Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Daily Mojo podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Unjustice your mojo.
Speaker 3 (00:07):
You are about to participate in a great adventure.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
No age, what's sixty?
Speaker 1 (00:13):
He's just going to break.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Back radio with an attitude. This system that we love.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Is broken.
Speaker 4 (00:23):
I know that, dude, not comply. Welcome to another two
hours of common sense. A liberty and justice for all
is a myth and euretic behavior.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
I want to you can't, and when you do, you
wish you did.
Speaker 5 (00:37):
This is your Daily Mojo.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
You think they've ever had sex in space?
Speaker 6 (00:45):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
I'm just wondering if they've ever had sex in space,
and there's there any way we'll ever know. That's one
of the questions on my mind this morning. The second
question on my mind this morning is did you know
you can not flood an electrical outlet with water and
have it end?
Speaker 7 (01:03):
Well?
Speaker 6 (01:05):
Did you test that theory?
Speaker 1 (01:07):
Well, not intentionally, I mean I didn't. You'd think somebody
like me would know better. And actually, to be quite
fair to myself, it it was weird. It was and
I and I that's the smell, you know, the smell
(01:30):
of electrical burn. Yep, do you smell I don't know
if that's ozone? Or if what what exactly constituted. It's
like it's like the smell of rain. It smells like dirt,
but the smell of electrical burn is unique. And you
(01:51):
know when you when you smell it, and uh, once
you smell it, you never forget that smell. And I
was I was up on a ladder. It doesn't sound
like it's going going well up on a ladder and
you smell electrical burn. That is not a good combination.
I was actually washing the wall here at the motel,
(02:13):
and because there were dirt, dabber and wasp nests up
near the peak of the roof, and so I was
up there and I was using water and because that's
how you wash stuff off, and the water's running down.
Speaker 6 (02:27):
The wall, and.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Suddenly I heard what I thought was a wasp. Oh shit,
I pissed them off now. But as I stopped and listening,
like what the hell is that? It's not? And then
I looked down and I noticed the outlet had water
going past it. Oh and and I thought, well, hell,
(02:55):
that's a GFCI. Isn't it about time it does what
it's supposed to do, pop off, which is to boo
pop off? And it continued to okay, anytime now and anytime,
waiting for the and it didn't and eventually went and
stop going.
Speaker 6 (03:16):
So your outlets aren't on the outside.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
It wasn't will be well, actually it yes, technically they
all should be. But this isn't an area where you
wouldn't typically unless some dumbass was up let's say, on
the ladder, using a hose above it on the wall
and you know, letting water drip down the entire wall
and in behind the in behind the cover plate. And
(03:41):
here's what really did it is because these these particular
outlets are so wide that they take up the pretty
much the entire inside of an electrical box. Yeah, and
so there's there's no room around them. And because of that,
as it's sitting sideways, a couple of factors went into this.
(04:05):
The fact that it was sitting horizontal not vertical. Horizontal
meant that. And again because plastic, the blue plastic little
outlet boxes have a little ridge r on the inside
which creates a nice well for water to sit in,
which when it sits in there just right, it has
(04:25):
just enough water in there so that your too hot
contacts are connected via a water conduit. But again, I
still don't know why I didn't go pick and kick off,
because that's the magic of a GFCI.
Speaker 6 (04:40):
Did it blow the breaker at all?
Speaker 1 (04:42):
No, didn't blow the breaker, which freaked me out too.
It's like, what the hell is going on? What kind
of safety statures do you have?
Speaker 6 (04:48):
There?
Speaker 1 (04:49):
No kidding, that's I thought this thing was supposed to
be a good you know, just in case there's some dumb.
Speaker 6 (04:55):
As the bathrooms and kitchens, that's what they're meant for
where water there are be prevalent yep.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
Yeah. So let's say that you had the toaster plugged
into this particular outlet in a configuration much like I
just described, Man, water did get in there, there would
still be a flow of electricity to set appliance while
you are dipping your butt in the in the tub
along with a toaster. Often said, you know, these days,
(05:22):
it's tough to take yourself out in a bathtub with
a toaster. You better you're better off doing it with
a blender that's turned on in spinning, so at least
you have to. If the electricity didn't get you, the
spinning steel blades will. But in this case, I don't
I don't know but it still has that lovely smell.
And these things are cheap either, They're like twenty bucks apiece.
(05:46):
So there will be a new one of these being
installed at the motel today by a licensed electrician. Don't
don't worry about that. That'll happen, but just be careful.
You are certified, yeah at minimal same thing, come on,
same thing, come on.
Speaker 8 (06:04):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
So it's a cautionary tale. Just because you think you're
protected from something, hm, even the dumb assery of a
human being that you know might be doing something dumb.
Always remember that weird things can happen and and often do. Man,
(06:25):
that is a smell you just do not want to smell,
so you can you know where to find me later,
I guess is the moral of that story. H it's
your daily mojo for today. This is Monday, right, yea Monday.
It's it's the eleventh day of August. Already time is
flying on by like nobody's business, and we have Yeah,
(06:48):
it's it's it's summertime. Well that's h I got it.
I fink it's par's it's just part for the course.
It's okay, it's okay. Look at least nothing burned I
mean that was just a that was just a glitch
in the matrix.
Speaker 6 (07:04):
Glitch in the matrix.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
That's all that was. If you want to get in
on a caraboy, says Brad, trying to end it is
all I hear. Now, you know, if I was going
to try to end it, it would not be from
a ladder with electricity. If you ever hear that, That's
the way the way I ended up going out. That
(07:27):
was never my intention, because my intention if if I ever,
if I was ever to take myself out, it would
not it would be the oh he fell asleep and
he never woke up. Uh, that goes nah, Nope, if
it involves pain, not for me. Yep, freebe thirty eight.
Ron was laughing, clearly evidence of him being a right
(07:47):
wing extremist. That's a good point.
Speaker 6 (07:51):
I was laughing, laughing at you.
Speaker 1 (07:53):
It's a damn good point. Wow, you laughing at the
possible down You know what?
Speaker 6 (07:58):
I was laughing at more than any thing.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
I know what?
Speaker 6 (08:01):
You know what? The smell of of burns are the
fun either?
Speaker 9 (08:09):
Are they?
Speaker 6 (08:10):
When the lightning struck the house, the whole house smelled
like it.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
Right, You can't get hard to get that smell out
of your nose too.
Speaker 6 (08:17):
It's still in my static a little bit.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
Yeah, it's it's you know what the what describes that smell? Acrid? Yeah,
it's acrid. You don't hear that word distinct? Yes, you're right, acrid.
That's a good acrid. I want everyone to today at
some point class today, I want you to work the
word acrid into your into a conversation that you're having
(08:42):
with somebody. It doesn't matter who, just work work the
word acrid into into the conversation. A very famous conversation
that took place some years ago.
Speaker 10 (08:56):
Recorder has been a big benefit to us and pass
away and are transit out to the boat. And it's
rather hot to see as puting like this heat odyssey
while it's playing the same for two thousand.
Speaker 3 (09:11):
And one April thirteenth, nineteen to seventeen, the mood could
only be described as relaxed. Apollo thirteen, Man's fifth Luna mission,
the third schedule to land on the Moon, continued. It's
tranquil coast, Apollo thir tails everyone there, I apath our
(09:35):
probably close out our affection of a prayer epect for
plus maybe atomy okay.
Speaker 11 (09:45):
Thirteen, we've got one more adam for you when you
get a chance, So we'd like it to stir up
your cryo tanks. In addition, I have a shafton trunnion. Okay,
or look at the common bennette if you need it.
Speaker 10 (09:56):
Okay, stamp Okay, you know your way.
Speaker 11 (10:02):
That's a problem here. This is here's some say again please.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
You know it went by so quickly, yeah, almost in passing.
You think when he said that that he realized that
those words would be not only famous, but infamous. Play
that part again, okay.
Speaker 10 (10:23):
STAMPI, okay, you know your way.
Speaker 6 (10:27):
That's a problem here.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
I want to point something out that's the same exact
sound I heard from the top of the ladder.
Speaker 12 (10:36):
That was.
Speaker 11 (10:37):
Okay, or look at the common Bennett if you need it.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
Okay, STAMPI, son of a gun, I should have known.
Speaker 10 (10:49):
Okay, you know your way.
Speaker 3 (10:50):
That's a problem here.
Speaker 11 (10:52):
This is here's some say again, please.
Speaker 10 (10:54):
Alight, here's the way had a problem.
Speaker 11 (10:56):
You've okay, stand by their dane. We're looking at it.
Speaker 10 (11:03):
And we had a pretty large bang associated with the
wicked him.
Speaker 6 (11:08):
We had a pretty large bang. He's about to say,
Jim level wicked Shimmy.
Speaker 1 (11:15):
Huh.
Speaker 10 (11:16):
I recall BP was the one that had a hamper
bike on it once before.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
Would you say about a wicked shimmy, Yeah, he says that.
Speaker 6 (11:25):
At some point I think, ah, well.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
It was Jim Lovell who said that in that conversation
with Houston. And Jim Levell has left this earthly plane,
he would. And we just the other day. I can't
remember where I was talking about Jim Level, whether it
was with Jeffy on the Saturday Morning Live program or
(11:49):
here on the Daily Mojo, but we were just talking
about Jim Level, and we're like, hey, is he still alive?
Speaker 6 (11:57):
And he was.
Speaker 1 (11:59):
He was still alive at that point in time, but
now he is. He was ninety seven years old. Ninety seven.
One of the quotes regarding Jim Lovell we will miss
his unshakable optimism and damn, you have got to be
(12:20):
optimistic when you are stuck in space and and you realize, aw, hell,
we have a problem. It was not that long ago
that his see when was his his wife passed away?
I think late last year, And you know so that
(12:43):
that happens a lot when the a couple who's been
together that long, when one of them goes the other
ones like, you know, I'm kind of bored here now,
and they leave as well. But here's a couple of
notable points. Jim Levell. When Apollo thirteen was was filmed
(13:03):
in nineteen ninety five, Jim Level would have been sixty
seven years old. Yeah, and Tom Cruise is now sixty
nine years old.
Speaker 6 (13:15):
Yeah. How weird is that? How weird is that?
Speaker 1 (13:21):
Uh? Think about that he was sixty seven Now Tom
Hanks is sixty nine. Don't you see You don't see
the relevance in that. I don't. That's because there really
isn't it. But it is kind of weird thinking that
was thirty years ago. Simply knowing Jim has been a
tremendous honor this Ron Howard said it. Of course, they
(13:41):
worked closely with him for the movie. His combination of intellect, courage,
and commitment to duty made him one of the most
remarkable individuals I've ever met. His support of our movie
making efforts inspired authenticity. It is h late great Doc
Thomson once said, and when you can fake that, you
are golden and elevated our pro in so many ways.
(14:02):
And I didn't realize that the movie Apollo thirteen was
actually based on a book. Did you know that?
Speaker 6 (14:08):
Uh? Yeah, gene Krantz book. Right, failure is not an option.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
It was written by Level, and I guess co written
by Uh was it gene Krantz?
Speaker 6 (14:19):
Well, I thought, while Jean's got a book, so I
thought that might have been Failures.
Speaker 12 (14:23):
Not it was.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
It was Level's book, Okay, that the movie was based on.
But to talk about an incredible life ninety seven years old. Yeah,
and look at the things he was able to accomplish.
Speaker 6 (14:39):
I mean, look, if you can say that you flew
around the moon in your lifetime, right, that's an accomplishment
in and of itself, whether you got to land or not.
You know, they wanted to put down They knew they
had lost it before they ever got to the moon,
but they sure did. They sure didn't want to get
down there.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Man, because you've got nothing. I mean, there's it's not
like I have. You know what, Let's just turn it
around and let's go back and let's change the tire,
let's get it back in the garage, change the time,
then we'll try this again. You noop, you are way
well if you believe they really went to the moon,
(15:16):
I mean that's a big if. But if they did,
that's a hell of a place to break down. Uh,
Florida man in Alabama. This weekend, Brad'll be setting up
a lightning rod in his backyard to get more of
that smell. If you could only bottle that smell, right,
so and carabout You're right. Jim Level's words were so
(15:37):
much better than the simple oops, which is a word
you never want to say if you're a surgeon working
on a patient. Don't ever. That should never come out
of your mouth. Oops. Uh, dark Magneto, says Tom Cruise. No,
(15:58):
it's a good whack when you taste your fillings. I
feel like that should be a bumper sticker of my
dog said that it's a good whack when you taste
your fillings. So many things you could do with that.
If you are listening to the program today, you could
also be watching it over at the Dailymojo dot com
or on Rumble. You can do that as well, folks
(16:21):
over in the Daily Mojo chat room. He laps over
there and pecan Pie Hobo Joe Fortunate Citizen beach Girl
has shown American jackasses there Bill, let's see California Cowgirl
asking beach go if they're getting a wildfire smoke in
the in their area. No, a month or so ago,
(16:43):
we got smoke, but not right now. That's right. The
wildfire is still burning out in California. Where are the
where is this round they are? Is it up by
Let's see, it's a canyon fire. It's so. It's Ventura
(17:03):
County right now, fifty three acres and it was today's
Monday morning. Saturday night, it was forty seven percent contained.
According to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
They did evacuate a bunch of people in Ventura and
La County. Would this have been helped if they had,
(17:27):
you know, cleared out some brush? Who knows? Who knows?
But back to to Jim Lovell. He was born in Cleveland.
He was a Navy test pilot. He the things that
he did during the course of his life were just
(17:49):
I mean, you think about the things he accomplished and
you stop and you think, Man, have I done? Have
I come close? Have I left to mark? When I
leave this earthly plane? Will people.
Speaker 6 (18:03):
Remember me?
Speaker 1 (18:05):
You know, for the right stuff, not the bad stuff.
But he's one of those guys who will obviously forever
be remembered for not only for the not only for
the not an accident, but the problem, but solving the
(18:27):
problem as well, and the and the and the guys
on the ground, the men and women on the ground
who were able to, you know, throw all the crap
out on the table and figure, I wonder if that
was real.
Speaker 6 (18:37):
I remember they.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
On the table.
Speaker 6 (18:40):
Here we go a round peg into a square hole.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
That's what the Yeah, they basically, yeah, here's all the
stuff that they have to work with fix their problem,
because that's the other thing. You you had limited resources
up in up in the module. What was the problem
in the module? Do you remember?
Speaker 6 (18:59):
Yeah? The CO two scrubbers. That was the secondary firston
was the tank blowing up?
Speaker 1 (19:08):
Right, what's the second?
Speaker 6 (19:10):
When?
Speaker 1 (19:10):
What's the CO two scrubber?
Speaker 6 (19:12):
So when you're breathing, Uh, the you ex l c
O two yep, and if you get too much CO
two you'll die. So scrubbers. Yeah, So they because they
were in see Odyssey. There was Odyssey, which was the
(19:34):
command module I think, and then uh, I forget what
the other one called Eagle or whatever it's called.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
The limb it landed.
Speaker 6 (19:45):
Yeah, the limb is the one that goes in lands
on the Moon, but they ended up having to live
in there. But they didn't have they didn't have the
correct scrubbers for CO two for three people because only
one one of them was supposed to stay in the
command module when the other two went down to the Moon.
(20:05):
So they didn't have this, yeah Aquarius, And so they
didn't have they didn't have enough stuff to take care
of the CO two, So they had to build another
CO two scrubber. And apparently that was when they threw
the stuff on the table and said, we've got to
fit either a square peg into a round hole or
vice versa.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
But well, and here's the thing. They could just they
could just text, you know, a picture like we do
and send a picture and say here this is you
got to look for this thing, and I find this thing.
Speaker 6 (20:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
What they couldn't send a picture. They couldn't just text
a picture to the astronauts. What the hell kind of
rinky dek operation was.
Speaker 6 (20:43):
This nineteen seventy that's how rinky dink it was.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
We sure they went to the moon. They couldn't send
a picture, so they had to describe everything that they
It's a little it's a black thing, it's about four
inches long and it's uh uh stop it. It's about
a half an inch across and there's a little clear
strip at one end of it. You can kind of
(21:08):
see through it. What do you see? Something like that?
Speaker 6 (21:13):
They had the cover off of the manual that they
had with them and use it as a part of it.
And it's and that The movie does a pretty good
job of explaining how they worked through all of that.
But yeah, that's how they had to do radio.
Speaker 1 (21:28):
It's amazing. It's amazing how they were able to do
And could we do that? Could the could the uh?
I guess the test pilots of today could do the
same thing.
Speaker 6 (21:41):
Probably probably. I mean you got going on on the
on the International Space Station all the time that they're
having to jerry rigg is what I call it.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
But mm hmm, yeah, is that like jerry mandering?
Speaker 6 (21:57):
No different Gary, Yeah, I mean different Jerry rig Right. Yeah.
I mean they're they're they're they're constantly having to do
stuff like that. So the astronauts are pretty adept at
that kind of stuff.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
I would think, I would hope. So yeah, uh, and uh,
butch what's his name? Butch? Oh, what the hell is
his name? Not soony. The hell's the guy's name, Butch?
Speaker 6 (22:25):
He's on the space station Butch and Sonny?
Speaker 1 (22:28):
Yeah, but Butch. What's his name? Willmore? Butch? Willmore. He
got tired of he got tired of trying to fix
stuff up on the on the space station. He's done. Yeah,
he said screw it. He gets back four months after
he was stranded on the space station for three hundred days.
He's like, I'm out. He gave up. I shouldn't say
(22:51):
he gave up. He probably just got tired of the BS.
And he's retiring after after being stranded out. I wonder
if that was only supposed to be there serious right
three hundred I wonder if that had anything to do
with his decision to retire. He was sixty two. He's
getting up there. He's been with NASA for twenty five years.
(23:16):
He went up. He went up in June of twenty
twenty four with Sunny Williams. They were originally scheduled for
that a day mission. They've just returned March eighteenth, after
being forced to spend two hundred and eighty six days
above the International Space Station. Helium leaks the Boeing star Liner. Yeah,
(23:41):
didn't work so good, and he he said, said, it's
not about me. He said, it's not about my feelings.
It's about what this human space flight program is about.
It's about our national goals. And I have to wrap
my mind around what does our nation need out of
me right now? And apparently it's not being here at NASA.
(24:06):
During the time at NASA, Wilmore completed three missions, launching
aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis. Wow. Yeah, also the Rusco's Rusco,
Rosco's most rock Cosmos.
Speaker 6 (24:21):
Rosco is that what that is?
Speaker 1 (24:24):
So use the riskies, yes, of the Boeing Starliner and
the International Space Station. Wilmore also returned to Earth aboard
a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft. He conducted five spacewalks. He was
thirty two hours outside the orbital laboratory.
Speaker 6 (24:41):
That's a lot of times.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
About how many that is a damn a lot of times?
And how bad did it suck to come back to
Earth after what through three hundred however many days it was,
because you know that after that much time, you feel
like you weigh about one thousand pounds when you climb
out of the oh, I'm sure, out of the spacecraft,
(25:03):
out of whatever craft get you back home you, I mean,
because it's bad when you get out of the swimming pool.
Speaker 6 (25:09):
Oh yeah, if you've been in the swimming pool thirteen
minutes immediately, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
Yeah, because you've I mean, it's you get out of
a swimming pool, You're like, well, damn, I've Can you
imagine how much more, how much worse it is feeling
like you weigh about as much as a car when
you get out of it, when you get back to earth.
That would suck. That's a price you pay for doing
extraordinary things in this life? Is the hashtag what I
(25:34):
learned today? You want to get in touch with us
over on the social media clock tower drunk I learned
that on Friday. Actually, and Jemima is back. I did
not know that either. She's back. Apparently the family was
pissed off that they got rid of her.
Speaker 6 (25:51):
I'm gonna let you reset this time because I can't
get in there. It kicks me out too.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
What is going on? Is this? This is nastiest way
of getting back at me, Isn't it? Isn't it? I
think it is. How are the signs coming over to
Romika Designs? Your stuff working over there?
Speaker 9 (26:14):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (26:14):
As a matter of fact, we sold several of those
this weekend. So yeah, it's good.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
Because people are tired of people knocking their doors.
Speaker 6 (26:21):
Yeah. I mean it's the no soliciting signs that we have,
and we've got several options of them. We do have
a new item coming out this this week or beginning
of next I think, No, it'll be this week, I think.
But we're doing Are you familiar with the brick engraving
kind of the reddish colored bricks.
Speaker 1 (26:43):
Is that like engraving on rice?
Speaker 6 (26:45):
It's not at all like engraving on rice, but we
have that though. Memorial bricks is what I'm calling them.
A lot of times you'll see them embedded in veterans
parks and stuff like that with the veteran information on them,
or we've had people, you know, build them into porches
(27:06):
and things like that. But yeah, bricks just standard sized bricks.
But they make a laserable brick, so we're going to
be throwing those out.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
I think it has to be laserable. It doesn't have
to be.
Speaker 6 (27:17):
But if they build the brick correctly, then when you
laser it, the lasering turns black as opposed to staying
the same color as the brick, so it actually stands
out a little bit better. So that's why I call
it a laserable brick. But you thought about that? Yeah,
these are used for memorial walks or sidewalks or veterans parks,
(27:43):
things like that.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
Or at the Tupper Where International headquarters in Orlando, Florida,
where they have bricks laid out for all of the
sales awards.
Speaker 6 (27:53):
Yeah, yeah, anything like play but so you can get
So we're gonna be doing the brick the laser Oh
I thought there was a picture of Okay, no, not yet.
I'm gonna do one, I think for my brother.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
Can people send in a brick and have it lasered
much like they would.
Speaker 6 (28:09):
The right not be able to be lasered? Oh where
it turns black? But yes, they could send in one
if they wanted to.
Speaker 1 (28:17):
Pretty much it would cost a friend brick.
Speaker 6 (28:19):
You know how much it colls to order these bricks
that I'm lasery?
Speaker 1 (28:23):
Yeah how much?
Speaker 6 (28:24):
Uh well, the bricks themselves aren't very expensive. It's the shipping.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
Yeah, yeah, that seems because damned expensive shipping is gone
just crazy wacky.
Speaker 6 (28:37):
But yeah I did. I did several of the no
soliciting signs this weekend, so people are foxing them.
Speaker 1 (28:43):
Yeah, because people are tired of other people knocking on
their door for no apparent reason other than hey, you
want your house painted.
Speaker 6 (28:53):
And dude, hey, when somebody does knock and cut your trees,
step outside and point at the sign and go back in.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
Be prepared. Though it does not, It does not prevent
everybody from knocking because there this is going to come
as a shock. But there are some complete dumbasses in
this world that don't read it exactly. But it's a
good deterrent. It's a good first step. So if you
go to Mojo laserpros dot com you will find is
(29:23):
no is there a promo code or anything.
Speaker 6 (29:25):
Yeah, promo codes either Daily Mojo or Mojo Favo. Either
one of them will work. Get you ten percent off
either one, Yeah, either one. I've said so, either one
will work.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
Nice. You make it simple. You are you, You're mister simple.
We want to thank you for that. Mojo Laserpros dot
com is the website.
Speaker 12 (29:48):
Radio your.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
Your w cuncle says, maybe the d NC could donate
bricks like they do for the riots. That's a good idea.
(30:32):
It's not a bad idea at all. Not my dog
Ron can you sweet black powder coat into the laser
relief and then heat it with a torch to make
it stay?
Speaker 10 (30:40):
Well?
Speaker 6 (30:40):
I could, I could put black black powder coat in
the Yes. What what we do is we don't. We
don't hit it with a torch. We laser it again.
If you put black powder coat in there and then
you laser it again, then it puts a kind of
a shot.
Speaker 10 (30:57):
Ye.
Speaker 6 (30:58):
Yeah, we can do that.
Speaker 1 (31:00):
Would on anybody's would uh huh? Okay. I have a
sign like that on my tall iron gate that says
private property, beware of dog, do not open gate. And
still I caught some woman opening the latch to get
at the recycling. I had to ask, and then she
stops is missy thirteen? Okay? She stopped typing in the
(31:23):
middle of her sentence. The woman finally got it. Aha,
I said, if my dog bites you or he gets out,
you would sue me. Does not the proper way to
do it. That's not a good threat. Throw a brick
at her. It's easier. It also gets the point across
a whole lot more. Sickcinkly Lep says happy happy two
(31:49):
acrid days. Since Friday it does time is again. I
know I've said this before. Time is going by incredibly fast.
It feels to me like it's going faster than it
ever has. But again, maybe that's just because I'm old.
But you know, people are say, even the kids nowadays,
(32:12):
are are noticing that the world is going is moving
more quickly. And I still think that has to do
with the fact that we are in a simulation. But
that's just me. But for instance such as.
Speaker 13 (32:30):
Remember this, a friend of mine told me try America Online.
I said, why, I've got a computer. He said, try it.
Speaker 12 (32:37):
You'll see.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
Try it. It's simple.
Speaker 13 (32:39):
Every time you sign on welcome, it tells you if
you've got mail, you've got mayil want to send some email,
Type the message, click.
Speaker 2 (32:46):
Here and it's done.
Speaker 12 (32:48):
I like this.
Speaker 13 (32:49):
With one click, I can browse all kinds of great
features on America Online.
Speaker 1 (32:54):
I've gotten help with.
Speaker 13 (32:55):
My golf swing, planned my next vacation. I even get
stock price updates every fifteen minutes. America Online puts over
one hundred newspapers and magazines right on my screen, everything
from Time to Cycle World, and I can browse them all.
With America Online, you can even point and click your
way across the internet and their web browser makes it
easy to explore the.
Speaker 12 (33:13):
World wide web.
Speaker 13 (33:14):
Call it total free number and you'll receive your free
startup kid and ten free hours to look around. It's
worth the try, you'll see.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
To try America Online free call one eight hundred and
three ninet eighty seven, seven nine nine. You'll receive your
free America Online Startup Kid and ten three hours your
first month call. Now you remember when AOL started America
Online or.
Speaker 6 (33:34):
A year I'm going to say probably nineteen eighty six.
Speaker 1 (33:43):
I'd love to give that to you, but we were
looking for nineteen eighty five. Okay, you were very because
I had a eighteen five Apple two C plus computer
in nineteen eighty six and I got it in like
January February of eighty six. And the very first disc,
I mean the disc that came with it was an America.
Speaker 6 (34:04):
Online disc.
Speaker 1 (34:06):
And you put it into the computer and.
Speaker 6 (34:08):
That's what you get. YEP. Twelve hundred, twelve hundred bald modem.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
Well, as of September thirtieth, in about a month or so,
it will be no more. AOL is getting rid of
the dial up service. It is going to Bellum service.
Holy caty that's exactly what I said. According to AOL,
they routinely evaluate their products and services. They've decided to
(34:38):
discontinue dial up internet. Who the hell has been using it?
Speaker 6 (34:42):
Exactly?
Speaker 1 (34:44):
The service will no longer be available in AOL plans
right the The AOL is now part of Yahoo, which
it was sold. How long ago was it sold to Yahoo?
Two thousand and six? It just became AOL. Verizon sold
(35:05):
AOL and Yahoo. Oh yeah, yah, who's still there? They
Let's see the private see how this all ties together.
The private equity firm Apollo Global Uh huh, tell me
it's not a simulation. Apollo Global Management bought AOL and
Yahoo in twenty twenty one for five billion dollars. Wow,
(35:32):
that's yeah. You when when AOL started, you paid nine
ninety five a month for five hours of online and
then if you went over the five hours, you had
to pay two dollars and eighty five ninety five cents
per additional hour. Yeah, if you went if you went over,
And then they changed I think the following year they
(35:52):
changed it to a flat fee of twenty twenty bucks
a month, limit as much time as you could pssibly
spend online, and that is the equivalent of about forty
bucks a month right now, So it wasn't.
Speaker 6 (36:06):
It is, but you didn't get the equivalent throughput is
what you get now because back on a twelve hundred
bullde it would take half an hour to download an image,
you know.
Speaker 1 (36:16):
Yeah, it was one line at a time, boom boom boom.
You could get up, go make coffee, come back and uh.
Speaker 6 (36:27):
Back at the very beginning, very beginning of the Internet,
and I'm gonna say this was probably maybe the even
right before the web, so probably ninety five, I started
a BBS. Do you remember that, the BBS board bulletin
board service that was all textual and you could do
you could make ascie graphics, you know. But yeah, I
(36:49):
started a BBS.
Speaker 1 (36:51):
All right, what the hell is an ascie graphic?
Speaker 6 (36:54):
So ASKI is a form of character on your keyboard?
And you could create eight graphics just by topping a
bunch of keys, keyboard and keys, and it was just
it wasn't an image per se. It was just a
bunch of keyboard.
Speaker 1 (37:09):
It was like using pound signs and ats and all that.
It maybe, yep, and that's what I remember. I didn't
know what it's called.
Speaker 6 (37:17):
ASKI, ASKI, characters ASCII.
Speaker 1 (37:20):
And of course back in the day you could also
when AOL started, you could go to websites like this
and you could see live streaming video for nine ninety
five a month. See, you really couldn't You couldn't possibly
do this back in nineteen ninety five. You couldn't barely
(37:43):
get an image, as we said, But this is what
we're capable of now. This, this is a live feed
of the sky. If you couldn't tell of a guy
who's he has it set up just so he can
go there and look at the percied meteor shower. Look
how far we've come in thirty years. Yeah, from barely
being able to download an image to now you can
(38:04):
watch an empty sky and wait for a meteor. You
know how much this would it cost you if you
wanted to do back then.
Speaker 6 (38:13):
Well, it wouldn't be live. They would snap a picture
and then about once a minute or once every five minutes,
and you'd get a single image and it would take
five minutes for that image to download.
Speaker 1 (38:25):
Yeah, exactly. Now this is because the person of meteor
shower is tonight. Tonight, I guess it's going to be
the best viewing this is from last year. It's pretty
amazing when you think about it, because the meteor shower
(38:46):
just means we're on this big old blue marble in space.
We are sailing through space, and we're passing through the
comet of a meteor and the name of this one
is hanging on a second.
Speaker 6 (39:01):
Through the tail.
Speaker 1 (39:02):
Yeah, it is called this music just makes me want
to I thought the person shows just a bunch of
space rocks.
Speaker 6 (39:17):
I didn't anticipate that it had anything to do with
a comic.
Speaker 1 (39:22):
Yeah, it's a it's a tale and it is uh
on a second. That's so cool just being able to
watch that. Uh, it's the swift tuttle comment that we
are zipping around through the peak for this year is
(39:42):
going to be see today's the eleven, So about twenty
four hours from now three in the morning ish on
the twelfth, favoring northern Europe. North America rotates into the
about four to six hours later, and you should be
(40:03):
able to see like fifty to one hundred meteors per hour,
which that's pretty impressive. You can tell if you saw
Percy because the the you can trace the path of
the media back to the point along the perseus cassiopea
border you'll have to read. And it's a good look
for me though, that is a good look.
Speaker 6 (40:24):
You look like you're concentrating.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
Very pensive. What is what is causing that?
Speaker 6 (40:34):
Not me? Did we not?
Speaker 1 (40:36):
Did we hold on?
Speaker 2 (40:37):
It's not me.
Speaker 1 (40:40):
Did we not pay the AOL bill?
Speaker 6 (40:42):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (40:44):
Did we not pay?
Speaker 10 (40:45):
Are?
Speaker 6 (40:46):
Did we not? Did we?
Speaker 1 (40:47):
Did we go for the extra fast dial up service?
I thought that I thought that. I thought that we were.
I'm pretty sure that that's the fast speed that we
that we're just saying, yeah, I think that's it. Let's
see if it works for uh. Look, it's bringing through
(41:10):
Phil Bell at your words.
Speaker 8 (41:13):
This Phil Bell on the Bailey Mojo with you bring
up the Great Rush. Limbaugh famously said the Democrat Party
has no rules, It only has traditions. Today, I want
to go a step further and say the Democrat Party
has no ideology. It just has strategies. Now, I want
you to think about this for a second. I believe
the Democrat Party is the most dangerous enterprise in the
(41:35):
history of mankind because its goal is simple. It wants
to control you and I, and it does not believe
in anything whatsoever other than that. Now, think about this.
For years, the Democrat Party and those on the left
would go around and tell us to believe all women.
It didn't matter what a woman said, it didn't matter
whether it was true or not. Your job was to
(41:57):
believe all women. But then their priorities changed. President Trump
got elected in twenty sixteen, things were dramatically different. So
rather than believe all women, they started to put men
in women's sports, They started to dress up men as women,
and suddenly it didn't matter what a woman was. Even
Katanji Brown Jackson, nominated to the US Supreme Court because
(42:21):
she was a woman, specifically a black woman, refused to
answer the question of what is a woman? Think about
that again. The Democrat Party ran around for years saying
we care about women, we believe in women, And then
suddenly it didn't matter. No ideology, just strategies, and all
(42:41):
of those strategies have a single goal, which is to
control our lives and leave us with absolutely no freedom.
Whether you consider yourself a Republican, a Democrat, or otherwise,
you should never ever give power to someone that does
not have any grounding other than to control your life completely.
So what I want you to do is leave a
(43:03):
comment under the show let us know what you think.
And what I also hope you'll do is download the
Daily Mojo's smartphone app and enable notifications. That way will
be up to date on the latest craziness and good
stuff coming out of Washington, d C. And you'll know
how to share it with us. Stay sharp, stay strong,
and stay free right here on the Daily Mojo.
Speaker 5 (43:22):
Bill Bell's morning update is only on the Daily Mojo.
Speaker 2 (43:33):
Stupidity is a competition.
Speaker 5 (43:35):
I've now been in fifty unless you're a politician, seven states.
Speaker 1 (43:41):
I think one left to go.
Speaker 12 (43:43):
Daily Mojo, Dailyjo.
Speaker 1 (43:50):
I'm just looking up the latest on a cold Play
issue because I was it w Tuncle? Who was it
over here that said, oh it was Caraboy. I heard
today that the whole Coldplay couple kiss thing was simply
to distract from the fact that the white hat save
(44:10):
thirty six thousand children, which at any other point in history,
I adds conspiracy theory. But now I'm like, oh, that's
that may have been what it was all about, because
after all, I mean, thinking about it is still a
little weird. But the only thing I came up with
was that this over at news break headline ultimate revenge
(44:35):
ever billionaire husband silently obliterates cheating wives life after Coldplay
kiss cam scandal UH story, she embarrassed her husband and
two families through worldwide lenses. According to World Star hip Hop,
I don't know if you've gotten your copy this month
yet of World Star Hip Hop, but I sat outside
(44:58):
at the mailbox hoping that it Hey, do you have
my cat? And so far he said no. But maybe
today things have continued to go south for her as
her spouse has exacted revenge in the coldest way possible.
She was married to Andrew Cabot. Maybe she still is
the owner of Massachusetts based privateer rum. Um. It appears
(45:19):
she's headed toward another separation following the Coldplay canoodling session
UM afore mentioned outlet reporting that Andrew has taken her
name off of everything UH. Former astor astronomer hr Chief
was listed as an advisory board member at privateer Rum
(45:40):
no longer publication claims that instead of making a scene,
he went completely silent and systematically erased her from existence.
Her job gone, her social media deleted, her name removed
from everything, No papers, no public statements, just cold calculated
silence avenge ever huh and what's the uh? And do
(46:06):
they really exist? Do you know anybody that knows either
one of them?
Speaker 6 (46:12):
I don't not personally. No, you're talking about either the
two that were on the cameras, you know, did.
Speaker 1 (46:20):
They really ever exist?
Speaker 12 (46:24):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (46:24):
See ex Astronomer? Oh I did see. I mentioned this
on Saturday. That's uh Andy Byron, the CEO of Astronomer.
Speaker 6 (46:37):
He is.
Speaker 1 (46:41):
Apparently there's a new scandal because he and his wife
now going through a divorce.
Speaker 6 (46:48):
You're talking about the former CEO of Astronomer.
Speaker 1 (46:50):
Yeah, the former the one that was on the head
now right right. So what happens when you start going
through especially if you've got money, what happened in a
high profile divorce? Who gets called but profession I'll save
you from guessing private investigators because you got money to
(47:11):
hire private investigators because they ain't cheap. So apparently one
of the things that they have discovered, or that his
ex wife or soon to be ex wife has discovered,
is that he was reportedly paying up to forty thousand
dollars to have private chats with Sophie Rain. Are you
(47:39):
familiar with Sophie Rain.
Speaker 6 (47:40):
I've only heard the name. I don't know who that is.
Speaker 1 (47:44):
I don't know why they call her Sophie Rain. I
can conjecture. Let me show you a picture of Sophie
Rain stand by one moment, please, But.
Speaker 6 (47:55):
He was paying forty dollars to Sophie Raephie Rain. Wow.
Speaker 1 (48:04):
Huh, I'm not sure it's worth forty grand. Matter of fact, no,
let me rephrase that. That's not worth forty grand. But
uh see he is.
Speaker 10 (48:17):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (48:17):
Private messages were allegedly leaked by his wife, Megan Kerrigan.
The controversy centers on his reported interactions with Sophie rain.
Speaker 10 (48:27):
Is.
Speaker 1 (48:27):
His screenshots shared online appear to show Byron using a
secondary messaging app called Finsta. I've never heard of that either, Finsta.
If I n sta to engage in explicit video chats
with Rain paying up to forty is this what you
do with your I don't know. That's not even that's
(48:52):
not hard up. That's like you can do whatever you
want because you got stupid money. But I think, I mean, okay,
let's just say I is you know, you just you've
got so much money you don't know what to do
with it. You've got It's like I bought all the
cars I want to buy. I've got, you know the
house I got. They just said, boy, I sure would
like to have a naked chat with her, and she's like,
(49:16):
it's gonna be forty yeah, no even I no.
Speaker 6 (49:25):
I mean, look Sophie Rain figured it out. It's the
oldest profession in the world. Show your boobs and whatever
else and make money.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
Sack and second second oldest, okay, second oldest. Most guys
I talked to are married, she says, let's see one
of the messages shows Byron saying, uh, most guys I,
most guys I talked to are married. That's what she
(49:54):
would have said, said, Okay, call me in five minutes. Rain,
who spoke to the Blast, declined to confirm details of
her of her clients, but said, this is a situation
is crazy. I don't contone this type of behavior. I'm
here if his wife needs a friend during this time.
Speaker 6 (50:10):
Oh, isn't that cute.
Speaker 1 (50:16):
I'm a huge Cold Play fan, she said, I'm glad this,
I'm glad this happened. Cheaters of the worst people on
this planet. She was in something called bob House, which
I was not familiar with. Were you no, no, what
do you say it.
Speaker 6 (50:33):
No, No, Bob House, you've said, I'm looking it up
right now.
Speaker 1 (50:37):
Oh you're you're uh huh, I think that. I think
you're protesting just a little bit too much. Is this
something we need to know? Something you want to get
out in the open? Bob House is, Yeah, it's it's
a it's like real World but naked. I think, uh,
camilla a rau hal. I don't know if that I
(51:00):
probably didn't pronounce that correctly. She said that he Byron
spent more than wow two hundred and fifty thousand dollars
on custom content and subscriptions with multiple creators, including several
affiliated with the Influencer collective two fifty k.
Speaker 6 (51:18):
Yesh Man, I just thought about the fact that my
wife doesn't have to worry about me doing that shit
at all. I ain't got no damn money.
Speaker 1 (51:27):
So you ain't got no money.
Speaker 6 (51:28):
I got no money.
Speaker 1 (51:32):
Let's see here, hang on a second, I will find you. Nope,
Carmel money. Here is the aforementioned Carmen rao Ho now
forty grand Nope, nope, nope, nope, nope. Uh see there's
(51:54):
a smile on camera, So I think that's the latest.
So she the Czeck. Kristin Cabot's being a ray from
apparently the life that she once knew, and Andy Byron
is about to face the wrath of a woman scorned,
(52:14):
which you might want to consider moving to the space station.
Speaker 6 (52:19):
Dude, Well, pretty soon he won't have money to do
it either.
Speaker 1 (52:26):
That's yeah, which is why he should probably move to
the space station now. Jay Ree Junior says, bet she's
twice as wide in ten years. Yeah, that's kind of
what I was thinking. Yeah, she got some hips, Hippi,
I just yeah, there's something. Yeah, what oh missy thirteen?
What if you found out? But if you found out
(52:46):
that she was a he?
Speaker 6 (52:51):
I'm pretty sure with those hips, there's no way she
was a he.
Speaker 1 (52:58):
Would you bet your life on it?
Speaker 6 (52:59):
Nope? But all right, those hips don't lie.
Speaker 1 (53:02):
How about that? That could be that? Yeah? Not My
dog's as former CEO, is little more than a feral dog. Wow,
definitely saw. Yeah, she had the body of a venus.
Imagine my surprise. Uh Ron is rich. He goes into
(53:24):
debt to go to the waffle house, right, dark Magneto.
Speaker 6 (53:30):
Eh, it's I'm can't want to pay attention much less waffles.
Speaker 1 (53:34):
Hell, you know you're gonna get caught. Do you this
discussion Saturday morning?
Speaker 6 (53:44):
Do you know you're gonna get caught?
Speaker 1 (53:46):
Deep down? Who has not? Who doesn't get caught? Eventually
you get caught. And but you, I mean you know
that deep down inside, but you keep telling you I'm
not gonna get caught, not kidding, I'm not, I'm not.
(54:06):
And then you go to a concert. I mean seriously, well,
you go to a concert and you and you find
yourself on the kiss cam and you do what they did,
and I mean that's that was top level stupid. Yeah, dumb.
Why I just it makes no sense.
Speaker 6 (54:26):
You have to resell I'm gonna look, there have been
At some point in the future of this show, we'll
discuss this a little further. But I didn't think I
was gonna get caught, but I got caught, So we'll
leave it at that. My wife's well aware of that,
(54:46):
my pre marriage to her issues. But yeah, so at
some point we'll discuss that a little further. But yeah,
you don't think about the fact that you might get caught.
Speaker 1 (54:57):
That sounds juicy, You don't.
Speaker 6 (54:59):
You don't think about it. There's something there's something blocking
that asking because men are stupid of your mind because
men are stupid, and you don't You don't realize how
stupid you are as a man until you get caught.
And then all of the sudden, every way that you
(55:19):
could have been caught comes back into your mind and
you start backtracking and you start apologizing, and then you realize,
what a dumb ass waite?
Speaker 1 (55:29):
Once know?
Speaker 6 (55:30):
What was this?
Speaker 1 (55:31):
What was the dude's name?
Speaker 6 (55:34):
What are you talking about?
Speaker 1 (55:37):
Wade? He's going to play hard to get You're not
gonna and you're talking about me getting caught. Yeah, it
wasn't a dude. It was Bob, wasn't it. It was
not It was Bob. Miss you will get caught, Yeah,
it has to be. The wonky ice is FREEB thirty eight.
(55:59):
Then you get lazy and you get sloppy, see she says,
Then you get lazy and slop boy, this is bringing
them all, missy. Third. Then you get lazy and sloppy
and I caught someone.
Speaker 6 (56:12):
That's what happens. You get lazy or or or or
you get away with it so many times that then
you go, oh, well, I'm just never gonna.
Speaker 1 (56:21):
Get caught, docor be magnito. I think, I think you're right,
it's Bob from Accounting. It's okay. This is a safe place.
It's a safe space. We won't we will not be right, Okay,
we will be. But it's better than having people you
don't know b rate you, isn't it? I mean, doesn't
(56:41):
it feel better? Hobo Joe says the CEO should have
used the excuse that she was choking it. I was
just doing the hemelook. That's what it looked like to me.
Looks like something wept would find for Tata's Tuesday. Okay,
that's what I thought too. I don't this one that thing.
I don't. I mean, she's cute, but it's just man
(57:07):
talk about a wide load. I don't. It's the Kardashian thing,
which I don't understand. But you know what, different strokes
different folks, and you know what, you know what there
are enough people is when I tell you this, you're
going to question your life choices. She's twenty. Sophie ran
(57:32):
his twenty and do you know how much? In twenty
twenty four that was her first year on OnlyFans?
Speaker 6 (57:41):
How old do you like to.
Speaker 1 (57:45):
She was either nineteen or twenty, so her first year
on OnlyFans. You want to take a guess at how
much she made.
Speaker 6 (57:55):
First year, I'm going to say three minutllion dollars.
Speaker 1 (58:02):
That's really cute. Forty three million dollars, mother of Pearl
god dog, the hell is she doing for forty three
million dollars a year?
Speaker 6 (58:15):
Everybody?
Speaker 1 (58:15):
But I you know what, I'll try it. Whatever it is,
I'll do it once for forty three million. If I
don't care if it's a foot, I don't care what
it is.
Speaker 6 (58:25):
Wow Wow.
Speaker 1 (58:27):
Then well then if it's going to be something that hurts,
I'm gonna have to be able to pull out my
maximum insensitive relief may come may come in handy which,
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(58:51):
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looking at the difference because there are different figures and
according to People dot Com February twenty sixth, twenty five,
(59:13):
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(59:34):
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put some on my knee this morning because Thursday last week,
I was standing I was just standing there and I
moved my leg in such and I felt this thing
(59:56):
in my knee. I'm like, uhh, I don't know what
it is. I just felt and I thought, I'm just
standing here.
Speaker 6 (01:00:03):
I'm standing here. Isn't sixty one years old. That's what happened.
Speaker 1 (01:00:07):
I was just standing there and I moved my leg
and oh, that's just I mean, it didn't. It doesn't
feel like anything's torn. It was just like one of it.
Because every time you feel something new that hurts, you're like,
what's that. I'm gonna stop doing that. It'll stop. I'm
just going to envision that. It feels every everything feels good.
I'm just I'm gonna stop envisioning things that feel bad.
But until that kicks in, I've got my dude. When
(01:00:29):
you maximum really.
Speaker 6 (01:00:30):
For a teenager, you could feel something hurt and just
keep on going, just just keep going through it, keep running. Yep.
Speaker 1 (01:00:39):
At fifty anymore. Nope, damn it.
Speaker 6 (01:00:42):
What the hell was that?
Speaker 1 (01:00:44):
What was that? I didn't know there was a nerve
in that place, but apparently there was. So anyway, go
to get Mojo CBD dot com, use the promo code
daily Mojo, and find uh, find something that will fix
what's ailing on you save a little money. I'm still
working through the fifty million dollars. But what she was
(01:01:07):
doing isn't right. That's not right. It's bad, it's morally bankrupt.
It's fifty million dollars. There's a good price for yourself.
Speaker 6 (01:01:18):
There's a price, dude, there's a price. We've talked about it. Yes,
I know there is a price.
Speaker 1 (01:01:23):
I'm well aware of that. No one's offered me the
fifty million dollars three million. This is her price. Evidently,
Now later you can repent, can't you. Are you trying
to make a case or what? No, I'm asking if
(01:01:44):
you know you're doing something wrong, can you later unrepent?
Everything's going to be fine. What do you think? I
don't know. In the meantime, you're gonna have things that hurt.
Get Mojo CBD dot Com promo code Daily Mojo, A
little delve deeper, coming.
Speaker 7 (01:02:00):
Up your daily sunrise, creeping like a thief through the flines,
Coffee brewing, Black as a Monday, riding Red and Run
(01:02:21):
left Loud on the air, Daily Mojo week in Us everywhere.
Speaker 14 (01:02:28):
Back at it again like we never left. Shake it
off the.
Speaker 7 (01:02:33):
Weeked, catching off bread with.
Speaker 14 (01:02:36):
The banter and the Mussy and a Monday song, Red
Run on the light, keeping.
Speaker 6 (01:02:43):
Us strong.
Speaker 2 (01:02:45):
Radio with an attitude.
Speaker 1 (01:03:05):
Another woman who's making some money, kind of the opposite
of the spectrum. Gina Carrno has settled her lawsuit from
with Disney and Lucasfilm. They've not said how much it is,
but a Lucasfilm spokesperson said, with this lawsuit concluded, we
(01:03:25):
look forward to identifying opportunities to work together with mss
Carano in the near future. Okay, we have reached an
agreement with her to resolve the issues in her pending
lawsuit against the companies. She was always well respected by
her director's co stars and staff, and she worked hard
to perfect her craft while treating her colleagues with kindness
(01:03:46):
and respect. Corano said in a statement that the deal
is the best outcome for all parties involved, and my
desires remain in the arts. Yeah, we're not disclosed required comment.
Speaker 6 (01:03:58):
I'm sure yep. So wrongful termination. That's what she sued
him for, right and uh.
Speaker 1 (01:04:07):
And you know how she was making per episode, huh
twenty five k.
Speaker 6 (01:04:14):
Which isn't a lot in the big scheme of things
from from uh, from what she was doing.
Speaker 1 (01:04:19):
No, I mean it's not here per episode on the
Daily Mojoe. But you know it's it's decent money. It's
decent money.
Speaker 6 (01:04:25):
She was good in The Mandalorian. I mean, you know,
Corrano is not the best actress in the world, but
there are things that she's been in that I like
to watch. I mean, she was what was that she
was in some action movie. Was it called Poison? No,
(01:04:45):
not something like that.
Speaker 1 (01:04:46):
I don't remember an action Uh, Gina Corona was in
an action movie. Yeah, uh, ray wirew it was called Haywire.
Speaker 6 (01:04:59):
She was in in the Sea in the Blood Haywire heist.
And she's a pretty She's pretty decent from an action
star standpoint. She's not like the best one in the world,
but for a woman, I mean, hell, Pam Anderson was
in one I forget what it was called, but but.
Speaker 1 (01:05:20):
As Pam Anderson.
Speaker 6 (01:05:21):
No, not at all. I mean, I like I like
chicks and action movies. I don't know why. I mean,
I guess they're chicks in action movies.
Speaker 1 (01:05:30):
Is that your kink?
Speaker 6 (01:05:32):
It's not my cank.
Speaker 1 (01:05:33):
I just like it because you know, I think it
might be your cank.
Speaker 6 (01:05:37):
They can't fight like that normally, but when you put
a camera on them and you do fifteen million takes,
of course they're gonna turn It's gonna turn out well.
Speaker 1 (01:05:46):
Haywire with Gina Carno, Live Wire with Pam Anderson. It's
about the wire. That's what Dark Magneto said. Uh, bring
it back to Mandalorian. She was phenomenal at her role
space hippie on Vaca. Yeah, she was wire.
Speaker 6 (01:06:00):
It was barbed wire with Pam Anderson.
Speaker 1 (01:06:03):
Ron just likes to watch hot chicks doing stuff. I
do bob from accounting from accounting, hot chicks doing stuff,
and that that takes away from the whole bob from
accounting thing.
Speaker 6 (01:06:17):
I'm a little bit arteristic when it comes to that
kind of thing.
Speaker 1 (01:06:20):
It's so was the dude that owned the motel out
there in Colorado a hell of a story. Uh, there
will be one million active robots worldwide in fulfillment centers
in Amazon warehouses. Very soon there will be as many
(01:06:41):
robots as human workers within three years. That's a little freaky. Now.
This is in the Amazon UK. According to the Wall
Street Journal, Amazon is also nearing a porn point where
it's US warehouses will employ more machines than people. They
have over seven hundred and fifty thousand robots deployed. Each
(01:07:03):
robot packer TIHI at a warehouse can replace twenty four workers.
Packers cost a million dollars each, which only takes two
years to recoup the cost. Yesh, hang on I saying,
is this little uh let me uh let me get
(01:07:24):
this over this you can see it because it's pretty
These little bad boys running around look kind of cool.
And they have these now at like Quick Trip.
Speaker 6 (01:07:32):
Oh yeah, see, said the little one at our Quick
Trip says, I am cleaning the floor. Thank you for
shopping at Quick Trip. I am cleaning the floor. Thank you,
see you next.
Speaker 1 (01:07:43):
Time, see you next time. Yeah. They recite the company
line pretty well. So here are some of the robots
at the Amazon. I don't know if it's the UK
facility or not, but look at all that stuff. Look
(01:08:05):
at that I just I'm assuming this is not AI.
I mean, this could be AI showing us AI, which
is kind of freaky, and robots their knees should not
bend that way. I mean, that is just amazing. And
this is a year and a half old, so they
(01:08:28):
set stuff to look at that. If you're listening to
the podcast right now, you got to go watch this
video because it's amazing that these I mean, if we're
not careful, we're going to get replaced. But you know
what they will never be able to replace is human
I take that back, they'll be able to replace human ingenuity.
(01:08:49):
What am I saying? But that's again a good look
for me at least, it's finding the good looks for
me when it's isn't it second? Because now when I do,
I have to reset this other thing. Why this didn't
do this to me on on Saturday, I don't know
why it's doing it to me today multiple times, which
(01:09:12):
I'm starting I'm really starting to think.
Speaker 15 (01:09:15):
That always it's always.
Speaker 1 (01:09:29):
But I don't make the rules. I don't make the rules.
I just I just end up having to live with them.
But there was a problem with the problem with AI
is that we are starting to depend too greatly on AI.
Speaker 6 (01:09:48):
You think already.
Speaker 1 (01:09:51):
That is what. Let me find the story because if
we continue. This is at Artificial Intelligence dash news dot com.
The title of the piece is AI obsession is costing
us our human skills. A growing body of evidence suggests
(01:10:13):
that overreliance on AI could be eroding the human skills
needed to use it effectively. That's a little spooky. It
is kind to see it, and yet you continue to
do it. I do every day, I use it. Yeah.
Research warns this emerging human skills deficit threatens the successful
(01:10:35):
adoption of AI, and with it, an opportunity for economic growth.
It feels like not a day goes by without another
proclamation about how AI will change our world. Every business
leader I speak to is either investing in AI, planning
to invest, or worried that they're being left behind. We
see the big numbers, like Accentri's prediction that AI could
inject seven hundred and thirty six billion pounds in the
(01:10:59):
UK economy. The hype is deafening. But amid all of
this noise, a quieter and more worrying counter narrative is
beginning to take shape. We've seen it in reports from
places like MIT that nagging sense that leaning too heavily
on AI tools might be making us less sharp. This
is the argument that David g has made that using
(01:11:22):
when his case it would be GPS, which I contend
I use GPS all the time, but I not necessarily
tell me how to get someplace, but to tell me
what's on the road between here and where I want
to go, if there.
Speaker 6 (01:11:34):
Are epigres or a lot of times it'll reroute you
if there's a rest.
Speaker 1 (01:11:39):
Yeah, yeah, I mean to me, it's no different than
listening for the traffic reports. You know, back in the
old day, you know, if there was going to be
a parce, you had to listen to the radio to
find traffic reports. See if where you're going to go, Hey,
make sure you listen to radio before we leaeve, see
if there's any res on the freeway. Well, now you
can find those in real time by yourself, without having
to go through a radio station or metro traffic. So
(01:12:01):
GPS to me is the same same thing. It's just
making sure, okay, there is a road clear between here
and there.
Speaker 6 (01:12:09):
And strangely, this difference does it make if you're using
GPS to direct you where you want to go? I mean,
what's Dave's argument.
Speaker 1 (01:12:19):
Because if you don't, for instance, the old days, you'd
have to if I wanted to go to your house,
it would be all right. Take whatever to get off
at exits, go to the quick trip, turn right, and
then you're gonna see a church on the left. When
you get to the church, make sure you're turning left.
You've gone to the Baptist church. You've gone too far.
Of course we all know that it's Baptist. But you
make a left and you turn third driveway on the left,
(01:12:41):
it's going to be a dog. If you see that dog,
make sure you park on the other side of the street.
And then my house is three doors down, and your
brain has to compute all that stuff. But if you're
just using GPS and just staring at the screen, turn right,
go through freezer, get bucks, you're not using the same
set of skills that you.
Speaker 6 (01:13:01):
Yeah, but I mean, can you walk in and buy
like a maps co anywhere? Now, I don't know what
maps CoA. You don't remember that maps co the books,
so rand MCNW maps COO like Thomas Guide. Yeah, I
don't think you can.
Speaker 1 (01:13:19):
I don't know. I mean, you can still buy Thomas Guides.
Speaker 12 (01:13:22):
Can you not.
Speaker 1 (01:13:24):
Beat scrap out of Thomas Guides? I'm sure you can, yeah,
Thomas Scott. Well yeah, standard, I'm checking Wikipedia. Uh see
Thomas Guide is a series of paper, so it doesn't
say it was, so they must still be available. Uh.
The Map guide still sell, but the famous digital map
database is now outdated. Is a digital map database? Okay,
(01:13:49):
but you can still buy map Thomas Guides, so you
can still have them, and you should have one in
your car just in case. You know, when the e
MP hits in the t down the innerweb, you'll at
least be able to open the book. Problem is, your
car's not going to work because the EMP will have
taken it out too, so you're going to be walking.
So if you want to use the Thomas Guide to
(01:14:12):
you know, you probably have some sort of a map
on paper. But and I agree, anytime you you overly
use anything, any technology, you eventually start losing that. It's
like remembering phone numbers.
Speaker 6 (01:14:26):
You don't have to remember them anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:14:28):
You don't have to. I remember my phone number though,
from forty years ago nine four two four two oh
nine was that mine?
Speaker 6 (01:14:33):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:14:33):
That was Dodds.
Speaker 6 (01:14:37):
Mine was two nine five four oh nine five yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:14:40):
Nine for eight four oh six three nine four eight
four oh six three two nine four six two seven
eight three was another one that was I think the
the apartment three five two oh three five one. I
remember that was a landline in Nashville.
Speaker 6 (01:14:56):
Do you know your driver's license number?
Speaker 10 (01:14:59):
Shit?
Speaker 2 (01:14:59):
No?
Speaker 6 (01:15:00):
Do you know your Social Security number?
Speaker 1 (01:15:02):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (01:15:02):
Okay, I mean these are numbers that you grow up with,
that you that you.
Speaker 1 (01:15:06):
Oh, would you need your driver's license number?
Speaker 6 (01:15:09):
I know mine. I don't get people ask me that
all the time. I mean for stuff, applications and different
things like that. I just it's only eight digits, dude,
It's one less digit than a so security.
Speaker 1 (01:15:22):
But why do they need to know that? Why do
they want to know that? I don't remember the fact
that they want, but I know what the number. Wade
Robertson says. My kid asked me why I'm old and
don't use paper maps? That turd? Yeah, Ewan Guru says
Thomas Guides and so cow were to bomb. They were
and they still are, and you should have something. You
(01:15:43):
should have a backup. But it's easier, doesn't make it better.
With GPS, you lose the ability to learn roots from
not paying attention for not paying attention. Yeah, exactly, And
that's just it. It's the there's cognitive memory and there's
associative memory. Cognitive memory is being able to tell somebody,
(01:16:09):
let's see, let me get this right. Cognitive memory, I
could tell you how to get there. Associative memory. I
know how to get there, but I can't necessarily tell
you how to do it. You know what I'm saying.
I can get there because I can when I get
to an area, it will kee me into Oh that's right,
(01:16:34):
I remember that seven eleven was on the corner. I
didn't realize I didn't remember that seven eleven being on
the corner until I got there to that intersection and oh, yeah,
that's right, and this is where I turn right or
left or whatever it is. That's your associative memory. Your
cognitive memory is when you've got that locked into your
brain and you know that you go down to seventh Street,
(01:16:54):
there'll be a seven eleven on the corner. That's where
you turn left, and so you can tell somebody else
how to do it. We don't very often use our
cognitive brain for things like instructions anymore. Original babe, I
remember my phone for seven one sixty four to twenty six. Babe,
that's still your phone number. Just kidding. I live in Minnesota,
(01:17:16):
because he'll I live in Minnesota. Oh because hell yeah.
Put apostrophe in is currently under construction and they're putting
roundabouts in all over the god forsaken place. So you
have to use GPS, right. There are reasons. I mean,
technology is good and you should use it when you
(01:17:39):
have to. I mean, why wouldn't you take advantage of technology.
That'd be kind of stupid, wouldn't it. But just don't
let it. Don't let it overtake you. If you haven't
downloaded the Daily Mojo app, do so when when you can?
Today would be a good day to do that. You
just go to the day emojo dot com and click
(01:18:01):
there on the top. It'll tell you how to put
it in. Have it for the iPhone. I think we're
still working on for Android.
Speaker 6 (01:18:10):
Yeah, I've got to reset the user account.
Speaker 1 (01:18:13):
Okay. I had a couple of people ask about it
for Android, so it's in the meantime. You can still
use the web based version, which is just as simple.
It's nice to be able to access the app, though,
if you have the iPhone space hippie said, I don't
use GPS, I asked directions or look it up beforehand. Women,
(01:18:38):
But if you have the map already or excuse me, the
the app or the map installed on your phone. Either way,
we're going to be using that again.
Speaker 9 (01:18:46):
For our next auction and that is going to involve now.
Speaker 1 (01:18:51):
This is still in progress, so this is a little
sneak peak of what it's going to be. There you go, Uh,
this is a Roswell poster from this year's UFO fest
and this is the only part of the mount. There's
(01:19:12):
another whole surround that goes into this will be it'll
be lit up. It is right now. It is framed
in part by three D printed I beam from the
Roswell Crash that makes up part of the frame. And
when this whole thing is put together, there will be
(01:19:33):
a light. It's gonna be really bad as it will
be one of a kind. And we'll auction this off
probably not this week, probably next, but you'll need the
app to do that. So there's another reason, the reason
to have the app downloaded to your smartphone so you
can get in on all the actions. This will be
like I said, one of a kind. It'll be a
(01:19:53):
piece of art and you'll be the talk of the
town when you when you do put it, when you do,
get it on your phone, see free and you can
send us messages to Freebee send a message. The best
thing about being a conspiracy theorist is not having to
worry about myocarditis, white fibrous blood clots and all the
(01:20:14):
other negative side effects of the COVID shots. That's a
good point. Oh oh, and who was it that recommend Oh?
Thank you Vince, Yeah, he said. Do you remember the
Cold War era movie fail Safe? Good movie with a
thought provoking ending. I looked it up. I haven't watched
it yet. But thank you for all the notes that
(01:20:37):
you send on the on the app. Appreciate it. It's
very kind of you to do so. And that's what
the app is there for, so that we can all
stay in touch with each other. And you know, I
don't know how much good it's going to do when
the EMP hits, but it might it might work. Maybe
What if? What if when the e MP hits the
(01:21:00):
only thing that works is your your cell phone and
the Daily Mojo app? What if tell me it's not
gonna work that way, and if it does, if it
doesn't end up working that way, what are you gonna do?
Sue me?
Speaker 3 (01:21:12):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:21:13):
Uh, if you go to smell mymojo dot com, you
don't want to stink during the apocalypse, do you? You
don't want to stink, You don't want to be dirty.
This is the answer to that. Between the body butter
and the soap, the bar soap, wrong loves showering off
bar soap. Now we know why his day's in prison.
Speaker 6 (01:21:31):
Nope, and it's okay. I don't.
Speaker 1 (01:21:36):
No, if you had it on the rope, you would
have to bend over to pick it up.
Speaker 6 (01:21:39):
That's a fact.
Speaker 1 (01:21:42):
Hence that's why you don't have to do it. I
know Freebie Ron needs to stop hating Android users. I agree.
I don't like it when he calls you tards. I
really don't. And I don't think your tards. I just
think you're misguided. And it's all right, you can be
we can still be friends and get along. But if
(01:22:03):
you go to smell mymojo dot com, you will find
the Sugar Creek Goods and and the Bethy Knot was
telling me about something that was fantastic there, and I'll
be damn. If I can remember what she said, should
have written it down. And I should have. I mean
she should have, not me, because what am I going
to write something down? I don't think so. But I
(01:22:23):
can tell you about the I can tell you about
the fantastic body better that I have on my feet.
I can tell you about the lotion that is it's.
Speaker 6 (01:22:30):
Fantastic adultsha love them.
Speaker 1 (01:22:34):
There you go. Ron uses both I do not necessarily
at the same time. But if you use the promo
code daily Mojo at smell mymojo dot com, you'll say
fifteen percent off, You'll be helping out a small business.
You'll be getting products that actually work and do some
good stuff for your bad day. And uh, at the
same time, you'll be helping out the program. Man, It's
(01:22:56):
just it's a it's a beautiful day, is it not.
It's a beautiful day. We need to do all those
at the same damn time. Go to us smell my
mojo dot com promo code Daily Mojo. Do it today,
do it now. I'll wait till the show's over. But
smell mymojo dot Com at.
Speaker 14 (01:23:15):
The top of the samball.
Speaker 8 (01:23:20):
For a blast of fruit and.
Speaker 14 (01:23:23):
From the Daily Mojo.
Speaker 12 (01:23:27):
But Daily Mojo, but Daily Moods, but Daily Mojo Radio
with an Attitude show.
Speaker 1 (01:23:59):
And the uh Friday It went to the David G
Compound out in BF Egypt, and believe me, it is
in DF Egypt. It is way it's I mean, just wow,
it's out there, but very cool shop. And on the
way past one of these which I hadn't seen. I
(01:24:24):
knew it was there, but I just hadn't seen it
in a long time, and it's this big. It's in
well in the in the case of the one that's
in in Texas, it's orange and it looks like a spaceship,
but it was a house. It's technically it still is.
Oh wow, you've never seen it. Uh No, it's in
(01:24:46):
uh Royce City, Texas. And there are only sixty three
of these in the world that are left. These were built,
uh your worthies built nineteen sixty eight. They were conceived
by Matti Surinin in nineteen sixty eight as a portable
(01:25:09):
ski chalet. It's a what they call an iconic piece
of architecture and the site, the Futuro House, is devoted
to documenting the history of the futuro and the current
status and whereabouts of the remaining examples, and it's really
kind of cool. Most of these things, apparently are in
(01:25:32):
or a great number of them are in Australia, and
they're Hang on a second, this is I'm fighting technology. Look,
I can talk and fight technology at the same time.
There are some in Finland, there are some in Germany.
They're pretty wild looking. There's one in France. I mean
(01:25:56):
it just and they they're pretty simple inside, well, especially
if they're not furnished, but I guess most of them aren't.
But if you ever, if you ever see one of these,
take a picture and send it to us. Oh, there's
one in Sweden that's sitting up on top of a tower.
Is that not just the coolest thing they When they
(01:26:21):
started making these, they were prefabed homes. They referred to
as the UFO Houses. It was July twenty eleven that
this particular website first found out about these, right after
they started an architecture blog called Strange, Weird, Wonderful and
Cool Buildings, and the Fiaturo House, located in Royce City, Texas,
(01:26:43):
became the subject of one of our early posts. You said,
see if I can get to that one, It's like
I said, it's orange and there it is right there,
and it's just sitting in a field.
Speaker 10 (01:26:53):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:26:53):
The weird thing is this was according to one post
I saw back in twenty eighteen. It said, if you're
interested in this, you might want to get in touch
with the owner because they were going to either move
(01:27:13):
it or destroy it or throw it away or something,
because they wanted to make a parking lot on this location.
But that's what it looks like. It's literally sitting in
this field. As you drive by it on the street.
It's really kind of trippy looking. But they were going
to sell these things for this particular one for twenty grand.
Speaker 6 (01:27:33):
I mean square feet that's had it.
Speaker 1 (01:27:38):
I don't know, it's not was they thirty feet across?
I think I should know that. I think I feel
like I know that. I feel like I know this answer.
They're not horribly large. It's probably it's probably bigger when
you get right up onto it. Really, it's probably bigger
(01:28:04):
right when you get up onto it. And nothing, I'll
get it. Maybe thirty feet across, thirty five feet all right,
And I mean it's pretty cool. Look, I don't know
if I would, you know, twenty grand, that's half of
what you'd pay Sophie Rain for some naked videos. Think
(01:28:25):
about the which would you rather have her naked videos
for forty or this thing for twenty? You can't live
in her naked videos, although we are for askets any
bigger you might be able to. Sorry, that was a
cheap shot, and I apologize to miss Rain for saying that,
because that was just wrong. She's just a kid. But seriously,
(01:28:46):
put down the cheetos because that thing is huge? Am
I wrong?
Speaker 6 (01:28:51):
No, you're not.
Speaker 1 (01:28:53):
I mean, when you're twenty, you're invincible. Hey, my ass
is great and people pay big money to see. But
you know what, when you're forty, pre gonna go damn
get that away from me? Or maybe not, you know what,
maybe you'll show me in twenty years. And besides, you
got forty three million dollars and you don't give a
shit what I think.
Speaker 6 (01:29:10):
He's not there at all.
Speaker 1 (01:29:12):
She does not care, So Wade says, Royce City blows
other than the BUCkies. I hate going that far east.
I'm kind of there with you. Let me tell you
after a don't ever go there on a Friday night
because me Christmas, it is torture. But these are like
(01:29:32):
I said, there's sixty three of these things in the
world today, and it's just it's amazing when you go
back to the sixties what they thought we'd be living
in in fifty years. I don't know why they thought.
Or and again there was originally designed to be a
ski chalet, but people talk about it being a house. See.
(01:29:58):
The research later confirmed the U units in the Antarctic
region are not futuros or in fact Google excuse me,
the Google or Google huts, because there were a lot
of them that supposedly people were getting pictures of these
down in Antarctica. They're not all They look a lot alike,
but they don't have the windows in them. In the
(01:30:22):
summer of twenty fifteen, the Ouiji Exhibition Center launched an
exhibit titled Futuro World. It ran from ran for about
a year. It was located in the Studio surinin that
is is that France? I believe it's France, but it
was the fiftieth anniversary of the Futuro the exhibit. The
(01:30:44):
exhibition was relaunched as Futuro World fifty Years and was
scheduled to run back in twenty eighteen, but it didn't
end on the due date, and they are still apparently
running it. The one that was available for twenty grand.
I don't know if if if it still is available
for twenty grand, but the units were previously listed for sale,
(01:31:06):
but they never sold. They're currently they're not sure whether
or not they are on the market. As of twenty
twenty one, there's a US based Futuro currently available, and
the price for that one starts about one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars. I think I'd rather pay twenty yeah,
(01:31:26):
oh yeah, wouldn't you. Yeah, I would rather pay twenty
four it than one hundred and fifty. But that's just me,
I kind of, you know, I'm a little weird that way.
And the original finish Futuro house molds are now available
for purchase, the asking price one hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
(01:31:50):
The trouble is you've got to get them home from
Finland and there are a bunch of these just sitting
I guess in a in a dump. Man, the future
is not what he used to be, is it? Speaking
of dumps, DC is I was going to ask you
about that? Yeah, what about DC being a dump?
Speaker 6 (01:32:11):
Well about the comment Trump made this weekend about d C.
Speaker 1 (01:32:16):
Well, looks like we're going to be having some National
Guard troops headed to d C, or probably just the
Guard the National Guard that are stationed in DC already,
but they are expecting and it's already nine thirty on
the East coast, So I don't know if he's made
any announcement yet. But I don't know what prompted this
other than the fact that d C is a complete
(01:32:37):
and total crap hole. But he is tired of probably
stary at the tents yep stake to the ground, and
maybe we're going to see DC cleaned up today. I
don't know. He's told the homeless are going to have
to move. He's told the criminals don't bother moving because
(01:32:58):
we're going to put you in jail.
Speaker 6 (01:32:59):
Put you in jail.
Speaker 1 (01:33:00):
And there're going to be a thousand According to the
reports from both Fox and a couple other sites, there
will be up to a thousand different troops, National Guard
troops headed to DC to clean the streets up.
Speaker 6 (01:33:14):
That's going to be a chore, because that place is
that place, like you said, is a complete dumps It
really is one of the most beautiful architecture in the
world that we paid surrounded by homeless with tents staked
to the ground.
Speaker 1 (01:33:33):
It's just drilled into the ground.
Speaker 6 (01:33:35):
Yeah, it's crazy.
Speaker 1 (01:33:36):
It's yeah. So if we do see something today in DC,
you heard about it here first, but maybe and there's
going to be something wrong with the way he does it,
count on it. I mean, yeah, you can't take the homeless.
You can't take the criminals off the streets. That's not right.
(01:33:59):
The criminals have a right to be there on the
streets just because it's Trump.
Speaker 6 (01:34:02):
Yeah, because Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:34:04):
Just because it's Trump.
Speaker 6 (01:34:06):
The homeless have to move out immediately. We will give
you places to stay, but far from the capital. The criminals,
you don't have to move out. We're going to put
you in jail where you belong. It's all going to
happen very fast, just like the border. So that's supposedly
coming out today. The other thing that's happening in DC
(01:34:27):
is this letter from the it's called the Steady State.
They wrote a letter last.
Speaker 1 (01:34:36):
Week to the men and women of the FBI, and
they're now accusing Cash Battel and Dan Bongino of politicizing
the FBI. I can't think of anything more ridiculous. Than that.
But apparently they fired some folks from the FBI this
(01:34:58):
past week.
Speaker 6 (01:34:59):
They did. They fired Jen Jensen. Yeah, they fired him and.
Speaker 1 (01:35:07):
Brian Driscoll who was the acting director of the FBI
initially back on January twentieth, before Cash Battel was made
the director of the FBI. So it was a Driscoll, Jardina.
I can't remember what he did. But they fired Brian Driscoll,
(01:35:29):
Michael Feinberg, and Walter Jardina. They were fired. Those are
the three that were fired as part of the campaign
to dismantle the FBI's long standing independence, according to the
Steady Jardina.
Speaker 6 (01:35:38):
But I think it was Jensen. They fired him. He
was the lead did he was the lead FBI agent
on the January sixth stuff. They finally got rid of him.
Speaker 1 (01:35:49):
Right, These are the three that they said were fired
because of for political reasons. That and that doesn't mention
Jensen in this particular story, but very likely could. I mean,
it's and my point with this letter from the Steady
(01:36:13):
State talking about they are they are alarmed of the politicism,
politicization and retribution over the FBI's criticism of Trump. To me,
they just outed themselves as deep state, and I don't
(01:36:37):
even know who is on and I don't think that
the list of people that is behind the steady state.
It's a nonpartisan group of professionals who have served in
the CIA, the FBI, the State Department, the Department of Defense,
the NSA, the DHS, and the uniformed military. It says, together,
we have spent our careers upholding the Constitution and defending
(01:36:58):
the United States from foreign and domestic threats. We've worked
across the globe at embassies, forward operating bases, and conflict zones,
as well as here at home in DC, and then
field offices across the country. Some of us sat across
the table from foreign intelligence services. Some led counter terrorism
operations or nuclear non proliferation programs, while others negotiated treaties
(01:37:20):
or built coalitions in defensive democracy. Whatever the mission, one
constant was our respect for and reliance on the integrity, professionalism,
and independence of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. To which
I say, it makes me laugh because I trust, I
(01:37:42):
trust Bongino, and I trust Patel. And if you come
out and tell me that those two guys are trying
to turn and I think there were I don't. I'm
going to paraphrase basically turn the FBI into a loyalty
machine for Trump. You've automatically lost any credibility you had
(01:38:04):
with me a period, end of story. If they don't,
who is the other guy you talked.
Speaker 6 (01:38:11):
About OSSA Jensen, but it may be Jardine in either way,
there were the Driscoll, Jardine, a mil Bow. I mean
they got rid of all of them that were related
to the j six investigation.
Speaker 1 (01:38:25):
Right and good good the I mean we all know
what the January sixth investigation was a croc from the
word go, and it was an It was an inside job,
the whole thing, the whole shooting match. They ended the
letter with to our friends and colleagues in the bureau
(01:38:47):
past and present, we recognize the pressure you are under.
We honor your service and the sacrifices you've made quietly, honorably,
often without recognition, and we want you to know we
stand with you. Problem is, there are still people in
the FBI know this, that are absolutely against Donald Trump.
They're absolutely against the agenda, they're absolutely against trying to
(01:39:12):
clean up the country, trying to make America great again,
and they're hiding this is this reminds me of the
letter of what was on one hundred security. What was
a letter that came out during the twenty twenty election,
whereas they they classified the Hunter Biden laptop as Russian?
(01:39:34):
Oh that was fifty profession Is it with the fifty thing?
Because aren't there fifty of these two? I feel like
there's fifty people in this thing. There's something special with
the number fifty. Is it starting to I don't know,
I'm starting to suspect some I'm starting to suspect and
some shenanigans going on here. But when you see about
(01:39:57):
this today, just take a look at it, because it's
it's a also like okay, here it is Steve Jensen,
the acting director in charge of the Washington Field Office. Yeah,
so good, good riddance the whole I mean, the whole
thing needs to be washed, rinsed, repeated, get rid of them,
(01:40:18):
start over. Did you have something on your mind?
Speaker 6 (01:40:21):
Wrong? Yeah?
Speaker 10 (01:40:21):
I did.
Speaker 6 (01:40:21):
As a matter of fact, this weekend, I caught a
story on Fox News. John Pavlovitz, a former Megachurch youth pastor,
has now turned into a far left just idiot, and
I made a mistake of reading one of his stories,
but I talk about it in this week's Twizzy.
Speaker 5 (01:40:40):
The way I see it, this is Ron's walky perspective
on life.
Speaker 6 (01:40:47):
Picture this, folks, the political landscape is a buffet table
at an all you can eat diner, and far left
liberalism is that guy piling his plate with kale smoothies,
keen wine, artisanal tofu while conservatism is over here grilling
a juicy steak wondering why anyone would voluntarily eat sadness
in a bowl. Former megachurch youth pastor turned progressive activist
(01:41:08):
John Pavlovitch's blog post Confessions of a radical woke Leftist. Yeah,
I read it so you don't have to lays it
all bare. This guy's so woke he's practically sleepwalking through
a utopia where everyone's hugging trees and banning plastic straws,
while conservatives are just trying to keep the lights on
without selling their souls to a wind turbine. Pavlovitch confesses
(01:41:29):
he's got the woke mind virus, which apparently makes him
allergic to common sense and gives them superpowers like infinite
empathy and a PhD in virtue.
Speaker 1 (01:41:38):
Signally, he's out here.
Speaker 6 (01:41:39):
Dreaming of a world where nobody's called illegal, health care
grows on trees, and books are so free that they're
practically leaping off the shelves into kids' hands. Sounds sweet, right,
like a cotton candy flavored fever dream. Meanwhile, conservatives are like, hey,
maybe don't bankrupt the country. Let's enforce laws, and how
about we don't let kids read fifty shades of gray
(01:41:59):
and home. The divide is like a vegan trying to
explain kale to a cattle rancher. Far left liberals like
Pavlovitz want to tear down borders, rewrite biology, and make
sure every classroom has a feeling circle before math. Conservatives,
we're just trying to hold onto the idea the two
plus two still equals four and not whatever you identify
it as. Pavlovitz thinks America is a big old communal
(01:42:21):
kombay y'all campfire, but conservatives see it as a fortress
worth defending because if you leave the gate wide open,
don't be shocked when the barbarians show up with a
U haul. He's out here whining about intolerance of intolerance,
which is just a fancy way of saying I hate
you for not agreeing with my utopia. Conservatives aren't perfect,
Lord knows, We've got our own clowns, but at least
(01:42:43):
we're not trying to turn the Constitution into a pinterest
board for social justice. The far left so far gone.
They're basically playing a game of ideological Jenga, pulling out
every foundational block of reality until the whole tower collapses. Us.
We're just trying to keep the table steady. So read
pavlobits is posed if you want to laugh. It's like
watching a toddler trying to solve a Rubik's Cube with
(01:43:05):
a sledge hammer. I'm Ron Phillips, and that's the way
I see it.
Speaker 5 (01:43:09):
The way I see it is only on the Daily
Mojo dot com where political correctness comes to die.
Speaker 12 (01:43:24):
The Daily Mojo.
Speaker 1 (01:43:32):
Squish over on the that says, I just realized you're
so tan. You match the logo. Now I do what logo?
Thank you?
Speaker 6 (01:43:47):
Your face and the logo maybe over here the others
are here. Yeah, I have.
Speaker 1 (01:43:55):
Been spending some time in the sun.
Speaker 6 (01:43:58):
Well, you have a pulse, so I would too if
I had a pool.
Speaker 1 (01:44:01):
Well that's not where I'm spending the time in the sun.
I'm miserable running out on the streets. That's where I'm
spending my time in the sun.
Speaker 6 (01:44:09):
You didn't run on Friday or Saturday, did you?
Speaker 1 (01:44:12):
I did on Friday, I went out and I did
a mile, but it's I didn't want to mess up
the knee. I did not on Saturday. Yeah, although I
had every intention. Of course, I had every intention of
having the lawnmode by nine o'clock on Sunday.
Speaker 6 (01:44:27):
How'd that work out?
Speaker 1 (01:44:29):
You know it? How Come it's the thought that counts
in everything, but mowing the lawn.
Speaker 6 (01:44:33):
I'm owed model on Saturday morning. I had to get
it done with.
Speaker 1 (01:44:36):
Wait a minute, we're taught. We're not talking about the euphemism, right,
We're talking about the load the lawn. Okay, yet, as
you know the other here's just a real quick I
found this. I found this on the interwebs on the future.
Speaker 9 (01:44:50):
Frisco Futuro House or Frisco UFO. It's the second most
photographed object on the outer banks of North Carolina, falling
short only to the Cape Patteras Lighthouse, one of only
one hundred of its kind, designed by architect Mattie Sirona
in nineteen sixty eight, Although it now sits vacant as
a roadside attraction for tourists, its life has been eclectic
and colorful. In nineteen seventy two, doctor Lee Russo and
(01:45:13):
his wife Mary Jane had the house delivered and placed
on a piece of ocean front property not far from
where the museum is now. After enjoying the house as
a beach cottage for over a decade, the family donated
it to the Buxton Fire Department, who in turn auctioned
it off and it became a meeting place for the
Scout Troops of Hatteras Island. It was eventually relocated to Frisco, where,
over the years it.
Speaker 16 (01:45:32):
Served as the office for the Scotch Bonnet Campground, home
of an island periodical called The Monitor, and the Out
of This World hot dog Stand. After being moved to
its current location from the Scotch Bonnet Campground, it has
remained vacant and provided mystery and intrigue to visitors ever since.
Speaker 1 (01:45:49):
Kind of cool, but I don't think I want to
live in one same again. If they were just a
bit small, yeah, you would get sick of whoever you.
Speaker 6 (01:45:58):
Were lit there with.
Speaker 1 (01:45:59):
Eventually, office though, Yeah, yeah, hot dogs say maybe yeah,
after a while. It's things people don't like that big
they don't. People are used to living in houses houses.
We have been for a long time, and so we
don't to try to get people to shift from living
(01:46:20):
in like a househouse to a spaceship house. I don't
know if that's ever gonna happen, because once humans get
used to something, it's very difficult to I mean, as
much as we like to think that we can break
out of our own molds, we rarely do. Ewan Guru says,
(01:46:42):
I'm looking forward to those people whose reality does not
include gravity, sit back and eat popcorn. Huh. I don't
know what that means.
Speaker 13 (01:46:53):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:46:55):
El el Nando Alvarez. I like Ron's face at the
end of his twizzy.
Speaker 6 (01:47:02):
Yeah, that's my put out face, that's my These people
are dumb asses.
Speaker 1 (01:47:08):
Oh I thought you meant that's your I put out face.
Speaker 6 (01:47:11):
No, we all know to put out put out, okay.
Speaker 1 (01:47:14):
Not put your are put out? You don't put out? Well, yeah,
you never know though, right, there's always a price.
Speaker 6 (01:47:22):
There is a price.
Speaker 16 (01:47:24):
Umm.
Speaker 1 (01:47:26):
Oh it's a wonky I really stands out in twizzies. Uh,
they're going to fall off the off cliffs bard, Who's
going to fall off cliffs? I feel like I'm not
keeping up this morning. Maybe I'm not. It could be.
Speaker 5 (01:47:39):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:47:39):
The folks from the from SpaceX finally got back from space.
By the way, on was it Friday? They get back
down on Friday? No, Saturday, Saturday, eleven thirty in the morning.
There were five of them and five right, probably four,
there are five of them. It was the crew it
(01:48:02):
was crew ten. It was number five. They were five
months in space. It was the crew ten. And there
were four of them, crew members McLean and Nicole Ayres
of NASA, Takuya Onishi of Japan, and Kittl Peskov of Russia.
All right, so there were four of them. So the flight,
(01:48:25):
launched atop a SpaceX Falcon nine rocket on March fourteenth,
arrived at the orbiting lab two days later, surprised that
they're not using the Boeing stuff. Crew tens four astronauts
soon set to conducting science work. They consume much of
their time and their back. It's amazing. Once you took
the basically the Uber service away from Boeing, how smoothly
(01:48:47):
things went, And yet we keep giving Boeing more business.
What's that about I don't I really, I don't understand.
Speaker 6 (01:48:58):
That Boeing's got a lot of money and a lot
of lobbyists evidently.
Speaker 1 (01:49:05):
And you know, because didn't didn't we just award the
new Air Force one to Boeing building?
Speaker 6 (01:49:15):
We didn't just do it. We did it a few
years ago. I think we did it in Trump's first term.
Speaker 1 (01:49:19):
But and then didn't Biden change the design, and then
didn't Trump change it back?
Speaker 6 (01:49:24):
I think.
Speaker 1 (01:49:24):
So it's just it's getting ridiculous at this point. But
it's and well, I guess who else are you going
to give it to? Who else makes a good plane?
Air bus? They're not America? Yeah, who do you give
it to? Wouldn't that be? Doesn't that make Boeing a monopoly?
(01:49:51):
I mean, isn't this the danger of isn't this what
we were all taught? That's this is why it's bad
to have a monopoly.
Speaker 6 (01:49:56):
Yeah, because you wouldn't get like Lockheed or or what's
the other.
Speaker 1 (01:50:03):
Uh, Northrop Grimo and lock in the rockwell.
Speaker 6 (01:50:05):
Those yeah, because those are all military aircraft. I mean
you would think that Air Force one might fall under
that category, but maybe not.
Speaker 1 (01:50:13):
It's just kind of weird that, Yeah, you know, but
even though it's a company, because generally speaking, if you
have a company whose doors fall off of their product,
you're gone.
Speaker 12 (01:50:25):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:50:26):
I think I'm going to go over to Bob's Airplanes instead,
because his bobs don't fall off. There are airplanes in
mid flight, but there is no bobs. There's only Boeing.
And again, I thought that was why we didn't like
to have monopolies in this country, because it eliminated competition.
(01:50:49):
But it seems like there's it seems to me like
there's monopolies where they want to have monopolies, and there
aren't monopolies where they don't want to have monopolies.
Speaker 6 (01:50:58):
Oh, that's a good looking plane. What is that?
Speaker 1 (01:51:01):
That's not a Boeing. That is a Lockheed Martin. That
is a supersonic jet. Did you know? Do you know
why you can't fly a supersonic jet? Because we talked
about the concord last week week before. Do you know
why we can't fly a supersonic jet from let's say
California to New York. Uh No, because there is a
(01:51:25):
ban on supersonic flights.
Speaker 6 (01:51:26):
In this kind over the US because of the.
Speaker 1 (01:51:30):
Cannot fly a supersonic jet over the United States because
of the of the loud noise make go boom.
Speaker 6 (01:51:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:51:39):
Fifty two years ago the ban on supersonic flights. It
was nineteen seventy three. The FAA banned them in response
to public pressure over noise concerns. However, Donald Trump on
June the sixth.
Speaker 6 (01:51:56):
Because it sounds like an explosion when they freaking hit
the sound barrier. Is that what you're is that what
you're saying? Yeah, the sonic booms, sonic booms, I can
say breaking windows maybe was it?
Speaker 1 (01:52:11):
Because I don't know, but people were whining about.
Speaker 6 (01:52:15):
I mean, do you not still hear sonic booms in
the US if they're military? I mean, I guess you can, right,
if they're out doing their things.
Speaker 1 (01:52:22):
If you live out in the al Valley, you're gonna
hear sonic booms. Yeah, but you cannot apparently fly over
flyover country. The ban was lifted June sixth via executive
order lays out a timeline for the introduction of noise
based certification rules for supersonic flights. This would mean that
if you wanted to fly between New York and LA
(01:52:46):
you could get there in just three and a half hours.
That would be kind of nice. Well, yeah, because that's
normally five and a half or six hour fly right,
six hour flight yep. Yeah. They all before the band,
the United States, France, the United Kingdom, and Soviet Union
all tried to get commercial applications for supersonic aviation technology.
(01:53:07):
But each country supersonic aircraft created deafening, window shattering sounds
at ground level. You would think that there would be well,
and this that's the Lucky Martin one. The there is
(01:53:28):
another one that they have. I just saw the design
for it, and it had like this sup pretty duper
like a pointy, really pointy nose, like a javelin point
on the nose, and nothing was obstructed.
Speaker 6 (01:53:42):
This one doesn't. This one does, right, But.
Speaker 1 (01:53:45):
There's something else that they had something else in the
in the design that it would not create. After all
this time, they don't have the technology to not have
a sonic boom. I guess it is my question. It
seems like there would be. It seems like they would
have been working on that, doesn't it.
Speaker 6 (01:54:09):
Yeah, it seems like or the surface of the aircraft
slipped through it without making the boom or something.
Speaker 1 (01:54:14):
That's what I'm saying that they would have been working
on that all of the Did you have time?
Speaker 6 (01:54:18):
Did you ever get to see the Concorde fly?
Speaker 1 (01:54:22):
Nope? Not in person, me either.
Speaker 6 (01:54:24):
Yeah, but.
Speaker 1 (01:54:27):
It's I mean, sonic booms are and I don't know,
maybe it was a really bad sonic boom. I don't know,
but sonic booms. You just got used to them if
you lived out in the desert.
Speaker 6 (01:54:36):
I mean you get used to them if you live
in South Texas or if you live in in uh uh,
what is it? Where? Where does the SpaceX come back in?
I mean, anytime SpaceX goes up and those boosters come back,
you're gonna get sonic booms Cape Canaveral. I guess.
Speaker 1 (01:54:58):
Do they?
Speaker 6 (01:54:59):
Yeah? What do they?
Speaker 1 (01:55:01):
What?
Speaker 6 (01:55:02):
Sonic boom? Of course? Yeah, yeah they do. Yeah, it's
actually a double sonic boom. You played it on the
show about two weeks ago, three weeks ago?
Speaker 1 (01:55:12):
Were those the those were the boosters.
Speaker 6 (01:55:14):
The boosters coming back? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:55:18):
I don't remember that, do I?
Speaker 6 (01:55:21):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:55:22):
Remember those?
Speaker 6 (01:55:23):
Yeah? When the boosters come back and land, they have
a they have a double sonic boom. It's like that.
It's like the bottom of the brocket and the top
of the rocket each have have a sonic back.
Speaker 1 (01:55:39):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I remember that now. Yeah, but that's
out over the ocean.
Speaker 6 (01:55:45):
Well unless it's coming back into land on the landing
pads and it's right over the top of Cape Canaveral.
And when they land back in, when they land back
in Boko Rica, Boca is that Boko Rika? Is that
how you said in Texas? It's the same thing.
Speaker 1 (01:56:00):
Sure, non military the rule, so the sonic boom ban
is only non military aircraft.
Speaker 6 (01:56:14):
And I'm sure no prohibits. SpaceX has to get permission
every time they do it. I mean they look, they
have to get permission every time they launch anyway.
Speaker 1 (01:56:23):
So the rule that the FAA set in motion fifty
years ago prohibited non military aircraft from flying faster than
sound officially April twenty seven to seventy three. The band's
introduction strongly influenced by public opinion surveys and cities where
supersonic military jets were flown overhead, and many folks said
(01:56:46):
they didn't like what they heard or the way their
windows rattled because of the sonic booms. Although some research
suggested ways to soften the impact of sonic booms, aeronautic
technology during the sixties and early seventies, wasn't sophisticated enough
to fully solve the problem in time to prevent the
rule from being enacted. That just seems weird to me.
(01:57:09):
Because money, I mean, if they were able to come
up with a super sonic jet that was going to
fly coast to coast and make some money, that rule
will go public. Doesn't like, don't care anyway. That's it's
so if you get used to it, you're about to
hear sonic booms over the because money. Wait a minutes,
(01:57:33):
let's go we can't need some of that money. If
we couldn't, Gordy makes seven, didn't we could make it
not do whatever the hell it's been doing this morning.
I don't know what the hell it's doing, but I
think we're I think it's the FBI trying to censor
us during two hours of the daily mojo for today Monday.
If you're forgetting, it's Monday, the eleventh day of August,
(01:57:54):
the year of our twenty twenty five. And did anybody
learn anything? Because we threw a lot at you today,
and I don't don't blame you, because it's there's a
lot to a lot happened and I had to absorb
a lot. Pika Pool says, I thought the sonic booms
are what you get after eating that drive in chain, right,
That's just true. That's that's low hanging fruit. That is
(01:58:16):
low hanging Fruitlev says, do you guys watch the splash down?
At one point the camera showed there were four shoots,
and then in the next shot there were only two. Aha.
Is that a conspiracy? I don't know. Running into Texas
heaway when you're close to one hundred years old is
(01:58:36):
a dangerous risk. Brad says DM. It's Texas. We do
stuff down here that other people had and one hundred.
I'll be doing it when I'm one hundred and twenty
because people will be chasing it over in the rumble
chat room space. Hippie on VAK heavy great days. She's
such a nice human being. It would be nice if
(01:58:56):
more people were like that, wouldn't it? Jody won twenty one.
Government monopolies are okay. Nipples and God bless you'll see
nipples for everyone, Missy thirteen. Everyone should see it. Try
finding it on YouTube. If not two d I don't
know what the hell she's talking about, but work works
for me, caraboy, do you keep a truck? I have
(01:59:21):
no idea. Crafting Freak. Keep an eye on my instagram, Laurens,
you need crafts. I'm going to add something soon. Crafting
Freak is a crafting freak. Let me just tell you.
And she's good at it. Over in the Daily Mojo
chat room again Fake Zoe, who is playing the Smoking
Pineapple Express music asking for a friend. I don't know.
(01:59:42):
Maybe it was wrong because Ron's been doing a lot
of me. I don't know any pinky things today. I
just never say it. As for the rest of you,
remember that we the people mustang together, otherwise we shall
surely hang separately. Six separate turannas, Resist stupid, and a
good night, Doc Thompson, wherever you are yet, why
Speaker 5 (02:00:00):
Listen at the Dailymojo dot com