All Episodes

November 11, 2024 138 mins
Welcome Back From The Weekend!! We Talk About The Best & Worst Parts, Wicked Movie Merch Screwed Up, Some Of These Disney Tapes Are Worth Some Major Coin, Stolen Lap Dance, When One Brother Stabs Another, We Talk To An Awesome Listener, Jeff Hensley Stops By, Jimmy Carter Has Been Nominated For A Grammy, & The Cowboys Blame The Sun For Their Loss!!!
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
You are about to witness as amazing Emo has comes
in living Man's property of all times. Yes, my bow
suck on you bow down to your master. Then you

(00:32):
did it. Then you did it?

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Where you did?

Speaker 3 (00:43):
Allowed to play, Allowed to play, Come out to play,
Come out to play.

Speaker 4 (00:59):
The crystal wos the.

Speaker 5 (01:07):
Sun is rising.

Speaker 6 (01:08):
God, Oh wake up, wake up.

Speaker 5 (01:10):
Now, don't worry.

Speaker 7 (01:13):
We're all here to.

Speaker 5 (01:14):
Show you how jan Witz horses Raw Station.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
K m o G.

Speaker 7 (01:20):
Home of the Listens is a family.

Speaker 5 (01:22):
Be don't turn downtown, just wait and say.

Speaker 8 (01:28):
Are you ready?

Speaker 5 (01:29):
Are you ready to jove in time to.

Speaker 6 (01:32):
Start to show crapstick apl about Fresco, Whisping Man Marny Show,
Welcome to the Working Week.

Speaker 5 (01:47):
It's on such a bore kick back, makes up the
offing and they get hardcore.

Speaker 1 (01:54):
Hang your whisby and then mess. Pick up your.

Speaker 3 (01:57):
Phone there line you're on the air.

Speaker 5 (02:05):
Dot liskay time dot shows.

Speaker 9 (02:23):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six O.

Speaker 1 (02:27):
K m o D.

Speaker 9 (02:30):
Can also text bmms and then what you want to
say to eight two, nine four five Listen online the
website that Rocks k m o d dot com. Past
shows available on iTunes search under BMMS.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
Listen with your cell phone.

Speaker 9 (02:44):
Get the iHeartRadio app available from the app store of
your cell phone provider. More on that at iHeartRadio dot
com and we're on Facebook, Facebook dot com, slash b
m MS six y nine. That's where you can hang
out with us each and every day. Good morning Linz,
Good morning Corbyn, Good morning.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
Give Bee, Well, good morn.

Speaker 9 (03:04):
Jelly Roll is going to be down in Okay see
at the peycm Center Thursday. You got a pair of
tickets for you. We've got best and worst of the weekend.
What's the best thing that happened this weekend and the
worst thing that happened this weekend.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
We're going to talk with our listeners because they're awesome.

Speaker 9 (03:22):
And you might not know this, but we are on
the verge of the January surge in divorces and if
you have questions about that, Jeff Heinsley will be in
the studio to answer questions about divorce, custody, guardianship. Maybe
you're like, I don't want to get divorced because I
don't want to pay alimony. You might not alimony is

(03:44):
it really a thing? Here Jeff can explain how that
works when he's in at nine. If you have a question,
email it to us show at kmot dot com, Show
at kmoty dot com, or you can text it BMMS
and whatever that question is to eight two nine four five,
or just call when he's in the studio at nine
four six.

Speaker 1 (04:01):
Oh k m O D boom. Wicked is like doing
a movie. Have you guys ever seen Wicked? I have
not really.

Speaker 10 (04:12):
Yeah, I know that's a version of the Wizard of Oz.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
Additional story, additional story.

Speaker 10 (04:18):
Yeah, I have heard of it. I've heard of the play,
never actually watched it.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
Musical musical. I don't want to make a mad ner.
I actually like musicals.

Speaker 9 (04:32):
Yeah, yeah, never been to one. I've seen a few
on TA I've seen one on TV. You've probably seen
more than one and just not known it musically. Sound
of Music is the only one that comes to mind.
You didn't watch Grease at all? Wizard of Oz?

Speaker 10 (04:46):
Yeah, I guess those would. Grease would be for sure.
I don't think Wizard of Oz would be a musical,
but I guess it is.

Speaker 9 (04:53):
It is, okay, almost any Disney cartoon movie. Yeah, it's
a musical. I've seen Wicked. It's awesome, it's good they've got.
They're doing this new movie with some stars and some
Broadway stars, and I guess it looks good.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (05:14):
But they've done some marketing with Target, which makes sense.
Write any movie, like I gotta have some marketing. People
gonna watch it and then they're gonna want to buy
the characters or the dolls or why not try to
get a little piece of the money. Some of the
celebrities that are in it, they get a piece of
the marketing or the merchandising. That happens, makes sense. Hell,

(05:38):
Wicked did this and they put a QR code for
more and the QR code goes to porn.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
Oh no, hooray.

Speaker 9 (05:51):
Loop QR codes all the rage. Everybody seems to be
doing them. They are quite convenient rather than giving a
web address, just going out scan the QR code.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
Right. It feels.

Speaker 9 (06:03):
We've utilized it many times in our house for our
kids stuff, for our stuff. Hell, the menu sing was
kind of a thing for a while. Yeah, some places
still do that. Why should I have to print out
menus when you just look at it on your phone?
And uh, now they're kind of a predicament. They say
they're going to fix it. I don't know how a
little late. I mean, they're gonna have to reprint everything.

Speaker 10 (06:26):
And if there's you know, merchants already out there, well
that's that's a lost cause.

Speaker 7 (06:33):
Yeah, you do a complete recall on everything.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
I mean maybe what's sold or what I'm sorry, what
hasn't sold?

Speaker 10 (06:43):
Right, Yeah, because you're going to have to rely on
people who actually bought it to bring it back.

Speaker 11 (06:48):
And are they going to get sued now by people
that bought the merchandise and like, oh, the QR hold
code sent me to my kids, negligence on my hurt
we got.

Speaker 9 (07:03):
I don't think they could sued. It's not like it's
not like it had trapnel in it.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 9 (07:09):
At least it didn't have the acceptable amount of trapnel
in its Yeah. I don't think there's much this could
spell the demise of like QR codes.

Speaker 10 (07:18):
Yeah, or at least put some you know, rules and
regulations behind it. Hey double check, triple check what you're doing.

Speaker 1 (07:26):
They could have.

Speaker 9 (07:27):
They could have and unknowingly it you know, expired between
the research and the development and the printing. It's not
like they did it on a Thursday and they went
into the stores on a Friday, probably years in the works,
and then the website expired or the ownership of the
website expired, and some porn guys in greasy stained shirts

(07:53):
and stacks of red bull were like, get it, and
they got the domain and got some traffic.

Speaker 10 (08:00):
From what I read, it looks like somebody left off
one very important word when it comes to the website
that is sending you to. It was supposed to say
Wicked movie, right, Wicked movie dot com. Somebody left off
movie and just put wicked dot com and that's what's
sending it to.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
The porn site, which, by the way, you don't see anything.

Speaker 9 (08:24):
Okay, they want you to sign up first, and they
want you to pay for your membership first before you
get to access any kind of It doesn't have any
boobs or anything. No, but it's nothing on their landing
page at all whatsoever. When you go to wicked dot com,
which is which is what this QR code sends you to,
you know, so it's it's not hurting anything.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
It's not offensive at all, non at all.

Speaker 10 (08:49):
You see women at maybe with some makeup on and
and maybe a brazier.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
That's about it. I try to go the word porn
is on here only once? Yeah, award winning videos.

Speaker 9 (09:00):
Yes, a guy in a in a douchey Jamiroquai hat
and girls, I mean clearly they're dressed up and so
you could all. I mean, but there's nothing porn about that,
right right, the scant the league, Yes, I don't.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
Even know scanton. I mean I see their shoulders and
a v neck right right? Well, the one that.

Speaker 10 (09:19):
Looks like she works at Twin Peaks. You you can
see your belly button? Oh no, can't you? Yeah, if
you gotta, you gotta look through the sea and the
damn that's yeah. But there's nothing offensive about there's not
all whatsoever. So somebody dropped the ball and and just
forgot oops my bad, probably in a rush to get

(09:40):
this merch out. I mean, they could have had wicked
dot com and it could have expired too, because I've
never heard of wicked porn.

Speaker 1 (09:52):
No, and I don't know.

Speaker 9 (09:54):
Maybe that's it says over six thousand plus scenes of
wicked porn.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
Is wicked porn? Is that? Is that? Like? Good? Is
it evil? I don't know? Right? Wicked?

Speaker 12 (10:05):
Good?

Speaker 1 (10:06):
Is it?

Speaker 9 (10:06):
Some sort of triangles and a bunch of different variations
and I don't know.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
I don't know. Is it wick End?

Speaker 10 (10:11):
Maybe they're all from New Jersey. Yeah, that's some wicked pawn.

Speaker 9 (10:15):
Right, fair good news though it's in four kid quality
because I have been totally critical of my poorn quality.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
I like to see all the wrinkles and dimples and
acne and back me. Yeah, back me for sure, for sure. Yeah,
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (10:36):
They could send out stickers to the retailers and put
new QR codes over.

Speaker 10 (10:40):
That is one way to do it, for sure, And
it's going to create a little bit of work for
everybody else, but oh well, it fixes it and probably
cheaper than having to recall everything, and you can get
everybody who actually bought one the ones that are out
there already, those are gone.

Speaker 1 (10:56):
You just can't do nothing about them. Yeah. I also
don't think they're gonna sell, probably not.

Speaker 11 (11:01):
Would that make them then like a collector's items, yes, okay.

Speaker 9 (11:06):
In a in a small group, right, yeah, because of
the air, not because.

Speaker 1 (11:12):
Of they're wicked dolls? Right, But even then I don't
I don't know how much that would be.

Speaker 9 (11:17):
You gotta find someone's willing to buy it, yeah, and
nobody's gonna be like Okay, So here's my Hank Aaron
baseball right right, here's my uh, here's my lyric sheet
from Bob Dylan. Here is a drum from a drum
cord during the Civil War. And here is my misprinted
QR code. Wicked doll. Yeah, I don't think those run

(11:39):
the line, but maybe of people that collect dolls, maybe, Yeah,
certain fans of because everything has somebody who's an over
the top fan.

Speaker 10 (11:48):
And I'm sure there's an over the fan of Wicked. Yeah,
you know there is. Yeah, they're in for Wicked, They're
in for Wizard of Oz. Is there any other Wiz
spin on the Wiz?

Speaker 9 (12:00):
But those are very all those are very different niches
of the movie. Not everybody who loves Wicked, he has
even seen Wizard of Oz. And everybody loves Wizard of
Oz has seen Wicked, Wiz or the or the Whiz.
By the way, we've brought up the Wiz now like
within five days of each other twice.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
We have Yeah, because of Quincy Jones. Oh yeah, I
don't think of Quincy Jones. Want to think of the Wiz?
You should? You should, yeah, but you should think of
Quincy Jones though, for sure. Yeah, I probably should. Yeah.

Speaker 10 (12:35):
Yeah, but Michael Jackson as the Scarecrow was that right?

Speaker 1 (12:38):
Yes, I'll give you.

Speaker 9 (12:40):
I'll give you a hundred bucks if you tell me
who the tin Man was. By the way, I say
any name because I don't know either.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
Wasn't it like Donna Summers, the Good Witch, Diana Ross?
I know it was one of them. Yeah, I couldn't
tell you who played the gowerly Lyon know.

Speaker 7 (13:00):
I to my point, Michael was actually the lion.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
Really, it looks like a scarecrow to me. I don't know.

Speaker 7 (13:07):
I don't know either.

Speaker 9 (13:09):
I mean, it's not for you, so why would you
be to the point of like The Wicked was like, yeah,
there are big fans of it, but I don't know
if there are enough to flood targets to buy all
the stuff. To me, it's like having Mama Mia dolls
or Miss Sigon dolls.

Speaker 10 (13:25):
This is an interesting cast of the Wiz. I never
really got into it. I've seen it a few times.
This turn go ahead, right. Richard Pryor was the Wizard
of Us and the Wiz. How awesome is that?

Speaker 1 (13:36):
Right? And then Michael was the Scarecrow.

Speaker 10 (13:39):
Nipsey Russell was the ten Man, how about uh, Mabel
King was the Wicked Witch of the West, and Diana
Ross was Dorothy all My Carpenter was the good Witch.
Teresa Merritt was aunt em Clyde Barrett was a subway
pat Okay Clyde Barrett, Stanley Green was Uncle Henry. And then, uh, yeah,

(14:05):
I think it wasn't more into it. But how about
that you learned some things Bray and then in rural
City gold pianist Quincy Jones.

Speaker 9 (14:15):
I'm not I've only seen parts of it. I've never
watched the whole thing.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
I did when I was a kid.

Speaker 10 (14:22):
When I was a kid, I was the last time.
Really Yeah, I think I might have been twelve at
the time.

Speaker 9 (14:28):
Yeah, because for those that are no, the Wiz is
a version of the Wizard of Oz for the African
American community. Because in the movie, the person that plays
the uncles, they're also the tin Man and they're they're
the same ones. But based off what you're saying, that
doesn't sound like what's true. So I don't know if
they all meet it a cookout or what.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
I don't know either. Again, it's been thirty something years
since I've watched it. Probably more than that probably probably
you should really go home and watch the Whiz. Now.
Uh no, you're not gonna watch the Wiz. It's available
on Sling and Zumo, but she's got both of those.

Speaker 10 (15:09):
I don't have Sling. Ah yeah, and you can get
it on Prime Video for three ninety nine.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
How about that.

Speaker 9 (15:16):
I would think anybody nobody's like, ooh, let's get the Wiz.
I think people that liked that movie have it already,
probably more than like, unless it's an assignment for a class.

Speaker 10 (15:27):
DVD or a VHS somewhere, Yeah, let's watch the Wiz
break out the old VCR out of the.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Attic, I mean yeah, or you just convert over.

Speaker 9 (15:37):
There was a time where I was collecting every Disney
movie for like.

Speaker 7 (15:41):
On VHS when they would open them from the vault.

Speaker 9 (15:45):
Right, But they had the special packaging that plastic Yeah,
weird plastic casing. It was different than the others, and
uh yeah, that was stupid waste of time. I didn't
buy any of them. They were in the record industry.
They were given to me, and so I was collecting
them that way because there's a record label that was
associated with Disney and that they would give us a

(16:07):
movies ton like you go to the like they would
have a kit like a box, like a suitcase, and
go which ones do you need?

Speaker 10 (16:12):
I wonder if those are worth anything? Like let's say
the like The Little Mermaid, the Original Little Mermaid where
on VHS on VHS where the cover is like just
a bunch of dogs, you know I'm talking about sure, Yeah,
so I wonder if that like is worth anything?

Speaker 9 (16:27):
Now, all right, what do you think, lindsay? How much
do you think the original packaged or unpackaged can.

Speaker 1 (16:32):
Be almost say packaged? You know, yeah you are? Uh
what do you think, lindsay?

Speaker 11 (16:36):
I like to think it is just because I'm sure
there's so many people that did collect them and save them.
But it's probably if it is maybe one hundred and
fifty bucks.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
I think if it's twenty five I'll be surprised.

Speaker 10 (16:49):
Wow cow, all right, So this one here is a
Little Mermaid out of print, controversial, almost ten thousand.

Speaker 1 (16:59):
Dollars on it. Wow.

Speaker 10 (17:01):
Yeah a band cover rare The Little Mermaid, Disney, three
hundred and sixty four dollars on Poshmark.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (17:08):
So, and here's one for four thousand dollars black Diamond,
The Original Little Mermaid VHS Classic So if you have one, So.

Speaker 9 (17:21):
These are the most valued Disney VHS tapes Number nineteen
tron sixteen hundred dollars, Aladdin three thousand, The Jungle Book
three thousand, Rescuers down Under five thousand, Alice in Wonderland eight,

(17:43):
Bambi nine, one hundred and one Dalmatians from nineteen sixty one,
ten thousand dollars, Yeah, Pinocchio ten thousand dollars, Peter Pan
from nineteen fifty three on VHS, twelve thousand dollars In
The Hound twelve thousand, three hundred Really cars came out

(18:05):
in two thousand and six, by the way, and fourteen thousand, Wow,
Sleeping Beauty from nineteen fifty nine on VHS, sixteen thousand,
Dumbo twenty thousand, Cinderella twenty five thousand, Fantasia. We're at
number five, twenty five thousand, Snow White and The Seven

(18:28):
Doors from nineteen thirty seven on VHS twenty six thousand
dollars is the value? My goodness, we're not even now.
We're in the top three. Little Mermaid okay, nineteen eighty nine,
thirty three thousand.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Dollars what According to this.

Speaker 9 (18:45):
The highest priced Little Mermaid tape on eBay is thirty
three thousand, two hundred dollars Number two nineteen ninety one's
Beauty and the Beast thirty five thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
Okay.

Speaker 9 (19:01):
The condition of the tape is what plays the highest
part the tape. The offered tape is in its original
shrink wrap. It's proven it's never been opened. Beyond that,
there are some nice touches collectors WI enjoy, including the
original Disney seal, as well as stickers on the cover
highlighting promotional deals from nineteen ninety two and then number one,
valued at forty five thousand dollars. I don't even know

(19:23):
what this is. Disney marking the Millennium. It came out
in two thousand. It's not one of the beloved Disney movies,
but a release that serves as a more behind the
scenes feature. It's documentary like feature of the Millennium celebration
at Walt Disney and EBCOI okay, interviews of the imaginative

(19:47):
some of the interviews of the imaginative minds putting the celebration together.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
It's listed on eBay for forty five thousand. The cellar
describes the item as brand new.

Speaker 9 (19:55):
It's a rare tape since it was only ever sold
at Epcot Center.

Speaker 10 (20:00):
Okay, you know there's somebody listening right now who probably
has most of those.

Speaker 7 (20:06):
But there, I'm sure they're opened.

Speaker 10 (20:07):
I'm sure they are too. But even then, if they're open,
they should still be able to fetch something.

Speaker 9 (20:13):
Yeah, I mean, I think I think if like the
Little Mermaid's open and it's the original one, it's probably
worth at least one thousand, at least or five hundred bucks.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
Yeah, because thirty three thousand is crazy.

Speaker 11 (20:27):
Yeah, where would you even go to see if if
they have any value?

Speaker 9 (20:31):
Well, you have to look again, it's if someone buys yeah, right,
So just because it's listed, which is what these say,
doesn't mean someone's buying it for that much. So you
can take whatever you have, go on eBay and look
it up and see and you can see what other
people are listening at.

Speaker 1 (20:46):
Yeah, so that's the going value.

Speaker 7 (20:48):
I don't even own any vhs.

Speaker 1 (20:51):
Let me ask you this, Do you own a Drew
carry doll in its original box?

Speaker 13 (20:55):
No?

Speaker 14 (20:55):
I don't.

Speaker 9 (20:57):
Not everybody can be on the cusp of what ture. Uh,
all right, we got to take a break. We've got
tickets to jelly Roll We're gonna give away. Plus we
want to know what's the best thing and worst thing
that happened to you this week.

Speaker 1 (21:08):
We'll be back. Good morning, It's The Big Man Morning Show.

Speaker 9 (21:23):
Nine one, eight four six oh kmod can also text
bmms and then what you want.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
To say to eight two nine four five. Headlines and
news are supposed to jolt you awake.

Speaker 9 (21:36):
We're supposed to get your attention and that's why we
do news quikies because the headlines are so crazy.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
Let's get started. It's time for news quikies. World news,
local news and news that just makes you.

Speaker 10 (21:50):
Say, what the Here's Corbyn gimbem Lindsay with what's going
on news quikies from The Big Man Morning Show.

Speaker 11 (21:55):
In ninety seven, five Ko, Pennsylvania man arrest at strip
club for stealing a lap dance. This happened in Clearwater, Florida.
We're twenty seven year old Mohammed Abadullah Ala Balan was
arrested on a petty theft charge for stealing a lap

(22:17):
dance on Saturday. Copp said Mohammad was buying a service
from a woman inside the Florida Strip Club when he
refused to pay the forty dollars service fee for the
lap dance. Mohammad sought to leave the Rain Nightclub in
Clearwater without paying for the two forty five am private dance.
A deputy arrested him after being told by a club

(22:39):
manager that the patron had not paid the forty bucks.
He was charged with misdemeanor theft. Mohammad was booked into
the County Jail, from which he was released last night
after posting, of course, a forty dollars bond. A judge
has ordered him to stay away from Rain, which features
fifty five televisions, three full liquor bars, thirty private dance rooms,

(23:02):
and several VIP suites.

Speaker 7 (23:04):
Muhammad was a recently.

Speaker 11 (23:06):
He received a bachelor's degree earlier this year from Alvernia University,
which is a private Franciscan school in Reading, Pennsylvania.

Speaker 7 (23:15):
Maybew was in Clearwater just celebrating.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
What well it could have been online?

Speaker 10 (23:19):
What uh what was the name of strip club Rain?
R E I G n oh like Rain?

Speaker 7 (23:29):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (23:29):
Yeah, I wonder if that would be that would fall
under the Defrauding and Innkeeper law, which is what they
call it's the law for dining dash right, but it's
not just for dining.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Right, it includes leap dances too.

Speaker 9 (23:42):
It should I would But which so, defrauding an innkeeper
charge at the strip club's a pretty funny charge. I'm
not saying people should do this. These are hardworking people, sure,
but yeah, you.

Speaker 7 (23:53):
Got a service. It needs to be paid for, h
of course.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Of course.

Speaker 9 (23:57):
However, to get a charge of defrauding inn keep her
at a strip club is a pretty what have you ever.

Speaker 1 (24:02):
Been charged with the crime? Yeah? What was it?

Speaker 9 (24:05):
A defrauding and innkeeper? You dine and dashed? Not exactly.
I was at honking Bobos and decided I'd just go right.
I want to know how he did it, because usually
I guess they asked for money.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
After he just.

Speaker 10 (24:24):
Pushes her off right onto the floor and she can't
get up because she's like baby deer with those giant
platform heels on, you know.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
And then he just skid daddles right on out the door.

Speaker 9 (24:35):
But usually the BOUNCERSUNC bouncers are pretty involved. That would
be I would think, create a ruckus.

Speaker 7 (24:40):
And that sounds like you're pretty high end place.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
I settled down far private room, settled down.

Speaker 10 (24:47):
Oh their website, man, it looks pretty snaky.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
This is.

Speaker 10 (24:49):
I'm just sure nice clear water. They got some good
looking dancers, for sure.

Speaker 1 (24:52):
I'm sure it's nice. But you know what constitutes a bar?

Speaker 7 (24:58):
Yeah, that's true. Be a little like pop up cooler
or whatever.

Speaker 11 (25:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
Yeah, just they sell liquor from behind him. Yeah.

Speaker 10 (25:07):
Their logo looks a lot like the radio shack logo.
I wonder if they can get in trouble for that.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
Yeah, I don't know. I don't even think of me.
Is going to get a confused? Probably not.

Speaker 10 (25:16):
I'm here for a caliber, right, I just wanted an
audio jack.

Speaker 1 (25:21):
Something else is getting jacked instead.

Speaker 10 (25:25):
I got this story strictly for my brother today's birthday,
by a happy birthday dude.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
Man easily the better of you two. Yeah, more than likely.

Speaker 10 (25:35):
Man stabs brother in the neck for talking over the
food while he was cooking. Because I stabbed my brother
in his leg twice anyway twice?

Speaker 1 (25:44):
Well yeah, yes, it just gleams over like it's no
big deal every time.

Speaker 10 (25:49):
It's all good brotherly love is what it is. It's
attempted murder. Now, no, this is a tempted murder. Getting
stabbed in the least one totally different man. There's a
difference between the neck and the leg. So this comes
out of Miami where our twenty year old guy named
Alexander Rodriguez was in the house that he lived with

(26:12):
his brother, his brother, right, So, his brother and him
are in the kitchen and his brother's cooking food and
they're talking back and forth, and then out of nowhere,
Al Here grabs a kitchen knife and then stabs him
in the neck with it, and they kind of tussle
back and forth. The brother ran to his bedroom to
try to, you know, I don't know, get away from

(26:34):
the situation. But that's when Al followed him into his
bedroom and he cut him on his arm and his
face as well. So then Al decides to go ahead
and hid till it out of there. He leaves police
a fire department. They come, They find Al's brother in
the house with some clothing on his gash, trying to

(26:57):
stop the bleeding. They dig him to the hospital. He
is in stable condition. So the police set up a parameter.
Now they're looking for Al Here. Well, they did find
out he was hiding in a tree and ended up
getting him out of the tree. They took him to
jail for felony attempted meyer deer and aggravated battery with

(27:18):
a deadly weapon. They said, why did you stab your brother?
He said he was talking over the food, which irritated him,
and he also said that he was worried that his
brother was going to get the knife and stab him first.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
Soon. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (27:36):
Nigerian national arrested for romance fraud. R forty year old
Nigerian national has been arrested for allegedly running a romance fraud,
stealing of over three million dollars. Prosecutors say Franklin Waldallo
would meet people on dating sites and gain trust. In
one case, he claimed he was in the military and

(27:56):
fined one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. The victim gave
him nearly two and a half million dollars. There are
at least four victims Nowaldi Nowaldio. This guy operated from
outside of the US when but when he arrived in Texas,
he was arrested. He'll be extradited to Seattle, will he'll
be facing charges and the country he's from. He was

(28:17):
recently elected in the like the head of part of
the government.

Speaker 7 (28:20):
Wow.

Speaker 9 (28:22):
Living two lives man, Yeah, right, living two lives. I
we were playing that segment and best of of giving
that guy two hundred dollars to make shoes from he
or whatever. Yeah, and to give nearly two and a
half million dollars online.

Speaker 10 (28:36):
That's ridiculous, insane. It's one thing to give him maybe
a couple hundred bucks, but two and a half million.

Speaker 1 (28:43):
That's multiple transactions.

Speaker 10 (28:45):
I would think maybe I don't know, I've never transferred
that much money or.

Speaker 9 (28:52):
Yeah, but let's let's simplify it down to like experiences
we can relate to, because million dollars doesn't make no clue,
but giving meeting somebody online. Of the three of us,
Gimpi's done that the most. Yeah, and in that time,
has any of them ever asked for money?

Speaker 1 (29:11):
Oh? No, m m.

Speaker 10 (29:14):
And even if they did, I wouldn't be giving it
to him.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
Yeah, that would be a giant red flag.

Speaker 10 (29:20):
Right, yeah, some day, because that's basically all it is
that I've met, you know, maybe line dating, right, I mean,
you don't know if you never meet him. Yeah, until
you meet him and they are like, hey, can can.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
You spot me one hundred bucks?

Speaker 11 (29:34):
No?

Speaker 1 (29:35):
Can you spot me fifty bucks?

Speaker 9 (29:36):
Uh? No?

Speaker 10 (29:38):
Right it out go hawk something not hucked to it.
But you know pawn something.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
What if she was?

Speaker 9 (29:44):
She assumed she was like, hey, I'll send you a
picture for the money.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
No, no, why why?

Speaker 8 (29:54):
Why?

Speaker 10 (29:55):
So I can see your mangled up kitten get out
of here.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
No, I can see that. I can look at you
and come on the floor. I don't need to.

Speaker 11 (30:02):
You can get a wicked QR code and see that real.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
All right, we're gonna take a break. We'll be back.
Good morning.

Speaker 9 (30:24):
It's the Big nine morning shown four six. Okmod can
also text bmms and then what you want to say
to eight two nine four five.

Speaker 1 (30:35):
Coming up best and worst of the weekend.

Speaker 9 (30:36):
We want to know what's the best thing that happened
to you this weekend and the worst bmms and whatever
that is to eight two nine four five.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
Let's do balls to the wall. Sports.

Speaker 11 (30:56):
The Detroit Lions storm back from a sixteen point half
time deficit to knock off the Texans on Sunday Night football.
Detroit kicker Jake Bates drilled the game winning fifty two
yard field goal as time expired to lift the Lions
to a twenty six to twenty three victory over Houston
at NRG Stadium. Bates tied the game at twenty three

(31:17):
with a fifty eight yard or with five minutes remaining
in the contest and finished the game two for two.
Jared goff overcame a five interception performance and finished at
fifteen of thirty for two hundred and forty yards and
two touchdowns. Sam Laporta and Aman Ross Saint Brown each
had a receiving touchdown, while David Montgomery found the end
zone before the eighth time this season. On the ground,

(31:38):
the Lions have won seven in a row to moved
to eight and one. Houston QB C. J. Stroud went
nineteen of thirty three with two hundred and thirty two yards,
one touchdown and two picks. Joe Mixon and John Metchi
the third scored for the Texans as they slipped to
six and four. I'll be quite honest, that first half
of the game, I thought I was watching the Cowboys.

Speaker 7 (32:02):
I mean, Houston had the lines looking like the Cowboys.
I was confused. They were awful.

Speaker 9 (32:08):
Yeah, But to me, what makes good teams like difference
between a regular just a regular NFL team and an
elite NFL team is how do you handle adversity? Yes,
and Detroit showed why they should be respected absolutely. Those
two field goals that Packer or Pocker whatever, that kicker.

Speaker 10 (32:26):
Was like, they were like hairline in like he barely
made them.

Speaker 1 (32:32):
But yeah, if you can.

Speaker 9 (32:33):
How do you handle adversity, because everybody's gonna deal with it.
Five interception, no joke, right, no joke. That's the Jared
Goff we all know and love, right, right, But yeah,
how you handle adversity? And they overcame it. Joe Mixon
is a stud. He has found a home in Houston.
He looks so good.

Speaker 11 (32:54):
Yeah, and man, those Texans uniforms.

Speaker 1 (32:57):
Yeah, they've done a good job this year.

Speaker 9 (32:59):
They had their those Matt Black ones with the alternate
Houston logo, so an homage.

Speaker 1 (33:05):
To the old Oilers logo. It was those were cool.

Speaker 7 (33:08):
Yeah, it was an awesome game.

Speaker 11 (33:11):
I turned it off because I thought they were Lions
were going down for sure, but yeah, pulled it off.
And then the Los Angeles Chargers are are one a
three game winning streak following a twenty seven to seventeen
victory over the Titans at SOFI Stadium. Chargers took the
lead late in the first half when Justin Herbert scored

(33:31):
on a four yard touchdown run. Quentin Johnson and Hassan
Hayskins added a second half score to put the game away.
Herbert passed for one hundred and sixty four yards in
a touchdown as the Chargers improved six and three. Will
Levis had one hundred and seventy five passing yards and
two touchdowns, while Calvin Ridley caught five passes for eighty

(33:51):
four yards and a pair of scores. The Titans fell
to two and seven.

Speaker 9 (33:56):
I think people are sleeping on the Chargers. I think
they've already beaten their record last year. Yesterday Justin Herbert
was scrambling out of the That's not Justin Herbert. I
think they I think they look good. I think they're
gonna play spoiler to some people.

Speaker 11 (34:11):
And the Vikings overcame a bad outing from Sam Donald
during a twelve to seven win over the Jaguars at
EverBank Stadium. Donald passed for two hundred and forty one
yards and three interceptions in the victory. The Vikings were
kept out of the end zone for the entire game. However,
the Purple held Jacksonville to one hundred and forty three
yards of total offense and made a pair of fourth
quarterfield goals to take the lead for Good Minnesota is

(34:34):
on a two game winning streak. Mac Jones had one
hundred and eleven passing yards and two interceptions and the
losing effort. The Jags have lost their last three games.

Speaker 9 (34:44):
They feel like a balloon deflating in a room. Were
just going around the room. The defense is saving them
every week and.

Speaker 7 (34:51):
That is your balls to the Wall sports.

Speaker 11 (34:53):
I'm Lindsay in ninety seven to five KM.

Speaker 9 (35:05):
Good morning, It's the Big nine Morning Show nine eight
four six oh kmo D. You can also text DMMS
and then what you want to say to eight two
nine four five, Good morning Lindsay.

Speaker 7 (35:17):
Good morning Corbyn.

Speaker 11 (35:19):
Ghost will be at the Dickey's Arena in Fort Worth,
Texas in August and if you want to win tickets
to the show, go to the website at rocks kmod
dot com.

Speaker 10 (35:29):
Good morning Gibbie, Well, good morning Corbyn. You know we
are less than a month away from our twenty eight
hour Toy Drive. That's where we stay up and broadcast
live for twenty eight hours, collect the toys for the
Marine Corps Toys for Tots. We're gonna be doing at
David Busters on December fourth and fifth. Starts at six
am on the fourth, ends at ten am on the fifth.
Come on down and bring a new unwrapped toy and
help some kids. I got an email from our friend

(35:52):
at UPS. They always do a big.

Speaker 9 (35:56):
Toy drive there and try to fill a pup trailer,
and he sent me they've already got their truck out,
they got the banner on. It just very cool that
they're already starting. So we hope you guys will be
a part of that as well. Best oft worst of
the weekend? What's the best thing that happened this weekend?
And the worst thing that happened this weekend? BMMS and
whatever that is to eight two, nine four five. I'll
call at nine one eight four six, Oh kmod lindsay

(36:17):
what's the best and what's the worst?

Speaker 11 (36:18):
The best part of the weekend was Friday night. The
seats weren't the best, but me and a couple of
girlfriends went and saw Pink at the Bok Center and
it was an awesome concerts.

Speaker 7 (36:34):
She Pink looked amazing, her vocals were amazing, she.

Speaker 11 (36:42):
Flew through the air, did all the acrobatic stuff and
it was awesome.

Speaker 1 (36:47):
Did she get free tickets from here?

Speaker 9 (36:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (36:48):
Yeah, yeah, How many you get.

Speaker 11 (36:51):
Four actually, and yeah, nosebleed seats. But when she's doing
her aerial stuff, like, it doesn't matter. You're seeing her
and you're in the venue, so it doesn't matter. Like
it was amazing, uh open. Yeah, she had two openers.
She had a guy down there on spinning records.

Speaker 7 (37:13):
And then there was a guy a woman, her name
I can't remember it.

Speaker 1 (37:20):
It's a horrible band name.

Speaker 11 (37:21):
Young, a young Hispanic artist, and she was pregnant.

Speaker 7 (37:26):
Oh, really cute.

Speaker 11 (37:28):
Okay, she looked like like a like an older Jenna
Ortega the actress, and yeah, she was good.

Speaker 7 (37:41):
I'd never heard her before.

Speaker 1 (37:46):
The script.

Speaker 11 (37:46):
No, that's that was on her summer tour. They opened
for her.

Speaker 1 (37:51):
Yeah, okay, but yeah it.

Speaker 11 (37:54):
Was a damn good show. Yeahs yes, that was it.

Speaker 10 (38:00):
And kid cut you Up, Kid cut Up, Kid cut up,
got it.

Speaker 7 (38:07):
Yeah, Pink was definitely the highlight.

Speaker 1 (38:09):
I would hope.

Speaker 10 (38:10):
So yeah.

Speaker 11 (38:13):
Oh and her daughter was her Willow was on stage
with her, performed with her one song that was cool.
But yeah, she has got it her body banging It's awesome.
And then the worst part of the weekend was didn't
get home from the show until about one o'clock in
the morning, and then had to get up at five

(38:35):
in the morning to get my son to wrestling at
six am.

Speaker 7 (38:37):
So I was exhausted, exhausted.

Speaker 1 (38:41):
Why'd you get home at one am?

Speaker 7 (38:42):
Because of traffic?

Speaker 11 (38:43):
Rain? Just I mean that Bok Center was packed. It
was a sold out show, so it was packed.

Speaker 1 (38:51):
So what time did she get off? Stay?

Speaker 2 (38:52):
Like?

Speaker 7 (38:52):
What time did was it a little after eleven?

Speaker 1 (38:55):
It took you three hours to get home?

Speaker 11 (38:57):
Well, arm our driver had a hard time finding us.
Traffic heavy and we dropped someone.

Speaker 7 (39:06):
I was the last stopped.

Speaker 11 (39:09):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, so not a big deal, but
it was. I was tired, and then sitting at wrestling
until about one o'clock in the afternoon the next time.

Speaker 9 (39:18):
Oh that's not bad. When we talked on Thursday, you were,
I know, yeah yeah.

Speaker 11 (39:22):
Well he lost both matches, so it's a double yeah
yeah yeah, but it was it was exciting to watch.

Speaker 7 (39:30):
Yeah yeah, yeah, So my first experience with it.

Speaker 1 (39:34):
Did he love it?

Speaker 7 (39:35):
He did like it? He did.

Speaker 11 (39:37):
He said he liked it more than he thought he
would and he wasn't as nervous as he thought he
would be.

Speaker 7 (39:44):
He did.

Speaker 11 (39:45):
His first match was up against last year's state champion,
so that made him really nervous.

Speaker 1 (39:51):
Do state champions at that age level?

Speaker 11 (39:52):
I guess, so huh yeah, yeah, but uh yeah, I
survived it.

Speaker 7 (39:58):
I survived it.

Speaker 11 (39:58):
And then I got home and took a a two
and a half hour nap.

Speaker 1 (40:02):
Best and worst the weekend? What's the best thing that
happened this weekend?

Speaker 9 (40:04):
And the worst thing that happened this week and BMMS
and whatever that is to eight two nine four five,
we can call it nine when eight four six o came,
ode gimpy.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
What's the best and what's the worst.

Speaker 10 (40:12):
Best part of the weekend would be Saturday, all day Saturday.
So Saturday, my youngest boy turned eighteen. So now all
my kids are all grown up and adults now, right,
And so I took him out for lunch, and I
was good, spend some time together and you go with him.
He wanted to go raising canes, so we went and

(40:33):
had some some chicken fingers, got the good old three
finger combo.

Speaker 1 (40:36):
Yeah did they called the gimpie? That's good? Goddamn right
they should anyway, So that was fun.

Speaker 10 (40:43):
And then Saturday night, so I drop him off and
then Saturday night, being as that today as my brothers.
My brother's birthday, we celebrated Saturday night and we went
to dinner at the Salt Grass right up the road here,
which is pretty good, and then we went to the
pomp and can continue to drink way more than what
we probably should.

Speaker 9 (41:03):
What's the because I know that that's a chain, and
some people have said it's pretty good.

Speaker 1 (41:07):
What kind of food is it? Is it like outback
or is it like Chili's.

Speaker 10 (41:10):
I consider it more outbackish, okay, right, because they have
steaks and they have poultry and seafood. They have burgers
and stuff there as well, but I just go there
for the steaks, you know, And I got, uh what
did I get?

Speaker 1 (41:24):
I got this.

Speaker 10 (41:24):
It was a Cajun ribbi, so it was like a
twelve ounce ribbi, but then it was smothered and like
crawfish and shrimp sauce.

Speaker 1 (41:34):
Whatever. Yeah, yeah, it was pretty good. It was pretty good.
So yeah, I did that.

Speaker 10 (41:39):
And like I said, we went to the Pump and
continued to party until we couldn't party anymore.

Speaker 1 (41:43):
So it was fun. Worst part of the weekend.

Speaker 10 (41:45):
I guess we'll be waking up this morning and get
on the facebooks and I'm scrolling and a buddy of mine.

Speaker 1 (41:50):
I knowing him since since well, he was the bouncer
at the first club that I dj' at back in
like two thousand and six, five four or something like that.

Speaker 10 (42:04):
So I've known this cat for about twenty years now, right,
And I guess he lost his brother. His brother was
in a car accident due to the storms last week
or whatever and ended up losing his brother. And I
met his brother a couple of times. Nathan was a
solid dude. But to find out that he's not around anymore,
it's like, ah, bummer, that sucks. My heart goes out
to Josh and his family.

Speaker 9 (42:26):
Best and worst of the weekend being a mess and
whatever that is to eight two nine four five, what's
the best?

Speaker 1 (42:31):
What's the worst.

Speaker 9 (42:33):
Best part of the weekend would have to be my kids.
They've been doing piano lessons. I've been taking them piano
lessons since for three years, like they've been playing a
long time, uh in kid time. And they had their
first performance recital like competition that they.

Speaker 1 (42:52):
Wanted to do. Oh like I didn't.

Speaker 9 (42:54):
I didn't care. It's their thing. It's not like but
I'm a I think that those are good. That's how
you know, like where you're at, how you're doing. Just
playing in front of your family and friends isn't always
a good measurement tool.

Speaker 1 (43:07):
But so they didn't. They did really good. They weren't
even nervous.

Speaker 9 (43:11):
It was really cool to see them feel comfortable and
doing that.

Speaker 10 (43:15):
Are they doing Mozart yet or are they still doing
like Twinkle Twinkle, Little Store whatever.

Speaker 9 (43:21):
I am not a piano person, so I can't I
don't know the right terms. But they're playing multiple notes
at the same time on different hands. There's a term
for that.

Speaker 1 (43:29):
I don't know what it is.

Speaker 9 (43:31):
My mother in law played, my wife played, I had instruments,
So that was pretty good. And then we went to
like someone recommended this special donut place that like they
pop up and go into different locations all the time,
and it's called a super secret donut shop, I think.

(43:51):
And I had maybe the best donut I've ever had
in my whole life.

Speaker 10 (43:55):
What made us so better than any other donut?

Speaker 9 (43:57):
So it was it was a brief don it, okay,
and it was salted caramel okay, and uh it was.

Speaker 1 (44:06):
It was amazing super secret donuts.

Speaker 9 (44:09):
But uh yeah, and they move around to like coffee
shops and sometimes there's a brewery in town that in
the morning they do coffee at the brewery and so
like they've done it there before.

Speaker 1 (44:18):
Man, it was it was.

Speaker 9 (44:20):
It wasn't cheap, but for a culinary like Oh okay,
like Gimby would never go do this? Yeah, probably not,
but I could see Lindsay doing it.

Speaker 7 (44:28):
So how'd you find out where they were?

Speaker 9 (44:30):
Then posted online? And yeah it was. It was again,
best donut I've ever had ever. Cool On top of that,
I had the best cocktail I've ever had ever too
with the donut. No, okay, this is a separate incident.
We went to a Mexican place called Dos Ponchos up
here in front of the Target at one hundred first

(44:51):
and had Beira tacos so good, best consumme I've had
in Beera tacos around here. And then they do a
thing called a Clarify mango margarita. Now I don't like tequila,
I don't like margarita's, but what they do is they
make a margarita, put milk in it, let it sit
for twenty four hours, and then drain the milk off
and it is all it is. Mind blowingly good, highly

(45:16):
recommend if you're a Margarita person.

Speaker 1 (45:19):
For sure, it was ridiculously good.

Speaker 9 (45:23):
Okay, so that was all. I guess all those things
were the best. That was a tangent. Worst part of
the weekend my my wife left today. She had to
go to town for a week and work, and that
always sucks. I do better when I have another human
around me during the day. Best and worst of the weekend.
Best relaxed all weekend, got caught up on things around

(45:45):
the house. Worst my dance band soul Shaker, was off
all weekend. Back to the twenty thirty PJS. Best took
a road trip with my dad to look at a
hot rod to buy, had a nice drive with him.
Worst card turned out to be a nightmare. Some nice
parts bolted to a frame held together with hopes, dreams
and a booger welds that wouldn't hold up to a

(46:07):
couple of expansion joints on the road.

Speaker 1 (46:10):
That's cool. You got to do that?

Speaker 9 (46:12):
Yeah, be able to go and have a car ride.
I would give anything to do something like that.

Speaker 1 (46:17):
Real. Best My birthday was Saturday.

Speaker 9 (46:20):
Worst I found out it's going to cost eight hundred
dollars to get my bike on the road. Uh, best
three day weekend. Worst had to use the line, Well
that wasn't a fart oo ew I mean that's not
I hear you, But it's not your friend's brother dying.

Speaker 1 (46:41):
Best. Best thing is I met an amazing woman after
years of looking. Oh that's awesome.

Speaker 9 (46:47):
Worst, I got sentenced to two years in prison after
being out on bond for nineteen months for a nonviolent,
non drug related first charge, clean, sober, and making more
money than I have ever ever have in my life.
I'm curious, what did you get in trouble for?

Speaker 10 (47:00):
Yeah, right, probably drugs. No, it's a non violent, non
drug related m.

Speaker 9 (47:06):
Shoplifting, heetty, theft, right, kidnapping assault?

Speaker 1 (47:11):
Maybe kidnap would be violent, right, yeah? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (47:15):
What are some examples of non violent, non drug related crimes?

Speaker 10 (47:20):
Shoplifting, theft of sorts as long as I guess there's
not like a weapon involved. Yeah, it's the only thing
I could think of.

Speaker 9 (47:29):
Uh, property crimes, theft, vandalism, arson, financial crimes like embezzlement
and fraud and tax evasion. Uh, intellectual property theft, forgery, bribery,
disorderly conduct, loitering, publican decency. Those are all not Yeah,

(47:55):
all those could eat You could easily get in trouble
for loitering.

Speaker 10 (47:58):
I want to say this gag on trouble for publican decency.

Speaker 7 (48:02):
I'm gonna say tax fraud.

Speaker 1 (48:04):
I'm gonna go embezzlement. Okay, okay, let us know. We
want to know.

Speaker 10 (48:10):
Oh, is this the the worst part of my worst
part was my wife had her self care weekend and
left me with our one year old.

Speaker 9 (48:19):
And the best part of my weekend was my wife
leaving so I got to spend some more time with
the little man for the weekend. Do do do people
do this? Do married couples do this? Like one leaves
for a self care weekend? I've heard of like, Hey,
I'm gonna go get my nails done, or go get massage,
or get my hair did or whatever, like I get Yeah,
but a week a whole weekend is that common?

Speaker 1 (48:38):
Must? By the way, I.

Speaker 9 (48:39):
Would have the same reaction to like a golf.

Speaker 1 (48:41):
Weekend, right right?

Speaker 9 (48:44):
Yeah, No, I've I have never experienced that. Do you
have friends that do self care weekends?

Speaker 7 (48:53):
Probably? I've never heard it called the self care weekend?

Speaker 1 (48:56):
What do they call it?

Speaker 7 (48:56):
I've heard of a trip, but I don't think that
they've ever.

Speaker 11 (49:02):
Maybe it's leaving the kids behind but never leaving their
spouse behind, so they've maybe left the kids with Graham
and Grandpa for the weekend.

Speaker 7 (49:12):
But yeah, must be awesome.

Speaker 1 (49:17):
I don't know. I think it's kind of weird.

Speaker 9 (49:18):
But what I mean, whatever if it works. Yeah. Best
took my girls to the Pink concert. Worst had to
leave Seema in Las Vegas early to attend. Bought the
tickets last year when she was supposed to be here
last November. Yeah, that show had been moved a lot.
I'm actually surprised it even happened.

Speaker 1 (49:39):
Uh.

Speaker 9 (49:39):
Best was seeing my husband and sons celebrate the Marine
Corps birthday yesterday. Worst Hubby broke his clavical tore a
rotator cuff surgery, and ruptured his bicep. Oddly enough, I
have the exact same injury right now. I have a
broken clavical, torn bicep and the trapezoid muscles torn too.

Speaker 1 (49:59):
That from your hakaraate.

Speaker 9 (50:02):
Probably not, I'm gonna say yes, Probably from just being stupid. Okay, Uh, Best,
my saw my son for the first time in a year. Worst,
my daughter is in the same college town and didn't
want to see me.

Speaker 1 (50:18):
Best.

Speaker 9 (50:19):
My daughter won her first varsity wrestling match. Worst, Oh
you sucks.

Speaker 1 (50:23):
I think you're.

Speaker 9 (50:24):
Being kind with the words about you. I think you're
being kind. Ou fans should be enraged.

Speaker 10 (50:33):
Oh, you know, first time in a new conference, so
it's going to take so much.

Speaker 9 (50:38):
I don't know Texas doesn't feel that way. No, And
I'm curious about your daughter. Was she doing varsity because
sometimes there's varsity women's now wrestling?

Speaker 1 (50:49):
Like was she doing with the boy?

Speaker 2 (50:51):
Like?

Speaker 1 (50:51):
Did she whoop the boys? Ass?

Speaker 11 (50:52):
They didn't have one at Marcus's match on Saturday, eighth
grade and there was high school there too. There was
no females. There was that was in a whole other
building was female wrestling.

Speaker 1 (51:04):
So there was okay, so it was yeah, that's good. Best.

Speaker 9 (51:08):
My son's first second grade football team won the championship. Worst,
my daughter acted like a total banshee all weekend.

Speaker 1 (51:17):
Uh. Not paying child support was the the charge. Huh.

Speaker 9 (51:22):
We're gonna ask Jeff about that because I thought Jeff said,
like the offense of putting you in jail, like they
try really hard to not put you in jail.

Speaker 1 (51:31):
We're gonna have to ask you know.

Speaker 7 (51:32):
It came from a different text.

Speaker 1 (51:33):
Yeah, okay, so somebody's probably just their suggestion.

Speaker 9 (51:37):
Oh okay, okay, uh, he didn't pay for the lamp dance, okay,
took best, took a four day weekend for my birthday.
Worst the realization that I only have a few more
weeks until I'm unemployed, laid off and replaced. Might as
well use that PTO. Well, I've got it right. Yeah,
you absolutely should use your time off if you have it,

(52:00):
because they don't.

Speaker 1 (52:02):
You don't get an award for not using it. Nope,
it doesn't roll over and use it or lose it. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (52:08):
I know some people aren't happy because I took Friday off,
but I don't care. I have my days off. I'm
taking every single one of them. Yeah, I want to
know what the charge was, like, what you get in
trouble for.

Speaker 1 (52:21):
And you just got out.

Speaker 9 (52:24):
Of being in jail, and you've been looking for a
girl and you found her, but you but you've been
out of You've only been out of prison for a
year and some change. So to be fair, it don't
be hard on yourself. It didn't take that. You know,
as long you were in prison, it's kind of hard
to find a viable partner in prison.

Speaker 1 (52:46):
It still happened, it can still happen.

Speaker 10 (52:51):
Then might not be the partner you're wanting, but it's
the partner you're getting. I mean, options are an important
thing to think about, absolutely one hundred percent.

Speaker 9 (53:02):
You're what's the what's the Chris rock Line? Min or
is only as loyal as their options as well. All right,
we gotta take a break. We've got tickets to jelly
Roll we're gonna give away when we come back. Good morning,

(53:25):
It's the Bigmed Morning Show. Nine one, eight four six,
oh K M O D. You can also text emms
and then what you want to say to eight two
nine four five.

Speaker 1 (53:38):
Let's play a game.

Speaker 9 (53:39):
Jelly Roll is gonna be playing down in Oklahoma City,
which is very cool because he was just here at
the be Okay Center. So to turn around, dude, show
down in Oklahoma City. If you missed him, you got
a chance to go down.

Speaker 1 (53:48):
There and see him.

Speaker 9 (53:49):
Get your tickets ticketmaster dot com for the Paycom Center's
performance of jelly Roll, and we're gonna give away a
pair right now. We're gonna play I Know.

Speaker 15 (54:03):
It quote flick you're half right, spit Flick, No still
half right, flick off, there you go.

Speaker 1 (54:16):
Oh right, Age is the thing, dude, Yes it is.

Speaker 9 (54:23):
I came up with the name, and I'm not remembering,
all right. So I'll give you three movie quotes. You've
got to get at least two of them right to
win those tickets to see jelly Roll down in Oklahoma City.

Speaker 1 (54:37):
Let's go here. Good morning, you're on the air. What
is your name? John? How are you today? You there? Yeah? John?
How are you today? How good are you?

Speaker 9 (54:48):
Good friend? So I'll give you three movie quotes, one
at a time. You need to get at least two
of them right to win these tickets. Okay, ok here
is the first. I'm gonna give you an easy one. Okay,
I love the smell of Nate Palm in the morning.

Speaker 16 (55:08):
Full metal jacket.

Speaker 1 (55:09):
Full metal jacket.

Speaker 9 (55:11):
Is incorrect, that's actually apocalypse now.

Speaker 1 (55:14):
That's okay. That's okay.

Speaker 9 (55:16):
You just got to get these next two right and
you'll get those tickets see jelly Roll Thursday at the
pay Compson in Oklahoma City. Okay, all right, all right,
so here's the next one. See if I can't get
you an easy.

Speaker 1 (55:25):
One, yippie kaye? That hard?

Speaker 9 (55:29):
Yeah, I knew you had that one excellent, So you
just need one more to get those tickets. Okay, here, okay,
keep your friends close, but your enemy is closer.

Speaker 16 (55:46):
Oh I remember.

Speaker 1 (55:54):
Friends close.

Speaker 9 (55:55):
Scarface. No, it is not scarface. Man, you're in the right.
It's from the Godfather part too.

Speaker 1 (56:06):
There man, you were there.

Speaker 13 (56:07):
All right.

Speaker 1 (56:08):
I'm sorry, John, thanks for playing. Thank you.

Speaker 7 (56:11):
Sorry.

Speaker 9 (56:13):
Okay, good morning, you're on the air. What is your name, Daniel, Daniel?

Speaker 1 (56:17):
How are you today? I'm doing good, good, all right, Daniel.

Speaker 9 (56:21):
I'm going to give you three movie quotes. You've got
to get at least two.

Speaker 1 (56:24):
Right, Okay, all right, let's see what we do.

Speaker 9 (56:30):
How about Carpe diem Seize the day, boys make your
lives extraordinary. Carpe a dim Seize the day, boys make
your lives extraordinary.

Speaker 1 (56:48):
Man, I don't know the Avengers.

Speaker 9 (56:50):
Maybe Avengers. No, that is that is incorrect. That is
from Dead Poet Society, Robin Williams.

Speaker 1 (56:56):
It's a fantastic scene. Yeah. Uh, let's see.

Speaker 9 (57:01):
I'll try and give you an easier one. I feel
the need, the need for speed.

Speaker 10 (57:09):
That's gotta be the Days of Thunder.

Speaker 1 (57:12):
Days of Thunder is incorrect.

Speaker 9 (57:14):
I'm sorry, man, it's actually top gun.

Speaker 1 (57:22):
No, worries, brother, no worries.

Speaker 9 (57:24):
Even the way you said it, Yeah, you're Daniel, were
so confident.

Speaker 11 (57:28):
But the way that you said the movie quote, I
felt like gave it away, because it's hard to even
give that movie quote without saying it the way that
Tom Cruise did in the movie.

Speaker 9 (57:38):
Unless he says it in Days of Thunder too, But
I don't think he does. I think it's only a
top gun movie. All right, brother, all right, guys, to
see you later.

Speaker 1 (57:47):
Man. I thought he had that one. I felt so good.
All right, last chance here, good morning, you're on the air.

Speaker 10 (57:54):
What is your name, Dan, Dan?

Speaker 1 (57:57):
How are you, buddy?

Speaker 8 (57:58):
I'm doing pretty good, Corn, It's so good.

Speaker 9 (58:01):
Uh, let's see how good you are at these movie quotes.
Here's the first one. Every man dies, not every man
really lives.

Speaker 8 (58:11):
Oh yeah, every man dies, not every man. What dreams
may come?

Speaker 9 (58:25):
What dreams may come is actually incorrect. That is braveheart.
All right, that's all right, wake up, time to die, Take.

Speaker 8 (58:39):
Up time to die. Oh. I kind of feel like
it might be a James Pawn movie or something. Ah, no, crap,
I'm jon a blank hair.

Speaker 9 (58:56):
Okay, okay, we'll do this. Don't give an answer to that,
I'm gonna give you a different one, but you gotta
get it right. If you don't get it right, it's over.
The greatest trick the Devil ever played was convincing the
world he didn't exist. The greatest trick the devil ever
played was convincing the world he didn't exist.

Speaker 8 (59:21):
Damn, that's not the Devil's advocate. That's my guess, though.

Speaker 1 (59:29):
That is incorrect. Sorry, Dan, I did not win, Buddy,
See you later.

Speaker 9 (59:35):
Usual Suspects Kevin Spacey's character and the Usual Suspects Wake Up,
Time to Die was Blade Runner? Yeah, all right, so
nobody wins those jelly roll tickets.

Speaker 1 (59:44):
So we're gonna take a break. Came well, be back.

Speaker 2 (59:45):
If you're listening to The Big Man Morning Show, this
he's Tulsa's Morning Show, Kim.

Speaker 9 (01:00:11):
Good Morning, It's the big Nd Morning Show. Nine one
eight four six O K M O D. You can
also text BMMS and then what you want to say
to A two.

Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
Nine four five. Jeff Finsley will join us at nine.

Speaker 9 (01:00:23):
If you have a question about divorce or custody or
guardianship or any family lost scenario, he'll be happy to
help you.

Speaker 1 (01:00:29):
Just email your question show at kmod.

Speaker 9 (01:00:30):
Dot com, text at BMMS and whatever that question is
to eight two nine four five or call at nine
one eight four six Oh kmod at nine See what
GIMBI has In this four by four al Corban.

Speaker 10 (01:00:41):
It says here that Trump Transition Team spoke forman says
that president will sign tens of.

Speaker 1 (01:00:46):
Executive orders, ten tens.

Speaker 10 (01:00:50):
President like Trump will hit the ground running on inauguration day.
That's what Trump Transition Teams spokeswoman Caroline Elevett said in
an interview where she promised Trump would immediately address issues
of illegal immigration, inflation, and energy policy.

Speaker 1 (01:01:08):
She said Trump would sign.

Speaker 10 (01:01:09):
Tens of executive orders on his first day and work
with congressional leaders to pass tax cut legislation as quickly
as possible. Trump also plans to fulfill his promise to
revitalize the fracking industry by signing executive orders approved approving
domestic energy projects.

Speaker 1 (01:01:29):
Every president does a bunch like in their first hundred days. Yeah,
just get them done, get them out of the way.

Speaker 9 (01:01:34):
Biden did fifty two on his first hundred days. Trump
did thirty nine. The last time in his first hundred
Obama did thirty four, and then before that Bush did thirteen,
so it's a common thing nowadays.

Speaker 10 (01:01:43):
Trump's scaling it back a little bit by just ting
I've been well.

Speaker 9 (01:01:47):
On his first day day first, I fully expect the
new president, whoever that would be, to do that.

Speaker 1 (01:01:53):
Yeah, for sure. What else we got here?

Speaker 10 (01:01:55):
Thousands of battle wildfires on West and East coasts.

Speaker 1 (01:02:00):
We are burning from the edges. In word, crispy grace.

Speaker 10 (01:02:04):
The wind driven mountain fire ranging across California's Ventura County
has now scored nearly twenty one thousand acres and is
roughly thirty one percent contained. More than two hundred homes
have been burned to the ground. Some three thousand firefighters
are on the scene battling the massive blaze. Meanwhile, on
the East Coast, a New York State volunteer forest ranger

(01:02:26):
is dead. Eighteen year old Dariel Vasquez was killed after
being struck by a falling tree. His passing marks the
first fatality resulting from the many wildfires burning in that area.

Speaker 1 (01:02:39):
Crazy right, Probably just didn't even know it was falling
hitting right, just trying to do his job.

Speaker 10 (01:02:44):
Twenty four more monkeys found after escaping South Carolina facility.
It always freaks me out. Anytime these test monkeys escape,
I've seen out break. I'm a r Were these tes monkeys?

Speaker 1 (01:02:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (01:02:58):
Yeah, I thought these were monkeys from like a conservatory,
like a place to like rehabilitate monkeys.

Speaker 10 (01:03:03):
From what I read they were, they were test monkeys.
And additional twenty four monkeys have been recovered in South
Carolina after escaping a research facility last week. One monkey
was found and recaptured on Saturday, and authorities caught another
twenty four on Sunday. Veterinarians have examined all of the
recovered animals and found that they were unharmed.

Speaker 1 (01:03:23):
Officials say most of the.

Speaker 10 (01:03:25):
Forty three escaped monkeys stayed near the research facility, and
now they have their eyes on a quote sizeable group
in a nearby wooded area. Police have emphasized there is
not a current threat to public health. How did they
get out right?

Speaker 1 (01:03:42):
Somehow? I mean they picked the locks.

Speaker 10 (01:03:44):
Maybe maybe some rogue employee reached in and just kind of,
you know, unlatched it. Maybe they didn't lock it all
the way, they didn't shut the door all the way
they thought they did. That crabbed one and pulled them close. Yeah,
another one lifts the keys out of his pocket. It's
just a big old monkey takeover monkey around. Oh god,

(01:04:05):
anyone fell and hit his head and the doctor's like, ah, no, more.

Speaker 1 (01:04:08):
Monkeys than this research facility.

Speaker 10 (01:04:11):
Lastly, here the Tulsa Police Foundation holds Serve for Safety
Pickleball Tournament. The Tulsa Police Foundation held the Serve for
Safety Pickleball Tournament benefiting the Tulsa Police Department. The tournament
started Saturday morning at the phil Crest Hills Tennis and
Pickleball Club in South Tulsa. During the tournament, citizens pay

(01:04:31):
to play pickleball.

Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
With Tulsa officers. Proceeds from the event will go towards
a new DNA testing machine for the police department.

Speaker 9 (01:04:40):
I was at the Dick's House of Sport. They have
a pickleball area. They have a bunch of play or
a bunch of equipment stuff. They even have disc golf stuff.

Speaker 10 (01:04:49):
Oh it's crazy the places, lindsay, did you ever get
into the pickleball like you said you was?

Speaker 7 (01:04:54):
I did learn how to play, okay.

Speaker 9 (01:04:57):
It was it was it hard to learn.

Speaker 7 (01:05:00):
No, No, it's fun though, it is fun.

Speaker 1 (01:05:02):
Well, it's a sport, I would yeah.

Speaker 11 (01:05:04):
No, yeah, let's see Russell Wilson threw three touchdown passes
to lead the Pittsburgh Steelers to a twenty eight to
twenty seven win over the Washington Commanders at Northwest Stadium.

Speaker 1 (01:05:16):
Hooray.

Speaker 11 (01:05:17):
Wilson finished fourteen for twenty eight with one hundred and
ninety five yards, three touchdowns and an interception. George Pickens
had five catches ninety one yards and a touchdown.

Speaker 7 (01:05:26):
Mike Williams, making his team.

Speaker 11 (01:05:28):
Debut after being acquired from the Jets, had just one catch, However,
it was the go ahead score with two twenty two
left in the fourth quarter. The Steelers improved to seven
and two with the victory. Jayden Daniels was seventeen for
thirty four with twoh two yards, no touchdowns and no
interceptions for the Commanders and the loss. Terry McLaurin had
five catches for one hundred and thirteen yards. Jeremy Chin

(01:05:49):
had thirteen total tackles, an interception and a fumble recovery.
Washington fell to seven and three with the defeat. And
that is your Balls to the Wall Sports ninety seven five.

Speaker 9 (01:06:11):
Good Morning, It's the big nd Morning Show nine one
eight four six O K M D. You can also
text BMMS and then what you want to say to
eight two, nine, four five.

Speaker 1 (01:06:20):
Good morning Lindsey, Good morning Corbyn.

Speaker 11 (01:06:23):
If you want to head on over to Arlington to
see the Dallas Cowboys play, our friends at Miller Lte
want to send you listen during the next of Balls
of the Wall Sports for your Dallas Cowboys update.

Speaker 7 (01:06:32):
And I'll tell you how to win those tickets.

Speaker 1 (01:06:35):
Good morning can be well, Good morning Corbyn.

Speaker 10 (01:06:37):
Next Saturday, the twenty third, oh you will be taking
on Alabama down in Norman and if you want to
go see him, well, we can hook you up tickets
to go watch them attempt to play cool I full
of free beer, cock hors lights, and a whole lot more.
You sign up to win at the website at rocks
chemo d dot com. We call it Crimson Cream and
chill all right. Time for our listeners are awesome. We

(01:06:59):
chat with the listener they're share a part of their
life with us. On the line right now is I
guess we dropped them? Hold on, okay, now I ain't
got him.

Speaker 9 (01:07:06):
Good morning Jackson, Good morning, How are you good Jackson?
It says you've been married for trees. How did you
How did you meet your wife.

Speaker 14 (01:07:15):
I actually met my wife at a bar in sky
Toil three days after I got out of prison.

Speaker 9 (01:07:21):
Wow and uh, wow, you must have felt like you
were really free get out of you know, like at
a bar and enjoin line and then you meet this lady.

Speaker 8 (01:07:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:07:29):
Yeah, it's pretty awesome.

Speaker 1 (01:07:31):
What was your line to her that to break the ice?

Speaker 14 (01:07:37):
I didn't have one. I was very awkward and weird.
But this old man I was playing pool with saw
her looking at me and me looking at her, so
he decided that he was going to go talk to
her mom, who was there with her and was not
coming back to shoot pool until I went over to
talk to her.

Speaker 1 (01:07:58):
Okay, after being how long were you in prison.

Speaker 14 (01:08:04):
The most recent time, I did a grand total of
about seven years, but I had six months where I
was out.

Speaker 1 (01:08:10):
You went twice. What were the two incidents you went
to prison for?

Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
Uh?

Speaker 14 (01:08:15):
The first time was drugs and the second time was
a lot more drugs.

Speaker 1 (01:08:22):
Okay, what how old were you each time?

Speaker 14 (01:08:27):
I think I was I turned twenty two. Yeah, so
it was right after I turned twenty one the first time,
and then I got out two years later and for
six months and went back and got out right before
my twenty ninth birthday.

Speaker 9 (01:08:43):
Wow, So what do you think about when you reflecked
on that? Obviously you're like, hey, it's not great, But like,
what do you think about when you reflect back on
having to go back to prison?

Speaker 14 (01:08:58):
I mean, really, I kind of knew it was because
when I got out that first time, I was not
rehabilitated in any way, shape or form. So I mean,
I'm just glad I'm not going to be doing it again.

Speaker 1 (01:09:13):
You got completely clean?

Speaker 14 (01:09:15):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, sir, I'm coming up on five
years sober.

Speaker 1 (01:09:20):
And how hard is that for you?

Speaker 14 (01:09:25):
Surprisingly easy, can spit considering some of the stories I've
heard other people tell about how difficult it is. But
a lot of that comes back to I have an
amazing wife, so yeah, it makes it a lot easier.

Speaker 1 (01:09:39):
And when you where were you in jail? At? Were
you in jail in Oklahoma or another state?

Speaker 14 (01:09:44):
It was Oklahoma where I did prison?

Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
Yeah, okay? And then how did you end up in Vegas?

Speaker 14 (01:09:52):
Well? I wound up in Vegas because I was doing
the whole hobo and backupond thing across the country and
I had been in Phoenix for a while, got tired
of it and hitchhiked to Vegas just to see what
it was.

Speaker 11 (01:10:06):
Like.

Speaker 1 (01:10:07):
How long did it take you to get from here
to Phoenix?

Speaker 14 (01:10:12):
That actually didn't take long. It was a bus trip.
I was walking down the road outside of Stillwater and
somebody pulled over and asked where I was going and
if I wanted to ride, and I told him I
was headed for Phoenix, and then he bought me a
bus ticket.

Speaker 1 (01:10:27):
Wow.

Speaker 9 (01:10:28):
And so you get you get off the bus stop
in Phoenix and you just go Okay, I mean, like,
what was the plan when you stepped foot in Phoenix?

Speaker 14 (01:10:37):
There really wasn't one. It was wintertime and Oklahoma was cold,
so Phoenix is warm, okay, And yeah that was the plan,
be warm?

Speaker 1 (01:10:48):
But where do you go after you get into Phoenix?

Speaker 14 (01:10:52):
Really? I just kind of hung out around the bus
stop and waited to run into more homeless people, to
kind of get away of where I would be able
to make a money, make money flying a cardboard sign.
Where would not be a good place to be in town?
You know what I mean?

Speaker 9 (01:11:09):
Right, as a guy who's done the cardboard sign thing,
what is your opinion of people who are on the
side of the road asking for money here.

Speaker 14 (01:11:20):
I normally have a five dollars bill in my wallet
that i'll give out about once a week. I've done it.
I know a lot of those people they choose to
be out there, but then some of them don't have
a choice. And in my opinion, if they're out there
and they're not lying about what they're doing, like if
they've got a sign that says something just absolutely ridiculously funny,

(01:11:42):
or they've got a sign saying, why lie, I need beer?
I mean, if they're not lying about what they're doing,
I'll give them five bucks.

Speaker 7 (01:11:49):
How can you tell the difference?

Speaker 14 (01:11:54):
You can tell whenever somebody's obviously you know, on drugs,
you know, out there trying to chew their ear off
and what and they've got a sign that said need
money for food or whatever. I'm counting that as a
lie because they're not hungry.

Speaker 1 (01:12:08):
And then you said you hitchhiked to Vegas? After that?
How long did it take you to get to Vegas?

Speaker 14 (01:12:16):
Once I left Phoenix, it took me about two and
a half weeks get to Vegas. Those little short hops.
I'd be walking down Interstate forty for a while and
somebody'd give me a ride to the next truck stop,
and it went like that until Kingman Arizona and Kingman.
I found somebody who gave me a ride all the
way up ninety three into Vegas.

Speaker 1 (01:12:38):
And so you get to Vegas, where do they dump
you out?

Speaker 14 (01:12:42):
They actually dropped me off right next to the MGM
Grand So you're in.

Speaker 9 (01:12:46):
Like you're in the Vegas like you you clearly are
in Vegas, all this money, clearly a lot of tourists,
and what do you decide to do?

Speaker 8 (01:12:58):
Well?

Speaker 14 (01:12:58):
I was looking around and this is actually goes right
into how I wound up in the tunnels under Vegas.
They have these bridges that go over Las Vegas Boulevard
and that's where people sit and fly cardboard signs. That's
where some of the street performers set up. So I
just found a bridge that had two or three other
hobos on it flying signs, and I sat down and

(01:13:21):
started flying my sign.

Speaker 7 (01:13:23):
What'd your sign say?

Speaker 14 (01:13:26):
I think at that time I was I think I
was using my bet you a dollar you read this sign?
That was the one I used most often, right going
for you?

Speaker 16 (01:13:38):
Yeah?

Speaker 14 (01:13:39):
Yeah, kind of angle it at the ground a little bit,
and when they're trying to read you sign, you flash
it at them and laugh at them and they give
you a dollar and it works.

Speaker 1 (01:13:45):
What's the most you ever got in one day?

Speaker 14 (01:13:49):
Well, when I was staying in Las Vegas on a
bad day, i'd make one hundred dollars in about four hours.

Speaker 1 (01:13:54):
Damn, that's not bad. That's not bad. And so you do.

Speaker 9 (01:14:02):
You're working on You're flipping your sign there on the bridge,
and then how do you get into the tunnels?

Speaker 14 (01:14:08):
Okay, so I'm flying, I'm doing my thing, flying my sign,
and some guy walks up to me and he is obviously,
you know, another homeless individual, and he says, hey, you
can't do that here. And I was like, man, there's
people up and down. What are you talking about. And
he says, no, you don't understand, you can't do that here. Well,
at the time, I was a very confrontational person. So

(01:14:30):
I stood up and I said, well, who's going to
stop me? And he hit me in the mouth. So
we're fighting. We fight for probably a good thirty forty
five seconds, and somebody starts yelling bumblebees, bumblebees. I had
no idea what this meant, but apparently Las Vegas Metro
walks around wearing bright black and yellow shirts.

Speaker 1 (01:14:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:14:52):
So somebody starts yelling bumblebees and he's like, hey, if
you don't want to go to jail, follow me and
takes off running. So I grabbed my backpack and I
take off after him, and we wind up over behind
the the Caesar's Palace and I throw my backpack down,
thinking I'm about to be fighting again, and he's like, no,

(01:15:14):
we're done with that. He said, you can fight. You're
coming with me. You're gonna meet Pops. And that's whenever
he led me to the entrances of the tunnels under Vegas.

Speaker 1 (01:15:24):
And Pops would be the mayor.

Speaker 14 (01:15:27):
Pops was the leader of his group of homeless people.
There are like clans and whole groups of individuals that
live down in the tunnels that don't intermingle with each other,
have territory fights over who can fly signs where it's.

Speaker 1 (01:15:45):
Crazy and you were you scared? Were you nervous?

Speaker 9 (01:15:50):
This feels a little bit like you're starting to meet,
like with a gang leader.

Speaker 14 (01:15:54):
That's pretty much what it was. And to be honest,
at that point in my life, there was very little
that made me nervous. A lot of it had to
be with do with being under the influence of drugs though, so.

Speaker 9 (01:16:06):
Right, And so was there any sort of initiation to
join this clan as you said.

Speaker 14 (01:16:14):
Not really. I mean I guess the initiation was getting
beat up by their quote unquote enforcer, and he decided
I was hard enough to beat up that he wanted
me to help them do their things.

Speaker 1 (01:16:27):
And so how what happened?

Speaker 9 (01:16:28):
Like, would you collect money and then you have to
give a percentage of it to them?

Speaker 14 (01:16:33):
Well, normally what we would do is me and the
other guys that I got into the fight with, we
would hang out near where other people were sitting, flying
signs and collecting money and make sure that none of
the other make sure the police didn't show up when
no one was paying attention, or make sure that none

(01:16:54):
of the other groups of homeless people sat down in
our area and took our money from us, and that
kind of thing.

Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
And then did you get like a piece of the pie?

Speaker 14 (01:17:02):
Yep, At the end of the day, they would split
it up and give me some and give him some
and divided amongst everybody.

Speaker 1 (01:17:10):
So you were like security for homeless people essentially.

Speaker 14 (01:17:14):
Yeah, pretty much.

Speaker 1 (01:17:17):
Wow.

Speaker 9 (01:17:18):
Okay, Now let's talk about the tunnels. So you're living
in the tunnels. Well, that feels like that would be
really dangerous.

Speaker 14 (01:17:26):
Yeah, yeah, it could be. I never actually saw it happen,
but apparently people got you know, killed down there, knifed
and whatnot. But yeah, a lot of the tunnels they'll
have like people paint up high on the wall so
you can kind of find your way around and don't
accidentally stumble into the wrong area. And there's some people

(01:17:49):
that live down there that I don't think ever come
out except whenever it's flooding. And there are some people
that have platforms built in the tunnels that stay above
the floodwaters whenever they do flood.

Speaker 1 (01:18:03):
What was the most surprising thing about living in the tunnels.

Speaker 14 (01:18:07):
The fact that you didn't have to leave for anything
if you didn't want to.

Speaker 1 (01:18:13):
Was there was there medical care down there.

Speaker 14 (01:18:17):
I wouldn't call it medical care, but there were groups
of individuals that show up. There's two or three groups
of people that go down there, uh once or twice
a week to check on everybody, and they bring like
first aid, kids and medical supplies and stuff to check
on people.

Speaker 1 (01:18:34):
It's like triage scenario.

Speaker 14 (01:18:37):
Yeah, yeah, pretty much.

Speaker 9 (01:18:39):
Okay, And what about food, Like, how did you guys
find food down there?

Speaker 14 (01:18:45):
That's one of the things that people would go out for.
But if you walk around, there are people that bring
food down and then sell it or share it to
other homeless people in the tunnels, like the people that
don't want to go out and interact with people.

Speaker 1 (01:19:01):
You mentioned.

Speaker 9 (01:19:02):
You mentioned people getting murdered down there. Is there other
crimes that happened down there are like people getting their
stuff stolen or things like that.

Speaker 14 (01:19:11):
Oh yeah, you leave your stuff alone and somebody else
is gonna walk off with it. That's the way it is.
I mean, it's it's really kind of a if you're
not part of a group, you don't want to be
in the tunnels because it's it's really kind of like
gang warfare down there, just with homeless people.

Speaker 9 (01:19:31):
And how what was your deciding factor to leave to
get out of there?

Speaker 14 (01:19:37):
I got arrested?

Speaker 1 (01:19:38):
What'd you get arrested for?

Speaker 14 (01:19:41):
I had warrants in Oklahoma and I went and tried
to uh get foodstamps. And when I went to get
food stamps, they I guess they ran my name and
they're like, hey, yeah, come on back, and the lady
is like, oh, give me about five minutes, I have
to go check on something. And about two minutes after
she walked out, two police officers walked in and arrested

(01:20:02):
me for warrant to Oklahoma.

Speaker 1 (01:20:03):
Oh man, So they extradited you back.

Speaker 14 (01:20:06):
Yeah, yeah, and that was a whole adventure as well.
It took like three months to get back to Oklahoma.

Speaker 9 (01:20:13):
So you were just incarcerated in Nevada until they could
get you back here.

Speaker 14 (01:20:17):
I was incarcerated in Nevada until or for about thirty days,
and then they started shuffling me from county jail to
county jail and holding cells across the country all the
way back to Oklahoma.

Speaker 1 (01:20:30):
Wow. And what was that like?

Speaker 9 (01:20:34):
Was it were you every time you go to a
new jail, did you have to kind of re establish
yourself and gain your respect or how did that.

Speaker 14 (01:20:40):
Work in some of them? Yeah, some of them. The
people didn't care. Whenever you're on transfer, you're considered a
flight risk and they put you in whatever their maximum
security unit is. So most of the jails I stayed in,
it was they put you in a cell and leave
you there, bring you.

Speaker 1 (01:20:58):
Your food solitary essentially, right.

Speaker 14 (01:21:02):
Yeah, pretty much. Now, there were a couple that were
like open dorms where I was on the dorm with
all of their county's murderers and whatnot, but.

Speaker 1 (01:21:11):
You would be by yourself, so you were safe.

Speaker 14 (01:21:14):
No, no, no, no, some of them were open dorm
where their maximum security is. They put you in there.
They put you in there and they locked the door,
and you just kind of meander around. You've got your
bunk and they serve your trays through a spot in
the door.

Speaker 9 (01:21:32):
Was there any of those times, even when you were
living in Vegas that you felt like like, upon reflection,
now you go, I can't believe that was a chapter
of my life.

Speaker 14 (01:21:40):
Oh yeah, yeah. I look back and I'll get to
telling stories to my wife and she has the same reaction.
They're like, I'm surprised I'm still alive.

Speaker 9 (01:21:49):
Sometimes it says here in the notes, you accidentally became
a pimp in Vegas.

Speaker 1 (01:21:54):
How do you? I mean, how do you accidentally become
a pimp?

Speaker 14 (01:21:58):
Okay? So I was walking around Las Vegas and this
woman approaches me and tries to, you know, sell me
her product. I guess we'll call it, and I told her, no,
I'm not paying for it, and she starts having a
little bit of a breakdown, and she says, well, will
you at least use your ID and rent the room
for me because I don't have ID, And I'll give

(01:22:20):
you some money in the morning. You can stay at
that gas station right there and play games, so you
know I'm not cheating you. I said, screw it. Sure
so I rented her a room, and in the morning,
sure enough, she brought me some money and a friend
saying that she wanted to do it again, and her
friend wanted a room too. So by the end of
the week, I have five hotel rooms for five different girls.

(01:22:43):
And I had beat up a guy because one of
the girls had come running over. Oh he was mean,
da da da da da hit me and whatnot. So
I beat him up, and I'm assuming he didn't go
to the cops because at the time I weighed like
I'm five 't nine, and at the time I weighed
like one hundred and forty pounds. And this was a big, old,
like six foot two guy that I got the better of.

(01:23:04):
And I did not realize that I could be considered
a pimp until at the end of the week. The
guy who who ran the motel came storming into the
gas station and he says, hey, hey, you are you
the guy that's pimping out my motel. I just kind
of paused for a minute, and I said, well, I
guess I am. So that's how that happened.

Speaker 9 (01:23:26):
But they didn't get like a standard issued hat or
boots or coat or anything like that.

Speaker 14 (01:23:33):
Caine, No, no, But after he said that, I felt
like I should have had it.

Speaker 9 (01:23:37):
Yeah, So how did you end all that? You just
tell him you can't stay there anymore.

Speaker 14 (01:23:42):
I got bored and walked off.

Speaker 1 (01:23:44):
Just didn't renew their rooms or anything.

Speaker 14 (01:23:47):
Well, well, I had renewed their rooms, and then about
halfway through the night, I got bored and I don't
remember what I decided to do, but I meandered off
to do something else and never could find that hotel again.

Speaker 9 (01:23:59):
Is it possible you were tripping and this is just
something that you believed happened during a trip.

Speaker 14 (01:24:05):
I believe that all of my stories up until I
turned twenty were that that's a possibility.

Speaker 1 (01:24:13):
How much money do you think you made pimpin.

Speaker 14 (01:24:18):
I don't know. I spending five or six hundred dollars
a night sitting at that gas station casino.

Speaker 1 (01:24:23):
So at least that much gambling.

Speaker 14 (01:24:27):
Yeah, wild, sitting at the sitting at the slot machine
all night playing.

Speaker 9 (01:24:34):
It says your celebrities would give you money. It says
two celebrities gave you one hundred bucks.

Speaker 1 (01:24:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:24:40):
I actually met Reeba McIntyre and Blake Shelton one time
outside the Caesar's Palace. Again. I was sitting there. I
have my bet you a dollar. You read this sign,
and you know, I kind of angle it down and
I look at people's feet and kind of catch them
out of my peripherals, and when it looks like they're
reading the sign, I turn it up and make eye
contact with them. Well, I'm sitting there and there are

(01:25:01):
two people walking by and they've been reading everybody's signs,
so they get close enough and I flipped the sign
up and make eye contact, and standing right there looking
at me, grinning is Reba McIntyre. So my reaction is
I said, holyes, you're reeve it Effan McIntyre. And she
starts laughing and Blake Shelton standing next to her, and

(01:25:22):
he goes, well what about me? I said, I don't
care who you are. That's Rebass and McIntyre. And that
made both of them laugh pretty good, and they both
gave me a hundred dollar bill.

Speaker 1 (01:25:32):
Wow, that is That's a phenomenal story, man.

Speaker 14 (01:25:37):
Yeah, I thought that was pretty cool.

Speaker 1 (01:25:39):
Is that the only famous person you ever met on
the street?

Speaker 14 (01:25:43):
No, I actually met Johnny Depp in Las Vegas as well.

Speaker 1 (01:25:47):
Tell me that story.

Speaker 14 (01:25:49):
Me and a bunch of other homeless people were drinking
fireball whiskey that plays into the story Fireball whiskey and
this guy, scraggily looking dude walks up to us and
he's like, Hey, can I drink with y'all? I just
want to feel normal for a little while. Okay, sure,
why not? So he starts drinking with us, and we

(01:26:10):
noticed that over at one end of the pedestrian bridge
are these two guys wearing suits that have been standing
there the whole time. And the drunker this guy gets
that he's drinking with us, the more he starts sounding
like other people. And finally somebody at somebody was like, hey,
are you Johnny Depp? And that question was asked after

(01:26:33):
we listened to Jack Sparrow argue with Willy Wonka because
Jack Sparrow wanted rum, but Willy Wonka liked the fireball
because it tasted like candy.

Speaker 9 (01:26:44):
That feels like I believe you. I feel like that's
just something Johnny Depp would do.

Speaker 14 (01:26:49):
And so as they were arguing, Johnny Depp says, why
don't y'all just shut up and let me drink? And
then a little while later, one of the guys in
suits walked over and tapped the guy and said, hey,
it's time to go back to your trailer.

Speaker 4 (01:27:05):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:27:07):
All right, that's crazy.

Speaker 9 (01:27:08):
And it says you you're in the uh the refuse
business now.

Speaker 14 (01:27:15):
Refuse? Yeah. Yeah, I drive a trash truck now for
the company out of Skytook. I drive the rule route
in between Skytook and Barnstall and out by the lake.

Speaker 1 (01:27:25):
How do you like that job?

Speaker 14 (01:27:27):
This is probably the easiest job I've ever had. I
love it.

Speaker 1 (01:27:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (01:27:31):
And the part that sucks is you got to what
you work a lot of days.

Speaker 14 (01:27:34):
Right Monday through Friday. That's it.

Speaker 9 (01:27:38):
Okay, that's a pretty good deal man. Well listen, it's
been interesting talking to you, Jackson. I appreciate you taking
the time and congratulations on that bride and take care
of her and and you know, enjoy your your life.

Speaker 1 (01:27:50):
Man.

Speaker 14 (01:27:51):
Thank you. Y'all have a wonderful day.

Speaker 1 (01:27:53):
All right, your letter, that's Jackson. Our listeners are awesome.
We're gonna take a break and we'll be back.

Speaker 2 (01:27:57):
You're listening to The Big Mad Morning Show. Is Tulsa's
Morning Show ninety km o D.

Speaker 9 (01:28:13):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Four six
oh k M O D. You can also text bmms
and then what you want to say to eight.

Speaker 1 (01:28:24):
Two nine four five.

Speaker 9 (01:28:27):
Uh, I got this thing to bring up just because
it feels like salt and the wound, and that is
Jimmy Carter has been nominated for a Grammy. How do
you feel I had a spry forty nine Corbyn because

(01:28:50):
I'm not one hundred and I have no that ship
is old. I have no plans to get a Grammy nomination.
Now what the hell does he get a Grammy for?

Speaker 1 (01:28:58):
For an audio book?

Speaker 9 (01:29:00):
And uh this it's ten songs, I guess, and I
actually have it. And these are last Sundays and planes
a centennial celebration. So this is a I don't know
if he's talking.

Speaker 1 (01:29:14):
I'm not sure. I have not pre listened to this,
but I picked this one. I think I'll pick this.

Speaker 9 (01:29:28):
I mean, he's got kep Mo's on this jump, Baptiste
is on Darius Rutger like he's doing stuff with other people.
I'm gonna pick America the beautiful, I think, because.

Speaker 1 (01:29:43):
I don't I want to. I want him singing.

Speaker 17 (01:29:46):
If the United States of America could be a superpower
in maintaining peace and to be a champion of human rights, okay,
a champion of en barba equalogy.

Speaker 1 (01:30:01):
So he's talking and then there's they're gonna sing.

Speaker 9 (01:30:04):
I'm expecting that, Like he's giving like a preamble okay
to the song.

Speaker 17 (01:30:10):
It a big quality.

Speaker 10 (01:30:12):
Ooh, that better not be him, right, He's all talking
like an old man should be talking.

Speaker 1 (01:30:21):
And then as soon as he opens up to sing,
let's up.

Speaker 17 (01:30:25):
Yeah, let's hear you in shape of bottom of equalogy
and shape it a big quality ooh.

Speaker 1 (01:30:34):
Ful full spaces. Guys, that's not Darius Rugger.

Speaker 10 (01:30:42):
Who says it's supposed to be yeah, and one other
person but I thought was a female.

Speaker 1 (01:30:48):
Is that him singing?

Speaker 10 (01:30:49):
Oh he loves Jimmy singing? Now, well, when was this recorded?

Speaker 1 (01:30:54):
Twenty twenty four? Okay? Ten songs?

Speaker 10 (01:30:58):
I think they're just taking old clips, you know, from
him speaking.

Speaker 9 (01:31:04):
Bro.

Speaker 1 (01:31:04):
I sent you the video of him on his birthday.
He ain't talking, he ain't doing nothing, I know, but
he could have earlier this year. I mean, you gotta
it's November, bro.

Speaker 11 (01:31:15):
This would be his third Grammy.

Speaker 9 (01:31:19):
Wow, he's easily the most accomplished after presidency president for Yeah,
easily the most accomplished.

Speaker 1 (01:31:29):
The habitat for humanity, right, that's yeah, build homes for.

Speaker 9 (01:31:32):
People, negotiated peace on hospice, this long. Here's a let's
see it. Maybe maybe this is different. This just says welcome.
So I imagine he's gonna say something. Then maybe they'll be songs.

Speaker 17 (01:31:57):
Contrary to what jan just said. I'm gonna ask for here,
tell me where you're from.

Speaker 1 (01:32:03):
Okay, so I know what's happening now.

Speaker 9 (01:32:04):
He has, on occasion presided over a congregation, and so
it sounds like they're taking clips from that and putting
it into with these songs and stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:32:19):
Feels like a money grab. It's exactly what it is.
Who is the client tele here, Big Jimmy Harder fans again,
who is the client tele here?

Speaker 9 (01:32:34):
I know some people become very like focused on certain figures.

Speaker 1 (01:32:39):
I love history stuff.

Speaker 7 (01:32:40):
Yeah, but you're not running out and buying this or anywhere.

Speaker 9 (01:32:44):
If Abraham Lincoln had an audio book, that would be amazing.

Speaker 1 (01:32:48):
I might buy that actually, because he's been dead for
a while. But like if there was, that is not
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (01:33:01):
He is quite the orator, so it is fair to
say it's a little bit different. But then to match
them up with songs is where the it feels like
a mistake.

Speaker 10 (01:33:09):
Yeah, and you can tell this is years ago. When
he was talking. He sounds like a very healthy ninety
seven year old in these audio.

Speaker 9 (01:33:19):
Clips at ninety seven, well four years ago, lindsay, Yeah,
that's pl in this world.

Speaker 1 (01:33:27):
Pre lindsay, all right.

Speaker 10 (01:33:30):
Yeah, ninety seven is young. Well do Yeah, what do
you think Jimmy's networth is as the thirty ninth president?

Speaker 1 (01:33:41):
Wow?

Speaker 7 (01:33:43):
Maybe thirty million?

Speaker 9 (01:33:46):
Okay, I think that's a pretty good. I'm going to
actually go less. He doesn't feel like someone who holds on,
so I'm going to say ten million.

Speaker 10 (01:33:54):
Okay, Yes, sa it's you're fifteen fifteen mil okay. Nuts
Man reflects the financial re whatever from his time in
office post presidential endeavors, obviously making albums hit albums.

Speaker 1 (01:34:11):
Yeah, Award winning.

Speaker 9 (01:34:13):
Yeah, Grammy nominated. Well yeah, he said to one other one.

Speaker 10 (01:34:17):
His significant impact on global humanitarian efforts and peacekeeping initiatives.

Speaker 9 (01:34:23):
You could argue one of the best humanitarians, at least
currently living humanitarians.

Speaker 10 (01:34:27):
Garter's journey from a peanut farmer in Plaines, Georgia to
Well Peace Prize Laureate is a testament to his dedication
to improving the world.

Speaker 1 (01:34:37):
I want.

Speaker 9 (01:34:38):
I've never been I've only known one person to live
over one hundred and I only visit him with him
like a couple of days, and they slept a lot, right,
conversations were brief, right, So I wonder how did the
conversation go of, Hey, we want we're going to use

(01:34:58):
your audio clips to make a Grammy to get to
make him an album, And does he go no, right
or does he just say jelly right. Surely there's somebody
that's making the decisions that has medical I don't know
if a man has ever been on or woman been

(01:35:19):
on hospice and been nominated for a Grammy.

Speaker 1 (01:35:21):
No, I think that's the first.

Speaker 9 (01:35:24):
He's definitely the oldest to ever receive a Grammy nomination
that I know for sure. But to be on hospice
and get a grant, they're just gonna give it to him.

Speaker 1 (01:35:33):
What competition? Who's this competition? Right? Who's he up against
in that category? Right? In the spoken word category, William Shatner?
Are you being serious?

Speaker 10 (01:35:43):
No, okay, I'm just trying to think of other spoken
word artists, you know, uh, didn't, didn't Henry.

Speaker 1 (01:35:50):
Rawlins do a spoken word for a little bit? Yeah,
get handkuf in there.

Speaker 9 (01:35:55):
Yeah, he and his stuff's awesome, Yeah, of course.

Speaker 1 (01:36:01):
Yeah. I want to what Grammy for? I want to
know who else is in this category? Okay, spoken word? Yeah, okay.
Grammy nominations there you go. Oh okay, did you find it? Yeah? Okay?

Speaker 10 (01:36:20):
Uh, well, I don't know why I got the twenty
eleven Betty Betty Ford won one, apparently, okay, because some
of the other Grammys that that are nominated are like, oh, okay,
Album of the Year, Song.

Speaker 9 (01:36:37):
Of the Year, like you look at me go okay.
It doesn't make me want to buy any of them
or listen to any of them. I apparently don't have
a gimbee.

Speaker 1 (01:36:48):
Okay.

Speaker 10 (01:36:49):
So when I just google spoken Word Grammy Nominees twenty
twenty four, it comes up with Barbara Streisan.

Speaker 1 (01:36:55):
Oh, Babs, my name is Barbara.

Speaker 10 (01:36:59):
Last Sunday in the Planes with Jimmy Carter, which I
think is what you were playing, right, and your ass
will follow from George Clinton. Oh p funk, Yeah, that's right. Uh,
and your ass will follow. Words and Music Volume thirty nine,
a guy named a Guy named Guy, Guy Oldfield. This guy,

(01:37:22):
all you need is love the Beatles in their own
words and then lastly your Dolly parton Behind the Scenes
My Life in Rhinestones. So you got five of them
looks like nominated.

Speaker 1 (01:37:39):
You gotta pick one. Who's your winner?

Speaker 10 (01:37:41):
Gonna be for a Grammy on Spoken Word, Narration, Storytelling,
Best Audio Book out of the five that I just
gave you, Barber Stradz and Jimmy Carter, George Clinton, Guy
Oldfield or Dolly.

Speaker 7 (01:37:56):
It'll go to Jimmy your pick.

Speaker 1 (01:37:59):
What's your pick? Yeah, Dolly Gimbi. Yeah, I'd have to
go with Dolly as well. Yeah, I'm good with. I'm
good with. But I like the idea of a guy winning, right,
the guy named Guy.

Speaker 9 (01:38:10):
Last year it was Obama, Michelle Obama, Bernie Sanders, Rick Rubin,
Meryl Street, William Shatner, and Michelle Obama won and Viola
Davis Questlove, Lyn Manuel, Miranda, Jamie Fox and mel Brooks
in twenty twenty two, and Viola Davis won that one.

(01:38:30):
Don Cheetah, Obama, LeVar Burton and Dave Chappelle were the
ones in twenty twenty one, and Don Chito won What
a Crazy category?

Speaker 1 (01:38:42):
All Right, we gotta take a break. We'll be back.
Telsa's Morning Show continues.

Speaker 2 (01:38:48):
Next Dax The Big Man Morning Show on Telsa's Rock
Staia ninety seven to five KMOT.

Speaker 9 (01:39:04):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning shown six kmo D.
You can also text bmms and then what you want
to say to eight two, nine four five.

Speaker 1 (01:39:16):
All right. NFL picks from the weekend.

Speaker 9 (01:39:21):
Gimpian Lindsay picked the Bears and I picked the Patriots,
and it played out just like I thought. That team
couldn't look more a mess, no doubt.

Speaker 1 (01:39:35):
Patriots one.

Speaker 9 (01:39:38):
A lot of people are asking for Ibuflus's departure, but
I don't know if it all lies on him. They're
not playing well.

Speaker 1 (01:39:47):
Right.

Speaker 9 (01:39:49):
You can make the argument that he isn't getting enough protection,
but C. J. Stroud is in the same boat. He
seems to try and makes it work. Okay, Missing open receivers. Right,
when you have a line that's like that, you you know,
maybe you do a couple different plays. But he does
not look comfortable. It's the same thing we saw with

(01:40:13):
Justin Fields. It's the exact same thing.

Speaker 7 (01:40:15):
But but Justin Fields went to the Steelers and performed well.
So I think Ebra Flues needs to go.

Speaker 9 (01:40:24):
Yeah, but also we have not seen anything from Caleb
to show because again CJ. Stroud's in the same boat
in terms of protection things like that, and he's making
it work. So it probably was unfair to put him
in as a as a rookie. But boat next it's
working out right. The guy in Washington's working out Jane Daniels.

(01:40:48):
So nonetheless, Patriots get to win there, Broncos Chiefs.

Speaker 1 (01:40:53):
I have a couple.

Speaker 9 (01:40:54):
Pieces of audio I could play for you. This is
the uh some goodness. Listen to this.

Speaker 12 (01:41:01):
Samin batlora lots de party Delano tris can't check amula
acharilante ya Patana, Hey, lolcio hell block hero O'Hea save
look he hi is Takugada.

Speaker 4 (01:41:13):
Hey, Casas City, Cansas City, say let me the other way?
He blokeo lose bro to la fian lose Brola. He
loves Kansas City jeeps say here, I love Victoria. When
the speramamus on the Campo Kansas City fires, he said, yeah,

(01:41:33):
I love Victoria.

Speaker 9 (01:41:34):
Posts funny and then as a comparison, this is uh
the uh uh.

Speaker 1 (01:41:45):
The Broncos broadcast.

Speaker 13 (01:41:49):
Backs up, takes two steps to the side, says he's
ready an attempt of thirty five yards for the win
snap placement kick on the way it is blocked.

Speaker 1 (01:42:12):
I don't even know what to say.

Speaker 13 (01:42:15):
I really he met a loss for its thirty five
yardfield goal blocked with one second to go, and Kansas
City is going to get out of here with a
sixteen to fourteen.

Speaker 1 (01:42:28):
Win over the Broncos. Yeah, yeah, he did so awesome.
The help blocked that crazy.

Speaker 7 (01:42:35):
We were a.

Speaker 11 (01:42:35):
House divided yesterday. Every Sunday we have friends over to
watch football, and we were sitting there and Sean Payton
calls that time. I'm like, what is he doing?

Speaker 7 (01:42:43):
Why? Why is this necessary?

Speaker 11 (01:42:45):
But anyway, we had a friend of ours over Ryan
who was a huge Broncos fan, and he was like.

Speaker 7 (01:42:51):
Watch markets, your team's going down today.

Speaker 11 (01:42:53):
By my Broncos, they're going to be the team that
breaks their winning streak, and I said, no, Ryan.

Speaker 7 (01:42:58):
Just wait, We're the Chiefs are going to.

Speaker 11 (01:43:01):
Show you why they are two time champions right here.
They are going to show you. And it was so beautiful.

Speaker 7 (01:43:08):
It was.

Speaker 11 (01:43:09):
He was so upset, he just puts his head down
when that was blocked. It was so great. Marcus turns
up Red Kingdom.

Speaker 7 (01:43:17):
It was just the best awesome.

Speaker 9 (01:43:20):
So the uh, we all picked that one. So we
got points to that. And then the forty nine ers Buccaneers.

Speaker 10 (01:43:26):
What a game, right, Yeah, Moody redeemed himself at the
very end, very last minute. Yeah, he did redeem himself
a little bit. Yeah, a little bit, a little bit.
I mean the Cats still missed three Phil goals. Yeah,
we're you see, they seemed somewhat easy, right, I mean,

(01:43:48):
fifty yards is still a long ways. But I mean,
these guys, that's nothing, right, and then just a whiff
and at the end they're like, let's put them in again.
I'm like, you, son of a bit, you better make, yeah,
you better make.

Speaker 9 (01:44:01):
It was a wild game, man. The Buccaneers they have losses.
That's why I don't think records count, because they if
they make it into the playoffs, I think they could
yoke some people up. Many They've had a tough schedule
and they are making it close every those losses are
pretty close, coming down to the wire each time.

Speaker 1 (01:44:17):
So I think that there there could be a dangerous team.

Speaker 9 (01:44:20):
And our boy Tabor got choked.

Speaker 1 (01:44:23):
That was awesome. Deebo Samuel, who's known to be not
a great locker room guy.

Speaker 10 (01:44:28):
Yeah, and I was like, oh no, I read your lips.

Speaker 1 (01:44:31):
I know what you're saying.

Speaker 9 (01:44:34):
And so now the record we all went to and one.
So Lindsey and I are twenty and ten and Gimbias
twenty two and eight.

Speaker 11 (01:44:40):
Do the co and really quickly your Cowboys update brought
to you by your friends at Miller Light.

Speaker 7 (01:44:44):
The Eagles crushed the Cowboys.

Speaker 11 (01:44:46):
And an nfcas the matchup in Arlington, Philly took Town
Dallas thirty six to six at AT and T Stadium, And.

Speaker 9 (01:44:54):
He complained about the Sun and the Jay Jones, like,
why I just rebuild a stadium so that we're gonna do.

Speaker 1 (01:44:58):
We're just gonna rebuild the state.

Speaker 14 (01:44:59):
Right right right.

Speaker 11 (01:45:00):
They've lost four in a row to slip to three
and six. If you want to win standing room only
tickets to the next Cowboys game in Arlington. Open up
the iHeartRadio app, use the talkback feature, tell us to
give you those Cowboys tickets and that's your bass to
the wall Sports.

Speaker 1 (01:45:29):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show.

Speaker 9 (01:45:31):
Nine four six oh kmod can also text BMMS and
then what you want to say to eight two nine
four five, Good morning, Lindsay.

Speaker 11 (01:45:40):
Good morning, Gorbin. Happy thirty fifth porn star. Birthday to
Abigail Johnson. If she gets a what and wild in
a cup, Qt's afternoon orgy in group group. This dame
is pretty obsessed with pigeons. Her ex page is full
of weird pigeon videos and sensitive material pertaining two pigeons.

Speaker 10 (01:46:01):
Good morning, GIMPI, Good morning Corbyn. Hey, he's got another
keyword to rock the bank. That keyward was Bills. Take
that keyword over the website that rocks kmod dot com.
Plug it in and you could be one thousand dollars
rich as we rock the bank.

Speaker 9 (01:46:13):
Join us in the studio now is Jeff Hensley of
Heinsling Associate. It's good morning, Jeff. Hey, good morning, and
Jeff's here to answer any question you have about divorce, custody,
guardianship name change any of the things like that that
have to do with family law and others. He can
answer them. So get your question to us. A couple
of ways to do that. You can email show at
kmod dot com to get us your question. You can
text BMMS and whatever your question is to eight two

(01:46:34):
nine four five, or you can call nine one eight
four six oh KMOD and he will try to answer
your question with you on the phone. This is one
we had from a couple weeks ago. It says, I
will try to keep this simple. I have plans to
adopt a child I've been with since he was born.
The child is three and a half years old. The
bio dad has chosen not to be involved in his
and hasn't made an attempt to be in touch with

(01:46:57):
the child since about a week after he was born,
notified that the child is his. How involved will a
biodad now have to in allowing be involved, and how
in how involved will the biodad now have to be
allowing me to adopt?

Speaker 18 (01:47:16):
So, Okay, so when you're talking about there's a couple
of things here, so let me kind of unpack it
a little bit, all right. The first part of that,
I think from hearing correctly is dealing with the issue
of well, you've got a dad that's a biodad that's
not involved, and you've got a step dad. It sounds
like that is ready to adopt, and that's great, assuming
again because we don't know because the caller didn't say.

(01:47:36):
Assuming that the caller is married all right and has
been married for at least a year, uh, then they
can apply for the adoption. And in that if the
biodad is unwilling to relinquish his rights to the child,
then they would do it. Something that's called an adoption
without consent, and adoption without consent is a hearing where
you have to prove one of two things. So it's

(01:47:58):
A or B, although a lot of times you get
A and B together. A he's failed to maintain a
substantial relationship with the minor child in twelve of the
fourteen months prior to filing, or from the date that
you file your petition, So if you file your petition
January one, it's the prior fourteen months before that and

(01:48:19):
only that timeframe. And it's the same thing for part B,
which is failed to pay child support according to their
ability to do so, and or in order, And like
I said, a lot of times those go together because
once they disappear, they stop paying and you don't hear
from either. So in answer to the question, I mean,
if I'm understanding her correctly, you know, substantial relationship. The

(01:48:41):
biodad has to maintain a substantial relationship. And that's kind
of gets into well, what's a substantial relationship. Well, it's
more than popping in once or twice a year. It's
more than popping in three or four times a year.
I mean, you've got to actually have a relationship with
the child, and the child needs to know who you
are and that you're involved in all these other things.
So and I understand we're dealing with a three year

(01:49:01):
old or three and a half year old. I get that,
But you know, substantial relationship is how the court looks
at it. So the burden becomes on the individual asking
to prove they don't have a substantial relationship and they
fail to pay child support either A or B. Now,
the big sticky question, because we're in that area of
the United States obviously, is obviously we're dealing with is

(01:49:22):
the child a Native American child?

Speaker 1 (01:49:24):
All right?

Speaker 18 (01:49:24):
And that's when we get into the Equi Statutes, and
that's ICWA Indian Child Welfare Act, all right, And there
are particular requirements from the tribes that require individuals who
want children to prove that there have been some sort
of active efforts to try and reunify the child with
the native parents. So if Dad is a biodad is

(01:49:47):
a native parent, then the people wanting to adopt and
have to prove they, you know, what they did to
try to what active efforts did they do to try
and get dad to see the kid.

Speaker 1 (01:49:56):
And be with the kid.

Speaker 18 (01:49:57):
All right, Now, you can only do so much, right,
I mean, if Dad flitters off into oblivion and is
high all the time, hiding out underneath one of the overpasses,
obviously there's only so much you can do to try
and do active efforts. You can lead a horse to water,
but you can't make them drink. But you have to
prove to the cord into the tribe that that has
been done so that you can move forward on the adoption.

(01:50:18):
So that's the second part of it is is if
the child is Native American. If they're not, then it
doesn't apply. We don't have to worry about it. But
if they are, just something to keep in the back
of your head.

Speaker 1 (01:50:28):
And we didn't.

Speaker 9 (01:50:28):
It didn't say in the note, but you have to
be married too, right, you can't be That's what I said.

Speaker 18 (01:50:33):
At the very beginning. Is it as long as they're
married at least a year. So I get a lot
of calls where they'll say, hey, I want to adopt
my girlfriend's kid. Can't do it because you would have
to literally when you do that, you would literally have
to terminate the rights of dad and mom. Okay. So
that's why the losses. You have to be at least
married for at least a year, okay. So that's where

(01:50:54):
that kind of important part comes in. It doesn't matter
if you're in a gay marriage or a straight marriage.
It's just marriage. So if you're a gay couple that
wants to adopt, we can help you with that too.
So give us a call at Hinsley Legal Services, and
of course we can have Sam Allison, who does our
adoptions in office, help you with that and get that
taken care for you.

Speaker 9 (01:51:13):
Jeffermansland Associates is here to answer your questions about family law.
You can text BMMS and whatever that question is to
eight two nine four five. You can email show at
kmod dot com or you can call it nine one
eight four six oh. KMOD says I have a current
child support order in Oklahoma. The mother lives in Arkansas
and is ordered to pay and is ordered to pay
child support. The DHS Benefits website says she's currently nine

(01:51:35):
one hundred dollars in back child sport. The last payment
received was a partial payment in April of twenty three.
My question is, as long as DHS knows that she
has paid and what she owes, will she be responsible
for what is owed till it is paid.

Speaker 18 (01:51:51):
So she will be responsible for any and all back
support as well as any current support moving forward and definitely.
Now here's let me give kind of two scenarios, right, So,
let's say she finally gets off her butt and decides
to start paying. They can get her caught up, they
can get her on a payment plan, those sorts of things,
and life goes.

Speaker 1 (01:52:10):
Forward, all right.

Speaker 18 (01:52:12):
But let's talk about the more common side of things,
which is typically that they aren't going to pay, and
they have no desire to pay, and a lot of
times they don't have any ability to pay. What can
you do? Well, one of the things we can do
is we can file a contempt citation against the individual
to try and force them to come to court and
reach a payment plan and try and get caught up

(01:52:32):
on those things. Now here's the kicker, and this is
why I'm bringing this in, is that you can't wait.
Let's say they're a child, the age is out at eighteen,
and you decide ten years after that or fifteen years
after that, you know that SOB should have paid me something. Okay,
So I'm going to go back and try and get
child support from all that time ago that was owed.
You're not gonna collect it, all right, There's no court

(01:52:54):
that's going to allow it. When I was a young lawyer,
trust me, I tried for clients. I was successful once
and that was a weird case. So the kicker of
it is is that there's something called equitable a stopple
and it's just a fancy lawyer means it says, you know,
you should be equitably a stop from collecting. On the

(01:53:16):
other side, so their equity says you should be stopped
from being able to collect because you waited fifteen years.
That's the argument that the person who hasn't pain is
going to make all right, assuming that you can find them,
get them served, they actually show up those sorts of
things you want to collect on it now before the
kid age is out. That's why I'm bringing this up
because it's coming more and more common where people are

(01:53:37):
waiting too long and the courts aren't allowing it, and
they're getting mad at us because the courts won't grant
them what they want, even though it's not our faults.
So just bringing that up. But yes, it's it's inevitably
it's old, no matter how long. I mean, until you
turn one hundred years old, and the kids, however many
years old too. Technically it's old, but being able to
collect on it past a certain age can be a

(01:53:57):
particular problem. So that's why we'll want to get it
during the time the child is still a minor. Now understand,
there's some people you just can't collect from, all right.
You can't squeeze blood from a turnip, is the old saying. Right,
So you know we're going to try, We're going to
get a judgment, we're going to get maybe a bench
warrant for their rest for failure to show up. But
you know, at that point we've better wait until they

(01:54:18):
either have a bank account, or they start working, because
until then there's not a whole lot even the court
system can do. So be aware of that, and people don't.
And if the person lives out of state knows money,
it's very all you're going to get out of that,
all right, Typically is going to be a bench warrant
for their rest because once you give them notice that
there's a hearing, they're not going to come into Oklahoma

(01:54:38):
to deal with it because if they do, then they're
on the hook.

Speaker 1 (01:54:43):
All right.

Speaker 18 (01:54:43):
I had one of those cases too, all right, I've
had an active bench warrant on a case for the
last fifteen years. But the guy's not set foot in
Oklahoma in fifteen years. And guess what, just because you
have a warrant in Oklahma for child support, another state is
not going to activate that warrant. They're not going to
extra diem from wherever on a child support warn't. It's
just not going to happen. Maybe there's maybe there's certain

(01:55:08):
what's the one I'm looking for the certain instances where
that may be true. But that is on the super
rare side, not on the normal, everyday side.

Speaker 1 (01:55:16):
So food for thought this and from a standpoint of
getting paid.

Speaker 9 (01:55:19):
You don't want them incarcerated anyway, because they can't pay
when they're incarcerated.

Speaker 18 (01:55:23):
Right, that's the idea. Although here's the flip side of that.
So the idea is you don't want them incarcerated because
they can't pay, because they lose their job and things
like that. But I have head cases where I've thrown
the other side in jail and miraculously they come up
with the money right away to get out of jail.
I had one one time where the guy owed over
fifteen thousand dollars right. He was in jail for four hours,

(01:55:45):
four hours, and he got someone to pay it for him,
and my client walked away with the cash.

Speaker 9 (01:55:49):
So flip side of it ability to pay and not
wanting to pay or not the same.

Speaker 18 (01:55:56):
Thing exactly is what you're saying.

Speaker 1 (01:55:58):
Exactly.

Speaker 9 (01:55:58):
Yeah, this text says I've had sole custody of my
daughter since she was three. Her mom hasn't had contact
with her since she was five. She's twelve now. Her
first name on her birth certificate is different than what
we have called her since she was one. She has
my last name, but wants to change her first name.
Change her first name legally, what do I need to
do to make this happen?

Speaker 18 (01:56:18):
Sure, give us a call. We can help with that.
I mean, we have to give notice to the other
side to see if they object to the name change.
But if she hasn't seen her since she's five, which
means she's been you MIA for the last seven years,
more than likely she's not going to object and we
can get that name changed and done. So please, whoever
this is, if you give us a call, we'd be
happy to help you with that, and Corn will do

(01:56:39):
the number at the.

Speaker 1 (01:56:40):
End of the show. Name changes are.

Speaker 9 (01:56:43):
A paperwork issue at most, but with a child, there's
an extra step, right.

Speaker 18 (01:56:48):
There's a extra step because if the other parent is living,
you've got to give them notice and a chance for
them to object to that name change. They have a
right to object to that name change. And if they object,
then getting in the name change is probably not going
to happen. But a lot of times when we do
these things, either they agree or they're MIA and we've
properly served them either by process server or by us

(01:57:09):
mail certified mail, or more than likely if they're completely MIA,
then we do publication, which is in the local newspaper
giving them notice and then when they fail to show,
we get the name change.

Speaker 1 (01:57:19):
In life moves on.

Speaker 9 (01:57:20):
What should one's expectation assuming you don't have this extra
step that we just described, how what should one's expectation
of How long it takes to change your name in
the court system?

Speaker 18 (01:57:30):
Are you talking about for an adult?

Speaker 1 (01:57:31):
Correct?

Speaker 18 (01:57:32):
So for an adult it's fairly quick. I mean. The
thing is is basically, you file up a petition, you
get a hearing date, and then the judge will authorize
the name change. The main thing is is you can't
go changing your name to try and hide from creditors. Okay,
that's one of the big questions that the court will ask.
We don't really have much in the way of restrictions
on name changes in the sense of you can pretty

(01:57:54):
much choose what you want. Otherwise, unlike other countries I
know we read about I least ide do we read
about them all all the time where they want to
give them some weird, funky name or it's you know,
some cussword in particular language or whatever. It may be
something clever I guess, and the country says no. But
we don't really have those kinds of restrictions per se.
I can see a judge in certain counties limiting it

(01:58:17):
to obviously, you know, we don't want to change your
name to a bad word that people have to say
he has, even as funny and as clever as that
may be. So yeah, give us a call. We can
help with that.

Speaker 1 (01:58:29):
And did they rarely say no, I've never short of
your answers.

Speaker 18 (01:58:34):
Yeah, I mean I'm short of your answers. I've never
seen them say no.

Speaker 1 (01:58:36):
I mean.

Speaker 18 (01:58:36):
Always remember, as far as times frames are concerned, we're
always at the judges. We're in the judges calendar, which
means we're at the mercy of their calendar.

Speaker 1 (01:58:45):
All right.

Speaker 18 (01:58:46):
And Tulsa one of the district judges handles the name changes.
They're a lot easier to get into sometimes out of county.
When you're dealing outside of Tulsa County. Remember there's particular
judges that handle name changes, also handle family law, criminal law,
you know, big civil cases, little carrc cases, anything can
think of. So their My point is, our calendar is

(01:59:06):
a little more full sometimes so it may take a
little bit to get in, but not terrible. So give
us a call. We can help you with that.

Speaker 9 (01:59:12):
This is kind of an in the weeds question. Do
judges triage their calendar to keep room for certain trials?

Speaker 14 (01:59:20):
They do.

Speaker 18 (01:59:20):
I mean there are certain things, certain hearings that they
have to keep openings for, for example, emotions to enforce
visitation or emergency custody orders, things like that. So the
judges that have those cases, they have to keep those
dates opening because one, you know, one has to be
heard within ten days by the law, one has to
be heard within potentially seventy two hours or heard within

(01:59:42):
twenty one days, depending upon what section you're in. So yeah,
there are certain things that they leave those open. They try,
but remember those empty slots fill up, so once they
fill up, then they're on to the next date that
is triaged, if you will, and we do the best
we can. But remember, you know, we can't control pay dmics,
all right. We can't control when people give birth, we

(02:00:03):
can't control when people die, we can't control when people
get sick, and we can't control the judge's calendar. So
there's a lot of things we can do, but those
five things are something we don't have control over.

Speaker 9 (02:00:13):
Jeff Finsley's joined us from Hensley Associates. If you have
a question about family law, divorce, custody, guardianships, name changes
like we just talked about. He can help with that
and a sp of other law issues. He can be
of assistance, but right now we're doing family law questions
nine one, eight four to six oho KMOD. You can
text BMMS and whatever your question is to eight two
nine four five, or you can email show at kmod

(02:00:35):
dot com. This says I've been a stay at home
mom for seven years with no income whatsoever. We bought
a house shortly after we were married, and everything is
in his name since I had no income to contribute.
If I stay in the home, do I get everything
put in my name with his alimony as my income.
I don't want to be dependent on him to be
able to stay here, but any job that I would

(02:00:56):
qualify for wouldn't pay enough to cover the mortgage in
this home. We have five children, so I need a
house the size and I suspect I will get full custody.

Speaker 18 (02:01:05):
Right so I understand they needing a decent sized house
for a number of kids. I mean I've got four myself,
so I get it. In answer to the question, one
of the things that we have to consider when we're
looking for these kinds of things is you've got to
decide the person and discussions with their attorney needs to
decide are we setting you up for failure? Okay, So

(02:01:25):
we have to look at what the child support is
going to be, what the alimoney would be if granted,
all right, and is that equal enough to survive on
at this particular juncture? All right? If you're spending more
than fifty percent of your income to stay in your house, no, wohy, no,
that's not smart. That'll get exhausted very quickly, especially with
five kids, Trust me, I know. So one of the

(02:01:49):
things I always go with my clients is, look, I
know you really want to stay in this house, and
I know that if it's your family and you don't
want to disrupt your schedule of your kids and you
don't want to have to move them, bah blah blah blah.
I get that. But at the end of the day,
how much do you have left over after the mortgage
is paid? And if it's not enough to live on,
we need to find a different solution because in the
long run, we're setting you up for failure and we

(02:02:10):
don't want that to happen. The last thing we want
is for the house to be foreclosed on and sold,
all right, So that's kind of how we look at that.
As far as alimony is concerned, remember it's based upon
need and Oklahoma, the two things need and ability to pay.
So the person asking for it must first show they
have a need and then they have to show that
the other side has the actual ability to pay that.

(02:02:31):
So it's very, very different from case to case to case.

Speaker 9 (02:02:34):
Jeff Finsley's joining us nine one eight four six Oh
kmoh dear, you can text BMMS and whatever your question
is to eight two nine four.

Speaker 1 (02:02:40):
Five Look this one. Can you do a name change
on a minor.

Speaker 9 (02:02:43):
Without adopting I will be adopting my steps on, but
he wants to change his name?

Speaker 18 (02:02:47):
Now, the answer is yes, again subject to notice to
the other parent to object, But yeah, we can do
that absolutely. If you just want a name change, we
can make that happen. But again we still have to
give proper notice to the opposing party, the other parent,
so they have a timeframe to object.

Speaker 9 (02:03:03):
Ryan cleaning that question up a bit would be can
a miner come forward and want to change their name?

Speaker 18 (02:03:09):
Well, the miner's not the one petitioning the court. So
let's make that because the miner cannot petition the correct
they have to be eighteen year older. So what it
happens is is the parent, and this is true for
any kid name change, the parent is the one petitioning
the court on their behalf to change the name. But
if your kids, you know, if you're in a situation
where you've got a step kid or something and the
kid says, hey, I want you to adopt me, but

(02:03:29):
until that happens, I want you to change my name again.
We can do it. Give us a call, happy to help.
Just have to give proper notice and if they fail
to show and don't object, then life moves on and
you get to what you want.

Speaker 9 (02:03:39):
Jared's been waiting, Jared, what's your question for Jeff Hensley
of Hensley and Associates.

Speaker 1 (02:03:43):
Go ahead, Jared.

Speaker 16 (02:03:45):
Hey, yes, sir, I've got a question for my son.
He is married to a lady and they got a
lump sum of money from her parents and they are
married and she ended up leaving him. She bought him
a pickup and it's in and she is trying to
take the pickup and she's got a brand new car.
Also so she is not strained. There's no kids involved.

(02:04:09):
I just didn't know if it was both.

Speaker 1 (02:04:11):
Cars get that truck.

Speaker 18 (02:04:13):
No, I mean because both cars are considered marital assets. Okay,
once you take so, once you get money from anybody,
whether it be by inheritance or by a gift or
something of that nature, all right. If she takes it
and dumps it into the family account and they start
using it to pay marital things, bills, groceries, food, whatever, cars,

(02:04:33):
all right, it's been commingled now and it all becomes
part of the marital estate that needs to be divided.
So she can be mad. All she wants that she
bought him a truck and she wants it back, But
at the end of the day, he gets to keep,
you know, he gets to keep the truck. Now, are
they looking at a divorce? Have they filed yet?

Speaker 16 (02:04:52):
They have not filed yet, and they are looking forward
to a divorce. He is not going to contesting, but
she will for the pick up.

Speaker 18 (02:04:58):
Okay, So what you need to do is give his
name a number to Gimpi and I will give him
a call this week and we'll see what we can
do to get that taken.

Speaker 16 (02:05:05):
Care for him, okay, and one other thing. They actually
lived with me, And I've told her she left the
twenty seventh of last month. Yeah, and I told her
she can get the rest of her stuff. She will
not come in. She said, I'm not going to get
the rest of my stuff till I get the pickup. Well,
that pickup of stuff has nothing to do with me,

(02:05:25):
you know. Agree that she lived in my house.

Speaker 18 (02:05:28):
What kind of stuff does she have?

Speaker 1 (02:05:29):
Man?

Speaker 16 (02:05:32):
Some clothes and two dressers.

Speaker 18 (02:05:37):
My best advice to you is because you did let
her live there and she did have a right to
be there at the time, is to hold on to
it till the divorce is dealt with, and we'll deal
with it in the divorce. Set up a time for
her to come get her stuff, you know, for now,
her clothes stuff. Box them up, you know, nicely, box
them up nicely and put them in the garage or something.
Don't go throwing them out on the porch and stuff

(02:05:59):
like that like we see in the movies and some
people actually do so. Do it nicely, hold on to
it and we'll deal with it in the divorce. But
give your name and your son's name of number to
Gaimpi and I will give him a call and we'll
get all that squared away for him.

Speaker 16 (02:06:12):
Okay, Tenere, I could do that, Thank you, sir.

Speaker 9 (02:06:13):
Hang on the line there, Gip Bill, talk to you.
This is an interesting question we've never dealt with, Jeff.
What happens if the mom objects but still hasn't had
contact with the child for seven years?

Speaker 18 (02:06:22):
You know, the parent has a right to object to
the name change. You know a lot of times, A
lot of times it's the ladies don't care so much.
It's the men that care, especially when changing the last name.
You know, some macho ego. I don't know primal thing
that's beaten into our brains from the time of conception
or something. But can she object? Yes, what happens if

(02:06:47):
she does object even though she hasn't seen him? It
doesn't really matter. An objection is an objection, and the
court's not likely to push it through. And with that
being said, we can always change it when the kid
turns eighteen, or we can try later down the road
when moms had even less contact and uh flitters into
oblivion and doesn't show up.

Speaker 1 (02:07:06):
So objection isn't an end of the road on that.

Speaker 18 (02:07:09):
No, it's not an end of the road. It's just
we're gonna have to do a different avenue.

Speaker 9 (02:07:13):
Look, these things can get complicated because it depends on
what you're dealing with on how it can be figured out,
and you need someone that knows what they're doing. And
the folks at Hensley Associates are those people. Give him
a call at nine one eight three, nine eight five
six nine two for Hensley Associates nine eight three nine
eight five six ninety two mentioned KMOD you get a
free consultation over the phone. Nine one eight three nine
eight five six nine two. You guys practice in other

(02:07:35):
areas of law besides family law.

Speaker 1 (02:07:36):
We do so.

Speaker 18 (02:07:37):
In addition to our office in Tulsa, we have an
office in Pahusca and it is the Shoemake Law Firm,
And yes it is a different name, but it is
our firm, which is the name has been there since
the nineteen seventies, so we left it. But give calling
up there a call. He can handle all the things
in addition to family law. So if you've got any
sort of car wreck case, if you've got a speeding ticket,

(02:07:57):
if you've been charged with murder, if you've been and
you know any criminal issue, any civil issue, if you
need a contract drawn up, if you need a will
or a trust, give.

Speaker 1 (02:08:09):
Him a call.

Speaker 18 (02:08:10):
You can also give him a call if you've got
any issues such as oil leases. I mean, we deal
with a lot of oil and gas up there because
of the northern counties. Any issue that you have in
addition to family law, even if it's something through Hinsley,
please give them a call. Again. It's his name is Colin.
It's up at the Shoemake Law firm and we can
you can call Tulsa. We can also get you hooked

(02:08:30):
up with him as well, but please give them a call.
We can help you with any other area of the
law in addition to family law these days, so it
gives all.

Speaker 9 (02:08:37):
Holler for Hensing associates. Jeff, have a great week. Hey
you too, Take a break and we'll be back.

Speaker 2 (02:08:46):
More of a Big Man Morning Show is next nine.

Speaker 1 (02:09:04):
Good Morning.

Speaker 9 (02:09:05):
It's the big nd Morning shown six O kmod need
to finish talking about the Cowboys, and I think it's
worth talking about because apparently they're still deciding whether Dak
Prescott's gonna have surgery for his hamstring. He's seeking outside
advice or whatever, and what does that mean. I think

(02:09:26):
it doesn't matter either way. He's still out four weeks,
I think with recovery, even if he doesn't have surgery,
and I think they're playing for a different position now,
right and then ceedee lamb. I mean if you watch
the video and he's wide open and the ball floats
perfectly to him and he just don't see it and

(02:09:50):
the sun is right in his eyes, and he was like, hey,
we need to put.

Speaker 10 (02:09:55):
Up curtains, like one kind of curtains a floral print.

Speaker 1 (02:09:59):
Maybe. I mean, it is a little ridiculous.

Speaker 9 (02:10:02):
When they designed that stadium, they weren't considering how the
sun sets.

Speaker 10 (02:10:07):
True that, But the thing Jerry came out on is like,
we knew we knew where the sun's going to be
setting when we chose on the coin flip, you know
what I'm saying.

Speaker 9 (02:10:15):
So that does make a bit of a difference there.
He put it back on them pretty much.

Speaker 1 (02:10:19):
Base.

Speaker 9 (02:10:20):
Yeah, you could have designed the stadium so the sun
isn't shining in right right into an end zone. To me,
it's a giant flaw in design for sure. But also
if it would have blinded the other team, we would
have been fine with it, right right, right, right, It
doesn't any stadium potentially have that problem, with the exception

(02:10:44):
of like domed stadiums, I'm sure they still have windows,
you know, but any stadium will have that problem where
the sun can be beaming down on you. Well, like
where the forty nine Ers play, that stadium is designed
intentionally that the visiting side gets roast.

Speaker 1 (02:11:00):
Yeah, it's designed that way, and.

Speaker 9 (02:11:03):
A lot of fields get that fifty percent son depending
on what time the game is, where that sun is
at and so yeah, there's some of ways you can't
avoid it. But when you're designing a stadium right shoot,
with that's enclosed, I feel.

Speaker 1 (02:11:18):
Like you could have avoided it. Yeah, you have.

Speaker 9 (02:11:21):
The retractable roof, and then you're like, oh, yeah, let's
put some glass.

Speaker 10 (02:11:24):
In, right, tinted glass something, maybe a tented visor, you know,
for for the you know, players.

Speaker 9 (02:11:33):
I think you're definitely going to see them put something
on it, because that is it's not helping. It's definitely
not helping. And Jerry Jones even addressing it seems ridiculous.

Speaker 10 (02:11:43):
So how come why is this all of a sudden
a problem. Now that stadium's been around for a while,
they've played many many, many, many men. It's been a
complaint before. Okay, I'm just now hearing it for the
first time. But I mean that doesn't mean anything.

Speaker 9 (02:11:56):
Well because cowboy fan everybody's coming up with excuses. Of course,
of course, right they're coming up with the reasons like
they're showing the not help the Jerry Jones is because
you you could also just put something over it so
the sun doesn't come in at all. I mean, it's
not a hard a fifty dollars vinyl right right right?
Sell a sponsorship covered up? Get ray band to buy right?

Speaker 7 (02:12:21):
Perfect?

Speaker 9 (02:12:22):
What's that guy that sells the screen door canoe flex seal?

Speaker 1 (02:12:29):
Do a flexial sponsorship right there? Right? Well, flexial will
block it all. Oh, yeah, for sure. And then well
it's the worst product ever, never use it. Don't use it?
Then good. I was. I had a leaking gutter.

Speaker 9 (02:12:44):
I was like, oh, it's flexial, I mean works for screens, right,
And so I used it and not even like a
month later it had cracked and peeled and the leak
was back again.

Speaker 1 (02:12:57):
You must have been doing something wrong. I'm sure.

Speaker 9 (02:12:59):
Don't sell it's easy. It's just spray and that's that.
And then it's not that, because now I'm just gonna
get cock and put in it.

Speaker 1 (02:13:06):
Right, just put cock in the hole. It works, it
plugs it up, it's.

Speaker 9 (02:13:10):
More reliable depending on how it's how you do it
really well. Yeah, you can't just shove cock in the hole. Now,
you got to have a certain type of cock.

Speaker 10 (02:13:17):
I mean, because white cock is made for one thing,
black cock is made for another. So so you got
to make sure you have the right cock.

Speaker 7 (02:13:24):
Yeah, but the right size hole.

Speaker 9 (02:13:26):
Well, I being on the tube, you can. Yeah, the
girth of the tube is what matters. Yeah, because you
can buy just the small ones, a little squeezed cock,
which is fine if it's just a solo project.

Speaker 10 (02:13:39):
Right, But I don't know how big your the gash
in your gutter is, so yeah, I mean you might
need a little bit more than just I mean it's
just dripping, I mean like spraying every It's not good.

Speaker 1 (02:13:50):
Yeah, it's not good.

Speaker 9 (02:13:51):
I woke up the other night, uh, and that woke
We were laying in bed and I was like, would
you hear that?

Speaker 1 (02:13:56):
Well? I was like, I don't hear anything.

Speaker 9 (02:13:58):
We have like sound machines and all this stuff apparently
we need. And I get up and I stand at
the door to and I can hear water spray.

Speaker 1 (02:14:06):
I'm like, that doesn't make sense.

Speaker 9 (02:14:09):
I walk and I think because we have a sink
that has you just wave your hand in front of
it and it comes on and off.

Speaker 1 (02:14:13):
It's awesome. I catch myself and we go to other places.

Speaker 9 (02:14:16):
And I just tried to do that anyway, and uh
so I thought that maybe I had to come on
and like it's happened before where a fly has walked
underneath it and turned it on, and so I thought
like maybe something like something like that, right, And then
I'm like, no, it's I hear spraying.

Speaker 1 (02:14:34):
That's not a faucet running, that's spray. And I go
to the guest.

Speaker 9 (02:14:37):
Bathroom of the half batht like by the front door,
and somehow the tube on the floater you know, to
fill the back of the toilet had come off and
was spraying water, Oh good, out of the out of
it on like and it was going out over the
lid just sits, so it was like draining out over.

Speaker 1 (02:14:57):
The walls of the toilet running. There's a good inch
water on the floor. Wow. Somehow I'm just mysteriously came off. Huh.

Speaker 9 (02:15:06):
It looked like that it had failed or it had cracked,
and it looked like it had been under pressure.

Speaker 1 (02:15:11):
Okay, you know what I mean.

Speaker 9 (02:15:12):
Like the guy was like, this is all I got.
Remember when my toilet, You remember when the toilet in
my house. I tried to fix it myself and it
was uneven, and the guy was like, it's fine, just
pay the guy to do it. Because I was like,
I don't know how to fix all this. Yeah, I'm
a bit off more than I could chew. And he
did all that, and I think maybe he was like

(02:15:33):
it would be enough.

Speaker 10 (02:15:34):
It doesn't work, No, you can't. You gotta have the
right amount of holes. Oh yeah, that's how you end
up with water leaks.

Speaker 1 (02:15:41):
Right. But yeah, he had too much cock. Not a
good thing.

Speaker 9 (02:15:48):
The squeeze cock usually works in pinch if you're really desperate.
All right, we got to take a break.

Speaker 1 (02:15:55):
We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (02:15:56):
Tell us this morning show is coming right back. Show
Dulsa's rock station KMOD.

Speaker 9 (02:16:16):
Good morning, It's the big Man Morning Show nine four
six KMOD.

Speaker 1 (02:16:24):
Lindsay, what'd you learn today?

Speaker 11 (02:16:25):
I learned that forty three monkeys escaped a research facility
in South Carolina. I just hope they know how to
take care of themselves, because it's hard out there for
a champ and even the best caulk can't sustain a
worn out gutter kimb.

Speaker 1 (02:16:40):
What'd you learn today?

Speaker 10 (02:16:40):
I'll learn it sometimes hobos need security too. And I'll
also learn that the Cowboys have resulted to blaming the
universe for their shortcomings.

Speaker 9 (02:16:50):
I learned that the refs blocked a field goal for
the Chiefs. And I also learned that it's Veterans Day
and all the veterans on behalf of the show, like,
thank you for your courage and your sacrifice.

Speaker 1 (02:17:02):
It's crazy we have to have a day to thank you.

Speaker 9 (02:17:03):
We should be thanking you each and every day, but
from the depths of our hearts, thank you so much.

Speaker 1 (02:17:09):
Take a break. No, it's Corbin say. Make sure that
dishwashers learned right.

Speaker 7 (02:17:12):
It's easy. Stop tracking my cycle?

Speaker 1 (02:17:14):
This is gay.

Speaker 17 (02:17:20):
Daddy?

Speaker 1 (02:17:22):
Can I get all? This should be no make noise.

Speaker 16 (02:17:42):
In your password.

Speaker 11 (02:17:44):
New messages.

Speaker 18 (02:17:45):
The Big Mad Morning Show would like to take a
minute to thank troops from Oklahoma.

Speaker 8 (02:17:48):
And all over the United States.

Speaker 1 (02:17:49):
These soldiers have sacrificed. Did the Big Mad Morning Show
before you to back? Like the total douchebags, that they
are total douchebag, little, incomplete douchebag.

Speaker 9 (02:17:59):
We honor and respect you.

Speaker 15 (02:18:00):
We honor and respect you.

Speaker 1 (02:18:02):
We honor and respect you.

Speaker 2 (02:18:03):
God bless rock.

Speaker 8 (02:18:04):
And roll, Cickle Tulsa.

Speaker 1 (02:18:07):
I'm blessed Tulsa.

Speaker 18 (02:18:08):
We try boys,

Big Mad Morning Show News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Good Game with Sarah Spain

Good Game with Sarah Spain

Good Game is your one-stop shop for the biggest stories in women’s sports. Every day, host Sarah Spain gives you the stories, stakes, stars and stats to keep up with your favorite women’s teams, leagues and athletes. Through thoughtful insight, witty banter, and an all around good time, Sarah and friends break down the latest news, talk about the games you can’t miss, and debate the issues of the day. Don’t miss interviews with the people of the moment, whether they be athletes, coaches, reporters, or celebrity fans.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2024 iHeartMedia, Inc.