Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
You are about to witness as amazing emo has comes
in living Man's property of all times. Yes, my bow
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(00:32):
did it. Then you did it? Where you did it?
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Allowed to play, Allowed to play, Come out to play,
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For crystals.
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Time to start to show crapstick a clabout, Brisco Whisping Man,
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(01:53):
it hardcore.
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Hang your whisby and then mess.
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Pick up your phone there line you're on the air.
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Dot shows.
Speaker 5 (02:15):
Time dot show, Good morning, It's the Big Man Morning Show.
Toll free eight three three four six O K M
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(02:36):
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(02:57):
with us each and every day. Good morning, Lindsey, Good morning,
Good morning, Gimpy Way, Good morning Grabs. Today a pair
of weekend GA tickets to Rockklahoma. That's a few weeks away.
A ton of bands are playing over the weekend Labor
Day weekend over and prior.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
Get the full lineup and link.
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For tickets the website that rockskmod dot com. We're gonna
do listener emails if you need help with the problem,
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kmod dot com is where you send that.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
We'll do that coming up.
Speaker 5 (03:31):
We've got to tell the truth as well. Your chance
to get to know the show better. Ask any question?
Do you want cozy up to us? See if you
can figure us out?
Speaker 1 (03:44):
Uh?
Speaker 5 (03:45):
I have never met selves, sil Hi Sylvester Stallone, have
you ever met in Lindsay Nope, never, Gimpy, there was
this one time. No, I just did want to assume. Yeah,
I assume Corbyn. And then when I do you do
s like that?
Speaker 1 (04:03):
Yeah? No, would I have loved to for sure. He's
a pretty big name. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (04:10):
All I know is second hand account stories about him.
I don't know very many people that when he was
here filming that say he was awesome.
Speaker 6 (04:17):
No, he complained a lot about the weather.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
But that that's my only account.
Speaker 5 (04:23):
And then Pamela Anderson puts out this documentary and says
that he offered her a Porsche and a condo to quote.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
Be his number one gal, number one girl.
Speaker 5 (04:44):
I do one movie like that. You're stuck with it? Yeah,
A thousand goats, that's it. One goat, sorry, four thousand
whatever teaches own.
Speaker 6 (04:56):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (04:58):
And so there's a couple ish is that.
Speaker 5 (05:00):
I think the one besides the blaring obvious problem with
it is that he set his number one gal he's
old school mane. Yeah, twenty one year difference between the
two of them. I'm sure that's the first time Sylvester
Saloon has ever done that, by the way, And a
(05:21):
portion of condo is pretty that's pretty high end. Yeah,
you're talking what ninety five thousand dollars for a Porsche.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
Yeah, probably more than that now, Yeah, depending on which
one you get. But I'm sure he's not getting her
the bottom of the line. What is it, like the
eight eighty four or something like that. I forget what
it is. There's a poor man's Porsche out here, and
you can tell by looking at it.
Speaker 5 (05:48):
I'll still take it one hundred and fourteen nine to eleven.
Carrera starts at around one hundred and fourteen.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
Yeah. Even that alone in itself is that's quite That's
quite a bit. And then a condo where aunt we
talk in LA.
Speaker 5 (06:02):
We talk in New York, Miami, Miami, and I think
it's LA because they're both actors at the time, and
that says that can be about a million dollars.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
Okay, So we're talking one point one.
Speaker 5 (06:17):
To be his proper sorry, to be his girlfriend, right,
his number one gal right to be his I mean
he's trying to buy her, right, that's prostat I think
that's safe to say. That's prostitution. It is, And she
says she obviously turned that down. That obviously triggered his
reps to come out and say that that didn't happen.
(06:39):
Of course, he never made the offer, said the statement
is false and fabricated to what She went on some
TV show and said, well, how could you make that up?
When she says the offer was pretty specific, she was
asked if another type of car would have swayed her decision,
and she said, no, like a Dodge many.
Speaker 1 (07:06):
Can't tell you. It's a pretty nice day. Yeah, right.
Speaker 6 (07:11):
When were they ever like in the same circles? Like
when would they have met in Hollywood? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (07:17):
Okay, she was prime, she was an a lister. Yeah,
and what you obviously invite her to parties?
Speaker 1 (07:26):
Yeah right, so we're talking back in her bay Watch
Yeah definitely, of course, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5 (07:32):
And then Sly I was gonna go with barbed wire,
but no teach his own. Yeah, Sly would have been
like what stop? Or my mom will shoot?
Speaker 1 (07:41):
I'm just thinking about the same time frame, you know
as Pamela Anderson in her prime, you know, Baywatch, pam
That's what early nineties, ninety three, ninety fourish maybe, And
that's the only movie I can think of. Cliffhanger, Okay, Stopper,
(08:02):
my Mam Will Shoot, Demolition Man, Judge Dread, Judge Dredd. Yeah,
that was huge. Rocky five assassins. I mean he's a
big name, Oh yeah, for sure. So he was doing
some good movies at that time, had a couple of
bump ones, but for the most part, judge dread cop
(08:22):
Land stuff like that name.
Speaker 5 (08:24):
I could be wrong, but I think Sliced Alone is
known as a top fifteen box office guy.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
Definitely from the nineties. Yeah, you're probably not wrong on that.
For sure.
Speaker 5 (08:37):
He's obviously not top five, but top fifteen, top ten.
I think you can make a big argument for that.
He was a guy you wanted in an action movie,
for sure.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
Kim Arnold. Yeah, you know at that point in time
in the nineties. Hell, you could even say Jean Claude
eighties you think so.
Speaker 5 (08:56):
Yeah, JDV only did like a few popular American movies,
and even then you're like, not everything was Blood Sport, you.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
Know, right, In fact, that was his best movie, I'd say,
and it's a tremendous movie. You can't watch it now. No,
so bad. But I think, but he shouldn't be asking.
Speaker 5 (09:22):
Maybe celebrities like the idea, or maybe certain men like
the idea of pay for a relationship because they think
it either a disconnects them from emotional connection, like I
could just I'm like, this business transaction is done. It
feels like you think that's going to be cleaner, right
(09:47):
or you're you think you're in control because you're paying them.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
I think it's the latter half there. I've got the money.
I can do this. I can show her things, give
her things that she's never had before, something to that effect.
But you can do that with that. I mean, he
could pick up Susie Anne in the Midwest and do
that and still it's you know what I'm saying, absolutely
(10:11):
so he doesn't have to go to Pamela Anderson and
who's a huge up and coming name, and.
Speaker 5 (10:17):
Get offer her one point one million dollars.
Speaker 1 (10:19):
Yeah, but when you're on the red carpet or you're
out and about, nobody's going to know who Sue Anne
is from the West. But you see him and a
big name, recognizable set of boobs, like you know, pamm
and Anderson, then that's like all right, it's got the
notoriety that goes with it, as opposed to some some
(10:40):
slug that you met in Kansas.
Speaker 6 (10:42):
Yeah, he wanted to be kept in the spotlight and.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
He didn't do it. He didn't need her he didn't
need her.
Speaker 6 (10:49):
I mean, he was a blockbuster hit actor in the
eighties and nineties.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
Those movies that we talked about are pretty big.
Speaker 6 (10:57):
I think that when it comes to him, it's Rambo
and it's Rocky that kept him big.
Speaker 5 (11:03):
That in the eighties, for sure, those were his big movies.
But in the nineties, Rocky five was a big deal.
Demolition Man was a big deal. Judge Stop Stopper, My
Mom Will Shoot was a big movie. Ye, Judged Dredge
was a big movie. Cliffhanger was a big movie. Now
we may not have seen those movies.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
I can't say I.
Speaker 5 (11:25):
Watched a lot of those, but they were pretty big
and he was in He was a voice in Ants.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
If that does it for you, No, not at all.
Speaker 5 (11:36):
But Cliffhanger's budget was seventy million. It pulled in two
hundred and fifty five. That is a that is a blockbuster.
Speaker 6 (11:44):
Stopper, My Mom Will Shoot fourteen percent on Rotten Tomatoes.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
Wasn't he also in like a indie car movie? Was
that like Driven? I think the name of it.
Speaker 5 (11:55):
Was Yes, but I think that was early two thousands.
Speaker 1 (11:59):
Yea one sure enough. Yep, yep, yep, yep. Okay, yeah,
and I hear you.
Speaker 5 (12:05):
I don't think that movie is very good, but it
brought in seventy million, and I think the budget was
twelve That's a blockbuster. And I don't know if you
should be pulling up Rotten Tomatoes and you know, using
that as an argument why a movie's not good. I'm
not a fan of Rotten Tomatoes anymore. And then you
can't use it for an argument that a movie's not good.
(12:28):
But people love that movie. They think it's a cult
classic type of movie.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
It's fun to watch on a Sunday afternoon. I guess.
I mean, Stelle Getty's your thing. You're damn right man.
Sophia Petrollo, Oh, Sophia The Good Life.
Speaker 5 (12:47):
I don't even know that movie. I think Copland was
a big movie too. It was, Yeah, it did four
times its budget and good movie code, isn't it Harvey
Kaitel de Niro, Janine Gruffalo, You say, huh? I didn't
(13:09):
expect that one now, did not? Or Robert Patrick? Okay,
but he he was still a thing of the nineties.
He was still a go to guy in the nineties.
I would think, yeah, but I think for this particular experiment.
It's one of those I need somebody the mega hot, right,
because you would that's an ego thing.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
Man. You look as like he was a sex symbol
of the seventies, eighties, and nineties, right, you look at him. Now,
age got you, plastic surgery got you. But he was
definitely a sex symbol of that time. So we need
to match that energy, We need to match that level
of sexiness. Well, who's as sexy as I a Pamela Anderson?
Speaker 6 (13:51):
Okay, if not sexier and he wanted it to be
brought up to that level.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
Okay, I see where you're I see where you're getting at.
I would think you wouldn't want somebody sexier than you
if your your ego is that big, because you don't
want to be you don't want to be outshine. You know,
people are more paying attention to your girlfriend than they
are you.
Speaker 6 (14:12):
Oh, but you probably thought people would look at them
as a power couple.
Speaker 5 (14:15):
Right, variable could be all right, So I don't know
the legitimacy on this. These are biggest box office box
office stars.
Speaker 1 (14:24):
Of the nineties.
Speaker 5 (14:26):
Give me five, Just see if you can name any
five box office stars of the nine Yeah, just one
at a time, Lindsay Julia Roberts. Yeah, she's number seven.
But we're talking about men.
Speaker 6 (14:38):
Oh men, okay, um the actor that was in A
Pretty Woman with her? And why am I drawing a
blink to his Richard Gear?
Speaker 5 (14:52):
Richard Gear is not in the top twenty. Tom Cruise, Okay,
one at a time, because I'm going to give me Kimby.
I'll say Tom Cruise, Uh, Tom Cruise, number fifteen, okay.
Speaker 6 (15:06):
Brad Pitt, Brad.
Speaker 1 (15:10):
Pitt not in the top forty. I would say he
was number forty eight, Okay. I would put him more
in like the two thousand yea than than the nineties. Arnold.
Speaker 5 (15:25):
Yeah, Arnold's a good guess, but he came in at thirteen.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
Wow. Yeah, that's what I were doing this because the
list is surprising.
Speaker 5 (15:32):
Keanu Reeves Jana Reeves a great gas right, because in
the nineties Matrix was a big deal towards the end
of the ninety Yeah, okay, because I think two or
three of those movies came out in the nineties.
Speaker 1 (15:44):
Janna Reeves number fifty two. Wow. Male stars of the nineties.
Tim Allen, Tim what movie was Tim Allen in in
the ninety class? Yeah? Number forty three.
Speaker 6 (16:00):
Was Eddie Murphy.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
Eddie Murphy is a pretty good guess. He's known as
a big box office guy. Uh.
Speaker 5 (16:08):
Not in the top twenty number twenty eight. Tom Hanks,
tonks great guess, number two, number two. I think we
can all agree Sylvester Stallon products of the nineties not
bigger than Tom Hanks.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
No, no, okay, all right, I figured weal now, all right.
Speaker 6 (16:27):
Definitely Ben a Flack.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
Ben aflac Alack. Ben.
Speaker 5 (16:36):
I don't think that was late nineties. I think I
don't even think he was. I don't think he was
a thing in the nineties. I think that's two thousand,
Project green Light. What's the movie, Ohio movie that he
made good, Battle of Shaker Heights.
Speaker 1 (16:54):
He was doing a lot of Kevin Smith movies at
the time with Dogma, but he was nobody was nobody
yet dazed and confused came out what like ninety nine
or something like, Oh no, it's earlier than that. Nonetheless,
he's not on the list. Yeah he shouldn't be. Okay,
gimme Bruce Willis.
Speaker 5 (17:14):
Bruce Willis, I think we all agree he's way bigger
than Sylvester Stallone.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
Number three of the nineties.
Speaker 6 (17:20):
Okay, Matthew McConaughey, no, because.
Speaker 5 (17:24):
He didn't get his first acting gig until Dazed and Confused,
and he was a nobody.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
He has a great story about how.
Speaker 5 (17:31):
He went for a fitting like they do an outfit
check and then gets full makeup all that stuff. The
director comes and checks and he did that and the
director was like, hey, I want you to shoot this
scene right now, which is the final scene where he
hits on the red Head, And he couldn't remember most
of the line and he improvised the most memorable parts
of it and he just went into his zone and
(17:53):
could do it. And it was like this crazy story
about how that movie had so many of those moments
that were improvised and made it so good.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
Yeah. Him and Brad Pitt, I feel like, really blew
up in the early two thousands.
Speaker 6 (18:04):
Yeah, I think we got to go back to like
the Brothers, Charlie Sheen or.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
Emelio okay, Emiliostavez. Yeah, I can give you that. He
was all over the nineties with Young Guns and the
Mighty eighties. Eighties. My Young Guns is eighties? Okay, what
about the Mighty Ducks? Is eighties really late eighties, My world.
I'm old, all right, so we're just going men. Top ten.
Speaker 5 (18:32):
Mel Gibson, Oh yeah right, oh yeah, yeah, I agree.
Definitely bigger than Sevester Stallone in the nineties.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
Number nine.
Speaker 5 (18:39):
Jeff Goldbloom Oh yeah yeah. Jurassic Park World.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Right, yeah, yeah, The Fly, but that was the eighties
as well.
Speaker 5 (18:48):
Bill Paxton, Twisters, Yeah, Titanic, Yes, Bruce Willis, we got
at number three, Tom Hanks at number two, number one,
Jackie Chan, Samuel Jackson.
Speaker 1 (19:01):
What okay, pulp fiction, Jurassic Park. He was. He was
in Jurassic Park and the pulp fiction. Okay, I think
pulp fiction. You think that's the one that did? Yeah well,
And he also in was it another Quentin Tarantino movie
with Jackie Brown? And he's in the movie The Good Fellas.
Speaker 5 (19:27):
Yes, he plays the guy they go to visit and
he was supposed to be the wheelman and they wake
him up and he overslept and he's like, I had
a bitch in here somewhere, and then they kill him.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
And the guy's like what are you doing. He's like,
you told me to make coff and he's like, get
out of here. Oh yeah, sure enough.
Speaker 5 (19:45):
Okay, so spoiler, sly isn't on this list at all. Yeah,
I agree, Kevin Costner is on this list. We missed him,
that's fair. Travolta, de Niro, Kevin Spacey, Lee Niece and
Denzel Gene Hackman, Jim Carrey, Harrison Ford, James, Earl Jones,
(20:09):
Danny glove Or, Nicholas Cage, Leonardo DiCaprio.
Speaker 6 (20:15):
Okay, there's so many more Samuel Jackson movies in the nineties.
Speaker 5 (20:20):
Oh yeah, Well, he played a lot of fringe. Yeah,
like characters, nobody really he didn't have a recognizable face.
Now that you know who he is and he's established,
now you see this and you go, oh.
Speaker 6 (20:30):
Right, the negotiator, Yeah, like, oh my goodness, he wasn't
coming to America.
Speaker 5 (20:37):
Only guy that tried to rob the store, yes, yeah, yeah,
but sly Stone Nope, no, no, but he still had
the notoriety.
Speaker 1 (20:45):
I would think, So what we can say, B level,
I don't know. I think his movies Rocky Rambo were
so massive and he portrayed those parts so well that
that kept him in then ale status. I think. So
here's the question.
Speaker 5 (21:05):
Then, because we're running out of time, sl stallone offers
you a Porsche and a condo, but you got to
be his number one.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
Whatever? Sure, okay, yeah, good for you.
Speaker 6 (21:22):
I'm a fan of of of sly.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
Yeah you'd have to be. What's a female equivalent of
Sylvester Stallone?
Speaker 5 (21:30):
I don't think there is one, but you're getting the
same question.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
I'm not gonna do it because I ain't geek. What
car would it take? Right? Right? Right? We'll do it
for Loon Ruver.
Speaker 6 (21:42):
No the latest greatest Harley.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Yeah, what if you don't have to have sex with him?
You just got to do the other thing. Ah No, no, no,
if I'm not having sex, it does the game because
it's the other thing. Right. No, you have a good
argument on why He's like, hey, GIMPI I just need
you to accompany me to all my you know, fancy whatever. Whatever. Yeah,
(22:07):
we got a hold hands and we have to kiss
on the red carpet.
Speaker 6 (22:09):
That his little arm candy.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
No kissing, No kissing. But I'll I'll let you grab
my little hand, pull me along and I get to.
Speaker 5 (22:18):
Put my arm around you. And then what he goes
in for a kiss because he can do that, he's
paid you. We have a contract.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
No, no, read the fine print. My part says no
kissing or any other kind of romantic gestures.
Speaker 5 (22:31):
Mine would be private jet okay, no car, no house,
private jet okay, whenever I want it. And every time
he'd want me for some I'm not available because I'm
on the other side of the planet.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
Get you.
Speaker 5 (22:46):
Yeah, the pilot's not here. Chetfield comes pretty scarce here
in Zumbabwe. Right, all right, we got to take a break.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
We'll be good morning.
Speaker 6 (22:55):
We've been asking you to nominate teachers in our area
to receive five thousand dollars towards stocking their classrooms ahead
of the new school year. And today's teacher of the
Day is Miss Angela Graham, who teaches at Deborah Brown
Community School in Tulsa, and she has made a lifelong
impact on her students the ability to help underprivileged children
(23:20):
rise to their potential. She's got a lot of community
support and family interactions. She has the most love from
every student in the public, says they run and launch
into her arms to receive summertime hugs at Guthrie Green.
Her end of the year MLK performances are one of
a kind. Congratulations to Angela, and you can nominate a
(23:43):
teacher too at kmod dot com.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
Good morning Gimpie, Well, good morning Gorman. How would you
like to hang out with me in some of my
extended family. It's pretty simple, going to be at B
and B Liquors this so Friday can qualify family. Were
you in all right? Getting you qualified for flight and
fairway your chance to score a badass golf cart from
yingling Flight. I'll be there from five to seven, me
(24:08):
and my extended family come on by. Is there things
that you don't tell your kids about them? Lindsay?
Speaker 6 (24:19):
What do you mean, like.
Speaker 1 (24:22):
Like what like anything? Is there something you keep from
their kids about them about themselves? Yes? No, okay, GIMPI
did you pretty sure? I'm pretty sure. It's been a
while since I've had to deal with them, but yeah,
I'm pretty sure I probably have. Did You could always
(24:42):
look down and see your hand. But at what point
do you remember that your parents talking to you about
like what happened? Well, like like what had happened? Yeah,
this is the reason why you have a dilda fist.
Speaker 6 (24:53):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
Yes, I did, of course, you know, because I had
to go through a lot of doc appointments growing up,
so it was exposed to me at an early age.
And I golly, I would have to have been under
ten when I first asked, Hey, exactly what happened here?
(25:17):
You know, because as far as I was told, you
were just born that way, right, that's just the way
God made you, you know. And then you're going through
these doctors visits trying to, you know, see what we
can do, see what we can do to make sure
he has a somewhat normal life, you know. Of course,
that's when one of the doctors was like, well, we
(25:37):
can cut it off and put a hook on there. Yeah,
so I, yes, I do. I did ask, but it
was like eight or so when I did ask, and
that's when I found out it was the lid of
mind supposed to be used for you know, morning sickness.
Here's a fun thing though that I'm I've realized about
my my parents, Okay, rest in peace as they may.
(26:01):
I don't know if they're telling me the truth or not.
And I say that because you know, when when I
was eighteen, I asked my mom, you know, who's who's
my real dad? Where do I come from? And she
gave me the whole story. It's one of two people,
but I'm not sure who it is, you know what
I mean? And I'm like, mmmm, something smells funny about
that entire story. So I don't know what to believe anymore.
Speaker 5 (26:25):
You feel like, as you've gotten know, they held a
lot of secrets. Yeah, for sure, for sure trying to
protect me from probably whatever you know, which I get it,
or just a shame, right, I want to share it.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
Yeah, that's what you want to do. You want to
That's what parents do. They want to protect their children
from any kind of bad. Sure.
Speaker 5 (26:41):
I've always said, like, if our kids got diagnosed with something,
I would I don't want them using it as a crutch, right, right,
you got to learn to evolve. Well, I found this
thing of parents that kids finding out what their parents
held from them, and one of them was like autism.
And I was like, ah, I can understand that. You
don't like, you know, give me that. You can't use
(27:02):
that as a crutch, right, We'll manage the school and
all that other stuff, but you can't go, oh, I
got autism. You're right right right. And that's a minor
one of the ones that were admitted. This one was
pretty intense and this one says, uh, my parents kept
for me that my dad was molested by his mom
(27:25):
and she let random dudes bully and beat him up
for their entertainment. Wow, that feels pretty intense. Sorry, that
is pretty intense.
Speaker 6 (27:35):
Yeah, and.
Speaker 5 (27:38):
The fact that your dad like, there's not that's not
an awesome story to tell to me. What is the
benefit of telling your kid, hey, here's some horrendous things.
Speaker 1 (27:49):
Yeah, there is none.
Speaker 6 (27:51):
Your grandmother was awful.
Speaker 1 (27:53):
Yeah, there's no positive benefit for that.
Speaker 5 (27:56):
I mean, if they're like, why don't we ever go
visit grandma? Then you go, well, she's not a real
great person, and.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
You can explain to them when they're older and their
little brains can handle that kind of information.
Speaker 5 (28:09):
Yeah, you have to give the information age appropriately. I
would agree with that. I don't know if you have
to go with all that other stuff. Well, your dad
got beat up by some people and grandma didn't protect him.
They came and hurt your dad, and so we just
feel like grandma's not a good protector. Yeah, and you're like, Okay,
(28:30):
that's pretty intense, right, And I'm sure that all that
trauma that person had on, you know, didn't carry down
to their kid.
Speaker 1 (28:38):
Usually it does. Right.
Speaker 5 (28:41):
Another one that's on here, it says I had a
brother that only lived twelve hours. He was two years
younger than me, so I didn't remember until they told me.
When I was ten years later, I found out his
birthday was the same day as my next door neighbors.
My parents had chosen to hide their pain for remembrance
and emotions so that I was able to enjoy us
(29:03):
sixth or seventh birthday parties in the neighborhood before he moved.
So that was your neighbor kid, I think nuh. It
sounded like it was as their sibling or would have
been sibling.
Speaker 1 (29:18):
I had a brother that only lived twelve hours.
Speaker 5 (29:20):
He was two years younger than me, so I didn't
remember until they told me when I was ten years
When I was ten years later, I found out his
birthday was the same day as my next door neighbors.
Oh okay, my parents had chosen to hide their painful
remembrance and emotions so that I was able to enjoy
us six and seventh birthday parties in the neighborhood before
(29:42):
we moved. So their parents were trying to like, didn't
want that to overshadow when they were obvious, but they
were in pain and kids pick up on that. Why
is mom crying on my birthday? Why is mom crying
as we make a wish?
Speaker 1 (29:58):
Right? Who's Jack? But then again, I mean they don't
need to know the full story. They're too young for that.
This one is interesting.
Speaker 5 (30:11):
My parents didn't tell me about my cerebral palsy diagnosis
until I was thirteen, even though I was diagnosed around
eighteen months. I'm really mildly affected, obviously, but it's become
far more important as adult, as I have health issues,
need to exercise and adapt to environments, have a slight
learning disability that makes aspects of college hard, and can't
drive due to my condition. Yeah, that makes sense, and
(30:35):
I'm I'm all for like, hey, when you ask, will
tell you, But I don't want you leaning into that
in school.
Speaker 6 (30:46):
Right and using it as a crutch or think or.
Speaker 5 (30:48):
Even thinking yeah you don't belong right, thinking that you
should be taken to the side, or yeah I can't participate.
Speaker 1 (30:59):
I got cerebral right being treated differently, right, And I
think that's that's a lot. My folks did the same
sort of thing, you know. They they had to figure
out everything on my own, all right, you know, just
to live a normal life somewhat quote unquote, we know
you've got this paenis arm, but it's like, we're not
gonna help you do this. You've got to figure it out.
(31:19):
We're not always going to be there for you. Try
to be as normal as humanly possible. So there you know,
you don't get special treatment in schools or anything like that.
Speaker 5 (31:29):
Yeah, this one said, Uh found out during COVID that
the man who raised me was not my father. My
mother killed herself over twenty years ago. I found this
out from twenty three and me after matching with half sibling.
She told no one. Some family members don't even believe me.
Big surprise. I looked just like my dad. He unfortunately
(31:51):
passed in twenty seventeen, so I never got to meet him. Yeah,
I think that's why you That would be the only
counter argument I would have of like, you don't tell
kids like you don't it's easy for like, don't tell
them and then you die and then they got to
find out at twenty three and meters isn't an awesome
way to find out?
Speaker 1 (32:08):
Right?
Speaker 5 (32:10):
If the day ever comes that, Gimpie finds out on
social media some DNA company about who his real dad
is that's going to be really hard and confusing on
why didn't his parents? I'm sure you reevaluate those things.
Not gimpy in particular, but sure overall. I would much
rather have that information from my parents. Oh yeah, totally,
(32:34):
then have some email.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
Hey you have a brother, God, God, you have a
long lost sister.
Speaker 5 (32:46):
I can only imagine how confusing that would be for
Lindsey to find out if her dad had some other
child somewhere else.
Speaker 1 (32:54):
Right, growing up as an only child.
Speaker 5 (32:56):
Yeah, I mean you every emotion, anger, confuse, usion, sadness, joy, Yeah,
real resentment could show up.
Speaker 1 (33:07):
Right, But as a parent, you've got to make that decision.
I mean, are they going to would they believe me
if I told them at any age oh whatever? Or
would there be resentment towards Let's say your mom is
the one that tells you, you know, would there be
resentment towards her? Maybe? Is that going to ruin family
Christmas for the next you know, I'm ten years, Maybe
(33:27):
a little bit of pain for future convenience? Yeah, right right.
Speaker 5 (33:31):
I'm a big believer in truth always is important. There's
never a reason not to tell the truth, or in
my opinion, right.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
If I would have gotten, you know, because I was
told it's one of two people and we don't know
who it is, right, sort of thing. If it was
just one, all right, yes it was you know Tom
Smith or whatever. Oh, okay, I might I might have
started looking a little earlier in life. Yeah, But since
it's all confusion, it's like, I'm good, I'm not going
(34:01):
to mess with it because I knew my stepdaddy. I
knew for a fact he wasn't my real dad.
Speaker 5 (34:06):
I think some people on the outside that hear stories
like yours think they're when they're like, oh, I want
to find out who my real dad is, they think
they didn't have a dad, And that's not true. You
had a dad, right, You had someone that raised you
and you looked at like your father because that's what
you knew, right, And he finding that what's that?
Speaker 1 (34:26):
I said? Even the ones before him, But he was the.
Speaker 5 (34:29):
Longest, I mean, he was the most tenured. Yeah, he
had the most influence for sure on your life.
Speaker 1 (34:34):
It sounds like twenty plus ys. Yeah sure. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (34:37):
And then you and you want to look, you're just
trying to close an information grant gap.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
Yeah, that's all you're doing.
Speaker 5 (34:46):
I don't know very many people that find their adoptive
parent and it turns out awesome, Right, I feel like
those stories are.
Speaker 1 (34:55):
Few and far between. Yeah, you're probably right.
Speaker 5 (34:59):
Of the small group of people that I know that
were adopted and did the search and had records open
and went to court and met them, it was a
one time meeting.
Speaker 3 (35:09):
Right.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
They're not going to the reunions every other year because
you realize it's blood.
Speaker 5 (35:15):
But those aren't people that you know, their lifestyle, their thoughts, right,
how they do Christmas?
Speaker 1 (35:21):
Right? Oh, I can't even imagine.
Speaker 5 (35:24):
Like, let's say I found out I was adopted in
I searched and found out that they were Okra farmers.
Speaker 1 (35:28):
Oh right, Yeah, I.
Speaker 5 (35:31):
Know it's a silly reference, but for me, that's not awesome.
Speaker 6 (35:35):
Or are vegetarians in general? I didn't even meet at all.
Speaker 1 (35:40):
I mean I wouldn't. Vegetarian food's pretty good. It wouldn't
make sense though, why you were why you hate Okrah
so much? Though? It's like, you know, the banker with
no money, the roof with the bad roof, that's bad
tea sort of thing. You know, your folks, you're real folks,
grew Okra and they just hated it so much, but
brought in a lot of money, you know. So I'm like,
(36:00):
and that's in your DNA, like.
Speaker 5 (36:02):
Okra Empire, I would listen, a dealer doesn't get high
on his own supply, you know what I'm saying. It
would be easy for me to be like I would
never be like I'm also a client.
Speaker 1 (36:18):
Magnate.
Speaker 5 (36:18):
Yeah, yeah, life is ironic. I don't know, tell you,
I'm pretty confident. And I look just like my dad
and like my grandfather and like my grant. Like it's
clear there is no adoption in that lineage for the
last two generations. But adoption, I think. I don't agree
(36:39):
with the cinema gimpia is is like kids don't understand.
I think if you give them the harsh details, I agree,
But if you make a kid digestible, then I think, yeah,
it's I think it's important not to lie. I think
it's important to always tell the truth to set the precedent. Hey,
I've always told you the truth. There's an expectation you
(37:01):
will tell me the truth.
Speaker 1 (37:01):
Yeah right. I think a lot of parents do it
just to protect them, protect their kids, you know, from
whatever it says.
Speaker 5 (37:13):
My grandparents lied to my mom until she was thirty
three that her dad wasn't hers his big he's a
big name in sports. Turns out other guy is too. Okay,
I've been in and out of foster homes. My stepdad
abused me every day. I was adopted when I was fifteen.
My mom failed to tell me my dad lived in
(37:33):
Bristow and could have avoided all that crap.
Speaker 1 (37:36):
My dad died in two thousand and nine before I
got to meet him.
Speaker 5 (37:39):
Another great example of like, you got to tell people
because you don't want That sucks, right, that sucks if
like Gimbie found letters that his mom was sending up
until her death and could have told him.
Speaker 1 (37:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (37:56):
I found out my stepdad wasn't my real dad when
I was eleven. After that, he started abusing me, and
then my mother left him before I was thirteen. I
found my real dad when I was twenty nine, and
we developed a wonderful relationship. In fact, he and my
mother got back together and even got married a couple
of years ago, something my mom said she would never do.
Speaker 1 (38:16):
Yeah, beautiful story that it is right.
Speaker 5 (38:18):
That's not adoption, right, that's not like, Hey, the whole
family gave you up. My mom was adopted and search
for her real mom. She was highly disappointing.
Speaker 1 (38:27):
It was sad.
Speaker 5 (38:28):
Those stories are sad, it is and tragic, and the
story of like, hey, I didn't know who my real
dad was feels common. It feels like a lot of
people have that storyline.
Speaker 1 (38:44):
Well, yeah, mama goes out parties a little bit, you know,
gets knocked up. I gotta do something. I can't schmischmort
this thing, so here we go. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (38:56):
Not everything is a MTV mini series, right, right, Sometimes
it works out and then you realize I don't want
to be married to this person, right, Yeah, I don't
want to have a I don't want you around. Or
the dad goes I'm going to get a pack of cigarettes.
Speaker 6 (39:10):
Yep, be back in an hour.
Speaker 5 (39:13):
He never came back. I, by the way, no way
I could ever do that. I got it true.
Speaker 1 (39:21):
I got a pack? Right? Am I taking snacks? Right?
Where am I going?
Speaker 6 (39:27):
Like?
Speaker 1 (39:27):
The amount of defing I would have to do it
is my brain is not built to just I'm going
out for coffee?
Speaker 6 (39:34):
Yeah? Am I going to a buddy's house? Am I
staying in a hotel?
Speaker 1 (39:37):
Right? What about my job?
Speaker 5 (39:39):
Those stories you have of like dad went out cigarettes
and never came back. You never looked, you never went
to his job, You never called his parents. Well, no,
the parents moved, the grandparents never knew that.
Speaker 6 (39:54):
What do you talk.
Speaker 5 (39:55):
I'm always fascinated. There's so many like intertwined things that
I would have expected happened when you have a kid,
that there's no those just cease to exist.
Speaker 1 (40:06):
Yeah. Yeah, people are like, I'm out by as.
Speaker 5 (40:10):
I get older, I think that storyline of I went up,
my dad went out for a pack of cigarettes and
never came back.
Speaker 1 (40:15):
Is just the story that's told, kind of like the
dog went to the farm. Yes, yes, because people don't
want to tell the truth, right, guard them, shield them
from being hurt. Right. It's like in the movie.
Speaker 5 (40:31):
The Town where Ben Affleck's character he's in crime, the
mom was. He was told the mom left and never
came back, and he put up search posters and he
went goes and visits his dad in prison, and he's like,
why didn't you look for her? And he's like, what
are you talking about? We did every day like there
(40:52):
was the kid just doesn't remember. And then come to
find out she was just hopped up on heroin and
she was a drug addict. Right, But the point is
is that kids would don't remember the details that way, right,
I don't remember a lot of I remember our dog
Brandy ran away. I feel like we never looked for
(41:12):
but I'm sure we did not that that's a correlation
to children.
Speaker 1 (41:16):
But right, still, something you love went missing.
Speaker 5 (41:20):
Just details of childhood that are that are missing. Our
memories will play tricks on us all the time.
Speaker 6 (41:25):
Definitely.
Speaker 5 (41:25):
Our memories will always make something more romantic than they
really are, or.
Speaker 6 (41:30):
Worse than what they were.
Speaker 5 (41:31):
Okay, that's fair. Yeah, that it's hardly accurate. All Right,
we got to take a break.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
We'll be back.
Speaker 5 (41:38):
A number of people that have had something hidden from
them from their parents, as wild the text coming in.
Speaker 1 (41:44):
Yeah, I'm not surprised though. I think that a lot
of parents hide stuff from their children. And when I
say it a lot, I'm thinking like more.
Speaker 5 (41:53):
All right, let's play a game. We got tickets to Rocklahoma, GA.
Tickets for the whole weekend prior USA Labor Day weekend,
Five Finger Death, Punch Breaking, Benjamin Shine Down, and tons more.
Get the full lineup and link for tickets at the
website that rockskmod dot com.
Speaker 1 (42:10):
Sing Sing is the game.
Speaker 5 (42:11):
The record is, well, you have eight and I have eight,
Lindsey has six. Last week's winner you so Lindsey and
Gimpy at nine one eight four, I'm sorry eight three
three four six oh kmod eight three three four six
oh kmo d call up.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
Decide who's going to be your clue giver.
Speaker 5 (42:29):
Whoever gets the most right is going to win those
weekend GA tickets to Roklahoma.
Speaker 1 (42:35):
Good morning, you're on the air.
Speaker 5 (42:36):
What is your name, Bam Dan? Who would you like
to give clues? Lindsay or Gimpy?
Speaker 1 (42:44):
Oh, let's go with yeah, I'm true, I'm all.
Speaker 5 (42:46):
Sixty seconds are on the clock. Timers starts after the
first clue.
Speaker 1 (42:50):
Here we go. Uh, okay, so I think his name
is Robert Smith. Eighties band, kind of dark guy. They
got the weird hair. You know, I'm talking about that band.
You know. Maybe you're sick and you go to the
doctor and they're like, hey, we have a blank for
you prescription. Okay, there is no blank for cancer. That's
(43:20):
the band. Now, this is a part of the week
that they say you are. What's the opposite of angry
or unhappy? Uh? The happy day? I mean the opposite
of being angry or unhappy like maybe Valentine. No, think
(43:41):
of like you know Valentine. There you go. That's the
well last word in this. And there's a particular part
of the week that you feel this we got sap.
Just give me the names of the days of the week, Dan,
and I'll tell you when you're right. Sunday day, Tuesday, No, Thursday, Friday,
(44:04):
there you go, Saturday. No, it was the first Friday,
Friday time no time? Wow? Uh, Dan, was the first?
You did not win. I can promise you that. No,
that's a first. All right, buddy, See you later, man,
all right, see you later. Good morning, you're on the air.
(44:26):
What is your name, Xavier? How are you many? Good? Listen?
You have an easy task. You just have to get one.
I just have to get one. You just have to
get one. And you win these tickets for Rockklahoma. All right,
all right? Are you ready? Yep? Here we go.
Speaker 6 (44:46):
All right. Really, if you're gonna get freaky with your woman,
you might put this song on.
Speaker 1 (44:56):
Part of the song.
Speaker 6 (44:57):
Okay, she grew up up in Indiana Town. Had a
good look at mama who never was around. Another word
for weed, A female.
Speaker 1 (45:12):
Name a female name for what. Sorry, I couldn't hear you.
Speaker 6 (45:16):
Another name for marijuana.
Speaker 1 (45:20):
Mary James Black. Damn.
Speaker 6 (45:22):
Yes, you got it all right.
Speaker 1 (45:25):
Congratulations man, you're getting those stiga.
Speaker 5 (45:27):
If you have a question like to get to know
the show better, feel free to send it over to
us BMMS and whatever that is to eight two nine
four five. Let's see what Gimpie has in his four
by four.
Speaker 1 (45:37):
Hell Covin says here that Abbot orders the arrest of
Texas Democrats who fled the state. Texas Governor Grigg Abbot
wants the Democrats who fled the state to stop congressional
redistricting to be arrested. The Republican has ordered the state's
Department of Public Safety to arrest House Democrats who were
(45:57):
not present for the special legislation media on Monday. With
the Democrats gone, the GOP is unable to vote to
redraw the map that would give them five more pickup
opportunities ahead of twenty twenty six. Abbott said the order
will remain in effect until all dismissing Democrats are brought
to the Texas Capital.
Speaker 5 (46:17):
I don't think a governor can order somebody to be arrested.
Now they can order the police to take action, or
or they can order the attorney general to investigate and
take action. But I don't think he can issue an
arrest that person.
Speaker 1 (46:30):
Round them all up. Ramman's sons of a political theater man.
That's what.
Speaker 5 (46:34):
It's more than it's ever been, got a lot of it.
What else we got here?
Speaker 1 (46:37):
The acting head of NASA wants a nuclear reactor on
the moon. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy sent out a directive
last Thursday saying it's imperative to get it done quickly.
Duffy says a nuclear reactor on the Moon would support
a future lunar economy and strength in America's national security
(46:59):
in space. Duffy says China and a Roasia are planning
to put a reactor on the Moon by the mid
twenty thirties, and they clear a keep out zone. I
think this is a pipe dream. I think you're right.
I think living on the Moon is a pipe dream
and highly stupid. There's no atmosphere.
Speaker 5 (47:20):
Well, I mean you could create like a bubble world
and stuff like that, but this you would have to
have pollution. Right, where's that go? Dust is kind of
a problem there, right? How you know, you got to
dig below the frost line. I don't know what that
means up there?
Speaker 1 (47:34):
Where is the right?
Speaker 5 (47:36):
I just feel like there's a not that they can't.
They got ten years, I get it. That feels like
I don't know just.
Speaker 1 (47:43):
Why, just because China and Rush is doing it. That's
I think. We hear these stories and I'm like, this
is crazy.
Speaker 5 (47:50):
But then if you go back and read how fast
we sent someone to space with almost no money and
no checks and balances, system and safety precautions, you go.
Speaker 1 (47:58):
Okay, right, are a little better off now anyway. Moving
on Trump administration changing visa rules for some transgender women athletes,
Immigration officials issued a new guidance yesterday that blocks extraordinary
ability visas for athletes who are biologically male but wish
(48:18):
to compete in female sports. The policy does not mention
transgender women directly, but instead refers to quote male athletes
who want to compete in women's sports. And then, lastly,
here Union Public Schools finding solution to their bus driver shortage.
Union Public Schools is working to make sure they do
(48:38):
not have to cut bus routes again. The district is
creating a more positive work environment and making sure drivers
feel valued.
Speaker 5 (48:47):
Pizza party, Pizza party to give them more money. They
sign up to drive the kids around and will give
you free pizza.
Speaker 1 (48:55):
Right. It says here that they're renovating the transportation area
and break room and that each driver got a two
point four percent raise this year. Says they also received
another dollar per hour on top of that, and all
drivers will qualify to get a five percent stipend in
mid July. As for buses, the district hired a consulting
(49:17):
firm to help reroot the district and every bus stop
and route is now different.
Speaker 6 (49:22):
Now.
Speaker 5 (49:22):
I know this is a real problem that they're trying
to figure out and stuff, But I don't know if
two percent is that much worth Like thirty more cents.
I was on the fence, but you got me some
more money that will buy me a gumball. Well you're
maybe you're short. It's two point four so we're looking
(49:43):
at forty five cents.
Speaker 6 (49:45):
And don't forget that dollar and a.
Speaker 1 (49:47):
Dollar, so it's a dollar forty five no, uh huh
on top of a new break room. Come on this company.
It's like, hey, you want to resign your deal, We're
going to do them breaker. I would feel like, is
this a jail? Are you running first? Tuco man? What
(50:07):
the hell's going on? There's Ashton Kutcher all right? Oh god, okay,
I think the problem to the the bus problem is
at the bus station.
Speaker 6 (50:18):
Good morning, Corbin. Another hard rock live experience could be yours.
It's up for grabs at kmod dot com. A pair
of tickets to see Marcus King live on October thirtieth
at the hard Rock Live, plus dinner for two and
a one night's stay at the hard Rock Hotel and
Casino the night of the show kmod dot com to win.
Speaker 1 (50:39):
Good morning Gimpie. Well, good morning Corbin. How'd you like
to go to the iHeartRadio Music Festival in Las Vegas? Yep,
happen then next month September nineteenth and twentieth. We've got
the Offspring playing jelly roll. Send you there for free
plus one thousand dollars. As you got to do is
listen for your keywords and your first one's coming up
in about and.
Speaker 5 (51:01):
All right, listener emails. You send us an email with
a question needing advice, and we can help you out.
We'll give our advice. You guys, get to give your advice. Too,
bmmss and whatever that is to eight two nine four five.
This email says I'm fifty years old and I just
got laid off after twenty five years at the same company.
No warning, no retirement package, just a handshake, a folder
(51:23):
and thanks for your service. I've worked there since I
was sixteen. I've never been without a job. Now I'm
sitting at the kitchen table every morning wondering what the
hell am I supposed to do. I don't know what
I want to do. I feel too old to start over,
but too young to be done. I've sent out a
few resumes, but everything either pays like I'm fresh out
(51:49):
of college or wants some software certification. I've never heard
of my wife's being supportive, but I can tell she's nervous.
Have any of the listeners had to start at fifty?
Is it even possible. I'm not looking for a pity party.
I just need to hear from people who have been
(52:09):
here and found a way forward. Only one of us
is fifty in this room.
Speaker 1 (52:14):
That is a true team.
Speaker 5 (52:17):
The other two look over fifty, but that's different, So
I don't know how much input we're going to be
able to have in that that's got to be crazy.
And that argument of just a handshake, a folder and
a thanks for your service.
Speaker 1 (52:32):
Yeah, welcome to life, bro, That's how it is. I
personally think we can take the age factor out of
this and then just it's just starting over, getting laid
off and having to start over again. I get the
age factor. Yeah, yeah, I'm fifty years old. What am
I going to do? But if you're trying to expand
(52:52):
and get more advice from you know, other listeners, take
the age out of it. It's just about getting laid off.
It's just about having to start over. What the hell
am I going to do? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (53:02):
No retirement package after twenty five years is crazy?
Speaker 1 (53:07):
Is fired? Right?
Speaker 6 (53:08):
Right?
Speaker 5 (53:09):
Laid off fire? Whatever way you want to put it.
Speaker 1 (53:13):
Now you can take I don't know, maybe you can
help me out in this because your four oh one
k right that you have with your company, if your
company has one, and if you are participant in it,
you can take that elsewhere with you, right, just the
company that you're working with, they won't be contributing anymore, right,
That's the way I understand it. Yes, yeah, so I
(53:35):
mean still used to got that if if you have that,
so when it comes to retirement, like Lindsay's talking about it,
you still have something there, right of a retirement plan.
Speaker 5 (53:45):
Now you may not have their pension right, you may not.
I don't know what your severance look like if they
even gave you, well, that's what I mean.
Speaker 6 (53:53):
It sounds like they didn't even hand them the severance package.
Twenty five years the company and just a handshake.
Speaker 1 (54:01):
Yn People think that means something. It doesn't. If anything,
it means you're a target because you've been around that
long and you make that much money.
Speaker 5 (54:13):
They don't go, well, Chad's.
Speaker 1 (54:15):
Been here twenty five years. Man, we can't let him go.
He's been here twenty five years.
Speaker 6 (54:19):
No.
Speaker 1 (54:20):
No, today's world, Chad isn't Chad. It is employee number
one seven four three two. I've been in those meetings
where they talk about people and who should get let go,
and never does tenure ever come up. No, or how
nice they are, or if they've been sick lately, or
(54:46):
if they just had a.
Speaker 6 (54:46):
Kid, right, if they have a family to support.
Speaker 1 (54:49):
Yeah, none of that. No. Companies are in the business
of making money and paying you the least amount possible.
Speaker 5 (54:58):
How can they get out of paying you? How Can
they give you more work? How can you cover someone
else's job without having to pay another person? Can they
drive a bus? Pretty sure? I heard something about schools
needing bus drivers.
Speaker 1 (55:16):
That's not a bad idea. It's bringing in income right
into his house so his wife doesn't have to, you know,
front the bill on air breathing gives them something to do.
I don't think that's a bad idea at all. It
may not be what you and you may not make
it as much as you used to, but it's something. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (55:37):
But if he's it's been sixteen, like he doesn't know, right,
I'm surely he knows how to drive. No, I mean like,
even applying for a job is dramatically different. Oh yeah, yeah,
even how you apply for a job is dramatically different.
Speaker 1 (55:52):
The people you meet with for hire, Like, what do
you mean a background check?
Speaker 6 (55:58):
Right?
Speaker 1 (55:59):
What do you mean I gotta go take a urine sample?
Who knows? I'm just saying that a lot has changed
in fifty years or whatever, however long since he was sixteen. Yeah,
for sure, man, And you're gonna try and make something happen, right.
I think the thing that you hear on something like
the recommendation of the bus driver. Is you think that's permanent? Right?
Speaker 5 (56:25):
Get started, start churning butter right.
Speaker 1 (56:29):
I get that. Like for somebody who's been at the
same job since he was sixteen, you would can kind
of expect, Yeah, the next one needs to be permanent, right,
because that's all I that's all I do. I just work, work, work, work, work,
you know. But you're right, it doesn't have to be.
It's a band aid until you can figure out something else.
Speaker 5 (56:47):
The hardest part is to stand up after getting hit.
Once you can get one foot planeted boom, you just
gotta keep working.
Speaker 6 (56:56):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (56:57):
In situations like this, I like to go to my
default comment and response, cheating whore. Your company is yeah,
his company's the cheating horn. If you're fifty and you
worked there since you were sixteen, how have you been
there for twenty five years?
Speaker 1 (57:11):
Great question. Maybe they were there that.
Speaker 5 (57:12):
Long because of math, math and mathing. Maybe they got
leg go Their math is bad. Your age equals experience.
Don't worry about being fifty. But I'll tell you this,
My uncle has been waiting for a good position for
thirty years. He's still waiting. Don't let the pay keep
you from starting somewhere start, show them what you can.
Speaker 1 (57:33):
Do, and work your way up. It'll be okay. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (57:37):
A lot of people that work jobs that long their
ego holds them back.
Speaker 1 (57:41):
Ry.
Speaker 5 (57:41):
Yeah, they're like, well, I worked somewhere fifty years. That
should mean something to you, even though you don't know
me or the job of the company I worked for.
Speaker 1 (57:52):
Right, they don't want to start over. We Light's kind
of like those people that don't want to go and
work the fry counter at McDonald's because beneath them, when
in all reality, that's a paying gig. Bro. It may suck,
and your hands are gonna burn if you got cuts
on them because of the salt the check clears. Exactly.
Speaker 5 (58:14):
I just want to throw out a comment that just
because you're fifty does not mean you're too old to
start over. I went to nursing school with women over fifty.
I don't know what the listener's career was in, but
I suggest visiting career services or a workforce to figure
out the opportunities.
Speaker 1 (58:31):
I think that's a good point too.
Speaker 5 (58:32):
Sometimes when you are trying to find a job, you
just peruse the want ads quote unquote or LinkedIn or
whatever those resources are but there's a ton of resources
out there to help weed through stuff, right, and those
people usually have relations with other companies and are like, hey,
(58:56):
do you have a good person for xyz. So utilizing
services for that type of thing I think is smart.
You don't want to get you get caught doing nothing,
just like well I sent out resumes.
Speaker 1 (59:15):
Nice? Yeah right, Well, I mean at least they're trying,
right and efforts being made. That is true. Yeah, that
is true.
Speaker 5 (59:24):
If you are playing a baseball game and you walk
up to the batter's box, does that count as trying?
Speaker 1 (59:33):
I don't think so. I mean you were there, you
got there. Yeah, but you didn't take a swing at
all whatsoever. So no, you're not trying. You just showed up.
You just showed up.
Speaker 5 (59:43):
Yeah, sending out a resume is just showing up as
far as I'm concerned. And if you're shooting out resumes
like they're handing out T shirts at a ball game,
I don't mean nothing, or a stripper making it, you know,
making it rain it a stripper, that's not that doesn't
count either. You think squeaky wheels gonna get the oil,
(01:00:05):
but what do you do if you get that? Let's
say you send it out to an industry you don't want,
and then you get an interview, and then what are
you gonna do?
Speaker 1 (01:00:12):
I really want this job?
Speaker 6 (01:00:13):
Do you?
Speaker 5 (01:00:15):
It's for nails, making nails on people's fingers? What did
you do before I made washers?
Speaker 1 (01:00:25):
Right?
Speaker 5 (01:00:27):
That's the other problem too, is so many jobs out
there are entry level jobs, and then you've worked somewhere
fifty years, they're gonna think you're overqualified.
Speaker 1 (01:00:37):
Yeah, why is he stepping backwards? Right? Well, I got
laid off? Why did you get laid off?
Speaker 5 (01:00:44):
That's great if you get an interview, right, But if
you don't get an interview and they just see your
information come through, and they're filtering through right on the surface,
you don't see that.
Speaker 6 (01:00:54):
Always hated that that you're overqualified for this job. Well,
then why wouldn't you want that person to be working
for If they're willing to work for the money that
you're offering, Why wouldn't you want the person that is
overqualified because you know they're going to do a good job.
Speaker 1 (01:01:10):
Yeah that's not true.
Speaker 6 (01:01:11):
Though.
Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
Overqualified doesn't mean you'll do a good job.
Speaker 6 (01:01:15):
But they know how to do the job.
Speaker 5 (01:01:17):
No, they've just worked somewhere a long time. Again, tenure
does not mean knowledge.
Speaker 6 (01:01:25):
I say they'd be worth it, though, to give them
the shot at it.
Speaker 5 (01:01:30):
The amount of money companies spend to train people, there's
no given a shot, right, and some managers have a
quota if you will on hiring and firing and who quits.
Speaker 6 (01:01:41):
I just think the people that when they say you're
over you're just overqualified for this job. I think they
use that because they're afraid that the person looking for
the job is going to expect too much money.
Speaker 1 (01:01:53):
And that's possible too.
Speaker 5 (01:01:54):
Yeah, that's possible too, because again they want to pay
as little as possible. This Texas temp service, that's how
I got the job. I'm out now and I've been
hired on full time with the company for two years.
It's great. Advice gets you in the door, keeps you active.
Everybody's on board. They know you're looking for another job.
Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
Right, and if it works out, you get to hold
onto that job for extended amount of time. Perfect. Cain't
beat that. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:02:23):
When I lived in San Francisco, I struggled to find
a job, decided to go and talk to a temp
next day I got hired at an ad agency doing
research and it was awesome.
Speaker 1 (01:02:34):
And isn't that what they do these temp services? Right?
They take what you have, what you know in your experience,
and they find a job in that field somewhere unless
you ask them for something different. Right.
Speaker 5 (01:02:44):
Well, it's not a cook, you know, made to order
a burger king, right, But you get put into a
bucket based on your knowledge, and then they have relationship
with companies in those areas and they go, hey, we
need someone, and then they look at the bucket and go, ah,
this person's a good candidate. Do you want to go
for this? That does mean you get the job, right,
(01:03:08):
but it sure helps out you a lot in the search.
Speaker 1 (01:03:11):
I think I would think anyway, yeah, because they have
all the resources and knowledge and.
Speaker 5 (01:03:16):
Whatnot, Especially if you can get a job doing that
in the industry you're trying to break into or start
over in. I think that's smart. I agree with GIMPI.
The bank account does not care if your check is
from McDonald's. No, they as long as it clears they.
Speaker 1 (01:03:32):
That's all they care about.
Speaker 5 (01:03:34):
Overqualified means you'll be there just long enough to find
something better. Listener email from a guy who is fifty
years old and he just got laid off after twenty
five years at the same company. No warning, no retirement package,
no retirement package, just a handshake, a folder and thanks
for your service. I've never been without a job, and
(01:03:56):
now I'm sitting at the kitchen table every morning wondering
what the hell I'm supposed to do. Worst part, don't
even know what I want to do. YadA, YadA, YadA YadA.
My wife's being supportive, but I can tell she's nervous.
Speaker 1 (01:04:09):
Is this normal?
Speaker 5 (01:04:10):
Have any of your listeners had to start over at fifty?
I just need to hear from someone who's been there
and found a way forward.
Speaker 6 (01:04:16):
Lindsey, I'm absolutely positive there's a handful of people, more
than a handful of people that have had to start
over at fifty. I agree with the texter that said
to check out visiting a career services or workforce to
figure out the opportunities that are available to you. That's
(01:04:37):
a great place to start, So do that, don't give up,
and don't worry about your age, GIMPI.
Speaker 1 (01:04:46):
There are so many options out there. You just got
to get out of your own way. I think that's
where the key is right there, getting out of your
own way. Because right now you're blocking yourself. Well I'm
too old, or I've been doing this for the past
twenty five years. This is all that I know. You
(01:05:07):
don't think that you can't learn something new, right go
to Walmart, be a stocker. You know, it's not glamorous,
but it's a paycheck and it's not McDonald's. You know,
temp services, huge fan of those. Those will help you out.
If you really want to get down in it, man,
(01:05:28):
you can. You can go back to school. There ain't
nothing wrong with going back to school at the age
of fifty and learning something new, a new trade. Let's
just say that this guy was in the manufacturing business
for these twenty five years and he got laid off. Well,
he's used to hard work, he's used to working in
(01:05:48):
the elements, in the heat and stuff like that. Why
not go to a trade school and learn HVAC or
something like it. Start a whole new thing. Then you
can start your own business. Yeah, there's plenty of options
out there. You just got to get out of your
own way. Don't let your ego get in the way
(01:06:08):
of you figuring out what you gotta do. I think
the movies make this thing of like when you're fifty,
you're about to enter a retirement home. Right.
Speaker 5 (01:06:20):
I saw an ad the other day and they're like,
you know, it was like events or something for people
over fifty, and they all look like they're in a
retirement home.
Speaker 1 (01:06:30):
Right. Nobody I know that's fifty looked like any of
those people.
Speaker 5 (01:06:35):
And I think Gimpie's right. What does Josie say?
Speaker 1 (01:06:38):
You're fighting the swim, you quit fighting the water. Quit
fight in the water. Right. You are worried you're gonna
have to start over. You're worried you.
Speaker 5 (01:06:49):
Are going to fail. And it's probably fair because you
feel like you failed already. You work somewhere that long,
that's not failure. There was a I like using the
term philosophical difference, and you get fired because that's what
it is.
Speaker 1 (01:07:03):
You wanted to keep working. They didn't want you there anymore.
Speaker 6 (01:07:06):
That's it.
Speaker 1 (01:07:09):
Now.
Speaker 5 (01:07:09):
Maybe there's some other X factors in there, but overall,
that's what it is, and you part of the ways.
Be proud of that, move on, be open to stepping out.
People's success is halted by willingness to fail. You have
to be willing to fail. And if you get knocked down,
you get up again. That's the way life works.
Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
Don't laugh at that. I know what you're doing. You
know what I'm doing. Just sit at home, get your
whiskey drink if you bought a drink, get your log
a drink, get your sight a drink. You sing some
songs that remind you of the good times. You sing
some songs that remind you of the worst times. Yeah,
(01:07:54):
if you get knocked down, you get up again.
Speaker 5 (01:07:56):
That's right, and just get out there, man, stick your
neck out. I maybe change your mindset. Don't look at
jobs to get fired from our lot, jobs that you want.
Speaker 1 (01:08:09):
Look for jobs.
Speaker 5 (01:08:09):
You don't start applying for jobs that you think you
would fail at. See what happens, because.
Speaker 1 (01:08:16):
Right now you are only hiring for jobs that you
think you're qualified for.
Speaker 5 (01:08:21):
But you caught a fish this big. But yeah, I
think you're fighting the water man. As Kimpie said too,
Lindsay did all right, we got to take a break.
You can always email a show at kmody dot com.
Speaker 6 (01:08:34):
Happy twenty ninth birthday to porn star Charlotte Sins. You
can watch this Vegas babe in Bangification, Big Boob Angels
two and Hot Dog Eating Contest. She was nominated for
the two hot Dogs in a hallway award.
Speaker 1 (01:08:51):
Good morning Gimpie, Good morning Corp, and hey, don't forget
to join me on Friday. Get qualified for that custom
golf cart from Yingling Flight. We call it flight and fair.
Get you qualified all summer long. That giveaway will be
sneaking up on us before you know it. So you
want to make sure you had to be in be
Liquor this Friday from five to seven and get qualified.
(01:09:11):
Time to tell the truth. This is your opportunity to
ask anything you want. Just remember keep it clean, no
bodily fluids, nothing sexual, and don't forget. We can and
will pass on a question. Let's open up the phone lines.
Here's Corbin in the gang with all the truth.
Speaker 5 (01:09:24):
You gotta eat b mms and then what you want
to say to the phone number eight two nine four five.
When you're emotionally eating, stressed or sad, what's your emotional
eating food?
Speaker 1 (01:09:40):
Mine's cereal? Okay, I will binge eat some cereal, Lindsey.
Speaker 6 (01:09:48):
I don't really emotional eat. I do like to eat.
If I watch Naked and Afraid, that show makes me hungry,
okay because they are lacking food obviously, so that show
makes me hungry, and it usually is a bullet cereal
that I will go to, or something salty like potato chips.
Speaker 1 (01:10:06):
So you don't emotional eat No, okay, I really don't,
GIMPI I'm more of an emotional drinker than I am
an emotional eater.
Speaker 6 (01:10:13):
Same.
Speaker 1 (01:10:14):
To be honest with you, I'll down it with the
bottle brown before I'll pick up a pine of ice cream.
Sounds healthy, I know, right, it's all got sugar in it.
Speaker 5 (01:10:27):
To tell the truth, BMMS and whatever that is to
eight two nine four five? Uh, what's something that used
to be free that isn't free anymore? I'll go because
this is my annoyance right now. Sacks at the grocery
store really go to buy something and then like this
(01:10:49):
actually happened in Mexico too. Were at the grocery store
and I bought some stuff and they're like, do you
want to sack? And I was like yeah, and I
already paid, and they rang me up again to pay
for the sack.
Speaker 1 (01:11:00):
Oh so like a reusable No, I really like paper
plastic bag?
Speaker 6 (01:11:04):
Yes, yeah, I noticed that the last time I was
in Chicago at the airport, when I bought something from
just one of the little convenience stands at the airport
and they asked me if I wanted a bag for that,
and I said yes, and they charged me I think
it was ten or fifteen cents for the bag, and
(01:11:24):
I found that unbelievable.
Speaker 5 (01:11:26):
Yeah, I now just say no and I just carry
my stuff like an idiot out because I'm like, no,
you're not getting one more dime. That annoy I know,
but it's also stupid to not pay for it, because
you're gonna be like, I'm not going to give them
one more dime when I just overpaid for something. It's
(01:11:47):
ridiculous and just put it to the side. But I
don't because I'd rather just carry it and you know,
drop my jar of pickles as I'm leaving.
Speaker 4 (01:11:54):
Right, what about you, GIMPI I want to say, like condiments, right, uh, okay,
when you're getting like chicken nuggets or something, Hey, can
I get an extra ranch?
Speaker 1 (01:12:05):
Well yeah, that'll be fifty cents please.
Speaker 2 (01:12:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
Or even the fact that cheese on a hamburger, you know,
you used to be free and then it's start thirty
five cents used to be free, then fifty cents and
then as a dollar twenty five now, and they bend
you over and rape you if you want bacon on
your damn old burger.
Speaker 6 (01:12:22):
Oh yeah. In some places, refills on drinks aren't even
free anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:12:29):
Right but right? Uh, can you do the floss dance? No,
that's the one where you go behind and in front
and then cry.
Speaker 6 (01:12:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:12:44):
Yeah, that's what I thought anyway.
Speaker 5 (01:12:46):
Yeah, yeah, give you seen if he can do it.
Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
I don't see any why anybody couldn't be able to
do that unless it involves actual loss. No, it's it's
a little more.
Speaker 5 (01:12:57):
It's a little bit of chewing, you know, patting your stomach,
chewing gum, pat in your head at the same time.
Speaker 1 (01:13:01):
Right, I'm sure I could if I practiced.
Speaker 5 (01:13:05):
Full disclosure, I do not practice dancemans ever, I don't
think I do either.
Speaker 1 (01:13:12):
Not something I do.
Speaker 5 (01:13:17):
What's your Apocalypse soundtrack? Top three songs?
Speaker 1 (01:13:23):
Hmmm, that's fine.
Speaker 5 (01:13:25):
I'll go first, give you guys a minute, not looking
me up. Just off the top of my head, I'm
going with, uh, this is the end by the doors.
I'm going end of the world, End of the world.
What's the rim song?
Speaker 6 (01:13:41):
It's the end of the World.
Speaker 5 (01:13:42):
Yes, And then alanis Morissett ironic.
Speaker 1 (01:13:47):
So you go, like, Okay, actual end songs. That's what
I'm just going off the top of my head. I
was thinking of, like, if it's apocalypse, these are the
three songs you have to listen to for all of eternity.
That's kind of where my mind went on that.
Speaker 5 (01:13:59):
I mean, okay, that's it. You're right, that's a completely
different list. I interpreted it as the three songs that
would be played at the end of the world.
Speaker 1 (01:14:06):
Okay, yeah, I like where your list is at though.
That's perfect. Yeah, you played at the end of the world.
Speaker 6 (01:14:13):
I was thinking of songs that I'd want to listen
to for till the end of time, and I first
ones that came to my mind were Wonderful World, Man
in the Mirror and Dance with Somebody.
Speaker 1 (01:14:28):
Okay, gimbi, I wanna go with Just let Go Stergil Simpson,
Just let Go Stergel Simpson Breakers Roar, and because it
is my most favorite song of all time is donal Lewis,
I Love you always. Have you seen Sturgel do pulls
on Prey? No, but I want to show you out now. Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:14:54):
Have you all seen the New King of the Hill?
And if so, what do you think Lindy have not ye, No,
I don't have to hear you. Uh, No, I gotta
be honest, didn't know what was back on.
Speaker 1 (01:15:06):
Usually when they bring those sort of things back, it's
not near as good, Like Beavis and butt Head tried
getting into that when they brought it back, not near
as good because humor has evolved, right right, South Park
evolved with the humor. Yeah, that's why they're still on
twenty years later.
Speaker 5 (01:15:22):
The Simpsons has evolved with the humor right, Like, but
when it takes a break and goes away and has
Mike Judge done.
Speaker 1 (01:15:30):
Anything movies or anything as of late? No, I don't
can think of. I felt like he was hot and
then nothing.
Speaker 6 (01:15:41):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (01:15:41):
If you were going to order your final meal but
you could only get food and beverages from Quick Trip,
what do you get?
Speaker 1 (01:15:48):
It's a great question.
Speaker 6 (01:15:50):
Food and beverages from Quick Trip. I'm going to go
with one of their like the uh, probably the cherry coke.
Are they slurpies there? It's not slurpy, but it's like
icy slushy yees slushy. Yeah, probably the cherry coke and
(01:16:16):
egg rolls.
Speaker 1 (01:16:19):
GIMPI going with a sweet tea. Now, this is the
final meal, so typically I would just get the thirty
two ounce the big queue, right, but since it's a
final meal, I'm gonna go with the big forty four
ouncer right the began. Okay, sweet tea, you gotta wash
all this stuff down somehow. Breakfast pizza okay from their kitchen.
(01:16:41):
I'm thinking maybe a milkshake of sorts, and I think
it has to be an apple fritter in there as well. Yeah,
I mean breakfast pizza all day. Their breakfast pizza is
so good, can't beat it, especially if you get hot
sauce with it.
Speaker 5 (01:17:02):
Their chicken strips like chicken Nuggies or whatever, they are,
Oh my gosh, so good, super crunchy, delicious. If I
could encourage the Quick Trip Kitchen labs to include those
in a breakfast situation, that would be pretty awesome. And
(01:17:23):
then a pretzel, a cinnamon sugar pretzel. Your pretzels are
pretty solid too. You get cinnamon sugar and you get
the icing you dip it in there. Yeah, that feels good.
Get in all my you know, yummy things before.
Speaker 1 (01:17:38):
It ends.
Speaker 5 (01:17:39):
What's number one on your bucket list?
Speaker 6 (01:17:43):
I would really love to go to Grease someday before
I Died'd love to go to Grease because I well,
I love Greek food. We have friends that are from Grease,
and we've always talked about going with them sometime. And
(01:18:04):
just I mean since I was young, we've always my family,
I've always talked about going and just haven't. I want
to see the nightlife. I want to explore the waters
and do some fishing there.
Speaker 5 (01:18:17):
Do you want to boogie boogie?
Speaker 1 (01:18:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (01:18:19):
Yeah, yeah, I just I would love, love, love, love
to go there at least one time.
Speaker 1 (01:18:28):
Gimbi. Now, your bucket list doesn't necessarily have to be
like destinations or anything like anything you want to achieve
before you kick the bucket. Yeah, I want to see
my grandkids have kids. I want to see and hold
great grand babies. That's good. I like that thought.
Speaker 5 (01:18:51):
I'll do a variation of that. I want to live
to be a hundred, but a healthy hundred, right, like
the one you see on the news.
Speaker 1 (01:19:02):
You out they're doing things every day, yeah, ron and
you know, playing you know, bingo or whatever, and yeah,
not like drooling on themselves and you know, smells like
they crap their pants exactly.
Speaker 5 (01:19:14):
I feel like that would be that would be pretty awesome.
I just want the TV interview, right.
Speaker 6 (01:19:20):
What's the secret deliving to one hundred?
Speaker 5 (01:19:22):
So they asked me the question, and then I can
just act one hundred right, and it's totally excusable. I
can say short of being racist, I can say the
most offensive thing, and they're like, ah, old people.
Speaker 1 (01:19:37):
Right, even racism, they might give you the little path.
I mean, they're not gonna put it on TV. He's old.
Speaker 5 (01:19:44):
There's some there's some trumps you gotta hit back in
my day in the in the sound bite and uh,
some sort of non conforming thing, whatever the least healthy
thing you've done in your whole life, attribute that to
the reason that you're staying one hundred right, you love.
Speaker 1 (01:20:01):
I smoked cigarettes and drank whiskey every day, sixteen right
ips right all my life.
Speaker 5 (01:20:08):
I touched the grass every day, somebody whatever, whatever thing
it is, you got to have that one right, and
you have to uh answer really slow.
Speaker 6 (01:20:22):
Shared my toothbrush.
Speaker 5 (01:20:24):
That was it. Would you rather never be trusted or
trust everybody too easily? Would you rather never be trusted
or trust everybody too easily?
Speaker 6 (01:20:38):
Lindsay, I would hate to never be trusted, But man,
the hard lesson you would learn to trust everyone too easily.
And I feel like I already do that, trust everyone
too easily. But that's what I'm.
Speaker 1 (01:20:54):
Sticking with, Gimpy. Yeah, it's and never be trusted man
lends the kind of nail that people will screw you
over if you trust people too easily. Also, if you're
never to be trusted, people aren't going to ask you
for anything.
Speaker 6 (01:21:09):
I don't know, so.
Speaker 5 (01:21:12):
I think that obviously, never being trusted, I don't think
I have a problem with that.
Speaker 1 (01:21:18):
That's a you problem.
Speaker 5 (01:21:20):
I don't know how that affects me. True trust everybody
too easily. If I'm being honest, I don't see how
that's a problem either. Like being that's being kind? What's trusted?
Speaker 1 (01:21:34):
Are we going to the extreme of like watch my
kids when I'm not around?
Speaker 2 (01:21:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:21:39):
Am I going here's twenty dollars and trusting you'll give
it back? Because to me, if I give you twenty
dollars and you burn me and taking my twenty dollars, okay,
then you must have the god mentality would be like
you must have really needed that, and I'm.
Speaker 1 (01:21:55):
Glad I was able to provide it to you. So
I don't see.
Speaker 5 (01:22:00):
I don't think you can go with the extreme to defend,
like he let some stranger bathe your children like that
feels really extreme. Yeah, to prove the point. But if
I had to pick, I would rather trust everybody too easily.
Speaker 1 (01:22:15):
I think that one makes the most sense.
Speaker 5 (01:22:18):
If you were to choose a horror character horror to
protect you in a battle, who would you choose and why?
Speaker 1 (01:22:26):
Oooh?
Speaker 6 (01:22:30):
I think I would ooh, that's a good one. Probably
Jason Voorhees, because he's he's massive. He's a massive man.
He's giant, and he seemed to be He never got
outran by anyone, even though he was pretty slow. He
(01:22:52):
always showed up. And he had the machete, didn't need
it really because he could just pick up anyone by
their net off the ground. He was so strong. Yeah,
he was a big brood of a man. I feel
like he would be a very good protector.
Speaker 1 (01:23:09):
Gimbie. I just kind of digging through. There's a lot
of horror characters out there, and I think, after scrolling through,
I am going to go with leather Face from the
Texas Chainsaw Masker. Scary comes with his own weapon, does
(01:23:31):
not ooh oh, Oh, I'm changing it right now. The
House of a Thousand Corpses. You know I'm talking, you
know the movie, right, Yeah, I'm going to go with
Otis Driftwood from House of a Thousand Corpses. Dude, that
guy was so menacing, didn't give any apps at all whatsoever,
(01:23:56):
would torture and have fun with their little victims, but
before they actually died. Even if he did something, he
didn't kill everybody. You know, there were some some people
that he would just skin, just peel the face right
off of their skin and then tie him to a
tree unless somebody just come stumble upon them and you're
just still alive with no face. Yeah, Otis Driftwood, it's
(01:24:18):
pretty good. I'm going with Pyramidhead from Silent Hill, that
whole franchise. And because he was like Jason Vorhees, tough.
Speaker 5 (01:24:30):
Couldn't kill him, hard to kill, relentless, wouldn't stop, just
like Jason.
Speaker 1 (01:24:36):
The guy was like a tank. Yeah, it's pretty good too,
because to me, Jason Vorhees is good. I think that's
a good one. Doesn't stop, but there's no negotiating with him.
You can't be like, hey, help out right, Hey, not
that guy.
Speaker 5 (01:25:00):
Over here stupid, like there's no real help, you're not
What if he gets the wrong person?
Speaker 1 (01:25:09):
Right? Yeah? Uh okay, oh we did that one. Oh.
Speaker 5 (01:25:18):
If you had a comic book character, would you rather
be a hero, sidekick or secret villain?
Speaker 1 (01:25:24):
What would your be? Your comic name? God, I don't know,
oh name?
Speaker 6 (01:25:30):
Hmm.
Speaker 1 (01:25:32):
So if you had to be a comic book character,
would you rather be a hero, sidekick or a secret villain?
Speaker 6 (01:25:39):
I mean, I think any of them would be kind
of fun. I think though mostly a secret villain. A
secret villain would be kind of neat. And I don't
know what my name would be, but I feel like
something booty would have.
Speaker 2 (01:25:54):
To be in there.
Speaker 1 (01:25:57):
Jimpy. I am going to go with Nobody really wants
to be the sidekick, you know, the hero or the villains.
Those are the two main characters when it comes to,
you know, your comic books. All right, I don't want
to be the bad guy. I'm good on that, So
I'm gonna go with the hero. In my name would
be Gimpy stretch nuts who uses his testicles to you know,
(01:26:21):
round up the bend guys, stop trouble and evil doers,
so you're never helping children. Then right, you're on your
own kid.
Speaker 5 (01:26:29):
Yeah, it doesn't feel very superhero. You're like, sorry, can't
help you kidding.
Speaker 1 (01:26:32):
I mean that would be kind of funny. I mean, oh, no,
they're falling over Niagara falls hold on their children. No,
I don't, I don't. I don't think that would work.
I'm good with being the secret villain. Uh huh.
Speaker 5 (01:26:50):
You always come back, nothing bad ever really happens.
Speaker 1 (01:26:52):
Right, You're also a hero because those people love you,
love seeing those people on the screen. Some people. Darth
Va is a great example. Right.
Speaker 5 (01:27:02):
Uh so, I'm good with that. And if you read
the Superman comic, you expect Superman to be in everyone
but a secret villain or a super you know, a
super villain. When they show up. You're like, yes, oh,
I can't wait to buy this comic because so and
so shows up return Yeah, yeah, uh and so my
(01:27:23):
name would be deadpan, deadpan.
Speaker 1 (01:27:28):
Yeah, any particular reasoning behind me.
Speaker 5 (01:27:30):
I just don't show emotion when you act an idiot
and I have to kill you, or when Superman shows up.
And I'm always honest, even if you're uncomfortable with it,
and my phrase would be.
Speaker 1 (01:27:46):
It's deadpan. You asked the guy killing one of his
own catchphrases. All Right, we gotta take a break. We'll
be back. The Big Mad Morning Show returns next Tulsa's
Morning Show ninety.
Speaker 5 (01:28:02):
I have an uncanny ability to find really horrible stories.
And what I'm gonna ask you is which one of
these is the most unfortunate? But it's unfortunate because they
didn't know what they were This was about what happened
to them. They didn't know was happening.
Speaker 1 (01:28:22):
Okay.
Speaker 5 (01:28:23):
As an example, one that didn't make the cut is
child locked away and dog crate pummeled with metal pipe
for misbehaving. The kid was in the environment. They weren't
caught off guard. All the ones I have, everybody was
caught off guard. Okay, So which one is the most unfortunate?
Even though child locked away, there's an innocent person here
(01:28:44):
and it's horrible, that's not what we're talking about. So
the lete first, one man married to three women at
the same time, says he did it for money. So
the unfortunate ones are the three women, right. They probably
did not know about the others. They were victims and
(01:29:04):
weren't aware they were even involved in a crime. Right,
So that's number one. Number two, man accused of killing
four bar patrons. He was a regular at likely.
Speaker 1 (01:29:14):
Knew the victims, So it's pretty hardcore. You go in,
you're like norm, and then Norm kills you. Yeah, patrons
in that bar didn't know. So that's number two, of
which one's the more unfortunate.
Speaker 5 (01:29:31):
Women shopping at Family Dollar crushed by a collapsing roof,
causing permanent injuries to her entire body. So who's the
most unfortunate here? The people who were married to one guy.
Three different women married to one guy. I mean they're
(01:29:52):
emotionally and maybe financially harmed.
Speaker 1 (01:29:55):
Yeah, but they're still alive.
Speaker 5 (01:29:58):
Exactly, but did you well, to be clear, only two
of the store. One of the stories, someone died, right,
but they're not maimed, they're not.
Speaker 1 (01:30:10):
But she's alive. But did you die? These other three
women didn't get, you know, brutally disfigured from the from
the guy. So right, but you're alive, you are.
Speaker 5 (01:30:24):
We can't keep it, we can't move the goalpost. And
the one where the guy walked in and shot the
and he was like a regular there. Yeah, I mean
it's a crazy story.
Speaker 6 (01:30:36):
I think that one is the most unfortunate people lost
their lives. They trusted this guy, probably they felt like
they knew him.
Speaker 5 (01:30:45):
I think you can say that about all three stories. Really, Yeah,
you you trust that those women trusted that man. You
trusted the store to not collapse.
Speaker 6 (01:30:55):
R Yes, that that is definitely wrong place, wrong time,
I mean to the store.
Speaker 5 (01:31:02):
Okay, So is the bar wrong place, wrong time?
Speaker 1 (01:31:05):
Right? You just wanted to go and have a drink
and next thing, you know, who you thought was a
buddy or somebody you saw regularly cheese finally slides off
the cracker and now you did. Yeah, or your friends
are dead or whatever.
Speaker 6 (01:31:16):
Yeah, and because death, that makes it the worst, most unfortunate.
Now the store, it is extremely unfortunate that you said
that she's disfigured.
Speaker 5 (01:31:30):
Now severe im permanent injuries.
Speaker 6 (01:31:32):
Yes, severe and permanent injuries.
Speaker 1 (01:31:34):
Also though it didn't kill a man too.
Speaker 6 (01:31:36):
By the way, probably gonna get a big pay day
though from insurance on that store.
Speaker 5 (01:31:41):
Yeah, if you can't enjoy it, I love wheeling over
to get my check right. Right, at least they'll get
to board first on the plane, right, and I go
to Greece.
Speaker 1 (01:31:52):
No wait for Disney Lane.
Speaker 5 (01:31:55):
Head of the line, right, injuries were limited to head, face, neck, spine, pelvis, arms,
hands and legs. Oh and a and a partridge in
a pear tree. Like, I don't know, why didn't you
just say whole body?
Speaker 6 (01:32:09):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:32:09):
I feel the store one is probably the most unfortunate
out of all of them. Yes, unfortunately, those three women
are out of money. They probably got their hearts broken.
But they'll survive. They can rebound from something like that.
That's that's pretty easy stuff right there. Now, they'll write books.
Speaker 5 (01:32:28):
And this is a really you're you're making a really
interesting point. As tragic as the death one is in
the bar, which it is, those people's lives are over.
The lady in the wheelchair life might be pretty good still.
Speaker 1 (01:32:47):
Maybe maybe you. I mean, you're wandering around, minding your
own business as a fully bodied person, right, got both arms,
both legs, Your head works just fine, you can smell,
you can see out of your eyes. You are living
your normal life until one day you go into the
DG to get you know whatever, some discount shorts. Yeah,
(01:33:10):
you know, and then the whole store collapses on you.
And now your life is over as you know it,
and you have to change everything that you have ever
done because you wanted some discount goods. Pump the brakes.
I can't help it. It's not over. Oh no, there's more. No, No,
I mean it's not over. Your life isn't over. No,
(01:33:31):
it's compared to the other people who died. Their life
is over. Ith Yeah, that sucks. That's terrible. You're still breathing. Yeah,
but you're not what you used to be, and neither
are those women. No. No, you're not what you're used
to be. No, you are.
Speaker 5 (01:33:46):
It's trauma exists across the board, and the severity is
only up to you. You can't say your trauma is
more severe than someone else.
Speaker 1 (01:33:54):
Absolutely not. No, it all depends on how you handle it.
But the ability to read off of that, off of
getting scammed swindled by a con artist, you can rebound
from that without any problems. You can't rebound from death.
That kind of sucks. It's over with. It sucks for
the families of those people. But there's no way this
(01:34:18):
woman who got crushed in a dollar general can rebound
from that. She can't go back to her normal life.
She can't. She probably can't even work. She may not
even be able to ever pick up her grandkids or
her kids. Everything is different for sure. Sure, let me
(01:34:39):
sit you on your invalid grandma's lap. She can't touch you.
She maybe talk to you.
Speaker 5 (01:34:47):
I think she's gonna be okay, based on reading the story. Okay,
like she's only seeking like twenty five grand That doesn't
reach that to me, that doesn't reak.
Speaker 6 (01:35:00):
Yeah, she needs a better lawyer for real.
Speaker 1 (01:35:04):
If she is well.
Speaker 5 (01:35:05):
Some states have limits on how much you can sue for.
Speaker 1 (01:35:10):
Right, right, So, but she's got permanent injuries.
Speaker 5 (01:35:14):
Yeah, I mean that's what the lawsuit says. Right, you
know you have a permanent injury from your motorcycle accident.
Speaker 1 (01:35:21):
True, right, I guess I got a scar. I mean,
can't use your hand of the fullest capability you could before.
Speaker 5 (01:35:29):
So I'm just saying, legally you can throw that around, right,
But the name of this is which is most more
the most? Unfortunately, I do have a fourth one I
can throw in there. Team kills man at beach in
a targeted shooting. Bullet ricochets kills boy, nil hits I'm sorry,
(01:35:49):
bullet ricochets hits boy nearby.
Speaker 1 (01:35:54):
So the boys just like d and dupe them on
the beach. Is very unfortunate. I chalk that one up
as the same guy in the bar. People snap sometimes
and you just don't know. Yeah, but this person was
not a part of the incident at all.
Speaker 5 (01:36:11):
They're just away from it walking and this guy whose
cheese fell the cracker to murder this other guy bullet
ricochets and kills him.
Speaker 6 (01:36:21):
A young You said it was a young kid.
Speaker 1 (01:36:23):
Yeah. Is the boy dead?
Speaker 5 (01:36:25):
No, he's expected to be okay, fifteen years old. He
was in the parking lot of the pier.
Speaker 1 (01:36:34):
I think you get rebound from that one. He's got
a hell of a story to tell for the rest
of his life. I was at the beach, mine of
my own business, and all of a sudden, out of
over crazy man on the beach shoots another dude. You
would not believe this. That bullet ricochets kids me in
the thigh. Show the woman chuck Yeah, you show mercar
(01:36:57):
buy this man a drink. Yell like, hey, Karen, thanks
for having us over to your house. Your ear, thank you?
Speaker 5 (01:37:05):
Who how'd you afford this pool? But it doesn't say
DG at the bottom because my name's Donna Green.
Speaker 1 (01:37:11):
Right, I'm just saying, but you're right.
Speaker 5 (01:37:18):
The kid who got shot, if he's gonna be okay
with no, he's got instant cred.
Speaker 1 (01:37:23):
Yeah, he's a badass in the circle and his circle
of friends. He's been shot with a real gun.
Speaker 5 (01:37:31):
Being Getting shot is so subjective, right, because because you
you hear someone got shot, you're like, oh, they must
be tough, as Giby said, a badass. I know plenty
of people that have discharged a weapon into their foot
and we don't. And they have a bullet wounded, you
don't think they're a badass.
Speaker 1 (01:37:47):
You think they're a yes, Well that's the difference. So
it's subjective.
Speaker 5 (01:37:53):
I'm just saying getting shot is subjective, right, all right,
we got to take a break.
Speaker 1 (01:37:58):
We'll be back.
Speaker 5 (01:38:14):
So people, some people say we're in a recession. Some
people say we're not.
Speaker 1 (01:38:18):
That's not what this is about, except because people say,
like waffle House can withstand any sort of economic up
and down, drinking does, and apparently strippers also yea. And
one stripper has said that she can tell that they
are entering into recession because no one's asking her to
(01:38:43):
hit the slopes. Thank you. And he's making a perplexed look.
I think I know what you're talking about now, but
I don't expect you to know what it is him
what it is. It took me a second the way
you worded it, but I know what you're talking about,
you know. Yeah, it's that dream you have when you're
in you skiing. No really, no, those slopes. Yes see,
(01:39:06):
I was thinking.
Speaker 5 (01:39:07):
You know, Kristen Stewart's movie where for those of you know,
there's a scheme reference that's a sexual term where you
are h Jane people at the same time, like which
I'm not interested in.
Speaker 1 (01:39:25):
All that sounds horrible, I know, but all right, I'm
picking I'm picking up what you're putting down. All right.
People aren't asking her to do so much blow because
it's extensive.
Speaker 5 (01:39:34):
Yes, she says that, Uh, it just tells me that
people can't afford to be here because there are less
people asking where they can hit the slopes. She says
she hasn't been asked that question in months, and she
says it's a telltale sign that the economy is in shambles.
(01:39:56):
She says, I trust the Stripper Index. That's we think
we are definitely in recession. It's called the Stripper Index
and is known to be more reliable than any economist
or financial expert.
Speaker 1 (01:40:10):
Throughout history her words, everyone I.
Speaker 5 (01:40:13):
Know stopped because they're scared of contamination with the drug.
Speaker 1 (01:40:20):
It sounds like that's where my mind went. People aren't
We're not in a recession because people can't afford the cocaine.
It's getting stomped on by fentanyl and people are dying
left and right, and I think people are just being
more aware of like, Ooh, I would like to do
some cocaine right now, but I'm not want to take
(01:40:41):
my chances with some fentany in it and possibly dying.
Speaker 5 (01:40:47):
Nowadays, she says, nowadays, if you hit the slopes, you're basically.
Speaker 1 (01:40:51):
Playing Russian roulette. Yeah. Now, I'm not one to say
I don't know enough about the stripper index to know
if it is a telltale sign that as an index
of a recession.
Speaker 6 (01:41:03):
Yeah, but.
Speaker 5 (01:41:06):
Maybe people just aren't going to the strip club.
Speaker 1 (01:41:08):
That's fair too. That can be a thing too. Maybe
your strip club they're not going to. Maybe they're just
not asking her. They're they're asking other people, just not her, or.
Speaker 5 (01:41:19):
There's no one that comes in that's in that world
for you're in a you know, a brief stint where
a lot of rehab people are in the right. I mean,
it's just not a full proof indicating right, not like
the waffle house index. For those who know, the waffle
house index is to to determine how detrimental catastrophe is
(01:41:41):
to a community is if the waffle house is still open.
Makes sense, now, why that's a more reliable index is
people have to eat. Yeah, people don't have to do cocaine,
and people don't.
Speaker 1 (01:41:50):
Have to go to the strip club exactly.
Speaker 5 (01:41:52):
So I don't know if this as reliable.
Speaker 1 (01:41:54):
You could not eat and just do more cocaine and substitute,
you know, suppress your appetite that way. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:42:00):
I haven't done cocaine enough or at all to know.
If I'm not hungry afterwards, I just go with coffee.
Speaker 1 (01:42:06):
Let me just tell you, if you're eating after you
do some cocaine, it's probably bad cocaine.
Speaker 6 (01:42:13):
Good stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:42:15):
Let's go to the waffle house.
Speaker 6 (01:42:17):
Sure, it's worked an appetite.
Speaker 1 (01:42:21):
Again, I don't know. I don't know. I don't know
the out the outings that go with cocaine compared to
like weed or shrooms. Strip club does seem right. Any
place that serves alcohol and pool tables or dark something
that you got to keep yourself occupied. Those are the
(01:42:41):
big things, not not going to Denny's. You're not napping. No, No,
that's why people have the cleanest house on the street,
because they got to keep the mind going right.
Speaker 5 (01:42:54):
They they don't want to cause any problems. I've been
to many strip clubs, and I have been a part
of some bruj haas in back rooms, in champagne rooms.
I've witnessed really crazy things in strip clubs. But I've
(01:43:16):
never been a part of seeing an inquisition for drugs
at a strip club.
Speaker 1 (01:43:22):
No, I've never asked anybody. I have not quite been
in your situation when you're in the back rooms, private
rooms or anything like. Yeah, but I have party with
them for and if they are asking them, they're doing
it on the side, you know, out of earshot. For me,
I've never seen it happen.
Speaker 5 (01:43:41):
I wouldn't even know how to ask, and I wouldn't
believe them or trust.
Speaker 1 (01:43:45):
Them, like asking the strippers, yes, yeah, the dancers, Yeah,
what do you say? I think that lady there's got
the new spin on it. Hey, how can I go
hit the slopes? Because I've never I've never heard that before.
But you know, growing up back when you know, weed
(01:44:06):
was still majorly illegal and you got to go hide
under a rock to go smoke somewhere because people judge
you for it. You know, you'd always have your code
words for at least we did anyway, you know, you would,
you know, ask your friend or whatever, you know, where
I can get some green beans or something to that. Beans,
green beans and chicken was another popular one. But green
(01:44:26):
beans makes sense because this is great.
Speaker 5 (01:44:30):
What if in this part of the country it's soda
pop and there's the other.
Speaker 1 (01:44:34):
Part is pop, yeah, or coke, right right?
Speaker 5 (01:44:37):
And so if I what if I ask for green
beans and that means heroin, and I'm like, well, I
don't want heroin.
Speaker 1 (01:44:43):
They don't have great return plies, right, Well, you just
find some other dummy to you know, pawn that off on.
You know, you figure it out. But I think, you know,
if you're running in that circle somebody else. Let's say
you just moved to this town, right, you just moved here,
and you got to try to find friends. You got
to make friends somehow, somehow, And I've moved around a lot.
(01:45:08):
We can smell our own. I don't know if any
other way to put it Besides, we can smell our own.
And I mean that by like, I can look at
you and be like, yes, I know what you're into.
I know that you smoke pot or I am fairly
positive that you're you're into the to the yuppers, you
know what I mean. We can smell our own. Okay,
(01:45:30):
I'm just not buying that, Like, I believe you, But
you also could be really lucky. That is a true
statement because I.
Speaker 5 (01:45:38):
Know plenty of people that you meet them and you're like,
what do you mean You've been doing cocaine for ten years?
Speaker 6 (01:45:44):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:45:44):
Right? Right right?
Speaker 5 (01:45:45):
What do you mean you smoke weed? They look nothing
like at all? And they're like, why just don't do
it all the time?
Speaker 1 (01:45:51):
I hit and miss or But yeah, they don't have
that stereotypical look to them. That's what I'm saying. Yeah,
I get that. I get that, And maybe that's just me.
You know, I've looked for those people, you know, being
the new kid in school or you know, new job
or whatever, and you're like, all right, your eyes are
a little baggy, all right, you kind of look like
you're into the reefs. And I guess if I'm going
(01:46:12):
to good, go ahead and put it all out there.
That's where you start, as you start for your your
chronic hookup, right, you find someplace geting some weed exactly,
and then you start smoking with them and like casually
getting high on the couch, you know, watching cartoons. You're like, eh,
I haven't done any blowing a long time. And then
(01:46:34):
that's where your new friend's like, I know a guy really,
and then you guys just became better friends.
Speaker 5 (01:46:41):
I'm reading this book. I'm sorry, I just finished this book.
Speaker 1 (01:46:44):
And in the book, they're on this suicide mission and
the government's setting it up and they go, how do
you want to end your life?
Speaker 5 (01:46:51):
And so they go to one guy and he's like
nitrogen and just fill my suit with and oh, fall asleep,
won't know any better.
Speaker 1 (01:47:05):
The last the last guy. I'm skipping the second person
because it's the one that I want. But they last.
Speaker 5 (01:47:13):
Person, who's the captain, will be the last one to die.
And he just wants a gun because he's like, if
the other two it doesn't work on the other two,
I can take care of that.
Speaker 1 (01:47:21):
So nobody is.
Speaker 5 (01:47:23):
In pain, yeah, anguish, and then I can just end
it myself.
Speaker 1 (01:47:27):
That's fair.
Speaker 5 (01:47:27):
I'm like, Okay, and he's like, and if there's a
misfire and it's it doesn't matter because they're not coming back.
They've they're thirteen years into the future, you know, in
space travel, take them thirteen years to come back. So
what would be the way you would want to die
if you were on a suicide mission?
Speaker 6 (01:47:43):
I like the idea of nitrogen of just gassing myself
and falling asleep. Okay, yeah, Like I had a friend
in middle school whose mom did the whole. I took
a sweatshirt and put it in her tail pipe and
in she sat in her car and committed suicide that way.
(01:48:03):
And it was like, awful. But if that's the way
I'm going to go out, I think that would be
the easiest way.
Speaker 5 (01:48:12):
To sit in your car and taking the carbon dioxide.
Speaker 1 (01:48:17):
Do you know what people? Do you know any people
that don't die that way?
Speaker 3 (01:48:21):
No?
Speaker 5 (01:48:22):
I don't a lot.
Speaker 1 (01:48:23):
Have we ever seen the firm? What about you playing
along with the book wearing space? Right? Yes, this is fantastic.
Just open up the door, Open up the door, fucking
suck me out, your lungs out though I'm dying, what's
the matter then? I'm just floating in you know, space.
Speaker 5 (01:48:46):
Yeah, there's no oxygen, so you would die instantly.
Speaker 1 (01:48:48):
Yeah. Yeah, I think that'd be the best and most
entertaining for everyone.
Speaker 5 (01:48:52):
Okay, the second person had the best answer, and I
think you'll be on board this.
Speaker 1 (01:49:00):
Maybe Lindsay will be too.
Speaker 5 (01:49:02):
And that is she said heroin, and he goes, what
do you mean heroin? She goes, I want to have
a heroin overdose, but not in immediately. I want the
doctors to give me incremental dosages, like for three days
so I can really enjoy the high, okay, and then
near one of the last doses, put in some chemical
(01:49:24):
to guarantee I die right whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:49:28):
I'm like, that's pretty goddamn good. I agree with you
on that. However, I've never done heroin before, so I
don't know how it feels, you know. I've heard stories that, yeah,
it's a rush and you're like whoa in a train
and then you fall asleep or whatever and you're fucking
just laying there drooling on yourself, But I don't know that. Yeah,
I've never personally done it before either, But I like
(01:49:50):
where you're at though. I mean to take a spin
on that. You give me a mountain of cocaine you know,
I'll just do it all up and let my heart explode. Yeah,
it's the same basic premise.
Speaker 5 (01:50:02):
I just never hear people say cocaine's the best high
they've ever had. I hear people say that with heroin
a lot okay and enjoyable. Okay, that's fair, I guess,
and you'd be real busy.
Speaker 1 (01:50:13):
I don't know if there's a lot to do near
the end on a suicide mission in space, telling you
have the cleanest spaceship ever sparkling the guy with the gun,
go ahead, take yourself out. I'll clean up when you're done. Right.
Speaker 5 (01:50:28):
They find the ship in the future and they're like,
these aliens are so clean. Wow, Why has that one
got a hole in its head?
Speaker 1 (01:50:36):
Everything's so organized?
Speaker 5 (01:50:38):
Wow, this one looks like they're still sweating and they've
been dead for decades.
Speaker 1 (01:50:44):
There is a half taken a part of VCR, though
we're not quite sure what happened.
Speaker 5 (01:50:48):
Yeah, I can't even imagine. Like, if you knew there
was cocaine and it's near the end, you're on, like,
what day do you go?
Speaker 1 (01:50:57):
We're done right, right, I gotta hurry up and get
this coke bender. Man. I'm just saying that like, do
you go okay, I guess we're done here. Do you
go to bed that night? Oh? I wouldn't go to
bed that night, do you?
Speaker 5 (01:51:10):
You're not writing letters because they're not getting them and
you've been gone thirteen but it's even more on Earth, right,
so they're probably you have God knows what's happened on Earth, right,
So we're gonna write a.
Speaker 1 (01:51:21):
Letter to who yourself? Maybe no one.
Speaker 6 (01:51:26):
No one's gonna find it.
Speaker 1 (01:51:29):
No way you would. I wouldn't go to sleep. I
think you stay up as long as possible, right if
the if the thing is is like you, as soon
as you go to sleep, you're never waking up ever again, Well,
you take all that time you've got. As long as
I don't go to sleep, you know, I can get
mentally prepared for what's about to happen. I think that
(01:51:50):
it's a big thing.
Speaker 5 (01:51:51):
Yeah, there's no mentally prepared because you're dying. You've known
this since you signed up to be on the ship.
Speaker 1 (01:51:58):
But then there's one thing of it, and knowing it's
going to happen sometime in the distant future, and knowing
it's going to happen tomorrow. I think that's where my
head is.
Speaker 5 (01:52:09):
I mean, that's fair, but if to me, I guess
my mindset is you've already come to terms with it
because that's that's been in the shadows right for thirteen years.
Speaker 1 (01:52:19):
Yeah, shit, just got fucking real. Yeah, your mission's over. Yeah,
tomorrow you're dead. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:52:26):
So it's like, okay, yes, And the spoiler of the
book is that in this they're on this mission to
save Earth. There's three of them, and they put you
in a coma for most of the time, and uh,
when he comes out of his coma, the other two
are dead.
Speaker 1 (01:52:44):
They died in there. They died in their comas, and
he's got to do it all by himself. Oh that's
the book. The guy with the gun. Uh no, the
guy with the nitrogen No, because no, those two people
died on Earth in a training exercise and this guy
had to go surprisingly like within days. You were supposed
(01:53:07):
to have friends with you, but about that, he's a trainer. Okay,
So I'll wait for the movie to come out. Yeah,
it's coming out with Ryan Gosling is the next year,
and it's called what is it called Projectail Mary. Okay,
I don't mind Ryan Gosling. Yeah, a good actor.
Speaker 6 (01:53:26):
Yeah, yeah, what else do you like about it?
Speaker 1 (01:53:29):
He is a good actors. What's that movie with Steve
Carell and Emma Stone And oh yeah, that movie's cute
as hell?
Speaker 6 (01:53:38):
Man, that is something's got to give?
Speaker 1 (01:53:41):
Is that? Okay? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (01:53:42):
Maybe not.
Speaker 1 (01:53:44):
He's awesome. He plays a playboy, but he has a turn. Yeah,
had to be such a loser. Yeah, yeah, I know
what movie you're talking about. It's a good movie. Yeah,
it really was. He's a good actor. And he's funny too. Yeah,
at least any time I've seen him on SNL, he's
been funny.
Speaker 5 (01:53:59):
And his personal life feels like he's a good dude
as well, because he's married to someone who used to
be She was doing a lot of movies and when
she was pregnant with their next kid, and he was
at the Oscars or Emmy's and he had a necklace
with her name on it, and like you're like, ah.
Speaker 1 (01:54:18):
That's cool. Yeah, he doesn't seem douchey, no, like some
some Hollywood actors.
Speaker 2 (01:54:23):
No.
Speaker 1 (01:54:23):
And he's a childhood actor really.
Speaker 6 (01:54:26):
Yeah. He was in the Mickey Mouse Club, Crazy Stupid Love.
Speaker 1 (01:54:29):
That was the movie. Oh yeah, right, Oh yeah, I
know what you're talking about didn't keep up with the
name of it, but like it was just on the
tip of our tongue. Right, Yes, he was really good.
Speaker 5 (01:54:42):
Uh, there is this story that is wild that I
found because the amount of energy you would have to
put in to do what this person did is what
caught my attention when I read the headline you will
go holy shit. Team finds A sorry teen finds out
(01:55:03):
anonymous internet bully who har raster for a year is
actually her mom.
Speaker 6 (01:55:10):
Yeah for real, Jesus.
Speaker 5 (01:55:14):
So, a Michigan's teenager spent a year being relentlessly harassed
online by an anonymous cyber bully, only to discover that
the person behind the screen was her own mother. The
teen's mother used a VPN and fake accounts to send
over three hundred and forty nine pages of cruel messages
to her daughter and the boy she was dating. Investigators
(01:55:38):
were shocked, and the public obviously has as well, and
the police were trying to help identify all this. The
FBI got involved, and she has since pled guilty to
computer crimes and she faced up to ten years in prison.
Speaker 1 (01:55:54):
Why would she do such a thing to make her tough, Lindsey? Yeah, whatever,
because life.
Speaker 6 (01:55:58):
Is cruel children?
Speaker 5 (01:56:00):
Right, Well, that mom's bullying their daughters is not a
new goddamn story.
Speaker 1 (01:56:08):
No it's not.
Speaker 5 (01:56:09):
But the technology has changed, so to me, I don't
know what the difference is. Is like, that's what you're
wearing outside, right, you're fat, you shouldn't wear that. You're
gonna wear your hair that way?
Speaker 1 (01:56:20):
That's a that is a old time story, right, I
lived through it.
Speaker 6 (01:56:26):
But why why would you do? I don't understand what
her meaning behind it was.
Speaker 1 (01:56:33):
What do you think the meaning was behind your mom
doing it?
Speaker 6 (01:56:37):
Because she like lives her life through me, I.
Speaker 1 (01:56:40):
Think, and that very well could be the same thing for.
Speaker 6 (01:56:42):
This guy's right, possibly. I wonder what she said to
her daughter in these messages.
Speaker 5 (01:56:48):
I mean three dred and forty nine pages a lot. Yeah,
I can't imagine. It was like you're gonna be a
great mom.
Speaker 6 (01:56:55):
Right, Like was it bullying? Like when you think of
cyber bullying, when when kids bully kids, it's like, oh,
you should kill yourself and things like that was what
she doing? Things like it's Boston.
Speaker 5 (01:57:06):
I mean, I think you're giving an extreme example, but
it doesn't have.
Speaker 1 (01:57:08):
To be just that, right, and take bullying back like
it used to be face to face, not over the computer.
You push them around, stuff them in a locker, maybe
a swirlly or two, and then the lockers are smaller
now ye.
Speaker 6 (01:57:22):
Do they know they're at the school, but they're not allowed.
Speaker 1 (01:57:26):
To use that exactly. That's how it was at least
when my uh my boy was going to school and
Broken Arrow had lockers all up and down the bucking halls.
Couldn't use any of them.
Speaker 6 (01:57:33):
They have to carry their books with them all day
and their computer.
Speaker 1 (01:57:38):
Why can they not use them?
Speaker 6 (01:57:39):
Because I guess years ago someone hid weapons. There was
a gun found in a locker, maybe some drugs.
Speaker 1 (01:57:49):
And and stuffing. Yeah, not like stovetop right, like ballast
like you used to make a doll getting stuffed in
the locker. Oh got that?
Speaker 6 (01:57:58):
I don't know, but I would much I would have
said it before. I would much rather have searches in
lockers if that's the case.
Speaker 5 (01:58:07):
Yeah, but who's going to pay those extra people?
Speaker 1 (01:58:09):
I know it. You don't even have a bus route, girl,
I know. So, Hey, you're going to have a new
breakroom soon, yes.
Speaker 5 (01:58:16):
So the world will be right. We're all just one
breakroom away from happiness.
Speaker 1 (01:58:20):
Better than a pizza party. At least you can go
to the break room every day and you can say, yes,
this is what I worked hard for. Yeah, pizza party.
You fucking eat two slices, go back to work and
it's gone, literally that night, probably twenty minutes.
Speaker 5 (01:58:34):
Right or your route was late, so you get back
and it's already gone or cold how or you get
the ship pizza that nobody likes fucking supreme or whatever,
the mechanic and the goddamn receptionist and dispatcher eating it all.
Speaker 1 (01:58:45):
Uh huh, sitting there chewing on a last piece of
cheese cheese fucking pizza. Sa cheese pizza. Yeah. By the way,
who's the breakroom for For the bus drivers? They're riding
driving the bus. Yeah, not all the time. Only in
the morning they can show up. They're not hanging out
there all day, can circling around town just waiting for
(01:59:05):
more kids to pick But they go and pick up
and then they do the route, but they don't go
back to the barn and hang out. Well, you got
to drop the bus off. You want to go home.
Maybe maybe they can't. Maybe they've got one of those
bosses who are like, I'm fucking paying you to be here.
You gotta be here. You can't leave and go home. No,
If they're hourly, it's do it as fast as you
(01:59:28):
can't get the fuck off the clock. Or they're bus drivers.
They might have a part time gig that they work
between morning and afternoon shifts.
Speaker 5 (01:59:36):
Right, of course there is, That's what I'm saying. They're
not there during the day. Yeah, so I guess you're right,
or that's a big selling point. Everybody needs a break room.
Speaker 1 (01:59:46):
Come on, I don't know if I do. We've got
two of them. Well, I mean we use the one
quite often, you know, the main one. The say secondary
one we don't use as much as we I do
because it's closer. The microwaves right there. But when you're
hot eating of ramen noodles doesn't matter.
Speaker 5 (02:00:06):
We got some boogie ass microwave. Every time I can't
figure out how to goddamn start it. And then when
it's done, I'm like, why can't I open the door?
Speaker 1 (02:00:15):
A lock lock on it. It's the stupidest microwave we've
I've ever seen. That's a pioneer woman, And now what.
Speaker 6 (02:00:23):
You said it was, I think it's a drew berrymore one.
Speaker 1 (02:00:26):
Drew Berry Moore. Somebody went out and got a boogie
ass fucking Microwaveie, give me the one in the back,
hit the button thirty seconds whatever we could door start.
Speaker 5 (02:00:38):
I have one that opens. The drawer opens up, and
people are always come over in these and like what
the fuck? I'm like, so I get it.
Speaker 1 (02:00:44):
That's bougie, but at least it still works with open
and start.
Speaker 5 (02:00:49):
This doesn't have that.
Speaker 6 (02:00:50):
What is the point of the drawer?
Speaker 1 (02:00:52):
So, uh you can put it like in an island.
Oh okay, yeah, so it's not above Yeah, that's and
when you have children who want to learn how to
do stuff in my short mom like mm hmm makes sense.
Speaker 5 (02:01:06):
Ever tried to pull out a hot thing of broth
like this?
Speaker 1 (02:01:10):
God damn.
Speaker 5 (02:01:11):
Yeah, Well it's blow. It's not as far as you're dropping.
Speaker 1 (02:01:15):
Less chances of burning yourself.
Speaker 5 (02:01:16):
Less chances of burning yourself. All right, Gimby's going to
be out a Friday at his beach house.
Speaker 1 (02:01:25):
Yes, B and B liquor and Broken Arrow seventy first
and elm getting qualified for flight and fair way because
I have a fantastic week and we'll talk to you soon.
See yea, bye bye