Episode Transcript
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(03:37):
at Caines Ballroom dot com. Yesterday it was announced that
Dolly Parton is doing a residency in Vegash probably just
off the Brujja.
Speaker 6 (03:46):
Molly Crue and and so that makes sense.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
You shouldn't have to tour, shouldn't have to go anywhere, right,
I can put it up in a posh penthouse.
Speaker 6 (03:59):
Yeah, And honestly, I don't think she has to work
at all. If she doesn't want to know, that's one
of those I need something to do. I guess I'll
go ahead and I'll play Vegas. I mean, she's seventy nine.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
I don't think she needs something to do, right, She's
got an amusement park to run, right, or.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
Just count the money that comes in from it.
Speaker 6 (04:25):
Yeah, Dollywood's still a thing.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
Oh yeah, Oh yeah, really.
Speaker 6 (04:28):
Oh yeah, I've never been. Now, I lived in Alabama
and I've traveled through Tennessee quite a bit and I've
heard of it, but I've never actually been to Dollywood.
Speaker 2 (04:37):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 6 (04:38):
I think vaage.
Speaker 2 (04:39):
I think in the beginning it was kind of a
slow like churn, but it feels like in the last
what decades, she's really had a resurgence and it's hit
its stride.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
We went once when I was little, little, little, like
probably nine or ten.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
I don't know, it's that old. Oh yeah.
Speaker 6 (04:54):
Oh yeah, it's been Dolly Wood's been around for a
long time since the eighties, early nineties. Yeah, yeah, I
guess I'll check real quick see if I can't find
a wikiess to when it opened up. But yeah, I
remember when I was a kid because I wanted to
go Noah, never going to Disneyland.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
It opened in nineteen sixty one, Yeah.
Speaker 6 (05:14):
Yeah, and it was struggling, so she bought it up,
changed the name because it was a different named theme
park from what I remember, and changed it up, called
it Dollywood, and then she actually worked there for a
little while, and then whether it just kind of took off.
It was Rebel Railroad from sixty one to sixty three,
(05:37):
gold Rush Junction from sixty four to seventy four, gold
Rush from seventy five to seventy six, Silver Dollars City
from seventy seven to eighty five, and then Dolly's.
Speaker 2 (05:46):
Like, let me have that, so she bought like the footprint. Essentially,
it wasn't Dollywood in sixty one, right, right, right, it
was already an established theme park. Just slap her name
on it and make it a little few changes and
go from there. But apparently I was looking because I
was like, let's check into this, and it's a theme
park and a water park, which I love those because
(06:08):
I'm all got to do that nowadays, I'm all about
some water slides. You really do, you really do have
to have both of them.
Speaker 6 (06:15):
Yeah, you know, I think I think a standalone water
park can do well, and a standalone theme park can
do well. But when you mesh them together like that,
it's just a superpower right there.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
Yeah, it's it's a peanut butter and jelly because one
of them. If you have just won, you got months.
It's not operating, absolutely, and you're not making money, You're
just paying rent.
Speaker 6 (06:37):
Right. People will still go to a theme park in
the colder months. Oh yeah, ooh, I'd ride a roller
coaster in October.
Speaker 3 (06:45):
Oh absolutely, especially like when six Flags has their fright
Fest during Halloween.
Speaker 6 (06:51):
Oh yeah, that's super late November, early December, January, maybe
not so much if there's snow blowing, right.
Speaker 2 (06:59):
Yeah, yeah here here, But there are other places where
it's not prudent. Yeah, to have a fright fest in
October and go out and ride riots.
Speaker 6 (07:10):
People would still do it, dude.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
In Northeast Iowa in October, there's a good chance it's freezing. Really, yes,
I remember playing football champion state football, state championship football
and in October, late October, and the ground being frozen.
While okay, so I've played football in the snow in October.
Speaker 6 (07:32):
Yeah, so let's just say anything south would work out well.
Speaker 3 (07:37):
In Illinois they put on a fright Fest at their
six Flags, and it's usually cold and sometimes a bit rainy,
not necessarily like pouring, but it's drizzling, and people will
go because the lines aren't long, and they'll usually mark
the ticket prices down if.
Speaker 2 (07:54):
It is bad, but that's different.
Speaker 3 (07:56):
Weather, and but people will go because they're not waiting
forever in line, right.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
I understand that, of course there are exceptions to this,
but ideally you're not getting people going. It's not a
they're doing it just for the mystique of hey it's
half price. They're not fully staff in the park. Right,
it's not a full run production.
Speaker 6 (08:16):
So a dolly would an adult for one day of
cosh dou ninety two dollars get bent, but a two
day ticket as one hundred and twenty two. And if
you want to go for three days, just add an
extra ten bucks. Wow. Now that's just for the theme parks.
If you wanted to get the two park tickets a
single day one hundred bucks, two day one hundred and
(08:37):
thirty two, three day one hundred forty two, that's not
that bad. No, and the grand scheme of theme park pricing. Lindsey,
you went to Disney World, Yeah, just was a couple
of years back. Yeah. And how much was that for
you and your family twenty five to get in?
Speaker 3 (08:51):
I mean it was I can't really remember because it
was all and I'm passage, no, no, no, but it was.
I mean it was expensive. I mean that whole week
trip was thirteen grand.
Speaker 2 (09:08):
Disney World one day park can be up to one
hundred and eighty nine dollars per person, damn.
Speaker 6 (09:15):
And that's that's like adult pricing. I'm sure that's not
children pricing. I'm sure children pricing is more reasonable, like
eighty five.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
Don't it is? For everyone? Really? Yes, all the more
reason for me not to go. But even what you
just described, right Disney, I'm paying for Disney, right, Dollywroad,
I'm paying for what Dollywood?
Speaker 6 (09:36):
Dollywood.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
But that's not even close.
Speaker 6 (09:38):
No, No, there's there's no comparison. Of course, Disney is
the massive one in this one. But you know, for
for what it is, you're getting theme You're getting roller
coasters and standard theme park rides. You're getting water slides
along with it, you know, and a good old country feel. Yeah,
but so what that that isn't Disney. I can justify
(10:02):
the expense for Disney. I'm gonna see characters. I'm gonna
see resemblance of movies. Okay, well, I'm gonna be enveloped
into like all the things I grew up with.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
My kids have grown up with. The mystique is there Dollywood?
What nine to five? Probably not even not even that?
Speaker 3 (10:19):
Right?
Speaker 2 (10:19):
All right, well, then.
Speaker 6 (10:20):
Let's take a look at six Flags. This is six
flags in Arlington. I would say it go like Disneyland
six flags and certain six flags, but everything else is
underneath it.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
Yeah, and six flags you get like Warner Brothers involvement,
So you see some of the Warner Brothers brand enveloped
in absolutely all Right, here we go.
Speaker 6 (10:40):
Daily tickets. Okay, so from where it's at here it's
looking at if you bring a coke, can get in
for thirty five dollars. Yeah, they've already got that deal
going on. Military discounts as well. Those are just the
daily tickets. You're not really helping me any at all whatsoever.
Give me some numbers. It's like Sun and seven. I
(11:03):
don't can now compare that to Dollywood. I don't think
that's that's a way better deal. Yeah, when I mean,
you're really gonna have sixty nine dollars and I got
to go to Knoxville to go to Dollywood. This is
just down in in Dallas Knoxville. Is you're You're still
an hour away from Dollywood. And listen, I'm a pro Dolly,
I get it. This is what I wanted to talk about.
(11:25):
But like, to me, the six Flag makes more sense. Yeah,
you're probably right because it is a bigger name, Like
I said, it would be Disney and then six Flags,
and you're getting more options and da da da da
da da da flys. I mean it's Hollywood.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
One day access to six Flags thirty five bucks just
to get in daily ticket starting online thirty five bucks.
Speaker 6 (11:48):
Application taxes and fees are journal sure.
Speaker 2 (11:53):
That feels like a way better deal? Yeah, you probably,
and then bring a friend for twenty five bucks.
Speaker 6 (11:59):
All these add on though, that's where they get you.
It's thirty five dollars to get in, But if you
want anything else, the twenty twenty five Thrill Seecret Bundle
sixty five dollars. The twenty twenty five Meal, Snack and
Drink Bundle sixty bucks. Yeah, let's talk about that.
Speaker 2 (12:12):
It includes admission, one meal, one snack, and one drink. No,
I'm not paying sixty bucks for one meal, one snack
in one drink f all that one fountain beverage of
choice once. What does a snack is popcorn? A snack?
Speaker 6 (12:29):
Probably?
Speaker 2 (12:30):
Yeah? And what's a meal? Is that hot dog or
some of your chicken chicken nug nuts?
Speaker 6 (12:34):
Exactly more than likely? Uh huh uh. Twenty twenty five
Gold Pass pays for itself in less than two visits.
Speaker 2 (12:45):
Enjoy free parking, discounts and more with your Gold Pass
unlimited visits. Say that's a season pass. Yeah, that's still
a great deal. Yeah if you go more than once.
Speaker 6 (12:55):
Dude.
Speaker 2 (12:56):
If as someone who has bought season passes for things,
I've totally been like, because we've got them for the aquarium.
Especially if you go one time and then you buy
a season pass. When you go for the first time,
all you do is go one more time, right in
a year.
Speaker 6 (13:10):
And that wouldn't be bad if you lived in Dallas
or that area. You know, driving from Tulsa to Dallas
at least minimum twice this summer, Okay, can be done.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
But it's three times a year, dude, it's eight hours
round trip. It isn't a kick in the balls, right,
It's not that bad. But still Yeah.
Speaker 3 (13:30):
Have you ever been to Cedar Point.
Speaker 6 (13:33):
No, that's up in Ohio and it's a home of
the world's tallest at least at one time. The test
roller coaster is like four huners and something feet And
I've always wanted to go.
Speaker 3 (13:42):
Same. My cousins used to go every single year.
Speaker 6 (13:45):
I think it's crazy you haven't been.
Speaker 3 (13:46):
Yeah, my cousins would go every year, and I always
wanted them to invite me, and they never would. I've
seen you do it, yeah, yeah, I'm like, oh, well
maybe next year, maybe next year, next year. Never yeah,
but they just they have a new one there this year,
a new roller coaster, and it looks like you it
doesn't connect, and then at the last second when the
(14:09):
ride takes off, it connects. The rest of the track
comes out.
Speaker 2 (14:12):
I'm good, I know.
Speaker 3 (14:14):
It looks terrifying.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
I can't do roller coasters anymore. I used to love
them and write them all the time. Really yeah, but
now I can't. I'll pass out.
Speaker 6 (14:21):
I don't know what it is. It's just too much pressure.
Speaker 2 (14:23):
Maybe yes, on age, I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 6 (14:25):
Yeah, I'm always the one because I love roller coasters,
and anytime there were kids involved, kids want to go on.
Yeah you know, I'm like, all right, I'll ride with you.
I got no problem with it. And it is so
much fun to watch those kids freak out over what
I feel is just the tiniest little little things.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
So many text in said, I think the appeal to
Dollywood is the area it is in is a vacation destination,
where Dallas isn't necessarily the same. Yes it is. Dallas
is a vacation destination. It's like the fifth biggest city
in America. There's plenty of things to do, Alice, What
is there to do with Knoxville? Oh wait, yeah, google it,
(15:09):
Google it. I'm sure the Knoxville Board of Tourism, the mountains,
Corbyn the mountains, uh huh.
Speaker 6 (15:16):
A lot of places have mountains.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
Fishing, Sure, Dallas has fishing, great fishing they got great awesome,
Like you can't say that sentence right because they have
awesome lakes.
Speaker 6 (15:31):
Well you've got uh, yeah, you've got uh the Knoxville
after Dark ghost tours. You can go the Knoxville Zoo,
the World's Fair Park. You also have the Sun's Sphere,
a giant ball in the sky that will bake you
like an ant Wow.
Speaker 2 (15:51):
The Women's Basketball Hall of Fame. Holy cow.
Speaker 6 (15:55):
Yeah sure, yeah, yeah this.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
So I looked up the top attractions in and around Knoxville.
The sun Sphere and worlds Fair Park, the Jam's Nature Center,
the Knoxville Sue Market Square in Gay Street, the Knoxville Museum.
Speaker 6 (16:19):
I'm sorry, none of this sounds awesome, but you know what,
I bet you you don't have many lines to wait in,
and if you do, it's not going to be that long,
not like Disney, where you pay just to stand.
Speaker 3 (16:32):
In line, or you pay more for an express.
Speaker 6 (16:36):
Pass just to stand in line, because everybody's getting the
express pack right right.
Speaker 2 (16:42):
Dallas Reunion Tower, which is the circle Globe thing.
Speaker 6 (16:47):
They can go to the top of.
Speaker 2 (16:49):
Okay, yeah, the sixth floor museum at Daily Plaza.
Speaker 6 (16:53):
Oh yes see, we're a president was assassinating.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
Yes, it's a big deal to stand on the circle
where his brain's got bladdered out. It's a wild place
to visit. Man, I did it while I was Yeah,
just you have to.
Speaker 6 (17:05):
You have to. Yeah, it's wild to do that.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
It's so crazy you do that. You go to when
you go to DC and you go to Ford's Theater
and you're like, here's where the president got shot in
the face.
Speaker 6 (17:17):
You're like, this is so weird.
Speaker 2 (17:19):
Yeah, you're like, oh, yeah, I visited Daily Plaza, Like
it's crazy to buy a shirt anyway. The Dallas Zoo
well known zoo, the Dallas Botanical Dallas World Aquarium, the Pero.
Speaker 6 (17:33):
Museum of Nature and Science.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
Yeah yeah, uh, the the art and the Sheer Sculpture
Center at and T Stadium. There's a lot of things
that are in Dallas that make it a destination. Yeah,
a vacation tourist destination.
Speaker 6 (17:52):
I'm sure there's some people that don't want to deal
with all those people, you know, there's a lot of sure.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
Of course, traffic does, of course, But to make the
broad statement that the appeal of Dollywood is the destination
of the rights and Dallas is not is a ludicrous
thing to say. Yeah, I'd put Dollywood as in like
great for the local population. It's a good little theme
park that's close, you get a lot done.
Speaker 6 (18:16):
You know, it's got Dolly's name attached to it. You're
probably right. I don't see a lot of Griswold's traveling
from California to Knoxville, Tennessee for Dollywood. But the people
in Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi in that general area.
Speaker 3 (18:33):
Now I could see if you were a huge Dolly
Parton fan, you might.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
Yeah, you know he said that it's not it's not
in Knoxville. It's gotten. This looks to me like it's
outside Knoxville.
Speaker 6 (18:45):
That's probably the biggest city next to it. That's why,
you know, if there's a theme park in a Waso,
they wouldn't be like.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
Come visit six park six flags in a Watso.
Speaker 6 (18:53):
It'd be six flags over Tulsa or Oklahoma, which would
be awesome if they put six flags over a Watsaw. Yeah, okay,
I listen.
Speaker 2 (19:04):
I'm sure there are people that are country fans and
giant Dolly fans like we gotta go and would feel
that way.
Speaker 6 (19:09):
And I get it. I'm not dogging on Dollywood.
Speaker 2 (19:12):
I'm just saying the price feels wild, Yeah, compared to
well established I'm gonna argue you probably have a better
experience going to six.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Flags or silver Dollar City.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
Maybe even silver I think that's a great comparison. I
think silver You got to compare silver Dollar City to Dollywood. Okay,
because silver Dollar City is in Branson, I would argue
that is a destination. There's a ton of tourist stuff
to do there, like see the Titan nick right right, yakoff.
Speaker 6 (19:46):
Smearing off.
Speaker 2 (19:48):
I'm just saying, like, you know, you might not be
your thing, but it is a destination for sure.
Speaker 6 (19:54):
Yeah, you can't get the traveling bald knobbers in Dollywood. Now, Nope.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
I don't even know, like silver dollars. I don't even
know what the current prices for silver Dollar City. And
we go up there and we go into Arkansas and
get like an Airbnb and hangout because Arkansas is gorgeous.
Ninety dollars to get into silver Dollar City.
Speaker 6 (20:19):
So it's comparable, maybe a little bit cheaper.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
Where's Dollywood and where's Worlds of Fun?
Speaker 6 (20:24):
Kansas City?
Speaker 3 (20:25):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (20:27):
That might be no, Okay, I have one in Island too.
It's called Adventureland.
Speaker 6 (20:34):
I think we had one of those around here at
one point in time. I could be wrong, and Adventureland
there was a low rent theme park, liverty Land maybe
something like that. I don't know it was. It was
a long time ago. My uncle was like, I wanted
to do gim We never went, of course, but yeah, I
forget the name of it. It was around here though
(20:55):
as well. It wasn't bells. I've never heard you speak
of your ownuncle. Oh, well, I've got a couple of them.
Oh I've only gotten well. So I had an uncle
on my mom's side, and he died when I was thirteen.
He died on his daughter's birthday. Car car accident. Yeah,
that's talk about trouble, right. And the fun thing is
(21:16):
is we had a Fourth of July party at the house.
I went to go stay with my cousin, different cousin,
and we passed, uh, this car that had rolled over
and landed in the ditch and we're like, oh, that sucks.
And come to find out the next morning it was
my uncle Bill's car that we had. Whoah, my gosh.
So then what happened to her? The daughter did she like,
(21:36):
she's still good.
Speaker 2 (21:37):
She didn't.
Speaker 6 (21:39):
No, she's grown up now and it's got kids of
her own, seems to be making it all right.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
That's rough.
Speaker 6 (21:44):
Yeah, yeah, uh so that was the only uncle I
had on my mom's side, and then my dad's side.
I've got a couple of them. Richard died I think
before my folks were together, or was a junior. Richard
died in jail, died in prison. Junior died well before that.
My uncle Leddie was the one I was talking about.
(22:04):
And uh and when my dad died, I was like, hey, Eddie,
you know your brother's dead. You might want to come
up funerals. Da da da da. He's in Louisiana's like, sorry,
we can't make it. And I was like, well, that's
pretty blame. You can't even show up to your own
brother's funeral. Get the hell out of here. I mean,
I can understand both sides of the coin. Yeah, sure,
you know, I got work to do, got stuff going on,
(22:26):
but I got a trip plan to sit to Dollywood.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
You can't. You've already put in your time off for that.
You can't now do this right right. It's called them broadcasting.
That's called closing the circle. It's time to take a break.
Tickets to the Tody's We're gonna give away Tulsa's Morning.
Speaker 6 (22:46):
Show, The Big Man Boarding Show.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
The assault continues the next thirty.
Speaker 6 (22:50):
Seven The new news Quichies. It's time for newsquakies, World news,
local news, news that just makes you say, what the
Here's Corbyn Gimbean Lindsay with what's going on news quickies
from The Big Man Morning Show. In ninety seven, five.
Speaker 3 (23:09):
Man breaks into stranger's home to avoid angry wife, cooks
and bathes. This happened down in Davenport, Florida, where the
Poka County Deputies responded to a call on June ninth,
when a neighbor noticed lights unexpectedly on in a rental property.
When officers arrived, they discovered forty four year old Joel
(23:33):
Charles inside the home. Now, according to the arrest affid, David,
Charles was found cooking and had just drawn a bath
for himself. Charles allegedly told deputies that he had been
using the homes water and electricity without permission. He reportedly
stayed at the residence for four days to avoid fighting
(23:54):
with his wife. Now he's facing charges of unarmed burglary,
and petite theft. According to the arrest affidavit, police said
that when they entered the residence, the stove was on,
the lights were going, and a cell phone was plugged
into a wall outlet. Officer of the Pope County Sheriff's
Office said, it's one of those things where you just
(24:14):
have to grin and bear it. On June fifteenth, the
Sheriff's office announced the arrest in a Facebook post filled
with references to Goldilocks and the Three Bears. The posts
featured baar puns, jokes about bath temperature, and a hashtag
if Joel's convicted, he will spend time behind the guilty
(24:35):
locks and the three bars.
Speaker 2 (24:38):
Yeah, it's not a good reference at all. No, Goldilocks
didn't take a bath.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
No, they were assuming that the bath water was just right.
Despite the humor, the post also made it clear that
Charles allegedly admitted to breaking in. Along with the official charges,
he is being held on a ten thousand dollars bond
for burglary and two hundred fifty dollars bond for theft.
Authorities confirmed he has no prior theft arrests and he
(25:05):
remains in custody as the case proceeds.
Speaker 6 (25:08):
A couple of things.
Speaker 2 (25:09):
One, some police departments are good at this m being
like silly. Yes, a lot of them are not, No,
but they think they should be because. And then the
other thing is we read a lot of stories where
people break into homes and take baths.
Speaker 6 (25:25):
Yeah, yeah, I can imagine. Yes, a vagrants a homeless person.
I can totally see that, right. You know, I have
not showered in six months and I need a math.
And this place has everything I named scot food, so
I can see that random person to avoid his angry
old lady. Right, that's a little different.
Speaker 3 (25:46):
And it'd be one thing. I mean, it's a Renald
Property'd be one thing if the guy knew the owners
and were like, hey listen, me and my wife just
got into it. Do you mind if I go stay?
Speaker 2 (25:56):
What if I at your place?
Speaker 3 (25:58):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (25:58):
Well, of course that's not breaking, right, come.
Speaker 3 (26:02):
On, man, Maybe jail just seemed better than an argument
with the wife.
Speaker 6 (26:08):
It's possible. Woman found to have fentanyl and syringes hidden
in her.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
Special spot, the box.
Speaker 6 (26:19):
Yes, yeah, a box. Of course. There's this gal. Her
name's Jess Caarino. She gets pulled over by police right,
because she's got mismatched tags on her vehicle. She has.
She's driving a Chevy pickup truck and the tag that
is on her truck is actually registered to a Ford car,
(26:39):
so the cops see that. They initially see that her
seat belt was dangling. She didn't have one on, so
they pull her over for that. Run the plates. That's
not right, Okay, this is fun. They get up and
they talk to the woman and they questioned her. She
admits that, you know. They're like, hey, can we get
your driver's license? Well, I don't have a license. I've
got a court date coming up because it's suspended. Okay,
(27:01):
Strike one, Strike two, Strike three, just keeps getting better
for old jests here. So they go ahead and they
search her down because you know, they're taking her to jail,
and they are like, hey, if there are any kind
of contraband found on or inside your person, that's going
to be an extra charge when you get to jail.
We're fine, it's fine, I'm good. When they get to
(27:25):
the jail, they start doing some deeper searching and that's
when they found a black sock that had been stashed
in her special spot, and inside said black sock was
some capped syringes and some fentanyl. She says that she
forgot all about it, but then later admitted that she
(27:46):
was scared to mention it because she didn't want to
get sick. And at first I'm like, what the hell
kind of excuses that I don't want to get sick?
And then it hit me, she's an addict, doesn't want
to go through DTS while in jail. That's what she
meant by g sick A sock in your cooter, though,
come on.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
No kidding out out. Yeah, I'm sure he's a nice guy.
Speaker 6 (28:10):
Nasty by the way, it didn't say it was a
brand new shresh out of the package sock, and I'm
sure sure as an addict it wasn't the cleanest, probably
hadn't been washed in a while.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
I mean, maybe you can be an addict and also
very clean.
Speaker 6 (28:26):
That is true. Yes, it'll make you clean your entire
house in a day.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
Nearly one hundred and fifty people jabbed with needles at festival.
Speaker 6 (28:34):
Oh God.
Speaker 2 (28:35):
This happened in false a dozen people who were detained
after allegedly stab stabbing nearly one hundred and fifty people
with syringes at a nationwide street festival over the weekend.
It happened in several cities across the country as people
were out and about enjoying music and festivities. No word
on what was in the syringes. Some people believe it
was the date rape drug. Some people say it was math.
(28:58):
Some people say it was some sort of like viral
sickness thing. Many people, including children, reported feeling sick after
the jabs. Authority say they are carrying out toxicology reports.
Speaker 6 (29:11):
Yeah, that's the only way to find out what was
in it. Ask the people and then test them or whatever. Sure,
I feel like, oh, yeah, I got jabbed, and then
you know, you're fine, going on about your day or whatever,
and then you get questioned about it, and then I
think the mental part kicks in and that's where you
start feeling, oh yeah, maybe I do feel a little
sick from that.
Speaker 3 (29:29):
How scary.
Speaker 2 (29:30):
I think so too.
Speaker 6 (29:30):
Absolutely. I think you would notice. I would.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
I would think you would get you would notice getting
pricked by a syringe.
Speaker 6 (29:37):
Yeah, I hope, so, I would hope. So they're not dull,
So I.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
Would think the moment it because you gotta go through
the genes, I would I don't know. Where they're doing
it right, if it's in their leg, like taking the
testosterone replacement therapy through the Low T Center, I end
up having to stick myself in my my thigh.
Speaker 6 (30:00):
Yes, and it goes in pretty smoothly. There's not like
it's not like, oh God, damn, I've been stabbed, you know,
So it goes in pretty smooth. You really don't feel
my child? Yes, true, true, I've never had an unexpected.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
Right the next dosage, bring it in and I'll just
when you're not expecting.
Speaker 6 (30:21):
Yeah, right, but we'll see you're gonna hi yami. But
then you got to hit the plunger. I guess, I
mean maybe somebody could do that. I did fertility treating
on my wife for like a year and a half.
Speaker 2 (30:31):
Ro I got this.
Speaker 6 (30:32):
I think. I just think that, you know, it's a
lot of work, and you know, because if you're going
to inject something into somebody, you gotta get them with
the needle first and plunge all at the same time.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
Yeah. So yeah, Liam Neesen makes it look like it's
easy for real, right, And even if.
Speaker 3 (30:49):
They're just walking around sticking people with the needles, not
necessarily plunging them, you.
Speaker 6 (30:54):
Would still get whatever's in there, right.
Speaker 3 (30:56):
Exactly, And maybe some people think, oh, did I just
get stung? You know, did I just get sung by
a b or whatever? Yeah, they might not think of
it as a needle.
Speaker 6 (31:05):
And people don't love that cross contamination in needles, right, No,
because I'm sure whoever's jabbing people is not replacing it
with a fresh needle.
Speaker 2 (31:13):
Yeah, I don't love I don't think it's the date
rape drug.
Speaker 6 (31:16):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (31:16):
That doesn't make much sense to me unless you're just
being a troll. I don't see the benefit of doing
one hundred doing that two hundred and fifty people. True,
you could just do it to want find the right suspect,
do it to one and then linger. Yeah, so what would.
Speaker 6 (31:33):
Would I mean to inject somebody with AIDS, Like, let's
say you're a patient.
Speaker 2 (31:38):
The only thing that I just think saying it was
the date rape drug and then saying it was some
sort of infectious disease is not equal, right, I don't.
I think if you're trying to cause mass hysteria, which
would what being a terrorist would be, then you're not
using MDA, right, Like you're gonna do something that's going
(31:59):
to make people sick in fear. Not that people wouldn't
be in fear of the date rape drug. It just
feels like the motive is different.
Speaker 6 (32:05):
Right, right. And I don't see a bunch of meth
heads coming off of their dope just to inject other
people for fine, not one hundred and fifty doses.
Speaker 2 (32:13):
No, maybe one to be like get out of here, right,
but not one hundred and fifty doses.
Speaker 6 (32:19):
No, that's just somebody going around being a dick.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
It feels like it feels like this may be a
little more terroristic in nature. Maybe not like nine to
eleven what you think, right, but of an individual can
be terroristic right by just causing mayhem?
Speaker 6 (32:37):
Yeah, all right?
Speaker 2 (32:39):
All these stories are on our Facebook page at facebook
dot com slash BMMS six.
Speaker 6 (32:42):
Nine The Big Med Morning Show returns next Tulsa's Morning
Show ninety seven five KMOD, Good Morning Lindsay.
Speaker 3 (32:51):
Good morning Corbyn. At around nine o'clock this morning, The
Thunder will be hosting a little bit of a a
pre parade ceremony and it will be available to watch
live on their Thunder official YouTube channel. The parade today
is going to be approximately ninety minutes long.
Speaker 6 (33:12):
Yeah, but stay with us listen to us. Don't go
watch that for real man, Good morning, gim be well,
Good morning Corbin. So Ronckklaholma is getting closer Labor Day
weekend prior USA all kinds of first timers like Tom
Morello and Manson and Cooper. You can sign up right
now to win tickets to Roncklaholmer. Why pay for him
if you don't have to, Just hit up the contest
(33:33):
page at the website at the Rocks kmod dot com.
Patrick Woggs got a Woggs dog.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
He got qualified for kmod's fifty for fifty celebrating fifty.
Speaker 6 (33:42):
Years of Millerts.
Speaker 2 (33:43):
We're gonna give away fifty pairs of concert tickets to
one lucky listener, but you got to get qualified exclusively
with us. So make sure you're listening for that cue
every hour with us to get qualified for kmod's fifty
for fifty brought to you by Miller Lyte and ninety
seven to five KMOD. So we were talking about all
partner earlier and she announced she's doing a residency, and
that got me thinking about the acts that we would.
Speaker 6 (34:06):
Like to see do a residency.
Speaker 2 (34:08):
Okay, right, because of course we all know like Sinatra
and Diana Ross and all those older legends have performed.
Celine Dion, we know Brittany Spears, Adele, Mariah Carey, Janet
did it, Kelly Clarkson, New Kids on the Block. The
(34:30):
Eagles are wrapping up their residency, and there have been
some others. Molly Cruz getting ready to do one, right,
Sammy Hagar has done it, of course, Shania Twain. Who's
somebody we want to see. Who's an act you would
like to see? Because I saw one and I was like, yes,
I would love to see them. I would They would
(34:51):
never do it, but this they could do it where
they don't have to be trapped on a tour bus
and deal with the turmoil that happens, and that would
be rage. I would love to see rage against the machine.
It feels a little not in line with them.
Speaker 6 (35:06):
But they sold out once they started making record deals.
Speaker 2 (35:11):
Yeah, but there's a little bit you got to pander
to it a little bit, and they made a record.
They just wanted to be a band and get their
message out. Sometimes you got to do that to get
the message.
Speaker 6 (35:20):
Out right right right. I think a residency for them
would be the ultimate sellout for them along with Green
Day two. Green Day could do it.
Speaker 2 (35:29):
I think Green Day's already sold out. They have their
own coffee, they have a Broadway show. Yeah. I've never
been somebody who bites on the sellout thing. You capitalize
on your brand, right, and you get into that business
to make money. Everyone famous and to make a boatloads
of money.
Speaker 6 (35:49):
That's what everybody does.
Speaker 2 (35:50):
Yes, So they're not a big sellout factor for me,
But I see the point.
Speaker 6 (35:54):
I have Metallica, Metallica doing a residency. They're touring worldwide still, but.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
They don't have to the only reason I like the
Metallica angle is the same reason I would like a
Taylor Swift angle, and that is they do pretty elaborate setups,
you know, and you could really do a pretty elaborate
setup in Vegas.
Speaker 6 (36:17):
Because you're not tearing it down every night, right.
Speaker 3 (36:19):
Yeah. In sync boy bands I think I don't. I
wouldn't have to see them, but I think that there
are plenty of women that would want to go to
that who grew up with you know, the justin Timberlakes. Yeah,
who are big enough fans of the rest of the
guys that would love to see them reunite.
Speaker 6 (36:42):
What does it take for an artist to have a residency,
because it seems like a lot of them are like
older artists. The Eagles, for one, is one that comes
to mind. It's like, listen, we've been around for a while,
we really don't want a tour anymore. Let's just go
ahead and we'll do this. How long he's like three
month stint in Vegas or whatever. Let's do that and
(37:03):
make a bunch of money that way.
Speaker 2 (37:04):
So let's look at the people that have done it.
See if we can't figure that out. Right, Adele is
probably a very modern reference, and you would go, why
would Adele get a residency? Because she's a worldwide stadium
sellout artist.
Speaker 6 (37:18):
Okay, so we're looking at being able to sell out.
You have to be massive and consistently. Yes, like that, Okay, yes,
Lady Gaga another one.
Speaker 2 (37:30):
Okay, I know you all don't want to like this one,
but pit Bull, he puts on a phenomenal show. Right.
Britney Spears at the time, there was a demand for
her to come back. There was some issues with her
legality things, and that made sense for her to do that.
Speaker 6 (37:48):
She could still do shows.
Speaker 2 (37:50):
Janet Jackson might be the one you're like, eh, Kelly Clarkson,
you might go eh, but consistent, solid show, entertaining you
may not get people going. Like Lindsay's point within Sync,
go we got to travel to Vegas to see Kelly Clarkson. Okay, right,
but if you're in Vegas looking for something to do,
you might see a Kelly Clarkson show.
Speaker 6 (38:11):
And by the way, she hasn't done that.
Speaker 2 (38:12):
I know she still does it, but it looks it
looks like it's an abbreviated kind of setup.
Speaker 6 (38:18):
It isn't like a massive show.
Speaker 2 (38:20):
The Eagles should be easy to explain, right, Dolly Parton
is on there, Lionel Ritchie has done it.
Speaker 6 (38:27):
Shania Twain The Killers you can go. Well, that don't
make much since.
Speaker 2 (38:30):
The Killers, as much as to your chagrin, they are
a massive band worldwide appeal. Lenny Kravitz Tears for Fears,
Backstreet Boys, Garth of course, Carrie Underwood, Blake, Shelton Crewe.
Speaker 6 (38:47):
Right right, Hagar. So as a stands, we're looking at
bands with massive or entertainers with massive names, massive appeal.
Speaker 3 (38:56):
Elton John.
Speaker 6 (38:58):
Yeah, he absolutely could if he wanted to.
Speaker 2 (39:01):
I think he wouldn't, though, one because he's losing his vision,
but also because it's too close to Liberaci.
Speaker 6 (39:09):
Okay, and if you're trying to break away from that,
I don't want to be compared to I could see that.
Speaker 2 (39:15):
I think I don't compare him to that. I think
it's too easy to draw a line.
Speaker 6 (39:18):
Yeah, A lot of people would go, what about Kiss?
Has Kiss done a residency? There's been talks of them
doing a residency. Okay.
Speaker 2 (39:25):
I think they've tried to put one together because I
could see that.
Speaker 6 (39:29):
I think they have the cloud, they have the name
that could possibly pull it off. Yeah, and I think
that's a perfect spot for them. Yeah, except.
Speaker 2 (39:43):
They're old. And I'm not trying to be mean. I'm
just saying twenty years ago, Jane was.
Speaker 6 (39:51):
Old, right, ye, right.
Speaker 2 (39:52):
And now when you see him now, when he does
the tongue thing and interviews and whatever, you're like, oh, no,
it's just an old man. It's really dry and it's
got stuff in the corner. It just feels weird now.
It was weird before, but now you're just like, Okay.
Or he talks about how many people he's banged, You're like, ah,
(40:13):
this just doesn't land the right way.
Speaker 6 (40:16):
Well, I mean, I get what you're saying with with
they old, but the eagles are old.
Speaker 2 (40:21):
But the eagles ain't out there with the aura of
I've slept with ridiculous number of women.
Speaker 6 (40:27):
And also look at my split tongue. That is true,
that is true, which his.
Speaker 2 (40:31):
Tongue isn't split. So here's how about how about the
chili peppers? I think that makes sense.
Speaker 6 (40:37):
Yeah, the Foo maybe for sure, the Foo. Tool is
on this list. Ah.
Speaker 2 (40:46):
I think if you do a come watches on the
beach thing, you can do this, okay, which is what
Tool did recently down and wasn't the Dominican or something.
Speaker 6 (40:57):
I think that then you can do a residence I
could get down on a Tool show at the Sphere.
That would be amazing just for the visuals alone. I
think that would be awesome.
Speaker 3 (41:10):
What about Marilyn Manson?
Speaker 6 (41:11):
No, yeah, he's too he's not enough appeal, big enough name,
people know who he is. Yeah, but can you sell
out shows every night consistently for a couple of months Manson?
Speaker 2 (41:26):
Do guests in Vegas? Like, if you're in Vegas, going,
what show do you want to see?
Speaker 6 (41:31):
Do you go? Let's go see Manson? Right?
Speaker 2 (41:34):
I don't think I don't think so. You might go, man,
let's go to see the Eagles in at the Sphere.
You don't even have to be an Eagles fan. Yeah,
let's go see that. I don't know if you would
do that with Manson. No, Weezer's on this list. I
don't know if I love that. I think they're a
big ban, but I don't know if it's enough for
(41:55):
a residency.
Speaker 6 (41:56):
I'm not going to travel to Vegas just to see Weezer.
Speaker 2 (41:59):
Taylor Swift to mention that one hundred percent she could
do a residency in Vegas. Beyonce, Beyonce, one hundred percent
she could do justin Timberlake. I think could do a
Vegas residency.
Speaker 6 (42:11):
The Beabes could probably get away with one. I think
he could. Yes, Bruno Mars Okay, oh.
Speaker 3 (42:19):
Yeah he could, for sure, he's big enough.
Speaker 2 (42:24):
I have a Bruno Mars Vegas story was right as
he was about to get big. I was in Vegas
two c tool at the hard Rock in Vegas, and
Bruno Mars was running around like he was still kind
of unnoticeable, like people knew who he was, but it wasn't.
Speaker 6 (42:40):
Like he is now.
Speaker 2 (42:41):
And we saw him in the casino, running around with
no entourage and all that, and that next day he
got arrested for cocaine at the hard Rock Country Chris Stapleton, Yeah,
for sure. Yeah, Tyler Childress for Okay, I don't think
(43:02):
he would do it. I don't think that's his mom.
Oh but not yet anyway. No, I mean I don't
think that's like his. It feels a little too corporate
e sell out.
Speaker 6 (43:10):
Eh okay for him. Okay, now I'm not feeling it.
I mean, Tyler Chielders is all right. But and that's
just my opinion. Some people go apst crazy over him.
He's just all right. Turnpike Troubadours I think could do it. Yeah,
people go nuts for him. If you want to put
together the whole red dirt package, Turnpike Ragweed. They could
(43:32):
definitely pull off a residency in Vegas. But you're probably right,
just the Troubadours themselves. But that's just for a round here.
Is that nationwide though? I think? So? Okay? I mean
I know they pulled tributors, yes, they you know, for
the Boys of Oklahoma concert and Still Water. There was
people coming from all over the country, hell, all over
the world. Yeah, I know, just to see this show.
(43:54):
So okay, okay, I can see it.
Speaker 2 (43:57):
You can make an argument that that show missed the
mark by not doing.
Speaker 6 (44:01):
It at the sphere.
Speaker 2 (44:02):
Yeah, you're probably right, but they were smart to pay
the play of their roots.
Speaker 6 (44:06):
Absolutely sure.
Speaker 2 (44:09):
Morgan Wallen, I know he's massive.
Speaker 6 (44:15):
Women love him. Yeah, oh good, But he could. He
could pull it off. He could do it. He sells
out shows. Yeah. Cody Johnson, I don't think so.
Speaker 2 (44:26):
Casey Musgraves maybe I love Casey Musgraves, but she probably
could do a residency.
Speaker 6 (44:33):
She could, She's got enough talent behind her. Zach Bryan,
I think he could. He's so hot right now he was,
he's cooled off quiet, No dude, I want to say
within the last year.
Speaker 2 (44:47):
No dude, he's still selling out every venue he does.
Did you see He's in Ireland and he started playing
a song like it was halfway through a set and
he just left.
Speaker 6 (45:01):
Oh see, And that's why he probably couldn't get it.
Speaker 2 (45:05):
It's a joke.
Speaker 6 (45:08):
Irish goodbye.
Speaker 3 (45:09):
Oh yeah, that's funny.
Speaker 2 (45:14):
I don't think defense thought it was that funny.
Speaker 6 (45:17):
He probably went back in. Uh Drake Kendrick Lamar.
Speaker 3 (45:21):
Kendrick Lamar probably could.
Speaker 2 (45:23):
Drake all these I think all these artists could Eminem,
Travis Scott, post Malone for sure, pulling two different groups. Yeah,
you know who else would be a solid residency.
Speaker 6 (45:41):
Hoody slash Darius. I'm not hating that. I'm not hating
that at all.
Speaker 2 (45:46):
So you get Hoodie and then he does a second
set of just his country stuff or vice versa.
Speaker 6 (45:52):
Either way would work out.
Speaker 3 (45:53):
I don't know. I feel like people might leave after
Darius first.
Speaker 6 (45:59):
No, no, und.
Speaker 3 (46:03):
You might stay for a couple of songs. I like
him better as as Darius Rutger.
Speaker 6 (46:08):
Hooting The Blowfish was massive.
Speaker 3 (46:10):
It was, and I and I owned one of the
albums massive.
Speaker 6 (46:16):
Yeah, that's another one. Pulling in two different crowds, country crowd.
And then you've got you know, us older folks that
loved Hoodie and the Blowfish. Bruce Springsteen for sure, Yeah.
Speaker 3 (46:32):
Worldwide, hasn't he already?
Speaker 6 (46:34):
No? No, these are all ones that haven't you too.
Speaker 2 (46:38):
They did a Sphere residency, but not a Vegas residency,
so they did like it was like nine dates or
something like that. At the Sphere. Maybe you could argue
that's a residency, but it wasn't like a year's long
thing right the Stones, Oh yeah, yeah, they sure.
Speaker 6 (46:55):
People are still paying to go see those games.
Speaker 2 (46:57):
Yeah, I would maybe just to check the box, but
my expectation of it.
Speaker 6 (47:03):
Being a great show would not be high. Aerosmith ever
do a residency. I know they're not touring now because
but I feel like they could pull it up if
they haven't. Probably that'd be a good spot for them.
You know, you don't have to travel. You can go
to your room, Steve and you know, hang out with
your underage girlfriend and let your voice rest.
Speaker 2 (47:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (47:24):
I think Billy Joel is another one that could.
Speaker 2 (47:26):
I don't think I think he's done well he is now.
But Paul McCartney, Okay, I think that's a huge one
that would do massive numbers. Yeah, I think I think
I don't see him on this list. I feel like
Sting's done that, but maybe he hasn't do a Sting
slash Police, Yeah, right, for sure. I don't know why
(47:49):
Phil Collins can't do one.
Speaker 6 (47:51):
Well because he's old and decrepit right now.
Speaker 2 (47:54):
Yeah, but he needs the money, true statements, and he
could do the double thing.
Speaker 6 (47:58):
Yeah. I haven't seen any recent pictures of him, but
the last ones I saw of old Phil. He was
not looking good on your list.
Speaker 2 (48:06):
It was he has a Milton look to him because
his glasses are so big.
Speaker 6 (48:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (48:11):
And yeah, and his his ex wife messed him up. Yeah,
he because she sued him and wanted all his money.
And he's like, I'm just a drummer and a band.
Speaker 6 (48:24):
Right, No you're not. You're Phil Collins. Man. I want you,
Phil Collins.
Speaker 2 (48:29):
I want you to Phil Collins money. Give me that
nine king money.
Speaker 6 (48:36):
It was.
Speaker 3 (48:38):
It was? Was it Milan what it was?
Speaker 6 (48:46):
Yeah, give me some of that Tarzan money I remember from.
Speaker 2 (48:50):
My AC days, AC Radio days. We give away the
start the Tarzan soundtrack.
Speaker 6 (48:56):
Of course, on Phil's Instagram, they're all older pictures of
when he was looking for and young.
Speaker 2 (49:01):
Of course I got another reason on here.
Speaker 6 (49:02):
Come on, I want to see your old decrepit ass.
Oh he's performing in a wheelchair. Yeah, yeah, he has
to sit down and play anymore. Man.
Speaker 2 (49:10):
Oh dude, I'm gonna send you this image and so
you can, uh, you can decide for yourself.
Speaker 6 (49:17):
We'll see if this, if this works.
Speaker 2 (49:19):
He looks like he's he's about to like he looks
like he's got a drawl rag.
Speaker 6 (49:27):
Around his neck.
Speaker 3 (49:28):
He's wearing a diaper.
Speaker 6 (49:29):
Is he doing treatments?
Speaker 2 (49:30):
Oh? Man, that sucks.
Speaker 6 (49:33):
Eh ah, that sucks. Isn't his daughter on a famous show?
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (49:44):
Yeah, I think she's. I think she's on a show.
Is it Emily in Paris? Lily Collins?
Speaker 6 (49:53):
Oh? That I don't know. I think so, along with
a few other she was on the blind Side and.
Speaker 2 (50:04):
Uh right, she's the daughter. Yep, she's the daughter on.
Speaker 6 (50:09):
The blindside with Yes, yeah, how about that.
Speaker 2 (50:13):
Though it's only seventy four, yo.
Speaker 6 (50:17):
Only seventy four.
Speaker 2 (50:19):
That's young dude for the what he looks like.
Speaker 6 (50:22):
Yeah, yeah, he looks like he's be in his nineties.
But listen, rock and roll will do that to you, Maane, sure,
sure you put him?
Speaker 2 (50:34):
Uh, Paul Stanley, Randy Travis, Oh god.
Speaker 6 (50:42):
Right? Uh?
Speaker 2 (50:44):
Who else can we put on there? Mick Jagger? And
you tell me which one's the older one, right right?
Put them in age chronological order, and you would go, oh,
damn it, ah, damn do it right? All right, we
got to take a break. We got tickets to see
the Toties.
Speaker 6 (51:04):
When we come back.
Speaker 2 (51:05):
Tody's gonna be at the Canes Ballroom on August twenty seventh.
Get your tickets at Knees Ballroom dot com. Pick the
flick is the game? Current record is well.
Speaker 6 (51:13):
You and I are tied with seven and Lindsey has four.
Last week's Winter for the second week in a row, nobody.
What's how many weeks in a row do we go
before we retire the game?
Speaker 2 (51:27):
Five?
Speaker 6 (51:28):
I'm happy with that.
Speaker 2 (51:29):
If we go five weeks in.
Speaker 6 (51:30):
A row, no one wins. We gotta kill the game.
We gotta figure something out out. I like it.
Speaker 2 (51:34):
Eight three three four six, Oh kmo D Good morning,
you're on the air.
Speaker 6 (51:38):
What is your name, Marty?
Speaker 2 (51:41):
I'm sorry?
Speaker 6 (51:42):
What was your name?
Speaker 7 (51:44):
Marty?
Speaker 2 (51:44):
Marty? How are you today?
Speaker 6 (51:46):
Hey, good morning, I'm wonderful. How you got it? Good buddy?
Speaker 2 (51:49):
Look, you got your choice of all three Lindsay, Gimpy
or Corbyn. Who would you like to use to try
and win tickets to see the todies?
Speaker 6 (51:55):
Marty? All right, let's rote with Come on, Marty.
Speaker 2 (51:58):
Seconds are on the clock. Time starts after the first clue.
Speaker 6 (52:01):
Here we go. Okay, female country singer smoking hot. Even
if he loves me, I still feel ugly. Something that
effect he could be I could be laid for a
date that's fine, buddy, better on time? Oh I know
(52:22):
that one? Yes, okay.
Speaker 2 (52:26):
So what's the opposite of a lady.
Speaker 6 (52:32):
A man very gian? Yes, you got that right, man.
And if it's not yours, it's what if it belongs
to me, I would say that is what mine? Okay.
So that's the basics of the title of this song,
Man and Mine. Can you fill in the rest? Marty?
There you go.
Speaker 2 (52:52):
I don't practice blankie, Blankie.
Speaker 6 (52:54):
I ain't got no.
Speaker 2 (52:55):
Crystal ball, but I had a million dollars.
Speaker 6 (52:59):
And huh yes, okay. So you know the song Marty.
There there's a drink where it's like wine with fruit
in it. What's that called? Okay? It rhymes with that word.
But it's a religious practice in like voodoo cults.
Speaker 2 (53:23):
Time time time time time time time one is what
we got.
Speaker 6 (53:28):
Hang on the line, okay, all right, good morning, you're
on the air. What is your name? Amy?
Speaker 2 (53:36):
Amy?
Speaker 6 (53:36):
How are you today? Good?
Speaker 2 (53:39):
Thanks? Amy?
Speaker 6 (53:40):
Lindsay or Corbin?
Speaker 2 (53:41):
Are your choices?
Speaker 6 (53:45):
Lindsay?
Speaker 2 (53:45):
It is sixty seconds are starts after the first clue?
Are you ready?
Speaker 6 (53:51):
I'm ready? Here we go, all right.
Speaker 3 (53:53):
The Prince of Darkness saying this about an insane form
of transportation.
Speaker 2 (54:00):
All of the.
Speaker 6 (54:06):
Really worked out well together with you to.
Speaker 3 (54:09):
Yes, insane form of transportation, all of yes. Yes, Now
I lay me down to sleep. I pray the Lord
my soul to keep is in the song. Yes, uh huh.
You find this on the beach, not exit, but h yes,
(54:38):
this is when you find she has. She sings really throaty,
and she can get really high and low. And people
used to compare her to Whitney. She was in the
Mickey Mouse Club and no, no, no, no, she was younger.
(54:59):
She was like opposite of Britney Spears. Yeah, she kissed
Madonna on stage.
Speaker 6 (55:09):
Who has time, time, time doesn't matter.
Speaker 2 (55:11):
You got to win. Congratulations, Amy, you got to win.
You're getting those tickets to see the Toadys, who are
going to be at the King's Ballroom on August twenty seventh.
Hang on the line, so gimp and get your info. Okay, okay,
thank you, good job, Marty. I'm sorry one was not enough, buddy, Hey.
Speaker 6 (55:31):
That's quite all right. But the answer to that last
one was gone, Ria, Yes, gone riea later, dude.
Speaker 2 (55:39):
I was so hoping when you were doing Shanaia Twain
you would have said, this is the opposite of an
Audi with your belly button.
Speaker 6 (55:48):
Oh okay, you got to get them to say annie,
which kind of rhymes with annie. Yeah, yeah, that worked. Yeah,
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (55:57):
All right, let's see we got those.
Speaker 6 (56:00):
This is the one that she couldn't get gimpy. Yeah.
So this was a late nineties early two thousands female
pop star and the song is named after Aladdin was
in one of these instead of a lamp, you know,
or maybe I dream of Blank the old TV show Yo,
and she lived in what did she live where? I
(56:23):
don't think she kissed Madonna. Britney Spears kissed Madonna.
Speaker 3 (56:26):
I think they both did. They both did okay cool, yeah,
but they both sang like a virgin on MTV Music
Awards or whatever. And then this person did yeah they
both uh huh. They both her and Brittany both sang.
I think it was like a virgin. And then Madonna
came out and she kissed them both.
Speaker 2 (56:47):
On This is she sang The Voice. She was She
was on the TV show The Voice as a judge.
She's very tiny. She's come under scrutiny about her weight fluctuation.
Speaker 3 (56:59):
And yeah, she had a beef with Eminem for a
long time.
Speaker 2 (57:04):
I don't think that's true. Yeah, I think she may
think that she had a beef with Eminem. Yeah that
feels wild. Yeah, what was the beef?
Speaker 3 (57:17):
They talked about it, They talked crap about each other.
Speaker 2 (57:20):
Wow, yeah I know, yeah, wow yeah. All right the
one that Gimpie ended on.
Speaker 3 (57:27):
Oh yeah, I mean he was singing it and yeah,
he had all the right clues and I don't know
why he couldn't get it.
Speaker 2 (57:34):
We play this song on a daily Yeah.
Speaker 6 (57:38):
This when something is perfect.
Speaker 2 (57:40):
Brad Noel, one of the best lead singers of all time,
overdosed on a bus. They're getting ready to play the
X Games in Utah. I mean, I don't expect nobody
know that, but if you do, that's a pretty good
clue to narrow it down. I think the wine Italian
wine with fruit and sugar in it.
Speaker 6 (57:58):
Is a great clue.
Speaker 2 (58:00):
The guy that Saint Nick Okay shows up on Christmas.
His name is what Santa Okay? Yeah, yeah, sublime in
Santa Ria religious practice. All right, the record, Now, well,
we don't.
Speaker 6 (58:14):
Get to retire this game yet. Keeps you as seven,
keeps me with seven moves, lindsay to find.
Speaker 2 (58:19):
You're listening to the Big Man Morning Show. This is
Tulsa's Morning Show. Nine kmod Gimpi has in his four
x four Well Corbyn.
Speaker 6 (58:29):
It says here that the Israeli Prime Minister confirms the
seaspire with the Ron. Israel is confirming a c spire
with the Ron that President Trump revealed on social media yesterday.
At the same time, however, they're also now claiming that
its terms have already been violated and making the initial announcement.
(58:52):
Benjamin Netting Yahoo thanks to the US for its help
and going after Iran's nuclear facilities, and said the goal
of eliminating Iran's nuclear and ballistic missiles threat had been achieved.
Just Aura's Letta. Israel accused of Iran of launching missiles
that sent civilians scrambling into bomb shelters. That followed an
(59:13):
earlier vow from Netanyahu that Israel would respond forcefully if
the truce was violated. Lasteria food recall after death, That's
what it says.
Speaker 2 (59:28):
At least sixteen.
Speaker 6 (59:29):
People from thirteen states have been hospitalized and three people
have died from possible listeria contamination involving a chicken alfredo meal.
The CDC is warning about Fresh Realm chicken ol Fetacini
Alfredo meals sold at Walmart and Kroger stores across the US.
They have been removed from shelves, but if you have
(59:50):
them in your freezer, you should get rid of them.
Listeria poses serious health risks, especially in pregnant women, newborn's,
older adults, and the immunocompromise. That says here that Target
is not raising prices on school supplies, The retailer said
yesterday that it will also offer discounts for students and teachers.
(01:00:12):
This is all ahead of the company's annual Target Circle Week,
which offers deals on school supplies and electronics starting July sixth.
And then, lastly here, the Tulsa Dream Center is looking
for volunteers to mentor young people within the community. Following
the recent uptick in violence, The Tulsa Dream Center says
(01:00:33):
it's looking for mentors who can be a positive influence
on young people in the community. The Dream Center serves
kids and young adults from pre k to the age
twenty four. The community outreach programs helps with clothing and
food and education and recreation and housing. And if you
would like to volunteer as a mentor, go to dream
(01:00:53):
excuse me, Tulsa Dreamcenter dot ORGA. All right, we're doing
listener emails.
Speaker 2 (01:00:57):
You can always email us show at KMO dot com.
Speaker 6 (01:01:01):
Here's what's going to happen.
Speaker 2 (01:01:02):
I will read an email that was sent to us,
and then you guys can send texts answering what the
person should do, bmms and whatever that is to the
phone number eight two nine four five is where those
texts should go. This email says, hey, guys, I listened
to the show every morning, and I never thought I'd
be the guy emailing end, but here we are. I
remarried a little over a year ago. My wife is
(01:01:23):
amazing in a lot of ways, funny, driven, great with people.
But the problem is she and my fifteen year old
daughter don't click, and it's getting worse. They're polite when
I'm around, but the second I leave the room, it's
cold war vibes. My daughter says, my wife is fake
nice and always trying too hard. My wife says my
daughter is moody and rude. I'm caught in the middle.
(01:01:45):
I've tried talking to both of them separately, but it
always ends the same. Each one thinks the other is
the problem. I hate feeling like I have to choose
sides in my own house. Here's where I need the help.
Do I make my daughter spend more time with my
wife to force some kind of bond, or do I
give them space and just hope they figure it out?
I feel like whatever I do, someone ends up mad
(01:02:06):
at me. Just want peace. Not everything's the Brady bunch, man, No,
not everything's the Brady Bunch, even though that's I grew
up thinking that's how blended holmes must work, right, right,
everything's great, got a housekeeper.
Speaker 6 (01:02:22):
Right, fantastic guess And then you find out later on
that your dad's gay and he got AIDS, and well,
here we are now. I'm just saying, mom slept with
the oldest, right. Bet you jan didn't see that one
coming in?
Speaker 2 (01:02:35):
Okay? Yeah? Uh, having to deal with your new mom
or new dad.
Speaker 6 (01:02:44):
I can't imagine how tough that is. And he said
they remarried a year ago. Yeah, about a year ago,
maybe a little over. So this kid would have been
fourteen at the time. Ish thirteen fourteen? Yeah, and teenagers
are already moody as it is.
Speaker 2 (01:03:00):
Anyway, people too, yeah, yeah, people are also very moody.
Speaker 6 (01:03:06):
Where's the other mother in this situation. I wonder, you know,
like this, is this a weekend dad sort of thing,
like every other weekend, or is it, you know, full
time I live with dad, you know, and then I
just go see my ma every other weekend. I want
to know how that situation is because I think that
makes a huge difference.
Speaker 3 (01:03:26):
Yeah, is he a widow?
Speaker 6 (01:03:27):
Right? Right?
Speaker 3 (01:03:31):
Is mom is bio mom? Completely absent? Who knows? And
did they get along before they got married?
Speaker 6 (01:03:45):
She's fifteen. She is going to hate any parent figure.
Speaker 2 (01:03:48):
The text I came in, I love there's a meme
and it shows like some kid maybe thirteen fourteen, fifteen
girl and she's cheering and smiling, and then she the
camera like the dad's filming, and she sees that filming
and she just turns like into frowny face and then
like flips in the bird. It's so awesome. You're like, yeah, awesome.
(01:04:09):
Sounds like they're both cheating horse.
Speaker 6 (01:04:10):
Okay, settle down, always with the horse, you guys.
Speaker 2 (01:04:16):
Yeah, right, she's gonna hate any parental figure. Yeah, I
mean that is the cliche thing to fall into.
Speaker 3 (01:04:26):
Right, But in fifteen, her hormones are out of control
and she's going through her changes.
Speaker 6 (01:04:32):
And can I use that excuse?
Speaker 2 (01:04:35):
Like, like, when do I have to stop using that
excuse that her hormones are out of control?
Speaker 6 (01:04:41):
Well, I mean when she does right? Right?
Speaker 3 (01:04:43):
Right? I mean she's just she's growing, she's turning into
a woman.
Speaker 2 (01:04:49):
No, yeah, yeah, I'm just saying when can I because
if I say that to my wife, I'm probably gonna
get thrown some thrown out, right. So I'm just curious
from a woman's standpoint, when can I stop saying she's
got hormonal issues?
Speaker 3 (01:05:01):
Well, she can say it all she wants, so you
don't get to say.
Speaker 6 (01:05:04):
It right, that's the better questions. When can I say
that it's hormones and get away with it? Right now?
Speaker 2 (01:05:10):
I'm just saying you said that about the fifteen year old.
I'm saying, when can you stop saying that?
Speaker 6 (01:05:15):
Right? Right? Because the mom can be hormonal in Moody
as well?
Speaker 3 (01:05:20):
Man, Well we're always we always.
Speaker 6 (01:05:21):
Will everyone's hormonal in Moody.
Speaker 2 (01:05:25):
Yes, it's a tough one, all right. Just told tight
for three years. So when she graduates and moves out,
you'll be golden. Sure your new wife thinks your fifteen
year old daughter is moody. All fifteen year old girls
are moody. Don't force your new wife onto her. Let
it fall into place on its own, or maybe it
(01:05:45):
won't fall into place at all. Just don't force it.
Speaker 6 (01:05:49):
I was gonna say, forcing things usually works out pretty
well no matter what the situation is.
Speaker 2 (01:05:53):
Right, Hey, no, I don't want to have to check
my luggage. Right, Hey, No, I want you to stay.
I don't want you to stay. Hey, get in the car.
I was watching a great episode of Cops the other
day and the guy they were like, get in the car,
and they had him hooked and he was like, no,
I'm not getting in the car. Not getting in the car.
And they picked him up and like head first, feed
(01:06:13):
her in the air, and he's like he's like, okay,
I'll get the car.
Speaker 6 (01:06:18):
Yea, you are in the car.
Speaker 2 (01:06:22):
Uh, this isn't teenager step daughter, step mom, deal, this
is just teenage daughter. Pretty sure my thirteen year old
daughter hates me. Uh make him fist fight in the street.
Speaker 6 (01:06:36):
Yeah, you still have to.
Speaker 8 (01:06:39):
Cheer for somebody, do you, as the dead yes, side
you can cheer all you you can't help it, you know,
you never outwardly express your cheer when your daughter and
your wife are fighting in the street, you just keep
it to yourself.
Speaker 6 (01:06:54):
I mean, in a street fight, you got a cheer
for your daughter.
Speaker 3 (01:06:58):
Oh yeah, you.
Speaker 6 (01:07:00):
Got it here for your daughter. But yeah, but then
now you got your new wife, it's like, oh two years.
Speaker 2 (01:07:06):
Maybe as a dad of five daughters, yes, your fifteen
year old ta teenage daughter does have an attitude.
Speaker 6 (01:07:18):
Time heels.
Speaker 2 (01:07:18):
Let them work out, work it out another one reasonable answer.
Forcing them to try and form a bond is the
last thing you want to do. Being fifteen and dealing
with a new authority figure has to be rough. It
may be time to call in a professional brain wrangler
to get them to get along. Nuclear answer, time to
lock them in the house together while you go live
in a cave for a while. Things will sort themselves out.
(01:07:41):
Maybe you come back to a peaceful house. Maybe you
move to Mexico and start over.
Speaker 6 (01:07:47):
That's not a bad idea, I gotta be honest, not
very nuclear like. Right. I was expecting some sort of
desk scenario when I got fights in middle school. Right,
they would take both of us and put us both
in suspension and house suspension and sit right next to
each other. Now granted, me and this kid just got
done beating the hell out of each other, but by
(01:08:10):
the end of the week we were more friends than
we were enemies. Some baby, that's what they need to do.
Speaker 2 (01:08:17):
This next says, maybe you could just stop being an
idiot and realize you have a teenager. They don't like
to talk. Hell, they don't like to be happy period.
Another one, My stepdaughter hated me at first, but now,
six years later, loves me more than her real dad, So.
Speaker 6 (01:08:34):
Give it time.
Speaker 2 (01:08:35):
Nice little Hallmark ending there as a husband of two
wives consecutively, not concurrently, Thank you for clarifying, Yes, your
adult female wife does have an attitude. Fistfights always worked
two another one. Send them both to the boarding school,
(01:08:57):
completely separate texts. Send her to Thunder Academy and get
on with your life.
Speaker 3 (01:09:02):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (01:09:04):
Yeah, kind of like we used to do with people
with down Send them just send them to a hospital upstate.
Absolute make it someone else's problem. All Oh, yeah, I
do have a kid upstate.
Speaker 6 (01:09:16):
You are now the state's problem, darling.
Speaker 2 (01:09:19):
The equivalent to no, they're happy on a farm. For
when you have a dog that you don't want anymore,
you're like daddy took him to a farm.
Speaker 6 (01:09:28):
He's running free chasing goats.
Speaker 2 (01:09:30):
It's great.
Speaker 6 (01:09:30):
Really is just a back road with a bullet.
Speaker 2 (01:09:33):
Yeah, it's not even a back road.
Speaker 6 (01:09:36):
It's called the dump.
Speaker 2 (01:09:38):
Truth listener email from a guy who is remarried and
his fifteen year old daughter does not get along with
his new wife. They're polite when I'm around, he says,
but the second I leave the room, it's cold.
Speaker 6 (01:09:54):
War vibes.
Speaker 2 (01:09:55):
My daughter says, my wife is fake, nice and always
trying too hard. My wife Life says, my daughter is
moody and rude. I'm caught in the middle. I've tried
take talking to both of them separately, but it always
ends the same. Each one thinks the other is the problem.
I hate feeling like I have to choose sides in
my own house. Do I make my daughter spend more
(01:10:16):
time with my wife to force some kind of bond,
or do I give them space and just hope they
figure it out. I feel like whatever I do, someone
ends up mad at me. I just want peace at
my house.
Speaker 3 (01:10:28):
Lindsey, of course, he wants peace in his house, and
I think both sides can be true. It might feel
like fake because I mean, I don't think anyone signs
up to be a step parent, you know what I mean,
Like it's it's a hard transition for both of them, definitely.
(01:10:52):
You know, my fourteen year old is going to be
fifteen next month, and luckily he doesn't have a horrible attitude.
He doesn't have that traditional teenage little brat attitude. And
he says, he tells me it's because he loves his
(01:11:15):
youth group that he goes to every week. He says
that it is his stress reliever. He goes and he
sees his friends there and that is his weekly deal
where he just has the best time. And so maybe
talk to your daughter. Maybe she might want to go
to a church youth group and make some friends that way,
(01:11:35):
and maybe that will be a stress release for her
as well. Just a thought. Maybe if she has a
close friend she can talk to, or maybe just setting
them down to talk to each other and talk about
their differences, maybe they can work it out on their own.
But I think over time, eventually they will definitely get
(01:11:56):
along better. Just give it time.
Speaker 6 (01:11:59):
Gimpy kids suck, That's all there is to it. Raising
kids suck. Oh it's such a beautiful, glorious moment. Yeah,
when they're little, and even when they're little, they're little assholes,
is what they are. This is something you just got
to let let it ride out. Sure, yeah, put them
in a camp or a youth group or a sh right,
(01:12:25):
you could do all these things. You could be like, oh,
you could try to force them to talk to each other.
You know, hey, why don't you going to sit down
and figure out your differences? And then three days later
you probably won't even get anywhere. At least with my
own personal experience, here's what I had to do because
my kids were assholes too. I love them to death.
(01:12:46):
I love all of my children, but there was a
point in time where they were just little dicks, flat
out just dicks. And it was those teenage years and
I just had to tell my Okay, here's what's gonna happen,
because it's the truth, and it happens for everybody. These
kids are gonna grow up, they're gonna grow out of
(01:13:09):
this little stage of their life. They're gonna become adults,
and they're gonna look back and they're gonna be like, ah, hey,
dad was just trying to do his best, or dad
was right, or mom was right, or mom and dad
were both. They were just trying. You know, they realize that,
and you know, usually it's at least for me anyway,
it was around eighteen nineteen, when they turned eighteen nineteen
(01:13:31):
that that happened, and you know, everything got whole heck
of a lot better. There's no attitude. We all get
along fine and life is great. So for me, my
advice for this person would just just deal with it.
Deal with it right now, suck it up, go on
with your life. It will get better in a couple
(01:13:53):
of years, I promise you.
Speaker 2 (01:13:57):
I kind of go with the adage it may not
get better. That's not always true. It probably will be,
but not always. And one of these two is a
grown adult and not acting like it.
Speaker 6 (01:14:15):
You don't get to call my kid rude, even if
it's the truth.
Speaker 2 (01:14:20):
I don't care. It's not your kid. If I was
out in public and you said that, I'd be like, hey,
whoa chill out?
Speaker 6 (01:14:27):
Okay, okay, you.
Speaker 2 (01:14:29):
Don't get talked that way. That's not cool.
Speaker 6 (01:14:31):
I think once she said I do, that makes her
your kid as well. Then act like then act like it,
and yeah, and if she's being rude, then she needs
to be called out on it.
Speaker 2 (01:14:44):
No, then act like it as an adult. You don't
need to call your kid rude. That doesn't win anything, right,
So how about just figure it out. Let her be rude.
Who cares? It doesn't matter. On the other side of
that coin, you're in charge of the fifteen year old
and say, hey, I can't have you disrespect in my wife.
(01:15:05):
It's a two way street in this house. We have boundaries,
and you know you can be angry, can't be mean.
That's right, So figure it out. I'm sure it's tough
to be a fifteen year old coming into this environment
and you think I'm replacing your mom. I get it,
but you're gonna have to be kind. You're not gonna
be mean. That's just the rule of the house. Go
(01:15:31):
smoke cigarettes or something to deal with it.
Speaker 6 (01:15:33):
I guess ay a word.
Speaker 2 (01:15:36):
I just feel like one's an adult and one should
be acting like it. When they're both acting like teenage girls.
Speaker 6 (01:15:45):
Just get a pack of marble lights. Both of y'all
go smoke.
Speaker 2 (01:15:48):
You have, chill out the new wife who's trying to
establish her dominance as the lead female, and then you
have the fifteen year old who's probably been the lead
female in your life now film her throne is threatened.
Speaker 6 (01:16:01):
Right. Also, you don't.
Speaker 2 (01:16:05):
Have to figure it out right, you're choosing to be
engaged in it. It's not your responsibility for harmony.
Speaker 6 (01:16:16):
They are.
Speaker 2 (01:16:17):
One is a grown adult that should be more responsible
and handle it better.
Speaker 6 (01:16:22):
Change is hard. I get it for everybody, but you.
Speaker 2 (01:16:26):
Putting it on your shoulders that you've got to make
everybody happy. That's ridiculous. All right, we've got another email
we're gonna read. You can always email us show at
kmod dot com.
Speaker 6 (01:16:37):
Rush of a Big Man Morning Show is next ninety.
Speaker 2 (01:16:42):
KMOD doing listener emails. You can always email us show
at kmod dot com. This email says, my husband got
laid off six months ago. Since then, I've been working
full time, handling the bills, keeping the house running, basically
doing everything. Meanwhile, he's either checked out or grumpy, and
I feel like I have to walk on eggshells just
(01:17:02):
to keep the peace. What really gets me is this.
When I lost my job a few years back, nobody
coddled me. I still did everything I was supposed to do.
But now he's unemployed, it's like the whole world has
to revolve around how he's feeling. I recently read that
men are thirty three percent more likely to get divorced
after losing their job. This makes sense. I'm exhausted. This
(01:17:28):
is exhausting. Why is it like this? Why am I
expected to keep it all together but he gets to
fall apart? Well, men are stable, so I'm not emotional.
Uh what do you think? Bmmss? And what should this
(01:17:48):
wife do? A two nine four five? Why is she
expected to keep it all together but he gets to
fall apart?
Speaker 6 (01:17:57):
I feel like there's some deep psychological stuff going on
in there.
Speaker 2 (01:18:00):
On both sides. Go see a doctor, full transparency. I've
never been fired, yeah, not once, so I have no
idea what it feels like to get fired. I have
quit many jobs. I have quit rationally, and I have
(01:18:21):
quit irrationally.
Speaker 6 (01:18:24):
It sucks, lucky, especially if you're trying to you know,
you've got a family to provide for it. Yeah, you know,
it really sucks, and it's it's very stressful. And I
think men are natural providers, want to be anyway, want
to be, and it's just in there their nature to
do that.
Speaker 3 (01:18:40):
Yeah, And when they can't do that, and when that
that is taken away from them unwillingly, they feel incompetent.
Speaker 2 (01:18:50):
Well, hold on. Being a provider can mean many things. Yeah,
but it doesn't mean bringing home the check.
Speaker 3 (01:19:01):
But there a lot of men see it that way.
Speaker 2 (01:19:03):
Yeah, that doesn't.
Speaker 6 (01:19:04):
But that's fine. That's your own mind framework.
Speaker 3 (01:19:06):
Right, And it sounds like that's what her husband is feeling.
Speaker 6 (01:19:09):
Right. We don't have to go out and hunt anymore,
you know, but we are kind of responsible for buying
paying for the groceries.
Speaker 2 (01:19:18):
Not necessarily. Again, provider can be you know, mowing the lawn.
H Provider can be picking up your wife from work.
Provider can be cleaning the house. Yes, yeah, we all.
Speaker 6 (01:19:35):
Know that's a woman's job. Come on, now, I don't
ask me to go in there and do the laundry.
I've got grass to mow, and cars to fix, damn it,
and seed to spread. Yes, a look like god, damn
cape Feller. I'm mister mom.
Speaker 2 (01:19:52):
No, I'm interested by the thing they said of thirty
three percent, thirty three percent, the marriage is in divorce
when the man is unemployed.
Speaker 6 (01:20:03):
I've never heard that before.
Speaker 2 (01:20:04):
Now I have been there, so a third right.
Speaker 6 (01:20:07):
Yeah, so that may I mean, really, is the divorce
because he lost his job or did was there a
lot building up. It's because that was the tipping point.
Speaker 3 (01:20:17):
No, it's because he's not feeling good with himself right now,
so he's probably I would in my opinion, it's because
they're not feeling In order for a relationship to work,
you have to feel good with yourself, you know, and
they're not feeling good about themselves, so then they will
blame the other person or the situation, and that's how
(01:20:39):
the relationship starts to crumble, and so it ends instead
of working on it.
Speaker 6 (01:20:44):
But if this guy, if it's inherent nature for men
to want to be providers right and be that person
for their family, and this guy got laid off, then
how come he's not out the next day looking for
a job. They didn't tell maybe and maybe he is.
We don't know, because they didn't didn't say that, you know,
but or tried. Yeah, yeah exactly. You know. She's saying
(01:21:07):
that he's just sitting on the couch being grumpy gus
all the time, sorry for him, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
which I get it. You could still do that, but
go find a job. Bro to me, there's some context too.
Speaker 2 (01:21:18):
Did he work at the same place for twenty five years?
Is that the job he had after he graduated high
school or got kicked out of high whatever. And he's
had this through three kids and you know all those things,
and now he's fifty and can't and is not sure
what to do with his life. Right, Yeah, I mean
that's important. I think that's important context, absolutely, But I'm
(01:21:42):
always fascinating when people like, well, men are providers. If
men and providers, then get up off your ass exactly.
If you believe that that you, as a male, that
is your role, then do it.
Speaker 6 (01:21:56):
Here's a good one. Men are very attached to their wallets.
Sometimes as a wife, we just need to let them
freak out and be supportive until things work out.
Speaker 2 (01:22:08):
I don't understand the wallet's part, but I don't get
that either, But okay, because I think that's just people.
You got to let people work.
Speaker 6 (01:22:15):
Through their emotions, right, right. And maybe this guy has been,
like you said, the past twenty five thirty years, he's
been working at this particular place and they let him
go for whatever reason, and it's like, maybe he's just
like I can breathe. I finally got a break because
I've been working, slaving away for the past twenty five
(01:22:38):
years and now I don't have to worry about getting
up in the morning. You know, I understand be grumpy.
I could be a million things, could be job related.
But maybe he's just like, I's gonna take a break, man,
give me a little bit.
Speaker 2 (01:22:50):
But if I don't think she's right, sorry, she's not writing.
Speaker 6 (01:22:52):
This after a week, right, right?
Speaker 3 (01:22:55):
Exactly?
Speaker 2 (01:22:55):
You got your break?
Speaker 6 (01:22:57):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:22:57):
Yeah. And if his ego is bruised and he's upset,
like if he was at this job for so long
and then he gets fired and he doesn't understand why, yes,
and he's upset, show him some grace. I understand that
and be supportive. But if he's just being grumpy and
miserable and he's not helping out in other ways and
he's not looking for a job, then I can understand, like, hey,
(01:23:21):
it's time, you know, change the attitude you've I've you know,
you've had your time to sulk.
Speaker 6 (01:23:27):
Put your big boy pants on, right, and get back
to work. You a lazy pitch. Yeah, sulking's always worked.
He usually does right.
Speaker 2 (01:23:37):
It always definitely keeps it from festering. Right he said
no one, no, it does nothing? And did he not
do other things?
Speaker 6 (01:23:51):
What do you mean by that?
Speaker 2 (01:23:52):
Well, did he just come home and then kick his
feet up and great googly moogly?
Speaker 6 (01:23:56):
Oh? Maybe so right? Maybe so she took care of everything,
because she did say in the email when she lost
her job, she still had to take care of everything.
Speaker 2 (01:24:04):
Yeah, because we have lives, right, you have things you
have to do, You have to get up, you have
to pay your bills.
Speaker 6 (01:24:15):
Right, those things still happen.
Speaker 2 (01:24:18):
But to be this woe is me like, oh, this
humanity feels really dramatic.
Speaker 6 (01:24:26):
Maybe he was, uh, I don't know, coddled as a
child and teenager and young adult and he just doesn't
know how to handle himself right now, how about.
Speaker 2 (01:24:37):
This next fist fight him in the street. All right,
we got a new contender cheating, horr. Oh cut him
some slack, you cheating, horr.
Speaker 6 (01:24:43):
Okay, sure, and we're back. Listener.
Speaker 2 (01:24:48):
Email from a woman who says, my husband got laid
off six months ago. Since then, I've been working full time,
handling the bills, keeping the house running, basically doing everything. Meanwhile,
he's either chucked out or grumb and I feel like
I have to walk on eggshells just to keep the peace.
What really gets me is this, when I lost my job,
a few years back, nobody coddled me.
Speaker 6 (01:25:09):
I still did everything I was supposed to do.
Speaker 2 (01:25:12):
But now that he's would, it's like the whole world
has to revolve around how he's feeling. I've read that
men are thirty three percent more likely to get divorced
after losing their job, and honestly, that makes sense. It's exhausting.
I'm exhausted. Why is it like this? Why is a
woman expected to keep it all together but he gets
to fall apart?
Speaker 6 (01:25:33):
Lindsey, Yeah, it.
Speaker 3 (01:25:35):
Sounds like it's it's been six months and she's over it.
It doesn't sound like he's doing anything to help. It's
one thing to lose your job and start Okay, now
that I've lost my job, I'm going to help her
at least around the house. And it doesn't sound like
he's doing that. Even to help with things around the house.
She's making it sound like she's affording their bills and stuff.
(01:25:58):
It's not about him not working. It's more so she's
still taking care of the household chores as well, and
she's over it, so he needs to start helping there
as well, and that's why she's like, Yeah, this is
why divorce happens because you're not helping with anything else.
(01:26:19):
You're just being a baby. You're just in your feels
and that's it, and I'm over it. I'm not coddling
you anymore. So yeah, I think it's almost like having
a kid living at home when we say it's time
to move out. She needs to tell him it's time
(01:26:40):
to start looking for a job then, because I'm over it.
Kevin has never been fired either. He's quit and took
some time off and it was fine. I've been fired
from positions and completely freaked out and thought, okay, got
to find something right away, and I've done that, where
(01:27:03):
Kevin is like, why don't you just take some time?
I've got this, It's fine, But I refuse to do that.
Speaker 2 (01:27:08):
Felt a sense of responsibility is the phrase you're looking for.
Speaker 3 (01:27:12):
Yeah, yeah, when going back, I wish I would have
taken more time, but I just my brain doesn't work
like that. So I can see where she's coming from.
She's just over it, and I don't blame her. So
you feel like you're doing it all. Just tell them
it's time to start looking. Time to start looking, gimbi.
Speaker 6 (01:27:36):
Everybody's allowed to fall apart at times. How long that
fall apart last that's a different story. But I think
everybody's allowed to fall apart. You know, you lose your job,
you lose a family member, divorce, whatever, You're allowed to
fall apart. But yes, eventually you're gonna have to ask
(01:27:59):
or get up pot. Come on, now, let's just be
real here. You got stuff to do. The main question
that I have for this particular listener is have you
tried talking to him yet? Have you tried saying anything
to him about Hey, listen, I understand that you lost
(01:28:19):
your job, and I understand you feel inadequate, and I
understand blah blah blah, whatever the case is. You know,
what can I do to help out? You know, let's
maybe it's time just talk to him about it. Ultimately,
in the end, that's all it matters. Just talk to
him about it, and it may be a little hard.
You might have to cry a little bit, but I
(01:28:39):
think eventually you might get somewhere and you learn something.
Speaker 2 (01:28:43):
Yeah, she just said she walks around on eggshells to
keep the peace.
Speaker 6 (01:28:46):
Yeah, you can't do that. You can't do that.
Speaker 2 (01:28:50):
Yeah, I agree, people are allowed to have breakdowns. Uh,
marriage isn't equal, so just because it worked out well
and you were coddled and all, that doesn't mean that's
the way it's going to work for him. Uh, six
months is a long time. I would be going crazy
(01:29:10):
if I were you as well. You can't control what
other people do. You can only control what you say,
and so I would make the advice of, hey, I
can't do all this anymore, what can you help with?
And see what he says. Rather than like you're being
(01:29:30):
a you're being e or dude, snap out of it.
I think if you said, hey, I have all these
things to do, and I've been trying to do them
all because I clearly can tell you you're disgruntled by
what has happened, and I'll blame you, But can you help?
I need some help.
Speaker 6 (01:29:47):
I'm drowning And his reaction will tell you all you
need to know.
Speaker 2 (01:29:53):
He should He should go. You're right, what do you
need help with? And maybe that'll churn the engines, prime
the pump if you will. You could also not have
sex with him.
Speaker 6 (01:30:05):
Cut them off. That will quickly get his attention, or
he may go find some cheap Well.
Speaker 2 (01:30:12):
Then let him go cry somewhere else because the shop
is closed. Hey, nothing more disenfranchising than nobody wants me
to work for them and nobody wants me to work them.
That might send him spiraling even more. Gosh, next thing
(01:30:34):
you know, he's eating a bullet.
Speaker 6 (01:30:37):
That's on him, right, that's on him. Why did you
kill yourself? Ah? She wouldn't have sex with me. That
bitch get out of here. Doesn't want me, dog, don't
want nobody wants me.
Speaker 2 (01:30:56):
Sometimes I think people should just record themselves on what
they're plane is and.
Speaker 6 (01:31:00):
Then listen to it back. Oh yes, because I think
when you hear you go a goad. Look that's what
you sound like to everybody else.
Speaker 2 (01:31:10):
You either do or you do not. It's super simple.
All you got to do is try what is he
doing all day? Is he just sitting around watching below
deck on? He's now got every season tapped?
Speaker 6 (01:31:25):
Maybe? Maybe?
Speaker 2 (01:31:26):
So he's doing something Most people can't sit still, right,
they're either doom scrolling NonStop looking at porn right watching TV.
Speaker 6 (01:31:43):
Most people can't be idle.
Speaker 2 (01:31:45):
Right, so he's doing something. I would argue he might
be up to something no good, right if he's that
content by sitting on his ass, not looking for a job,
not in the art, not helping out. Like you're implying
something has his attention, right, most people, and I'll go
(01:32:07):
ahead and be cliche.
Speaker 6 (01:32:08):
Most men have to have a project. Right. What's that
old saying, idle hands or the devil's playground? Right?
Speaker 2 (01:32:16):
And so what's got his attention? What's occupying that space?
Something is We talk about it when people lose jobs,
and we're like, if you have four people and one
person sucks and they fire that person, there's a new suckie, right,
there's now somebody's got to be in last place. Right,
(01:32:41):
So and then when the third person gets fired, now
there's two people, someone's still in last place. So something's
got his attention?
Speaker 6 (01:32:53):
What is it? All? Right?
Speaker 2 (01:32:55):
We got to take a break. You can always email
a show at kmody dot com.
Speaker 6 (01:32:58):
More of the Big Men Morning Show is next ninety
kmog Good Morning, Lindsay, Good Morning Corbyn.
Speaker 3 (01:33:06):
Happy twenty sixth, the birthday to porn star Willow Ryder.
You can watch this gorgeous Texan in Astounding Anniversary Gift
Backdoor Gymnast and Throat Goat. She was a twenty twenty
three Most Amazing ass Award nominee.
Speaker 6 (01:33:25):
Good Morning, Gimpie Oil, Good morning, Corby, you just got
another keyword to rock the bank. The keyword is pay
pay pay take it over. The website of the Rockskamandy
dot com could score you on thousand dollars. All right,
let's go ahead and do to tell the truth.
Speaker 2 (01:33:42):
I'm to tell the truth. This is your opportunity to
ask anything you want.
Speaker 6 (01:33:45):
Just remember, keep it clean, no bodily fluids, nothing sexual,
and don't forget. We can and will pass on a question.
Let's open up the phone lines.
Speaker 2 (01:33:53):
Here's Corbyn in the gang with all the truth.
Speaker 6 (01:33:55):
You're gonna need.
Speaker 2 (01:33:58):
All right, bmms and whatever that is to eight two
nine four five. What's the one thing that should make
everyone happy?
Speaker 6 (01:34:10):
I can't say that.
Speaker 2 (01:34:11):
What's the one thing that should make everyone happy?
Speaker 6 (01:34:18):
Your answer wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (01:34:18):
Apply for children?
Speaker 6 (01:34:20):
Can people?
Speaker 3 (01:34:21):
Desserts?
Speaker 6 (01:34:23):
Great answer? Great answer.
Speaker 2 (01:34:25):
When we went to NAPA and they brought dessert and
we'd already had a great meal and they.
Speaker 6 (01:34:31):
Brought I'm not joking, seven desserts for us to eat. Damn,
that's a lot.
Speaker 2 (01:34:36):
They were like it was the final, like a finale
of fireworks display. Like they were like, we're gonna make
you so bloodless, Yes, you won't leave with a complaint
with seven desserts, I'm just saying, and.
Speaker 3 (01:34:49):
With seven, I feel like that's enough so everyone can
just share.
Speaker 6 (01:34:53):
You can have this person got seven Oh my god.
Speaker 2 (01:34:58):
Yes, now they were massive portions, but still yes, yeah, yes,
it was wild.
Speaker 6 (01:35:05):
I'm usually too full at the end of the dinner
meal the main course to get any kind of dessert.
I honestly can't think of any time that I've been
at a restaurant and gotten dessert. Oh, it's one of
my favorite things.
Speaker 3 (01:35:21):
In the same if there's crembrew lay on the menu
and if Kevin and I are out, we're ordering it.
Speaker 6 (01:35:27):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (01:35:27):
So there's a new restaurant. It's in Oklahoma City. They've
opened one here in Jenkson. I think they're opening one
on Cherry Street. And they have these fantastic little potato
instead of hash browns. They're like little potato circles and
they're super crunchy. They're called they called potato tumblers. They're awesome.
Speaker 6 (01:35:46):
But they have crimbrewlay oatmeal.
Speaker 3 (01:35:51):
Okay, I would try that.
Speaker 2 (01:35:53):
Yes, I'm just that was the Krimberlay connection. It's called
hatch for those that are.
Speaker 3 (01:35:57):
And I just saw we were watching I forget what
we were watch. Oh I do The new final destination,
Bloodlines is available to rent, So we watched that the
other night, and there was a scene in the film
where there was cremebrew let being served and people were
tapping the top of it to break up the sugar crust.
(01:36:21):
We had never known to do that. We've never tapped
it and broke it before. No, never. We're like, huh,
we didn't know you were supposed to do that. We've
always just scooped it and broke it and broke it
that way.
Speaker 2 (01:36:32):
Yeah, what's the one thing that should make everyone happy?
Speaker 6 (01:36:36):
Gimpye? We even kids, even kids, even kids, they do
have that. You can actually give it to your children. Okay,
it is legal, he says that caretaker Oklahoma state law.
Especially if there's something wrong with them mentally, they got
some kind of you know, sickness or whatever, you can
give them a very small dose. Okay, You're not gonna
(01:36:58):
sit there like give them a the hundred milligram gumming
and be like here, have fun. Take that much, right,
but no microdosing is key in it right there, And
and it's true, man, I don't know a lot of
people who haven't ingested some kind of THC and it's
still angry afterwards.
Speaker 2 (01:37:21):
Just saying also the same thing said about Heroin. Right,
I'm going with air.
Speaker 6 (01:37:28):
Conditioning, Okay, yeah, that's fair.
Speaker 2 (01:37:31):
I've never heard anybody. I've heard people have dessert and
go eh. I've heard people be waiting eh. I've never
heard anybody get into air conditioning go well, this sucks.
Speaker 3 (01:37:41):
No, but I have had people come into my house, man,
what's your air conditioning set?
Speaker 6 (01:37:45):
Too?
Speaker 2 (01:37:47):
Yeah? But they're happy. Nah, yeah, that's too much. That's
not not happy.
Speaker 6 (01:37:52):
Maybe eskimos. They're like, listen, I spent too much time
in the cold as it is anyway, almost eat, I
don't care when it came south.
Speaker 2 (01:37:58):
And when it's one hundred and five, you like outside,
you hit that air conditioning hits you. You're like phoof.
And if you think I'm lying, go into a building
where you expect there to be air conditioning and not
be there yesterday. You immediately would be like, oh, why
am I not happy?
Speaker 6 (01:38:19):
Somebody texting a nice low loud truck. No.
Speaker 2 (01:38:25):
I learn a lot about you when I see those
Mary bang Kill, Jerry Seinfeld, model, Jerry Hall or Jerry Redding.
The inventor of Jerry curl. Assume they're all live? Oh,
Jerry Hall. She was the actress. She had a TV
(01:38:47):
show for a long time. No, no, I'm thinking of
someone else. Jerry Hall was married to Mick Jagger.
Speaker 6 (01:38:57):
Apparently, she was in the original Batman, the nineteen eighty
nine Batman and Urban Cowboy and Vampire in Brooklyn. She
was in a lot.
Speaker 2 (01:39:08):
Okay, Okay, okay, Jerry Seinfeld, Jerry Hall or Jerry Reading,
the inventor of the Jerry curl. Assume they're all live
and in their prime. Okay, that's who invented Jerry curl. Huh.
Speaker 6 (01:39:24):
A white guy, an old white guy. That's the Jerry Curl.
H How much can we make their hair extra greasy?
Speaker 2 (01:39:34):
Damn? Yo, you see this and you go huh Jerry Reading? Huh?
Speaker 3 (01:39:43):
I want to see what he looks.
Speaker 2 (01:39:44):
Okay, So, Lindsey, what are you picking? Jerry Seinfeld, Jerry
Hall or Jerry Reading in their prime?
Speaker 3 (01:39:50):
Okay? How much money does Jerry Riding have?
Speaker 2 (01:39:52):
I don't know, Jerry Seinfeld, Jerry Hall, Jerry Reading.
Speaker 3 (01:39:56):
I never found Jerry Seinfeld to be that funny. I
guess I will. This is a bad list.
Speaker 6 (01:40:11):
I know it's perfect. I think it's great.
Speaker 3 (01:40:15):
I will marry Jerry Seinfeld for his money. I'm gonna
assume he's got the most. I will bang Jerry Redding
and kill Jerry Hall.
Speaker 6 (01:40:29):
I guess, okay, Kimby, I'm killing Jerry hall Man. Just
excuse me, Jerry Redding. Nobody needs to deal with that.
Prevent the Jerry Curl from ever happening. Okay. And he's
a dude, all right, so I'm not gonna marry him.
I don't know how much money he has, don't really care.
(01:40:51):
I'm sure the Jerry Curl empire was huge for a
little while but eventually faded out. So you're dead. You're dead, Jerry.
I totally banging Jerry Hall because well, I'm not gay,
and she's still kind of cute for a sixty eight
year old woman, eh, giggity. Uh So then that leaves
(01:41:12):
me marrying Jerry Seinfeld. I'm okay with that. He's funny
and he's got money. He's got funny money. I'm alright
with that. I'm definitely killing Jerry reading.
Speaker 2 (01:41:26):
Of the three, I see he's the lowest on the
totem pole, if you will, And I am banging Jerry Seinfeld,
and I'm marrying Jerry Hall.
Speaker 6 (01:41:34):
She's worth sixteen billion dollars. Wow?
Speaker 2 (01:41:36):
Really from that, I will gladly be seventy year old,
mister Hall.
Speaker 6 (01:41:43):
She's married to Rupert Murdoch. Keith, Rupert Murdoch. Yeah, ninety
four years old.
Speaker 2 (01:41:52):
Yeah, yeah, she needs some attention.
Speaker 6 (01:41:55):
Yeah yeah she does. God he looks like an old,
shriveled up stickle.
Speaker 2 (01:42:02):
Somebody tech corny. Do you think you'll ever compete in
BJJ again?
Speaker 6 (01:42:04):
No? I will not. Your day's a competition are over?
Huh uh?
Speaker 2 (01:42:09):
I enjoy I love jiu jitsu. I don't need to
the Last time I did it, I got pushed down
to a younger weight class and up into a weight class,
so I was wrestling or rolling with people younger than
me and heavier than me. I just I'd had nothing
to prove. I'm happily married, done pretty good at this job.
(01:42:31):
I don't need a medal around my neck to tell
me anything. So I would roll with other people and
go to other gyms. But competition. I don't need to
blow my knee out because somebody's trying to get a medal.
Speaker 3 (01:42:44):
My mom just hurt her meniscus just totally like she
just fell. She just fell. Now she's gonna have to
have surgery on her meniscus. Yeah, have you done that surgery?
Speaker 6 (01:42:57):
Absolutely not.
Speaker 2 (01:42:57):
That's that's hard.
Speaker 3 (01:42:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:43:00):
Uh an old guy invented Jerry curl.
Speaker 2 (01:43:03):
How Wow. You really do learn something new every day. Yeah,
the number of things I've learned from this job is crazy.
All time favorite weekend lunch bar and grill to eat
at in the Tulsa Metro. Let's just go with a
weekend lunch spot. I don't know, brunch spot. Is that
what we're saying.
Speaker 6 (01:43:22):
Sure, what a lunch brunch?
Speaker 2 (01:43:23):
I mean, we can lunch bar and grill. I don't
know of any place I go to that's called a
bar and grill.
Speaker 6 (01:43:29):
Right right, Chillies Hello, Applebee's Bar and grill.
Speaker 3 (01:43:35):
I don't really get to go to money places on
the weekend unless I'm taking stuff to the resale shop
doing my weekend drop off. And then if I'm doing that,
my kid will go with me and we'll go to
Ron's and have a burger. So we'll do that on
the weekend sometimes.
Speaker 6 (01:43:57):
Okay, gimb man, I'll tell you what, if you want
to good even during the week it's a good spot
for lunch runch. I usually go there on the weekends
or a brunch slash lunch sort of thing. And that's
Potbelly's a broken arrow. It's typically a bar. We went there, right,
That's where we all went one time, I believe. So. Yeah,
and it is good food here. You're thinking bar food,
(01:44:20):
but it's it's more than just bar food, I think anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:44:25):
Yeah, I don't know what the uh? Do you want
an outside place?
Speaker 6 (01:44:31):
Right?
Speaker 2 (01:44:31):
Do you just want tasty food? Roosevelt is pretty good
on Cherry Street. Yeah, there's the uh. They just did
a altequila off forty four has an outdoor area that's awesome.
Speaker 1 (01:44:48):
Okay, Yeah, brunch is a different answer, But it feels
like a bar and grill lunch spot would be like
kind of like pop Bellies, like Gimpium said, Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:45:05):
I don't know, crap, Pappy, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:45:09):
By the way, they they crowned a new favorite restaurant
chain in America that has d throned one for a
long time.
Speaker 3 (01:45:18):
Really, what was the favorite for.
Speaker 6 (01:45:21):
The longest I'll tell you.
Speaker 2 (01:45:23):
For the longest time, it was Longhorned Steakhouse, and now
it is Texas Roadhouse as.
Speaker 6 (01:45:29):
It should be. It is a superior steakhouse. When you're
talking about chained steakhouses, lone Star is crap.
Speaker 2 (01:45:39):
I don't think.
Speaker 6 (01:45:39):
I don't think I've ever been to a Texas Roadhouse.
Speaker 3 (01:45:42):
We were there a few weeks well not a few
weeks ago, about a month ago, when the kids were
getting out of school and we sat down and I go,
this is Gimpy One Gimpy's favorite places.
Speaker 6 (01:45:54):
Y'all talk about me at dinner.
Speaker 3 (01:45:55):
Huh uh.
Speaker 6 (01:45:59):
Also on the list Olive Garden.
Speaker 2 (01:46:03):
I believe it, dude.
Speaker 6 (01:46:05):
People love Olive Garden. Yeah, seeing a commercially yes, they're like, oh,
we've got a new I think it like spaghetti dish.
Oh it's hot and spicy sauces what they were talking about.
And it's like now at only twelve ninety nine, and
I was just like, oh God.
Speaker 2 (01:46:19):
Red Lobster was on the list, even though it's filing
for bankruptcy. People love going there. But Chili's is asking
to be recognized as they're popping up on the list.
I didn't know that that's a thing. Like there's people
are into their Chilies era.
Speaker 3 (01:46:33):
Apparently their sales have been up by like forty in
the past, like four months or something like that.
Speaker 2 (01:46:43):
It's just read that somewhere.
Speaker 6 (01:46:45):
It's not bad.
Speaker 2 (01:46:46):
Just do some food. Somebody asking if we're eating at
Mission Barbecue near Woodland Hills. I have not eaten there.
I've eaten at the one that took over Fuddruckers.
Speaker 6 (01:46:55):
Oh god, Clarks, Oh god, sorry man. Sorry. Their drinks
are good, their food's overpriced and mediocre.
Speaker 2 (01:47:06):
I also did not find their barbecue to be up
to my standards. I won't say it's bad, it just
was not up to my standards.
Speaker 3 (01:47:12):
You said you had Mission, right, I've had both of them.
Speaker 6 (01:47:14):
Yeah, I'll choose Missions over Clarks any day. Missions is
really good. Now. They don't serve alcohol there, and it's
kind of one of those you walk up to the counter,
you tell them what you want, and then they'll bring
it out there too. It's not like a sit down,
here's your menu, blah blah blah. But it's really good.
It's really good barbecue.
Speaker 2 (01:47:34):
I'll have to remember that because the other one feels
like you walk in it, it feels like a restaurant.
Speaker 6 (01:47:41):
Yeah, which I'm okay with that.
Speaker 2 (01:47:42):
Yeah, they have a cool ice bar.
Speaker 6 (01:47:44):
Yeah, but that's about where it ends. Yeah, everything else.
Speaker 2 (01:47:47):
I was dramatically unimpressed with them. But I'm a bit
of a barbecue snob, if I may say so myself.
Speaker 6 (01:47:54):
I ain't nothing wrong with that. You'd like that one
I went to over the weekend. I smoking Joe's down
in Davis so much. I just finished my meal yesterday.
I had barbecue the day twice yesterday and the day before.
That's how much they gave us. It was outstanding.
Speaker 2 (01:48:12):
Uh yeah, people agreeing with some of the things we're saying.
Speaker 6 (01:48:16):
Crown Pappy's is awesome. Pop Bellies always love. Yeah, Ron's
is always good.
Speaker 2 (01:48:22):
I again the lunch spot thing is I go with this, dude,
if there are cars in the parking lot, you're good
to go. Yeah, that's true because it's all subjective, even
our opinion on Clark's.
Speaker 6 (01:48:36):
If there are cars in the parking lot, like.
Speaker 2 (01:48:38):
Let's say you drive by it for a month and
every day at lunch it's packed, you should feel good
about the decision to go there.
Speaker 6 (01:48:46):
Yes, absolutely, Like Roadhouse always packed all the time, never
a moment in time that it is not busy, not ACKed.
Speaker 2 (01:48:55):
My wife and I will pick a place whatever, and
then we drive to it.
Speaker 6 (01:48:58):
And if there's no cars in the park, not we're out.
That's a good sign because nobody likes it.
Speaker 2 (01:49:03):
Doesn't matter even if we're blue hairn doing the blue
Hair dinner. Like, there should be some people in the
parking lot. It shouldn't be barren. And sometimes we're like, now,
give it, give it a chance, and we do, and
every time we're like.
Speaker 6 (01:49:16):
Damn, it shouldn't have been there, shouldn't have done that.
Speaker 2 (01:49:20):
Uh, if you could add one extra band to rock
Lahoma this year, but you have to replace one of
the headliners, who would it be and why?
Speaker 3 (01:49:30):
Hmm? Now I gotta think who's I gotta see the lineup.
Speaker 2 (01:49:37):
Now, boy.
Speaker 6 (01:49:40):
You can get your full line and your link for
tickets at the website at rock slaholm i kmode dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:49:48):
I feel like I can't take away three eleven because
that's who I'm really, really really looking forward to seeing.
But I still I still stand. I want to see
Miley Cyrus at Rockklahoma. I think she would fit in. Well, No,
she's got a rock and vibe.
Speaker 6 (01:50:09):
No, she is a pop artist, but she.
Speaker 3 (01:50:13):
Also does a lot of good rock.
Speaker 6 (01:50:16):
Covers, so does Lady Gaga. But she ain't gonna be
on that bill anytime, so does Dolly exactly.
Speaker 3 (01:50:21):
Word, So what you pick, I would take away Alice Cooper.
Speaker 6 (01:50:31):
And replace with.
Speaker 3 (01:50:35):
Who I just said, Miley Cyrus.
Speaker 6 (01:50:39):
Hey, Gimby's your concert. I'm taking out Breaking Benjamin, and
I'm going to put somebody on. Who was on the
bill a couple of years. I think it was twenty twenty,
but then I guess somebody pulled him off for whatever,
Wheeler Walker Junior Man. When he was on that bill,
Everybody's like, what he's a country guy. That is a
true statement, but he's also funny, kind kind of like
(01:51:01):
you know, uh, who's that? Uh? Who's the parody rock band? Uh?
Steel Panther, Steel Panther. Yes, he's a country version of
Steel Panther. So I'm like, yeah, I think he would
fit just fine.
Speaker 2 (01:51:18):
I am taking off Manson and I am putting on.
Speaker 6 (01:51:28):
Blink.
Speaker 3 (01:51:29):
Oh that's good.
Speaker 6 (01:51:31):
Okay. I'm surprised they've never played before anyway. It's not
like they're overly expensive, right Oh no, they're a yeah,
totally affordable band for rock you think, so okay, I
mean they're not like demand push that price. That's great.
Speaker 2 (01:51:50):
Yeah, Like I would Oasis. I think would be pretty
awesome on that bill. Okay, but I feel like even
Blink might be borderline not okay for that bill. But
if we she got Kelly can do it the truth right, Sorry,
machine gun Kelly fans, there is one put in THC.
Speaker 6 (01:52:11):
Yeah, they've played before. It's awesome.
Speaker 2 (01:52:15):
People giving their opinion about Clark. Listen, it's arbitrary. Let's
do one last one because this person. Would you rather
go blind for a week or eat an entire can
of sardines and mustard sauce that has been poured over
Gimpi and Corbin's feet right after the twenty four hour
toy drive with no sock or shoe change. I'll go blind, Gimpy.
Speaker 6 (01:52:40):
I like sardines, and they're just feet, and it's not
like this taste of our feet is going to mass
this taste of sardines and mustard sauce anyone. Pretty pungent?
Speaker 2 (01:52:52):
Ye?
Speaker 6 (01:52:52):
Yeah, so I'd like I like to be able to
see where I'm going. I like to look at my
girlfriend's breasts, you know what I'm mean? So I need
my eye too, I meane, sure, who doesn't? Uh?
Speaker 2 (01:53:06):
Yeah, I'll eat the sardines and mustard. I'll figure it out.
I feel like the mustard and sardines have enough tenacity
to get past the pungentness of feet. As long as
they're not I don't have to feel a toenail across
my tongue. I think I'll be Okay.
Speaker 6 (01:53:26):
Those are just sardine bones. Man, Do I have to
clean them?
Speaker 3 (01:53:29):
Like?
Speaker 2 (01:53:29):
Do I have to get all the mustard off? Or
can I just like if they're laying on the feet,
can I just eat them?
Speaker 6 (01:53:34):
Like I said, poured over right, Yeah, poured over our feet,
so they're not resting on the feet, They're just it's
like an ice lose.
Speaker 2 (01:53:44):
You know what I'm talking about, one of those Okay,
so poured down and then just falls into my mouth.
Speaker 6 (01:53:48):
Done, done, done.
Speaker 2 (01:53:50):
I don't have to lick anybody's, you know, callousy heels exactly.
Speaker 6 (01:53:53):
Meanwhile, Lindsay's bumping into walls and stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:53:55):
Yeah, but it's the mustard sauce that doesn't for me.
I don't like mustard. Sardines are fine. I grew up
eating him.
Speaker 2 (01:54:02):
That sounds exactly like a Miley Cyrus fan. All Right,
we got to take a break. We'll be back.
Speaker 6 (01:54:08):
Elsa's Morning Show Lindsey, it's your choice.
Speaker 2 (01:54:10):
Disney or Friends Enemies or frin of me Disney Disney
or front of me of Me. So, Florida man is
in trouble after he assaulted, robbed, and kidnapped his best
friend since high school, all because he threatened him that
(01:54:33):
there would be quote consequences. Alberto Turrey, thirty nine, is
behind bars after police charged him with six felonies, including
armed kidnapping, robbery with the firearm, and aggravated battery. The
alleged victim, thirty nine year old Jeremy Maccas, is a
(01:54:54):
childhood friend and former business partner, who told police that
Alberto led ambushed him in his car outside the Lifetime
Jim on June ninth. The friend told police that Alberto
(01:55:14):
tased him and robbed him after reportedly telling him quote,
he can't afford to not pay me. The police said
that the fallout between the two happened when the two men,
who were longtime high school friends, had been conducting business
deals together for several years. They ran a pair of
businesses involving pawning, firearms, and real estate, but the man
(01:55:42):
told police that he noticed Alberto was not being transparent
with this side of the real estate business, and he
wanted to end their partnership. The man told police that
after one hundred and forty thousand dollars business deal in
late twenty twenty four, he told Alberto that the amount
was about what they owed him him they owed his
(01:56:02):
mother so they could in their business partnership and basically
call it even. He described Alberto as extremely upset the
partnership dissolved. The statement was made that Alberto continued to
run himself into further debt, maxing out cards, taking out
loans that he could not repay, and one day in April,
he showed up at the guy's workplace jittery and possibly
(01:56:27):
high on drugs, and at some point Alberto started screaming
and then forced him to leave. The incident, according to
the statement, seemed to be the turning point for Alberto,
who then reportedly began leaving the other man threatening voice
messages on WhatsApp. In the messages, too Marcus, Alberto reportedly said,
(01:56:52):
you can't afford to not pay me, You can't afford it.
The voice message reportedly became increasingly threatening, where Alberto told
them your mom's in the middle of it, so think clearly.
Before you don't pay me, you have till Monday to
pay me what we agreed on, and another message he said,
whatever happens from there is consequences of your actions and
(01:57:13):
your decisions, because I would not do this to you.
On the morning June ninth, the man went to Lifetime
Fitness like he did to work out, and while walking
back to his car after he was finished, he told
police that he felt what appeared to be two taser
prongs going into his back. He told police that he
estimated the taser attack to have lasted about a minute,
(01:57:37):
and when he was able to look up, he allegedly
saw Alberto standing over him. Alberto then allegedly switched out
his taser for a gun, and, according to the statement,
Alberto allegedly forced the man into the back seat of
Alberto's truck, where the man was told to put a
pair of handcuffs on himself. The man tried asking Alberto
(01:57:58):
what he was doing and told that his ex business
partner looked like he wanted to kill him. O Alberto
allegedly told his friend held his friend captive and forced
him to have his mother wire fifty thousand dollars to Alberto,
telling her it was time sensitive, and that he would
explain the circumstances later. The man tried to call nine
(01:58:21):
to one one while he was handcuffed, but was unable
to complete the call after Alberto took his phone away.
But this is the funny part. The bank wasn't open,
so they drove around for a while and went to Starbucks.
All right, so you've taken somebody, kidnap, you've kidnapped somebody.
(01:58:42):
You need to go to the bank. You gotta pass
some time. I don't know if Starbucks is the best place.
Speaker 6 (01:58:50):
No, I mean if you're a coffee lover, sure.
Speaker 3 (01:58:54):
Free WiFi.
Speaker 6 (01:58:55):
I mean McDonald's got free WiFi, right, almost everywhere does nowadays.
Speaker 2 (01:59:00):
True, I wouldn't go anywhere. I don't think I would
go into a business.
Speaker 6 (01:59:06):
You sit in the bank bargain lot and wait for
them to hope up. No, I'm not even doing that
because that's suspicious. Yeah, huh.
Speaker 2 (01:59:12):
I mean, maybe go get some donuts. I don't know,
but right, because it's what eight o'clock in the morning. Yeah,
you got like three hours you got to burn.
Speaker 6 (01:59:20):
Yeah, there's not many like bars that are open that
early in the morning. Oh, you don't want take him
to a bar. Get them all liquored up. Man, he's angry.
Yeah that's true. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:59:30):
Uh you drive around.
Speaker 6 (01:59:33):
On waist your gas yeah, I mean maybe yeah uh.
Speaker 2 (01:59:37):
So they went to Starbucks. They eventually went back to
the guy's house, where Alberto allergedly allegedly robbed him over
rolex in thirty thousand cash and firearms who Alberto then
let the man take a shower patch up a laceration
on his head before then taking him back to Lifetime Fitness.
The man waited a day to call police after trying
(01:59:58):
to view surveillance video from the gym, but was denied
access to the footage. Why would you wait a day?
Somebody held you at gunpoint? You wait a day?
Speaker 6 (02:00:09):
Right?
Speaker 2 (02:00:09):
Handcuffed?
Speaker 6 (02:00:10):
Yeah? No, no, Well they were friends, they were doing
illegal things.
Speaker 2 (02:00:16):
You wait a day?
Speaker 6 (02:00:17):
Yeah that makes no sense. Illegal things are not. Man,
if you hold me hostage, it's the moment you released me,
I'm thinking I'm gonna have to go. Hey, he was
hoping that they you know, it was just a simple misunderstanding.
Speaker 2 (02:00:30):
According to police, they were able to see the footage
and they showed Alberto tasering the man they compelled compiled
more evidence, including the Starbucks receipt and the aborted nine
to one one call. Police obtained a warrant and rested
Alberto on the nineteenth. He charged with kidnapping, arm robbery
with a firearm, aggravated battery, grand theft, larceny of less
(02:00:52):
than five thousand dollars for the firearms, grand theft, larceny
of more than twenty thousand but less than one hundred thousand,
and tampering with a witness. He's being held appropriately without bail.
How many years do you think he could get in jail?
Speaker 3 (02:01:08):
Twenty five?
Speaker 6 (02:01:10):
What was his charges again?
Speaker 2 (02:01:14):
Charge with armed kidnapping, armed robbery with a firearm, aggravated battery,
grand theft, larceny less than five thousand for the arm
for the firearms, grand theft, larceny of more than twenty
thousand but less than one hundred thousand, and tampering with
a witness.
Speaker 6 (02:01:27):
It seems like a lot, And I like where Lendsay's
headed is a twenty five, but I feel like it's
gonna be less. I'm gonna go fifteen less than fifteen.
I'll wanna ad less than twenty five. I wanna go
with fifteen years.
Speaker 2 (02:01:40):
Okay, I think the kidnapping charge and the larceny of
more than twenty is the big, right, is the big charge?
Speaker 6 (02:01:49):
Right?
Speaker 2 (02:01:50):
They typically don't love kidnapping, right they typically I feel
like that's the one that always, Yeah.
Speaker 6 (02:01:56):
You can't really plee down from kidnapping.
Speaker 2 (02:01:59):
Wow, I handcuffing him. Yeah, And the guy making the
statement of I thought he was going to kill me
to me is the big the big rub Armed kidnapping
in Florida carries up to life's life in prison. Okay,
it's a forcible felony, so he could get twenty. Armed
(02:02:20):
robbery with a firearm is a first degree felony. It
carries life in prison. But he could get twenty aggravated
battery second degree fifteen years. Because a firearm is used,
it enhances it to the twenty to life depending on
the intensity. Grand theft of firearms and five years in prison.
(02:02:44):
Grand theft of twenty thousand dollars that's first degree that
gets you thirty. Tampering with a witness five years. So
overall he's going to jail for life, maybe maybe even
if he doesn't get those life sentences. The combined twenty
twenty twenty.
Speaker 6 (02:03:04):
But are they going to do them consecutively like that
or are they going to put them all in one?
All right, you did all these crimes, You did all
these charges. Here's the you know, because most of them
there are twenty years, right, I think there's one that
carried like thirty or whatever. Yeah, so at most I
think they lump them all together. He's thirty on paper,
(02:03:25):
will serve maybe half of that fifteen, maybe twenty. I
don't know.
Speaker 2 (02:03:29):
Violent crime also, is it his first offense? I think
it doesn't matter when it's that violent.
Speaker 6 (02:03:35):
Maybe, so, I don't know. I try not to commit many,
you know, violently.
Speaker 2 (02:03:39):
Yeah, right, excuse me. That ship is sales. Yeah, take
a break, we'll be back.
Speaker 6 (02:03:46):
The big Man Morning Show returns next Elsa's Morning Show
ninety seven.
Speaker 2 (02:03:51):
KMOD. You might not know this, but the first Batman
movie came out thirty six years ago, and there's a
(02:04:16):
bunch of cool facts I found about that Batman movie
that I wasn't aware of. Like they wanted Mel Gibson
to be Batman.
Speaker 3 (02:04:26):
What Okay, No way, that wouldn't have worked.
Speaker 6 (02:04:30):
I mean we would if if he would have done it.
We'd say the same thing about Michael Keaton, you know
who actually got the part. It doesn't seem right. I
don't see Batman with a mullet, but.
Speaker 3 (02:04:39):
What of right the mullet?
Speaker 2 (02:04:42):
Yeah, and the who remind me who played the Batman
in that is Michael Michael Keaton.
Speaker 6 (02:04:48):
He played it in the first couple ones, in the
first one and then I don't know about Batman two
maybe returns, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, he also did this,
so yeah, he did the first two and then that's
when it start getting weird.
Speaker 2 (02:05:02):
Yeah. Yeah, I was trying to look because there's so
many versions. Yeah, I think back in nineteen eighty nine,
Jack Nicholson, Michael Keating, So.
Speaker 6 (02:05:13):
He did it in a couple right, yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:05:16):
Uh, he might have been good. I mean that was
we weren't too far.
Speaker 6 (02:05:21):
There's dead dead air alarm, there was.
Speaker 2 (02:05:29):
Hold on resettingh that was.
Speaker 6 (02:05:34):
Fresh off the Mad Max. Uh. Do you think the
Batman mel Gibson mel Gibson, Yes, And as mel Gibson
has been on a lot lately because they've been running
a marathon, a fucking lethal weapon, right. I was trying
to figure out, all right, because I was like, okay, well,
for at least in my world, lethal weapon was where
(02:05:57):
mel Gibson got his start because I really well, for me,
it was because I wasn't I was too young when
Mad Max came out, and my parents they weren't big
into that sort of kind of movie or whatever. Probably
just thought it was weird and I'm not gonna watch
this or whatever. So I was trying to think, well,
(02:06:17):
what did mel Gibson do before Lethal Weapon? Well, it
was Mad Max, and I was like, well, what else
did he What else did he do? And I couldn't
think of anything else that he's done that's notable.
Speaker 2 (02:06:28):
He did all the Mad Max before he did Letho
Weapons for sure, for sure, Underdome, Mad Max two, the original,
But that's about it.
Speaker 6 (02:06:36):
I couldn't think of any other movies aside from the
Mad Max movies that he did that stuck out into
my head.
Speaker 2 (02:06:43):
He did nine other movies besides the Mad Max movies
before he did, not that you would know them, but
before he did the Lethal Weapons.
Speaker 6 (02:06:51):
Okay, okay, so you could make the argument that he
was established. Yeah, yeah, yeah, doing those nine maybe not
known movies. Mad Max was definitely huge, franchise huge, So
I'll give him that. For me, though, it was it
was the leathal Weapon that did it? Yeah, mad Max.
It made so much money.
Speaker 2 (02:07:11):
Yeah. The budget for the first one was four hundred
thousand dollars. It made one hundred million. Wow, that isn't
a success. That's a blockbuster. Oh yeah right. And then
the other ones were ten million dollars and made thirty.
Speaker 6 (02:07:24):
Six Okay, still making money or whatever, but not near
as not as big as the first flight like that one. Yeah. Yeah,
So he.
Speaker 2 (02:07:31):
Was definitely on the scene by the time that they
were like, hey, we want you to do Batman.
Speaker 6 (02:07:37):
Right, He's like sor right, I gotta take a break.
They wanted Michael J.
Speaker 2 (02:07:42):
Fox or Eddie Murphy as Robin and John Lithgow as
the Joker.
Speaker 6 (02:07:48):
Did you say Eddie Murphy as the Robin? I did
want that, but I think Michael J. Fox would work.
Speaker 2 (02:07:55):
Yes, absolutely work, And even wanted Bill Murray at one
point as Batman, whoa.
Speaker 6 (02:08:05):
Should be my friend. Yeah, I couldn't see that. Bill
Murray is a good comedic actor. He's a good serious actor.
I'm trying to think of anything I'm seeing him as serious.
Speaker 2 (02:08:16):
I mean when he's not being like the character in
Caddie Shack. Right, Uh, what's the movie he does with
Scarlett Johansson lost in translation.
Speaker 6 (02:08:27):
I have never seen that one.
Speaker 2 (02:08:28):
It's a pretty it's a pretty good movie. Okay, artsie FARTSI.
He probably wouldn't like it. Yeah, let's see what's another
one here.
Speaker 3 (02:08:38):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:08:41):
They spoke to David Cronberg about directing. He was just
coming off the success with Pee Wee Herman. They spoke
to Tim Burton. Tim Burton said he'd take the job
if he and his artist girlfriend Julia Hickson could rewrite
the script.
Speaker 6 (02:08:55):
Oh god, I'm making a weird Tim Burton film.
Speaker 2 (02:08:58):
He did, He did, do it. He did the next,
he did the second, the other one. Yes, okay, yeah,
So they wrote thirty page rewrite and then they had
another screenplay writer to help write it even more okay.
Speaker 6 (02:09:13):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:09:15):
And then Burton's Beetle Juice was a hitch hit, huge hit,
and they went, yeah, this feels fine.
Speaker 6 (02:09:19):
Yeah right.
Speaker 2 (02:09:21):
They just thought he was a weird kid, and then
you know, his Beetlejuice is huge, and they go, okay, I'm.
Speaker 6 (02:09:27):
Gonna give us some of that Beetlejuice money. At one
point they wanted Pierce Brosnan to be Batman. That feels logical, Yeah, yeah,
because he's always kind of played that. I mean he
was a bond guy. He was a bond for a while,
all right, and even even a Missus Dowfire. He was
kind of that rich kind of guy. I could see
Pierce Brosnan as a Batman.
Speaker 2 (02:09:48):
And then ultimately wanted only Tim Burton because of Beetlejuice
and his chemistry with him on that, which makes sense.
Speaker 6 (02:09:57):
I didn't realize any damn Batman movies. They were I
just want to write Batman, not all this animated bullshit.
Speaker 2 (02:10:04):
Initially, they thought that having Keaton on didn't make sense
because they thought that Tim Burton was trying to make
it a comedy.
Speaker 6 (02:10:15):
And they almost fired Tim Burton because they believe that.
Speaker 2 (02:10:19):
Okay, there were fifty thousand letters of protests sent to
Warner Brothers in frustration that Michael Keaton was gonna be Batman.
Speaker 6 (02:10:32):
God why, I thought he was a great Batman.
Speaker 2 (02:10:35):
But at the time he was mister Mom Beetlejuice, true.
Speaker 3 (02:10:41):
Mister Mom was the best.
Speaker 2 (02:10:46):
Keaton did research into bats lived alone in London for
a year. I guess that helps when you're trying to
get ready to play Batman. Yeah, they Burton and Keaton
discussed at lengthalwed Bruce Wayne would keep it his identity secret. Ultimately,
Keaton decided to perform Batman's voice at a lower register
than Bruce Wayne. This has now become a staple of
(02:11:09):
screen portrayals of the character.
Speaker 6 (02:11:11):
I think Christian Bale took it to a whole other level.
Speaker 2 (02:11:14):
Yeah, but even when he was doing Batman, Michael Keaton,
it still felt like you were on Batman.
Speaker 6 (02:11:22):
You knew Michael Keaton.
Speaker 2 (02:11:23):
Yeah, Keaton came up with the Batman line. The line
in the script was I am the Night, but Keaton
felt like I am Batman made more sense.
Speaker 6 (02:11:35):
It does make more sense because I mean, this is
a movie, but this isn't The Dark Knight. It was
The Dark Knight Rises, right, that just makes sense. Who
are you? I'm Batman?
Speaker 2 (02:11:50):
And they they met with Jack Nicholson to be the Joker,
but they also met with William Dafoe and they were
leaning towards William Dafoe decided they want to Jack Nicholson
and then uh, Nicholson was like, I'm not that interested now,
and they had to convince him.
Speaker 6 (02:12:10):
Yeah, Willem Dafoe, he's got a funny look at face,
So I can see why he's crazy, why they'd want
to put him in there on that.
Speaker 2 (02:12:18):
Yeah, he's a good crazy actor. If you need someone
to be crazy, he can make that happen.
Speaker 6 (02:12:23):
Yeah. I think he was more And maybe he did
play this part doc doc Ock, doctor Octopus, you know
from one of the other confers, spider Man. Yeah, didn't
he play I didn't will or was he the Green Goblin?
I think he was the Green Goblin either way. I
mean he fits that because it's got a weird look,
because he's got a funny looking he's got a villain face. Yeah, yeah,
(02:12:43):
didn't play the villain and platoon right, Willem Defoe didn't.
Speaker 2 (02:12:48):
No, No, he sure didn't. But he played that rigid
looking guy that yeah.
Speaker 6 (02:12:53):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:12:54):
Tim Burton wanted Robin Williams to be the Joker, met
with him, Robin will agreed to be the Joker, and
then when one of the heads heard about it, they
went back to Nicholson and said he was about to
lose the part. Nicholson agreed to be in the film,
and then Robin Williams refused to work with Warner Brothers
again until they apologized.
Speaker 6 (02:13:14):
Wow, because he was promised a spot and then got
a yang deaf monter.
Speaker 2 (02:13:17):
Yeah, because when Jack Nicholson was like, eh, I don't know,
and so they went searching again found Robin Williams.
Speaker 6 (02:13:25):
And then Williams was screwed over.
Speaker 2 (02:13:27):
He was screwed over so bad that when they did Aladdin,
he didn't want to do it and he said, listen,
I'll do it, but I have the rights to any
to the genie in anything I say. It's all me.
That's why you can't hear if you go to Disney
or you see Disney rides, you don't get to hear
those lines. Makes sense because he has the had or
(02:13:47):
has as the state does, the rights to those lines.
Speaker 6 (02:13:49):
Which he weighed a perfect genie. He made the movie, Yeah,
he sure did. And I don't think Robi Williams is
cynical enough right to pull off a villain like the joke.
I think Jack Nicholson was a perfect fit. He's a
great dramatic actor. Look at his track record. Yeah, okay,
he's kind of got that, you know, look amongst them anyway,
(02:14:11):
and uh yeah, I just don't think Robert Williams could
have pulled it off. He probably would have gotten fired
halfway through and be like Jack, we need you.
Speaker 2 (02:14:17):
Nicholson hated being the joker. It would take him two
hours to become the joker with makeup. He hated it
so much he brought in tapes of baseball games to
keep him entertained.
Speaker 6 (02:14:27):
Makes sense. I don't know that sounds boring. Yeah, I know.
If you're sitting in a fucking makeup chair for two hours,
you gotta do something, and you're not gonna watch movies
because you do movies, right, exactly, So baseball games makes sense.
Speaker 3 (02:14:41):
But no, it doesn't make sense to watch baseball games
that you probably are.
Speaker 6 (02:14:44):
No no tapes. Listen, Oh, listen to tape. Huh. That's
the way I interpret it, Okay. I thought it was,
you know, VHS tapes.
Speaker 2 (02:14:52):
I mean it was eighty nine, so VHS was pretty
not common.
Speaker 3 (02:14:57):
Oh, it was very common. You watched VHS. That's how
you watch movies.
Speaker 6 (02:15:01):
We got our first VCR in eighty seven, eighty eight.
Speaker 3 (02:15:05):
But I would think that he I mean, why wouldn't
you want to watch like stand up comedy or something
like that, you know.
Speaker 6 (02:15:10):
Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (02:15:11):
If I don't know if they had a lot of
stand up comedy on VHS.
Speaker 6 (02:15:16):
Right, A lot of that stuff was pressed on album
and shit like that, so you'd have to learn that, like.
Speaker 3 (02:15:20):
You could listen to any podcasts or anything.
Speaker 2 (02:15:23):
No, no, uh, let's see what's the next one.
Speaker 6 (02:15:29):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:15:29):
Nicholson will give away his Joker gloves as sign gifts.
Costume designer was very frustrated and so they kept having
to make more for Jack Nicholson and they promised he
would stop, but he never did.
Speaker 6 (02:15:43):
They said he remade the gloves over one hundred times. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I'll stop giving him a wee. I wonder how much
something like that's worth. An autographed Jokers set of Joker
gloves autographed from the Joker himself. Yeah, that's pretty awesome.
Speaker 3 (02:15:59):
Well, you remember he did warn what was his name
that died after playing the Joker, Heith Heith Ledger. Yes,
he warned him that, you know, playing the Joker is
going to take a lot out of you, and you
don't probably don't want to do it.
Speaker 2 (02:16:16):
Jack Nicholson received a percentage of the gross of the film,
and due to its massive take, he made sixty million dollars.
Michelle Pfeiffer was asked to audition to play Vicky Vale.
She was dating Michael Keaton at the time, though so declined.
She returned for the sequel, of course, as Catwoman, right that.
Speaker 6 (02:16:34):
Yeah, it's just so good because what was she a been?
She would have been what that blonde reporter gall or
whatever that fail? Yeah, Vicky Vail?
Speaker 2 (02:16:41):
Yeah yeah, yeah, that was played.
Speaker 6 (02:16:45):
By that broad that we were supposed to you know what,
the fucking Jerry what's her nuts? Jerry Hall whatever?
Speaker 2 (02:16:51):
She was supposed to be Vicky Vale, isn't that isn't
she the one who was?
Speaker 3 (02:16:54):
Oh no, no, no, Vicky Vale was played by Alec
Baldwin's X wife.
Speaker 6 (02:17:05):
I was trying to look and see the other.
Speaker 2 (02:17:08):
Things that what was she in at the time that
got her the notoriety to be in the in that movie.
Speaker 6 (02:17:16):
So far as Michelle Fiffer, yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:17:18):
Yeah, because a lot of her stuff came after that,
if I remember correctly, Kim Basing Kim, because.
Speaker 6 (02:17:26):
It all played Alisha Hunt where the fuck it is?
Speaker 2 (02:17:29):
Because she was in Greece too, sure, Okay, Michelle Pfeiffer
was she was in Greece too. Oh Scarface Okay, yeah,
Michelle Feiffer was the girlfriend in Scarface. That makes sense,
And that was a huge, massive movie which Is of Eastwick,
which was a big movie.
Speaker 3 (02:17:46):
Oh yeah with Jack Nicholson.
Speaker 6 (02:17:50):
Okay, yeah, so she was on her way up as well. Yeah. Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:18:00):
Sean Young who I don't even know that was cast
as Vicky Vale. She broke her collar bone practicing horse
riding for a scene and had to drop. Burton had
earlier been speaking with Kim Basinger. She received an emergency
call one week before filming and took the part Don
Johnson Ray Laota, Uh, we're all considered for the part
(02:18:24):
of Harvey Dent. Burton woned ray Liota, but he was
in talks to make Good Fellows at the time.
Speaker 6 (02:18:31):
Makes sense. They approached Billy d Williams.
Speaker 2 (02:18:35):
He took the role on the condition if it was
written into his contract he'd returned to play two face.
When Warner Brothers was casting for Batman Forever. They had
to buy Williams contract out to hire Tommy Lee Jones.
Speaker 6 (02:18:49):
Which I think Tommy Lee Jones did a pretty good job.
Has two faces. I can't I can't picture Billy de Williams.
Speaker 2 (02:18:57):
Tim Burton had dyslexia, didn't read any Batman comics to
understand the mythology. He studied Joker on original story The
Killing Joke. Burton said it was the only comic book
not hindered by his dyslexia. Tim Burton is in the
movie in a cameo. He plays one of the Joker's
squad goons.
Speaker 6 (02:19:18):
Okay, they seem like that happens a lot like the
creators of the movie The Right. Some directors do that.
They find their way in there.
Speaker 2 (02:19:25):
Shamalan does it, Tarantino does it.
Speaker 6 (02:19:27):
Yeah, yeah, yeah uh.
Speaker 2 (02:19:30):
The Joker's name is revealed as Jack Napier. This was
made up for the film, as they play on the
word jack Knapp's, an old English term for an idiot
who looks like an ape.
Speaker 6 (02:19:43):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (02:19:47):
Bob Ringwood designed the batsuit. Burton's brief was no tights
or spandex. Ringwood studied two hunred plus comic books. Twenty
eight suits, twenty five capes, and six cowls were created
at a cost of two hundred and fIF fifty thousand dollars.
Speaker 6 (02:20:01):
That makes sense because if you look at like the
Batman television series with Adam West with his tights and
his fucking yes, and if you want to make it
a masterpiece and separate it away from you know what,
we know of Batman totally don't want to go with that.
Speaker 2 (02:20:19):
They wanted a pop soundtrack to be written for the movie.
They spoke to George Michael, they spoke to Michael Jackson.
Neither one would commit, and so then they went to Prince.
Speaker 6 (02:20:33):
Prince said, I'll do it. Makes sense, right, Yeah, the
bad Dance.
Speaker 2 (02:20:38):
Yeah. And then they had the ba mobile design and
they took inspiration from comic books and from Malcolm Campbell's Bluebird,
which set the land speed record in nineteen thirty five,
as the inspiration.
Speaker 6 (02:20:53):
Yeah, I see this, Malcolm Campbell, you said it.
Speaker 2 (02:20:55):
Here's the car if you want to see it, that's
at the land speed record.
Speaker 6 (02:20:58):
Okay, I can see it. Yeah, that's what it looked like.
And then obviously that's what they Yeah. And then that
motherfucker has changed so much over the year. The Batmobile.
Speaker 2 (02:21:08):
Yeah, I think it's fascinating that they, like comic book
movies now gets so much like, Oh, comic book movies.
Speaker 6 (02:21:13):
They're resurgence.
Speaker 2 (02:21:15):
Batman Man been around, been doing it for a long
serv nine, Yeah, nineteen eighty nine.
Speaker 6 (02:21:21):
But other than the Batman, Superman, Batman and Superman were
the only comic book movies at that time that I
can think of. You didn't see ant Man in nineteen
eighty nine, hell, even the seventies, because is that when
the first Superman came out, was in like seventy eight,
seventy nine something like that, the very first Superman movie.
(02:21:42):
These are the Batman I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 (02:21:43):
These are the comic book movies of the nineties, okay,
Batman and Robin, The Crow, Blade, Phantom, Teenage Mutant, Ninja, Turtles,
Dark Man, Batman Returns, Dick Tracy, The Mask, Spawn, Judge, Dread,
The Rock a Teer, Barbed Wire, which was a comic
book Yeah, Batman Forever, The Shadow, Blank Man, Mighty Morphin,
(02:22:08):
Power Rangers, Mystery Man, The Fantastic Four, Tank Girl, which, yeah,
that was for sure, The maskazorro Those were all nineties
comic book movies.
Speaker 6 (02:22:18):
I don't really There's a few of them I didn't
realize were comic book movies. I didn't realize the Mask
was a comic book movie. I knew about Spawn, all right,
that's interesting. How about that though?
Speaker 2 (02:22:31):
Huh uh. This is the other thing I had When
I asked lindsay what story she wanted, this was the
Disney story. Oh yeah, Man arrested after marrying nine year
old girl at one hundred and fifty thousand dollars Disneyland wedding.
Damn good, I didn't know you could do Disney weddings
at Disney makes sense? Why can't you?
Speaker 3 (02:22:52):
I have a cousin who got married there.
Speaker 6 (02:22:54):
Really amazing. Yeah, that's amazing. You have someone that was
married there one.
Speaker 2 (02:23:01):
Hundred and fifty thousand dollars apparently to do it. This
happened at Disneyland Paris, and apparently when they were unaware
that the bride was nine year old girl who was
accompanied by her mother on the day in question, they
were said to take place on Saturday, the staff was
not psyched. They alerted the authorities on what they thought
(02:23:24):
was happening.
Speaker 6 (02:23:26):
The young girl's mom.
Speaker 2 (02:23:29):
Was there and other members of her family were intendants
as well, in addition up to one hundred guests.
Speaker 6 (02:23:36):
Damn. So there's a lot of people that knew that
this guy was gonna be married in a nine year old.
Speaker 2 (02:23:41):
Apparently, it's since been revealed that the whole thing was staged,
as the girl's mother said she wanted her daughter to
feel like a princess for the day.
Speaker 6 (02:23:50):
A Meanwhile, the groom was like, oh.
Speaker 2 (02:23:55):
The prosecutor said, so it wasn't a wedding but a
staged wedding filmed with a round one hundred extras. They
hired Disneyland Paris, pretending it was a real wedding. It's
said the whole thing was going to be broadcast on
social media. It appears, though, as if the man wasn't
genuinely going to wed the nine year old and that
was all a ruse. The man's criminal history has since
(02:24:17):
been revealed. Prosecutors say the groom or groomer is believed
to be a thirty nine year old man who has
been known in Britain for sexual offenses against miners.
Speaker 6 (02:24:27):
Oh god, that's not helping any.
Speaker 2 (02:24:29):
He is registered on the British Sex Offenders Registry and
currently wanted at the national level by the judicial authorities
for failing to comply with the obligations arising from the registration.
He's been hailed as the mastermind of the bizarre plan,
but reportedly there were some nationals that helped organize it.
(02:24:50):
The groom is one of the people that was arrested,
the child's mother. Another woman was also arrested who was
supposed to be the bride's sister in a fifty five
year year old man was taken part in the ceremony
was also taken into custody.
Speaker 6 (02:25:05):
Hmm. I wonder how that came about. Putting out an
ad looking for an older man to marry my young
daughter at Disneyland and make her feel like a princess.
Speaker 2 (02:25:21):
Let's let's feel it back even more. I'm looking for
a job. What some kind of jobs are a villa.
Speaker 6 (02:25:26):
Here's one. We need someone to act in a in
a performance.
Speaker 2 (02:25:30):
Oh yeah, I did.
Speaker 6 (02:25:31):
A little bit of acting when I was in high school.
Speaker 2 (02:25:33):
Yeah, and it looks like, let's see the performance is
marrying a nine year old. Hey, I know nine year olds.
I have I have some connection of working with children,
right because he's on the sex registry.
Speaker 6 (02:25:47):
Right right, Like he said I know nine year olds,
not like I like nine year olds. That change also
fair to say, right exactly what was the interview process?
Like was the only candidate? Right? Well, nobody else has
responded to this ad in the past two weeks.
Speaker 2 (02:26:07):
Uh, you're hired and as a somebody on the sex
industry like maybe it was blind a blind item, and
so he's like, what's the what is the acting.
Speaker 6 (02:26:15):
I get to go to Disneyland Paris. Oh then nice,
nice OI sounds good?
Speaker 2 (02:26:25):
Yeah, I almost said craiky, right, and then it was like,
hey man, there's there's a nine year old oi.
Speaker 6 (02:26:34):
Hey winker.
Speaker 2 (02:26:37):
You twat yes the word out there country judicial system because.
Speaker 6 (02:26:48):
I talked to some some yappers. Right, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:26:55):
You had a chance to get out of the deal.
Speaker 6 (02:26:57):
You had plenty of opportunity to get out of it.
But it's okay because it was staged. It was real.
Speaker 2 (02:27:03):
Right.
Speaker 6 (02:27:04):
Oh no, that shouldn't even be stayed. There's plenty of
other ways to make your daughter feel like a princess
without having to marry her off to some creepy old man.
Speaker 2 (02:27:14):
For it, fake even fake? Right, maybe fake marry another
nine year old. That's just an idea there you go.
Speaker 6 (02:27:20):
Yeah, yeah, what's the oldest you could go on that
sort of thing? I could like, no, no, no, no, Like
if you're marrying your daughter, your nine year old, fake ceremonial.
Speaker 2 (02:27:33):
Right, you don't want to go thirty nine year old?
Speaker 6 (02:27:35):
Yeah that makes no sense, right, you know nine obviously
somebody her age, but you know.
Speaker 2 (02:27:42):
Well let's do this. You're trying to like emulate the
story yeah, right, the stories that Disney puts out of,
like Prince Charming, I think you gotta go fifteen.
Speaker 6 (02:27:52):
That's what I was thinking.
Speaker 2 (02:27:53):
Fifteen sixteen look somewhat like a Prince Charming, and a
ten year old doesn't.
Speaker 3 (02:27:58):
Right, exactly, twelve year old could?
Speaker 6 (02:28:02):
No, a twelve year old does not look like an
age too. Yeah, two bunch of a baby face for sure. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:28:08):
Yeah, he's got to have.
Speaker 6 (02:28:09):
Some some pecks, even like a thirteen maybe thirteen if
they've already hit the puberty right where they getting a's
a he's a tall thirteen year old? Yeah, yeah, I
think something like that, you know, would.
Speaker 2 (02:28:23):
The question it's all wrong, Lindsay, But the question has
to be, like, you got to pick one that still
is within the parameters of the law, that isn't too creepy,
because reality is is that when she's eighteen, right, he'll
be twenty two. It's not that crazy, right, nothing over
five years, So fourteen, Yeah, you're good with fourteen.
Speaker 6 (02:28:45):
We tucked into it, okay.
Speaker 3 (02:28:50):
Yeah, come around, girls too mature faster than they do.
Speaker 6 (02:28:53):
Sure, no, they don't.
Speaker 2 (02:28:57):
And then there's the whole extra showing up like oh,
I'm gonna be an ex Disney. Yeah that sounds awesome,
and you're like, just stand here at a wedding. You're like, sweet, okay,
d what the fuck is is she a flower girl?
Is that it's the flower girl? Why is the flower
girl wearing a wedding dress?
Speaker 6 (02:29:16):
That's the bride? Isn't she beautiful? No? Sure, she looks
so majestic on her special.
Speaker 2 (02:29:26):
They should arrest all those people were incompliance, every last
one of them, even the extras.
Speaker 6 (02:29:30):
That's what I'm saying, Like nobody's like, hey, time out, yes, yes,
sorry to be that guy. Arrest the people who at Disney,
who allowed it, who booked it and said.
Speaker 3 (02:29:40):
Yeah that's fine, saw a paycheck?
Speaker 2 (02:29:42):
Sure, come on in.
Speaker 6 (02:29:45):
Last one of them. The only one that shouldn't be
arrested is the guy running a roller coast because he
just showed up for it.
Speaker 2 (02:29:50):
How much do you have to make as an extra
to turn the other cheek.
Speaker 6 (02:29:55):
It's just one day event, right, yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:29:57):
A couple of hours, Yeah, a couple thousand.
Speaker 6 (02:30:01):
Oh fifteen twenty five fifteen.
Speaker 2 (02:30:04):
Twenty five hundred, five thousand thousand. Yeah, I'm going with none.
I'm saying so I don't give a shit. That's fucked up, man,
you take your money. Shut the fuck up, right now,
you take your.
Speaker 6 (02:30:16):
Money and then go to the police, like you would
not believe what I was just you can't say that game. Yeah,
I was just a part of I tried to leave. Yeah,
they would they would not let me.
Speaker 2 (02:30:27):
They kept adding a comma, Well if that's the case,
then and I'm going to give some of it to charity, right,
We're going to fight human trafficking with the portion of
my proceeds, almost raise money to fight traffing. I got
to tell you what happened to me Father's Day. I
went to the grocery store to get some stuff and
then left, and as I was leaving, they were set
(02:30:49):
up in front of woman. I fucking hate this. Oh
I can't stand when they do this. And it was
this woman and she was like sir, third you're like
a fuck and you're like yeah, yeah, I'm fine, And
she was like, uh, would you like to make a
donation just stop teen suicide? And you're like ah, fuck.
(02:31:10):
And I could not bring it in me to be
like fuck them fucking kids, girl scouts, I got no problem,
Like plenty.
Speaker 6 (02:31:19):
Of beer, Fine, you're benefiting from that, Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:31:23):
Yeah, but nine times out of ten, I do not stop.
And she was like, hey, no, no, no, no, no, you
like teen suicide. Would you like to help stop?
Speaker 6 (02:31:31):
And You're like, well, fuck, I'm not for it, right
because if you say now, then it seems like you
are for it.
Speaker 2 (02:31:38):
Yeah, And I have a I'm sensitive to suicide and
I try to be and and so I was like okay.
I was like, tell me what we're doing. And she
was like, do this thing. And here's all these tears,
and I'm like, can I just make a donation? I
don't have cash. She's like, we take credit card. I'm like, fuck,
of course you do, yeah, cash, of course you have square, right,
(02:32:02):
And so she shows me this thing and I'm like, listen,
I don't want anything. I don't need a fucking thermos, right,
I don't need a fucking bottle opener. I don't need
a fucking fan advisor. I don't need no shit. Can
I just make a donation?
Speaker 6 (02:32:20):
Yeah? Twenty five? And I'm like ten, Now.
Speaker 2 (02:32:23):
You're negotiating with her, because the first tier was like
twenty five bucks or some shit. I was like, get
the fuck out of here. And so she has to
do the thing and then so I have to sign.
She's like here's something. I'm like, I don't have the buck.
Speaker 6 (02:32:36):
Good.
Speaker 2 (02:32:36):
Yeah, I forgot all about it right, go home. Like
two days later, much was like, hey, what's this fucking
charge for ten dollars and forty cents? And I was
like yeah. I was like, it's Father's Day and I'm
walking out of the grocery store and the lady's like, hey,
are you four teenage suicide? And I'm like, hell no.
Speaker 6 (02:33:00):
Your lesson has been learned. Next time they say are
you four teenage suicide? And fucking are right I am?
And keep along.
Speaker 2 (02:33:06):
I used to try and do fake hey, you know
asl right.
Speaker 6 (02:33:14):
I got burned on that.
Speaker 2 (02:33:16):
He didn't dang any dang sir By He's a dang
dang she did. She was like, sir, that's terrible. And
I just grabbed my groceries and ran.
Speaker 6 (02:33:33):
That's all you can. Yeah, I got no problem telling
them mofuckers, no man, girl scouts team suicide. We're just
trying to raise money for our youth football team. I'm sorry,
I'm poor. I got nothing for you.
Speaker 2 (02:33:45):
Have you seen have you seen the Ricky Gervais. That's
one of the shows I forget which one he's on,
and he's walking through and they're like, would you like
to help hungry kids and blow? And he's like no,
and the guy starts like persuading him, and he's like,
who the fuck are you to guilt me? I'm totally paraphrasing,
who the fuck are you to guilt me? When you're
getting paid to be out here? You're no fucking saint, right,
(02:34:07):
so like fuck off or whatever. And then he walks
in some other person's asking for money and he turns
around and takes money and puts in the tin and
flips the guy off.
Speaker 6 (02:34:18):
Nice.
Speaker 2 (02:34:20):
Nice, Yeah, yeah, So I did my part. So if
suddenly teen Suicide just evaporates off the face of the earth,
you know, it's my ten dollars and forty cents.
Speaker 6 (02:34:31):
Way to go, Corbyn.
Speaker 2 (02:34:33):
That sealed the deal to make sure that, like we
were all good for forever. All right, guys, have a
fantastic week, and we will not have a show next
week for two weeks.
Speaker 6 (02:34:47):
We won't have a best podcast for two weeks, yes, right,
because we'll all.
Speaker 2 (02:34:51):
Be on a weird book vacation rotation. So you guys
have a great week. Ye bye bye,