would punish Big Tobacco by handing down the final
judgment of two hundred and six billion dollars to pay
every the course of twenty five years. And the settlement
also had helped hospitals care for ill smokers, and some
of the money went to develop anti smoking organizations. We
all know that, like truth dot org and stuff like that.
And then you have one hundred and fifty billion dollars

(41:58):
for the family of Robert Middleton. To any of you
guys know who Robert Middleton is, No, it sounds like, uh,
that's not the No, that's uh. I was thinking of
that Simpson that was being stupin' uh nicole and killed

(42:20):
her too, called him.

Speaker 11 (42:22):
Ah.

Speaker 9 (42:23):
The name sounds of here, but I'm not placing him.

Speaker 2 (42:25):
Listen to this. In nineteen ninety eight, eight year old
Robert Middleton was sexually assaulted, doused in gasoline, and lit
on fire by a then thirteen year old Don Collins.
Middleton received burns over ninety nine percent of his body,
with injuries sustained severely impacting his life. Twelve years later,

(42:48):
in twenty ten, old Middleton, Robert Middleton died of skin cancer.
Now Robert's family pointed the finger at Don Collins, claiming
that the burns caused the cancer. So Collins attorney did
everything in his power to convince the jury that Don's
misbehavior had nothing to do with Robert's death. With the

(43:10):
jury was like, ah, now, we're not buying it, and
he was sentenced as an adult. Don was and charged
with wrongful death of Robert Middleton. Robert's family was warded
one hundred and fifty billion dollars and punitive damages. That's
a lot of money. I want to read more about
that because how old was he when he got tried?

(43:30):
How old was the Don Collins? Well, he's thirteen at
that time, ten years twelve years later, so he'd have
been twenty five right when he got tried and went
to court and did anything. I wonder if anything happened
to him when he set the kid on fire. Oh like,
did he get in trouble at the time? Did he
go to jail with something to that effect? Now, I

(43:52):
didn't say anything yet, didn't say anything in here about
going to jail. He'd after the words he was yeah,
the convince, Yeah, yeah, I didn't say anything in there
about him going to jail or anything at that time. Anyhow,
twenty billion dollars for the BP oil spill, remember that
the BP oil spill. Here's one four point nine billion

(44:16):
dollars for the Anderson family from General Motors. This is interesting.
In nineteen ninety three, a Chevy Malibu containing six of
the Anderson family members was hit by a drunk driver.
The impact from the car accident caused the fuel tank
to catch fire and explode. All six members of the family,
including four children, were severely burnt. The family pursued compensatory

(44:40):
damages from GM and a personal injury case, but of
course the major corporation fought back. The case went to
trial and the family was awarded four point nine billion
dollars to one hundred and seven point six billion dollars,
of which for comps excuse me for compensitory damages at
four point eight billion, of which was for punitive damages.

(45:04):
Feels okay, I'm away with all that. Yeah, that says. GM.
Of course appealed and the Supreme Court judge ended up
reducing the settlement amount to one point two billion dollars.
There is a gas station manager awarded sixty million with
an M after suffering brain injuries caused by a derail train.

(45:25):
This happened in nineteen ninety seven when a derail train
smashed into a track side gas station. Old Donnie French
was the gas station manager. He was in his office
at the time. Wasn't expecting that he'd get hit by train,
but that's what happened. He did live, and he suffered
a traumatic brain injury, and he was awarded forty six

(45:46):
million dollars in damages and then another fourteen million in interest,
making a total of sixty million dollars. Dude. Going back
to the Anderson thing, they presented evidence in it that
said GM did an internal internal cost benefit analysis where
they decided to relocate the gas tank eleven inches from

(46:08):
the rear bumper, which was the key factor in the explosion,
and it was only to save eight dollars and fifty
nine cents per vehicle, wow something. And then GM peeled
it and it got reduced to one point two still
totally at fault though, yeah, GM, oh yeah, and they
should have to pay Oh yeah, And I think that

(46:29):
one point two billion dollars probably still not enough. But
we're talking billions at this point. And GM, you know,
that's a fun thing we talk about when it comes
to lawsuits and stuff like that, you know, personal lawsuits
like a lot. Yeah, you can sue anybody for any
amount of money, right, But them having the money and
being able to pay you back as a total different story. Yeah,

(46:50):
you were awarded one hundred and six million dollars, but
if Johnny King pay it, Johnny King pay right, and
that other one you talked about for sure, but this
they can pay, but they'll put in stipulations of like,
well you can get so much a year, right, right, right,
so and there if you die, it is like they
tried to play the long game.

Speaker 9 (47:05):
Right.

Speaker 2 (47:06):
I'm a big believer that if you do this as
a company and you cause lives to die, you lose
your right to be a company.

Speaker 9 (47:12):
Yes, I would agree and pay it all up front.

Speaker 2 (47:16):
Here's another one from another from the automotive industry, where
Ford and Mazda were blamed for malfunctioning seat belt ended
up getting thirty two and a half million dollars. Nineteen
ninety six, Mark Force was hit head on by another vehicle.
He was wearing a seat belt, but instead of locking
up like seat belts do, which is sometimes a giant

(47:36):
pain in the ass you're trying to reach across and
get something out of the seat, whatever locks up on.

Speaker 8 (47:41):
It does its job.

Speaker 2 (47:42):
Yeah right, Yeah, I actually love it for when I'm
trying to play, you want to reach Ford and grab
that for me, it said, instead of locking up and
keeping him safe. As seat belt malfunctioned and he was
thrown out of the windshield on impact and suffered traumatic
brain injury as a result. He didn't just the negligent
gent driver. He went towards Ford Motor Company and Mazda

(48:03):
Motor Company for damages caused by the malfunctioning safety belt.
The jury sided with Mark and gave him thirty two
and a half million dollars. Makes sense, Yeah, yeah, with
those big corporations, I'm right there with you. Gloria Aguilar
was awarded twenty seven and a half million dollars after
losing her leg and a bus accident. This wasn't that

(48:25):
long ago. In two thousand and five, she was just
two blocks from her apartment in New York City when
a city bus ran over her as it was turning
a corner. Imagine that as a result of the accident,
she lost her leg. After seven agonizing weeks a trial,
the jury handed down a verdict that Gloria and her

(48:46):
had Gloria and her family in teers. She was to
walk away with twenty seven and a half million dollars.
The verdict came four years after the accident, following Aguilar's
personal injury claim to seek fair compensation for her and
dreams seeing that's I'm talking about. Man, that'll get her
a nice process for real?

Speaker 9 (49:05):
Would you give up your leg for that?

Speaker 2 (49:07):
For twenty seven and a half million dollars? Yeah? I
can hop along, I can wheel in a chair, I
can use a prosthetic. Why do you look at me
like a I just think you're underestimating how much of
an inconvenience it is. Dude. My whole life has been
an inconvenience. I'm sure I figured. I'm not doubting that
it's dramatically different without a leg. You still had part
of your arm again. For twenty seven and a half

(49:30):
million dollars. I figure it out. Uh. This one here
comes out of London as a medical malpractice suit gave
somebody twenty five and a half million dollars. Uh. Misha
Najib was only ten years old when shit underwent a
procedure at Great Ormond Street Hospital in which the medical

(49:50):
professionals were supposed to inject die into her brain. Instead,
the doctor's on staff injected glue into her brain. What
As a result, she went blind in one eye and
continues to suffer from medical complications today. The jury awarded

(50:10):
her a lump sum of two point eight MILI and
an annual amount of three hundred and eighty three thousand
dollars until she turned nineteen. After she turned nineteen, she'll
get four hundred and twenty three thousand dollars every year
for the rest of her life. This case is a
notable example of personal injury lawsuits resulting from medical amount practice.
I read that, I was like, holy cow, Yeah, the

(50:32):
same resaction Lindsay had glue in the brain. Yeah, I
get it, man, I mean you get busy, get sidetracked, whatever.
But I feel like that's pretty important and you should
probably really really triple quadruple check. Yeah, make sure you're
grabbing the right bottle. Right.

Speaker 8 (50:49):
That's definitely lose your license.

Speaker 2 (50:52):
Yes, absolutely, yeah.

Speaker 9 (50:53):
Maybe maybe I don't know.

Speaker 2 (50:56):
If you commit malpractice, it's an automatic loser license in
the medical world. Maybe feels this one should though, But
it's not Elmer's glue, right, it's still glue. It's medical glue, right,
And it cost her to go blind and one eye
and still having conditions dealing with it today. Yeah, no,
I get it. I'm not saying it's fair. I'm not
saying it's okay. I'm just saying it wasn't like this.

(51:17):
You know, somebody had rubber semit in the surgery room.
There was a product used in medical a lot of stitches.
They don't some places don't use stitches, they use glue.
Right right, either way, watch what you doing, bro. New
York pharmacy made to pay two hundred and twenty million
dollars in damages. This happens in two thousand and eight
where Shirley Miller was crossing a street when a pharmacy

(51:40):
truck smashed into her and causing massive brain injuries and
other physical damages. The pharmacy agreed to pay her twenty
two million dollars in damages, making it the largest personal
injury settlement in New York history by a pharmacy truck.
And then, lastly here at delivery true accident results in

(52:01):
a large settlement, the largest settlement in Los Angeles history.
In nineteen ninety eight, a forty four year old Carol
Hackins was injured when a city maintenance truck went haywire
and smashed into several vehicles. I don't think it was
the truck that went haywire. Is probably the driver that
did it, right, because you know, in nineteen ninety eight,

(52:23):
self driving vehicles weren't really a thing at that point
in time.

Speaker 9 (52:26):
Maximum it wasn't maximum overdrive.

Speaker 2 (52:30):
So they say that the injuries she sustained were so
severe that after the accident she can only communicate by blinking. Damn,
that's awesome. As of the year two thousand, she was
being fed through a tube and the cost of caring
for her totaled around thirty thousand dollars a month. Though

(52:52):
the claim involved a city government agency, Carroll's attorney was
able to reach a nineteen million dollar verdict that was
to be paid in four installments over the course of
two years. Yikes, And you said thirty thousand dollars a
month just to take care of her, right, and she
got how much money she got? Nineteen mili nineteen million dollars.

(53:18):
Hold on, I'm just doing some quick math here. That
would only get her like eighteen months. Wow, No, that's
not right. Yeah, I seem right. I didn't. I went
to school in Nilo, so that's that doesn't feel like enough,
by the way, she can enjoy it. No, No, Carol,

(53:39):
would you like to go to the park today? You
know what I'm saying? Was that blank once for yes,
blank twice for no. I mean they've advanced some of
the technology. I would imagine at least that much money
you get some of the you might just get shiny
er straws. Yeah. Right, Still, that's gotta suck. So yes,
as as much as it would suck to have to

(53:59):
deal with this when you're talking about billions and billions,
twenty two billion whatever, Like you asked me, would I
lose a leg for that much money? One hundred percent?
What about the last story? She got thirty million? You
okay with that? Well, if all I could do was blink?
Nineteen million, yeah, it was nineteen million, Yeah.

Speaker 8 (54:17):
Thirty thousand dollars a month.

Speaker 2 (54:18):
That you care of her, just to take care of
her again, not the question, because you don't know that
about the other story, so you don't know what their
situation is, right right. I think that's a little extreme.
I'm more on the side of let's just lose a leg.
I don't you don't want to say I want to
get hit by a truck. Or a bus or something.
I don't mean death. Peoplere like, no, you don't want
to you die. I'm like, I don't want to die.

(54:40):
I just want to be maimed a little bit, you know,
just enough, you know, get me a couple of mill
pay off some bills, you know, maybe a new car.
I saw the whole I'll wheel around in a wheelchair.
I saw a story this morning, the Instagram thing of
a woman and she was sharing that she was in
a wheelchair and she was lead in the hospital and

(55:00):
somebody had parked in the loading area of a handicapped
spot right like a big truck, so she couldn't even
wheel to get to her car. Right. She calls the
parking garage people, nobody comes. She calls the police. They
won't tow his car. They just issuehim a ticket. They
help her get her car out, but they wouldn't put
it in the front seat with her.

Speaker 9 (55:21):
It had to be in the trunk.

Speaker 2 (55:22):
So she got home, but then she had to wait
for someone to come get her wheelchair out. I'm just
saying that, like, for what, the fact that we know
that person's a jerk, that should go without saying. I'm
just trying to show you a little bit like how
big of an inconvenience it can be being in a wheelchair?
Oh yeah, it would suck. But you know, if you
got twenty seven billion dollars, I'm okay, I'll figure I'll

(55:44):
figure out how to get my own chair out of
the front seat. I figure it out.

Speaker 1 (55:49):
Around the world, Take my strong hand, Give train moments,
Give train around the world, take my hey, get.

Speaker 8 (56:01):
All the.

Speaker 2 (56:12):
Good morning. It's the Big Man Morning Show. Nine one
eight four six, oh kmo D. You can also text
BMMS and then what do you want to say to
eight two nine four five. Let's play a game. We've
got tickets to give away to see Primus Plusifer in
a Perfect Circle. They're gonna be on one stage on Thursday,

(56:35):
May first at the Bok Center. Tickets available bok center
dot com. And uh, we're gonna play Schnip schnaption Er.
Our current record is well, this game, much like all
the other ones, I am leading with seventeen. You and
Lindsley are tied with eleven. Last week's winner, that'd be
me so Corbet and lindsay at nine one eight four
six oh kmo D nine one eight four six O

(56:56):
KMOD call up, decide who's gonna be your clue giver.
Whoever gets the most is gonna win those tickets. Nine
eight four six, Oh kmo D Good morning, you're on
the air. What is your name, Ronnie?

Speaker 9 (57:07):
Ronnie?

Speaker 2 (57:07):
How are you today?

Speaker 10 (57:09):
Good? How are you good?

Speaker 2 (57:09):
Ronnie? Who do you want to give? Clues? Lindsay or Corbyn?
Lindsey Ronnie. Sixty seconds are on the clock. Timer starts
after the first clue. Are you ready?

Speaker 10 (57:18):
I'm ready?

Speaker 8 (57:18):
We go, all right, A lot of miles song black.

Speaker 2 (57:25):
Night that day.

Speaker 8 (57:27):
It's a fabric blackton, no different, very soft black silk.
Nopeum the blank teen rabbit, black velvet. Yes, from blank
till dawn.

Speaker 10 (57:48):
DoD.

Speaker 8 (57:49):
Yes, this is blank edge technology.

Speaker 10 (57:55):
Cutting.

Speaker 8 (57:56):
Uh huh uh. This is what you see at most
lakes at the edge of the walkway. We were just
talking about how these don't exist anymore, that they would
light out. No, no, no, this is my husband is
one of these. They go out and they look for

(58:17):
deer and they shoot them, or ducks or a pheasant. Yes,
this might someone that's always looking for money.

Speaker 2 (58:26):
By time time time four is what you got might
be good enough for the.

Speaker 9 (58:31):
Wind hang on the line there Ronnie.

Speaker 2 (58:32):
Okay, okay, good morning, you're on the air. What is
your name? Xavier? How are you today? Good Man? We
got to beat four? Are you ready? Yes? Third, here
we go. This is where the type of doctor you
would take your pet? Two? Correct? Ding Dong? Who's there? No?

(58:58):
This is a game you play as a kid ding on. Correct.
This is also a game you played as a kid
called Blank the Flag Capture. Correct. This was a TV
show based out of Korea was on Netflix called Blank
Game squid Game. Yes, if you and I talk a

(59:20):
couple of times, we hang out, we develop a friendship. Correct.

Speaker 9 (59:27):
Baked Blank a state in the north, Nome Juno.

Speaker 2 (59:35):
Big. It's a state. Juno Blank is a city. It's
like three miles from Russia.

Speaker 10 (59:45):
Moscow a state.

Speaker 2 (59:49):
Baked Blank doesn't matter, man, we get to win. Congratulations,
you're getting those tickets. You're gonna see Primus plus A
for a perfect circle. They play and on one stage
Thursday May first at the Bok Center. Hang on the
line so you can get your info. Xavier, awesome, didn't

(01:00:10):
even hang out the one that Lindsay ended on? Benny
the Blank someone who borrows things from you constantly? Uh
if you are in a circle smoking weed. Somebody who
always shows up and never brings the weed but smokes yours.
They might be labeled a move. We gotta finish this one. Yeah,

(01:00:36):
this is very common on the East Coast, and to
avoid it is an illumination, to avoid rocks hitting the boats,
hitting the rocks or hitting the shore. Yeah, yeah, what
the hell bake? I know the word, but I'm trying
to figure out how you got maketh Alaska is a dish.

(01:00:57):
I've never heard of that before. Yeah, I know this
is gonna be giant news. There's a lot of things
you me us have never heard of before. We're sure
there is. It's just odd how you got there. And
I obviously Exavier wasn't getting it either.

Speaker 9 (01:01:09):
So well, that doesn't mean anything. We don't know what
people don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:01:12):
I'm just saying it was a weird clue.

Speaker 9 (01:01:14):
Man, it's not that weird.

Speaker 2 (01:01:17):
Two centsitive, it's not that weird question.

Speaker 12 (01:01:19):
The biggest state, the coldest, Yeah, yeah, people buy this
kind of salmon.

Speaker 8 (01:01:32):
I don't know what else you could have said. Juno
should have given it away.

Speaker 2 (01:01:37):
Probably the coldest state in the United States of America.
I think it would be a fair clue. All good clues.
All right.

Speaker 9 (01:01:46):
The record now looks delicious though.

Speaker 2 (01:01:49):
A hey, so it keeps being the lead with seventeen,
moves you to twelve, keeps Lindsay dead last with an.

Speaker 3 (01:01:55):
You're listening to the Big Mad Morning Show. This is
Tulsa's Morning show, KMOD.

Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Nine four
six zero KMOD. You can also text bmms and then
what you want to say to eight two nine four
five topless coming up. Things you should never ever mess with.
We'll get to that, but first we got to see
what Gimpi has in his four x four says here

(01:02:45):
that the Justice Department's winding down cases against Trump. The
Justice Department is looking into how to wind down two
criminal cases against Donald Trump now that he's been re
elected to the White House. It's because of a policy
that is sitting resident can be prosecuted. The cases center
around his actions leading up to the January sixth Capitol

(01:03:07):
riot and his handling of classified documents. The Trump camp
is also looking into how to get rid of the
state's criminal cases against him in New York and Georgia.
He's the first person with felony convictions. Elected to the
White House after he was found guilty on thirty four
counts of falsifying business records in a New York hush
money case this past spring. Sentencing in that case is

(01:03:28):
currently scheduled for November twenty six. A wooden satellite has
been launched into space. I love this story. The world's
first wooden satellite. Seems like it's taken a couple of
steps backwards. But what do I know. I don't have
a space degree. The world's first wooden satellite has been
launched into space. The palm sized satellite again, who's palm?

(01:03:53):
Your palm? My palm? Which palm? Either way? Like, ma'am?
A palm sized satellites was by Japanese researchers. And we'll
be released into orbit from the International Space Station about
two hundred and fifty miles above Earth. It'll stay in
orbit for several months to see how wood and here's
the extreme environment of space. The invention is an early

(01:04:15):
test of using timber in Mars and lunar exploration, and
if it's successful, it could open the door for other
uses for wood in space. I'm not an astrophysicist. I've
never been on the International Space Station. You're not telling
me we're gonna ship wood to Mars, are you. It's

(01:04:36):
a whole new form of like log trucking, you know,
instead of semi trucks, they're using space shuttles and old
smoky and the bandits where the thing get your trucker
had on?

Speaker 9 (01:04:45):
And is it gonna be like pine or is it gonna
be like oak?

Speaker 2 (01:04:47):
Like? I mean, right, what kind of wood are we
sending to space? I feel like there might be better solutions. Uh,
you would think that, well, I mean I guess if
it's being like if it just came in like re entry,
or because it's gonna be launched out on a space shuttle,
it's going to be in a container, so therefore it
won't burn up on the way out. Yeah, this is
just orbiting. They'll grab it and then check it and

(01:05:09):
then bring it back to the iss or whatever.

Speaker 10 (01:05:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:05:11):
Yeah, as it's floating by, they're like, oh, get it,
goetch you a damn it, I missed. We'll have to
wait another. In the movie marsham with with Matt Damon,
great movie where he grows potatoes in his feces, but
they make the place out of like kind of parachutes
and like very flimsy material because they got to be
able to I don't know, get it there, right, We'll

(01:05:32):
see how this works out. I never thought wood in space,
but Times We Live not a movie. Lindsay's gonna promote it.
Nine yeah. Maybe. A study links daytime sleepiness to dementia,
not just being tired. And the study published yesterday, over
thirty five percent of those who experienced daytime sleepiness developed
a cognitive risk syndrome that could lead to dementia. The

(01:05:56):
syndrome often results in a slow walking speed and memory loss.
The French authors of the studies said.

Speaker 11 (01:06:04):
Chaque le Bleau, establishing the relationship between sleeping, disholme shown
and cognitive risk is impotent because early investigation intervention may
offer the best hope for preventing dementia.

Speaker 2 (01:06:16):
It's the best French accent I can give. That's not
it's not bad. It's not a peppi la pew, but
it's not bad of course, Like okay, sure, sure this
is linked to dementia. Yeah, which you know? I mean?
Is it Is it because you're tired and you worked
or maybe stayed up late? Is it just random sleepiness?
Like you know I take naps during the day. Does
that mean I want to be demented later on? I

(01:06:38):
think we can all agree that being tired can affect
your cognitive abilities, so it is fair to make the
assumption that long term cognitive problems can affect That feels
like a fair jump. Oh and lastly here Toulsa City
Council approves proposal for Tulsa or rocket testing facility. Tulsa

(01:06:58):
City councilors approved of proposal to bring a rocket engine
testing facility to Tulsa, plan to be located at the
Tulsa International Airport. A small Colorado firm, Agile Space Industries,
is the company that plans to bring the rocket engine
testing facility. The facility has coming to Tulsa at a
perfect time due to shortage of testing infrastructure in the

(01:07:19):
United States. Agile Space Industries has stated the rockets will
be tested in thermal vacuum chambers to reduce the noise.
Reduce the noise and assures neighbors that they won't have
to worry about the sound from the testing. I know
where I live. I can hear them testing at UH
for American Airlines. Yeah, so I can. And this is
going to be closer to my house, so I can

(01:07:39):
only imagine how loud it's going to be if they
build the thermal vacuum thing. We'll see though. Anything for jobs, man,
I think that that's awesome. Oh. Absolutely.

Speaker 8 (01:08:02):
The Panthers are sticking with their second year signal caller.
Head coach announced yesterday that Bryce Young will start at
quarterback for the Panthers when they take on the New
York Giants on Sunday in Munich, Germany. Young is set
to make his third straight start since a veteran Andy
Dalton suffered a thumb injury in a minor car accident.

(01:08:23):
Dalton had taken over for the former first overall pick
after Carolina started the season zero to two. Young gets
the nod after leading his first career game winning touchdown
drive against the Saints. The top free agent in Major
League Baseball is not expected to rush in making a decision.
According to his agent, Superstar outfielder Juan Soto will take

(01:08:45):
his time surveying the market before signing with a team.
During Wednesday's general managers meetings in San Antonio, it was
stated that Soto desires a thorough vetting before deciding his future.
Soto spent the twenty twenty four season with the New
York Yankees, helping to lead the Bronx Bombers to Game
five of the World Series. The twenty six year old

(01:09:05):
is likely to sign one of the largest deals in
MLB history. Shoe a Otani signed a ten year, seven
hundred million dollar contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers last
off season, and one of the most coveted free agents
in Major League Baseball is recovering from surgery. Third baseman
Alex Bregman underwent surgery to remove a bone chip from

(01:09:27):
his right elbow. The former Houston Astro star became a
free agent last Thursday after the five year, one hundred
million dollar deal he signed with the team in twenty
nineteen expired. Bregman's agent, Scott Boris, said the Bregman will
be back swinging in a few weeks, while also telling
teams at the general managers meetings that the two time

(01:09:48):
All Star is willing to move to second base. And
that's your Balls to the Wall sports Lindsay on ninety
seven to five KMO.

Speaker 2 (01:10:12):
Good morning, It's the Big NAD Morning Show nine six
oh k m O D. You can also text bmms
and then what you want to say to eight two, nine,
four five, Good morning Lindsay.

Speaker 8 (01:10:25):
Good morning Corbyn. The Cowboys are back in Arlington this Sunday,
and if you want to see them play, our friends
at Miller Lite want to send you listen during your
next Balls to the Wall sports and I'll have your
Dallas Cowboys update and tell you how to win those tickets.

Speaker 2 (01:10:40):
Then good morning can be oh, good morning. You just
got your first keyword to rock the bank. That keyword
as cash, as in what you beginning if you happen
to win, take that keyword plugging the website at the
Rockschamody dot com. Good luck. Uh you heard cross Canadian
ragued there because we're going to be talking with Cody
Canada here in a little bit, and uh, we're obviously
very excited to do that, so we want you to

(01:11:00):
be excited too. That's why you hear across Canadian ragweed
right there right Conspiracy theory Thursday. I came across as
I don't know the validity of it, of course, or
or a reality of it, I guess, or not reality,
but it's a really fascinating thing that I've never went
down the rabbit hole of and that is who's a spy? Okay, right, there's.

Speaker 9 (01:11:26):
Juliet Child was rumored to be a spy.

Speaker 2 (01:11:29):
Yes, I gu that's probably the most popular one. Yeah,
and it probably isn't out of the rim of possibility
that people could be celebrities and spies. It makes sense
because they could get into places because of their celebrity status. Yeah,
you know, and it would be unsuspecting. I feel like
you wouldn't suspect Brad Pitt to be an international spy,

(01:11:53):
but you know, invite him into the parties, you know,
come on in, and he could totally be unsuspecting get information. Well,
the idea that he also did a movie about being
kind of a spy, a hit man. He's done a
couple of them. Actually, some other people that are believed
to be have been celebrities to have been spies. Marlene

(01:12:14):
Dietrich She was a German born actress and singer. She
was a prominent Hollywood star and anti Nazi activist During
World War Two. She reportedly assisted the Office of Strategic Services,
the precursor to the CIA, by entertaining Allied troops and
engaging in anti Nazi propaganda efforts. She also allegedly provided

(01:12:35):
intelligence on German military movements, and was highly valued by
American intelligence due to her background and influence. Another one,
Josephine Baker, an American born French entertainer and civil rights activists,
celebrated her role as a spy during World War Two.
She used her fame and extensive travel to smuggle messages
written in invisible ink on her sheet music and gather

(01:12:57):
intelligence at embassy events. Her effort supported the French resistance,
and she was later awarded France's highest honors, including the
Quadrigliere and the Legion of Honor. Before becoming a famous chef,
Julia Child worked for the OSS during World War Two.
While she wasn't a field agent, she held various clerical

(01:13:19):
and intelligence roles, including working in Sri Lanka and China.
Her work involved gathering and processing classified information, and she
Larry later married a spy, Paul Child.

Speaker 8 (01:13:32):
Huh so she was a spy before she became a chef.

Speaker 2 (01:13:39):
She's like, you know what, the spy work. I'm good.
I think I'm just gonna go baked chicken. It wasn't
until she married him. Have you ever seen the movie
with Meryl Street. It's great, it's a great movie Frank Sinatra. Okay,
there's no definitive proof, but there was rumors he had
connections to the CIA. Some speculate he may have helped
with certain COVID missions, especially given his links to politicians

(01:14:02):
and the mob, the claims are really speculative. Sinatra allegedly
used as private jet to transport people associated with intelligence agencies,
though this has never been confirmed. Errol Flynn, Australian American actor,
was rumored to have connections with Nazi Germany. This is
very controversial and also unproven. Reports suggest he may have
been an informant, though it is also rumored to have

(01:14:26):
assisted the Allied intelligence in Latin America by using his
Hollywood connections to gather information on Nazi sympathizers. Also had
a killer mustache he did Sterling Hayden confirmed OSS operative
during World War II. He conducted missions in Yugoslavia and Italy,
working closely with the local resistance. His OSS role was

(01:14:48):
publicly acknowledged, and he later received multiple military honors for
his service. Those are just around World War two, right,
But there's a one that apparently there's like one real
claim to back this up, and that is a current
rock star is a spy okay? And what are some things?

(01:15:13):
I've been really intrigued with spies more than ever lately
because some spies are talking. People that worked for the CIA.
Spies have been talking on the TALKI and sharing things
about being spies. Like one of them shares a story
about being friends with a guy in the CIA, and
they were good dudes. He liked him a lot, and
then he found out the guy was lying all the
time and that it made sense the CIA had him

(01:15:38):
because he was so good at manipulating people to believe him.
And then he was like, well, where were we ever
really friends then? And the psychological turmoil you go through
right being a spy because you don't really trust anybody.
And he even goes on to talk about what it's
like to be followed and how to follow people and
what that looks like. Right, Just really fascinating to go down.

(01:16:01):
But anyway, what are some attributes you would need to
be a spy? World access, I would think I think
that'd be the number one. Yeah, ability to fly around
a lot. People want to see you, want to know
you're there right, look for you, right, It's not suspecting
behavior to see you in a country you don't belong in, right, Oh,

(01:16:22):
they're just here for a movie or vacation or whatever
performance a live show, right, they can afford that sort
of thing. Comers like you and I probably couldn't make
it happen, you know, but the rich could. I show
up in Japan, they're like, there's a white guy, a
guy in a band shows up and they're like, oh,
that's so and so he's going to play today. Were

(01:16:43):
you playing a show? Even if you're not, you're like
cool ed. Sharon's here, Yeah, least unsuspecting spy of her.

Speaker 9 (01:16:54):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:16:54):
Sometimes they think that's that's the best thing, right exactly, Yeah,
call it out here, I am, Yeah, what are you
gonna do? And so anyway, you would need to be
able to move around without a ton of attention in
an odd way, right. Rockstar celebrities definitely have that.

Speaker 8 (01:17:14):
Maybe the ability to speak more than one language okay.

Speaker 2 (01:17:18):
Okayling multi lingual, that makes sense. The ability to manipulate,
I think is a number one. And my experience with celebrities,
they're real good at it. Yeah, they're real good to go.

Speaker 9 (01:17:31):
Well, if you did this for me, I would be grateful.

Speaker 2 (01:17:33):
Yeah, cash flow cash flow, right, yeah, how about fly
a plane John Travolta, that son of a bitch, not
John Travolta, right, he's not a rock star. Bruce Dickinson
of Iron Maiden is the suspected of being a spy okay,
for whom form I six he'd be British, right and good.

(01:17:57):
I guess it could work for other agencies, but suspected
form I sick that makes sense, which is the British
version of the CIA, which, yeah, I guess you're right.
You be able to fly in and out of where
you need to be, but I mean at the same time,
and you still take a regular plane, take a regular flight.
You don't have to be a pilot. It helps, though

(01:18:17):
I think I don't know much about this actually this fact,
to really know the ins and outs of it, of
when why all that? I know they're making a movie
about it. But he was smuggled into Sarajevo to perform okay,
and I don't know the reasoning why or was he

(01:18:39):
in danger what? But to be able to smuggle somebody
in it sounds like something that would feel odd. Yeah,
and what a smuggle mean? Right? But I get if
you're smuggling people in so they not detected by the
government and nobody wants to see you there. You don't

(01:19:01):
need to be seen, right, I get that as a spy,
But if you're being smuggled in to perform, people are
gonna see you, they know you're gonna be there. They
eventually no, eventually, yeah, yeah, yeah, eventually. So that seems
a little odd or like you smuggle in, you do
the performance, and you leave before they ever know. Can

(01:19:21):
catch when that you're there? Okay, that's I guess that's possible.
But smuggling would be like we're not announcing, we're not
arriving in traditional ways. Could be smuggling as well, Right,
I don't know if he was necessarily put in a
crate with other crates, right, it wasn't in a shipping
container on a boat for months. Again, smuggling, I feel

(01:19:41):
like it is light mail. It could mean a bunch
of different variations. And if you're trying to embellish on
a story, why not say you were smuggled.

Speaker 8 (01:19:48):
Right, I can put them in disguise.

Speaker 2 (01:19:50):
But he also flies all around the world, has his
own plane. It is a pretty good cover to imply
that Bruce Dicketson of Iron Maiden is a spy. I'd
like to say that he doesn't have that spy look
to him. But Juliet Child she was not an attractive woman,

(01:20:12):
and maybe that's the case. It's like, we don't need
to draw too much attention, so we don't need all
these hotties out here spying around. Yeah. Uh. They say
he also is an expert in fincene, which I don't
know how that makes you. I guess because Vincen's a
very calculated It's like chess, right, It's it's more of

(01:20:34):
a thinker's sport, yeah, than it is a actual slashing
samurai type of thing. I know that's what they're doing.
But it is a very calculated thing, So I guess
that makes you capable of spies. I also think that
spies aren't you know Daniel Craig too, right. The idea
that you think Daniel Craig is what a spy is

(01:20:56):
kind of shows you don't know what a spy is.
He's a really loud spy, you.

Speaker 9 (01:21:03):
The idea is, do not make so much noise, right
to go undetected.

Speaker 8 (01:21:08):
Inconspicuous, and in a lot of scenarios he makes massive messes.

Speaker 2 (01:21:13):
You gotta think about that though. Have all the James
Bonds been like that if you think embellishments, No, so far,
it's just like being loud noisy spies, you know. Right, Well,
let's take the Brad Pitt Angelina Joe Lee movie, right,
mister missus Smith. Yeah, yeah, great movie.

Speaker 9 (01:21:29):
They blew their house up, that would make the news.

Speaker 2 (01:21:32):
Yeah, yeah, they just kind of covered that one up,
didn't Yeah. Or the underground bunker that the part of
the spouse didn't know about with all the or the
oven that turns into a gunrack. Yeah. Have you like,
come on, I accidentally pushed the wrong button and be like,
oh whoa, what's right? Trying to turn a fan on

(01:21:54):
and out comes an AKA. Right, there's an exorbant amount
of electricity you was coming from the garage? Yeah? Right,
we our dog sniffers smell gun resident. I don't know
like how that works, but I think there's embellishment that
happens in those Absolutely. I think the idea that being

(01:22:15):
a spy is really awesome is so far from the truth.
I think being a spy has moments of excitement, but
it's a lot of sit and wait. Imagine be very
stressful too, because one, I mean, you got what you're
holding on to, all those secrets, right, the information that
you get as a spy, You've got to worry about

(01:22:35):
getting caught and what the other side will do to
you if you get caught. I think it'd be more
probably one of the most stressful jobs around, definitely. I
mean I feel like that's fair. I think you also
have to be a complete introvert loaner to be a spy, right,
you have to like the one that the guy that
I've been reading about online. He talks about how he

(01:22:58):
became a spy and worked for the CIA, and that
was he was in the Air Force and he didn't
have a great relationship with his family, to the point
where if he was trying to come home at Christmas,
there would be an argument on who would pay for
the ticket, and his parents wouldn't. He was finally like,
I guess I'll just stay here, and he never went
home from Christmas and was really alienated from him, so

(01:23:18):
it was really easy for him to walk away.

Speaker 8 (01:23:21):
Yeah, So if that's the case, if you have to
be a complete loaner, who in the celebrity world would
make a great.

Speaker 2 (01:23:27):
Spy I don't think we know them enough to know that.
You can't grasp someone's personality on a red carpet or
their performance in a movie or in an interview for
a movie release.

Speaker 8 (01:23:42):
Well, kennu Reeves came to mind for me, because you
never really hear any negative or he stays out of
the spotlight for the most part.

Speaker 2 (01:23:50):
Right, he would be a perfect spy. I mean, yeah,
I guess it's possible. I don't like that just because
it's so predictable. It's so like, yeah, man, he's he
missed wick. Unpredictable spies, Jack Black, Yeah, Julia Child.

Speaker 9 (01:24:07):
You don't expect Julia Child to be a spy.

Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
At all, right, So to me, it makes it would
be too obvious to make you know the rock or
or Daniel Craig.

Speaker 9 (01:24:24):
Or Liam Nice and any of those people to be.

Speaker 2 (01:24:28):
Spies. It's got to be unassuming people. And Bruce Dickinson,
he's like, ah, now, come on, of course he's going
to sing, no, he's not a spy.

Speaker 8 (01:24:37):
Don't want to give himself up.

Speaker 9 (01:24:38):
Yeah, yeah, he's got on album covers.

Speaker 2 (01:24:41):
Air force Plant forty two is visible on the Skunkworks
album cover. It also has an image of a Lockheed
s R. Seventy one Blackbird Sight. Yeah, just saying. But
I love the idea of Bruce Dickinson also because he's
so cool, right, Like, he's awesome, He's a good dude,

(01:25:02):
flies as on plane lands always like so happy to
be everybody to see everybody rock star by day, spy
by night. Yeah yeah, And then you have to go
out to kill people, right, That's something you don't think
about do the spies. I'm sure they would have to
if it came down to it, to protect themselves and
the information they're getting. You think Julia Child actually killed somebody.

Speaker 8 (01:25:24):
Baked him in the oven?

Speaker 2 (01:25:26):
Oh god, I mean Julia Child. They've said she's more
of like a clerical spy. She wasn't a Again, it's
not uncommon. What's the TV show We watched Lindsay on
Amazon Jack Ryan and Jack Ryan, and the TV show
is a is a desk jockey right for the CIA,

(01:25:48):
and then he has to go be a spy. So
I think when you're a desk jockey, you're also, by
the way, you can do this type of thing, which
also seems wild to me. A texta came in some
the host of the Gong show was a spy and
I guess yeah. Chuck Barris, the host of The Gong Show,

(01:26:09):
claimed to have been a CIA assassin in his nineteen
eighty four memoir Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. How about
that a game show host also CIA assassin. Yeah, I
can't do the show to that, guys. I gotta go to
rush and kill somebody.

Speaker 9 (01:26:25):
Somebody texted it and said, have you seen the burn?

Speaker 2 (01:26:28):
Notice? Have you guys seen that? I've heard of it,
never seen it, though, I don't think I have. Uh,
his career as a spy ends when he gets a
burn notice the covert equivalent of a pink slip. Okay, okay, sure.
Jeffrey Donovan, who's a great actor. Bruce Campbell, Yeah, Bruce

(01:26:49):
Campbell's not. It always cool to see him. Yeah, okay.
The idea though, that and if you do one thing
for this for the CIA, you get to say you're
a spy.

Speaker 8 (01:27:00):
Right yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:27:02):
Who I don't know, no, no, no, no no. We
have said multiple times on this show. If you just
do it once, you are that. If you go to
one open mic night, you're a comedian. Yeah, sure, but
I think you have to go on a mission as
a spy to be considered a spy, even if you
just go on one. Yeah, I was a spy for

(01:27:24):
the CIA. I don't like the idea of the desk
jockey or the Milton's working in the basement for the
CIA that are just filing files all day being calling
themselves a spy because they're not they're not spying on
yeah exactly, Yeah, that's fair.

Speaker 9 (01:27:41):
But a lot of spy work is behind a computer nowadays.

Speaker 2 (01:27:44):
Right, right, so they a spy. I guess essentially that
would be Yeah, if they're doing cyber work like that, yeah,
for sure, they would be a spy hacking into other
you know, governments, whatever, infrastruate whatever. Yeah. But if you
are just rolling a mail card around and delivering envelopes
to the people in their offices, I don't think that

(01:28:05):
makes you a spy. That just makes you a worker
for the CIA. What's the Jennifer Lawrence movie, The Redbird movie?
Is that what it's called? Where she plays a Russian
spy and their whole point is red sparrow is that right?

Speaker 9 (01:28:19):
And she is booing them, she shows more than her boobs.

Speaker 2 (01:28:24):
And she is trained to be a sexual toy to
lure other age ci agents and people of influence you.
But you see the American side of that too, that
interacts with her and the things you have to go through,
and not all of it is awesome. It's a slow,
slow turn, but it's a fantastic movie. I just think

(01:28:47):
that Dan a spy doesn't mean you're automatically in danger
all the time. No, because if you if I'm carrying
the paperwork to go file downstairs and I open it
and read the special information even though I'm not supposed to,
curiosity got the best of you though, all right, if
I make the invisible ink pin, you got a little

(01:29:07):
hand in there for sure. Still not a spy in
my BOOKO, all right, we gotta take a break. We'll
be back.

Speaker 3 (01:29:14):
Rush Fur of The Big Mad Morning Show is nest
ninety seven five KMT.

Speaker 2 (01:29:34):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one
eight four six oh K M O D. You can
also text bmms and then what you want to say
to eight two nine four five. That's what feels like validation. Ah.
So you might remember when we talked about the lady
online who said she slept with like three hundred people

(01:29:57):
in one day or whatever. She's trying to it's some
crazy number and if you remember, especially we listened to
the extra podcast, we were mostly me was like, I
don't know, something ain't right here. Let's reach out to her. Yeah,
which Gimpie did and a night I think is her
name or whatever you go. Did you ever hear.

Speaker 9 (01:30:17):
Back from her?

Speaker 2 (01:30:18):
Never did?

Speaker 9 (01:30:19):
Yeah, well now we know why.

Speaker 2 (01:30:21):
Apparently, according to reports, her wild claims about repet rampant
sex encounters are fake. Bonnie Blue is what her real
name is, apparently, and she apparently well, so what she

(01:30:42):
does is she goes and says, hey, college kids sleep
with me and holds has pictures of her holding signs
up and all that. But according to reports that at
least one guy has come forward and said that he's
in the adult sex industry and that he was paid

(01:31:03):
to be a part of it for her own only fans,
that she's just making porn, and those are all claims
and things she's doing to market and promote her only fans.
So these are two separate people. Bonnie Blue is the

(01:31:25):
one you're talking about, the one that I reached out
to who wants to do it with like six hundred
men in a year. Annie Knight is her name. She's
from Australia. But I guess, so these two people look
exactly the same. They're not, but they look exactly this.
Bonnie look up, Bonnie Blue. Yeah, I got her on

(01:31:47):
I got her Instagram right here. And then Annie Knight
and they they're okay, wow, has one stealing from like
their idea from the other. Maybe so somebody said, or
maybe they just got together andre like, hey, hi, let's

(01:32:10):
sleep with as many as we can. Australian. Yeah, quiky
Barbie Faustas throwing other dong and the Bobby. Yeah. I
mean it's good to have goals and aspirations, right, I guess. Yeah,

(01:32:33):
they're similar. They're both blonde, they're both attractive, but they
are two totally different women. I would say that Bonnie
probably looks better than Annie. Annie's got la a tin head. Well,
Bonnie's got like a man face.

Speaker 8 (01:32:49):
They both have pretty big foreheads.

Speaker 2 (01:32:55):
Okay, they're both pretty, yes, absolutely, And Bonnie's got really
crazy blue eyes, but she looks she's got some man
features to her that I'm like. And I'm not a
big fan of the lip injection thing, and she's definitely
got something going on there. She's very shiny, too, Yeah,

(01:33:16):
like she sweats a lot or uses a lot of
makeup oil. I like to think that she just sweats
like a greasy hug. Yeah. And the other one she's
just too skinny for me. I'd be worried she might
break a leg when she falls that or she's I

(01:33:36):
need to collect money for her for unisef right. But anyway,
so Bonnie was like, come to find out, Bonnie is.

Speaker 9 (01:33:44):
Just she's faking it. Yeah, all for clout.

Speaker 2 (01:33:47):
I wonder if the other dame's faking it to Yes.

Speaker 8 (01:33:50):
The other dame only according to her Instagram, she only
has a seventy five to go to reach her goal.

Speaker 2 (01:33:59):
Only so fine her.

Speaker 8 (01:34:01):
Goal of three and sixty five dudes in a year.

Speaker 2 (01:34:05):
Yeah, I thought it was like some even bigger than that. Yeah,
because everything I've read it was like six hundred people. Yeah.
So I'm of the position of I feel like I've
said this before, it if you're doing something like that online,
you're line all right, you just are so far as

(01:34:27):
like having the sex online or just promoting it or
what do you mean by that? I think ultimately the
internet is I caught a fish this big on everything.
You know, if you think about it. It makes sense.
These two highly attractive females, yeah, are trying easily nine yeah, easily,
are trying to garner as many followers for their Instagram

(01:34:49):
so they can be Internet famous as possible. You know,
So why not put out there I want to sleep
with six hundred dudes to break the record or whatever
I want to do x amount, you know, because that's
gonna garner people's interest, especially pervy guys like us. Yeah,
you know. And so we're gonna we're gonna go to
their Instagram and we're gonna follow them. We're gonna see

(01:35:12):
how many dogs that she can actually get right and
and mate, And they're not doing any of it, and
it's all just to become quote unquote Internet famous. I
think it's just not physically possible, right to sleep with
that many people in a year. A Yeah, because that's
what I mean, that's what Annie says. She was trying

(01:35:32):
to do six hundred games in a year. Yeah. I'm
not saying there's not a Jordan or Lebron James or
Kobe Bryant out there. I'm just saying, the chance you
found that person and they're doing this, I don't know.

Speaker 9 (01:35:43):
Man, sickness life right right.

Speaker 2 (01:35:46):
Stuff gets in the way. Yeah, but much schedules, somebody
says they'll be there, they won't show up.

Speaker 9 (01:35:51):
Absolutely, Hurricanes like things happen.

Speaker 2 (01:35:54):
Yeah, but much like regular work, you gotta work through
the obstacles. So let's say you get the flu and
your your stomach bug and you're sick for a couple
of three days. Well, now you've got to double up
on dong to catch up, for sure, you know for sure?

Speaker 9 (01:36:08):
So I no, I no, I agree, one hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (01:36:12):
Except here there's a boss telling you you got.

Speaker 9 (01:36:14):
To right right and.

Speaker 2 (01:36:17):
This, and if it's and if there was a thing like, hey,
my plans changed, a hurricane came in. I need some
emergency dong to meet the number to a point, to
to push the point you're saying, GIMPI, but you're not
seeing any of that stuff. No, you're not. You're not.
And I'm not subscribing to their only fans, absolutely not. No,
I'm not paying money for that. I I will, I will.

(01:36:39):
We can put it on the board on the that
his ship of sale board. I am not subscribing two
porn or only fans. It just is not gonna happen. No,
I if I have an extra so much dollars a month,
I'll get another Starbucks, right, right, I saved some money
this month. I look, I've got an extra forty five dollars.

(01:36:59):
What I gonna do with it? Will? There was that
only fan subscription? Yeah? Yeah, then you start bargain shopping
only fans. You know what can I get for forty
five dollars? Anything you want? Because I also know that's
the gateway. The membership is the gateway. That isn't the

(01:37:20):
That isn't the fee r? Yeah? Right? Because then you pay,
I know, all these subscription things work. You pay, and
they're like, listen, pay a little bit more, you get
to hit the horn. Right. What. I bought a car
and they started sitting me like, hey, car's great and
all right, but if you'd like to do X y
Z you might want to if you want to have

(01:37:42):
the internet on your car that we teach you with
for freaking five days. Right, got used tu and you
thought was awesome? Right? Your satellite radio, Yeah, I always
having fun jam it and nothing but blues all day. Right,
that's just Zac channel. It was awesome. Man, haven't heard
the Zydacho channel. It's so good, right? The guy who's

(01:38:04):
the best side could playing in the world has a channel?
Do you believe he's got the time for that? No,
I can't. They want me to pay fifty dollars a
month now. I don't like Zytego that much, said everyone, right,
I don't even know people that make zydaco music like
zydacom music. That's just all that they could get. They're like,

(01:38:24):
I just I'm already involved. Man, I've already given him
my job. All right, we gotta take a break. We'll
be back time.

Speaker 3 (01:38:33):
More of The Big Man Morning Show is next ninety KMOD.

Speaker 2 (01:38:57):
Good morning, It's The Big Man Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six KMOD. You can also text bmms and
then what you want to say to eight two nine
four five.

Speaker 6 (01:39:07):
No.

Speaker 2 (01:39:07):
Start to NFL week, and so we need to do
our predictions. We've got really riveting game that will be
one of the first of our three on Sunday, and
that is Patriots at Bears. And uh, that's gonna be
Bears minus six and a half on that one. What
do you think there, lindsay, I'm going with the Chicago gimme.

(01:39:31):
That's a tough one because they're both let's see here,
Bears Patriots. I'm just trying to look at the record
real quick. Two and seven, four and four going for
the Bears.

Speaker 9 (01:39:45):
Uh, yeah, I know you do that.

Speaker 2 (01:39:48):
I don't. I'm not a big fan of using their
their record as the reason on who they should pick,
because we've seen that not play out. It has not
worked out for me a few times. But look who's
in the lead on this here. Yeah, I think for me,

(01:40:10):
who's quarterbacking that game? I'm gonna go this is either
the game where we see that the wheels come off
completely of the Bears because there's some infighting, the rumors
that Ebus has lost the team, whatever that means. Their
play calling is just atrocious. Patriots aren't very good either.

(01:40:31):
They've only won two games.

Speaker 9 (01:40:33):
That doesn't mean anything, I.

Speaker 2 (01:40:35):
Mean speaks volumes to me. Anyway, I'm gonna go with
the Patriots. I think, uh, big chance. Big rewards require
big chances. So I'm gonna go ahead and take the
the Patriots on that one. You took the Bears, right, gimpee? Yes,
Broncos at Chiefs. Chiefs are eight and a half point

(01:40:57):
favorites against the Broncos.

Speaker 8 (01:41:01):
What do you think, Lindsay, I mean the Broncos have
been playing better.

Speaker 2 (01:41:05):
Ye have a great defense.

Speaker 8 (01:41:07):
And yeah, and I mean the Chiefs have got to
lose some time. But I don't think it's the Broncos
that are gonna kill their winning streak. So I'm taking
the Chiefs.

Speaker 2 (01:41:19):
GIMPI Yeah, I want to take Chefs on that one
as well. I'm not even gonna look the last time
someone other than the Broncos and the Chiefs won the
AFC West the MySpace he had one hundred and twenty
five million users. Wow. So with that being said, I

(01:41:40):
am taking the Chiefs for that. I cannot The Broncos
are one of those ones you just can't if you're
a Chiefs fan, you can't just go with that. So
forty nine ers at Buccaneers forty nine ers are six
point favorites on that. Both the Chiefs and the forty
nine ers lines moved as of yesterday, so but not
very much. So forty nine ers at Buccaneers lindsay.

Speaker 8 (01:42:01):
Yeah, I'm gonna go with the forty nine ers.

Speaker 2 (01:42:03):
Give me, I'm gonna go with the forty nine ers
for sure. I think I was reading somewhere. I know,
I know McCaffrey is practicing I'm not sure if he's
going to be playing this weekend, but he should be
come on up soon. I'm still gonna take the Niners
any way. Uh, just because all season long, I've been
rooting for Baker to lose every game that I've watched them.

(01:42:26):
What do you know like him? That's not that I'm
just just something about I don't know about his face.

Speaker 9 (01:42:31):
I I like Baker.

Speaker 2 (01:42:35):
I think he's a stud. And I think the Buccaneers
have played or almost played spoiler multiple multiple, multiple times.
They should not have played well last week, and they
made it. They figured it out. They're tight end. Ottoman
or whatever his name is, is a stud. McCaffrey is
not going to play on Sunday. He's been in limited
practice all week. If if he does play, I think

(01:42:56):
he's gonna get hurt again. So I imagine they're trying
to play the long game here with So I am
picking the Buccaneers on that one. Yeah, I'm going to
pick the Buccaneers on that. So we'll see what happens.
All right, Let's see what lindsay. As for Balls to
the Wall Sports.

Speaker 8 (01:43:21):
I've got your Cowboys update, brought to you by our
friends at Miller Lyte, the Cowboys might be without their
franchise quarterback for longer than was initially anticipated. NFL Network
is reporting that Dallas quarterback and Deck Prescott is dealing
with a partial ebulsion of his right hand string, which
means that part of the tendon has pulled away from

(01:43:41):
the bone. Prescott has not been placed on injured reserve,
but would miss at a minimum of four games if
the Cowboys decide to go that route. Multiple sources have
said that the three time pro bowler will need a
recovery period of more than four weeks. The thirty one
year old was injured on a five guard scramble during
the team's loss to the Falcons in Week nine. Dallas
will host the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday afternoon at AT

(01:44:04):
and T Stadium. And if you want to win standing
room only tickets to the Cowboys game in Arlington, open
the iHeartRadio app and use the talkback feature tell us
to give you those Cowboys tickets. That's your balls to
the Wall Sports. I'm Lindsay in ninety seven to five KMO.

Speaker 2 (01:44:27):
Good morning, It's the Big nine Morning Show. Nine went
eight four six o KMOD. You can also text BMMS
and then what you want to say to eight two, nine,
four five, Good morning Lindsay, Good.

Speaker 8 (01:44:40):
Morning Corbyn, Happy thirty second porn star birthday too, Miss
Demi Blaze see this brestecular babe in in praise of Blaze,
dripping wet hooters and jiggle bell. She's packing a brawl
load of thirty eight h's, but they look much bigger
than that to me.

Speaker 2 (01:45:01):
Good morning Gimbee, She's a hefty gow. Good morning Corby.
You just got another top You gotta another keyword to
rock the bank. That keyword is grand, as in how
much you're gonna get if you win. Take that keyword
plugging in the website the Rockscamody dot com and you've
got more chances throughout the day. So just keep on listening.

(01:45:21):
We do this thing called top list on Thursday. Let's
get started. It's Harper Big Mad Morning Show's top list,
random topics, randomly drawn with random results. Now here's Corbyn,
Gimpi and Lindsay with this week's top list. This week's
top list is things you should never ever mess with.
Things you should never ever mess with Lindsay.

Speaker 8 (01:45:41):
Number five A hungry woman on her period. Oh good saying,
don't mess with her. She's hungry already and on her period.
Just feed her and leave her alone.

Speaker 2 (01:45:57):
I feel like that's like saying, don't mess with a toddler,
Like you're in Your inability to ask for food when
you need it and your inability to manage this unfortunate
medical thing you're dealing with.

Speaker 9 (01:46:11):
Is not an excuse to be a complete asshole.

Speaker 8 (01:46:13):
I'm already in a bad mood.

Speaker 2 (01:46:16):
That's not my problem. That's a you problem.

Speaker 8 (01:46:18):
Don't add to it.

Speaker 2 (01:46:19):
Don't add to No, you're the keeper of your world.
You should be able to control your emotions as an adult.

Speaker 9 (01:46:28):
Luckily for me, I don't settle down.

Speaker 2 (01:46:29):
I saw you.

Speaker 8 (01:46:31):
Yeah, exactly. Luckily for me, I don't have to deal
with that anymore.

Speaker 2 (01:46:35):
So what's the problem then? Yeah? So what are we
talking about?

Speaker 8 (01:46:37):
I remember?

Speaker 2 (01:46:39):
I remember?

Speaker 9 (01:46:40):
Sure, band of brothers.

Speaker 2 (01:46:41):
I get it. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:46:43):
Number four a bee's nest in the woods, Macaulay Hulkin,
don't do it? Hey did it? And my girl and
look what happened to them. A Number three a man
while he's taken a dump, don't do it?

Speaker 2 (01:47:05):
Why why is it god to be just to do
I say it with anybody just don't mess with that.

Speaker 9 (01:47:09):
Hey, you take your own advice.

Speaker 2 (01:47:11):
I'm just saying, number of times you've tried to engage
in a conversation with me when I'm chunking of juice.

Speaker 8 (01:47:18):
Well, I feel like as a woman, my kids have
come to me while I've been in the bathrooms, and
so many times it's it doesn't help whether or not
I tell them to leave me in alone or not,
they still are there. But when my husband does it,
it's like the kids won't go near him.

Speaker 2 (01:47:35):
Yeah, you know what that means, right, It means he's
the enforcer and you're the pushover.

Speaker 8 (01:47:40):
There you go, probably, So Number two, a married man
or woman, don't mess don't she never ever mess with
a married man or woman.

Speaker 9 (01:47:55):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:47:55):
There are some really happy people that messed with a
married man or woman and they're now with that individual
and they're very, very happy. I understand the idea of
morality like don't engage in cheating and all that, but
there are people that are happy that have done it

(01:48:16):
it worked out for them. As opposed to your B
five example, I don't know anybody that was like that
was a great idea, right right, Whether you're allergic to
them and may die or not being stung by a
beast sucks, right, right, But there are plenty of people
that mess with a married man or woman and are
very happy now because of that.

Speaker 8 (01:48:34):
Okay, Number one, you don't agree with that? No, well,
I haven't witnessed that.

Speaker 9 (01:48:38):
You don't know anybody.

Speaker 2 (01:48:40):
You don't know anybody that was engaged in a situation
where the other party was married and now they're together
and they're happy.

Speaker 8 (01:48:47):
No, I can't say that.

Speaker 10 (01:48:49):
I do.

Speaker 8 (01:48:51):
Number one Democrat on Facebook after Trump wins an election,
I don't know how many people I saw yesterday that
have jumped people of friends on Facebook or even family members.
Really yeah, okay, yeah, yeah, those are my top five things.

Speaker 9 (01:49:15):
Gotta be honest.

Speaker 2 (01:49:15):
I didn't think we were gonna go political, but here
we are top list things you should never ever mess with. GIMPI.
Number five, here is an angry mother that's been dealing
with unruly kids all day. Just don't don't even look
at her. Wait an hour, two hours, twenty four hours,
give it some time, let her calm down a little bit,

(01:49:39):
you know, and then you can go in and have
a conversation or.

Speaker 8 (01:49:44):
Something and ask what's for dinner.

Speaker 2 (01:49:47):
But just coming straight in out of work and she's
been dealing with these little assholes all day long. I
wouldn't do it. I wouldn't do it. That's how you
get your head snapped off. That's just my opinion. Number
FI or the cartel, any cartel that feels fair, I
think you should just just just stay away. What about
the Pokemon cartel even then cartel or the D and

(01:50:12):
D cartels that are out there, they are serious about
their stuff. They're doing hangings, but it's mostly by like
the third or fourth card, right. I wouldn't mess with
any of them because they are serious about whatever it is,
whether it's cocaine, fentanyl, or Pokemon. Don't mess with them
because you might get cut. I just my advice. Number

(01:50:34):
three for me was a hornet's nest. Okay, Lindsay said
bee's nest kind of along the same lines, but or
really any kind of stinging insect animal nest. I remember
when I was sixteen, and I didn't do it on purpose, right,
but I was mowing a lawn and I guess there

(01:50:54):
was a yellow jacket or nest or something like that
that was made in the ground. As some insects like that.
And I was mowing my neighbor's lawn. My mom was
I was mowing my lawn and my mom's like, hey,
that guy over there, see the neighbor, he's out there
cutting his lawn with a weed whacker, right, you know.
And I don't know if you've been there or not.
I've done it before. It sucks. So she's like, hey,

(01:51:16):
go go cut his grass for him. So me being me,
I'm like, yeah, sure whatever. So I go over there,
and I got my push mower and I push. I'm
pushing a long and I got about maybe two passes
in and I ran over this nest. And I didn't
know that I ran over this nest until I started
getting stung. And I got stung, I want to say,

(01:51:37):
at least twenty times, at least all over my body.
And that sucked. You know, I'm not allergic to him
to where like I'm gonna die like my caulaue did
or whatever. But I swelled up a little bit. I
had welts all over me. You know. It was not
a pleasant experience at all whatsoever. So I want to say,
stay away from all stinging animals nests. I think that's

(01:52:01):
number two alligator snapping turtles. Alligator quick to fire that
one off yesterday, Yes, because when we were talking about
that's the first thing that came to mind. This happened
about maybe seven eight years ago. I was working here,
I was on the show. I was married at the time,

(01:52:22):
and we go out to the lake Lake Hudson out
there with with my ex wife's you know, mom and
her stepdad, and we're out there, we're camping, we're having
a good time, and I saw this little baby alligator
snapping turtle and it was no bigger than the palm
of my good hand, okay, And I'm like, wow, that's cool.

(01:52:44):
I've never seen one so small before. I've usually only
seen adult ones, their massive, gnarly prehistoric looking animals. And
I'm like, I ain't messing with that at all. Right.
I was like, oh, this is look, it's so cute.
Just the time, a little alligator snapping turtle. And I
got my I got a leaf because I'm like a

(01:53:05):
hungry fella, you know, I don't know what alligator snapping
turtles eat. So I got this leaf and I'm dangling
it up over its head, you know, just to see
its little neck stretch out. Right, this son of a
bitch jumped two feet in the air, grabbed onto that
leaf and grabbed a hold of the tip of my

(01:53:26):
finger and left a nice, nice blister on my finger,
snapped the hell out of it. And it was at
that point in time that I said, I'm never gonna
mess with an alligator snapping turtle again, no matter what
the size, big or small. Ain't messing with it all
that because I want to see a turtle hit poke
out anyway. Number One on my list people that prepare

(01:53:50):
your food. People that prepare your food. As a guy
one who has been somebody who's you know, messed with
me and I prepare their food before. To be fair,
he didn't know he messed with you. He didn't do
it there, Oh he did. He did. It was just
like you, Corbyn. You know you say it all the time.
You know, I just like to be a sniper and
wait and one of these days you're gonna cross in

(01:54:12):
my path. Yeah, but he didn't show up at the restaurant,
is what I'm saying, Like, Hey, you dumb idiot. No, no, no, hey,
this food isn't good, send it back. He didn't do that, No,
but he did mess with me, and I was preparing
his food and I got him back, and then he
died like a month or two later after that. But nonetheless,
I think I think that should be number one. Don't
mess with people who prepare your food because you never
know what's gonna happen. Could be lookies, could be nut here,

(01:54:35):
who knows we're doing. Top list things you should never
ever mess with. Number five for me, mandolin's not the guitar,
musical instrument, the slicing. All these have to do with
a little bit of ego, Like your ego gets out
in front of you, you get over your skis, you
chop and tip of your finger off. Every time you
watch someone using a mandolin, you're like, hell, here comes

(01:54:58):
right about to happen. Number four stingrays, Yeah, asked Steve
h One, the most qualified individual. That's how we die.
Who nobody would have besides an alligator eating them. Ain't
nobody predicting, sorry, crocodile. Ain't nobody predicting that? It's number four.

(01:55:20):
Number three floods of any kind of any height. People
drive their car into high water. They just think it's
all good, or they see them walking through it. Then
it get your feet taken out from under you.

Speaker 9 (01:55:36):
You're like, it's just water.

Speaker 2 (01:55:38):
Water kills people the most of anything that happens in storms.

Speaker 9 (01:55:41):
Dangerous.

Speaker 2 (01:55:43):
Number that was number three. Number two feels like an
obvious thing that I'm gonna say, But numerous stories of
people that are like, I'll just dabble and their life
gets turned upside down.

Speaker 9 (01:55:57):
And that's heroin. So many people you can do.

Speaker 2 (01:56:02):
You dabble in the weed, Okay, you dabble in those shrooms. Okay, acid,
all right, ALKI sure, but Heroin. You could probably add
a couple of others in there, maybe cocaine, lio math.
But like Heroin yokes people up so fast they don't

(01:56:22):
even know it. They're like, I thought I would be fun,
and then the next thing I know, I'm forty and
I'm sleeping on a park bench right and I'm engaging
in sexual activity I didn't know I was a fan of,
but hey, I got my Heroin.

Speaker 9 (01:56:39):
Number one again feels very.

Speaker 2 (01:56:43):
Obvious. But you see people do it all the time, recklessly,
sometimes even with like they just think they know what
they're doing. And that is electricity, specifically high voltage. I
think it is incredibly reckless to engage in grabbing electricity change.

(01:57:04):
I think changing light bulbs even to a degree is
like people are like, well, it's just it broke off.
I'll just stick my finger in there. No, get a
potato right right right, or just turn off the power. Yeah,
you could do that too. I can't tell you how
many times I've been shocked replacing ceiling fans or light

(01:57:25):
fixtures of any kind. Hell, I was replacing the it
was an electrical outlet for a dryer at one house
that I was living. Oh God, And I thought I
had everything. I did. I went to the panel and
flipped everything off. Right, it wasn't very well. Can't use
your middle finger, dude, so it's not the same. I

(01:57:46):
turned everything off. I'm like, everything in the house is off.
All the breakers have been flipped. We good. Well. The
one that the dryer was hooked up to happen to
be a separate power source, and that was on the
outside and I did not know that. And I get
in there with my screwdriver and I'm taken it off
and it bit me hard. Yeah, and I said, what

(01:58:08):
the hell? I turned her And that's when I walked
around to the other side. I was like, damn, that's
why I'm a big proponent of like not messing with
electricity because if you do it and on a light
switch whatever, and you get bit, it ain't a big deal, right,
But then your condition that it's fine. And again I
said it your ego. You get out over your skis,

(01:58:28):
you're like, it's fine, and then you get bit by
a dryer outlet. Oh gosh, a little it's a little different.
I'm the guy who has the checker and like I
check it multiple times and I turn it off, like
over the top cautious.

Speaker 8 (01:58:43):
My dad's neighbor went after his divorce, he had his
neighbor had horses and they had an electric fence to
keep the horses in. And he said, do you want
to feed the horses? And I said sure. And my
dad had on overalls at the time, and he said,
you just got to be really careful because the fence
is hot and it's electric, and don't touch it. Said okay.
He had carrots and he went to lean over to
feed the horse the carrot and the top button on

(01:59:06):
his overalls hit the fence. All you can see my
dad his whole body got struck and he shook from
his head to his toes and pulled him back, and
oh my gosh.

Speaker 2 (01:59:20):
That's a vibration. You don't forget. No, growing up on
my grandparents farm and grown up in Iowa and working
on farms, you don't lean over electric fences. No. If
you want to test and see if it is hot,
use the back of your hand. Yeah, don't use don't
just grab it like you normally would anything else. I
just assume it is. If it's a one wire, it's electrical.
I have a neighbor, so I live in a neighborhood. Right,

(01:59:43):
But I have a neighbor and he has electric on
his fence. Okay, does he have animals like dogs?

Speaker 12 (01:59:51):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:59:51):
And it's a hot the neighbor you have to have
like a high fence, so it's a good five foot fence,
chain link, Okay, hiding. I mean, I think it's more
of like he's I guess it's a safety precaution, makes sense,
I guess. I guess how many times have people gotten jumped?
And he lives on a corner, so you see into
his backyard. How many times have people jumped into your

(02:00:13):
It feels a little over the top. Probably only one
time they got the pitch shocked. Out of him. Somebody
text in, never mess with a lama. Yeah, dude, people
are like alamas are awesome. I'll put ostriches on that
list too, are as they are a barrel leaking glowing
green ooze.

Speaker 9 (02:00:33):
I gotta be honest.

Speaker 2 (02:00:34):
If you approach a barrel leaking with glowing green ooze, you.

Speaker 9 (02:00:37):
Are already made a mistake if you can see it.

Speaker 2 (02:00:42):
Uh.

Speaker 9 (02:00:43):
A hippo, dude, hippo is deadly animal on the planet.

Speaker 2 (02:00:46):
All right, Well there's two reasons why they're not to
hit a hippo. Well why not too. It says from
the back we've all seen that video about the sprinkler.
True statement. And then from the front, they can eat
your head right off. True statement was on the TikTok
and I watched video of them feeding a hippo. Uh pumpkin,
right and it's the whole thing in its mouth.

Speaker 9 (02:01:07):
Yeah, it's gone.

Speaker 2 (02:01:08):
That could be your head. Yeah. They're also fast there.
They don't look fast, but they are fast. So yeah,
I'm good with all of that. All right, we got
to take a break. We come back. Cody Canada is
expected to join US Tulsa's morning show.

Speaker 3 (02:01:22):
Oh yeah, he's coming right back. A Mad Morning Show
Tulsa's rock station ninety seven five KMOD.

Speaker 2 (02:01:48):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show nine one,
eight four six oh KMOD. You can also text bmmass
and then what you want to say to eight two
nine four five. Join us on the line right now.
It's Cody Canada. Hey Cody, how are you man?

Speaker 10 (02:02:03):
How good? How you doing this morning?

Speaker 2 (02:02:05):
I'm great, man, It's great to talk to you, dude.
Congratulations on the sold out shows over at boone Pickens.

Speaker 10 (02:02:11):
Oh, thank you man. It's pretty pretty wild to me.

Speaker 2 (02:02:14):
I've always wanted to ask us when we see shows
get added one after another when they sell well, was
it planned or did you have a contingency plan for
her to add multiple days?

Speaker 10 (02:02:24):
I mean, I honestly didn't think that we would sell
out even one night. And then I walked into the
kitchen and my wife was on the phone with a
booking agent and she said, Okay, it looks like we're
doing night too, Like okay, so and then after that
they added night three and four just instantly. So it

(02:02:47):
was all shocked to me.

Speaker 2 (02:02:49):
Was there a debate ever to add another date? When like,
were you like, all right, let's just do like two more.

Speaker 10 (02:02:56):
There was like one hundred and or two hundred and
fifty thousand more people in the queue. So that was definitely,
you know, a plan. But we decided that let's let's
just get through the first the four and uh and
then we'll plan after that.

Speaker 2 (02:03:11):
You know what, what what about the because I know
a lot of people that never got tickets and the
did like the frustration and stuff. I do, were you ever,
guys ever brought in like, hey there's a problem with
ticket sales or there's more demand than we expected. Was
there any that business side of that that you were
involved in.

Speaker 10 (02:03:30):
I got online before everything went on sale, and I said,
you know, don't buy from third party. You know there
we're gonna everybody buy from the school. You know, if
something happened, then you have to buy a third party,
and you really want to come to the show and
do that. But there was such so much internet traffic,
server traffic that I mean, there was no way that

(02:03:51):
anybody that everybody could get them. And then we found
out you know that a lot of it was like
seat geek and stub hub. But I don't I don't
really think you can beat that, So I don't I mean,
I don't If Tavid Swift can't, I damn sure can't.

Speaker 9 (02:04:03):
You know, yeah, Yeah, From an artist's standpoint is, what
does that do?

Speaker 2 (02:04:08):
You do? You feel helpless? I mean, of course you feel,
you know, empathy for fans and stuff, because you want
them to come to the shows. But where does that
land with you?

Speaker 10 (02:04:16):
I mean, yeah, it's frustrating, you know. I mean I
have people I've been doing this for thirty thirty years,
thirty one years next year, and man, I've got people
all over the country that want to see the show.
And then you know, on top of that, I'm only
allowed so many people on a guest list. So that's
definitely empathy. You know. I really felt like, I this

(02:04:40):
is the kind of the way I'm built through. I
kind of felt like I let people down. But in
the end, I mean, there's nothing I could do about it.

Speaker 2 (02:04:48):
How did the show those shows in April? How did
just because you thought it was going to be a
one day thing, but how did that come to fruition
share it with us and the fans? Like how the
idea of getting back together and doing this and doing
that day and doing it in still are How did
all that come about?

Speaker 10 (02:05:05):
So about if you got a minute, I.

Speaker 9 (02:05:09):
Got all the time you want, man.

Speaker 10 (02:05:12):
And like two years ago, my wife lost her dad.
So we went to we kind of got away from everything,
and I have friends up in New York and we
went up there to hang out for a few days.
And we went to see a band called eichnine Kills.
My kids and wife loved metal, and honestly, I like

(02:05:32):
it more than then I used to. But uh. We
were underneath the Madison Square Garden at the Hulu Theater
and we took the kids back to the house and
then we walked to a bar and my wife was
going around the table saying, Hey, let's let's talk about goals,
you know, let's sitch goals. And she into me and
I was like, kind of teary eyed. She's like, what's

(02:05:53):
wrong with you? I said, I think it's time that
we we start romancing the idea. I would like to
at least, you know, have everybody be friends again. And
so there was She said to me, you know, I
think that's great, but the thing I want from you
is to be happy. And I was like, well, I
kind of want everybody to be happy. I mean, just

(02:06:14):
the world is so especially our country is is everything's
so divided and people were yelling at each other all
the time, and like, what's this is something that makes
people have fun. And so it was a two year
process and my book and agent, John Folk, who is
I told her He told me not to say it,
but I don't care what he says. He he's one

(02:06:36):
the reason that this is happening. I mean it, I
know it took us calling each other and talking through things,
which really wasn't that big a deal. The more I
I lean into it, the more I realized that I
think I was the one that was kind of like
maybe holding a grudge, you know, and uh, for no reason.
I mean my thought was nobody died, nobody scared anybody around.

(02:06:58):
It was just, you know, we just had a a
disagreement fifteen years ago, and we were overworked and we
were over drinking. And now everybody's grown and their kids
are grown, and maybe it's time, you know. I mean,
it's think think outside of yourself, is what I tried
to tell myself, you know, And what's what's There's people
out there that are mad, whether it's financially or politically

(02:07:23):
or whatever, and let's just kind of come together and
see what we can do. And uh, John said, hey,
I think we can do the football stadium. So the
first thing I thought was we're going to sell half
half of the stadium. That's about it. It's like, well,
whatever we got to do, let's still let's do it,
and let's do it in still Water first. And uh

(02:07:45):
we got on the phone with each other, and man,
everybody just fell back in love with each other instantly,
and there was a peers and joy and and you know,
talking about our kids have bands and let's let's do
this for them. And man, to be honest and not
over sell it, I mean, it really was just a
love fest. You know. It's let's get back in the saddle,

(02:08:07):
not necessarily, you know, go back on tour, because that's
what did it, you know, was too working, too much,
and you know we're not young anymore. So we just
settled on, Okay, let's do a handful of shows. Well
that handful of shows happened to turn out to be
the same as the same town four nights in a row.

(02:08:27):
And man, it just this last weekend we were in
still Water for homecoming and was the first time everybody
got together in fifteen years in the same room, and man,
it was beautiful. We had a good time. We joked around,
we talked about the good times and what's to come.

Speaker 2 (02:08:44):
You know, what is it about getting older that makes
you reflect back on relationships you had? This is more
like philosophical like anyone in general, not just you specifically,
but that makes you reflect back and go, Man, I
want to redo on that.

Speaker 10 (02:08:59):
I think it's the more behind you than there is
ahead of you that I think, in my personal opinion,
I think it's looking around going you know, I have
something that's just pressing down on me that I would
like to lift off me, you know. And my kids
are nineteen in almost seventeen. You know, they told me

(02:09:19):
that it was so nice to see everybody together. It
was just like a weight was lifted. I think this
was part of it, you know. I mean my kids
never would bring up, hey, would you get the band
back together? Because they knew it was, you know, a
subject that I was not necessarily a sore subject, but
just the subject that I was tired of talking about.
But now, man, I keep going back to my family

(02:09:44):
and I are metal heads and comic book nerds, and
I was watching the entire world just enjoy each other
because of the Deadpool Wolverine thing. And I tell my wife,
was like, that's what I want to do, not only
you know, obviously not on the scale that they're doing it,
but everything they do is just positive and making everybody happy.

(02:10:05):
And I want to do that on a smaller scale.
And I feel like we got to do it. You know,
there were people that were meant, they're upset they didn't
get tickets and everything, but in the end, man, that
wasn't our fault.

Speaker 2 (02:10:17):
Would just all have fun, you know, right, uh you
mentioned I mean I think historically people think that there
was personal reasons to end the band to go and
spend time with family, which is true I would I
would assume. But what I'm hearing you say is no,
there there's more to it. And I'm not asking to
spill the beans, but like you're saying, there's more to

(02:10:37):
it than just that.

Speaker 10 (02:10:39):
But the thing that really the big issue was there
was never any like one issue. It was we were overworked.
We all had kids at the same time. I mean,
all of our kids are the same age, well we
all of us except Jeremy. Jeremy has four kids. They're
all different ages. But Randy and Grady and and I,

(02:11:00):
I mean our kids are all the same age because
our wives were all pregnant at the same time while
we were recording the record called Garage. And that was
a stressful moment, you know, because that was the year
that we did two hundred and fifty shows shows that's
not traveling. And so really there wasn't like a really
big blowout. It was just we were just overworked, over stressed,

(02:11:23):
and one night a disagreement happened and we just didn't
really recover from it, you know. Just and and I'll
say this to everybody out there, alcohol does not mix
well and a stressful a stressful condition, you know. But
now everybody's alcohol intake is either zero or barely And

(02:11:46):
I don't know, we just you know, when we started
the band, we were hell Randy was sixteen years old,
you know, I was seventeen. So I mean this is
something that we were We set out as teenagers as
a goal to do something, not necessarily change a scene
or change the way things are done or anything like that.

(02:12:07):
We just we just wanted to play music and have
fun and take it as far as we could. I
remember telling my wife when we just met us, like,
our plan is to take this as far as we can,
you know, and still have integrity without selling out whatever
that is, you know, selling it's selling out different to everybody,
but to me it was, you know, the they pegged

(02:12:30):
us as a country band. It's like, okay, but I'm
not doing the national dance. I'm not. We'll sign a
record label with them, but I'm not going to do
the dance. And it was just the label pushing us,
booking agency pushing us, and then pregnant wives and then
missing home and all of a sudden, everybody's just mad
and there was really no way to get past them,

(02:12:52):
and except poor a little bit more alcohol on it,
you know. And I'm not saying everybody, I'm really saying
me and uh Man, just one day we just w
just woke up and thought, if we don't ever play
a note together, at least we can you know, be
civil to each other. We weren't uncivil, but it was
just we just didn't talk. So it was nice to

(02:13:15):
It was nice to be able to shed shed that
gross skin and be able to hang out with everybody
last weekend and still water and you know, the guys
got up and jams a couple of tunes, and our
kids got up and we all jammed together. So we
had a big family thing, family jam and so it, uh,
I feel like it's on the right track.

Speaker 2 (02:13:33):
Is this gonna be the one Is it gonna be
a one off? Is this gonna be it?

Speaker 9 (02:13:36):
Or is there hopes to do other things.

Speaker 10 (02:13:39):
I am in the middle of never say never, because
I said never for a long time. I wouldn't see
why we wouldn't. I'm not going to don't. I really
don't want to get back on the road full time,
you know. I just did a pretty busy year with
What's Departed, and it was fun and everything, but it

(02:14:01):
made me realize that that I need to be home more,
you know. And my wife has a music school and
it's nice to be home bill to help her. And
my kids are in a metal band and I want
to help them pursue their thing, and I think doing
the Ragweed stuff, I'll be able to take more time
to be on with my family. So I'm not going

(02:14:23):
to say no. But it's definitely not going to be Hey,
let's go out for three weeks. You know. This will
be probably one office or whatever. But well, I'll be
able to have a more positive answer after we see
how April goes.

Speaker 2 (02:14:38):
I think people would love to see you guys at
the King's Ballroom again. But thinking realistically about this, you
guys just sold out four days at boom Picking Stadium,
right four days. You guys could sell out to be
Okay Center easily, I think the same amount of four days.
So I guess, Cody, what what does retirement look like

(02:15:02):
for you? As you as you're kind of you know, hey,
let's just do our thing and enjoy life, and you
want to spend more time at home? What does retirement
look like for you?

Speaker 10 (02:15:12):
And to me? Chasing my kids their dreams, you know,
you know, I take them to all these concerts, all
these festivals, and and they're really they're really good about
being social and about about networking and everything. And I
know that it's a hard a hard business to really crack.

(02:15:33):
And I'm just now learning the metal world and the
people in it, and they're so kind. I Mean, when
I was a kid, my mom had me scared that,
you know, I was going to go to these metal
concerts and they were going to offer me free drugs
and I was gonna you know, get in fights and everything,
and and I mean the drugs thing. You know, I've

(02:15:54):
kind of seen that happen. But when it comes to
just the mentality of a metal cra they're so kind
and I would I'm so glad my kids picked that genre,
so chasing them around. You know, I live in South
Texas now, I have for twenty like twenty three years.
I think, man, I wouldn't mind going somewhere where it's cooler,

(02:16:17):
you know, Colorado, and following my kids and my wife
will never ever ever be able to not work. There's
no other way around that. Me. On the other hand,
I wouldn't mind just fishing and enjoying and enjoying cooler weather.

Speaker 2 (02:16:38):
Well, dude, we would love to spend more time talking
with you. We've run out of time. Congratulations on those shows, dude.
Everybody is so excited. I can't wait to see the
difference between Night one and Night four and what that's
like for you guys, and to see you enjoying it
up on stage. Man, that's that's a very cool moment
that not everybody gets to experience. To relive something from

(02:17:01):
the past and keep it going. Uh.

Speaker 9 (02:17:03):
Final question for you.

Speaker 2 (02:17:04):
We ask people what's the best thing you bought on
Amazon for fifty bucks? What's the best thing you bought
on Amazon for under fifty bucks? Cody?

Speaker 10 (02:17:12):
For under fifty bucks, I bought a pair of black
and orange parachute pants that I got to play in
and still water the other night. That's the last thing
I bought that was around fifty dollars pants.

Speaker 2 (02:17:23):
I love it, didde, I got great clothes on Amazon.
Don't sleep on Amazon's close selection. Man. You think Costco's
got a good now Amazon has got good stuff.

Speaker 10 (02:17:31):
Yeah. The older I get, the more it's like, I'm
just gonna have it delivered my poor.

Speaker 2 (02:17:35):
One hundred percent. Cody, Thank you so much man. Congratulations again,
and uh, there's anything we came ot you can ever
do for you. Make sure you're calling us to help out.

Speaker 10 (02:17:44):
Thank you, guys. I will say this that they did
a breakdown of the ticket sales and seventy seven thousand
of them. We're from the Oklahoma So thank you guys.

Speaker 2 (02:17:51):
Awesome, awesome, so cool man. Have a great day, Cody,
thanks so much.

Speaker 10 (02:17:55):
Bye, guys.

Speaker 2 (02:17:55):
That's Cody Canada. We'll be back big Man Morning Show.

Speaker 3 (02:17:59):
Read Jurns next Elsea's Morning shown KMOD.

Speaker 9 (02:18:18):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Time to
find out what we learned. Lindsay, what'd you learn today?

Speaker 8 (02:18:26):
I learned that if you're tired in the afternoon, it
could be a sign of dementia. And if that's the case,
our workplace is less of an office and more of
a memory care unit. And I also learned that Gimpy
unintentionally was a home wrecker and got stung in the
ass for it.

Speaker 2 (02:18:42):
Gimpy, What'd you learn today? I learned the best way
to see if a fence is electrical is to piss
on it. And I also learned life can hit you
hard at any times, and at any moment you might
need some emergency dong. I learned a woman lies about
how many men she's had sex with what? And I

(02:19:02):
also learned that hot asphalt was not on the list
of things to not mess around with.

Speaker 9 (02:19:08):
Goryn say, make sure that dishwasher is loaded, right.

Speaker 8 (02:19:10):
It's lindsay stop tracking my cycle.

Speaker 2 (02:19:12):
Yes, this is Gimpy and I'm sorry, thank you, thank you,
thank you.

Speaker 3 (02:19:19):
Maddy.

Speaker 2 (02:19:21):
Can I get a call? Yeah, well you.

Speaker 7 (02:19:32):
Lay me it should be no top.

Speaker 2 (02:19:36):
Makes a noise.

Speaker 10 (02:19:41):
Interrpassword.

Speaker 2 (02:19:43):
Coryn new messages. The Big Mad Morning SHO would like
to take a minute to thank troops from Oklahoma and
all over.

Speaker 10 (02:19:48):
The United States. These soldiers have sacrificed. Give the Big
Mad Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (02:19:51):
Before you to back like the total douchebags that they are,
total douchebagg little incomplete douchebag.

Speaker 10 (02:19:58):
We honor and respect you, honor and respect you.

Speaker 2 (02:20:01):
We honor and respect you. Do blass rock and roll.

Speaker 8 (02:20:05):
Cickles Tulsa.

Speaker 10 (02:20:07):
I'm blessed Tulsa.

Speaker 2 (02:20:07):
We try boys,

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