All Episodes

April 14, 2025 • 15 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, Kelly nat Hello Jonathan Tomorrow Show. Today Tomorrow be
Tuesday text Day and the taxman cometh.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Oh, he's got his palms out. You bet agrese them.

Speaker 1 (00:09):
He brought a bucket grease them real good. Okay, let's
talk about what we're going to talk about. To do
it six thirty. What you're talking about for Kane Brown tickets? Yep.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
And all you got to do is tell us what
the word guess? Well, you know what, I should probably
look up the pronunciation on this. I could have a
at the end of it. Okay, gasconade day or gasconade.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
Gasconade, ranting, just out of control, ranting, lunatic.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Maybe that's maybe that's that word.

Speaker 1 (00:38):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
This one is basically you're being a you are. The
actual definition is extravagantly boasting about yourself.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
Oh oh okay, so I act didn't realize it was
specifically about yourself.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Yes, you're boasting. You're a blow hard. People are tired
listening to you. Probably lie about yourself. I'm the greatest
one who's ever live. I guess they use that term
sometimes on Donald J. Trump.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
I would imagine that that should be the word of
the day. So now we've got to learn how to
pronounce it properly. We'll go to our friend what's his
name again? I forgot this in two days with it
of the day. He's guess maybe one of those words.
You can pronounce it either way. He'll be sure and
tell us we'll play that for you tomorrow. At least
you know how to say it, because you already know

(01:23):
what it means. That's right.

Speaker 2 (01:25):
And if you forgot any of these things, always got
to remember is go to ninety seven to five WCS
dot com and check out the Morning rushblog that I'll
get you the answer other things that you can find
on the Morning Rush blog right now at ninety seven
to five WCS dot com. First off, I'm in shock.
I don't know why I'm in shock. Time, you know. C. S.
Lewis said that only people who were built for eternity

(01:48):
would be shocked by the effects that time passing on
them has, And I'm one of those people. I am
constantly shocked that time has passed. It's the fortieth ann
of nursery of the Breakfast Club. Going to the movie theaters.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
Ali was shot by some of the photos of the
people what they look like now as opposed to when
we saw them.

Speaker 2 (02:10):
Then, Yes, the club, that's what I'm saying, forty years
is going back. I can't Anthony Michael Hall does that?

Speaker 1 (02:19):
Can't be him. Couldn't pick him out of a lineup
of two if you told me that one of them
was him.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
Well, and right now, Anthony Michael Hall is as big
as two wa kidding, he's not that big, but he
used to be such a scrawny, goofy kid.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
Yeah, he doesn't look like that at all.

Speaker 2 (02:36):
His face filled out and and and you know, you
know what's his name? Looks great, by the way, looks fantastic.
I gotta say, Molly Ringwall, very nicely done preserving yourself.
Ali Sheety has done.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
Very nice, aging gracefully.

Speaker 2 (02:53):
But what's the main guy there? The other guy looks
horrific that and I jud Nelson, Judd Nelson. Judd Nelson
looks like he just escaped it from a mental institution.
I don't know what's going on with these people, but
it's the fortieth anniversary and I feel very old movie feel.

Speaker 1 (03:14):
I saw the photos.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
Well, we've got the interview of them celebrating their fortieth
anniversary up on the Morning Rest blog.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
What movie. Uh.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
And they say they'll probably never be any kind of
remake of this, so I wouldn't think so what other
movies should? There never be another? They did it right
the first time. No point in redoing it like a
Rocky or or a because you can have like Rocky two,
Rocky three, whatever, but you're not remaking Rocky.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
No.

Speaker 2 (03:43):
The story Rocky was one and done.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
You know, they never did the remake of but Cassidy
and the Sundance Kid. I think because Paul Newman called
him out. I think we did it. They did it
pretty good the first time, you know. It's funny.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
I saw an interview with Adam Levine, the lead lead
singer of Maroon five, and he said he's only been
scared a couple of times as an adult, and one
of them was when they were at a Beatles tribute show.
And I think they saying, I don't maybe it was
help or one of those types of classic Beatle records

(04:18):
in front of the Beatles.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (04:21):
He said, I'm staring at Paul McCartney and I'm singing
Paul McCartney to Paul McCartney, and I'm about crap myself.
And he said after Paul McCartney walked by and said, hey,
thanks for doing that, blah blah blah. By the way,
you know, we did it better than you, right, And
then he said that he saw Paul McCartney like two
months later, and he said, Paul McCartney came up and said, hey, man,

(04:44):
I've been thinking about that comment. I hope I didn't
hurt your feelings. I was just trying to be funny.
And he was like the fact that Paul McCartney actually
thought about what he said to me and he felt
bad about it, like maybe that was interpreted as me
taking a shot at him and I just meant to
be fun And he apologized, and he's like, dude, you're
Paul McCart You should never apologize to.

Speaker 1 (05:04):
Paul mccartny doing that. I think he's probably a nice guy,
but he is.

Speaker 2 (05:07):
Right we did. You don't need to remake a Beatles record.
You don't need to remake Whitney Houston records.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
No, Hey, we got to rush this to radio immediately.
What a great remake. Nobody said that unless.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
You're doing it completely differently, because I do remember, like
I really enjoyed the original dancing in the streets and
I also and like the Van Hallen version of them,
not so much. The Orchestra Jagger one. Didn't like that
one as much. No, but yeah, make it different, Make

(05:39):
it different, Jonathan. They're telling us they being experts, and
I know how much you love experts.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
You got to listen to the experts.

Speaker 2 (05:46):
The two experts in question, they speak yes. Parent coach
Kristin Gallant and family therapist Dina mark Goolin said that
the phrase be careful, when you say that to your children,
you're making a massive mistake. Say be careful. Really, you
say be careful all the time, because then you said
it so often that it loses any urgency. It now

(06:10):
means nothing to the child by the time they're like
six or seven years old, because you've said everything about
so like, they want you to be specific when you
talk to them. Look down where you're stepping, Hold hold
my hand tightly. Do you see how close you are
to the edge? Say help if you need help, those

(06:31):
types of things. So the clickbait headline that we put
is stop telling your kids to be careful, And we'd
appreciate it if you'd click that and find out why.
Even though I just told you at you click it
for the tickets.

Speaker 1 (06:44):
Even if you don't read it, just click it as
soon as you'll get the click. It's all we needed,
that's all we need. You don't even have to stay there.
No nobody's you know, there's no measurement of how long
you stayed there. In a forty five second read, you
were there for a second and a half. That's all
we needed.

Speaker 2 (06:56):
We're here for High Holy Week, as Jonathan likes to
point out, and Monday after the Masters is going on
right now out in Oory County somewhere with Hooty and
the Blowfish and all their celebrity friends. But another debate
is raging Jonathan, is this the year that we finally
kill off the Easter peeps? Why do we still have

(07:17):
Easter peeps? Have you found anyone who likes the Easter peeps?

Speaker 1 (07:21):
I believe people just use them for decoration, I swear.
I mean, we sell millions of them every year, and
they're always They're already out there. They've been out there
for a while now, different sized peeps, different colored peeps,
but the peeps are always peeping at you. Those little
eyes kind of freak me out when you look at
that entire display because it's like five hundred thousand eyes
looking at me.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
Oh, I haven't really thought about that.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
I can't go and stare at the Eastern play. But
you know, if they all came to life and attacks you,
which may be the movie The Easter Peeps Come Alive,
that's a creepy movie as a creepy movie. Did you
eat Easter peeps when you were No? I don't like marshmallows,
so you were never even given the Easter peeps. Did
any of your siblings eat the peeps? Oh? We had them.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
I ate them just because they were there. Yeah, But
even that I almost felt like obligated to eat them.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
I didn't like them. This is for adults only. If
you take a peep and you put it on a
surface that's not flammable, you need like a brick or
a metal surface, okay, and you drip lighter fluid on
it and then set it on fire. All right, that's fine?

(08:34):
Why is that fun? They just but the lighter fluid
starts to dissolve them as soon as it hits it.
You gotta do lighter food quick, gotta be pretty quick.
How did you discover this? Always to burn all kinds
of stuff? I was not true. We didn't have a
whole lot to entertain ourselves. So Will It Burn? Was
the game show Will it Burn? And will it be
funny when it burns? And will it burn in the

(08:56):
different color?

Speaker 2 (08:57):
So your Easter peeps that somebody gave you would get
burnt every year you look forward to just watching it
for the fun.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
Oh, if I got a peep, it's gonna get burned.
Because this is.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
Long before YouTube channels existed.

Speaker 1 (09:07):
Absolutely, you would have might have had a great utub
I would have had a great YouTube, the.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
Jonathan Rush Will It Burn YouTube show? And then we'll
just take whatever Easter holidays and will the whole basket burned?

Speaker 1 (09:18):
What will that look? I'm having a flashback right now.
You know, if you take an army soldier back in
the day, we had a little plastic army soldier green ones. Yeah, yeah,
some of them. If you if you set them on fire,
on like on their feet and you and you hold
them up when it when it drops to the ground
or if it drops on a peep, it goes zoop zoop.
You could hear it going through the air soup soup zup,

(09:40):
little balls of fire.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
Did I just hear you say though, that you would
light the army man on fire and then drop him on.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
A peep where you would hold him up. Yeah, so
as he melts, it would drop on a peep. Oh,
or drop wherever you wanted to drop. I okay.

Speaker 2 (09:53):
In my mind, what was happening was he's on fire,
the peep's already got some lighter fluid on it. You're
dropping him onto peep, which then ignites the peep.

Speaker 1 (10:02):
It's good stuff.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
Goodness, gracious you people were crazy out in the country.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
Maybe in a future podcast we'll talk about how you
really suppose to deal with firecrackers. You take a razorblad
and cut them open and get all the powder out.
Then you collect it. Oh, because it's not big enough. No,
you gotta put a bunch of it here.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
I want to make a bomb on it.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
Then you need to take a prescription bottle and then okay,
we'll stop right there.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
Well, tomorrow we will debate the peeps. Who's buying the peeps?
Why are you buying the peeps? Who does anybody actually
enjoy eating peeps? I have not yet. I don't think
I've met anyone who likes peeps.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
And I know some people like to put him. I
know a guy I'm thinking of right now. He takes
a paper plate and he puts the peeps so that
they are all facing out in a circle, and you
put them in the microwave and you start it and
you can watch them. My gosh, I guess you're waiting
to see the death come across those little eyes. That
frighten me. I don't know what. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
Maybe do people take peeps and make smores out of
them because it's marshmallows?

Speaker 1 (11:02):
I guess you could. I've never And what do you
use instead of a gram cracker? Is there something else?
You use? Mots of bread? I don't know. Is it
a passover? Peep? The passover peeps? We're talking, you're coming up.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
You're dropping billion dollars over here this morning over. We
just missed the passover on the Friday night. That's great goodness,
gracious wow, peeps? I mean, And whoever is the marketing
genius behind the peeps?

Speaker 1 (11:31):
I mean, think about what about a duck? It's a dove, you.

Speaker 2 (11:36):
Think about this, Jonathan, Somebody in a marketing meeting was
given the peeps, right, And I'm sure even in the
nineteen fifties or whenever they were invented. They somebody said, well,
here we go. It's this marshmallw thing. It's tainted yellow,
looks like somebody urinated on a marshmallow. We'll put some
eyes on it. Go ahead, bite it, see what you think.
Taste horrible? All right, we're gonna try to sell these now.

(11:56):
Whoever the marketing guy was who was able to figure
out a way to get this into the consumer's hands,
like make them believe because the first year it should
have died. It should have died because all the kids
would have said, this is horrible. They're setting the kids
stuff on fire. Look at them, they're outside blowing up

(12:18):
the peeps.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
I believe they're so popular because they're different colors and
they're easy to decorate with. I think that's why mom
buys them, because she likes to decorate with the peeps.
Why do they have little tiny peeps in the cereal
because then the ducks would float in the in the milk.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
Did they always have multiple colors? Because I just remember
the yellow peeps when I was Oh, they got multiple yeah, now,
but originally it was just yellow.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
I was like, was that a thing?

Speaker 2 (12:42):
That came around in the nineties or something. It probably
took them forty years or so just to come up
with the multiple colors.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
I always thought it was much better to go to
tractors supply and get the yellow colored live chicks. You
got actual chickens. Oh yeah, you got those available. I'm
sure today for I know what the tructor supplying Baseburg
they got. They got the dye chicks out there.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
Please don't tell me you set them on fire.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
No, no, you don't. What did you do with a
live baby chicken? Well, my dad quit buying those. I'm
not sure what happened, but he quit buying those. But
do you remember, like, yeah, you got it for Easter? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then we got the bunny rabbit one year, but
the dog killed him and that broke my little brother's heart.

(13:27):
So we didn't get any more bunny rabbits.

Speaker 2 (13:30):
The dog didn't go after the little chickens.

Speaker 1 (13:32):
The little bunny made it two hops, and then the
dog thought it was a play toy. The dog doesn't know.

Speaker 2 (13:38):
He thought it was a wind up thing. There's no
way they would bring this into the house.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
Brush that little bunny's head. My little brother came running
over there, and I looked at my older brother and
I said, this is not good. Send him back.

Speaker 3 (13:49):
Yep, little bunny needs to sleep, Sorry, Alan. I wonder
if he remembers that, maybe Mom can sew it back on,
put a patch on it. Anyway, we got a lot
to get to tomorrow. Very serious business here on the
Morning Rush.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
What kind of fun or furry story have you got
you could share? Involved explosives. Now we're talking. That was
a good old fascist slid a county easter right there. Hey,
reach out to us a social media how to do that?
You can also email us. I'm Rush at ninety seven
FIVECS dot co, Nash at ninety seven five WS dot com.
We could be talking tomorrow on a Tuesday. At some

(14:26):
point this week, we're gonna be talking to our coach,
Shane Beemer. That's right now they're talking about when we're
going to put that on the radio. Hey, if you
want to be a part of the big Spring celebration
for the Spring Game, there is an online auction going
on right now, but it closes on Tuesday. That will
be tomorrow in real time.

Speaker 2 (14:43):
Yeah, I've got the link on the Morning Rush blog
at ninety seven five w sos dot com if you
want to go bid on those VIP experiences that they're
having this Friday night at the football game.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
Otherwise it's free to go to football and even if
the taxman is taking all your money, you don't have
anything to bid. Just click on it. We want to click.
That's all we want is for us to get that's right.
We're not getting a commission off of this. We just
want to click on the morning Rush
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

The Breakfast Club
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Decisions, Decisions

Decisions, Decisions

Welcome to "Decisions, Decisions," the podcast where boundaries are pushed, and conversations get candid! Join your favorite hosts, Mandii B and WeezyWTF, as they dive deep into the world of non-traditional relationships and explore the often-taboo topics surrounding dating, sex, and love. Every Monday, Mandii and Weezy invite you to unlearn the outdated narratives dictated by traditional patriarchal norms. With a blend of humor, vulnerability, and authenticity, they share their personal journeys navigating their 30s, tackling the complexities of modern relationships, and engaging in thought-provoking discussions that challenge societal expectations. From groundbreaking interviews with diverse guests to relatable stories that resonate with your experiences, "Decisions, Decisions" is your go-to source for open dialogue about what it truly means to love and connect in today's world. Get ready to reshape your understanding of relationships and embrace the freedom of authentic connections—tune in and join the conversation!

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.