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May 1, 2025 142 mins
HAPPY FRIGGIN' "A" FRIDAY EVE!!! Ear Wax Is Connected To Cancer & Alzheimer's, Stealing The Donatioin Jar, Swingers In Connecticut Have To Find A New Place To Party, Sea Turtle Boots, Things You Cann't Buy On Amazon, Conspiracy Theory Thursday, Top List, & Who Wins Between 100 Men & 1 Gorilla?!?!?!?
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Episode Transcript

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

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

Speaker 3 (00:36):
Where you did?

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

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For Crystal wos.

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The sun is rising God, Oh wake up, wake up.

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Now, don't worry. We're all here to show you how.
Jen Witz Hols Raw Station, k m BO G Home
the listens is a family bee.

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Don't turn downtown, just wait.

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And say are you ready? Are you ready to jove
in time to.

Speaker 7 (01:32):
Start to show?

Speaker 5 (01:34):
Crapsticks are going about Prescot Whisping Man, Marny Show, Welcome
to the Working Week. It's on such a bore kick back,
makes up the offing and make it hardcore.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
Hang your whisby and then mess.

Speaker 8 (01:56):
Pick up your.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Phone there line you're on.

Speaker 9 (01:59):
The air.

Speaker 6 (02:05):
Dot dot.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Toll free
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is the phone number. You can also text b m
MS and then what you want to say to eight
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with us each and every day. Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning, Corbin,
Good morning, Gimpy.

Speaker 1 (03:06):
Good morning.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
Tickets to see Say Santa, which is going to be
at the Bok Center on tonight right because it's Thursday.
Get your tickets Bokcenter dot com. See what Gimpee wants
to talk about. We've got some conspiracies to hit. We're
gonna talk drillers, baseball. We've got our top list top

(03:30):
five ways you got the herpes, and we're qualifying people
for see them all. Twenty twenty five, you gotta listen
for that que Daniel Flannagan Ah Flanagan, a broken Arrow,
heard the que and now could be on his way
to see every concert Camo D as a part of
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(03:52):
Qualify every hour with us and throughout the day as
well from Yingling and kmo D. We'll have chances every hour,
so make sure you're listening for that. You to play
and we'll get to it. I always love going down
a rabbit hole because you never know where it's going
to lead you. And so I saw this story about

(04:14):
ear wax. See this is where probably I'm different than
a lot of people. A lot of you would just
keep going. I am fascinated by that, and so this
has a landing spot.

Speaker 10 (04:29):
There's no way you're going to predict.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
And that's why I've chosen to start with the show
with this. Okay, so researchers are finding a connection between
Alzheimer's cancer and earwax. Incredibly fascinating. Right to me, that
is incredibly fascinating. I mean cancer, that's good, let's focus
on that. But also Alzheimer's that's pain in the ass.

(04:54):
So I'm good with that. Why not think about exploring
air wax. Now, for those who don't know, ear wax
is that substance in your ear that glands disposed stuff
the body doesn't need anywhere from skin, hair, dirt into
your ear and then it kind of works its way
out at a rate of twentieth of a millimeter every day. Okay,

(05:17):
so very small increments movements still gross according to the study. Lindsay,
that's the answer.

Speaker 9 (05:23):
Yeah, some people do, though, produce way more than normal.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
Again, it moves out of the ear at that rate,
does your segment or mine go for it?

Speaker 10 (05:34):
And so they do this at a very slow rate.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
Now all that I knew, but I did, and I
knew this that apparently the ear wax is also a
thing that helps bugs from getting in your ear right there.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
It is like a protective film.

Speaker 10 (05:49):
Yes, you may know, a sticky substance.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, kind of like the eyelashes keep the
dirt out of your eyes. Yeah, those hairs keep the
dirt out of your nose.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
The article defined it as an effect of trap not
just for bugs, but bacteria and other things. I knew
it was pretty essential to have ear wax. None of
these things that I've said so far were surprised. But
what I was surprised by that the vast majority of
people have wet earwax, but ninety five percent of people,

(06:19):
specifically from East Asia, have dry earwax that is gray
and not sticky. Right, this isn't the landing spot, by
the way, You'll know when I hit the landing spot
you'll go, oh, that's why he picked this.

Speaker 1 (06:36):
I'm curious.

Speaker 2 (06:36):
Okay, So apparently, like I said, it's gray and non sticky.

Speaker 10 (06:42):
It's also.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
They have found about two percent of those people have
that are in that dry ear wax category produce the
same gene that makes their armpits have no order, no odor. Right,
all this from some stupid article that most of us
would have passed over, and I probably should have. However,

(07:06):
this is the crazy part we're getting too.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
Well.

Speaker 2 (07:09):
So one of the things in the study is they
found that people that had that dry earwax that they
found that seventy seven percent were more likely to have
wet ear wax when they had breast cancer. Okay, good
nerd stuff, good good lead into what they're looking for.

(07:31):
And they also were able to establish a link between illnesses.

Speaker 10 (07:39):
And maple syrup urine disease.

Speaker 9 (07:42):
What the hell is that?

Speaker 2 (07:43):
I'm glad you asked. Welcome to the arrival spot. The
maple syrup urine disease is where your your your body
has the inability to break down certain amino acids found
in food, and it leads up to a build up
of volatile compounds, giving the urine a distinctive smell of

(08:05):
maple syrup.

Speaker 9 (08:08):
I think i'd rather color, by the way, I'd rather
have the smell in color of maple syrup than the
texture of it.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
All I know is I didn't know that urine could smell.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
So good, right right, right, well, at least for me personally.
When I'm on a coffee binge, right after about my
fourth cup of coffee, it smells like coffee, you know, cheerios,
coffee kind of mixture sort of thing. Never like syrup.
But I just, you know, figured that's because I'm I'm

(08:41):
drinking a lot of coffee. I don't disagree.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
If you drink an increased amount of coffee, there is
a distinct smell that you're going, ah, that feels similar
to coffee.

Speaker 1 (08:51):
Yeah, and it's it's somewhat pleasant. I mean, I wouldn't
drink it, but you know, it doesn't smell like ammonia.

Speaker 10 (08:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
I guess we found where we're One of the ways
we're different, because I don't think urine ever smells good
in any way shape or form different than normal.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
Yes.

Speaker 10 (09:09):
Can I get to the where.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
It's coffee, yes, but I do not go that's enjoyable.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
So I'm not saying that I would use it as
like a body spray or anything. But again, it doesn't
smell like pure ammonia coming out of my body. So
I'm like, oh, right, I think I'd be happy with
maple syrup urine disease.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
I would well, I don't want to say i'd be
happy with any disease. I don't like the way that
sounds in the universe, but I definitely wouldn't be I wouldn't.
Remember last week we talked about like how long would
you bleed before You're like, aah, this should be a problem.

Speaker 10 (09:42):
I should get this checked out.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
If my urine started smelling like some sort of topping
for a waffle, I don't think I'd be like alarmed?

Speaker 1 (09:52):
Right, let that bitch right man?

Speaker 10 (09:54):
All right, then you read this right now.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
I'm a hypochondriact by nature, So now, wow, any sort
of vanilla fruit topping or whatever my urine smells like,
I might be on tinge alarmed by it. And it
wasn't until I read this article one that I knew
people had great earwax that were alive and dry. And
I also wasn't aware that your urine could smell like

(10:19):
something The Canadians or Northeastern specialize.

Speaker 4 (10:22):
In a right.

Speaker 1 (10:22):
Apparently this is very popular with the babies. Yes, I
did not realize that, but you know, normal people can
get it too. Yeah, it can lead to seizures and coma. Yeah,
and severe cases or drain bramage. That sucks.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
He did that on purpose, Lindsay, looked like you were
having a seizure. Right, it's because of my maple syrup
urine disease that's gone untreated for too long.

Speaker 10 (10:48):
Right, how many people are like this right now?

Speaker 2 (10:50):
Going, huh, that explains while my urine smells so yummy.

Speaker 10 (10:54):
Right, maybe that's what Bear Grills has.

Speaker 1 (10:57):
You get up in the morning and take a league.
I got a hanker for some mile.

Speaker 10 (11:01):
Right house, you have a hookup. You smell maple syr pancakes.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
Nope, just taking a leak.

Speaker 10 (11:12):
He's got a disease.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
And now you.

Speaker 2 (11:17):
Blind person follows their nose because they smell something so yummy,
and they will find out they're in a bathroom and
can't get out.

Speaker 9 (11:23):
Right, mummy's so perfect. Even his pea smells like maple syrup.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
Oh God, for the record, maple syrup, your disease is
not contagious. So you know you're having sex with somebody
whose pea smells like syrup, it's okay, you can continue
having sex with them.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
Further in the article talks about all of the things
that the kit they can discover through earwax.

Speaker 1 (11:44):
Whatever. That's not why. It's not why I'm bringing up.
It was the maple syrup disease.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
We didn't do in the show a long time, and
I'm still shocked when I discover something. I'm like, no kidding,
Just when you thought you covered it all right, you
learn about maple syrup urine disease. And this is where
we express our gratitude that I am a dork. And
we'll read an article about ear wax.

Speaker 1 (12:07):
Right. It starts with earwax, ends with piss.

Speaker 10 (12:13):
I would have said maple syrup, but.

Speaker 1 (12:15):
You're like, oh listen, and now you're just splitting hairs.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
Yeah, yeah, ear wax is wild man, Like, I don't
produce that much ear wax. I just have really hairy
ears my daughter and my wife, Holy cow, really ridiculous
amount like Shrek.

Speaker 1 (12:29):
Like, would you say, you know when he pulls it out,
it's got all that goop on there?

Speaker 2 (12:35):
I yeah, not that bad, Like I have to take
my youngest to go have it removed.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
Yah.

Speaker 2 (12:40):
Yeah, because I don't trust things I buy off TikTok
inserting into my children's ears.

Speaker 1 (12:46):
See, now that's a difference. Another difference between you and
because I had seen that tool on the TikTok. Yeah
with the camera, Bonny, did you really ye what? Yeah,
You're the first person I've known to ever buy it.
For one. I looked at it, I was like, this
is pretty awesome. So I liked it, and then that's
the same thing that populated on the shop, you know,
commercials every day. So Lindsey, I gotta ask, how does

(13:09):
it work? I mean, I know how to work, but like,
give me a rating, tell me about it.

Speaker 9 (13:13):
The picture is very clear you through.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
The camera that you're using to look down into the
ear hole.

Speaker 9 (13:19):
Yep, you see it right on your phone. It's there's
an app you download and it just hooks up through
blue tooth. It's very simple. The camera's on the very
edge of like the Scooper I alcohol it is. It
will scoop out the ear wax. Okay, it's it's more
difficult to use on yourself than someone else.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
That makes sense.

Speaker 9 (13:41):
So it's more for like parents to use on their children. However, however,
my children, the twins are scared to death of it.
They are scared of.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
It because a long, pokey thing come in. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (13:54):
They are afraid that I'm going to go in too deep.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
I am too, Yeah, No, I'm afraid you're gonna go
in too deep. Sure, yeah, but doctors don't recommend.

Speaker 1 (14:04):
You do this.

Speaker 9 (14:04):
As long as I like them see the camera, then
that helps ease them a little bit. But otherwise we've
gone back to the elephant ear that the doctors recommended
buying off of Amazon, just the spray bottle with the
long tube and it just shoots the water in the Yeah,
and that seems to help. But then also that makes

(14:27):
them a little bit disoriented. You're getting all that water
stuck in there.

Speaker 10 (14:31):
Well, and the temperature of the water makes a difference.

Speaker 9 (14:33):
Yes, absolutely, Okay, if you.

Speaker 1 (14:35):
Use cold water it'll mess you up. Yeah, something warm,
not hot, something warm?

Speaker 3 (14:40):
Ye.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
Would you be willing to bring this tool in and
clean my ears? Sure? Because I know that I've got
some good build up because the cute tips just don't
they just don't get all the way down in there,
you know, and when I do dig deep, you know,
and it's like, if you choose.

Speaker 10 (14:58):
To do that, that's your thing.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
I feel a responsibility to say on the air, doctors
do not recommend you stick things in your ear, even
if you buy it on TikTok.

Speaker 1 (15:07):
You've been sticking stuff on our ears since the beginning
of time. It'll be fine. Well, that thing's got a
little rubber scoopier thing on her eyes. Yeah, see, so
it's not gonna hurt anything.

Speaker 10 (15:17):
Except it could rub your ear drum. You could go
too far if.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
She jams it down. And I have enough trust and
faith in Lindsay that she is not going to penetrate
my ear drum.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
This is where you and I are different. And it
ain't a Lindsay thing. It's a people thing, right.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
I wouldn't trust a guy that I found standing outside
of the Quick Trip uh huh to do it for me.
But I've known Lindsay long enough, We've got a good
enough relationship that I feel I could put all my
trust and faith in her to scoop out my ear goop,
you know, and it'd be fine.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
Why does the person at quick Trip have less experience
doing this than.

Speaker 1 (15:59):
Lindsay, what do you mean by that? I mean I
don't know of either.

Speaker 10 (16:02):
One of them exactly right, Well, neither one knows.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
What they're doing.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
She owns the tool, she's.

Speaker 10 (16:08):
You does not make you an experts.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
Use the tool more so than the guy at the
quatre of that. I don't know that, you're right, I do.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
He could have been an ex audiologist and he's going
to tell.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
You, oh, you don't want to put that thing in
your ear, And to him almost say, if you, buddy,
I'm gonna have somebody clean my ears out, and it's
gonna be her, and she's gonna do with this weird
rubber scooper thing that has a camera on it, and
then I'm gonna be able to here a little bit better.
I just really want to see what kind of horrible
goop that I've got deep down in there.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
Yeah, I feel like we have to look in your
ear first. It would be pretty uh boring if we went,
oh no, it's not that bad, right, there'd be nothing
but a forest, right, maybe so in there. Maybe I
do like the idea of a new segment called Let's
let people from the convenience store do blank.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
I'm not hating, and we'll.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
Just put a bunch of things in a fish ball,
like you know, clean the studio. Okay, give us an enema,
give us a haircut, brush your teeth. I would let
a random convenience store person brush my teeth. I wouldn't. No,
I don't want No, they're just toothbrushings.

Speaker 8 (17:23):
Man.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
If you get a brand new out of the package toothbrush, right,
you don't ask the hobo to bring his own. Yeah,
I think there's a way we can make it happen.

Speaker 9 (17:32):
Are they flossing them too?

Speaker 1 (17:33):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (17:34):
Yeah, you're getting a full dental overhaul. You get twenty
point check system. Yeah, trim your nose hairs. There's something
you could have in that bucket, I feel Yeah, Lindsay
can't participate in that.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
I think.

Speaker 2 (17:48):
Waxed?

Speaker 10 (17:49):
You get yours waxed? How regular?

Speaker 1 (17:51):
Oh?

Speaker 9 (17:52):
Not very? I've only done it three times.

Speaker 1 (17:54):
How bushy are you right now? How bushy is your nose?

Speaker 8 (17:58):
Not very?

Speaker 10 (17:59):
It's buggery, but you fine? Yeah, uh, I'm part. I'm
with you. As I've gotten older, it's like it hardly matters.

Speaker 1 (18:08):
But also no, certain things, certain things i'd let them do,
Certain things I probably wouldn't an edema. I don't know
you well enough to get that close to me with
the garden hose and one of them.

Speaker 10 (18:22):
Why is that so interesting? Why is that so bad?

Speaker 1 (18:25):
Because that's very private area of mie Kormin and I
don't know this person well enough.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
Hold on, we just gave an example where you're completely
fine with somebody entering a hole, my tooth.

Speaker 1 (18:36):
My mouth. Ol. Right, yeah, what's the difference, you know,
because this you were taught in school that this was
a no no zone. No, I think it kind of. Maybe.
I think once the pants come off it changes everything.
I need that on a shirt, it really does.

Speaker 8 (18:55):
Why.

Speaker 10 (18:56):
But here's the part I can't figure out with you.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
Sometimes?

Speaker 10 (18:59):
Is your very very much a what's it matter?

Speaker 2 (19:02):
Story?

Speaker 10 (19:02):
Absolutely right, let's go. I'm up for the adventure story.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Huh.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
But then you have weird parameters that don't follow that
that mindset, absolutely, because this.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
Is my life and it's my choose your adventure books. Sure, no,
I get that. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:16):
So usually we apply in a logic two scenarios when
we make decisions.

Speaker 1 (19:20):
Do you know who you're talking to?

Speaker 10 (19:22):
Human beings? In general?

Speaker 1 (19:25):
Logic is not in my forte at all. What's your logic?
With your logic, with my own logic. Yeah, that's what
I'm that's what I'm trying to get to it so
so so uh yeah again it's my own choose my
own adventure book. And I'll let a hobo dig in
my ears. I got no problem. But once he comes
at me with the garden hose and that weird bag
looking thing come out again again, once the pants come off,

(19:47):
everything changes. I think that's a good life.

Speaker 2 (19:53):
Motto right there, Tex Corbin. You can see your ear
drum with it. Just don't go near your ear drum.
You'll be fine. It's weird. Depth perceptions really hard through
a camera that's attached via bluetooth to your phone.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
Knowing my luck, that would be the time that it
glitches or something, or.

Speaker 10 (20:09):
You sneeze or the person you're doing.

Speaker 1 (20:12):
See, that's where it takes communication on both hands. Hold on,
lendsey before you jam that in my ear. I've got
a cough or sneeze or something. You know, all right,
I chew get the digging.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
Of course, the audiologist or doctor will tell you not
to do that. They want they want you pay one
hundred and fifty bucks to come in and let them
stick a tool down your ear because they have a
certain college degree and that's how they pay for their
BMW and audi. Okay, I'm just saying, I know what
does a college degree get you.

Speaker 10 (20:41):
I don't know training.

Speaker 1 (20:42):
We're digging in ear holes, man, We're not doing surgery,
not the text.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
The ear wax tool is wonderful. I have built up
ear wax and just like Corbyn's daughter had to go
get it drained so much and the tool works wonderful
where you can see and can't go deep because you
see the wax and the ear drum itself.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
Another one.

Speaker 10 (21:00):
I just ordered my earwax camera tool that will be
here on Friday.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
I love it great.

Speaker 2 (21:07):
Yeah, this is where I like to think about history,
right when people are like this is so great. And
there was also a bunch of Nazi parties during before
we decided that was bad. So just because a bunch
of people decide to do it hardly means it's the
right choice. There's a huge difference between genocide and ear cleaning. No, no, no, no,
I'm illustrating the point of we as humans will go

(21:27):
this is a good idea and then rebraggadocious about it,
and then upon reflection, we're like, well, that wasn't a
good idea. I tell you what, After sixty billion ear
drums get punctured, then maybe I'm mine take a guess
how many ear drums get ruptured a.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
Year because of this particular tool, or just in general
and in general. I am going to say roughly a year,
one hundred and fifty.

Speaker 9 (21:55):
Thousand, maybe twenty thousand.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
Yeah, I don't think it's that much.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
I don't know how much it is, right, I'm looking up,
But we're always surprised by these stats. Yeah, okay, each year,
over two hundred thousand ruptured ear drums, often due to
trauma or chronic ear infections.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
Yeah, that's not that bad.

Speaker 2 (22:20):
Roughly five point eight million people have a tympanic tympanic
membrane perforation at any given time, and that refers to
structures and conditions related to the membrane the ear drum
cone shaped brain that separate, so some sort of traumaa vat.
So five point eight million have some sort of trauma

(22:41):
to their membrane.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
What are they doing though? Are they letting strangers from
the convenience store dig into their ears? Or are they
leading a trusted coworker do it.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
Common causes include infections, sure, sudden pressure changes, sure, loud
blast okay, and inserting objects like cotton swabs.

Speaker 10 (23:02):
Under your ear. All right, we gotta take a break.

Speaker 2 (23:06):
Pair of tickets to see say Something two point oh
Primus plus Afer in a perfect circle on one stage.
Make sure get your tickets be Okaycenter dot com. That
show is tonight news quickies when we come back.

Speaker 8 (23:16):
The Big Man.

Speaker 3 (23:17):
Morning Show returns next Elsa's Morning shown KMOD.

Speaker 2 (23:41):
Good morning, It's The Big Man Morning Show TLL free
eight three three four six o k M O D.
Time for news quikies eser stories you may have missed
in the news. We cover them here and put a
link on our Facebook page if you want more.

Speaker 1 (23:57):
It's time for news quakies. World news, local news, and
news that just makes you say, what the Here's corby
Gimbean Lindsay with What's going on News Quickies from The
Big Man Morning Showing.

Speaker 10 (24:06):
Ninety seventy five.

Speaker 9 (24:09):
Woman steals donation jar and food items from restaurant. This
happened in Harrison, Michigan. We're forty seven year old Jennifer
sea High. She was living in an apartment next door
to a restaurant and what she had done was cut
like a glory hole inside the business.

Speaker 10 (24:35):
Why did you say a glory hole rather than just whole.

Speaker 9 (24:38):
Well, I mean because it's a small, very small, hey savage, Yeah,
an average size.

Speaker 10 (24:45):
Hole, but a glory hole implies.

Speaker 9 (24:47):
Yeah, you're right. Okay, she cuts a hole about the size.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
Of her Just say, I just want to make sure
I understand the story, Like was she give it? Was
it in the bathroom and there was a chance to
give some get some extra, like I don't know.

Speaker 9 (25:00):
It's from a room in her apartment to the kitchen
of this restaurant, and inside the kitchen it's covered by
various kitchen items, so it's not very noticeable. Apparently she
had been pulling items from the kitchen into her apartment
and police were called. When there was a phone call

(25:22):
about this woman. She ended up breaking into the restaurant,
maybe to make sure the hole was completely covered, who knows,
But they found various items the donation jar and in
her apartment. They also discovered drug paraphernalia in her apartment
which tested positive for methamphetamines. Yeah, she arrested her. She

(25:46):
had access for about a week or two from her
apartment to the restaurant. She's accused of taking the donation
jar and various food items. She's charged with possess I
should have meth breaking and entering with the intent to
commit larceny. And she's also charged as a four time
habitual offender.

Speaker 10 (26:07):
I'm confused.

Speaker 2 (26:08):
So she made a whole and then also she broke
in like two those are two separate things that were happening.

Speaker 9 (26:14):
Yeah, yep, forty seven years old. I don't know. I
I guess when you're that desperate.

Speaker 1 (26:26):
Or high on the mast, high on the math. Yeah,
she was high on the math and she wanted some
extra scratch. So, oh, I couldn't steal this donation jar.
And while I'm here, might as well just steal some
of the things.

Speaker 9 (26:40):
Yeah, I'm hungry, right right.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
Swingers club next to church forced to close comes out
of Connecticut where the Wicked Fun Club, which is a
private swingers club there in Plymouth. They're forced to close.
Why because there was a town meeting on Tuesday. The
folks and the church goers of Plymouth, Connecticut got together.

(27:06):
They say that the club is in violation of zoning regulations.
The club is just thirty feet away from the Riverside
Baptist Church, and according to their zoning regulations, it prohibits
adult use businesses from operating within a thousand feet of
a church or a residential zone. The club owner, Steve Gagny,

(27:28):
and his wife, say that it's a private member's only
social club, not an adult entertainment venue. However, the church
goers and the town people Rabble Rabble are angry, and
they say that the club's activities fall under the category
of adult use, saying that the club's own description of
consenting adults engaging in adult sexual activities is the reason.

(27:52):
So now the great folks, the swinging folks of Plymouth, Connecticut,
got to find another place to have their fun.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
Dude, it's like an alley that's howl like dirty feet
is not far, No, it's not. And the video it's
like you literally could spit from one building and hit
the other. That's how close together they are.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
We are tired of hearing you guys bang it out
the chance of you hearing them exactly. I was gonna say,
maybe on a Wednesday, because most churches they have what
Sunday and Wednesday services, right.

Speaker 10 (28:28):
Maybe a Saturday early evening.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
Yeah, yeah, So My thought was like, okay, maybe on
a Wednesday, but as a guy who worked in the
swingers clubs, the Wednesdays weren't for that. It was more
of a place to hang out, you know what I mean.
It was a bar scene more so than a swingers
club at that point in time. So I'm like, they're
not they're not getting freaky. Church people will be.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
Fine, uh and typically correct me if I'm wrong on this.
Typically people that are associated with swing swingers club it isn't.

Speaker 10 (29:00):
Rampant crazy drug use.

Speaker 2 (29:01):
Oh it's not like a dance club for example, right
where there's a high probability of some sort of drug
use being used by fifty percent of the patriots.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
Yeah, absolutely, man, people doing cocaine in the bathroom, getting
high on the ecstasy or what not.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
That swingers don't do that, but not like compared to
other clubs like that. And here's where I think the
Church made a giant blunder. They had hedonism happening right
next door. And use that as an example to remind
you of your mission, right and also to be like
we're here when you need.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
Us, right, let them do their things. Yeah, you know,
if you want to stop by for some repentance. Come
on through.

Speaker 2 (29:41):
I forget the part of church where you know jac
wanted to control everyone right right.

Speaker 1 (29:46):
And meanwhile the church goers, Hey, if you need to
blow off some steam, come on in Clain steam.

Speaker 10 (29:53):
Man arrested for selling sea turtle boots.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
Texas man has been charged for allegedly selling exotic cowb boots,
and they were made out of the skin of sea turtles,
which has been banned since the late seventies. Man has
been dieted on federal charges, and court paper show that
he smuggled the handmade boots from Mexico and then sold
them online from his home in Houston. If convicted, he

(30:17):
could get up to how long ten years, four years
out of fine, twenty years in prison.

Speaker 10 (30:27):
Well, they are in it longer than some of the
rape ones.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
We've talked about, right, but these are turtles.

Speaker 2 (30:33):
I get it. This feels like that punishment doesn't match.
I don't know rape right, right? All these stories around
our Facebook, paget, Facebook dot com, slash bmms six y nine,
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show toll free

(30:57):
eight three three four to six OKMD, And see what
Lindsay has for Balls to the Wall Sports.

Speaker 9 (31:06):
A baseball fan is in the hospital after falling from
the outfield wall at PMC Park in Pittsburgh last night.
The man fell twenty one feet, landing in the right outfield.

(31:28):
He was taken off the field on a stretcher and
taken to an area hospital in critical condition. In a statement,
the Pirates said their thoughts and prayers are with him
and his family. Another baseball fan, Cole Whipkey, says he
believes the fan who fell was definitely intoxicated.

Speaker 10 (31:46):
I just sent you the link. If you have not
seen it.

Speaker 2 (31:49):
It is this person was barely wearing any clothes and
he literally this is again where I get back to
maybe life is a video game?

Speaker 10 (31:58):
Are this aw simily?

Speaker 2 (31:59):
Because he just jumps up and goes right over and
the comment section is wild. Apparently the criminal gang unit
with the police department is investigating this, Yeah, because they
think there's something else going on here, Like what, So

(32:20):
let's go with a couple of things. How about he
owed somebody some money.

Speaker 1 (32:25):
Okay, if you owed a loan.

Speaker 10 (32:28):
Shark some money, you may just kill yourself.

Speaker 1 (32:31):
And falling twenty feet would do that.

Speaker 2 (32:34):
If you watch again, he lands on his head. Yeah,
I think he's probably gonna die or he's definitely not
walking again. Yeah, okay, but it is a crazy video
to see.

Speaker 9 (32:45):
Yeah, I mean he didn't even try to land on
his feet, and mean, he just literally it definitely looks
like a suicidal fall.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
And he springs up out of his chair. He doesn't
stand up and then lean over. No, he jumps. He's
trying to get the momentum to go over the wall
and onto the field.

Speaker 10 (33:04):
I don't know if I could.

Speaker 2 (33:07):
I don't know if I could get up high enough
because the railings about. Like some people are claiming that
the railing needs to be higher to sit because if
somebody who's tall will be top heavy and fault, you
can't stop everything.

Speaker 1 (33:18):
No, people will still find a way to, I don't know,
climb on top of the rail, stand on it and jump.

Speaker 10 (33:25):
This has happened at many ballparks.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
It was a Mets stadium where a guy was doing
a fell into the bullpen. Years ago with the Royals
play at Kaufman Stadium, a guy was trying to do
it in between Indians, was doing a handstand on the
concrete thing and fell into the bullpen. I mean, you
can do whatever you want, but people. There's no full

(33:48):
proof way to stop people.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
Right.

Speaker 2 (33:53):
I saw an interview, an interview with a CIA person,
and he would They were talking about the guy who
shot Trump and whether this was just a covert mission.
Was it this lapse in security, all these scenarios, and
he was like, honestly, this is stuff happens.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
Right.

Speaker 2 (34:16):
We can do all the things we're gonna do, but
there's always a way around it. There is no perfect plan, right,
And I think this is that too. There's no perfect
way to stop people from harming themselves.

Speaker 1 (34:28):
There is martial law.

Speaker 10 (34:31):
Even then people will jump in front of right.

Speaker 1 (34:34):
Right, they want you to stay inside your house, but
you can still leave people.

Speaker 9 (34:38):
Yeah, yeah, and that's your balls to the wall sports.
I'm Lindsay in ninety seven KMOD.

Speaker 2 (34:55):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Toll free
eight three three four SI so k m O D.
Toll free eight three three four six Oh k m
O D is the phone number. Good morning, Lindsay, Good
morning Corbyn.

Speaker 9 (35:10):
We want you to rock the bank this morning. In
about an hour from now, listen for your first nationwide
keyword and when you hear it, enter it online at
the website that rocks go to kmod dot com and
enter that word for one thousand dollars. Your chance happens
thirteen times a day from eight am until eight pm.

(35:32):
You could win one thousand dollars when you rock the bank.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
Good luck, good morning, gimbye, well, good morning. Corwin, Valla,
bits Ya and Hailstorm are going to be playing in Rogers,
Arkansas on Thursday, July thirty. First you want to go
for free, will make it happen. Just at the website
the rocks kmod dot com.

Speaker 11 (35:50):
Berown no world, Take my strong hand, get all, give
train a man, give train.

Speaker 7 (35:58):
The real world.

Speaker 1 (35:59):
Take my truve, wrap your lips around the tailpipe, and
get to sock in. So I have stated before, Amazon's
a pretty amazing place to go. You can buy damn
near anything on Amazon, like sex toys, not just vibrators
and dildos, but the actual sex dolls, not the surprised ones,

(36:22):
but the ones that look like real people. Right, All
kinds of different stuff. But there are some things you
cannot buy on Amazon, and some really fun things you
can buy on Amazon's For example, you can't buy pets
on Amazon. You can't buy goldfish, can't buy dogs, can't
buy cats, right, No live animals. No live animals, with
the exception of live insects. You can buy live insects

(36:43):
on Amazon. They consider that pet food for like you know,
your lizards or whatever like that. Okay, that's cool. You
cannot buy lottery tickets, makes sense, not even scratchers. I
think you should be able to buy at least scratchers
on Amazon, but state regulations they're like, now, he ain't
gonna let you do it. Firearms is another thing you

(37:07):
cannot buy on Amazon. You can't get ammo, you can't
buy actual guns, but you can buy baby guns, airsoft guns,
pelagons and stuff like that.

Speaker 9 (37:18):
Can you buy the the build your own gun?

Speaker 1 (37:22):
No, no, no, nothing firearm related. But you may accessories
like scopes like that exactly. But if it's going to
cause damage, you're trying to buy a gun, build a gun.
Can't buy ammunition whatever, which you could still, like I said,
you can still buy baby guns and pelaguns, which don't
cause as much damage but not lethal. You could put

(37:42):
an eye out and kill a squirrel. You could kill
a squirrel. I found this interesting.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
They don't sell a goddamn thing related to the Washington
Redskins well, I mean they're not a team anymore so, right, However,
vintage shirts stuff like that, you would think you'd be
able to, but they jumped on the bandwagon, are like, no,
we're not gonna be selling redskin stuff. You can find
all kinds of and I had to dig I was like,

(38:07):
are you sure about that? And you can find all
kinds of different books about the Washington Redskins. But if
you're wanting like teen merchandise commanders, that's as good as
it gets. You can't get any vintage like redskin stuff.
I was like, well, that's very interesting.

Speaker 1 (38:24):
Tobacco products. Can't buy tobacco products on Amazon? I goes
to look in sure enough, you can't. They have all
kinds of herbal cigarettes, right, but non actual tobacco products.
I was even searching for like vapes. Right, surely you
could buy a vape on Amazon. Now that makes sense though,

(38:45):
because state laws you have to be a certain age
to buy that stuff. Exactly same reason like with alcohol.
You can't buy alcohol because you know, we age requirements
and sums and stuff like that. I go do some
digging around. Yes, you can find all kinds of non
alcoholic wine and stuff, but you can't buy actual alcohol
on the Amazon. Okay, that's cool. I didn't know that

(39:08):
they used to sell this. I didn't know that. I
guess you could buy facial recognition software. You can buy
that on the Amazon. I was like, Okay, that used
to be a thing, Hi, I says here. In June
twenty twenty, in response to the outpouring of protest against
racial injustice and systemic racism, Amazon announced that it would
stop selling a Recognition It's facial recognition technology to law enforcement.

(39:34):
Many activists have been pointing out that facial recognition was
disproportionately used to target black people and other people of color.
My thought there was, why would you need something law enforcement?
All right? I get I get that one. I don't
know if I want my law enforcement officers or entities

(39:55):
purchasing their stuff off of Amazon because Amazon's known just
to have cheap stuff, right.

Speaker 2 (40:02):
I just don't know how much software people are buying
off Amazon in general, right, right? Regardless of I mean,
you're making a good point, I'm just I can't when
I think about buying software, buying it from Amazon is
not the place I think of it.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
Why would you need facial recognition software as a private citizen.

Speaker 2 (40:22):
Uh, I mean if you had on your house you
could do that. It feels like an expense that you
don't necessarily.

Speaker 1 (40:29):
I guess that makes sense.

Speaker 10 (40:31):
But like some people are really hyper focused on security.

Speaker 1 (40:34):
Yeah, I guess if you got your ring camera up
or camera up or whatever, the facial recognition software will
be like, ah, this is Tom at your front door.
But I think that like, if you got the camera up,
you can see Tom's face and be like, oh, that's
definitely Tom. That's not somebody with a Tom mask.

Speaker 9 (40:51):
Well, or maybe if you're not home like mine will
tell me, Like I'll get a notification on my phone
and it'll say like, oh, GIMP's at your front door,
or because it recognizes.

Speaker 2 (41:02):
The face, it does really Yeah, you.

Speaker 9 (41:04):
Can program it in if you see a face on
your camera and it'll ask you do you recognize this person?
And if I say yes, I can give them a name.
Program it in and every time they come to my door,
it'll say so and so is at your front door.

Speaker 10 (41:19):
How much does extra does that cost?

Speaker 8 (41:20):
Not?

Speaker 9 (41:21):
It's just part of the Google Home.

Speaker 1 (41:23):
But you have to give it a name, like you
have set it up right with like you know Google
pictures and stuff like that. It also has the facial
recognition stuff on it, but I have to give it
a name, right right. It's like, so, here's a picture
of you and so and so from sixteen years ago
or whatever. But it wouldn't do that unless I purposely
gave it a name. It's not like it's reaching into

(41:44):
a national database pulling up you know, pictures much whatever,
and like, oh, gimpi's at your home.

Speaker 2 (41:51):
I think you're bringing as a personal person, Like as
a person. I don't see a reason why you would
need facial recognition as a business or a public entity, Okay.

Speaker 1 (42:06):
Public entity, law enforcement, courthouses, stuff like that, for sure.
I don't know what a business would really need it for.

Speaker 2 (42:15):
I don't want criminal people with felonies in my business, Okay.

Speaker 1 (42:18):
Okay, when you put it like that, I could see
that if it does go into like a national database
and it's pulling up you know, mug shots, criminal records,
that makes sense. But that's fun that you say that,
what if this person had a felony, you know, when
they were in their early twenties or whatever, and did
their time and it's changed, are you still denying that

(42:41):
person simply because it read Flagnam you know Tom Smith here,
I had a felony for whatever the case is. But
he's he's good now, he's paid his debt to society.

Speaker 2 (42:53):
I mean, I think if it's been expunged, that's one thing.
But just because you're a good person now, doesn't that
that goes away, right, according to the way the rules work.
But I think that's the argument people have in general
with AI, is it profiles people, whether they've had felonies
or skin color.

Speaker 1 (43:11):
Right in the wrong way. I guess it makes sense.

Speaker 2 (43:15):
But again, I I saw an article that there's why
we should allow Amazon to self you know, facial recognition.

Speaker 10 (43:22):
I didn't read it obviously because I just saw it.

Speaker 2 (43:24):
But I'm curious to the counter argument, why would you
rather than just because right right?

Speaker 1 (43:32):
Or there's got to be some kind of good reasoning
behind it. I I don't I don't disagree with you know,
your businesses. If they're like violent offenders, you wouldn't want
them in there, you or or you know, child predators, Sure,
you wouldn't want them in there, even if they paid

(43:54):
their debt to society.

Speaker 2 (43:55):
I don't know how the query works on how you
can filter people out with AI. But even and if AI,
you know, we had that software on your cameras and
it was like red flagged someone shouldn't be there. It
still takes a human interaction right to stop them, unless
it's like, hey, scan your face and then we decide
that's on no fly list work. Right, when they do

(44:16):
your face scan and then or your name is put
into the system, it flags it.

Speaker 1 (44:21):
But you got somebody that's there a guard of sorts
to be like, hey, sorry, we got a flag here.
We can't let you in something like what you're talking
about with a business. Let's just go with like a
dispensary or something like that. You know, facial recognition gets flagged,
it won't unlock the door to let you in because

(44:41):
you know a lot of dispensaries they're separated. They have
to be separated.

Speaker 2 (44:44):
Yeah, they got to have a lobby exactly.

Speaker 1 (44:46):
So it's like, we can't unlock the door and let
you in back here if you get flagged on facial recognition.
Probably one of the most ludicrous or silly rules with
our marijuana lawns is you've got to have this separate room.
We can't see in, right, but you still can see
in which there are some out there, and I don't

(45:06):
know how they get away with it that, Like you
can see clearly, especially at night, clearly into the dispensary
and see exactly everything that's going on in there. I
know there's one out there by Catusa that you can
do that. Now, during the day it looks like their
windows are tened and you can't see in, but at

(45:26):
night time you can see plain as day.

Speaker 2 (45:29):
I just don't understand the reality the mindset of the
rural enactment of well, let's make it where at least
people you know, if there's a child in the car,
they can't see in yo, if there's a child in
the car, they're seeing it at home, right, which I
find bizarre because they passed it recently.

Speaker 1 (45:47):
What was it like a couple of years ago, maybe
where you can bring your kids into the liquor store
with you, right, but you can't you know, you can't
take them into the dispensary with you. Yeah, that doesn't
make any damn sense at all whatsoever.

Speaker 2 (46:01):
I mean I get it with like strip clubs, like
maybe we shouldn't see for sure breasts just when you're
driving your kid to school.

Speaker 1 (46:07):
Would be awesome, right, it would be awesome in the morning.

Speaker 2 (46:11):
You know, maybe kids shouldn't be exposed to that, and
so that that I can get my head around that one.

Speaker 10 (46:18):
That makes sense. The weird one, I can't.

Speaker 1 (46:21):
I don't get it at all. You can't buy contact
lenses on Amazon either. You can buy all the other products,
your solution and your little canisters or whatever, but you
can't buy actual contact lenses.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
Every time I buy glasses, I'm always just flabbergasted at
how strenuous the prescription isn't I've never had to deal
with it, like I've got to have a prescription. They won't.
There's no if ants are like it is like buying medicine. Yeah,
well doctor has to prescribe it. No, I understand, but
it's not like I'm gonna make meth with it.

Speaker 8 (46:57):
Right.

Speaker 1 (46:57):
But yet you can buy readers at General Walmart, whatever. Yeah,
and don't you have to You have to know what
your prescription is in order to at least get close
to with readers.

Speaker 10 (47:08):
No, you just try them on too.

Speaker 2 (47:09):
You're happy even little reading things on the on the thing.

Speaker 1 (47:13):
I've seen them. I try them on. I'm like, everything
looks funny. I'm not messing with any of this.

Speaker 10 (47:17):
Right, you maybe going the wrong way?

Speaker 1 (47:19):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (47:20):
This is a wild story. So my daughter, my oldest,
has glasses, and she has she needs them right Without them,
everything's blurry, right, And we were buying prescription swim goggles
because she swims so much and they aren't cheap. And
I lost the prescription and prescriptions expire. That's another weird thing.

(47:43):
And that I called the doctor and there the lady
was like, just get her the prescription for just half
of it so she can see underwater. She's not She
doesn't need to see far down. She just needs to
be able to see in front of her Okay. And
I was like, so you've been making me buy three
hundred dollars goggles when I could have bought twenty five dollars.

Speaker 1 (48:05):
Guys, Yeah, how pissed were you when you?

Speaker 2 (48:08):
I was pretty frustrated.

Speaker 1 (48:09):
Yeah, I can imagine I.

Speaker 10 (48:10):
Was pretty frustrated.

Speaker 2 (48:12):
What I'm getting at is that I don't know why
the prescription industry with glasses is so strenuous. No, no,
we can't sell them without a prescription. If I want
to go drop a couple hundred on glasses and mess
up my vision. What do you care.

Speaker 1 (48:27):
Fact that they're your eyeballs. Well, listen, we just want
to make sure that you've got the right ones. Whatever, dude, whatever.
You can't buy gasoline on Amazon. I don't know if
you knew that or not, but kind of makes sense
because you know, I don't storage, and it's bollatone traveling
kind of you know, gets shook around in the Amazon

(48:48):
truck or whatever.

Speaker 9 (48:50):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (48:51):
There, you can't buy cars on Amazon. This is what
this article says. With the exception it says here that's
Amazon has teamed up with Hyundai, and what they do
is they kind of act like a middleman when it
comes to buying a Hyundai. So if you want to
buy it just a Hyndai, you can kind of do that.
But here's the thing, Like I've been on Amazon, and

(49:13):
I've seen all kinds of different motorcycles for sale on Amazon,
like legit right around motorcycles, not just like kids toy motorcycles,
but like H one hundred and twenty five two fifty
cc motorcycles. You know, they're cheap, Chinese made motorcycles and

(49:33):
may not last you that long, but you can still
buy them. I had to go too far on like
actual automobiles and cars and stuff. But what's the difference.
What's the difference. They're still using the same components. You know,
it's still gasoline that goes into them. They're still lubricant
that goes into them. If they were all electric, I
could be like, all right, I get that. Maybe it's

(49:55):
the shipping part. Maybe so maybe so fireworks can't buy
fireworks on Amazon waistkra it's an explosion. Yeah, okay. They
say even snakes and sparklers you can't buy on Amazon,
which I'm like, oh okay, I get like, if you're
trying to buy like the giant mortar shells that they

(50:16):
would use for like the Riverside or the whatever down
in Jinks when they do that size, you know, professional fireworks,
I could be like, all right, I get that. But
if you're just wanting you know, some black cats or
some some Roman candles or something, I think those should
be you should be able to buy those on Amazon. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (50:37):
Again, for me, it's an explosion. And people that haven't
get injuries off the small ones too.

Speaker 1 (50:42):
I guess right. I mean sparklers are just a stick
of you know, burning molting fire.

Speaker 2 (50:48):
Here here's the thing that, Uh, the difference between Amazon
and Facebook Marketplace is a pretty thin line, right, Facebook Marketplace,
you have no you think you know who you're buying
it from, right Amazon? The thing you can read and
it'll say ship from Amazon, or it'll say ship from
you know, Bob Smith. You don't know, right, And so

(51:09):
the ide that, the idea that you're getting a legitimate
product and Walmart dot Com is this way now too, okay,
Is that you think you're getting it from Walmart or
you think you're getting it from Amazon?

Speaker 10 (51:20):
No, no, no, no, I don't know Amazon.

Speaker 2 (51:23):
It's just a place where people that can't afford the
spot online can go and they let Amazon or Walmart
dot Com facilitate the sale.

Speaker 1 (51:34):
Okay, I knew about that, like third party sales with Amazon.
Is that a buddy that would do that sort of
thing as well? Yeah, but I didn't know that about
the Walmart Walmart dot com Okay, Walmart dot com. Yeah, okay,
but I guess it makes sense. You know, if you're
just trying to sell something, we'll sell it for you,
will help you facilitate it for a nominal fee, of course.

Speaker 10 (51:52):
Right, they take their cut. Yeah, So if you just
have to see.

Speaker 2 (51:55):
It'll say ships from Amazon Fulfillment Center, which also doesn't
mean it's legitimate, right, or it will say you know,
fulfilled by Bob Smith's warehouse.

Speaker 1 (52:04):
Okay, man, tell yes. So there's a thin line. You
can't buy Confederate flags on Amazon. You can buy all
kinds of books about the Confederate flag, but if you're
trying to buy a Confederate flag itself, nay, nay, you
are not getting one here, my friend. And lastly here,
real estate is another thing that which kind of makes sense.

(52:27):
You know, you can buy a plot of land in Oregon.
I guess I got it cheap on Amazon. I don't
know whatever. And then they have this here on the
list which I am calling bs. On this particular one,
they say theft devices. Theft devices like lock picking kits,

(52:48):
card skimmers, code grabbers, digital decoders, and more. You can
buy a lock picking kit on the Amazon, all kinds
of them, different kinds, right. Remember it was a couple
of years ago that was one of my new resolutions
was learn how to pick locks. So I started digging around.
You know, well, how much is a lock picking kit?
They're dirt cheap, all right. You can get all kinds

(53:10):
of on Amazon. I did dig around looking for like
digital decoders, because I'm interested, like, oh yeah, what is that?
You know? I did search for card scammers. Not that
I'm trying to steal anybody's information or anything. I'm just
trying to put the legitimacy on Amazon out there. You know,
can you really get it? As you can buy lock
picking kits, you can't get a card scammer.

Speaker 2 (53:32):
I have a friend who has this little scanning device
so you know, like our entry system, and he can
get in without real Oh.

Speaker 1 (53:38):
Yeah, any any lock at all? What's the way? Pretty
much for the most part, Like so he can get
in here right? Or how about like certain hotels where
they have you set up your hotel key on like
your phone, Bluetooth or whatever.

Speaker 10 (53:50):
People think I'm crazy.

Speaker 2 (53:51):
I have a security block for when I go travel
that gets put in front of the door. Because there
are countless stories out there people in hotel rooms while
people are in them.

Speaker 1 (54:03):
That makes sense. We read stories about somebody who was
sneaking in there, and toes that adds for one hell
of a story. On your vacation, I was just sitting
there sleeping, mine and my own business and all of
a sudden, my toes all wet, unhinged would not be
the accurate urn. Now, there are a lot of stuff
that you can buy on Amazon, but there are some

(54:25):
things you cannot.

Speaker 2 (54:27):
Be around the world.

Speaker 11 (54:29):
Take my strong hand, get on give train moment, give
train world, Take my shrum hand, get on my.

Speaker 1 (54:42):
Wrap your lips around the tailpipe and get the side.

Speaker 2 (54:46):
Tell us this morning show, Good morning, It's the Big
Man Morning Show. Toll free eight three three four.

Speaker 1 (55:06):
Six oh k M O D is the phone number.
Congratulations to Tracy Robinson of Chelsea. She heard the Q
and is now qualified for c M ALL twenty twenty
five from Yngling Flight. Another chance coming up very soon,
so be listening for that Q. Right now, it's time
to play a game.

Speaker 2 (55:22):
We got tickets to say Santa two point zero Primus
Pussifer in a perfect circle will be on one stage
tonight at the Bok Center. Get your tickets bok Center
dot com or try and win them right now. A
schnip schnopschner And the current record is.

Speaker 1 (55:35):
Wel sa, you are leading with seven. I am hot
on your heels with six. Lensy so far back there.
Since you all got two.

Speaker 10 (55:44):
Last week's winner. You gim b n Lindsey.

Speaker 2 (55:46):
Are your choices at nine one eight four six oh
kmo D nine one eight four six oh K m O.

Speaker 10 (55:51):
D call up, decide who's going to be your clue giver.

Speaker 2 (55:53):
Whoever gets the most right is going to win those
tickets to say Santa two point zero primis pus for
in a perfect circle on stage at to be Okay,
So let's go to the phones.

Speaker 10 (56:02):
Good morning, you're on the air. What is your name, Xavier?

Speaker 1 (56:06):
How are you today?

Speaker 2 (56:08):
Good lindsay or gimpy Xavier. Sixty seconds are on the clock.
Timer starts after the first clear.

Speaker 1 (56:15):
Here we go. Okay. This is a body of water
that's smaller than a lake. You fish in it hand.
This is okay. The ocean creates these. It's also a
thing you do when you want to say hi to somebody.
Rave Uh. This is a hollowed out cigar and you

(56:36):
put weed in it and smoke.

Speaker 8 (56:37):
It bright yep.

Speaker 1 (56:41):
This is what a child needs and there when they're sitting,
to make them sit higher. Boost the whole thing. There
you go.

Speaker 10 (56:52):
H This is a delicious pork product that you make
on Easter.

Speaker 1 (56:59):
Oh, it's made from a pig, spiral cut, honey glazed. Hey,
you got it, You got it man. The United States
of America is a blank. Russia is a blank. These
are all types of what country. Yes, oh, this is

(57:19):
like take a sixty four and Paula drop it down
and put hydraulics on it. That's time. Time.

Speaker 2 (57:24):
Time is what I got. Might be good enough for
the wind. Hang on the line, Exavier. Okay, alrighty, good morning.

Speaker 10 (57:33):
You're on the air.

Speaker 1 (57:34):
What is your name, Jake? Jake?

Speaker 2 (57:38):
Yes, Jake, make sure your radios turned down. Sixty seconds
are on the clock. Timers starts after the first clue.

Speaker 10 (57:43):
Here we go.

Speaker 9 (57:45):
This is a friend of Mickey Mouse. He has a No,
he has a girlfriend named Daisy.

Speaker 1 (57:54):
Donald.

Speaker 9 (57:55):
Yes, this is someone who looks just like you. But
they're no really, they say, oh my gosh. Yes, this
is ink on your skin.

Speaker 8 (58:08):
Tattoo.

Speaker 9 (58:08):
Yes, if something doesn't have something in the center, you
knock on it. It sounds what inside. Yes, this is
something that holds two things together. It used to be
on Microsoft in the little corner. Yes, this is an

(58:29):
ugly blank party. In December. You may go to one
of these ugly sweater so yeah, December twenty fifth is
what day Christmas?

Speaker 8 (58:40):
Christmas weather?

Speaker 1 (58:41):
Yes?

Speaker 9 (58:41):
Uh huh oh, your penmanship is another word for.

Speaker 8 (58:47):
Writing.

Speaker 9 (58:48):
What kind of writing?

Speaker 1 (58:50):
Time?

Speaker 8 (58:51):
Time time?

Speaker 2 (58:53):
We have a tie, which means you've got fifteen seconds
to try and get as many right as you can.
And whoever gets the most right in these fifteen seconds
is going to be the winner. If we have another tie,
nobody wins anything. All right, all right, all right, Jake,
Here we go.

Speaker 9 (59:13):
Silk wool. These are all types of Yes, you might
discipline your children with this, a hand across the bottom. Yes, yes,
the grand blank you might go there?

Speaker 10 (59:33):
Yes, time time time time that is three. That's pretty good.

Speaker 1 (59:39):
Hang on the line, Jake, okay, all right.

Speaker 2 (59:44):
Xavier, you got to beat three and fifteen seconds.

Speaker 10 (59:47):
Are you ready?

Speaker 1 (59:48):
Let's do it? Here we go. Oh, this is where
you go to get money for your belongings. Rick has
one of these in Vegas. No, no, that you take
your ite and you take your gun to this store
and they give you there you go. Uh. This is
something you put on your hand. It's a weapon. It's

(01:00:10):
made out of metal. Yes, isn't it blank? Don't you
think a little too blank? Just a little time time
time time I'm so sorry you did not win Xavier.
All right, all right, buddy, have a good one. Jake,
congratulations you're getting those tickets to say Santa.

Speaker 10 (01:00:30):
Two point zero.

Speaker 1 (01:00:31):
That show is tonight at the bok Center, Primus plus
for in a Perfect Circle, all on one stage.

Speaker 8 (01:00:37):
All right, that sounds great.

Speaker 10 (01:00:39):
Hand line, so gimp you can get your info.

Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
Okay, all right, give me. This is the one that
Lindsay ended on in the first round. Yeah, I think
that she got the clues right. Penmanship is another word
for what if if you do this.

Speaker 10 (01:00:55):
Very messy doctors, you can't read there?

Speaker 9 (01:00:58):
What?

Speaker 1 (01:00:59):
Okay? This another one. Some people say you have chicken
scratch for blank?

Speaker 2 (01:01:04):
Yeah, if you are if notes were left at a
crime scene, they might bring a blank analysis.

Speaker 1 (01:01:10):
There you go, hand right handwriting.

Speaker 8 (01:01:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:01:14):
And then the one that he ended on in the
first round. Okay, that's the end of the first round.

Speaker 9 (01:01:17):
They got it kind of on the Yeah, yeah, all
my friends have a blank chicken blow rider. And then yes,
Alanis Morrisett song. People get this word confused with a coincidence,
isn't it's blank? Ironic?

Speaker 1 (01:01:39):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (01:01:40):
All right?

Speaker 1 (01:01:40):
The record now keeps you with seven, keeps me with six,
but moves Lindsey to three. All right, we'll be back.
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show. Now the

(01:02:00):
chance get qualified for see them all. Twenty twenty five
is minutes away.

Speaker 8 (01:02:04):
Be listening for.

Speaker 2 (01:02:05):
That Q to get qualified.

Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
Right now.

Speaker 10 (01:02:09):
We got to see what Ghimpie has in his four
x four.

Speaker 1 (01:02:12):
Well, allbin, It says here the Ukraine Minerals Deal has
been signed. It means that the US will have access
to Ukraine's rare earth minerals. The Trump administration says. The
deal also addresses the one hundred and seventy five billion
dollars in aid that the US has given Ukraine since
the start of its war with Russia and establishes an

(01:02:33):
economic partnership. The administration adds the deal signals to Russia
that the White House is committed to a peace process
that is centered on a free and prosperous Ukraine. It
comes almost two months after the White House meeting between
Trump and Zelensky derailed talks on the deal. Elon Musk

(01:02:54):
may be stepping down from the Trump administration, though no
official announcement has been made. Musk made his march during
the Cabinet meeting yesterday that it was an honor to serve.
He touted finding one hundred and sixty billion dollars of
government waste and predicted more accomplishments for the White House
moving foodward. VP vance cast the tie breaking vote and

(01:03:17):
Senate effort to end the tariffs. The Senate yesterday rejected
a resolution that would have revoked Trump's emergency order allowing
him to impose global tariffs. The vote was tied forty
nine to forty nine, mostly along party lines, with a
handful of Republicans joining Democrats in support of the resolution.
Senator Majority Leader Tom or excuse me, John Thune then

(01:03:40):
moved to ensure that tariff opponents would not be able
to challenge Trump's emergency power at the later day four
seeing a VP to appear in Senate to cast the
deciding vote. And then lastly here Hamnyamanahma declares state of

(01:04:01):
emergency and the public is asked to conserve water. The
city of Hominy declared the state of emergency or and
asking the public to serve water after the primary water
line transporting water from the city was damaged. Yesterday. The
main water line transporting water from the lake to the
treatment plant was majorly damaged after a section of the

(01:04:23):
concrete shoot was washed out and is believed to have
crushed the water line. According to the city, the only
water supply now available is about seventeen feet of water
inside a nearby storage tank. That's not a lot and
not a fast fix. No, no, right, that's going to
take some time.

Speaker 2 (01:04:41):
All the water in the last few days is crazy.
They told us it was going to be crazy. Oh
and I didn't know this stat until they said it
on the news. Whether you think it's true or not,
I don't care. But they said more people drown in
storms than die by tw tornadoes and storms for the
last ten years.

Speaker 1 (01:05:02):
That makes sense. People thinking they can drive right on
through it, it gets stuck, end up drowning. Yeah, I mean,
there was a family out in Leonard, was that last week?
Week before last, something like that that try to drive
through some flood waters gets swept away. The dad and
one of the kids got away, the mom and another
kid didn't.

Speaker 2 (01:05:20):
Right, just yesterday, there's been a bunch of rescues in
the last twenty four hours from people that the water
rises faster than you think, right, I get the confusion, right,
I get that you go down the road you've always
gone down and now you can't. You're like, well, I'm
gonna be laid like it looks like I can make
Like you try to deduce and your reason why you
think you can pass through, right, and why you think

(01:05:42):
you can make it, And you underestimate the depth.

Speaker 10 (01:05:46):
Of the water, right, or how fast the water's moving.

Speaker 1 (01:05:49):
That's another thing. You think it only takes like a
couple of inches a fast movie, right to sweep a
car off if it's moving. It's just got to pick
those tires up, right.

Speaker 2 (01:06:00):
Well, people do this with trucks.

Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
They think because their trucks higher or whatever, that they're
less susceptible. Right, No, it's the same thing.

Speaker 2 (01:06:05):
It's not always true. It's like driving a four x
four on ice. You're suddenly your four by four means
zero on ice. Well you don't know, Corbyn, Okay, I don't.
That's fine, But statistically it shows how dangerous it is
that people, just like in a waso, there are certain
parts where almost like every major cross road floods and
you can't get to the west right and you gotta

(01:06:28):
go way out of your way.

Speaker 1 (01:06:30):
That sucks, but at least you're still alive.

Speaker 2 (01:06:32):
It was a Tuesday, and the water was down on
a bunch of the road, so I tried to go
another way. Well, the wind that micro tornado thing had
knocked down some power lines, so I couldn't go that way,
so I had to go like all the way around.
It took a forty minutes to get to their school.
But it is what I don't care.

Speaker 10 (01:06:53):
I like me right right. Let's see what lindsay has.

Speaker 2 (01:06:58):
Four balls to the wall Sports.

Speaker 9 (01:07:11):
The NFL is hitting the Atlanta Falcons and one of
the team's coaches with fines over the prank call made
too Chadur Sanders during last week's draft. The team is
being fined two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, while defensive
coordinator Jeff Ulbrick is being fined one hundred thousand dollars.
The twenty one year old son of Olbrick admitted to

(01:07:31):
making the prank call in a social media post. The
team said Jack Soulbrick got Sanders number from his dad's iPad.
The draft status of Sanders received a lot of attention
when he wasn't selected in the first round after some
projections had him being taken as a high as high
as number two. Overall, The Cleveland Browns selected Sanders in

(01:07:52):
the fifth round of the draft.

Speaker 2 (01:07:53):
I think this is an appropriate punishment, definitely, for sure.

Speaker 1 (01:07:57):
For sure, the team gets fine, the coach gets fine
because you know it was his kid. Do you keep
the coach? There's a couple of questions here. Do you
keep the coach? It was his kid? They cost your
team a quarter of a million dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:08:10):
Well, there's some story surfacing about how bad his interviews were.

Speaker 10 (01:08:15):
Whether the little jitleman or not.

Speaker 2 (01:08:16):
I don't know, but I could see where the interviews
were so bad that some individuals could have contempt for
him and maybe not.

Speaker 10 (01:08:26):
Close their app if he was intent.

Speaker 2 (01:08:30):
If there was intent and he was out to, you know,
get this guy back, then yeah, I think he should
be fired. If this is one hundred percent his kid
knew his pass code and all those things right, then no,
I don't think he should be fired. Some of the
stories coming out are that. So typically when a quarterback
comes in for a meeting, they're given a play or

(01:08:51):
a couple of plays to study, and then they're quizzed
on it to see how they handle it. They give
them some scenarios to see how they would adjust just
kind of feel the quarterback out to see if they
can make decisions based off the mission the team is
trying to achieve, right, and there are a couple of
stories coming out that more than more than one and

(01:09:13):
more than one team are saying he didn't study the
place he he didn't give the answer again, whether these
are true or not, I don't know. Was not giving answers,
didn't even try. It was almost annoyed that he had
to do it. Not a good look. It's not a
good look again. Were they true?

Speaker 1 (01:09:34):
I don't know.

Speaker 10 (01:09:34):
The truth is usually in the middle somewhere.

Speaker 1 (01:09:36):
I can kind of see it. Though. You know who
my daddy is, you know who I am. I don't
have to read your stupid plays. May not say it
out loud, but the way you hold yourself and conduct yourself,
let's say it all. And I can. I get that
vibe from him. I got that. I get that I'm
better than anybody else vibe from him. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:09:54):
Modern quarterbacks, in my opinion in the NFL, need to
be good decision makers, not athletically superior. Right, you can
be both, but typically you are not. Typically you're okay athlete.
Tom Brady not a great runner, right, not incredibly flexible. Right,

(01:10:15):
great thrower can make great decisions, right. The mind is
where that works. Lamar Jackson's really good out at his
accuracies where the question is right.

Speaker 10 (01:10:26):
So you compensate where you can.

Speaker 2 (01:10:28):
But if you can't make good decisions, they're automatically not taking.
And if you see how deep the quarterback room is
for the Cleveland Browns, right, and none of them look
like the star.

Speaker 9 (01:10:41):
No, there's another NFL rookie that says he received a
print call during the NFL Draft, and that's Giants pass
rusher Abdulla Carter received a call when the Jaguars were
on the clock after acquiring acquiring the second overall pick
from the Browns. The caller said he was from the
Jags and would be selecting Carter second overall. Other players
who receive print calls include Mason Graham, the Colts, Tyler Warren,

(01:11:04):
the Eagles, Kyle McCord, and the Bills.

Speaker 1 (01:11:06):
Chase Online, We're gonna have to do what we did
with When I was little, and schools would call into
the new station to give school closings, that'd have the
code word for the year, right, and it was one
year I remember somebody got the code word and would
call in for the school that had changed the code
word mid up midyear.

Speaker 9 (01:11:21):
Yeah, and that's your boss to the Wall Sports. I'm
Lindsay A ninety seven five km.

Speaker 2 (01:11:38):
Good morning, it's the Big Man Morning Show. Toll free
eight three three four six oh kmo D. That's the
phone number. You can also text BMMS and then which
you want to say to eight two nine four five.
Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn.

Speaker 9 (01:11:53):
If you've got some unpaid bills, we want to help
you pay them. When you rock at the bank one
thousand bucks again at nine o'clock this morning, all the
way up until eight o'clock tonight. Listen for that keyword,
and when you hear the nationwide keyword, you go to
kmod dot com and give us that word. There you
enter it online for your chance at one thousand dollars.

(01:12:14):
Maybe pay some bills, buy some concert tickets, whatever you want.
It's your money, you do what you want with it.
Just listen for that keyword again at nine o'clock this
morning when you rock the bank.

Speaker 1 (01:12:23):
Good morning Gimpie, Well, good morning Corbin. If you are
a die hard Daughtry fan and you missed Daughtry when
he was down in Oklahoma City with Disturbed. It's okay
because he's going to be at the hard Rock Live
on July thirtieth. We'll send you for free. Just sit
up to contest page the website of The Rocks K
do go.

Speaker 2 (01:12:44):
Right, little conspiracy theory Thursday, Gimby and I were excited
about this on Monday. When I'm got me frame that
Gimby and I were intrigued by the news.

Speaker 1 (01:12:53):
That we discovered, we get excited for you.

Speaker 2 (01:12:58):
I don't want to say excited, because this person is
in the news and if you know the name Virginia Jeffrey,
then you should understand why. If you don't, let me
give you just a brief timeline of her. She at
the age of fourteen, ran away from home and she

(01:13:19):
was abused fell into some trafficking at that time. Apparently
she was recruited by Gishlaine Maxwell while working.

Speaker 10 (01:13:29):
This says in Mao mar A Lago, Mara Lago.

Speaker 2 (01:13:34):
Where she met her and she says Jeffrey says that
Maxwell introduced her to Jeffrey Epstein under the cover of
a massage job, and she claims this is when the
trafficking began. She says Epstein and Maxwell trafficked her to
various men, including Prince Andrew when she was seventeen. He

(01:13:55):
of course denied this. She escaped from that circle, moved
to Australia. She married somebody. She became part of a
civil lawsuit involving Epstein in two thousand and eights plea
deal which many criticized for being too lenient. She started
speaking publicly about Epstein and Maxwell and others. She started

(01:14:16):
naming high profile people and giving media interviews. She filed
documents in court accusing Prince Andrew of having sex with
her when she was under age. The court striked her
allegations from the record, but it got a lot of
public attention. Gishlane was arrested and charged with helping Epstein

(01:14:38):
abuse underage girls. She says Jeufrees says she was one
of the victims. She files a lawsuit in New York
accusing Prince Andrew of sexual abuse. Prince Andrew settles the
lawsuit out of court.

Speaker 1 (01:14:51):
A reported twelve million euro was paid without admitting guilt,
and the case went away. Then documents in three twenty
twenty three came out from the Epstein Maxwell case Jeffrey's
name appears often, but no new legal action is taken
by her. Then this is the part that's really crazy.

(01:15:15):
Then she's hit by a bus. Oh damn, hit by
a bus or pushed in front of one.

Speaker 10 (01:15:25):
She says that she was in the hospital.

Speaker 2 (01:15:28):
She shared photos from the hospital bed after she says
a school bus bus crashed into her at sixty eight
miles per hour while she was slowing down for a turn.
She claimed her injuries were so severe that doctors gave
her just days to live. This was in March, and
transferred her to a special hospital because she was having

(01:15:52):
failure of her internal organs to go to the bathroom. Oh,
and she says she was ready to go, but she
wanted to see your kids one last time. And some
kind of cast doubt on what was happening. I can
only imagine, like, can we separate the two for a second.

(01:16:13):
You get hit by a bus, I can only imagine,
and they say you got days to live, you go,
and you've been through a lot in life. Yeah, yeah,
you go. I'm ready. Yeah, I'm ready for this to
be over. It makes sense.

Speaker 10 (01:16:27):
How much suffering does one individual have to go through?

Speaker 2 (01:16:30):
Yeah, and the details that have to do with her
hospital are a little clear, and there are no media
reports in the city that this happened, didn't hm, or
anywhere in Australia claiming confirming that she was in a

(01:16:51):
car accident involving a speeding school bus.

Speaker 1 (01:16:57):
So who, okay, who said that she was hit by
She did?

Speaker 2 (01:17:00):
She posted it in social media from her in a
hospital bed.

Speaker 1 (01:17:04):
Right, But there's no coverage at all of any kind
of major.

Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
Actions, no news stories to validate that story, and her
face is did jacked up?

Speaker 1 (01:17:14):
Right. I was about to say, well, how many school
bus accidents do you see in the news, But you
do see them local news anyway, may not hit national
or world news, but there should be something in her area.
You know, local school bus was in an accident, No
kids were involved, and you know, uh, the only person

(01:17:35):
hurt was the driver of the car, right. Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:17:41):
Yeah, And they go to school for two hundred days,
so they're there their school weeks ten weeks longer than ours,
so they were in school.

Speaker 1 (01:17:50):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:17:50):
Usually if if there's a school bus accident when school
is in session, it gets a lot of attention because
people are worried about the kids. Hopefully so and I
would think school bus hitting another car would create some news.

Speaker 1 (01:18:04):
Stories, right again, at least bare minimum locally, even in
a like a New York City or in LA I
think it would cut through to be kind of a
at least some story something, but apparently there was no
coverage in it.

Speaker 2 (01:18:23):
Then fast forward to just this week where she apparently
died by suicide at forty one quote unquote. Police apparently
responded to a call Friday night, forty one year old
woman was located unresponsive at a residence. First day was provided,

(01:18:44):
but she could not be revived. She was pronounced dead
at the scene. They said the investigation is ongoing, but
circumstances are not suspicious. The family went to news outlets
praising her as a fierce warrior in the fight against
sexual abuse and sex trafficking. Her lawyer says her dear

(01:19:04):
friend was fearless, aiding her sunny strength was contagious and
her smile spread hope to so many and she was
obviously noted as one of the people that came forward
against Jeffrey Epstein. And then the family released part of
her diary, which I have major issues with, right, I

(01:19:29):
don't know how I feel about so releasing it so.

Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
Soon because it's so personal or.

Speaker 2 (01:19:37):
Yeah, okay, yeah, yeah, what they released isn't really that concerning,
But it's still the normalizing of releasing people's diaries right
after they die.

Speaker 8 (01:19:51):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:19:52):
But in the diary it says, mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers,
need to show the battle lines are drawn, We need
to stand together to fight the future of victims. Is
protesting the answer? I don't know, but we've got to
start somewhere. There's really no information correlating with her suicide.
There just really a statement that she was sharing with

(01:20:14):
herself in her journal. The family says the words. They
found the words as they were going through journal entries
that she had written over the years and stumbled upon
this quote and thought it was a beautiful moment to
share with everyone in light of what had happened to her.

Speaker 1 (01:20:29):
Her handwriting is atrocious for a forty one year old woman.

Speaker 2 (01:20:35):
So I'll say this, when you write in a journal,
you typically not everybody writes in the clearest way. When
I write, I don't if it's for me, I don't
make it completely legible.

Speaker 1 (01:20:45):
Right, They're just scrawling whatever to get it out.

Speaker 2 (01:20:47):
Yeah, it's a place to put your thoughts.

Speaker 1 (01:20:49):
On paper, Okay, I'll buy that.

Speaker 2 (01:20:51):
I would think I would think most people who write
in a journal write with the idea that it will
never be seen by other eyes.

Speaker 1 (01:20:58):
Right, Instead, it's published on the inner forever. Yes. I
was just looking at that. I was like, I wonder
and it could go with the conspiracy of like because
they found this in her journal, right, And it wouldn't
surprise me if the hitmen in this case, because you

(01:21:19):
got a pretty high profile person here, you know that
that is I think speaking out is isn't she probably
the only witness available for this particular case. So I
may be wrong, but you know, you've got this one
witness for this huge, high profile case. It wouldn't surprise
me that the hitman, you know, write some jive down

(01:21:41):
and slide it into her diary so they can find
it later. And I'll be like, oh, well, yeah, she
was clearly clearly messed up, you know, and going through
some things, and that's why she did what she did.
I would hardly.

Speaker 2 (01:21:57):
Interpret someone's journal as one where are the other what's
going on in their life? Because you write stuff in
a journal that you're just trying to get the thoughts
out of your head, what you're feeling at the moment. Yeah,
that hardly constitutes where you were at in life, right right.

Speaker 10 (01:22:18):
I just don't I don't take it as the real thing.

Speaker 2 (01:22:21):
You're just sharing thoughts and that I don't know if
when you write in a journal it shouldn't be scrutinized, right,
But then when someone does something heinous or whatever, then
we're sudden like, ah, the smoking gun, right when that
might not necessarily be true. So with this, there's this

(01:22:43):
interesting thing I came across when it comes to Jeffrey
Epstein that never occurred to me and we've never talked
about when it comes to conspiracies involving him, Okay, and
that is that Jeffrey Epstein was an operative for the CIA.

Speaker 1 (01:23:01):
Okay, why do you say that?

Speaker 2 (01:23:04):
Uh, he had a lot of wealth with no clear source. Yes,
he claimed to be a hedge fund manager, but no
major clients were ever identified.

Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (01:23:14):
He handled money for very rich but almost no paper
trail of actual investments. And people say this could suggest
he was being funded for other reasons, specifically maybe the
intelligence world. He had a lot of connections to powerful
people world leaders. Intelligence agencies often seek access to people

(01:23:35):
in high places. Some argue Epstein's network look like a
classic honey trap operation.

Speaker 1 (01:23:42):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (01:23:44):
His homes had cameras everywhere, including guest bedrooms. The theory
is he lured powerful men into having sex with young girls,
filmed it, and used it as leverage.

Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
For the CIA, not just his own personal gain. Right.

Speaker 2 (01:23:58):
Okay, and this does fit tactics used an intelligence work
to control assets.

Speaker 1 (01:24:04):
Okay. Are there examples of past you know where that
has happened where the CIA has totally deliberately set somebody up,
made him have sex with you know or whatever they
went and did something bad and use it to blackmail them.

Speaker 10 (01:24:19):
Honeytrap is a common tactic in espionage.

Speaker 1 (01:24:22):
Okay.

Speaker 10 (01:24:23):
And honeytrap is where you basically use sex as a weapon.

Speaker 1 (01:24:26):
Right. Was that they made that movie on a red sparrow?

Speaker 10 (01:24:30):
Yeah you see Jennifer Lawrence naked in it?

Speaker 1 (01:24:32):
Dude. Yeah, there's a couple of hot scenes in there. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:24:36):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:24:36):
Light legal consequences as a potential argument on why he
was an operative, He got an extremely lenient plea deal
despite evidence of track ficking miners. The US attorney who
handled the case letter said he was told Epstein belonged
to intelligence to back off.

Speaker 10 (01:24:54):
Okay, some people don't think he was a part of
the CIA, but he was a part of the Masad.

Speaker 2 (01:24:59):
Which is is where Gishlane Maxwell, whose father was linked
to the Israeli intelligence agency. The theory claims Epstein ran
a blackmail operation for Israeli and joint Israeli American intelligence.
And then of course his death being a suicide had
many people confused, the broken cameras, guards asleep, a questionable autopsy,

(01:25:19):
that all these things add up to the conspiracy that
he was an operative in the intelligence world.

Speaker 1 (01:25:26):
And his quote unquote contract was up. Now it's time
to get rid.

Speaker 2 (01:25:31):
Of him or he became too much of a problem
right there. I think one of the most underrated shows
on television is on Apple TV and it's called Slow Horses,
and it's in its fifth season, and it's about this
group of spies for five that are the degenerates, but
they still do spy work and in the episodes, the

(01:25:52):
number of things that are wild that they do. Now
Getnett's TV show, right, So grain of salt, but it
is not out of the room.

Speaker 10 (01:25:59):
If possible that things like this happen.

Speaker 2 (01:26:01):
And in the latest season there is people coming back
to get revenge on one of the main characters, family
members who was also an operative in the m I five,
and for past things that.

Speaker 10 (01:26:15):
They did, and what they did is wild.

Speaker 2 (01:26:19):
So to me, it's not out of the realm of
possibility that they just went, We've got to get rid
of all the people that.

Speaker 1 (01:26:26):
Know, right, the CIA, the deep state.

Speaker 2 (01:26:30):
The intelligence Well, I think I think the deep state
and the intelligence agency are two completely different things. Okay,
I think you can have an intellig intelligence agency in
the deep state, right, but the deep state doesn't. Nextly
always mean the intelligence agency whiskey Whisky's right, right, Okay,
So to me it is a branch of but not the.

Speaker 1 (01:26:52):
And they got to get everyone. So how come Jelane
is still running free like this ain't nothing? Right? She
was a big part of it. They've already killed Epstein,
the head of it, right, they got the one and
only witness done, But you still got this broad running around.
She's not in jail anymore, right, she got a while

(01:27:13):
ago years Yeah, unlet she got up for whatever reason. No, No,
she's but she's still but she's still in and she's
still alive, and she is still listed longer than Epstein
did when he got locked.

Speaker 2 (01:27:27):
That's true, that's true. So why that's the question. I
think you can't use the same market. You can't do
the same game. What do you mean, Well, you can't
go with broken cameras and we.

Speaker 1 (01:27:37):
Already played that card. Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, fine, yes,
you cannot play that card, ah, broken cameras, tired security guards.
But you can play the jailhouse justice card. You know,
one of the other gals in, you know, in that prison,

(01:27:57):
right was paid off by whomever or made a deal
by whomever, and and can simply take that bitch out
and then you don't have anybody, and then the Epstein
case just dies right there, No pun intended, it's too suspicious.

Speaker 9 (01:28:15):
Then if you kill her off.

Speaker 2 (01:28:17):
She's in a low security women's prison in Tallahassee, Florida.
Her projected release date is twenty thirty seven.

Speaker 1 (01:28:24):
Low security. Huh, you would think that would.

Speaker 2 (01:28:27):
Be high security exactly, just from mrstatus. Yes, yeah, she
could still be in a I don't know if they
do solitary and low security prisons.

Speaker 1 (01:28:36):
Yeah, okay, I guess that would make sense. If you
are in the whole solitary confinement, right then that would
be like, well, the only way that somebody get in
there is if there was guards or whatever. Right, they
may now be put in the hole. They may have
a separate part, right, Like they have a separate part
for police officers, right, attorney attorneys and things like that.

(01:28:58):
They could have a separate part or celebrities. Right, But
that doesn't mean she's not accessible so exactly. But if
they still got to eat though, she still gotta eat.
I mean, if we're talking about ways that we can
take this bitch out, then poison her food, right, you know,
find somebody in the kitchen or whomever delivers it. You know,
even if she is in solitaire, right, she does, she's

(01:29:20):
not going out on the yard getting her yard time whatever.
You know, It's that's as simple. We're gonna put this
in her mashed potatoes. Yeah, got, I don't know. I'm
just trying to figure out why is this bitch still
around and we've done killed everybody else off, there's got
to be a reason why.

Speaker 2 (01:29:38):
I think, No, there doesn't have to be a reason, right,
This is the problem with conspiracies. Just because everybody's a lot,
there's someone alive connected to it, doesn't make it true.
Or false, right, right, Not everybody has to die. It
all happens a time. They let this uh Virginia girl
be alive for a.

Speaker 1 (01:29:55):
While, Yeah, after trying to kill her with a bush
two months ago.

Speaker 2 (01:30:00):
Still, I'm just saying that before that, they left her
alive for a long time. If they were trying to
get rid of her, right a common citizen, I feel
like you could get rid of pretty easy.

Speaker 1 (01:30:09):
See Now that with that, it's like, all right, well
we just killed Epstein. We don't want to kill the witness.
It looks too fishy, too suspicious if we did it
too close to each other. Yeah, all right, So we'll
let her live for a couple of years, letter get
her story out, say whatever she wants to say, and
we're go and try to kill her with a bus.
Yeah that didn't work out, all right. Well, now she

(01:30:31):
dies of suicide by a gunshot to the back of
the head.

Speaker 2 (01:30:34):
Yeah, except she's always connected to him, So I don't
know if six years is enough time to be like
who oh, that's right, right.

Speaker 1 (01:30:41):
But yet still Gallaine, the one who set everything up
allegedly right, she was the work course right exactly, is
still running free. And when I say, well, when I
say running free, she's not around, you know, going to
Walmart or whatever. But she's she's still alive, is what
I'm saying. And I think you would think that those

(01:31:02):
two would be the first ones go out.

Speaker 9 (01:31:05):
Maybe they're keeping her alive because they and they have to.
Maybe she's got more information that she's withholding or.

Speaker 1 (01:31:15):
Or they think that she's withholding. Yeah, right, right.

Speaker 2 (01:31:21):
And depends on how hot you know, the connection to
whatever agency. Yeah, keeping her alive is important. She'll be
sixty three when she gets out of jail.

Speaker 1 (01:31:30):
That's not that bad young.

Speaker 10 (01:31:33):
No, that's true.

Speaker 1 (01:31:35):
That's true. She's not going to be one hundred and
six by the time she gets out.

Speaker 2 (01:31:53):
Good Morning, it's the Big Man Morning Show, qualifying people
for see them All twenty twenty five and Randy Evans
of Tulsa got to Q should say hurt the Q
and he called in and is now in the running
to see every concert. Cameo d A is a part
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(01:32:14):
Another chance is coming up very soon, so be listening
for that.

Speaker 1 (01:32:17):
Cue.

Speaker 2 (01:32:18):
Continuing with Conspiracy theory Thursday. We all know what the
Mandela effect is if you don't, that is when you
falsely remember something. And I've got a couple to share
with you. We all know about the Shazam. You know
that there was a movie with Shaq as a genie
or there wasn't.

Speaker 1 (01:32:36):
Sindbad send Bad as the genie.

Speaker 2 (01:32:39):
And whether that's the moment Burnstain bears is one we
all thought it was Bernstein Bears. Ed McMahon and the
Publisher's clearing House. I think we all feel like we
remember ed McMahon showing up to houses, but apparently that
never happened.

Speaker 10 (01:32:56):
He never went to a house.

Speaker 1 (01:32:58):
Right.

Speaker 10 (01:32:59):
These are all ones that we've talked about before.

Speaker 2 (01:33:01):
But I'm gonna try and hit a couple that maybe
you don't know or you haven't recalled, and that's Jeffy
Peanut Butter. There's no such thing as Jeffy Peanut Butter.
It's always been jeff choosing, moms choose Jiff. Another one,
Hello Clarice. You think Hello Clarice is in the scene

(01:33:24):
right with him Silence of the Lambs. Yeah, he doesn't
say that, he says good morning. I'm just telling you
the frony, the frowning Mona Lisa. You think the Mona
Lisa is frowning, She's not. She's smiling.

Speaker 1 (01:33:45):
I don't ever think that she was frowning. But I
don't think she's smiling either. She's she's your teeth, but
she's smiling. She's more smiling than frowning. Right, here's what
I didn't know, risky business. I think we all remember
Tom Cruise dancing in his underwear and a dress shirt
in the Ray Bands. Right.

Speaker 2 (01:34:06):
Yes, uh, he isn't wearing sunglasses in that scene.

Speaker 1 (01:34:13):
What lies? I'm gonna go ahead and hit it again.

Speaker 10 (01:34:19):
That's fine, you can do it all you want.

Speaker 2 (01:34:21):
But that is one he isn't wearing sunglasses when he
slides into the room acting like he's singing and dancing
in his underwear, which, by the way, I want to
clarify something.

Speaker 10 (01:34:34):
A lot of men don't do this.

Speaker 2 (01:34:37):
I've never slid into it only to impersonate the movie, right,
but never slid around in my socks and singing in
a dress shirt.

Speaker 1 (01:34:47):
So how come every movie and TV show that mocks
or reenacts that scene they all show, you know, have
their sunglasses.

Speaker 10 (01:34:56):
That doesn't mean anything. You're trying to pander to someone's memory.

Speaker 1 (01:35:00):
I'm talking like before any of this Mandela Give came around,
it's always been anytime somebody recreates that scene.

Speaker 10 (01:35:07):
Yeah, button up shirt, socks, glasses again.

Speaker 1 (01:35:10):
Just because you're pandering to people's thoughts, that doesn't mean
they're depicting it with act with facts.

Speaker 10 (01:35:16):
I'm looking at the video. He isn't wearing sunglasses.

Speaker 1 (01:35:19):
No, because we shifted timelines a long time ago, and
that's where all this Mandela give comes from. Sure, but
you got to take it from somewhere, because why we
enact a scene?

Speaker 10 (01:35:32):
Where do they get that content exactly?

Speaker 8 (01:35:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:35:34):
Yeah, there is later in it. You see him wearing
the glasses and putting them on. I think it's actually
near the end of the movie where he's being a businessman. Right,
So they think they're combine, blending and combining the two.

Speaker 10 (01:35:47):
Let's move on. Here's another one. Curious George has a tail.

Speaker 9 (01:35:52):
He's a monkey.

Speaker 1 (01:35:54):
Yeah, he's always have to.

Speaker 2 (01:35:56):
Despite what you remember, he's never depicted with a tail.

Speaker 1 (01:36:05):
Some of it.

Speaker 2 (01:36:06):
We've talked before about Star Trek. Beat me up, Scotty
is a phrase that we've heard many times, or have
we He never says, beat me up, Scotty. Instead he
utters Scotty, beat us up or beam us up?

Speaker 1 (01:36:24):
Will? Did he ever have enough goalthium crystal?

Speaker 2 (01:36:28):
How about Smoky the Bear as one that maybe you
haven't thought about. People referred to the U referred him
as Smoky the Bear, but actually there's no the It's
just Smoky Bear.

Speaker 1 (01:36:43):
Ah, that's a bunch of We've.

Speaker 2 (01:36:45):
Done this with Winnie the Pooh, Oscar the Grouch, and
McGruff the crime Dog. So I think that's where we
put the the in front of Smokey Bear.

Speaker 10 (01:36:59):
And then the last one.

Speaker 2 (01:37:00):
We all know that famous Bruce Springsteen album cover, right, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:37:04):
You got the red rag in the back of his pocket.

Speaker 2 (01:37:07):
He does not have a red rag in the back
of his pocket. He does it is a red hat.

Speaker 1 (01:37:13):
You can look for yourself, come to the conclusion on
your own, but the evidence is clear. He is got
a red hat in his back pocket. Everybody did what
Gimpy did? I did that too. You thought it was
a red bandana.

Speaker 2 (01:37:29):
It is a red hat, or Gimpy is going to
say in a few seconds, Well, that was before the
timeline shifted.

Speaker 1 (01:37:36):
Absolutely, my parents had this CD. I wish they still
aren't around, because I know they would still have it
to this day, and you think it would look it
would be the red rag red bandana. Yeah, not some
stinking red hat, right.

Speaker 2 (01:37:49):
The idea that you know, the holding on to I know,
even though evidence is presented, is fantastic stuff. I'm confident
even though you're presenting every someone shifted to the evidence in.

Speaker 1 (01:38:02):
All of that is made up. I am confident that
something somewhere has gone awry and they're just because it's
on the internet doesn't mean cramp. I trust my own
memory and your memory, and her memory and the memory
of a million other mother lovers out there. There's something
that's on the internet, because why you could put anything

(01:38:24):
on the internet and then people believe it.

Speaker 9 (01:38:27):
Well, I think people think it is the red bandiana
in his back pocket, because there's also album covers with
him wearing a red bandanna.

Speaker 2 (01:38:35):
Maybe maybe, but there's no that is the famous Bruce
Springsteen album cover full Stop.

Speaker 1 (01:38:41):
Yeah. I couldn't think of any other ones, to be
honest with. Maybe Nebraska. Maybe it's not the one where
he's wearing like a denim jacket.

Speaker 2 (01:38:48):
That's the one. It's a fantastic story. That's the one where, uh,
the record label wanted him to do it. It's his
Johnny Cash moment and he doesn't get credit for it,
but it's the moment the record labels like, you can't
do that. He's like, I'm doing it. And he put
out this completely different album called Nebraska.

Speaker 1 (01:39:02):
It's fantastic, the.

Speaker 2 (01:39:04):
Last one I have. The monopoly man, right, mister Monopoly.

Speaker 1 (01:39:10):
You're gonna tell me he never had a mono, mister
Uncle Penny bags money bags. Yeah, he did not have
a monocle. People confuse him with mister Peanut, who sports
a single corrective lens. Our brain easily takes subjects with
similar traits and blends them and slides them around.

Speaker 10 (01:39:33):
We do so, Gimpie.

Speaker 2 (01:39:35):
Taking the hard stance of I trust my memory is
not an uncommon thing. People's personal accounts of information is rarely.

Speaker 1 (01:39:45):
Accurate, but if it's on the Internet, it's one hundred
percent roo.

Speaker 2 (01:39:49):
I didn't say that. I said when they're providing documentation
that I trust that a little bit more falsified documentation
isn't proof. It is more proof than what you think
you remember.

Speaker 1 (01:40:01):
I doubt it. I doubt it because when you put
millions and millions and millions and millions and millions of
people in the same room, and they all recall the
exact same thing. That's where my hang up is on
this whole Mandela thing, you know, because millions and millions
and millions and millions of people all remember the same thing.
So you're going to say that millions and millions and

(01:40:23):
millions and millions and millions of people are all stupid
and retarded. I don't think so, Yes, I am okay.
I have said before. I'm reading this book that is
completely stupid.

Speaker 10 (01:40:34):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:40:34):
And it's it's called Everything Is Tuberculosis. It's a great book.
And in the book, there was a time when people
had tuberculosis and they thought that when you got it,
it meant that you were going to be very creative.
And it became like a sought after like if you
got it, you would I'm not joking here, And like
people thought they were pretty, like women would because their
cheeks would rose up and their lips would become red.

(01:40:57):
And there would be women that would tell me, if
this feels familiar, emulate it by putting what bush on
their cheeks and making their lips red. That people still
do today, right, because they it would look cool. You
don't want to look like you don't know what you're
talking about. Take an example of the story I've told

(01:41:20):
before about a doctor who treated people with infertility and
would put goat testicles in them, and if they tried
to speak up, they would make them feel stupid. I'm
the doctor, you're not, and people would go along with
it in fear of looking stupid. I've got a third
one if you'd like. Lemmings don't follow each other, but
you believe they do because you saw one movie where

(01:41:42):
they were jumping that they showed you in school where
they were jumping off of a cliff. Unbeknownst to you,
they were coercing all of them to jump with food.

Speaker 1 (01:41:51):
So just because you believe it and you remember it
one way, doesn't mean that's the fact. Yeah, I disagree
with you strongly.

Speaker 2 (01:42:00):
All Right, we gotta take a break. We're gonna talk drillers, baseball.
We've got our top list and more qualifying for Cee
them All. Twenty twenty five brought to you by Yingling Light.

Speaker 3 (01:42:07):
You're listening to the Big Mad Morning Show. This is
Tulsa's Morning Show ninety seven km o D.

Speaker 2 (01:42:24):
Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show, full free
eight three three four six oh.

Speaker 10 (01:42:29):
Kmo d join us on the rock.

Speaker 9 (01:42:32):
Fine.

Speaker 10 (01:42:33):
Right now is Mike Malega with the Tulsadrillers.

Speaker 8 (01:42:35):
Hey Mike, good morning, Corbin. How are you.

Speaker 10 (01:42:38):
I'm great, sir.

Speaker 2 (01:42:39):
Can we talk about the six foot tall outfielder Jose
Ramos and how much of a stud this guy has
been in the season so far for the Tulsa Drillers.

Speaker 12 (01:42:50):
Yeah, man, you love to see it. We needed him,
We've needed him every time. So he came up big
yesterday with the walk off to run Homer in extra innings,
which is great. But yeah, Ramos has been He's been
part of part of the Rollers team here the last
three seasons and he's really coming into his own this
year for sure.

Speaker 8 (01:43:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:43:05):
And that's one of the exciting things when you go
to one Oakfield and see the Tulsa Drillers in action.
I'll get your tickets Tolsa Drillers dot Com. Is the
amount of dingers this guy is putting up. If I'm
not mistaken, he might be the Is he the home
run leader right now in the Texas League?

Speaker 8 (01:43:19):
I think he is, Yeah, I think he is. After
yesterday's home run.

Speaker 12 (01:43:21):
He was leading it when he was when we were
home last week, and I think he's back into the
lead now.

Speaker 8 (01:43:25):
So yeah, he's tearing it up.

Speaker 2 (01:43:28):
Yeah, future stars of Major League Baseball, specifically the Dodgers
played down at one oak Field and like you said,
last night, walk off home run. After you guys got
that game in and you guys have a super super
super busy week with the remaining schedule for this homestand
let's talk about the games that you guys have and

(01:43:48):
the promotions that go along with it. Because you're trying
to get an Easter egg drop in there, aren't you.

Speaker 12 (01:43:55):
I think we're doing that yet. We're trying to do
that on Saturday, I believe. So yeah, we we've had
some struggles with the weather here in April, but it's
Sunday this morning, May first is here, so we're excited
on we'reing upward. Yeah, drillers home Thursday tonight.

Speaker 8 (01:44:08):
You know, we've got.

Speaker 12 (01:44:09):
Hornsby bubble Heads for the first thousand fans to night's
at Thursday, Thursday, Friday night, we come back with fireworks Saturday.
It's kind of our Star Wars night, and and we're
doing you know, we're doing fireworks after the game as well.
And you know, then we wrap it up with Sunday
with the family day out there, kids e free, and
you know it should be just an awesome weekend. We've
got little hoodies. First thousand fans get a hoodie on

(01:44:32):
Sunday too, So we got a lot of great promotions
going this weekend.

Speaker 2 (01:44:35):
Yeah, and if you're doing this hoodie, I want to
bring up, is it just perfect timing that you have
this hoodie that kind of emulates a little bit of
Bill Belichick hoodie and kind of a cutoff looking hoodie thing.

Speaker 10 (01:44:46):
It's like perfect timing.

Speaker 8 (01:44:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:44:49):
Well, I would definitely say not Belichick inspired. Okay, not
not a huge Belichick guy over here, but you know,
our promo guy is, so maybe maybe there was something
behind the scenes there that I didn't realize.

Speaker 2 (01:45:00):
We're talking with Mike Malega the Tulsa Drillers. Make sure
you get your tickets to see the Drillers in action
at Tulsa Drillers dot com. Great family fun is happening
at one oak Field. We got the doubleheader on Saturday,
Star Wars Night, which is always a big night on Friday.
There are plenty of things for you to see uh happening.
Let's talk about Major League Baseball. A couple of things

(01:45:21):
I wanted to bring up. One of them was this
game with the Boston Red Sox and I think it
was Jaren Duran that a fan was yelling at him
and he immediately got upset, and it comes to find,
come to find they kicked the fan out and that
he was mocking the player for a previous suicide attempt.

Speaker 8 (01:45:46):
Man, I missed that one. That is terrible. I did
not see that. That is awful.

Speaker 2 (01:45:50):
So here's the question, because one of the great things
about baseball is how close you can get to the players,
and a lot of times players will interact with fans
that are.

Speaker 10 (01:45:59):
Close to the side.

Speaker 2 (01:46:02):
Do fans have too much access to the players?

Speaker 8 (01:46:06):
You know, No, I don't think they do.

Speaker 12 (01:46:09):
I think that is part of the game that's special,
and these these types of instances are rare enough. You
just you just hope that the fans should so show
some humanity, you know when instead of looking for ways
to try to get under a skin by trying to
be the most clever and nasty heckler.

Speaker 8 (01:46:25):
You know that's out there.

Speaker 12 (01:46:26):
Some fans just feel like that's their right, you know,
like Homer Simpson, you know, I paid for this ticket,
so I can do whatever the heck I want kind
of attitude. There's no place for that. There's no place
for those types of fans in the game, and it's
up to guys like me and our teams to make
sure that we monitor those types of situations because the
fans don't want to see that either. You know, that's
that's just terrible. But access to the access to the

(01:46:47):
to the fans and proximity to or access to the
players in proximity to the players, I think is part
of what makes baseball special. There's so many different areas
of a stadium where you can get close and interact.

Speaker 8 (01:46:57):
Sometimes the fans just take it too far.

Speaker 2 (01:46:59):
One of my favorite things to see when you go
to a game at one Oak Field is when the
players are coming out of the dugout before the game
starts and fans, specifically kids line up along the wall
and seeing that interaction between players and fans or kids
is a really cool moment that generates a ton of
memories in my brain of when I used to go

(01:47:21):
to Waterloo Indians bas single a Waterloo Indians Baseball and
wanting to have access to players and you felt like
you were meeting stars.

Speaker 12 (01:47:29):
Yeah, and you carry that on forever. I mean, we
always talked about it in minor league baseball. It's not
just the drillers, but throughout the industry that we have
this tremendous opportunity to help make these lifelong, lasting memories.
You know, for fans and for some it's that autograph
before the game starts, when the guys are coming out
to stretch. For some, it's the interaction with the player
in the bullpen, or the autograph that you get signed

(01:47:50):
after the game when the players are leaving. For some,
it's the mascot. For some, it's the opportunities to get
on the field with the contests we do. But everything
that we do is kind of geared towards family fun
and making making memories for these families. Baseball is such
a generational thing. You have these memories of going to
games with your grandfather or with your dad, and you know,
we strive to create as many of those opportunities as

(01:48:12):
we can. So we can't let stupid fans that are
are callous and trying to enjoy the game in a
very kind of a perverted way, you know, affect the
way that we approach fan experience, right, And.

Speaker 2 (01:48:24):
I think it's unfortunate too with this week, with the
story I just told you that happened with the Red
Sox in Cleveland and the plant the player getting the
fan getting into the player's head and the wrong way,
and what happened in Pittsburgh. I mean, these are two
stories that are taken away for some really crazy storylines
that are happening in baseball. We don't we haven't mentioned
Trout leaving the game and how long will he be out.

(01:48:45):
We didn't talk about the bench clearing brawl with the
Yanks Yankees. We didn't talk about the Rockies taking the
Chicago White Sox card for the worst start since ninety one. Like,
there are some other really good storylines that are happening
in baseball, but unfortunately, these two dark clouds can kind
of suck the vacuum of those what's happening with major
League Baseball?

Speaker 12 (01:49:05):
Yeah, that ends up to be what you talk about
for you know, for a twenty four hour news cycle
for sure. But you know the bottom line is for
every for everyone jerk that you know that interacts with
a player in a negative way. There's about five hundred
extremely positive experiences happened in the ballpark that night, you
know what I mean.

Speaker 8 (01:49:20):
So, yeah, we discard those guys.

Speaker 12 (01:49:23):
We're on the lookout for those dudes and we're gonna
we're gonna kick them out of One Oak Field as
well if they if they start acting that way to
the Drillers players or the opposing team. It doesn't matter
who you are. You know you can you can heckle,
and you can cheer for your team and route in
a positive way. You don't need to you need to
get personal with guys. You know that's that's just not right.
Just because you bought a ticket doesn't give you the
right to do that garbage.

Speaker 2 (01:49:42):
Yeah, I will say this, when we were at the
game a couple of weeks ago, the day game, it
might be one of the best times I've had at
One Oak Field. The crew is on maybe playing the
best game that they've ever played, and then the players
on the field are also look like they're having fun,
and that just that just translates up into the crowd too.

(01:50:02):
And so if you want to have a good time,
this is the weekend to go out to One Oak Field.
There's so many giveaways happening. Get your tickets Tulsa Drillers
dot Com Thursday Thursday tonight, gimpy, are we doing.

Speaker 1 (01:50:14):
Uh yeah, sure, Let's go ahead and give away some tickets.

Speaker 2 (01:50:16):
All right, We've got family four packs. We'll give a
way right now. Toll free A three three four six
oh kmod makes you get your tickets to see the
Tulsa Drillers in action, Tulsa Drillers dot Com.

Speaker 10 (01:50:25):
Mike, thanks for taking the time you bet hey, Corby.

Speaker 12 (01:50:28):
One quick thing go Tonight is the doubleheader, not Saturday,
So tonight is five o'clock game one, so a little
extra baseball. Gates open at four thirty and we hope
to see you all out.

Speaker 1 (01:50:37):
There right them.

Speaker 10 (01:50:37):
All right, guys, have a great week. We'll talk to
you soon, Mike.

Speaker 8 (01:50:40):
See you all right, we'll be back.

Speaker 2 (01:50:51):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Toll free
A three three four to six oh kmot is the
phone number. You can also next emms and then what
you want to say.

Speaker 10 (01:51:02):
To eight two, nine four five, Good morning, Lindsay.

Speaker 9 (01:51:05):
Good morning Corbyn. Happy porn star. Birthday to Zoe Fox.
She turns thirty two today, but apparently her boobs are
brand new. You can check them out in four Hands,
two Sisters, Gaggers ten and is this Your Cat? She
was nominated for the coveted Hottest ass Fan Award.

Speaker 1 (01:51:27):
Good Morning Gimpee, Well, good morning Corbyn. We are one
hundred and twenty days away from the loudest weekend of
the year, Labor Day Weekend, which is Rocklaholma twenty twenty five.
You can get the full lineup and your link for
tickets at Whips at the Rocks kim Oi knockm.

Speaker 10 (01:51:42):
On Thursdays, we do our top list.

Speaker 1 (01:51:44):
It's typerbic Mad Morning Hoe's top list random topics, randomly
drawn with random results. Now here's Corbyn, Gimpie and Lindsay
with this week's top list.

Speaker 2 (01:51:54):
This week's top list is the top five ways you
got the herpes, not that we have the herpes, Lindsey,
What do you got for number five?

Speaker 9 (01:52:05):
I was trying on lipstick at all tame it could happen.

Speaker 2 (01:52:11):
Yeah, they have those out there, like, yeah, do you
get to try I don't know, do you get to
try lipstick on it at the makeup store?

Speaker 9 (01:52:18):
Yes, they have uh huh. And then they have like
little sprayers to spray it down. But I I have
a feeling it's kind of like the gym. You're expected
to clean off the equipment, but not everyone explain how
it works. So they'll have like a lipstick to like
It'll say a sample or a tester, and they'll have

(01:52:38):
a spray and you're supposed to spray it to disinfect
it or you can use it.

Speaker 10 (01:52:43):
I want you to run me through it.

Speaker 9 (01:52:44):
Well, I don't do it actually, So you.

Speaker 2 (01:52:47):
Take the cap off, you open it up, you put
it on your lips, and then you're supposed to spray
it onto the lipstick. Yeah huh.

Speaker 1 (01:52:53):
Then you're putting the whatever sanitizer on your lips. You
wouldn't think they'd be healthy for it or.

Speaker 2 (01:52:58):
Would change the texture viscosity of the lipstick.

Speaker 9 (01:53:01):
They also have like Q tips standing by as well
that you can use those.

Speaker 1 (01:53:06):
That makes sense mm hmmm.

Speaker 9 (01:53:08):
So you could use those to use on the lipstick
and then put it on your face or whatever. But
I think a lot of people don't like to use
that because then you get the little hairs and the
fuzzies from the Q tip on your face.

Speaker 1 (01:53:21):
It's better than herbies.

Speaker 9 (01:53:22):
I agree.

Speaker 1 (01:53:24):
I'm just saying you have to pick something to be
stuck on your lip? Would you rather be a weeping
cold sore or just a little bit of cotten from exactly? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (01:53:34):
Number four, the toilet seated, come and.

Speaker 10 (01:53:37):
Go just that place? Huh yeah for real?

Speaker 1 (01:53:43):
Watch singling out that gas station.

Speaker 9 (01:53:46):
There aren't many left.

Speaker 2 (01:53:48):
I always love when we bring up bathroom hacks, like
place to go to the bathroom that's clean.

Speaker 10 (01:53:52):
Hotel lobbies is a great one.

Speaker 2 (01:53:53):
Any professional building right right, doctor's office, things like that
medical professional building. The always have the cleanest bathroom. So
when you're on the road or driving around, you need
to go. Don't go to a gas station, go to
these places. I've got a new one for you. Oh
Andy's Frozen Custard. They have awesome, super clean standalone bathrooms.

Speaker 1 (01:54:12):
Okay, never been to an Andy's ever before mylife. Oh
they're frozen custards so good. They're caramel pressel all right, dan,
and apparently really clean back, really clean. Hmm.

Speaker 9 (01:54:24):
Number three hanging out with Sexy Red at the freak
Off at p Diddies.

Speaker 10 (01:54:31):
Who's Sexy Red?

Speaker 9 (01:54:32):
A rapper who's apparently given a lot of other rappers herpies.

Speaker 1 (01:54:38):
Oh yeah, not sexy.

Speaker 9 (01:54:47):
Uh Number two, Oh, this that's a herpes. I was
stung by a bee. It's just a beasting. It's yellow
jacket season.

Speaker 1 (01:54:58):
My mom was stung on a litt buy a yellow
jacket when I was a kid. It's swelled up good,
but it didn't look like no harpies or cold sore.
She looked like Marge Simpson, but she didn't look like
she had the herbs. The memory remembers what it wants.

Speaker 10 (01:55:13):
To remember, right.

Speaker 9 (01:55:18):
And Number one, how'd you get the herpies? Your mom?

Speaker 2 (01:55:24):
You can ask top list, top five ways you got
the herpies?

Speaker 10 (01:55:29):
What do you got gimpie?

Speaker 1 (01:55:30):
Number five, I must have picked up the wrong towel
at the hotel pool I was on vacation. Yeah. Number four,
I was kissed by a monkey at the zoo because
monkeys can carry herpes. Number three I was trying on

(01:55:53):
I was trying on sunglasses at the Walmart.

Speaker 9 (01:55:57):
Eyah sunglasses.

Speaker 1 (01:55:59):
Yea, get herpies anywhere. Man, If somebody you know happened
to be rubbing the glasses on their facial area, got
the weeping goose on there, and you're like, I now
I've got herpies in my eyes, because you know I'm
lying on sunglasses at the Walmart. Number two reason or

(01:56:20):
excuse me. Number two way I got to herps. I
got it from a cigarette I found on the ground,
which younger me, much way younger fourteen fifteen year old
me would because people throw down their cigarette, like half
a cigarette down on the ground before they go into
a building. I pick a some bitch right on up

(01:56:40):
and I would light it. I had smoke it, and
I would have no problem with it looking back, right.

Speaker 10 (01:56:48):
Idea as to how disgusting.

Speaker 1 (01:56:50):
That was and how you could have gotten the header
piece is a bad idea. So children, if you're listening,
don't be picking up cigarettes that you've found on the ground.
You don't know what you're gonna get. Number one way
I got herpies. I was smoking some pot with some
people at work. Must have got it from them.

Speaker 2 (01:57:13):
That feels actually plausible, right, Yeah, all right, we're doing
topless top ways you got herpes? Number five for me
saying yes to a Craigslist ad.

Speaker 9 (01:57:26):
Yeah it's a good one.

Speaker 2 (01:57:28):
Number four had sex and a porta potti at Rocklahoma.
Number three getting a mouth hug behind the taco bell. Okay,
Number two kissing the blarney stone. Stop doing this. They

(01:57:48):
don't clean it, the locals pee on it.

Speaker 1 (01:57:53):
And you can get herpes.

Speaker 2 (01:57:55):
Go watch videos of people kissing the blarney stone. Why
people think this is awesome is beyond comprehension to me.
You have to lay on the ground, lay backwards, stick
your head in a hole and kiss a rock that
you're in line to kiss.

Speaker 1 (01:58:13):
But it's for good luck or good fortune, isn't it. Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:58:17):
Yeah, so bizarre and gross and weird. I can't put
my brain around it. And the number one reason on
ways you got the herpes? You thought grinder was a
sandwich app?

Speaker 1 (01:58:32):
Wait a minute or not?

Speaker 3 (01:58:36):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:58:37):
You think you think you know?

Speaker 10 (01:58:40):
How about this one?

Speaker 1 (01:58:41):
Bart?

Speaker 10 (01:58:41):
A razor at the gym?

Speaker 2 (01:58:44):
Oh what?

Speaker 10 (01:58:46):
Why at the gym? Do you think it's that's the
time to shave?

Speaker 1 (01:58:49):
I mean maybe you working out before work?

Speaker 9 (01:58:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:58:52):
Sure, you gotta get ready, so you're like, I'm not
as well. You know, I'm here, might as well shave
up while i'm there. Hey, excuse me, sir? Can I
borrow your raisin?

Speaker 8 (01:59:01):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:59:01):
No, no, you you could.

Speaker 10 (01:59:04):
Go one more day for Yeah.

Speaker 9 (01:59:07):
You gotta that. You gotta be real desperate.

Speaker 2 (01:59:11):
I know there are people that do that that they
work out and they shower there. That's their morning routine.
You don't clip your nails at the gym, right, you
should be trimming your beard at the gym, you trim
your pubes.

Speaker 10 (01:59:24):
Treating it like it's your home. Bathroom is rents go.

Speaker 1 (01:59:29):
People got no shame though. Man. They prove whatever whenever, wherever.
It's my world and y'all just in it.

Speaker 9 (01:59:35):
Yeah, but people look at it it's like I'm paying
for this, so I'm gonna use it.

Speaker 1 (01:59:39):
Well, you're paying for the workout equipment and the shower,
but the accessibility of the locker room, yeah, yeah, I
don't think you should be getting all done.

Speaker 2 (01:59:48):
I can't speak for a women's locker room at a
gym because I've never been in one, but I'm always
flabbergasted at men walking around naked in the locker room. Right,
it doesn't happen a lot, but there's always an occasional
one guy walking around naked. You're like, bro, and the
towels like over their shoulder, around their Now you're like,
what are you doing?

Speaker 1 (02:00:09):
Hope that he's not a close talker.

Speaker 10 (02:00:11):
Dude, you're not getting close to me?

Speaker 2 (02:00:17):
Can you tell me Yeah, you're sitting sitting on the
sitting on the bench right, putting your shoes on here
like hello, nurse.

Speaker 10 (02:00:28):
You definitely are gonna wish you had the top locker.

Speaker 1 (02:00:30):
Yep, for real, you don't want to be putting your
shoes away in the bottom locker. For bit. You got
to yawn at the right time.

Speaker 2 (02:00:38):
Text coming in time. Five ways Jenny is such a whore.
Number four Stacy is such a whore. Number three Becky
is such a horse.

Speaker 1 (02:00:48):
She's a nice lady.

Speaker 2 (02:00:49):
Number two Jeff is such a whore. And number one
Stephanie is such a whore. Uh tried on swim trunks
at the thrift store.

Speaker 1 (02:00:59):
O god, e ew they're only two dollars. I wonder
if they fit?

Speaker 9 (02:01:09):
Sure? They said they were never worn right.

Speaker 2 (02:01:11):
This says you are definitely not supposed to put lipstick
on your actual lips. At Sephora, they have disposable lipstick applicators.

Speaker 10 (02:01:19):
People like Lindsay are the reason I don't try them on.

Speaker 9 (02:01:21):
I don't be fair.

Speaker 2 (02:01:22):
Yeah, Lindsay then never said she did it? Grab a
slice of pepperoni at the wrong house party.

Speaker 1 (02:01:30):
Ew, that's nasty.

Speaker 10 (02:01:33):
If you take a sip of my drink. That's your drink.

Speaker 2 (02:01:36):
If I see a homeless man with a joint, I'll say, hey,
let me hit that.

Speaker 10 (02:01:41):
That's the truth.

Speaker 2 (02:01:42):
Man as gift, you pointed out like there are a
lot of people that will share joints, like it's going
out of style.

Speaker 10 (02:01:47):
But hey, we don't sit my beer. Hell no, I did.

Speaker 1 (02:01:51):
I don't want your saliva, right, but I will hit
that joint.

Speaker 6 (02:01:55):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (02:01:55):
You can only get her bees.

Speaker 2 (02:01:56):
Once and then this one got them from the horror
I married you didn't mayor here though? All right, all right,
we got to take a break.

Speaker 1 (02:02:06):
We'll be back.

Speaker 3 (02:02:08):
Four of The Big Mad Morning Show is next ninety
seven five km o D.

Speaker 2 (02:02:30):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Toll free
eight three, three four to six.

Speaker 8 (02:02:36):
Oh k m O D.

Speaker 2 (02:02:38):
You can also text and bmms and then what you
want to say to eight two, nine, four or five.
I want to bring this up because I saw trending
online and it's the conversation happening online around this topic
is so fascinating. Who would win one hundred men or
one gorilla? Who would win?

Speaker 9 (02:03:00):
I saw this too, and we've talked about this before.

Speaker 10 (02:03:03):
I think it was it was a different scenario it was.

Speaker 1 (02:03:07):
Roman soldiers, a thousand Roman soldiers or one hundred military
something like that.

Speaker 9 (02:03:13):
Yeah, yeah, one hundred men. I'm going with one hundred
men more. Well, the video that I watched, there was
one guy who said that he would perform a sexual
act on the gorilla to distract him, while the other
gorillas or the other men would then beat the gorilla

(02:03:35):
to death.

Speaker 1 (02:03:37):
I thought you already said that.

Speaker 2 (02:03:38):
Yeah right, Okay, so you're going with the argument of
a sexual act will be the thing that.

Speaker 10 (02:03:48):
Makes the gorilla step back. Okay, what about you.

Speaker 1 (02:03:52):
Gimpie man? All right, So there's a couple of different
ways that you can go on about this one. I
had seen a mean on Facebook just earlier today that
one hundred men would win because last time a gorilla
got out of line, he was made an example of
hashtager Rombie M see what I mean. Realistically, though, If

(02:04:16):
you were thinking about this realistically, and you've got a
hundred dudes trying to fight a silver back gorilla, a
wild animal, probably the strongest animal on the planet, come on,
go with the gorilla, because I think the gorilla is unpredictable.

(02:04:38):
The gorilla's got the strength. I think that you know,
you've only got a hundred dudes, and the moment that
that gorilla rips off three or four of these guys's
arms and then appendages, because that's what they're gonna do.
That's exactly what they're gonna do. The one hundred men
are going to go after it with what weaponry, some

(02:04:59):
guns and not maybe punch it. Gorilla is going to
they call it aps for a reason now, and he's
going to go crazy. He's just gonna start ripping limbs
right off. And I think after the first we'll just say,
like ten people get their arms or legs or you know,
testicles ripped off. That's going to cause the other like

(02:05:20):
ninety people be like whoa aw and they could retreat
or they'll continue to try to fight this gorilla. But again,
you've got a crazy, unpredictable wild animal, and I think
right there that's where it's at because it is so
unpredictable and so strong.

Speaker 10 (02:05:40):
So gorilla can be up to six feet tall.

Speaker 2 (02:05:42):
They usually weigh about five hundred pounds, right, they're massive, right.
I understand collectively, one hundred people together you are way
more than that, right, right. Obviously, if you stacked them
on top of each other. We talked, But here's the
place that I go to. What's the dedication of the men? Yeah, because,

(02:06:04):
as Gimpie pointed out, this gorilla, whoever the first person
there is, is going to pop their head off. And
when you see that happening, you're gonna go yeah, press forward.

Speaker 10 (02:06:21):
No, right, the gorilla.

Speaker 1 (02:06:23):
Ain't giving up.

Speaker 2 (02:06:26):
The gorilla just has to swing his arms and put
five people out. And let's say you can go hands
on with the gorilla. Oh god, what do you think
you're gonna do? Most of y'all can't swing your fist

(02:06:46):
for two minutes, much less for the amount of time
it would take.

Speaker 10 (02:06:50):
To put damage on the gorilla.

Speaker 2 (02:06:52):
Right, if you had the power, you're not straddling the gorilla.

Speaker 10 (02:07:00):
You're not getting top mount.

Speaker 1 (02:07:03):
Right. Well, one person or two people might be able
to surprise attack while while the gorilla is beating one guy, right,
you know, you get two others sneak around the back
and they could probably jump on the back. But again,
gorilla grab flame do that quite often, winter poop the gorilla.

Speaker 2 (02:07:25):
Many experiences fighting other massive individuals, right gorillas, You no
experience fighting a gorilla.

Speaker 10 (02:07:37):
You are And let's just start with let's go with
something very easy.

Speaker 2 (02:07:40):
I think the amount of energy you exert in fighting
is incomprehendible to people.

Speaker 1 (02:07:47):
Right.

Speaker 2 (02:07:48):
Keep in mind, guys in the UFC train for twelve
weeks NonStop to be able to fight for three five
minute rounds, right, and they look like they're about to
pass out, and sometimes they vomit. Right, what do you
think you're gonna do? This text here says the one

(02:08:09):
hundred men could kill it with their weight, just dog
pile them. So everybody, here's where the law the flaw
in that logic is, right.

Speaker 1 (02:08:21):
So you get the first like five maybe ten people, right,
I think it's more realistically five, and they're gonna circle
this gorilla and then they're all gonna jump on them
at the same time, and then everybody's got a pile
on top of that. Yeah, well, the moment even if
all five people synchronized jumped on the gorilla at the
same time, landed on the gorilla at the same time,

(02:08:44):
and they're taking their little feeble human fists and they're
beaten on that monkey. Right, Jesus gonna flame him off
and then other people and the next thing you know,
he's just beating dudes off left and right, just boom
boom boom boom boom. I don't think you could dog
pile a gorilla.

Speaker 2 (02:09:02):
I just sent you a link so you can see
a simulation of the gorilla. And they all do that.
They try to get to the gorilla fast, and they
try to dog pile them. Guess what the gorilla does.
Pirouettes right and they go flying. Yeah, and then all
the other people are like, whoa dog? And back up

(02:09:23):
another simulation. The gorilla evaded and let people come to him,
and he controlled the disbursement towards him.

Speaker 1 (02:09:32):
Very smart gorilla.

Speaker 2 (02:09:34):
It is a fighting tactic when you're fighting more than
one person is to not go forward, let them come
to you, and as they come to you, you let
the first person be the blocker of the second person.
So it requires the person being attacked to keep moving
and let that person chase them while the other person's

(02:09:54):
blocking the person behind them, so they can't get two
people on you.

Speaker 10 (02:09:58):
So that's what the gorilla does. Again. This grilla has
got experience.

Speaker 1 (02:10:03):
There's another text here. It says is it a wild
gorilla or one raised in a zoo? I feel like
that matters. I don't think that matters. Because that's the
kid exactly. Instinct is going to kick in. Whether this
has been a zoo raised gorilla or not, instinct you're
still gonna kick in and win. An think about that.

(02:10:24):
If you are a cat owner at home and you're
trying to get the cat out of something like maybe
it's underneath the bed or something like that, and you're
trying to you're reaching under there, and you grab that
cat by the nape of its neck. What's the first
thing it does? Turns around and wants to scratch you
because you're attacking me. So instinct kicks in. I don't

(02:10:44):
think zoo gorilla is the same thing. It's just going
to instinct's gonna kick in.

Speaker 2 (02:10:49):
This text says the grilla all day, only five men
at a time or so would be able to get
their hands on the grill at one time. I agree,
if five right, gorilla only has to slap a man
unconscious only ten to fifteen minute on the grilla at
a time.

Speaker 10 (02:11:03):
Due to space.

Speaker 2 (02:11:04):
How about this, but if you dropped one hundred men
from one hundred feet onto the gorilla, the men win, No,
they don't. You got to assume at least half hurt.

Speaker 10 (02:11:12):
Themselves, right, Yeah, Gorilla's move.

Speaker 1 (02:11:16):
It's not like he's chained to the ground, so they're
gonna land right on top of them. Gorilla moves from
one hundred feet.

Speaker 8 (02:11:22):
Look what happened to.

Speaker 1 (02:11:22):
The guy that I've felt twenty feet exactly? He's a
critical condition, might not even make it through the note,
And there was no Gorilla exactly.

Speaker 10 (02:11:30):
Uh the uh.

Speaker 2 (02:11:32):
If you're gonna do the zoo raised, which I guess
you're implying, is the lesser specimen, right, then more docile.
The hundred men have to all have not gotten off
the couch in a while. Stains on the front of
their shirts. A hundred of us, right, I mean, so
here's another take of the hundred men. You got Mike
Tyson brock Lessener.

Speaker 10 (02:11:57):
The Rock.

Speaker 2 (02:11:58):
Listen, these guys are physical spas. They're also not agile anymore. Right,
the Rock maybe, but the Rock has never thrown a punch.
He's done wrestling, right, don't confuse physically fit and low
body fat with ability to punch exact.

Speaker 1 (02:12:15):
Right, You're gonna have to get some like UFC fighters
in there, right, because they know all about the movements,
and it's more than just you know, taking a few bumps.

Speaker 2 (02:12:23):
Yeah, right, Okay, here, so here's some other ones. Twenty
twelve Messier. Okay, I think you can insert any sports
figure that was successful by any time frame, but his
ability to kick the ball. Again, there's no weapons, right,
so it's not like it was gonna kick him in
his shin.

Speaker 1 (02:12:39):
Yeah, that doesn't make.

Speaker 9 (02:12:40):
Any damn saying they kick a ball at his face.

Speaker 2 (02:12:42):
Twenty No no weapons twenty seven Ronaldo Again, I think
you insert any sports figure that you think is a
superior sports morning routine guy. I mean, okay morning routine well,
because they're disciplined. Okay, right, Mark Henry again, we're with
the wrestler. I don't I know brock Less or fought,
but the moment he faced any type of adversity other

(02:13:03):
than punching, he didn't do well.

Speaker 1 (02:13:05):
Right.

Speaker 10 (02:13:08):
Jason Statham, you know he's an actor, right.

Speaker 1 (02:13:10):
Right, But he's a badass.

Speaker 10 (02:13:13):
Is he gonna act like a gorilla?

Speaker 1 (02:13:16):
It's like saying, hey, let's kill Liam Neeson in there, right?

Speaker 2 (02:13:20):
Arnold five Manchester United fans. Okay, maybe hooligans could be
quite dangerous.

Speaker 1 (02:13:28):
Although I do like the image in my head of
some hooligans taking on them a giant gorilla yeah.

Speaker 10 (02:13:33):
Usually they do well only against fighting some frogs.

Speaker 2 (02:13:35):
But like.

Speaker 9 (02:13:37):
And when they're done, they drink beer out of their boots.

Speaker 2 (02:13:39):
They don't do it when they're done. Lindsay, Uh ten kickboxers. Okay,
now we're onto something. You might have something there like
ten Jean Claude van Dams. Yeah, I would prime of course.
Obviously I would probably go with movie tie kickboxers. They
tend to be a little more resilient and push forward.

Speaker 1 (02:13:56):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (02:13:57):
Uh ten zoo guards. I don't know what that would do?
Get them food, right, I'm not downplaying zoo guards.

Speaker 1 (02:14:05):
Well, they'll just take their gun out shoot them.

Speaker 2 (02:14:07):
Yeah, well they get the kid out for ice cream.
There's zoo guards. They're just z Even if they're zoo keepers.
They typically work on the other side of the fence
until the animals put to sleep.

Speaker 1 (02:14:18):
Right.

Speaker 8 (02:14:20):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (02:14:21):
Ten black belt taekwondo men. Why so they can throw them?

Speaker 1 (02:14:25):
Right?

Speaker 2 (02:14:25):
That taekwondo's throwing? Uh twenty men from World's Strongest Again.
They squeak when they walk. Don't think that they can
punch or run or evade or attack. Ten death sentenced men.
There's a flaw in this one. If you go with
ten of the most heinous people ever. You might have something,

(02:14:48):
but keep in mind John Wayne Gacy was he had
Ted Bundy drug pop. Like, they're not that menacing, right, right, right,
they're menacing in a dark alley and unsuspectingly getting a
shot in the neck or help getting helped, you know,
pushing a couch in the back of a man.

Speaker 1 (02:15:07):
I don't mind the thought of ten death row inmates.
Like if you if you can beat this gorilla, you
go free. Yeah, right, You're you're off of death row.
And I think that want that fight for survival and
freedom is what's going to drive out.

Speaker 2 (02:15:25):
Here is the problem. Uh huh with that thought process.
People do this all the time. They mistake because I
want to therefore I will right that you can't overcome physics.

Speaker 1 (02:15:35):
Well, listen you, it's a mother's strength.

Speaker 7 (02:15:38):
Man.

Speaker 1 (02:15:38):
A car is laying on top of a child, you know,
and the mother comes in there with her motherly strength.
You've just seen the Rocket man, right, it's a movie
from the nineties, and he's like it's got that uh
oh god, it's such a weird oddball name. But he's
funny as hell, and he's like he's got to lift
the rocket off with the captain and he's like, I
want you to call me mommy. And he's like why

(02:16:01):
because of adrenaline, and a mother can lift a car
off of a child. Now call me mommy, And he's like, mommy,
and then he lifts the rocket off of the man
and saves his life. That's what I'm talking about.

Speaker 2 (02:16:13):
Yeah, do not mistake adrenaline for being scared out of
your mind. Yeah right, you're standing there with the grills
like like bull in the dirt.

Speaker 1 (02:16:26):
You are essing yourself. You're not like, I must save
my trapped child, my offspring. And this is a movie,
so let's get the film in it, right. Uh.

Speaker 2 (02:16:37):
Somebody said, the entire argument assumes that some men are
going to die in this battle. It's not can they
defeat the gorilla without losing any men? No, that's true,
that's true. That's one hundred percent true. But think of
Mortal Kombat. Okay, what amount of damage is the gorilla
gonna take? It's a good point, right, I hear you. Yes,

(02:17:00):
some men are going to die in this battle, But
how much damage? Even if one man or two men
can get to them, will they inflict?

Speaker 8 (02:17:10):
Right?

Speaker 1 (02:17:10):
Without any weapons at all? Whatswept? Yeah, just fists.

Speaker 2 (02:17:13):
Let what are you gonna get on top of the
grilla and gouget's eyes out with your thumbs?

Speaker 1 (02:17:18):
Maybe? Right?

Speaker 10 (02:17:19):
What do you think the grill is gonna do? Go stop?

Speaker 1 (02:17:23):
You're gonna reach behind, grab you and fling you across wherever.

Speaker 2 (02:17:27):
Yeah, if you can get that far, I would imagine
that you will find like, give me point out with
the mom when you're struggling for your life. The amount
of where you find energy is fascinating. Sure, all he's
got to do is hip bump and throw half the
group off. Yeah, yeah, I think the element of survival

(02:17:47):
is a different mindset. But I love the arguments that
people are having. What about one hundred one three hundred
pound jabas simultaneously fired out of circus cannons at the gorilla.
A grilla sees one hundred people coming at it, Chances
are the gorillas retreating and getting the hell out anyway,

(02:18:09):
that might be true. Even one hundred brock lesseners will
get their limbs snapped like twigs. For sure. The size
you are, the specimen you are hardly will warrant. It
may take a little more oomph, but he's still Delemming.
He got the perfect text one Chuck Norris the end.

Speaker 10 (02:18:27):
Nope, not true. Look at him now. Why he's not
on someone's death pool?

Speaker 1 (02:18:31):
I don't know, because death shudders at the thought of
Chuck Norris.

Speaker 2 (02:18:36):
Maybe twenty five year old Chuck Norris. All right, pick
a fight.

Speaker 1 (02:18:43):
With seventy what is he seventy seven now eighty three
or something like that. Go ahead, let's pick a fight
with Chuck Norris. We can even sanction it. Five eighty five.
Can you whoop an eighty five year old Chuck Norris?
I would pay. I would pay pay per view to
watch that.

Speaker 2 (02:19:03):
I heard Logan. Paul's already contacting me. Okay, I love
this theory too. It's like Mike Tyson, Right, I'm pretty
confident I could put my hand on Mike Tyson or
Chuck Norris.

Speaker 8 (02:19:19):
It wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (02:19:20):
He may not be fast or agile Chuck Norris, but
his technicality is probably still there, and technology, being technically
proficient will override strength and speed every time.

Speaker 1 (02:19:34):
Right, he doesn't need to be fast and strong. He
knows what he's doing. You have no idea.

Speaker 2 (02:19:38):
You do not need to throw the hardest punch to
knock someone out. You just need to hit them in
the right spot. You don't have to put one hundred
percent behind the weight of your fist. But if I
hit you on the button, you're getting starched.

Speaker 9 (02:19:53):
And you don't have the opportunity to do that with
a gorilla.

Speaker 8 (02:19:56):
No.

Speaker 2 (02:19:57):
I promise many of you will be acting like you're
a kid running that just got scared.

Speaker 1 (02:20:02):
La alone yo.

Speaker 2 (02:20:07):
And the first time I see someone's head easily get
popped off, at least fifty percent of the group's going,
oh no, this is oh I thought this was going
to be easier. Yeah, there's a one hundred of us.

Speaker 9 (02:20:18):
I got a thing.

Speaker 10 (02:20:19):
I gotta go right, my.

Speaker 7 (02:20:21):
Ubers get delivery.

Speaker 1 (02:20:36):
Good morning, it's the Big Mad Morning Show.

Speaker 10 (02:20:42):
Time to find out what everybody learned.

Speaker 1 (02:20:43):
Keep listening for your chance to get qualified for See
them All twenty twenty five. Your next chance to get
qualified is coming up with mel about ten.

Speaker 8 (02:20:55):
Forty.

Speaker 1 (02:20:56):
If I'm not mistaken ten thirty five After Pink Floyd's
Empty Space, lindsay, what'd you learn today?

Speaker 9 (02:21:05):
I learned that you may only be able to get
herpes once, but it's the gift that keeps on giving.
And also herpes is like nature's glitter. Once you get it,
good luck getting rid of it.

Speaker 10 (02:21:16):
Gimpy, what'd you learn today?

Speaker 1 (02:21:17):
I'll learn that you can buy something on Amazon that
looks like a red rocket and you can use it
for sexual pleasure, but you can't buy an actual red rocket.
And I also learn that everything changes once the pants
come off.

Speaker 2 (02:21:31):
I learned I have a special skill. Would you like
some syrup on your pancakes? And I also learned Gimpy
back in the day, would just pick up butts and
put him right in his mouth. Corpin say, make sure
that dishwasher is loaded right.

Speaker 9 (02:21:44):
It's lindsay stop tracking my cycle?

Speaker 8 (02:22:01):
Yeah no, it to make some noise.

Speaker 2 (02:22:11):
Interpassword Corbin new Messages.

Speaker 7 (02:22:15):
The Big Mad Morning sho would like to take a
minute to thank troops from Oklahoma.

Speaker 1 (02:22:17):
And all over the United States. These soldiers have sacrifice.
Did the Big Mad Morning Show before you to back
like the total douchebags that.

Speaker 8 (02:22:24):
They are total douchebag bag, little incomplete douchebag.

Speaker 7 (02:22:27):
We honor and respect you.

Speaker 1 (02:22:29):
We honor and respect you.

Speaker 9 (02:22:30):
We honor and respect you.

Speaker 1 (02:22:32):
Less rock and Roll, bless Tulsa.

Speaker 7 (02:22:36):
We tried boys,

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