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May 15, 2025 • 18 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, Kelly Nash, Hey, it's tomorrow show today. It is
so thank god it's Friday. It's tg I M m F.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Hey, you've been having more g I m F.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
I like better.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
Thank god tomorrow is Morgan Friday. The MF seemed to draw.
I raised ivery on the hallway, and I'm like, I
don't even know what acronym or abbreviation you're pointing to.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
It's not like you said, TGI MF mfers.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
Well, and that's the thing. I wanted to.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
Have a special subset of Morning Russia regulars who were
called the five to ten mfors, meaning I listen every
morning five to ten Monday through Friday, so Monday through
Friday you're an mfor exactly. And for some reason Legal

(00:56):
kick that back. I said, you can't say that.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
Why did Legal get a comment on your so happy
it's Thursday?

Speaker 1 (01:06):
You know something? Somebody at Legal is not paying attention.
As we wrap up at s H, I T so
happy It's Thursday, heading into a tg I m F tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (01:18):
Let's go, you ms.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
Let's talk about some of the things we can talk about.
You nine, you five to ten mfs.

Speaker 2 (01:25):
We're gonna be talking about the last pair of tickets
for Maddix Batson and boy we all this week. I
think every person who has won, if I'm I might,
I can't, might not remember the Monday Winter. But it
seems like they've been so happy for their kids. Yeah,
the guy is just it's like the recreation of the
Elvis phenomenon. Now, the older people didn't appreciate the swinging

(01:48):
of the hips and the guitar playing, and they wouldn't
even show him waist down on the ed Cullivans, you know,
couldn't because but the young people would go nuts and
they were already doing the sure a dance that we
later learned he learned from a guy named Forrest comp
So the youngsters again leading the way. Yes, and the

(02:09):
youngsters love Maddox Batsen and as he launches his first
ever too or he'll be in Columbia Tuesday, September twenty
third at the Senate. It's an all ages show, So
if you want to take the kids, or if you
want to just maybe give one of your teenagers access
to the two tickets. Either way, it's your choice. The
word of the day for what you're talking about, a

(02:32):
vuncular of what exactly.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
A vuncular A vuncular. Yeah, wow, I'm I have never
heard this word.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
Now this You the other day said something about one
of the definitions of the word, and you said, the
answer is right in the word. You kind of pointed
that out. I can't remember what the word was, but
you were right. So this has kind of got the
answer kind of in a word, A vuncular avuncular.

Speaker 3 (03:08):
Well, I'll just give it to you.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
It's relating to an uncle.

Speaker 3 (03:14):
Oh gotcha.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
Maybe you're displaying a vuncular behavior.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
This is good. I like that.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
So it sounds smart when you just drop that bomb
on somebody anyway.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
Especially if you use it in such a way in
a family gathering that all you're relatively he's just curshy, dude.

Speaker 2 (03:35):
Oh you're so like a monkey avuncular? Got it anyway,
now that you know that word, or if even if
you forget it. It's on the morning Rush Plug at
ninety seven five WS dot Com tomorrow morning about six thirty.
Jonathan will tell you what number he's looking for at
that very moment. If you're them with that answer, you
get the last pair of tickets. Let's see, Jonathan, this

(03:58):
is bad news. For buses, and I'm gonna guess Sally's
right up there with them.

Speaker 3 (04:04):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
I hate to tell you this. According to this survey
nineteen hundred US dog owners, we knew that dog owners
love their dogs, but maybe not as much as we
had anticipated. Is the actual answer. Fifty two percent of
dog owners say that their dog's health is more important

(04:26):
than their own health. The dog's health is more important
than their own health. Now we'll go even further.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
Please do, because I don't understand it yet.

Speaker 2 (04:39):
Well, if if it came down to I need medicine
or my dog needs medicine, my dog's getting it, I'll
just sit here and die. Let the dog eat, let
the dog do whatever. How about this? Fifty two percent
of married people now they don't say male or female.
If asked to choose, forced to choose between the dog

(05:02):
and your spouse, the dog wins, I will divorce you.

Speaker 3 (05:08):
If you do not.

Speaker 2 (05:10):
If it's me or the dog, dog wins.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
I'm gonna tell you that. I believe that to be true.
And I believe right now. There's a couple that I know.
They no longer live here, they moved away, but I
believe what kept them that marriage together was the dog,
because they knew if they divorced there was going to
be a huge fight over who would get ownership of
the dog, and neither one of them were willing to

(05:34):
roll the dice, so they stayed together because neither one
of them wanted to lose the dog in a custody battle.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
One in seven dog owners say they would divorce their
spouse if it would somehow add one year of life
to the dog.

Speaker 3 (05:49):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
Wow, he loves the dog, or he loves the dog.
But the doctor says they're adding stress or something. So
if you could, if you could get them out of
their lives, Oh well, not a problem, you're divorced. Wow,
now this is why they would. This is one of
those answers that just drives Jonathan nuts. Ninety six percent

(06:12):
say they're willing to pay more for their dog food.
Just told you, right there, just.

Speaker 3 (06:18):
Told you raise the price of dog food.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
Gen Zers are the ones who are willing to pay
the most.

Speaker 3 (06:27):
Thirty one what.

Speaker 2 (06:30):
You've got to be crapping me. Thirty one percent of
gen zers say that they're willing to pay at least well,
they're ten dollars or more per meal for the dog
do the dogs eat twice a day or three times
a day.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
There's something going on with people's budgets and the availability
to buy dogs food that befuddles me.

Speaker 3 (06:56):
Now, I'll be the first to admit only because.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
My dad is not in the room, Sally has me
buy in that new refrigerated dog food.

Speaker 3 (07:08):
We pay a lot of money for that. It's like
six bucks for the small.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
I'm trying to equate it to something that you would
typically buy. I'm gonna guess this about a pound. Okay,
so it's about a pound.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
Of this stuff.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
But she actually I was fascinated because when I bought it,
I thought this ain't gonna last long because Sally didn't
like to handle meat. I have to tram all the
chicken breast and stuff like that.

Speaker 3 (07:39):
I have to pat out the hamburger. She didn't like
to handle it.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
Okay, but we're paying for this, and I thought this
ain't gonna last long because I know when you unwrap it,
that's gonna look like a sausage roll. She's not gonna
want to deal with that. But it doesn't. The manufacturers
of that were very smart. They make it look like

(08:02):
it looks like not like Plato, but kinda so it
doesn't look like meat, which makes me think, why would
you feed that to your dog? But nonetheless, because of
the advertising of the marketing it goes with it. They
do a lot of people do buy it now because
I've noticed that in the pet food aisle that refrigerated section.

Speaker 3 (08:21):
Is getting larger. Big ups.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
By the way, to a company I met yesterday from Wagner,
South Carolina called Bercolow Creek Farms USDA pasture raised meats,
and I bought some hamburger meat and some pork chops
from him yesterday, but one of the things on the
menu board was dog food, so I said, let me

(08:45):
see the dog food.

Speaker 3 (08:46):
So they brought it out.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
Now that looks like what you think it would look like.
And Sally would never open that and slice it up
for the dogs because it looks like meat, which is
the point I think.

Speaker 3 (08:55):
But nonetheless, we market in such.

Speaker 1 (08:57):
A way that people will buy it anyway, I pointed out,
my wife will never use that. He said, yeah, it's
funny because a lot of women say they want it,
and they see it, then they don't want it, he said,
because it looks too much like meat. You gotta make
it look like the playto stuff. If they get the
grocer story, he said, isn't that amazing? I'm like, yeah,
So I met the guys from Berclow Creek Farms and

(09:19):
Wagner and I saw him at the Forest Acres farmers
Market yesterday.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
According to AI, you're supposed to feed your adult dog
two meals per day if you have a large dog,
three to four meals a day, and at ten bucks
a pop, let's just go with the two. So you're
willing to spend one hundred and forty dollars a week
on your dog. I don't spend one hundred and forty

(09:46):
dollars a week on me and Angela.

Speaker 3 (09:49):
People would do it.

Speaker 2 (09:51):
They do not care, and they talk about I mean,
they got all these crazy examples of like what would
you be willing to give up? Jen Xers said that
they would cut their favorite favorite beverage out of their
life forever. I would be willing if it's coffee, whatever,
never have it again, just to make my dog happy.

(10:12):
They love their dogs more than they love themselves.

Speaker 3 (10:15):
I believe it.

Speaker 2 (10:16):
Some of them say openly twenty eight percent. I love
my dog more than I love my child. I love
my dog, the thing that came out of my body
that I birthed. It has my DNA. I don't love
that as much as this random dog.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
Mark Davis, Okay, one of our account executives here bought
cat food canned and dry to put out near the
back door for stray cats faral cats born in the
dumpster back here, all right, So I know, damn good and.

Speaker 3 (10:48):
Will he do this?

Speaker 1 (10:49):
And while I know everybody's look, if you have a
company like Bercolo Creek Farm, so I'd never heard of
until yesterday, a South Carolina company out of Wagner. You
have these guys who produce high quality meats and they
make sure it's all natural, organic, all that stuff, and
they raise the cattle for you and then take it
to have a process the way you'd like it. But

(11:11):
they're doing dog food. That's how big the market is.
So we sell tons of this. I'm like, people will
spend the money. He's, oh yeah, they'll spend it, all right.
They want it. It's kind of having for him. They
go find us someplace else.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
Are there dog owners or dog lovers who are also
South Carolina State fair lovers? Because we know in the
years past that we've had State Fair attendees give up
their prescription meds in order to go get the big turkey.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
Leg We know that from Kenneth Long.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
Yes, and we've heard and you read the stats and
how many people stop buying prescriptions like two three months
in advance in order to attend the state Fair and
spend all their money there. But could they also have dogs?
Would you give up your dog to go to the
state Fair or if you give up the state fair
to go to to take care of the dog? I mean,
it's just crazy where people's priorities.

Speaker 1 (12:06):
Lie interesting, Okay, we're gonna delve into your pet's life.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
We've got Taylor Swift in a legal battle. Have you
been following this at all with the Blake Lively You know,
Blake Lively is right.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
I gave up on the Blake Lively thing a long
time ago. All right, well it's Blake live. Is you
got another crisis going on? Because another No, it's the
same one. Yeah, it's still going And now it's now
it's getting real because Taylor Swift has been subpoenaed into
this case and they're trying to fight it and they're

(12:42):
saying it's an abuse of the discovery process. But according
to Justin Baldoni's lawyers, he's the guy who is in
the legal battle with Blake Lively. The text messages between
Taylor Swift and Blake Lively and Taylor Swift and Ryan
Reynolds prove his point and so he wants them introduced

(13:05):
into court. And you had to slap that baby, did you.
Now you got it all over yourself. Now you're going
to court.

Speaker 2 (13:13):
Yeah, So it's it's getting really messy and expensive because
these lawyers. I'm sure when you start suing Taylor Swift
an that's not an inexpensive proposition sucking people.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
It's like a black hole sucking people into it. We're
gonna have more celebrities tied up in this than we
are the Diddy freak call parties.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Boy, I am not following the Diddy thing. I'm not
really following this thing either. But the Diddy. I heard
a guy on the Clay and Buck Show yesterday and
he was breaking it down a little bit, and he said,
the thing that people aren't talking about on the Diddy
thing is a they've already got him for twenty to
thirty years in prison. If they had wanted that, that's

(13:56):
an open and shut case because they arrested him. When
they arrested him, they found a pound of cocaine in
the house. They also found numerous ars that he had
filed off the numbers on. So you got the illegal guns,
you got the you got the meta amphetamines, you got
the cocaine. That's twenty to thirty years, not a problem.

(14:19):
They're going to give him fifty and he'pfully down to
twenty twenty five. That's not what they want. They want
life without the possibility of parole. And that's why this
is a Rico case. And he said, it's a Rico
case without any other defendants. That's never happened in history.
We've never had a Rico case without one other defendant.
The reason you don't have any other defendants, and that

(14:40):
nobody's talking about it. They all flipped. Everybody on his
crew has flipped. They're all going to come forth and
say how he, under the threat of gun violence, put
women in these positions, how he forced people to engage
in be bizarre sexual acts in front of him for
his perverse pleasure. He's going to go away to prison

(15:02):
for the rest.

Speaker 3 (15:03):
Of his life.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
That's the end of ditty And just here in the
testimony of Cassie, who's the first one, I read some
of the stuff she was talking about, and I don't
even know how she got herself in that mess when
she's talking about getting into the pool or the tub
filled with lotions or oils or whatever, and she said yes,

(15:24):
she didn't want to do it, but she said yes
because she didn't want to make him feel bad about himself.
Are you kidding me, lady? That's beyond a red flag.
But now I'm sure she's an abuse victim later on.
But that first couple of decisions you made to get
involved with him, I'm guessing a lot of that was
career oriented. Like she was like, like, he's a freak,

(15:47):
but it's ditty and he's making hit records and I'm nineteen.
She was nineteen. I wonder if Diddy's thinking about that
now that he's in his what fifties or whatever, because
his daughters are turning nineteen this year?

Speaker 3 (16:01):
Something.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
Did he thinks about anybody but himself? So no, he's
not concerned about that.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
He's not okay, probably not well, Jonathan. The final thing
for tomorrow, We've got no more morning rush problems.

Speaker 3 (16:15):
Morning.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
Russian regular did not take off Mother's Day. Now his
wife is very upset about it. He did, yes, well,
he wrote into us. I don't know if if this
is still a thing, but uh, he wrote into us
about it. It's her first Mother's Day, she's got a baby.
He did not take the day off. Now, he says

(16:37):
the reason he didn't take the day off is because
he launched a business. I don't know if that business
was before they got married or whatever, but it's still
in the can't take I can't take weekends off stage.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
Oh this is my baby. I'm having to deal with
this baby business.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
And he says, I bear, I barely can take a
day off ever, like he might go three or four
weeks without it day off, but I'm certainly Sunday is
one of our busy days. I can't take that day off.
I bought her flowers. I gave her a card and
flowers and let her know how much I really appreciate her.

(17:13):
And then I went to work, and she's upset, like,
you know what, You're prioritizing your business over our family,
and that's wrong. So he's starting to I guess, maybe
wonder can I am I one of those people who
I was trying to have it all and you can't
have it all. You can't have it all that We've
heard that all the time, right, you can't have it

(17:34):
all at all. There's not really a good work family
life balance. Some people would.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
Say interesting because there's a lot of spinoff conversations her regulars.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
Tomorrow, I'm liking it.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
Well, that will be on the docket at seven.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
To ten, all right, contemplate that till tomorrow. Hey, what's
going on in your neighborhood? We should be talking about
what are you giving up so your dog and live
the life of Violet.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
So that's a big gave up your office or whatever?

Speaker 3 (18:01):
Didn't you I did?

Speaker 1 (18:02):
I gave up to Dan Florida room have it, have it.
That's how much it means to Sally. I get it
so I know where I am on the tone, Paul,
you didn't give it up for the dogs. You gave
it up for Sala. That's right, all right? So, and
you can also reach out to a s by email
I am Rush at ninety seven five, w COS dot com.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
Nash at ninety seven five to b CUS dot com.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
Oh, your last chance to win those highly touted Maddox
bats and tickets. The numbers AO three nine seven eight
ninet two six seven eight H three nine seven eight
w cos when we get together again for t g
I M F hey now on the morning, Rod
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