Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I was joking around about shooting the dog that's barking
and scaring away the deer. You probably, uh, but you
know people get upset with me from time to time.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Who got up set with you?
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Well, there was this email that came in said, you know,
you shoot a trespasser. Sure, I mean obviously, if you
have to sign up and then they don't read the sign,
you can shoot him.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
But don't shoot a beagle. Uh.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
Well this guy shot the dogs with a bow and arrow. See,
if you're hunting for deer with a with a gun, yeah,
you can shoot near the dogs and run them off,
but you can't do it. You can't do that with
a bow and arrow. And the dogs are yapping and barking,
scaring the deer away, and you're wanting to get you
at big eight point buck you saw yesterday and you
(00:45):
know now you staked them out and you're ready to go,
and then they were coming to him, dang dog. So yeah,
just kidding around about shooting dogs with don't don't be
coming up here like some Antifa protest and standing around
outside the radio station.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
We don't need that. We all right, if you're upset
about the dogs, here's a story that'll cheer you up.
Two police officers in Kentucky saved a horse. The horse
was stuck in a swimming pool. They saved it by
making a lasso out of a garden hose. Here are
the homeowners and Officer Trey McKnight talking about the amazing rescue.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
All four legs were stuck through the cover and they
were thrashing about. You know how long the horse could
hold his head above water. I saw composed a lasso,
and me and my sergeant lassoed the horse and pulled
him over to the stairs, and he walked right.
Speaker 2 (01:38):
Out there we go, come this way.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
I did tell my sergeants that they're going to take
my gun and issue and me.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
I'm.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
A horse. Is a horse? Of course? Of course a
horse got stuck in a swimming pool. It's Kentucky. Wouldn't
you think the pull would be on ty by it's November.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Well, that first lady said his all four legs went
through the cover. They had the pool covered, say for winter.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Yeah, but they didn't empty it.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
No, And then the horse got on the cover went
you know, you know, hoofs went through the cover. It's
it's okay for children, little little kids can walk out
on it. You know, they make them pool cover safe.
But a horse, you know, heavier than a child, shuriously,
yea legs went through and and then of course it
was still in the water because it was pushing the
(02:34):
cover down, so they they didn't have a lot of
time to get him out of there.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
That's good for him. Well, I'm glad they're okay. You
ain't people ever cheat on that Kentucky Derby, What do
you mean? Well, they got this, They were in Kentucky
in that news story, and they got this betting scandal
going on. And I just couldn't help but think.
Speaker 1 (02:50):
That was mostly NBA over red and and Cleveland Gaudian
baseball players. Now, the one dude with the Cleveland the
picture you got in my five hundred thousand dollars bond.
Speaker 2 (03:01):
Lewis Ortiz walked out of the Federal Courthouse in Boston
a hood over his head, never uttering a word to
the gaggle of reporters who peppered him with questions on
a gloomy day in bean Town. He walked out with
a five hundred thousand bond. So did he pay it?
The I guess do you pay the butt? You paid.
I guess he'd have to pay five thousand or fifty thousand, Yeah,
(03:23):
fifty thousand. The Guardian's picture stood before us Mangistrate Judge
Donald Cabell, appearing in the court for the first time
on charges related to an alleged sporting bet scheme. It
involved or Ties and another Guardian team made em manual
class associates in the Dominican Republic apparently also involved. Ortiz,
twenty six years old, granted release after appearing before the judge,
(03:46):
but was ordered to pay Here we go fifty thousand
dollars secured, surrendered his passport.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
Good man evid I mean a professional athlete, a goufie
de Graham nin He ain't very good.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
Ortiz, his lawyer said his client has never and went
never in properly infl It's a game, not for anyone,
not for anything. But anyway, he is in a little
bit of trouble right now.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
In the meantime, email from Patrick titled Tibet or not
TI bet And he's not talking about Tibet China.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
No, he's not talking about that Freedom concert in the nineties.
That online betting stuff is just getting crazy. Suckers can
bet on just about everything you can imagine. Now, people
betting on whether other people will bet on things is
now a thing. What do you think the odds are
that people will bet on that? You can bet on
whether they'll bet or not. Can you bet on whether
(04:36):
or not Tony Ortiz gets convicted? I'm sure you can. Yeah,
the prop bets. I think the hardest thing to regulate
has got to be the prop bets. It's one thing
to arrest a guy for trying to throw a game,
that would be obvious, right, But what's the prop bet is? Like, well,
he tap his helmet three times before hiking the ball.
You know, some of these prop bets are weirdly specific.
(04:57):
They are, and the guy's on. How do you regulate that?
How do you know he didn't tell someone ham, I know,
I'm gonna touch my nose twice and then I'm gonna
scratch my ass or he's gonna yell out, Oh my hall?
Who was that? They used to say, Omaha, pyton Man
pay Manning. Yeah, I knew that he loved it. Yeah,
om why he did that? And what does he do now?
Pizza commercials or something? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (05:18):
And uh no, his his brother does Jersey Mikes. I
don't think I'll ever eat another Jersey.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
Mic have you ever had it? But maybe once I'm
not in Jersey. Yeah, I like when a sandwich is hot,
but uh, I always care.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
For Eli or Nanny DeVito, either one, to be honest
with you, And those commercials, they just make me want
to go somewhere else.
Speaker 2 (05:37):
Fire Fire Fireman's subs. Those are good when I'm picking
a sandwich. I always used to go to Jimmy John's
because he's like us politically and fast. Yeah yeah, they're
quick too. But also I remember they were mad at
him when they found out he was a big game hunter. Oh,
they tried to cancel Jimmy John And I thought, that
just makes me want to eat at Jimmy John's. What
a cool guy. And they made hippo subs, so you
(05:58):
know there's that. Yeah, all right, We now take you
to Saint Louis. We're an attractive blonde woman who used
to be a Fox Saint Louis reporter has been arrested
for murdering her mom. Oh no, let me put a
picture of an attractive woman broke the law. She looks
a little bit like Kelly Anne Conway. Let me get
her up on the screen, but she's not Kellyanne Conway
(06:19):
to be bitter. Yeah. Former Fox anchor has been charged
with murdering her elderly mom after she was discovered covered
in blood and cuts by police. Not a good luck
oh got arrested on Halloween for stabbing her eighty year
old mother, Anita Avers.
Speaker 1 (06:34):
So I'm guessing this wouldn't one of them mercy kill
it because she was in pain and needed to be
put down. I don't think multiple stabbings is considered mercy.
Speaker 2 (06:44):
Angela and mock Age forty eight arrested and she used
to anchor for Missouri Saint Louis local Fox station that's
Channel two, charged with first degree murder by the Sedgwick
County District Attorney's office. I bet she was a cheerleader
in high school and maybe college, because she looks like
one of those mean girls.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
Yeah, that was a cheerleader and then wouldn't let other girls,
you know, get on the cheer team.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
You probably is mean. Officers allegedly discovered the former news
reporter standing outside a property in Kansas, covered in blood
with cuts on her hand. First Responders transferred to the
mother to the hospital, where she was pronounced dead. The
suspect was also taken to the hospitally and she's fine.
Other than the fact that she may have murdered someone.
That's not cool. Yeah, but she didn't stab herself to
(07:28):
death a million dollar bond boyd, She probably ain't got it,
all right. Look at what she looked like then when
she was a news anchor. Look at her now, ye
yay yi, I know what happened. What the hell is
that what Fox does to you?
Speaker 1 (07:41):
They do your hair and makeup and then all of
a sudden you're like, wow, miss America.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
Now I think she let herself go after her career
at it? I think so. Yeah, I don't think it
had anything. Nope, bet that is so sad. I don't
think that's what Fox does too.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
All right, Well, let's not forget. It's Veterans Day. Into
all the veterans out there, we say thank you. And
by the way, we got an email from a vet
who just wants to send us warning out.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
What's the warning? The war we fought abroad has come home? Now.
You know how we're always talking about how you.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
Know women or gays that are voting for you know,
Middle Eastern types of terrorist types and while yeah, part
of right basically just you know, letting the enemy behind
the walls.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Well, that's what we've all done.
Speaker 1 (08:25):
The Veterans Day warning, what we're seeing in the streets
of Chicago and in New York City is not random violence.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
It is the very.
Speaker 1 (08:34):
Thing veterans sore an oath to protect against. Insurgent in nature,
symbolic and purpose, very strategic. When border patrol agents are
ambushed in an American city, sure, it's more.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
Than a crime.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
It is an assault on the institution charged with upholding
the boundary of American citizenship. I love this line. Citizenship
is more than paperwork. It's a covenant that binds people.
That's dope, the shared rights, duties, and consent to govern ourselves.
(09:11):
Without it, sovereignty is an empty word. That's good stuff,
That is powerful stuff. Think on that a little bit
on Veterans Day. Okay, absolutely, Hey, don't look at me.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
I did my part. When I saw those comedies in
the park, I made fun of them until they cried.
That's true. And did you know why the commies were
in the park last week? They were handing out a newspaper.
It was like anti Communist Week, and the Commies were
there to try to you know, like not be anti comedy.
They were very pro commy. Yeah, actually, mister Kennis right
(09:44):
about this. We didn't figure this out till after the
faculty last week the White House declared it was anti
Communist week. If I had known, I just stuck around
longer and made fun of them more. You know, it
was still fun though. Yeah, oh, Rahed you or die?
Hold them high. Tony Gott to restart are Ley Army
here Walton and Johnson Radio Network to have a problem
(10:06):
as they get into the primaries of the twenty twenty
six midterm election. Oh lord, can we at least get
past the holidays before we have to start doing elections again? No,
it's too late. John Coreyan spending three million dollars a
week trying to stop Ken Paxton and Wesley Hunt for
taking his job.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
Besides that, we got an election this weekend in Louisiana.
You know, they do things a little different over there.
So the fifteenth is there voting day?
Speaker 2 (10:32):
That's true? Yeah, did you know, not to get off
topic because the Democrats have a problem, but did you
know that in Texas we had seventeen amendments or propositions
or whatever they want to call them. Yeah, on the ballot. Sure,
do you know how many of them passed? I think
they all passed, all of them. Yeah? All do people
not read those things? I think that if you just
(10:52):
ask somebody if they want something, well, let me give
me an example. Hey, billy eah, do you want one
of these little child clots here? Oh? Yeah, give me that.
But but they're laxatives. Wait wouldn't they? Yeah? You see
what I mean. He didn't even bother to ask what
it was. He just wanted it. Right. That's that's people
for you. Do you guys want to spend more money
on dementia research, let's dementia exactly right. Everybody voted yes
(11:16):
on that. He's like, well, wait, why do we need
the state to research? Why? Why are we doing all
these things? Maybe a few of them. Sure, I think
I think most people thought Prop three, which was about
bail reform, perhaps sixteen was about illegal immigrants voting most
people agreed on those. We don't want criminals to roam
the streets. No, we got all of them, and every
one of them is going to cost the Texas taxpayers
(11:38):
millions of dollars, and they're like, yeah, yeah, sure.
Speaker 1 (11:41):
Let's let's get that. Let's everybody wants to go spend
other people's money. Well with Republicans like this, who needs Democrats?
It's my money, but I will stretch. The Democrats have
a problem. The Democrats know that men don't want to
be in their political party anymore. Sure, one in ten
men might be okay with it, you know that.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
Kind of what are you saying? One in ten? I
think everybody knows what I mean. But average guys don't
want to be part of the political party of cross dressing,
wirdos and flamers. They don't want to be in that party.
There you go. Sorry. The Democrats have been working on
a plan to get manly your men to either come
(12:21):
back or stay in their party. So far, all they've
come up with is talking tough, which means cursing. And
they think if if they say the EF word occasionally,
that that will make men want to be part of
them again. So they went out and they found the
manliest guy they could find, Kevin Newsom, who's basically Patrick
(12:43):
Bateman suffers from narcissism, obsessive compulsive disorder psychopathy is Sherry's
psychopathic and if he was some people that liked that movie.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
They said, you are doing Patrick Bateman a disservice by
saying he's compared to Gavin Newsom.
Speaker 2 (12:59):
That's just an insult. Dude, they're the same guy, But
as an insult to the movie character. Do you understand
he was a bad guy the guy work.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
Yeah, but he wouldn't no Gavin Newsom. I mean, that's
that's just mean spirited, Jane.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
If Gavin Newsom wasn't the governor at California, and I
cannot naked women around the townhouse with a live running chainsaw. Yeah, still,
Gavin Newsom's way worse. If Gavin Newsom wasn't the California governor,
he would probably be a serial killer. That's just my opinion. Yeah,
you could see that, thank you. Yeah, they even look alike.
(13:33):
They're the same guy.
Speaker 1 (13:34):
And I also think without all of his money and
the the you know, the well, let's say, the cosmetic surgeons,
the hair and makeup people that dominate the California coastline there,
I think he'd probably look a lot like that Fox
newswoman the day she was arrested.
Speaker 2 (13:54):
It's a good point. He is well groomed and quaffed
but that won't hold up. You know, if he goes
to jail, he won't look like that in a month.
That's a two hundred dollars haircut. Oh easy? Why why
two hundred dollars, mister Kenneth. That's important, and I'm not
taking anything away from his hair grooming. I think that's important.
(14:14):
You get what you pay for. I don't know. I
got it the great clips. I think I look fine. Yeah,
you got thirty dollars worth. Yeah, what's wrong with that? Well,
you got what you paid for. That's an expensive haircut.
I think he's trying to insult you, billy. And how
much was your haircut? Right here? Praylean did dish? It
looks good? Thank you? You look nice. Man.
Speaker 1 (14:31):
I normally cut it myself, but I can't get around
them back good. Sure, so you know she whittled on
it a little bit. I have that problem with shaving
my back hair. Whittled on it. That's not Oh good.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Lord, you people are killing me. I'm getting a headache again. Yeah, widled,
how do you cut your hair? Yeah? Whittling works great anyway.
Patrick Paintman, he's the governor of California and he and
here is him, and Jake Tapper explaining how they're going
to get men to come back to the Democrat Party.
Oh good, Governor doesn't know it's his turn to talk.
All that talking, and then the computer FROs I blame
(15:04):
Billy ed Wait what hang on? I got it?
Speaker 4 (15:07):
Referred to President Trump in one of your tweets or
one of your staff's tweets as a beta, as a
beta mail.
Speaker 2 (15:15):
Let me finish the question. Just let me finish the question.
Speaker 4 (15:19):
There is a big debate and discussion right now about
masculinity in America. Professor Galloway has this new book out
talking about what a man is, what a man should be.
There's all these questions in handling among Democrats about what
is the reason that we're losing the male vote and
not just white men, increasingly Latino men, increasingly African American men,
(15:41):
not majorities, but they're heading their trending conservative Well, let
me back up. I'm really proud of the work we're
doing with Richard Greaves and others.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
Scott Galloway's been a rock star in this space.
Speaker 4 (15:51):
We've leaned in California, did an executive order. We've got
a whole team working on the issue.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
The crisis of men and boys. We have a whole
team I'm working on how to get men to come
back to our political party where we celebrate losers, cross dressing, weirdos,
and defend pedophilia.
Speaker 1 (16:07):
They want to keep doing the things that they're doing now.
They just want to trick men into thinking that they're not.
I think I know why you're easily tricked.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
Go be a Democrat, Dame. It's weird. The one portion
of society that's not overwhelmingly on psychotropic drugs doesn't want
anything to do with this political party. Imagine that. I
think I know why they suck. They suck because they suck. Yeah,
who wants to join the political party of losers? Not me?
(16:38):
You want to be a Mayon? Don't you? Now you're normal?
Walton and Johnson Radio Network,