Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Search Dave Ryan TV Wild one last Night, So now
that series is tied. Timber Wolves lost last Night. Series
is all so tied. It is KTWB. We're gonna play
a little game of our own. Is not hockey nor hoops.
It is called face off on KTWB.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Here's the way it works. It's fun. You get to
play along too.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
They give you a category and then you got to
name as many items in that category, hopefully name more
than your opponent will. Jenny going to try one out
on you. I know you're hosting today fought Bailey's hosting
Fonts Jenny fonts.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Go Times of Roman, sans sans serah, gosh, I have
no idea, Ariel.
Speaker 4 (00:39):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (00:39):
Aerial bowl sands and San Sara are like umbrella categories,
so you really put.
Speaker 4 (00:45):
Yourself in a hole for those I don't know.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
Sometimes New Roman, the one that everybody uses movies with
Tom Hanks go.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Forrest Gump.
Speaker 6 (00:59):
Toy Story Story one, Toy Story three, Toy Story four two,
Upcoming Toy Story.
Speaker 2 (01:05):
Five, one and three.
Speaker 6 (01:06):
He's got a wide discography. Before we do this, do
we want to give the Charlie XCX keyword? No, Okay,
let's keep playing this, Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
I told them right before we went live, I was
excited to play the game games keywords target because she's
gonna be a target center Charlie XCX. Open up your phone,
iHeartRadio app. Tap the red microphone. Say the keyword is
target and you can say in the funny voice if
you want to. I don't care, but use the keyword
to win your tickets from k d w U B
All right, for real, Jenny is host and it's me
(01:37):
versus Jenny versus Bond.
Speaker 7 (01:39):
God.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
Okay, I'm just trying to keep tracking.
Speaker 3 (01:43):
I gotta wonder sometimes if when I talk Dave just like,
here's silence?
Speaker 4 (01:48):
Is it just like?
Speaker 1 (01:48):
Yeah, you know what, because I'm a guy and I
think that I can multitask, and I'm busy editing a
phone call over here, So the whole time you're talking,
I'm like, yeah, got it, got it, got it, got it.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
Didn't hear a god, no thing, not a thing? She said.
Speaker 5 (02:03):
All right, so he's are playing. Take your headphones off? Okay,
are you ready?
Speaker 4 (02:15):
Button?
Speaker 5 (02:15):
Okay, David, your first category is mammals.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
Elephant, dog, cat, the goat, horse, chicken, the cow, sheep,
lamb my pony.
Speaker 5 (02:35):
Dig all right, I didn't give you chicken or pony
because pony is just like a little horse, and a
chicken does is not a mammal?
Speaker 2 (02:43):
Is chicken not a man? What is a chicken?
Speaker 5 (02:45):
Then it's not a mammal. It reallys eggs. Mammals aren't mammals,
the ones that I believe you're right? Yeah, okay, all right?
Speaker 4 (02:52):
Your next category David.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
Flowers, petuniaia iris or did roses, hydranges, geraniums, christmas cactus, daisies, bluebells.
Speaker 5 (03:12):
That's actually kind of impressive. Da nice word, you know,
springs in the air.
Speaker 4 (03:17):
All right. Your last category is yes, Sitcoms.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
Signfeld, the Friends, How I Met your Mother, Big Bang Theory,
leave it to be for Brady Bunch, Cosby Show, Dukes
of Hazard Friends.
Speaker 5 (03:38):
All right, nice David, all right, yeah you did decent.
You didn't, I mean, you could have done worse. That's
pretty much it.
Speaker 6 (03:48):
Hello here you ready present vant.
Speaker 5 (03:54):
D decent. So now it's up to you. First category
is mammals.
Speaker 6 (04:00):
Oh lord, us, whales, wooly mammots, dolphins, sharks, sea urchins. Nope,
I don't know what classifies as a mammal. They're in
the water, right, No, amphibian, Yeah, that's wrong. Amphibian is
(04:22):
a duck because they're in the water and on the land.
Speaker 4 (04:24):
Yeah, okay, it's okay.
Speaker 5 (04:26):
Some of those were mammals' listed, so it's okay.
Speaker 4 (04:29):
Us we are a mammal. Okay. But your second category
is flowers.
Speaker 6 (04:36):
Daisies, tulips, petunias, roses, white roses, dandelions.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
Mmm uh uh an extent of my flower knowledge.
Speaker 4 (04:55):
All right.
Speaker 5 (04:55):
Your last category is tough one, sitcoms, oh uh, Scrubs,
Modern Family, Howard Met Your Mother, Seinfeld, Friends, The Big
Bang Theory uh uh.
Speaker 6 (05:08):
Modern Family, uh, Simpson's Family, Guy, Abbot, Elementary, Kurby.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
Your enthusiasm on that one. You did good on that one.
Speaker 4 (05:18):
All right, So the scoring is as follow house. Okay,
on that last one. Sitcoms, Dave, You've got nine, pretty good.
You gotta love it?
Speaker 2 (05:30):
Whoa, come on, baby?
Speaker 5 (05:33):
All right? Moving backwards, flowers vat you got five, Dave
got ten was really.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Good, hydranges shout out Fakman's yes I love and your
local forest.
Speaker 5 (05:45):
And then finally for mammals, come on, I know I've
brought him both. You got one five and Dave got eight.
Speaker 4 (05:53):
Uh, Dave wins. A mammal gives live birth.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
It's okay, tell me some of the ones.
Speaker 4 (05:58):
Dave said, Yeah, like dogs hat it gives live birth,
gives live birth. Yeah, not just.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
In the water, well, so essentially almost anything. A dolphin's
a mammal.
Speaker 5 (06:08):
Yeah, I gave you a dolphin, and I gave like whale.
I gave you whale, I gave you shark.
Speaker 4 (06:12):
What about Koi? Is koi like a koi fish?
Speaker 8 (06:14):
No?
Speaker 4 (06:15):
No, sure, they lay eggs.
Speaker 2 (06:16):
You don't know that for sure? You've ever seen the
love one lay an egg?
Speaker 5 (06:19):
I mean I don't want to play a platty a platty. No,
I didn't say a platypus. I said a platty of fish.
Look up a platty. Never heard that it's an aquarium fish.
They give live birth. Why is that an new Why
Why didn't you say that one? Why didn't you say
that one during face off?
Speaker 2 (06:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
Is it a mammal? Is a play of mammal? If
it gives live birth? Is a platyum?
Speaker 5 (06:43):
Sounds like he's the fisherman in the shack like plenty fish?
Speaker 4 (06:48):
No?
Speaker 2 (06:48):
All right, here's one for you. You get to play
at home.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Get out the timer, Jenny, Oh, okay, can get out
the time right Once you played home, we're gonna bequiet
and see how many you get.
Speaker 4 (06:55):
Okay, you're going to give them one.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
I got one, I got one, I got one. Here
we go, makes some automobiles go.
Speaker 2 (07:18):
How'd you do?
Speaker 1 (07:19):
Hopefully got Ford and Hyundai in there, Honda. We'll be
back in the second Marina. I have somebody who is
forty six dating the guy who's thirty one. Once again,
she's forty six, he's thirty one. Is that ever going
to work? Is it just now just for lust and
the hot love? Or is there a future there? Fifteen
(07:40):
year age difference. We'll cover that next. On Katie, you'll
be commercial free, all right, We're commercial free, and we
are under attack. We are under attack, you guys. We
are like John Cena being screamed at by fans that
he's got a bald spot.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
We are under attack on Katy. Well, here's why.
Speaker 1 (07:59):
A little while ago, we were doing a game where
you had to name items in a category and they'd
be like, okay, flavors of ice cream, then Ella strawberry chocolate,
and the category was mammals and we were all kind
of stumped as to what a mammal actually is. And
I said, well, the Bailey's like, well, a mammal it
gives live birth.
Speaker 4 (08:16):
That's what I thought that like a baby comes out.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
I always thought a mammal has a spine. Now this
spot that's anybody I realize that now. So then we
started getting blasted and attacked from people who were going,
you're like four adults with like varying in degrees of.
Speaker 4 (08:31):
Education that science was my worst subject.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
I get it.
Speaker 4 (08:34):
I have half a master's degree.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
Well, yeah, it's in theater where you don't really learned
anything and arts and cultural man, actually you learned lighting
and like, you know, the worse. So somebody texted in
and said, y'all are idiots, and I said, well, let's
get you on the phone.
Speaker 2 (08:47):
Then this Nick, Nick?
Speaker 1 (08:49):
Yeah, Nick, are you a science teacher or just smarter
than us? Uh?
Speaker 2 (08:56):
Apparently smarter? I actually was a high school dropout.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
Okay, but but but sometimes they're some of the smartest people.
So what what did we get wrong with mammals? Because
we were kind of stuff that we couldn't agree on
what a mammal.
Speaker 6 (09:09):
Is, Mammals feeds, are their young milk.
Speaker 2 (09:14):
That hence mammary glands.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
Okay, so if a mammal feeds their young milk, then
they are a mammal. That's where we get from mammary glands. Correct.
Speaker 2 (09:25):
So you look at likes and the kidness.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
They still lay eggs, but they produce milk and that's
why they're mammals.
Speaker 5 (09:33):
So what about like if somebody has like a live
birth and it's not like laying eggs, but they don't
have milk.
Speaker 4 (09:38):
What kind of animal is that?
Speaker 6 (09:41):
Well, you use plates for reference.
Speaker 2 (09:44):
Those are fish, you know, stuff like that.
Speaker 4 (09:48):
What about like a dolphin, a dolphs that's a good question.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
They've got nipples on that dolphin.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
Dolphins don't nipples.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
Look it up and googling it right now?
Speaker 4 (10:00):
Does a dolphin have nipples? Have nipples?
Speaker 3 (10:05):
They are located in two memory slits on their undersides.
Speaker 4 (10:09):
So the mammals, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
Whoa kidding? What if a mom doesn't what if she
bottle feeds her baby, is she still a mammal? She'd
still be producing milk or to a limited extent.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
Okay, all right, Nick, thanks for this. I appreciate it.
Speaker 7 (10:26):
Really.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
You know what's funny is Nick you know there's a
lot of second grade science teachers screaming at the radio
right now, going.
Speaker 4 (10:34):
It's probably second grader. What's a chicken?
Speaker 7 (10:39):
Chicken?
Speaker 5 (10:40):
Is a bird? Just a bird, just a bird, so
like bird fish. That's so boring different. My logic was
so stupid because I thought they were they were in water.
But then the first thing I said mammals were was us. Yeah,
my logic was.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
And you said amphibians and phibians lay eggs, but they
are classified because they changed body structure.
Speaker 5 (11:01):
They change body structure, amphibians do I want.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
To be an amphibious frog goes from an egg to
a caadfule who grows legs and comes to frog. Frog
have nipples Nickers, No, no, that frog sounds hot and
you sound like the guy.
Speaker 4 (11:14):
From Meet the Fokkers. I've got nipples and you milk.
Speaker 6 (11:17):
Me by nick No problem.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
Love.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
When you call the show or the show, uh it
is Katie WB on the Day Ryan Show. We got
something this is this is serious, but it's not that serious.
It's kind of fun. They're anonymous. It's a woman and
she is forty six years old. She says, I listen
to your show every morning and I've listened to ever
since I can remember. Anyway, I'm wonder if you guys
can talk about older women dating younger guys. I need
(11:44):
thoughts and advice. I'm forty six and I just can't
seem to find anybody in my age range that I'm
attracted to. I don't look my age, so I'm constantly
getting hit on by younger men. I looked up her
name from her email. She is accurate. She does not
look her age forty six. I'd say she looks she
could pass for thirty, she could pass for thirty. Anyway.
(12:05):
I feel a good age range would be forty to
fifty year old guys. Currently, there's a young man that
I'm attracted to that seems interested in me, but he's turning.
But he's thirty one. Here's my dilemma. My son's twenty
six turning twenty seven. My brothers are thirty three and
thirty five, So I feel like this new guy in
my life is just too young for me. He's literally
only five years older than my son and basically the
(12:27):
same age as my brother's. Uugh, I just don't know
if I should say af it and give it a go,
or close the door permanently. But how do I stop
thinking about the age difference to give this new relationship
a fair chance. I'm hoping you can talk about this
on the radio and then I can listen to the
discussion and see what other people have to say about
it seems normal for older men to date younger women,
but not the other way around. I think there is
(12:48):
some truth to that, but I think it is changing now.
Look at Jennifer Lopez dating like a college kid. She's
always dating some guy that's like, you know, like forty
years younger than her.
Speaker 3 (12:56):
Citate, someone who's in like their thirties, yeah, yeah, and
shares like seven something yeah, something like that.
Speaker 2 (13:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (13:01):
I think that. I think it's fine personally, but I
want to know what you think. If you are dating
somebody who is much younger or much older than you,
then let us know and how does it work out.
I think at some point there will be lifestyle differences
because as you start to get an AARP card in
the mail in another three years or so, he's still
going to be, like, you know, early midpoint of.
Speaker 2 (13:23):
His career, right.
Speaker 4 (13:24):
I think that's the big thing.
Speaker 3 (13:25):
And then it's also about emotional maturity because I would
say if she what it's fifteen years of say she
was thirty five dating a twenty year old or something,
that doesn't work twenty year old.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
Is that again, a thirty five and a twenty year old.
Speaker 3 (13:36):
Yeah, Like if that was the fifteen year age difference,
I think that that does not work because twenty year old, Yeah, yeah,
the maturity's not there, the emotional maturity. Your brain's not
even fully developed till you're like twenty five. So it's
like that age range doesn't work. But someone from like
thirty one to forty six, I feel like you would
think that they're pretty emotionally mature at that point at
thirty one.
Speaker 4 (13:56):
Not everyone is, that's for sure, but.
Speaker 5 (13:58):
And you're like full adult by that point, Like you
have a job slash career by that point hopefully, and
you have like the things that you want in life
are kind of figured out, hopefully, you have goals, all
of that jazz by the time you're thirty one.
Speaker 4 (14:12):
So I feel like the age difference is less of
a trade.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
It depends on the age.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
I mean, yeah, if you're fifty five and you're dating
somebody who is, like, you know, forty three, who cares?
Speaker 5 (14:21):
You know?
Speaker 1 (14:21):
What I mean, it's like big deal. But yeah, the
younger you are, the more of an age difference it makes.
But I think that I'll be honest with you, ask yourself,
is it just the sexual physical connection? Because sometimes you
can meet some guy who's like thirty one and you're
forty six, and he is good to get he is
read to go, and you are too, and you're having
(14:42):
a great time. But then you go, well, what do
you want to do And he's like, well, I'm gonna
play Xbox and you're like, I'm going to go running, yeah,
or I'm going to go the you know, do whatever
my hobby is, and he's going to do something that's
you know, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
I think it may be finances too, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
I do know someone I was probably about twenty eight
at the time, so he was twenty eight and he
met a woman who was like going through a divorce.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
They went to the same gym together.
Speaker 3 (15:06):
She was probably forty early forties, and they started dating
once she got a divorce and it worked out great for.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
Them for how long.
Speaker 4 (15:14):
I'm pretty sure they're still together.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
And so like, yeah, at the time, it would have
been about like twelve thirteen years difference and they're still
going strong, and she had kids that were probably closer
to his age.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
I think, yeah, that's weird.
Speaker 3 (15:26):
Yeah, someone did Texan about the kind of a similar situation.
She said, my mom and her husband are nineteen years apart,
so he's only two years older than me. She's to
be honest, I have no issue about the relationship except
the fact that we're from a small town and I
went to high school with him.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
That is a little bit weird.
Speaker 5 (15:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
When I was twenty four, I dated a woman who
was forty four and we got along great. We had
a great time, and she played video games, so it
was super cool. But we both knew it was not
going anywhere. It's not like we were going to, like,
you know, have a lot long term relationship. It was
just for fun. So maybe the woman's writing in maybe
it's just for fun, but that's okay. Yeah, you know,
if you're looking for something long term, then you know,
(16:07):
give it a shot and see whether it works out.
Speaker 4 (16:09):
Well, that's what I was going to say.
Speaker 3 (16:10):
Something like that is definitely going to start off as
something just for fun. You know that it is, and
then you can see if it develops into something more.
So I'd say I personally say go for it. I
just wouldn't expect a hold ton in like looking at
a long term relationship right off the bat, like you
really should get to know this person and see if
your lives really are going to work out based off
the fact that you have a lot more life experience
(16:32):
than that person.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
Fifteen year difference. I mean, you're going to retire in
fifteen ish years and he'll be like forty five and
still you know, have a ton lef a ton left.
Speaker 5 (16:40):
And I think speaking to your point, like if you're
doing it for fun at the beginning, that totally makes sense.
But then you do have to see, like, Okay, what
is it that we want out of a relationship, any relationship,
not just this one. Because someone texted saying if the
younger guy wants to have a family one day and
she can't because she's too old, thought, then he's probably
gonna dumper or they'll realize, you know what, probably not
(17:02):
a good idea for us because of that age difference.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Okay, I hope that helps out. I what do we
around the room? I vote, go for it, have fun,
see what happens.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
Why not?
Speaker 4 (17:11):
I say, the same thing as Dave, So go for it.
Get it.
Speaker 8 (17:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (17:15):
I think he's already thirty one, which is not too like.
He's done a lot of the adult things. He's has
the experience, a fleet, he has some maturity, So go
for it.
Speaker 2 (17:22):
I guess. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
Well, I mean you be in twenty three, you look
at a thirty one year old and go oh wow,
they're like that's a real adult.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
Yeah, they are.
Speaker 6 (17:29):
And if she was dating me, like whatever, whatever age difference,
I would say no because I don't have I haven't
gone through the maturity. But he's thirty one, so he
has almost ten more years of life experience than I do.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
What if she was dating a guy, she's forty six,
she's dating a guy this twenty three?
Speaker 2 (17:43):
What would you say then?
Speaker 4 (17:44):
Then?
Speaker 2 (17:45):
Would I would you say? Go for it? Have fun?
Speaker 5 (17:47):
I mean I think it would be like a definitely
have fun situation period.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
Okay, what do you think Send me a talkback, use
the talkback feature, or send me a text.
Speaker 6 (17:57):
That's just weird for me because my mom is forty
seven and I'm twenty three, So just thinking about that.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
To give me a little bit weird.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
All right, let's do Dave's Dirt The Dave Ryan Show
one on one point three kd WB brought to you
by six point two Injured Heimer and Lammer's Injury Loss.
Shaboozie has got a new snippet of his upcoming song
with Jelly Roll, and I thought I'd played a little
clip for you.
Speaker 2 (18:23):
I like that song.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
It's got that shaboozy vibe to a totally ben Affleck.
His kid's got a regular teenage job. He's rich, but
he said they're not the oldest to have jobs.
Speaker 9 (18:33):
In fact, one just got a job, and one like
the kind of classic you know, teenager working in a
shop job.
Speaker 2 (18:39):
I won't say what it is. My older one, who's
in college, is.
Speaker 9 (18:43):
Working and trying to get an internship with the summer
and stuff.
Speaker 10 (18:46):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
Dateline Soul South Korea, Coldplay concert. Rose gets on stage
with Coldplay for APT. Okay, that's kind of cool. Yeah, yeah,
(19:12):
I love that Nature calls even on celebrities. Shack is
on NBA on T n T and all of a sudden,
Nature calls, so Shaq leaves the set.
Speaker 9 (19:21):
The other thing about Kawhi is right, big fellah, I know,
go ahead, keep talking.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
Yeah, we on TV know what that's not olive oil.
You've been drinking.
Speaker 1 (19:31):
No, you take some matches with you.
Speaker 2 (19:33):
Okay, hey listen, he couldn't hold it. They hold it?
Speaker 5 (19:39):
What's it?
Speaker 2 (19:39):
First? You kill been drinking? I think, okay, we get it, Shad.
Speaker 3 (19:47):
But have you no, have you seen the olive oil trend?
I know you did it in your coffee. Yeah, okay,
but it's now a trend to just like drink it straight.
Speaker 2 (19:55):
That's dumb.
Speaker 4 (19:56):
Icky.
Speaker 7 (19:57):
I know.
Speaker 3 (19:58):
I've seen some like kind of health fitness people start
to do it, and most people are like, now the
same it.
Speaker 4 (20:03):
I'm not going to do it. But yeah, that's like
a new trend.
Speaker 3 (20:05):
I don't know what the benefits are, but supposedly, you
know there's benefits to it.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Well, Shack apparently has been on TikTok to find out
the latest health trend. Yeah, you poured a little olive
oil in your coffee. It's good. It's almost like creamery.
Just put like a little, you know, a little tablespoon
in your coffee.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
But these people are taking olive oil as like shots
just straight.
Speaker 4 (20:24):
Yeah, strange.
Speaker 2 (20:25):
I don't get that one.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
Taylor Swift has been bumped from the Billionaire title Forbes
magazine named the new title of told her of youngest
self made woman billionaire. She had it for a couple
of years, but a thirty year old AI entrepreneur has
dethroned Tailor. Her name is Lucy Gwow. She co founded
Scale AI when she was twenty one years old. She
(20:49):
doesn't work with him anymore, but she retains a five
percent steak and based on the value, she is worth
one point two billion dollars. Wow at twenty She started
this at twenty one years old.
Speaker 4 (21:02):
Must be rough.
Speaker 2 (21:03):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (21:04):
We had trouble buying booze at twenty one years old,
so I got can you afford any?
Speaker 2 (21:09):
Today?
Speaker 1 (21:09):
In Los Angeles, the first of five people charging the
death in Matthew Perry going to be sentenced today. His
good friend Eric Fleming agreed to the prosecutors deal in
exchange for a lesser sentence. He pleaded guilty to a
charge of distribution of ketamine resulting in death.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
When did he die?
Speaker 6 (21:26):
Like?
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Was it two years ago? It was October twenty twenty three. Okay,
so coming about a year and a half ago.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
Yeah, today, big anniversary, the twentieth anniversary. The first video
uploaded to YouTube. Yes Hm, the co founder Joweed Kreem
made a twenty second video that he titled meet Me
at the Zoo twenty years ago.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
Gosh, we're getting old.
Speaker 5 (21:52):
I always say every time I open up a YouTube
and it plays an ad, I'm just like, I remember
when YouTube.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
Didn't have a true Oh yeah roll out all the time. Yeah.
You Tube used to do the Vivo thing. Viva was like,
this is how you knew a music video was verified.
I don't know what Viva was.
Speaker 6 (22:08):
If it was like a company or what. You see
that logo, you'd be like, Oh, this is gonna be heat.
This is gonna be heat.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
That's funny.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
That is a dirt on KDWB, brought to you by
Heimer and Lammer's Injury lost six one two injured. It
is time now for your keyword for Charlie XCX. Your
keyword that you're gonna use is Apple. Open up the
iHeart app. Listen on the iHeart App. It is super
cool and it's fun to play around with. Setis is
a preset. You can also set the Minnesota Goodbye as
a preset and use the keyword Apple. Just say simply
(22:36):
the keyword is Apple on that talkback feature. That is
how you enter for tickets for the show. On Saturday night,
I randomly it was I don't a walk last night,
and I was listening to a podcast about disasters, and
I was listening to the Texas Bonfire, the Texas A
and M bonfire collapse disaster.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
Do you guys know about that? I never heard of it?
Speaker 1 (22:52):
In nineteen ninety nine, Texas A and M. For one
hundred years has had a tradition if they call it bonfire,
not the bonfire, but bonfire. They would stack logs fifty
five feet in the air in kind of like a
tower pyramid, kind of a log cabin kind of a look.
They would douse it with diesel fuel and then they
would burn it before the big Texas Aggie's game. So
(23:16):
Texas A and M and then Texas Longhorns whatever. And
then one year they were building this in nineteen ninety
nine and it collapsed while they were building it and
it killed twelve people. Oh no, it's really interesting. But
then that ran out, So I listened to the Minnesota Goodbye.
I just scrolled back to like twenty twenty two, and
I found one with me and fallon and you're like
all the good times, the good days, back before things
(23:38):
turned sour. And so anyway, check out the Minnesota Goodbye
on the iHeartRadio app and also that talk back feature
as well.
Speaker 2 (23:48):
Can I stroke Jenny's ego real quick? Please, Jenny?
Speaker 6 (23:50):
Somebody on our YouTube live commented, Uh, just wanted to
check in and see how stunning Jenny looks today.
Speaker 4 (23:55):
Oh that's very sweet. Thank you.
Speaker 2 (23:57):
What they say about me and baby?
Speaker 10 (23:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (23:58):
What did they say about us?
Speaker 2 (24:00):
Bring back Drake Drake?
Speaker 4 (24:02):
That's weird? Okay, sure I didn't. That doesn't say anything
about how I look, though, weird.
Speaker 2 (24:08):
I can tell you how you look.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
Shut up, Okay, all right, it's Katie w Let's talk
about a career one eighty.
Speaker 2 (24:18):
How did this come up on the show?
Speaker 5 (24:20):
I saw a TikTok about it, and I thought it
was fascinating because I feel like I've had many a
career in my life. And I used to work on
a historic living history farm and now I work in radio.
Speaker 4 (24:31):
And that's a very clear one eighty Okay.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
It is, but it's it's it's more like a job
one eighty because I mean, your your job at the
hobby farm or whatever the historic farm has done, really career.
Speaker 4 (24:40):
That was working there for five years.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
Oh did you okay, did you consider that a career?
Speaker 4 (24:44):
I mean, I thought museum education was my career.
Speaker 2 (24:46):
Ye, okay, And now you're in. Now you're in, I'm
in radio. What do you think you're gonna do after radio? Next?
Speaker 4 (24:51):
You know, next?
Speaker 5 (24:54):
I want to I really, I think I'm gonna do
that weird mobile thing.
Speaker 4 (24:57):
So I'm gonna have to Then you have to be
a college to and how they know you're right? I
don't have a masters.
Speaker 5 (25:04):
I can show them bailis is a fake ID to
get the internship with the Oscar Meyer.
Speaker 2 (25:09):
Wouldn't that be a cool job? What about you? What
if I knew?
Speaker 1 (25:12):
Okay, For example, Pat Eberts used to work on the show,
and he went to medical school and he was only
a couple of I don't know what they call it
in the terms of medical school rounds or a couple
of more steps to becoming a literal physician. He was
going to be a physician, a doctor. He got a
part time job at a radio station in Jamestown's North Dakota,
(25:35):
and then he totally switched careers. I knew somebody else
who was a lawyer. They passed the bar and then
He's like, it's not for me, it's not my thing,
and he became a radio program director.
Speaker 4 (25:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (25:48):
That is a total career one eighties.
Speaker 5 (25:51):
Right, And I feel like talking about one eighties makes
it feel less daunting, like, Oh, I have to do
the same thing for my entire life.
Speaker 4 (25:59):
You don't.
Speaker 5 (26:00):
We got a lot of responses on Facebook because we
asked on Facebook. Stephanie says I used to be a
hair stylist. I am now an attorney. I can get
rid of your grays and also help you divorce the
person who gave them to you.
Speaker 2 (26:10):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (26:11):
So she was a hairstylist, now she's an attorney a journey. Wow,
that's cool because you go to school, become a hair stylist,
figure and you're gonna do that for many, many million years.
Speaker 5 (26:19):
Amy says I was an at home daycare provider for
nineteen years, went back to college, and now I am
a funeral director.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
Okay, that's very interesting.
Speaker 7 (26:29):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (26:29):
Katie says I went to school to be a physical
therapist and ten years later I'm a pilot.
Speaker 2 (26:34):
A pilot yeow, Wow, that is super cool.
Speaker 4 (26:38):
Want a switch.
Speaker 5 (26:38):
Emily says I got an accounting degree, worked various office jobs.
At a credit union until I decided I didn't want
to have us a town job. I now load trucks
and enjoy being able to move around, get outside working
with big, heavy equipment.
Speaker 4 (26:51):
I even get to drive a semi.
Speaker 6 (26:53):
I wonder where like the strike of let me change
this or not let me change this, but like to
go to this thing comes from my dad worked at
McDonald practically built a McDonald's for twenty something years. That's
why I can't stand it. Now he's a teacher, a
seventh grade math teacher.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
That's so cool. Huh uh.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
When I probably about I don't know, I got burned
out on radio, probably twenty five years ago. I'm like,
I've been doing this a long time. I want to
do something else. So I went to a career counselor
and you take a test and like you kind of
like an aptitude or interest test. Yeah, and I forget
what it was, but it was something like chemical engineer.
Speaker 4 (27:26):
Ooh jeez.
Speaker 2 (27:27):
It wasn't that, because I could never be an engineer.
Math is hard.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
But it was something like that, totally unrelated, and I
actually thought about doing it for a while, but then.
Speaker 2 (27:35):
I thought, you know what I like radio? Yeah, radio
is pretty cool.
Speaker 5 (27:39):
I would be nervous because, like for you, if you,
I mean, you've done radio your whole life. So if
you did a career one eighty, it would be like
starting from square one.
Speaker 2 (27:48):
From square one, yeah, yeah, but it looks.
Speaker 5 (27:50):
Like that's what a lot of these people did. Is
kind of just yeah complete when eighties started square one.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
Let's find out from you. Maybe there's some people listening
who have got to a career one eighty. We got
somebody on the phone, Jenny Tiffany. Tiffany, we're talking about
career one eighties. Hi, Tiffany, what was your story?
Speaker 8 (28:07):
Well, when I was like eighteen, I worked in fast food.
I kind of had a life one eighty. I was
a party girl. I went out every weekend. I drank
and did other things, went home with people. And now
I'm a teacher, I'm a mom and I go to
sleep at eight thirty every night. I love it, take
care of kids.
Speaker 2 (28:28):
I love it.
Speaker 1 (28:29):
So kind of a life one day. I think a
lot of people do that. They turn from party people
when they were in their twenties to like very responsible.
Thank you, Tiffany, appreciate that one. There's a bunch of
these if you got you can use a talkback feature too.
You want to use the talkback feature. If you're like
I don't want to call and be on the phone,
then use the talkback feature because we're going to use
that more and more. Just open up the iHeart app
(28:50):
and use the red microphone and tell us about your career.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
One eighty.
Speaker 5 (28:54):
Yeah, this text says my husband went to school for
traditional Chinese medicine to be an acupuncturess.
Speaker 4 (29:00):
Now he works in aerospace.
Speaker 1 (29:02):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (29:04):
Well they're also brilliant too.
Speaker 4 (29:05):
Exactly, yesactly.
Speaker 5 (29:07):
I went to school for law enforcement and just had
to take the post test, but I went to being
certified mechanic for GM, So that's a switch.
Speaker 4 (29:16):
This Texas.
Speaker 5 (29:17):
I went to school to be a vet tech and
ten years later, I'm four years into working at a
daycare center.
Speaker 4 (29:22):
Okay, okay, dogs to children. Is there a difference?
Speaker 1 (29:25):
We're not sure, Jannita wrote in He's one need our
friend Wannita. She said, I went school to become a
phlebotomist and ended up becoming a CNC machinist. I don't
know what CNC means, but ahlebotomist to a machinist that's
pretty cool. There's a bunch of people who were like
totally switch careers. I was a barista for years. Oh
(29:45):
I think we the funeral director. Okay, we did that
one already. Yeah, here's one. I was three months into
cosmetology school said, and ain't for me. Three months in
ain't for me, dropped out for business school.
Speaker 5 (29:57):
And the person got their license in aesthetics and worked
in a a loan for a few years, and now
she's a full time nanny in e dina money money, money.
Speaker 4 (30:05):
You can make so much money being a nanny. Actually
in a dina. Oh, I may considered being a nanny before.
Speaker 1 (30:11):
You would be a good nanny. You should consider that.
I'll help you fill out an application.
Speaker 4 (30:14):
Okay, great, thank you. Why are you giving it to
me right now? How did you already have this on hand?
Speaker 2 (30:18):
Trying to be helpful, that's all.
Speaker 4 (30:19):
It's printed in everything Roman.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
If you got one, lift, If you got one, let
us know, use the talkback feature or send me a text.
Speaker 2 (30:27):
What was your career? One eighty?
Speaker 1 (30:30):
All right, it's one of one point three kd WB
coming up Monsters the pot and will do some of
these playback the talkback next on career one eighties on
KDWB after the weekend kd WB, the Twin Cities number
one hit Me music station, Tell me about your career
one eighty. Here are some talkbacks.
Speaker 4 (30:52):
I twitched my career twice.
Speaker 11 (30:54):
The first time, I was supposed to follow the family
business and buy my mom and dad's coffee shop and bell,
and then I decided I was going to be a
massage therapist. And I was very successful massage therapist for
many years. And no, I'm a hospital administrator.
Speaker 7 (31:09):
I love it.
Speaker 1 (31:09):
Hospital administrator. Wow, as a man, that's really impressive.
Speaker 9 (31:13):
I went to school for networking, became a network engineer,
and then switched over to cybersecurity. And I'm switching back
to networking and I don't think I've ever studied this much.
I love it and I'm really excited to get back
into networking.
Speaker 5 (31:30):
Okay, cool, cool voice, Yeah, all right.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
What was your career one eighty?
Speaker 4 (31:35):
When I graduated college, I did.
Speaker 1 (31:38):
Sales downtown. I used to work in the Gava day
where my high heels, my nylon.
Speaker 3 (31:45):
Clo shirts, and I did credit card processing services.
Speaker 5 (31:49):
For a bank.
Speaker 9 (31:50):
And then when I turned thirty, I quit my job,
went back to school, had to start from scratch and
became a nurse and.
Speaker 2 (31:56):
Became a nurse.
Speaker 1 (31:57):
Okay, I think is it nurse one of those things
you'll all work if you want. If you're a nurse,
you're always going to work. There's always going to be
a job.
Speaker 2 (32:04):
People always dying.
Speaker 5 (32:05):
We're just getting hurt.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
I just jumped. People are always dying. I have a
couple more tough bags.
Speaker 12 (32:20):
Hey guys, I'm Caitlin. I originally went to school to
become a teacher, a high school of science and math
teacher is what I was studying. And now I am
almost three years deep as a emergency room registered nurse.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
Wow, that is is super cool. And that's a lot
of education. That's just like taking the temperature and the
blood pressure. That's a lot of sense.
Speaker 11 (32:47):
I used to work in photo for thirty years about
and now I'm into the accounting bookkeeping services.
Speaker 2 (32:55):
How do you switch up and do that? See this
is so cool.
Speaker 6 (32:58):
I just thirty years doing something like you said, Dave,
like you did radio for pretty much since you popped
out the womb.
Speaker 2 (33:04):
Then just switching up at the blank of a night,
it's something completely different. Good for you.
Speaker 4 (33:07):
What do you think here?
Speaker 3 (33:08):
Your retirement plan will because I know you're not gonna
be able to just like set at home TSA.
Speaker 2 (33:12):
You think is going to work at TSA?
Speaker 4 (33:13):
Are you going to be a nice TSA person or
mean while you're gonna be like screaming, like get your shoes.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
Off, right?
Speaker 1 (33:19):
I think I think like anybody who probably works in TSA,
you're very bright and cheery the first couple of years.
Then after that you've had it a couple of years
for days, first couple of days, then you've had it.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
It's like I said, take your shoes off.
Speaker 4 (33:33):
You can at like a ukulele store.
Speaker 3 (33:37):
Well there's a but I'm just saying like you could
do something where it's like you're interacting with people and
it's something you're really knowledgeable on. Okay, so maybe you
work at like a historical bookstore or something.
Speaker 2 (33:48):
I think that'd be cool.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
Yeah, but TSA sounds like it's kind of like a
you know, it's a a A.
Speaker 2 (33:53):
It just it's an open door. What's a turnkey?
Speaker 1 (33:55):
It's a turnkey job because you just you walk in,
you put on the badge, you get a add and stuff.
Speaker 4 (34:01):
Know how much process.
Speaker 3 (34:02):
I would never want to work at an airport because
of the process of having to get through the airport.
You got to park somewhere, you got to probably shuttle
to wherever you need to be, and then you probably
still have to go through security yourself just to start
your job.
Speaker 4 (34:13):
That's too much. I just I couldn't do it too much.
Speaker 2 (34:15):
I can't call a friend of mine who works in TSA.
Speaker 3 (34:18):
Because I'm curious, because I know, I know people who
work service industry jobs at an airport and they make bank.
But you also probably get to get there like a
half hour before your shift to being sure you get
there on time.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
Yeah, yeah, well I don't know. TSA sounds pretty cool.
You get a stand on and stuff to wave, like, okay,
wave people through.
Speaker 3 (34:37):
When you get tired, you're like, hey, let me do
the sitting part where I just get to look at
the scanner.
Speaker 4 (34:42):
See how many shaky things are in people's suitcases.
Speaker 2 (34:45):
Can I tell you?
Speaker 1 (34:48):
But my friend who works at TSA, we were talking
one time and he said, people bring shaky things through
the airport all the time. They don't even bat an eye.
They see it in the in the lex ray machine
and they're like next, It's like, okay, I don't.
Speaker 4 (35:03):
Care, another one, another one, exactly all.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
Right, it is time on KATWB. By the way, never
more than thirty minutes away from Charlie xc X. Next
one is about fifteen minutes away. But right now on KATWB,
it is time for vant to stir the pot.
Speaker 2 (35:20):
Vat what's on your mind today? Well, today somebody else
stirred the pot.
Speaker 6 (35:24):
There's a video on TikTok going viral of Well, I'll
let the clip speak for itself and then we shall discuss.
Speaker 10 (35:29):
I've got a busy toddler. Yes, he sits on a
chair at home. He'll eat at the table with us.
Not perfect, but he'll eat with us. He got off
the chair, he went into hollow to the people next
to us. They came over to me and they said,
could you please put your child in the seat. Well,
if you can't sit down the whole time, I'm going
to have to ask you to leave.
Speaker 4 (35:49):
Sorry.
Speaker 10 (35:49):
If he's not going to sit there the whole time,
I'm sorry, we can't serve you here, and we left.
Now we're in the hotel room. Something like that can
just be really upsetting. Obviously, keep friendly here.
Speaker 6 (36:02):
So if you haven't seen the video, a woman got
asked to leave a restaurant because her kid, who's two
years old, was running around. I don't know, I don't
think like the bad the whole restaurant, but the people
next to them in the booths trying to talk to them,
kind of pointing at him and stuff. And so she
posted because she was upset. She was like, he's just
a kid. I well, and people are trying to figure out,
you know, is she you know, in the word justified, Yeah,
(36:23):
she justified. It's a two year old. Kids do that
type of thing. I want to say, and we'll go
around the room. And you can also text in a
five three ninety two one, Yes, tell your kid to
sit down. I understand he's two years old, but there's
just certain places there's a decorum of how you're supposed
to act, and restaurants cool, your kid is cute, and
maybe like once or twice if your kid comes up
and says hi, I'll smile. But you know, I'm trying
(36:44):
to do dinner. I'm trying to, you know, enjoy time
with my family over here.
Speaker 1 (36:46):
Mm hmm, I agree, hundred percent. Seriously, I think that's
really annoying and irresponsible. We were at a place out
in excels here. It was the Hot Dog Burger Place,
and it was wonderful and it's not there anymore. But
there was a family and they were sitting there just
drinking and having a great time, and their little kids
four or five years old were running around the restaurant
full free reign of the and it was so annoying.
(37:07):
I was like, no, put your make your brady kids
sit down and shut up. There are family restaurants where
they can do that. Take them to McDonald's or take
them to Denny's. I don't even know about Denny's. I mean,
but sit down place. Yeah, yeah, but absolutely, I don't
think there's anybody who I think that's rage bait. I
think that's one of those where it's like she is
trying to get people to interact.
Speaker 4 (37:28):
She was like, feel bad for I don't know.
Speaker 3 (37:29):
I think there are people out there that don't care
though that they just like let their kids run around
and they think that that that they really think that
the restaurant wasn't the wrong there.
Speaker 4 (37:37):
I mean, I was a server for.
Speaker 3 (37:38):
Somebody years, so I feel like I have my thoughts
about parents who don't keep an eye on their kids
because it's like kids are running around while you're carrying
hot food in your hands, and all of a sudden
they run into you because nobody's keeping an eye on
all them, and they're like, come on.
Speaker 1 (37:52):
I was at a restaurant one time years ago and
there was a family of like eight sitting at the
table next to us, and they had a little kid
and he was probably running around, running around, and I
told the server, I said, if you don't say something,
I will, And she's like eighteen years old, and I
shouldn't have put it on this poor eighteen year old.
And so the eighteen year old servers like, hey, can
(38:13):
you have your child? And the mom went off, do
not tell me how to raise my kids. It is
not your place to tell me how to raise my
kids or how to and I.
Speaker 4 (38:22):
Was like, you're in public space, though.
Speaker 5 (38:25):
But I was at a restaurant this weekend with my mom,
my sister, and my niece who is two, and at
one point she was just kind of standing up in
the aisle, just like pouting, but she wasn't like running around.
But even at one point, like she was laughing really loud,
and I kept thinking, like, oh crap, we're really being
a hindrance.
Speaker 4 (38:41):
To the other people trying What restaurant were you at?
We were at Cerum's in a Noka. Oh, your guy's
favorite spot.
Speaker 2 (38:46):
Yeah, what is that?
Speaker 4 (38:47):
Like, Uh, it's it's it's a Wings place. It's wings.
It's like a bar kind of thing.
Speaker 5 (38:51):
But like, I just felt bad because she was laughing
really loud, and I didn't want everyone else to be
judging us. But at the same time, like she's two
and so she just didn't want to sit down for
a minute. So she just stood up next to our
next to our booth, and it seemed fine. But now
I'm like, oh crap, I was really really ruining this
lunch for everyone else.
Speaker 1 (39:11):
So I think it so vun You say, what, you
think that she should keep her kids under control?
Speaker 6 (39:15):
Yeah, because I think that there's certain places that, like
I said have at the Korum, in certain places you
just shouldn't be taking your kids. Like I'm from New
Jersey if you didn't know, and so when I used
to go to New York Times Square all the time,
I don't think you should be walking around Times Square
with the two year old for your's sake and for
everybody else, because there's so many people in New York,
it's crowded. There's just certain places you just kids just
you know, you can't go. I'm sorry, that's just having kids.
Speaker 2 (39:37):
Okay. Text messages and you can also use the talk
back feature. Either one. Kids are allowed to exist.
Speaker 1 (39:42):
How will they learn restaurant etiquette if they're not allowed
to eat in a sit down restaurant. Yeah, well sure,
absolutely they can come in, but you teach them that
they don't get to get up and run around.
Speaker 2 (39:52):
And that's it's as simple as that.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
If your kids are affecting my people, Like, if I
can do whatever I want with my life, it does
the effect to you. But if it starts to affect me,
then it does. That's called a polite society. Okay, another text.
I got two kids six and eight. I'd be mad
at them and mortified if they ran in around in
a restaurant. Your kids should not be running around in
(40:15):
a restaurant. Bring stuff for him to do at the table,
that's right. Bring them screen in the headphones. Oh no,
I kind of agree. That's what I would do. If
my kid wasn't paying attention, I would not. I don't
care if people want to judge me for that. If
I had a kid running around, but they would sit.
If they had a screen in front.
Speaker 5 (40:30):
Of them, I'd do it where it's like coloring back,
remember when we used to color I.
Speaker 1 (40:35):
Do you use the little kids menu and have the
word search or the connected dot?
Speaker 2 (40:39):
Yeah, kids don't do that anymore.
Speaker 1 (40:41):
I don't think a text message says you guys don't
have kids, and it shows, well, you're wrong. I've got
four kids and absolutely never ever had a problem with
my kids. You know, they would create a mess. They
would always like cracker crumbs and spaghetti and noodles and
crap all.
Speaker 2 (40:58):
Over the floor.
Speaker 1 (40:58):
And that's just the way it is. I was able
to have never gotten up and run around at the outback.
Are you kidding?
Speaker 2 (41:03):
Yeah, I know it's tough.
Speaker 6 (41:05):
I don't personally know that it's tough because I like, yeah,
you're right, I don't have kids. But I also see
so many people I'm walking through the cub and their
kids are just running through the aisles or like butt
scooting on the ground. Just you know, they're just the
mom or the dad is grabbing the strawberry wafers off
the aisle and as long as their kid isn't going
too far they're like, oh, it's fine.
Speaker 2 (41:24):
That is not fine. There's a decorum everywhere you go.
Did you get a thesaurus that had the word decorum
in it? Like four times?
Speaker 5 (41:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (41:33):
I think that.
Speaker 1 (41:34):
You know, it's so funny because Steve used to work
on the show before Steve had kids, and he's got
two kids now that are in their teens. But Steve
would say, he said, one day, He's like, I was
a target. There was this lady and her kids were
running around and like blah blah blah blah blah. I
would have taken those kids out to the car and
said we're going home. And I'm like, no, you wouldn't
because you've got to get tide pods, you got to
get Q tips, you gotta get toothpaste, you got to
(41:55):
get a laundry basket. You're not gonna let your kids
dictate whether you get them or not. They're gonna scream.
It's target. That's the way it is. And sure enough,
when Steve had kids of his own, he learned that
when you go to target, your kids are gonna be
unruly and scream and cry, and right.
Speaker 5 (42:09):
I realized that, like, we can't dictate what kids do.
A lot of the time. But I do think, like
what you're saying, vont that you can teach them at
an early age what like etiquette is like when you
are in.
Speaker 4 (42:20):
A public space. But I mean kids will be kids.
Speaker 5 (42:25):
I mean my niece is too, and she was b
boobopping in the aisle at the restaurant and.
Speaker 1 (42:29):
We're just like, you're responsible of Madison, pick your battle, Madison. No,
you do not pick your battles. That is not a
battle that you pick. If your kid is b boo
bopping in a restaurant, they need to sit down.
Speaker 5 (42:39):
They need to sit down standing running around because Vant's
kind of saying like, oh, kids are running around and
being a new sense.
Speaker 4 (42:47):
What's like, what where's the line here?
Speaker 5 (42:49):
Like where's the line where we need kids to be
better and have de quorum? Like is standing near you
being bad? Or is it running around being bad?
Speaker 6 (42:57):
It's situational like in this like a restaurant, you shouldn't
be running around talking to other people, like tapping them
on the thing. Somebody texted and said as karma in
a couple of years, when Bailey has kids and I
have kids, that our kids are gonna be the loud
ones that embarrass us. Oh yeah, I think that's wrong.
Speaker 4 (43:11):
What am I saying poorly?
Speaker 5 (43:12):
I'm saying my niece was doing it, and I'm like,
I see the problem, but I also see where you
can't really control it.
Speaker 2 (43:19):
No, you can.
Speaker 1 (43:19):
You actually can control it. And that's the thing is
that you should control it. And if you can't control it,
then you either got to do better or you got
to stay home. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (43:28):
My mom would have beat my east if I was
running around like that.
Speaker 1 (43:31):
Yes, yeah, all right, thanks Spot It's Katie w B.
Let's do brand new game on the show. Name that tune.
Speaker 2 (43:38):
We're gonna do.
Speaker 1 (43:39):
Name that tune playing today is going to be Bailey
j Hess versus Jenny, and I'm going to give you
a clue and then you have to bid how many
seconds you need for you to name that tune. It's
easy and it's fun. Are you ready? Yeah, Okay, here
we go. You'll bid back and forth. Here is your
first clue. This song was a minor hit for the songwriter,
(44:01):
but this version by somebody Else spent fourteen weeks at
number one on the pop charts. Bailey, what's your bid?
Speaker 5 (44:10):
I'll say I can name that tune in five seconds?
Speaker 3 (44:13):
Jenny, Gosh, that clues hard. I can name that tune
in four seconds.
Speaker 7 (44:21):
Uh, okay, I can name it in three seconds.
Speaker 3 (44:26):
I can name it in two seconds.
Speaker 5 (44:30):
Jenny named that too.
Speaker 4 (44:36):
Whitney Houston, but I don't know. Come on, Jenny, always
love you. Yeah, okay, that's the only song I think
it could have been. Yeah, Dolly Parton was the one
who wrote it.
Speaker 1 (44:47):
Right, very good. So Jenny is on the board at
one point. Let's see how you do on this one.
This song was not only big, it's about something big.
The artist's real name is Anthony L. Ray, but you
know him by his stay each name. Jenny, what do
you bid?
Speaker 3 (45:05):
Never heard of that name in my life, though. Name
that tune in six seconds.
Speaker 5 (45:11):
Okay, well, I'll name that tune in five seconds.
Speaker 7 (45:17):
I'll name it in four seconds. Yollo, I'll try and
name it in three seconds. Name that tune, Bailey, Okay, cool,
that's baby got back.
Speaker 2 (45:34):
His real name is Anthony L. Ray.
Speaker 1 (45:37):
His real name is not sir. Okay, here's a harder one.
This song is a thank you for their fans encouragement
and devotion from a boy band. This song is a
thank you for the fans encouragement and devotion from a
boy band. Jenny or Bailey, you're up first.
Speaker 5 (45:58):
Oh, I'm I'm confident I can name that tune in
five seconds.
Speaker 3 (46:04):
Because it's boy band, I think I'm gonna be even
more confident and say I can name that tune in
three seconds.
Speaker 2 (46:11):
Jump.
Speaker 5 (46:11):
Well, because it's a boy band, I think I can
name that tune in two seconds.
Speaker 2 (46:16):
Jenny.
Speaker 3 (46:17):
Come on, Jenny, I think I can name it in
one second.
Speaker 5 (46:21):
Name that tune?
Speaker 3 (46:23):
Wow, Jenny, Well, obviously Backstreet Boys larger than like.
Speaker 2 (46:28):
Yeah, all right, this score is to Jenny one Bailey.
Speaker 1 (46:34):
Okay, we're gonna go way back to a one hit
Wonder from nineteen eighty one. It's a song everybody knows,
and you might remember the video of the artist performing
in the video in a cheerleader outfit.
Speaker 3 (46:46):
Jenny, Oh, no, I can name that tune in five seconds.
Speaker 5 (46:54):
Oh, I can name that tune in four seconds.
Speaker 4 (46:58):
Hopefully I can name it in three seconds.
Speaker 7 (47:02):
Okay, Jenny, name that tune. It's Hey Mickey, Yes, I
don't know Tony Basil.
Speaker 2 (47:17):
Okay, here we go next one. Name that tune.
Speaker 1 (47:19):
This hip hop song is by an artist that we
don't really like much anymore and contains a sample of
the voice of legend Ray Charles.
Speaker 4 (47:30):
I can name that tune in five seconds, five seconds.
I can name that tune in four seconds.
Speaker 7 (47:35):
I can name it in three. I think I just
know because of your hint. I do too, so I'm
going to say it.
Speaker 1 (47:40):
Well, then just go right to one and you can
skip right to one. If your confident, go right to one.
Then the other person can underbid you. Okay, what do
you got?
Speaker 2 (47:48):
Who's the latest? Big?
Speaker 4 (47:48):
Can I name it in zero seconds? I was the latest,
and I said I can name it in one.
Speaker 3 (47:53):
Okay, here you go, Kanye West, Gold Diggers, Yes, very good.
Speaker 4 (47:59):
That was your Who was too easy?
Speaker 1 (48:00):
I think I'm trying to mix it up a little? Yeah, Okay,
now here's a charge a harder one. This girl group
had a huge song with this number. Written by Daniel
betting Field. It contains several work related sexual innuendos. Jenny,
you're bidding, I'll name it.
Speaker 4 (48:19):
In six seconds.
Speaker 7 (48:20):
Okay, I can name it in four seconds.
Speaker 3 (48:26):
I'll name it in three seconds. I'll name it in
two Name that tune, Bailey, Okay, Yeah, that's.
Speaker 4 (48:34):
Work by pussy Cat Dolls.
Speaker 2 (48:35):
No, we're not we'll accept it. It's work. No no, no, no
is it's work, work from.
Speaker 4 (48:40):
Home, work from home.
Speaker 2 (48:42):
They'll take it. We'll take it. She got it, she
knew what it was. Also not pussycat Dolls.
Speaker 1 (48:46):
Its harmony. Okay, we're up to another round here. Okay, Jenny, you.
Speaker 4 (48:51):
Don't have to try and come for me. Okay, I'm
not trying to come for you're winning winning. It's okay.
It's called name that tune.
Speaker 2 (48:59):
The next one, you're right, next one.
Speaker 1 (49:01):
This weird song by an Absolute Unknown was number one
on the charts for nineteen weeks just.
Speaker 2 (49:09):
A few years ago. Bailey, go ahead and did.
Speaker 4 (49:15):
I can name that tune in five seconds. I can
name it in three seconds. I'll try to name it
in two. I'm gonna name it in one. Go ahead,
name that tune? Oh Alton rowe Y.
Speaker 1 (49:31):
Hey, Now, as you're listening to this, let me know
whether you like this game or not. Because I love it.
I think it's a lot of fun. But you're the
one who's the final judge. And if you're going bur boring,
then you gotta let me know. But if you love it,
let me know, send me a text. Next one. You guys, ready,
we should have a keyword quest we do got to
go do a keyword. This is very important for Charlie XCX.
The keyword this hour is three sixty. So open up
the iHeartRadio app, tap the red microphone button and leave
(49:51):
a talk back that simply says, the keyword is three sixty.
Speaker 2 (49:55):
You ready for another round?
Speaker 11 (49:56):
Sure?
Speaker 1 (49:57):
Everybody loved this song for a while before it was
revealed that it was stolen from an old Motown's song, Jenny,
start your bidding.
Speaker 4 (50:09):
I'll name that tune in five seconds. I will name
the tune. In four, I will.
Speaker 3 (50:17):
Name it in three, I will name it in two, Bailey.
Speaker 4 (50:23):
Name it. That's blurred lines?
Speaker 3 (50:27):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (50:29):
Do I need to make these harder?
Speaker 3 (50:31):
I feel like they are pretty easy today. I feel
like last week you were a little bit harder.
Speaker 2 (50:35):
Going to do opera songs in Beethoven.
Speaker 4 (50:38):
Okay, I don't want that.
Speaker 2 (50:39):
And a couple of more. Here we go, next one.
Speaker 1 (50:41):
This song was written in response to the talk to
the This song was written in response to the talk
that the artist could not keep a boyfriend.
Speaker 2 (50:51):
Bailey, I can.
Speaker 4 (50:53):
Name it in five, I can name it in three.
Speaker 2 (50:57):
Go to one, do it right to one? Go to one?
Come on, Jenny, do one know.
Speaker 4 (51:00):
I already said three, so I'm not going to.
Speaker 3 (51:02):
Okay, I'll try to name it in two then, okay,
i'll name it in one.
Speaker 4 (51:05):
Okay, name that tune. I mean it's Taylor Swift. Oh
my gosh, Bailey.
Speaker 5 (51:14):
Yeah, I don't have it blank space.
Speaker 9 (51:17):
I think.
Speaker 1 (51:18):
I think in this game there's got to be a
penalty if you can't name it, because.
Speaker 2 (51:21):
I think it's.
Speaker 4 (51:23):
It is.
Speaker 5 (51:23):
If you can't name it, then the other person gets
I don't even have to know it, say it.
Speaker 6 (51:28):
Okay, yeah, all right, last one, we're gonna put some
music behind the suspenseful music during.
Speaker 1 (51:33):
The that's a good idea it yes, Okay, I got it,
go ahead.
Speaker 4 (51:42):
Wants to be a millionaire?
Speaker 2 (51:44):
Okay, here we go. Final round.
Speaker 1 (51:47):
This is a breakup song with Marshall beats, pounding piano keys,
and chanting background singers. Although the title doesn't quite make sense,
it propelled this artist to Internet superstardom.
Speaker 2 (52:02):
Jenny, open the bidding.
Speaker 4 (52:04):
I don't know what any of them me neither. I'll
name that tune in seven seconds. Well, i'll try to
name it in five, then i'll name it in four seconds.
I'll name it in three. Name that tune Bailey, Oh
(52:26):
the Deep. Yeah, that's one of my favorite songs.
Speaker 1 (52:30):
I should have gone for it right to improve this
game suspenseful music, harder, easier, more Poka.
Speaker 4 (52:39):
Oh I love Poka?
Speaker 8 (52:40):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (52:41):
Can we do a musical theater round?
Speaker 1 (52:42):
No?
Speaker 4 (52:43):
No, no, I would win.
Speaker 1 (52:45):
Okay, what do you think? I love the game? But
you know what it's all up to. You send me
a text and let me know. It is one on
one point three k d w B. We ain't going anywhere.
We take a little break, we'll be back into sound.
Speaker 2 (52:55):
Went curre.
Speaker 1 (52:55):
Just curious. I got a text from somebody a minute ago.
They said they've been up for eighteen hours and they're
still gonna be up for a while. Eighteen hours ago
was eight o'clock last night, and then like in the afternoon.
So I don't if they work third shift or what.
So they've been up for eighteen hours. So they got
up at like three o'clock or two o'clock yesterday afternoon.
They've been up all night. They haven't gone to bed yet.
(53:17):
How long have you been up? I'm wondering if there's
anybody listening who's been up longer than eighteen hours send
me a text or set or call me at six
five one nine eight nine KDWB. Hopefully you're driving, No,
I'm kidding. I'm kidding. Let me know how long you've
been up. We'll be right back on KDWB