All Episodes

August 14, 2025 120 mins
August 14, 2025

Have you had your dose of The Daily MoJo today? 

Download The Daily MoJo App! 

"Ep 081425: Time Has Flown | The Daily MoJo"

Kellogg's commits to removing artificial food colorings by 2027 due to health concerns, particularly for children. The discussion also touches on various topics, including the cultural impact of the Rocky Horror Picture Show, political commentary, and personal anecdotes about health and community. Plans for a new shop location and a weight loss journey are shared, emphasizing local business support and resilience in personal growth.

Phil Bell's Morning Update Is Trump a racist or do these mayors just suck at their job?:  HERE

Jeff Fisher - Host of Chewing The Fat Podcast - Was nowhere in sight.  
Jeff Fisher Linktree

Brandon Morse - Redstate Author & host of The Brandon Morse YouTube channel- Has a great idea - bring back smoking!
Brandon's Linktree


Our affiliate partners:

Be prepared! Not scared. Need some Ivermection? Some Hydroxychloroquine? Don't have a doctor who fancies your crazy ideas? We have good news - Dr. Stella Immanuel has teamed up with The Daily MoJo to keep you healthy and happy all year long! Not only can she provide you with those necessary prophylactics, but StellasMoJo.com has plenty of other things to keep you and your body in tip-top shape. Use Promo Code: DailyMoJo to save $$

Take care of your body - it's the only one you'll get and it's your temple! We've partnered with Sugar Creek Goods to help you care for yourself in an all-natural way. And in this case, "all natural" doesn't mean it doesn't work! Save 15% on your order with promo code "DailyMojo" at SmellMyMoJo.com

CBD is almost everywhere you look these days, so the answer isn't so much where can you get it, it's more about - where can you get the CBD products that actually work!? Certainly, NOT at the gas station! Patriots Relief says it all in the name, and you can save an incredible 40% with the promo code "DailyMojo" at GetMoJoCBD.com!

Romika Designs is an awesome American small business that specializes in creating laser-engraved gifts and awards for you, your family, and your employees. Want something special for someone special? Find exactly what you want at MoJoLaserPros.com 

There have been a lot of imitators, but there’s only OG – American Pride Roasters Coffee. It was first and remains the best roaster of fine coffee beans from around the world. You like coffee? You’ll love American Pride – from the heart of the heartland – Des Moines, Iowa. AmericanPrideRoasters.com  

Find great deals on American-made products at MoJoMyPillow.com. Mike Lindell – a true patriot in our eyes – puts his money where his mouth (and products) is/are. Find tremendous deals at MoJoMyPillow.com – Promo Code: MoJo50  

Life gets messy – sometimes really messy. Be ready for the next mess with survival food and tools from My Patriot Supply. A 25 year shelf life and fantastic variety are just the beginning of the long list of reasons to get your emergency rations at PrepareWithMoJo50.com


Stay Connected

WATCH The Daily Mojo LIVE 7-9a CT:
www.TheDailyMojo.com (RECOMMEDED)

Rumble: HERE
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Daily Mojo podcast. Unjustice your mojo.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
You are about to participate in a great adventure now.

Speaker 1 (00:12):
The age what's sixty?

Speaker 3 (00:13):
He's just going to break back.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
Radio with an attitude. This system that we love is broken.
I know that, dude, not comply. Welcome to another two
hours of common sense. That liberty and justice for all
is a myth and euretic behavior.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
I want to, you can't, and when you do, you
wish you did.

Speaker 4 (00:37):
This is your Daily Mojo.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
What will they look like? What are fruit loops? What
are froot loops going to look like? Without artificial dies inside?

Speaker 1 (00:50):
What I mean?

Speaker 3 (00:51):
It's going to be one of the color of wheat.

Speaker 6 (00:56):
That.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Larger.

Speaker 5 (00:59):
It's kind of sad. That's exactly what they look like.
Ken Paxton, our Attorney General here in Texas, has signed
a voluntary letter of compliance with Technically it's an assurance
of voluntary compliance. The company Kellogg's is committing to removing
all artificial food colorings from its cereals by the end

(01:19):
of twenty twenty seven. They're deadly, they're bad for you,
but you got a couple more years to ingest them.
This is kind of like when Anjemima was bad, and
Jemima is so bad, and Jemima's horrible. We can't say
if we stare at her one more minute, we're all
going to grow hair on the pums of our hands,

(01:40):
and people are going to become racist overnight. But well,
we'll let the remaining stock sell out before we actually
have to chan. And then they of course brought to
and Jemima back. But Kellogg's is going to remove all
of the artificial dies. They verbally committed to removing the
food dies. They are the first to officially sign a
legally binding agreement confirming that they'll all go away, following

(02:03):
months of investigating and negotiating. I am proud to say,
according to Ken Paxton, that officially Kellogg's is will stop
putting these unhealthy ingredients in its cereals. However, for the
next two years, you'll still be ingesting them.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Mahau.

Speaker 5 (02:18):
He also he also huh maha, yeah, oh yes, yeah,
they make it, make them right. But in a couple
of years it'll be will be healthy. In the meantime,
they'll keep ingesting the artificial dies. Uh. The other food
manufacturers are also encouraged to sign these agreements to demonstrate
their commitment to helping Americans lead healthier lives. How many

(02:41):
people need to die in the next two years because
of these dies? Why if they're healthy, why not tomorrow?
Why aren't we just done with them tomorrow?

Speaker 2 (02:53):
Well, it gives us two years to tell our kids
sorry about you, but then they won't want for loops anymore. Dude,
I love fruit loops. Man tricks.

Speaker 5 (03:04):
You ever think that there might be a connection between
the eye and the fruit loops? Dude? Just saying. Back
in February, the Office here of the Attorney General issued
a civil investigative demand that would be a sid to Kellogg's,
formally announcing an investigation in April after the company claimed

(03:26):
it would remove petroleum based food colorings. I didn't realize
that they were based like oil based.

Speaker 2 (03:34):
I didn't either. I wonder you feel so bad after
eating a bows?

Speaker 5 (03:37):
This is right.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
This is why you don't.

Speaker 5 (03:38):
I mean, you don't want to see how the sausage
is made because you find out things like this. That's
whether they take a court of motor oil and then Ugh.
Paxton's office says that Kellogg's has removed toxic ingredients in
Canada and Europe, so they're healthy but they are so

(04:00):
we got all of the leftovers from Canada and Europe.
They are still putting in different types of blue, red,
and yellow dyes in American cereals. The let's see, we've
got fruit loops, apple jacks, frosted flakes.

Speaker 2 (04:13):
What no, no, not frosted flakes.

Speaker 5 (04:18):
Well what colors? What color is in frosted flakes?

Speaker 2 (04:21):
I don't know. They look like frosted flakes.

Speaker 5 (04:24):
Right, they just look like cardboard. Really they make?

Speaker 2 (04:29):
Do they still make like fruity pebbles and tricks? Because
those were all the same things as fruit loops, all
just a different shape.

Speaker 5 (04:38):
Just crushed up. Uh boo, that's a front. Wait a second,
Hold on a second. Paxton says, Kellogg's makes popular cereals
like fruit loops, apple jacks, and frosted flakes and rice crispies,
and they're healthy. How can fruit loops be healthy if
they've got all the petroleum based colors in them? Right?

(05:00):
He noted some varieties contain petroleum based artificials eyes linked
to hyperactivity, obesity, autoimmune disorders, endocrine issues, and cancer. A
critical part of fighting for our children's future is putting
an end to companies deceptive practices that are aimed at
misleading parents and families about the health of food products.

(05:23):
All you have to do is read the ingredients, turn
the box over and read what's on the side. You
can't pronounce half of it.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
No, look, I'm gonna I'm gonna read the I'm gonna
read my box and tell you what it says.

Speaker 5 (05:37):
Poop like a champion high fiber.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
It's high fiber. Uh, what the freak does that say?

Speaker 5 (05:45):
I see you can't. You can't pronounce half of the world.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
High fiber diet. It's thank you beaver for my poop
like a champion cereal. I haven't tried it yet because
I was pooping. Fine, you've been doing that for years.
Been for you.

Speaker 5 (06:00):
There will be accountability for any company, including Kelloggs, that
unlawfully makes misrepresentations about its food and contributes to a
broken health system. What have what have Kelloggs and other
companies said about like fruit loops and frosted flakes that
I mean they say part of a balanced diet or
part of part of a balanced breakfast? Yeah, is that untrue?

(06:24):
And sugar is I mean, sugar is not good for you?
Well processed sugar If you can go with the unprocessed stuff,
the natural or even like monk fruit. Monk fruits, that's
better for you.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
It is and and it it looks and acts and
taste just like sugar.

Speaker 5 (06:45):
Who are you the monk fruit spokesperson? Love monk fruit?
Monk what's the other one? There's another one that tastes
just it's just as sweet. Okay, it was a bag
of it. I bought a bag of it, and it
tastes just same, just like monk fruit, but with alternatives
like well it takes it's It will decimate the processed

(07:08):
sugar market. You got two years before before you have
to worry about it completely disappearing. Semi Ambivert says, fruit
loops tear up my tear up my tongue. If I
ever try to eat them. It's like eating rocks. Yep,
that's if you don't. Oh what is it? Grape nuts?

Speaker 2 (07:26):
Oh, dude, you can choose them nuts For like half
an hour before.

Speaker 5 (07:32):
My grandmother would pour hot coffee on grape nuts. What
softens them up?

Speaker 4 (07:38):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (07:38):
I mean hockey on them and then put milk on them.
It was brilliant, dude. Grape nuts man makes they're like.

Speaker 5 (07:46):
Nature is a little broom. Yeah, yeah, Alan Trotter says,
yellow dye number four seven, three six, two eight four
oh five. Come, people say that there was it the
yellow dye in autism?

Speaker 4 (08:02):
Is it?

Speaker 5 (08:03):
Is it the yellow or the red red number five?
Is it red number five? That's what I remember being
in the news. It's red number five. Specifically, yellow five
and yellow six are among the artificial dyes that have
been associated with these potential behavioral issues like autism. But
there's no conclusive evidence we can find out. It's amazing.

(08:29):
If they'd tied this somehow to the rona, they would
have we would have we would have had unequivocally the
answer to whether or not yellow dye does not or
or does cure the rona. But because it's not, there's
no conclusion.

Speaker 2 (08:41):
We don't know.

Speaker 5 (08:43):
We can tell you everything else about anything else in
your diet. Here at the FDA and the CDC and
the what's the it's not this? What's uh? Kennedy in
charge of AJHS Health and Human Services? Right, yes, yes,

(09:04):
what the hell are we? Why do we even have
a Department of Health and Human Services?

Speaker 2 (09:07):
To get rid of freaking fruit loops? What do you mean?

Speaker 5 (09:09):
Is that? What it is. Okay, so I can tell
you anything about the RONA. But if it's if it's
something questionable like this, it's going to take years of
study to find out. Uh. Some research indicates a possible connection.
It's important to note that no study has proven that
food dies cause autism or that eliminating them from a

(09:29):
diet will cure or treat autism, according to the FDA.
Remember this is the same government agency that at one
point ok dokid butt plugs as a cure for constipation.
Look that one up sometime. Um Wait a second, w

(09:53):
Cuncle says, I used Suno shortly after you introduced us
to the app to make a serial song. It's called
serial killer darst drest I isn't that what rf K
Junior is? Yeah? I get yeah, that's what you know what?

(10:13):
Stop trying to pick the little hang up. That's too easy.
Dare sty hit play.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
Might as well. That's the kind of show we are.

Speaker 6 (10:23):
Wait, no money and stumming rum and loud hat straight
to the kitchen, Gotta make my mama pow. Open up
the bat trees in the breaking berry honey poon and
made me smile. Got the cap the crunch board in
my ball, super shooting Chris.

Speaker 3 (10:39):
Yes, the breakfast on the ball.

Speaker 6 (10:40):
You can't forget the alphabet thes.

Speaker 2 (10:42):
Spelling down the name alphabets, alphabets.

Speaker 5 (10:46):
I remember alphabets like Cheerio, but I remember, I remember them.
I just never did you ever eat alphabets?

Speaker 2 (10:53):
Yeah, cheer it was cheerios, and it was like cheerios
in alphabet form. But didn't they have did they have
marshmallows in it? Alphabet?

Speaker 5 (11:03):
We did they? Nah? They still make them charms in general.

Speaker 6 (11:08):
Millsman a running his breakfast day serial killing, killing.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
The boss, gom up prizes in the boxes.

Speaker 5 (11:15):
Like winning at the casino.

Speaker 6 (11:17):
No generic bs, only the best few for my mind.

Speaker 5 (11:20):
And I'm rapping that Cereal game. Breakfast is my shrine,
all right?

Speaker 2 (11:27):
Got it be?

Speaker 5 (11:28):
You can dance to it you want to get in
on this game. Here the hashtag to use is what
I learned today, And tag us in your posts at
real Bradstags at real ron Phillips uh and semi ambivert
and thank you.

Speaker 7 (11:44):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (11:45):
You know here's a I put a damn posted note
right there right there in front of me, and some
it has disappeared somewhere over the I think the cleaning.
People may have brushed it off. But today is Timmy
the Pilot's birthday. Oh, happy birthday, Happy birthday, Timmy the Pilot.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
He I mean.

Speaker 5 (12:06):
For eighty it was eighty six, now six or eighty
five eighty five. It looks pretty decent for five years old, right, Well,
that's one hundred and forty seven in dog years. And
it's also is it Alan's birthday today? Alan Trotter, Happy
birthday to you. And that's a good question, James and Louisiana.

(12:27):
What did y'all get rad and ron for for your birthday?
Because that is the that's the tradition, is that you
send us the gifts for your birthday. I mean we
let's face it, we could do it the other way around,
but we would go broke, so we don't. So And

(12:49):
if you feel like, if you just want to send money,
that's fine too. We will accept all donations in the
form of cash, crypto, doesn't matter. You can get it
no matter how. You can top them off here at
the at the motel if you want to. If you
have a truckload of change from the couch, we'll take that.
And if you're ready to feel superty duper old. This

(13:14):
one shocked me. I was really I wasn't prepared for
this today. But when I looked at what anniversary, it
was fifty five years five, zero years fifty five.

Speaker 6 (13:32):
Oh not for very much longer. I've got to.

Speaker 5 (13:42):
Rocky Horror fifty years old today. It was August the fourteenth,
nineteen seventy five that.

Speaker 8 (13:58):
Brad and Janet burst out of the scene.

Speaker 5 (14:10):
It's just a jump to the left, just.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
To jump to the left, that's all.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
And then jumped to the ride.

Speaker 5 (14:27):
God, you didn't say yay, yay.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
Yay, yay.

Speaker 5 (14:30):
Come on, this is great. This is back when, this
is back when you kept the freaks in the closet.

Speaker 2 (14:40):
Well, that was back when the freakings coming out of
the closet.

Speaker 5 (14:43):
Freaks were smart enough to stay in the closet. Back then,
Tim Curry and he celebrated the freaks. No joke for
Tim Curry.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
Yeah, he's uh, he's Tim Curry is now in a wheelchair.

Speaker 5 (14:56):
Was it ms that he has?

Speaker 2 (14:58):
I don't remember.

Speaker 5 (14:58):
I mean, h I don't remember what he's don't care
enough to know?

Speaker 2 (15:02):
No, I mean you didn't either, I did.

Speaker 5 (15:06):
I was just testing you. He has he suffered a
stroke in twenty twelve.

Speaker 6 (15:11):
And.

Speaker 5 (15:13):
See he is. He's been in a wheelchair since then.
I think he was in a movie in twenty twenty three.
But yeah, a far cry. That's man. Life is short.
Life is short, and enjoy it while you can. But
fifty freaking years.

Speaker 2 (15:31):
Come on, dude. He was probably Rocky Horror thirty when
he made that movie. But I was. I was nine.

Speaker 5 (15:38):
And you went to the Rocky Horror Picture Show when it.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
When I was probably twelve or thirteen. I remember going, No,
I remember going I know what happened. But I've been twice.
I think the first time I just watched the movie
and everybody kind of acted like idiot's. A second time,
I went with some accoutrement I think I had. I
don't remember what I had, gloves, rice.

Speaker 5 (16:01):
A tronch. Did you have a Tronchis I didn't.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
Have a troncias stuff just I don't remember what I had,
but a satchel it was. But they played it like
every Saturday night at midnight, of course, in this little
RinkyDink theater we had in town.

Speaker 5 (16:16):
And what was the what was your favorite memory? What
was the uh like? Was it getting sprints with water?
Did you throw rice?

Speaker 2 (16:24):
Did you threw rice? I remember that. I don't really
toast a lot of it.

Speaker 5 (16:29):
Did you bring toasts because you were hammered?

Speaker 2 (16:31):
No? I wasn't a hammered dude. I was twelve.

Speaker 5 (16:35):
You were hammered. Hell, I was hammered when I was twelve,
of course you were. I was drinking mad Dog twenty twenty.
I think now I may have been thirteen by the
time I started drinking that.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
I think buck horn was what I was drinking.

Speaker 5 (16:47):
No, I yeah, what is buck horn? Bluck corn beer?
That's blasphed when you were twelve, your little degenerate. I
was probably sixteen, wow, and late to the party. And
so anybody get naked inside the Rocky Horror Picture Show,
not that I recall mm hmm um, and they're all

(17:09):
they're all well, But I thought was fabulous, supertty duper
meat loaf was in it? Uh, it was.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
Benny Hill was in it. We found that out this morning.

Speaker 5 (17:19):
You know. That was Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
Oh sorry, sorry, I got I got mixed up with
all the ship.

Speaker 5 (17:27):
Be careful, care ron gets a little excited any Hill show.
But it was, Yeah, it was Chitty Chitty Bang Bang Uh, yeah,
I had no idea that Benny Hill was in that.
Alan says, I went to I went straight to the
Midnight show, and the freaks tried to be all awesome
about it. About what, fun fact, he was the original voice?

(17:49):
Who was the original voice? Sorry? I had to read
in reverse here? Who was the original voice of the Joker?

Speaker 2 (17:59):
Huh? Was it is that Tim Curry? Is that what
he's saying?

Speaker 5 (18:02):
No, can't be. Uh. Janet was hot, neither was I
Rocky Horror?

Speaker 9 (18:08):
There?

Speaker 5 (18:09):
Who the hell was the original voice of the Joker?
If you people are going to have conversations over there
and make me read the original voice of the Joker? Well,
he was the Joker on the Batman TV series Bugs
Mom was his prayers every time I see it. I
have no idea who the hell he's talking about? Fun fact,

(18:31):
the original voice of the Joker didn't Alan? He's a
Batman cartoon?

Speaker 2 (18:34):
Am I wrong? Or did Alan Cummings play the Tim
Curry part in a version of that movie.

Speaker 5 (18:46):
Rocky Horror?

Speaker 1 (18:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (18:48):
Am I wrong?

Speaker 5 (18:48):
There's been another version of the Rocky Horror. No, no
one was dumb enough to do that. Were they? Were
they version of Rocky horrse, surely not.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Nah?

Speaker 5 (19:08):
No, so nah, couldn't be there was a TV adaptation
that can't be right, No one would be crazy side
by side visual comparison between the seventy five feature film
and the twenty sixteen TV movie adaptations of Richard O'Brien's
They did do something in twenty sixteen? Are you serious?

Speaker 2 (19:28):
But I don't think who's coming? I think it was
I found a website that like Neil Patrick, Harris, Brandon Rodgers,
these were all people that were being voted on frankenfur
who would be crazy.

Speaker 5 (19:48):
Enough to try to do a Sasha Baron Cohen version.
Let's see here. This is the supposedly a comparison top
Is movie. Obviously, bottom is twenty sixteen. I had no

(20:11):
idea that, of course twenty sixteen. Although it seems like
it was just yesterday, it was ten years got ten
years ago? Okay? I have no recollection of this? Whatsoever?
Do you?

Speaker 2 (20:24):
Is it a TV show?

Speaker 5 (20:26):
Was it the Rocky Horn for TV adaptation?

Speaker 2 (20:29):
Huh?

Speaker 5 (20:31):
I have absolutely no recollection of that at all.

Speaker 2 (20:35):
Played doctor frankenfurter in it?

Speaker 5 (20:39):
This the comments on this, I had no idea this
remake existed and I could have lived peacefully the rest
of my life without knowing it of its existence. Rocky
Horror is one of those things that there's no point
in remaking. There's something special about it that can never
be duplicated. Even if you were able to magically bring
back the original cast in their prime to remake it,
it still.

Speaker 2 (20:59):
Wouldn't be very good. Tim Curry has look he has
a role in the new one.

Speaker 5 (21:06):
Maybe he was the whole reason why nineteen seventy five
the version there is amazing is the aesthetic. The remake
completely doesn't get this. No see this was no one
asked anyone if they should do this, because everyone would
have told them no. Don't the thing about the original
it was so raw and rough looking. The sets looked

(21:27):
like something out of a crazy drug and sex field party. Ah,
the good old days. Both the sets and Laverne Cox
are far too polished up in my opinion. Oh Laverne
Cox was seeing.

Speaker 2 (21:38):
My guess is because she was one of the ones
that people wanted to play doctor Frank.

Speaker 5 (21:43):
The monster doctor Frankenfurter or the no creation doctor Frankenfurter.
So that's why Tim Curry was so great as Frank.
He didn't have, he didn't have perfectly done makeup, and
he really put the energy into it, not worrying about
if he busted ass. I'm wait, it was done on
a shoe string. I'm waiting to see Frank in the
in the TV remake to see who it is. It's

(22:07):
just the point, the whole point of Rocky Horror is
that it's literally insane. It's exactly what you'd expect to
be made if all your ideas came out in in
a random thought generator. Putting a beautiful woman with perfect
makeup and a fashionable outfit is literally the opposite of
what should have been done. Turning a pink science lab
into a literal nightclub is not how this should have
been done.

Speaker 2 (22:27):
Yes, so it is, Laverne Cox.

Speaker 5 (22:30):
This was this was just this was a bad idea
from the very beginning. How much was the a budget
for a Rocky Horror?

Speaker 2 (22:41):
I don't know, less than a million bucks.

Speaker 5 (22:43):
Probably original budget one point four. Some sources say it
was one point two either way, two hundred thousand dollars
small budget it has made over the years. Ed, He guesses, No,
I don't even know how you how you figure that out?

(23:05):
After all, of these years it is grossed and estimated
that can't be right. Grossed an estimated one hundred and
thirteen million domestically total of one D one hundred and
thirteen thousand, excuse me, one hundred and thirteen million, twenty
six thousand worldwide. Now, while initially a box office flopped,

(23:27):
the film's cult following, that's just it. When it came out,
everybody was like, this is crazy, and it was. It
was insane. There's no way that that's the uh, that
that is the total box office take. It's got to
be old to be in the reason it has to
be bazillion.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
Because they were playing it every weekend for years.

Speaker 5 (23:51):
Yeah, but it was a buck yeah, but it was
a dollar to go, so it was, you know, the
cheap seats. Since its release in seventy five, Rocky Horror
has made more than three one hundred and sixty five
million at the box office. That doesn't even that still
doesn't sound right. I would have thought it would have
been a whole lot more, but that would make it

(24:12):
not this. I can't as if it's a gross in
Canada top grossing movies now for say, it's all over
the place. I don't think anybody knows. I think everyone's guessing,
because how the hell would you figure it out over
the course of all this time. There's no there's no
way you could legit do it. Box Office Mojo listed

(24:35):
total lifetime North American gross of one hundred and thirteen million,
which puts it at number eight among all live action
musicals released since nineteen seventy five. I still that does
not sound like fifty years and the remake does not
even know even remotely look like it would be worth
a damn You know you're not supposed to wear stripes

(24:57):
to Rocky Horror?

Speaker 2 (25:00):
No, I didn't know that.

Speaker 5 (25:00):
Why considered bad form? Why was it? Why does anybody
want to go to see it at all? To begin with?
It makes no sense, None of it makes sense. I
wouldn't mind having a piece of the back end, though,
did you I see what you did there? If you
know what I'm saying, and I think you do. Susan

(25:25):
Sarandon does not regret being in it. I wouldn't think
anybody put you on the damn map. And Barry Bostwick too,
damn it, Janet. It thrills me that my grandchildren may
see their grandmother in her half slip and bra seducing
a monster. That's a little freaky, but hey, you do

(25:46):
you boo in the meantime, back in the present, if
you are looking for a way to stay healthy and
get healthy or get and stay healthy, consider Stella's mojo.
You know by now that if you go there you
can find your the ivermactin the hydroxy chloroquin that you've
been searching for that you have a for whatever reason.

(26:10):
That's still like if you walk into your doctor's office
and you want, you know, the prescription for ivermact and
they still kind of look at you as scants they do,
which is kind of strange.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
But it's going to your local feed store. You can
get it without them questioning you.

Speaker 5 (26:28):
They don't ask you any questions at all.

Speaker 2 (26:29):
If you want, Nope, sure shouldn't. I went into the
Don and Donna in Georgia and they had it. They
had it at the counter ready for them when they
came in. They just handed it to them. It was
a big old boy. It was a box with a
bottle in it, of course, and uh, it was the

(26:50):
swine and something else, but it was the liquid. And
they take a freaking syringe in the glass with water
around and then drinking it.

Speaker 5 (27:01):
Write your own jokes in the air. Yeah, well, at
least it's that said the movie was cheap midnight mattee. Yeah,
that's why one hundred and thirteen million. It's got to
be more than it. But if you think of when
you the next time you go to the Rocky Horror
Picture Show, and I'm assuming people still go, right, I mean,
it's it's still a.

Speaker 2 (27:20):
Hard doing that. I don't know. Surely I haven't heard
of it in a while.

Speaker 5 (27:27):
Surely Preeby thirty eight says, Ron didn't know you're not
supposed to wear stripes to Rocky Horror. No, I did not,
He says, I wasn't even alive back then, and I
knew that. Ron. It's okay, you can't win. Just remember that.
Just just remember that, you just can't win. As long
as you do that, it'd be fine.

Speaker 1 (27:50):
Yeah, you're still doing it wrong seven years.

Speaker 5 (27:53):
Just remember but what we owed does stellis mojo? That's right,
Stellus mojo. Because the next time you go to Rocky Horror,
think of all the think of all the the Rona's
going to be all the smeg that's going to be, Uh,
you know, coughed into sneezed into the into the air
while you're in the theater. That's the other thing is
that you go to those you go to those movies
like that, everybody's coughing on each other and yeah, it's

(28:17):
like a disease pit. You don't think about that stuff
when you're sixteen, do you know? You get to be
our age though, and it's say, oh, I want to
go out there and all that funk. Just get juiced
up on ivermectin and hydroxychlork and CLOrk win and then
go to the Rocky Horror Picture Show. It'll be a
big time. Go to Stellar'smojo dot com. He's the promo
code daily Mojo get five percent off, which again beats

(28:42):
a swift kick right in the weasel snack, isn't it. Yes,
I was hoping you'd say, yes, Stellar'smojo dot.

Speaker 10 (28:51):
Com do everything they down to the daily motive. Now
it's time to stund.

Speaker 6 (29:14):
With Run.

Speaker 10 (29:17):
The airwaves, Ing of the Airwaves, King of the Airwaves.

Speaker 1 (29:25):
This is your daily Mojoe.

Speaker 11 (29:35):
You know.

Speaker 5 (29:35):
Barry Bostwick originated the role of Danny's.

Speaker 2 (29:40):
Zuko on Broadway Good Gon.

Speaker 5 (29:46):
He's impressed by how many people still love the Rocky
Horror Picture Show. I'll do these conventions occasionally and keep
up with them, and you know, in that world, I'm
Uncle Barry. When I do these conventions, all of a sudden,
I'm meeting a third generation of kids who've just seen it,
you know, ten year olds, twelve year olds, and then
their parents of their grandparents. It's just one of those
moments in life that people sort of measure their life against.

(30:08):
Because it was simple, because it was the good old.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Those simple You could sing every freaking song. It was
just it was the good old days.

Speaker 5 (30:20):
It's just a jump to the left and then what ron?

Speaker 2 (30:24):
Jump to the right, step to the right, step to
the right, okay, and then a hip thrust?

Speaker 5 (30:28):
Then what do you do?

Speaker 2 (30:29):
Hip thrust?

Speaker 6 (30:30):
No?

Speaker 5 (30:31):
You put your hands on your hips?

Speaker 3 (30:33):
Did? Sure?

Speaker 2 (30:33):
You can sing along the hip thrust? Okay?

Speaker 5 (30:37):
You were drunk, weren't you? You were drunk when you
went to see it twelve years old? You were drunk.
You were a drunkard, probably was. Why don't we call
them drunkards anymore? Remember that year?

Speaker 2 (30:48):
He because we call them drunk asses, And now.

Speaker 5 (30:51):
You're an ALKI strange drunk? How strange was it for
the pen live comments below, It seemed a fairly ordinary
night when Brad Major Chirk and his fiance Janet.

Speaker 3 (31:02):
Weiss, women of ill repute.

Speaker 5 (31:04):
Oh you know her, I've forgotten that when they when
they uh, they're in the rain. You take out your
your newspaper. If you've never been to the Rocky Horror

(31:25):
Picture Show, you have no idea what you're missing. It
is really just the trippiest thing.

Speaker 2 (31:32):
It was community, you know what. That's what it is.

Speaker 5 (31:34):
It was and you got.

Speaker 2 (31:39):
Ready your gloves.

Speaker 5 (31:41):
Where else did you get to see that?

Speaker 9 (31:43):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (31:44):
Tim curR even tried unsuccessfully to attend the midnight screening
of Rocky Horror in five He uh he found the
U there was a theater in New York that was
holding audience participation screenings of Rocky Horror, only to be
told by the ticket agent, you're the third Tim Curry
to call this week. He simply went in person to

(32:06):
get a ticket. He was thrown out for being an impostor.
He produced his passport. Yeshuared apologized, but he ultimately told
her I wouldn't dream of going back in huh and
Curry David. Tim Curry rather said It was David Bowie's wife,
who was one of the very first people. Because this

(32:27):
had to start somewhere, right, I mean, it wasn't the
first time that the Rocky Horror Picture Show was shown
in the theater and people started talking back. That took
on a life of its own over the years. It
was David Bowie, his wife, Angie Bowie. They went to
his screening, it says, at the height of the film's popularity,
whenever that was. I know what year, he said. I

(32:48):
remember when Bowie came and he brought this huge entourage,
and she was with him, and when Richard O'Brien was
about to kill me, she shouted, no, no, don't do it.
So I guess she was one of the first people
to do that. It was deemed to be culturally, historically,
or esthetically significant by the Library of Congress. It was

(33:10):
added to the Library of Congress National Film Registry along
with the with the Sting Toy Story and A Raisin
in the Sun. I had no idea it was on
the National Film Registry. There are Easter eggs hidden in
Rocky Horror, really actual Easter eggs around the set. The

(33:32):
crew allegedly had staged a literal easter egg hunt, and
some of them proved so well hidden that they ended
up in the movie, including what you can see underneath
Frankenfurter's throne, and at the beginning of the number time Warp,
you see what appears to be a skeleton embedded inside
a coffin shaped grandfather clock. They say it's an urban legend,

(33:53):
that the skeleton was a real one, and that the
time piece selling it Southby's in Law, and it sold
for thirty five pounds in two which is it's kind
of like the real skeletons at Disneyland and Pirates of
the Caribbean. Excuse me, Caribbean. I can't believe I said

(34:15):
it wrong. How dare I that there was a real skeleton?
Did you know that?

Speaker 2 (34:21):
I've heard that?

Speaker 5 (34:22):
Yes? And why wouldn't there be? I mean back when
it was built. Why wouldn't it when it was first
built in sixty seven, I.

Speaker 2 (34:33):
Mean, you don't get more authentic than that, right, Well,
and it wasn't.

Speaker 5 (34:37):
People weren't all freaked out about stuff like that back then.
But they were actual human bones. It was a of
The ride was originally envisioned as a walkthrough wax Museum
Walt Disney rethought that after the success of the nineteen
sixty four World's Fair, where the company debuted audio animatronic people,

(35:00):
Small World, the iconic attractions, Runaways, Accessibility to Move, and
blah blah blah. Building the ride involved close collaboration between
the machine shop the animatronics. One thing the imagineers couldn't
recreate was skeletons. The technology of the time was not
Why didn't they just use a three D printer.

Speaker 2 (35:19):
The technology at the time.

Speaker 5 (35:21):
Come on, you're telling me they didn't have three D
printers back in sixty seven. Don't do you think I'm
gonna believe that. Don't even tell me the They didn't
feel feel like the kind of the recreations that they
met their standards of realism, So instead of faking it,
the imagineers went to find the real thing, straight to UCLA,
where they procured real human skeletons for the ride. Is

(35:45):
that creepy? Could be? But I mean skeletons bones, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
Why is it that?

Speaker 5 (35:52):
Why if you came across a skeleton would you be
afraid of? Like you're going through the woods and you
see a skeleton on the ground, would you be free doubt.
I mean, would it would you be afraid of it?
Would it? What if it still had some meat on it?

Speaker 2 (36:05):
Uh, still wouldn't be freaked out, but definitely would you wouldn't. No, No,
I think what would freak me out more was a
newly decayed body, not.

Speaker 5 (36:20):
A Okay, so what I don't that's by point is
why is it that you a skeleton is still still
a person.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
The goer of it? Maybe a skeleton is a skeleton.
Your brain doesn't doesn't put a person's face on a skeleton.
You see what I'm saying. Okay, you can you can disassociate.
You can disassociate a person from a skeleton, believe it
or not.

Speaker 5 (36:45):
But and that's why I think it's not not that
big a deal that had skeletons in the in the
Maybe somebody they had a will partially decomposed body in
there would be different. That would be a little freaky.

Speaker 2 (36:58):
Maybe somebody willed their body to signs or Disney.

Speaker 5 (37:02):
No, they got him from UCLA. Rocky horror is what
happens when the CIA traffic's cocaine into the cities in
the sixties. Tenzo one twenty five must be a slow
news day. No, not really. We can talk about DC
if you want to. I mean, they've got the they've
got the uh National Guard there and they're arresting people

(37:24):
and for throwing up and talk about we can walk
about talk about Putin if you want to, because Putin
and Trump met are getting going to change?

Speaker 2 (37:31):
Aren't they meeting tomorrow?

Speaker 5 (37:34):
I think they talked on the phone.

Speaker 2 (37:36):
Yeah, the meeting in Alaska's tomorrow. I think.

Speaker 5 (37:40):
Is uh, what's your face going to be there? Who
payne the Yeah?

Speaker 2 (37:48):
I don't know. I doubt it.

Speaker 5 (37:50):
Why wouldn't she be She's an important important political city Russia.
From our porch, right, newspaper and squirrel gun. I filled
my squirrel gun with water down liquid ivory soap. Nothing
like a milky white substance landing on you from the
air during that movie, Thank you, John Clapp. Mm it

(38:13):
was funnier with the squirrel gun. She says, No, there's
all kinds of things going on, and it's uh, after
a while, it just starts to hurt your brain because
you realize, are they just going through the motions? I mean, DC?
Is it still a crap hole? Yep?

Speaker 2 (38:32):
Does anything ever really change?

Speaker 5 (38:34):
No? No, that's just That's that's the issue. Does anything
really ever change? It's slow if and when it does.
But Missy thirteen says, sometimes a political crap is too much.
It does you just you get at some point, you
just get you've had it up to your eyeballs with it,
and you want to think about something different. That's the

(38:57):
way I approach it. Anyway. However, I will tell you
that it was a coming up in less than a month.
It's been ten years since. And if I mentioned the name,
let's see if let's see if you can associate it
with what what what happened? Ahmed Mohammad?

Speaker 2 (39:21):
That's that's been ten years.

Speaker 5 (39:25):
You know what I'm talking about? Yeah, you know, don't
look it up. Don't know.

Speaker 2 (39:32):
I'm not looking it up.

Speaker 5 (39:33):
But what do you think it is? One word? Just
one word? What do you think it is? Ahamed Mohammad bombing?
Am I thinking, Wow, you are such a xenophobe and
a Muslim hater? You do you think of? You hear
Ahamed Mohammad and you think bombing, You're You're almost right?

(39:57):
Sort of huh? It was kind of but was it
may have been, but it probably wasn't. But he still
got arrested for it. You'll find out next on The
Daily Mojo.

Speaker 11 (40:14):
This is Phil Bell on the Daily Mojo with your up.

Speaker 1 (40:17):
This.

Speaker 11 (40:17):
A couple of days ago, on the Morning Update, I
talked about how excited I am to see President Trump
taking over Washington, d C and bringing an end to
the insane crime that's taking place there. However, in that
last couple of days, I've heard several sources, including this
college student, come out and say that Trump is being
racist by saying bad things about Baltimore and Chicago because

(40:40):
they are being run by black mayors, and of course
taking over Washington, d C, which is also run by
a black mayor. Hold on a second, I've got something
coming in the IFB here from Brad. Hey, Brad, what's up?

Speaker 5 (40:51):
Wait?

Speaker 11 (40:51):
You mean that's not a college student. That's the mayor
of Baltimore. I mean this guy with the dirty shirt
who looks like you just ran a bet. Okay, look,
let me just finish the update. So apparently this isn't
a college student, this is the mayor of Baltimore. But
the point still remains. Their assertion is that President Trump
is being racist by taking over Washington DC and denigrating

(41:15):
these cities because they're run by blacks. Now I got
a different take, and my take is correct. If you're
doing a bad job, and Brandon Scott, the college student mayor,
clearly is doing a bad job, it's right for someone
to come out and tell you you're doing a bad job.
And the same goes for Chicago and Los Angeles and otherwise.
And President Trump is doing the absolute right thing by

(41:38):
calling out this in Sandy. And quite frankly, if you
believe that you are being targeted because you're a black
mayor and you're doing a bad.

Speaker 1 (41:45):
Job, then maybe you need to do a better job,
and maybe you need to.

Speaker 11 (41:49):
Stop making other blacks look bad by doing such a
bad job as mayor of the city of Baltimore, mister
Brandon Scott. And the same goes for you, Mayor Brandon
Johnson in Chicago, and yes, that also applies to the
mayor of Washington, DC. You need to do a better job.
You need to stop the crime, you need to lower
the taxes, you need to get your government the hell

(42:10):
out of the way when it comes to growing the
economy that will make those cities better, not running around
and asking for special treatment because of your race. It's
unacceptable and it has to stop. And you know what
else has to stop. The people who are electing you
need to hold your feet to the fire as well.
So what I want you to do is leave a
comment under the show let us know what you think.

(42:32):
And I also hope you'll download the Daily Mojo 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 others. Stay sharp, stay strong, and stay free
right here on the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 4 (42:48):
Phil Bell's Morning Update is only on the Daily Mojoo.

Speaker 10 (43:02):
It's Thursday Morning.

Speaker 3 (43:04):
The coffee's hot, Brad and Ronde.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
You've got the live news and.

Speaker 5 (43:08):
Weather traffic too.

Speaker 10 (43:10):
They spend the hits just for you. The Daily modos
on the air Thursday Shimmer Beyond Compare from the sixty.

Speaker 2 (43:21):
Swing of twenty to Unplay.

Speaker 10 (43:24):
You'll find the groove.

Speaker 1 (43:25):
It's everywhere.

Speaker 5 (43:29):
Joy turn the dial and let it play.

Speaker 1 (43:33):
They'll chase your.

Speaker 11 (43:34):
Blues, ride away from beetles, beats to discochine and everything
in between.

Speaker 1 (43:44):
They're spinning tails. They're spinning tunes, bright as the morning.

Speaker 5 (43:48):
Sharp as news. It was almost ten years.

Speaker 2 (44:13):
Ago Thursday, Shimmer Beyond.

Speaker 5 (44:16):
Compass, September fourteenth. Actually, so we're technically we are what
nine years and eleven months post Ahmed Mohammed.

Speaker 2 (44:26):
Yeah, I was thinking of the wrong person.

Speaker 1 (44:27):
Sorry, guys.

Speaker 5 (44:29):
He's clockboy. He was arrested at MacArthur High School here
in Irving, Texas. He brought it. She's still saying, shut up.
He brought a Well they said it was a bomb.
Well they thought it was a bom. Well one teacher
thought it was a bomb, but wasn't a bomb.

Speaker 2 (44:48):
No, it was a clock.

Speaker 5 (44:49):
He invented a clock. What is wrong with you people?
It was just a damn clock. Well, I don't know
why you people think that it had to be why's
everything got to be a.

Speaker 1 (45:02):
Bomb with you?

Speaker 2 (45:03):
I mean it looks like a bomb, though, I mean
it's just a clock of a racist, Muslim hating, xenophobic asshole.

Speaker 5 (45:10):
I mean, what, it's just a clock.

Speaker 2 (45:16):
In a case.

Speaker 5 (45:17):
I mean, who hasn't seen a clock like that, because
it doesn't really look like a clock? Trucker clock? Who
wants it? Talk to Teddy Bear and this kid and
was he was he improperly handled? Pardon the expression I
don't remember what what has arrested at school?

Speaker 2 (45:38):
He was fourteen, fourteen or fifteen years old.

Speaker 5 (45:41):
So that it's fourteen years old, fourteen years old and
he brings it to school. He says he brought it
to school to impress his teacher. But then there was
another teacher who thought it was a bomb. Calls the cops.
They come, They put the kid in handcuffs. They take
so bad. Look, Yeah, why couldn't they have called the

(46:05):
parents and said, what's the deal here? I mean, it's
let's see the hands of everyone who thinks that this
kid was just innocent and you know he was trying
to make a clock, trying to impress his teacher. Or
was he being used by his dad, who's fairly political
and I think even ran for president in Was it sedan?

(46:30):
And was he being used as a pawn by his
dad to garner some attention? I would I think that's
a safe bet because if the kid was really, I
mean an inventor, which was that that was the whole thing,
is that he just he loved to invent things. He

(46:50):
went on the What's this guy? Who was called the
Nightly Show? I don't remember this. He was on Comedy Central.
I remember this guy's name, but here he is appearing
on the on the program and they talk about some
of the other things he's invented. I'm at Muhammet. Yeah,

(47:14):
Larry's does nassa shirt on too? I have a see
let's talk about Hey, I mean, bright eyed kid. Right,
he's just I'm probably Larry Wilmore.

Speaker 3 (47:29):
Nice land.

Speaker 2 (47:30):
Isn't that nice?

Speaker 11 (47:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (47:33):
You, Sai's a cool kid.

Speaker 5 (47:34):
It's great to have you here.

Speaker 12 (47:35):
Oh, before we start, I just have a quick note
to your teachers, if they're watching, please don't be alarmed.

Speaker 3 (47:41):
This isn't a wall of explosives.

Speaker 11 (47:46):
These are just some clocks from around the world.

Speaker 2 (47:49):
We're absolutely safe.

Speaker 12 (47:51):
I just want to make that okay, okay, First things first,
how long did it take you to make that bomb?
It looks like a pretty complicated explosive device, right minutes.

Speaker 2 (48:09):
So you wanted to make a clock?

Speaker 1 (48:10):
Is that how it started?

Speaker 5 (48:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (48:11):
Well what was your thinking?

Speaker 2 (48:12):
Had you made a clock before?

Speaker 6 (48:14):
No?

Speaker 3 (48:14):
Really?

Speaker 12 (48:15):
So why were you thinking you wanted to make a clock?

Speaker 7 (48:17):
It was something really simple to make.

Speaker 5 (48:19):
Because wait, wait, wait, wait, hold on, I thought you,
he told his teachers, trying to impress the teachers but
it was simple. They say that we're getting our stories
mixed up.

Speaker 12 (48:30):
He didn't look simple. I mean that thing looked pretty complicated.
Did you have to look it up or anything like that.

Speaker 7 (48:35):
No, I didn't have to look it up. The only
thing I had to look up was the receipt for
the box.

Speaker 12 (48:39):
Really, wait, so you actually thought through the process of
how to make a clock yourself?

Speaker 1 (48:46):
Right?

Speaker 5 (48:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (48:46):
So is that what you're really proud of?

Speaker 12 (48:48):
Like about when you do these type of things that
you just figure it out all by yourself. Because I
can't even figure out how to do a lego clock like.

Speaker 7 (48:55):
That, but a real clock, it's really it's really simple
to me because I'm smart, I built more stuff that's
very complicated.

Speaker 9 (49:05):
Like like what like what what?

Speaker 11 (49:07):
What?

Speaker 5 (49:08):
Stuff has he built that's complicated?

Speaker 7 (49:11):
No idea CPUs and sorry enough.

Speaker 5 (49:17):
He's made CPUs and soldering them. That's what he's clock.

Speaker 7 (49:23):
It was simple, and some of the parts were scrapped off.

Speaker 5 (49:25):
So that some of the parts were scrapped off. I
mean the again, is it the kid's fault? He's fourteen,
probably put out there by his parents's a pond or
his dad in particular to you know, Garner against some attention.
But if he was this electronics prodigy, what are some

(49:47):
of the other things, because that would be, you know,
kind of a news story. Look at the other stuff
that he's invented. I mean, he made this little thing
over here that pours your coffee in the morning and
makes it puts the toast, you like, kind of like
a Rube Goldberg thing where you put the ping pong
ball in here and it goes to the track and
the bird hits it and then it's a flushes the toilet,

(50:09):
the toilet and then puff your toast is done. Where
are those inventions? Oh yeah, there aren't any, because he's
made other stuff, like he's made CPUs and how you
saw it?

Speaker 1 (50:23):
Ron?

Speaker 5 (50:24):
Do you solder a CPU? Evidently? I mean you you
sought her on the board. You've diddled with a CPU,
right once or twice? Okay? I mean yes, you solder?
Is that inventing something?

Speaker 9 (50:42):
No?

Speaker 5 (50:44):
No, no, you you you install a CPU and a
computer on a motherboard and there's some solder. And it's
pretty delicate soldering too. I mean you have to be
pretty decent, a pretty decent soldierer. The soldier the CPU
onto a mother board can't be sloppy, because if it's sloppy,
it doesn't work. But that's what I mean, that's the

(51:04):
other those are the other things he's worked on. He's
you know, cpu soldering it. So he just wanted to
impress the teacher with a clock that he had made
in a box that again looks nothing like a clock.

(51:27):
It looks more like a complicated wiring device. And again
at the time, tensions were you know, a little dicey,
shall we say, My question is where is this kid today?
Because again you'd think that, you know, he's twenty four
years old.

Speaker 6 (51:44):
Now.

Speaker 5 (51:46):
They moved out of the country after this whole thing
happened because you know, the Islamophobia, and people didn't like
him because he well, if you look at the Wikipedia entry,
it's interesting he was arrested for bringing a disassembled digital
clock to school because that's what he did. He took

(52:10):
the he took a digital clock and just took the
pieces out of the digital He didn't invent anything. He
took the pieces out of a clock and put them
in a metal They call it a pencil case. It's
hard to get because it kind of looks like a briefcase,
does it not?

Speaker 2 (52:25):
It does but it's smaller than that.

Speaker 5 (52:27):
Yeah, it's very small because look at that, there's an
electrical plug right there next to it, so you can
kind of get a sense of scale.

Speaker 2 (52:33):
Pencil case or a cigar case. I've seen cigar cases.

Speaker 1 (52:36):
Like that, right, so.

Speaker 5 (52:39):
And so, wait, it's a clock that you you you
have to open it up to see the digits and
the incident ignited allegations of racial profiling and Islamophobia from
many media sources and commentators. The episode a rowse when
Muhammad reassembled the parts of a digital clock into an
eight inch pencil container and brought it to school to

(53:01):
show his teachers. His English teacher thought the device resembled
a bomb, confiscated it, reported him to the principal. Police recalled.
They question him for an hour and a half. He
was handcuffed, taking the custody transported to juvenile detention facility.
According to the police, they arrested him because they initially
suspected he may have purposely caused a bomb scare, yeah reasonable.

(53:27):
Following the incident that he had determined that he had
no malicious intent. He was not charged with any crime.
News of the incident went viral afterwards. The President of
the United States Barack Hussein Obama at that point in time,
as well as other politicians, activists, technology company executives because
why wouldn't you, right, and media personalities commented about the incident,

(53:49):
many of them praise Muhammad for his ingenuity and creativity okay,
and he was invited to participate in a number of
high profile events related to encouraging ute interest in science
and technology. He was cleared in the final police investigation.
He became the subject of conspiracy theories, many of them contradictory,
citing no evidence and conflicting with established facts, which claimed

(54:13):
that the incident was a deliberate hoax. I'm going to
put my money on it was a deliberate hoax, because
otherwise you're just an idiot. No, it really, I mean,
why wouldn't you look at that and think that's a
really cool clock that you can't see unless you open

(54:34):
up the little box there. And when you open up
the box, there's a bunch of wires and there's a timer.
Like every freaking bomb you've ever seen in a freaking
movie where there's a bomb in a box, except in fifteen,
except there's no.

Speaker 2 (54:55):
Bomb.

Speaker 5 (54:56):
I mean, there's nothing explosive. Correct, there's nothing esposed it,
But that's not the first thing you think of. I mean,
I agree, Yeah, when you open that, you don't think
you think that triggers a memory, because, like I said,
it's the same as every other bomb in a movie.
And you open up a and you see a timer. Now,

(55:18):
I don't know what the digits say, but again, your
brain associates with that.

Speaker 2 (55:21):
It probably.

Speaker 5 (55:25):
Was a you know, a deliberate hoax, wouldn't you. It
is not a reasonable assumption to make. It's not like whoa.
I can see where he took that and wanted to
impress his teachers. Was showing a clock. I mean, that's
a cool clock. Be intellectually honest with yourself. In November
of twenty fifteen, they threatened to sue the city of

(55:46):
Irving in the school district for civil rights violations and
physical and mental anguish unless they received written apologies and
compensation of fifteen million dollars.

Speaker 2 (55:57):
There you go, that's what they were ating.

Speaker 5 (56:02):
You know, I feel very violated and I'm very mentally anguished,
but I probably would feel better if you gave me
a buttload of money. By the way, the lawsuit was
dismissed by a judge in twenty seventeen for lack of evidence.
He they then ended up moving to to cut her again.

(56:30):
I realized, I know what, I know what the intention
of Wikipedia entries are. It's interesting that one of the
background here, his father, Mohammed el Hassan Mohammed, said that
he had driven him to school that morning and encouraged
him to show his technological skills. I would say, I

(56:51):
mean again, I'm just being a critic that if that
is the presentation of your technological skills, it's kind of sloppy.
It doesn't look like the wires aren't dressed up nice
and neat. I'm just saying. Ralph Kubiak, Mohammad's seventh grade

(57:12):
history teacher, said that Mohammad was known as an electronics enthusiast,
with a history of being disciplined for using a handmade
remote control to cause a classroom projector to malfunction on command.
He was also noted for making a battery charger to
help recharge the cell phone of a school tutor. Some
of those creations looked much like the infamous clock, a

(57:33):
mess of wires and exposed circus stuffed inside a hinged case,
perhaps suspicious to some. According to the Guardian, everybody in
middle school knew Muhammad was a kid who makes crazy
contraptions and who fixed electronics. Classmates brought to him, earning
him the nickname inventor Kid. He has a a Twitter.

(57:59):
It's he hasn't posted anything for a couple of years,
but the last time I guess he was at I
don't know what museum that is, but they've got a
there's a big Is that an oversized animal?

Speaker 1 (58:18):
Balloon?

Speaker 5 (58:18):
Animal?

Speaker 2 (58:19):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (58:20):
What is that? Like a ducksun something like that. The
the comments on it are interesting. Dude took a screwdriver
to a clock radio and became a baller. Do you
have him in it? I watched an interview with him
back in twenty fifteen. One of my English students has
watched it countlessly. He's also your fan. Go away, you terrorist, clown,

(58:44):
You are trash. That's not very nice. But the interview
I mean with with.

Speaker 3 (58:50):
Him, but that's how it got easier.

Speaker 12 (58:53):
Okay, And now the horrible thing about this was you
got to rest and we had the picture of you
in handcuffs.

Speaker 5 (58:57):
Do we still have that again?

Speaker 1 (58:58):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (59:01):
Because bad luck he was.

Speaker 12 (59:04):
Taken because like I love space and I love NASA.

Speaker 1 (59:06):
I'm like, what how can they do that to this good?

Speaker 12 (59:08):
But but be honest, keep it hundred was a little
cool to be arrested, right, I mean I didn't give
a little street credit back in it.

Speaker 3 (59:21):
It was it was kind of cool.

Speaker 5 (59:24):
I thought I was traumatized. Didn't seem traumatized.

Speaker 2 (59:27):
Not fifteen million dollars worth?

Speaker 5 (59:29):
No, no, right, I've been traumatized. But if I had
a little cash, was like.

Speaker 3 (59:37):
Yeah, I made a clock and not taken.

Speaker 7 (59:42):
The only reason, like, I felt cool about it because
I knew I was innocent, and I knew, yes, if
I didn't take it to court, I wouldn't.

Speaker 5 (59:48):
That's right, That's right. I knew it's innocent. If I
didn't take it to court.

Speaker 12 (59:54):
What all was any part of it scary at all?
We ever scared something might happen?

Speaker 7 (01:00:01):
I mean, yeah, where the cops almost mean to do
a nana back where he's wearing my arm?

Speaker 5 (01:00:06):
Wait remember the nne? No you don't, I don't do
it the dance in nne? Okay, seriously you don't remember. Wow,
I thought you were a cultural historian. Nope, do the nyne?

Speaker 4 (01:00:25):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (01:00:27):
Seeing how it's a fake bomb. I would have paid
him fake money and said congratulations. Not my dogs. Jody
went to anyone, says, I thought that was the Jeff
Dunham puppet. Ah Mad Muhammad. I did too. Actually when
I first when I first heard it, I was like,
wait a minute, and I done him. So then he
apparently the kid went on to and again he's twenty

(01:00:47):
four years old. Now I just thought, I wonder where
he is I met again. He's an inventor. You'd think
by now he would have invented something. It was really cool, right,
I mean, if he was that into inventions, where are
the inventions Obama at the time, Hey cool clock, Ahmed
want to bring it to the White House. We should

(01:01:07):
inspire more kids like you to like science. It's what
makes America great. Did Barack Obama say it's what makes
America great? Wait a minute, does not make him a racist,
homophobe nazi who knew weird. Hillary Clinton tweeted her support

(01:01:28):
as well, with assumptions and fear don't keep us safe,
they hold us back. Ahmed, stay curious and keep building,
which of course he did and I don't. I would
love to know if he's built something wouldn't that be nice?
I mean again, I would it would be kind of
cool if there's a head and he's gone to build

(01:01:50):
incredible things and make inventions that you know again, create
your toast and make cool stuff happen. But that's because
the whole thing was designed to garner attention and to
possibly get a fifteen million dollar payout. But we were
all considered racist, homophobes, xenophobe, islamophobes if we said anything

(01:02:17):
about it, which again remember that was ten years ago.
It was the PC thing. You couldn't you couldn't criticize.
And look where it's gotten us. There can't be you
got it. If there's a sacred cow, they probably make

(01:02:37):
a really good hamburger with it, right, ron, right, that
should be on one of your signs that you put
on the front door. Bring us your sacred cow will
have a grill out. Huh. Okay, sorry, did I wake
you up?

Speaker 9 (01:02:53):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:02:55):
But I don't understand. I don't understand the sacred cow
make in a sign thing.

Speaker 5 (01:03:01):
Okay. I was trying to lead you into your signs
there up on the those are no soliciting signs. There's
nothing about a cow on those, right, That's what I'm saying.
You could probably have a cow you bring another sign,
bring it, expand the product line into bring us your
sacred cow. We'll have a grill out. Or you could,
you know, buy one of these no soliciting signs. If

(01:03:22):
you're selling a sacred cow, don't don't bring it because
we're not buying it.

Speaker 1 (01:03:26):
Yeah, that right right.

Speaker 5 (01:03:28):
If you have a let's say you have a clock
in a bomb case, don't bring it. We're not buying it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
I'll engrave the shit out of.

Speaker 1 (01:03:33):
It, though.

Speaker 5 (01:03:35):
Gotta be careful though, because if there's dynamite in there,
it would be bad. Right. See, Yeah, this is where
you go. Yeah, we're selling the hell out of these things.
They're great at Romika Designs, at Mojo Laser Pros.

Speaker 2 (01:03:52):
Sometimes you crack me up with this whole segueing into
Romeika Designs and Mojo Laser Pros.

Speaker 5 (01:03:58):
I'm just hand it. I'm off to you.

Speaker 2 (01:04:01):
No, I get that by the silver platter. No, I'll
show this again that I showed yesterday that we're working on.
These are the These are the well I call them
memorial bricks, but this one I tested with is not
memorial from my brother. It's just his his dates of service.
But we're I'm I'm learning how to engrave on these bricks.

(01:04:22):
And I thought for a long time that there was
some specialness about this brick, but it's not. It's just
a red clay brick. But I bought it from somebody
who said it was a laser.

Speaker 5 (01:04:32):
Old brick, Fiel, How do you make that? How do
you think that makes the brick feel? When you just
call it a regular old break. It's just a regular
old brick. But what happens.

Speaker 2 (01:04:40):
What happens is the laser gets hot enough to melt
that clay into glass, and that's what makes it black.
So that's what I'm trying to do now, is figure
out what I can do. I did this one on
my sixty watt laser. I have one hundred and thirty
wht laser. I'm going to hit it, hit the next
brick with and see if I can turn that into
a blacker black or black black or black on the brick,

(01:05:04):
and then we'll put those up on the site. Quite honestly,
there are a lot of what I call veterans memorials
or memorial type hell, even people wanting them for just
bricks in their yard. I get it, but we get
asked about it quite.

Speaker 5 (01:05:22):
A bit, so we decided we did ping Floyd sing
the song about another brick in the yard.

Speaker 2 (01:05:26):
It was in the wall. But yes, so yeah, but
and and good news. I did talk to the folks yesterday.
Mojo Laser Pros and or Romika Designs will have their
own shop pretty soon in the local vicinity, and I
can get the hell out of my garage. So that's

(01:05:48):
going to take place sometime first part of September.

Speaker 5 (01:05:52):
That's weird because that's your family standing over there. Yes,
you're going to get the hell out of the garage.

Speaker 2 (01:05:56):
Those that remember when I first started this in twenty
twenty one one, probably late twenty twenty one, I had
a Laser Shop Live, which was the twenty four to
seven feet of the Laser Shop, Well, I took that
down because quite honestly, it was my garage and people
were coming in and out of the garage. But I'm
gonna put that back up. Laser Shop Live is still
an active link. It goes to our YouTube channel. So

(01:06:19):
we're gonna put back up a twenty four hour Laser
Shop Live so people can come out there and be
bored watching me build stuff.

Speaker 5 (01:06:27):
So is it laser shop?

Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
Oh it does.

Speaker 5 (01:06:29):
It takes you right there too.

Speaker 2 (01:06:30):
Yeah, laser shop look takes YouTube takes YouTube YouTube channel.

Speaker 5 (01:06:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:06:35):
And I haven't posted in two or three years.

Speaker 5 (01:06:40):
It's been a brief pause, just a brief pause.

Speaker 2 (01:06:42):
Much bigger dude in those pictures.

Speaker 5 (01:06:44):
But yeah, holy shit, you are a cow.

Speaker 2 (01:06:47):
Oh my gosh, dude, really what You're not a cow?

Speaker 7 (01:06:50):
Now?

Speaker 5 (01:06:50):
You're not an now? Look at you. I was.

Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
I was a little bit.

Speaker 9 (01:06:53):
I just.

Speaker 5 (01:06:56):
That's weird. Put yourself back up on the screen again,
because that's a it's a little bit of a difference, right,
big time difference. That's amazing. I didn't realize what a
cow you were.

Speaker 2 (01:07:06):
Forty five pounds difference. Yeah, good for calling me a cow.

Speaker 5 (01:07:12):
Please, I'm not calling you a cow. I'm calling him
a cow.

Speaker 2 (01:07:15):
Him is me?

Speaker 5 (01:07:16):
Would put bring up? Bring up? That's horrible English. No,
I book up images of me from two years ago.
I was a freaking moo cow. I was a horse.
I was a giant oxen moo. I mean that's people
would drive by the motel here and they'd lean out

(01:07:36):
their car windows they go mooh. I'm like, no, I'm
one of you.

Speaker 2 (01:07:40):
I'm one of you.

Speaker 5 (01:07:41):
I'm one of you, and they'd moo at me. It's Ron,
thank Youcenzo one twenty five. Ron is a sacred cow.
Was a sacred cow. So you're not a cow anymore?

Speaker 1 (01:07:52):
Son.

Speaker 2 (01:07:53):
Yeah, So the story the reason why I'm not in
the thank you you sound depressed. I'm a little bit
depressed because I never wanted to.

Speaker 5 (01:07:59):
Be a but I remember, you're not a cow anymore.
Celebrate life, Celebrate life. Let's hear you say, I celebrate
a skinny life.

Speaker 2 (01:08:07):
God, celebrate a skinny life. That's it.

Speaker 1 (01:08:10):
That's it.

Speaker 5 (01:08:11):
Can I get an amen?

Speaker 2 (01:08:12):
Amen? Brother?

Speaker 5 (01:08:13):
That's right?

Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
Straight up. The story goes that I would be in
this shop already had the.

Speaker 5 (01:08:23):
Cow let's call them a cow.

Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
No, the name of this company, twenty four K Braids,
Wigs and Dreads place, hadn't put some crap on the
floor that they just can't get up. They've had two
flooring companies come in there and they're like, yeah, I know,
we're not going to take this job. It's seven hundred
and fifty square feet, but they won't take the job
to get whatever it was they put on the floor off.

(01:08:49):
So it's it's likely they're going to just have to
bust out all of that tile and put new flooring in,
and that's what I'm waiting.

Speaker 5 (01:08:56):
Well, look at it this way, You're going to get
a brand new floor. Isn't that nice?

Speaker 2 (01:08:59):
Potentially?

Speaker 5 (01:09:00):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:09:00):
And it's in a really good area of town. It's
it's it's the perfect size for what I need right now.
It gives me another three hundred and fifty square feet
that I don't have right now. So what are you
looking at?

Speaker 5 (01:09:12):
Seriously? Look at how fat you were?

Speaker 2 (01:09:18):
I was I was pretty big.

Speaker 5 (01:09:20):
Wow, I was the rona that you know what? That
was your rona weight you. I'm proud of you for
dropping the pounds, dropping the lbs. Yeah, and you should
look at that and think, Man, I have done some
I've done some amazing schnizz And I can laser on.

Speaker 2 (01:09:34):
Bricks and slate. Apparently that's what that is.

Speaker 5 (01:09:38):
Yeah, this is why I married you. This right here,
this is the reason. This is the reason why we're
still together, because you can do anything when you set
your mind to it.

Speaker 2 (01:09:53):
Mojo laserpros dot Com.

Speaker 5 (01:09:55):
That was beautiful. That was really beautiful. All right, Now,
let's do it one more time, and let's try to
let's try to be authentic. Everybody back to one, back
to one, everybody from Ojo, laserpros dot.

Speaker 3 (01:10:06):
Com where political correctness comes to die.

Speaker 1 (01:10:14):
The Daily Mojo.

Speaker 5 (01:10:18):
Oh shut up, James in Louisiana. I've been cursed by
the skinny life. My whole life. Fight me. I hate
people with metabolisms. Tell you, yeah, hey, just piss me off.
Ew and Guru says it's Ron's manufacturing plant. Boy Blob
says hobbies are healthy. Indeed they are. And let me

(01:10:41):
just tell you I discovered something on I don't. I
want to give him a shout out because he does
some awesome work. It's called the High Tide Supply Company.
You can find it over on the Etsy. And uh,

(01:11:03):
he's one of our family here. I'm gonna let him
out himself because I'm he did he said, I don't
want to. It's kind of weird to tie this to myself,
but I'm gonna let him. Just High Tide Supply Company
on Etsy is really awesome and I'll let y'all dig
into it and figure out who it is. But he's
he's one of the family here at at the Daily Mojo.

(01:11:28):
I are very cool and he's he's right now. He's
in the Rumble chat room so he can out himself.
He just did. It's the boy blob. Who knew the
boy bless he And look he's still kind of blobby,
unlike you, Ron, and we're no longer blobby. The boy
blob is still blobby. You are skinny wrong, So you

(01:11:51):
see I'm skinny. I'm not skinny wrong yet. We love
the skinnies we like, I said, James and Louisian who's
out there. I'm all skinny and stuff. But I thought
those are very cool. And you can go to the
High Tide Supply Company over on Etsy, uh and pick.

Speaker 2 (01:12:06):
H Tie Supply Company high Tis yesterday for quite a while,
I had to add a new product to the Timber
and Beam workshop.

Speaker 5 (01:12:15):
So how is Jerry.

Speaker 2 (01:12:17):
He's doing all right. Uh, I'll see him later this
afternoon because I have to go pick up. We had
four orders for Clay Shooting Awards yesterday, our biggest award
day ever, and uh, they just kept coming in and
I were like, what is going on? Did Etsy feature
us or something? I don't know, but anyhow we got.

Speaker 5 (01:12:40):
Take the win. That's good. I'm glad to uh glad
to see things that are working out there for you
and for the boy Blob as well. It's amazing. You
know what you should get into is the U is
the manufacture of helmets, because apparently they're going they're going

(01:13:01):
for some pretty decent money up on Mars. They found
a helmet on Mars, just in case you were wondering that's.

Speaker 1 (01:13:07):
What that is.

Speaker 5 (01:13:07):
They say it's an odd shaped rock, but it certainly
does it not look like a helmet at the very
least a rain hat rain hat? Maybe that does not
look Does that look like a natural rock formation to.

Speaker 2 (01:13:20):
You, there's not a It's on Mars, dude, It's not
like natural earth rocks exist.

Speaker 5 (01:13:28):
Look at the rest of the rocks. Does that not
look like the desert somewhere out and.

Speaker 2 (01:13:34):
Looks like something that was placed there. I'll give you that,
thank you.

Speaker 5 (01:13:39):
I'm just saying, I mean, you could just you can
say that's just that's Mars. Those crazy Martians they leave
shit laying around like that all the time. But the
Perseverance Rover found this picture, and it's apparently NASA wasn't
able to censor it before the rest of us were
able to see it. It's a volcano shaped rock on

(01:14:00):
the surface of Mars. It looks like a weathered battle helmet,
but it is not a battle helmet. Don't even begin
to think that there was ever anybody on Mars that
wore a helmet, because there never was anybody on Mars
that wore a helmet. Has there been ron not that.

Speaker 2 (01:14:17):
I'm aware of.

Speaker 5 (01:14:18):
Yeah, thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:14:19):
Don't know that if if.

Speaker 5 (01:14:20):
There had been ever anybody on Mars who wore a helmet,
we would know by now because they would have told us.
It's not like they lied to us. It's not like
they withhold information. It's not like NASA goes in and
like photoshops pictures of Mars before they send them out
to the general public so that we don't see what
it's really like. They don't do that. NASA is a

(01:14:43):
fine upstanding organization. Oh and I remember our conversation from yesterday.
We were talking about I don't know if we said
this on the air or not, but our old friend LP,
who's a a member. I told you my friend's dad
had the like the test pilot's over to the pool
all the time. They found out he worked for the

(01:15:06):
skunk works.

Speaker 2 (01:15:07):
Oh interesting, I know.

Speaker 5 (01:15:14):
You think, yeah, he I didn't. All this time, I
didn't know. I mean, he obviously hung out with the
the test pilots and did stuff with Edwards, but I
just never knew that it was actually the skunk works
that he worked for. Telling you just you never know
what you never know about, you never know. It takes
a few a few decades for the truth to finally

(01:15:34):
come out.

Speaker 2 (01:15:35):
So these.

Speaker 5 (01:15:39):
They're calling him fair rules up on Mars because a little,
a little beady bead looking rocks. It looks like almost
it does, but it looks like a it looks like somebody,
you remember, one of the rovers found a whole bunch
of those on the ground at one time. Individually, it
looks like some but he took them and glued them

(01:16:01):
all together. There is no one to take those all
out them together on Mars. There's nobody else we know
by that we know by now if there was anybody
who could do that on Mars. The rock displays a
pointed peak and pitted nodular texture. It evokes an image
of an armored forge of armor forged centuries ago. On Earth,

(01:16:23):
similar nodule textures can form through chemical weathering. Mineral precipitation
or even volcanic processes. They found a similar rock in
March of twenty twenty five, but there's no connection. Don't
even begin to go there, because that's crazy. The hat
shaped rock is composed of spherules. The target name. They've

(01:16:46):
given the rock a name, apparently it's horniflier h O
R n E f l y A horn? Is that hornyfly?
What's a hornyfly? On a second, thank you very much.
I appreciate it better late than ever. Hang on, let's

(01:17:10):
see if we were, if we were saying it right. Seriously,
there's not one, no one stepping forward to try to
say this. I'm all I'm getting. Are horny? Wait a minute,
was that King Arthur's wife's name now as Guinevere. There's

(01:17:31):
nobody that says it's a unique name given to a
rock found on Mars by NASA's perseverance Royer Rover. And
they don't tell you how to bastard. They don't tell
you how to say it. So we're gonna go with hornyfly.
It's distinctive less because of its hat shape and more
because it's made almost entirely those spherules. Scientists think that

(01:17:54):
some rocks seen on Mars that in some of the
rocks scene on Mars's fears form when groundwater passed through
pores in sedimentary rocks. Now here is the hat, because
this is see if it see if it matches up
with your the image you had in your mind of
the hat, because that's exactly what I was thinking of.

(01:18:19):
I mean, right, I mean I.

Speaker 2 (01:18:24):
Could see it. Yeah, but that's not I wasn't thinking.

Speaker 5 (01:18:27):
That because it's no possible way it could be that,
no way that it could be a hat, a literal
hat worn by somebody on Mars. Because there's nobody on Mars,
and there never has been anybody on Mars. We would
know by now if there had ever been anybody on Mars,
would we not? You would think so, yeah, you'd think,

(01:18:47):
right exactly. I mean, this is this crazy, how this
stupid conspiratorial talk about there ever being life or anything
like that on Mars is nuts. You people are crazy,
Thank you, EWE and Guru. The National Official Space Agency
boy Blob says some rocks just get y'all hot and bothered.

(01:19:09):
Scientists that named the rock horny, right, I just a
horny fly thing. W Cuncle will see a purple one
of those thrown on the w NBA court next game?
How how did they how were they sneaking those things
into the into the game.

Speaker 2 (01:19:30):
In their pants? Who's going to ask them about it?

Speaker 5 (01:19:35):
Well, I mean that's a good point. Actually I had
thought about it. It's like, emphasize it, right, So I
wear tight jeans.

Speaker 2 (01:19:43):
I'm sorry, sir, Are you carrying a you see what
I'm saying? Or are you just happy to see me?

Speaker 5 (01:19:52):
You know? I would give you one hundred dollars if
you do that, and let us videotape down and floor
already in the meantime, a powerball winner. This is what
happens when you get too much money too quickly. And
this guy, uh, his name Okay, we're in a simulation.

(01:20:19):
His last name is farting, spelled correctly. I mean there's
an H in there. Okay, what do you mean, spelled correctly? Well, okay,
so it's fart ing. Farting, yeah, farting.

Speaker 2 (01:20:35):
I bet he? I bet he freaking annunciates the H
every time he says his last what's your name is
Ralph farting?

Speaker 5 (01:20:44):
Farting, James farting. He's fifty years old. He starts Martha,
and he counts, Oh, I bet it's farthing now farting
when you see faar th h I n G. What
do you think?

Speaker 2 (01:20:57):
Well, well, realistic, what do you I think farthing? Because
nobody would name their kid farting, So farthing. That's what
I'm going with, farthing. It's funnier if you say farting.

Speaker 5 (01:21:12):
It's it's a challenge, is what it's. It's pete booty judge.
It's it's a damn simulation and we're all being we're anyway.
So here is the I don't think there is any
audio to this, but this is the body cam footage

(01:21:33):
that shows the deputies down in Florida arresting the Powerball
winner after he kicked a deputy in the face shortly
after he collected the jackpot prize. See money makes Right.
He was charged with a felonycount of battery on a
law enforcement officer to mister, there's a here's the audio

(01:21:57):
U and two misdemeanor counts a simple bat and resisting
an officer.

Speaker 12 (01:22:01):
Step it up.

Speaker 3 (01:22:02):
I just got kicked.

Speaker 1 (01:22:05):
See you win.

Speaker 5 (01:22:06):
Just because you won money does not mean that you
get to go around and start kicking people.

Speaker 2 (01:22:11):
Well, why did he grab that other dude?

Speaker 5 (01:22:14):
Do it because he's rich, Because you can do stuff
like that when you're rich and you got no one
told him he has to wait a little while after
he makes the money. You can't immediately go out and
start doing stupid shit.

Speaker 2 (01:22:29):
Yeah, who is that right? Is he the one that
won the money or the other guy?

Speaker 5 (01:22:35):
Yes? There he is right there, mister Farding. That's mister farthing. Okay,
that's that farthing. Don't be so, it's mister Farting.

Speaker 2 (01:22:45):
Okay. So why did he handcuff the other dude? That's
my question.

Speaker 5 (01:22:50):
Well because his girlfriend, His girlfriend, Jacqueline fight Master, of course,
was also arrested. She was charged with a misdemeanor count
of disorderly intoxication. That's come on. She was accused of

(01:23:14):
trying to fight other patrons in the resort bar. The
Panela's County Sheriff's Office released the body of camera video
on Tuesday, appeared to show Farting kicking a deputy in
the face as he attempted to break up a fight
between the suspect and another man. So that was the
other that was the fight you originally saw. Deputies had

(01:23:36):
arrived at the trade Winds Resort in Saint Pete found
the two men fighting and a woman on the ground
farting allegedly punched another hotel guest in the face during
see again, you get money and you start doing stupid
crab If hang on a second, I will show you
the lovely family portrait here. Oh, there's your family portrait.

(01:24:02):
One hundred and sixty seven point three million dollars. That's
all he won. That right there is called stupid money. Okay,
you see the results.

Speaker 2 (01:24:10):
So but he won this not at the point that
they arrested him.

Speaker 5 (01:24:14):
This was in April. Okay, it was in April, but no,
but he was back in there. It's from April.

Speaker 1 (01:24:20):
I got.

Speaker 2 (01:24:20):
Oh it is because he doesn't look the same. I mean,
obviously he doesn't have the beard anymore.

Speaker 5 (01:24:28):
Yeah he does.

Speaker 2 (01:24:29):
Oh he does. By the way, he doesn't look the same.
For whatever reason.

Speaker 5 (01:24:32):
Are you watching the same video?

Speaker 2 (01:24:34):
Maybe I'm yeah, I guess. Maybe it's the sunglasses.

Speaker 5 (01:24:38):
Are you drunk you've been? Are you you're drinking? Aren't you?
Did you falling off the wagon?

Speaker 1 (01:24:42):
The hair?

Speaker 5 (01:24:42):
Maybe I don't know. It just didn't look the same.
The shirt, it's you know what, you're distracted by his nipples.
I am, I am no doubt because right there there
put your eye out with those things. Yep. Trade Winds
Resort is super exclusive, well east it used to be.
According to John klat.

Speaker 2 (01:24:59):
Did they give him the money even after they arrested.

Speaker 5 (01:25:01):
Him, Well, you can't take his money away, can I
bet they can?

Speaker 2 (01:25:08):
I bet they can decide whether they give it to
him or not.

Speaker 5 (01:25:14):
They arrived at the Trade Winds Resort found the two
men fighting. When a responding deputy attempted to break up
the fight, Farting allegedly kicked him in the face subsequently
tried to flee the scene, although deputies used a taser,
he was tackled before being taken into cut No shirt
What no shirt comes over to kick him? Missus?

Speaker 3 (01:25:37):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:25:37):
No shirt? Okay, so he's calling the guy no shirt,
no shirt comes over to kick him, missus and hits
me right here, the deputy has heard saying in the video.
The other man involved in fight was seen was also
seen being placed in handcuffs, which was the.

Speaker 2 (01:25:50):
First guy that we saw. The first guy was trying
to take this dude down, and he did happen.

Speaker 5 (01:25:55):
When you give somebody from Kentucky money you know some
people from Kentucky, right, I mean, look at him. All
you have to do is look at a Kentucky and
you're like, don't ever give them money. This is what
they're gonna start kicking people. I'm looking at you, lap.

(01:26:16):
He purchased a two dollars ticket from a gas station
in Georgetown, Kentucky. He matched all the numbers and farting
and his mother.

Speaker 2 (01:26:24):
Uh okay, So he didn't win his money at this casino.
That's where I was getting crossways. He just does happened
to be at the casino sixty seven million dollars.

Speaker 5 (01:26:36):
You think it's gonna take him to run through that money.

Speaker 2 (01:26:38):
I was thinking that this video was of him after
he won the money at that casino, but it's not.
And then different and then it would have been okay
if if you it wouldn't have been.

Speaker 5 (01:26:48):
It was right after.

Speaker 11 (01:26:51):
You're back.

Speaker 1 (01:26:53):
Against the woo.

Speaker 5 (01:26:55):
That's a door, dude, down taste. The poet's the only one. No,
I have her on the ground there. You want to
talk about a good time in the face, you can
go it. That is called a good time right there.

(01:27:19):
If you ever, I mean, if you're looking a little good.
He did he did. It was the largest, by the way,
uh Jack Pop prize ever awarded in the state, and
his mother. He won it with his mom. Her name
is Linda Grizzle. So you have Grizzle, farting and a

(01:27:40):
fight master. Attorneys at law tell me they're not going
to open it right, Just yeah, I gotta go.

Speaker 1 (01:27:54):
If you're offended, you're listening wrong. The Daily Mojo.

Speaker 5 (01:28:06):
Evan Gouri said he tried to run what an idiot
a lengthy criminal history too, mister farting at just joining us,
mister fighting at the law firm, fighting Grizzle and fight Master.
Excuse me, farting Grizzle and fight Master. He has convictions
across nine counties in Kentucky for choking a girlfriend, bribing

(01:28:27):
officers while in prison, and selling cocaine to an undercover officer.
So he is no amateur. Let me just tell you
he's got some experience in the arena, and now he
has a shitload of money on top of it. Imagine
the parties that are going to be happening over at
the old Farting and fight Master house, which is just

(01:28:51):
pisses me. I mean, how can you don't think mister
farting and the fight Master. They don't. I just okay,
when are my quarters running out? Because I really, I
just I want to take a break from the simulation,
just to just get up out of my chair wherever
I'm sitting, go maybe to the snack bar, get some chocolateters,

(01:29:15):
and then I'll come back to the simulation. But can
I just for a second, just go stretch my legs
and then I'll come back to farting fight Master and Grizzle.
And then the other is Brian Cooberger. Now he is
in prison. He's in his new prison home.

Speaker 2 (01:29:33):
It's not going well.

Speaker 5 (01:29:35):
Not going well. He's facing taunts from other inmates as
he adjusts to his new He got four consecutive sentences
of life without parole plus ten.

Speaker 2 (01:29:47):
I think they need a plus ten just to piss
him off. Made here, you're never getting out of jail
because you can't live four lives. But you know what,
just for the hell of it, we're going to throw
ten more years on it.

Speaker 5 (01:30:02):
Thirty. He's thirty years old. There's still something not right
about this thing. I don't know what it is. I'm
not saying he didn't do it. I don't know that
he did. I don't know that he didn't. But there's
something is doesn't feel quite right. I've said it before.

(01:30:22):
I don't know what it is, and I but there's
just According to the Idaho Department of Corrections, he is
being housed on J Block inside the Idaho Maximum Security
Institution outside Boise. It's a secure housing unit with individual cells.
According to the Department of Corrections, inmates are typically high
risk prisoners and are limited to one hour of outdoor

(01:30:44):
exercise a day. They also have other restrictions that get
access to the showers every other day. It's a unit
that can house up to one hundred and twenty eight individuals,
includes populations in general pop protective custody, long term restrictive housing,
and death row. Incarcerated individuals in long term restrictive housing

(01:31:06):
live in single person cells, are moved in restraints, and
are provided showers every other day, along with one hour
about direct blah blah blah. But while the killer may
be physically separated from other lifers, they are put reportedly
tormenting him to the point where he has complained to
prison guards about the abuse. They're literally getting up into

(01:31:27):
the grate and yelling at him. According to a former
detective who is now with the Cold Case Foundation. The
inmates are taking it in turns doing it. It is relentless.
Why him? I mean what.

Speaker 3 (01:31:43):
That?

Speaker 5 (01:31:44):
What makes him so? I mean, Dahmer at least was
a freakazoid? Who is you know, keeping meat parts in
his freezer and eating people after they were well cooked?

Speaker 11 (01:31:57):
What is so?

Speaker 2 (01:31:59):
Maybe he's just because this is the new kid on
the block.

Speaker 5 (01:32:05):
Maybe I don't never been in prison, hope never have
to be in prison, But it just seems like what
I don't know what it is about him? Cenzo won
I was kidding earlier. Can we go back to Tim
Curry and the Rocky Horror Picture Show? Oh no, you

(01:32:26):
meant sit the hell down. You sit down in your
seat and you don't move until we call on you
to move. You wanted this, now you everybody, everybody look
at ccenzo one twenty five. This is his fault. Next
time you want to open your mouth, Cenzo, this is
what you're gonna get. See see Ron, this is what

(01:32:48):
we do. This is this is the tough love we've
talked about for so many We know, I know, I mean,
this hurts me more than it does you Cenzo, I
want you to know that far more than it hurts you.

Speaker 2 (01:33:01):
My mom used to say that a lot this is
gonna hurt me more than it hurts you.

Speaker 5 (01:33:07):
She was full of shit.

Speaker 2 (01:33:08):
I think you're probably not correct in that statement, but.

Speaker 5 (01:33:12):
Yeah, right exactlydus five says in high school, I was
in a band called Farting and Grizzlin Fight Master. We
open for Crosby, Stills and Nash. Thank you. My aunt
and uncle are from Kentucky. It's true, Count and Jackal.
Never give somebody from Kentucky one hundred and seventy one
hundred and sixty seven million dollars. They'll end up getting

(01:33:34):
in a fight on the Florida Casino in Florida. I
think we all know that. Shy Boy and Iowa. The
real question is photo reel or AI.

Speaker 2 (01:33:44):
Now what photo are we talking about?

Speaker 3 (01:33:51):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:33:52):
I'm running back through them in my mind. I mean,
are we talking? Sophie Rainer to yesterday's program for the
uh huh five says I need to start dropping a
little weight. Several years ago when I was able to
weigh the shadow of my ass cheeks. And again for

(01:34:12):
those of you just joining us, we were remarking at
how absolutely horrifically fat Ron was just a short time ago.
Apparently I was like that, now, wow, No, I mean
I was a little chunkier, yes, but you're not anymore.

(01:34:37):
You're not and that's good.

Speaker 2 (01:34:39):
No, But I now know what you were thinking back then.

Speaker 5 (01:34:42):
So oh, that's just that we weren't thinking. No one
thinks at the time you did. You did you look
at yourself back then and go, whoa, I'm I know, yeah, No,
it's okay, you didn't. But it's but it's it's you
get in retrospect and you're like, damn, damn, all right,

(01:35:05):
I need to make a hole. And then we have
somebody who is renowned for their spelt, their good Jeanes,
the're s felt. Figure. You don't hear that word enough anymore?

Speaker 2 (01:35:15):
Do you spelt spelt?

Speaker 5 (01:35:18):
Oh stereo right, there wasn't it. Now. We'll talk to
mister spelt next.

Speaker 6 (01:35:48):
In the top of the hour with BOUNDARYO for a
blast of truth and power for the damy mojo.

Speaker 1 (01:35:59):
Stupid is not a competition.

Speaker 3 (01:36:02):
So you don't shoot deer with a bullet that size.
If you do, you could cook it at the same time.

Speaker 1 (01:36:08):
Unless you're a politician get the news from.

Speaker 5 (01:36:15):
It's all right, so I have, and I apologize. Frankly speaking,
the plural is hor hory eyed cory eyed.

Speaker 1 (01:36:31):
Hoy.

Speaker 5 (01:36:33):
They said they were accusing me of neglecting and ignoring
the Daily Mojo chat room. And I may have it.
It's been a busy news morning. It Chenzo pointed that out.
It's not my fault, Big Joe, say, so is the
word farther farther?

Speaker 3 (01:36:49):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (01:36:50):
I think we all know that. I told you about
my English teacher in ninth grade who I wrote some
paper and I wrote farthest and and anyway. He said,
he said that you're you're wrong. It's it's farther and
further and furtherest and furtherest. And I was like, this,

(01:37:11):
are you on crack well, because it's not there's no
such word as fartherest or furtherest. You know who knows that?

Speaker 2 (01:37:22):
Let me guess.

Speaker 5 (01:37:26):
That's so weird that you would think that, uh V
Brandon Morris joint, mister s felt, mister hotstuff, mister goodluck,
just real quick, Brandon, did you ever notice how absolutely
porky ron was like two years ago?

Speaker 2 (01:37:39):
Oh my gosh, I mean, I have.

Speaker 3 (01:37:43):
I have. Look ozempic is a miracle, you know, but
I have absolutely Uh. I mean, look, ron is.

Speaker 2 (01:37:56):
That face was get the hill away from my front door.
That's what that was. That it's our old time signs
or I'll eat you. I didn't have the I didn't
have the advantage of using AI. Brandon.

Speaker 3 (01:38:12):
I don't use AI anymore, not anymore. What I used
to use AI when I needed to like have a
have a fun little way to remote my live streams.
Now I just don't use AI anymore. Really, that's no
more AI.

Speaker 5 (01:38:32):
So you all just like just photoshop, just straight up photoshop.

Speaker 3 (01:38:36):
That's all straight up photoshop that you're seeing right there,
all of it. There's not one ounce of AI in there.

Speaker 5 (01:38:42):
Wait a second, you really dressed up in a Fantastic
four outfit?

Speaker 3 (01:38:50):
Yeah, And for that picture, I literally just went to
the gym and just like just jacked myself up.

Speaker 2 (01:38:58):
To that one hour.

Speaker 3 (01:38:59):
Yeah yeah, and then and then like you know, now
now I'm back to normally just right after me two
weeks ago.

Speaker 5 (01:39:06):
Yeah, all right, just just checking wanted to make sure,
why did to make sure who was the who was
the chick there in uh uh in the Fantastic four.
Is that the same one that was in Mission Possible?

Speaker 3 (01:39:20):
Yeah, it's actually the Yeah. Vanessa Kirby, Okay, Vanessa Kurby.

Speaker 5 (01:39:26):
She's English, right, She's very English.

Speaker 3 (01:39:28):
Yes, she was also the She also played what's her
name in The Crown, Queen Elizabeth's sister Margaret.

Speaker 2 (01:39:36):
Oh she did, didn't she? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:39:39):
Really, Margaret was a partier.

Speaker 3 (01:39:42):
She was a big partier. Did you ever watch The Crown?

Speaker 2 (01:39:44):
I loved it. Yeah, I watched the first.

Speaker 3 (01:39:46):
Yeah, Helena Bottom Carter plays her like in later Life,
and they have that episode where she goes to the
White House and like she's hanging out with LBJ. That
was such a good episode. You really showed you how
bo a party or she was.

Speaker 5 (01:40:02):
They think they got that in a business behind closed doors.

Speaker 3 (01:40:06):
I don't know about that.

Speaker 5 (01:40:08):
I don't get that down. I mean, look dump in
front of people.

Speaker 3 (01:40:13):
Look, you know the Royal family. Royal Family's full of freaks,
you know, so very well could have been.

Speaker 5 (01:40:20):
Yes, that's because whether you when you have stupid money
like that, you can become a total freak and everybody
excuses it as being eccentric.

Speaker 3 (01:40:31):
Yep, that's exactly when when you get you can literally
appear on the Epstein files and just you know, nothing
will happen, so right, and and and.

Speaker 5 (01:40:43):
When you give somebody from Kentucky one hundred and sixty
seven million dollars, I mean they end up looking That's
why they end up getting called trailer trash because they're
getting fights in casinos, but they have a hundred. If
that had been like Prince Henry or somebody, they would
have been you know, he just was a rough night,
that's all. He just uh, he was being picked on.

(01:41:04):
He had to defend.

Speaker 3 (01:41:05):
His report would have disappeared after a little while.

Speaker 5 (01:41:07):
Yes, yeah, exactly. Dude, there's got one hundred and sixty
seven million dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:41:16):
Man, I would I don't know what I would do
with that kind of money, you know, No, I know
exactly what I would do with that kind of money.

Speaker 5 (01:41:23):
I can rend I's to say, I could, I know
exactly what.

Speaker 2 (01:41:27):
I would become pretty eccentric myself, quite honestly.

Speaker 3 (01:41:30):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 5 (01:41:32):
Yeah, there would be subtle changes.

Speaker 3 (01:41:35):
There would be there would be signs that would I
wouldn't tell anybody, there would be no pictures of me,
but you would start noticing things like why does he
have a six foot statue of like a wolf hat
and a beard you'd call me. I don't know why
I do.

Speaker 4 (01:41:55):
I don't know why I came.

Speaker 3 (01:41:57):
I just I just pulled that off the top of
my brain. I don't no wife there wear.

Speaker 5 (01:42:02):
A hating Ron says plenty of things that make no
sense every morning, and we just we glid, don't we run?
We do? He's having a rough day, Brandy, give him
a break.

Speaker 1 (01:42:16):
Well.

Speaker 2 (01:42:16):
Being called a cow didn't make it any better.

Speaker 5 (01:42:19):
I know you are not a cow. That's you're missing it.

Speaker 9 (01:42:22):
You are.

Speaker 3 (01:42:22):
We are not a You're a cow. Run nobody you
trying to make it, trying to make a dangerous face
next to your ring doorbell?

Speaker 5 (01:42:37):
Right, I mean that's a completely different I don't we
we know what the hell? We may have been brain
damage there, but and and a cow. You may have
been a brain damage cow there, But you're not a
cow now?

Speaker 3 (01:42:49):
That's Can I make it? Are you still Ron? Are
you still making these YouTube videos?

Speaker 9 (01:42:55):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:42:55):
No, I haven't made one in two or three years now?

Speaker 3 (01:42:59):
Okay, I can I give you a piece of police? Okay,
go back, go back, Brad, go back to the Okay,
you see the brick you see the brick, yes, sir,
the brick background. It's fighting way too much with the
rest of the of the of the Uh what I
tell you?

Speaker 5 (01:43:19):
Now? What did I tell you?

Speaker 3 (01:43:21):
Fighting way too much? It's it's it's too busy. I
would get rid of the brick. I would take a
P and G of the doorbell, right, and I would like,
you know, just kind of put it in the middle
of a more solid maybe background anymore.

Speaker 5 (01:43:40):
Oh you don't know, Go ahead, Brandon, go ahead, P
and G I love procter and gamble of the doorbell sign.

Speaker 3 (01:43:47):
Yeah, and then and then I would, uh, you know,
I would keep the laser engraved. But why is it
over the product? Why is the Why is the the
lettering over the product? Well, you're trying to push.

Speaker 2 (01:43:57):
The product, is not the doorbell, dude, try to push.

Speaker 3 (01:44:00):
The Okay, all right, all right, I didn't know that.

Speaker 1 (01:44:06):
I didn't know that.

Speaker 5 (01:44:08):
Look showing your brick, ron idiot, Oh my god, show
him your bread. You're come on here? Is this is different?
Because it look that's different. Now, this is a different product, Brandon.
This is uh, this is the brick. This is the

(01:44:29):
lasered brick. It's not a special brick. It's a laser brick.
But the the sign there is the actual product in that,
the little bitty sign.

Speaker 2 (01:44:39):
The little bitty sign that was back in the day, man,
back when I didn't know what I was doing.

Speaker 5 (01:44:43):
When you were a cow. Thanks, it's okay, you're not
a cow anymore. People are gonna start filing. That'd be
great if you want to have a thousand views on that.

Speaker 2 (01:44:57):
I had a little over a thousand.

Speaker 5 (01:44:58):
Yeah, that's a good thing.

Speaker 3 (01:45:02):
That's a good thing.

Speaker 5 (01:45:04):
Brandon asked him how his lasering on a grain of
rice is coming, because he loves that one.

Speaker 2 (01:45:09):
I'm not doing. I haven't done that.

Speaker 5 (01:45:10):
Why, oh come, I just have it the slow news day, Seecenzo,
you still want to yap about being a slow news
day there? Pal after tax is only about eighty million
dollars one hundred and sixty seven million from the guy
in Florida. Although I would, I'd still take it. So

(01:45:32):
how are things going with you? Brandon? And last week
spoke you were you were riding high? Things are still no,
that's not you hang on things going well? I mean,
what's what's what's new? Because I I haven't had a
chance to delve into your life in the past week.

Speaker 3 (01:45:53):
To me, I'm actually experiencing the you know, whenever you
do something that is really great and you're like, man,
I got to take a finish that follow it up,
you know, and then like yes, yeah, and then you
learn like, hey, you just got a lucky break. It's
not like you know, you're you're you're in it yet,
you know. I recently came across that sensation. So I

(01:46:17):
am learning to be uh not I would say humble,
you know, but also.

Speaker 5 (01:46:23):
Like you are you are a humble human already, I mean,
but it's.

Speaker 3 (01:46:28):
More like perseverance, like keep going, you know, like you're
gonna have your highs, you're going to.

Speaker 5 (01:46:34):
Have your lows, so you know, you and the ding
ding repeatedly exactly, but you know what, you got to
keep going.

Speaker 3 (01:46:41):
You got to keep working at it. You know, you
got to take the blessings and the shortfalls, you know,
whenever you get them. So that's that's that's I'm having
a good time with it though, you know, all right,
it's all learning process.

Speaker 5 (01:46:56):
Not this last video, but before that is that you
got one hundred and fifty thousand views, and and you
do when you something like that happens because that would
be considered that would be viral. Right, that's fine, Yeah,
for me, that's viral. And and and do you know
how much money you made off of that, that particular video?

(01:47:16):
And do you can you say it or would you
prefer not to? Because that's uh, I've had no idea
how much a video. Like, if you get one hundred
and fifty thousand views on a video, it's like, oh shit,
I can retire and move to Florida with my one
hundred and sixty seven million dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:47:31):
Now, well, keep in mind, it's never a singular video,
like unless you you get like a VID that really
like gets into the multi like one hundred millions of views,
You're not going to like bank off of a singular video.
It's accumulation over a lot of videos. This one in
particular got let me see here, Well.

Speaker 5 (01:47:50):
You're looking that up. I'll tell the story about a
guy who was a cruise ship almost three okay, so
three hundred bucks. And I don't you know, for I
don't know if I thought that was ron did you
would that about what you would think?

Speaker 2 (01:48:04):
I would have thought more? I don't, but I don't
know why. But but but I agree with Brandon, it's
it's not a video that makes you the money.

Speaker 5 (01:48:12):
I agree, but you can see what you see where.

Speaker 3 (01:48:15):
Your mind. Also, you in mind that when it comes
to like YouTube and stuff like that, a creator who
gets that amount, who has way more fame than me,
will probably make more off of that many views than
I would because I'm a nobody. Right technically, but.

Speaker 9 (01:48:29):
Let's say that you get like a not to us here,
somebody love you. But say like you get like a
mister beast. You know, mister beast. He creates a video
and obviously he's going to get millions of views right away.
But let's say that at one hundred and sixty thousand views,
he is going to make more in that time or

(01:48:51):
in that viewframe than I because he is worth a
lot more. People want to advertise. Corporations would advertise with
mister beasts a lot more. Solgarithm right, right, It's it's
all and I mean, like there's a whole bunch of
this is going to get technical. But like corporation's bid
on video placement, you know, the the ads that play

(01:49:13):
before videos, they actually make VIDs on, you know, where
their videos appear on what content creators and stuff like that.
So there's a lot that happens behind the scenes that
kind of gets you that certain amount of money, so
it's never the same amount, you know.

Speaker 3 (01:49:29):
From video to video. Very very interesting process happening on YouTube.

Speaker 10 (01:49:37):
Have you.

Speaker 5 (01:49:39):
Have you ever seen this chick, Brenda Turner. No, she
has four hundred and eight thousand subscribers. I've reached out
to her because I'd like to talk to her on
the on the program, but she this particular this particular
video is it's fascinating because it's a very it's a

(01:50:02):
simple lesson and speak like this to stand out on YouTube,
breaking the fifth wall, and it's it's what you would
think it spoiler alert, it's it's what I thought it
would be when she started talking about it. And she's
had one hundred and ninety one thousand views on it
in two months. And it's a very simple concept and

(01:50:23):
she's very she's actually very good at what at what
she does on here and then she's teaching a very
simple lesson. But it's fascinating to me what does and
doesn't become viral because sometimes there's absolutely no memories, right,
just things that you thought would be incredibly interesting to

(01:50:43):
somebody aren't and things that you think are like through
that one like whoa, I got a million views? But
and I so there's a great deal of luck involved
in it as well. And the video I was thinking
of was from a few years ago was a guy
who worked on a crew ship and it was a
video of him sitting next to one of the portholes

(01:51:04):
and they were in rough seas and it was all
the waves and stuff, and it was he was showing
how hard it was to walk down the aisle of
the of the of the ship and all that, and
it uh, it got I want to say, it got
several million views. And he showed the check of how
much he made off that, because that was like his
one big breakout. He wasn't expecting it to be all

(01:51:27):
that in the bag of chips, but he made like
eight grand yeah, off that particular video, and I think
it was the only one that he made that you know,
did anything, But it is. It's fascinating because you really
most people don't have a concept of what you can
make on YouTube. And it didn't a couple of years

(01:51:48):
afo the cylinders hit, YouTube changed.

Speaker 2 (01:51:50):
Their method for payment. You usually get paid more, right,
They used the Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:51:56):
They do it all the time.

Speaker 3 (01:51:58):
You know, it goes up, it goes down, and it
really just depends on the market. But I mean, like, no,
when it comes to YouTube, yeah, a lot, a lot
of it is luck. You never know what's going to hit.
It could just be just some random video that you
never you uploaded and just forgot about because you thought
it was interesting and apparently everyone else thinks it was hysterical.
But I mean, no, there is a formula that does work.
And I mean like there have been creators who are like,

(01:52:20):
I'm going to create a new channel. No one's going
to know it's me, and I'm going to create a
video and I'm going to prove to you that you know,
it's not luck, And they prove it, They absolutely prove it.
But a lot of it's just experience and time and
what works for you and your style, Like Sydney watching.
A good friend of mine has a million subscribers on YouTube.
What works for her doesn't necessarily work for me. You know,

(01:52:45):
the demographics, the you know, her personality and stuff like
that are all different from mine. So if I were
to copy her directly, and I've actually I've actually tried this.
I copied a thumbnail that she made with her permission.
I didn't just like rip it from her. But the
thumbnail that she made then versus the thumbnail that I

(01:53:07):
made very similar, both the same, almost exact same. She
got way more play on hers than I got online
and by volume. Not just like I'm not saying, well, yeah,
she's got more subscribers. No, I'm saying like they reacted
better to her thumbnail than me. Well she's a pretty girl.

Speaker 5 (01:53:24):
I'm not five. I was gonna say five letters make
all the difference. Yeah, two of them are o's, two
of them are bees, one of them.

Speaker 1 (01:53:33):
Is an S.

Speaker 5 (01:53:35):
And it's but it's true. I mean pretty and pretty
men too. I mean pretty women and pretty men. You
have to have that into the in the mix, because
ugly people do not aren't fairly treated when it comes
to you know, unless you know what the exception to
the rule is. If you are fugly but you're funny.

(01:53:57):
If you're fugly and funny and you you refer to
yourself as you know as as being ugly, then you've
you've got a winning combination. See Ron Embrace the Pigs.
I guess what I'm trying to say embrace.

Speaker 3 (01:54:09):
I knew it was coming.

Speaker 1 (01:54:12):
I was embracing for run, thank you.

Speaker 3 (01:54:15):
I was bracing for run in coming.

Speaker 5 (01:54:19):
Embrace the cow, and well I said, embrace the pig.
But you know, if you want to do cow, that's okay.
But it's true if you do. If you take that,
I'm gonna look at four MANU like, what is it
like you gotta you gotta change. Uh, let's see. But
cows are bovines, swine. He's a bow swine, He's a

(01:54:43):
he's a cow. Pig, he's a cow pigs. Was stop
getting saying, you know your conflate, he was, He's not
any longer. Ron is a beautiful man now, thank you,
You're welcome. He always has been a beautiful he has
been inside and out. But it is the the YouTube

(01:55:05):
game fascinates me because there is a way, I mean,
you can make money. But it's for people who say
that it's right. It's a challenge. It's like a puzzle,
isn't it. I mean, when you get when it gains
right down to it, it's a puzzle. But you're not.
If it's a jigsaw puzzle, you are not shown what
the image is going to be exactly like, here's a

(01:55:25):
bunch of out good luck.

Speaker 3 (01:55:28):
But here's the thing. The one thing that I'm learning,
and it's it can hurt your ego real hardcore because
you're going to release something that you just think is fantam.
Like that that video that I released about uh, the
Betrayed video. I thought that it was utterly fascinating because
it really does show that the legacy media and access
media is starting to kind of just see things in

(01:55:52):
movies that aren't there, you know, right, And I even
wrote an article about it yesterday. It's like really fascinating
that they're almost like writing fan fiction about something that
they saw right before their eyes that doesn't actually exist, right,
And it makes me think that they're really losing their
grip on the culture because now they're just making stuff up,
you know, in terms of like redefining something that they saw.

(01:56:13):
And it's like I thought that this was super fascinating
and I wanted to make a YouTube video about it.
I thought it would go viral that you know, no one,
no one cares.

Speaker 5 (01:56:21):
It's like, you don't know, you know, it could it
could still blow up, but.

Speaker 3 (01:56:25):
It might at some point somewhere, but I doubt it.
But I mean, like you know, it's it's just it's
it's an ego killer. And you know what, that's good.
Move on, move on, try again, you know, figure it out.
You're gonna fail today, mister beast I watched a lot
of mister beast house videos. He said, your first one
hundred videos are gonna suck. No one's gonna watch them.

(01:56:48):
We're gonna think that they're worth something, that they should
be watched, if they should go viral. They don't. They
don't deserve to go viral. Do one hundred videos improve
something every time, and then eventually you'll get to a
point where your videos deserve to be watched. And that
is something that is really, it's really it's good to
keep your ego in check. You know, your pride in check.

Speaker 5 (01:57:08):
We're out of time, but for for next week, I
want to talk. I remember the song by Gautier, someone
that I used to know, to know that side, that
was his number. The first song blew it out of
the water right and sunk him. At the same time,
he quit the business because uber successful. The Brandon Morse

(01:57:31):
on the on the X over at h just I said,
see he's gone, he's out. Of here.

Speaker 2 (01:57:39):
We're done.

Speaker 5 (01:57:42):
I'm sad that it's over.

Speaker 11 (01:57:45):
Gone.

Speaker 5 (01:57:48):
I was just getting started. I just I feel like
that two hours this went? Can we do another two?

Speaker 2 (01:57:53):
Yeah? Can we talk news this time?

Speaker 5 (01:57:58):
Thank you, Ron, you used to be a cow, used
to be someone that I used to know. Two hours
of audio deliciousness and starting fight master in grizzle here
on the daily Mojo for what is it? Thursday, the
fourteenth day of August, ye of our twenty twenty five
and got the week?

Speaker 2 (01:58:18):
It's almost over.

Speaker 5 (01:58:22):
And then it's Monday again. Anybody learning a damn thing?
I don't know? Uh ccenzo ophthalmologist MD with I specialty.
Thank you. It's exactly what I was thinking. I have
no idea what he's talking about. I think they've they've
got some drama going on over in the in the
Rumble chat room over in the x Pika pool says,
god knows, giving Brandon lots of views would be like

(01:58:43):
giving a Kentucky in millions of dollars?

Speaker 1 (01:58:45):
Right whoa.

Speaker 5 (01:58:49):
Thank you? Clock tower drunk for that image? Oh I
mean it's it's Glenn Backley got a shirt on. Huh
huh oh my eyes Holly over in the Daily Mojo
chat room. If you can't fix it, feature it. Thank you,
thank you, Holy cow. That made me blush. I know

(01:59:11):
if they were talking about you or not. Ron, don
Pie got a run. Ben here listening, but so stupid
busy here on dang darn work screen. Can't wait till retirement,
love and hugs. Is it time to announce our retirement yet? Ron?

Speaker 2 (01:59:26):
It's getting close.

Speaker 5 (01:59:26):
I feel lucky, very close, frankly speaking, says Farting, named
after the smallest amount coin in the Kingdom one farting. See,
these people are really smart, Ron, except Genzo, and Genzo
says he guesses he's the sacred cow today. No, that
was Ron Genzo. He tried to keep up good grief.

(01:59:48):
Thank god it's Friday tomorrow. Am I right? Remember we
the people mus staying together, otherwise we shall surely hang separately.
Six ecept for turannas res a stupid things. Good night,
Doc Thompson, you are see yeah, damn it.

Speaker 1 (02:00:02):
Wash. Listen at the Dailymojo dot com

Speaker 3 (02:00:07):
M
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.