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September 18, 2025 • 17 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I was about to say Happy Thursday, but it really
isn't his it, guys, I just hate to follow up
all the bad news that you've talked about this morning
already with more bad news. But we haven't died suddenly,
report And it's not anybody famous or anything. It's just
a seventeen year old high school kid.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Well, look, all lives matter. Oh wait, no, that's not right.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
Careful.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
I know we're not supposed to say that, are we,
But all lives do matter.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
We do a lot of things we ain't supposed to
around here. Of course, that means we always got to
look for the acts. He's probably hanging over our head
any day. All right, I will tell you what we're
going to do. A favorite of the audience today.

Speaker 4 (00:37):
Yesterday Barack Obama talked for a very long time, and
we're not going to play any of the sound bites.
I'm not going to play us. He made it all
about how Trump is a problem. Trump is the cause
of all of our problems. Let me guess Trump is
a fascist?

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Yeah, I think so. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (00:52):
In the wake of Charlie Kirk's murder, they dragged Obama
out from his Martha's Vineyard cocktail parties like, you know
what you want to do, talk in fragments and then
pause before you complete the sentence. Sure, and he did
that for like thirty minutes, and it's kind of his
way of doing things. He's you've kind of been like that,

(01:14):
you know.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
So we're not gonna play any of that today instead.

Speaker 5 (01:19):
And now it's time again for another edition of medical Coincidences.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
And that's what I meant medical coincidences.

Speaker 4 (01:28):
Well, all died suddenly reports their medical coin incidences, but
not all medical coincidences or died suddenly.

Speaker 2 (01:33):
Is you know, it's tricky, isn't it? All Right?

Speaker 1 (01:35):
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(01:57):
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Speaker 1 (02:16):
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Speaker 1 (02:29):
A high school golf prodigy, seventeen year old boy named
at Hayden or Haddon ha d D sounds like Cayden,
but yeah, yeah, usually I see Hayden with just Onondy
Hayden Kelly, a junior at the Dodge County High School
in Eastman, Georgia, but just will south of Macon, so

(02:52):
it's weight down south nowhere in the Northwest area where
we broadcast in Georgia. Known as a supportive leader, probably
the best athlete in the school and sure to go
pro in the golf world, say all the people that
knew him, but no, because he died collapsed while involved

(03:13):
in a homecoming prank.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
I'm sorry. Sounds like this guy was really young.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
Seventeen. I already said he was seventeen. I mean, it's
just it's unbelievable. Why would he just fall over and
die if he's a lot of people are curious about.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
He was pronounced dead Monday after being found unresponsive in
the yard of a home that he and his friends
were tpeeing.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
You familiar with the phrase, yeah, I mean I've done
it before, throwing rolls.

Speaker 1 (03:41):
Of toilet paper in the house, the trees, the bushes, YadA, YadA.

Speaker 4 (03:45):
As sad as this makes me, and there's a part
of me that's glad that kids still do that because
that was fun when I was a kid.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
Kid it's not that hormful.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
I mean, you know it's gonna make a mess, but
then it draws attention to you know, maybe your your
kids dating this, I don't know. But anyway, he was
with some kids and they were toilet papering a house
and he just collapsed and died, just fellow.

Speaker 4 (04:07):
And so they must have given an explanation because that's
so uncommon and unusual.

Speaker 1 (04:11):
They astops the results to determine the cause of death.
They're still pending, so sad well.

Speaker 4 (04:17):
I mean, how hard could it be to figure out
why you just fell over and died.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
I mean they would. They got to look into it.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
They got to see if there's anything else besides that,
you know what, that could have been involved.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
And they don't mention that, you know what, obviously we
all know what, but just in case we don't.

Speaker 1 (04:35):
Know which, they don't bring up anything about his VAXA records,
some booster records or any of that. Just the fact
that a lot of very young, healthy people for the
last I don't know, three four years have just been
up and dying. And if you if you don't think

(04:56):
it was any you know, COVID vaccine related, then what
was it?

Speaker 2 (05:01):
Huh that they don't have another explanation? Really? Yeah, boy,
I'll tell you what.

Speaker 4 (05:05):
Well, I believe whatever explanation they give us, I'll tell
you why.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
And if they don't ever give us one, that'll be
fine too, right, whatever they say it is, that's completely
fine with of course. Maybe that's something Jimmy Kimmel and
Steven Colbert could address on their new podcast that they
could potentially be doing together.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
Oh be still my beating heart. I'm excited. Now.

Speaker 4 (05:27):
Okay, it's not a thing yet, but there are calls
for them to do a podcast together since they're both
going to be losing their jobs. And I gotta tell you,
if nobody was watching them on network TV, why would
anybody go out of their way to listen to their podcast?

Speaker 2 (05:38):
Exactly?

Speaker 1 (05:39):
I believe y'all said a truthfulness earlier when you said
they were looking for a good excuse to get him
off of their television networks, and they found it.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
He gave it to him. Wait, it sure sounds like it.

Speaker 4 (05:54):
If you think Kimmel and Colbert need to start their
own podcasts, gotta ask, why aren't you watching them on
tea right now? Yeah, Colbert's show is hemorrhaging money. Do
you think Jimmy Kimmel's show is making money? I have
a hard time believing it. No, of course, it wasn't
making any money. I don't know, but I do know this,
Illinois Governor Pritzker is one fat son of a bitch.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Am me into that.

Speaker 4 (06:17):
Yesterday Jim Psassi talking about the governor of Illinois on.

Speaker 6 (06:21):
This undemocratic act.

Speaker 7 (06:23):
Joining me now is Illinois Governor Jami Pritzker. This is
as I just said, this is this is much bigger
than a media story. It feels to me. First of all,
Brendan Carr went out today the FCC chair and basically
Warren called out Jimmy Kimmel by name, and then a
couple of hours later he was put on indefinite you know, hiatus, suspension,

(06:43):
whatever you want to call it. Does this feel it
feels to me.

Speaker 6 (06:46):
Like obedience in advance?

Speaker 2 (06:47):
Does it feel to you like that?

Speaker 4 (06:48):
It's intimidation clearly, And this is what we're seeing across
the board from the Trump administration.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
So it's Trump's fault. Well, of course it's Trump's fault.

Speaker 4 (06:57):
That Jimmy Kimmel said that thing that was and that
he vilified the victims.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
Of a murder.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
That was Trump's fault for him even motivating the assassin
to kill Charlie Kirk in the first place. You know,
it's all that maga energy and that that maga negativity
that's just driving people to do terrible things.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
How is it that the left.

Speaker 4 (07:19):
Has to play victim here when they clearly are the
ones that fault. I mean, you guys, you radicalize this teenager,
you forget how the lift works. Whatever they're doing blaming
the other side, and everybody goes, oh, yeah, it was them,
And then narrow off the hook. Have you heard the
new narrative now about the shooter that the left is
pushing on. I'm even afraid to ask anymore. They're saying

(07:40):
this wasn't politically motivated, it was a love story.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
Oh yes, yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
They kind of took that gutman guy's comment about how
touching these you know, emails or these text messages were,
and there's like it was all about defending his gay lovers, roommates,
you know, defending him because Charlie Kirk was an evil,

(08:05):
hateful man who hated gays and trans and all the.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
Rest of those people, and so you know, he just
did it to defend his lover.

Speaker 4 (08:15):
Our younger listeners probably don't remember. Montel Williams. This is
a guy that used to be on TV a lot.
He had a popular daytime TV show back when that mattered,
and now I guess he's a CNN contributor. He says,
Charlie Kirk's assassin was just sad because people were mean
to his boyfriend.

Speaker 5 (08:31):
Trying to pigeonhole this as a leftist thing and a
right thing, and what we're really talking about, hear me,
because I'm gonna throw you when I say this.

Speaker 3 (08:38):
We're talking about a love torn child.

Speaker 4 (08:41):
I love how he prepared us for the fact that
he was about to say something.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
Really I think it don't you're ready, hold on here,
it comes. Get ready. This is gonna be so stupid,
you're gonna spit your coffee out.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
A kid.

Speaker 5 (08:51):
This is probably his first real relationship, and somebody was
disparaging the person that he loved.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
He sat on that building for thirty men have before
took the shot. Why did he wait until the first
world trance came up?

Speaker 4 (09:05):
I guarantee he couldn't hear what Charlie was saying, not
from two hundred yards away. No, No, it probably just
sounded like this. I don't think he knew it. Might
have been trying to get a nerve up. But if
he didn't, no, let's pretend maybe mine tell's right. If
he did know, is it possible there's someone on the
ground communicating with him.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
It's quite possible. Yes.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
I still think that seventy one year old guy that
they immediately arrested, how did he have the that thought
process go through his head. He's sitting there watching Charlie Kirk.
Charlie Kirk gets shot, falls over and everybody starts running,
and this guy within a few seconds thinks to himself,

(09:48):
I have no idea who shot him, or where it
came from, or why any of this happened, but I'm
gonna try to protect the shooter and allow him time
to get away by telling the police that I did it.
Arrest me, right, because that's what he did. Yeah, he said,
I did it.

Speaker 2 (10:06):
I shot him.

Speaker 1 (10:07):
Now shoot me, And the police all rushed in and
they dealt with him instead of dealing with the actual
shooter for the longest time.

Speaker 4 (10:14):
And then they go look into who that old man was,
and it turns out he was a pedophile, purportedly child
porn all over his phone.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
Child porn all over his phone.

Speaker 4 (10:22):
If you had child porn all over your phone and
there was just a shooting, did he want.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
To get caught? Did he want to be in trouble?

Speaker 1 (10:29):
I just don't know the thought process what goes through
people's minds. But he helped him, whether he knew in
an advance that this was going to happen or not.
But boy, that that speed with which he made that decision,
it's a little suspicious in my way.

Speaker 4 (10:45):
I feel the same way now, Just to get that
terrible taste out of your mouth of all the information
we just gave you. The Scott Jennings did shut down
Montell Williams after he made this ass backwards point about
love and not politics.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
I think this was motivated emotionally.

Speaker 2 (10:59):
Yes, guys, come on.

Speaker 8 (11:02):
The evidence here is overwhelming, he said Charlie Kirk, I
can't stand his hate anymore.

Speaker 6 (11:09):
I'm gonna take him out.

Speaker 8 (11:11):
He the testimony from him in the statements of his family.

Speaker 6 (11:14):
He had become more left wing.

Speaker 8 (11:17):
He etched the statements that are made by the left
about Republicans and Conservatives and Charlie Kirk fascist on the
bullet cases.

Speaker 3 (11:25):
He made a joke about it in his last text, But.

Speaker 6 (11:27):
It doesn't sound like a joke to me because someone's
dead and.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Oh yeah, he's just joking right now. He is just
joking around with his lover. Everybody again, it's just Romeo
and Juliet. Are they gonna try to turn this into
a Hallmark movie?

Speaker 5 (11:41):
Now?

Speaker 2 (11:41):
Is this gonna be like a Christmas special or something?
And it would probably start if they do, it'll probably start.
Two black people.

Speaker 9 (11:47):
Well, of course, your kids are starving. Carls Junior believes
no child should go hungry. You are an unfit mother.
Your children will be placed in the custody of Carl's junior.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
This is the Walton and Johnson Show. I'm just gonna
pile on.

Speaker 1 (12:02):
If y'all don't mind, since y'all doing all this terrible, nasty,
horrible death news this morning. I mean, you got the
five cops that was all shot there in Pennsylvania somewhere.
You got that high school golfer that died suddenly while
he was toilet paper in somebody's house. So I'm gonna
just jump in here with my with my pizza man story.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
Shiit, what do you got?

Speaker 1 (12:23):
Forty five year old employee had a pizza factory. I
don't know, Palermo Pizza. I guess that's like a you know,
like a frozen pizza kind of place or something sounds
from there. They just, you know, they make pizzas and
then put them in the stove. This forty five year
old dude works there making pizza alongside the robots, you know,

(12:45):
because all these factories and shot they they got they
got you know, robots in there, making cars, making pizzas,
just doing every little thing. He was killed by the
robot machine while he was over there making some pizzas.

Speaker 4 (12:59):
See, I knew this was going to happen. I knew
once we had AI everywhere, it's just a matter of time.
I'm surprised it took this long before the robots rise
up and start killing us.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
No one's surprised by this.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
He was, they say, crushed by the robot. Now they
don't go into detail, like if the robot. Was it
a big, heavy machine or was it one that robots
with like arms and a face, So we left to speculate.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
They don't tell us.

Speaker 1 (13:27):
I don't know if it fell on him, or when
they say crushed him, if it just grabbed him with
his little robot hands and just squeezed him until his
you know, life flew out of him. But the first
responder said they'd tried some life saving measures on this dude,
but he was dead at the scene, and then they
got to send everybody else home for a day off.

Speaker 4 (13:46):
Here's where this gets tricky, because I, you know, I
don't want people to spit a loogie in my pizza
when I you know, like the teenage kid that hates
his part time job, right, But I don't want to
get murdered by a robot either.

Speaker 1 (13:55):
Yeah, or have anybody else murdered by them as they
are preparing to rise.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
Up and rule the planet?

Speaker 4 (14:02):
Rise up. I see what you did there? Yeah, I
did that because of the pizza. Yeah that's clever, but
also twisted.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Miss a little bit, you know, But hey, it's a
twisted world in which we live, is it not.

Speaker 4 (14:12):
Is this a chain or is it just like a
thing up there in Milwaukee Palermos, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
You probably get it in your store. Sounds familiar. They
can make them wherever they won't do, and then they
just ship them out.

Speaker 4 (14:23):
They have these places that will pop up around the
city where you make your own pizza. Right, You go in,
you buy the dough and the toppings, You take it
home and cook it yourself. I don't understand that, And
I also don't understand why I'm expected to tip that person.

Speaker 2 (14:37):
Oh god, no, I'm doing the work. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:39):
Well, you're expected to tip everybody for everything. Now everywhere
you go. If you pay by credit card, you get
that little machine that says, and here is your chance
to tip? How much would you like to not not?
Would you would you like the tip?

Speaker 2 (14:56):
You can just answer yes or no.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
No, they assume you'll be tipping so here, and it
usually starts at eighteen and then it goes you know,
eighteen percent or twenty five percent or I mean it's
like really seriously, for what I mean if somebody, you know,
like a waiter at a restaurant, comes back and forth
to your table multiple times, takes your order, tells you

(15:18):
the specials, brings you drinks, brings you the food, they
clean up after you're gone, yeah, I definitely think they
should get a tip. Plus they're they're not making very
much money. But the person that just stands there and say,
hands you a cup here, you can go fill that up,
whether your diet pop or whatever. I should tip you

(15:38):
for handing me the cup.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
I don't think so.

Speaker 4 (15:40):
You know, I get it if you want to show
petty to someone, it's nice to have the option.

Speaker 2 (15:44):
But it is weird that now you're pressured into it.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
Oh god, yeah, that it's expected you're forced to and
if you don't, you know, you have to look at it.
Is there a way I can pay for this without tipping?
I mean, are you going to be that person that
stands up and says.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
That out loud? How about this one? You're at the
grocery store.

Speaker 4 (16:00):
You just bought all your groceries, and then it says,
would you like to donate five percent to some charity
you've never heard of before? And they'll ask you that
real loud, They like, you want to donate money to
this charity?

Speaker 1 (16:11):
You know, I'm just going to answer real loud back no,
not just no, but hell no, because I don't know
if that wouldn't Sally put that thing up there and says,
how would you like to give money to this? You
put money in the little box, and then when Sally
checks out and goes home, takes.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
It with her.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
Never say yes unless you know what the charity is,
because you're I mean, we've talked about this on the
show so many times. There's so many charities out there
where the vast majority of your donation isn't going towards
the actual charity. Does everybody remember that thing that just
happened in Malibu with the fires?

Speaker 2 (16:39):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (16:39):
I do.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
They had this big music festival they weread like one
hundred million dollars. Fire Aid they called it.

Speaker 4 (16:45):
And fire Aid was almost as big of a mess
as fire Fest, which was something totally different. And fire
Aid they Oh, they had the biggest stars in rock.
Nirvana did a reunion and they had Jon Jet fell
in for Kurt Cobain, and it was a big deal.
And something like less than ten percent of the actual
money that was raised went towards the people whose homes
burned out.

Speaker 1 (17:04):
Yea, they said, they're still trying to find people who
actually suffered from the fire, lost their homes, lost everything,
and right now they're having trouble finding anybody that actually
received any money.

Speaker 4 (17:15):
Never give anything to a charity if you don't know
what it is, or you don't have a nor good
authority that it's a reliable charity. On that note, I'll
tell you a good one that we like Wheelchairs for Warriors.

Speaker 2 (17:24):
They're doing good work out there, they need your support.

Speaker 4 (17:27):
Yeah, Wheelchairs for Warriors is one of those charities that
weirdly uses most of the money that you give them
to pay for wheelchairs.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
Oh radical, How about to say this cost for action?
And now, nip it in the bud. First sign of
youngster's going wrong.

Speaker 1 (17:41):
You got to nip it in the bud.

Speaker 9 (17:44):
Nip it.

Speaker 2 (17:44):
Stay tuned for more. Waltman Johnson
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