Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I'm gonna give you two options here will be like
(00:02):
the Scarecrow and the Wizard Oge. You know, some go
this way and some go that way, and then you
tie itself.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
In a knot. Goofy. No, I don't think it's given
me anything like that. Bill. Yeah, where are we going? Okay?
Speaker 3 (00:14):
So, as you know, tomorrow at six thirty pm, we
are gathering together with like minded individuals. Me, the Attorney
General of Texas, Ken Paxton, and a young group of
conservative students will be gathering together at City Center in
Houston eight right exactly. And there's a hotel there, Maran Hotel.
(00:36):
It's called part of City Center, and we are going
to be having a rally to support a group of
teenage high school kids who were docksed.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
Yeah. I get behind some of that. The support them
little high school girls mostly.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
No, mister ow No and the boys and the boys.
I don't know what why you're making this weird. They
were docksed by an adult from Spring Branch Democrats.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
It's a local activism. Should they should they not have
done that? Well?
Speaker 3 (01:02):
The kids wanted to start a turning point USA chapter.
So some activists local Karen Liberals soccer mom took photos
screenshots of the kids online discussions and she posted their
names on the internet.
Speaker 1 (01:15):
Wasn't that group up to like seven hundred people? I
think I read somewhere maybe even more than that.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
Now, look a lot of young people want to join
Turning Point USA now and apparently this really upsets Democrats,
so they're trying to endanger the children. I think I
think they're endangering them. I don't think you should dox
kids on the internet. So Ken Pakson's doing an investigation
and we're having a rally and you could join us
six thirty pm on Wednesday, that'd be tomorrow at City Center,
(01:40):
or or you could do this. The University of Glasgow
has asked students to to please be careful around Bonnie
Blue if you see her on campus.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Oh oh, she's not going to be in the Spring
Branch school district is year No. University of Glasgow is
in England. Bonnie Blue is expected to present Glasgow be
president in Glasgow. That you had the college to to
me again who she is though she's the porn star at
sex with over one thousand men in a day. Oh
that's right, that's your ex girlfriend, right, didn't you have
a thing for her. No, and then a thousand guys
(02:11):
cut you off, and you're like, well, never mind, yuck, yeah, yuck.
Speaker 3 (02:15):
Bonnie Blue is twenty six years old. She looks like
she's five times that age.
Speaker 1 (02:19):
Oh she looks forty at least, you know, rode hard
and put up never mind.
Speaker 2 (02:23):
Yeah, Bonnie Blue is not my type. I'm not. That's gross.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
She was physically attacked and punched in the faiths by
another woman who stood in line, waited her turn to
get up with her, and then told her how horrible
she is.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
Well, the University of Glasgow put out a warning saying
if you encounter Bonnie Blue on campus, please don't have
sex with her. Apparently she's doing something called the bang
bus to her planned to coincide with the university's Freshman
Week Freshman meeting Great Week. Students attend daytime and evening
social events, and the university is warning kids you may
encounter Bonnie Blue. She may want to sex with you.
(03:00):
Please don't do it, is what they're saying. And that
is a weird problem to have had a call. We
never had anything like this in my college. You didn't
have to worry about encountering porn stars. But you claim
that while she was people were waiting in line to
have their turn with her. Apparently you mean to have
a turn with her. Yes, No, these were women waiting
in line.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
I don't know what she autographing a book or were
they taking selfies together? I don't know, but yeah, there
was a line. We've been in similar situations were people
line up to come and hang out with us, and
we always appreciate it, but not once has any of
them killed an hour of their day so that they
could wait in line to get up close to us,
(03:41):
so then they could just hit us.
Speaker 2 (03:43):
So people were waiting in line just to meet her.
It wasn't like a sex thing.
Speaker 4 (03:46):
I don't know what.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
No, it wasn't a sex thing.
Speaker 3 (03:48):
But whenever I read about this in the New York Post,
I wouldn't know who Bonnie Blue was if not for
the New York Post. But unfortunately I know all about her,
and they use a lot of British words when they're
describing her. Yeah, the men were all in waiting for
their turn like they were in what they were lined up?
Speaker 2 (04:03):
They were lined up. That's what the British people mean
by this.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
This wasn't a club at a nightclub and that's where
the exchange and the punch to the face took place.
And then security grabbed the woman that punched her, and
then the police came.
Speaker 2 (04:16):
And you know, it's like, she's fine. She says, she's fine.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
The woman waited a turn, She took forty minutes out
of her day when she got to the event, queued
up to meet the adult film store before punching her
in the face.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
Okay, so two immedia things. I'm gonna tell you.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
Number one, I don't like Bonnie Blue, but you just
made her look like a hero, right because she's just
doing her thing out there. I didn't do anything, not you,
but the woman that punched her. And then number two
isn't Bonnie Blue? Basically what feminists always wanted? Like, what
are they mad about? They don't know what they want.
You know that women will change her mind. I asked
for something, you give it to them, and they said, no,
I want something else. Stop for just a minute and
(04:54):
think about what feminists want. What do they claim to want.
I'm talking about neo fifth wave feminists, this current wave
of feminist. They were like, oh, we want to be
able to do what men can do well well, you
can do what we could do, well, not have a
bunch of lovers without getting shamed. Men get celebrated. Okay,
here's Bonnie Blue. Bonnie Blue banged over a thousand guys
in a day, and then what do the women do.
(05:15):
They jump all over her and tell her what a
slut she is.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
Well, wait a second, I thought you got what she is.
I thought you all wanted this.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
Yeah, but they said that that's all. That's their power, right.
What are they doing when they're talking about their stuff?
They're speaking speaking truth to power power, that's what they say,
which means nothing. By the way, Yeah, that that You
might as well put that on a bumper sticker. So
that's what it means. It is on a bumper sticker.
Oh good, that's the kind of gibberish that they say
on the left. I'm speaking truth to power. That's my truth.
(05:43):
It's my truth. Is it your truth or is it
the truth? Because I don't think it is the truth.
If you're saying it's your truth, that's like admitting that
you're telling a lie.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
What's your truth?
Speaker 3 (05:52):
My truth is that I can have sex with a
thousand men in a day, and I'm empowered.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
So these people were all lined up, A lot of
women apparently were in line to meet her. It was
just meet her and take a picture with her. And
apparently their tensions had already grown a bit hostile in
the club before the woman that punchter stepped up. Bonnie
apparently got into a fiery discussion with a different party goer,
(06:19):
and then that was followed up with the punch from
another woman.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
Okay, so here's my question, because you know, I just
have to.
Speaker 1 (06:25):
Do with Spring Branch School District. That's what I'm still
trying to figure out. Well, it's a fork in the road.
Speaker 3 (06:29):
You can join the young conservative men and women who
are going to go out and fight for rights and
truth and free and defend life at our rally tomorrow,
or you can be a student at University of Glasgow
where the superintendent is warning you you might accidentally have
sex with the porn star while you're walking around campus.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
I'm gonna pass on that it doesn't sound like a
good idea.
Speaker 3 (06:50):
Yeah, even if you were feeling amorist, do you really
want to be person number one thousand and one. I'm
sure that's how the next pandemic starts. Oh, absolutely, what
you don't seek to understand.
Speaker 2 (07:08):
Is I'm not trapped in here with you. If you're
trapped in here with me, stay tuned for more. Walton
and Johnson. All right, let's play a game.
Speaker 3 (07:19):
I'm gonna play a recording for you of Olivia Dunn,
famous LSU gymnast and girlfriend of Pirates Paul Skin. Paul Skin, Sure,
she's gonna tell a story. I want you to tell
me if you think it's a true story or not.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
Well, you set it up makes me doubt it immediately.
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (07:35):
It's a seemingly mundane story the way she tells it,
though I don't know what it is. Let me play
the story first, and then you tell me if you
think it's wrong.
Speaker 4 (07:42):
Story time. So the other night was date night and
I went out to dinner with Paul. We get to
the restaurant, we sit down, we order, I get up,
I go to the bathroom. I walk in the bathroom.
There's three stalls. Two were taken, so I go in
the third stall and I'm just like innocently pik, And
there's these girls that are communicating through the stalls and
they're like, did you see that Libby dunnis here?
Speaker 2 (08:02):
Like what is she even doing here?
Speaker 4 (08:03):
So then I stop what I'm doing and I try
to listen a little closer, and I kid you not,
these girls are like my age, or maybe a little younger.
But one of them, one of them goes like, honestly,
I thought she'd be more chopped in real life. What
I didn't even know people use chopped in like their
everyday vocabulary.
Speaker 2 (08:18):
Like.
Speaker 4 (08:18):
So then naturally I chimed in and I was like,
oh my god, like I heard Livy Dun's the worst.
At this point, they're like, really, like, what do you know?
Speaker 2 (08:27):
Now?
Speaker 4 (08:28):
They're both washing their hands. I come out of the stall.
They're like, I think I heard literal crickets. But then
they asked me for a photo and I took it.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
So I don't know why she lie.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
And if you were gonna lie, make up a more
interesting story, wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
You hear that's a real story? I do, Yeah, because
I believe her.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
I'm sure LSU has a code of conduct, just like
the Yaggi's over and you know Brian College station, and
they don't put up a tolerate no line.
Speaker 3 (08:56):
I'm not so sure about that. She's not even on
the team anymore. By the way, by the way, not
for nothing here, But look at Paul, Look at her.
I gotta tell you, Good for you, Paul.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
You know what I mean? Look at this guy, I
look at her. I mean, look at her, look at him.
Good for you girl.
Speaker 3 (09:11):
If they both worked at the same accounting firm and
they weren't famous athletes, do you think they'd be an item.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Well, he has to deal with the fact that she
makes more money than him, and I guess he's okay
with that. You know, younger men can put up with it.
People like my dad's age, we didn't have to. They
didn't deal with that kind of stuff because you know,
women didn't make no money back in those days.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
You know what makes me think it's not a true story.
It has a beginning of middle in an end. She
told it quickly for a woman. I know women are
now good at telling stories.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Speaking of aggies, there's more trouble over Texas A and
M University.
Speaker 2 (09:46):
I'm sure you've heard of it, do you tell? Well,
First of all, you need to know this.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
The Aggies have a code of honor, always have, always will.
Speaker 2 (09:53):
And it's really easy to remember.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
An aggie does not lie to eat or steal or
tolerate those who. Okay, period, sure somebody's been told to
lie at Texas A and M. Really they still do
that hazing thing for fraternities, which they probably ought to
just completely do away with all that foolishness because they
just keep getting in trouble.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
Now.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
Back in the old days, they do weird stuff with
them and their butts, and then they got in trouble
for that, So now I'm sorry.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
What.
Speaker 1 (10:22):
Yeah, there was a lot of butt stuff going on
in old fraternities back in the day. Now these new
uh hazing. Some of the pledges at the Kappa Sigma
fraternity were put through.
Speaker 2 (10:37):
A strenuous, tortuous workout.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
They took them out out in the woods somewhere in
the darken night, and then they had them squat with
their heels over their hands.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
Trump's going to the United Nations.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
Do you see what's happening on the TV. It's the
weirdest thing. He went up an escalator. There's a working
escalator next to a broken escalator. We're at the United Nations,
live on TV in New York City. Trump and his
team go walk up the broken escalator. They don't go
up the working escalator. That's because they leave that one
for the liberals. Liberals don't know how to work.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
An escalator if it's not moving, they just stand there
frozen saying help help.
Speaker 3 (11:19):
Is it because Trump's trying to get in better shape
or is that a security protocol? Hell head me, Sorry, Billy,
I didn't mean to interrupt your ant m story.
Speaker 2 (11:26):
Gone.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
Campa Sigma fraternity got it hazing their kids and they
put them through some kind of workout. They had to
squat on their hands, and then they did like three four,
five hundred of these squats in the mud in the dark,
people yelling at them, shining lights in their face, getting
old dizzy. Some of them was throwing up and then
and it got serious after that. Some of them had
to go to the hospital when they're urine turned black
(11:49):
and they couldn't walk.
Speaker 2 (11:51):
So I had turned black. So it's wrong with that?
Speaker 1 (11:54):
Sound a healthy happens to me all the time. What
do you yeah, Well, apparently college kids freak out about
that kind of stuf. What do they raise this or something.
They went to the hospital and the guys in charge
of the fraternity, he told them spread it out, go
to different hospitals and if they ask you what happened?
Speaker 2 (12:11):
Lie.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
They told them to lie so the fraternity wouldn't get
in trouble. And that means you can't be an aggie.
That goes against the code of honor, remember the other part. Yeah,
and you won't tolerate those that do, can't put up
with them, so they shouldn't even be aggie. Is that
whole kick Kappa whatever Sigma thing. They're suspended, I don't know,
(12:37):
Probably like Jimmy Kimmel, you know, but a week and
everybody will lose their They'll forget about it and move
on to something else.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
All right.
Speaker 3 (12:43):
I have questions obviously because it's me. So you can't
lie if you're an aggie. But don't they have a
law school there? M It's tricky, isn't it, right? I mean,
and that's like that's part of it, right, I mean
they're supposed to. I mean, a good lawyer lies once
in a while. It's a lawyer.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
I think they only misrepresent the truth. Oh yeah, there's
nothing in the code about that.
Speaker 3 (13:06):
Okay, Well, what if these guys just misrepresented the truth,
and do they still get into trouble?
Speaker 1 (13:10):
A loophole yet again, today's show has just been filled
with loopholes. Yeah, well, ways for your taxes. Kosher elevator,
your kosher elevator if the Jews can't use an elevator
or electronics or whatever on the Sabbath.
Speaker 2 (13:25):
And I don't know what the rules for Russia Shana, which.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
Is going on right now, but they do figure out
a way around those tricky little suggestions.
Speaker 2 (13:35):
That's all it is is suggestions these days.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Not the demands of Thy God Almighty on his throat
in heaven.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
Well, that Libby doing is cute, do ain't she? Here's
what I want to know, very flexible. I hear a
couple of months from now, do you think Jimmy Kimmel
gets canceled? And you know, the Babylon b put it great.
I thought it was the truth is always a funnier
than the made up stuff. They said, ABC rehires Kimmel
(14:04):
so they can refire him just for being unfunny.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
I actually think that will happen.
Speaker 3 (14:10):
I know, I think this gave them an excuse to
take the show off the air, and in doing so,
because they it was associated with Trump, even though it
really wasn't, you know, think about it.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
That's what they'll do.
Speaker 3 (14:19):
They drummed up a lot outrage, and people demanded to
see it back on TV, and they thought to themselves, well, hey,
we wanted people to watch the show. Now you want
to watch it, Okay.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
Don't you imagine the ratings will probably spike that first
five minutes of the show. Sure, people might want to
see if he's going to make an apology.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
I want to know. I will bet you fifty books
right now. He don't know. Probably well.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
And also there's different levels, different types of an apology.
Sometimes they're just insinuated.
Speaker 2 (14:51):
But I hate a fake apology.
Speaker 3 (14:53):
When someone does a fake apology for their employer, doesn't
mean it. No, absolutely not, not after what he said.
I mean what he said so dark and just macab
and I can't imagine a scenario in which, yeah, but
it was.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
A week ago.
Speaker 1 (15:07):
Yeah, you know, the tensions were still high then and
feelings were tense.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
But it's a full week later now, aren't you over
it yet?
Speaker 3 (15:16):
Well, one week later, Kimmel and Disney have still not
retracted the lie. Jimmy Kimmel's ratings were down forty three percent.
Long before Charlie Kirk only one hundred and twenty nine
thousand viewers in the coveted demo. So I ask you,
what's the point of having this. I mean, that's less
viewers than we have listeners to this radio show. What
do they need him for.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
It's pretty sad when you're nationally syndicated TV show, can't
whoop us international internationally?
Speaker 3 (15:39):
Sure, it's Disney and ABC. You can get that in
other countries. I mean, you can watch that all over
the world.
Speaker 1 (15:44):
We actually everybody is syndicated now thanks to social media
and the Internet.
Speaker 2 (15:51):
Not us.
Speaker 3 (15:51):
Apparently there are countries where our smartphone app is not
allowed for legal purposes.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
Well, well, let's go to war with him countries.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
I don't know, let's help it up. The whole can
of woop action seems kind of exhausting to be honest. Well,
I mean, I mean, you know, we'll send to people,
Oh yeah, someone else.
Speaker 3 (16:05):
Yeah, hold on, I feel like I caught that French disease.
Speaker 2 (16:08):
It makes things happen to you twice. Walton v. Johnson