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.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Yes, my bow suck on you bow down to your master.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Then you did it, Then you did it?
Speaker 4 (00:36):
Where you did?
Speaker 5 (00:43):
Allowed to play, Allowed to play, Come out to play,
Come out to play.
Speaker 1 (01:01):
For crystals.
Speaker 6 (01:02):
The sun is rising God, Oh wake up, wake up now,
don't worry.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
We're all here to.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
Show you how.
Speaker 6 (01:16):
Jan Witz hors raw Station K and B G home
The listens is a family fe don't turn downtown, just
wait and see.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
Are you ready?
Speaker 7 (01:29):
Are you ready to jove in time to start to
show crapstick al about briscome whisping Man, Marny Show, Welcome
to the Working week. It's on such a bore kick back,
(01:50):
makes up mess of it and may get hardcore.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
Hang your whisby and then mess.
Speaker 8 (01:56):
Pick up your phone.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
There line you're on the air. Dot time dot show,
(02:23):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one
eight four six Oh k m O D.
Speaker 9 (02:28):
Can also text BMMS and then what you want to
say to eight two nine four five. Soit online the
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(02:53):
slash BMMS six nine.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
That's where you can hang out with us each and
every day. Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning, Good morning, Giving Oil,
Good morning. How just takets to Pop Evil sound? Well,
we're gonna get some way at seven thirty. Pop Evil
is gonna be a Canes on April eighth.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
Get your tickets at.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Canes Ballroom dot com.
Speaker 9 (03:12):
And anybody that wins this week is going to be
joining and give you for the Shamrock Showdown a party
bus pub crawl on St. Patrick's Day weekend from Guinness
and kmod. I'm just guessing you don't have to drink
to go on that, but there will be drinking.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
Just a guess.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
You can drink water, you can't soda or pop or
pop whatever you want to call it. Coke, hippers, coke,
do a lot of I guess eat orange juice, cranberry
cranberry apple. Yeah yeah, bars do have juices. Don't ask
for milk. They don't have milk. I'm sure they do
(03:51):
for some drinks like a white Russian or something like that.
Speaker 9 (03:54):
But drinking milk at a bar just seems weird. Drinking
a white Russian seems weird.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
I'm good for maybe one or two. I can't be
like the dude where like that's where what you drink
all the time. That is an obscure drink. It is
that is not a common company.
Speaker 3 (04:10):
Right, But mocktails are yes.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Right, like a Shirley pimple.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
Sure well, I think a little more advanced.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
But yes, essentially a greayhound is what vodka and gray grapefruit? Right,
So without the vodka, would that be like a dash hound?
Speaker 1 (04:25):
No, it'd be grapefruit.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
Its grapefruits. I love it. I love it.
Speaker 9 (04:30):
So it ain't good man like I love it, but
it is it tears my stomach up there sits so
much acid.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
We I go to Winco for groceries, right, and and
lately I've been getting fresh fruits and vegetables, trying to
you know, be a healthier me. Right, yeah, and uh,
I'll look at they got to you, I know, right,
they got the oranges next to the grapefruits. And I'm like, oh,
I made this mistake when I was a kid. And
that's why I hate grapefruits, right because we had a
grapefruit tree in the backyard and I thought, oh, they're
(04:59):
just giant oranges. No, no big difference. So I'm like,
m I think I'm just going to stay away from
the oranges for now, but don't want to make that
mistake again.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
I have a way for you never to make the mistake.
Speaker 9 (05:12):
By the way, if you had oranges on your BMMS
Bingo car, congratulations, just by clementines. They're small, they're easy
to appeal, they're always sweet.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
That's fair. Okay.
Speaker 1 (05:21):
They definitely don't look like grapefruits.
Speaker 2 (05:23):
No, no, you can definitely tell the difference there.
Speaker 9 (05:26):
Yeah. Anyway, so that's the pope crawl thing. And we'll
see what Gimpie wants to talk about. We've got conspiracy
theory Thursday. We've got our top list. What are the
top old people habits that you do?
Speaker 2 (05:39):
You kids? Get off my law.
Speaker 9 (05:42):
I talked a while back, and we spoke with Jeff
Hensley about this about professions that are most likely to
be faithful, and it was farmers, accountants, and pharmacists, which
I kind of blow off as mah, because there's still
a fifty percent involved that could be doing something else.
Speaker 2 (06:01):
Okay, so you're talking like the people that work in
these professions being faithful to their partner.
Speaker 9 (06:06):
Yes, okay, yes, yeah, if anything, was more of an
implication on men, right, and that there's you know, women
cheat or in relationships too.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
It's not just men that this happens too.
Speaker 9 (06:18):
And yes, women can be farmers, and yes women can
be accountants, but typically or stereotypically, men are farmers.
Speaker 2 (06:26):
Is it cheating if it's with a goot.
Speaker 9 (06:28):
But this person also came out with professions most likely
to cheat, and I have the same stance. Just because
you're in this you can also cheat, like, for example,
one of them is a firefighter, right, Well, if you're
a firefighter, your other partner is away from you equally
(06:50):
for as much as you are away from them. I
know someone who was their partner female was a.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
Nurse and cheated all the time because she was always
there in overnights away right. So I don't think it
has to do with it because.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
It do with your profession.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
I don't think so at all.
Speaker 9 (07:12):
But this is the part that I thought was interesting
in that I wanted to bring up, and that is
these are signs you're being cheated on. So what say you?
If you do, you agree? Is this an automatic they're cheating?
If this is happening, we'll start with the first one,
keeping secrets.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
Not that lets it go ahead. I mean little in
order here.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
I feel like it depends on what kind of secrets
they are. Like, what if the secret is that they're
planning a big getaway for you and they can't really
discuss it.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Yeah, I think we can all.
Speaker 9 (07:49):
I mean, obviously, if your your secret is I'm cheating
on you, that is obvious.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
But that's not I don't think that's what we're talking about.
So keeping secrets.
Speaker 9 (07:57):
Again, we can't go into this person says the sign
you're beat it on keeping secrets.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
I have to agree with lindsay. It depends on what
the secret is. You know, a surprise birthday party. I
don't necessarily think that you're cheating on your partner. You're
just trying to make sure that they don't know about
their surprise party, you know. But going to lunch with
a female co worker or male coat whatever, a coworker
(08:23):
of the opposite sex probably doesn't necessarily mean but it
doesn't look. Yeah, for sure, definitely sus.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
I'm with you guys halfway.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
I agree.
Speaker 9 (08:37):
Depends on what it is, and just because you go
to lunch with someone of the opposite sex, one doesn't
mean you're cheating, right. Two doesn't mean that you're attracted them.
Three doesn't mean you want to have sex with them.
Speaker 1 (08:53):
Four.
Speaker 9 (08:54):
There are plenty of people that are married to someone
of the opposite sex that are gay and go out
to lunch with those. I just feel like there's so
many X factors involved there. It's not automatic. Now, if
your partner has said I don't want you going to
lunch with the opposite sex, and you do it and
keep it a secret, of course, right again, I think
this is just not a red flag because it's so complicated.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
The answer is, again, it doesn't mean that you're cheating,
but it is definitely suspicious reason an orange flag.
Speaker 9 (09:22):
Maybe even not me, I don't. I don't think it's
an automatic flagh. I just don't think it's automatic. It
depends on the why, of course, but it is not automatic.
Speaker 4 (09:32):
Right.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
It could also slip your mind.
Speaker 9 (09:34):
It could also not be a like, if it's not
nefarious to you, like it's important information, you might just
not share it.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
Right, you got to think of it. You know, from
your partner's perspective. For you, it's nothing. For you, it's
it's a nothing burger, right, Yeah, But to them it's
a bigger deal because I mean, you're you're worthholding. You
didn't tell them about it. It slipped my eyes.
Speaker 9 (09:55):
But I'm not going to debrief at the end of
the day all my interactions with people.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Some people want that though.
Speaker 9 (10:01):
Yeah, relationships I'm with you, I mean, I'm that is
not again, That's why secrets aren't a thing.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
Now.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
If your partner is an I want to know, that's
a whole other thing.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
Yea.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
But if you've never said that, I'm not.
Speaker 9 (10:13):
Gonna be like, all right, So I had a call,
I saw oh, I saw Susie in the break room
when we were alone for two minutes.
Speaker 1 (10:19):
I'm not I'm not doing that. There's gotta be some
trust there.
Speaker 9 (10:24):
Another one focusing on self improvement without involving your partner.
Speaker 2 (10:29):
That that is a red flag.
Speaker 3 (10:35):
No again, I don't think that that's a sign of cheating.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
No, I don't. I would agree with Lindsay. I don't
think it is a sign of cheating. You're working on yourself,
which I think is a good thing, and sometimes your
whole focus is on that and not again, much like
the you know lunch, I'm just focused, wrapped up on this.
(10:59):
Didn't even think that the trying to work on myself.
Speaker 9 (11:03):
I mean, you should be sharing things about your life
with your partner. But also if you notice they're working out,
you should be like, oh, you're working out?
Speaker 2 (11:08):
What's going on?
Speaker 9 (11:09):
I'm just focusing themselves. Oh that's awesome. Can I go
with you?
Speaker 2 (11:12):
No? Okay?
Speaker 1 (11:14):
Can I go with you?
Speaker 3 (11:15):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (11:16):
Right? Right?
Speaker 9 (11:16):
Hey, I'd like to work out too. Hey, I'd like
to eat better too. And they say no. That is
for sure a red flag. I think it's a red
flag you don't want to do stuff together.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
Whatever.
Speaker 9 (11:30):
But just because someone decides they're going to start wearing
nice clothes to work, I mean, it does not mean
they're Genieyeah, true.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
But it could have a negative image, just like you
usually do not. You know, you work in an oil field.
Why are you wearing cologne to work? Right? Hate? You
see what I'm saying. You don't normally dress like this.
You don't normally do that, so it's a change of something.
So it's like, who are you doing it for? Are
you doing it for your own self confidence that's a
little weird, or are you doing it for or Becky
(12:00):
in accounting.
Speaker 9 (12:02):
You've probably not seen Becky accountant in the oilfield. But
you know me, well, I'm just saying you can't connect
to the two. To me, that is an external thing.
That's not an internal thing. That is something happening outside
of your body. If that is, if that person wants
to go wear clone to the oil field, it is weird.
That is abnormal.
Speaker 1 (12:23):
But that doesn't mean it's cheating, right, It's not an
automatic red flag in my opinion.
Speaker 2 (12:29):
Let's say, like your old lady, right, she dresses a
certain way for work, and we know she what business
she works. She probably has a certain tire, she has
him anyway. But let's say she, out of nowhere starts
ramping it up. You know what I mean. You have
said publicly before she doesn't wear a whole lot of makeup,
but she doesn't have to. She has a natural beauty
about her, right. But let's say that she starts piling
(12:51):
on the war paint, yeah, you know, and starts dooding
it up a little bit a lot more than what
she normally does. Yeah, wouldn't that raise at least an
orange flag? For No, really, No, she's her own individual.
I'm not her keeper. I don't own her.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
She's not my property.
Speaker 9 (13:06):
I totally I don't. I just don't buy into all
that stuff. If she is doing it to me, me
bringing it up ain't stopping it.
Speaker 1 (13:15):
Oh no, for sure, it's not gonna I'm just torturing myself. Yeah,
that's my opinion on how to handle those things. And
then the last one here is reducing their communication that
it's automatically assign their cheating.
Speaker 3 (13:27):
Lindsay, No, I think that something internally could be happening.
Maybe they're having a hard time at work. It doesn't
mean that it's that they're cheating. Nothing. It always goes
to cheating. So yeah, no, that's not an I mean,
it's definitely an orange flag, but it's not a red flag.
Speaker 2 (13:50):
Gimmy. Yeah, I would agree. Doesn't necessarily mean that it is,
but it is. You might want to open your eyes
a little bit more, maybe find out, hey, what's going on,
because some people they just need to internalize things, you know,
and and for you know, things that are going on
in everyday life or the in in their mental state.
(14:11):
And and some people, and I'm I'm probably the worst
about it. You know, I internalize a lot of stuff,
and so if you're not communicating it whatever it's doesn't
necessarily mean that you're cheating. It just means that you know, hey,
there's a lot going on and I need to figure
it out on my own. Sorry for not communicating that
to you.
Speaker 9 (14:32):
Uh, it isn't necessarily a red flag for me or
an orange flag. They could be if it maybe maybe
I've turned into an insufferable pos I'm just saying, Uh,
maybe they're really stressed out. Maybe I don't know. There
could be a hundred things.
Speaker 3 (14:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (14:51):
Actually, I'm not going with they're automatically I have enough
self esteem to go. I think I think I'm pretty awesome.
So I'm not going with, you're automatically cheating because you're
not talking to me. I know it's a possibility. I'm
not going with because you decide to wear a makeup,
you're cheating on me because I think I'm a catch.
It might be right, but I'm not going with that's not.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
My first jump to right. Right, But that's what works.
Speaker 9 (15:15):
For you, And I have trust that my partner wants
to be in this and so if they wear makeup,
I'm going, well, they must want to try and do
better at a job or something else. You could probably
chalk that up to be a naive and maybe it is,
But I just have self esteem and I have faith
in my relationship.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
So these are all great, And that's fantastic stand alone, right,
The wearing extra makeup to work stand alone, the not
communicating stand alone, the going to lunch with a person
of the opposite sex stand alone. But what happens? What
if they're all a combination of the same thing. Let's
just say exactly, your person started dressing up more and
(15:56):
putting on more makeup or whatever, duding themselves up a
little bit more. Also, they're not communicating. Also, they're going
to lunch with somebody the opposite sex. Is that an
automatic red flag? Or are you still comfortable enough to
be like, ah, that's all good.
Speaker 9 (16:09):
I mean I might cock my head nipper, But how
do I not know that They were told they got
to dress better, they got a network better, they got
to be more social at work, and they need to
focus when they're at work, right.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
And that all goes back to communication that they're not
doing right now.
Speaker 1 (16:24):
You know what, I maybe I would like to.
Speaker 2 (16:26):
Think that, you know, my significant other be like, hey man,
I tell you boss man came down and said that
we've got to start doing all these things. So if
you see me start dressing up a little bit more,
or networking and going da da da da da da da,
it's nothing to worry about. But if there's no communication there,
I think that's where a lot of this comes.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
Down, right, But also that could be stress that they
don't want to bring home and talk about. Like my
husband always says, you know, home is where his piece
is at, so he doesn't want to bring work stress home. Sure,
so if that's like the situation, they don't want to
bring that stress and talk about it, so they're just
going to do their job and move along.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
Yeah, but you should be able to vent that work
stress to your person if they want to.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
If that person may not want to, absolutely, But that stuff.
Speaker 2 (17:15):
Keeps, it piles up. If there's anything that I've learned
over the years of BE and me, that stuff piles
up and it comes out eventually. It may not be now,
it could be six years, it didn't even come out
in the form of work exactly. But that stuff comes
out eventually. Yeah, And I think that's where the communication
is very important.
Speaker 9 (17:35):
Yeah, I'm just individually those things are not signs to
me collectively. Maybe, so I kind of go with the
idea of there's got to be some other factors going on.
And I also have the attitude of, like, if you
want to cheat, that's on you, right, you got to
carry that way. I know my personality and I hyper
(17:58):
fixate on things, right, So if I think that's happening,
that's all all focus on.
Speaker 2 (18:06):
For sure.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
And so to manage that, I have to.
Speaker 9 (18:10):
Put it in individual buckets and judge it based off
that and not put them together. Right now, you're staying
out late, right, you don't come home at night. You
have two phones. Don't text me the reasons you have
two phones. I think it's.
Speaker 1 (18:28):
Sus right, there is no reason to have two phones.
It Maybe you're honest, but it creates, it breeds.
Speaker 9 (18:39):
Deception, right, it's deceptive in one way or another. Well,
I can't have I can't look at porn on my
company phone.
Speaker 2 (18:46):
Deceptive, right, I kept my porn phone.
Speaker 9 (18:50):
That's funny, right, I'm not allowed to do personal emails
on my company phone, Okay, deceptive.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
Well, only if you're not communicating about it. Is it deceptive?
Speaker 1 (18:59):
No? I think having two phones is deceptive.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
Well, okay, I mean I get what you're saying. But
if those are the reasons I can't do X y
Z on my company phone, that's why I have a
personal phone and a company phone. But though that message
is clearly communicated, you know what I mean.
Speaker 9 (19:17):
No, then I think people lie all the time. Oh yeah,
for sure, and they're deceptive all the time. There's no
reason you need to carry two phones with you all
the time. There just isn't. Because let's just say you
have a company phone and you have a personal phone. Right,
Guess what number I'm calling phone?
Speaker 1 (19:35):
No, probably your company phone, to be honest, because I
don't know which phone you're carrying. Why do you need
to carry two?
Speaker 2 (19:42):
So for your own significant other you would call their
business phone over there? Yes? Really, yes, I think it
would be the opposite.
Speaker 9 (19:50):
I'll give you an My wife has a desk phone, right,
and she has a cell phone. I call her desk phone.
I don't call her cell phone.
Speaker 2 (19:59):
Okay, And I get that because she's more likely she's
at her desk, she's more likely to answer that phone
as opposed to cell phone because it may be turned
off her in a purse or whatever. That makes sense.
But what if she's not at work, like she's driving home, right,
and but you know she still has the two phones,
one for business, one for person. There's no need for it.
(20:22):
There's no need for it. I cannot rationalize in my
we brain. And sometimes people rationalize these type of things
to make it okay. In other times, you don't need
your phone after five PM for work. In ninety percent
of jobs, you just don't.
Speaker 9 (20:47):
The chance of Lindsay's husband getting a car deal at
two am, yeah, I know, is zero, right, But what
if it's like.
Speaker 3 (20:55):
Five and he works until nine.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
People the storre's open.
Speaker 9 (20:58):
Till nine, right, right, what if it's you know eight,
the hours are That's why I said ninety almost normal
ninety percent of jobs if you're on call, okay, right,
But when you're not on call, you don't need two phones.
It just breeds an opportunity. That's why I'm not a
fan of split bank accounts.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
Right.
Speaker 9 (21:18):
It breeds deception. It is a potential parasite for lying.
And that's just the way I operate. It ain't the
way I'm not a therapist, and I'm sure telling your.
Speaker 2 (21:29):
Therapist except for on Tuesdays when we do listener emails.
Speaker 9 (21:33):
I'm just saying that I'm just a believer that there
are certain places that breed deception.
Speaker 2 (21:39):
Yeah, yeah, that's fair.
Speaker 1 (21:40):
Social media is that.
Speaker 9 (21:42):
Oh yeah, you can easily get contacted from an X,
be flirtatious.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
Delete it right, not even an ex, just anybody from
your past or right, right, why I wonder what so
and so is doing. I haven't heard from them in
six years, let's check in even just looking them up, right,
it breeds deception and opportunities. Parasite might be the best word.
(22:13):
It's a parasite for nefarious activities. But you think about it,
anything that we do can be sort of just staying
at home.
Speaker 9 (22:22):
Yeah the time, that might be true, But there are
things you can do to keep your character away from that, right.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Not having two phones is one of those things. What
if it's phone in a pager. If you have a pager,
I feel pretty good.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
Yeah you're probably a doctor.
Speaker 9 (22:40):
I don't think doctors even use pagers anymore. I'm just saying,
if you have a pager, I'm gonna go with Okay, Well,
no one wants.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
That page me, he'll never suspect it.
Speaker 9 (22:52):
The other thing too, that's popping in my brain is
people here when someone says something like what I'm saying,
you you interpret it or digest it, or maybe you
take offense to it, so you interpret it as altruism,
like I'm better than you. That's not it. It's just
what works for me. Your insecurity gets to that conclusion.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
Stop pushing your gin on me.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Right, it ain't my agin, it's my opinion, which so
far I'm still allowed to have.
Speaker 3 (23:21):
Right.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
All right, we gotta take a break. We'll be back.
Speaker 8 (23:25):
Tell us this morning show. Oh yeah, he's coming right back.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show nine one
h four six oh kmod can also text bmms and
then what you want to say to eight two nine
four five.
Speaker 9 (23:51):
News quakies are stories you may have missed in the news,
but we cover them here and put a link on
our Facebook page.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
It's time for news quakis.
Speaker 10 (24:00):
World news, local news, and news that just makes you say,
what the Here's Corbyn Gimpean Lindsay with what's going on
news quickies from the Big nine Morning Show in ninety seventy.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
Five, Dad convicted of shooting volunteer football coach. Yeah, this
happened in Saint Louis, Missouri. I've seen a lot. I've
been to a lot of youth football practices, and never
have I seen anything like this go down. Darryl Clemens,
forty five years old, shot married father of five Shaquille
(24:33):
Lattimore five times near a practice field in Saint Louis
as a group of nine and ten year old kids
on the team were playing nearby. He targeted the Saint
Louis Bad Boys coach in a rage and guess why.
Speaker 2 (24:51):
Because his kid didn't get to play enough.
Speaker 3 (24:53):
Absolutely yep, bingo. Clemens and Latimore were both armed when
they started fighting on October tenth, back in twenty twenty three,
with the coach handing off his weapon to a friend,
telling the dad he was ready for a fistfight, but
Clemens rejected that idea and he shot Latimore. He said,
(25:16):
I didn't see his gun until it was already too late.
He has since recovered from his injuries. He said, I
ran and he shot me in the back. I fell
and he shot me a couple more times. Clemens, who
used to coach the same team before Latimore, came on
board allegedly taunted him while he was on the ground
(25:36):
before other adults jumped in. After he shot me, he said,
I told you I was going to pop your ass.
Speaker 1 (25:45):
The dad fled, warned him right.
Speaker 3 (25:47):
The dad fled the practice field, but then turned himself
in later that night to police. He told authorities he
was upset with him for not starting his son. Clemens
was found guilty of assaul an armed criminal action, and
he's scheduled to be sentenced on March thirteenth.
Speaker 1 (26:07):
What age did say?
Speaker 3 (26:08):
What age?
Speaker 2 (26:09):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (26:09):
The kids were nine and ten years old, The shooter
was forty five, and the coach was thirty four years old.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
They were watching nine and ten year old football. Yeah,
it ain't real organized.
Speaker 2 (26:19):
No, it's not. Just let him play as it is.
No sense of bringing guns into this talking.
Speaker 3 (26:25):
About fourth and fifth grade kids.
Speaker 9 (26:28):
I sadly have been part of yelling matches at kids sports,
and it's stupid on every level. I was yelling at
parents for being stupid, and then I realized I'm yelling
at them for yelling, and now I'm yelling. Yeah, I
was just pure k now, Yeah, now we all look
like children. The adults were actually on the field playing
(26:48):
football right.
Speaker 2 (26:51):
Prison guard jailed for having sexual relationship with an inmate.
This comes out of South Yorkshire, England, where a twenty
six year old named Katie Evans Giggdy. She was working
as a prison guard at the Doncaster Prison and she
met an inmate named Daniel Daniel Brownly and over the
course of time, at least between March and November of
(27:13):
twenty twenty, she performed some oral sex on the man
and they communicated nearly one hundred and forty time times
using a smuggled phone. She would refer to herself talking
to him as your queen, and then she would also
(27:36):
assist him with collecting money from weed deals and share
some confidential prison information. All this came to light because
she bragged about it to a former prison officer that
she had been given the man the mouth hugs. Yeah,
(27:56):
so now she's looking at twenty one months in prison.
Four misconduct in public office.
Speaker 9 (28:03):
I mean, he doesn't seem like a girl who doesn't
get compliments.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
Right, she's very homely looking. No, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 9 (28:14):
No, she's very makeup up, but she's easily an eight
or nine.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
Even without the makeup. She's up there in the upper realms.
And she was twenty one at the time when all
this was happening, and the judge was like, listen, I
get it. You were young, you were very impressionable, but
that doesn't negate the fact that you'd be doing dirty things.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
Why they let twenty one year olds be guards anyway?
As wild?
Speaker 3 (28:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (28:39):
I know, yeah, but they do things different across the bond.
Sure they do.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
Swearing linked to increased pain tolerance, No s No, swearing
is linked to increased pain tolerance, it cleared. According to
a new two thousand and nine study out of Keighley
University in England, well they do things different from there.
They found that people who swear when experience seen pain
had not only increased pain tolerance, but also a decrease
in perceived pain. Researchers carried out their studies over the
(29:08):
years showing that using a real swear word not bitch,
not poop, not damn, it showed decreased pain perception, but
not a made up word like shut the front door, right,
(29:28):
not cheese and rice.
Speaker 2 (29:30):
Right. You have to actually say it and meane it,
say it with your chest, say it.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
Like from your grundle.
Speaker 2 (29:39):
Right.
Speaker 9 (29:42):
There's only one word to say when you stub your
toe tartar sauce, Oh shaboozy, dignamit.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Suffered at right? No, No, not the ones. None of
those were This morning.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
My kid had a bad dream or whatever, and so
I picked up and carrying her back to bed. And
there was some you know those little mini claw machines
you can play some on Amazon or whatever.
Speaker 2 (30:17):
She had one.
Speaker 1 (30:18):
I kicked it. I was like you boarder sweets.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
Okay, did you have your crock slippers on?
Speaker 1 (30:25):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (30:26):
And it still went through.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
It was well, it was more than almost fell.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
I didn't. They didn't. I clearly was not injured.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
Right feet of steel.
Speaker 2 (30:35):
My toes are stubbed free.
Speaker 9 (30:37):
Well, I have an arsenal ready to dispose at any moment.
All these stories are on our Facebook page at facebook
dot com slash BMMS sixty nine.
Speaker 4 (30:46):
The Big Man Morning Show returns next Elsa's Morning Show
nine kmod.
Speaker 1 (31:02):
Good, good morning.
Speaker 9 (31:03):
It's The Big Man Morning Show nine one, eight four six,
oh kmod.
Speaker 2 (31:07):
You can also.
Speaker 1 (31:08):
Text bmms and then what you want to say to
eight two nine four to five. See what Lindsay has
for Balls to the Wall Sports.
Speaker 3 (31:28):
Shay Gil Gilgess, Alexander scored forty one points and Keith
a third a quarter rally as the Oklahoma Ceity Thunder
beat the Memphis Grizzlies one twenty to one O three
last night. Jalen Williams added twenty points and Aaron Wiggins
had sixteen for the Thunder, who have now won five
straight games and seven of their last eight. Isaiah Hartensteam
(31:51):
finished with ten points and fifteen rebounds. Okasee has won
fourteen of sixteen and maintain a salad hold on the
top seed in the Western Conferences. Oklahoma City hosts Portland
on Friday nights in the first of a three game homestand.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
Yeah, they've already clinched playoffs.
Speaker 3 (32:07):
So the Los Angeles Chargers are parting ways with five
time Pro bowler Joey Bosa. The Bolts released the veteran
linebacker to save more than twenty five million dollars against
the salary cap. The twenty nine year old has wrecked
up seventy two sacks over his nine year career, but
has been limited to twenty eight games over the last
(32:27):
three seasons due to injuries. The Chargers drafted Bosa third
overall in twenty sixteen out of Ohio State.
Speaker 9 (32:34):
People are really shocked by this. But if you look,
they have Khalil Mack.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
I mean they were a crazy duo, right, But of
the nine years Joey was playing for the Chargers, he
really only played three full seasons. Wow, that's not awesome. No,
that doesn't feel like they're getting their money's worth. So
I can understand.
Speaker 9 (32:55):
And they had a twenty five million cap, so cutting
him freeze up space, freeze up money.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
Can they fight someone as good? Probably not.
Speaker 9 (33:02):
But he was only playing like forty percent of the
snaps in the other six seasons.
Speaker 2 (33:07):
Well, whose fault is that? For him only playing so much? Injured? Okay,
that makes sense. He's very injury per gotcha, got you, gotcha?
I didn't think about that.
Speaker 9 (33:15):
So for them, they're trying to make a run, so
they need someone a little more consistent, so they cut him, right,
but he could go. I mean a Chicago would probably
love to have him. A Cleveland might love to have him,
especially if A getting the rind of Miles Carolina. That
I mean, there are teams that are willing to pay
him even if they only get him forty percent of
the season.
Speaker 3 (33:35):
Yeah, the Raiders are making history with their star pass rusher.
According to ESPN, defensive end Max Crosby has agreed to
a three year, one hundred and six point five million
dollar contract extension to stay in Las Vegas. The deal,
which includes ninety one and a half million dollars guaranteed
(33:56):
and a thirty five and a half million dollar average
annual value, makes him the highest paid non quarterback in
the history of the NFL.
Speaker 2 (34:05):
So far.
Speaker 3 (34:06):
Since entering the league yeah in twenty nineteen, Crosby has
recorded fifty nine point five sacks, which ranks him third
in franchise history, behind Greg Townsend and Howie Long. Las
Vegas has the sixth overall pick in the twenty twenty
five NFL Draft, which begins on April twenty fourth.
Speaker 1 (34:24):
It makes first of all, I love Max Crosby, even
though he's a Raider.
Speaker 9 (34:28):
I think he's awesome. There was no way he would
ever leave them. There was no way he wasn't gonna resign.
There's just not He has a Giant Raiders tattoo on
his chest. He is mister Raiders modern day, right, There's
no way he was not going to resign, and he's
an absolute stud, so the pedigree is there. He had
(34:49):
his first he missed his first games ever professionally firm
injury just this last season.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
Wow, Yeah, he's a stud.
Speaker 3 (35:00):
The Seahawks are cutting ties with one of their franchise legends.
Seattle released wide receiver Tyler Lockett after ten seasons.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
With the team Tolson.
Speaker 3 (35:08):
The thirty two year old is second in Seahawks' history
and catches receiving yards and receiving touchdowns. Releasing Lockett will
save Seattle seventeen million dollars in cash and cap space. However,
the team will take on a thirteen point eight hundred
ninety five million dollars in dead money. Lockett plans to
(35:29):
play in twenty twenty five. He had his fewest receptions
and receiving yards since twenty seventeen last season. In other news,
NFL Network reports that star wide receiver DK Metcalf has
asked for a trade and Seattle has agreed to explore moving.
The twenty seven year old Metcalf had sixty six receptions
for nine hundred and ninety two yards and five touchdowns
(35:52):
and fifteen games in twenty twenty four.
Speaker 1 (35:54):
Rumor is he's going to go. He's going to join
Raiters with Pee Carrol.
Speaker 2 (35:58):
That'll be good good for them.
Speaker 3 (36:00):
Yeah, for sure, And that's your balls to the Wall sports.
I'm Lindsay at ninety seventy five.
Speaker 9 (36:28):
Good morning, It's the Big nine Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six, oh Kmod. You can also text DMMS
and then what you want to say to eight two,
nine four five, Good morning, Lindsay.
Speaker 3 (36:38):
Good morning. Corbyin Lincoln Park is going to be at
the Bok Center with their new lead vocalist Emily Armstrong.
That's a Monday show April twenty eighth. Sign up to
win tickets at the website at rockskmod dot com.
Speaker 2 (36:52):
Good morning, Gimpie, Well, Good morning Corbin. Every day that
passes is another day closer to rocklaholm libor Day weekend
prior to USA three days, Grace and Shine down in
three eleven Manson and a whole lot moretgage full lineup
in your lenk tickets at the website that rocks cable
do you dot com?
Speaker 11 (37:11):
Oh gott to push the button, drown, no world, take
my strong hand, give train moment, give train, no world,
take my trum hand, Get on my give train train.
Speaker 2 (37:36):
You guys got prime video right? Yes? Do you guys
save a lot to your my watch list on Prime Video?
Oh yeah, okay, so do I Like I'll see a
clip of a movie on like TikTok or something, and
I'll be like, oh, what is that movie? I'll google it,
and if it's available on Prime Video, any of the
(37:58):
streaming services that I have, Paramount plus whatever, I'll go when,
I'll save it so I can watch it later. And
this happened to me. I've seen a clip for that
Michael J. Fox kind of like a documentary that's still
movie Michael that's the name of it. Still a Michael J.
Fox movie, right, shows like you know him and how
(38:18):
he came to Rise Right. I was like, well, that's cool,
it's available on Amazon Prime Prime Video, say for later,
and I go to watch and it's like, oh, it's
only available if you have Apple TV. Well that sucks.
But that got me to look in at what's in
my my list right, and I'm curious as to like,
(38:40):
what's in your guys is my list? I went through
this and I'm like, holy crap, how what was I
thinking when I decided to save some of these for later?
Some of these are our ones that I found on
the TikTok Some of them are like recommendations from like
cornorline saltburn Right is on my watch list because you
(39:04):
had talked about I was like, well, that sounds interesting,
And like The Road is another one that I think
Corman has talked about. I've never really seen it, so
I'm like, hey, it's there. I want to watch it eventually.
But start going through these and I'm like, what the
hell was I thinking? Like this suicide Kings from nineteen
ninety eight, it says, I look at the description, I
(39:25):
guess this is one of those ones that I had
seen on the TikTok. It has Christopher Walking in it,
and I'm like, Okay, that looks interesting. It says that
Avery is a desperate is desperate his sister's been kidnapping
ransom for two million dollars, and his father doesn't have
the cash. So Avery and his buddies concoct a bold,
semi suicidal scheme a ductor retired mob boss, which is
(39:48):
Christopher Walking, and force him to help find the girl
I'm used by his cap tours. Christopher Walkins's character agrees
to help, but cautions that them to a guilty party
might be the right under their noses so I'm like, Okay,
that's interesting. Then I get into some of these other
ones here. Zapped have you ever heard of that? Zapped
(40:13):
is a Scott Bao movie and it Scott Willie Aimes
in it, and it is from uh when is it?
Nineteen eighty two? And apparently I did start watching this
because I was like, Okay, let's see what this is about.
Scott Beo's there in college or high school or whatever.
Scott Bao is this smart scientist kind of guy who
(40:38):
ends up concocting a potion or whatever that allows him
to move things telepathically, and of course Willy Ames horny
little character uses it for nefarious reasons against women. It's
a It's a stupid ass movie, is what it is.
Speaker 3 (40:54):
You're like, how high was I?
Speaker 2 (40:58):
Yeah? Some of these movies that I have in here
are movies that I used to watch or I have
seen in my youth. And that's how I'm like, hey,
it's there. I remember that movie. Let's watch that again.
For example, this movie blown Away, not the blown Away
that you're thinking of with the firefighters and the bomb
makers right was at the Kurt Russell I believe blown Away. No,
(41:21):
this is a Nicole Eggert movie. Oh from nineteen ninety three.
And I remember this movie because my brother had brought
it home on VHS and I was like, well, this
is interesting. I remember my friends and I was talking
about blown Away, but it was the It was the
Kurt Russell movie. And come to find out, this is
not it. This is nowhere close. And I watched it,
(41:44):
and the only reason I think I got it now
it is because near ol Leggert gets nicked in it
a lot.
Speaker 3 (41:51):
Did she die?
Speaker 2 (41:53):
No, no, she's still alive. It blew up to hot mess,
hot mess.
Speaker 1 (41:57):
I don't know this Kurt Russell blown Away.
Speaker 2 (42:00):
Oh yeah it was. It came out about the same
time as this Nicole Eggert movie, blown Away came in,
and that's where the confusion betwixt me and my friends was.
And I've seen the Kurt Russell what. It's a good movie.
It's a good movie about a bombmaker or whatever.
Speaker 1 (42:14):
I mean.
Speaker 2 (42:15):
It says.
Speaker 1 (42:15):
It doesn't say Kurt Russell.
Speaker 9 (42:16):
It says Jeff Bridges, Tommy Lee Jones, Forrest Whittaker, look
over here.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
Yeah. Yeah, So maybe Jeff Bridge is not so much
Kurt Russell. But nonetheless, it was an interesting movie. Way
more popular than this one with Nicole Eggert for sure.
I mean, yeah, I've got the Land before Time Saved
in mind because I like to step back every now
and again in my childhood. Another one that I watched
(42:44):
way back in the day, National Lampoon's Favorite Deadly Sins.
Speaker 1 (42:47):
Well, yeah, it's got Andrew dice Clay at it.
Speaker 2 (42:51):
It's a It's a Lampoons movie, which that sent me
down a rabbit hole of how many different Lampoon movies.
They're all, oh a ton tons of them, and I've
seen i'd say probably about seventy five to eighty percent
of the Lampoon movies that are out. People aren't aware
that Lampoon is a magazine way before it was TV
(43:15):
movies and stuff like that. Yeah, yeah, and you can
always guarantee on some silly stupid stuff. Yes, when it
comes to Lampoon movies. Not all good though, No, No,
like we know for like Christmas Vacation and all the
vacation movies stuff like that. Like I got another one
in here, Senior Trip, Senior Trip, National Lampoon's Senior Trip.
It's got a very young Jeremy Renter in it, and
(43:39):
it's got Tommy Chong in it as well. It's another
silly ass movie. But yeah, just going through here, I'm like,
how hell house? Okay? Going Overboard is another one that
I have saved on my watch list, and that's an
early Adam Sandler movie that I a listener had texted
(44:03):
in about an Adam Sandler movie and it was this movie,
and I was like, wow, that's what that's a saidlor
movie I've never seen before. And I started watching it
and it is so retarded, so bad, so bad. Do
not waste your time on it. If you thought Sasquatch
Sunset was bad.
Speaker 1 (44:20):
Oh man, I don't know. I feel like you're now
just going overboard. Yeah, I've got another one on here
called Shakes the Clown from nineteen ninety two.
Speaker 2 (44:29):
I know this.
Speaker 1 (44:30):
Yeah, I don't remember even saving that or how I
got to that movie, but it's just one of those.
Speaker 2 (44:37):
So I'm curious, Like, what do you guys have in
your my watch list on Prime Video?
Speaker 3 (44:43):
I don't. I don't ever do that. Really, No, I
don't use that feature.
Speaker 2 (44:47):
You should.
Speaker 1 (44:48):
Fortunately, you should, because then you can get drunk on
a box of wine like I do, start saving weird
random stuff and then you look back later on when
you're a little more sober and you're like.
Speaker 3 (44:58):
What, I will say that as I'm looking at Shakes
the Clown an image of it. We actually own this
on DVD at my house.
Speaker 2 (45:05):
It was so many questions right there.
Speaker 3 (45:08):
One in Kevin's collection. There's so many questions right there,
and it is in our attic.
Speaker 2 (45:12):
I have never heard of this movie, but apparently I
had at one point in time, so I decided to
save it. Dueling gangs of clowns are pitted against each
other in this outrageous dark comedy Shakes an alcoholic kids party,
clown finds himself framed for murder and must get off
the sauce clearness.
Speaker 3 (45:30):
Adam Sandler's in it. It's another Adam Sailor.
Speaker 2 (45:33):
I'm probably where I see in it because it's like, ah,
you watched this stupid Going Overboard movie, maybe you'll like
this dumbass movie as well. Uh so, since she does
in corpor what you got in yours, man, Well.
Speaker 9 (45:45):
First of all, the Amazon Prime interface is the absolute
worst to navigate. Oh yeah, but so I have chiefs
Aholic in mine.
Speaker 2 (45:54):
That makes sense. That's about the bank robbin right, like
like a documentary thing. Okay, Yeah, I could see why
that would be in your watch list.
Speaker 9 (46:04):
Outer Range, which is a Josh Brolin sci fi TV show.
Speaker 2 (46:08):
It's in its second season.
Speaker 9 (46:10):
He discovers this hole out in his field in like
Wyoming or Montana or something like that. It's a very
interesting but I'm struggling getting through the second season of
that Wilderness. Okay, it's some show, and it says a
deliciously twisted thriller starring Jenna Coleman. Live and Will seem
(46:32):
to have it all, a rock solid marriage, a glamorous
new life in New York until liv learns.
Speaker 1 (46:37):
About the affair. Oh I do know about this.
Speaker 9 (46:41):
She gets revenge on him, and is it The question
is is that okay?
Speaker 2 (46:46):
What she did? Okay? Yeah? Do you remember how you
stumbled across that one?
Speaker 1 (46:50):
I'm sure I saw it on social media, Like that'll
be a great movie to watch. Another one.
Speaker 9 (46:55):
This is a movie called The Broken Circle Breakdown. And
this is is a non English movie about a blues
singer in another counch in Norway and he gets in
a relationship with a tattoo artist and the music is
supposed to be really good in it. And if you're okay,
(47:16):
with reading subtitles. It's supposed to be really good.
Speaker 2 (47:18):
So okay, it's available on tub apparently, Free Birds, which
is a movie for my kids.
Speaker 9 (47:24):
Okay, Rock Dog again, movie for my kids. A movie
called Leap Okay again a movie for my kids. Another one.
Sound of my Voice.
Speaker 1 (47:36):
I don't know anything about this.
Speaker 2 (47:39):
I think that's the beauty of this. Right here, You're
going through and you're like, apparently, at one point in
time you thought it was all right, you want to
save it, but then when you look at it back,
you're like, what, how? Why? Yeah?
Speaker 9 (47:52):
A filmmaker and his girlfriend set out to expose the
beautiful leader of a cult who claimed to be from
the future.
Speaker 2 (48:00):
Hey, what was the name of that one? Again?
Speaker 9 (48:02):
Sound of my Voice? Zombie lands on here? That makes sense,
Licorice pizzas on here? Okay, Moonri's Kingdom, The Florida Project,
It Comes at Night, which is a movie Lindsay will
talk about later. An artist is present. I don't know
(48:27):
what that is, following groundbreaking artist Maria Ambermovak. She creates
a major respective of her work, and you, okay, this
is the woman Maria Ambervak. This is a documentary, This
is a movie. About She does living art pieces, and
she did a piece in the the eighties or nineties
(48:48):
where she sat there and you could people stood in
line and you could do anything you want to her.
Speaker 2 (48:53):
I've heard about that story. I didn't know about the
movie or whatever.
Speaker 9 (48:55):
And the things that people would do to her and
she didn't, like she just sat there and took it
for like some ridiculous amount of time and just more
of it was more of a specimen on human beings
and if they knew.
Speaker 1 (49:07):
They could get away with something, what would they do? Yeah,
she died from that, or like didn't she?
Speaker 9 (49:12):
She she definitely had to be hospitalized afterwards. But yeah, uh,
I don't know this one.
Speaker 1 (49:21):
Three thousand years.
Speaker 2 (49:22):
Of Longing, Okay, never heard of that.
Speaker 1 (49:25):
It's a Tilda Swinton movie.
Speaker 9 (49:28):
Why an Instable instabul She happens to encounter Idris Elbow,
whatever character he plays, who offers your three wishes in
exchange for his freedom. At first, she doubts that he
is real, and she knows all the cautionary tales of
wishes gone wrong, but he pleads his case and eventually
she is starts making wishes. Okay, that's a recent movie.
(49:53):
That's a twenty two movie.
Speaker 1 (49:54):
We got a.
Speaker 3 (49:55):
Text that says Corbyn go ahead and give up on
Outer Range. It got canceled and leaves a ton the
plot unresolved. Yeah, just a huge letdown.
Speaker 1 (50:02):
Yeah, the second season was really lacking. Okay, the first
season's money. The second season was not good. I've got
like the Before Midnight series, if you know that series.
Speaker 2 (50:13):
It's like.
Speaker 1 (50:16):
This French actress and Ethan.
Speaker 9 (50:18):
Hawk, and it is about their life together from when
they meet the first time when they're young. And this
movie's these series of movies have been done over like
three decades, and so they do it when these two
actors are very young and they just meet while he's
vacationing in Europe, and then they get married, so you
see what their marriage is like, and then you see
(50:38):
them post divorce.
Speaker 2 (50:40):
Wow.
Speaker 9 (50:40):
But it's all through different stages of their real lives.
So they revisited the movie like twenty years later, and
then they revisited it ten years after that, okay, and it.
Speaker 2 (50:49):
Kept shooting footage or whatever for okay.
Speaker 1 (50:52):
Yeah, it just like continued on.
Speaker 9 (50:54):
I've got that stupid movie that I have not watched
called Becky.
Speaker 1 (50:58):
Which is yeah, I haven't seen it either, which.
Speaker 9 (51:02):
Is the movie with the only reason I got it
is because Kevin James is in it and he plays
an evil person.
Speaker 2 (51:09):
That is a great movie. I can't watch Leave You anymore. Well,
you know, listen, I was thinking. It's Kevin James. He's
always been that funny guy, right yea, and he pulls
off a great psychopath in this movie. It is totally
worth the watch. I'm not Sasquatch Sunset and you on
this one. I promise you. It's definitely worth the watch.
Speaker 3 (51:32):
Someone texted and said we should all watch Class Action
Park a documentary and it's incredible.
Speaker 2 (51:37):
I can't really get in the documentaries.
Speaker 1 (51:42):
Does it say what it's about or are we just okay?
Speaker 2 (51:44):
Well I can't.
Speaker 1 (51:45):
That doesn't pull me in because you tell me to
watch it.
Speaker 2 (51:47):
Something about the documentaries, I just maybe they're just too slow,
or maybe I'm just not interested in whatever they're talking about.
I just can't get into him.
Speaker 1 (51:54):
I have House on here, the series House that makes sense.
Speaker 9 (51:57):
Rick Steves Europe never heard of it. It's a travel
show like Steve's from PBS. Blippy of course is on here.
I have a series called Really.
Speaker 1 (52:06):
Dough and it it's about pizza okay, really dough, really dough? Yeah,
grill it with Bobby Flay Big Brother Mister Robot, which
might be one of the best TV series of all time.
There was a movie in here I wanted to bring
up because I did watch it and it is such
(52:28):
a bad movie, but I'm not seeing it for it.
Speaker 2 (52:34):
All of a sudden, I've got this really cool Coole
at Ice movie. It's the Vanilla Ice movie. Yes, Vanilla
Ice made a movie back in nineteen ninety one. Haven't
washed it yet. Seeing a clip on the TikTok, I
was like, Okay, let's see how terrible this turret is.
Speaker 9 (52:54):
I tend to like get a lot of recommendations I
see on social media of show okay, and I don't
know why, but I'll that will hold more merit with
me than if like one of my friends tell me.
I think that because I feel like that person will
say something, and then I can go through and look
at the comments to see what is like what other
(53:18):
people are saying, like this is garbage, don't waste your time.
Speaker 2 (53:25):
Things like that. I have this twenty fifteen movie in
here called Lama Geddon, a killer Lama from outer space
crash lands on the Lord and begins raining havoc on
a group of unsuspecting college partiers. What hey, if you
(53:46):
can watch Sharknado, you go watch Lalama Get in. Of course,
mall Ratch is in my list as well. I think
that's just a time honored classic of people my age.
Speaker 9 (53:56):
I have a Sound of Metal in here, which is
a Rizamed movie where he is in a band and
he goes deaf okay, and he is not embracing that
he's deaf, and he has to like, have.
Speaker 2 (54:08):
You watched it yet? Yeah, it's good.
Speaker 9 (54:10):
I don't take stuff out of my watch list even
if I watch it. So, like you know that horrible
movie Mother that I don't recommend anybody watch.
Speaker 2 (54:16):
That's in here. That's fun. That's fun. Because I've heard
about the Sound of Metal, I was like, Okay, that
sounds kind of interesting as a music guy, Yeah, it'd
be interesting.
Speaker 1 (54:25):
It's really Rizamed might be he's a fantastic actor.
Speaker 2 (54:28):
Okay. I have thirty one in here, which I believe
is a Rob Zombie film. Okay. From yeah. Rob Zombie
comes a story of five carnival workers who are kidnapped
and forced to fight for their lives against an endless
parade of homicidal maniacs. All right, that's cool. That's cool.
Speaker 1 (54:48):
Somebody text and said, have you watched for All Mankind? Yeah?
Speaker 9 (54:50):
That's on Apple TV. That one is pretty good. I
look at it like I feel about Breaking Bad. It's
pretty good.
Speaker 1 (54:57):
It's just not for me.
Speaker 2 (54:58):
Got it? God have the Apple TV. So that's why
I haven't heard of it or watched it or whatever.
So it's fun to go through and see, like what
was I thinking? When you start saving stuff in your
watch list or whatever on Netflix and Amazon Prime?
Speaker 9 (55:14):
You know what, doing a watch list reminds me of
a specifically for Amazon Prime, it reminds me of when
you would come home at night after being out and
what would be the TV show on USA or the
movie that was on.
Speaker 2 (55:27):
It's always some weird thing. You're like, huh okay, sit
back and watch it. Yeah. Yeah. That's how I got
into Boardwalk Empire though, which was a great, fantastic series
on HBO. I come home from the clubs I'm working
and be on Late and I'm like, ooh, this is interesting.
Nineteen twenties gangster stuff and booze right around the world.
Speaker 12 (55:48):
Take my strong hand, get on give train moment, Give
train the world, take my trull hand, Get on the grain.
Speaker 2 (56:00):
Yeah We.
Speaker 4 (56:08):
Tilsay's Morning Show continues next with The Big Man Morning
Show on Tulsa's Rock Station ninety seven five KMO.
Speaker 9 (56:26):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show nine four
six oh kmo D. You can also text BMMS and
then what you want to say to eight two nine
four five.
Speaker 2 (56:36):
Let's play a game.
Speaker 9 (56:37):
Pop Bibo's gonna be over at Kain's Broom on April eighth.
Get your tickets at Kainsbarroom dot com and anybody that
wins this week is gonna join. Give you for the
Shamrock Showdown, a party bus pub crawl, Saint Patrick's Day
Weekend from Guinness in ninety seven to five kmo D
and we're gonna play Schnip Schnapcher.
Speaker 1 (56:54):
Current record is.
Speaker 2 (56:55):
Well you and I are tied with three Lindsay as
one last week's winner. That'd be me So Corbyn and
Lindsay at nine one eight four six oh kmo D
nine one eight four six oh kmo D call up,
decide who's going to be your clue giver. Whoever gets
the most right is gonna win those tickets to see
Pop Evil and go on a little Saint Patrick's Day
pub crawl nine one eight four six, Oh K M
(57:17):
O D.
Speaker 1 (57:18):
Good morning, you're on the air. What is your name?
Good morning, you're on the air. What is your name?
Speaker 2 (57:26):
Jake? Jake?
Speaker 1 (57:27):
How are you today? Good? Are you good? Who do
you want to give clues? Lindsay or Corbyn?
Speaker 8 (57:32):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (57:33):
Corbn Lensday. Let's keep her at one.
Speaker 8 (57:36):
Thanks?
Speaker 3 (57:36):
Shake?
Speaker 1 (57:37):
All right? Did you hear reluctant? He was to pick
me though? All right, sixty seconds around the clock. Here
we go.
Speaker 2 (57:43):
That's probably enough.
Speaker 1 (57:44):
Here we go. Uh, wild e blank coyote?
Speaker 9 (57:49):
Correct, I blank? Allegiance to the flag pledge correct. Not
a freshman, not a junior, not a senior.
Speaker 11 (57:59):
Sophomore.
Speaker 2 (57:59):
Correct.
Speaker 1 (58:00):
This is what you an optical device you used to
look at the stars or the moon or telescope? Correct?
Speaker 5 (58:08):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (58:08):
If you live in an area prone for a lot
of water, the insurance coming in.
Speaker 1 (58:14):
Correct. This is a state that is pretty big. Not Bontana,
not Idaho, near Colorado, west of Nebraska, west of Nebraska.
Speaker 2 (58:32):
Lord west of Nebraska, south Dakota.
Speaker 1 (58:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 12 (58:37):
I'm geography terrible.
Speaker 3 (58:39):
Uh another hand.
Speaker 9 (58:42):
I mean I feel like I've given some pretty good ones.
It's in the northern part of the United States. Not
it's right there by Idaho and Colorado. And your time
five is what we got. My man might be good
enough for the wind. Excellent job, Jake, hang on the line.
Good morning, you're on the air.
Speaker 1 (58:59):
What is your name?
Speaker 2 (59:04):
Xavier? How are you today?
Speaker 4 (59:06):
Good?
Speaker 2 (59:06):
Are you good? Buddy?
Speaker 1 (59:07):
You got to beat five? Are you ready?
Speaker 2 (59:10):
Yeah? Here we go?
Speaker 3 (59:11):
This comes back or this comes with a money back?
Speaker 2 (59:15):
What guarantee? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (59:19):
Uh? You wash your floors with this and a bucket
of water. Yes, these are not pants, but they you
wear them in the summer. Uh, but what kind? They
usually have pockets? Yes, this is this cleans the air.
(59:41):
You have them in your houses. You have them in
your cars, and you have to change them every month
or so in your house. Yes, not just leave off air. Yes,
uh huh, that was quite the statement. The blame and
the beautiful. Uh, A strong body is very over the shoulder,
(01:00:13):
blank holder, leave off older.
Speaker 1 (01:00:18):
Time time time. Damn I got you had me. I'm
so sorry, Xavier, you did not get to win.
Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
My man doing alright?
Speaker 1 (01:00:30):
Congratulations Jake. You're getting tickets to see pop Evil and
you're going on that pub crawl, man, excellent job, buddy,
hang on the line. Okay, all right, that's the one
that Lindsey ended on. With the font you have choices
of italics underline? Uh you when you take text and
(01:00:50):
make it darker and wider, I love blanking the beautiful.
Speaker 2 (01:00:56):
Yeah that was good. Yeah. Apparently he doesn't know his
soap hop right the one.
Speaker 3 (01:01:02):
I ended on, lindsay, Yeah, the US state that not
many people living.
Speaker 1 (01:01:09):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (01:01:10):
Yeah, it's not very popular. It's under Montana.
Speaker 1 (01:01:15):
And are you looking it up online right now to
give clues?
Speaker 9 (01:01:19):
Are you looking it up? To be honest, you're looking
up clues right now. That's not what we're supposed to do.
Speaker 1 (01:01:25):
But I mean we're supposed to give clues off the cuff.
Speaker 3 (01:01:28):
But it doesn't matter for me. It wasn't my clue.
Speaker 2 (01:01:31):
So Cheyenne is the capital?
Speaker 1 (01:01:35):
Yeahline.
Speaker 2 (01:01:38):
It took me a little while to figure it out
with your clues, man, I was like, okay, what is
it's because I'm not good with geography either. Finally, women, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:01:54):
All right, the record now?
Speaker 2 (01:01:55):
But you and the lead with four, keeps me with three,
keeps Lyn dead as last with one's.
Speaker 4 (01:02:03):
Voting show The Big Man Boarding Show. The assault continues
next ninety seven five.
Speaker 9 (01:02:28):
Good Morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six, Oh kmo D. You can also text
bmms and then what you want.
Speaker 1 (01:02:35):
To say to eight two, nine four five Coming up
our top list top five old people habits.
Speaker 9 (01:02:44):
We'll get to that, but first we got to see
what Gimpi has in his four x four.
Speaker 2 (01:02:50):
It says here that the EPA head says the US
needs to adapt to climate change. Aaron's Zabo made the
comments during his confirmation hearing yesterday, saying the country should
adapt to the changes rather than mitigate the problem. When
questioned whether the US needs to reduce carbon emissions to
(01:03:10):
protect the environment, well, Zabo once again said the country
needs to be adapting to all changes, including ones in
the world's climates.
Speaker 9 (01:03:19):
Fast forward to tomorrow's four by four, where he has
been fired and they're closing the EPA moving forward.
Speaker 2 (01:03:27):
US pauses intelligence sharing with Ukraine. National Security Advisor Mike
Waltz said the US has quote taken a step back
and are pausing and reviewing all aspects of this relationship.
This comes after last week's tense Oval Office meeting surgery
on Fridays leads to a greater risk. Now this is
(01:03:49):
interesting because I went from a console yesterday for my vasectomy, right,
and they're like, well, we can do it on like
a Monday. I was like, no, I want it on
a Friday after noon, right, it makes sense. Give me
the weekend to recover.
Speaker 3 (01:04:02):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:04:02):
They're like, well, we close at one o'clock. Sorry, we
can't do it. So I'm like having it done on
a Thursday or whatever. Simple enough. So I found this
to be interesting. I prefer surgeries on Friday, right, right,
it makes good sense. Right, gives you the whole weekend
to recover. You got nothing to work. It's convenient for me. Yes, okay,
Well it says here Corbin that people who have surgery
(01:04:24):
on a Friday face greater risk of death and complications.
A new study reveals a team of Houston Methodist Hospital
looked at twenty five common procedures and found that the
risk went up compared to people who retreated earlier in
the week. It's called the weekend effect and could reflect
that hospitals tend to operate with fewer people on Saturdays
(01:04:46):
and Sundays. The risk of death on for Friday surgeries
went up as much as twelve percent. The study was
published this weekend JAMA Network Opening.
Speaker 9 (01:04:56):
I feel like they just went I mean, there's more,
but what could it be. I feel like there's so
many X factors that go into complications, and the day
of the week hardly feels like that should be in
the top five of reasons.
Speaker 2 (01:05:08):
On Fridays, everybody's checked out. Docs checked out, nurses are
checked out. They're like, it's frigging a Friday and I'm
ready to get the hell out of here. Hurry up,
hurry up and button this guy up. The chairs that
we pull out as pancreas and they needed to be
as you know, liver or whatever.
Speaker 9 (01:05:25):
Yeah, I think there's you could argue that's on the
days when they have to go play golf. If there's
categorically across the board, when they're about to go on
vacation the end of the school year, their kids are sick.
Speaker 1 (01:05:38):
I feel like they.
Speaker 2 (01:05:39):
Get listen, doctors, studies don't lie. And lastly, here Tulsa
reps bill aimed to protect renters fails despite bipartisans support.
A bill aimed at providing state regulated safety and transparency
in rental units has failed to get the needed reading
in the Oklahoma state legislature. Also, freshman Representative Michelle McCain's house,
(01:06:03):
built nineteen forty five, requires landlords owners and operate it.
I'll try to get creator today with at least five
rental units or properties to subject all employees to a
background screening before they can get hired. It also required
them to maintain a log that tracked the issuance and
return of keys for all units.
Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
But it did not pass. But it did not pass.
So not that you feel like it's not worthy.
Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
Absolutely, you can still keep your slimy little maintenance man
and his keys and access to your place.
Speaker 3 (01:06:47):
Dubb Bears are serious about rebuilding their offensive line. Chicago
traded for a Pro Bowl guard for the second day
in a row yesterday. The team acquired Joe Toney from
Kansas City in exchange for a twenty twenty fourth round pick.
Tony spent the last four years with the Chiefs, making
the Pro Bowl in each of the last three seasons.
(01:07:08):
The move came just a day after Chicago traded for
one time Pro Bowl guard Jonah Jackson.
Speaker 9 (01:07:13):
I mean everybody Chiefs fans knew when they franchised Trey
Smith that there was not room for Tony anymore. So
they knew that that that shouldn't be a surprise the
Chiefs fan, and yeah, good for Bears.
Speaker 3 (01:07:26):
Are you bumming to see Tuning go?
Speaker 9 (01:07:28):
Or I don't get hung up on players. They come
and go and there'll be a new star at some point.
Does it make you go, I hope everything's okay when
we had barely a line as it was. Yes, Chiefs
do not have a good track record of drafting linemen right.
As an example, they took Eric Fisher when they had
like a top five pick, and he sucked.
Speaker 3 (01:07:52):
The Jags are reportedly moving on from one of their
offensive weapons. Per ESPN, Jacksonville is planning on releasing wide
out Chris Kirk. The move will save the team more
than ten point seven million dollars in cap space. Kirk
signed a four year, seventy two million dollar contract back
in twenty twenty two. He had a career high eighty
four catches, eleven hundred yards and eight touchdowns that season,
(01:08:15):
but has missed fourteen games across the past two seasons
due to injuries, and one of the Dolphins defensive stars
is reportedly restructuring his deal. According to ESPN, linebacker Bradley
Chubb has agreed to restructure his contract. The twenty eight
year old would have been a twenty eight and a
half million dollar cap hit in twenty twenty five. He
(01:08:36):
was unable to play last season after tearing his right
acl and a pateller tendon late in the twenty twenty
three season. He has thirty nine point five sacks in
seventy three career games. And that's your balls with the
Wall Sports. I'm Lindsay on ninety seven to five, Can
you move?
Speaker 2 (01:09:02):
Good Morning?
Speaker 1 (01:09:03):
It's the Big Man Morning Show. Nine one, eight four six,
oh kmo D. Can also text emms and then what
you want to say to eight two, nine four five,
Good morning Lindsay.
Speaker 3 (01:09:15):
Good morning Corbyn. You could win a hard Rock Live experience.
Go to the website that rocks Kamody dot com. Lit
and Fuel will be performing on Saturday, June fourteenth at
the hard Rock Live and you could be upgraded to
the hard Rock Live Experience that includes a pair of
tickets to the show, dinner for two, and a one
night's stay at the hard Rock Hotel and Casino the
(01:09:37):
night of the show. It's pretty spectacular Kamody dot com
to win.
Speaker 1 (01:09:42):
Good morning Kimpie, Oh, good morning Corbin.
Speaker 2 (01:09:44):
We just listened to the sturb. They're gonna be down
in Oklahoma City on ap for twenty eighth. You can
get your tickets at ticketmaster dot com.
Speaker 9 (01:09:50):
All right, little conspiracy theory Thursday and aliens and stuff
like that are always a nice, easy one to do.
And this one, the headline alone just has like so
much credibility in it. And then we'll get into it
and you'll go, huh, okay, Well, former CIA agent claims
there was life on Mars and he saw bones on
(01:10:14):
the surface. Okay, immediately you put CIA on something, it
feels legitimate.
Speaker 2 (01:10:21):
Right, it's a good agency.
Speaker 9 (01:10:24):
But if you're the janitor or a cook in the
kitchen or the maintenance worker, you get to say former
CIA employee, yeah for sure, or CIA employee. This man
says he was a former CIA agent Joel macknegaal goal.
(01:10:49):
He calls himself a remote viewer. Okay, that should already
raise flax, which he claims means which there should be
your second red flag, which he claims means.
Speaker 1 (01:11:04):
Right, there's no definition, his made up definition.
Speaker 9 (01:11:08):
He can perceive information about distance, distant objects or events
using the power of his mind.
Speaker 1 (01:11:21):
Let me translate that he can.
Speaker 2 (01:11:23):
Make stuff up me too.
Speaker 9 (01:11:28):
He's a retired US Army Chief Warrant officer. He claims
he and others so called remote viewers, took part in
an experiment carried out by US Army Intelligence and the
Stanford Research Institute. He was one of the first people
recruited for the Stargate project, which between nineteen seventy eight
and nineteen ninety five, leading him to be known as
(01:11:49):
Remote Viewer Number one. The project was canceled and canceled
and declassified in ninety five after a CIA report included
no discernible benefit had been established. But Joe appeared on
a podcast last week and made claims about what he
(01:12:10):
saw on Mars during the experiment. He says instructors handed
him a white card and coordinates and Mars one million
BC written on it, and he saw a giant pyramid
bigger than the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt, with
(01:12:32):
monster rooms inside. And in the podcast he said quote,
I started getting an image of human beings that were
trapped in a place where the atmosphere was turning bad.
Speaker 2 (01:12:44):
It was obvious.
Speaker 9 (01:12:44):
These people were dying for some reason, but they were humans.
They were just twice our size. He believed the very tall,
thin people wearing strange clothes were hiding inside the pyramids
for shelter from a violent storm sweeping across Mars, which
if you've seen Martian with Matt Damon, you know about
(01:13:05):
those storms. He described the chambers as different chambers, but
they almost stripped of any kind of furnishings or anything
like that. Strictly functional, a place for sleeping or that's
not good word, hibernation of some form.
Speaker 2 (01:13:24):
Those are his words.
Speaker 9 (01:13:26):
Later, Joe saw negative images of the areas of Mars.
He was asked to remote view, and claims he saw
bones and buildings on the planet's surface. He theorized a
big object passed through our solar system that stripped the
atmosphere from Mars, which caused alien life on the planet
to go extinct. The nineteen eighty four CIA document recounting
(01:13:47):
the remote viewing session, which has since been declassified, continue
to explain Joe's observation of the ancient people. Quote, it's
past their time or age, he told the instructor. They're
very philosophic about it. They're looking for a way to
survive and they just can't. He then said, one of
the ancient people told him a group had left what
looks like the inside of a larger boat, and he
(01:14:12):
told more things. I'm I'm getting annoyed by this the
more I read it, because.
Speaker 1 (01:14:19):
I'm okay, I want to do an experiment on you
guys after reading this, and so hold on, this is
on the cuff. This is not planned.
Speaker 2 (01:14:33):
I just.
Speaker 9 (01:14:37):
Okay, I wrote something down on a piece of paper.
You guys are going to be a part of an
ability to see if one of you are remote viewers, Okay, okay,
one at a time, I will show you each a
different number and that's how many years in the future,
(01:14:58):
and I want you to tell me what you see.
Speaker 1 (01:15:01):
Okay, Okay, lindsay you're gonna go first, all right.
Speaker 2 (01:15:05):
So should I close my eyes? No, it's okay. You're
gonna get a different number. Okay, all right. What do
you see?
Speaker 3 (01:15:16):
Nothing but dirt?
Speaker 2 (01:15:19):
Oh? Anything else?
Speaker 3 (01:15:22):
Possibly lots of crime.
Speaker 1 (01:15:28):
With the dirt, like the dirts committing crime with each other.
Speaker 3 (01:15:31):
See a lot of green grass, I see sadness.
Speaker 1 (01:15:40):
Okay, uh, gimpy yea, here you go. I'm gonna write
a number for you. You might not be able to
see it.
Speaker 2 (01:15:49):
Okay, is there a particular location or you just want
me to use the earth whatever you see?
Speaker 1 (01:15:53):
Okay, uh a destruction by the way, the number was ten. Yes, destruction.
Lots of fires in ten years.
Speaker 2 (01:16:06):
I see lots of angry people.
Speaker 1 (01:16:13):
You Walmart, you're a ross. Yeah, right, trying to check out.
Speaker 2 (01:16:17):
We're LIKEJX, I think right right.
Speaker 1 (01:16:20):
Uh so, fire destruction, angry people protesting. I see that's it.
Speaker 2 (01:16:32):
That is it. That's just a lot of destruction and
angry people.
Speaker 9 (01:16:36):
Okay, congratulations, you guys are remote viewers. You have the
ability to see into the future.
Speaker 2 (01:16:43):
I'm gonna go work for the CIA. Now.
Speaker 1 (01:16:44):
There's no way this is a thing. He's telling a story,
especially if he knew he was part of an experiment. Right,
That doesn't make you a remote viewer. If that's even
a thing I would to tell. If it was, you'd
have to have a group of people.
Speaker 9 (01:17:03):
And put some where you know it's there, and see
if they can find it.
Speaker 2 (01:17:09):
Yeah, okay, like putting an object in a certain place
and seeing if they could find it using nothing but
their mental powers. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:17:16):
Like, hey, when Armstrong was up there. He left a
uh uh howdy duty doll. I just tried to think
of something form the like, right, and then be like,
what do you see.
Speaker 2 (01:17:32):
On the moon?
Speaker 1 (01:17:32):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 9 (01:17:33):
Like that would be you have to validate it somehow
And this old codre Why is it when we get
some of these stories, it's always like somebody old from
that industry government entity.
Speaker 2 (01:17:46):
Because it makes it more believable.
Speaker 9 (01:17:48):
Corbyn, like they're on the way out and then I
can now finally speak because I'm going to die anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:17:55):
The one they're working for a government agency, that makes
it believable. Right, they're older, so they're supposed to be
wiser and more experienced. That's what makes it more believable.
Speaker 9 (01:18:08):
I gotta be honest, man, I don't take anybody's word
at merit when they're near the end.
Speaker 2 (01:18:16):
Because they could also be like, what have I got
to lose?
Speaker 9 (01:18:19):
Exactly, I'm going to make stuff up. I want to
troll this place all the way out because and you
could I definitely could see the argument of like they
finally can aren't worried about them coming to get them?
Speaker 2 (01:18:36):
Right, I'm going to die soon anyway, so let them
come get me.
Speaker 9 (01:18:40):
And you also don't know anything about this person's character
at all. I know plenty of people that you meet
at parties that are charismatic, and then you see them
in their real life and you're like, you're a mess.
You can't you can't even keep a box organized that's empty.
Speaker 3 (01:19:01):
What were you going to say, Lindcay, Yeah, no, like
he's just maybe he was diagnosed with cancer and he's like,
I'm going to die anyway, so I may as well
go out lying. You know, they'll they'll kill me. I'll
be out of my misery and these people will be worried.
Speaker 9 (01:19:18):
I love this, laugh all you want, but check out
Joe Rugan episode about telepathy tapes. Autistic people able to
do this very thing one hundred percent accuracy. Makes sense
government would use them, but there's no proof of that.
Speaker 1 (01:19:34):
I listen just because Joe Rogan don't mean anything, right,
it's a show.
Speaker 2 (01:19:38):
Who's to say that autistic people can't make stuff up too?
You know? Yeah, that's just throwing a spicy word in
there to make Oh hell yeah, they're autistics, so it
has to be true.
Speaker 1 (01:19:50):
How about this tax? This is rough, This is a
result of boomers. Having a space addiction.
Speaker 9 (01:19:56):
Aliens aren't real illegally ensure but not UFO aliens. I
don't know if boomers have a space addiction. I think boomers,
which I hate doing this, but I think boomers have
a connection to space because a massive event in their
life happened that was connected to.
Speaker 2 (01:20:18):
Space, right, the so called moon landing.
Speaker 9 (01:20:21):
The Challenger explosion for me was a big one because
it was a huge chapter in fifth grade my life.
That's like saying millennials are have a terrorism addiction, right
because of nine to eleven.
Speaker 1 (01:20:38):
Like, I'm not there on all that. And I don't know.
I don't know if aliens real. I kind of believe that.
I don't think we're that great. If I'm an alien
and you figured out all these other things, being able
to fly under the radar and super beans, we may
not be the most exciting thing out there.
Speaker 2 (01:20:56):
No, but we are entertaining for them.
Speaker 1 (01:21:00):
I don't know that.
Speaker 9 (01:21:01):
Again, I I just think there's a little self indulgence
there of like we're so great they'd want to come
check us out there again. They have the whole world,
the whole universe to go to, right, and it's and
they come here right uh uh. And also just because
you see something in the sky does not automatically mean
aliens or spaceship.
Speaker 2 (01:21:21):
Oh absolutely, it's a unidentified flying object or whatever. You
know how much trash TV, especially you guys watch, right,
because I'm not huge into that reality TV sort of
stuff like that, like you guys are. But here's my
theory on this. What if we Earthlings are the trash
(01:21:42):
TV for the aliens and that's why they come by,
That's why they watch us the way they do. They're
not trying to learn anything at all whatsoever. We're just
entertainment from them, relief, right, watch the civilization. Look at
how they act and how stupid they are, or you know,
(01:22:04):
how different they are amongst themselves. You know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (01:22:09):
That's a possibility. No, there's no merit that that's a possibility.
Speaker 9 (01:22:14):
You could say that it's a possibility that we're gumballs,
right like they both those have the same merit. There's
just making up a story doesn't give it merit. Kind
of like what this guy's doing as far as I'm concerned,
because grifters are amongst us all the time. I love
(01:22:38):
that podcast Behind the Bastards, and it is about grifters
and Charlton's and people tricking you and tricking you in
a way to make you believe their intentions are sincere
and honest. And I think we have more grifters now
than ever before. Ain't nobody selling snake oil medicine, but
(01:22:59):
there are people selling snake oil medicine. And I'm not
talking about medicine. I'm talking snake oil. Is a broad
stroke of of anything, right right. It can be that
to get stuff, to get your password for your credit cards,
right right.
Speaker 2 (01:23:15):
It can be.
Speaker 1 (01:23:17):
Your employer, It could be a potential employer. It could
be a girl, it could be a guy. It could
be a politician. It could be your teacher, it could
be your minister.
Speaker 2 (01:23:28):
Huh, this okay text comes in. There's a movie about
this project called The Men Who Stare at Goats.
Speaker 1 (01:23:34):
I'm familiar with it.
Speaker 2 (01:23:35):
Yeah, it got George Klooney on it, and I've only
seen it once and it's a pretty interesting movie. But uh, okay,
but absurd, yes, very very absurd. However, who's to say
that that isn't a real thing? And because you know
it's movies sometimes are inspired by other events or you know,
(01:23:56):
based on real things, and who's to say that that
it wasn't a real thing, like the CIA guy, And
they're like, that would make a great movie and we'll
get George Clooney involved and people will watch it.
Speaker 5 (01:24:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:24:07):
I like this text. Speak for yourself, Corbyn. I'm amazing,
Yes you are, sir?
Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
Are you? Yes you are. I don't know this person
for nothing, No, yes you are. Sure, you're amazing, But
in the universe.
Speaker 1 (01:24:20):
You're not.
Speaker 9 (01:24:23):
You have one goldfish, you're an awesome goldfish, but at
the pet store you're.
Speaker 2 (01:24:30):
Not that great if you're doing tricks for me.
Speaker 1 (01:24:36):
I have never seen a goldfish do tricks.
Speaker 2 (01:24:38):
Yeah, it ain't.
Speaker 9 (01:24:39):
An octopus, right, But to see oh people come out
and be like aliens are real and then they just
get so much honesty.
Speaker 1 (01:24:50):
Is wild to me. And like Joe Rogan is like
does he have an interesting guess? For sure?
Speaker 9 (01:24:56):
But when you give grifters an audience, that's where I
think it's danger and reckless and giving. Not that Joe
Rugan gave this guy, but when you give people that
have no science and they just run their mouth, there's
a percentage of your audience that's gonna believe it. Oh yeah,
And I think that's reckless.
Speaker 2 (01:25:15):
All right, we gotta take a break. We'll be back.
Speaker 4 (01:25:16):
If you're listening to The Big Mad Morning Show, this
is Tulsa's Morning show.
Speaker 9 (01:25:23):
M Molton, Good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show.
Nine four six oh kmod. You can also text bmms
and then what you want to say to eight two
(01:25:44):
nine four five. As you can see, I'm working on
my list for top list of old people habits and
that's probably got twenty that I've got to narrow it
down maybe more. I'm hitting my stride though, so okay,
I don't know. I don't know what I'm gonna do
(01:26:07):
here to try and narrow this down and make it.
Speaker 2 (01:26:12):
Easier, but we'll get to it. Conspiracy Theory Thursday.
Speaker 9 (01:26:18):
I wanted to hit this again just because there was
something I noticed, so we mentioned yesterday at the fire
festival too, and how the tours and boards like I
have no idea what they're talking about.
Speaker 1 (01:26:27):
Nobody's contacted us. There's no people from hotels or even going.
Nobody's contacted us. And so what does this guy do
is he go to my point about grifters. He does
an Instagram video in a bathroom with earbuds in defending it.
Speaker 9 (01:26:48):
Okay, Now, this is not normal behavior of a legitimate individual.
Speaker 2 (01:26:55):
It just isn't.
Speaker 9 (01:26:57):
If you were once convicted of conning people and then
you try to do the con again, you would have
some sort of representation or face of legitimacy, right, like
a lawyer.
Speaker 1 (01:27:12):
Yeah, someone else, right other than you?
Speaker 3 (01:27:20):
Right, right, someone legit.
Speaker 9 (01:27:22):
Someone who doesn't have a stigma associated with conning people.
Speaker 2 (01:27:27):
But the only thing about that is that that makes
me think of like those commercials that like shows a
doctor and it's like, oh, this is great at all,
work for you, blah blah blah, when it's just an
actor in a lab coat. Yes, you know what I'm saying.
So anybody could put that lab coat on. Anybody could
put that suit on and be like, I am the
attorney for what's his nuts and he's not lying, right,
(01:27:50):
it's really gonna happen.
Speaker 9 (01:27:51):
But that's fine, that's fine. It's still not you, right,
I'm with you hundred percent. That guy should not be
opening his at all whatsoever.
Speaker 3 (01:28:01):
No, but it's like once a cheat, always to cheat,
Like once a liar, always a liar.
Speaker 9 (01:28:05):
I don't know if it's that, it's you have to
prove to me, you're not right, But to do the
same drift again.
Speaker 2 (01:28:11):
That's it right there.
Speaker 9 (01:28:12):
It isn't like he's like, hey, I'm making amends or whatever.
Speaker 2 (01:28:17):
That's different.
Speaker 1 (01:28:19):
He says he's paid made forty reparations payments already and
I'm gonna do more.
Speaker 9 (01:28:25):
I feel like I say this a lot. Maybe I
don't words mean nothing. Your words mean nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:28:31):
Yeah, you could say all day long. It's the actions
that make it happen.
Speaker 9 (01:28:34):
My wife can tell me she loves me every day,
but her actions should reflect that. Right, So I go
the same thing with anybody else. It's your actions that
mean something to me. And this individual, Billy McFarlane, has
no action to legitimize anything he's ever done.
Speaker 2 (01:28:55):
You think there could be like a court order put
on him, Like shut up, dude, No, you know you've
already scammed people out of millions before. No, we don't
need you doing it again. Though he's a grifter, he
is an American citizen.
Speaker 1 (01:29:12):
If you fall for it, it's on you, right, I
don't feel bad for you.
Speaker 2 (01:29:19):
Right. I wonder if there's two timers in that club.
And when I say that, like people that fell for
it the first time. And then he comes back and
says he's doing it again, and the same people fall
for it again.
Speaker 9 (01:29:33):
Oh for sure, for sure televangelists all right, example that
can people feel like when you dog on a televangelist,
you're dogging on a church. Though they may be connected,
I don't see them as the same. A televangelist praise
on people's depression, they're bad times to get money out
(01:29:58):
of them, right, And that's not how he works the powers, right,
And they do it under the cloak of a church.
Speaker 1 (01:30:06):
It's horrible. So people go back to televangelists all the time, right.
Speaker 2 (01:30:14):
Right.
Speaker 9 (01:30:16):
There are many self help people out there that you'll
go and pay into it. It's an endless list of
people that are grifters. But so let's just start with
back to the bility thing.
Speaker 2 (01:30:30):
If he is.
Speaker 1 (01:30:32):
The face, at least do a professional looking video.
Speaker 2 (01:30:37):
Not in your bathroom. Not in your bathroom, man, But
that's selling the point that he is so rich and
you know, doesn't have to get dressed up.
Speaker 1 (01:30:48):
He's not rich. Is he rich?
Speaker 2 (01:30:50):
No? He is not.
Speaker 1 (01:30:51):
He owes people like a ridiculous amount of money.
Speaker 3 (01:30:53):
Yeah, So if not a lawyer standing by to back
you up, what about an actual artist who's supposed to
be perform.
Speaker 9 (01:31:00):
He has not named any artists, but he's like, I
got him, but he's not naming him.
Speaker 1 (01:31:04):
That is another red flat.
Speaker 3 (01:31:05):
He went on USA Today and talked about ticket to
start at fourteen hundred dollars per person.
Speaker 1 (01:31:10):
He did an interview on the Today Show.
Speaker 9 (01:31:12):
Yeah, but that's the other problem, is it gives this
grifter an audience. Yes, right, it doesn't matter to let
give him the audience for him to be on the
Today Show. If I don't know how you let that
happen unless you're going to confront him and be like,
(01:31:35):
why should people trust you this time?
Speaker 2 (01:31:37):
Right? But did that happen? No? Exactly did not. It
did not.
Speaker 9 (01:31:44):
It's one thing to have somebody on and have the
spiritual debate, but to just go along with what they're
saying put makes you InCom complicit in the grift. And
it's Jordan Belford's another great exam. Right, how about the
movie Catch Me if you can another one? Right, there's
(01:32:09):
no legitimate blood sport. Great movie there is that man
is a grifter, which one Jean Claude Van Now, no,
I don't know about him, but who he represents in
that uh, None of those things ever happened. There's no
proof that the kumute is a thing. There's no proof
that he participated. Frank Duke's participated in any of these things,
(01:32:32):
all his own stories, and people buy it right.
Speaker 3 (01:32:37):
Four hundred tickets have already been sold.
Speaker 1 (01:32:40):
Again, who are you trusting me?
Speaker 3 (01:32:41):
Exactly?
Speaker 9 (01:32:42):
If you wouldn't take advice from this individual, you shouldn't
believe what they're saying.
Speaker 3 (01:32:47):
They start at fourteen hundred and go to one point
one million. This is what he says is involved. He
says what you can expect at this year's Fire Festival too.
Confirmed excursions include a whale shark dive with a festival
artist and diver.
Speaker 9 (01:33:07):
Again, let's stop for a second. I don't want you
promoting the grift right confirmed. That's all you need to
tell me is that it's not real. Just using the
word confirmed in front of it. It ain't confirmed, right?
What if it rains?
Speaker 3 (01:33:27):
That's true?
Speaker 2 (01:33:28):
Well, I mean you can still do a dive even
if it rains.
Speaker 1 (01:33:31):
They typically don't. I'm just saying, red flag after red
flag after red flag. The real thing to me when
it comes to conspiracy is when you get stuck in
an echo chamber. And if you are so bad, you
think you are an influencer, You think you do have money,
(01:33:53):
you think you must go to these shows. You think
they'll be all these famous people there, You'll be at
some exclusive thing.
Speaker 9 (01:34:00):
You're like, yeah, I can do. This doesn't end with
just ends. You're laughing at an influencer, you're belittling them.
But you see your parents do it.
Speaker 2 (01:34:13):
For whatever it is.
Speaker 1 (01:34:13):
You see your sister do it with essential oils.
Speaker 9 (01:34:15):
You see I mean is it's endless. And I think
it is the biggest threat to our society because people
just are so fear, which is what a grifter's play
is to make you look. You don't want to look stupid, right,
you'll continue on with the grift.
Speaker 2 (01:34:35):
Right, but this guy's already done at once. And if
you're going a fall for the same scam twice in
a row, you kind of deserve to look stupid. Just
my opinion.
Speaker 9 (01:34:48):
If you have a senior who is lonely and they
fall for a scam with Brad Pitt with Brad Pitt
and give them money and then they do it again,
they're lonely, maybe you don't feel bad for them, but
you can connect the dots at least normalizes it, if anything,
(01:35:09):
right again, the fire festival thing is just wild to me.
And the conspiracy is griffs, and there's so.
Speaker 1 (01:35:20):
Many of them.
Speaker 9 (01:35:20):
We accept them now, right, we accept them. There are
so many conspiracies out there that we have hit on
before that there was no way anybody believed them. That's
what's so challenging with the segment now. But now they're
so believed. Wild conspiracies and griffs are not far apart
(01:35:43):
from each other.
Speaker 2 (01:35:44):
No, all right, we got to take a break.
Speaker 8 (01:35:48):
We'll be back from Tulsa's Morning Show. Is coming right
back to the Big Man Morning Show, Tulsa's rock station.
Speaker 1 (01:36:15):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. N I'm
when eight four six O KMBO D. You can also
text to BMMS and then what you want to say
to eight two nine four five.
Speaker 9 (01:36:28):
We typically don't talk college baseball only when maybe something
big is happening, like maybe some rankings or one of
the area schools is doing well in some capacity.
Speaker 2 (01:36:46):
But a college baseball.
Speaker 9 (01:36:50):
Team has broken a forty year old NCAA record forty
years George Mason University made history Tuesday, shattering a record
that had stood since nineteen eighty four, they were playing
Holy Cross and they had a record setting twenty three
(01:37:12):
runs in one inning.
Speaker 2 (01:37:13):
Wow.
Speaker 9 (01:37:14):
And then they went on to win twenty six to
six after jumping to a twenty three to zero lead.
The previous record was twenty one runs and that was
by Wichita State and Penn State back in nineteen eighty
four and nineteen eighty three. They started the third inning
(01:37:36):
with a groundout before two players reached base on back
to back walks.
Speaker 1 (01:37:40):
From there, the inning blew open.
Speaker 9 (01:37:41):
By the end of the inning, holy Cross had surrendered
eight walks, hit five batters with pitches, and conceded eleven hits,
including seven singles, four doubles, and they also committed an air.
Speaker 1 (01:37:55):
As of that game on Tuesday, they were in a
five game winning streak. George Mason was had scored no
fewer than nine runs in any of those victories. Pretty awesome.
Speaker 9 (01:38:07):
Yeah, anytime you see something that lasts that long. I
can't imagine the other team goes up twenty three to
nothing and you're like, whoo, all right.
Speaker 1 (01:38:19):
Go get them boys, and then you score six runs. Awesome. Yeah,
and you're not even fourth of the way there, right, It's.
Speaker 2 (01:38:30):
A reason to celebrate though, No, I don't know. Well,
I mean it's better than getting shut out, right, I
don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:38:38):
You're not completely skunk.
Speaker 2 (01:38:40):
Yeah, yeah, you're not a total loser.
Speaker 9 (01:38:42):
I think when you lose by twenty runs, huh, it's
as equally.
Speaker 2 (01:38:47):
As rough as.
Speaker 9 (01:38:50):
But I can make an argument this is why people
should play organized sports, right, you should learn what defeat
feels like.
Speaker 1 (01:38:56):
Absolutely, Yeah, for sure, it's not real defeat, but it
does hurt.
Speaker 9 (01:39:02):
And I think that would that's the biggest and learn that, Hey,
you got to try to overcome adversity right.
Speaker 2 (01:39:08):
Right, and then go out for pizza later.
Speaker 9 (01:39:11):
Maybe you know, get your hair cut in a bowl
cereal in the locker round, right or whatever that looks like.
But twenty three runs, by the way, that means they
went eight other innings with only three runs, right, And
do you score twenty three runs.
Speaker 1 (01:39:29):
And go, my gosh, we might score forty. Yeah, the
hope is there for sure if we can do twenty
three and one inning.
Speaker 9 (01:39:37):
Do you have a meeting with the coach of the
other team someone scores twenty three runs on you, like.
Speaker 2 (01:39:41):
What's going on? Is your guy juiced up? Is your
entire team on in the sauce.
Speaker 3 (01:39:46):
Oh no, we're just having an off day.
Speaker 1 (01:39:48):
Well, if we're having a really good day.
Speaker 9 (01:39:50):
I mean, you could make an argument in that inning
when they hit as many players as got hit by
pitches like they were in their whoopsies, right, and they
really struggled to get out of it. But they scored six,
so you can make the argument they recovered.
Speaker 2 (01:40:03):
Yeah. Yeah, but again it's better than zero.
Speaker 9 (01:40:06):
But the damage was already done exactly. Even if George
Washington doesn't go on to win whatever conference they're in
or any of those things, they still will have a
banquet and talk about that game.
Speaker 2 (01:40:18):
Oh absolutely, Texas. How many runs in an inning before
you pull the pitcher? That's a good that's a good point.
You know, that's not a simple question. What rotation are
we on? Whoa who are we playing? Coming up? Yeah,
but if the picture that's currently on the mound is
giving up twenty three runs, I'd say, just me personally,
(01:40:41):
you gave up a dozen runs in one inning, You're out.
Speaker 1 (01:40:44):
I just get the next guy in. I hear you,
and you're probably right.
Speaker 9 (01:40:46):
What I'm saying is, when you are managing a baseball
team and deciding whether to pull the pitcher. There are
other factors than how many pitches have have runs have
been happened? Off that picture of the guys that are
in the bullpen. How many innings do they have left
in a rotation? Like pitchers have arms, they have limits.
And if your guy that the day before through whatever
(01:41:10):
pitches and you're gonna go to the bullpen already, your bench,
if you will, is short, all right, and you've got
more games, you got to plan it out better. You
might have to just endure the pain at least get
him through an inny, right, all right, let's see what
Lindsay has for balls to.
Speaker 1 (01:41:25):
The wall sports.
Speaker 3 (01:41:37):
A key player on the Texans is undergoing another surgery.
Tank Dell announced yesterday that he had a procedure done
on his knee. The receiver said his ACL was repaired,
this time after a previous surgery addressed a ligament damage.
Dell suffered the gruesome injury during Houston's Week sixteen loss
(01:41:59):
to the Chiefs following a touchdown reception. Dell was diagnosed
with a dislocated kneecap and is still expected to miss
significant time next season. The twenty five year old was
taken in the third round of the twenty twenty three
draft and finished last year with more than six hundred
and fifty yards to go with three touchdowns. The Cowboys
(01:42:19):
are reworking in their star quarterbacks contract. ESPN reported on
Wednesday that Dak Prescott had nearly forty six million dollars
of his current deal converted from a base salary to
a signing bonus. The move reduces his cap figure from
almost ninety million down to just over fifty three million dollars.
The rework also means that Prescott is no longer the
(01:42:43):
highest salary cap figure in the NFL. The thirty one
year old played in just eight games last season after
suffering a torn hamstring, and threw for almost two thousand
yards to go with eleven touchdowns and eight interceptions.
Speaker 9 (01:42:57):
Quarterback deals contracts from the novel constantly getting restructure, especially
when they're big value ones. That's why when you hear
the initial number, people are always like, whoa, But that
doesn't mean anything that can change a lot.
Speaker 3 (01:43:09):
And also he wasn't worth being the highest paid quarterback
in the Naval.
Speaker 9 (01:43:14):
Yeah, who do you blame in that scenario? If you're
the Cowboys, do you let him go?
Speaker 6 (01:43:18):
What?
Speaker 1 (01:43:19):
But do you let him go, and what's out there?
If you let him go, then who do you.
Speaker 3 (01:43:24):
Get, right? Who's their backup?
Speaker 2 (01:43:27):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:43:28):
Yeah, the Eagles are bringing back a key member of
their defense. ESPN reported on Wednesday that Zach Bond has
agreed to a three year, fifty one million dollar deal
to stay in Philly. The contract includes thirty four million
in guaranteed money, which makes him one of the highest
paid linebackers in the league. Bond signed a one year
(01:43:48):
deal for just three and a half million last offseason
and racked up more than one hundred and fifty tackles
to go with three and a half sacks. The twenty
eight year old posted big playoff numbers as well, notching
thirty three tackle and a pair of interceptions, including one
against the Chiefs to secure a Super Bowl fifty nine victory.
A defensive player on the Bengals is stepping away from
(01:44:09):
the game for good. Sam Hubbard announced his retirement on
Wednesday after spending seven seasons in the league. The defensive
end thanked his teammates, coaches, and the rest of the
NFL for a great career and is happy to end
it with one franchise. Hubbard was born in Cincinnati and
was taken in the third round of the twenty eighteen
draft out of Ohio State. The twenty nine year old
(01:44:29):
finished his career with more than thirty eight sacks to
go with the nearly four hundred tackles and six forced fumbles.
That's your balls to the Wall sports. I'm Lindsay in
ninety seven to five Kim, Good.
Speaker 2 (01:44:50):
Morning, It's the Big nine Morning Show nine one, eight,
four six, oh kmod.
Speaker 1 (01:44:56):
You can also.
Speaker 9 (01:44:57):
Text to bmmass and then what you want to say
to E.
Speaker 1 (01:45:02):
Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn.
Speaker 3 (01:45:05):
Happy twenty seventh porn star birthday. To miss some mich
O Lilly, you can watch this cosplay Quti in Devil's
Threesomes Juicy Licks ten and Hike and pipe. Fun fact
about her, she says that bigger tips get faster hips.
Uh huh, the get you faster. DM responses on our
(01:45:28):
only fans page.
Speaker 2 (01:45:32):
Good morning, Gimbe, Good morning Corban. Don't forget Linkol Park's
gonna be at the Bok Center on Monday, April twenty eighth.
Why don't you just go ahead and head on over
to Bokcenter dot com and get those tickets right now?
Speaker 1 (01:45:43):
All right, let's go ahead and do our top list
Every Thursday we do this.
Speaker 2 (01:45:57):
Dope.
Speaker 10 (01:45:58):
It's tiper Bid Morning Show's top topics randomly drawn with
random results. Now here's Corbyn, Kimpi and Lindsay with this
week's top list. Not coincidentally, Vision won't be on mine.
Speaker 1 (01:46:13):
But we're doing top list. Old people habits, Old people habits?
Speaker 2 (01:46:19):
What do you got? Lindsay? Starting at number five?
Speaker 3 (01:46:21):
Number five? Waking up every morning and checking the weather
app on my phone never fails.
Speaker 1 (01:46:28):
Also got an old person thing?
Speaker 3 (01:46:30):
I think so, I mean, not necessarily the weather app,
but checking the weather waking up first thing, also periodically
throughout the day and talking about the weather throughout the
day with people I run into some weather we're having
or can you believe this weather? Or isn't it crazy?
Goes from snow to seventy I mean, yes, I.
Speaker 2 (01:46:52):
Can see that as small talk. But why do you
check the weather every day? I can see it like
I should because I ride every day.
Speaker 1 (01:46:58):
I want you to know what to wear exactly. It
feels like a very common thing at this point in time.
It's like, okay, you should wear pants, maybe a jacket
because it's it's March.
Speaker 3 (01:47:10):
But am I wearing a jacket and a sweater or
can I just get away with a sweatshirt or you know, say,
do I need a hood?
Speaker 1 (01:47:17):
Do I need? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:47:19):
And I didn't worry about that younger my younger days
or whatever. Who cares? Number four And also whether I
will text my son like, dude, make sure you are
dressed for it today or it just.
Speaker 2 (01:47:34):
Sounds like, yeah, those kids will wear whatever the hell
they want if you don't.
Speaker 3 (01:47:38):
Yeah. Number four. And I don't know when this started,
but Kevin makes fun of it, makes fun of me
for this, calling the television shows that I watch my programs.
Speaker 2 (01:47:54):
Okay, I do this.
Speaker 3 (01:47:56):
I'm not sure how long ago it started, but I'm
I'm going to go watch my programs. My programs are on.
This is what I'm doing. I gotta get home because
my program is about to start. Yeah, leave mom alone,
she's watching her programs. It's just my thing. And I
(01:48:17):
do remember my grandparents calling it their programs.
Speaker 2 (01:48:21):
There's always shoes around for like my folks and Graham
gotta watch my shoes programs.
Speaker 3 (01:48:27):
Man number three wearing clothes for comforts instead of style,
specifically shoes like the clerks, the naturalizers, and the new
balances of the world.
Speaker 1 (01:48:43):
I mean, I don't put new balance in that, but
you know there are there is a sensible shoe out
there for the elderly. Yeah, yeah, my uh my grandmother
actually first turned me on to the naturalizer in shoes.
Do you wear natural I have a couple of pairs
Doctor Schulz too.
Speaker 3 (01:49:03):
I even have a pair of doctor Sholes.
Speaker 1 (01:49:05):
Does Doctor Shuls make shoes?
Speaker 3 (01:49:07):
You make shoes? I used to sell them. Yeah. And
number two I wasn't gonna put this on the list,
but then I did it yesterday in front of Kevin
and he said.
Speaker 1 (01:49:20):
What's up, old timer?
Speaker 3 (01:49:22):
And I was like, you know, I do this a lot.
It should probably be on the list. And that is
standing and making a noise. And I did it yesterday
like stretching, just and that's when he said, what's up,
old timer?
Speaker 2 (01:49:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:49:39):
I do it a lot. And sometimes when I stand,
it'll be like a back creak or my knees will pop.
But it's always followed with a noise comes out of
me verbally, stretchy noise just to whatever. Yeah, do that
all the time. And then my number one on the list.
(01:50:02):
I never leave my house without my Gie driving glasses,
acid reducer or ibuprofen in my purse. Those are my
must haves because I never know if I'm gonna have
a headache, I'm gonna have acid reflux, or if I'm
going to be somewhere late and I'm gonna need to
see while I'm driving.
Speaker 2 (01:50:23):
Oh so you have glasses like when you're driving a
nice Yes, got it.
Speaker 1 (01:50:26):
I've never seen your glasses and I've seen your drive.
Speaker 3 (01:50:29):
I wore them in this morning because it's night when.
Speaker 1 (01:50:33):
Oh yeah, yeah yeah, I thought, no, you're right, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay.
Speaker 9 (01:50:38):
But we're doing our top lists. We're doing old person habits.
Give me what he got for number five.
Speaker 2 (01:50:44):
Number five is going to bed early, sometimes before the
sun goes down. And that's not you know, yeah, we
have to go to bed or we don't have to
go to bed early because we get up early and
we have to be here. Uh, but it sure does
feel good. And lately I've been going to bed early
and earlier. I'm talking like seven thirty early, you know.
Usually eight o'clock i'm in bed, wind down. Eight thirty,
(01:51:06):
I'm usually asleep, you know, But lately it's been seven
seven thirty and I'm like I am done, I'm going
to bed. I'll see you tomorrow. Number four is comfy clothes.
Now see, I'm not the one that like, as soon
as I get home, change into comfy clothes. Right, I'll
(01:51:27):
stick around with what I got. But it is garon
damn teed that I usually start making dinner about five
o'clock and I'm changing into comfy clothes. I'm talking like
pajama bottoms, you know, T shirt and slippers to make dinner,
and I wear that until I go to bed before
the sun goes down.
Speaker 1 (01:51:48):
Sometimes if i'm home for the day, I'm putting cozy's on.
Speaker 2 (01:51:53):
Yeah, yeah, I'm with you unless I got you know,
and I won't go out after that. It's like, you know, okay,
I'm just going to Walmart. And then everybody at Walmart
looks like this, so it's okay.
Speaker 9 (01:52:03):
There's no reason to wear jeans after four o'clock in
my world, all right, whatever I'm wearing for the day,
four o'clock, I'm in cozies.
Speaker 2 (01:52:11):
Number three is yelling at cars to slow down as
they're going through the neighborhood. I do. And if I'm
out in the garage smoking or in the driveway, just
hanging out, listening to music, having a drink, and somebody's
blasting through the neighborhood. Son down, your son up a bitch.
There's kids out here playing blah blah whatever, yelling at
(01:52:33):
I don't tell people to get off my lawn. I'm
not that old yet, but it's definitely slow down through
the neighborhood. Just son of a bitch. Number two is uh.
I guess I've been old for a long time, but
old watching old people shows like Andy Griffith, mash and like.
(01:52:53):
There's plenty of other stuff on TV that is probably
more entertaining, but I would rather sit down and watch
Andy Griffith, Gohmer, pile usmc right, Hogan's Heroes, stuff like
that old s. I'm at the house, sitting in front
(01:53:20):
of the TV, and I'm flipping through the channels, and
I'll be damned if these words didn't come out of
my mouth. Oh, Matlock's on. And I sat there and
I watched several episodes of Mattlock and not the new
Mattlock with what's her name in it? Yeah, Kathy Bates, right.
Speaker 3 (01:53:42):
But have you checked it out? No?
Speaker 2 (01:53:44):
I refuse to because in my world There's only one Mattlock,
and that is Andy Griffith. He is the only Mattlock
that should ever exist.
Speaker 9 (01:53:51):
You felt that way about night Court, but look how
happy you are now.
Speaker 2 (01:53:54):
You were absolutely right. I'm still sticking with the old
school Mattlock. Sometimes sometimes I'll watch a little Walker Texas Ranger,
maybe even a little Doctor Quinn Medicine woman.
Speaker 1 (01:54:09):
That's different, she's hot, still right.
Speaker 2 (01:54:13):
But old people shows, man, I do love me some
old people TV. Man. I don't know what it is,
whatever's on Cozy or Me TV or whatever, I'm all
about it. And Number one naps, dude, naps, naps during
the week, naps on the weekend. Naps sometimes two or
(01:54:33):
three times a day. You know, you wake up from
a nap, ride, hang out, maybe watch some TV, take
another nap, naps or fantastic. I do love naps.
Speaker 9 (01:54:46):
My favorite naps are unplanned naps where you'll be sitting
watching something and then you're like.
Speaker 1 (01:54:51):
Oh, yeah, You're like, how long are you live to sleep?
Speaker 2 (01:54:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (01:54:57):
Those are my favorite old person habits that you picked up.
That's our top list. Number five for me is taking
photos of neighbors or people's landscape.
Speaker 1 (01:55:09):
Landscaping, maybe good ideas for your own or just yeah
that's a good looking law.
Speaker 2 (01:55:14):
Yeah, okay.
Speaker 9 (01:55:19):
Number four going outside and looking for the helicopter or plane.
Speaker 2 (01:55:23):
I hear right, Like you ain't never seen a helicopter
or plane before?
Speaker 9 (01:55:30):
Why do I need to see it? You're not like
a even a jet like you go. I'll go to
the window and look up. I don't know why.
Speaker 2 (01:55:39):
Well, you need to make sure they're not communists, man, That's.
Speaker 1 (01:55:42):
Why Number three. I like going the speed limit. I
like to let everybody else be in a hurry. Well,
at least you're not going under the speed limit sometimes, right,
speed limit sixty five, you're not doing fifty.
Speaker 9 (01:55:58):
I'm just I'm just you all rush to wherever you
need to go. Number two watch a Ken Burns documentary.
Speaker 2 (01:56:10):
I mean he's pretty towent. Yeah, but here he is.
But here's the problem.
Speaker 1 (01:56:13):
I like him.
Speaker 9 (01:56:14):
Here's the problem. It isn't a show. It's a show
of pictures.
Speaker 1 (01:56:19):
Right, yeah, World War One documentary.
Speaker 9 (01:56:23):
It's just pictures. There's no video. So I'm watching a
nine hour documentary of pictures slideshow in nine hour.
Speaker 12 (01:56:35):
Yes they are.
Speaker 1 (01:56:38):
Good man, sitting there so much vacation pictures, right, and
then number one.
Speaker 9 (01:56:47):
Of old people habits because I tried to not do
the ones we all know I do. But number one
of the old person habits that I do is going
to the window to look outside when weather of any
sort is happening, the rain coming down, and making some
sort of comment or about the wind coming happening.
Speaker 2 (01:57:07):
Right, it's pretty hard out there.
Speaker 9 (01:57:10):
Usually throwing in some sort of cats and dogs reference.
Hold your hat while you go outside, even if it's hot,
I'll be like, oh, it looks hot out there.
Speaker 1 (01:57:21):
Right, it could be just a nice day in the sunshine. Yeah,
it looks hot. How about this text?
Speaker 9 (01:57:28):
I have a photo album of pictures titled puzzles that
would suck. Number five forgetting why you entered a room. Yes,
talking about the weather a lot, saving everything just in
case for sure, getting giving advice that starts with back
(01:57:49):
in my day. And the number one on this one
is turning the TV volume way up. I have abandoned that. Well,
you just turned a close caption it.
Speaker 1 (01:57:58):
Was on here. I crossed it off.
Speaker 2 (01:58:00):
Huh. I haven't gone close caption yet, but I am
a turn that so bitch way up to the point
to where it's like I'll run it through my stereo,
so I don't have to turn it up as much,
you know, but it's still screaming at me.
Speaker 9 (01:58:14):
Uh, you want to hear some of the ones I
crossed off? I had wear sensible shoes, okay.
Speaker 2 (01:58:20):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (01:58:21):
Magnesium digestion, I'm really worried about my digestion. Mumbling early bed.
We all know, dinner, wake up, we all know those. Right,
I can't hear if there's another noise happening.
Speaker 2 (01:58:41):
Right, does that fall under like turning the radio down
to concentrate when you're driving.
Speaker 1 (01:58:47):
If I'm trying to find something, Yeah, you're like, or
the police or a car wreck, yeah, or if it's raining,
I have a favorite burner on the stove.
Speaker 2 (01:58:59):
Yeah you too.
Speaker 3 (01:59:02):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (01:59:03):
Rolling my eyes at any car that's got music louder
than it should that's been by the way, that's light mao. Right,
if I can hear the car going down through my neighborhood.
Speaker 2 (01:59:15):
I'm like.
Speaker 9 (01:59:17):
Kids, especially if I see somebody like kids playing, Like
I have cameras on my house, right, and I'll get
alert if like someone's in the camera, right, and I'll
go to I'm guilty of going to look and be
like watch them in the street like, are they gonna
step in my yard?
Speaker 1 (01:59:39):
Which I don't care?
Speaker 2 (01:59:40):
Yeah, I was gonna say, what are you gonna do?
If they do nothing? You run out there? What you'd
be to go?
Speaker 9 (01:59:44):
No, I don't care shake a stick at them. I
don't care being worried about birds and squirrels. I'll stand
if I see a squirrel in my yard, I'm like,
where are you going?
Speaker 1 (02:00:00):
Where are you going?
Speaker 2 (02:00:01):
You little effort?
Speaker 9 (02:00:04):
Uh compression socks, keeping all the boxes for things I
buy because I may need them for something. I used
to do that, and it's quite freeing once you let
them all go complaining about fireworks scaring my dog or
a neighborhood. I don't know if that's an old person thing,
(02:00:25):
because I know plenty of people for multiple different reasons,
some of the military, that don't like loud fireworks, right,
So I don't know if that's necessarily an old thing.
In the New Mattlock, Mattlock is her undercover alias, chosen
because she's infiltrating a law firm and uses the old
show name as an icebreaker to keep people off guard.
Speaker 1 (02:00:46):
So it's not Malock.
Speaker 2 (02:00:47):
I guess not. See. I haven't even wasted any time
to get it in check.
Speaker 1 (02:00:50):
But I thought they were pritting it as it is, Mattlock.
Speaker 2 (02:00:53):
What I thought too? Yeah, whatever, stick with the og.
Speaker 9 (02:00:58):
Corbyn using worse code. If there's danger in your backyard
flicking the light off and on, that's.
Speaker 2 (02:01:03):
Not one goat man.
Speaker 9 (02:01:11):
I'm thirty two and if I eat dinner after six pm,
I can't go to sleep until digestion gets to a
certain point and I take three tombs. Dude, I will
make meal plans based off my bedtime. We're having pizza, well,
then I can't go to bed till later. Right are
we drinking? If we're drinking, like, whoa, there's no early bed.
I will not be getting good sleep if I'm drinking.
(02:01:34):
These are not old people's things. These they're just common
sense things. Wait, oh god, I was waiting for that
comment to come in. If somebody complaining that this is normal, yes,
then you are old. Yes, welcome, welcome. All right, we
got to take a break.
Speaker 2 (02:01:50):
We'll be back.
Speaker 8 (02:01:53):
Tilsa's Morning Show continues next X The Big Bad Morning
Show on Telsa's rock station ninety seven D.
Speaker 1 (02:02:22):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show.
Speaker 9 (02:02:24):
Now I when eighty four six, oh kmod you can
also text BMMS and then what you want to say
to a two nine four five. Here's some commonly believed
facts that aren't true. Like remember when you were told
that most of the oxygen we breathe comes from trees.
Speaker 2 (02:02:43):
Yeah, not true.
Speaker 9 (02:02:45):
According to National Geographic only twenty eight percent of oxygen
on Earth comes from rainforest. The majority of it, somewhere
between fifty and eighty five actually come from marine plants.
Daddy long legs are the most venomous spiders in the world,
(02:03:06):
but their fings aren't too big enough to hurt you.
Remember that you're nat I'd never heard that, but okay,
that makes sense.
Speaker 1 (02:03:15):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (02:03:16):
There are three different bugs that we consider daddy long legs,
two of which aren't even spiders. Crane flies and harvestmen
aren't venomous at all. Harvestmen are poisonous, coating themselves in
a poison that kills predators, but it's not poisonous to us.
Speaker 2 (02:03:32):
The other one that.
Speaker 1 (02:03:33):
Is a spider, A seller spider does not have particularly
potent venom. It's venom paled in comparison to black widow
in a twenty nineteen study. Their fangs are about as
long as a brown recluse, but having longer fangs wouldn't
make the venom any stronger.
Speaker 9 (02:03:50):
So no another one these are myssed that you thought
were true. Albert Einstein failed math.
Speaker 2 (02:03:57):
I had heard that ing Time magazine in nineteen thirty five.
Speaker 9 (02:04:01):
Ripley's Believe It or Not column claimed he'd failed math
was shown to him by a rabbi at Princeton. Einstein replied,
I never failed in mathematics. Before I was fifteen, I
had mastered a differential and integral calculus calculus.
Speaker 1 (02:04:17):
I should say another one. Hair and nails keep growing
after death. I've heard that.
Speaker 2 (02:04:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (02:04:25):
As explained by the BBC, both our nails and hair
need energy to produce new cells and grow, and that
energy comes from burning glucose. Oxygen is needed to do that,
but the heart is no longer pumping oxygen through our
blood after death, so that glucose can't be burned, and
in turned, there can't be growth. The reason the myth
(02:04:46):
has likely persisted over the years is because bodies can
give the.
Speaker 1 (02:04:49):
Illusion of hair or nail growth after death.
Speaker 2 (02:04:53):
What is really happening is that the skin is retracting
because it's dehydrating, which in turn makes hair or nails
seem like they've gotten longer.
Speaker 1 (02:05:02):
Yeah, that makes sense, right, everything kind of loosens up. Yeah,
this is one we've talked about on the show many times.
Hair gets thicker and darker every time you shave. It
heard about that.
Speaker 2 (02:05:16):
No it does not.
Speaker 9 (02:05:18):
Just so we're clear, several studies have found that shaving
does not, in fact make hair grow back any thicker.
Hank Green, which sounds like the name of someone I
would totally believe in a did a study like this
explain several reasons why it may appear that way to
the average person. For starters, hair lightens over time from
(02:05:38):
exposure to sun or chemical compounds, making it appear lighter
than the hair that grows back after a shave. As
for thickness, how shaving works plays into the illusion. Shaving,
unlike waxing, doesn't pull out the whole hair from its follicle.
Speaker 1 (02:05:55):
It just curls or sorry, cuts part of it. The
end of the hair, which are or what we see
tend to be thinner, tapered, and softer. We cut the
hair close to the shaft when we shave, which is
the thickest part. Now, the thickest point. That doesn't mean
your body. Hair is growing back thicker. It's just always thicker,
(02:06:16):
closer to the follicle.
Speaker 9 (02:06:21):
Fortune cookies are Chinese. We've talked about this on the show.
They are not Chinese. It was made in La I
remember correctly. If you swallow gum, it'll stay in your
body for seven years.
Speaker 1 (02:06:36):
Who was I told this?
Speaker 3 (02:06:38):
Oh yeah, oh yeah, no.
Speaker 1 (02:06:42):
You pass it just like anything else. It probably passes
through slower, but it still goes through. Your body still
passes it through. This is my favorite one and timely.
Saint Patrick was Irish. He was born in Scotland and
(02:07:02):
he ended up in Ireland after being kidnapped.
Speaker 2 (02:07:05):
By Irish pirates.
Speaker 9 (02:07:08):
After six years, he escaped and returned to Britain and
supposedly had a vision that told him to return to
Ireland as a Catholic missionary, which he did. He converted
thousands of Irish to Catholicism, where the Patriot Saint of
Ireland title comes from, and the assumption that he's Irish himself.
Sugar causes hyperactivity.
Speaker 1 (02:07:29):
Man, I can't tell you how many times I have
heard this, and even though I know it's a myth,
I don't know if I believe.
Speaker 3 (02:07:39):
It right it's all in your head.
Speaker 9 (02:07:43):
This myth was popularized in the seventies. All started from
a book, and according to The New York Times, this
is likely because at the time stimulant drugs were given
were being popularized for the treatment of hyperactivity and ADHD,
and many parents preferred the idea of managing their child's
hyperactivity through a change in diet rather than medication. The study, however,
(02:08:03):
wasn't widely supported by scientists and has again and again
been disproven. According to the study, the strong belief of
parents may be due to the expectancy and common association
of sugar.
Speaker 1 (02:08:17):
So no, it does not eat away. Have all the
sugar you want, just.
Speaker 3 (02:08:21):
Brush your teeth afterwards.
Speaker 1 (02:08:24):
Flemings are thoughtless followers and commit mass suicide. I have
heard this.
Speaker 2 (02:08:28):
I've seen the video. Yeah, played the video game.
Speaker 9 (02:08:32):
The myth can be traced back to a nineteen eighty
five Disney produced Wilderness documentary that had a bit of
how lemmings strangely commit mass suicide. The nineteen eighty three
investigation into the documentary revealed that its director faked the
deaths by.
Speaker 1 (02:08:46):
Having thrown the Lemmings off of the cliff and then
edit it to look real.
Speaker 2 (02:09:00):
Cute little animals.
Speaker 1 (02:09:01):
It's a documentary. Documentaries are real.
Speaker 2 (02:09:06):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (02:09:08):
This myth that people in the Middle Ages thought the
Earth was flat. People in the Middle Ages did not
think the Earth was flat. It was clarified by a
University of Delaware philosopher. From the ninth century onwards, there
was common knowledge for educated individuals thanks to the discovery
of Aristotle and their own observation. That makes sense because
(02:09:29):
there were plenty of people traveling around, right, shipping and
boats and stuff like that.
Speaker 1 (02:09:35):
It wasn't like they were just in their own little.
Speaker 2 (02:09:37):
Part right, right. But you know, these ships go out
to the horizon and then they don't see them anymore,
so it's like, oh, well, they just fall off. It
wasn't until Magellan made it all the way around they're like,
oh wait, wait a minute.
Speaker 1 (02:09:48):
Money of ships left and came back.
Speaker 9 (02:09:51):
It just took a really long time because it was
either manpower or the wind.
Speaker 2 (02:09:56):
Right.
Speaker 9 (02:09:59):
I don't think you don't think anybody believes this. Putting
potatoes in your socks when you're sick cures you.
Speaker 2 (02:10:09):
That's funny.
Speaker 3 (02:10:10):
Never done it, I have heard it.
Speaker 9 (02:10:13):
According to the Idaho Potato Commission, when a raw potato
slices are exposed to air, they darken. Additionally, if the
knife used to cut the potatoes contains iron, this causes
the potatoes to be blacken as well. Claims about detox
holding don't do not hold any weight. There is no
evidence of that being true.
Speaker 2 (02:10:35):
I wonder who started that. Oh, you're not feeling good. Here,
here's a couple slices of tatter. Put those in your sock.
You be eyes.
Speaker 3 (02:10:41):
One of those natural remedies websites. Probably. I've also heard
like slice a onion or peel an onion and put
that next to your bed if you're sick at night.
Speaker 9 (02:10:52):
So I'm a big believer in this, and I don't
have any scientific data to back it up. I do
this with my chill d I do it when I'm
sick right and I.
Speaker 1 (02:11:04):
The next day.
Speaker 9 (02:11:05):
Makes a vast difference whether this is correlation or causation.
Speaker 1 (02:11:10):
It's probably the latter. I'm sorry, it's probably the former.
Speaker 9 (02:11:14):
And that is I take vix vapor rub and rub
it on my chest, and I rub it on my
feet and put socks on.
Speaker 1 (02:11:18):
Yeah, that helps.
Speaker 9 (02:11:21):
It does not help. It's not real. There's no scientific
data to back it up.
Speaker 3 (02:11:25):
I think it opens up your sinuses.
Speaker 1 (02:11:27):
There's no scientific data to back it up.
Speaker 3 (02:11:30):
I do it to my kids too. Yeah.
Speaker 9 (02:11:33):
My wife laughs at me every day when this happens.
I'm like, well, let's do this.
Speaker 1 (02:11:37):
So I've got our sowin doctrine with CROs and now
this she's coming around.
Speaker 2 (02:11:42):
Some believe that the vapors from vix can penetrate the
skin and reach the respiratory system, providing relief from cops
and congestion. If we're improved sleep, the menthol and eucalyptus
oil invix me have a calming effect, promoting better sleep,
and apparently for foot pain. It provides temporarily from footpaints
(02:12:02):
such as from muscle aches or neuropathy hum.
Speaker 9 (02:12:08):
One of the turning points in my relationship with my
mother was when we were talking about it and she
would take a finger of it and put it on
her finger and then eat it, and I'm like, you
shouldn't be doing that, and she's like, that's what I did.
My mom did to me when I was little. It's
totally fine. I'm like, no, it says on it do
not ingest right.
Speaker 2 (02:12:28):
If vix vapor rub is swallowed, it can cause nausea
and vomiting, diarrhea, seizures, respiratory problems, and a coma.
Speaker 1 (02:12:38):
Yeah, it's not. It's petroleum jelly with menthol in it.
That's the end of the sentence. It's severe cases. Ingesting
vix vapo rub can be fatal, especially in young children.
I would I can only imagine. Is she still alive?
Speaker 2 (02:12:53):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (02:12:54):
No, but no nonsense, Okay, she.
Speaker 2 (02:12:58):
Read the label. If you or someone you know has
accidentally ingested vix of vapo rube, seek medical attention immediately.
Do not induce vomiting or give the person anything to drink.
Speaker 9 (02:13:09):
Call nine one one. Yeah, because you don't want to.
Can't dilute it down. It's like putting oil on water
on a oil fire.
Speaker 1 (02:13:15):
Yeah that that is insane. Yes, eating it, you can
see how rubbing it on your chest, you know, the
mental late a minute. The eucalyptus opens up the ear
waves a little bit. You know, I could buy that,
but dip in your I'll like it's peanut butter.
Speaker 9 (02:13:34):
It doesn't I think of anything else. I think like
with your kids. Here's here's my explanation on why it works.
Is that when your kids are sick, their anxiety is high.
They don't feel well and doing this gives them comfort.
It relaxes them. It relaxes them so they'll sleep. I
also put eucalyptus in the humidifire. They get that smell.
(02:13:57):
They know they're being taken care of. They calm down,
allows their body work and get a good night rest.
Speaker 2 (02:14:01):
It's a placebo thing.
Speaker 9 (02:14:03):
Well placebo, but it definitely helps them calm down right right.
It's like, you get injured, we have this little frozen
piggy and if you if my kid falls or bumps
their head or whatever, I'm like, you want to get
the piggy right? And I get it and it changed.
It works. I used to fight it and be like,
you don't need it, and then I was like, why
if it gives them a little bit of confidence, right,
(02:14:23):
then let's get the piggy man. So might even do
it with my wife now, I'm like, do you need
the piggy?
Speaker 2 (02:14:29):
Right?
Speaker 3 (02:14:29):
We had the magic healing It was baby powder on
a boo boo.
Speaker 2 (02:14:34):
Baby powder, yeah, right, because it drives up any kind
of It was just no, it.
Speaker 3 (02:14:39):
Was just a do you need the magic healing dust
for your boo boo? Yes? I need it it was magic.
Speaker 1 (02:14:44):
It was feeling dust.
Speaker 3 (02:14:45):
It was just something that I had handy that I
just pop a little baby powder.
Speaker 2 (02:14:50):
Are you still do this? No? No, At what age
did they ask for it?
Speaker 1 (02:14:54):
And you're like, hey, uh, I'd.
Speaker 3 (02:14:57):
Never said it. They just stopped asking for it. Probably
after the age of five or six.
Speaker 1 (02:15:02):
They just know that mom's lying, forgot about it.
Speaker 3 (02:15:04):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (02:15:05):
Kids don't forget stuff like that.
Speaker 3 (02:15:07):
I don't know. I guess maybe when they stopped asking
for kisses on their booboos.
Speaker 9 (02:15:13):
Here's one that's definitely going to get some of you all.
I don't know, your panties in a bunch. The whole
concept in alpha and beta wolves is not a real
thing to see. According to Scientific American wildlife biologists have
mostly dropped using the term alpha and beta as wolf
packs actually operate more like families in the wild. The
(02:15:37):
studies that led to the terms in the mid nineteen
hundreds were done on captive wolves, which operate differently than
wild packs. These wolves often didn't share family lines, which
makes battling for hierarchy in the pack much more likely,
as opposed to wild packs, which are made up of
(02:15:58):
parents and their offspring. The wild all members of a
pack defer to the mother and father of the pack
and don't fight it out for dominance. One of the
researchers you played a hand in popularizing alpha and beta
wolves has indeed fought back on the use because he
don't want to look stupid, he don't want to look
like a beta, and since new research has proven them wrong,
(02:16:22):
his book The Wolf Ecology and Behavior of an Endangered
Species went out of print last year.
Speaker 2 (02:16:30):
I wonder if that's like, you know how sometimes teenage
boys sixteen, seventeen, you know whatever, he call out their
old man, right, and they end up duging it out
in the backyard or whatever. Won if that's that same
sort of thing you get like a young wolf, that's like, psh,
if this old man, I'm gonna take him down. I'll
(02:16:51):
be again.
Speaker 1 (02:16:52):
Only in only in captive packs that are made up
not a family. In family wild packs, they all defer
to the parent.
Speaker 9 (02:17:00):
It doesn't mean they don't have disagreements, right exactly, but
that's not an alpha and beta thing. I think that
if anything, the young wolf.
Speaker 1 (02:17:09):
Goes, I don't want your life right, right, I want
to get into insurance. Not a football star, right, You
just don't blow less bird. I love the one now
where they're being creepy and like taking care of them,
Like she's just hiding in the shadows, waiting for something
(02:17:30):
to happen, Like she moves into an apartment and peels
off the plastic and the insurance girl standing there, and
at one point she's in the bathtub like ready for
something to happen, I guess, and she's like, you don't
need to linger, and she's like I'll always be watching.
Speaker 2 (02:17:48):
Oh yeah, and you're like, yeah, because that's.
Speaker 1 (02:17:51):
What insurance does.
Speaker 9 (02:17:52):
So awesome. All right, we got to take a break.
We'll be back of The Big Man Morning Show is.
Speaker 1 (02:18:10):
Good Morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine one,
eight four six, oh kmod. You can also text PMMs
and then what you want to say to eight two
nine four five. Lindsey, what'd you learn today?
Speaker 3 (02:18:21):
I learned you don't want to be the last surgery
of the week. And also getting older is trading in
your party shoes for comfy slippers and a wild night
means back to back episodes of your favorite program to watch.
Speaker 2 (02:18:35):
Give people what you learned today? I learned that Lindsay's
magic healing powder and mine are totally different. And I
also learned that pitchers have arms, which is good because
throwing baseball's with your feet could be difficult. Uh. Oh
what happened there? It is Oh.
Speaker 9 (02:18:55):
I learned every great NFL player's dad shot the coach
for not letting them play m it gets cruise over.
Speaker 2 (02:19:03):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (02:19:03):
And I also learned Magic Powder is the name of
a movie that Lindsey was supposed to talk about at nine,
Corbyn saying, make sure that dishwasher is loaded right.
Speaker 3 (02:19:12):
It's Lindsay, stop tracking my cycle.
Speaker 1 (02:19:14):
This is Giffy, So thank you, thank you, Thank you Daddy.
Speaker 2 (02:19:24):
Can I get a call you.
Speaker 3 (02:19:31):
B Yeah?
Speaker 11 (02:19:33):
Now what.
Speaker 3 (02:19:37):
It should be?
Speaker 1 (02:19:37):
No time makes a noise interrpassword cor New messages. The
Big Mad Morning Show would like to take a minute
to thank troops from Oklahoma and all over the United States.
These soldiers have sacrificed. Give the Big Mad Morning.
Speaker 2 (02:19:54):
Show before you to back like the total douchebags that
they are.
Speaker 1 (02:19:57):
Total baggag, in complete douchebag.
Speaker 2 (02:20:01):
We honor and respect you.
Speaker 6 (02:20:02):
We honor and respect you, We honor and respect you.
Speaker 1 (02:20:05):
God bless sucking ball.
Speaker 2 (02:20:08):
Tulsa, blessed Tulsa.
Speaker 12 (02:20:10):
We try boys,