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July 18, 2025 114 mins
HAPPY FRIGGIN' "A" FRIDAY!!!! Just The Boys Today!!! We Gave You Beer For Surviving, Smear Yogurt On Your Windows To Keep Your House Cooler, Who Needs 53 Right Shoes, Don't Wear Metal Near An MRI Machine, Lonely Kids Are Using Chatbots As Friends, NFL Player Suspensions, Mike From Andolini's Stops By, They Want To Have A UFC Fight On The WHite House Lawn, & Uranus Is Surprisingly Warm!!!
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

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

(00:33):
Then you did it?

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

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

Speaker 4 (01:02):
The sun is rising.

Speaker 5 (01:08):
God, Oh wake up, wake up.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
Now, don't worry.

Speaker 4 (01:13):
We're all here to show you how.

Speaker 3 (01:16):
Jan Witz hors Raw Station k m b G home.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
The listen is a family be don't turn downtown.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
Just wait and say are you ready? Are you ready
to jove in time to start to show.

Speaker 4 (01:34):
Crapsticks a clabout brescome whisping Man, Marny show, Welcome to
the working week. It's all such a bore kick back,
makes up best of it and may get hardcore.

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

Speaker 4 (01:56):
Pick up your phone there line you're on the air.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
Dot dot Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show.

(02:26):
Toll free eight three three four six O k M
O D. Can also text BMMS and then what you
want to say to eight two nine four five. Listen
online the website the Rocks kmo D dot com. Past
shows are available on iTunes search under BMMS listen with
your cell phone. Get the iHeartRadio app, available from the

(02:48):
app store of your cell phone provider. More on that
at iHeartRadio dot com. And we're on Facebook, Facebook dot com,
slash b m MS six nine. That's where you can
hang out with us each and every day. Good morning,
give me will, Good morning Cordon. Lindsay's out, she's got
a personal thing. She's doing fine. We expect to hear
from her on Monday. To be back with us maybe,

(03:13):
I mean, yeah, you never know. Yeah, we've got tickets
to Daughtry. We're gonna give away. Daughtry's gonna be at
the hard Rock Live at the hard Rock Hotel and
Casino on July thirtieth. We've got Mike from Mandelein's stop by.

(03:33):
We'll talk about all the good things, mostly pizza. Yeah,
we got Willy Nilly your chance to own the show,
talk about anything you want. We'll do that at nine.
So if you think we've missed something, that'll be your
chance to bring it up. And it's Friday, specifically friggin'
a Friday. What's something you shockingly survived a case of course,

(03:55):
like could be yours BMMS and what that is to
eight two nine four five, what's something you shockingly survived
BMMS and what that is to eight two nine four five.
I don't know if this guy who was cheating on
his wife had a Coldplay concert's gonna survive? Right? That
thing blew up quick, didn't it?

Speaker 6 (04:17):
Dude?

Speaker 1 (04:18):
He was he's worth one point two billion. Sorry, he
was worth one point two billion dollars because his lady
about to get half Uh yeah, now what was what
was his job? What did he do? A ceo story?
He's the CEO of a company. And the woman he
was canodling at a Coldplay concert, which we will circle
back to, was the director of HR. Big. No, no,

(04:39):
especially HR, lady, and you know better, Becky. I mean,
people be people, And my hot take on HR is
they aren't there for the people. They are there for
the company. And that is the end of the sentence.
So when you're like, oh, they're all they care about
is the goodness of the people, No, they do not. No,

(05:00):
they are not a neutral party. No, they are there
for the company over the As you you have an
assault that happens, don't call HR. First call the police
and then involve HR, right, because they're gonna be like,
whoa did he mean it. But this guy, the CEO

(05:24):
of Astronomer, valued it over a billion dollar. He's valued
it over a billion dollars. He's ca noodling. Now we
don't see them kiss or anything, but they are rather close, right,
and I I don't I was trying to think what
I divorced my wife if I if that was reversed. Okay,
that's a fair question to ask yourself, because they weren't cheating.

(05:47):
I don't know what's happening. The optics on it don't
look no, no, no, sure, because he's got her his
arms around her boobs. Well, let's do better. His genital
are pushed up against against her butt. Yes, they are
snugged up nice and tight as you would with your
significant other, usually with someone that you have a pretty

(06:11):
close relationship with.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
Yah.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
Yeah, yeah, this isn't close friendship because everybody, I don't
want to say everybody, but there's a lot of people
out there that have that work wife, work husband. You know,
somebody close at work of the opposite sex that you
you know, you talk to, you know, you have a
good relationship with. You know, that's what they call it
the work life, work husband. And this is not that

(06:34):
I mean it could be that, but it it just
got a lot deeper.

Speaker 6 (06:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
The best part is the woman in the left hand
corner when her face when all that's going down. Nope.
But again there's no evidence that he's cheating. It just
optically doesn't look good. Well, of course they're at a
Coldplay concert. He doesn't have her bent over in the crowd. No,
but he's not kissing her right right. And and if

(07:00):
I'm gonna cheat, I don't know if a Coldplay concert
is it. And by the way, by the way, you're
going out in public. Yeah, so I always kind of
think it is pretty daring to cheat, right, Yeah, it
is a whole other thing to do it in public eye. Yeah,
especially when you're the CEO of a company where people

(07:24):
would maybe have seen you speak at events or your name.
You know what I'm saying it right, it's a high
profile person. So my thoughts on this whole thing is,
and I've got a story to go along with it.
You don't know who your significant other knows, and you
don't know if they're going to be out right, So

(07:45):
you think you don't know this person, it's a random stranger,
but that person knows your significant other. Here's a prime example. Okay,
so last year I've been dating this girl for over
a year now, right, love her. She's amazing. So last year, no,
it was this year. It was in January because I
took my daughter out to lunch for her birthday, right, okay,

(08:10):
and so we go, I pick her up, We go
to El Chico and have some lunch. Nice and my daughter,
she's a good looking gown, right, she's she's twenty, and
she was dressed. She had a you know, tight black
dress on, little little black dress, you know what I'm
talking about. Sure, right, And we walk into El Chico

(08:32):
and again, this is just me and my daughter, my
twenty year old daughter. It optically is not one hundred
percent all right. So we walk in and the host
sets us down at this table and then my girlfriend
messages me a little later on says, ha ha, you
got caught. And I was like, what are you talking about?

(08:53):
And she sends me a screenshot that one of her friends, Dave,
had snapped a picture or something to that effect and
messaged her, who's this out? Which your man? And that's
when my girlfriend corrected her and said, that's his daughter,
so right, because you guys have a pretty thorough relationship
with you. She knew you were going to lunch. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

(09:16):
So the fact of it is, had that not been
my daughter, if it was some other gal or somebody
I worked with, you know, that could have start stirred
up a whole s storm. Would you find out who
took the picture? Yeah, yeah, yeah it was one of
my friends or whatever. If I found out, I'd be like,
next time I see him and be like, mine your
own business. Yeah right, Why are you trying to stir

(09:38):
up my st if you care about your friends so much?
Uh huh without any information? Uh huh, what are you doing? Yeah?
But the fun thing is is people don't know how
to mine their own business and they want to put
their big old nose right in the middle of it.
And again I knew I didn't have anything to worry about.
Uh So I thought it was kind of funny. But

(09:58):
the fact of it is is if you don't know
who your significant other knows, and you don't know who's
going to be out, So this being a major concert,
there's no telling if one of his wife's friends was
at the concert, family members, whatever. So brass balls on
this guy. For all snugging up to HR Becky at

(10:20):
the concert. Yeah, so his little canoodling probably's gonna cost
him his job, you think, So the CEO fratnizing with
the director of HR. Yeah, not a great look. Yeah,
the board's gonna be like, hmm, you're not representing the
company very well if they're stock drop Like, it's not
a good look. So just because he's the CEO, doesn't

(10:41):
mean he's the owner of the company. Right, he's the
head coach, right, I know he's the he's the h
and I C and I totally get that for sure,
But that doesn't mean he's the owner. He owns astronomer,
whatever the hell it is. I would have said, be
ic but whatever to each his own. I don't know
if what you did was different on the less, Yeah,

(11:02):
I think there's a probability he's gonna lose his job
and she's definitely gonna lose her job, Oh for sure.
I mean I would imagine her my thought on him,
because he's the CEO, he is the big chief there
that maybe he might get some leniency on it, but
definitely somebody is losing their job. So there's this other
thing too that, like I can go to the Bok

(11:24):
Center and I know my way around backstage that I
could go and act like I know where I'm going, right,
and nine times out of ten, ain't nobody bother me,
depending on the artists especially. Yeah, if they wouldn't have
reacted the way they reacted, wouldn't be a blip so
far as well. Yeah, nothing to see him? Yeah, okay,

(11:47):
it would have been not a blip. How should they
have reacted then? For it to not like people do
that are in in a committed relationship. Just keep on
snugging away. Yeah, okay, Right. If they wouldn't have done that,
we wouldn't be talking about it. It wouldn't be all over
the news. They wouldn't have found out who he is,
they wouldn't have figured out his value, They wouldn't have
already found his wife. She wouldn't already be file of

(12:08):
hor divorce. Yeah right, you're right, Okay, I didn't think
about that. Just keep on like everything's supposed to be
the way it is. Okay. Not only that, if you
shouldn't you have like a suite, shouldn't you have kind
of like a more of a private spot. Yeah, but
those are floor seats, man, I don't know where they
were in the arena, but it did not look like
they It looked like they were on the top level somewhere.

(12:29):
To be honest, Well, he is a CEO trying to
save money, cutting corners wherever we go. He's got to
he's got to have his whole card. Man, he's got
to use that whole credit card. What do you want
If I'm up in the three hundreds, nobody will ever
see me up here. They probably were in a suite. Yeah,
And I don't know if I would end the relationship

(12:51):
with your with your significant other. I mean, I'd have
a lot of questions. Yeah, and I would put on
my best Sherlock Holmes, and I'm bet, I bet you
start piecing some things together. I think eventually it would
lead to a divorce. After you know, everything's cool and
gravy right now, let me have some discussions, let's do

(13:13):
some investigation. But I think eventually it would lead because
you're gonna find out that you know, your significant other
was indeed stripping the boss or whatever. Let's let's back
this up. He's the CEO of a company. Is it
out of line for him to have two cell phones
before this you would go, no, that makes sense, like
he has to have a phone. He has a phone

(13:34):
for work that the company pays for, and then he
has his private phone. Yeah, because if he's the CEO,
his stuff can be subject to investigation with the SEC.
Like there's there's some things that happen. So yes, but
then that happens. You're like, it doesn't look good. Are
you sure about that? Let me take you sure about that?
Let's see your text messages? Yeah, right, yeah, And you're like, well,

(13:58):
how many HR companies, how many retreat That would be
my thing. I'd be like hard nos questions. You start
backtracking of all the things, all the business trips he's
been How many times did the director of HR go
on those business trips to the Maldives exactly for the
economic summit? How many times? Yeah? And if the answer

(14:18):
is more than zero, right, then that really raises a
red flag. And you're like, yeah, wait a minute, yeah,
it's it is juicy. Yeah, I'm interested to see what's
going to happen in the next coming weeks because I'm
sure this isn't gonna go away for a while and
so fast. Yeah, it is stories like this. I'm sorry

(14:42):
if this is gonna ruffle some of your feathers. But
if stories like this where we got all this information
so fast, and then the guy who shoots Trump we
don't know anything about, right because it was whatever, It
hardly matters now.

Speaker 6 (14:56):
But like.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
To me those two things, why is the speed of
information dramatically different? Well, that's an easy, easy answer, Corbin.
For this, you have the Internet sleuths. You have just
regular people that are doing this with that the FBI
in charge in the scene. Right, you have internet sleuths. True,

(15:19):
for all that stuff threw you would think they would
have figured that out already unless they were silent. Talk
to the dad and the mom. Well they did in
the beginning. Huh. Yeah. Right, we're gonna have an interview
with the wife on GMA probably this morning. Right, She's
gonna be on E Entertainment tonight. Tonight, she'll be on

(15:42):
the Kelly Clarkson Show tomorrow, right, right, and then Drew
Barry Moore on Monday. Yeah, with Drew bymore crying and
sitting on the floor. Right, that's such a terrible talk
to her and Kelly Clarkson's she's always so like yeah, right,
I used to think she's adorable now and I think
she's the crazy cat lady. She probably smells like cats too.

(16:03):
They'll do all right. We've got beer we're giving away
for freaking a Friday case of COR's Light. What's something
you shockingly survived? Bmms and what that is to? Eight two,
nine four five.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
More of The Big Man Morning Show is next ninety seven.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
On Fridays, we do news quikies, but we do just
the headlines, and these are supposed to be some of
the well crazy headlines from the week. So let's get started.
It's time for news quakies, world news, local news, and
news that just makes you say, what the Here's Corbin,
Gimbi and Lindsay with what's going on news quakies from
The Big Man Morning Show. In ninety seven five, A

(16:44):
man ignores no sex rule after hair transplant. His head
swells like a balloon. You know, why wouldn't you be
able to have sex after a hair transplant? I think
because the top if your head is really sensitive. You
have you seen some of those Turkish head transplants. Huh

(17:04):
uh their hair transplants, huh huh. Post like look up
Turkish airport and the number of bald men in it,
it's hilarious. Or the number of men who have these
red heads from the need of God. Yeah, okay, yeah,
so I get that. Yeah, it would be sensitive. And
I guess having sex, could you know, agitate it but

(17:28):
make it swell up like that. Blessing buckets filled with
Bibles hope arrive for Texas flood survivors. How much hope
does it take to fill a bucket? I don't know
why you got to put a Bible in a bucket? Ah,
you know it gives them hope. Scientists find that uranus

(17:49):
is surprisingly warm ninety eight point sixty degrees to be exacted. Well,
it varies person to person. Man charged with beheading father
says he was trying to perform a citizen's arrest. That's
a little extreme. I thought it was just like citizens

(18:12):
arrest and then you find a way to detain them,
not chop off day hits. I believe I could be wrong.
I believe citizens arrest is not a thing. Well, the
movies and television will lead you to believe. Elsewhy if
somebody runs in here and yell citizens arrest and holds
me down against my will, there is now an assault

(18:34):
and kidnapping charge. You can't just come in and apprehend somebody.
You can have a citizen's arrest the police and be like,
I want this to be a citizen's arrest. Uh huh,
that's a thing, okay, But I do not believe you
just proclaiming it okay makes it so. I always thought
it's like citizens arrest. We're gonna hold you here until

(18:56):
the police show up, and then you explain to them
what's going on on and then they take it from there.
I'd have to speak to one of our officer friends
to see if that's a if that's a legit thing.
But I think people just think you can just do that.
There are limits and risks by doing that. Well, of
course there's a risk of being assaulted. I don't know

(19:18):
what kind of legal trouble the arresttir would be. And
I think you can be like stay here, right, but
I don't think you can forcefully make them step. But
if some jo comes up to me as like citizens arrest,
stay here, well see you bitch, just I'm out the door.
So in Oklahoma, the state law says that a private

(19:41):
person a private person could let's a private person arrest
for a felony but it says that you must have
the suspect to a peace officer without unnecessary delay, So
anything more than if you're like, let's just stop a
quick trip to get a slurpie or whatever. I think
that's where they're like, Ay, okay, I just assume leave

(20:05):
it alone. It ain't none of my business. I mean,
I'd rather just let the people that are trained to
try it.

Speaker 6 (20:11):
Right.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
If there's a crime being committed and I'm seeing it,
I'm just calling nine one one and let them handle it.
I might ghost hey, hey, hey, right see. And that's
the thing. I don't want to get involved because I
don't want to get shot or stabbed, you know what
I mean. Oh No, I'm keeping distance yeaheah. I'm not
trying to get in proximity of somebody. Yeah, thirty feet away.
Lonely kids are using AI chatbots as substitute friends. All

(20:36):
poor kids. Woman attacked driver that hit killed chicken that
was crossing the road. Damn it, I didn't see that.
You had that one in there, which is hilarious. What's
your headline sound saying they woman arrested after attacking driver
that hit and killed a chicken that was crossing the road,
which is funny because you know, she's save the chicken

(20:57):
and this guy is just like, don't don't stop, citizens
arrest the chicken, right, and then she goes to let
me assault you. Naughty Tortoise starts apartment fire in London.
Lindsay was here. That would be a movie, right right,
he would be promoting at nine. Naughty Tortoise family wants

(21:21):
changes after video catches neighbor waving hatchet shouting racial slurs
outside their door. Yeah, that does. That does constitute some change,
doesn't it. I was thinking, like, what would you do
if someone's like yelling racial slurs or whatever and swinging
a hatchet around. You're calling the police, But if they

(21:42):
show up and you and the guy's like, I don't
know what you're talking about, and they just keep doing it.
Like if the police come up and the hatchet guys like,
I don't know what you're talking about. Yeah, and then
he leaves and then they do it again. I mean
it can go on. He's just going to terrorize you,
true to that, but I think after you know, maybe
first call, second call, the police might be like he

(22:04):
says he didn't do it, But on the third call,
I think that that constitutes police getting Hey, listen, bro,
they say you're out here yelling racial slurs and swinging
a hatchet around, You're gonna have to go, or we're
gonna get you for trespassing. I think they have to prove,
they have to catch him in the act, or they
have to have evidence. That's the cool thing about all

(22:24):
these ring doorbells nowadays. Right, you can rent a Grandma
in Japan for twenty three dollars an hour. Also a
movie Lindsay would have promoted at nine, Please investigating After
fifty three right shoes were stolen from a business on Monday,
Why just the right ones? Why fifty three? I could

(22:45):
see somebody trying to steal that many shoes to like
like a Robin Hood sort of thing. You know, I'm
gonna go shoe the homeless, right, that's the thing or whatever.
But and I guess maybe if if you're just going in,
like to a shoe store, and they've got the display
shoes out there, you know, and it's it's just the
right one, you know, it still works. But even then

(23:06):
it's just the right shoe, you don't know. But why
fifty three right ones? Right? I mean, correct Yeah, woman
winds up in wheelchair after her breasts start growing uncontrollably. Dude,
you got to hit that link picture. It didn't happen.
These things are massive, are massive. You just gotta look

(23:29):
at the pictures. I can't tell you much more about
story because it's mine, but you at least look at
the pictures and you're like, damn, those are some honkers.
What those are comically big? Yes? Yes, Now I didn't
read the article. I don't know if they're implanted now,

(23:50):
but they say they started growing, so to me, that
sounds natural. This says that they started growing in a
rate of seven hundred and fifty grams are one and
a half pounds per month. Damn. She used to wear
a medium shirt and now she wears a Her aunt

(24:11):
was the first to raise concerns, and then strangers started
taking notice. Gee you think, you think then the strangers
will take notice first, Like those things have gotten bigger overtime. Listen,
don't question which the way the Lord blesses you. Just
take it with what you you can. Yeah. So, but
she has an actual disease. Oh this is the thing. Huh. Yes,

(24:34):
there's about three hundred cases documented cases around the globe. Huh,
it strikes at random. It's linked to puberty, pregnancy, medications, obesity,
autoimmune disorders, and even hormonal imbalances. Well, she doesn't look
like a massive goal, you know, a big ol' hefty gal.
She's got some massive tatas, that's for sure, but the
rest of her seems to be fairly well. At their

(24:57):
biggest they weighed twenty six pound twenty six pound boobs.
Dang she they say that, Uh yeah, twenty six pounds. Wow,
that's a whole lot of jug man. Yeah, but she
since had a reduction. So I don't know why we're
hearing the story now, but eh, it's now a nothing
burger man in critical condition after being sucked into an

(25:21):
MRI machine. Dude, that is crazy. So this guy, for
whatever reason just busts into the MRI room while there's
an active scan going on. Right. He it didn't say
from what I see in the article, like he was
part of the family or anything like that. He just
bust into this MRI room, and of course he's got

(25:42):
this large chain on and what's an MRI a giant
magnet and just sucks him. Right. I didn't think that
they were that powerful. Oh yeah, suck him in from
across the room. Oh yeah, dude. I don't know why
I'm doing the Koli guy, but I every time I
get an MRI, I go I have the sectomy clips

(26:03):
because guess what I don't want. Oh yeah, your ball's
ripped off. Oh I didn't even think about that, So
I don't care people think I'm a hypochondriac. Good. I
don't want that problem. I gotta check back with my
doctor see if he put the clips in it. I
think he just did the whole soldering thing. I'm not
sure if he put clips in or not, but that's

(26:23):
something I need to check into in case I ever
have to have another MRI. I did the super super
per protective so they clipped soldered and moved them away
from each other because they can grow back. They they
naturally want to be back together, and they can re
get back together. I've got to send my sample off
at the end of this month, July thirtieth, as a

(26:43):
matter of fact, to find out if I'm good to
go or they didn't get it right, grow back together
or not. They said, though, if they do, if it
comes back, and you know, I've still got you know,
mother nature's glue in there. Then they'll do the they'll
go aha and redo the procedure for free, which I
think is is complain about that. Yeah right, I mean

(27:05):
it didn't bother me the first time. Let's go ahead,
go for round two. Well maybe it didn't bother you
because they didn't do it right. Maybe so, I don't know.
I saw the smoke. I saw we have a new
pope come up. So British community looking into fines for
public swearing. That's some bs. Yeah right. Airports ordered to

(27:26):
report any weather modification activities. Okay, weather modification like cloud
seating or you know, harp controlling the weather. What how
are you gonna know? You look up the cloud, you
look man made? Hmm. Man elopes with his son's fiance

(27:50):
and takes the family jewels and savings with him. I mean, yeah,
he's the dad. Of course he's got the family jewels.
What Dick though ankle on, Yes, yes, I'm sure it
was the first time. It's been Hell, hundreds of Amazon
packages mistakenly shipped to US women's home for over a year. Damn.
What do you do about that? I mean, if it

(28:13):
came through the US Postal Service, you can't do anything.
You've got to give it back. You have to give
it back if it came through FedEx or UPS. I mean,
I think it's mine at that point. I guess you're right.
I guess you're right. Uk Man fakes DNA test to
avoid child support. I don't think that's how it works, man. No,

(28:34):
no experiment finds smearing yogurt on your windows can lower
your house temperature by six degrees. Oh god, And it'll
also attract flies and all kinds of other jive. But
your house's bowel movements will be on point. Maybe smart
it's a uti, right, I thought it was cranberry juice

(28:56):
for uti.

Speaker 6 (28:58):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Maybe it's mediction you take. You're supposed to keep eating
a bunch of yogurt for good bacterio and I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know, eat yogurt for the
flavor of it. I'm out last one. No jail for
Wisconsin nurse who cut off man's foot without permission to
use as a frost bite prop. Dude, I accidentally get
my foot cut off? Oh yeah, loss, Oh my gosh.

(29:22):
I will hobble over to the courthouse so fast. All
these stories are on our Facebook page at facebook dot
com slash bmms six nine. We want to know from you,
what's something you shockingly survived A case of course like
could be yours bmms and what that is to eight
two nine four five, just like David is waiting, Hey David,
how are you?

Speaker 7 (29:41):
How about yourself?

Speaker 1 (29:42):
I'm good, sir. What's something you shockingly survived?

Speaker 6 (29:46):
Well?

Speaker 7 (29:47):
I shockingly survived vocal cord cancer.

Speaker 1 (29:53):
And how did you find out you had vocal cord cancer?

Speaker 6 (29:57):
I was.

Speaker 7 (29:58):
I lost my boy. I started whispering talking. My grandson
was just a tiny boy and he was whispering. I said,
why are you whispering? He said, that's what you do.
So I thought I knew the past was my dad
having it and dying, and his dad and other members
of my family. I thought, man, I gotta go get
a checked out. And sure enough I went and they said,

(30:21):
yeah's growing all on your vocal cords.

Speaker 1 (30:23):
Oh man.

Speaker 7 (30:25):
So they decided that the do surgery. They did that
and it was fine. Six months later they grew back.
They did it again. We went on the next year.
This is twenty fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, eighteen and nineteen
that I did the the treatments there was eight over

(30:46):
five years. I'm pardon me. The surgeries there was eight
over five years. And then I ended up doing thirty
six treatments of radiation which was through my mouth on
my vocal cords, and that was a May twenty seventh,
twenty nineteen. It's when I took my last radiation treatment.
And I've put some bill form chemotherapy since then. But

(31:12):
as of late, as you can tell, I've got a
really strong voice. I even was able to sing the
national anthem at the bull Riding Hall of Fame induction
ceremonies three times. So I'm really lucky that I listened
to my body and went and got myself taking care
of before what happened to my relatives happened to me.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
How old was your dad when he died?

Speaker 7 (31:39):
He was forty three? He died in nineteen eighty eight.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
Wow, And how old are you us?

Speaker 7 (31:44):
I'm sixty one, so I was about twenty three, and
my grandpa died of it two years before that in
eighty six.

Speaker 1 (31:51):
How old was he?

Speaker 7 (31:52):
He was in his sixties, I believe.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
So you've, I mean, you've been able to handle it
better than you know. Their bodies can handle it, huh.

Speaker 7 (32:02):
I did, And you know I never missed no work.
I was always able to go to work. I told
myself that I had to keep myself focused on something
other than the cancer. So I did that. And I
credit my job for partly saving my life because it
was so demanding, and I knew I had to show

(32:22):
up for work and I had to do it because
you know, I'm in the US mail business, so we
have a bunch of trucks eighty or so and it
was a really trying time. But I think it made
me a stronger person, and I definitely know it made
me a more grateful person.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
Amazing. Well, Gimby's going to hook you up. Gimby, go
ahead and tell him exactly what he's going to get.

Speaker 8 (32:45):
It's a good thing you survived a'm to such a
tragic event. If not, you wouldn't be able to enjoy
this case occurs light back to you, Cordan, Thank you
so much.

Speaker 1 (32:55):
Man hang on the line so Gimby can get your
info and have a great day, David. Thank I just
was checking my cameras on my kids right and they
were up. The youngest was up a lot last night.
Thunder and stuff.

Speaker 6 (33:09):
Like that.

Speaker 1 (33:09):
At one point I even had go sleeping in bed
with her, right and I don't know why. I see
you're still in bed. I'm like, dude, she's like what
like seven. Yeah, and at seven o'clock in the morning
during the summer. Yeah, no, I know, but I had
to get up a lot. So now you're holding a
grudge again. I didn't say that. I just I didn't

(33:30):
say that. I just was like, and on the weekend,
they're up at like six. That's how it goes. Cartoons, man,
come on, you clearly don't have kids currently. Now there's
cartoons are always on now all right, listen, it's freaking
a Friday. We're giving away beer a case of course,
like could be yours. All you need to do is
answer this question what's something you shockingly survived? By texting

(33:52):
it to us BMMS and whatever that is to eight
two nine four five. If we pick your text and
get you on the air, you will get a case
of COR's light for freaking a Friday can be what's
something you shockingly survived?

Speaker 6 (34:03):
Bro?

Speaker 1 (34:03):
Where do you want me to start? Man? Because I
have been through some stuff in my time, you know,
I think the big glaring one would be like my
motorcycle accident back in twenty eighteen coming back from Rocklahoma.
But I feel like I've talked about that a lot.
I've been run over, I've been hit by cars before, okay,

(34:25):
but I think the one that I'm going to land on.
And I don't know if I've told this story too
often many times, but when I was growing up in California,
I had to be seven or eight at this time,
maybe even nine because we moved when I was ten,
so it was like eight or nine, probably eight. But anyhow,

(34:46):
so my brother and I, my mom and my dad,
we went out to Bodega Bay out there in California,
and it's it's out to buy the ocean, you know,
and my brother and I are and he's five years
older than me, so he would have been what twelve
thirteen at that time something like that, And so we're

(35:08):
we're chasing the waves out right. And I've seen some
kids when I was on vacation in Florida doing the
same thing, and I was like, y'all need to stop that.
Y'all need to stop that, because one of these days,
one of those waves is gonna get you. And we
may we may not see you ever again. But not
my kids, not my business. I'm on vacation. I let
them do their thing, right. So we were chasing the

(35:30):
waves back and forth, and we'd run out there, chase
the waves out to the ocean and then run back
and then back and forth. We did that several times
and one of them, one of the waves got me.
One of the waves got me and pulled me out
to see. There goes Gimpy. See you have a nice day.

(35:51):
My folks were just kind of, you know, hanging out
doing their thing. And luckily there was there was two
random do that were out there on the beach. I
don't know what they do. If they were having a
nice walk or whatever, and romantic walk on the beach.
I don't know whether they know. Maybe they were serving
I don't know. But they ended up going out there

(36:12):
and snatching me up out of the water. I don't
know how far out I went. Here's what I know,
and here's what I remember. We're chasing the waves back
and forth. All of a sudden it's black. I don't
see anything at all, and then the next thing you know,
I'm waking up, laying down on the beach. I finally

(36:35):
come to and my parents my brothers around. They're like,
oh my god, thank god, go you're safe, You're alive,
blah blah blah. And then after that, you know, of course,
my clothes are all soaking wet, so we had to
go to the gift shop and get new shorts and
t shirts so I can have something dry to wear
on the way home or whatever. But that's all that
I remember. I don't really remember the wave swooping over me,

(36:59):
and you're as hell. Don't remember being in the water,
you know, I just remember blacking out. I guess that's
the best way to put it, you know, just seeing
all black and then waking up on the beach, which
I think is shockingly because I if those guys weren't there,

(37:19):
I'd like to think that my parents, my dad at
least would have attempted to go out there and try
to save you. But who knows. Maybe maybe he did
and those other guys were just faster. I don't know.
Maybe everybody saw it and just swarmed in at one time,
but it could have been a lot worse. I could
not be sitting here right now sharing this story with you,
because hell, when I was on vacation Florida. There was

(37:40):
a young girl who got caught up in a riptide
and nobody ever seen her after that, So that could
have been me. I think about this all the time.
The number of things that have to happen correctly for you,
well you to be where you are today is astron
It's insane. It's insane. And so you giving that story,

(38:04):
the motorcycle, all those things. The number of things that
have to happen for you to be where you are today, yeah,
it kind of makes you think like, Okay, what's the
reason of the matrix? Yeah, yeah, for sure, I don't
know if it was matrix and be like let this
GIMPI guy go, come on. Now, there's a video. There's

(38:24):
a video of somebody being pulled out by a riptide online.

Speaker 2 (38:27):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (38:27):
It was going through the tiktoks or something, and the
lifeguard sees it and runs, I mean just full sprint, right,
got their their booie thing running and the parents are
trying to get to the kid, but they don't know
what they're doing right right, and the lifeguard, I mean,
boom is there and so fast. So maybe some of you,

(38:48):
I just i'd like to think your parents were going
but you know, anxiety, adrenaline, not knowing how to fight
the current, right compared to maybe these these two bears
that were there for a long walk, we're like, look
at that, hey, little boy, and knew maybe they were
former lifeguards and maybe cut through either way. For them

(39:11):
to just spring into action like that is pretty impressive. Yeah,
I think a lot of people would do that. Yeah,
I think a lot. I'd like to think that I would.
If I saw somebody drowning out there, I'd give it
my best.

Speaker 2 (39:23):
I the.

Speaker 1 (39:25):
Again, i'd like to think that. I would like to
think that. But the ocean specifically, a riptide ain't nothing
to play with. Plenty of people die trying to save
people who are drowning because the other person's panicking and
pulling them underneath with them, or they get caught up
in the same riptide that pulled that person out. Your

(39:46):
ability of for wanting to help supersedes your ability to
process information now, like it's a riptide. Oh, I don't
know how to swim. Oh I've never trained to rescue
someone who's drowning, And how they will pummel you trying
to get their head up, and then you can't get
your head up right, You see what I'm saying, Like,

(40:07):
your ability to process that information gets negated. So here's
your PSA for the day if you do end up
getting caught in a riptide. And I learned this while
I was on vacation, because they got giant signs that
tell you how to deal with it. Yeah, I'm wondering
how many people ended up drowning before they're like, you know,
we should put a sign up and tell people how
to The key to getting out of a riptide is

(40:28):
to swim parallel with the beach. I learned that. Don't
try to swim towards the beach, swim parallel with it,
and that'll get you out of the riptide and back
up to where you need to be. We always talk
about sharks and how they're like, oh, sharks so horrible, right,
and it's like not a big number or less than ten. Uh,
it's ten more than that should yeah? Yeah, yeah. How
many people do you think die from riptides each air

(40:50):
in America? I feel like the way you're current, yeah,
I feel like the way you're setting up, it's going
to be a low number. But at the same time,
as a who has experienced that sort of thing. I mean,
I didn't die a lot of shark attacks. Did you
see any shark attacks?

Speaker 5 (41:05):
No?

Speaker 1 (41:05):
Okay no, but I did puss out as I was
swimming towards the dolphins to go swim with them because
I couldn't see what was in the water, and I
was like, there could be sharks out here. I don't know,
I'm I'm scared. I'm gonna go back anyhow. I want
to say you said per year twenty five, it's one hundred.
It's one hundred. It's one hundred. And that's the point
of bringing up the shark thing all the time. It's

(41:27):
not worth the amount of tension we get it, right,
especially in what's the word Oklahoma?

Speaker 5 (41:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (41:34):
Yeah, not a lot of rip tides here in Oklahoma? Right,
all right, what's something you shockingly survived? BMMS and what
that is to eight two nine four five case of
corps light could be yours? Listen. I've had a gun
pointed at my face, and I've told that story many
times before. I have been hit with a car. My

(41:56):
car has been hit with a car at sixty five
seventy miles per hour on the road and then pulled
over and then was hitting the face on the side
of the road.

Speaker 6 (42:08):
I have.

Speaker 1 (42:10):
Thought I was going to drown doing a triathlon in
an open water swim. That's gonna be scary. It was
incredibly I was not prepared for the chaos. I have
thought I was going to drown before. I have flipped
over my handlebar bikes as a kid and hit my
head and woke up and everything was green. Oh my,

(42:33):
that's not what I thought of. And although a lot
of people are thinking death, I can tell you two
scenarios where I wasn't sure if I was going to survive,
and one of them was my divorce with my first wife,
my first wife, my practice wife. Oh the amount of

(42:55):
time that that was going on, and not the divorce process,
divorcing from this individual, and the philosophical difference, and her
showing up at my work, her yelling at me when
I used to do the stuff for the drillers, and
yelling from the stands, Oh God, casing the house I
was living in and leaving evidence to prove she was

(43:18):
there to try and terrorize me. The phone calls, the
calls to people in my life. I didn't think I
was going to say. I was like, I don't know
how I can survive this. It felt like it was
I was suffocating. It felt like it was never going
to enter that fair just the weight of all of
it on your shoulders. Yes, and yeah I did. And

(43:42):
she settled down before she passed away. Is she settled
down and you know we moved on. Yeah, But it
felt like I wasn't going to survive it, which I
think is a phrase people say in a lot of
situations in their life.

Speaker 6 (43:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (43:57):
And then the other one was when my oldest got
bacterial meningitis and became sepsis in the hospital. And there
were two scenarios that stick out in my brain at
six months old, by the way, two scenarios that stick
out in my mind where I went, oh, No. One

(44:17):
of them was when seven doctors with their computer carts
are in our room talking about how serious this is
and maybe we need to start thinking about what life
looks like when she doesn't survive.

Speaker 6 (44:33):
And that was.

Speaker 1 (44:36):
A lot to process. And the other was when you
look up the information about bacterial meningitis sepsis. Is that
kind of like googling cancer and then you just kind
of spiral down into the hole. Yes and no, Yes,

(44:58):
you immediately start looking it up well my dad. When
I was told my dad have pancreatic cancer, I looked
it up and you see the mortality rate, and that's
the end of the search. Bacterial meningitis. You can go
down a rabbit hole of what has happened to people,
what has not happened to people in the number of
complications later in life. I mean, it is so yeah,
you can definitely go down the rabbit hole. When you
look up cancer, you're like, oh, the mortality rate is

(45:20):
this okay, or oh, the life expectancy is this long?
And it felt like I remember sleeping in the hospital
and I broke out in hives my whole body. Just
the stress made you break out, or I guess here
in the middle of dealing with all this, I had

(45:40):
to go see my doctor because I was breaking out
and hives, Like my kid is hooked up to machines,
multiple medicines, and they're like, you need to go to
the doctor. We need to make sure this whatever you have,
isn't something that can be shared. And just feeling like

(46:02):
how can I be here when I need to be there?
I can only imagine and felt like I wasn't going
to survive being in the er, and if you're a
bit in the ar, you go in, you see somebody
and like, oh okay, yeah, yeah. But when you're in
the er and more and more people start filing into
the room and you're pressed against the wall because there's

(46:24):
fifteen people in a closet working on your kid, You're like, oh, no,
something is not good. Literally nothing you as the parent
can do about it. You're being yelled questions, but you
can't process what's happening. Yeah, I didn't think I was
going to survive that. Yeah, I can imagine, and.

Speaker 6 (46:46):
I did.

Speaker 1 (46:47):
And so I wanted to pick those two because surviving
isn't necessarily about life or death. We probably throw the
word I survived around a lot longer or a lot
more than we probably should. It should be reserved for
things like, hey, I woke up blocked out on a beach,
right right, right, right, But that's still surviving a major

(47:07):
major problem in life. You know that some people, some
people might not even make it through. Some people might
take that weight of the world that's on their shoulders
and just say, you know what, I'm done, give me
a rope or whatever the case is. Yeah, that's definitely
a choice. So what's something you shockingly survived? Bm ma mass?

Speaker 6 (47:30):
And what that is?

Speaker 1 (47:31):
To eight two nine four five? A case of course,
like could be yours. We're gonna give away some beer
coming up, tell us this morning show.

Speaker 6 (47:37):
Yet we're good.

Speaker 1 (47:40):
You've been asking people what's something you shockingly survived? A
case of course like could be yours? Be in my mass?
And what that is to eight two nine four five.
And it looks like Mark is waiting, Hey, Mark, how
are you doing all right?

Speaker 5 (47:55):
How are you good?

Speaker 1 (47:55):
Friend? What's something you shockingly survived?

Speaker 9 (48:01):
So three years ago, I had shoulder surgery. It's a
repair of bicet muscle and removed some cartleage from my shoulder,
got out, got into recovery. Ten days later, I started
coughing up blood and wound up with blood class my lungs.

Speaker 1 (48:19):
And how did that happen? Like do they know how
to connect the dots to what happened?

Speaker 9 (48:26):
No, they have absolutely no idea, Like I started physical
therapy two days before that, and they think that just
from setting around for seven days or whatever causes it
to blood clot to build on my shoulder. And when
we started physical therapy broke free. That's the only explanation
they could give me.

Speaker 1 (48:46):
Wow, and you say you started coughing up blood. How
freaked out were you when you went hot poora and
found all this blood in your mucus?

Speaker 9 (48:56):
So at first I wasn't very free that all right,
because I've had science infection before that, So I just
kind of put it towards that, like it's just hawking
a loogi spent no blood from it, you know.

Speaker 1 (49:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (49:13):
But I woke up.

Speaker 9 (49:15):
Monday on a Monday morning and started just having real paints,
couldn't set up, couldn't breathe, nothing like that, coughing up blood,
and told my wife it's time to get me to
the emergency room. Something drown.

Speaker 7 (49:29):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (49:29):
So did you do you have any residual problems?

Speaker 9 (49:33):
So three years later and I still recovering right like
I can. Probably I've gotten to where I could start
jogging maybe one hundred and fifty feet, throwing up a
flight of stairs. I get winded. I have to stop
all that good stuff. So yeah, it's been it's been
a road of recovery, that's for sure.

Speaker 1 (49:52):
And are you still seeing a medical professional?

Speaker 5 (49:56):
Uh? No.

Speaker 9 (49:56):
I go in for basically once a year and now
out to get scanned or whatever they want to do,
just to double check make sure everything's still on, get
upping up and everything's recovering. Other than that, nobody for
anything else.

Speaker 1 (50:11):
And did you did they tell you, like, hey, you're
you're going to be struggling to get back to normal.

Speaker 9 (50:17):
Oh yeah, yeah, I would say that's on a blood
thinners for six months. So basically I had to watch
everything I was doing. Little cut man, you believe you
wouldn't believe have both?

Speaker 6 (50:29):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (50:30):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (50:31):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (50:31):
All right, well, Gimby tell him exactly what he's going
to get.

Speaker 8 (50:36):
As much as you wish he'd didn't. Corbyn survived being
held at gunpoint back in college. Here's a case of
curs life at.

Speaker 1 (50:45):
Mark King on the line, so Gimby can get your info.
Have a fantastic weekend, All right, thank you man. All right,
let's see what Gimpi has in his four by four
well Corvin. It says here that Maureen Kmy responds after
her firing. Fired federal prosecutor Maureen Comy says fear is

(51:06):
the tool of the tyrant. The daughter of former FBI
director James Comy, was fired by the Department of Justice Wednesday.
From the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District
of New York, where she worked as a federal prosecutor
in the Glaine Maxwell case loop Maxwell serving a twenty
year sentence for helping the late Jeffrey Epstein sexually abuse

(51:29):
underage girls. Comy says no response is given for her termination.
We know it's petty. We're trying to cover this up.
It's petty. She's responsible for two of the biggest court
cases right in the last what ten years. So they
get rid of her, they're gonna have to put in

(51:51):
another sure person, right, So sure, I guess maybe somebody
that will bend to their will or whatever.

Speaker 7 (51:57):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (51:58):
Just with everything going on, it doesn't look good. Yeah,
what else we got here? Jewel wins an FDA author
authorization to continue selling e cigarettes not Jewel the uh oh.
I was like, I was trying to find the song.

Speaker 6 (52:12):
Sh your not me.

Speaker 1 (52:15):
Say she's got she's got some jank t. Yeah, she's
still a hot though, by the way, and a heartbeat,
and man, she's gotta be damn near sixty. I'm all,
I'm alright with that. What does it say here? Jewel
has faced controversy over its early marketing practices, which critics
say targeted young consumers under twenty one now. According to

(52:37):
the FDA spokesperson, Jewel provided evidence demonstrating that It's e
cigarettes met the legal standard for marketing new tobacco products
in the US. Sorry, she's fifty one, hey either way?
Man still hot, Still still would knock it out in
a heartbeat. What else we have here? House approves cutting
funding to public broadcasting and global health. The House is

(52:58):
voting to pass a back in giggdey of nine billion
dollars in DOGE spending cuts. Lawmakers voted two sixteen to
two thirteen to approve the cuts to public broadcasting, global
health programs, and four and eight. This after Republican senators
narrowly passed the package yesterday. The bill can now head
to President Trump's desk for his signature and then lastly, here,

(53:22):
the city of Catoosa a men's curfew for juveniles. This
change comes after recent increase in vandalism at their splash pads.
The city's previous curfew hours we're eleven pm to six
am Sunday through Thursday, and twelve am midnight to six
am on Fridays and Saturdays following the amendment. The new

(53:42):
curfew hours are ten pm to six am Sunday through Thursday,
and eleven pm to six am Friday and Saturday. The
curfew applies to CATUSA residents under eighteen years old who
are within the quote corporate limits of Good morning, gippee Oil,
good morning Corban. You just got your first keyword the
rock bank. That keyword is grand as in the amount

(54:02):
of money you're gonna win, or lake or the piano.
And you take that keyword over the website the rockskawhen
he dot com, plug it in and gets yourself one
thousand simoleans. Good luck, giving away beer for freaking a Friday.
What's something you shockingly survived BMMS and what that is
to eight two nine four five BMMS space, whatever your

(54:24):
answer is to what you shockingly survived to the phone
number eight two nine four five, we'll give away some
beer coming up here in a little bit. Normally we
do taste of time trivia. We won't be doing that
today because it's born when there's two of us. Well,
that was over, uh so Rashi Rice the Chiefs player, Yeah,
who was caught going one hundred and nineteen miles per

(54:48):
hour through Dallas triggered a six car crash injured four people.
He has been given a sentence of five years probation
and thirty day in jail, and the judges said he
can serve those thirty days at any point during the
five year probation, so he's not instantly in. He's just

(55:09):
within the next five years. He's got to do thirty days. Yes,
Now the question is is that thirty consecutive or does
he go in like when they're during the week, when
they're not playing or in the off season. He can
do it whenever he wants, okay, and not like to
here to there, whatever, So he could do thirty days,
you know. Next March, I agree. I think he got

(55:32):
a slap on the wrist. Yes, he got a got
He definitely got not a intense punishment for something that
could have been could have been really dangerous, a six
car crash. Four people did get injured, two or treated
at the scene. Two had to go to the hospital,

(55:53):
but nobody had serious injuries. Nobody dined from it, nobody died,
Nobody had serious injuries. So why did he get such
a light Well, no one died. That actually matters a
lot and sentencing for sure. Yeah. The other is he
turned himself in. He's been a legitimate part of the process.

(56:14):
He apparently they think he might have already settled or
is working on settling the civil side of these situations
with the families of the ones that were injured or
the people that were injured. Yes, and then of course
he's a high profile celebrity with means to hire really
great attorneys and that makes a big difference, right. Yeah,

(56:38):
So to me, yeah, this I was kind of shocked.
I thought that was pretty light for what happened. Now,
what he did was dangerous, but again, nobody was seriously hurt.
Correct reckless, yes, but not not the most egregious thing

(56:59):
we've seen happen.

Speaker 6 (57:00):
Kay.

Speaker 1 (57:01):
So he's on five years probation and if he messes
up in any way, whatsoever does it say in there
how long he goes to jail four If he does,
we'll just be a parole violation. And so okay, he
would they would probably get him on that, Okay, and
then I think they would be a little bit longer,
probably more than thirty eight.

Speaker 6 (57:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (57:20):
Yeah, but that's only one part of this story. Okay.
The other part, now, is he has to find out
how many games he will be suspended from the NFL. Okay,
and this is the Roger Goodell that's gonna make the
suspension or whatever the committing Okay, yes, so I was
went down a rabbit hole of NFL spen suspensions of

(57:42):
the last five years. Okay, twenty twenty two players suspended. Really, yes,
that's not bad. Both of them for PED violations, both
of them six games. What's the ped performance enhancing drugs? Okay, gotcha?
In twenty twenty one, no one, really, it was a
good year for the NFL. Yeah, which point out this

(58:03):
is when they handed out the suspensions, right. Twenty twenty
two Deshaun Watson, Yeah, eleven games and that was for
his sexual assault with the mas Sewers. Right, Well, they
cited it as personal conduct violations resulted related to multiple allegations.
Calvin Ridley, Okay, one year for betting on NFL games. Wow, now,

(58:29):
twenty twenty three was a banner year. Wait a minute, pause, Yes,
so Deshaun Watson gets suspended for eleven games for forcing
women to touch his wayner, right, and this other cat,
Calvin gets suspended for the entire year for just placing
a bet well, because betting is kind of a hot
button because you can it can imply that you're cheating

(58:51):
or throwing things to let an outcome you. So they're
pretty harsh on that. Salting women totally different thing, but
there's a point. I'm I'm glad you're getting there because
I'm making a point here. Twenty twenty three was a
banner year. I will not name all the players, but
there was one, two, three players that were in trouble

(59:15):
for personal conduct anywhere between three and six games. And
there was two players that were in trouble for PD
violations where Cam Robinson got four games and Amani Bledsoe
got seventeen game suspension for ped wow and the rest

(59:36):
are all gambling. One two, three, four, five, six, seven,
Eight players got in trouble for gambling, a lot of
them indefinite, like in definite suspension if you're suspended until
we say you can come back. Correct. Huh So twenty
twenty three was a banner year. Yeah, clearly they don't

(59:58):
mess around. They're trying to send a mess. We don't
mess We're not messing around with gambling, right right, take
you know, the drugs and assault women whatever you want,
but do not bet on a game. In twenty twenty four,
we got PD violation, six games, personal conduct, Zay Jones
five games, two games personal conduct. Von Miller got in

(01:00:21):
trouble in twenty twenty four four games for domestic violence. Wow.
Jamis Williams of the Lions got two games for a
PD violation. I don't know if you heard me. None
of them were aggravated assault. No, none of them. Now,
personal conduct, you could probably argue, is what this is
going to fall under. I don't see how Rashie Rice

(01:00:42):
fits into all this in terms they're saying, Rashi Rice
is going to get six games, that's the prediction, right,
I don't know how that matches with some of these well,
I mean with the personal conduct, I could see, you know,
since we're going that route with it, he should have
conducted himself a little bit better off the field and
not con six car pile up, of course, But none
of these people. Some guys are getting two for cheating, right,

(01:01:07):
Some guys are getting two for hitting a woman, which
I think is so fast awkwards y, yes, yes, And
so then I delved in a little bit further to
players that have gotten in trouble for felony, reckless driving
or aggravated assault. What was their suspension? The only match

(01:01:27):
that I can find of all of the players happened
in twenty twenty two when Brandon Eckles of the New
York Jets he was in a high speed crash and
he was charged with fourth degree assault by auto felony
for reckless driving and the person that he hit listened
to what happened to this person? It is horrible. So

(01:01:48):
he was driving his Dodge Charger Hellcat eighty four miles
per hour in a fifty mile per hour zone when
he rear ended a BMW in New Jersey. The driver
of the BMW suffered serious injuries, broken ribs, spinal damage,
and partial paralysis. Oh god, so this feels like an
equal thing that happened right with Rashid Rice's case? Yes? Yes,

(01:02:13):
How many games do you think he got suspended? Four?
Four games? One? Really? So you can't tell me Rashid
Rice is gonna get six? That makes no sense, No,
there's no now. If anything, the punishments and how they've
handled them out has been erratic, and this severity, and

(01:02:34):
because Deshaun Watson probably should have got more than what
he got for sure, but he should at least got
one game for its intion. But whatever, Yeah, if they're
suspending people indefinitely for gambling, then the sexual assault, this
with this guy ramming into the s end of that
BMW paralyzing an individualities exactly, should get you know, at

(01:02:54):
least a year. I would think at least six you know.
The domestic all domestic violence should get you at least,
you know, a year. I think it should be a
zero tolerance. I'm domessage one hundred percent.

Speaker 6 (01:03:08):
It should be.

Speaker 1 (01:03:09):
First time you get a year, second time you're done. Yeah,
like kicked out of the league. Gun. I don't I
don't disagree with that at all. With domestic I think
it sends a clear message that they're not going to talk.
They're doing it with goddamn gambling. How come they can't
do it with this right? You know, gambling isn't technically
hurting anybody.

Speaker 6 (01:03:26):
You know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (01:03:27):
But it's it's it's it's messing with the integrity the game.
That's why ped also has kind of a harsh punish
And I get that, and we'll almost circle around back
to that one here in a second there, But like
technically it's not physically hurting anybody. Yes, it and it it,
you know, harms the integrity of the game. At this point,
what fin integrity is there? I don't think there is.

(01:03:48):
You're letting wife beaters go, You're letting sexual assaulters go
without minimal punished integrity of the game of like playing
the right right, not integrity like good human beings. It's just.
But as far as comparable situations, she Rice didn't paralyze
anym No. There was some minor injuries and some of

(01:04:09):
them were treated on the scenes, some had to go
to the hospital, but none serious, none considered serious. Nobody
was paralyzed. Nobody was paralyzed. So why is he? Why
is six games? And this wasn't like the Brandon echlesing
wasn't ten years ago.

Speaker 6 (01:04:23):
Right, it was three?

Speaker 1 (01:04:24):
Well who's the better player?

Speaker 6 (01:04:26):
Rush?

Speaker 1 (01:04:27):
Sheied Rice. I know you're gonna say him because you're
a Kansas City mark, but no, seriously, who's the better player?
I think it's still to be one hundred percent proven
that Rashi Rice is. But it appears that Rai Rice
is right because my thought is, well, if this cat's
a better player, of course he's gonna get a lighter
sentence as opposed to this guy who was still good
but not as good as the other guy. I just

(01:04:48):
don't say. I just don't see how you get to
six games. Now there's in a similar situation worse but
on the same level. To only get one game two
makes it a by two. You're like, well, it was
going one hundred nineteen miles p hour, that's true. That is,
you know about forty miles prour, almost forty miles p

(01:05:10):
hour more than what the Brandon Eckles guy did. So
I'm good with three games, right or again, I'm not
saying he should get punished. He should absolutely get punished.
So about these performance enhancing drugs, does this say what
does it?

Speaker 6 (01:05:23):
Ever?

Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
Do they ever release what they were? Because when I
hear that, I instantly think steroids, But I know they
also put marijuana under that category. Or maybe you tested
positive some cocaine or something, or maybe you had a
poppy seed muffin and got popped for that, you know
what I mean. So I'm just curious as to what
are the what is their definition, and what are the

(01:05:45):
performance enhancing drugs? So usually it's some sort of steroid.
Of course, it's some sort of HGH human growth hormone.
It's some sort of diuretic. It's some sort of masking agent,
it's some sort of peptide hormone. It's something that enhances
your ability to play, okay, or cover up situated stuff,

(01:06:06):
right right, right, Okay, that's silly. Ah Again, it is
the illusion of integrity, right. I like that the illusion. Yeah,
we turned our blind eye with Mark McGuire for a
long time. Yeah, man, he was cranking him out there,
wasn't he beefy?

Speaker 6 (01:06:23):
Now?

Speaker 1 (01:06:23):
Where I different an opinion is I'm for like, I
don't care if you do. In baseball, hitting home runs
is awesome.

Speaker 5 (01:06:29):
In the.

Speaker 1 (01:06:31):
NFL, players exerting force on another individual, I think that
that's where that that's kind of really dangerous. I see that.
You know, you start causing concussions and stuff like that now,
But still, your performance enhancing drugs isn't getting near as
many suspensions as physically harming somebody, domestic assault, whatever the

(01:06:53):
kids may be. But for me, Rashid Rice getting six
games is wild. Maybe it's the man's way of stomping
them down. Be Like, the Chiefs are not going to
win this year, and I'm gonna make it happen, right,
suspended six games. Yeah, you may not like it, but
Taylor Swift's good for the league. You got to take
a break. We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (01:07:12):
Tilsa's Morning Show continues next with a Big Man Morning
Show on Tulsa's Rock.

Speaker 1 (01:07:17):
Station ninety seven. We are going to give away some
beer coming up freakin a Friday. What's something you shockingly survived?
A case of course, like could be yours. So I
wanted to bring this up because I saw it on
TMZ Sports yesterday that they have the mock ups done
and that Dana White is going to go meet with
the President to do a UFC event on the lawn

(01:07:40):
of the White House. I can see that happening for
twenty twenty six July fourth, celebrating two hundred and fifty years. Right.
I love the idea of this. I just don't know
logistically how they can do it. What do you mean
by that? Well, let's just talk of basic infrastructure, okay,
I mean, come on, bathrooms, you put it porta potties

(01:08:02):
for I mean, how many people are they gonna do it?
Maybe maybe I'm misthinking it's gonna be like ten thousand
people right, just a certain amount of people, maybe just
a couple one hundred okay, right, I'd say at max
a thousand okay, because you're looking at it's on the
White House lawn. Okay, so it's gonna be pay per view.

(01:08:23):
I would imagine it would be. Oh, I don't think
I don't think so, why not? Well, okay, we'll come
back to that. The other logistics situation security that would
the Secret Service has the protection responsibility of the lawn. Okay,
you have a lot of people coming onto the property, yes,
and that every cable would have to be checked, right,

(01:08:46):
Every camera would have to be checked right right right.
The logistical nightmare that this provides is wild to comprehend.
Unless the White House uses their own cameras and cables
and still has equipment. Still all has to be checked,
everything has to be checked, which, okay, that I don't

(01:09:09):
think would be that bad. I don't think it would
be that hard to go through that, especially if they're
in the planning phase now and they're like, yes, we're
gonna do it. It's like, okay, let's start doing all
that and getting all this equipment ready and checked now,
and then once it's checked, then has to be protected
by Secret Service the whole time. Now here's I feel
you on that one. I feel you on that one

(01:09:31):
because you could start early. There's only x amount of
Secret Service agents, right, but so the Secret Service is
in charge of it. But let's also bring in the
National Guard or you know, the Army of the Marines,
whatever the case is, local DC police as well. You know,

(01:09:52):
they've got a lot of authorities around that area that
where they can, they could pool their resource together where
it's not just hinging all on the men and women
of the secrets. So normally that's true, except it's on
the White House grounds, which is where the asterisk is.

Speaker 6 (01:10:12):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:10:12):
If it's happening in the street or things like that, yes,
so because it's happening on the White House grounds, be
that as it may. We don't have to solve that.
The other part is they can't spend money on a
commercial event. This is why they won't be able to
charge a pay per view. Oh, the government can't do that, right,

(01:10:33):
use government funds and then charge people. There can't be logos, okay,
it would have to be neutral. The UFC can't pay
for it, okay, and gifted that's not the way it works.
There's a thing called the Hatch Act. That's a real thing, right, Right,
So we're only talking about three that are way above
our pay grade to understand. Yeah, for sure, what if

(01:10:56):
there's more issues. What if the White House lawn is
what they're the term that they're using. I think that's
ultimately what's gonna happen. And it's actually in the middle
of the street in front of the White House, except
that's now closed and part of the considered the White House.
There's the Eclipse on the other side of Lafayette Square.
I mean, there's there's places where that look like they're

(01:11:17):
not a part of the White House, but they've broadened
the circle of dome of protection if you will. Okay,
that makes sense. Then Yeah, I don't know how they're
gonna do this. They're gonna have My only thought, listen,
I want them to do it. I'm just saying, like,
this feels like not a great way to spend money.

Speaker 6 (01:11:32):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:11:34):
And the other part that I think will happen is
what you alluded to. It'll be kind of like maybe
you'll see it in the background, the White House lawn
in the background. Yeah, so put it on a whole
other part of DC just happens to have the White
House in the background.

Speaker 6 (01:11:52):
Okay, that can make it work.

Speaker 1 (01:11:54):
But then it's but it's then you're just doing in
the street. Yeah, and then there's this other thing, what's
it called weather? That makes it even better though. Bro,
if they're out there fighting and beating the hell out
of each other in the rain, Ah, yes, that would
be amazing. Okay, let's just take that out. It's one

(01:12:16):
hundred and ten even better. No, yeah, you like out
the guy in the corner with the squirt bottle, goles
thirty or whatever. I'm just saying there's some logistics involved.
I don't even think the UFC's ever done an outside event. Yeah,
I don't know. I don't keep up with it enough
to know, so probably not. It always seems to be
in an arena somewhere. And then maybe it's gonna be

(01:12:37):
in a tent. We're gonna make this big tent and
do it inside like a big circus tent. Okay, yeah,
because they have to have protection for the president. They
don't love him.

Speaker 6 (01:12:48):
Just walk.

Speaker 1 (01:12:49):
There's this thing that happened down in Dallas. I don't
know if everybody remembers, they don't like open air scenarios.
I just think there's a lot. Again, I'm just saying
it isn't as easy sys you want to do it right.
The idea is there, but now we gotta figure out
how to actually make it work. Yeah, yeah, you know whatever,

(01:13:10):
Maybe ooh, here's one. Put it in the dome right
in Vegas. And then because you know, they can change
the background whatever of the dome in Vegas and you
just change that or the sphere, my bad, the sphere
in Vegas, and then you just change that to look
like the White House or the White House lawn. Technically

(01:13:34):
this is the White House lawn. It's just digitalized picture
is still in the sphere. I think that could work.
I think that I think I've got something here. Dana
White call me, Yeah, there can't. It's gonna be wild
to see how this plays out. And I mean, hey,
as far as I know, all bets are off on
everything anymore, so I don't know anything about nothing. We

(01:13:58):
gotta take a break. We'll be back Telsea's.

Speaker 2 (01:14:00):
Morning Show, The Big Man Boarding Show. The Assault continues
the next ninety seven.

Speaker 1 (01:14:07):
Giving Way Beer for freaking a Friday. What's something you
shockingly survived case of course, like could be yours and
Jacob's waiting. Hey Jacob, how are you good? How are
you good? What's something you shockingly survived?

Speaker 6 (01:14:24):
Me and my wife were.

Speaker 10 (01:14:26):
Actually headed to the bar on our Harley and we
hit a deer at seventy mile an hour.

Speaker 1 (01:14:30):
Dang, not a fun time. Did it throw you off
the bike?

Speaker 10 (01:14:41):
Yeah, we actually hit it, and I kept it up
right for a second, and my front tire locked up
because the sender has been into it, and so we
kind of stood up on the front tire and went
down on her side and I wrapped my wife up.
She got away with just a few scratches, and I
saw plumped through my arm because she rode down the

(01:15:02):
road on.

Speaker 9 (01:15:03):
Top of me.

Speaker 1 (01:15:04):
Oh so you like because of road rash you had
a hole in your arm. Yeah, and you could see all.

Speaker 10 (01:15:10):
That, Yeah, from the tip of my pinky all the
way to about two inches above my elbow on my
right side, my right arm, just grinding it all down
all the way, yeah, all the way to the bone.
Is that And that's the only injury you had?

Speaker 5 (01:15:26):
Uh?

Speaker 10 (01:15:27):
No, it broke my left ankle. Uh, my left knee
got You could see my kneecaps through my skin and
there was a huge spot on my back as well.

Speaker 1 (01:15:39):
How pissed off was your wife?

Speaker 10 (01:15:42):
She was pretty piste off.

Speaker 1 (01:15:46):
Deer, you son of a bitch. You got us in
an accident.

Speaker 10 (01:15:51):
Yeah, well, and the other bad part, you know, when
you hit a deer on a Harley.

Speaker 1 (01:15:56):
Yeah, yeah, we can't say that on the air. Poop
would be a better What he is? Oh my bad,
that's okay, that's okay. And so they defecated. The deer
defecated everywhere, yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:16:09):
All over us, and uh we slid. We slid down
the road and we hit the The rumble strip in
the center on that section of highway had just been redine.
So when we hit it, it sent me airborne and
we went tumbling, and it was It was a crazy ride,
for sure, but I looked so bad when the highway controuble.

(01:16:33):
He was first on scene. He come running up and
he said, all right, guys, what have we got going on?
I was laying on the shoulder. He took one looked
at me and covered his mouth. He said, I'm gonna
go get my first aid kit. And then I never
seen him again. I don't think he had the summit
for it.

Speaker 1 (01:16:46):
So did it knock you out?

Speaker 5 (01:16:49):
No?

Speaker 10 (01:16:50):
I never lost consciousness.

Speaker 1 (01:16:51):
Were you well we're in a helmet?

Speaker 10 (01:16:54):
Nope?

Speaker 1 (01:16:55):
Wow. Uh have you stopped riding or did you get back?
You and your wife get back on.

Speaker 10 (01:17:01):
We still have the bike. It was eight hundred dollars
from being totaled, but we had it completely rebuilt and
customized and we still ride it every summer.

Speaker 1 (01:17:10):
Nice. Wow, that feels like a gift. Man, Gimby, go
ahead and tell him exactly what he's gonna get.

Speaker 8 (01:17:17):
I'm really glad the abortion didn't take or I wouldn't
be able to give you this case of Kurz Light.

Speaker 1 (01:17:23):
Back to you, Coralvin, hang online, man, so Gimpee can
get your info and have a fantastic weekend.

Speaker 10 (01:17:31):
Thanks you too.

Speaker 1 (01:17:32):
All right, let's go ahead and do Balls to the
wall sports. The Major League Baseball season resumes tonight with
the start of the unofficial second half. Troy Tiger's come
out of the All Star break hold and the best

(01:17:53):
record in baseball at fifty nine and thirty eight. They
also have a comfortable eleven and a half game lead
on the twin in the Al Central. Toronto Blue Jays,
aren't I the AL East, two games ahead of the Yankees.
The Astros lead the AL West by five games over Seattle.
In the Senior circuit, the Dodgers sit five and a

(01:18:14):
half up on the Padres in the NL West, Phillies
hold just half game lead on the Mets in the
NL East, while the Cubs are up one game on
the Brewers in the NL Central. The executive director of
the NFL Players Association is backing down. Lloyd Howell Junior,
resigned last night after two years as the leader of
the union. In a statement, he said his leadership has

(01:18:37):
become a distraction to the work they've been doing every day.
The resignation comes after numerous reports about FBI investigations, conflicts
of interest, and confidentiality agreements, and finally, the Tulsa Oilers
football can clinch a playoff spot for the first time
in team history this weekend. As possibilities continue to add

(01:18:59):
to the bedlam of the final two weeks of the
regular season, the Oilers are gearing up for a pivotal
two game stretch to close the Indoor Football League's regular season.
With the Eastern Conference playoff picture tight, Tulsa's postseason hopes
and potential seating depend on the upcoming matchup against Jacksonville
tomorrow night at the Bok Center. The regular season home

(01:19:20):
finale kicks off at seven oh five pm and tickets
available at Bokcenter dot com. That's your Balls to the
Wall Sports. I'm corbin in ninety seventy five kmod Combos.
To the Wall Sports is powered by the award winning
service of ground Works Tulsa. More of the Big Mad
Morning Show is next.

Speaker 2 (01:19:37):
The Big Man Morning Show returns next Tulsa's Morning Show
ninety km o D.

Speaker 1 (01:19:43):
All right, time for Will and Illy. Mike from Andandalini
is joining us. Hey, ma'am, Hello, good, just chewing on
some SPQR oh y'all. All right, so Andelini's we've got
summertime going on. Pizza always works in the sun or
even when it's hot.

Speaker 6 (01:20:00):
It is a very interesting summer because the rain keeps
cooling us off. But we are in full swing with
all our patios kicking into full gear and then a
lot and I mean a lot of catering this summer
and we are game for it. You know, twenty years
deep now, we've got our catering game really tight. So

(01:20:21):
if you got anything coming up. I don't want you
to worry about it. That's my goal. Is a catering
company works one day a week, two days a week.
We're a full blown restaurant that does catering, so we're
seven days a week. If you email Ashley at Catering
and a Pizza dot Com saying hey, I got this thing,
we got I need twenty people, I got seven people.
I got one hundred and twenty people. It's just old

(01:20:41):
hat to us now, and we'll get you right with
whatever it is, whether it's fine dining food with Prossobo
pizza or we have our connections with those pachos to
get you a baller ass Mexican dinner all set up
and ready for you, easyps, lemon squeezing.

Speaker 5 (01:20:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
And I see the pizza trucks out and about doing
this thing. Of course it'll be a right Oklahoma. I
saw you guys are going to be at the Philbrook
tonight for the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. We're screening.

Speaker 6 (01:21:07):
It's Adeline's worldwide and that's why we live it, you know,
a worldwide all over Tulsa. If we could be there,
we will be there. And also Oklahoma, this summer looks amazing.
Can we just say looks amazing? We got three eleven
in the mix. I am very excited for this year's
Wrockaholma and the truck guys are as well.

Speaker 1 (01:21:26):
Yeah, always does well at Rockaholma. And we have people
you just got talked about it in the breakroom. People
want to know how to get the truck to come
to their house or for a block party or a
PTA event. What's the best way for people to get
in touch for that?

Speaker 6 (01:21:41):
So again, email catering at Ando pizza. Just say the date,
say the date, and if we got it, we're your huckleberries.
It's it's an easy way to just not worry about
your thing, and we're there. You got a wedding, you
got a party, you got anything, We'll be there, as
simple as that.

Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
Yeah, it doesn't have to be pizza.

Speaker 6 (01:22:01):
It does not. We do so much more than pizza
at this point. You want something, we'll make it. We
know how to do anything, all right.

Speaker 1 (01:22:10):
So Mike from Annealini's is here. We're doing Will and Nelly.
Anything you want to talk about. Bring up something new.
What's something you shockingly survived? Mike?

Speaker 6 (01:22:17):
I got a few quite a few. You know, I've
talked about it briefly in the past. I was in
the Marine Corps Officer Canada school, not knowing I was
a Type one juvenile diabetic, and I got down to
one hundred and thirty pounds. I went into what's called
keto acidosis, but did not get hospitaliast never went comatose.

(01:22:38):
Normal blood sugar range is like eighty to one twenty.
It people will be like, oh, I'm pre diabetic, I'm
one thirty. I was running thirteen hundred at the time
and consistently not knowing it, running uphill everything. And then
when I went back, when I got out of OCS,
I went I was just eating to eat and eat,

(01:23:01):
lasting get my bloodsherg even further. Then I couldn't even
walk upstairs. Once in the hospital under like, You're the
most obvious Type one diabetic we've ever seen. And I
was hospitalized for four days. So that one that was
a you know, pretty close to death, right.

Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
The chance is the chance it's a hairline difference between
the story you told and it not ending well right.

Speaker 6 (01:23:20):
Oh, very much. So I could have died. And there's
been a lot of near accidents. I had a helicopter crash,
you know, feet away from me when I was a kid.

Speaker 1 (01:23:30):
What, Yeah, you don't get to just go and then
move on if you look it up.

Speaker 6 (01:23:35):
In nineteen ninety nine, a police helicopter crashed in Santa
Clara and I was on a trip with my high
school and we were at a stoplight and a helicopter
crashed ten feet away from me. At that stoplight. It
is the police officer was had both jines to go
out of this helicopter. He had the wherewithal to steer

(01:23:59):
it towards the stoplight of an empty intersection.

Speaker 1 (01:24:03):
Is this in nineteen ninety nine.

Speaker 6 (01:24:04):
Ninety nine, right in Santa Clair And I just watched
the helicopter crash, writing from me, it's police helicopter. So
what's at that point? The police call I believe it's
a ten ninety nine is called out where every single
officer is called. So if they're riding a ticket, if
they're in the everyone abandons what they do. And I
saw hundreds of police cars descend upon where I was

(01:24:26):
in seconds. Wow, and this story. I was like, what
was that? And it was like this in retrospect, the
pilot avoided everyone's step. But if I had a green
light at that moment, we would have gone right into
it and they would have crashed a right on top
of us. Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
Known you a long time man, almost twenty years.

Speaker 6 (01:24:46):
When you said it this morning, I was like, what, Oh, yeah,
there's almost that time I died by helicopter, not while
flying one right right.

Speaker 1 (01:24:53):
I thought, actually it was gonna be a story from
when you were in the Marines. But no, you said, And.

Speaker 6 (01:25:00):
Uh, you know, driving on the on the forty four,
I see a car. I just see two cars in
front of me, go right. You merge both simultaneously in
front of me, and they both were talking like two
seconds in front of me while driving. They both merged.
One was in a lane left of me, one was

(01:25:21):
in the lane right of me. They both merged right
into each other, and the it was an SUV that
starts rolling and I went right like three lanes and
had to like force myself to go to that merger
towards broken arrow. But again two second difference between going
right into a massive accident. I don't know if I
would have died on that one, but it certainly would
have ruined my Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (01:25:43):
Do you think, yeah, maybe a Wednesday too, Yeah, maybe
carried over. Yeah, yeah, that's crazy. Those are both really crazy, man,
Will and nearly anything you want to talk about, bring
up something new, go back to something. That's your chance
to own the show. I saw this and I'm I
love bringing your take in on food stuff And this

(01:26:04):
is a dishes chefs never order at restaurants. Do you,
as someone who works in the industry, do you have
a dish or food item you don't order? Now, I'll
give you one off the list just to kind of
give it some context. Holland Dai sauce because in most
restaurants Holiday spot sauce is supposed to be an instant thing.
It's not gonna be something you said and let just

(01:26:24):
set fester on the stove because it can break and
not be as good. It still works, but it isn't perfect.
Do you have something you don't order at a restaurant?

Speaker 6 (01:26:35):
I have, yes, there's so. First off, it depends on
a restaurant style. Like if it's risotto and you're not
at the most krem de la Creme restaurant, it's gonna
be basic b risotto that was pre done and it's
not gonna be good. That's one you gotta. I'm like, oh,
we're at a really nice restaurant, then I'll do risotto
and nothing shy of it. Now, if I'm at a
steak restaurant and you see anything on the menu that's like, uh,

(01:27:00):
steak bites in pasta, that's old ass steak being reused,
and it's not. It's just not there. You're at the
steak restaurant and it's a it's a meal that's made
and designed to take care of scraps. So there's meals
designed for scraps. It's best explained by Anthony Bourdain in
the movie The Big Short, like how he's talking about

(01:27:24):
CDLs or whatever and how they take old fish. So
and then I don't like going to restaurants that close,
like on Sunday or Monday, and then you're like come Tuesday, like,
well this is a roll of the dice, Like what
do we got here? Did they really throw everything out
and start fresh?

Speaker 1 (01:27:40):
Yeah, explain that little bit, because you have all this
product that's city not being used. You're wasting a day
of use.

Speaker 6 (01:27:45):
Completely. I do not like clo No Andelini's Worldwide restaurant
closes because I don't want you having something that's you
know has a forty eight hour I want to run
through product uh and keep it consistently moving. That's what
it's called faifoh or first in, first out. And if
you have stuff, if you're closed on Sunday, that's a

(01:28:07):
day of stagnation. And the notion that everyone's just going
to toss everything on Saturday night when you close on Sunday,
come on. So these are things to be aware of.
H When you go into a rest. Now here's the
other caveat people are like, oh, I'm in I'm in
the New England. I'm gonna have the best clammed chowder.
The recipe and people have been around it for a

(01:28:29):
long time. Sure, but very few places are going to
be buying it from anywhere different than where we buy
it here. They're buying it from Benny Heath or Cisco,
just like us. So the notion that it's like they
went to the docks and got the product is just
a you know not There's a few there's a lobster
roll right on the on the coast that's getting fresh

(01:28:50):
lobster because they have a connection that guy. But everyone
else in the city.

Speaker 1 (01:28:54):
No, they're gonna get it from Cisco. Or whoever they're
gonna g it just like us. That happened when I
lived in Fancisco. People always would come visit and they'd
want to go to the wharf and have some sort
of soup in a bowl or whatever. I'm like, we're
doing We're not doing that. That's not a thing. San
Franciscos don't do that. Nor would I let you go
eat something that is also served at Panera exactly.

Speaker 6 (01:29:16):
But we would stop every day and eat at the
cable car or rice a roni because it's the San
Francisco treat. Every day.

Speaker 1 (01:29:24):
We would just go to the trolleys just to watch
people fall because I know to hold on when the
trolley takes off.

Speaker 6 (01:29:29):
The amount of you could live your whole life in
San Francisco. Would never go once on the trolley. It's
not a thing.

Speaker 1 (01:29:36):
You only do it because people are asking you too
that are visiting.

Speaker 6 (01:29:38):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
Biscuits are on this list because most people can make
biscuits at home. I wouldn't trust the ones you made
two days ago and have been sitting on the warmer.

Speaker 6 (01:29:47):
Yeah. I mean, here's the inverse of that, though. If
you're at a place, a breakfast place, they're probably making
it's a good breakfast place. There's not a lot of
cost in that, so they probably are making it each morning.
But if you have a protein item, there's no way
they're tossing the protein item. It does cost too much.
They got to figure out something.

Speaker 1 (01:30:06):
Some of the other things on this list, one of them,
I'll give merit. They said fish because fishes to make
fish as an art, to cook fish properties an art,
and not just everybody can do it. So maybe if
they don't specialize in that, you shouldn't order it. Then
they had like steaks and chicken and alfredo and beef
tips to your point earlier, and they just made were
naming salads were on the list. I mean sometimes chefs

(01:30:27):
can get a little very proud of what they do
and think no one else can do it, right, Oh,
I mean.

Speaker 6 (01:30:34):
The there is a lot of ego with chefs. And
then there's this, you know, any restaurant, it's like, well,
we can make it, so we will. That's dumb, and
you're not cheesecake factory like do the five things you
do and let it be that. And even cheesecake factory
like there's a lot of pre made stuff in the
mix as To pull that off, you just have to.

(01:30:55):
But they can proprietarily create their premade stuff. Everyone else
is just like frozen, frozen, deep fried ravioli, toasted ravioli.
There's no one making that. No, it's making that. It's
just they bought it, they deep fried it, and that
is abysmal to me. I don't want our customer to

(01:31:15):
have this thing that I essentially reheated.

Speaker 1 (01:31:19):
I'm gonna make a statement. You tell me if there's
any legitimacy to it. The reality that most restaurants make
all their food fresh, all their dishes fresh, is probably
less than fifty percent, Oh.

Speaker 6 (01:31:31):
Way less than fifty We're talking ten, ten to fifteen.

Speaker 1 (01:31:35):
Now, how as a consumer can I know if it's
fresh if they're making it back in the room and
fresh is relative.

Speaker 6 (01:31:42):
So are we saying like an alfredo sauce they could
make there's they could make the powder fresh. But are
they make taking fresh cream fresh butter fresh? Parbat are
on making it to order already batching like, so that's
a fresh item? Are they cooking something to order for
what it's worth? By that logic, this will go to
the next level. McDonald's cooks the Big Mac to order.

Speaker 1 (01:32:06):
It's fresh.

Speaker 6 (01:32:07):
It's fresh by that standard. But the beef patty was
a puck that is so cryogenically frozen that you could
not break it even if you were in a strong
man competition pre cooking. So it's is it fresh up
till that point. Product and then cook to order are
like two part two components to this. What I want

(01:32:28):
out of a place is that they have a smaller
menu and everything they do is their thing. It's their thing,
and that you can tell because it's a little bit
off kilter. And if you see that, then you're like,
all right, these guys are here to play.

Speaker 1 (01:32:42):
Mike's joined us from Andelini's and if you need them
for a truck or doing some caterye make sure you
look at Andopizza dot com. Does Mike have a favorite
food truck besides his own? Of course?

Speaker 6 (01:32:56):
Shit, Yeah, I mean for the longest time when it
was the Lone Wolf truck, that was like the hotness,
the Loopia truck, the one the Loopia.

Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
The Philip we've got one of those in town.

Speaker 6 (01:33:11):
Yeah, the I haven't had it in a while. It's
that Purple there's a company that and the Manila Ice
guys had a truck for a while. Anything Filipino Loopia
is my jam now. If you Filipino loopia is like
an egg roll, but it's just chicken and flavor inside

(01:33:32):
of it, and it's effing awesome. Like there's nothing more
delightful in this world that chicken and sticky rice and
Lopia and I am a massive fan of it. And yeah,
anything that does that, I'm there. I'm just okay. It's
like watching them Terminator too. When you see it on TV,
You're like, Okay, I'm just this is what I'm doing
now this came on TV. Same thing for me with Lopia.

Speaker 1 (01:33:53):
Willing really anything you want to talk about, bring up
something new, go back to. Do you have a favorite
food truck?

Speaker 6 (01:33:57):
Gimpie.

Speaker 1 (01:33:58):
There's this talk of truck that I used to go
to over on twenty first in Garnet that I really like,
And it seems like a lot of the food trucks
that I go to are taco trucks. To be honest
with you, I need to really stretch out. I'm interested
in this Lumpia truck with my girl being Filipino, she
really likes that, and I didn't know that we had
one in town. So I'm gonna have to take her
and try some of this. If she's Philippin has herself.

(01:34:22):
Oh well that's there, you go. Why make her do
it that down? Yeah, don't worry, it's get her trained.
Yeah me, I mean there. I haven't been on the
food truck scene for a while, but I mean I
always love Andelini's food truck. There's a food truck behind uh,

(01:34:43):
Heirloom rustic Ales is pretty good. They have a barbecue
truck that stops by there. That's pretty good. Most barbecue
food trucks are pretty solid.

Speaker 6 (01:34:53):
Yeah, and now we talked like trucks that are stationary, right,
that are like you know, and then the truck scene
evolves so quickly because if it's hitting, then they go
to brick and mortar or they go into a food hall.
So it's a really ever evolving business model. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:35:09):
Yeah, they're good one moment and then they're suddenly a
brick and mortar and then it's not the same. It's
changed somewhat. Not everybody's got a success story like some
of these ones that I've worked their way through Mother
Road and everything else, for sure. Yeah, well, and only
anything you want to talk about bring up something new,
go back to something. They announced that water contamination up

(01:35:31):
in a WASO and boil order, and I was going
to ask you, should a business have a plan, a
restaurant have a plan for that scenario or wait until
the rarity of it popping them because boil orders is
a rare thing, that is not a very common thing
with modern water technology.

Speaker 6 (01:35:48):
But should it?

Speaker 1 (01:35:49):
Should a business have that plan?

Speaker 6 (01:35:51):
I look at it because we've been through so much
in twenty years, so many weather, ice storm this, buh,
we've been We've had boil orders before, so I like
to keep us ready for anything two steps ahead. So
I'm playing checkers, not chess, because chess will drive you crazy.

(01:36:13):
Like if you're like, well, this could happen, which could
lead to this, which another pandemic could lead to this?
Could we lead Like that'll drive you crazy because there's
just too much. But you're like, all right, if this happens,
do we have a generator? Great? If that happens, do
we have filtration and the capacity to cool? So our
ability to pivot is very good at this point, and
there's not much you could throw at us that we
can't immediately get something together.

Speaker 1 (01:36:35):
On because I was thinking just from a home standpoint,
the planning that I had to do when we got
word of going, Oh wow, we've already made the kids
waters for tomorrow. I gotta throw that out. Oh there's
the dishwasher. How does that work? Oh? I already made
the coffee pot. I gotta dump all that out. Yeah,
how are we going to wash? You know, kid stuff
that they you know, where is that okay? Like the

(01:36:57):
number of X things that go into the thought process
and that's not even a restaurant where you're responsible for
other people's health totally.

Speaker 6 (01:37:04):
And that's why, you know, having the health department of
the mix and just again we have the ability to
buy commercial grade stuff and be more formulaic and thoughtful
about it. It's easier when you're bigger. I'll say that.
You would think it's harder because it's more stuff to do,
but you just have more resources and more thought and
more eyes on it, willing nearly anything you want to

(01:37:26):
talk about, bring up something new. Have you ever delivered
pizza to someone and they had something really disturbing in
their home or at the front of the home. Delivered
a lot of pizza. I've delivered to people in their underwear.
Usually it's like okay, because nowadays it's leave it at
the doorstep and walk. But back in the day, it

(01:37:49):
was knock on the door and wait. And you know,
old town Owasso had many gems to offer, but it
was a lot of oh okay, hey, and you're like,
there's drugs going on, there's there's that, And you see
someone come to the door and they present a check
and you're like, ah, damn it, this isn't gonna clear.

(01:38:11):
That's about as bad as it got.

Speaker 1 (01:38:14):
The number of times I've floated a check to eat pizza.
When when you would get like four days, like you
knew the businesses that weren't wouldn't be turned them in
every day. Yeah, and you could you could float a
check for like five days, yeah, and have pizza of
food for a few days.

Speaker 6 (01:38:31):
I had a lady who was basically ordering her groceries
from us, again pre door dash. She's like, hey, when
you bring this pizza, can you also bring two gallons
of milk? And I'm like, yeah, we had milk for kids.
Can you bring some two leaders? Like well yeah, we
have that, Like what's this all about? And then gave
us a check. I'm like, oh, we just did her
grocery order with a check that's going to bounce there there, it.

Speaker 1 (01:38:53):
Is, right, that's right right, And nobody, i mean door dash,
any food delivery services really circumvented a lot of that,
right because you got to have an account online. Totally
much happening much less. Very few people write checks anymore.

Speaker 6 (01:39:06):
No went writes checks and someone writes like Businesses could say,
now we don't take cash. That's technically illegal, but you know, hey,
here we are, and it cuts down on theft. People
would rather deal with the three percent on average credit
card fee that deal with counting money, having the theft
of from staff, or the potential of having all this

(01:39:29):
cash on site, robbery and things, or a robbery. So yeah,
it's a whole different game.

Speaker 1 (01:39:33):
Yeah, fascinating. Mike from Aneline's is with us freakin' a Friday.
We want to know from you what's something you shockingly
survive BMMS and what that is to eight two nine
four five. While you're doing that, let's see make sure
you get that pizza order. Gelato's a solid thing to
have when the weather's like this. You guys have great patios.
The beverages are on point at all locations and the

(01:39:54):
look for the food truck around town. Right there there
you go.

Speaker 6 (01:39:57):
Also the possible brunh if you want to feel fancy,
Prossimo brunch is like is like Bellaggio level open buffet.
We have a buffet. It's like this over the top thing,
and a lot of people don't believe us. One day
if you wanted to try it, well, you can just

(01:40:17):
go to town and have a bunch of food and
really enjoy brunch. It's a really opulent brunch at a
pretty dark, great price. And if you want to get
fancy this weekend, I'd say try something new with us.

Speaker 1 (01:40:27):
Is it like a you got a table set out
with a bunch of pancakes on it.

Speaker 6 (01:40:31):
We have French toast pasta. It's it's an insane undertaking
and people we do have that go to town.

Speaker 1 (01:40:40):
Eggs, Yes, eggs are a part of the brunch. Hot sausage,
the hottest bacon, bacon.

Speaker 6 (01:40:51):
We do have many data animals that you can enjoy.
Thick bacon, the thickest, the megan, thee stallion.

Speaker 1 (01:40:58):
Thick.

Speaker 6 (01:40:58):
All right, that's how thick it.

Speaker 1 (01:41:00):
Make sure you look up andopizza dot com or visit
Prosmo online as well. Mike thinks Man, thank you, We'll
be back.

Speaker 2 (01:41:07):
If you're listening to The Big Man Morning Show, this
is Tulsa's Morning Show.

Speaker 1 (01:41:14):
It's always fun eating pizza and drinking beer with new
people that just started and they're like, what's happening. It's
nine am. I know, yeah, it's fantastic. It's friggin a
Friday and we're giving away beer. Bye. What's something you
shockingly survived? By the way, thanks to Mike Fromandolini's for
stopping by. Let's go to the phones and Brady is on.

(01:41:39):
Hey Brady, how are you good? Brady? What's something you
shockingly survived?

Speaker 6 (01:41:46):
My egg?

Speaker 1 (01:41:49):
You and me booth? What made her so toxic? What
made her so necessary to survive from?

Speaker 5 (01:41:56):
She was a bad alcoholic and were talking Yeah, yeah,
of course all of them.

Speaker 6 (01:42:05):
Uh no.

Speaker 5 (01:42:05):
Uh, she had been drinking and we were eating dinner
and she was getting a tense message over and over
and over, and I just happened to look at her
phone and she was like, trying to cheat on me
with this guy, and I said something about it, and uh,
she grabbed her steak knife and put it to her
neck and was like, well, if you're leaving me, I
want to kill myself. And me, being the guy I am,

(01:42:29):
I'm like, you're not going to do that, like you
know you're not.

Speaker 6 (01:42:33):
And she did.

Speaker 5 (01:42:34):
She cut her throat, and uh so, I, being the
reasonable person in around, I tried to grab her and
wrap her up so she didn't hurt herself anymore, and
she stopped me in the stomach.

Speaker 1 (01:42:46):
What I felt, I had the same story until you
went went that way? Did she go to jail?

Speaker 5 (01:42:56):
Dude? I was stupid and I totally didn't even call
on her. I just totally got away from her. It
was an abort mission type thing. It was just like,
all right, you gotta go get away from me, right.

Speaker 1 (01:43:09):
You just reached over your head and hit the eject.

Speaker 5 (01:43:11):
Right, Oh yeah, yeah, ejected jack.

Speaker 1 (01:43:13):
What uh so you get stabbed, you go to the
dot in the er?

Speaker 5 (01:43:18):
It didn't go It went in probably about a quarter
of an inch. It was like right right on my hip,
and uh because I wrapped her up from behind, trying
to wrap her arms up, and she still just had
a little bit of motion where she just went straight
down and hit me right in the hip.

Speaker 6 (01:43:33):
Damn.

Speaker 5 (01:43:33):
And I'm like, okay, all right, you just do whatever
you gotta do to yourself, like, I'm out of here.

Speaker 1 (01:43:40):
I'm not hoping, no work, Go ahead and kill yourself.
I'm out of here. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:43:45):
And then she went to the you know doctor.

Speaker 9 (01:43:46):
I'm like, dang, you couldn't even do that, right?

Speaker 1 (01:43:50):
Is she still alive?

Speaker 5 (01:43:53):
I'm assuming I see I see Facebook like you know,
you may know type stuff, and I'm like, no, no.

Speaker 1 (01:44:01):
Thanks, Okay, So she she still populates that way?

Speaker 6 (01:44:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:44:05):
Did she try to resurface when you initially broke try
to break free?

Speaker 6 (01:44:10):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:44:10):
Man, this girl's trying to come back, like numerous times.
She's almost borderline stalker. Did you ever have to te
she comes back every couple of years and she's like, oh, hey,
how you doing. I'm like no, still, no, hell no.

Speaker 1 (01:44:24):
Did she ever accuse you of being an alcoholic too?

Speaker 5 (01:44:27):
No, I'm not an alcoholic. I'm a pothead through and through.
I don't I don't drink very much. I drink it's
an occasion and I'm getting drunk.

Speaker 1 (01:44:34):
There you go, all right, we'll get me tell him
exactly what he's gonna get.

Speaker 8 (01:44:40):
That is such a terrible event to have to live through,
but it just earned you a case of hers life.

Speaker 1 (01:44:46):
Man, can you call him Brady? Thank you for sharing
that with us. Man, hang on the line so Gimpie
can get your info. Have a great weekend.

Speaker 5 (01:44:54):
Okay, yeah, well thanks?

Speaker 1 (01:44:56):
Okay. So, I uh, I just got this this message,
a Facebook message while we were on break, and I
thought it was very interesting. I wanted to share it
with you, Corbyn. Here's what it says. It's from a
guy named JD Right, and JD says, how do I
get a commercial on the radio? And I simply responded

(01:45:16):
to him. I says, email me Gimpy at kmode dot com.
I'll personally hand it to the salesperson and get in
touch with you. Right, I kind of stole your line.
I apologize, but it's the best thing to do. At
least this way, it's getting into the hands of somebody. Right.
So he says, okay, thank you very much. I says,
send me all the details. What do you do, the

(01:45:37):
name of the biz, what you're looking for, et cetera.
And he says, okay, awesome. It's a porta potty business
I just recently bought and I'm just looking for some advertising. Boom.
Does that not scream Gimpy exactly. Man, I'm it's no
strange deal that I'm an odd duck, right. I like

(01:46:01):
to promote the ostable Patricia's sex toys. You know how
many times have you heard me say I love Cox
when we're referring to the cable business. So I think
advertising me, Gimpy McGee, advertising your porta potty business makes
complete sense. And the fact that he reached down on Facebook,
I think is even better. You know, there's so many

(01:46:23):
different ways, Like if you have a business, be it
a porta potty business or maybe a headshop or something
or hell CBD. We have basket case disc golf here
in town. I did them for a little while. If
you have a business that you think, man, this is
perfect for Gimpy McGee on the Big Man Morning Show.
There's all kinds of ways you can reach out to me. Facebook,

(01:46:45):
Messenger is perfect, Email GIMPI at kmod dot com. I'm
not going to give you my personal phone number on
the air. I did that once, never again, never again.
So I think if you're like JD here and you've
got a biness that you think me Gimpy is perfect
for I want your voice to be the voice of
my business. I want your voice to be the voice

(01:47:07):
of a porta potty biz or whatever of that for you,
whatever it is. I don't think that's the weirdest one
we can get. I challenge accept it. I'll put it
out there. If we can get something stranger than a
porta potty biz, send it to me. I would love
to hear going, Hey, it's Gimpy for Bob's porta potties.
Absolutely are Bob shrunking heads. Absolutely Bob's toilet cleaning biz

(01:47:30):
or whatever it is. Man, I'm I am in again.
You can reach me either on Facebook or just email
me Gimpy. That's pretty simple, right, It's not just super long,
right email address, it's Gimpy g I m p Y
at kmod dot com. Send it to me. I'll take
it up to one of the salespeople. I got a

(01:47:52):
pretty good repertoire with most of them up there, so
I'll figure it out and I'll get it into the
hands of somebody that can answer all of your questions,
and I will gladly be the voice of your business,
no matter.

Speaker 6 (01:48:06):
What it is.

Speaker 2 (01:48:07):
Tulsa's Morning Show is coming right back to the Big
Man Morning Show Tulsa's rock station.

Speaker 1 (01:48:15):
I'll only bring this up. It kind of came up
yesterday at the end of the day. Remember we watched
that guy fall from the edge of space. Yeah, Bumgardner
bump something like that, Yes, Felix, Felix, Yeah, yes, Street
and he fell from the stratosphere. It was fascinating to watch.

(01:48:36):
And he went through a massive tail spind as he
was doing it. I mean, it was crazy to watch.
He broke the speed of sound. Bro Yeah, all in
a special suit, right, very wild to watch. Crazy that
someone did that, and they put a red Bull of

(01:48:57):
logo on it. Yeah, still fun to watch to this day.
Getting on YouTube, watch of the videos. I think it's amazing.
And that's not the only thing he's done. He wants
what was it off the Christ the Redeemer statue? Yes, right,
base jumped off the base jumped yep. I thought that
was pretty awesome. He's he's just a known daredevil. Was Oh,

(01:49:19):
he has died. He has died doing a stunt in
Italy where he was trying to land in a pool
in a pool. Is this like the cartoons where they
jump off the high dive and land in a tiny
cup of water? I guess. Oh, man, I guess he

(01:49:41):
was fifty six, by the way, and I was trying
to remember when that happened, and it happened twenty eleven.
That was when the space jump happened. Yes, so fourteen
years ago. Manow, it's crazy how long ago that was. Well,
did he make it? Did he land in the whole?

(01:50:02):
I know he died, but did he land in the pool? Sorry?
Twenty twelve is when that was. He was paragliding in
Italy and apparently he was trying to make it into
some pool. And I'm not clear on if he missed
it or I don't know if it was a stunt.
I don't know. Then another one says he was it
was just part of his vacation. I don't want to

(01:50:24):
work when I'm on vacation. I mean, if your vacation
is if you like jumping out of things, then maybe
you do those things. I guess right, I can't imagine.
I would imagine golfers still golf when they're on vacation. Yeah, sure,
why not? I guess. I guess. I know when I
was in Florida, I wasn't hitting up other iHeart stations

(01:50:46):
to go to work. Can I pull a shift for you?
Right shift?

Speaker 6 (01:50:50):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (01:50:52):
What do you think his net worth was? Oh, Felix
bomb Gardener's. You know, I'm not quite sure how much
the daredevil business pays, but I'm going to reach out
there and say two million dollars. I think that's high.
His net worth is five million dollars. Okay, still a

(01:51:14):
little high, I think. But I mean, the guy got
paid to do crazy stunts like that, to jump off
of buildings and nash you know, world monuments and the
jump from the edge of space. I wonder if it
says how much he got paid to do that jump
from space. I mean, I'm gonna go with five million.

(01:51:34):
Do you think that was the one that did it?
I don't know. Uh, he dated tens, I can tell
you that. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:51:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:51:42):
Was he not married? He wasn't married. No, No, he
dated women near his age that were we're attractive. Okay. Yeah.
It doesn't say in here not directly paid a specific
sum for the Red Bull Stratus jump itself, but the
event generated significant exposure for Red Bull, of course it did. Okay,
all right, here's here's the official He died paragliding in Italy.

(01:52:07):
He lost control of his craft in the air after
suffering a medical episode and crashed into a wooden hut
near a swimming pool some camping village where a young
woman was injured by debris. Oh, man, So he could
have had a heart attack or a stroke or something
in midair, something to throat, something attack, he's flying, sry

(01:52:31):
medical emergency, you're right, maybe he's swallow episode, not emergency. Episode,
could have been a sea it could have been anything.

Speaker 6 (01:52:38):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:52:40):
Well, listen, at least he died doing what he was Wow.
I wanted to look up medical appless. Medical episode is
considered uh, dizziness, abdominal pain, fainting, chest pain, choking. Okay,

(01:53:01):
those are all examples of seizure. Right, a stroke, right
breathing problems. That's something that I think about often, but
probably not as often as I should. That Like, I'll
be riding my motorcycle going across country, going across town
or whatever, and I can have a heart attack and

(01:53:21):
there's not a damn thing I can do. You know,
it happened to Randy the mancho man, Randy Savage. Oh yeah,
he's driving his Jeep's driving his jeep, had a heart
attack and died in his jeep, but you know, he
hit the tree or whatever. And of course that was
the initial thought, was he died after he hit the
tree or lighthole or whatever structure it was. And that
I think about that a lot, cause you know, I'll

(01:53:41):
be riding down the road and then somebody just driving
by sees me cut across a couple of lanes, ride
off the road, smash into a building. They think, oh,
he's probably just drunk or stupid or whatever, you know,
and oh, no, I had a heart attack. But it's
it could happen to anybody at any time. It doesn't
matter if you're in a motorcycle, we're in a car,
or you know, a paraglider. People don't want to, don't

(01:54:04):
like the thought of this. Dying of a heart attack
is a natural way to die. It is so when
someone died of natural causes. Heart failure is natural causes.
Now is it heart failure caused by cocaine? Different story.
Give me what you learned today. I learned that uranus
is awfully warm, and I also learned to stay cool
this summer. Just rub yogurt all over yourself. A quarter

(01:54:28):
inch is more than Brady could handle. I learned that,
and I also learned two dudes on the beach snatched
gimp you right up. Oh god,

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