Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Control Chaos.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Yeah, Garry Garver, Tim Doones.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Yeah, listen, Border Touch the fun the Bone Garber and
take a Domes did.
Speaker 4 (00:35):
The wings of love bringing this music your m your
empire made it through another week. Listen, Yeah, listen, listen.
It is Control Chaos case A ten fifty AM one
A six point five FM in the Inland Empire. Gary
(00:55):
Garber here, Yeah, radio dot.
Speaker 5 (00:58):
Com because this radio station is the bombs.
Speaker 4 (01:03):
Get damn any plans this weekend. I really don't try
and figure out what to do. I want to go
down at Delmar Racetrack. I've never been there. It's a
two hour drive. I don't know. Maybe I'll go tomorrow
(01:26):
or Sunday. I don't know. I want to go check
out that racetrack. Or I may just stay home and
do a rock workout. I don't know. I have no
plans this weekend. How about you? The dog days of summer? Right?
(01:47):
I did do something though, I cut my hair. How
many times I've been called Sammy Hagar over the past
like six months. I mean everywhere I go, Hey Sammy,
Hey Sammy. I really don't look like Sammy Hagar. I mean,
I guess I do in a way, but at least
(02:14):
twenty five thirty times over the past six months. Sammy Hagar,
are you Sammy? Hey, Sammy, you look just like Sammy.
I'm like, oh my god. So finally, I just like,
I just cut my hair. I did it myself. I
was like, cause I was playing golf the other day
and I was trying to putt and it was a
(02:34):
little windy and my hair would blow right into my
face while I was trying to putt and I had
to like put it back. It was like really distracting.
I'm like, you know what, it's time to just cut
the hair. It will grow back. So I cut like
two inches. Yeah, I cut two inches off my I
did myself, like I said, went in the shower, grab
some scissors, and I did a decent job. It may
(02:57):
not be completely even, but who cares at this point.
So I'm kind of digging it. I don't know, I
look kind of different. I like the long hair, but
it's not bad. It's not bad. So I did do that. Anyways,
It's been a weird, weird week, to say the least
(03:19):
in the entertainment field. Entertainment business, we lost Malcolm Jamal Warner.
He drowned and Costa Rica. I believe it was Sunday
or Monday. And then Ozzy Osbourne passes away. Ozzie Osborne
(03:41):
jan where am I? He passes away? And then on
the same day, and this didn't get much news, John
Mayoll from John Mayoll and the Blues Breakers passed away.
And then yesterday we had Hulk Hogan suddenly he gone
(04:01):
and Chuck Mangioni, jazz musician, Chuck MANGIONI what a weird,
weird week, right, I mean, one after another it didn't
stop this week. So I tell you life is so bizarre, man.
You just never know. This is why I say all
the time, you just never know when your number is
(04:22):
going to be called. I mean, Hulk passed away at
the age of a seven. How old was Hulk? Let
me see, let me look it up. The weird thing is, well,
he had a cardiac arrest, but he was seventy one.
Haulk Hogan was seventy one. I guess he had had
a surgery about a month ago on his neck and
(04:43):
it didn't go well, and there was rumors that he
wasn't doing well. His name, his real name, Haulk Hogan's
real name was Terry Bolea if you remember that he
was in the movie The Rocky Movie. I mean, he's
probably the most famous wrestler of all time, Andre the
Giant and Rick Flair the Hulkster. I mean, you really
(05:05):
put wrestling into a different hemisphere. But he wasn't well
and he was still touring. He was still wrestling. Haul
Cogan was still wrestling. And that's another shocker. At seventy one,
out of the Blue of Cardiac Arrest, Chuck Mangioni was
in his eighties, John Mayol was ninety, Malcolm Jamal Warner
(05:26):
was young. He was fifty four when he passed. But
what a strange And Ozzy was sick, he had Parkinson's
and all that. But I mean two weeks ago he
had a concert. He did his last live concert on
July fifth. What a strange time, What a strange week.
I gotta say, what a strange week. That's why you
can't take any day, any moment for granted. On today's show,
(05:53):
we have a representative from Peta Peita, Yes, calling in.
They've got this really are I don't know if I'm
going to the movies, like I'm gonna go see Superman
next week. I wanna take mom she hasn't really been
out of the house in the last month and a
half since she fell. I mean she's been out. She's
walking around a little bit, which is very cool. I
(06:15):
thought she broke her hip about six weeks ago. Man,
I thought she broke her right hip and was gonna
be game over. I mean, she's gonna be eighty eight
in a couple of weeks. But she bounced back and
she's able to move around and get up and down
the stairs. So I'm gonna take her to go see
Superman next week. The Mary Pickford Peter. They actually serve
(06:35):
beer there, which is very cool, beer and wine. But
I guess before you know how they had these previews,
Like now it's like a half hour of movie trailers
before the movie starts. It's so annoying. I mean I
used to like that, you know, when I was a kid.
You know, you have a couple of movie trailers, it'd
be like they'd be like three or four five minutes long,
(06:55):
you know what I mean, the whole thing. They'd you know,
do these trailers Now it's likety minutes. But I guess
Peta has a trailer out of a one minute trailer,
and they have it's it's it's a video. I don't
know if you've seen it at the movie theater, if
you've gone to the movies. It's a little one minute
trailer where those of these guys pigging out on meat
(07:18):
and then there's a fire engulfing the mansion that they're
eating in. I want to get the whole meaning of this.
I mean, I'm gonna play Devil's Advocate today with Peta
because I mean, I believe me, I love animals, and
I think what happens to animals is got awful at times.
I mean, I remember when I was dating a my
(07:39):
girl up in Fresno and I take I believe was
Highway forty one of the Fresno usually a forty nine
or forty one, I don't know, and there'd be these
slaughterhouses along the highway and you can actually smell smell
the poor cattle being slaughtered and stuff. It was really disturbing,
(08:00):
though it didn't stop me from having a good Prime
rib or a New York steak. I'm sorry. I mean,
I like to eat I like to eat meat. I'll
be the first one to say that I don't eat
it every day. I eat it, maybe once a week
or twice a week, I'll have a steak or you
know whatever, hamburger. I went and got in an Outburger
the other day. I mean, because they're the best burgers
(08:20):
on the planet. But they're gonna it's really a disturbing video.
So I want to I'm gonna have the representative Impeta
call in and tell us what's going on with that,
and you know, play devil advocate, Devil's advocate. Anyways. Also,
I'm so thankful that I'm not Donald Trump. What is
(08:41):
going on with this? Jeffrey Epstein crap ola? Man, I mean,
enough is enough, man, enough is enough. Just release the
effing files. Though it looks like Trump's all over these files,
these Epstein files, there's audio and video coming out now
where says that Donald Trump was his best friend for
(09:02):
fifteen years. And I mean this is from like the
late eighties to two thousand and four, two thousand and
five when they had a falling out. And the bottom
line is that, please, if Donald Trump did do anything wrong,
then release the files. What is in the files? Why
will not why will they not release the files? It's
it's bizarre, and even Republicans, I mean It's very rare
(09:26):
that Republicans and Democrats agree on anything nowadays. But there's
a few Republicans out there, more than a few, that
are saying, hey, release the effing files, and the Democrats
are saying the same thing.
Speaker 6 (09:40):
Now.
Speaker 4 (09:40):
They're on recess until the end of August. Okay, they're not.
And by the way, they're getting a month off vacation
from the American taxpayers. We're paying for their month off
that do nothing. Congress is still doing nothing. They're on
vacation for a month. And guess what we're aim for
it the American taxpayers paying for their vacations for a
(10:05):
month paid vacations, right, So ridiculous. It's so fed up.
So anyways, just release the effing files. I guess they
met with Maxwell, Maxell or Maxwell whatever name. Gallaine Maxwell,
the one that basically helped run the Jeffrey Epstein pedophile
(10:28):
business and the federal the second in command in the
law enforcement Attorney General met with her yesterday. Of course,
we don't know anything about it. She knows all the names,
but she's probably scared out of her efing mind. She
knows that Epstein was murdered. He didn't commit suicide. Okay,
(10:50):
I'm not a conspiracist at all, But the bottom line is,
how do you kill yourself when you're on suicide watch
in a federal prison where you're being watched twenty four
hours a day, seven days a week. Okay, they had
a camera on him the whole time. Oh, by the way,
we didn't have the video on. Right, it's a conspiracy.
(11:12):
There's no way Jeffrey Epstein killed himself. He had too
much He had too much power. He still had too
much power because he knew all the skeletons in the closet,
and god knows. I mean, he hung out. I'm not
saying these guys did anything, but he hung out with
Trump and Bill Gates and Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew.
(11:34):
Those are heavy hitters, man. Those are heavy hitters, big
time heavy hitters. So the bottom line among others, I mean,
who else, I mean, that's what the Epstein files are
all about, is to find out who else was hanging
out with Jeffrey Epstein. We're not accusing them of of
banging young girls, though. You know, Prince Andrew basically was
(11:56):
caught with his hand in the cookie jar. If you
want to say that bottom line is just release the
effing files. And I highly doubt this chick's gonna say
anything Goodleen Maxwell, because she knows that she opens her
mouth unless they pardon her and ship her off to
a Maybe they can ship her off to Epstein's former
(12:19):
island and she can live there. I mean, the bottom
line is that she's got to be scared out of
her Mike. She already knows that Epstein was murdered in prison.
So they can get to anybody. Believe me. It's like
the movies. We can get to you anywhere. We can
get to you anywhere. So it's kind of crazy. What's
going on with that. I don't know. Just release the
(12:40):
effing files. Okay, it's not gonna go away. And then
Donald Trump's of course trying to divert the whole thing.
Saint Obama did it treason this act, trying to trying
to overthrow Donald Trump's election in twenty sixteen, total diversion,
and I mean, you know now they're looking into that.
(13:02):
I mean, you know, please please, it's just so insane, man,
It's so insane in the membrane, it totally is all right, listen,
enough of that, enough of that, Okay, it is control
chaos case EAA ten fifty AM one or six point
five FM in the Inland Umpire. I'm Gary Garver. I
promised you a George Carlan bit yesterday. So I'm gonna
pull George Carlan bit and then we'll have a representative
(13:24):
from P to Collin to talk about this disturbing one
minute trailer that are running in movie theaters. It's it
is kind of disturbing. I gotta say so. It makes
a point. That's what they want to do. They want
to make it disturbing. Okay, we'll be back after this. DC. Hi,
(13:45):
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Speaker 7 (14:50):
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Speaker 4 (15:03):
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Speaker 8 (15:47):
I'm Jim O'Hare. I'm here to help raise awareness for catasil,
a genetic disorder that affects one in twenty five thousand people.
Catasil can cause strokes and young adults, leading to memory
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(16:07):
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can do to help find a cure.
Speaker 4 (16:16):
Are doing this a whole breck? How you don't? Do
you miss the spotlight?
Speaker 3 (16:24):
By the way, that is the single greatest question you
could ever ask your celebrity, do you miss the spotlight?
Speaker 1 (16:31):
I thought it was who are you?
Speaker 9 (16:33):
Who are great?
Speaker 3 (16:34):
But we find that do you miss the spotlight? Is
more irritating than than anything.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
What do you?
Speaker 9 (16:39):
What do you mean?
Speaker 3 (16:39):
And they give you Inevitably, they end up giving you
their whole resumes to prove they're not out of the spot.
Speaker 9 (16:46):
Are you doing this a hall breck?
Speaker 8 (16:50):
You doing?
Speaker 4 (16:50):
Do you miss the spotlight? What missed the spotlight? In
what sense? Do you mean that?
Speaker 9 (17:00):
Have you been doing a lot of things lately?
Speaker 10 (17:02):
Have I done anything lately?
Speaker 4 (17:04):
Well?
Speaker 10 (17:05):
Yeah, I did a film called Into the Wild, which
Sewn Penn directed, and.
Speaker 4 (17:08):
He's being honored here tonight and Emil.
Speaker 9 (17:13):
Hurst who has started in it.
Speaker 4 (17:14):
And I are accepting Sawn Penn's Medallion award and saying
a few words about him tonight because he's making a
film about the time for SI stuff. Are you tired
of Jews running the entertainment business?
Speaker 11 (17:30):
Am I?
Speaker 12 (17:30):
What?
Speaker 4 (17:31):
Tired of the Jews running the entertainment business? Tired of
the Jews running the entertainment?
Speaker 2 (17:37):
Dude?
Speaker 4 (17:38):
What kind of a question is that?
Speaker 6 (17:40):
That's a twisted question, and of course not I mean,
man alive?
Speaker 10 (17:46):
What kind of question is that could have?
Speaker 4 (17:49):
That's text of thinking, man, if you're at sex and your.
Speaker 13 (17:51):
Trailer that's not dry, Garver, jew of the why can
we say that's not gonna never mind?
Speaker 4 (18:09):
It is controlled chaos? Y KCAA ten fifty am monal
six point five FM in the Inland Empire, Gary Garver here,
Now I mean I could play Stephen Colbert's monologue ripping
on Trump. It's eleven minutes long. Or I could do
(18:31):
a George Carlan bit called rights and Privileges. I think
I'll do the George Carlin bit. I mean Stephen Colbert,
how long does he have to be on Late Night?
I mean they say at the end of next May
they are going to let him go. I don't know
if you know the news, but last week they basically
(18:52):
CBS fired Stephen Colbert because Paramount wants to cut a
deal and Donald Trump hates Colbert and would probably nix
the idea of them merging with I think it's called
sky Box or something on on sky something along with
like Trump saying, hey, if the Washington Commanders don't change
(19:13):
their name back to the Redskins, they'll nix that deal too.
I mean, he can do whatever he's doing, whatever the
f wants. Man, it's just insane. So I say there's
no way because I guess every monologue for the past
week Colbert has just been ripping on Trump, I mean
big time. So when there's going to be time for
(19:33):
CBS to pull the plug on Colbert, I say, he
doesn't last till the end of the year, they say,
mate of next year. No way. I mean, there's no
chance that Colbert lasts that long. If I had to
take the over under, I take the under that he
gets out by twenty by December of twenty twenty five,
not me of twenty twenty six. But you know what,
(19:55):
maybe next week I'll play a monologue from monologue from Colbert.
But right now, want to play at George Carlin bit
because I've been saying I haven't played at George Carlin
bit in a minute. I loved George Carlin. I wish
he was on this planet to talk about what the
hell is going on with the woke generation and the
gen zs and the Trump administration, the Biden administration, all
(20:17):
this stuff, the Jeffrey Epstein stuff, the whole thing. Wouldn't
that be awesome? But here's George Carlin on rights and privileges.
Speaker 5 (20:23):
Here we go, customers swearing on the Bible. You understand
that they tell you to raise your right hand, place
your left hand on the Bible. Does this stuff really matter?
Which hand? Does God really give up about details like this?
Suppose you put your right hand in the Bible, you raise.
Speaker 9 (20:40):
Your left hand. Would that count?
Speaker 12 (20:43):
Oh?
Speaker 9 (20:43):
Would God say sorry? Wrong hand? Try again?
Speaker 5 (20:47):
And what why does one hand have to be raised?
What is the magic in this gesture? This seems like
some sort of a primitive voodoo mojo stick.
Speaker 9 (21:00):
Why not put your left hand on the bible. Let
your right hand hang out by your side, it's more natural.
Speaker 5 (21:05):
Or put it in your pocket. Now what your mother
used to say, donum put your hands in your pockets?
Does she know something we don't know? Is this hand
really important? Well, let's get back to the Bible, America's
favorite national theatrical prop. Suppose the Bible they hand you
to swear on is upside down or backward or both,
(21:27):
and you swear to tell the truth on an upside
down backward Bible.
Speaker 9 (21:31):
Would that count?
Speaker 5 (21:33):
Suppose the Bible I hand you as an old Bible
and half the pages are missing.
Speaker 9 (21:39):
Suppose all they have is a Chinese.
Speaker 5 (21:41):
Bible in an American court, or a braille Bible and
you're not blind. Suppose they hand you an upside down
backward Chinese Braille.
Speaker 9 (21:51):
Bible with half the pages messing it?
Speaker 5 (22:00):
At what point does all of this stuff just break
down and become just a lot of stupid shit That
somebody made up. They made it up, folks. It's make believe.
It's make believe now, all right, Okay, let's leave the
Bible aside.
Speaker 9 (22:20):
We'll get back to the science fiction reading later.
Speaker 5 (22:24):
The more important question is what is the big deal
about swearing to God in the first place?
Speaker 9 (22:31):
Why do swearing to God me you're going to tell
the truth? Wouldn't affect me?
Speaker 5 (22:37):
If they said to me, you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth to help
you God, I'd say, yeah, I'll tell you about as
much truth as the people who wrote that Bible.
Speaker 9 (22:47):
How do you like that?
Speaker 5 (22:56):
Swearing on the Bible doesn't mean anything. It's kids to
God his kids stuff. You member, when you were a kid,
if you if you told another kid something he didn't
quite believe, he'd say, you swear to God. I would
always say, yeah, I swear to God, even if I
was lying.
Speaker 9 (23:12):
Why not? What's gonna happen if I lie? Nothing? Nothing
happens if you lie unless you get caught. And that's
a whole different story.
Speaker 5 (23:22):
Sometimes a kid would think he was being slick with me,
and he'd say, you swear on your mother's grave.
Speaker 9 (23:28):
I'd say, yeah, why not. First of all, my mother
was alive. She didn't even have a grave.
Speaker 5 (23:34):
Second of all, even if she was dead, what's she
gonna do? Rise from the grave and come and haunt me,
Come and haunt me all because I told a lie
to an eight year old? Get real, will you? Sometimes
I would say, I swear on my mother's kids are
(23:58):
impressed with things like I mean out of care, but
my mother's either. I don't care if they fell off,
not my problem. There, you smile, you keep an.
Speaker 9 (24:08):
Eye on them.
Speaker 5 (24:10):
Swearing to God doesn't mean anything. Swearing on the Bible
doesn't mean anything. You know why, because Bible and no
Bible God and know God. If it suits their purposes,
people are gonna lie in courts.
Speaker 9 (24:21):
The police do it all the time, all the time.
Yes they do.
Speaker 5 (24:28):
It's part of their job to protect, to serve, and
to commit perjury whenever.
Speaker 9 (24:33):
It supports the state's case.
Speaker 5 (24:35):
Swearing on the Bible is just one more way of
controlling people and keeping them in line. And it's one
more thing that holds us back as a species. Here's
one more item for your the last in our Civics book.
Speaker 9 (24:46):
Rights boy.
Speaker 5 (24:47):
Everyone in this country's always running around yamoring about their
freaking rights.
Speaker 9 (24:50):
I have a right, you have no right. We have
a right. They don't have a right.
Speaker 5 (24:53):
Folks, I hate to spoil your fun, but there's no
such thing as right. So okay, they're imaginary. We made
them up, like the book Man, the Three Little Pigs, Pinocchio,
mother Goose.
Speaker 9 (25:04):
Like that.
Speaker 5 (25:04):
Rights are an idea. They're just imaginary. They're a cute idea. Cute,
but that's all cute and fictional. But if you think
you do have rights, let me ask you this. Where
do they come from? People say, well, they come from God.
They're God given rights. Here we go again. There were
all around.
Speaker 9 (25:22):
The God excuse the last refuge of a man with
no answers and no argument. It came from God.
Speaker 5 (25:28):
Anything we can't describe must have come from God personally.
Speaker 9 (25:31):
Folks, I believe that if.
Speaker 5 (25:32):
Your rights came from God, he would have given you
the right to some food every day, and he would
have given you the right to a roof over your head.
Speaker 9 (25:39):
God would have been looking out for you. God would
have been looking out for you.
Speaker 12 (25:44):
You know that.
Speaker 5 (25:47):
He would have been worried about making sure you have
a gun. See get drunk on Sunday night and kill
your girlfriend's parents.
Speaker 9 (25:54):
But let's say it's true.
Speaker 5 (25:55):
Let's say God gave us these rights. Why would he
give us a certain number of rights? The Bill of
Rights of this country has ten stipulations, okay, ten rights,
And apparently God was doing sloppy work that week, because
we've had to amend the Bill of Rights an additional
seventeen times. So God forgot a couple of things like
(26:15):
slavery just slipped his mind. But let's say let's say
God gave us the original ten. He gave the British thirteen.
The British Bill of Rights has thirteen stipulations, the Germans
have twenty nine, the Belgians have twenty five, the Swedish
have only six.
Speaker 9 (26:35):
And some people in.
Speaker 5 (26:36):
The world have no rights at all. What kind of
a God and God given.
Speaker 1 (26:40):
Deal is that?
Speaker 9 (26:42):
No rights at all?
Speaker 5 (26:44):
Why would God give different people in different countries different
numbers of different rights? Boredom, amusement, bet arithmetic? Do we
find out a long last after all this time, that
God is weak in mad skills doesn't sound like divine
planning to me. Sounds more like human planning. Sounds more
(27:07):
like one group trying to control another group. In other words,
business as usual in America. Now, if you think you
do have rights, one last assignment for you. Next time
you're at the computer, get on the internet.
Speaker 9 (27:19):
Go to Wikipedia.
Speaker 5 (27:20):
When you get to Wikipedia, in the search field for Wikipedia,
I want you to type in Japanese Americans nineteen forty two,
and you'll find out all about your precious right.
Speaker 9 (27:30):
Okay, all right, you know about you know about it. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (27:38):
In nineteen forty two, there were one hundred and ten
thousand Japanese American citizens and good standing, law abiding people
who were thrown into internment camps simply because their parents
were born in the wrong country.
Speaker 9 (27:53):
That's all they did wrong.
Speaker 5 (27:54):
They had no right to a lawyer, no right to
a fair trial, no right to a jury of their peers,
no right to do process.
Speaker 9 (28:01):
Of any kind.
Speaker 5 (28:02):
The only right they had right this way into the
internment camps. Just when these American citizens needed their rights
the most, their government shock them away. And rights aren't
rights if someone can take them away their privileges.
Speaker 9 (28:19):
That's all we've ever had.
Speaker 5 (28:20):
In this country is a bill of temporary privileges. And
if you read the news even badly, you know that
every year the list gets shorter and shorter and shorter.
Speaker 2 (28:31):
Is there all stay?
Speaker 9 (28:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (28:39):
Sooner or later, the people in this country, you've got
to realize the government does not give a fuck about them.
Government doesn't care about you or your children, or your rights,
or your welfare or your safety. It simply doesn't give
about you. It's interested in its own power. That's the
only thing keeping it and expanding it wherever possible. Personally,
when it comes to rights, I think one of two
things is true. I think either we have unlimited rights
(29:03):
or we have no rights at all. Personally, I lean
toward unlimited rights. I feel, for instance, I have the
right to do anything I please, but if I do
something you don't like, I think you have the right
to kill me. So where you're going to find a
fair deal of that? So the next time somebody asks us,
(29:23):
says to you, I have a right to my opinion,
you say, oh, yeah, well I have a right to
my opinion, and my opinion is you have no right
to your opinion. Then shoot the walk away.
Speaker 4 (29:38):
I don't advise that. I don't advise that. I see
just laugh at him and walk away, walk away. The
Great George Carlin Rights and Privileges rights and privileges. It
is Control Chaos casey AA ten fifty AM one to
six point five FM in the Inland Empire. I'm Gary Garber.
We'll have a little bit more chaos for you, yeah,
(30:00):
because there's plenty of it out there right right after
this controls Chaos, Hi, this is Gary Garber. If you're
looking for new adventures to grow your finances and future
wealth for you and your family, there is a great
opportunity for you with a Spire Equity Group. Aspire Equity
Group's main goal is to revitalize multifamily assets in high
(30:24):
growth urban markets, delivering quality housing and sustainable risk adjusted
returns through strategic acquisitions. Aspire Equity Group provides investments at
all levels and joint venture opportunities through acquiring real estate
in Los Angeles and surrounding areas. Aspire Equity Group's mission
is to help communities provide affordable, quality housing and improve lives.
(30:47):
So if you're looking to improve your life along with
other people's lives, Aspire Equity Group is the place to be.
To find out more about Aspire Equity Group, give Jorge
Aspire a call at three to one zero nine to
one two nine six five eight. That's three one zero
nine one two nine six five eight. Aspar Equity Group
(31:08):
a great adventure and investment for you and your family.
How you doing, guys? How are you? Are you a
fan of Howard Stearns?
Speaker 1 (31:15):
Yes?
Speaker 14 (31:16):
Yes, fill five?
Speaker 4 (31:18):
And what's your name?
Speaker 1 (31:19):
Sienna?
Speaker 13 (31:19):
Sana Sienna Miller for me s I E W N
A M I W L E R.
Speaker 4 (31:24):
And what's your favorite type of porno?
Speaker 5 (31:27):
Oh my god, I'm going to get in trouble.
Speaker 4 (31:30):
I'm not gonna say favorite hunt really joke? And what
would you like written on your gravestone?
Speaker 15 (31:38):
I told you I was ill?
Speaker 4 (31:40):
All right?
Speaker 15 (31:41):
Thanks?
Speaker 16 (31:42):
This is the Gary Garb Show. If you're not listening
to Gary, you.
Speaker 4 (31:51):
Told Chaos k C A A ten fifty AM one
oh six point five FM in the Inman Empire. Also,
iHeart Amazon, Apple, all the different social media platforms. Gary
are over here right now. I have a very special guest.
She helps out Pta. She is the vegan campaign project
manager for PETA, and I love PETA. I think what
(32:13):
they're doing is great work for the animals, because the
animals have no voice, only the humans do. And we're
doing a great job of destroying our planet. They have
a very very disturbing trailer that's being played in movie theaters,
I believe throughout the nation. I watched it this morning
(32:35):
and I was just like, okay, forget the forget the
bacon and eggs. Okay, just give me the eggs. If
that's okay to eat. I don't know. I'm gonna ask
Amber right now, Amber Kennevan Amber, good morning? How are you?
Speaker 2 (32:47):
Good morning?
Speaker 12 (32:49):
So?
Speaker 4 (32:49):
Can I still eat eggs?
Speaker 8 (32:50):
Or no?
Speaker 4 (32:50):
I can't have my eggs. I know the bacon's out,
but how about eggs? Is eggs okay? Or do they
have to be cage free? I always get cage free eggs.
Is that alright with you guys?
Speaker 6 (32:59):
Or no?
Speaker 2 (33:01):
There are a bunch of problems with cage free. But
you know, I love how you called it a trailer.
We've been calling it a horror short, and we have
been airing it, you know, ahead of some movies and
theaters in California and other states. And I mean, you know,
(33:22):
I think you have to some degree know that animal
agriculture is a bit of a horror show, right, So
we have animals who are keptain factory farms, and as
our horror short shows, you know, it's fueling climate catastrophe
and that is literally bringing flames in some cases straight
(33:43):
to our doors.
Speaker 4 (33:44):
Yeah, it was. It was kind of. It was very
disturbing to say the least. Yes, and I've talked about,
you know, how animal cruelty is relevant and prevalent throughout
our nation. I mean, I used to date this girl
up in Fresno and I lived in Los Angeles and
i'd go up this I think it was called Highway
forty nine and there was a bunch of slaughterhouses like
(34:05):
right along the highway and you could smell, you know,
the slaughterhouses, and it was so disturbing to me because
that was really the first time I ever smelled a slaughterhouse.
And I'm like, oh my god, that's where our meat's
coming from. But I gotta be honest, I'm not, you know,
I'm very honest person. I still eat you know, meat
every now and then. I don't need it every day,
but you know, maybe once a week I'll have a
(34:26):
steak and blah blah blah. But it is disturbing, to
say the least. It really is. It's really sad how
we treat our animals and slaughter them the way they do.
It's just it's it's disturbing. And this this this well,
I call it a trailer because it's it's being played
in movie theaters in Los Angeles and throughout some other states.
It's really wild, man. I mean it's a minute long,
(34:49):
and I'm like, holyes, So tell us about tell us
about the horror short. It's you can explain it.
Speaker 2 (35:00):
I mean, you can find it on at Pita dot
org if you want to watch it on YouTube as well.
We call it the Room on Fires. So it's a
bunch of decaditely dressed people who are just chowing down
on all sorts of.
Speaker 4 (35:14):
Meat and cheese.
Speaker 2 (35:15):
And eggs, and meanwhile, this flame that starts out in
the distance in the hills slowly creeps closer and closer
to the house and straight into that dining room with them.
And we were inspired partly because of the horror of
wildfires that are just coming more frequently, burning hotter, coming
(35:40):
more into where people humans are actually you know, living.
We have all these fires in la I mean, this
stuff is at our doorsteps. And like you said, usually
the factory farms and slaughterhouses they're out there in the
countryside and you might only see them on a trip
up to see your girlfriend. Right, But this stuff is
(36:01):
having impacts on our lives because animal agriculture raising and
killing tens of billions of animals for food every year.
These slaughterhouses, as you can imagine, there are these window lis,
large buildings that you can't see what's going on inside.
PETA has sent investigators into fat or tree farms and slaughterhouses,
(36:24):
and you know, we know what's going on inside. Nothing
humane never happened in a slaughterhouse. And these animals are
just the hind closed doors tacked shoulder to shoulder, wing
to wing. These factory farms, even the cage free ones,
they just kept the same factory farm shed, took out
the cages and left all the animals in there crammed together,
(36:48):
and say cage free.
Speaker 4 (36:50):
So just a bunch of bs? Is that what you're
trying to tell us?
Speaker 2 (37:00):
Peda dot org you can see our investigation of Hillocker
cage free. This is one of those Prop twelve compliant,
you know farms in California that went cage free. The
owner was calling it chicken Disneyland. PETA has footage from
inside and it's that chicken prison. There's no other way
(37:20):
around it.
Speaker 4 (37:21):
Well, let me ask you, you know, let me ask
you a question. Okay, because like I said, this this
you guys listen, I don't care if you're you know,
you're not for peta or whatever. You gotta see this.
This uh this this short horror video. It's it's it's it.
I'll shake you up a little bit. Especially the pig
in the middle of the table. That was the first
thing I saw, was a big pig in the middle
(37:42):
of the town. I'm like, oh my god, this is
this is really disturbing. And then you see these wildfires.
How does that correlate? How do the wildfires correlate with
what's going on with the treatment of of animals and
the slaughter of animals? How does that all correlate?
Speaker 5 (37:59):
Right?
Speaker 2 (37:59):
Well, so you know sauntry farming, raising and killing tens
of billions of animals for food. Those animals require a
lot of water, so factory farms and slaughterhouses stuck up,
you know, tens of millions of gallons of water, you know,
creating drought which leads to wildfires. Also, the methane emissions,
(38:24):
the climate warming gases are very strongly associated with animal
agriculture in particular, so you can actually reduce your food
related carbon by about seventy three to seventy five percent
by eating a vegan diet. So you can just imagine
(38:44):
how much is coming from when you're when people are
eating meat, dairy, and eggs. All of these things are
kind of collecting, you know, coming together and feeling the
climate catastrophe, feeling out, feeling wildfires, and all three of
these things are just kind of feeding off of each other. Literally,
(39:06):
it's like.
Speaker 4 (39:06):
A perfect storm. Yeah, Like it's like the perfect storm,
like you know, because I mean, you know with all
these carbon emissions. Uh, you know, there are gases that
come out of these slaughterhouses and these other slaughterhouses for
pigs and things like that. It's just, uh, it is weird.
It's it's a strange environment, strange vibe we're going through
(39:26):
right now in our in our country and entire planet.
So what do you suggest that we do? We just
stop eating meat or I mean, listen, Amber, I love animals.
I've got two cats. I love my cats to death.
I always water the plants, I feed birds, I do
anything I can. I love. I stop when I see
a rabbit running across the street. I mean, I love animals,
(39:50):
you know, I mean, it's it's so sad what the
humanity does to to animals and the cruelty because they
really don't have a say in it. So what do
you I mean, do you say we all do just
become vegan? Or how about people that really you know,
how about let me play devil's advocate. How about the
cats that have to that do you know, run the
slaughterhouses and all that, They're going to be out of work,
(40:12):
People will be out of jobs, stuff like that. I guess,
I guess they could go to different things. But what
do you want? What do you want humanity to do?
Just go vegan? Is that your answer? Or is there
something some sort of like compromise, Can we compromise here
or something like that? Or no compromise?
Speaker 2 (40:30):
Well, I mean the vegan food economy, you know, has
been been booming, so we you know people there's companies
that have been switching like Elmhurst Dairy with a dairy
company for one hundred years, they switched over. They make
nut based milk now and they've been surviving. And you know,
(40:50):
the slaughterhouses need to shut down and can be changed
into you know, van meat production facilities that are much
more water much less water intensive. And also don't you
know require somebody fit somebody's job literally sitting all day
stabbing animals in the throat. Nobody wants that. Nobody wants
(41:12):
that job or it has to, you know, go through
that mental turmoil. Farmers who you know, end up raising
these animals and having to send them on these horrible
slaughterhouse trucks you've probably seen down the highways. These animals
are crammed shoulders to shoulder in these transport trucks on
one hundreds and seven degree days without any water. I mean,
(41:33):
no one wants that, no, but they they want they
you know, they keep eating this stuff. The thing is,
there's such delicious vegan foods out there. If you've tried
vegan bacon, there's vegan steak. You know, there's pretty much
everything you could imagine vegan these days, and it has
a much lower water footprint, carbon footprint debtor for your health,
(41:55):
better for the environment obviously.
Speaker 4 (41:56):
Well, I wish they did it in the supermarkets, you know,
I mean, they should have like a you know, I
know they have organic sections, but they really don't have
any vegan sections. Because if I saw a vegan steak
or a vegan chicken or something like that. I'd i'd like,
I'd try it, I'd see what it tastes like, and
if I liked it, i'd probably you know, switch off.
I mean, you know, they just don't. They really just don't,
cause I just don't think there's as much profit. You know,
(42:19):
it's all about big business and profit. Let's just call
it what it is, Okay. When you you know, when
you're running you know, meat producing plant stuff like that
as opposed to a vegan plant, you're gonna make more
money with the meat plant as opposed to the vegan plant.
Maybe it will change as time goes on. But why
don't they have any like vegan sections in the supermarkets?
Have you guys ever pushed for that, you know, with
(42:41):
these big conglomerates, you know, these market conglomerates.
Speaker 2 (42:48):
I mean I'm hard pressed even when I'm in small
towns to you know, not find something in the grocery store.
You know, there's to foods beyond.
Speaker 4 (42:57):
Yeah, but I mean you're talking about talking about listen,
you know, I'm what I'm talking about is you know,
like a vegan section, like you said, they have vegan steaks,
They have vegan this vegan that it'd be cool if
they had a vegan section. That is what I'm trying
to say, because the normal person like me, like when
I go shopping, I don't I don't see that. I
see organic. There's organic everything, but there's no like vegan.
(43:19):
Like I'd like to try a vegan steak. Why not,
you know, let me see what it tastes like. I mean,
I'm open to it. I just wish the big business
of America, in the in the market chains would maybe
put together. You know. I'm sure some like Sprouts or
somebody does it, but you know, I don't see it
where I shop. That's all I'm saying. I just wish
there was more of that so we could so it
(43:39):
could be we could be more aware of it as
as as a society. That's what that's all I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (43:46):
Right, all right, Well, we'll have to team up and
work on your grocery stores.
Speaker 4 (43:54):
I could do is all I buy is corona and
tequila there anyways, don't worry about it.
Speaker 2 (43:59):
Well, listen, maybe that's why their shelves are just full
of that.
Speaker 4 (44:02):
Yeah, exactly, that's why they know. Well, I want to
I appreciate you calling in and tamber Canavan. She is
the vegan campaign project manager for Peter Uh. You want
to tell the public anything else? You have a public message,
public service announcement for America and the world over.
Speaker 2 (44:23):
Well, you know again like that our horror, our horror
shore is like you said, it's just so good, so
well produced it is. You really do think you're watching
a movie trailer. Y visit Petera dot org and you
can catch that trailer if you're not going to catch
it in one of the theaters running it in. And
I also just love reminding people that we will send
(44:43):
anyone who orders one on our website Peta dot org
a free vegan starter guide that does have all those
recipes and meal plans.
Speaker 4 (44:52):
We'll send me one. Hey, hey, hey, send old Garwan. Okay,
I need I want a want all this stuff, and
I'll send you.
Speaker 2 (45:00):
From Vegan Bacon and Vegan State.
Speaker 4 (45:02):
Yeah. That would be awesome. Oh my god, that I
would be I'd be open to all of that. I'm serious.
I mean, you know, I like, I like eating healthy.
I've been you know, I constantly watch my diet. Like
I said, I'll eat eat maybe once a week. Or
something something like that. But I mean, I watch my diet,
I work out, I do all that. So I want
to be healthy and I want to make I want
to make America healthy again. Isn't that slogan from somebody
(45:25):
like one of the Trumpian guys. But don't sue me.
Don't don't sue me for that. Anyways, Listen, that'd be awesome. I'll, uh,
you know, give me send me an email. Who do
I send him to? I send it to Nicole and say, hey,
I need.
Speaker 2 (45:39):
Some people talk to your people.
Speaker 4 (45:41):
Okay, cool? Perfect, I agree, Thank you so much. I
look forward to doing it. You know, I'll eat it
right on the show. I mean, you know, I'll try
it right on the show. All right, all right, well listen,
thank you so much. You guys got to check out
this trailer. It's really it's a minute long, and it
will shock. It's it's really good. It's and it really
is very well produced. You guys did a great job
on that.
Speaker 14 (46:01):
So and if he's if he's yeah, if you go
go see Superman or F one or whatever it is,
and you see this these guys pigging out on meat
and uh and and the fire burning them up.
Speaker 4 (46:14):
You know where it came from. It came from Peda.
Go to Peda dot org, Peda dot org. Amber, thank
you so much for calling in. Good luck with the movement,
and I'm all for you guys. I love you guys
anytime you want to call in. But send me some
of that vegan bacon and steak.
Speaker 8 (46:29):
Oh.
Speaker 4 (46:30):
I would love that. All right, Thank you so much, jear,
have a great day. Thank you so much. All right, alright,
all right, that's that's Amber Canevan, the vegan campaign project
manager for PETA, and listen, I'm open. I'm definitely open
to trying vegan food. I wouldn't mind. I mean, why
(46:50):
not if you can be healthy and save some animals.
I'm all for of that, man, I'm all for that.
Speaker 9 (46:56):
All right.
Speaker 4 (46:57):
It is control chaos casey AA ten one to six
point five FM in the Inland Empire'm Gary Garver. But
if you do go to the movies and you see
these these cats pigging out and a fire engulfing them,
it came from PETA, Peta dot org, Pia dot org.
I love them. We'll leave back more chaos were you.
They're trying to help humanity out and the animals and
(47:18):
the animals they're they're doing good work, They're doing God's work.
We're gonna be back with more chaos for you right after.
Speaker 17 (47:24):
It's controlled chaos, controlled chaos, controlled chaos, controlled k controlled case,
controlled case, controlled Ko.
Speaker 4 (47:32):
This is Gary Garver and I've written a book called
Radio Blows. It's all about my career in the radio business,
my time with the Howard Stern Show, and celebrity interviews,
my top ten cool celebrities and my top ten uncool celebrities.
Here's a sample of a couple of cool ones and
a couple uncool ones. Bigasiztens arrest on me.
Speaker 12 (47:51):
Yea, I'm gonna take this stuff here.
Speaker 4 (47:52):
Yeah, all right, I'm holding you. Call get the marshall,
Get the Marshal's who's wrong. We'll see the marsh right now.
We'll see who's wrong.
Speaker 14 (47:59):
You want them to scary morning people are going to
ask horrible things.
Speaker 4 (48:02):
You got that look?
Speaker 1 (48:03):
Are you? Look?
Speaker 4 (48:04):
They don't have that look you do?
Speaker 1 (48:05):
You got to look like watch you do something that
would have been second grade.
Speaker 4 (48:08):
If you're forcing the guy sucks, who would you choose?
Speaker 9 (48:11):
I don't get forced into anything.
Speaker 4 (48:14):
Thanks at Jack. If you're on a desert island and
you had a choice of making love to Pamela Lee
or Jennerino, who would you choose.
Speaker 6 (48:21):
That's a question I don't want to answ if coach
my wife.
Speaker 9 (48:23):
I'm to listening to the show.
Speaker 4 (48:24):
Thank you, mister President. Okay. Radio Blows available now on Amazon,
Amazon dot Com and Kindle Radio Blows. If you want
to get in the radio business or find out the
inner workings of radio, it's a must read book. Hi,
this is Gary Garber. If you're looking for new adventures
to grow your finances and future wealth for you and
your family, there is a great opportunity for you with
(48:47):
a Spark Equity Group. A Spark Equity Group's main goal
is to revitalize multifamily assets in high growth urban markets,
delivering quality housing and sustainable risk adjusted returns strategic acquisitions.
Aspire Equity Group provides investments at all levels and joint
venture opportunities through acquiring real estate in Los Angeles and
(49:09):
surrounding areas. Aspire Equity Group's mission is to help communities
provide affordable, quality housing and improve lives. So if you're
looking to improve your life along with other people's lives,
Aspire Equity Group is the place to be to find
out more about Aspire Equity Group. Give Jorge Aspire a
call at three one zero nine one two nine six
(49:31):
five eight. That's three one zero nine one two nine
six five eight. Aspire Equity Group, a great adventure and
investment for you and your family. Erson, how you doing?
What would you be doing if you weren't an actor?
Speaker 9 (49:46):
Uh, don't know, don't know.
Speaker 4 (49:49):
What's a likelihood that there will actually be one more
Indiana Jones movie?
Speaker 9 (49:53):
I'm delighted.
Speaker 2 (49:54):
I think they're great movies and I'm looking forward to
starting the next one.
Speaker 6 (49:57):
Do it?
Speaker 4 (49:57):
Yeah? Sure? Why not? When you turn out roll of
Meathead and all in the family.
Speaker 9 (50:02):
It was a long time ago, I can't quite remember,
but worked out well for other people.
Speaker 4 (50:08):
Would you would you consider yourself a hero for helping
rescue children?
Speaker 15 (50:12):
No, me and me and two hundred other people that
just didn't get mentioned somehow.
Speaker 4 (50:18):
When you measure your penis from, where do you start measuring?
Speaker 8 (50:25):
All?
Speaker 12 (50:25):
Right? How are you.
Speaker 16 (50:29):
From the four corners of the world? Dumbing down his
IQ so you can understand them. It's Garry gard money.
Speaker 4 (50:37):
That was Harrison Ford. Yes, I love the chatter in
the background. You can hear these people. That's nasty questions.
It is what it is. It was what it was,
all right, it is Control Chaos. Casey a A. I'm
Gary Garver and I'm out of here. You guys have
a great weekend. Enjoy your weekend. Knock on this eight
(51:02):
hundred pound bar. My dad bought a Tia one in
nineteen fifty seven. I'll be back god willing Monday with
some more chaos for you. And I want to thank
the Pita the Peta people, because I love those people.
They are very cool. They fight for animal rights, which
is very very cool. It's a noble thing. Though a
(51:25):
lot of people think they're a little off the hook.
That video is a little off the hook, but hey,
it is what it is. It's they want shock value
and they got shock value. Okay. In honor of Chuck
Mangioni passing away yesterday along with Hulk Hogan, I just
can't even believe this weird week I'm gonna play some
Chuck Mangioni for you right now here on the Control
Chaos Radio Show. Enjoy the rest of the day and
(51:48):
enjoy your weekend.
Speaker 12 (52:24):
Back in.
Speaker 11 (55:02):
CACAA Loma, Linda, your CNBC News station where your business
comes first.
Speaker 15 (55:11):
And now the voices of KCAA was an exciting announcement.
Want to hear NBC News or KCAA anywhere you go, Well,
now there's an app for that. CACAA you is celebrating
twenty five years in our silver anniversary with a brand
new app.
Speaker 4 (55:25):
The new KCAA App is now available on your smart device,
cell phone, in your car or any place.
Speaker 17 (55:32):
Just search KCAA on Google Play or in the Apple Store.
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One touch and you can listen on your car radio,
Bluetooth device, Android Auto or Apple Car Play. Catch the
KCAA buzz in your earbuds or on the streets.
Speaker 8 (55:45):
Celebrating twenty five years of talk news and excellence with
our new KCAA App.
Speaker 15 (55:49):
Just do it and download it. KCAA celebrating twenty five.
Speaker 4 (55:54):
Yeah, this is KCAA.
Speaker 15 (56:01):
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Speaker 7 (57:01):
NBC News on Case AA Lomela sponsored by Teamsters Local
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Speaker 10 (57:10):
Dot org Scene News Radio. I'm Brian Shook. WWE Hall
of Famer and pop culture icon hul Cogan is dead
at the age of seventy one. Clearwater, Florida Police said
they responded to a medical call this morning for a
(57:31):
cardiac arrest. Former wrestler Joe Malenko tells News Channel eight
Hogan was a pioneer for today's multimedia wrestling superstars, all.
Speaker 2 (57:42):
These guys who have since, you know, since become movie stars.
Speaker 9 (57:46):
All of that, all of that.
Speaker 8 (57:47):
Was spring you know, was from that springboard of Hogan
doing what he did.
Speaker 10 (57:51):
The Justice Department has met with Jeffrey Epstein associate Geelane
Maxwell in Florida. The meeting lasted for six hours in
Tallahafe Thursday. Maxwell's lawyer said after the meeting that his
client answered all the questions and answered them honestly. Tensions
between President Trump and FED Chair Jerome Powell are rising
again over Powell's refusal to lower interest rates. Today, Trump
(58:16):
toured the Federal Reserve Building in DC with Powell to
take a closer look at the controversial two point five
billion dollars in renovations Powell signed off on. The Department
of Justice is suing New York City and Mayor Eric
Adams over the city's migrant sanctuary policies. Sarah Lee Kessler reports.
Speaker 17 (58:35):
The lawsuit comes just days after an off duty Border
Patrol agent was shot in an Upper Manhattan park allegedly
by a Dominican national in the country illegally. He had
arrest records, according to authorities in New York and Massachusetts.
The suit claims New York sanctuary law violates the supremacy
clause of the Constitution, in which federal laws overrides state
(58:58):
laws when there's a Conflict's Earle Kessler.
Speaker 10 (59:01):
Millions are dealing with scorching temperatures in a large part
of the country. A heat dome is striking from Chicago
to New Orleans. You're listening to the latest from NPC
News Radio.
Speaker 6 (59:14):
Located in the heart of San Bernardino, California, the Teamsters
Local nineteen thirty two Training Center is designed to train
workers for high demand, good paying jobs and various industries
throughout the Inland Empire. If you want a pathway to
a high paying job and the respect that comes with
a union contract, visit nineteen thirty two Trainingcenter dot org
(59:38):
to enroll today. That's nineteen thirty two Trainingcenter dot org.
Speaker 11 (59:47):
Ten fifty AM. Don't forget that number. And for you
young people who got here by accidentally fat fingering your
FM band selector. We're an AM radio station and AM
refers to more than just the time of day.
Speaker 4 (01:00:03):
Stumps off that exhausting amster wheel and inter balanced living
with doctor Marissa from