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February 6, 2025 132 mins
HAPPY FRIGGIN' "A" FRIDAY EVE!!!! How Many Unread Texts Do You Have? Pig On Pig Crime, Not All Accountants Are Nice, Feaky Spiders, Gimpy Points Out How Lindsey Undersold The Movie Blink Twice, Conspiracy Theory Thursday, Top List, & What Were You Thinking?!?!?!?
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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.

Speaker 5 (01:02):
The sun is rising God, Oh wake up, wake up.

Speaker 4 (01:10):
Now, don't worry.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
We're all here to.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
Show you how jan Witz horses raw.

Speaker 4 (01:18):
Station k m o G.

Speaker 6 (01:20):
Home of the Listens is a family.

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

Speaker 4 (01:28):
Are you ready? Are you ready to jove in time to.

Speaker 5 (01:32):
Start to show crapstick apl about Fresco, Whisping Man, Marny Show,
Welcome to the Working Week. It's on such a bore
kick back, makes up the offing.

Speaker 4 (01:52):
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 4 (02:05):
Dots.

Speaker 5 (02:15):
Time dot s.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six Oh k m o D. Can also
text bmms and then what you want to say to
eight two, nine four five Listen online the website that
Rocks kmod dot com. Past shows are available on iTunes
search under b m MS. Listen with your cell phone.
Get the iHeartRadio app available from the app store of

(02:46):
your cell phone provider. More on that at iHeartRadio dot com.
And we're on Facebook, Facebook dot com, slash BMMS six
y nine.

Speaker 7 (02:55):
That's where you can hang out with us each.

Speaker 1 (02:57):
And every day. Good morning, Lindsay, good morning, Good morning
Gimpy Rocks and Roses is going on. You could win
a thousand dollars gift card and to have a chance
at winning that, you've got to win today's game at
seven point thirty. When you win that game, we're gonna
hook you up with a pair of tickets to see
Theory of a Dead Man Unplugged at the Tulsa Theater
on Saturday, and you'll get a hundred dollars movies gift

(03:19):
card and then be in the running for that thousand
dollars gift card to Moodies Julie for Rocks n' Roses.
We'll see what Gimpey wants to talk about. We got
conspiracy theory Thursday. Whoa, And besides the normal everyday ones,
there wasn't a big one. So we're gonna go ahead
and do Catastrophe Movies today for our top list. What

(03:41):
I like about that list is it can be apocalyptic,
and it cannot be apocalyptic. It could be conspiracy, conspiracy, conspiracy, conspiracy,
it can have a conspiracy in it. So we'll get
to that coming out like conspiracy ish ish there you go. Uh,

(04:06):
similar to conspiracies hint of at the super Bowl. I
think everybody's I don't know if you guys heard super
Bowl Sunday. I don't know if you know about this
to some, to some it's one of my favorite things
that happens is where people won't say the word super

(04:27):
Bowl or can't or have been sued or don't want
to be sued, and they come up with a different
phrase the old game on Sunday, Sunday's game. It feels
just so like narc ish, right, like the nark at school.
You're like, you're a nark, right, you guy who's gonna
watch the big Game the Sunday. It has the same

(04:48):
feel when someone says we made love. You're just like
you're like, what, ah, feel a little slimmy? I don't
think settle down, like I'm sure your man loves you anyway,
This super Bowl is happening, and uh, I this conversation

(05:09):
with multitude of players from both sides gives me anxiety.
And I think when you hear what the question is
and you hear some of the responses, hopefully you'll understand
why it gives me anxiety. All day.

Speaker 6 (05:24):
Tell me I text you have right now. It's Super
Bowl week.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
So she's asking how many unread texts do you have
on your phone because it's Super Bowl week?

Speaker 7 (05:37):
Two thirty three.

Speaker 1 (05:39):
Is what he said. Wow, I am thirty.

Speaker 7 (05:45):
Thousand, three hundred and forty eight.

Speaker 8 (05:47):
Wow residents test messages, four hundred and eighty seven miss calls,
two hundred and twenty three text messages.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
Nine hundred and eighty two unread text messages.

Speaker 6 (06:09):
Yeah, a thousand, one hundred and seventy two.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
One thousand, one hundred and seventy two unread text messages.
I bet it's no more than five. I'm trying to.

Speaker 5 (06:20):
Stay off on that.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
Four to fifteen. Not too bad, not too crazy, it's
a little too much. One thousand, eight hundred and sixty
four eleven, Oh gonna get mad at me?

Speaker 6 (06:32):
Just eleven, just eleven all from the same group.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
Check two hundred and fifty two fifty. I'm not a
good phone person.

Speaker 7 (06:40):
Now, granted it is there.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
It's a big thing, right, you're checking message, you're checking
some of them. Yeah, dude, just that many people have
your number that you just I can't do it. I
can't have unread text messages on my phone. Calls I
feel as different. But text messages a thousand, you'll never

(07:03):
get to them. No, no, no, no, Like one guy
was like, it's from the same group text message. So
I guess see where like if there's a lot of
amount there that are like group messages like that where
you have a dozen twenty five people in the same
sure that'll show up as like twenty five mismassage.

Speaker 6 (07:21):
Oh yeah, and those caused me so much anxiety. Those
are the worst because you'll answer one and then five
minutes you put your phone down. Five minutes later there's
fifteen new messages. What just happened?

Speaker 1 (07:35):
How many group messages like that are you in?

Speaker 6 (07:40):
I would say four?

Speaker 1 (07:41):
Okay, maybe how many are you in gimpia of like
group chat things like that strictly text messages? Or are
we're talking like Facebook message? No, no, no, no, text messages
A very small amount, my kids, I think you guys
are one of them as well. And and that's where
it ends. So too. Two group messages. That's interesting because

(08:05):
I don't count like like that like ours. I don't
count that as a group chat. Wow, I mean, but
it is, you're right, Actually it is.

Speaker 7 (08:12):
You know, you're right.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
I just never thought of it like that. But there
are some where there's like I'm in like one I
think that has like ten people in yeah, and I'm
I don't participate in it. And that thing that you
said happens where it just blows up and you're like, eh,
you go to take a dump and then you come.

Speaker 7 (08:33):
Back and you're like what happened?

Speaker 1 (08:34):
Yeah, Yeah, I'm in. When it comes to a Facebook messenger,
I'm in like maybe like three or four groups like that.

Speaker 7 (08:44):
One of them we use a lot that I use
a lot to chat with.

Speaker 1 (08:49):
My crew of people, you know, the same eight people
that always hang out together. And then another one I'm
part of, but I'm not active in it, Like it's
a writing group, and I all the people in that group.
They're great people, but it's one of those that like
just it won't stop going. Oh, what's the difference between

(09:12):
that a Facebook group chat? Like why use that instead
of text messaging? I don't know, to be honest with it,
it was specifically, Yeah, maybe because like let's just say,
with the writing group, not everybody and that group has
everybody's phone number, so it's easier that way.

Speaker 7 (09:27):
Okay, So far as like with my crew, I.

Speaker 1 (09:31):
Think it's it's just easier that way as opposed to
because you can just go to Facebook, d D D
d D and it's not that much. I mean, it's
probably the same amount of time or whatever. But honestly,
I didn't start that group. One of my friends did
because we were all getting ready to go to Texas
Hippie Coalition concert and we wanted a way to kind

(09:52):
of you know, organize everything. Hey, this is where we're
going to meet up and blah blah blah. Let's go
get something to eat and we'll go to the show. Yeah,
And then after that it just stayed like that and
then kind of grew more people into the group and
so forth. Sure, like, I know I'm in a cheer one,
but I don't feel like that counts. And that's on
a like a different app completely right, And I don't

(10:14):
feel like that counts because there's no I mean, sometimes
it turns, but again, I do not participate in it, right,
It's just there for information like vacate, like hey there's
no practice today, or hey we need make surebody socks
are clean.

Speaker 6 (10:28):
Yeah, practice is canceled or removed.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it still counts even though you don't
use it. It's still a group messaging service, you know,
where people talk to you to each other all the
one time. I think what I'm getting at is that
I always imply those type of things as a social thing, yeah,
not as a business thing for like your family or now,
if your family's getting together like Grandma's brownie suck that's funny,

(10:53):
then that's like okay, but I I'm in, Like my
wife and I are in, like it's money, my wife,
our best friend's husband and wife. Like that's one. But
I guess that's a group chat, yeah, for sure, rather
than it's texting between two couples. Yeah, if you've got
more than two people individuals in this little chat block,

(11:15):
that's a group chat, even if it's just three of them,
you know. Okay, So I think that's a fair point
than with the that I never thought about with the
football players, but still a thousand Yeah, it's kind of ridiculous.
I can understand having a thousand unready emails. Is group
chats a younger thing?

Speaker 6 (11:37):
No?

Speaker 1 (11:38):
No, let me rephrase that. Do more young people use
more of them? Because the football players are all about
the twenty something?

Speaker 6 (11:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (11:48):
Right? It is more like, do do you young people
do you hit hey they're young ones? Do you guys
do a lot of group chats?

Speaker 6 (12:02):
My kid does a lot of group Chatskay? Yes, yeah,
I know. He's got a group chat with his football teammates,
he's got a group chats with his lacrosse teammates, and
then he's got group chats with just his regular friends. Okay,
so sure, Yeah, I guess it's.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
Just an ease sort of thing for anybody who wants
to talk to a bunch of people at one time. Right,
But like, not just niche down to just one demogram.
I respect you wanting to hold on to being young,
But like the idea is that maybe everybody uses them
for convenience. But is it a trend that started because
a lot of young people were doing it? I don't.

(12:42):
I can tell you. I just knew it was an option.
I was like, Okay, let's do this, let's get everybody involved.
All at one time, so I don't have to sit
there and text one person after another, you know, separate
text messages. Same way with the Facebook messaging group. You know,
it's it's easier to just get everybody involved at one
time as a pose to fifteen different messages. All right,

(13:03):
it's just one. Yeah, yeah, I feel yeah for me,
they it has to be for a non social reason,
is why I'm involved, because like ours is ninety nine
percent business stuff. Right, maybe I'm sick, which is business
yeah right, But and then the cheer one is one hundred.

Speaker 7 (13:27):
That's the only reason I have it is to get information.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
I don't think only that fa that ones with our friends,
and that's the only when we travel together, yeah, or
we're making plans.

Speaker 7 (13:39):
So it isn't an active one.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
I've never woken up and had twenty messages in either
of any of those. Right. This text here says Discord
is an amazing app for friends and groups, two texts
and voice chat. I will go on a limb and
say that Discord is a young younger person's thing app
because I don't know a lot of people my age
that are the Discord, but I do know a lot

(14:02):
of people like my old roommate, for example, my little
illegitimate bastard child. You know, he's he just turned thirty, right,
and uh, and he's he's talked about discord many times,
and I was like, I've never heard of it, don't
plan on using. I'm happy with Facebook. Yeah, and I've
used discord for a lot of work stuff, a lot

(14:22):
of contract work stuff I do exists in that arena. Okay,
so it I think you're right, it's but I don't
understand what makes it better than texting? Why that over
a group text? I don't know. I've never used it before,
so I've never never thought about it. The same but
the same question I have about like Facebook, like why
would that be better? Yeah, because I don't know if

(14:43):
I want to be in a group chat with people
I don't have their phone before. I'm just I'm just saying,
you don't want to give out your phone number because
you respect your privacy. You know. It's like, Okay, well
that's that's a way to do it. Use the discord,
use the Facebook messenger stuff like that.

Speaker 6 (14:59):
And for some peopleeople, it's just like, oh I got
you on Facebook, I don't need to ask you for
your phone number.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
Right, Yeah, of course you also have to do things,
but that's a whole other topic.

Speaker 9 (15:07):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
And I don't even like when we're doing something like hey,
what's your Facebook, I'm like, eh, I don't really have one.
I have one so I can be in the PTA stuff.
I have one so I can be in the neighborhood group,
but I don't ever go in and be like, listen here, buddy,
that stop signs for stopping who left their traff can out.

(15:34):
I did see one, man. I mean, some people that
is their life. That's what gives them, gives them life, right,
I did see one the other day that I was like, ah, man,
I might have to participate in this. Really, somebody dumped
nine puppies in our neighborhood. Nine hide your kids, And

(15:58):
I was like, I mean, I don't want a dog,
but I also think that that's really horrible.

Speaker 7 (16:05):
Absolutely, kiddies would be a different thing.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
But like those you put in a sack and throw in.

Speaker 6 (16:10):
The stop it.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
People do it, thrill they do.

Speaker 6 (16:16):
They deal with puppies too.

Speaker 1 (16:18):
That is a true statement. I mean, I think you
hear more of sack of cats is like an actual
term people use. Sack of puppies is not a thing.
Sack of dogs is not a thing. I mean Jeff
Finsley comes and says, that's a whole other bag of cats.
Yeah right, He never said, oh, that's a whole other
bag of ogs. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (16:33):
So it is more of a cat thing. Cats own that.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
For sure. Here's a question. Not that I want to
do this, nor would I encourage it. It's horrible. How
do you do it? How do you put a puppy
in a bag?

Speaker 6 (16:51):
No?

Speaker 7 (16:51):
No, no, like a cat?

Speaker 1 (16:52):
Do you? Is it a I gotta go look up
the origin of this, Like do you take a hefty right?
And then I mean the bag would float because you're
not gonna get all the air out of it. You
get most of it out and the weight of the
cast is going to disperse the air. Not enough, I think,
so No, No, So I like, do you have to

(17:16):
get a strong you can get all the air and
then tie it and then do you put like a brick? No,
you're missing the whole thing. You get one of those
space bags vacuum up. Got it?

Speaker 7 (17:29):
Oh those things are not cheap.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
If you're going to go through the effort to buy
one of those space bags. I've never called them a
space bag, but I get it a space bag. Yeah,
vacuum bags is what I always heard them, and which
they don't work great. By the way you vacuum me out,
You're like, this is awesome, and then you go back
the next day and it's filled up again. You're like,
how the hell did that happen? I just had the

(17:53):
craziest premonition. We're going to get an email today. Why
because you're in a bit to process the information, you're
getting anxiety.

Speaker 7 (18:04):
Here's what's happening.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
You, Karen or Chad are getting anxiety off of an
imaginary conversation in your head. Right, they just tuned in.
We're talking about space bags and cats. We're talking about
the origin of the word and how did it come about?
Don't be a baby? Have you seen since January fifteenth?
It's a new world, all right, We've ended racism. Grow

(18:29):
the hell up? She was love. People have to be
one way and that's it. It's over, So grow up.

Speaker 7 (18:37):
And yeah, so I don't. I just can't.

Speaker 1 (18:42):
I'm trying to figure out, like how that became a thing,
and someone go, that's not how you do it right, right?
I could imagine trying to put that cat in a
bag like a dog. I feel like, oh God, we
go in there without a problem, be like, okay, you
want me in this bag? I won't get in there.
They may fight a little, but eventually you'll hold a
treat and they'll go okay. But just trying to get
a can't do anything that it want, it doesn't want
to do. You're gonna you gotta have chain mail gloves

(19:05):
to get it in washing a cat like, you're never
getting a cat in a bathub. It's damn near impossible.
And then to put them in a bag, they got nail,
So a hefty bag is getting destroyed. So it has
to be like bur lamp or something. Burlap bags. Where
are you finding those? Yeah, you gotta go to a
hobby lobby. Not easy in the home, decord, I don't

(19:25):
even know if they have that a good enough size
of one. And nobody's picking cotton anymore, so you're not
gonna have a burlap sat. I mean, burlack sap races
aren't even really that anymore. Right, Maybe you'd have to
use your bookstore bag, but those aren't deep enough. No,
oh no, no no. And besides, I mean they don't

(19:45):
tie off very well. You know you're talking about the
reusable grocery bags, right, ye, yeah, yeah, yeah, the handles
they don't tie off very well. And I don't think
that'd be a good idea. Yeah, I mean, I guess
you could use a suitcase, but you know it's a
that's a whole other suitcase of cats just doesn't have
the same.

Speaker 6 (20:02):
That will definitely well, who's gonna waste good for shortgage?

Speaker 1 (20:05):
Do you know? Throw a cat at the bottom of
a river? Come on right, luggage is at least a hundie.
It's not cheap. Yes, you might have to double bag
a hefty. That's just all there is to it. So anyway,
super Bowl player's got a lot of text messages who
had bag of cat death on there? Okay, all right,
we've got taped theory of a dead man more qualifying

(20:27):
for rocks and roses. We'll see what Gimpei wants to
talk about conspiracy theory Thursday and our toplest we'll take
a break and we'll be back of The.

Speaker 9 (20:34):
Big Mad Morning Show is Nest twine.

Speaker 4 (20:38):
D.

Speaker 7 (20:49):
Good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine four
six oh k m O D.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
You can also text bmms and then what you want
to say to eight two nine four five.

Speaker 7 (21:02):
All right, we have news quikies.

Speaker 1 (21:03):
These are stories you may have missed in the news
and then we cover them here and put a link
on our Facebook page if you want more, Facebook dot
Com slash pms six nine. It's time for newsquakies. World news,
local news and news that just makes you say, what
the Here's Corbyn Gibean Lindsay with what's going on newsquakies
from the Big nine Morning Showing ninety setenty five.

Speaker 6 (21:22):
AMoD pig bites officer's hand during hoof pursuit. This happened
right here in Tulsa, Clohoma, the Tulsa Police Department set
on Facebook. Contrary to what the title implies, this was
not police officers chasing other police officers. On February first,

(21:45):
around twelve twenty am, officers were called out to a
hazard in the roadway near the ninety seven hundred block
on East thirty first Street. When officers arrived, they found
a large pig in the street. Officers tempted to detain
the swine. However, the pig was less than compliant and

(22:05):
would not obey commands. As is often the case, food
is a strong motivator for compliance. Unfortunately, no one had
any donuts in their car, but an officer did have
a box of crackers. Two course the pig into cooperating,
the over zeals, porker took a nibble on the officer's
hand and took off running. The pig then led officers

(22:28):
on a short hoof pursuit before animal control arrived and
I was able to take the pig to a safe place.
No word on exactly where the pig even came from.

Speaker 7 (22:41):
I saw this two days ago.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
Whenever this was, it feels like the weakest attempt at
a story ever from news agencies like, oh look, a
cliche played out right, right right right. News is slow.
They got to come up with something right. Accountant allegedly
tries to kill person four sitting next to him on
a park bench, as comes out of Denver, right where

(23:06):
this CPA. Ryan Eggleston was sitting on a park bench
at Washington Park when two people walk up to him
and one of them's like, hey, mind if my partner
sits here next to you, and the guy sits down,
and that is when mister Eagleston, who is a self
proclaimed certified joy enthusiast with a deep passion to preach

(23:30):
and teach the word of God starts yelling at the
dude and then starts pushing him in the chest, spitting
on the victim eventually punched him in the lower back,
so like a good kidney shot pow. Well, the two
people are like, you know what, screw this, We are
out of here, and that is when Ryan here w

(23:53):
cpa Rye pulls out a gun of fires around at
him as they're walking away. Come out. They questioned the
man and he says that he attacked him because he
believed that they were parts of a psyop mission aimed
at harming him. Yeah, well that's how they were exactly

(24:15):
accounts we're getting coming after UCPAS. He's now locked up
for attempted first degree in mered Air. I don't sit
in enough park benches. They're underrated. My ex wife used
to go and sit on one and drink vodka and
watch the squirrels by yourself. Oh yeah, I mean no,

(24:38):
the squirrels were there. I mean where the squirrels drinking
with her? Maybe it's possible mind control fungus turned spiders
into creepy caves zombies. A newly discovered fungus jabulah antin
burrowa infects cave spiders in Britain and Ireland, altering their
behavior and forcing them to leave their webs and move

(24:59):
to exposed air areas, which helps the fungus spread its
spores more effectively. This phenomenon phenomenon mirrors the well known
zombie and fungi, but occurs in cooler cave environments rather
than tropical regions. Scientists observed other fung gui growing on
top of Gattenborough, indicating a complex web of parasitic interactions.

(25:21):
The discovery challenges previous assumptions about fungi manipulation and highlights
the intricate ecological relationship within cave ecosystems.

Speaker 6 (25:31):
They look horrifying.

Speaker 1 (25:34):
They look just like anything you've seen on the Last
of Us. Yeah. Now just wait for that fungus to
spread from spiders to humans and then the Last of
Us is real. Yeah, we talked about it when that
show debuted. Of all the a zombie esque type of
things out there, this is the fungi one is the

(25:55):
probably the one that sells me the most, right right,
I don't see a vi risk doing it, but a
fungus that's anywhere, could be anywhere with it spreading and
taking over and becoming like its own breathing thing.

Speaker 6 (26:09):
Yikes.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
A virus killing people and then them moving on. I
guess you could maybe a fun guy could be a
virus or people would interpret it that way. But yeah,
it looks because it alters the look of the spider. Yeah,
it looks very like avant garde arts or whatever, like
very weird, and it looks like it's going to hurt
some people.

Speaker 6 (26:30):
Yeah, that's what nightmares are made of.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
Yeah. Hey, yeah, I've had to shoot those a couple
of times on video games, for sure, Yeah, I have.
It usually takes about four or five shots to kill.
There's a game at David Buster's AI game where you
do that and it looks too You're right, it looks
just like that, all right. All these stories are on
our Facebook page, Facebook dot com, slash bmms six y nine.

Speaker 9 (26:52):
More of The Big Man Morning Show is next ninety.

Speaker 7 (26:57):
D Good Morning.

Speaker 1 (27:10):
It's the Big Mad Morning Show nine one eight four
six oh kmod. You can also text bmms and then
what you want to say to eight two nine four
five See what Lindsay has for balls to The Wall Sports.

Speaker 6 (27:36):
The former interpreter for La Dodger Star Showy Otani, will
be sentenced today. Epe Mizuhara is facing a multi year
prison sentence after pleading guilty to bank and tax fraud
last year. He stole nearly seventeen million dollars from Otani's
bank account to feed his gambling addiction. Prosecutors are seeking

(27:57):
a four year, nine month prison sentence for Mizuhara. Sentencing
will take place in federal court in Santa Ana.

Speaker 7 (28:05):
What kind of prison do you go to for that?

Speaker 1 (28:06):
It's not a violent crime, Probably like a club med
type prison some Yeah, the defences are just hedges, yeah,
really tall hedges.

Speaker 6 (28:18):
The Chiefs are back on the practice field to continue
preps for Super Bowl fifty nine. Kansas City is set
to challenge Sakwan Barkley and the Philly Eagles on Sunday.
The team released its first injury report of the week
and there were three players listed. Wide receiver Sky Moore
was limited during the session with an abdomen injury, while
quarterback Patrick Mahomes and offensive tackle Juwan Taylor were listed

(28:40):
as full participants. Mahomes, a tight end, Travis Kelcey defensive
tackle Chris Jones and kicker Harrison Bucker and long snapper
James Winchester are the lone members to have played in
each of the team's four previous Super Bowl appearances. Philly
released its first practice report of the week, and several
players were limited. Kenneth Gainwell is dealing with a concussion

(29:02):
along with a knee issue, Brandon Graham is nursing an
elbow injury, and DeVante Smith has a hamstring problem. Jalen
Carter was also limited as he battles through an illness.
Nick Sirianni is just the third head coach in league
history to make two or more Super Bowl appearances in
his first four seasons.

Speaker 1 (29:22):
I saw a thing yesterday. Jalen Hurts is the first
quarterback since Jim Kelly to make it back to a
Super Bowl for redemption. Yeah, and no one since like
nineteen fifty or something has been successful. Wow, isn't that interesting? Yeah? Now,
I think Jalen Hurts is completely capable of it. I

(29:42):
also thought Jim Kelly was too. We'll see what happens.

Speaker 7 (29:46):
Yeah, there's no Yeah, there's no way to predict.

Speaker 1 (29:49):
Do you think these players have somebody they're telling them
like not to do stupid stuff like this week. They're like, Patrick, listen,
we don't need you armor assle in people at the bar. Yeah,
the week before the big game. Yeah yeah. I think
it just depends on the culture of the locker room.
I'm confident the you know, the coaches are going guys,
you know, keep your nose clean, blah blah blah.

Speaker 7 (30:09):
But they're still grown adults exactly.

Speaker 1 (30:11):
But in the breakout rooms, so quarterbacks, offense, maybe defensive players,
their guys are going, no going out this week, Let's
stay it, Let's stay focused, get to the room. If
you go out, let's be backed by a certain time.
They may have a curfew, But I think that depends
on the attitude of the team and what happens in

(30:31):
the locker room. They were interviewing like the third string,
fourth string tight end for the Chiefs and he was
a tight end in Dallas and they were asking him
about the difference and he's like, we in Dallas compared
to here, And he's like, Dallas is a great organization.

Speaker 7 (30:46):
I'm not dogging on it.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
He's like, but here, we talk about two things, football
and winning, and that's it, which seems crazy, that feels
like exactly what any organization should be talking about, you think.
And for a guy at that, you know who's been
another and he's that far down on the tree, you
would think that for him to even be in that
mindset is I think pretty interesting. But again I was shocked.

(31:10):
I was like, don't all teams have that mindset?

Speaker 4 (31:13):
Right?

Speaker 1 (31:13):
Really not?

Speaker 6 (31:14):
But even the even if he doesn't get any playtime,
he still gets a ring if they win.

Speaker 1 (31:18):
Sure, I mean if you're a part of it, yeah,
you get different rings based on your role.

Speaker 7 (31:22):
But uh, yeah, of course.

Speaker 4 (31:26):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (31:27):
The Midden or Madden simulation of the game went down
and a CBS Sport It's set at a game with
a ten minute quarters and then watch the magic unfold.
The opening of Possessions saw both the defenses in control.
An interception off the arm of Jalen Hurts resulted in
the Eagles getting the ball at the Kansas City thirty

(31:48):
five yard line and a drive resulting in a Jay
Brown touchdown for a seven and nothing Eagles lead. Another
touchdown pass, this time to Jay Dotson, gave the Eagles
a two touchdown lead that she Chiefs Defense showed up
next with Chris Jones recovering a fumble followed by an
Xavier Worthy touchdown reception for a score of fourteen to seven.

(32:08):
The Eagles answered that one with a one yard touchdown
run from say Kwan Barkley, and the Eagles took a
twenty one to seven lead into halftime. The Eagles scored
again in the third quarter thanks to a Hurtz touchdown run,
making the score twenty eight to seven. The Chiefs then
started to claw their way back with a twenty one
point fourth quarter thanks to a touchdown connection with DeAndre

(32:29):
Hopkins twenty eight to fourteen at that time. That was
followed by an Eagles field goal, making the score thirty
one to fourteen. The Chiefs continued to bring the offensive
fire with two more touchdown receptions, one to Noah Gray
and another to Hollywood Brown, making the score thirty one
to twenty eight. The Eagles then recovered the on side
kick and ran the clock to secure a Super Bowl win,

(32:52):
with Hurts getting the MVP nod.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
Hooray. I put as much merit in that as I
do as the hip on which watermelon he swallowed, right,
which are also really great, and they always tried to
do this. I mean, he's picked the winner, right, Yeah,
Madden doesn't have those special refs in their game yet though, No, no,
or Taylor Swift, yeah right, exact or that voodoo magic.

Speaker 6 (33:16):
Right, We'll have to wait until Sunday to see what happens.

Speaker 1 (33:19):
Nobody's making the connection. That voodoo magic, which they said
the Chiefs have happ had all year, is rooted in
what culture New Orleans Creole cut culture.

Speaker 6 (33:29):
Yeah, and that's your balls of the Wall sports. I'm
Lindsay in ninety seven five km OD.

Speaker 7 (33:44):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show six O
K M O D.

Speaker 1 (33:49):
You can also text BMMS and then what you want
to say to eight two nine four five.

Speaker 6 (33:57):
Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning, Corbyn comes laining about high
egg prices. Have you checked out our contest page at
kmod dot com. You could win one hundred thousand dollars
in groceries courtesy of the Stellar Rosa Wine Company and
kmod dot com. Go check it out.

Speaker 7 (34:13):
Good morning, Gibbie, Good morning Corvin.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
I guess Pop Evel's going to be at the Canes
Ballroom on April eighth, that's Tuesday. If you want to
go for free hit up whips at the Rocks Kimody
dot com bedrown, no world, take my strow hand, get
on give train, give train. Then no world, take my
shrow hand, get on the train. Look at back to

(34:41):
the lard. I can't press the fire button and jump
at the same page.

Speaker 7 (34:45):
Lendsay, yo, thanks for being here.

Speaker 6 (34:48):
Oh you're welcome.

Speaker 1 (34:49):
How well? How long you been here, Lendsai?

Speaker 6 (34:51):
Almost four years?

Speaker 1 (34:52):
So you're rounding out your first contract, yes, sir, und
your second one yet? No, okay, you weren't.

Speaker 6 (35:00):
Sure well, I mean I signed my uh what's the
word option here?

Speaker 7 (35:10):
Okay, okay, so we're stuck with you for a little
bit longer.

Speaker 1 (35:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (35:13):
Nonetheless, I'm glad that you're here. I really am.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
You are far better than that Cea you next Tuesday
that was in that chair before you. Yeah, no problem. However,
I think whoever replaced Hitler they also had like exactly,
I mean, just nothing she was Hitler.

Speaker 7 (35:29):
I'm just saying that, like, right, right, right, You're way
better than that last.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
Anyway, LENDSI I am highly disappointed in you.

Speaker 7 (35:40):
I'm glad that you here.

Speaker 1 (35:43):
I am highly highly disappointed in you. You grossly under lindsay,
you grossly undersold blink twice on Tuesday. Oh okay, oh
my goodness gracious, So Tuesday, Lendsy brings somehow we got
Hatley Joel Osment brought up on the show, right, And

(36:04):
Lindsay's like, I just saw him in this movie with
Channing Tatum called Blink Twice. I've never heard of this movie,
never seen this movie. It's on Amazon Prime, It's on
Prime Video. And so she goes in to tell us
about it, and like I said, grossly undersold this movie.
I mean, she said it was good. I feel like
she gave it him a pretty on par when Lindsey

(36:27):
thinks something's good Lindsey review. Okay, yes, I don't feel
like she I mean, I don't know what more she
could have said.

Speaker 6 (36:33):
Also, I hate giving way too much because I do
not like being the spoiler.

Speaker 1 (36:38):
It's okay, really yes spoiler. I I will try not to.
I want to play spoiler on this movie. Anyway. It
is a badass movie. We talked about, you know, is
could this be Channing Tatum's best work ever? Because he's
known for dancing and magic mike and and all that
other stuff and a Lotti Gards type of person, a
hunky dude or whatever. He plays a great psycho band

(37:00):
in this movie. So Lindsey talks about this movie on Tuesday,
and there ain't crap on TV for me to watch. Really,
if it's on my dvr, I've already watched it, you know,
sitcoms and stuff like that. So I'm like, okay, I remember, oh,
Blink twice, it's on Uh, Lindsey's talking about it's on
Prime video. I'm gonna check it out. So I did.
And holy hell, first thing, Lindsey, you didn't mention this

(37:23):
is a Zoe Kravitz movie. We know we did, did you? Okay?
I didn't catch that part. I was like, all right,
that's interesting. You didn't mention that Christian Slater was in
this movie.

Speaker 6 (37:33):
Oh yeah, I did leave that out.

Speaker 1 (37:34):
Okay, Which there's a part in there that involves him
that I was like, holy crap, go ahead. Yeah, he's
not a huge role in it. He is a major
role in it. He is the guy that is taking
all the pictures, all the polaroids of all the debauchery
that's going on on this prime documenting everything. So so

(37:56):
Blink Twice. It's Channing Tatum is this billionaire tech playboy
who abused his power and he's like, I'm so sorry.
I'm going to therapy. I'm being a better person now.
And apparently he buys a private island, right, and it's
got this plantation on it, and that's where they go
and just kind of hang out. And he's like, I've
been hanging out on my island. We grow all of

(38:18):
our own food. I've been eating a lot of chicken
because they raise chickens on this island that they have.
And he's like, I'm really just trying to, you know,
be a better person or whatever. So the movie starts off.
It's got this gall named Frieda and her friend Jess.
Now Jess is played by Aliyah Shawkhent If you know
who I'm talking about. She's on Arrested Development, she was

(38:40):
on that show Search Party. She's a pretty good actor. Okay,
So these two Frida and Jess, they work for a
catering company that is catering a gala that Channing Tatum's
character is putting on, this billionaire character is putting on, right,
and this freeda gal is totally inmred with Channing Tatum's character. Okay,

(39:03):
And so they're working, they're doing the catering, they're passing
out the orders and the whatnots like that, and then
they break away and they change into some evening dresses
and they sneak into this gala and become part of it.
And this Galfrida ends up talking to Channing Tatum's character
and they hit it off and he's like, hey, you

(39:25):
should go back to this island with us, and she's
like hell yeah, and he's like, bring your friend too. Okay. Cool.

Speaker 7 (39:32):
So now these two girls hop on a plane.

Speaker 1 (39:35):
And they go to this island that Channing Tatum owns
now Channing Tatum, Haley, Joe Osman, Christian Slater. Those are
the three main like names you would probably know. There's
another guy because there's five people, five guys that are
running in this group.

Speaker 7 (39:50):
Another guy Levon Hawk. Never heard of this guy before.
And Simon Rex.

Speaker 6 (39:56):
Simon Rex, he used to be a MTVVJ.

Speaker 1 (39:59):
Okay, he's done something. Okay. I never heard of those
two before, but I did recognize those three. Okay. So
these five guys find five girls and they take them
to this island and it's time to party, all right,
We're letting loose, We're having a good time. They keep
these girls drunk again the whole time, right, to keep

(40:21):
them from remembering things. So you think, anyway, total psychological
thriller this movie is. And it even has a warning
at the beginning of the movie, Hey, psychological thriller. Gotta
be some pretty violent acts, rape and stuff like that.
If you're offended, don't watch the movie. And I was like, well,
if it comes with a disclaimer like that, I'm in

(40:41):
right right, So all right, So they go to the
island and they're partying or whatnots, and then Hatley Joel
Osmond his fat little characters like, now it's really time
to party, and he pulls out this little like eye dropper, right,
it's got some liquid in it and drop it on
their tongues and it's apparently some kind of massive hallucina
general whatever.

Speaker 7 (41:00):
Right, this's fantastic.

Speaker 1 (41:02):
So they're partying, and you know, the whole time, throughout
the whole movie, you see them, you know, just having
a good time. They're swimming, the women are running around,
just having a good time. They're laughing at whatnots. And
somewhere in the middle of the movie, these women are

(41:23):
running across the field or whatever, and one of the
girls is like, why are we running, you know, because
they just they just running, but they don't realize that,
you know, the guys are chasing them because they're about
to do some dirty, dirty, dirty stuff to them. Right,
So how do they get these girls to not remember anything? Right? Well,

(41:46):
they get these little gift bags that has a bottle
of perfume in it, right, and the girls are spraying
the perfume on them, and apparently it's whatever's in the
perfume that keeps them from remembering things. Right. So the movie,
he goes on through Jess played by aliash Yeah, a
Liah Schalcat. She gets bitten by a snake. Now I

(42:07):
remember me, lindsay mentioning that, right, gets bitten by one
of these yellow snakes or whatever. And apparently they're a
big nuisance and throughout the island or whatever. And in
the beginning of the movie, you see this old Mexican lady, right,
her job is to go around and kill the snakes, right,
And she runs into this freeda gallon. The only thing

(42:28):
she ever says is red rabbit, red rabbit. And the
Lady's like, okay, whatever, red rabbit. That'll come into play
later on down the road. So this this Alea gal,
this Jessical gets bit by a snake and it's the
snake venom that causes them to remember what is happening.
And Lindsay had mentioned that as well, but they didn't
know that that's what it was. Right. So once the

(42:50):
Channing Tatum and his crew of douchebags realized that this
gal is remembering all the filthy, hill horrible, disgusting things
that they have done to her and her friends, they
kill her. They kill her because they can't have that
be getting out. So right now, at this point in time,
Jess is gone, right, and the other girls they don't

(43:13):
ever remember her being here. And the only way that
they know that Jess was there is because she was
the only one with a lighter. And they're all smoking
joints and fat blunts, right, and you know, passing the
lighter around Guardian, Yeah, having a good time. But she's
the only one with lighter out of all these groups
of people, she's the only one with the lighter. And
she's like, I want to have to write my name

(43:33):
on that, and she does so. Anyway, I guess at
some point in time, this Frida Goal is kind of
wandering around the island just walking discovering things, and she
comes across this building and inside this building is shells
and shells of these red gift bags, and inside these

(43:55):
gift bags or these bottles of perfume or whatever that
they give to the girls. See, they won't remember anything
that's happening. And then she runs into that same creepy
Mexican goal from the beginning of the movie where she's
like Brad rabbit, rad rabbit whatever. She's like, oh, yeah, cool,
and then uh, the Mexican lady hands her like a
pint of some green liquid. Right, she's like, you want

(44:17):
to drink? And sure, whatever knocks back a shot or whatever,
and it's like plauh, my god, that's terrible. What is that?
You know? But she can't understand anything because she's you know,
speaking Spanish whatever. Well, then that that was the snake venom.
She's killing all the snakes and using the venom, and
that's what causes them to start to remember things. So
since that one gal Frieda had taken a shot out

(44:40):
of that bottle, now her mind's open and now she's
remembering everything, but not like everything all at one time.
It's a little bit of little yeah, ok, yeah, yeah.
So uh. Then then then she goes to this other
gal because this other that's in there, one of them whatnot.

(45:02):
She's like because she's asked free to ask, like, hey,
where's my friend Jess? Where's my friend Jess? And all
these other girls are like, who Jess? She was just
here and now she's not. And then the other gal
was like, wait a minute, I've got this lighter. It
has Jess's name on it, but I can't remember who
Jess is. And she's like, what is going on here?

(45:23):
Something weird is going on. So they figure out that
the snake venom is what's causing them to remember things.
So then they take the snake venom juice and they're like, well,
how are we going to get these other girls to
drink this snake venom juice tequila? So they start mixing
the snake venomn and their pool side and they're due
and they're slamming shots of this snake tequila down and

(45:46):
eventually eventually all of them start remembering what had happened,
and that my friend is when all these women turn
on the dudes and it goes straight to hell. That
scene with Christian Slater his little girlfriend that he had
brought along. She gets mad, takes what does it lendy

(46:08):
like lindsay, like a brick or something like that, and
smashes his face open with it to the point you
think he's dead, but he's not.

Speaker 6 (46:17):
No, he's just messed up.

Speaker 1 (46:19):
He is jacked up. And the guys realize they're like, oh,
holy crap, they're remembering everything. We got to figure this out.
So they all gather up into this house. You know,
two of the other guys they end up one of
them ends up, you know, getting stabbed or whatever. So
you've got Channing Tatum, You've got Christian Slater, You've got

(46:39):
this Levon Hawk guy. Those are really the last three
guys that are left. Uh, and and you've got two girls.
You've got the Gal Frieda and the Gal Sarah. And
they're like, we're gonna get these some bitches anyhow. So
they go ahead and they exact their revenge and ends
up shooting one of the guys kills So now it's

(47:00):
just down to Channing Tatum. So Channing Tatum's got this
Gal Frida on the ground, he realizes that this other
goal still out there, chases her down, drags her back
into the house by her here and then slams her
down on the floor and is like, all right, we're
gonna do that whatever. So Christian Slater's over there getting

(47:22):
drunk on a couch because his face is all mashed up,
which I thought it was pretty funny anyway, And so
they eventually he goes through and uh, and he's like, Frida,
you forgot so well. You forgot that you were already
here the year before. See if Frida had done some
snooping and she found all the polaroids that had been

(47:46):
taken throughout time, and she found one of her She
was flipping off the camera and Freeda likes to do nails,
that's her side gig, and she likes to put little
animals on nails. And she had a red rap it
on her finger, and that is how the Mexican lady
remembered who Freedom was. She was the red rabbit lady.

(48:08):
So she's like, he's like, you forgot so well that
you were already here once. And then she starts having
the flashbacks of all the stuff that he did beforehand.

Speaker 6 (48:20):
And she even meets his psychologist or right, he was
even in on it and raping women while he was
on the island.

Speaker 1 (48:27):
Yeah, it's all bad. It's all bad. So event that
was a great movie. It's a fantastic movie. So in
the end spoiler alert, I'll do it because Linday doesn't
want to. In the end, Channing Tatum starts to remember
all the stuff that he has done. He was unaware.

(48:50):
He was not aware it was happening as well, because
he's like, you can't forgive, you can only forget, right,
that was the thing. Forgetting is a gift. That was
a big mantra throughout the movie or whatever. So then
he starts remembering everything that's going on, everything that he's done,
and he's like, holy crap, I am such a piece
of ass.

Speaker 6 (49:07):
Yeah, and he's like, why am I remembering that? Yes,
I'm not supposed to be.

Speaker 1 (49:10):
And I kind of wanted to say that because I
don't remember her. She must have slipped some of that
venom into like his whiskey or something to that effect.

Speaker 6 (49:16):
It shows it. It says, yeah, look.

Speaker 1 (49:19):
In your right, yeah yeah yeah. So uh, he starts
remembering and at the very end, I guess she flips
everything on him and now she is the new leader
of this tech billionaire business that Channing Tatum was running
and now tanningdum Channing Tatum is just a I don't know,
a submissive douche at the end of the movie or whatever.

(49:41):
And uh, and that's just where it ends right there.
I was like, holy crap, Lensey, you totally undersold this movie.
It's a fantastic movie. Blink Twice is the name of it.
It's on Prime Video. Who is the villain? Then? Uh?
Essentially in the beginn it's it's Channing Tatum, but he's not.

(50:02):
But it's not in the end. I guess it has
to be Freeda because she flipped everything on him and
kind of took over his business and and him if
maybe there's not a villain in there, Maybe there's not
a So you don't know who's the person that is
doing the drops? Well, no, everybody's doing the drops, right,

(50:25):
who's the person initiating it? Who's the one responsible Channing Tatum? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, definitely,
but who got him? Maybe is that the out for
a sequel? And then we're gonna we're gonna have Blink
Twice too? Maybe so? Maybe so, because it never does
say and maybe Blendsay picked this up and I didn't
and it never said like how he came across that perfume,
that that potion or whatever that causes them to forget that,

(50:48):
never really do mention that as all whatsoever. So maybe
it doesn't. I don't know, but I do have to say,
you gotta watch this movie, Corbyn. You love movies like
you should totally check this out. Blinked Weiss is what
it's called. Be around the world. Take my strong hand,
get on the give train, Alma, give train hand. Be

(51:09):
around the world. Take my my shrum hand, get on
the train. Yeah, looking back to the Lord. I can't
press the fire and jump at the same thing.

Speaker 9 (51:21):
Tulsa's Morning Show, Oh yeah, he's coming right back. A
Big Mad Morning Show. Tulsa's Rock Station ninety seven five KMOD, Good.

Speaker 1 (51:41):
Morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one, eight
four six oh KMOT can also text bmms and then
what you want to say to eight two nine four
five Saturday There If a dead Man is going to
be playing Unplugged at the Tulsa Theater, and we've got
tickets for you. Let's play a game, and when you
win those tis Tier of a dead Man, you're also

(52:02):
going to get one hundred dollar Moodies Jewelry gift card
and qualify for Rocks and Roses, which is a thousand
dollars Moodies gift card, so you'll be in the running
for that if you win today. We're gonna play snip Schnapschner.
Current record is I have two and you have two
and Lindsey has none. Last week's winner I'd be you,
so Gimpy and Lindsay at nine eight four six oh

(52:25):
kmo d nine eight four six oh kmod call up,
decide who's going to be your clue giver. Whoever gets
the most right is winning tickets there if a dead
man and be qualified for Rocks and Roses.

Speaker 7 (52:35):
Good morning, you're on the air.

Speaker 1 (52:36):
What is your name, Lisa? Lisa? How are you?

Speaker 6 (52:41):
I'm good? How are you?

Speaker 1 (52:42):
Corby good?

Speaker 7 (52:42):
Who do you want to give?

Speaker 1 (52:43):
Clues? Lindsay or Gimpy Gimpy? Sixty seconds are on the clock, Lisa.
Time starts after the first clue.

Speaker 7 (52:50):
Are you ready? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (52:52):
Here we go, Lisa. This is one of the very
first gaming consoles before Nintendo and after Khaleikavisionong No, okay,
Pong was played on this console. Uh, she got it?
Go ahead, Okay, This is the type of sweater that

(53:12):
mister Rogers wore. Yes, this is the place in your
house where you keep your canned goods plantry. Okay, uh
a ol blank messenger, fill in the blank. If I
need something fast, I need it in a blank or

(53:35):
there you go. Blank Nikki is a song by Prince
and the Foo Fighters. Little no uh. It's a very
endearing kind of term, mostly used in feet for me
no you usually most mostly pass uh blank and bone.

(53:57):
It's another name for skin time time time four is
what we got hang on the line.

Speaker 7 (54:06):
Okay, okay, thank you.

Speaker 1 (54:09):
We thought she said natari that's what it sounds like. Okay,
all right, good morning, you're on the air. What is
your name? Sorry?

Speaker 7 (54:17):
What is your name?

Speaker 1 (54:19):
Matthew? Matthew? How are you?

Speaker 7 (54:20):
Buddy? Doing fine?

Speaker 1 (54:22):
Good?

Speaker 7 (54:22):
You and lindsay gotta be four?

Speaker 1 (54:24):
Are you ready? I am?

Speaker 9 (54:26):
What's good? We go?

Speaker 6 (54:27):
All right? If someone has bo they might say that person, what.

Speaker 1 (54:35):
Can you repeat that?

Speaker 6 (54:36):
If you got bo? I might say that you yes,
uh huh dog the blank hunter. Yes, this is a
redheaded singer. He sings perfect. He was also on Game
of Thrones. Blank helms the actor Uh pass blank. If

(55:05):
this is a game, Blank pursuit. It's a board. Yes, yes, yes,
these are little glass balls and sometimes you collect them. Yeah. Uh,
singular Marvel Yeah, Rice, Blank, treat Christy, just leave off

(55:29):
the y christ Yeah. Uh huh the Blank of the
Litter No, uh, the Little.

Speaker 1 (55:37):
Dog on time time. Congratulations, Matthew, you're getting those tickets
to see the Theory of a Dead Man Unplugged on
a Saturday. You get one hundred dollars Movies gift card,
and then you're in the running for Rocks and Roses,
which is one thousand dollars Moodies Jewelry gift card. Congratulations,
the man hang on the line. Thank you, matt.

Speaker 7 (55:57):
Sorry you did not win. Girl, Thank you so much
for playing.

Speaker 3 (56:01):
Thanks you later.

Speaker 1 (56:04):
You are one pathetic losers, the one she passed on Gibbe.

Speaker 4 (56:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (56:08):
This is a singer and uh a bit of a crooner.
I guess people say that this is what you do
with sheep, and he does this with sheep in his
spare time. I think this is an incredibly tough one
because you can name songs all day, but if you
don't know who this guy is, he was in one episode.

Speaker 7 (56:30):
I think Game of Thrones, Redheaded pop singer.

Speaker 1 (56:35):
That's it. Yeah, if he goes on a jog, Oh
female version would do you'd say what she are? Blank
to the store, she ran, that's the way to do it.

Speaker 7 (56:53):
Yeah, and then mister.

Speaker 1 (56:55):
Yeah, that's the one she ended on gimbi. Yeah. This
is the small list of the dogs and the litter,
the one mom don't want.

Speaker 6 (57:06):
The tiny ones, okay.

Speaker 1 (57:10):
List more people said that average average dog.

Speaker 6 (57:16):
Yes, so this one here you had it with blank,
Nikki or oh my blank, oh my blank, oh my blank, Clementine.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
That's what I want to yeah, darling.

Speaker 6 (57:28):
And then this blank and bones? Yeah another word for
skin zombies?

Speaker 7 (57:34):
Are they like to eat brains?

Speaker 1 (57:37):
Yeah? Yeah, oh yeah, that's not a cut, that's a
blank wound, a.

Speaker 6 (57:40):
Blank yes, uh huh, or a blank eating disease.

Speaker 1 (57:46):
Yeah, flesh, he's the word, all right. The record now
hack us me with too, keeps you with two? Now
puts Lindsay on the board with one.

Speaker 9 (57:53):
The Big Man Morning Show returns next Elsa's Morning Show,
km OD.

Speaker 7 (58:10):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show.

Speaker 1 (58:12):
Nine one, eight four six oh kmod can also text
BMMS and then what you want to say.

Speaker 7 (58:17):
To eight two nine four five.

Speaker 1 (58:22):
Let's see what Gimpi has in his four x four.
Covin says here that Trump signs executive order banning transgender
athletes from women's sports. Bump up bum.

Speaker 7 (58:33):
He signed an executive order yesterday.

Speaker 1 (58:35):
He said from now on, women's sports will only be
for women, and the order directs the Department of Justice
and other federal agencies to interpret the Title nine Rules
as banning transgender women and girls from participating in female sports.
The order also requires the immediate enforcement of these rules.
The funniest thing about all that was when he signed it.

(58:58):
There was like all these girls, kids, whatever, and there's
a moment when the Secret Service is like, hey, they're
too close, and the presence like if we're worried about them, right,
we got another problem, right. It was pretty funny. What
else we got here? The helicopter may have been flying
too high ahead of mid air collision. They may have

(59:20):
been new data from the deadly mid air collision outside
of Washington, DC last Week's just the US Army black
Hawk black Hawk helicopter was flying higher than it was
supposed to. However, the NTSB still wants more proof in
its investigation. The black boxes from both the helicopter and
the American Airlines regional jet have been recovered, and the

(59:43):
NTSB says they're working on synchronizing the recordings. I thought
it was well clear that they were higher than they
should be. They were not in the right spot. The
helicopter pretty much intact right the plane. I think we're
all aware, not so much, and it just sounds like
they're trying to be very slow of getting to it
was their fault, right right. I wasn't aware of the

(01:00:05):
recklessness that these helicopters are in that area. Reckless, I
might not be the right word. The other thing I
keep seeing online is the number of people who fly
or have flown with Blackhawks and talk about that the
three is not enough to fly the helicopter, and that
they're designed to be hard to find, and that they

(01:00:29):
are one of the most sophisticated flying aircrafts today. So
that to imply that something else, there has to be
something else going on, which may be true, but ultimately,
human beings make airs in flying. That's literally ninety nine
percent of the problem unless it was an inside job
by the deep state. Bean everybody that's not me. That's

(01:00:55):
my very thing about the deep state. And when you
start working for the deep State? Are you the deep state?
You are? But you'll never know? I guess well anyway, anyway,
that's the biggest chat s game of all time, right,
is if you were like, they're bad, let me do
it right? Right? What else we got here? National Women's

(01:01:15):
Soccer League agrees to pay for abuse. Attorney general from
Atturn Everyone attorneys man probably Attorneys general from New York, Washington, DC,
and Illinois say an investigation revealed years of systematic emotional
abuse and sexual coersion was ignored across the National Women's

(01:01:37):
Soccer League. Coaches and officials allegedly made racial, antisemitic comments
against players and even made sexual advances towards players, sometimes
coercing them into inappropriate relationships. The league has agreed to
set up a five million dollar fund to compensate affected
players and then, lastly here Oklahoma House committee passes the

(01:01:59):
bell to Bell No Cell Bill. An Oklahoma House committee
has passed a bill that called the Bell to Bell
No Cell Bill that's aimed at keeping cell phones out
of classrooms except under specific circumstances. The bill would require
school boards to adopt policies prohibiting cell phone and smart
watch use. On campus before the beginning of the next

(01:02:19):
school year, though the policies must include a provision for
emergency use. School boards would have the option to opt
out of these policies, but it would have to be
a decision that's revisited and approved yearly.

Speaker 6 (01:02:48):
The Jaguiars have found their next offensive coordinator. Jacksonville hired
Grant Yudinsky to the position. The twenty nine year old
has five years of NFL coaching experience. He was the
Minnesota Vikings assistant offensive course and assistant quarterbacks coach during
the twenty twenty four season. The Vikings offensive ranked twelfth
in the league and yards and ninth in points last season.

Speaker 1 (01:03:09):
Speaking of the Jaguars, the owner of the Jaguars is
in New Orleans. Oh his I mean, A lot of
guys are in Nuances and his yacht is parked there.
Apparently he took his yacht. It's a three hundred and
sixty million dollars four hundred foot yacht. Wow. Four three pools,

(01:03:35):
four fireplaces, a spa, asana, a cryo chamber, a gym,
a yoga studio, a pickleball court, a basketball court, and
a helipad. Sleeps twelve crew of thirty seven. I put
I just so you guys can see it.

Speaker 6 (01:03:52):
May How does it only sleep twelve?

Speaker 7 (01:03:55):
Well, because they're not like bunks.

Speaker 6 (01:03:58):
It feels like a cruise ship.

Speaker 1 (01:04:00):
They're massive, right, and the owner of is worth like
thirteen billion dollars. Wow, but got a crappy impressive And
I was like, man, how nice would it be to
be that rich? And go, I'm gonna take my yacht
from Jacksonville to New Orleans.

Speaker 6 (01:04:19):
That thing's beautiful, and the.

Speaker 1 (01:04:20):
French riviera is my employment. What is what I'm plying
it's the redneck riviera?

Speaker 6 (01:04:24):
Right. Oh, that thing's gorgeous.

Speaker 1 (01:04:27):
I guess it better be.

Speaker 7 (01:04:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:04:30):
Absolutely. The NFL Players Association is pushing back on any
plans to extend the regular season schedule to eighteen games.
NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell Junior criticized NFL Commissioner Roger
Goodell's recent statement that safety data does not discourage expanding
the regular season. Rogers said Monday that eighteen regular season
games and two preseason games might be a possibility, but

(01:04:53):
how Will responded by saying, no one wants to play
an eighteenth game. Several issues, including the number of by
weeks roster size and length of the off season would
need to be addressed before any negotiations take place. The
current CBA, which was ratified in twenty twenty, expires after
the twenty thirty season. And that is your Balls to

(01:05:15):
the Wall Sports. I'm Lindsay at ninety seven to five KMOD.

Speaker 1 (01:05:28):
Good morning, It's the Big nine Morning Show nine eight
four six oh KMOD. You can also text BMMS and
then what you want to say.

Speaker 7 (01:05:36):
To eight two nine four five, Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning.

Speaker 6 (01:05:41):
Corbyn, Giovanni and the Hired Guns are going to be
at the Canes Ballroom on Friday, March fourteenth. Show is
at eight pm. It's a Friday night. Come on. Get
your tickets for free at the website that rockskmod dot com.

Speaker 7 (01:05:55):
Good morning, gimbe, good morning.

Speaker 1 (01:05:57):
March fourteenth is also the male Valentine Day, if you
know what I mean, So go celebrate. You just got
your keyword. Your first keyword to Rock the Bank keyword
is bills. Take the keyword to the website at the
rocks chemody dot com. Good luck, all right. Conspiracy Theory Thursday.
I saw something online and it got my attention, and

(01:06:18):
uh it made me wonder if it was actually really
a thing, and it was about this place in Missouri.
And I grew up in Missouri, lived in Iowa for
a while, but would spend my summers in Kansas City
and in the Ozarks, and so I'm.

Speaker 7 (01:06:35):
Quite familiar with the area.

Speaker 1 (01:06:38):
I know there are pockets of obscurity, especially in the Ozarks,
with individuals who don't want to evolve with time might
be a way to put it. Also, stuck in their
ways might be a time also really weird. Plenty of
movies have documented this over time on TV shows, but

(01:06:58):
this is when I was not aware of And it
is the legend of Monkey Mountain and it is near
New Madrid in southeast Missouri, and it is believed that
there is a cannibalistic group of people that live there.

(01:07:18):
And the idea is that there were stories of people
traveling through the area, going missing and then finding their
belongings in the woods, sometimes their bodies with signs of
struggle and other times just undisturbed. Some versions suggest that

(01:07:43):
in bred clans inhabit the dense forest, surviving off the
land and these visitors. There are no official cases of
cannibalism documented, and the idea has taken root in the communities,
and they've just continued to tell these stories of people

(01:08:03):
living in the woods, sometimes even going as far as
saying that you can see glowing eyes peering at you
from the tree line, and unsettling noises and howls and
screams and growls and things like that. Hunters and hikers
have even said that they've had feelings of being watched,
and some claim to have found primitive handmaids structures deep

(01:08:27):
in the woods looking like shelters, and it is one
of the more mysterious places Monkey Mountain is. But there
is no documented cases of cannibalism. Now, that could mean
a couple of things. It could mean there are no

(01:08:47):
cases of cannibalism, right, but it's not unheard of, especially
in the communities like that where the it would benefit
them to not document it, or they would reason to
not document it unwanted attention that it would bring on.
You'd like to think that that is the thing, but

(01:09:08):
keep in mind, we've told stories of factual events where
they just take the ideas off people and bury them
and say they died right in certain communities, with leadership
of those communities doing that. So it's not out of
the realm of possibility that it just didn't get documented
because it didn't happen. It's also more likely that it

(01:09:29):
just didn't happen. So that made me wonder, is cannibalism
a thing? Now? We know about Jeffrey Dahmer, But I
don't know if it was cannibalism, like he just had
a certain he like, you know, he had horse meat
once and then couldn't stop, or if it was more
of a case of it happened one time, or that

(01:09:51):
was a belief, or he just said it and he's crazy.
And did he also have fruit loops and then occasionally
he wanted a little tartar.

Speaker 7 (01:10:00):
Human tartar?

Speaker 1 (01:10:01):
Right? I don't know so, But apparently cannibalism is deep
in American culture, and I didn't know that. There's a
Native American legend about the wendigo, and it has to
do with the idea that this monstrous, emancipated creature with

(01:10:23):
glowing eyes, sharp teeth, and insatiable hunger for human flesh.
The legend warns that those who resort to cannibalism either
have a necessity or evil intent, can become what do
you say Lindsay it's a windigo cursed to wander the
wilderness in internal hunger, and it has gone on for
centuries in the US and Canada, and especially in the winter.

(01:10:50):
Another one, the Donner Party. This happened in eighteen forties.
A group of pioneers traveling westward became trapped in Sierra
Nevada mountains during a brutal winter with no food and
freezing conditions, and the survivors resorted to cannibalism to stay alive.
By the time rescuers arrived, half the group had perished,
and gruesome evidence of their desperate choices were discovered. I

(01:11:14):
think there's a difference between I've got to survive, I'll
allow the movie alive this story, and being like, well,
sorry Lenz right, right, sorry, Corbin, sorry, Yampee. Right, that
feels like not cannibalism. That's that feels like survival at
that right, That's exactly what it is. You have to

(01:11:35):
result to cannibalism for survival. This isn't a Sunday dinner
where we're sitting around eating Uncle Tom, you know what
I mean, Right, I'm not eating my feelings, eating your
feeling I'm eating your feelings because I want your feelings,
so to me, those type of things feel not the same.

Speaker 7 (01:11:52):
Another one the Sawny Bean legend.

Speaker 1 (01:11:57):
This is a Scottish tale about a family of care
dwelling cannibals, and there's no proof that this person or
family ever existed. There's similar stories about them in the
Appalachian and the Ozark Mountains, about isolated families accused of
praying on travelers. I just told you about the Monkey Island,
very deep in that type of folklore. The Boogeyman of

(01:12:19):
Smoky Mountains is another one that goes along those lines
of somebody lurking in a cave or in the woods
or in the dark corners of the Smoky Mountains eating humans,
and so some other ones. This is what I didn't know.
The feral people of the National Parks, like all national parks,

(01:12:41):
so this is an urban legend, but it claims that
within America's vast national parks there exists quote feral people,
wild inbred, cannibalistic communities that have lived off grid for generations,
and some versions of the legend suggest these groups are
responsible for mysterious disappearance of hikers and campers. And there

(01:13:04):
are many of these type of stories, especially in the
Smoky Mountains Yosemite. The National Park Service has never confirmed
such claims, but you can find the stories online of
this happening. Another one the Kentucky Cannibal Cave Clan, similar
to the National Park ones. This take place in the Appalachia,

(01:13:27):
particularly in Kentucky. Some locals claim that deep within the
abandoned mines and caves there exists a group of humans
who were left behind by society and forced into cannibalism
to survive again. You can find the stories of this online.
Another version of cannibalism, the Smiley Face Killers, an organ

(01:13:48):
traffing cannibalism group. A modern legend, the Smiley Faced Killers.
Some believe that are as a secretive network of criminals
abducting young men, particular curly college students, and murdering them
in real ritualistic form. It revolves around drowning victims, with
even fringe versions suggesting things like human trafficking and cannibalism.

(01:14:13):
They have not There's no confirmed evidence, but the stories
online about the Smiley Face Killers exists.

Speaker 6 (01:14:22):
Sounds a little John Wayne Gacy Smiley like the clown
going after young boys.

Speaker 7 (01:14:28):
His name wasn't Smiley.

Speaker 1 (01:14:29):
No, uh, this is the case. This is an actual
case twenty thirteen of Timothy the Fadus the Fetus. He
was a truck driver arrested in twenty fourteen after it
was discovered he had kidnapped multiple women kept them as
captives in his truck. There was no proof of cannibalism,
but the nature of crimes, including keeping them in change,

(01:14:52):
mutilating them, and attempting to erase their identities, kept him
in comparison with cannibalistic stories like the Peaceeople in the Backwoods,
Monkey Mountain, Smoky Mountains, those type of things, right, Yeah,
the Craigslist cannibal. This happened in twenty twelve where police
arrested a New York police officer, Gilberto Valet, for plotting

(01:15:14):
to kidnap, cook, and eat women. He was known as
the cannibal Cop. He had detailed plans on how he
would carry out these acts, though he never acted on them.
His case sparked widespread fear as it blurred the lines
between fantasy and potential reality. So you're telling me, if
I have a journal and I write dear Diary, I

(01:15:34):
can't stand the checkout lady at the grocery store. I
would like to dismantle her and put her in boxes
and ship her around the world.

Speaker 7 (01:15:42):
I can get arrested for that.

Speaker 6 (01:15:45):
Yeah, I don't know if you can get arrested.

Speaker 1 (01:15:48):
That's what they did. But that's what they did. That's
what they did.

Speaker 7 (01:15:52):
They arrested him for that.

Speaker 1 (01:15:55):
We got to take every threat serious. Yeah, it's not
a threat. I have a comp my thoughts on paper
to get him out of my head. So I'm not
acting on them. How do we know you're not going
to act on them?

Speaker 7 (01:16:06):
How do you know I'm not?

Speaker 1 (01:16:07):
I am, Well, you're not going to because you're gonna
be locked up. I just think it's a little weird,
like if you're writing stuff out as a form to
deal with it, if you're in it, just because you
wrote it down doesn't mean you're gonna do it. E.
I don't know. If it's a fictional book and you're
like an aspiring author, I'll give you that, But this
is your journal man. This is where you put your deepest,
darkest thoughts drafts for his book, right.

Speaker 7 (01:16:31):
It could be.

Speaker 1 (01:16:32):
Yeah, it feels like an easy out in a in
a judicial situation, especially if you wrote any hypothetical or
hyperbole at any point in your journal.

Speaker 6 (01:16:42):
Right, Well, did the woman in the grocery store go missing?

Speaker 1 (01:16:45):
No? None of No, he never acted. This cop never
acted on any of those things. They were just things
written down. Another one, the Nathaniel bar Jonah.

Speaker 6 (01:16:52):
Hold on, wait, do you really want him on your
police force?

Speaker 1 (01:16:54):
Though?

Speaker 6 (01:16:55):
If if you found I didn't write.

Speaker 1 (01:16:56):
It, but that we're not talking about being fired, that
feels maybe warranted.

Speaker 6 (01:16:59):
But yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:17:01):
Nathaniel barr Jonah a convicted child predator and suspected cannibal.
He was arrested in Montana in the nineties. Investigators found
disturbing evidence suggesting he may have killed a young boy
and severed and served human meat to unsuspecting guests at barbecues.
No forensic proof of cannibalism was ever confirmed, but the

(01:17:21):
nature of his crimes keep him in that cannibalistic conversation.
Of course, the Miami one that we all know that,
but that really we know that that wasn't cannibalism either,
even though the news tried to portray it that way,
It wasn't the Bath Salts.

Speaker 7 (01:17:36):
There are many different.

Speaker 1 (01:17:39):
Versions of that story, and the one the News has
is not even close to what happened. I have to say,
whether you're high on bath salts or your bone sober,
if you're eating human flesh, you're committing cannibalism, whether you
like it or not. That is what it is. You
may not be out thinking like I'm hungry, I want
to eat some man and meat. You know. So you're

(01:18:01):
saying the argument I just put it in my mouth
is not gonna hold up. No, no, man, you hate
the face off of somebody. You are committing cannibalism.

Speaker 7 (01:18:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:18:15):
Sure, you may have been high out your mind at
the time, However it's still cannibalism. Did you eat the
entire thing? Well, people don't eat all their food all
the time anyway. Yeah, clean your plate. A clean plate
is a happy plate. Oh that's a lot of meat
to be eaten.

Speaker 6 (01:18:35):
But if you don't swallow it.

Speaker 1 (01:18:37):
Uh what you just wallowed around in your mouth for
a little bit and spit it out? Yes? Yes, because
why you took your teeth. You've put your teeth on
this man's face and then you bit a chunk out
of it, and maybe you didn't like the taste. Have
you eaten something? Gone to eat something regular? Not human being? Right?

(01:19:00):
Didn't like the taste of it and spit it out. Yes,
and it's the same thing. I don't know besides the
example we gave of survival, if cannibalism is a real thing,
because even Jeffrey Dahmer, who they say was known as
the Milwaukee cannibal, Yeah, they he lied about many things. Yeah,

(01:19:24):
why is that the thing he was telling the truth about.
There'd be no way to prove unless they found, like
a leg with a bite out of it. Maybe they did.
Didn't he have pieces of people? But many serial killers
keep trophies.

Speaker 6 (01:19:38):
Yeah, yeah, But going back to if you don't swallow
the meat, you're saying that that Mike Tyson is a cannibal.

Speaker 1 (01:19:48):
Yes, yes, he had human flesh in his mouth that
was detached from the human body. Yeah. I'm not ready
to jump into that. Is that just because you bite somebody,
that doesn't make you a cannibal if you bite a
piece of them off. I mean, I've pulled skin off
my bitten skin off my right. Yeah, Yeah, I mean
you could that could be considered definition of cannibalism. Yeah,

(01:20:12):
you know, it's it's it's it's I think it's when
the flesh leaves the body. That's what makes it cannibal.
Lots of toddlers bite other kids, That doesn't make the cannibals.
But if they continue to bite and they're ripping flesh
off of them, then that one at tyle toddler's a psychopath,
and two it makes them a cannibal. So he texted
in said. In two thousand and six, Kevin Underwood of Purcell, Oklahoma,

(01:20:34):
killed his ten year old neighbor and stuffed in a
container in his closet. He was planning to rape and
eat her later he may maybe I but he didn't.
Then that's my point, Like, I think you see this
charge get put on people and that it sensationalizes them
and makes them more heinous, which then in turn, there

(01:20:54):
is a psychological effect of you going, oh, I'm glad
we're being kept safe.

Speaker 7 (01:20:58):
Right, I'm glad. You see what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (01:21:00):
So I can see the sensationalism of adding that to
a thing. Uh, But I don't, And that's where the
conspiracy is from me. I don't know if cannibalism is
a real thing. There's been many documented stories of you know,
different low income countries. Papa, you know, is one of them.
That comes to mind. You know where that cannibalism is

(01:21:23):
a thing.

Speaker 7 (01:21:24):
Let me rephrase in America.

Speaker 1 (01:21:26):
In America then okay, yeah, you're probably right. Uh This
person texted and said my uncle was a full on
hermit that lived off the grid in the Ozarks and no
electricity running water. People would be surprised the things that
go down deep in the woods. I'm there were many.
We would go to the lake and when I got
in college and we can go there on my own
and meet my family there there was I remember my

(01:21:47):
dad being like, Hey, there's certain towns we just don't
you just don't go through. And maybe he was just
old school going with folklore, right, don't flash your high
beams type of thing, don't sit too close to the TV,
wait swimming, but I it was I remember that conversation
with my dad, like, Hey, we don't go through this
town and get your gas before this town. Yeah, stay

(01:22:10):
away from it. Because of the folklore of some of
the towns in the Ozark Mountains. But the cannbell one
of Monkey Mountain was a new one to me that
I had never heard of. Are there even monkeys on
that mountain?

Speaker 4 (01:22:23):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:22:23):
No, I would argue the Mountain might be an argument
too well.

Speaker 6 (01:22:28):
From what I read, they said that it was called
a monkey mountain because the cliffs were so steep that
even monkeys couldn't climb them.

Speaker 1 (01:22:38):
True, but what about the eyes gazing at you from
the tree line. That was just more of like the
folklore of a candle, the creature living in the woods, right,
and not with the monkey part.

Speaker 6 (01:22:51):
But the total area of that the total acreage of
that area Monkey Mountain is is less than sixteen hundred
just like us. Huh yeah, Okay, so I mean it's
not very big. So I feel like it could be
possible that there could be a small group of people
living there and people that travel into that area could
get eaten.

Speaker 2 (01:23:10):
Okay, we're gonna take a break and we'll be back
to Tulsa's Morning Show continues next with The Big Man Morning.

Speaker 9 (01:23:16):
Show on Tulsa's rock station ninety seven KMOD.

Speaker 1 (01:23:41):
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 7 (01:23:51):
Two nine four five.

Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
Conspiracy Theory Thursday, the Time Travelers back with more warnings.
I love these because one of them's got a hit
one of them. This is alluding that on March thirtieth,
a one mile asteroid is going to hit Central America,
causing four hundred mile wide crater that will be named Goliath.

(01:24:18):
Millions of people will be killed in the southern United
States along with Mexico, will be ininhabitable for years to follow. Yeah. Yeah,
if something like that happens in Central America. Hello, what
do they call it? Dark winter? Gray winter? Yeah, ash

(01:24:39):
ash winter, something like that.

Speaker 7 (01:24:41):
Stuff won't grow.

Speaker 1 (01:24:42):
Yeah, cannibalism will be a different topic on this show.

Speaker 7 (01:24:46):
Then it knows we're locked in.

Speaker 1 (01:24:50):
On April twentieth, many of the world's largest volcanoes will
erupt due to the sky turning a bright pink color.

Speaker 7 (01:24:59):
For some reason.

Speaker 1 (01:25:00):
The time traveler says this will cause a lot of
pressure in Yellowstone, Fuji, Muana Luau, resulting in the largest
eruptions in known history.

Speaker 7 (01:25:10):
I think it's.

Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
Only in the last five years was I even aware
that Yosemite was a volcano. Yeah, super volcano for that. Yeah,
and if it erupts, we're all ft. Yeah, no reason
to have a go bag. Nope. At that point, Nope,
I saw something and they were asking like a former
CIA person or something I don't know, like what's in

(01:25:32):
his go bag? And he was was like cash, a
solar charger, and maybe like a weapon, but I don't
know a couple of things. And I was like, huh, Now,
I don't know anything about planning for an apocalyptic moment.

Speaker 7 (01:25:50):
I don't think cash is going to be a big gal.

Speaker 1 (01:25:53):
I didn't think so either. I'm like, why would you
need cash? I guess maybe in case somewhere in the
world there's still using it, but I think in a
catastrophic event like that it would be useless. And then
the solar thing, I get it, Yeah, no, you want
to charge that. But there's this thing called cell towers,
yeah right, and the internet that I don't know if

(01:26:17):
a lot of those things are going to work in
that moment. Just feels like two things that are a
guy who's supposed to be highly trained and all that stuff,
like unless he knows that the money will still be good,
I don't or cell towers will still be up, but
I don't know. I feel like that's let's just say
they are up. Someone's going to steal the wiring out
of it for wiring their own thing, right.

Speaker 6 (01:26:37):
Or maybe he assumes he'll run into someone evenough to
take cash for something if they have something that he wants, use.

Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
It as just a bargaining chip at that point. Okay,
am I buy that? And then the final thing he
said was he would get to like Norway or some
other And I'm like, how you get into Norway a boat?

Speaker 4 (01:26:56):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:26:56):
Yeah, a lot of walk next month, Yeah, you got
to get to a boat, uh huh. And then you've
got to find a boat that can make it there,
and you got to find either someone to navigate it
for you or you have to be able to figure
it out. Yeah, you would need provisions. It isn't just
get to normal Royal Caribbean won't be still booking. No. However,

(01:27:19):
if you could find one of their abandoned ships, there
may be plenty of provisions there. The ship is still running,
you could use it maybe. I mean, I was just saying,
maybe be a way to go. And I'm sure you've
all done your pontoon on skytook. I feel like a
Royal Caribbean cruise ship might be a little bit different

(01:27:42):
than your try. Nah. It's all basically the same thing. Scale, man,
It's all it is. It's just scale yeah. July seventh,
the Time Traveler says these will be the hottest days
in history of the United States. It'll be known as
heat weak. The average temperature will be one hundred and

(01:28:04):
fourteen degrees fahrenheit. And because of this severe heat, car
tires will melt, and massive wildfires will proliferate, and you
also get some burn just from stepping outside into the sunlight.
Doesn't have it already, I mean, yeah, you think I
think they mean immediately, And I don't think the tires

(01:28:28):
are gonna melt at one hundred and fourteen. I was
just looking to see how hot it would have to
be to melt tires.

Speaker 6 (01:28:37):
Ooh, you want a guess, lindsay, I think it would
have to be at least over four hundred degrees.

Speaker 1 (01:28:46):
Okay, Okay, I was gonna go like three point fifty
huh uh. It says here how much heat can tires
will stand in your summertime? Da da da da. So
one person says eleven hundred degree trees, another person says
two hundred degrees Above two hundred degrees fahrenheit. There's no

(01:29:08):
real answer as to how hot it has to be.
Most experts consider one hundred and ninety five degrees fahrenheit
as the line in the sand when it comes to
tire temperature. Yeah, it would be so hot because there's
this there is the idea that you know, baking the
road and it's not like dissolve right right, it's more

(01:29:31):
of like sag rice forty old woman.

Speaker 7 (01:29:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:29:35):
Yeah, but this says it's practically impossible to reach that.

Speaker 7 (01:29:40):
Yeah, so I feel like we're good in that scenario.

Speaker 1 (01:29:43):
Yeah, one hundred and fourteen degrees. That doesn't seem like
it's that hot. Well is it a dry heat? Right?

Speaker 6 (01:29:50):
I mean we've reached one hundred and fourteen easy.

Speaker 1 (01:29:53):
No problem. Yeah. Or or because I'm fifty and I
get to say this, it's not the heat, right, don't
say it. Don't say it, don't say it. It's the humidity.
It's the humidity that gets you so thick you canna
cut it. And then the last one here, September twenty first,

(01:30:14):
the first ever Category six hurricane will hit the southeastern
portion of the United States and it will be heavily
focused on Florida and Georgia. Win Speeds will reach four
of miles per hour, and the hurricane named Karen, we'll
stretch over fifteen hundred miles. I want to speak to
everybody's manager, right, Florida, who's your manager around here? I

(01:30:39):
want to talk to him. Well, and we know that
what the names already are gonna be for this year.
And I'm looking real quick to see what Oh and
it is Karen? Okay? Is Karen this year? How about that?
So there might be some truth to that so far,
and I think we will see it. I think we

(01:30:59):
in our life will see a category six and it isn't.
It's just we've never obtained that, right, so it doesn't
not exist. There's just never been a human record of one, right,
that's at least not around here anyway, right, So I
think that's that might be the most realistic one out
of all of them.

Speaker 7 (01:31:18):
I think one hundred and fourteen's realistic.

Speaker 6 (01:31:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:31:20):
Oh yeah, one hundred fourteen degrees, that's easy. Yeah, you
do that in a Texas summer, no problem, you think, so? Yeah?
I mean, hell, even Death Valley gets up to like
one hundred and thirty something, doesn't it, right?

Speaker 7 (01:31:31):
But as a national average.

Speaker 1 (01:31:33):
Oh national average. April thirty six, the temperature in Oklahoma
one hundred and twenty degrees, a record high temperature in
Death Valley, California as one hundred and thirty four degrees,
which is recorded in July tenth of nineteen thirteen. TWI
is also the highest temperature ever recorded on Earth. In
twenty eleven, Oklahoma experienced a one hundred and fifteen degrees

(01:31:56):
swing in the year low of minus five and a
high of one hundred and ten. In twenty twenty three,
Paul's Valley experienced a one hundred and twenty six degree day. Yeah,
ye are one hundred and twenty six degrees. That ain't nothing.
It's good. It's a hawesome bitch for sure. How humid
was it? All right, we gotta take a break. We'll
be back.

Speaker 9 (01:32:16):
Tilsa's Morning Show, The Big Man Boarding Show. The Assault
continues next ninety seventy five GMOD.

Speaker 7 (01:32:34):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show.

Speaker 1 (01:32:36):
Nine one, eight four six oh kmod can also text
BMMS and then what you want to say to eight
two nine four five. Let's go ahead and see what
lindsay has four balls to the wall sports.

Speaker 6 (01:33:02):
It appears that the increasing tumultuous relationship between Jimmy Butler,
pat Riley and the Miami Heat has come to an end.
According to sources, a multi team a mega deal has
sent Butler to the Golden State Warriors, where the star
player intends to sign a new deal after declining his
fifty two million dollar option for next season. The new

(01:33:23):
deal will reportedly be for two years and one hundred
eleven million. In addition, the Warriors send Andrew Wiggins, Kyle Anderson,
and a top ten protected twenty twenty five first round
pick to the Heat. Guard Dennis Schroeder will be sent
to the Utah Jazz. Utah will send Jay Tucker to
Miami guard Lindy Waters. A third will be sent from

(01:33:44):
the Warriors to the Detroit Pistons. Josh Richardson will leave
Miami and head to Detroit. Reportedly, other parameters in the
deal are being set and details were still being ironed
out to finalize the deal. The Lakers are adding a
big man to the roster prior to the NBA trade deadline.
ESPN reports that Los Angeles is trading Dalton connect Cam Ruddish,

(01:34:08):
a twenty thirty one unprotected first round pick and a
twenty thirty pick swap to the Charlotte Hornets in exchange
for center Mark Williams. The Lakers now fill a void
in the front court that was left by the trade
of Anthony Davis to the Dallas Mavericks last weekend. The
twenty three year old Williams is averaging sixteen points and
nine point eight rebounds through twenty two games played this season.

(01:34:30):
He's been limited to eighty four career games since entering
the league as a first round pick in twenty twenty two.
The Raptors are making a splash before the deadline. According
to ESPN, Toronto is acquired forward Brandon Ingram from the
New Orleans Pelicans. In return, the Pelicans are receiving Bruce Brown,
Kelly Ulnick, a first round pick and a second rounder.

(01:34:53):
Ingram in the final year of his max rookie extension
he signed in twenty twenty and is set to become
a free a this summer. Brown has appeared in seventeen
games for the Raptors this season and averages eight point
four points per game. Ol Knicks has averaged seven points
over twenty three games for Toronto, and the Mets are

(01:35:14):
bringing back a star slugger. According to ESPN, Pete Alonzo
and the Mets are in agreement on a two year,
fifty four million dollar contract. The deal includes an opt
out after the first season and will pay Alonzo thirty
million dollars in twenty twenty five. The thirty year old
has hit two hundred and twenty six home runs since
debuting back in twenty nineteen. He ranked second in Major

(01:35:35):
League Baseball behind Aaron Judges two hundred and thirty two
in that time. In seventy postseason played appearance, Alonzo is
hitting point two seven eight with a four to two
nine on base percentage and a point five to seven
four slugging percentage, and the NFL is touting its security
ahead of Super Bowl fifty nine. League official said on

(01:35:55):
Monday that the safest place this weekend will be under
the security umbrella around Caesar Is Superdome. The plan includes
help from the Department of Homeland Security, which is dispatched
nearly five hundred FBI personnel in New Orleans to investigate
and prevent threats. The intense security measures have been in
place for about two years. However, concerns were heightened following

(01:36:18):
a terror attack that killed fifteen people outside of the
super Dome before the college football playoff Sugar Bowl matchup
between Georgia and Notre Dame on January first.

Speaker 1 (01:36:27):
How about that that story pretty much fizzled out?

Speaker 6 (01:36:30):
I did.

Speaker 1 (01:36:30):
We didn't hear it, Like they didn't go Usually when
somebody does something heinous, they go deep into that person's life.
Wait hear much. I don't feel like went on to
the next shiny object. I guess did you see the story?
And by the way, I think it's good they have
security there. Yes, of course, and especially the President's going
to be there. Obviously that makes sense to have the
best security possible. Nobody wants to see a bad thing happen.

(01:36:53):
I just hate when they come out like, no, you're
safe here, like ooh man. It's like saying, do you
knock on wood? Or something like did you see the
story about Bill Belichick and him getting all these lacrosse
players to join the University of North Carolina football team, And.

Speaker 7 (01:37:10):
People are like, this is crazy. It isn't.

Speaker 1 (01:37:12):
Actually, if you know anything about Bill Belichick, Chris Hogan
played for the Patriots, won two Super Bowls with them,
was a lacrosse player, went on to I think he
even went on to play professionally. And Paul Rabel wrote
a book about Bill Belichick and his love for lacrosse
and how his kids played lacrosse, Like, this isn't a

(01:37:34):
giant leap.

Speaker 6 (01:37:35):
Both of the brothers played lacrosse.

Speaker 1 (01:37:37):
It isn't an abnormal. It isn't as abnormal as you
think it is. They may have played lacrosse, but in
the college world and then going to the NFL or
vice versa not as common. Usually coaches recruit from football teams,
and so it is a little bit of an anomaly
from that Standbo, but not Bill Belichick, And I think
it's probably safe to say anything Bill Belichick does ain't

(01:37:58):
gonna be where you used to and college football.

Speaker 6 (01:38:02):
That's true. True. Major League Baseball is upholding the firing
of an umpire for gambling violations after an appeals process.
Umpire Pat Hoberg was fired for sharing sports betting accounts
with a friend who bet on the sport, as well
as intentionally deleting messages important to the investigation into his conduct.

(01:38:23):
The leagues that Hoburg denied betting on baseball directly or indirectly,
with Commissioner Rob Manfred saying that there was no evidence
that games were bet on or manipulated by Hoburg. A
statement from the league said he was let go for
failing to uphold the integrity of the game. That's your
balls to the Wall sports. I'm Lindsay on ninety seven
to five km Ody.

Speaker 7 (01:38:54):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show.

Speaker 1 (01:38:56):
Nine one, eight four six, okmo d You can also
BMMS and then what you want to say to eight two,
nine four five, Good morning, Lindsay.

Speaker 6 (01:39:06):
Good morning, Corbin. Happy twenty fifth porn star birthday two.
Sasha Tatscha. Check out this rhyming Russian in do my
chores and I'll give you a hand. I love to
be stretched and vibrate or surprise. She enjoys being naked,
submissive and kinky.

Speaker 1 (01:39:25):
Af Good morning, Gimbee. Well, good morning Corbin. You know,
if you ever sit back and you're like, let talk
about rock bang a lot, and I don't wonder if
anybody ever actually wins, well they do, galfam Man for wonder.
Name's Julia. Congratulations Julia. You could be like Julia by
taking the keyword that just came in. That keyword is

(01:39:48):
going to be money. Take that over the website, the
Rockscambi dot com. You could be like Julia and be
one thousand dollars. Richard It's Typer big Man Morning Show's
top list random topics randomly with random results. Now here's
Cormyn Kippi and Lindsay with this week's top list. This
week's TOMP list is Catastrophe Movies. This just opens the

(01:40:10):
spectrum up, not just zombie, not just a post apocalyptic
or anything. It's catastrophe movies. What do you got? Lindsay?
Number five?

Speaker 6 (01:40:20):
Armageddon? I loved this movie.

Speaker 1 (01:40:23):
What do you love about it?

Speaker 6 (01:40:24):
In nineteen ninety eight? I love that it hit all
of my emotions. It was funny, it was sad, I cried,
I got nervous. I mean, it was just it was good.
And I love Bruce Willis.

Speaker 7 (01:40:36):
Yeah, can you give me any specificies that you loved.

Speaker 6 (01:40:40):
I love the father daughter with him and Liv Tyler.
I love that interaction. I love the love story between
Liv Tyler and Ben Affleck's character. And I loved the
uh the first hatred between the boyfriend and father with
Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck and then they end up
loving each other. And it was just good. I mean,

(01:41:02):
asteroid threatens to collide with Earth and then NASA takes
a bunch of oil riggers or oil drillers and turns
them into astronauts to save the planet. Yeah, one of
my I wouldn't say I watch it if it's on,
but if there's nothing else on, I'll check it out.

(01:41:23):
I'll watch it. Number four on my list. World War
Z with Ben Fleck or not Benflex excuse me, bread Pitt.

Speaker 1 (01:41:32):
That's the one with the fast, scary climbing Zombieah.

Speaker 6 (01:41:35):
Right, lethal virus breaks out, turning healthy people into feral
zombies and extremely fast. It was very scary. Yeah, but
it's to think like they're not just normal zombies, like
brain eating zombies. Like you think like could this really happen?

Speaker 7 (01:41:54):
Do you have a scene that sticks out in your head?

Speaker 4 (01:41:56):
Mmm?

Speaker 6 (01:41:59):
I do, Like when they're running through that building and
they're and then all of a sudden they're like jumping
from the zombies. Yeah. And there oh that I realized,
like they're gonna outrun us, like we really have no
escape from these creatures. They're like we are ft. It's
just very fast action. It goes quick. Uh. So that

(01:42:23):
that one was really good. It just it wasn't the
ordinary zombie movie.

Speaker 1 (01:42:28):
I love the scene when they are trying to be
quiet and showing to get the chicken pox virus or
whatever it was, and that other wing of the building
and trying to get back and just how that was
easily the scariest moment.

Speaker 6 (01:42:43):
Yeah, they had a few good jump scares, I think
in it number three for me outbreak with Dustin Hoffman
and Renee Russo.

Speaker 1 (01:42:53):
Patrick Gimpsey. You forgot about old mister mc dreamy, didn't you. Yeah,
I guess so he's the one like bit by that
little Yes, yes.

Speaker 6 (01:43:02):
The airborne virus threatened civilization, this little African monkey that
comes over carrying the lethal virus, which again totally could happen.
And that one is out of all of them, I
think if it's on I'll definitely sit back and watch it.
We actually watched this one in school. That was the

(01:43:22):
first time I ever saw it, and it freaked us
all out.

Speaker 1 (01:43:26):
I feel that could happen out of any of them. Yeah,
we've had so many stories of escape lab monkeys. You
don't know what's carrying what. Yeah, granted they rounded them
all up eventually, Yeah, eventually.

Speaker 6 (01:43:38):
And then the scene with the little girl finding the
monkey and you're like, oh, no, don't touch the monkey.
Don't touch the monkey.

Speaker 1 (01:43:44):
You don't want to be talking about yeah right.

Speaker 6 (01:43:49):
Number two on my list is Twister. That is I
will sit down and that's the original. I did watch
the remake recently and I thought it was okay, but
it's still the original with Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton.
I mean Tornado we live in, you know, Tornado Valley.

(01:44:09):
I just I like, yeah, Tornado Alley. I loved that
movie when I wasn't even living in Oklahoma when I
first saw it, and it was still to this day.
One of my favorite.

Speaker 1 (01:44:19):
Films is the classic It doesn't matter if it's true
or not. Yeah, for you to think it's really good, right,
not you royal you?

Speaker 6 (01:44:27):
Yeah? And then number one is The Birds, the Alfred
Hitchcock film from nineteen sixty three. This movie, I didn't
see this movie until I was probably in junior high,
but it was the reason why I saw it is
because I loved Elfred hitchcock films. Scary movies were is

(01:44:49):
my favorite genre of film. But my mom is deathly
afraid of birds, completely scared because of this film. And
this movie was about birds that just want Psycho for
basically no reason. They're just attacking people from all over
the place, and that movie freaked my mom out so

(01:45:13):
much that that's why she is scared of birds. She
feels like it could happen at any moment. And I
think that Alfred Hitchcock was such a master at the
craft of scaring people. And if he were still alive today,
with the advances in technology as far as movies go, oh,

(01:45:34):
he would own it completely still because he was so good.

Speaker 1 (01:45:39):
Yeah, and if you go down the rabbit hole of
how he tortured his female actresses to make them be
good in those roles, you might have a different opinion.

Speaker 6 (01:45:47):
He is not a good be I mean, the original
Psycho was so much scarier, I think than the remake.

Speaker 1 (01:45:53):
It just yeah, originals are almost always better.

Speaker 6 (01:45:56):
He was just so good. So that one for me
definitely number one, the scariest.

Speaker 1 (01:46:03):
Doing our top list and we're doing catastrophe movies. What
do you got? GIMPI coming to number five day after tomorrow.
That's a pretty solid movie, Jeeke gilling Hall. You know,
the world freezes over and they have to try to
figure it out and hold up and like a it's
like a mansion or some jive somewhere and burn books

(01:46:24):
to stay. It was the New York Public Library Okay,
I don't know what it was, but it was a
damn good movie, especially when the the fuel freezes and
the helicopters and they all go plummeting towards the earth.
You know, like, how cold does it have to be
to freeze fuel? Pretty goddamn cold.

Speaker 7 (01:46:40):
Do you have a favorite scene?

Speaker 1 (01:46:41):
Yeah, one of the fuel freezes in that's your favorite.
And they all go plumbing to their death.

Speaker 7 (01:46:46):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:46:47):
Number four is gonna be deep impact. Giggity. Uh, that
has a good, solid movie. I'll watch it for the
first time. Uh, not too long ago, and I am
Meteors coming to Earth and we're all gonna die well,
and morgana like, you still gotta get up, you gotta
go to word, gotta big your bill, payo bill. And

(01:47:08):
then at the end, they're on the beach just sitting there.
Spoil alert if you haven't watched it, they're just sitting
there waiting. I'm waiting, do I know? For me? It's
the scene where one of the they're coming back, they're
gonna decide to fly into the into the meteor and
agay the good news. We're gonna have schools named after us.

(01:47:28):
And they couldn't find some of the guy's sons because
they're serving and he talks to his wife, who's been
dead for a while, and he's like, I think about
you every there's not a day that goes by I
don't think about you.

Speaker 6 (01:47:44):
And you're just like, God, wasn't Jodi Foster in that one?

Speaker 7 (01:47:47):
I don't think so.

Speaker 1 (01:47:50):
Number three is Flight with Denzel Washington. Okay, that's a
great movie. Man. I've seen a lot of clips on
the TikTok and I was like, all right, to sit
down and watch this movie. And I was like, wow,
that's intense. For one, the way he handled that plane
and and and just barrel rolled that giant airline and

(01:48:10):
it was like, all right, cool. Uh. And then of course,
you know, the passengers up and down and the stewardess
or whatever cracks your head open, and he's all pissed
drunk the whole time. Anyways, why we find out he's
enraging alcoholic.

Speaker 4 (01:48:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:48:25):
Yeah, And they're like, all right, we got to uh,
we got to get this guy ready for court or
his deposition or whatever the hell it is. And uh,
I was a John Goodman, right, yeah. Yeah, he comes
in and a bunch of cocaine. You know and and
just gets them loaded up and ready to go. And
and uh, well he he ends up see you know,

(01:48:47):
going through with it. It's it's a good movie. Yeah,
because he was about he had to testify and he
he was totally clean, straightened his life up. Huh and
uh he broke into the adjacent room to get into
the because they cleared out the mini bar, right, but
he broke into the adjacent room and drink apparently so much.

(01:49:08):
They kept so much alcohol in the mini bar that
this raging alcoholic benderd yeah, and was unfunctional the next day.
It was pretty It's a great movie, really is. And
I forget what the name of the thing is that
he brings him, but he has like a special thing
he brings. It's got a name, the cocaine. It was
like a cocktail of like cocaine. I felt like he

(01:49:32):
had a different name. Maybe it was that maybe you're
right and yeah that that because you go. John Goodman's
in this Yeah, yeah, fat John Goodman too, not skinny
John Goodman. Charlene Mays is the character's name. Yeah, Number
two for me on this list is going to be
this is the end Seth Rogan James Franco. Okay, it's

(01:49:53):
a it's a comedy, but it's hilarious, pretty absurd. Yeah, yeah,
I don't know. Crazy graphics too. This cocaine smell funny
to you. I was like, Michael Sarah, I believe you
see him in a light that you don't normally see
Michael Sarah or whatever. I always just remember from that movie,
like any scene they showed with the catastrophe happened in

(01:50:15):
the background looked like the worst CGI ever. Yeah, Danny
McBride makes Channing datum is bitch when he's leading him
around on a chain. It's a it's a hilarious movie.
Number one is a classic man that's Airplane, Airplane movie,

(01:50:36):
the comedy, the comedy movie. Okay, yeah, there's just so
many one liners pulled from that movie. And as a
kid when I watched it so many times as a kid,
and I didn't pick up on any of the adult
humor obviously until I until I got older, and I
was like, yeah, like the uh, the autopilot, the inflatable

(01:50:57):
autopilot which she's gottam and the little air nozzles down
there by his crotchul area, and then she gets them
fully inflated and then they're both smoking afterwards. Yeah, doing
our top list and we're doing catastrophe movies.

Speaker 7 (01:51:14):
Number five for me.

Speaker 1 (01:51:17):
Bird Box, the Sandra Bullock movie that everybody was not
sure what it was going to be about. And it
is where you can't see, you're not supposed to be
able to see anything. You used to use your eyes.
They can get you whatever they are and people are
there's chaos happening, and and uh, it was like it

(01:51:38):
kind of it felt like an introduction to a new
genre of catastrophe movies that are about the senses. Yeah,
and uh, I thought it was really good and I
felt like it was a Netflix mount rushmore like it's
what kind of got Netflix going. Yeah, you thought it
was just a show thing. And then they started doing these,

(01:51:58):
like a movie Bullock that's number five. Number four, Children
of Men. This is a Clive Owen movie from two
thousand and six and it is people they're trying to
if you can get pregnant, then you are considered special
on the planet. Infertility has become the catastrophe and they're

(01:52:22):
trying to save the only woman who's pregnant and the
other people are trying to kill her. And it is
a bizarre movie. And I think Clive owns money and
everything he does, but in this movie, it is just
a really bizarre not on the usual radar of catastrophe movies,

(01:52:42):
because you don't think of infertility as peana catastrophe. All right,
it's got Charlie. Yeah, I didn't know that number three
book of Eli, and I don't know how Milakunis can
still look hot in a post to apocalyptic world. But man,
wowser Denzel Washington again, and he plays, unbeknownst to you,

(01:53:07):
a prophet, and he is trying to save the Bible.
And here like water is a commodity. The shootout scene
at the house might be one of the craziest even
maybe even ridiculous shootout scenes in any movie ever.

Speaker 7 (01:53:30):
But the sun's really bright.

Speaker 1 (01:53:33):
At one point, he's trading in relics that we are
aware of, iPods, things like that, and it just he
has got some moments of relatability.

Speaker 7 (01:53:44):
That's really good.

Speaker 1 (01:53:47):
Number two and I think the last two feel very realistic.
And so number two is Contagion, where virus breaks out and.

Speaker 7 (01:54:00):
People are losing.

Speaker 1 (01:54:00):
This is gonna this is all fiction, This didn't happen,
But like people are losing their minds, nobody's being rational.
The scene that sticks out for me, there's two of them.
One is when they go to the grocery store. He
tries to go to the grocery store to get medicine
for his kid and or is it for his wife.
And he goes to the grocery store to the pharmacy

(01:54:22):
and there's no one there and a guy's robbing the
pharmacy and they kind of have an altercation and he's like, no,
I need this, and the guy breaking the law helps
him find it, and it's just a very bizarre mo
And then the other one is when the neighbor shoots
himself he realized things are not going well. And then

(01:54:45):
number one for me easily the most catastrophe, easily the
best post apocalyptic movie of all time, Easily the best
cannibalistic movie, and that is the road when they are
in that house and they see the person body laying

(01:55:07):
there and the ends that are of the body are
burnt because the people in the house are eating them
when they're ready. You could almost smell it. It is
an crazy scene. The end, when they are they make
it to the ocean. The whole time you're being depicted.
They're trying to get to this special place when in
reality they're going to this place, and like, so he

(01:55:31):
can die, right and his son has to carry on.
It's just such a great movie. The beginning when his
wife like the flashbacks and you're like, oh okay, and
the wife doesn't get her act together, she can't handle it.
It just feels very real. If you've never seen this movie,
you love post apocalyptic movies, watch this movie. It is

(01:55:54):
insanely good and the book is ten times better. But
it is easily the best catastrophic movie of all time.
Somebody texting, oh, brother, where art thou? I love that movie?
But is it a catastrophe movie? I don't think so.

Speaker 6 (01:56:10):
Maybe they're just calling the movie a catastrophe.

Speaker 1 (01:56:12):
The movie's amazing. Speaking of catastrophe, Waterworld and the Postman real. Ah,
there is this group of people that love that movie. Yeah,
and they're like, it's such a good movie. I mean
to be fair Water World was such a big movie.
They made it an exhibit at a theme park, right,

(01:56:34):
and I believe it's still going today.

Speaker 7 (01:56:37):
So all right, we gotta take a break. We'll be back.

Speaker 9 (01:56:41):
If you're listening to The Big Man Morning Show. This
he is Tulsa's Morning show.

Speaker 7 (01:56:47):
Kim, good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show.

Speaker 1 (01:57:07):
Okay him? Oh, you can also text be in a
mess and then what you want to say to eight
two nine five. I called this segment what are you doing? Man?
And hopefully I'll read the story and you'll have some
feeling of like what are you doing? Man? Maybe you won't.
I don't know. I'm going to start the worst and

(01:57:29):
then go backwards. Normally I saved this one for the
last one. So this guy and girl met online on
a dating app, and he wanted to advance the relationship,
move it forward, try the next thing. She wasn't having it,
but he kept pushing and she was taking offense and

(01:57:52):
like having to be like stop, I don't want to
this is not what I want. So what does this
guy do?

Speaker 6 (01:57:59):
He I'm already what are you doing man?

Speaker 1 (01:58:03):
He grabs the woman's pug named Lexi and kills it.

Speaker 6 (01:58:09):
What are you doing? Man? What an asshole?

Speaker 1 (01:58:16):
She says. He kept pushing it to where he wanted
things to go further, to where he kept trying to
force himself onto her, and she didn't want it, and
that's when he was like, come here, LEXI and killed
the dog enrage. Did say how he killed it?

Speaker 9 (01:58:37):
Like?

Speaker 1 (01:58:37):
Was it with the ball peen hammer? Did he run
over it? Did he hang it up from a tree?
Did he put it in a burr lap sack and
throw it in the river.

Speaker 6 (01:58:43):
If I can't have you, your dog can't either.

Speaker 1 (01:58:47):
The man confessed to stealing the dog and taking the
dog's life. His parents have said that he suffers from
mental health problems. He don't say, he said, I found
an open window, climbed in, grabbed the dog and left.
At one point wanted to take it back, but starting

(01:59:08):
hitting the dog in rage. It was battered pretty good,
so I took it to the woods and killed it.
The day before the dog was taken, she and him
had discussed ending their friendship and their relationship.

Speaker 7 (01:59:28):
Because of the repeated rejections by.

Speaker 9 (01:59:32):
She.

Speaker 1 (01:59:32):
Allegedly, she told him she didn't want to be friends
with them. I did everything with that dog. It was
my best friend. This one pastor intends to show dead
wife's post mortem photo to suspect before he will forgive

(01:59:55):
him okay. Lucy, eighty five years old, was taken off
his life support and died Wednesday. Her husband, a long
time pastor at a church in Florida, has said that
he wants to forgive the man that did it, but

(02:00:15):
he's going to have some circumstances for that to happen.
The event that earned ended Lucy's life happened Saturday morning
when she answered a knock on the door and fifty
five Ronald Dwayne Davis was posing as a community service
officer and then attacked her. Her husband found her a

(02:00:36):
couple of hours later after the attack. Quote. The circumstances
of her passing are shocking and abrupt and not what
we would have expected or chosen. But as our Lord
has forgiven us, we are asked to forgive each other.
When asked what he would do with the picture that
he took after she died, his response was quote, I'm

(02:00:58):
going to show it to the man who did this
to her, and then I'm going to forgive him. I
refuse to let his actions dictate.

Speaker 7 (02:01:04):
Who I am.

Speaker 1 (02:01:07):
That's not that bad.

Speaker 7 (02:01:09):
Well, I mean, one, what are you doing?

Speaker 1 (02:01:14):
Man? Is the guy posing his security officer and beating
an eighty five year old lady. I'll give you that. Two,
I understand the desire for revenge. Desires are hardly worth it.
But that's not really revenge, though, yes it is. You
want him to feel the pain. I would say revenge
would be more like he knocks on his door and

(02:01:37):
then you know, beats him to death. Attacks it's a
version of yes, yeah, I think this is, you know,
showing the man what he's done, holding him accountable for
what he has done. And I don't think that is revenge.

Speaker 6 (02:01:50):
Saying, look at what you've done.

Speaker 1 (02:01:51):
Yeah, he was there, and he was there, Yes he
saw her.

Speaker 6 (02:01:56):
But yet and then I'm sure he's feeling like, you're
gonna feel bad because I'm gonna forgive you for this.
Even though you've done this, I'm still able to forgive you.

Speaker 1 (02:02:06):
Yeah, yeah, I don't think the guy's in the wrong
for this. One. Forgiveness is for you, it's not for them,
right so, And the other part of that, too, is
what makes you think he's gonna feel bad? Right so,
you're kind of out of it for you, it's not
for them, But showing the photo, it's what makes you

(02:02:29):
think that's gonna make him feel bad. If that's why
you're doing it, you know you got a fifty to
fifty shot on that sort of thing you really do.
I mean, you can go up and you can show
this guy the photo and this is what you did.
You murder this asshole, and then he could change his
ways and never murder anybody ever. Again, he's going to
jail for life, So I mean people still get murdered

(02:02:49):
in jail, that true, or they quote hanging themselves. Uh,
this is another one that again I said that he was.
We're gonna get as bad as the first one. I
started off strong and ending a little light instead of
the other way around. I know. The feeling woman admits
to swapping places with her twin sister after car crash

(02:03:11):
that killed two Amish children. Seth Hey Hey sit here.
Peterson pleaded guilty to two felony accounts of criminal vehicular
operation that caused great bodily harm.

Speaker 7 (02:03:29):
Both those counts are about what she.

Speaker 1 (02:03:31):
Did after a crash that killed two Amish children in
September of twenty twenty three, a crash allegedly caused by
her nearly identical twin sister. The twins are accused of
plotting to switch places after Samantha's two thousand and five
Toyota four Runner SUV struck a horse drawn carriage. Seven

(02:03:53):
year old Wilma and eleven year old Irma were killed,
along with one horse. Two of the siblings were also injured,
but survived. After the crash, witnesses described the bizarre incident. First,
a woman was seen walking around with a cell phone,
according to the Sheriff's office complaint, Then another woman allegedly
appeared on the scene. She looked mostly the same as

(02:04:15):
the other woman, but for her clothes they were different.
One witness described one of the sisters as a blonde female,
and a second witness described the presumed driver as wearing
black clothing, no eyeglasses, really light blonde hair, and was
taller the plan. The complaint goes on, second lady had
a T shirt with no sleeves on and looked a

(02:04:36):
little bit smaller than the first lady. Wasn't sure how
the second lady got there, She just sort of appeared.
Man saw the second lady give the first lady a
hug and had the first lady and heard the first
lady say that she didn't see them until it was
too late. So whichever one you think it is now,
because I'm even confused, took the fall. An investigation synth

(02:05:00):
the case into a tailspin. Quote. There's no way they
would ever know the difference between the two of us.
They can't tell, she told her sister while sitting in
a squad car. According to the vehicle's in camera system, hmmm.
They uncovered a series of incriminating text messages between the two.
She made Sarah come and take the fall for her
so I wouldn't go to prison. Internet searches also found

(02:05:24):
cell phones were said to be equally incriminating. Allegedly included
what happens if you get in an accident with an
amish buggy and kill two people? That was what they
searched for. Wow, if you hit buggy and kill two people,
are you going to prison? So this is where I
have the lucky opportunity to give public service announcements. If

(02:05:46):
you kill someone buggy standing walking accidentally, the probability of
you going to jail is high, we discovered yesterday, unless
you do it in your sleep. Yeah. In Australia, did

(02:06:07):
she fall asleep behind the wheel? Right?

Speaker 6 (02:06:09):
I wonder if she had if the reason why she
had asked her sister to take the heat four was
because maybe she had priors, but she wasted.

Speaker 1 (02:06:17):
Let me answer it for you. She said that she
received a frantic phone call from her sister. She was crying,
She said, one of the sisters. Whichever one the stupid one, uh,
the equally stupid one. She was panicking and scare the
defendant sent her twin sister explained that she did not
see the buggy when she crossed over a hill and
then made the fateful request that would wrench their lives forever.

(02:06:39):
At first, I said no, she told the court. Then
she made the comment saying she would go to prison
for a long time for that admitted peace. Sarah faces
a maximum sentence of six months in jail and four
years on probation just for lying and trying to take
the fall the other one. She think, yeah, because you

(02:07:02):
should at least right you should? Yeah, what were you thinking? Man?
Just let your sister take the heat. Yeah, your brother called.
You love your your brothers dearly. Absolutely, But yeah overall, yeah, overall, Hey,
call and go, man, I just killed somebody with my car.

(02:07:25):
Will you and you assuming you're seven feet three right
right and look like you can you open cans with
your hands right and have two good hands. A lot
of assumptions here by right, and they say, hey, will
you picked the world? Will you take the fall for me?

(02:07:45):
And you go to prison? Ah? Man, that is uh,
that's an easy question on your own, bro lindsay, make
believe you have a sibling. I'm sure you I've never
done that, right.

Speaker 6 (02:08:02):
Uh.

Speaker 7 (02:08:03):
And they call and say, hey, I want you to
take my spot in the car.

Speaker 1 (02:08:10):
Will you do that?

Speaker 6 (02:08:11):
No, absolutely not, Gormyn.

Speaker 1 (02:08:13):
If your brother called up was like, hey, I killed somebody.
I killed two Amish in a buggy. Yeah, I need
you to take the heat for me.

Speaker 7 (02:08:21):
I said, Man, I'll be there in twelve hours.

Speaker 1 (02:08:24):
Now, I believe I may have the story incorrect because
it didn't happen to me. Happened to my brother. They
got in a car wreck and my brother said he
was driving right and there was alcohol in the car.
Now that's different, of course, and murder. Yeah. Policemen don't
like that. They don't like it when you try to

(02:08:45):
pull the old switcheroo on him.

Speaker 7 (02:08:47):
Well, I'll do you one better. Why you don't get
an award?

Speaker 6 (02:08:51):
No, I don't.

Speaker 1 (02:08:52):
You don't in my opinion, don't look that doesn't look
honorable chilvrous like you look, why would you get a
is in record, right, why Jesus, Like we weren't going
to let you in, but you know what, you took
the wrap. Hey for your body, Thank you for the donation.
Did meals and wheels for a while. It looks like
you donated a couple of toy drives. The radio station

(02:09:14):
was good. That gets you some extra points. And then whoa,
what are you doing? Stupid? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (02:09:21):
And what's the sister saying? Like, I'll owe you one
like you do this for me.

Speaker 1 (02:09:26):
I think this is where we get to use that
really great line of like, well they're twin sisters, you
wouldn't understand right right. It's one of my favorite things
people say, Well you wouldn't understand you got twins. Ask
them that question when you get home and see what
they would say.

Speaker 6 (02:09:38):
Dude, they won't even eat, like the vegetables off the
other points.

Speaker 1 (02:09:44):
No, what are you doing?

Speaker 4 (02:09:47):
Man?

Speaker 2 (02:09:48):
Take a break, We'll be back tu Tulsa's Morning Show
is coming right back to the Big Man Morning.

Speaker 9 (02:09:53):
Show, Tulsa's Rock Station ninety.

Speaker 1 (02:10:12):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show nine six KMOD.
You can also text Lindsey what'd you learn today?

Speaker 6 (02:10:21):
The little ones deserve attention to And I've also learned
if you've ever nibbled on your lever's neck, toes or ears,
then you might be a cannibal.

Speaker 1 (02:10:33):
Gimb what'd you learn today? I'll learned just put in
your mouth at a wall around for a little bit.
I also learned that I always thought that you could
never be too high, but apparently the NTSB says otherwise.
I learned that if I just put the meat in
my mouth and just let it settle my tongue, I'm

(02:10:54):
still a cannibal. And I also learned that man grabs
pug and punches. It is not a movie. Lindsey promotes
at nine, Gord, say make sure that dishwashers look it right.

Speaker 6 (02:11:07):
It's Lindsey. Stop tracking my cycle?

Speaker 1 (02:11:10):
Say Daddy, can I get a call.

Speaker 4 (02:11:20):
With what the hell.

Speaker 1 (02:11:29):
It should be? No makes a noise interpassword Corbyn new messages.
The Big Mad Morning Show would like to take a
minute to thank troops from Oklahoma.

Speaker 9 (02:11:43):
And all over the United States. These soldiers have sacrifice.

Speaker 1 (02:11:45):
Give the Big Mad Morning Show before you the back.

Speaker 9 (02:11:48):
Like the total douchebags that.

Speaker 1 (02:11:49):
They are, total douchebag, do little incomplete douchebag. We honor
and respect you. We honor and respect you. We honor
and respect you. Stop buss rock and roll it over, Sickle, Tulsa.
I'm blessed Tulsa. We tried, boys,

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