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October 26, 2024 54 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:19):
The views expressed in the following program are those of
the participants and do not necessarily reflect the views of
SAGA nine sixty am or its management.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Live from Toronto to the world. This is Josh Holiday Live.
Josh is like a smack talker. Josh is the same
level as me.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
Like this vibe is just like strong and masculine and tough.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
Talked at rocks. Got something to say?

Speaker 3 (00:42):
What do you have to say?

Speaker 4 (00:43):
The phone lines are now open. Kyle six four seven
six yo. Josh operators are standing by. Raise yourself. Josh
Holiday Live starts.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
No good morning. It is the twelfth of October. God damn,
getting further and further away from summer, and it makes
me sad. I am Josh, he of the show title,

(01:16):
Josh Holiday Live. We are live. I'm Josh and I'm
joined as always from the great state of New Jersey.
Bert is here.

Speaker 3 (01:24):
Good morning in Canada.

Speaker 1 (01:26):
There you go. So you're we're covering all bases of
all we need now is uh is someone from Mexico
and we'll have the whole North American.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
Whole NAFT team.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
Yeah, we'll cover We'll cover it from again. Yeah that's right.
But for now, two of the America's two yeah, two
of the North Americas. I guess is how how you
will put that it is unbeknownst Well, maybe beknownst to you.
Wait wait, wait, beknownst just means you know, right, because

(01:58):
if you say unbeknownst, it means you don't know. So
instead of saying so, instead of saying, instead of me
just saying you know, I could say it's benown to
you or beknownst to you it is. This weekend is
Canadian Thanksgiving? Oh congratulations, thank you. Yeah, we have It's

(02:20):
it's a little bit further out from from the Christmas
season here.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
Maybe mid to late November is not the best travel
time to go over the river in the north.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
Uh yeah, I you know what, I I'm I don't
really like I don't know.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
I think they built a holiday around travel. I'm just saying, yeah,
I have a blind spot for yeah lucky.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
I don't know what like the significance of our Thanksgiving,
I just know we have it this weekend. I remember
being in uh in well in Los Angeles in the US,
and basically like Thanksgiving and there and Christmas, it all
kind of blends into one like elongated holiday season because
it's so close to Christmas, so everyone starts like right

(03:05):
around Thanksgiving, it's basically festive until until the end of
the new year.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
Right, sure, we don't like to keep it festive.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
Fastive and yeah people people take that that stuff seriously.
Uh here, I mean the same same sort of traditions.
Your your turkey or your your whatever. I I don't
know why, Like, turkey's not really a great meat. I
don't think.

Speaker 3 (03:28):
I'm well no, So my question would be like, who's
you know I understand the lore of I mean, I
guess we're all just colonialists out here and that's what
they had available, so that's what we're eating. Yeah, all right,
but I.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
I don't know, like I would rather just have like
a chicken breast or something. The turkey feels like it's
still just a little bit tougher and like slightly more gay.
It's just I don't know.

Speaker 3 (03:53):
Have you ever had a fried turkey like a deep fride?

Speaker 1 (03:57):
I don't.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
That is a Southern technology that has been spread for
the last twenty five years or so.

Speaker 1 (04:01):
Is that the one where they where you see these
on fail army where they dunk the turkey in a
pot of oil and it catches fire.

Speaker 3 (04:08):
Yep, And so the the more savvy amongst them will
inject the turkey with a you know, sort of salt
brine in addition to frying it so that way it's juicy,
wants it's it's really good. It's unbelievable how good a
turkey could be if it is prepared in this way.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
Okay, well, I think brining is a big thing too.
I think if people like to brin like, it adds
that extra kind of sure saltiness. And I sometimes at
the fair they have like turkey legs, but I don't
think they're deep fried. I think they're just throwing.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
I never went for that. No, Cory Dog was my
go to.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
Well, yeah, if you're at a fair, I mean the choice,
you have so many choices that I don't know, Like
a turkey leg just doesn't seem have a.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
Lot of choices. And it's all on a stick.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
Yeah technically, h you know, turkey legs, it's got its
home built in stick.

Speaker 3 (04:58):
Right indeed right there for you.

Speaker 1 (05:01):
Yeah, that's your stake.

Speaker 3 (05:02):
I see people walking around the fair with that turkey
leg and it just I'm just going like, how are
you enjoying that?

Speaker 1 (05:06):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (05:07):
It looks like a burden, and.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
There's so much other like other, like if you're gonna
go to like a fair or hear like the exhibition,
you might as well get something like that. You're not
gonna get elsewhere. That's bad for you. And this is crappy.
Yeah right, Oreos de fried Mars Bar like whatever experiment
they have. I do. One of my favorite things at
the one we have here that I always go do

(05:31):
is the the waffle ice cream sandwich. So basically it's
like two waffles like that. Even though that's not that's
not very extreme, but I do like it. That's good.
It's good times. Yeah. So yeah, Thanksgiving we have Monday
is a holiday here. We have Thanksging. I in terms
of my Thanksgiving very very low key because the only

(05:54):
real relatives here in Toronto is basically my mother and
I and she is uh yeah, she's not a great
health at all, so it's gonna be super low key.
Maybe we'll just have some have some chicken Monday holiday.

Speaker 3 (06:11):
Though, I feel like a Thanksgiving Thursday is a greater
accomplishment for the society because then the Friday becomes kind
of like it's it becomes up in the air as
to whether or not you have to work.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
Yeah, probably most people don't.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
Right days with a Monday holiday and.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
Isn't isn't so is the Friday right after the Thanksgiving
in the US is always on a Thursday? Is that
the deal?

Speaker 3 (06:33):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (06:34):
And then that Black Friday is kind of that in
between day, right.

Speaker 3 (06:38):
The official day of consumerism. Yes, that's the.

Speaker 1 (06:41):
Okay, I guess that's why they made it. They made
it there because it's sort of like like a day where, yeah,
we might as well shop. It's the all American way.
You have our Thanksgiving to be shop, and then we
have the weekend.

Speaker 2 (06:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:54):
I as long I as long as you get some
kind of like longer than usual weekend out of it,
it's good. But I do agree that holidays that happen
to fall on like a Thursday or a Tuesday, are
a great excuse to kind of make it.

Speaker 3 (07:06):
A four day exactly. Well you or you know, a
three day.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
Yeah, well no, this is already a three day because.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
I'm saying, oh, I'm saying the three day work week.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
Is oh work week? Yeah, yeah, no, i'man you.

Speaker 3 (07:17):
Would get off on school. A lot of times you
get off, you get a half day on Wednesday before
Thanksgiving and then the Friday you didn't have to go
to school.

Speaker 1 (07:24):
Oh that's a good one. Yeah, yeah, I went to
for high school. I went to Uh. I went to
a boarding school. And it wasn't like a super super
like Rudy to the one. It was about one hundred
and twelve students and it was up like on a lake.

Speaker 3 (07:41):
How intense was it? Were there rulers slap some.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
The No, God, no, No, it was pretty chill. It
was like, uh, it's good.

Speaker 3 (07:48):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
Yeah, Like it's not like military school.

Speaker 3 (07:51):
It's like boarding school, bohemian and not that.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
Yeah, it was like a lot of it was kind
of outdoorsy stuff, which I'm not especially like keeno. But
the good thing about it was there's because there was
so few students. I got involved in everything. I was playing sports,
I was like public speaking, theater with theater, I directed
theater stuff. You get like super involved in everything because
there's not a lot of people there. Right. But I
will say this, and I believe we talked about this

(08:16):
on the show before. One of the drawbacks was that
when I went there, uh, the school was co ed,
but it had only within the last couple of years
before I went there, turned co ed from all boys.
So the ratios weren't great. Right, there's about you know,
one hundred guys and maybe twelve ladies. Yeah and so,

(08:39):
and you're in the SERI you're somewhat isolated from the
rest of the world. So these we am these girls,
I guess your high school girls right where you wouldn't
give them a second thought and if you saw them
in the city or.

Speaker 3 (08:54):
Whatever, what rudeness.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
No, but I'm just saying it's like that the sublime
demand meant that they could like they were super super
in demand, popular, and uh, I sort of. I always
joked when I was in that high school. I was like, oh, man,
if ever, if ever a girls school turns into a
turns into like a co ed school, I'm gonna go right,

(09:18):
I'm gonna I'm going to be one of.

Speaker 3 (09:19):
Those you had solved the riddle of the sphinx age.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
Yeah, I'm going to be one of the ten.

Speaker 3 (09:24):
And then that co ed girls school is where you
really wanted to be.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
Well, and that's what then like my last the what
would have been my last year at this this school,
another another boarding school did exactly that. They went from
from all ladies to uh co ed and and the
ratios were but I wasn't that like it would have
been hard to explain to anyone like my parents. Yeah,
I want to change schools for the last year radio school,

(09:53):
the reason being I'll be very popular with ladies. I'll
have my have my choice at the bond. But that
never happened. And yeah, the rest is history went on
a tangent. But we were talking about holidays. So this
boarding school, every they would have like classes during the

(10:14):
day and then in the evenings, I think for an
hour or two they'd have like study time where you
do your homework or whatever. This was before phone, so
you really had to like do something like read or whatever.
But as that and that was sort of included as
I guess, you have to have a certain number of

(10:36):
hours of schooling during the week, and that was added on.
So when we got holiday, like every every three weeks,
we had a long weekend, so we would get a Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
had great Christmas holidays, and then for the for the
Easter break, most schools here would have a week off.
We would have three weeks vacation in the spring. So

(10:59):
it was like yeah, and I think we ended a
little bit earlier than Yeah, this is very similar to college,
so I did like that part of it, but the
the isolation, I think wasn't great for for my for
my early dating life at all. You may have noticed
I'm slightly more na like, I'm more I definitely sometimes

(11:23):
sometimes well most of the time, have a slight nasally
thing going on. Uh, but now like today, it's a
little bit more extreme. And I always tend to get sinused.
I don't know why, but my sinuses always seem to
get kind of clogged up. And whether it's allergies or whatever.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
But when the seasons change, I guess.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
But I feel like I discovered something that I don't
know if it's a placebo thing or not, but uh,
I think it was in the spring I was having
I had some early kind of signs of a cold
kind of happening, and I got this. Uh uh they
have that they had the TV ads on here. I
don't know if they do there, but I did look
it up before the show and they definitely have a state.

(12:09):
It's called navage. Okay, do you know what that is?

Speaker 3 (12:12):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
Okay, Okay, so it's this machine.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
Oh, I am aware of this show.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
Oh yeah, and you basically load up it with with
like he has a little salt water cartridge and you
you load it up and the two section cups in
the machine going in each nostril and it it sends
liquid through one nostril and out the other sort of
with a vacuum thing and then for yeah pretty much. Yeah, yeah,

(12:41):
it's it's uh and it has a little container where
the rest of the stuff comes out. And I feel
like last spring I had something early on and I
feel like this. I used this navage thing like once
or twice a day while that was happening, and it
really seemed to seem to help. And uh, I'm using
it again this time, and I think it's helping clear,
but I still feel kind of stuffed up.

Speaker 3 (13:03):
I had a Are you using the proper distilled water?

Speaker 1 (13:08):
Yeah, oh definitely, yeah, because uh.

Speaker 3 (13:09):
There's a city water for that.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
Yeah, there's a danger if you just use water that
hasn't been boiled or anything that you'll get.

Speaker 3 (13:15):
Well not even boiling is not enough. What boiling is
not enough?

Speaker 1 (13:19):
When they say boiling is enough, I don't know, because
I know you can get if you like, you can
get brain. Uh, parasites.

Speaker 3 (13:27):
Really, the brain eating omiba is not necessarily you know,
excluded from the tampwater.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
Yeah, well that's why they do encourage you to boil
that water. I had it.

Speaker 3 (13:38):
I don't think I'm just saying my understanding is boiling
is inadequate.

Speaker 1 (13:42):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (13:42):
Well, they one must go distilled. Well, if something putting
something up there in these sinuses, keep it distilled. People.

Speaker 1 (13:49):
Well, if something happens, uh, and I get a brain,
we're eating amba. I'm gonna sue Navage for telling me
I have thental capacity. I'll leave all everything, every everything
I went in a settlement. I'll leave the amoeba living
in my brain. I had a I had a ah

(14:15):
as sort of a pre but I think it was
came up before Nevage because I've always like obviously I
had the sinist thing. I've always you know, I had
the netty pots. And then I found I found this
thing that was essentially a water pick for your nose.
So it was like the same little box. It had
the same pulsation, but it had.

Speaker 3 (14:34):
Like a little.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
Like a little triangle kind of nose thing. So you'll
put in your nose and it would it would you know,
kind of blast through there and then water will come
out the other side, and then you do the other nostril.
But I do find the novage is a much more
refined experience.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
Well good, yeah, and.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
You can also so it it sends a flow in
one nostril and out the other using kind of the
suction stuff, but halfway through I kind of turned the nozzle,
so it sends the flow a different way. So I'm
getting both directions happening in my nevage.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
I mean, oh, I would think that that would be
part of it, that you would plush one side then
the other. Does it not work that way?

Speaker 2 (15:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (15:17):
Well they say, yeah, if you want to, you can
like change that, like you just basically twist the nose.
The nose plugs that because it just changes the direction
that way. So yeah, so that's what's uh, that's what's happening.

Speaker 3 (15:31):
You know.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
I like my novage and and I'm counting on it
to help clear the rest of the sun is. So,
hockey season is upon us. There's we had the preseason obviously,
then the the Wednesday the Leafs played their first game.
Thursday they played a game, and then tonight is the
I believe it's the home opener, so uh, all the

(15:53):
excitement of a new season.

Speaker 3 (15:55):
Can watch the New York Islanders take on the Dallas Stars.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
It doesn't that doesn't sounds specially exciting. No, did they?
But that's not for Dallas? Is it the homeowner? They've
already played a couple I think.

Speaker 3 (16:07):
That is the preseason, preseason they were going through. And
then oh they played a Thursday game that was they
won over the Predators four to three.

Speaker 1 (16:15):
Friends tonight, yeah, Saturday night hockey night. Now, the Leafs
got a new coach over the summer who was meant
to instill a more of a like a tough playoff
style hockey, you know, more more accountability for these star players.

(16:38):
And I was I was looking like in the preseason
it seemed like it was going in the right direction.
I was looking forward to a team that like was
tough to play against, that hit that kind of was dirty.
But the first two games it just seemed like the
same old team. Like on Thursday's game they played New
Jersey and the hitsation was thirty one hits like body

(17:03):
checks for New Jersey and eleven for the Leaves. And
the Leafs are supposed to be this new like.

Speaker 3 (17:09):
It doesn't seem especially hard nosed.

Speaker 1 (17:11):
No, And I think part of the problem is we
still don't have the personnel. Like they went and got
some big defensemen over the summer, and that's great. They're
not necessarily like scrappy defense. They're just large, fast, you know.
I think it's more about like being big and being
able to slow down opposing forwards. But we've had the

(17:32):
same kind of core group of high end skill guys
without a lot of like kind of grit or compete,
and that's been our problem with the playoffs. And they're
supposed to be changed the summer, but nothing's really changed.
So I don't know that we have the personnel to
be able to carry out this this hard nose hockey plan,

(17:52):
but we will see. I'm actually going this like it's
because it's about ten times cheaper. I'm going to the
Marley's home opener this afternoon, yeah, which is basically the
next level down on that And it'd be good because
there's a lot of a lot of people kind of pushing,
pushing to get on the big team on that team,

(18:13):
so it should be exciting and again, yeah, a lot
lot cheaper the tickets. I'm where I'm sitting in this
Marley's Game, different arena. If you were get the same
seats in the in the Big Arena would be probably
like five six, six hundred dollars a ticket, but here
was like I paid about thirty Yeah, yeah, yeah, I

(18:35):
know you have prime. Because we've been talking about the
Boys and I'm almost I'm two episodes away from the end, okay,
and it just is it's such a good show. I
love it.

Speaker 3 (18:46):
It's great.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
I love there was this might because it was more recent,
because because I'm in the new the latest season. There
was a great there's a great scene where the girl
who's kind of mute, yes, she she's in this They're
in this mansion and she's in this library and she's
trying to trying to talk to another superhero and she's

(19:08):
trying to explain something to him, and so she's just
picking up various books that have titles that like, oh
that that our match what she wants to try and
tell them, and she's like scattering through the book. She
picks up one and has the title that she's like,
go save him, And like, I thought, it was just
really really clever and clever and like so funny, dirty
growth like it's it's just like all around amazing.

Speaker 3 (19:31):
Show is very grotesque, that show and timely.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
Like they've really like this season, this most recent season
in particularly, they've really.

Speaker 3 (19:39):
Nailed down the the the political spirit of the show
is in tune with the moment.

Speaker 1 (19:45):
Yeah, it's like basically the fashion like Homelander is sort
of like a Trump esque figure. And uh, there's a
lot of like the the you know, the right wing
stuff being parodied and the fascism of the US being parody.
It's quite interesting. Yeah, I know it's too too close
to home. I will say this though, on Prime there's

(20:07):
another series I will recommend to you. Okay, I know
you're not like a super hardcore hockey fan, but there's
a series called face Off inside the NHL. I believe
it was six episodes, and they focus each episode on
two sometimes three specific players as they go through the playoffs,

(20:30):
and it's really great kind of inside stuff that you know,
they have them miked up and you see their home
life and stuff. The first episode was kind of well,
it's hard to watch because it was about the Leafs
losing once again in the first round, but it was
interesting to sort of see the behind the scenes stuff.

(20:50):
And then I'm trying to think it was a Dallas
element here. Certainly I think the Predators. They focused on
one of the players on the Predators. So there's a
series against Dallas. Uh there, But I would recommend it
if you want to get hyped about the NHL. He
kind of get it, get a real look inside of
what goes on there.

Speaker 3 (21:11):
Face off, it's the basketball team. That's where my attention is.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
Yeah, I know, but this is a good little like
like it's a it's a fast paced, kind of cool series.
Uh you know, that's sort of like a diet. It's
like a hockey digest from the playoffs. You know, you
kind of get a look inside. Yeah, so recommend it.
And that's enough hockey.

Speaker 3 (21:34):
Uh that.

Speaker 1 (21:36):
So the hurricane happened, but it wasn't. Which one, well,
the most recent one Milton, which for for like, I
think I think there's got to be some discretion for
these these hurricane names where like you can't give them
names that sound like like nerd like nerdy names.

Speaker 3 (21:53):
Oh well, I mean Milton, Milton. They have they have
a rotation of names. Yeah, and I think they are
like there's seven rotations, I guess. And so then if
from hurricanes particularly bad, they retire that name and replace
it with a uh, the same letter.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
So like I know that like one of the famous
ones is the hurricane Andrews, so that will never come
around again because it's kind of like a legendary.

Speaker 3 (22:22):
Yeah, but that's gone still.

Speaker 1 (22:25):
They they which one Emi six believe, Okay, Emille. I
never heard the name of Camille.

Speaker 3 (22:35):
I I think I have a bad Bill Cosbys.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
Yeah, but I yeah, Honestly, like if you for something's
like ferocious or like like scary or whatever, you maybe
some names just shouldn't be included, like in Milton or
or Stewart or you know, just names that you would
associate with sort.

Speaker 3 (22:55):
Of We've been suffering under the storage of Milton Friedman,
so Milton should be a hurricane.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
Name, I guess. And then there's no like it's all
kind of like you know, a lot of very white
bread names you don't you don't have, like hurricane Kwame
or anything like that.

Speaker 2 (23:12):
Kwami.

Speaker 3 (23:13):
That's funny, Hurricane Kwame, like.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
You should it should there should be you know, this
is the States and and other other countries are are
you know, it's it's not just a big white population.
There should be more diversity of names for for weather events,
let's one. But then then you would have people saying, oh,
you're to.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
Have six names. They have six naming conventions that are
not conventions.

Speaker 1 (23:39):
But but if you gave it, if you if you
did try and give it like a like a like
more of an ethnic name, then people would be like, oh,
you're trying to you're trying to demonize the black community. Oh,
let's see a little bit of okay, mar Marco.

Speaker 3 (23:59):
Omar, Yeah is an option. Odette is an option.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
Omar makes me think of the wire like Omar is coming.

Speaker 3 (24:08):
Right right, Yes, Tobias is an option. Option is going
to happen.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
Tobias is like.

Speaker 3 (24:17):
Ophelia is still in there and that was kind of
a powerful hurricane, but they didn't retire that name.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
Dawn.

Speaker 2 (24:24):
I like it.

Speaker 1 (24:24):
It's almost like it is almost like sports, like the
you know, the players that are the are the greatest,
they get retired.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
Yeah, the greatest number it gets. Yeah, that's right, they
take the number right out.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
We're no longer and Andrews retired. He can't use that anymore.

Speaker 3 (24:39):
Let's see Brett's still in there, So that's good brat
to me.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
Yeah, what about Bert.

Speaker 3 (24:47):
Uh not an option? Bonnie, Beryl, Barry, Bertha, Bill, Ernie,
what about Ernie, Edward, Ernesto, Errol, Emily's Ernie.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
Yeah, so it is Can you can you, like, if
you call hurricane or Neesto, can you say Ernie's coming through?
Can you shorten hurricane names?

Speaker 3 (25:10):
I mean I don't want to get into the Eastern
Pacific names. But they got a whole separate list for them.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
Oh but what okay, So what if it happens over
there and then the storm comes over here? Does it
change names?

Speaker 3 (25:19):
I don't think that they can cross. I mean they
have to cross the Isthmus of Panama or something.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
Yeah. Well, you know the way things are going.

Speaker 3 (25:25):
Hurricane Zeke Oh I know, Zeke Zeke actually repeats. They
don't have as much diversity. They don't actually get to
Z in the Atlantic list. They only get to w
interesting and then Zeke, Zelda, Zeke, Zelda, Zeke Zelda. It
just goes back and forth, assuming that probably you won't

(25:46):
have twenty six named hurricanes in the Pacific.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
Oh yues, So it's the season. So wait, at the
end of hurricane season, does it reset or just goes
through the alphabet then comes back again.

Speaker 3 (25:57):
Well, every year has its own list. Oh okay, so
there's you know, six lists of names, and they recycle
unless one is retired by the intensity and devastation of
the storm.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Yeah, they should. They should have opened to the public
oup like a naming contest. But then you'd have like.

Speaker 3 (26:18):
We need a new so give us a new name.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
Not the apps. But you have people like hurricane mhurricane
like like body mcboat face. Right, people, they're gonna have names.
They're clever, they're clever names. Uh.

Speaker 3 (26:35):
The next one is Nadine, Nate Lane is coming.

Speaker 1 (26:38):
That's got to hit somewhere in the South.

Speaker 3 (26:40):
That's a real Oscar Patty, Raphael, Tony, Valerie and William.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
Tony's coming through. Tony said, like Antonio sounds more official,
like than Tony sounds the way down do casual, Tony.

Speaker 3 (26:55):
You get all the way down there. Yeah, that's a
lot of hurricanes with names.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
Yeah, well they're gonna need more and more names. Uh.
Uh do you listener? Do you dream in black and
white or do you dream in color?

Speaker 4 (27:13):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (27:13):
There may be an explanation why I'll tell you what
that is in a moto.

Speaker 4 (27:20):
Sex, money, dating, health, hockey, science, burritos.

Speaker 2 (27:25):
If there's something on your mind, it's on this show.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
We'll do it live.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
Do it live.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
I can go alrite it and we'll do it live.

Speaker 2 (27:32):
Something else. Articulate your brain.

Speaker 3 (27:33):
Josh, You's sleep in a dumpster last night.

Speaker 4 (27:35):
Tell us now at six four seven six yo, Josh,
call or text talk to Rocks. Josh Halliday is live
and free to one on.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
Yeah. Yeah, ah. Kiss. I don't know. I love kiss
that because.

Speaker 3 (28:01):
There's a lot of people that love kiss.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
Well, I only like not something like. I just I
think I was at an age where the whole mythos
of the guys in makeup and the characters thing really
appealed to me.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
You definitely were, and I also liked the like.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
I like I roll in, like crazy stage and magic
and all that junks.

Speaker 3 (28:18):
So it's sort of you know, they did a lot.
They did a lot to try to make it entertaining
for the folks. I think boys mostly boys.

Speaker 1 (28:26):
Yeah, I think for the most part for me, they
are doing well. Probably their tenth or twelfth.

Speaker 3 (28:33):
Or tenth FA Parawell tour. I saw the one in
two thousand.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
Yeah, I saw one. Yeah, I probably was the same
same at least like ten fifteen years ago. I saw.
I was like, I better see them once in my life.

Speaker 2 (28:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (28:45):
My friends that are way in the Kiss drag me
to that show and it was fine. It's entertaining, right, free,
totally fine, but it's entertaining.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
It's like going to a Vegas show. There's like a
lot like even if you don't like the music.

Speaker 3 (28:57):
There's like blah blah blah, We're so glad to be
here in Houston. And Paul's like.

Speaker 1 (29:01):
He's just getting folks. Ah. Yes, I like the puns
where they start songs.

Speaker 3 (29:10):
It's getting really hot in here.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
It's like they got it. Yeah, they always have bad
puns to go into songs.

Speaker 3 (29:20):
But I did some good songs. Okay, yeah, catchy, well
that's I love.

Speaker 1 (29:25):
That song was like the Kiss Kiss like goes disco
and my sister I mentioned this before. My sister and
I like played the crap out of that record. My
parents had it.

Speaker 3 (29:33):
We really over backage for that.

Speaker 1 (29:35):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 3 (29:36):
The what I know of your age, I've interpreted you
as being, you know, slightly older than me. But I
when I was forty one, forty one, right, My cousin
was into kiss and we went and stayed the night
at you know, their house for Christmas or whatever, and
I slept in his room and he was probably like fifteen, yeah,
and I was like maybe five. I don't know, maybe

(29:57):
wasn't that old. But anyway, it was horrifying kiss posters everywhere.
You were frightened, awful, and I slept in there, but
I didn't like it. And then the next year we
went back, he had gotten into bikini models and so
there was only one kiss poster and it was just
all women and everything was You slept much better, correct,
you weren't.

Speaker 1 (30:17):
Afraid, uh there. I remember as a kid watching like
the Kiss, uh meets the Phantom. I think it was
called like That.

Speaker 3 (30:24):
It's available on YouTube for those who want to. You know,
I may go time watching something that doesn't matter at all.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
Well, at the time, I thought, I like obviously thought
it was like the coolest thing ever. But I wish
I would like to go back and see how.

Speaker 3 (30:35):
How might shod not go? It's all I know, But.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
I just want to see, you know, have your like
when you're gone back to somewhere you vacationed as a kid.

Speaker 3 (30:45):
And everything smaller.

Speaker 1 (30:46):
Everything's a lot smaller like this. I went. I remember
going back to this like resort on a bay, and
I was like, oh my god, this like this is tiny,
Like the bay is is basically like this tiny little bay.
But as a kid, you thought it was Yeah, it's
just weird. I guess it's not weird, but.

Speaker 3 (31:01):
It's just you know, it's just like it happens. Yeah,
we're small. Your memories are small person's memories. Uh.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
I think I I I read I think this week
that as Kiss goes out on this uh quote farewell
unquote tour there they will have a documentary crew along
for the ride. Will but I think that would have
been much more interesting if they had had documentary crew
like in the heyday when when you know they were
all single and with them. I don't even know. I

(31:31):
haven't dug that deep, all right, Ace, I don't know
who the drummer is now, like I'm a Peter Criss guy.
Uh yeah, we'll see.

Speaker 3 (31:41):
Uh oh.

Speaker 1 (31:43):
So we talked about this on the show before, but
not in a scientific way. I I said that when
I was in high school, I had this, ah, this
teacher and she was to describe something that was like
unlikely or incredulous. She said to me, oh, sure, and

(32:05):
I bet you dream and color too, right, as if
as if that was something that was impossible or didn't
happen at all. Right, And I was like, well, yeah,
I do, like what like what people don't dream in color?
And so this week when I was reading the Washington
Post and I stumble across an actual, like scientific kind

(32:26):
of thing. Uh, and people, it is true that people
dream in black and white. It used to be like
in the old days when people dreamed in color, people
would say, oh, they must have psychological issues or or
they are having mental health issues because they're dreaming in color.
And my theory when we talked about this before was that, well,

(32:50):
a lot of those people who are older grew up
in black and white TV, and maybe there's some kind
of correlation between how they they envision things. Maybe they
did This is back in two thousand and eight, they
did a study found people older than age fifty five,
who may have grown up without a color TV, reported
dreaming in color only about thirty four percent of the time,

(33:12):
whereas those younger than twenty five said they dreamed in
color about sixty eight percent of the time.

Speaker 3 (33:17):
I almost I don't even remember dreaming of black and white.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
I know, never. And then some people say it could
just be you know, in some cases they don't remember
the details of the colors and stuff, but more the
content of the dream.

Speaker 3 (33:34):
So whether or not it's in color is incidental.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
Yeah, so they say this. Expert says, for example, after
dying at a restaurant, a customer is not likely to
remember the color of the server's shirt, But it doesn't
mean the shirt black color. The color just wasn't noticed
and committed to memory. So that's an analogy that they're
using here.

Speaker 3 (33:55):
But yeah, I feel like if I was dreaming of
black and white, that would be a tell then it
was a dream and I would figure it out.

Speaker 1 (34:02):
Oh yeah, how you would think. But yeah, yeah, I
love to dream and I even like having like weird ones.
It's just kind of cool.

Speaker 3 (34:13):
Yeah, it doesn't seem to last, you know, it's always
only remember them when they're right before I wake up.

Speaker 1 (34:18):
Yeah. Well, I think sometimes if if I have to
get up to go to the bathroom or something, I'll
be aware of it and I'll sort of like think
about it while I go pee, and then sometimes I'll
try and get back into it if it's a good one, like, Okay,
do you.

Speaker 3 (34:29):
Have the thing where you're doing something and then you're like,
didn't I have this conversation with you and then or
not just even that, or you go like I haven't
talked to that person in twenty years. That was a dream.

Speaker 1 (34:39):
Yeah, I have. Well, I have some weird radio ones
where there's people who who I've worked with in the
past and I'm at a radio station, and then also
ones where like my dad's in dead like got it
a long time, but he appears quite a lot, so
he must have made some sort of impression and it's
usually angry when he in there, because that's sort of

(35:02):
your experience. Yeah, that was my my real life experience.
And so yeah mentioned a restaurants. Do you I do you?

Speaker 3 (35:13):
Are you?

Speaker 1 (35:14):
If you know you're going to a restaurant, a specific restaurant,
especially if it's one that's new you haven't been to before,
do you go online and kind of preview the menu?

Speaker 3 (35:25):
I guess it depends on if I'm choosing the restaurant
or if someone else is making the selection. Okay, choosing
I don't necessarily bother with.

Speaker 1 (35:32):
That if you're choosing, you don't bother, or if the
other person.

Speaker 3 (35:35):
They are choosing, I don't bother with the menu. I'm
just because I'm just gonna be down for whatever.

Speaker 1 (35:40):
Yeah, if I'm.

Speaker 3 (35:42):
Choosing, then yeah, I mean I'll go look at the
menu and the prices of course. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:48):
Yeah, I I well, I hadn't thought of it that way.
If I'm going to, well, if I'm picking a place,
I go when I look, if there's like sometimes there's
places that are like fancy and they have stuff that
I just won't like duck and like stuff that I
don't want to eat at all, Like for if it's
a birthday or a special occasion, I'm like, oh, that
restaurant's got good reviews and stuff, and I'm like, no,
too much like stuff that's just not you know, normal

(36:12):
right for me, normal for me. But I am like,
I think I'm the neurotic type that always wants to
get get sort of think, yeah, I stay in the obviusier,
but I always want to kind of get ahead and
like know what's happen. So I basically open it up
and I know what I'm going to order when I
get to the restaurant.

Speaker 3 (36:29):
I mean, you know, the great thing for you is
that you live. I moved from a world city to
a rural context at least, so like the number of
restaurants have to choose from has dramatically reduced.

Speaker 1 (36:41):
You probably know the rest of the men used by
heart with so Fie.

Speaker 3 (36:44):
Well, I mean, just the few places we even bother
to go. And there's some good spots. Even there's a
couple of good Mexican food places. They're not text Max,
although one text mex chain has opened here nice to
to where you know, it's one of those that's in
Dallas you just never go because it's too expensive get in.
But in New Jersey it's the best place in the

(37:04):
whole state to get text mix nice.

Speaker 1 (37:07):
Uh I I but the word okay, No, The worst
is I find is I'll look at the menu and
I'll like, I'll zero in on something like, oh my god,
that yuki oh, that looks like an amazing Yukiya. And
then you get to the restaurant they're like, yeah, that
the online man, you have an updated that we don't

(37:28):
have that anymore.

Speaker 3 (37:28):
And then for three years.

Speaker 1 (37:30):
Yeah, and then you're like, yeah, you you you're you're
because I build this anticipation because I've looked ahead of time.
One of the reason to not look I know, I know,
and the same thing I think, I think, just because
then I'm impatient too. I'm like, Okay, guys like hurt,
let's get our order in here. Let's hurry up, because
I know already what I want. So I think it's probably.

Speaker 3 (37:51):
Better for me to your selection was made potentially days ago.

Speaker 1 (37:55):
Yeah. So, but I should probably break that habit because
then I won't be so impatient with other people trying
to figure out what to order. I can kind of
go through and there won't be any nasty, uh negative
surprises where I'm a creature of habit.

Speaker 3 (38:09):
One thing I will do is when we're trying to
choose between places, I'll go on Yelp and start reading
the reviews, or sometimes even when I'm sitting in the restaurant,
I'll go on Yelp and just see what people are liking.

Speaker 1 (38:19):
Okay, And then I'll.

Speaker 3 (38:21):
Also ask waiters, what do you like? What do you
keep coming back to? And now, as I've gotten older,
that has been a more reliable guy than just me
going like I prefer this at you know, like or
I'll give them two things, what would you choose between
this and this? And if they don't choose the higher
priced item, you definitely know you're getting a.

Speaker 1 (38:39):
Oh yeah, that's a yeah, good point. Yeah, because there
there could be some price bias there. Yeah, yeah, what
do you think the surf and turf or maybe this
salad with chicken. I'm a creature of habit though, Like
I'll find a restaurant that I like, and then I'll
just like, like, I know exactly the meal there, and
it's love of it, so I keep going back and back.

Speaker 3 (39:00):
Yeah. Same, I mean if you find something, if I
find something I like at a place, I would have
to go there a lot in order to get to
my second or third option. Yeah, because if I find
something that's delish, that's just all I want.

Speaker 1 (39:12):
Yeah, Like why you know it's great? Why like get something.

Speaker 3 (39:15):
That you're I want to pay twenty dollars for this
delish and not that risk?

Speaker 1 (39:19):
Yeah, low risk, high reward, delicious food. I do you
mentioned reviews? I will if I'm going to a new restaurant,
I'll definitely go on like restaurants near me, and then
I do look at the star ratings. And then sometimes
I'll read the text inside as well. But I went
to I made the mistake. I think, I don't know

(39:41):
it was trip Advisor was YELP. But I was in Winnipeg,
which is like a city in the middle of the
country that's cold and windy and like very you would
consider a very white bread Midwest like north north midwest city.
Right right, we were saying in a hotel and there

(40:02):
is I noticed there's an Indian restaurant nearby, and I
went online to read the reviews, and people like, oh
my god, it's so good. It's authentic, it's all this stuff.
They went there and I had the butter chicken, which is,
you know, pretty typical butter chicken, buttered chicken, little Oh
my god, you don't a butter chicken. Oh my god.
It's basically like the what most like like it, most

(40:27):
of us whities or the butter chicken. Well, no, it's not.
It sounds like, oh, it's just chicken with butter on it,
but it's actually like this kind of tomato sauce with
like fen youw, Greek and spices, so it's a little spicy,
little sweet. It's really delicious. If it's made right, But
this place, the butter chicken, like the sauce lacked any

(40:49):
real flavor at all. It was like like basically a
rose spaghetti. It was like it's really really bland. And
then I realized that, well, most of the reviews are
from people in Winnipeg who probably haven't had a chance
to stay up a more authentic Indian.

Speaker 3 (41:04):
And that's the way I feel about like a Mexican
food review in New Jersey. You really have to like
read into it and see if the people establish their
credibility on the topic.

Speaker 2 (41:13):
Which some do.

Speaker 1 (41:14):
Yeah, because here at like Toronto, you can kind of
trust it a little bit because we have like a large
Indian community and you.

Speaker 3 (41:21):
Got a real that's a real big city right there,
so you have everything and it's with the people from
the place that originated the food quite often. So yeah,
it's reliable.

Speaker 1 (41:32):
This is true. This is true. Uh let's uh, let's
we'll take a quick break and then we'll come back
and talk a little bit of about the nightmare that
is uh that is the US and a.

Speaker 4 (41:44):
Sex, money, dating, health, hockey, science, burritos.

Speaker 2 (41:49):
If there's something on your mind, it's on this show.

Speaker 1 (41:52):
We'll do it live do it live.

Speaker 2 (41:54):
I can go all write it and we'll do it
lit something else. Yes, you're sleep in a dumpster last
night US.

Speaker 4 (42:00):
Now at six four seven six yo, Josh call or
text talk their rocks.

Speaker 2 (42:04):
Josh Halliday is live and free to one one.

Speaker 1 (42:10):
Oh boy. That's embarrassing. I put this show the I
run the whole show, this whole operation here from my
my little home studio, and I put together the commercial
breaks the day before usually and kind of, you know,

(42:30):
just kind of randomly picking shoes, the different IDs we're
going to use, and uh, of course dumb dumb here
I use the same same ID twice in the same show.
What how Amateur Hour? What the hell?

Speaker 3 (42:46):
Calling attention to it is the worst worst violation.

Speaker 1 (42:49):
That's behind you know, it's behind the scenes.

Speaker 3 (42:51):
Radio right really after you're saying yeah.

Speaker 1 (42:54):
Yeah, they want they want the meta version of the show.

Speaker 3 (42:56):
In a podcast. Now they the bloom is off the road.

Speaker 1 (43:00):
Yeah this is true. I'm Josh, he's he's Burt. He's
in New Jersey, and what do we say? Twenty four
days away.

Speaker 3 (43:09):
From we counted and it's still just a blur it really, like,
can we get past this man already? That's the question
and this movement.

Speaker 1 (43:17):
I just have this, and I don't think I'm alone
in this, just this kind of like this small kind
of dread inside me that knows something's like something's going
to go wrong or something like even though you know,
most most indications seem to, you know, say that things
are going to go right way and we're.

Speaker 3 (43:39):
Not going to have you know, a fashion Yeah, we're
talking about the election Trump Harris. We're talking the fact
that Harris has more paths to victory than Trump does.

Speaker 1 (43:48):
Yeah, and also like just in general, we're talking about
the biggest fork in the road the US has ever had,
whether it remains as a democratic country or if it
becomes a fashionis dictatorship.

Speaker 3 (44:03):
It is. It is already oligarchic, but it.

Speaker 1 (44:06):
Is for sure. Yeah, yes, uh, and it's that's not
getting any better as he's you.

Speaker 3 (44:12):
Know, I mean, come on, the first stirrings of trying
to unravel the concentration the economy have actually begun under Biden,
which was surprising. But you know, the FTC has been
I mean, Lena Kahan is getting more attention than any
other secretary of any department in the history of since

(44:34):
I've been alive. No, other you know FTC personality has
ever gotten.

Speaker 1 (44:40):
Federal Trade Commission as we're talking about.

Speaker 3 (44:42):
Yeah, I mean this woman is you know, because she's
a she was an anti trust essentially academic prior to
coming to work in the government. And it's been you know,
I mean, they are attacking her in the Wall Street Journal,
they're attacking her on television. I mean they don't you know,
the oligar don't like her.

Speaker 2 (45:01):
Well.

Speaker 1 (45:01):
Yeah, I read an article speculating that as as Kamala
Harris tries to appeal to some of the more moderate
types and more more of the industrial types like your
Mark Cubans and stuff, that they may be trying to,
you know, just nudge her towards getting someone in there
who who's who's more friendly to corporations, which is bad.

Speaker 3 (45:25):
I tea, Yeah, I mean it's uh, it's what did
I say?

Speaker 1 (45:28):
I said?

Speaker 3 (45:30):
I think you said it the other way. But it's
all right, Comma law. Yeah, like I had to get
the nieces at the the convention to teach me how
to say it. That it works.

Speaker 1 (45:40):
It's like the punctuation mark comma and then the law.

Speaker 3 (45:44):
It works. It works. It's very easy.

Speaker 1 (45:46):
Yeah, it's not hard. I did, you know, Like I
I want to talk only so brief because it's so angry.
But Meeric Garland, the Attorney General for the United States,
seems so so ineffective. And we've tught I think we
talked about this a little bit last week. That could
have been somewhat like someone more. It feels like he's

(46:09):
he's basically just trying to like not ruffle any feathers
and not appear to be, not appear to be by
the bare minimum, yeah, which is not enough. And and
here we are like there's been no real consequences for
for Trump, and now like Elon Musk is basically he

(46:31):
runs a pack for Donald Trump. He's in regular communication
with Donald Trump, and he's using this huge communication platform
to stifle any voices against the Trump and to amplify
not just people in favor of Trump, but white nationalists
and racists. And he's exposed himself as a as a

(46:55):
white nationalist many times over. You could say he's a
Nazi sympathy, uh, and you would not be wrong.

Speaker 3 (47:02):
He came out of that old apart type system.

Speaker 1 (47:04):
Well that's the yeah, that's the thing. He has a
history and his I think his dad was you know.

Speaker 3 (47:08):
So what's up with this pack?

Speaker 1 (47:10):
Oh, well, he's out of her while and he's actually
it came out that he's been supporting UH this cause
for longer than people thought, like he he was giving
a lot of money to Stephen Miller's UH association. Stephen
Miller is probably in the trumpet in the Trump administration,
probably the most openly white nationalist Nazi Nazi type guy

(47:36):
there is. And and Musks has been right there giving
him money all along for the last couple of years.
And uh, you're the rules of like and and obviously
it's it's you know, there's no, there's no it doesn't
seem to be any consequences for any kind of election
finance stuff anymore. Uh. The idea of packs and super

(47:57):
packs where that they people could donate as much money
as they want it to a super pack as long
as it was not controlled or influenced by the actual candidate.

Speaker 3 (48:09):
But in this case, the campaign, the candidate, the campaign.

Speaker 1 (48:11):
Yeah, it was totally it was like supposed to be
kind of boxed off. And obviously that's in the you know,
in the past, in the past, there's been lots of
cases where it hasn't but it hasn't been as blatant
lay out in the open as Yeah, elon mus saying
he has regular conversations with Trump. He he thinks he's
going to be sort of the de facto president when

(48:33):
he gets in there. Yeah, it's just a scary.

Speaker 3 (48:37):
There's some going on where he was like giving people
forty seven dollars something. I thought that's where you're going to.

Speaker 1 (48:41):
Get that too. Yeah, he was basically like offering and
I think just for people in swing districts forty seven
dollars to register, which is a.

Speaker 3 (48:51):
Register swing state voters to sign petition, to refer swing
state voters to sign petition.

Speaker 1 (48:56):
Yeah, which is essentially illegal.

Speaker 3 (49:00):
Yeah, it sounds like he's buying on boats.

Speaker 1 (49:02):
Yeah. Well, and I like the whole idea of him
using Twitter as a as a propaganda tool for Trump.
I mean, if you think of that as an in
kind donation to the Trump campaign, it's a massive, massive,
massive lots of It's just a fraud, right, I.

Speaker 3 (49:23):
Mean, it's you know, I don't even know what it's
worth anymore. Because Twitter has probably reduced its influence over
the last couple of years.

Speaker 1 (49:33):
Well, I think so. And I mean there's definitely an
echo chamber there where you know, the right wings all
kind of talking to themselves and and uh, and then
people say it's lost tons and tons of money. But
a lot of the investors were people who wanted it
to basically be a tool for fascism, Like the Saudis
were heavy investors and other bad actors.

Speaker 3 (49:55):
And so you mean people that have come in with musk, yes.

Speaker 1 (49:58):
Yeah, yeah, who bought Twitter. Like the idea of when
they when they purchased it was to make it a
weapon of the right, a right ring thing. And and
you see that because it's basically it used to be
you know, if you said something that was even even
sort of remotely anti semitic, you know you will probably
get booted. But now people post like the N word

(50:22):
that like all kinds of it's basically a free for
all of just the most disgusting people you'll meet getting booted.

Speaker 3 (50:28):
Now, was that the left is getting?

Speaker 1 (50:30):
Yeah yeah, if you like, if you spew actual facts,
it's like, oh no, get too, can't show that. Uh.
There was an article that was I don't know if
it was a book about him or something, but he
was at I think he was the I don't know
it was the Limus or the super Bowl. But he
was he was not into the game. He was all
worried that he wasn't trending on on on Twitter, and

(50:54):
he was like talking to his engineers and angry that
he wasn't trending. So they had to adjust the algorithm
so that he was he was getting seen by more people.
It was like yeah, uh, and Trump seems to be
getting more and more. Like the people were on the
right were all complaining about Biden. O. Biden's got dementia.

(51:14):
He's he can't have trouble thinking. But if you look
at Trump and like he can't put he can't put
a single thought together. It's just a meandering kind.

Speaker 3 (51:23):
Of there's a lot of distractions for him right now.
He'll start talking about one thing and it just kind
of goes in the exit ramp.

Speaker 1 (51:31):
And I want to print I want to print out,
like I want to print out a transcer of one
of his speeches and I'll read it next week, because
if you hear it coming like spoken just normally, like
it's just a mishmash of stuff.

Speaker 3 (51:45):
Well, the other thing is like nobody wants to hear that.

Speaker 1 (51:48):
It's been known like kind of unknown ish for quite
a while that he wears a diaper like he's incontinent,
and now.

Speaker 3 (51:55):
He's an alleged diaper where.

Speaker 1 (51:58):
Yeah, yeah, for quite a long time. Like there's people
who have worked close to him who have who've indicated
that that's probably the case. And now when he's doing
some speeches and press conferences and stuff, some people have
kind of gotten in there and listened a little more closely.
And one of the recent ones he's apparently like sounded

(52:19):
like he's pooped himself all through this one as one speech,
Like he's been known for being gassy, but this in
this case, it sounded like he was actually pooping himself.
And yeah, he's basically.

Speaker 3 (52:30):
All there's videos where you kind of like see other
people wrinkle their nose up and start looking around.

Speaker 1 (52:35):
Yeah he uh yeah.

Speaker 3 (52:38):
Kinzinger said he smells like a mix of armpits, ketchup
and butt, which that's right, uh yeah. And there's like there's
like the when this all started to like circulate again,
because if you pay attention to certain enclaves, there's people
who worked on the Apprentice will tell you stories absolutely yeah.

Speaker 1 (52:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (52:57):
But then they went to the rallies in the spring,
saying with signs said real men wear diapers.

Speaker 1 (53:04):
That's all right. Yeah, whatever he does is they'll twist
their views to fit that. Everything he does is good.

Speaker 3 (53:12):
But it's not a cult.

Speaker 1 (53:14):
Not a cult. And he's yeah. So basically you have
this this old senile guy who can barely string a
thought together, who who is a narcissistic anti immigration, white
nationalist who poops his pants versus someone who's who's immensely qualified.

(53:37):
And yet the race is so close. It's it's that's scary.
That's what it is. Welcome to and with that positive thought,
we will send you off for another week. Have a
good one.

Speaker 2 (53:50):
The show is over, The show is over. Lessons were learned, but.

Speaker 4 (53:54):
The conversation continues. Phone lines are open twenty four hours
a day, seven days a week.

Speaker 2 (53:59):
Okay, well thanks to call it three hundred and sixty
five days a year.

Speaker 4 (54:02):
Donal six four seven six Yo, Josh, I leave your
message gott Leren Jinas send a text instead. We're on
the web at Josh holidaylive dot com.

Speaker 2 (54:11):
Missed an episode.

Speaker 4 (54:12):
Download fast shows from better podcast platforms everywhere. Need to
send an angry manifesto to the manager. Email Josh at
Josh Holiday dot Com.

Speaker 2 (54:21):
That's Joe.

Speaker 3 (54:21):
It's over.

Speaker 2 (54:23):
Okay, we're all down now.

Speaker 3 (54:24):
This show is over.

Speaker 2 (54:25):
See you see you next time. Talk to it Knocks
Josh Holiday Live
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