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November 3, 2025 19 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I'm always reminded of the fact that right now there's
a lot of people just waking up who missed the
first thirty minutes of the show.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Well, I wouldn't say they missed it. They didn't hear
it though.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
They don't even understand how crazy the last thirty minutes was.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
No, it got off the hook in a hurry.

Speaker 1 (00:16):
Around here, a cafe in Dubai is selling a one
thousand dollars cup of coffee. What could possibly have made
them think that's good for business?

Speaker 2 (00:26):
Are they just so desperate over there for coffee they're
auctioning that. I'm off one cuple of time now.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
I wonder if they just saw Americans drinking Starbucks and
they thought five dollars for coffee, oh please. There's a
report about Vegas right now that claims Vegas got so
cocky with all of the incoming tourism over the last
few years that they started charging absurd amounts of money
for things like MGM resorts started charging twenty six dollars

(00:50):
for a bottle of water, and so there's a lot
of news stories about this. The bottle of water was
just kind of a symptom of the whole thing, and
during that time, they said they they lost a million tourists,
that the average people came there, looked at the prices
and said, we're just not going back. And so now
Vegas has to do something about this because during a
time when the economy grew significantly over the last year,

(01:13):
their tourism plummeted. So I guess it's a good time
to go to Vegas.

Speaker 2 (01:18):
Is there a good time to go?

Speaker 1 (01:19):
Well, they don't. You know who's at the sphere.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
You get to know who's at the sphere.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
I was just looking at that yesterday. Probably probably not
something you'd be interested in. It was some electronic music artists. Yeah,
probably not for me, and I, you know, I hadn't
even heard of them.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
Huh, you don't don't fly today, though you already said
don't go today, so hold back. Well, you could jog there,
you know, yeah you could, but your tip was not
flying today. I don't know if it was out of
fear because the pilots aren't getting paid, or the air
traffic controllers aren't getting paid, or somebody's pissed off about
this government shutdown, which of course is Trump's fault. Naturally,

(01:54):
So they asked some pilot or somebody about flying with
the pilots who were just gruntled or whatever, and it's like.

Speaker 1 (02:00):
Well, I'm not.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
I'm not unless he's already suicidal, which would have nothing
to do with not getting paid or whichever. I don't
think the pilot's going to crash the plane, do you.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
No, I don't think so, just because he's upset.

Speaker 2 (02:15):
And are they not getting paid by the individual airlines
or is this just people that fly for the government.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Well, I will remind everybody that when we had the
air traffic controllers, we were having weird problems with planes
crashing into helicopters, and it is possible this will make
it better, might be, how are we are we looking
so far? Well, wherever you live, whatever airport you're near,
if you put in the name of your city and
then TSA, you get a headline like this, here's ours.

(02:44):
Houston travelers face hours long TSA lines at Bush Hobby
airports amid government shutdown. And then I just experiment here.
I did the equivalent of that with Memphis, and it said, yeah,
the same thing said yeah, long lines at Memphis TSA
and play Memphis trying to make ends of me at
the mid Federal shutdown, long lines expected. You get the

(03:05):
general idea. I hope you're happy, kitty.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
I just hope this stupid time change has made you happy.
You're the one who kept running around here going, uh,
you know, man, we gotta put it back the way
it was. Yeah. I was stumbling around through the double
at at five thirty last night in the dark.

Speaker 1 (03:25):
Yeah, five thirty is dark thanks to you. I'm sure
you know. I've thought a lot about this, and it
occurred to me that with the time change, Billy Ed,
nobody's stopping you from getting up an hour earlier and
going to bed an hour earlier and just living your
life on the same schedule you were already on.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
It didn't well, I wouldn't be here yet. It's only
uh oh wait, it's crap, it's seven o'clock in the
old time. Huh.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Yeah, it'd still be dark out. It wouldn't change anything.

Speaker 2 (03:53):
Yeah, but it wouldn't be dark at five thirty at night.
You like that getting dark early because you want to
go to bed at six o'clock.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
No, I got the rest of us don't necessarily like it.
I got about at eight thirty or nine. But still,
I you know, to your point, I remember you sitting
here just this summer. It was just a few months ago.
You're like, I'll be glad we can change those clocks back,
cause I'm trying to go to bed at at you know,
eight eight o'clock at night and it's still all daylight
and stuff outside.

Speaker 2 (04:17):
Yeah. Now, well you got your wish. The rest of
us have to suffer to make Kenny happy. I want
to get eight hours asleep. The male hormonal cycle is
twenty four hours. For women, it's twenty eight days billion.
If you don't get six hours of sleep at night.
Talk about that, your testosterone crashes into the earth.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
It goes south. As some would say, well that's where
we're supposed to go. I never never understood that expression.

Speaker 2 (04:40):
Well, they did another survey. They do this all the time,
and no matter what the survey says, they still don't
do anything about it. Only twelve percent of the people
in the survey said they like this going back and
forth stuff. Everybody else wants it to either be, you know,
like it was, or like it is now and leave
it alone. But then, of course those people are split

(05:05):
bet forty five fifty five, somewhere in that range between
who wants it early and who wants it late? So
we can't decide. So since we can't decide, we got
all these different politicians beating these bills to work with
them every year around this time and again in the spring,
and they talk about how this is the last time,
and it's not.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
It does seem to happen once every six months. Somehow,
I have this conversation, and for years we've been proposing
a policy that would get rid of it.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
They got it like four or five bills. If Congress
was working up there in Congress right now about daylight
saving time, and they still don't do anything about it.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
Well, let's play why Devil's advocate for a minute billiad
because obviously we're all against the changing of the clock.
Doesn't make any sense. What's the argument for it? Does
anyone know? I feel like I hear this every year,
and yet I still don't really understand. I know, well,
a long time ago, the farmers needed to know when
because they didn't have a digital clock back then, and
back in those days, you know you used, uh though,

(06:05):
you looked at the sun to get the time. And
it's like, what the hell are you talking about? We
have Twitter now, we have satellites, we have helicopters. Things
were different to we have drones the size of mosquitoes
that can spy on you. For the Chinese Communist Party,
I'm pretty sure we don't need to change the clocks
based on where the sun is at right now. No, No,
it's just.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Mainly about whatever I like. Of course, I'm not the
only one that gets to say which is wrong. Uh,
change its subjects here real quick. I don't know if
you saw it or not, but oh my god, I
just wanted to warn you if if you see a
headline in your news today on your phone or whatever,
your computer, and it's something about Jayden Daniels, the quarterback

(06:48):
the Washington team and his injury.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
Oh yeah, the team from Washington.

Speaker 2 (06:53):
Sure, if you're if you're a little squeamish about things
like that, you might not want to watch it.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
Because he gets.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
Flung to the ground in one of those illegal tackled
and when he goes to catch himself before he falls
and hits the ground, he reaches out with his left
arm to catch himself, and that arm bends the wrong way.
It looks like a mannequin's arm in a store when
they're trying to, you know, get the arm to go
in in the sweater or whatever. It bent completely the

(07:25):
wrong way.

Speaker 1 (07:26):
Oh, I'm looking at it right now.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
And then then it swivels.

Speaker 1 (07:29):
Watch it. Look at it. It goes backward. Oh, and
then swivel. Ah. That is harsh. Every time I see it.
It's like, oh, do you remember years ago there was
an NBA player and he jumped up and came down
on his leg the wrong way and you watched it
bend then. Oh yeah, and I think it was the
end of his career to publish one of those things.

(07:53):
What's the equivalent of that in this industry? Billy had
it paper cut?

Speaker 2 (07:57):
Probably, And remember in the old days, I don't know
if you did this or not, but you had to
get the albums out of the album covers and they
would always have this little paper sleeve inside the album
to wrap the record. And then sometimes when you pull
that out, you could you could cut you a little
paper cut, and especially if it was in that webbing
at they're at the bottom of your thumb right.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
Ooh, that would hurt for days. Man. I'll tell you what.
People think we have an easy job, but if you
if you don't see the horror in the subtext of
what Billy had just described to you. You probably have
a real job.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
Yeah, probably.

Speaker 1 (08:31):
Nancy May's losing it on the news about the TSA
agent's not coming to work. And I get that people
are mad about this, but I might remind everybody, and
I know that this is the last thing you want
to hear. We have added a trillion dollars in debt
since August. How much a trillion? Well, that's that's all
the way back to August, though, and that is with
the Republicans in charge. That's with a group of people

(08:53):
that were trying to make cuts. The only time in
history we did a budget vote to get rid of spending,
the only time we've ever done that, yep, was under Trump,
and we still added a trillion in tat in a
little over one month, less than two months. The Doge cuts.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
Are kind of like this clock business. They all seem
to think it's a good idea, and they spent a
lot of money and paid Elon and his crew to
find what hundreds of billions of dollars of waste, But
then for some reason, they didn't cut out the waist.
They found it, they identified it, and then somebody had

(09:30):
a lobbyist or somebody paid somebody to get real angry
about well, don't cut this. You can cut all that
other stuff, but this affects me. But every single thing
affected somebody, and so they just didn't cut nothing. Yeah.
I don't like it.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
Yeah, it seems like what was the point of all that.
I'll tell you what I mean.

Speaker 2 (09:49):
You'd get up in there, we wait in there with
one of them red ink pins, and we just start
just lining stuff out. This is canceled, canceled. Can't we'd
save some money in a hurry.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
It feels like it'd be easy to fix SNAP. Let's
start off with this. You cannot spend SNAP on anything
that's not healthy fruits, vegetables, bone, broth, or just the
basics what they call staples.

Speaker 2 (10:13):
Back in the old days, if you was getting on
a wagon train and head and west, you wouldn't pack
a bunch of twinkies and laced potato chips. You'd pack beans,
rice and taters and flour and stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (10:26):
And there's two reasons why I'd say that. It's not
because I'm mean. The first reason is this group of
people that are getting SNAP benefits are probably also getting
free healthcare from the government.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
Well, yeah, that's true.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
So if we're gonna feed you, I can't feed you
something that's gonna make the healthcare costs go up. That
seems counterintuitive.

Speaker 2 (10:42):
Plus, every video I've seen if people complaining about their
benefits getting cut off, it's either just like this one
lady or it's her whole family and they're all fat.
They're all huge. I mean, not just like a little
bit fat like me. They're obese, right, and they're doing
it on my money.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
It's true. We've seen a lot of these videos of
people on the internet getting mad about snap benefits being
cut off. And I understand that this isn't a true
litmus test of what kind of people get it, but
the kind of people that are posting videos on the
internet about snaps seem to always be fat. And then
there's this other deeper problem. At the end of the day,
we really feel like the system is supposed to be

(11:21):
designed to get you off of it, right. You're not
supposed to stay on it like anything Section eight welfare, Medicaid.
Eventually you're supposed to stop getting it.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
Oh, they got families that have been on this since
they trotted it out back in the sixties or whatever,
and they just pass it down from one generation to
the next. This is how the system works. We get
our check or our thing, and the mail used to
be mailed. Now I guess they just get it sit
right to their email on their phone or whatever, which

(11:51):
I'm sure we paid for it too. Well.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
You remember what LBJ said, Sadi, Yes I do. He said,
I don't like those pants. They cut my bung hole moday.
It's Monday morning.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
What Monday morning?

Speaker 1 (12:02):
Monday morning? Going here today? He was ready for a
great first.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Day, getting ready for the big day, get ready for
a great week.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
Every day's a great dest for me. I'm a person
who oves his positivity.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
You're listening to the Walt and Johnson radio network. The
Nigeria's apparently you got something going on. And then of
course there's all this news in America about you know,
how awful Trump and the Republicans are, how terrible it
is that they're holding the country hostage with this terrible,
terrible thing that the government won't work now. And you know,

(12:34):
we know the Democrats would love to get back to work,
turn this place into a commie hell hole.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
But we're slowing them down a little bit. I don't
know why I'm okay with that. I do not agree
with Trump's idea to end the filibuster. I feel like
government expands and grows rapidly enough, we don't need to
help it.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
Did you share that with him?

Speaker 1 (12:53):
I doesn't take my calls. Oh no, that's rude.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
You know, it's another reason to hate him. He's just awful.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
But again, balls and strike, it's not I don't hate Trump,
but then he's way about I Okay, it's okay.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
You kind of should. Everybody's supposed to if you know
something wrong with you. If you do hate him, that's
just Trump arrangement syndrome. But it's okay.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
I reserve the right to disagree with people on my
side when they say something I don't like. I find
the attempts to tie Charlie Kirk's death to Israel to
be silly and stupid. If someone can actually prove to
me that Israel had something to do with it, because
what has it been two months at this point, Show
me the evidence or shut the hell up.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
I'm so sick of hearing about this. Well, since you
mentioned Charlie Kirk, what about that hug?

Speaker 1 (13:37):
Yeah, thank you. There's another though about that hug. Huh oh.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
Somebody sent this pray Lean and she showed it to me,
and I'm like, oh, well, there you go. Erica Kirk
had her husband killed so she can get with the
vice president apparently okay.

Speaker 1 (13:53):
Over the weekend, people bloggers political people started posting photos
of the different ways that Erica Kerk hugs people to
try to prove or not prove that she was sleeping
with our vice president in the studio. Right now, I
have a photo on the left of Erica Kirk hugging Jadvans,
and she touched his head.

Speaker 2 (14:11):
She reached her handback behind her head, kind of like
you would do with a woman. But then this is
just a standing up as a face kissing kind of
a thing. And boy, everybody thought it just looks, you know,
like she's running his finger, her fingers through his hair
and she's being all seductive and look at that she's

(14:32):
given it to him good right there on stage in
front of you know, thousands of people at Ole Miss
and then of course on the cameras in front of millions,
Like she didn't know anybody would notice this.

Speaker 1 (14:47):
This is it's just how she hugs people.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
But no, we're supposed to think that she is a
tart and a murderer.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
Yeah, I'm one of those crazy people. Did that does
not think she murdered her husband to sleep with JD
Evans in the studio Right now, we're looking at a
photo of her hugging Jad Vans. And if you actually
watched it live at the Turning Point USA event, it
happens real fast. She walks up, she hugs them, she
touches his head, they walk away. The whole thing was
one second long. On the other side of the screen,

(15:16):
here is a photo of her hugging a woman after
her husband died, and she's hugging this woman the exact
same way. Now, either Erica Kirk is sleeping with everybody
or trying to, or this is just how she hugs people.
I really think you people are trying too hard.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
That's all they needed, any kin of little reason, and
they need go birdserk.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
See this is what we've made this point before the
world is already awful enough. We don't need to try
to come up with fake reasons why it's really awful.
I've got the video now on the screen. She walks up,
they embrace the whole hug is less than a second.
I mean it's one and they're done and she walks away.
The other thing that bothered people about this is you

(15:59):
see what she's wearing here, Billy.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
Oh, yes, you got them sexy leather pants on. It's
just another way a woman advertises she's ready to go.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
Okay, Now, it's not up to me what's going on
in fashion right now. But if you do a news
search for black leather pants, apparently that's the thing this season,
leather pants and this fall celeb must have according to
Vogue magazine one month ago, on the screen here in
the studio, I have pictures of all these famous celebrities
wearing black leather pants. Now, I didn't pick out Erica

(16:29):
Kirk's outfit. You know who did. Have you ever seen
that movie You Devil Wears Prada? I saw that want
we're all wearing the same thing, and we just don't
realize it because somebody a month or two ago picked
it out for us.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
Yeah, I guess that's what I hear.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
Anyway, I don't try to explain fashion. And fortunately, you
know who hasn't shown up to work at Yeah? Fortunately,
But that's the thing I guess black leather pants are
in right now? Okay, so is Erica Kirk a whore
who's trying to seduce the vice president or did she
just go to the mall and buy what was available every.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Other woman her age is wearing now, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (17:00):
All right, exactly. I don't know. Leave her alone. Her
husband got murdered. You don't have to care about turning
point USA. But on that note, that's really what this
is about. Billiad who's going to control the future of
the young Conservative movement and they don't want it to
be Charlie Kirk's widow. No, so they're doing anything they
can to trash her, which is just second sad. I

(17:20):
don't know. I'm over it. I'm not impressed by that.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
It was another horrible murder that took place over the weekend,
this one in Mississippi. You remember the monkeys that escaped
a while back. It's all I can think, It's all, yeah,
it's on your mind after that truck overturning the monkey's all,
you know, scattered nine different directions and everything. We were
told they were diseased. We were told they weren't diseased.

(17:46):
We were told they had you know, the six different
kinds of diseases. They were DG in COVID. Sure, they
were hepatitis. They were test monkeys in a laboratory.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
So they ten.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
Are they got something you didn't want? So this woman
in Mississippi, Jessica, said she was alerted early Sunday morning.
Her sixteen year old son came in. He said, think,
I just saw monkey in the yard. And she went
and looked. Sure enough, there's a monkey in the yard.
This is in Heidelberg, Mississippi. She got out of bed,

(18:17):
grabbed her firearm and her cell phone and went outside
and faced the monkey down.

Speaker 1 (18:22):
She was going to kill the monkey.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
It was about sixty feet away. Is it aggressive? And
said that she had been warned that they were diseased,
and it was in the yard where the kids play.
I didn't want another mother. I did what any mother
would do, she said. I shot at it and it
just stood there looking at me, and so I shot
it again and that's when it backed up and fell over.

(18:46):
And yeah, she killed it.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
Oh she killed it.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
Oh says that good or bad?

Speaker 2 (18:51):
Well, you know, monkeys should have read the sign no
trespassing private property, stuff like that, but it didn't. Stupid monkey.

Speaker 1 (19:00):
And you know what's interesting about this. When you hear
like Mississippi woman shoots a scape monkey and her on
her rural property, you paint a picture of a certain
kind of person in your mind. And I have a
picture of her here on the screen in the studio.
It's not quite what I would have expected.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
That there's a Jessica Ferguson. Huh, yeah, that's what she did. Yeah, yeah,
not what I was expect but anyway, good for her.
You expected like some some gun toting gal from the hills,
you know, come out of the come out of the mountains,
spitting and riding on a bobcat.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
Yeah. Well no, I was expecting a trans person. Oh
they're doing so many shootings. Guess what today is Monday?

Speaker 2 (19:47):
We have a winner. You win?

Speaker 1 (19:49):
Oh boy, what's my pride?

Speaker 2 (19:51):
The chance to get to work Walton in Johnson Radio
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