Episode Transcript
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Hey, what's going on? It's gonna be here.
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(03:26):
We'll see what Gimbe wants to talk about. We've got
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I told Gimp yesterday.
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I'm like, this one's amazing, and I might believe this one.
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I'm excited if I know what it's about. We're gonna
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We're gonna talk with Sal Volcano.
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Hooray. And if you don't know who that is, you
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(04:10):
So I think there might be new episodes because I
read something about how Sal left and they've got Eric
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the other original hosts that left as well. So I
really wasn't one hundred percent sure. And that is a
meaning thing. They could still have the same title, same show,
just different hosts. That makes sense.
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I don't think it works with other hosts.
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It does, and those guys made the TV show. It's
not my show.
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I don't watch it, but I get it.
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I understand.
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I understand it.
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I watched it when it first came out. Buddy of
mine had its old job, but I had told me
about it. He's like, it's Larry As you gotta watch it.
Got into it for the first couple of seasons and
then uh, life just got in the way after that.
They do have one of the best memes when like
somebody does something stupid and they split the screen split
and shows them talking and like, okay, now do whatever,
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Flight and ninety seven to five. Kmod. I like to
read these signs about things that happen in relationships because
ultimately they don't mean anything, but we take them into account,
(05:43):
or we have a friend tell us and they're like, oh,
that's a sign they're cheating, or that's a sign that
something's going to end, or they don't like you, or
they do like you or whatever, and all that means nothing.
That's why I like doing them because they don't mean anything.
And this one is a list that these are subtle
signs that someone is cheating. Okay, one of them is
(06:05):
packing a bag with a change of clothes, lindsay, or
going to the gym. Well, I mean, yeah, are.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
You saying the bag might be for going to gym?
Speaker 2 (06:18):
Yeah? Okay, there might be another reason. Doesn't mean they're
automatically cheating. Okay, I was thinking the same thing. Unless
you're going to the gym. You don't pack a bag
to go to work, all right, unless you know you
work a dirty job, maybe that might be the case.
But unless you're going to the gym, you don't pack
(06:38):
a bag to go to work. You don't pack a
bag to go to the grocery store. You know what
I'm saying, Right, So there might be something there. It
just depends on what the case is. What do they
say there?
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Yeah, Well, let's make this true. Why would you pack
a bag to cheat?
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Uh? So you can have fresh clothes the next day
after you leave the skeezy hoping, assuming you're staying right,
if you're staying the night, not coming home would be
the sign exactly. So I just don't know. Packing a
bag implies is a subtle sign you're cheating. We talked
to a listener who had to pack a bag why
because he deuced his pants all the time. Right, that
(07:16):
that does make sense, and I think that would be
the pass on that one. Here's a thought. Maybe you're
packing a bag to change clothes for your date, and
then you're going to swap back into your old clothes
before you come home because you want to look fresh
and clean for you for your side piece. But your
your main piece is going to know you didn't wear
(07:39):
that to work today.
Speaker 6 (07:41):
So it's a good point.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
That makes sense. Uh yeah, I guess I kind of
look at it as like, so you're leaving with luggage
for work would be too too obvious, too much of
a tell, And if you're being deceptive, you're not doing
that right. You're gonna be way more, way more covert,
I would, I would think, And then you're coming home
(08:03):
and then you're like, oh, here's my luggage. I just
this feels like a giant movie reach. Right, of the
people I know that have cheated, I can't think of
any of them that packed bags.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
No, unless you're doing something that requires you change clothes,
i e.
Speaker 2 (08:23):
Swimming, Jim whatever, stay in the night totally valid, one
hundred percent. You gotta have some clean underwear on when
you're a cheating whore, right right, But I don't know
if packing a bag is one, at least not for me.
And what if you're someone who's prone to spill things
you may pack. I know a lot of people that
(08:45):
keep an extra set of clothes at work, right.
Speaker 7 (08:47):
Yeah, I feel like it only takes one situation to
happen to where you would have needed a change of
clothes that you would actually keep them on hand.
Speaker 2 (08:56):
Then moving forward another one rearranging of schedule. No, I
don't want to go deeper in on that one, but
things like hey I can't I got a last minute meeting,
right we were supposed to go to dinner tonight, but
I can't do it on maybe once or twice, maybe
even three or four times, you might let that slide,
(09:18):
but it becomes a pattern that Mike, they might be
fooling around. If it becomes a pattern, it's a pattern.
Speaker 6 (09:26):
Here for us.
Speaker 2 (09:27):
Are we cheating? Is cheating?
Speaker 8 (09:30):
Well?
Speaker 7 (09:30):
I mean think about it we were supposed to have
a meeting today and then one that it's gotten changed.
Speaker 2 (09:35):
Because that's your coworker's right that we're talking about significant Oh,
your partners.
Speaker 6 (09:39):
Right, yeah, But I mean if we had made plans
with our partners.
Speaker 2 (09:42):
They would now then be open up and we'd have
two days of planning to get around it. Right.
Speaker 6 (09:47):
But I'm saying our work schedule is changing, so it's.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
Not last minute though, right. Last minute is Hey, it's
four o'clock, I'm supposed to meet you at four fifteen. Right,
like yesterday we got a change of meeting, you know,
and we would have told our partners yesterday, hey da
da da da, And like Corbyn said, if it had happened,
you know, thirty minutes an hour before we were supposed
to meet with our significant other, then it might it
(10:11):
would be different.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
Now it doesn't. It doesn't feel like the same. And
I'm being honest.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
If my wife and I had plans to eat dinner
at five and she called me at four forty five
and was like, hey, I've got to go have dinner
and drinks with a client or whatever, I go, No,
that makes no sense how to It's just out of
her norm to either let that happen or for it
to not be on the schedule. It's not a surprise
(10:39):
for it to be a surprise thing, right, you know
what I mean? Most people know when clients are in town.
Most people know, and and when there are, she'll go, hey,
I don't know what's going to happen, so we shouldn't
plan anything on that day the client's here, right, But
I would be like, ah, what you're coming home. Another sign,
apparently that is a subtle sign of cheating relationship is
(11:00):
changes in the bedroom so far sexually, yes, okay, they
might be more adventurous, trying things out. That could go
either way. I'm not a settled down well I'm just
saying it's like when you know not you settle down them,
Like you know, there ain't nothing wrong with trying something new.
(11:21):
Maybe you saw it in a movie or whatever like that.
But if you're not that type of person to watch
the adult films or to try new things, and all
of a sudden you are, I could see where that
might be an orange flag.
Speaker 1 (11:34):
I don't think.
Speaker 2 (11:35):
So we go out to eat and I've always ordered steak,
and then I'm like, hey, I think I'm gonna have taketos,
we don't go whoa, we go, No, we're gonna try
something different. Yeah, but there's a difference between Taketo's steak
and let's just say missionary and the Pakistani pil dren.
They're both wrapped up in routine right right. But I
(11:58):
feel I feel like if you do a missionary Mary
all the time and all of a sudden it's like
I want you to fold me up like a pretzel,
you know what I mean, Then it's like, where is
this coming from?
Speaker 1 (12:09):
Where did you get this idea?
Speaker 2 (12:12):
If you've always worn a denim skirt to the floor,
I would agree with what you're saying. But if there
was a time in your relationship where you got folded
up like a letter right then and then you go
back to that, I just don't see it as a
giant signal.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
Is it weird?
Speaker 2 (12:32):
Is it different? Is it abnormal? All those things are true.
For it to be a sign of cheating is I'll
give it to you. If you guys used to do that,
you know you're trying to get back to something. But
if you've never done it and you're like, we're going
to do this, I think that might be a little bit.
And then I think this one is the sign for sure.
(12:53):
It might not necessarily mean they're cheating on you. It
might necessarily mean they're done with you. And that is
how they treat you on the phone, suddenly not answering
your text oh yeah right, not saying I love you
when you hang up, Yeah, I not calling okay, Yeah,
that makes sense right.
Speaker 9 (13:16):
To me.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
That that behavior, it's it's like an avoidance behavior. Yeah,
it's not a hey, let's try folding you up like
a letter. That is like a la la la la la.
Don't see ye right. You could also say maybe that
person is going through a lot of you know, mental stress,
you know, and it's just you know, sometimes even though
you know you do it all the time, it's just
(13:37):
like I got a lot going on. Yeah, sometimes people
need that mental space. One time, sure, two times three
times something's up right, kind of goes back to that
hole if it becomes a pattern sort of thing, totally,
And uh, as far as I'm concerned in my situation,
I don't care if you're going through a mental thing.
(13:58):
We're supposed to be the safe place for each other, right,
and so if you need a mental break from me,
We've got another problem that we have to talk about. Well,
it's not you, per se. It's just a lot going
on and I just need to give me some space.
Speaker 9 (14:13):
Bro.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
Yeah, yeah, then then I should be the stability in
the chaos. I should be your north star.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
You should be and you are, trust me, you are
just not right now, not right now.
Speaker 2 (14:23):
No, I just I just need to be alone. Why
Because I am tired of the voices in my head
and you are not making it any better.
Speaker 8 (14:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
I'm tired of the voice of my head. I'm tired
of you leaving your drawers, the drawers on the floor.
I'm tired of putting wet towels down. But I show
up every day? Yeah? How much?
Speaker 1 (14:41):
How hard is it to show up every day? Honor
your commitment?
Speaker 2 (14:43):
Stupid? Fine, that's great, and I'll be there for you
when you need a mental break, But for right now,
just give me my goddamn space. Going to my mother's good.
Oh I can't you mean the cemetery? Yeah, enjoy the grass.
Speaker 9 (15:01):
I will.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
At least it's warmer than you are, says the person
not calling. This always happens all the time. I say
something simple and then you twist.
Speaker 9 (15:14):
It all up.
Speaker 2 (15:14):
How can I twist around your words? Go through the
greatest tits?
Speaker 1 (15:22):
You twist around my words?
Speaker 2 (15:23):
You're a Bitchuh yeah, listen, listen, I'm just gonna go.
George's wife doesn't do this good for go through all
the greatest tits. You know what?
Speaker 1 (15:32):
Fine, I Am going to go talk to George's wife myself.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
I'll be back. Yeah, go go talk to her. Your
stuff will be on the lawn when you get home.
Hold On, I got a phone call, it says Hensley
and associates. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I didn't I didn't
mean like I mean, I just got caught up in
the moment. Can we just go back to the way
(15:55):
it was? Please?
Speaker 9 (15:56):
Please?
Speaker 2 (15:57):
I'm tired. Can we just forget all those things? I said? Listen,
you're for me, You're the only one for me. Now,
now that I've realized I'm forty and a I can
use my belly as a shelf and the idea of
downloading tender seems exhausting. God, I'm sorry you think I'm
(16:19):
a lot. Have a new girlfriend. At least she'll respect me.
No for a little while, as long as you're paying
for that trip to Cabo exactly right. Well, guess who's
not going you back?
Speaker 8 (16:34):
Eh?
Speaker 2 (16:35):
Hearing there's a show on? Is it on Showtime? And
it's Couple's Therapy And it is honest couples like real
couple's therapy, And sometimes it can be sometimes it's really harsh.
And these people have signed over the opportunity to share
(16:56):
all this. It is so uncomfortable, imagine and only because
we're witnessing, you know what I mean. Like it's not uncomfortable,
but people are going through strife. It's uncomfortable, like when
you can clearly tell one of them sucks.
Speaker 6 (17:12):
I want to watch this.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
It's a good show. It might be just called Couples.
Speaker 2 (17:17):
Maybe I don't know. It's on Showtimes Therapy. Yeah, it's
Amazon Prime's got it. Okay, I's got it. Hulus got it,
so yeah, sometimes Amazon Prime has it because you have
to pay for a Showtime subscription. It is. It is
a showtime series, so if you already have showtime, you
could probably get it on the man. I'm gonna check
it out. You can find clips online too. Okay, all right,
(17:38):
we got to take it. Let's go ahead and do
news quikies. These are stories you may have missed in
the news, but we cover them here and put a
link on our Facebook page if you want more. It's
time for newsquakies, world news, local news and news that just.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Makes you say, what the Here's Corbyn Gimbam.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
Lindsay with what's going on news quakies from the Big
Man Morning showing nineties.
Speaker 7 (17:58):
Crocs dishwashering hack has gone viral. People seem pretty divided
about this. You guys wear crocs, you love them?
Speaker 9 (18:06):
Right?
Speaker 2 (18:07):
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Speaker 7 (18:08):
I just had to drop like one hundred bucks on
Crocs for the family just this over the weekend. I
personally don't really wear them.
Speaker 1 (18:18):
I have crocs slippers will change your life.
Speaker 7 (18:20):
That's what you've said. There's this ausy content creator Anthony D. Paulo,
and he has taken to his Instagram showing how he
cleans his Crocs in his.
Speaker 6 (18:32):
Dishwasher with his dishes.
Speaker 7 (18:35):
And that's where people are going crazy because he loads
them in with the dirty dishes and before removing them
to find that there as clean as new, but they
are a tadbit smaller. When he pulls them out of
the dishwasher, it does tend to shrink them up a
(18:55):
little bit.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
He says rubber shrinks. Huh. Apparently even think it's the rubber.
Speaker 6 (19:01):
I know, I don't think they are either.
Speaker 7 (19:03):
But he does say that it's actually not a bad
thing that they shrink up a little bit, because they
do stretch out, I guess when you wear them so much.
But lots of people are having a big problem with
this because of the fact that he's washing them with
his dishes.
Speaker 2 (19:23):
Yeah, I think that's a number one. The things that
people put in dishwashers or do with dishwashers has begun bizarre.
You know, I've seen people making dinner inside the dishwasher,
which I think is bizarre. Washing your sex toys in
the dishwasher, I think is bizarre. Yes, I'll need you
taking your turd covered crocs and putting them in there
(19:44):
next to the spoons. Right.
Speaker 7 (19:46):
So, according to Crocs website, they recommend only two ways
of cleaning them, hand washing them or the delicate style cycle.
Speaker 6 (19:56):
In your washing machine.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
Until I've done it.
Speaker 6 (19:59):
Yeah, the gentle laundry detergent.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
I guess for me, crocs are just outdoor where right
I e. I'm going to Rockaholma or I'm going to
the lake. I don't wear them when I go out
to dinner at night or what. Don't need them to
look so pretty pretty much? Yeah? So, and I've got
several pairs of crocs. I ain't never washed any of them.
One of them IM mowed the lawn and so they're
(20:23):
orange and green. I have washed only when they get
like really gross. If the kids wear them and they're
really muddy, I just use a hose in like a
brush and like get the mud off.
Speaker 9 (20:34):
Right.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
But if you are someone who subscribes to washing your
dill dough in the dishwasher with your dishes, then this
shouldn't bother you either. No, I guess you're right. I
mean the dishwasher will get them clean and it will
sanitize everything.
Speaker 7 (20:50):
Yeah, but you know there are times where you pull
out a dish and there's something still.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
Stuck to it, dried food short right, and sure.
Speaker 7 (20:58):
It's sanitized now, but I cannot. I can't put it away.
I have to it goes right back in.
Speaker 2 (21:04):
Yeah. As someone who loves the dishwasher, nothing brings me
more joy than using it twice in a day. How
lucky am I that I don't? I can good for
you got all the soap water in the world we
want all the worse. I don't even have to fill
it partial, you know, fill and still run a full
(21:25):
site anyway.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
Yeah, why you gotta fill it up?
Speaker 7 (21:30):
Man?
Speaker 2 (21:30):
Why I can't run the cycle with just like a
cup of a bowl in there? Man? Why am I
the one labeled to be such a tight ass? And
here you are arguing to load the dishwasher fully? Maybe
it's maybe it's because I've got X amount of dishwasher soap, right,
and it's gotta last for so long and I don't
want to. What do you mean it's gonna last for
so You only get so many pounches in a bag.
You can buy more, can I? Yes I can't, But yes, no,
(21:55):
I get it when I need to, when I get groceries,
you know, and sometimes like was a just this week?
You know, it's cutting towards you know, we get paid
a day or whatever. Right, I had two pods left
right to last, made a payday I started on a Monday, Right,
I got two pods left. So I'm like, all right,
well I wanna skip doing dishes tonight, all right, And
then I'll load the dishwasher up kind of a little
(22:17):
more full than usual. Tomorrow and then I can wash
that load, and I got another load, and then I'll
I'll be able to get more soap on Thursday when
I get paid.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
Yeah, I don't. I don't redline stuff like that.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
I always have a back, Like when I see we're
getting near the bottom, I'm like, let's get another because
guess what, I don't want to run out.
Speaker 6 (22:36):
Of Yes, dishwasher pods.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
Hand washing dishes is a very limited thing in my
house for me. Nonetheless, what I'm saying is as someone
who loves the dishwasher, loves to run it twice in
a day, even I'm aware, I don't know how clean
it is. I've never tested it. I don't know how
clean my dishes are when they come out right, I
(22:59):
just trust they are. They look clean, They're shamey and
I hear germs.
Speaker 7 (23:06):
I like to have the dishwasher completely full. If it's not,
if there's like six dishes in there, I'm not running it.
I will hand wash those six dishes. What if it's
at the end of the night, like you're going to bed,
Yeah I have I have definitely just ran it. Yeah,
at the end of the night, I will run it
no matter what.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
Because I need the new day to start with an
empty dish wash Yeah, okay, because it catches up with
you fast. Yeah, with two kids, and I.
Speaker 7 (23:31):
Will not go to sleep with dishes in the sink.
I cannot stand a dirty can.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
Now my kitchen has to be reset.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
Yeah, yeah, I will.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
It'll be mostly maybe a cup in the sink.
Speaker 2 (23:40):
As a single guy, I get it.
Speaker 6 (23:42):
Actually, that's fine.
Speaker 2 (23:43):
No, I you know, like I said, I had to,
you know, backlog one day of dishes, and that drove
me bananas. And I'm like, I got a sink full
of dishes and I can't wash them yet because I
got a conserve soup.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
How long?
Speaker 2 (23:54):
Like do you run your dishwasher like every day? Every day,
every day, with the exception of maybe I'm getting low
on soap like this week. You know, I had to
back it up a little bit. But yes, my kitchen
is clean. Dishwashers run every day, but it's not run
twice a day. It's just run after I get done
making dinner. You know, So if there's a cup, because
usually when I start the day, there'll be a cup
(24:14):
left over from the night before, right, whether it be
iced tea wine, whatever, right, just whatever, I had before
I went to sleep, and then I start the day
with a cup a cup of coffee. Hold on my
add is like, I'm I'm hyperfixating on something. So you
will start the dishwasher, but have a glass and then
just set the glass on the counter. No, no, like
(24:36):
I've already had. This has been my daily my all
day glass right of sweet tea, wine, beer, whatever the
case is that I'm drinking. That's that's the glass I've
been using all day long. So I eat my dinner
all right, and I'm done eating dinner. Load the dishwasher.
Wash the dishes from dinner, right, all the dishes that
have built up throughout the day and from making dinner,
(24:56):
make it into the dishwasher. Absolutely, But I still have
my one cup that I've been us using all day long. Yeah, well,
now it's time for bad. You don't put that in
the dishwasher because the dishwasher just is already running. That's
what I have to run. Yeah, Like, so you run
the dishwasher, but have a glass. Oh man, hell now,
so that one couple stay in the sink overnight. It's
not a hell No, I rinse it out, you know,
(25:16):
it's it's it's not like, you know, I'm leaving it
with milk at the bottom of it, right, aholic, No,
but it gets rinsed out right because I don't want
a dirty dish in the sink. You know it's dirty. Yeah,
you know, it's not as dirty as it could be.
Speaker 7 (25:29):
But he's been using it all day and he's still
using it even while the dishwasher is going.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
I get it, but but don't just don't start the dishwasher.
Just wait, wait twenty minutes.
Speaker 7 (25:40):
And if you use the one glass all day for everything,
you are, Yeah, a man after my mom's heart.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
She loves that.
Speaker 7 (25:48):
She tells my kids that all day. Why can't you
kids just use one glass all day long? No, my
kids will, never drives her crazy.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
That's how I was raised to use one cup all
day long. And that's that.
Speaker 7 (26:02):
And I don't know where it comes from because I
wasn't raised like that either. So when she says that
to my kids, I'm like, what are you doing?
Speaker 2 (26:09):
Listen?
Speaker 1 (26:10):
That was probably a rule in my house.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
Guess what, I'm not a kid anymore, right, I can
make my own decisions, So I'll use forty glasses if
I want to. You're the one who has to wash them.
I don't have to wash them. This is the thing
that boggles me. I have to load it into a
dishwasher that is not washing. Nope, it's not as someone
who washed dishes in a restaurant. It's not right. It's
(26:34):
basically do with a sting. It's basically not even close washer.
Speaker 1 (26:37):
The washer is cleaning them. True, but you still have.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
To physically take all the dishes and put them into
the dishwasher so the machine can.
Speaker 1 (26:45):
Actually it is not scrubbing, rinsing, drying. It isn't. It's
not even close. By the way.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
It's like thirty cents to run your dishwasher, y'all trying
to like, oh I've got to save money. Sure, get
in your garden harvest tomatoes.
Speaker 6 (27:01):
Does it matter though, how long your dishwasher runs for?
Speaker 2 (27:04):
No, Okay, I mean it may be less if you
run a like a short cycle button or you don't
use the heat. Yeah, but it's about thirty cents, not
bad at all. No, that's why you can run it
as it's probably the cheapest appliance in your house to run. Honestly,
man found with tool inside display shed sounds innocent enough.
(27:26):
It comes out of Louisiana where this past Sunday, cops
had to respond to a Low's because a couple of
customers had seen this naked man inside one of their
display tool sheds, you know the ones they have out
in the parking lot to sail or whatever. So the
cops show up and they're searching all these tool sheds,
and after searching several of these sheds, they found a
(27:46):
sixty six year old guy named James Kaliavas. And well,
James was lying on his back on the floor in
one of the sheds with his pants around his ankles
and an open bottle of asaline next to him, and
he was in the process of masturbating vigorously tool demonstration. Ah.
So they questioned the man and he admitted that he
(28:09):
had been masturbating inside the shed while watching YouTube videos.
And how they went ahead picked the guy up on
obscenity charges and took him to jail. YouTube videos Well,
I mean, you can definitely see boobs in vaginas on YouTube, true,
if you like search for vaginal examination or something to
(28:30):
that before and after. Yeah. Yeah, still though, well, I
think for education can be on YouTube with all the
porn that's available on the world Wide Web. YouTube is
not my go to. Keep in mind, the only reason
we have YouTube is for boobs, right. The reason it
was created was because justin Timberlake ripped that thing off
(28:51):
and the guy, I'm not joking, and the guy couldn't
find the video anywhere, so he created this YouTube so
he could see it whenever he want. And now look
at the monster it's turned into.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
I'm just saying, people forget that. That is the reason nice.
Speaker 2 (29:08):
Dozens of birds killed after landing on powerline's happened in California,
where people are perplexed over an issue where dozens of
birds are dying after landing on a power line. Residents
say about fifty birds have fallen dead to the ground
after perching themselves on a specific stretch of power line.
The birds say I'm sorry. They say birds are being
(29:31):
electrocuted at an alarming rate and nothing is being done
to fix it. However, PG and E, the electric company,
the officials say the bird corpses showed no signs of electrocution.
They believe the deaths were caused by trauma, potentially from
appellet or BB gun or slingshot. The Sheriff's office says
they're investigating the bizarre instant. Now, it is damn near
(29:55):
impossible for a bird to die on a power line
if it's running correct, right. If there's a fault or
some issue of this could happen if their ground is
being connected right. But if there's an issue, nine times
out of ten, the electric company's gonna know about it.
What if the dozen birds aren't on the line itself,
(30:16):
per se, but they land on the transformer, all right,
you got it, Like a dozen of them on that transformer,
and then all it takes is one bird to touch
another bird to ground it out and the next thing
you know, Yeah, I don't, I don't. I have never
seen a bird on a transformer. But they're saying the
power line and it's fifty okay, it's totally kids, totally
(30:37):
kids shooting a sling shot. They'd be able to find
out by examining the birds they'll find holes or some short.
Speaker 7 (30:42):
Also, PG and E doesn't have the best reputation for
being honest.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
I mean, I don't think you have to pinpoint PG
and E. You're not wrong.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
I just don't think you have to pinpoint PG and E.
Any corporate entity doesn't have the the tracker to be
an honest right. So all these stories are on our
Facebook page at facebook dot com slash BMMS six nine.
Speaker 10 (31:07):
Tulsa's Morning Show is coming right back, The Big Morning Show,
Tulsa's Rock Station n kmod.
Speaker 11 (31:15):
Be aroun No World, take my strong hand, Give train
a the give trainn World, take mine my strong hand.
Speaker 2 (31:26):
Get on the grain.
Speaker 6 (31:29):
Hey guys, it's your boy, the hot Dog King here.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
Yeah, that's right, I got something fun for us. You
guys are ready, Corbny probably aren't gonna like this too much.
It's gonna make you feel slightly uncomfortable, which makes it
all that much better. Okay, okay, but we're gonna do
with celebrity impressions. Okay. Now, I have a bucket full
of names here that I just randomly pulled out of
this guy. Okay, and uh, what's gonna happen is I'm
(31:53):
just gonna I'm gonna dip my little handle a little
bucket and I'm gonna pull a name out, and we're
all gonna do the same name. Okay, the same impression.
And I'm gonna start with Corbyn is gonna go Corbyn
lendsay and then.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
Name Okay, all right, so you're ready.
Speaker 2 (32:06):
You're gonna have to think fast on this one and
try to stay away from like if I give you
like you know, George Bush, like little George Bush. You
know what I'm saying, try to actually make it work out. Okay,
I know Cortin Koran doesn't like impressions, he doesn't think
I like impressions. Then let's do it that. I like
doing ones I can do well that. We're gonna find
out if you can do these or not. All right,
first one out the shoot is William Shatner. Now, Corbyn,
(32:31):
we spoke to him several times. You should be able
to do William Shatner and go give me those damn aliens.
That's not bad. That was good, all right, Lindsey. William
(32:51):
Shatner booked today on price Line. That okay, I mean, yeah,
it's a price like commercial right, going for more like
what Corbyn was with the whole Star Trek sort of thing,
because that's damn it.
Speaker 1 (33:10):
Jim Key is from Star Trek, not just price Line.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
All right, So that's my Williams. Yeah, I mean you
saw them. Also, I fully expect you to be prepared
absolutely and uh, let's see here, just digging in. I'm like, again,
I'm randomly pulling these out of the bucket here, I'm
not even looking. How about, well that's what George W.
I used them as an example. All right, George W. Bush, Corbin,
go strategy. I know you said, don't do that, but
(33:41):
that's what impressions are are of cliche things. The individual
has died exactly, and you could do that. It's just
you know, just by saying I'm George Bush. That's kind
of where I was at it. You want to say strategy,
that's fine.
Speaker 6 (33:55):
Oh fool won'ts Shame on me, Oh fool me twice.
Speaker 2 (34:00):
Shame on me.
Speaker 6 (34:03):
You something here's something like that?
Speaker 2 (34:09):
All right, I'm trying to get the zone here because
i want to do something a little different. You know,
I'm not I'm not just trying to do the same
old thing that everybody else is doing. Uh so I'm
not just you know, pull this straight out of my
ass and uh well, yeah, try to do the impression
here you are, all right? How about another one here?
All right? Pull in this. We're doing celebrity impressions, trying
(34:30):
to anyway. Ah, yes, this is a fun one. Sean
Connery Sean Connery double O seven the Rock maybe one
of the easiest. Indiana Jones. So Sean Connery, Corbyn.
Speaker 12 (34:45):
Go schlop a betch yeah, Lindsay, Hello, I'm Sean Connery.
Speaker 2 (34:56):
Yeah, I definitely you can't say their name is like
we're doing the impression. Give me another attempt there, Lindsay,
without just saying arm Sean Connery.
Speaker 6 (35:07):
Make it shaken, not stirred. I have no idea.
Speaker 2 (35:12):
Okay, okay, all right, darmit and dy. I told you
not to grab that, and look at what happened.
Speaker 1 (35:20):
The whole world is going to hell now because.
Speaker 2 (35:24):
You just wanted to go out and have what you
needed to have.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
It started turning into Santa.
Speaker 2 (35:29):
But okay, all right, celebrity impressions, Ish, I'm gonna dig
deep here at the very bottom and pull out who
am I pulling out? Mike Tyson. Mike Tyson should be
a pretty simple impression. Yeah, I mean yeah, probably easier
(35:50):
than Connery. I just got in the ring and I
just did what I could, and then he's here with
you and.
Speaker 9 (35:57):
They ate it.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
That was really good, dude, that was really good. Lindsey.
What's your what's here? You're Mike Taxon sufferings we're looking
for Mike Tyson.
Speaker 7 (36:12):
That's who he reminds me of because he can't pronounce
his asses.
Speaker 2 (36:19):
You know, that's just preposterous. You know. All I wanted
was just to have a pet tiger, you know, and
then I come in and you guys want to steal
my pet tiger, and then no, this is hold on,
this is my favorite part. Don't care? All right, hangover?
He was doing the hangover? Yeah, all right, pulling out
another one. Celebrity impressions. Let's see here. Oh, just came
(36:44):
in as a text. How about that for timing Elvis?
Elvis Presley, the King of rock and go. I mean,
I'll kind of really rot in these songs. I'll just
steal him from other famous people that can't be famous.
That was pretty good.
Speaker 1 (37:03):
I'm interested to see how Lindsey's Elvis Presley goes.
Speaker 2 (37:06):
I'll thank you. I'll think it. Armuch. Yeah, that's how
I'm about right. Uh excuse me, little mama. I hate
to interrupt you right now, but uh, you know I
was on stage and I was performing. I look down
and I'll see your daughter she's looking I'm mighty fine.
Now I understand she's only nine years old. But uh
can she go on a road with me? That was yeah,
(37:29):
all right, doing celebrity impressions here, Well we got randomly
pulled Joe Biden. How was that it?
Speaker 1 (37:52):
I can't do his voice, so I pandered to y'all.
Speaker 6 (37:56):
Okay, I'll see back in Marda. This smells like some
good shampoo you got there?
Speaker 2 (38:05):
Why is that Elvis? I don't know, all right, Joe Biden?
Uh uh see what what what? You don't understand? That's
going more? Bill Clinton?
Speaker 6 (38:21):
That's what I thought.
Speaker 2 (38:22):
I didn't know what you were doing. To be honest, Uh,
I like ice cream. Vanilla is probably my favorite. I'm
gonna have to work on that one a little bit.
That was a weak ass, Joe Biden. Unless you do
a cliche thing like shampoo, you know, like, it's not
(38:43):
an easy one. I'm gonna I'm going to try to
climb up these stairs. I don't again, that's not it
doesn't sound like make up this one.
Speaker 1 (38:53):
This one should be easy for everybody. How about share, share.
Speaker 2 (39:00):
Her shower, her.
Speaker 1 (39:02):
Showing all over shauner door, watch out for the tray.
Speaker 6 (39:11):
It was great. Can't you hear without singing? You fuck
tim that time?
Speaker 1 (39:23):
I think singing is a shortcut.
Speaker 2 (39:25):
But okay, yeah that I'll give you this one here.
Mm hmmm, dude, let's shoe now. Cory Corbyn did it right,
because you gotta get the mouth of just kind of right.
You can't move your lips at all. It's just a
little ters like that, gotta before Look you're drunk a straw.
(39:45):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, you're kind of surprised, but not
really surprised, you know what I mean. Now, if you
don't mind me, I'm gonna go skiing. We don't wait
a minute. That's shunning. Yeah all right, Uh let's see here.
How about this one? How about Michael Jackson. I just
(40:09):
want to say that I'm real sorry and it's all
because of my dad and I drink pepsi but my
hair catches on fire. That was really good.
Speaker 6 (40:25):
I love the little children of the world.
Speaker 7 (40:27):
Thank you very much.
Speaker 6 (40:29):
Hi, I love everyone.
Speaker 2 (40:33):
I love you, I love you and I love you.
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (40:38):
You kind of sound like mister Hanky the Christmas. This
sounds very hanky.
Speaker 2 (40:42):
Yeah yeah, that was really good.
Speaker 13 (40:45):
Oh no, look blanket, hey, everybody, look, this is my
little child, Blanket.
Speaker 2 (40:51):
Hold John. I want to dangle him over the back
oh no, all right, let's see here.
Speaker 1 (41:00):
We'll do a couple of more before we get out
of here.
Speaker 2 (41:02):
Let's see what else do I got just randomly pulling
names out of a bucket for celebrity impressions. Arnold Schwartzenegger
another I think easy one that people imitate a lot.
I just love to talk to my housekeeper. She's not
(41:23):
very pretty, but I just want the vagina. Get back
to the vagina, all right, man, good, get to the
choppa think it's very very common. Yeah, that's where I
was gonna go with that one. Uh well, since we're
(41:44):
doing movie cliche, it's not a tuma. I know that
I got a mild headache. And these little kindergarten there's
the little ones that are pissing me up. That sounds
more like Sylvester Stallone. No that's not it's a leaning yeah, yeah, yeah,
not a tuma. All right, what else we got here?
Digg my little hand in celebrity oppressions. We're gonna go
with a very Jack Nicholson, Jack Nicholson, I have to
(42:11):
take my headphones off there. He's got to get in
the zone for this one.
Speaker 5 (42:15):
Ah.
Speaker 2 (42:15):
Yeah, he's gonna be able to raise your eyes and like,
but not open them right right, It's good. Eh. I
like ladies and they like me.
Speaker 6 (42:32):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (42:34):
That's the beauty of this whole bit. All right. Uh,
let's see here there's the batman. He's like, where does
he get all those wonderful toys? You know, I'm a
Jack Nicholson here, and I'm really trying my horn saying
his name again. You know, it's not as easy as
(42:55):
somebody would think sometimes.
Speaker 1 (42:58):
But that's pretty good.
Speaker 6 (42:58):
Good, Yeah, that was good?
Speaker 9 (43:00):
All right?
Speaker 2 (43:00):
What else we got here? Reaching in text says gimpies elbows.
Sounds like Christopher walking. Oh, this one's an easy one.
JFK JFK John F Kennedy. M. Case you're wondering who
JFK is, thanks for clearing that up, just len, you
know how many other JFKs are out there. I'm just
(43:25):
trying to think of the dialogue without doing the predictable
dialogue that he would do. M. I was looking for
the gunshot, but I could uh huh, Okay, he got
(43:46):
shot in the head for those unknown His brains got
splattered all over his wife. I don't know if anybody
knows that, Oh Marylyn, maybe sure? Nope, alright, Uh, Jackie,
(44:06):
I'm sorry, but I'm gonna have to go with this
hot blonde over here. Forgive me if I lose my
head for a moment, but uh yeah, I'm done with you.
I want to go ahead and bang this big breasted
bitch over here. What happened at the end, I just
trailed off. It's better than whatever the hell she was doing.
Speaker 1 (44:28):
I read that you have to do and you have
to do an era in it, so you have to
go and rah Maryland.
Speaker 2 (44:36):
Right because he's uh, he's from mass that Joss, don't
you know? All right, this will be our our last
one here, last celebrity impression. Uh, this last one. We
don't think I got in there twice. Get out of here.
How about Oh, we're gonna end it with Kat Williams.
(45:00):
Corbyn's trying to get into the zone. He's trying to
get into the cat Well William's frame of mind. I
I gotta be honest, I've never seen I don't think
I've seen anybody do a Cat Williams impression. I'm not
sure how to find the pitch of his voice because
he's got a very distinct voice. Well, you know, Corbyn,
(45:20):
now here's the thing.
Speaker 13 (45:21):
If you need somebody to give you a bit of
an idea of how Cat Williams sounds, well then maybe
just maybe I might be the way to help you
some fast.
Speaker 2 (45:33):
Cadence says, okay, because there's a certain way that he
likes to talk. And you're right, he's got a certain
pitch when it comes to it. But definitely, definitely, definitely
try to do a Cat Williams impression a right now. Yeah,
I mean yours is pretty good. I would say you
got to throw in a little bit of some white
bitches in there, okay, because he does. He says white
bitches a lot, huh ah, and I and the white bitches.
(46:03):
You know, hey, that's pretty good considering he had no
idea going into it.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
Well, I know, I love Catwinman. He's fantastic.
Speaker 2 (46:12):
He's gonna be in talent like he's fantastic, right, I
just he's really he's never the same. He just he
has a couple of terms he uses, and then he's
got that distinct the bitch. Yeah, yeah, that he'll throw
a on once in a.
Speaker 1 (46:26):
While, every time, every time, every time, Lindsey.
Speaker 6 (46:31):
Williams, I've got to butcher it.
Speaker 12 (46:37):
But oh.
Speaker 6 (46:42):
What bitch has been.
Speaker 2 (46:43):
Crazy and stand up Kat Williams is different than Interview
Cat Williams.
Speaker 1 (46:49):
True that because.
Speaker 2 (46:50):
Interview Kat Williams now he's just a little more toned
down and.
Speaker 3 (46:54):
Way like he's like, listen to me THEO right, you
can be a comedian, but you're crazy for Hollywood.
Speaker 2 (47:07):
Like it's a very different type of that was really good.
That was really good. But he doesn't do that on stage.
It's like George Carlin on stage is different George Carlin
interview right right, it's a little bit more calmer or whatever.
And can't Williams same way. He's the same in the
movies as he kind of is on stage, but like
in Shannon Sharp's podcast, totally different anything else you see,
(47:28):
totally different.
Speaker 1 (47:29):
Anyhow, Good job, guys, I thought that was hilarious.
Speaker 2 (47:32):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (47:35):
That's the wrong thing to hit.
Speaker 2 (47:38):
Brown.
Speaker 11 (47:39):
No world, take mine strong hand on, Give train on,
give train, No world, take mine my trung hand.
Speaker 8 (47:49):
Get on.
Speaker 6 (47:52):
Hey, guys, it's your boy the hot Dog King here.
Speaker 10 (47:56):
The big Man Morning Show returns next Tulsa's Morning show.
Speaker 1 (48:00):
Ninety km o D.
Speaker 2 (48:02):
Let's play a game. Tickets to see mud Vainer up
for grabs. Mud Vane and Static X at the Tulsa
Theater on October ninth. Tickets available Tulsa Theater dot com.
We're gonna play Schnip Schnapschner. Our current record is.
Speaker 1 (48:17):
Well you and I are tied with seven.
Speaker 2 (48:21):
Lindsey as three last week's.
Speaker 9 (48:23):
Winter, that'd be me.
Speaker 2 (48:24):
So it's going to be Corbyn and Lindsay at nine
one eight four six oh kmo D nine one eight
four six oh kmo D.
Speaker 1 (48:31):
Call up, decide who's going to be your clue giver.
Speaker 2 (48:33):
Whoever gets the most ride is gonna win those tickets
to see Mudvan and Static X at the Tulsa Theater
on October ninth. Get your tickets Tulsa Theater dot com.
Good morning, you're on the air. What is your name?
Speaker 14 (48:45):
This is not Xager at the time, Bro, you can't
call him twice man, No, this actually is not Ocager.
Speaker 8 (48:56):
What's your name then, Jacob?
Speaker 2 (49:01):
We had a technical problem that's happening this week. Good morning,
you're on the air. What is your name?
Speaker 8 (49:08):
Ronnie?
Speaker 2 (49:09):
Ronnie?
Speaker 1 (49:09):
How are you today?
Speaker 2 (49:12):
Ronnie?
Speaker 1 (49:12):
Who would you like to give clues? Lindsay or Corbyn?
Speaker 8 (49:17):
Let's go, uh, let's go Lindsay.
Speaker 2 (49:21):
Ronnie, sixty seconds are on the clock. Timer starts after
the first clue. Are you ready?
Speaker 8 (49:27):
I'm ready?
Speaker 6 (49:27):
There you go, all right, there's gases, there's liquids.
Speaker 9 (49:32):
And there's.
Speaker 8 (49:36):
Gases, liquids and solids.
Speaker 6 (49:38):
Okay, keep going. You would put this?
Speaker 7 (49:44):
Oh my gosh, uh pass Yeah, you might become a
type of artists you go to this type of school there.
Speaker 6 (50:02):
Animation.
Speaker 7 (50:03):
Uh, a type of artist if you're good at drawing
or advertising, drawing, painting. Uh, special effects another word for that.
Oh did you see the did you see the blink
(50:25):
in that game?
Speaker 2 (50:26):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (50:26):
They were awesome? Just the first word. Uh, snow white,
a poisoned.
Speaker 2 (50:36):
Snow white? Time time time time time time? One might
be good enough in question mark hang on the line. Okay,
thank you, good morning, you're on the air. What is
your name? And Dan? How are you buddy doing? All right?
(51:00):
All right, we've got a big challenge in front, so
we've got to beat one.
Speaker 1 (51:03):
Are you ready?
Speaker 8 (51:06):
Yes, sir?
Speaker 1 (51:07):
All right, here we go, Colgate Crest. These are brands of.
Speaker 9 (51:12):
Correct h.
Speaker 1 (51:16):
Hodgkin's lymphoma pancreatic.
Speaker 2 (51:20):
Yes.
Speaker 7 (51:22):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (51:22):
If you can't run very well, you need to build
up your Yeah. But when you can't breathe very well
while you're running.
Speaker 8 (51:33):
A cramp Arabic. I mean, and we've already won, but
I'm still it.
Speaker 2 (51:41):
Yeah, cramp, you run and you're out of breath really easy.
You have low.
Speaker 4 (51:51):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (51:52):
Well, yes, that is part of.
Speaker 2 (51:56):
It, but that's not the word. Uh an audible bat
as are there's a hair band with three letters Ronnie James.
Speaker 14 (52:11):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (52:12):
Time time time.
Speaker 1 (52:14):
Time, time, It does not matter.
Speaker 2 (52:16):
I'm pretty happy with my clue.
Speaker 8 (52:18):
Man.
Speaker 2 (52:18):
Let's go ahead and see what Gimpi has in his
four I four what Corbin? It says here that Putin
and Trump to skip the Ukraine peace talks. President Trump
and vladimil Putin are both skipping the Ukraine peace talks
proposed by the Russian leader. Now on Sunday, Old Putin
proposed direct talks without any preconditions with Ukraine to be
(52:41):
held today in Turkey. Now, last night, nail the hand,
the Kremlin announced its delegation to the talks, and Putin's
name was not on the list. And then the US
is sending a high level delegation to the talks. But
Trump has indicated that he will not be there. If
Hooton's not going to be there. I'm going to he
(53:02):
ain't going.
Speaker 1 (53:04):
What else we got here? US drug overdose deaths decline.
Speaker 2 (53:08):
According to the CDC, there were thirty thousand fewer drug
overdose deaths in twenty twenty four, marking the largest one
year decline ever recorded. Now experts say more research needs
to be done to understand what drove the reduction, but
mentioned several possible factors, including increased availability of the overdose
(53:30):
reversing drug ANOLI zone, expanded addiction treatment, and ships in
how people use the drugs. That's good? What else we
got here? Qatar is buying billions in Boeing jets. President
Trump has announced record breaking news deals new deals between Katar,
(53:51):
Boeing and the US Department of Defense. Boeing will be
selling billions of dollars worth of planes to the Middle
Eastern country, and the DoD will be selling top drones.
Boeing CEO Kelly Orkberg appeared alongside Trump in Katari capital
for yesterday's signing ceremony. And finally, lastly here Tulsa State
(54:13):
Fair announces they're twenty twenty five Oklahoma stage lineup and
I'm excited. The Tulsa State Fair announced is twenty twenty
five Oklahoma stage lineup yesterday. This year's concert lineup includes
musicians such as loupe Fiasco, Switch Foot, Nate Smith, and
my favorite, Cooper Allen. Starting September twenty fifth, live performances
will kick off at seven thirty in the evening every
(54:36):
day until October fifth. Concerts are free with paidgate admission.
V IP selection tickets are forty five dollars and they're
going on sale now through May eighteenth at midnight.
Speaker 1 (54:46):
Which, what's a good show.
Speaker 2 (54:47):
Good morning, Lindsay, Good morning Corbyn.
Speaker 7 (54:49):
We've teamed up with Taziki's and we're gonna bring lunch
to you and your coworkers, ten of them, and I'm
going to bring it in our new Chevy Blazer. Ev
All you have to do is.
Speaker 6 (55:00):
Up to win at the website that rockskmod dot com.
Speaker 2 (55:04):
Good morning, Gimpee, Well, good morning, Corwyn. Just got your
first keyword to rock the bank. That keyword is grand
as in what you're going to get if you win
Rock the bank. Take the keyword plugging in the website
that rockskmode dot com. You get played and do you
have more chances throughout the day? All right? Conspiracy Theory Thursday.
This is where we talk about things that might be true,
(55:24):
might not be true. You can decide on your own
and today's I saw come across my FYP and I
was intrigued by it, so I went down the rabbit hole.
And the conspiracy claim is that there is a highly
let me phrase, that was a highly advanced global civilization
(55:46):
that existed before our recorded history, and it's called the
Tartaria Empire. Okay, I've never heard of the Tartaria Empire.
I've heard of the Onunaki a lot, which is kind
of the same thing. I don't know, Okay, the Tartaria Empire.
It was a civilization that had advanced technology and built
(56:07):
incredible architecture. The buildings are now called Neoclassical, Beaux Arts
or even Victorian, and they're supposedly leftover structures from this
lost civilization. The real history was supposedly erased or rewritten,
blamed on the world's fairs or mud floods. Is that
(56:31):
a movie that he is going to promote later? These
grand old buildings like old courthouses, train stations, exposition halls
that were really advanced or ornate for the time period.
You can find photos from the nineteen hundreds with cities
that appear oddly empty or show construction in strange ways.
(56:54):
Some believe they early technology like free energy or anti
gravity devices was already discovered and then hidden and suppressed.
Some examples of these buildings that you can see for
yourself the Singer Building in New York City. It's one
of the once the tallest building in the world, demolished
in nineteen sixty eight. The ornate design and sudden removal
(57:18):
fueled claims of the Tartarian Empire. The Old Penn Station.
It was a grand boarts structure demolished in nineteen sixty three,
and conspiracy theorists argue the destruction was part of erasing
the evidence from that time. And if you look and
see the Old Penn Station, you will be shocked that
(57:39):
they tore it down. It was a stunning building. World
Fare structures in Chicago in eighteen ninety three and in
Saint Louis in nineteen oh four. They were timberary yet
but really elaborate buildings that were dismantled post fare, and
believers question why such monumental structures were short lived. If
(58:00):
you see any of the structures in Saint Louis or
Chicago from the World's Fair. They are mind blowing how
cool they are. And then some even put the US
Capitol Building in there as one of the classic tartarian
designs that existed. Now they, like I said, they believe
(58:24):
it was an advanced civilization. They had free energy, advanced
construction techniques. They believe anti gravity, and wireless power. Much
of the quote old world architecture is actually from this civilization,
(58:45):
and civilization was wiped out by floods, wars or resets
like the World's Fairs, and they use the World's Fairs
as the chance to reset everything. I think that's kind
of bizarre, right, isn't the World Fair just like a
chance for everybody around the world to get together and
showcase what they do right different countries and stuff like that.
(59:07):
I don't know, I've never been to one before, but
the buildings look amazing, giant structures that were built in
the eighteen hundreds, and people usually when they see these
old buildings, you go how they do that? People see
the black and white photos of empty cities, huge construction projects,
or mud flooded buildings with windows below ground level and
(59:30):
think somewhat something's being hidden. The reset is something people
do believe in. They believe the idea that we were
recovering from a forgotten disaster. Now the reality most of
(59:50):
the architecture cited from the eighteen hundreds and nineteen hundreds
was built by known architects using known methods, and it
just took a lot of labor.
Speaker 1 (01:00:00):
A lot of time.
Speaker 2 (01:00:02):
Photos look strange because of the long exposure time photos
used to take to take pictures. So early photo limitations
or context is misunderstood because you know, you think it
looks empty when they just kind of blurred those out
because of the people were moving through the shot.
Speaker 9 (01:00:26):
And the mud.
Speaker 2 (01:00:27):
Flood stuff is just normal historical events like regrading, some flooding,
sometimes construction, and people believe with their to their core
that there are hidden truths out there, that they know
something is out there and they've got to believe it. Now,
(01:00:49):
when you look at the photos and the explanations of stuff,
you do see it and go, well, that's pretty impressive.
It's pretty amazing. One of my favorite things to do
is to go into cities and see architecture and see
like the why why were things built so grandiose? Right
when things like nowadays just seem kind of bland, small
(01:01:12):
out of a box. Yeah, I wouldn't even say now,
I'd say in the last fifty years, that's fair. That's fair.
When they built the Pentagon, they were like, we want
when people and if you ever go to DC, we
want people to come to town and see the Pentagon
and be terrified. And you it's massive. You come around
on the highway and you're like, what is that is crazy?
(01:01:33):
How big that building is, And we just don't we
don't do that really, No, even if you look at
you know, you just like how houses are built nowadays
compared to back then, the different styles of houses, your
Victorian style houses and you know, your farm style houses
(01:01:55):
and stuff like that, and seems.
Speaker 1 (01:01:56):
Like anymore that's just you know, zip zip four walls
and a roof.
Speaker 9 (01:02:00):
There you go.
Speaker 1 (01:02:02):
There is history that like in Rome.
Speaker 2 (01:02:05):
I know this for just because the tours I went
on there, is that when they want to reduce something,
they just buried it with dirt. So there was times
when they just buried stuff and that's why they're taking
so long to build the subway system there, because they
have to dig stuff out and then when they find
something they have to stop construction, they have to bring
an archaeology team, they have to look at an examine,
make sure if it is an artifact, is it not
an artifact? And so that is something that people do.
(01:02:30):
New York City, Manhattan is covered in mud. It was
not real Manhattan not a real place. They brought in
stuff and built the land up to make it an
island and a city. So covering stuff up with mud
does happen. I don't know if it happened across the board.
(01:02:51):
And when it comes to World's Fairs, I know with
World's Fairs, these are these the buildings are not designed
to withstand years. They're designed to be temporary structures for
a month or a year, you know, I don't don't. Okay.
You got to think of like the Olympic villages that
get built, right, you know, they come in and they
(01:03:12):
build up these these buildings and whatnot strictly for the
Olympics that are only going to be there for what
like a month at most, you know, and then of
course you can see pictures online and what not if
they get abandoned and you know, they fall to pieces
because they're not taken care of, but they're still standing.
They're still standing. They're still there. And wasn't uh wasn't.
(01:03:35):
I think I read somewhere somebody told me somewhere that
the Eiffel Tower was built strictly for the World's Fair. Yes,
it was supposed to be temporary and it ended up
still around. Yeah, but it was. So there's two facets. One,
let's go with the Eiffel Tower. That was to show
engineering capabilities. Okay, that's right, what the future could do,
what engineering could do the the Olympics in the Olympic villages,
(01:04:02):
that is more of a political money grab thing where
they would say, hey, you host the Olympics, you get
all these things, and then people will come to your
city and they do No, they don't. Well, yeah for
the Olympics, hu, but then after that it's gone. That's
why now the Olympics is about structures be already being
in place. That's why when the Olympics come to America next,
(01:04:24):
they're gonna play softball in Oklahoma, right right, and they're
gonna do whitewater events in right. That makes sense because
it's already a stad because the facility, the infrastructure is
already there and built for that. It doesn't have to
be in that sit d Okay, So these tartarian buildings
and stuff, you said, what was that seventeenth and eighteenth century? Right,
(01:04:45):
So that's sixteen hundreds seventeen hundreds, And you got to
think back. You know, they've got castles in England and
Scotland and stuff like that that are well older than
than that, but are still standing in in good condition.
Speaker 9 (01:05:00):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:05:01):
So I guess what's what I'm asking is what's the
difference between those It's not America, Okay, I guess it's fair.
So this tartarian thing is strictly for America, not worldwide.
And you may be going that our history, well, it's
why did we luremit? Our history is hardly accurate? Right?
Speaker 1 (01:05:21):
Well, Columbus did not discover America, right right, the Pilgrims.
Speaker 2 (01:05:27):
We leave out this thing about the first of all
the Pilgrims specific specifically, it is kind of hard to pinpoint.
And on top of that, they found the rock calm down.
And two we were never really taught, at least I
wasn't until I read books on my own that they
slaughtered a bunch of Native Americans. Right, That's the only
reason they had dinner together was because they were celebrating murder.
(01:05:50):
But that was you know, that was the thing back then.
When you take over somebody's land, you know, you conquer,
and you got to conquer who's already there, you know.
And it's not just a Erica that that is. That's fine,
but that's not the way it was. That's what I'm
saying is that our education is not telling us that.
They're not telling us the Russians are the ones that
ended World War Two, that the Russians lost way more
(01:06:11):
people than Americans did.
Speaker 1 (01:06:13):
Right, We're not taught that information.
Speaker 2 (01:06:15):
It's too sensitive. Well, you feel like it's less patriotic, right,
and that doesn't necessarily mean that it's just history. It
just blows me away, like why would we want to
cover up bury these amazing structures, you know when when
you look at it and you're like, well, that is
(01:06:35):
that is great architecture there, that is a work of art,
that is not just a building, that is somebody's life's
passion and artwork standing, right, Or why we won't bury it? Yeah,
because we don't like them, you know, we can't. You
can't have them get up right, I mean they hid
they kept the books away from the slaves. Because they
didn't want I'm reading right, So if you can't have
(01:06:57):
people get if you're trying to keep people down, you
don't let them get too high. I guess you're right.
I guess you're right, And we don't want them finding
out what really happened. Of the conspiracies we talk about.
To me, this is the most fun and most has
the most reality around it. Not some mythical creature in
the woods who is not coming out of the woods,
(01:07:18):
but he has plenty of siblings right all over America,
you know what I mean. Like this one has the
most I feel like I can connect the dots on
it personally, that's the simulation. I can connect the dots
in the simulation. It just for me feels more legitimate, right.
And there's plenty of it online that you can go
(01:07:40):
down the rabbit hole on. So if you want to
read about the Tartaria or Tartarian Empire, you can look
it up.
Speaker 1 (01:07:47):
Take a break, We'll be back.
Speaker 10 (01:07:48):
Tulsa's morning show, The Big Man Boarding Show.
Speaker 2 (01:07:52):
The Assault continues the next thirty seventy. Besides watching road
rage videos where people out of the cars and fight
on the street. Like on the road, there's other things
for me that make me believe we live in a simulation, okay,
because it makes no sense for people to do that.
I just watched one where a guy's in his car
(01:08:13):
and the other person's punching him, but he's out of
the car, but the cars move.
Speaker 1 (01:08:17):
I don't know what we're doing anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:08:20):
Some physicists believe gravity is the proof we're living in
a computer simulation. Okay. Scientists have studied and wondered whether
the universe is really nothing more than some sort of simulation.
One scientist has a theory that the law of gravity
could be proof that we are all in a computer.
(01:08:40):
Group of scientists put the odds of being in a
simulation at one in three, while another study put that
number at fifty percent. Melvin Yopson, who's exactly the person
you want being a physicist, spent years studied and trying
to figure out if we're living in a simulation. One
(01:09:02):
of the numerous theories he has put forth over the
years includes the belief that we may be living fifty
four million lifetimes because our world is nothing more than
a virtual simulation. He suggested that the Bible tells us
that we are in a simulation, and it also tells
us who is running it and his study published in
(01:09:23):
the Journal of AP Advance.
Speaker 1 (01:09:24):
Don't worry, I renewed your subscription, Lindsay.
Speaker 2 (01:09:28):
He asked, is gravity evidence of computer computational universe? Quote?
It's a notion that seems like science fiction, but one
that is based in physics and evidence that the universe
appears to be operating suspiciously like a computer simulation and
digital technologies write down to the apps in your phone
(01:09:51):
and the world of cyberspace. Efficiency is the key computers
compact and restructure their data all the time to save
memory and computer power. Maybe the same is taking place
all over the universe. Taking a take a cooling cup
of coffee, Energy flows from hot to cold until the
(01:10:12):
temperature of the coffee is the same as the temperature
of the room and its energy is minimum, a state
called thermal equilibrium. The entropy of the system is a
maximum at this point, with all the molecules maxim maximally
spread out having the same energy. What that means is
that the spread of energy's per molecule in the liquid
(01:10:33):
is reduced. Yes, what he said, but if we consider
just one look, just location rather than energy, then there's
a lot of information disorder, which when particles are distripped
distributed randomly in space, the information required to keep pace
with them is considerable. When they consolidate themselves together under
(01:10:54):
gravitational attraction, however, the way planet, stars and galaxies do,
the information gets come pacted and more manageable. It's in simulation,
that's exactly what occurs when a system tries to function
more efficiently. So matter flowing under the influence of gravity
need not be a result of force at all. Perhaps
it's a function of the way the universe compacts the
(01:11:15):
information that it has to work with.
Speaker 9 (01:11:20):
So fitted to the ambithation lunar, Wayne Shaft.
Speaker 1 (01:11:23):
I don't feel like it was that extreme. I hear you,
but I don't feel like it was that extreme.
Speaker 2 (01:11:27):
So how do you explain history? And I say that
by like, look at what we know of? Was it
Newton Newton that discovered the gravity? Right? Not just the cookie? Right?
Apple falls down? And he's like, ugh, gravity, So how
do you explain if this is a simulation that we're in?
(01:11:49):
And somebody, which Neil de gross Tyson has a great
take on, are we living in a simulation or not?
He says, somebody has to put it together. Somebody had
to put the simulation and put the cod together for us.
So there is there there's at least one real person
out there that has put together the simulation that we
were all living in. Okay, So word's AI and the
(01:12:10):
eyes killed everybody, And you know, I guess that could
be a point. I mean, but like, if you were
to put together a simulation, a simulated world, okay, why
would you explain like colonial days and the clothes, you know,
and why would you why would you dress people up
like that in those hot powdered wigs. Why wouldn't you
(01:12:32):
just go straight to the best of the best of
the best.
Speaker 6 (01:12:35):
Someone had to suffer to make it look to fake us.
Speaker 2 (01:12:38):
Out, Okay, I mean, I guess I think my response
would be, uh, think of my Space, okay, and then
Facebook and then Instagram, right, and like there's an evolution
that happens.
Speaker 1 (01:12:51):
So you're telling me, you're you're gonna tell me that
back in the day when we had horse drawn carriages
and people were out physically working in the field plowing
fields with oxen and tools and hose and stuff like that,
(01:13:11):
you know that, you know that's that's just the way
we started, you know, and I think the code started
that way.
Speaker 2 (01:13:17):
Okay. That's what I'm saying is like there's a look
at any computer program, the first version of it. This
blows me away. It's like, but it evolves, right, That's
what I'm saying, is the software evolves, huh, it gets
more sophisticated or just you know, just like we do.
You start by using a horse and then now you
use a machine, right right right, So like to me,
(01:13:39):
it's not a giant leap. It is the evolution of
the software. And Isaac Newton just discovered it. He didn't
even discover it. He just had the theory figured out
right exactly. It existed without him saying anything, was already there.
But how did he get that knowledge? How did he
get that? How did he you know, say, okay, the
apple was hanging up there and then it falls that
(01:14:00):
it's got to be gravity. How did he get that knowledge? Yeah?
I mean the computer could have put it in the right,
I guess, right maybe maybe you look, it's possible, right,
but you know, for look at the computers compared from
the nineteen sixties, right that you know, you see there's
a size of this room that I'm in compared to
(01:14:21):
the computers that we have now. You know, wouldn't there
be some kind of evidence and history and colonial times
and medieval times and stuff like that, Like, wouldn't there
you would you would think there would be some kind
of record of a computer from from back then.
Speaker 1 (01:14:41):
No, no, no, no, no, no, we're in the computer.
We're in the program.
Speaker 2 (01:14:46):
Think of the matrix right right when Neo, when he's
wearing the black leather, is in. They're bouncing in and out,
okay and out of it is all computers running everything,
but in it there's no sign right of course. Okay, okay,
think of it from that. From that standpoint, I guess
that makes sense. So there wouldn't be any evidence of
(01:15:07):
a computer inside the simulation. And think of the training program.
A version of the program. Did you see the red
the girl in the red dress? I put that in there, okay,
so you can write any code? Just blows me away.
It's like, would why would we start so old and
ancient if it's a computer simulations version? Just jumped straight
(01:15:30):
to you know, the good stuff first version. Huh right?
I guess that to me, that's the explanation of that
and again to me, that's a more explanation than like
the guy running around in the woods, right right? But
then who who built the simulation? I'll agree with Neil
de gross Tyson, where like somebody had to put this together.
(01:15:53):
And the big question of the day is who is it? Now?
Speaker 1 (01:15:56):
You said at the beginning of this. Even the Bible
says who you know? I've never heard that.
Speaker 2 (01:16:00):
I've never heard it be either, you know, So.
Speaker 1 (01:16:02):
Who did it?
Speaker 2 (01:16:03):
Who's running the simulation? Who created the simulation? I'm sure
whoever created that simulation is probably deadly now, so who's
carrying it on? I mean Clippy doesn't know who wrote him, right,
Clippy from Microsoft work, right of course? Right? So why
would we know? Why would we why would they even
let us know? I could see, like now modern times,
(01:16:28):
it seems like we are living in a simulation, especially
with as digital as everything is. I just can't buy it,
you know, pre nineteen ninety or I even say nineteen eighty.
You know, that's just me. I mean, history repeats itself
for me, is the biggest argument. Right in every way,
shape or form, fashion repeats itself. Now you're not getting
(01:16:51):
wool dresses, right, But like bell bottoms are coming back now,
Oh yeah, for sure. So I'm just but I'm just
saying so like everything's a cycle.
Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
Everything.
Speaker 2 (01:17:04):
When you read history and you read about things that
have had events that in life, it's all the same events,
it's like crazy predictable, right.
Speaker 1 (01:17:12):
And I agree with you there.
Speaker 2 (01:17:13):
I know for I know that history repeats itself, just
on different scales or whatever, right, because they get the
new update date. Right, we're on like Earth six point
twelve or sixty two, right, or or version twenty five.
Yeah okay, And again for me, this is more believable
(01:17:38):
than the guy in the Woods Tex says that literally
explains why it's not a simulation, okay for you, just
the realization that the Simpsons have predicted the future. Comic
book guy is the architect. Oh god, m well. And
I would say to the person that says it explains it,
(01:18:02):
I'm going to go with the science guy, no offense.
I'm not going to go with you texting me. I'm
going to go with the guy who's been studying it
his whole life, Melvin Melvin. Melvin Melvin knows more than you.
(01:18:24):
I think that's fair to say with anybody named Melvin,
I'm just I hate when people do this. Well they're wrong.
Oh yeah, how much virals? You know stuff?
Speaker 1 (01:18:33):
Have you studied?
Speaker 9 (01:18:34):
Right?
Speaker 6 (01:18:36):
How many books have you read?
Speaker 2 (01:18:37):
I don't even have to say books. That doesn't mean anything,
but you've never studied it, and suddenly you're you're an
expert on constitutional law. I have watched enough YouTube videos
without masturbating that I know what I'm talking about. Why
are you lying? Why are you just sitting there on
the other side of the glass just lying. To take
(01:19:00):
a break, we'll be back.
Speaker 10 (01:19:01):
The Big Men Morning Show returns next Tulsa's Morning Show
ninety seven KMOD.
Speaker 2 (01:19:08):
And join us on the line. Right now is Mike
Malega with the Tulsa Drillers. Hey, buddy, how are you.
Speaker 9 (01:19:12):
I'm doing great, doing great, Good morning, Good morning. It's
good to talk to you.
Speaker 2 (01:19:16):
The Drillers are just at the beginning of this two
week home stand that you guys have longest homestand of
the year.
Speaker 1 (01:19:23):
Tulsa Drillers dot com to get your tickets.
Speaker 2 (01:19:25):
Northwest Arkansas is visiting right now, and you guys had
day baseball yesterday and it's great to see the guys
back in town.
Speaker 9 (01:19:34):
Yeah, it was great.
Speaker 14 (01:19:35):
Good win yesterday, big crowd at over seven thousand fans,
a bunch of screaming kids out of the ballpark watching
some Drillers baseball. So it was a lot of fun,
great weather and a Drillers win.
Speaker 2 (01:19:46):
Yeah, and today's going to beautiful as well for that
seven o'clock start for Thirsty Thursday happening down at one
Oak Field again.
Speaker 1 (01:19:53):
Get your tickets Tulsa Drillers dot com.
Speaker 2 (01:19:55):
And what's really great about this homestand is you've got
the Chicken dam. This is a special weekend nine one
eight weekend with the Tulsa Drillers.
Speaker 14 (01:20:05):
Ye have the annual nine one eight weekend this year,
and our identity this year is the Tulsa Chicken Dancers.
The Chicken Dance was originated at Tulsa Octoberfest, which is
incredible really, I mean, what a legendary type of thing
that is. So we're kind of celebrating Octoberfest and all
of that good stuff, and tonight we started off with
some prost Chicken Dancer logo t shirts for the first
(01:20:26):
thousand fans and of course all of our Thursday Thursday activities.
So lots of fun at the ballpark tonight and then
all throughout the weekend.
Speaker 2 (01:20:33):
Yeah, and then don't forget about Memorial Day weekend, lots
of fireworks. Make sure you get your tickets in advance,
Tulsa Drillers dot Com. There's something for everyone out at
the ballpark. Food, a special food for everybody out there.
You can't go wrong spending an evening out at one
Oak Field with the Tulsa Drillers. Again, Tulsa Drillers dot
Com to get your tickets. I wanted to bring up
(01:20:55):
there's two things I'm really excited to talk to you about, Mike.
One of them is the Pete Rose being taken off
the permanent ban list.
Speaker 1 (01:21:04):
And I've seen two different thoughts on it.
Speaker 2 (01:21:06):
One people being like, good, he's quite the accomplished baseball player.
Time has gone by, it's okay for him to come
off the list and be accepted. Another one is is
that this is really dumb and almost cruel to the
point where he doesn't even know it. He's dead, Like
who is this for?
Speaker 9 (01:21:26):
Yep? Yep.
Speaker 2 (01:21:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:21:27):
I mean I think they're both valid points that I
would add almost kind of a third point is that
you know, he just passed away, so it is kind
of rude that it was just so close to him
passing here within the last I think like it within
the last six months or so. So you know, he's
one of the greatest players of all time, There's absolutely
no question about that. His credentials absolutely are are worthy
(01:21:48):
of being recognized and being put in the Hall of
Fame eventually and all of those good things. So you know,
he definitely is. But you know, he did break the rules.
He did gamble on baseball when that was against the rules,
and an MLB, to their credit, they stuck to their
guns with that for a very long time. So I
give them credit for sticking to their guns on that
and not setting a precedent that that's okay that you
(01:22:10):
can get away with. I don't know the reasoning behind
the timing of it all, but again, you know, Pete
Rose is the all time hits leader in Major League Baseball.
I don't think that that is ever going to get broken,
and he's certainly worthy of recognition. Is one of the
greats of all time, and I'm glad that I got
to see him in my lifetime.
Speaker 2 (01:22:26):
Question for you, as someone who's involved in the baseball world,
and I'm not going to look at this as you
speaking for the baseball world, but of the four of us,
you are the baseball expert as someone who lives and
breathes it every single day, So I feel like you're
the appropriate person to ask this. What is the opinion
of baseball people on that. Do they feel like it
was it should be over and he should get in
(01:22:46):
and the band was dumb? Or are they like, no,
it's good, we have these rules. People need to adhere
to them. You know.
Speaker 9 (01:22:53):
I think it's kind of a combination of both.
Speaker 14 (01:22:55):
I know that's kind of a cop out, but I
think guys like me think, yeah, he should be in
the Hall of Fame, there's no question, but we understand
why he's not, you know, and that MLB had to
draw a line in the sand before that became.
Speaker 9 (01:23:07):
More of a problem.
Speaker 14 (01:23:08):
And I think Baseball doing that with a great like
Pete Rose also was you know, a trailblazer with respect
to following those types of rules for the other sports. Right,
So Baseball stuck their foot out or stuck their neck out,
you know, with one of their all time greats, and
that probably helped the other leagues, the NFL, the NBA,
(01:23:29):
and the NHL probably helped those leagues and also have
a hardline stance on gambling and fixing games and so forth.
Speaker 9 (01:23:37):
So you know, I think it's both. I think it's both.
Speaker 14 (01:23:39):
I think universally everybody believes he should be in the
Hall of Fame based on his on his credentials, but
at the same time we understand why he's not well.
Speaker 2 (01:23:48):
And then then we can add the conversation of shoeless
Joe Jackson being added to it, where he says he
was given like a couple thousand dollars to throw a game,
but he still had in that series. He had like
a crazy series with no airs and I think couple
of home runs and everything, So it made no sense
that what was throwing it?
Speaker 9 (01:24:06):
At?
Speaker 2 (01:24:06):
What part did he throw it? And for him to
be included into the band removal too, it just feels
you're right, you said it earlier. This just feels like
weird timing.
Speaker 9 (01:24:16):
It is weird.
Speaker 14 (01:24:16):
Yeah, it's weird timing, absolutely, Yeah, and Sholis Joe, and
also in the same case with with Pete, it wasn't
like obviously Shuliff's Joe was. You know, he went out
and had he balled out and had an incredible series.
So it wasn't like he was laying down to help
the other team win. And and from what I've read,
it seems like Pete Rose always he bet you know,
he never bet on his team to lose, so you know,
(01:24:37):
so you can make that same argument that he wasn't
sacrificing his team.
Speaker 2 (01:24:42):
Well, and then you see the hypocrisy because we know
of other players and other sports that are known gamblers.
Speaker 14 (01:24:48):
Right, absolutely, yeah, I mean people should be able to gamble,
but just not on your own sport, and certainly not
on games that you have an impact on, right, I mean,
like that should be the overlying emphasis on on what's
right and what's wrong and otherwise, you know, you got
to do what you've got to do, and then that
should be fun.
Speaker 2 (01:25:03):
Well, and now we're to the other thing that I
was really excited when I saw this blip across my
phone as an alert yesterday, is we talk all the
time about going to see the Tulsa Drillers in action
down a one oh field because you are seeing the
future stars of baseball. And yesterday he gets announced that
Dalton Rushing is going to get picked up and have
to report to Los Angeles, and he was been with
(01:25:24):
the Royals, sorry, the Dodgers a couple of seasons, and
then he was down in Oklahoma City this season and
that you guys have to love when you see a
guy you almost knew was going to get picked up anyway,
see them finally pull the trigger on it.
Speaker 14 (01:25:37):
Oh yeah, I mean we were pumped. We were all,
you know, fire and text off to everybody on the staff.
You know, hey, did you see Russian got called up?
That's awesome, you know, super deserving. You know, he came
into Tulsa last year as the number one prospect in
the Dodgers organization. He was super touted and he universally
throughout throughout the game of baseball like this guy is
(01:25:58):
an up and coming stud and he did nothing but kind.
Speaker 9 (01:26:01):
Of prove those you know, those those accolades. Correct.
Speaker 14 (01:26:03):
He just went off for us in Tulsa, and he's
been doing the same thing in Oklahoma City and they're
finally giving him the chance.
Speaker 9 (01:26:10):
You know, they've used it. They've had a backup catcher
up in La for.
Speaker 14 (01:26:14):
A long time named Austin Barnes, and he's he doesn't
play very much and he's kind of like a personal
catcher for Clayton Kershaw, and he doesn't provide too much offense,
and it's always been kind of like, why is that
guy blocking the way for rushing to get up to
the big league. So they designated Barnes for assignment, and
that means there's a roster spot for Russia. So Russian
(01:26:35):
we'll get to go up there and back up another
former driller and Will Smith. And he's also going to
get a chance to play some outfield. He played a
little bit of outfield for Tulsa. He played a lot
of outfield in Oklahoma City, so we love to see it.
Speaker 9 (01:26:45):
And he joins a couple of other twenty twenty four
drillers up there right now.
Speaker 14 (01:26:48):
So you know, Jack Dryer in the bullpen, who's pitching
great for the Dodgers, was with us last year. And
benkus Farrius has been dynamite. He started, he was a
starter for us at the beginning of last season as well. So, yeah,
those those former drillers definitely, as you always say every week,
you know, there are the future Dodgers.
Speaker 2 (01:27:04):
Yeah, it's really exciting. And they have Dalton in a
DH position, They have him at first base, they have
him at a i think right field, Like you're right,
this guy is a future star of the Dodgers, and
we got to see him play at One oak Field.
Speaker 9 (01:27:18):
That's exactly right, man.
Speaker 14 (01:27:19):
And and you know, and right now, honestly, one of
the biggest prospects in all of minor league baseball is
at One oak Field this week. Unfortunately he's on the
other team. By the Northwest Arkansas of Naturals have got
a kid named Jack cagleone who is gonna be up
with Kansas City here within I would say within thirty
forty five days. The guys at Absolute Monster went off
(01:27:41):
in spring training. A lot of people were calling for
him to make the big league roster right out of
spring training, but he had never played even at the
Double A level because he was at our University of Arkansas,
I think, and was just drafted pretty recently. So come
out this week, and this is gonna be the last
time we get to see this guy at One Oakfield
for the Northwest Arkansas Naturals. He'll be moving on to
Triple A or the big leagues certainly by the next
time we see Northwest in July.
Speaker 2 (01:28:02):
Well, and I think we could say that almost every
team that comes through One Oakfield Cardinals is going to
be there for next week and there's always a guy
on the team that is the big promise for that organization,
and it's worth going down there to see some of
these guys play before they make it to the next level.
And that's going to happen at one Oakfield this week.
You at games this week and next week, so two
(01:28:23):
week home stand Tulsa Drillers dot com to get your tickets.
Thirsty Thursday is tonight. Let's move on to they announced
the football schedules. I like to compare football to baseball,
and it's not really fair, but when it comes to
the announcement of the schedule, you don't really get this
with baseball at all. But with football, they just do.
(01:28:43):
The organization do a great job of making it fun
on something that is so passive.
Speaker 9 (01:28:49):
Yeah, you know. I mean it's just a different animal, right.
Speaker 14 (01:28:52):
I mean, you're only playing seventeen regular season home games
and people go travel and see their team on the
road a lot too, so it is a little bit
of a bigger deal to see who are we playing
on the road, and baseball you know who you're playing.
It's just a matter of when you're playing them. In football,
you're playing teams that you may not have played for
two or three years too, which makes it a lot
of fun. But yeah, they do make a big deal
out of it. It is a little bit of a
(01:29:13):
bigger deal, a little bit more of a reveal.
Speaker 2 (01:29:15):
Yeah, there were some great reveals. The Titans had a
really good one. I thought the Buffalo Bills was a
pretty entertaining one. If you have a team you like
to follow, you should go see what they did for
on social media to announce the team. And I would
think from your standpoint on the business side, the line
item you got to have to put something like that
together is wild too to think about. They're spending a
(01:29:37):
couple fifty maybe even one hundred thousand dollars to do
some of these.
Speaker 9 (01:29:42):
Yeah, they do.
Speaker 14 (01:29:43):
And you know, in our side, like the comp is
promost the promo calendar, like we do our promo calendar,
reveals and we kind of do like a you know,
a watered down version of these big productions that the
NFL teams do with their schedule. But on our end,
it's more about what are the promote what's the promotional
calendar going to be, not not the schedule.
Speaker 2 (01:30:01):
And now let's talk about the basketball playoffs and just
some exciting games happening and guys just going crazy. Draymond Green,
we talked about him earlier. We found Mike that he's
been fined over a million dollars through his career and
he's lost out on like three point two million dollars.
As from a sports fan standpoint, talk about like why
(01:30:24):
guys like that are worth it? Why guys like that
and the trouble they bring is worth it when you've
got a defensive monster like Draymond Green on your team,
you know, I just.
Speaker 14 (01:30:35):
I think he's a difference maker. I guess I'm not
a basketball guy. I love I love the game, and
I'm hugely into the playoffs this year. I love the Thunder,
I love the Knicks, so I'm way into it. But yeah,
I mean, Draymond he must be that good of a
player to have on your team that it's worth the
negative public that he brings it. Plus he's the one
getting fined, and you know, it doesn't seem like those
finds are really changing his way as much at all.
(01:30:56):
And he's a thug and I'm not a fan of
his in any way, shape or form, but obviously he
gives the Warriors a little bit of an edge, and
you know he's making bank and he can afford those
three point two million dollars in flats.
Speaker 9 (01:31:08):
I guess.
Speaker 2 (01:31:10):
As a Knicks fan, are you psyched that they couldn't
let Boston's having trouble?
Speaker 14 (01:31:15):
Well, I mean they didn't have much trouble with us
last night. I think they won by over twenty so
that was a little bit disconcerting. I thought maybe we
could close it out last night. So but the good
news is the Knicks will have a chance to go
home in Game six and win it at home, and
they got two chances to get past Boston. And my
dream matchup would be would be Nixon Thunder in the Championship.
I got I got Yankees Dodgers last year in the
World Series, So let's keep it going.
Speaker 2 (01:31:37):
Well, we'll see if that happens. Make sure you go
see the Tulsa Drillers in action down at one Oakfield
Tulsa Drillers dot Com to get your tickets. You got fireworks,
you got thirsty Thursday, you got nine to one to
eight weekend with the Chicken Dancers. There's so much fun
stuff happening, family fun happening at one oak Field, great food,
great beverages for anyone of all ages. Tulsa Drillers dot
(01:31:59):
Com to get your tickets. Thanks for joining us, appreciate it.
Speaker 9 (01:32:02):
Man, have a great weekend everybody.
Speaker 1 (01:32:03):
All right, Good morning Lindsay.
Speaker 6 (01:32:04):
Good morning Corbin.
Speaker 7 (01:32:05):
Happy thirty third porn star birthday to Licky Lex. You
can see this oral expert and hits like Licky Lex
testing a new desk, Poundtown and Squirtspa. She's got a
chili pepper tattooed just above her right cheek.
Speaker 2 (01:32:22):
Good morning, get Peep, Good morning, Gorbin. Hey, don't forget.
I want to be at CJ. Maloney's in Broken Arrow
tonight from five to seven. Get you qualified for see
them all twenty twenty five. So if you can't get
in on the phone with us throughout the David Mellon,
j Rod, you have an opportunity to get qualified regardless.
Just swing on by again. Ce J. Maloney's in Broken Arrow.
Speaker 1 (01:32:40):
So we're waiting for sal to join us. Salve Bcano
is going to be doing a show.
Speaker 2 (01:32:46):
Over at the theater the Brady Theater, a Tulsa Theater
this weekend, Saturday the seventeenth. Get your tickets. Tellstheater dot com,
so we'll talk to him in a few minutes. I
wanted to bring this up. Have you seen the thing
about the new TikTok trend of chromebook fires.
Speaker 1 (01:33:02):
Yes, I've heard of it, but I haven't seen it.
I heard there's a big to do about.
Speaker 2 (01:33:07):
It right now.
Speaker 6 (01:33:07):
Our school sent out a note about it.
Speaker 7 (01:33:10):
And because kids have been watching it or whatever, Marcus
showed me a video on it. I was like, that
is crazy, I said, And don't you dare He goes, Oh, no,
I wouldn't.
Speaker 1 (01:33:18):
I wouldn't.
Speaker 7 (01:33:19):
And because you know you buy insurance, it's only good
one time. If something were to happen to your computer, sure,
then you have to start over sure and pay for
any additional damages.
Speaker 6 (01:33:32):
This is ridiculous, though, And it's so easy to cause
the fires.
Speaker 2 (01:33:37):
Okay, well, hold on, I don't think this is a
real thing. I know they can catch on fire. Yeah,
I don't think kids are doing this. I'm sure there's videos.
Speaker 13 (01:33:47):
Uh huh.
Speaker 1 (01:33:48):
That hardly means kids are doing it.
Speaker 2 (01:33:50):
You could buy a come chromebook and make a video
saying you're doing it to generate a bunch of hits.
This feels a little bit like razor blades and candy. Okay, maybe.
Speaker 1 (01:34:02):
Because I can't find one story where it happened in
the school.
Speaker 2 (01:34:05):
I see plenty of administrators and fire departments all warning
against it, which is all fine, yeah, but it also
that doesn't.
Speaker 1 (01:34:12):
Make it a thing.
Speaker 6 (01:34:16):
Yeah, they're taking the lead from like mechanical pencils.
Speaker 9 (01:34:20):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:34:20):
No, you're closing a circuit. That's all you're doing.
Speaker 2 (01:34:23):
It's not a why I again, I know it can happen,
but I don't know any I'm not. I couldn't find
one story where this has happened, and it just feels
a little over alarmist. It's kind of like the tide
pods thing, right, like that was okay, but I don't
know anybody that did it. Maybe one kid did, but
(01:34:46):
it's not becoming a trend it was. Yeah, they're making
it sound like it's an epidemic, like every school is
dealing with it. Maybe they are, and if they are,
there's no news stories about it. It just feels like
a lot of Faike grage. Just because there's a TikTok
video of somebody doing something doesn't mean that's happening at
(01:35:07):
the school. Well, you know, the fun thing about TikTok videos.
Especially with AI nowadays, you don't know what's real and
what's not, So that could have been an AI generated
video of kids setting their you know, chromebooks on fire,
and now all of a sudden, everybody believes it. I think,
there is, of course a likelihood this could happen, But
(01:35:28):
to imply that all kids are completely oblivious to the
cost of things right and willing to set things on
fire in a second, it feels not trustworthy of the students, right,
Like Lindsay said to her kid and the response was like, no,
I would never. Yeah, I think most kids have that attitude.
They understand. Is there some bad actors, of course, But
(01:35:50):
I couldn't find one story where this happened.
Speaker 1 (01:35:53):
By the way, a mechanical pencil.
Speaker 2 (01:35:57):
I don't know of the less in a mechanical pencil,
I don't know how much current it can hold, right,
And I think they're graphite now. I don't think they're
lad anymore. I don't think they've been led for a
long time. So I just feel like this is a
lot of like rabble rabble these kids today type of thing.
(01:36:19):
I just had a search. Can graphite hold charge? Yes,
particularly in lithium ion batteries. So if those batteries or
those are the types of batteries that are used in
these laptops, and then okay, yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:36:31):
Yes, a potato can also hold a charge.
Speaker 2 (01:36:33):
So I'm just that's true statement. Yeah, I just do
you see what I'm saying? Like it feels a lot
of like raw when it's just a okay, yes, it's
a fair point to make the warning that this could
be a danger, but to imply that it's happening all
over the place, right remember the Hyundai thing, Oh yeah,
(01:36:55):
where they were stealing your cars. Oh yeah, like through
a USB cable or some jug I know some got stolen,
but I don't know anybody that happened to you. And
I know plenty of people that drive hun days, all right.
But yeah, so I just feel like sometimes that's the
whole point of when we do news quickies, is that
these stories and the headlines are so flashy and over
(01:37:17):
the top, and this feels like that, this feels like
it's not really happening.
Speaker 1 (01:37:24):
We're just being tried to be scared about it.
Speaker 2 (01:37:30):
The most dangerous thing about a chromebook is not them
setting on fire, right, The most dangerous thing on a chromebook?
Is the internet? Right? Hey, you gotta, you gotta, you got.
Everybody's gotta have something to get riled up over, right,
and maybe the cycle was getting a little dull, so
they're like, what's set a chromebook on fire? That'll get
(01:37:52):
them riled up. This person says, there was a kid
in my son's seventh grade do it, uh, and he
got expelled for doing it. Okay, it's not the news.
I feel like that would be in the news. Hey,
watch out, parents, this is thing. This happened at Bobby's
middle school. Right, seventh grader did it in class and
he got expelled. But I didn't see any of those stories.
(01:38:14):
How about this one. This is how you light a
cigarette in prison. Can't use a mechanical pencil. Have to
split a wooden pencil. Good to know, right, by rubbing
two sticks together, he would need fuel, right, and you're
not gonna have a lithium battery, so you got to
use the wooden pencil exactly. You take a couple of
those shavings off right, and you put that in the
middle little groove and you rub it. Rebbit rebit rebbit,
(01:38:37):
rebit rebt ubbit. I've got a spark and now I
can smoke a cigarette that somebody found on the ground
and had to smuggle it in somehow? How'd they get
it in? And they're underwear And I feel like this
is an important point too. Chromebooks aren't only susceptible to
fire at schools.
Speaker 1 (01:38:55):
Everywhere a chromebook is used as susceptible.
Speaker 2 (01:38:58):
Yeah, true statement. I would think you would see if
kids were going to do this, they would go to
places where there aren't there are for like checking in
or whatever, and do it there, right, And why is
it just chromebooks? Wouldn't it any computer or laptop be
susceptible something like this. I'm I'm not sure. I think
the chromebook has a USB support on it, and like
(01:39:18):
a tablet, an iPhone and an iPad has a USB
C ride, right, so it's a much small See what
I'm saying. I want to see this go to work.
Let's see it in action, get MythBusters going. I want
to get them putting this to the test to see
if it can happen. Is it one of those Yeah,
(01:39:39):
it can happen, You've got to really work at it.
Or is it one of those that's not really something
like that all right, Sal's joining us. Hey Sal, how
are you Sal?
Speaker 9 (01:39:54):
Are you there?
Speaker 8 (01:39:55):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:39:55):
Let's right, Sal, are you there?
Speaker 8 (01:39:58):
Yes?
Speaker 9 (01:39:58):
Sure? Hello?
Speaker 2 (01:40:00):
Are you man good?
Speaker 8 (01:40:01):
How you doing good?
Speaker 2 (01:40:02):
We're on the air.
Speaker 1 (01:40:03):
It's Corbyn, Lindsay and Gimby. Thank you so much for
joining us.
Speaker 8 (01:40:07):
Hey guys, thanks for having me.
Speaker 2 (01:40:09):
So we know you're gonna be in Tulsa on Saturday.
How you know you're doing the tour? And and uh,
I noticed something on your bio that I want to
ask you, and it's don't I don't know if it's real.
So I apologize out of the shoot cause I'm kind
of a germophobe too.
Speaker 1 (01:40:26):
Are you really a germophobe?
Speaker 9 (01:40:29):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (01:40:29):
Okay, I thought you're going to ask it because I
was not in World War Two. I thought you were
going to ask you about that one.
Speaker 2 (01:40:33):
Okay, I'm no, I gotta know we can circle back
to that.
Speaker 8 (01:40:37):
Nope, I actually did my germophobia stem from World War Two?
Speaker 2 (01:40:42):
No?
Speaker 8 (01:40:42):
Okay, So I am, I am. I you know what
it is. I get. I don't have a good immune system,
so if I get like a cold, I might have
that cold six to eight weeks easily. So I just
try to avoid it as much as possible. I need germs,
sneezing things like that, shaking hands.
Speaker 2 (01:40:58):
Yeah, what's the what's the like root of giddy like
your germophobia? Because I know for me, it's just the
I like the idea of getting as a kid and
I got dirt under my fingers and it like would
freak me out. And I swear to God I'm being honest,
is that I had dirt underneath and I would bite
my nails and I would get the dirt and I
would gritty on my teeth and it would grossed me out.
(01:41:20):
And I was like, that's gross and I became super
like hyperchondriac about washing my hands. So do you have
like that yang moment that you can remember that made
you a germophobe?
Speaker 8 (01:41:30):
I'll say your your origin story is way more disgusting.
Speaker 7 (01:41:35):
Uh.
Speaker 8 (01:41:37):
No, I didn't eat the dirt that I was already
afraid of the dirt, so I wouldn't even do that.
But no, I think it. I like, like I said,
I think, you know, my my wife makes fun of
me because someone will sneeze, Like I say, I'm on
the subway, someone will sneeze, and I literally I swear
this sounds but I know my body, and I go, well,
about three or four hours, I want to be sick,
(01:41:57):
and she's like, that's impossible. If not, how well, I said,
I don't care what you think. You know, I know
my body from the day I was born, and then
three or four hours in I have a cold. So
I just I don't know. I'm tuned into it. It
just gets sick easily. So and by the way, my
fingernails impeccable. You can't catch through a bad finger.
Speaker 2 (01:42:15):
Yeah, mine are now mine are totally impeccable. But when
I was like six, they were really gross. Goha, gimpee.
So how do you being a public figure like that
and being I don't stand. I'm sure you're meeting fans
and stuff like that. How do you combat that being
a germophobe? Are you just going around fisting people all
the time or they say, hey, I want to hug
you just avoid all that? How do you combat do
(01:42:37):
we lost her? Sorry, gimpee, we lost her thing? Go ahead, dot,
no worries. How do you combat being a germophobe and
a public figure at the same time?
Speaker 8 (01:42:44):
I do like that? How how you? Mandel told me? Well,
I do a fist BUMPU. Everybody wants to shake your hand.
I want to oblige, But if I shake that many
hands in the day, I'm going to be in the emergency.
Speaker 2 (01:42:55):
Room, right, I agree. There's been plenty of times I
go out and shake people's hands and then I pull
my handback and I'm like, you need to wash that
thing that.
Speaker 1 (01:43:03):
It just feels grimy, you know what I mean. So
I kind of get you the worst.
Speaker 8 (01:43:09):
The worst feeling in the world is to shake someone's
hand like I'm caught off guard and then it feels clammy.
Oh my god, I have to I had to do
everything in my power to not make a disgusted face
in the moment of contact.
Speaker 2 (01:43:26):
What about like people are in the meet and greet
and there like sneezing in their hand.
Speaker 8 (01:43:33):
Yeah, it's it's It's so funny because in the meet
and greets, I have like a tub, like a Costco
sized tub of it hand sanitizer, and I hit it
after every shake.
Speaker 2 (01:43:44):
I have to you should just start like put your
face on it and just like sell those out, you
know in the merchant area. I was on a train
one time in Italy and there was a lady sneezing
like crazy and doing a bunch of essential oils at
the same time, and I was just so freaked out,
and I was waiting for like a goat to go
down the middle of the train aisle. We're talking about
(01:44:07):
Sava Counter. He's going to be at the Tulsa Theater
on Saturday. Get your tickets Tulsa Theater dot com. Everybody
knows your history with Impractical Jokers and stuff, and I
don't want to go through all of that, you know,
rehash all the history of that. But I did want
to ask you because we do some stuff, not close
to what you guys do, but we do some stuff
and sometimes we go, ah, that's a hard no. Did
(01:44:28):
you have anything when you did the show that you
were like, hard, no, there's no way we're doing this.
Speaker 8 (01:44:35):
Well, I mean, things get sprung upon us. And I
think that's why we realized early that we should be
able to be allowed to say no and then that
would be of consequence in the show. But like, cause
you know, you can't vet everything, so I say no
the most, so I get punished the most. But the
catch is that you can't say no to the punishment.
So that's been like a point of major stress and
(01:44:56):
contention for me for the last fourteen years. You know,
you know, going into it, Yeah, going into it, you
don't know, like I tay you more than half the time.
It's a surprise, and then you're not allowed to deny it.
So it's it's it's tough. It's tough, especially I got
thicker skin over the years. But there's still that variable,
(01:45:16):
like it could be something like I w't won't give
anything away. But we're filming season twelve right now. And
the other day I was being punished. I didn't know
where I was. They made me walk out on stage
and I was at a vaudeville kind of freak show
and I was the sword swallower and and there was
like a whole crowd. I was on stage, and then
there was just like a whole array of like I
(01:45:37):
had to try to swallow a katana sword and you know,
I can't. I don't want to love a secret, but
I can't swallow a katana saur. You see, I almost
I almost sliced my uvula clean off. So that you know,
you get scared. You know, the things still happen.
Speaker 2 (01:45:58):
Hey listen, I hear uh eagles on with me in
my ear and they're telling me that you have violated
the the the NDA on the show by giving away
you don't swallow a sword. I feels like that's a
pretty yeah. Uh, we know that because of the show.
When we would do stunts and stuff, we it was
(01:46:18):
a giant point of contention. I mean almost where you
started having contempt because people you felt like someone was
coming up with something just to get your goat, Like
did that happen with you guys?
Speaker 8 (01:46:29):
Oh my god, you're discarding my daily life.
Speaker 2 (01:46:34):
It makes you create right to the office, it makes
you crazy, does it.
Speaker 8 (01:46:37):
Does make you? Yeah, paranoid, Like I'll walk into the office.
You can always tell when something's going on because we
have an office, like our whole crew is like fifty
sixty people and you walk into the office and the
whole vibe is a little weird, and you know people
are keeping something from you and this is like this
is something that's like I've now become accustomed to and
a lot of people like they say, and it is.
It is a fun We have fun. It is like
(01:46:57):
the funnest job in the world. But it is very
very it's also not fun, you know, Yes, stressle, It
can be stressle.
Speaker 1 (01:47:07):
Yes, we ultimately had to be like, okay, no guns,
like no weapons, catch a.
Speaker 2 (01:47:11):
Bullet with your teeth. We didn't want to go through
through anything like that. And the other thing that happens
too with people that do the type of things that
you guys do in entertainment is there always tends to
be somebody. And I think we're seeing this play out
with some other shows now as they the people have
gotten much older. Is they developed some sort of dependency
issue or they some other coping mechanism to deal with
(01:47:34):
this stress and anxiety? But we haven't seen. I mean,
you're you're you're forty eight, right like you're not You're
not twenty doing this anymore. So what is the way
you cope with all the anxiety and stress of doing
the stunts and coming up with them and everything.
Speaker 8 (01:47:51):
Oh I got that answer for you right away. My
daughter and marijuana.
Speaker 2 (01:47:56):
Yeah, not necessarily, not necessarily in that order either that's good?
Speaker 9 (01:48:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:48:04):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:48:04):
Are you a flower guy or an edible guy or
a concentrate?
Speaker 2 (01:48:07):
What is your thing?
Speaker 8 (01:48:09):
It depends on where I am at the moment, you
know what I mean? But uh, you know, nothing's better
than than than doing it the original way, I think.
But but you know, if I'm traveling, you know little
edible never heard anybody did it. I don't know did it.
Speaker 2 (01:48:23):
I've had to hold onto the earth before off of edible.
So yeah, yeah, I've definitely had edibles and people thought
I had a mental disorder. Do you have a go
to like what's your what's an edible? You typically gravitate towards.
Speaker 8 (01:48:41):
Uh, yeah, I mean that's just you know, just a
gummy or something like that, just something easy, you know,
just I could kind of take it with me and Papa,
you know whatever. I mean, I do it like try
to fall. See I see a lot of red eye flight,
so that's when I usually do that. But uh, you know,
I looked. But we've all been there with the like
taken too much on an edible, So I make try,
you know, I say, you can always add you know
(01:49:03):
what I mean. It's like putting salt on a dish.
Speaker 2 (01:49:05):
I started, you can't take it away. Yeah that's right,
but the prom is you take a bite. You know,
you're eating too much salt or not enough and edible
it takes forty five minutes before you're like, nah, I
haven't felt it, And sure as you take the second bite,
you're like, damn it, it's too salty. Now.
Speaker 8 (01:49:25):
No, absolutely, that always a timing is always something that
comes back to bite me, like the other like not
too long, always traveling. And I took it too soon
before my flight. It was a red eye flight, but
I was, I was, and it was a bit too much.
And I as I approached security, I was pretty high,
and I think they could tell, and it was it's
not a good feeling. You feel very paranoid.
Speaker 2 (01:49:47):
Yeah, for sure. I tried to sneak edibles into Mexico
and didn't tell my wife, and we were in line
and the dogs started sniffing our luggage and they grabbed
the people in front of us because I was pushing
the luggage in front of me, but they and I
told my wife. I was so scared.
Speaker 1 (01:50:05):
She was so mad at me. So yeah, I can
relate to that feeling for sure.
Speaker 2 (01:50:10):
And maybe I may not.
Speaker 8 (01:50:11):
I may not make the show Saturday night because I
feel like I'm gonna get arrested at your airport, bus
out on the street.
Speaker 2 (01:50:17):
No, well, you probably need to be worried about is
people come to the meet and greet and hand in
you some because that definitely happens.
Speaker 8 (01:50:24):
Oh that that happens too, and I got it. There's
no way I'm taking that unless it seal. It sealed,
find no problem.
Speaker 2 (01:50:30):
Yeah, So as long as somebody owns a sealer at home,
they can just self seal and bring it. I've seen
that on TikTok. Hey, everybody go see sal at the
Tulsa Theater this Saturday. Get your tickets Tulsa Theater dot com.
And hey, I had more questions to you about the
show and stuff like that, but we've run out of time.
Thank you so much.
Speaker 7 (01:50:47):
Man.
Speaker 2 (01:50:47):
We've enjoyed your show and we know it's made a
lot of people laugh. And uh, it's just cool to
be able to talk to youm We're glad you're coming
to Tulsa on Saturday.
Speaker 8 (01:50:56):
That's so nice. I appreciate you guys so much. Thank
you for taking the time to talk to me.
Speaker 1 (01:51:00):
All Right, man, have a gret day, so I'll see
you later, dude, Thank god.
Speaker 2 (01:51:03):
All right, we're gonna take a break and we'll be back.
Speaker 10 (01:51:05):
Tulsa's Morning Show's coming right back to the Big Mad
Morning Show, Tulsa's.
Speaker 9 (01:51:09):
Rock station.
Speaker 1 (01:51:13):
And what we always like to do top list.
Speaker 11 (01:51:15):
At this time, it's hyper a big mad Morning Show's
top list, random topics, randomly drawn with random results.
Speaker 2 (01:51:23):
Now here's Corbyn, Kimpan and Lindsay with this week's top list.
We're doing it a little late because of the salad interview,
but that's okay. We're gonna get it in. This week
has not even gone to plan, so it should not
be a giant shock that this isn't gonna go this way,
all right, And so our top list is talking animal movies.
I wanted some clarification though, because are these talking animated movies,
(01:51:44):
talking real animal movies or all all of the above? Okay, yeah, okay,
thank goodness, yeah, because I was like, ah, I mean,
I don't typically Paddington really when it comes to real
animals talking those, that's a very shallow by it. Okay,
so we blind it open with animated Okay, all right,
(01:52:05):
So top talking animal movies. What do you got for
number five? Lindsay?
Speaker 7 (01:52:10):
Okay, number five is The Lion King. It's one of
my favorite animated Disney movies. And it was kind of
tough because I wanted to put Finding Nemo on there too,
but I thought, you know what, Lion King just for me.
It came before Finding Nemo, and they haven't made a
Broadway show of Finding Nemo yet. And I've seen The
(01:52:32):
Line King, the Broadway production of it twice, not in
New York City, but regardless, it's super good and one
of my faves.
Speaker 2 (01:52:43):
Surprise that said number five. Then, since you've seen the
Broadway play twice and you like it so much.
Speaker 6 (01:52:48):
Yeah, but I feel like.
Speaker 7 (01:52:52):
The live action films, and I didn't see I actually
did not see the live action film of Lion King,
but the live action in talking animal movies, I thought,
maybe that was the direction you wanted to go.
Speaker 6 (01:53:04):
I wasn't sure, but so I kept them further back
on the list.
Speaker 2 (01:53:09):
Now, I've never seen Linking. Really, I've seen bits and pieces,
but I've never watched it from beginning to end. It's
all right if you were a child, you'd probably love it.
As an adult.
Speaker 1 (01:53:19):
I tried to get my kids to watch it and
watch it with and.
Speaker 7 (01:53:21):
Then really, the soundtrack alone is good. Yeah, I love
the soundtrack and the kids. My kids liked The Lion King.
They were not a fan of the Little Mermaid. When
I sat them down and made them watch that one,
like mom, what Yeah?
Speaker 6 (01:53:37):
But anyway.
Speaker 7 (01:53:38):
Number four on my list is an American tale fivele Yes.
One of the very first films I saw in a
movie theater, and and it could just be that for
that reason, like that, you know that that memory for me.
But it was a really great expres experience, and whenever
(01:54:01):
it would come on, I would sit down and watch
it again.
Speaker 6 (01:54:04):
I liked the music from it.
Speaker 7 (01:54:06):
I remember watching my parents dance to the love song
from that movie, and I it brought back good memories.
Speaker 1 (01:54:17):
And trying to remember the love song that's in it.
Speaker 2 (01:54:19):
There were sing yeah, yeah, I liked it as on
the air. Ain't that the truth? We might get in
trouble just for singing it.
Speaker 6 (01:54:33):
Number three for me is look who's talking now?
Speaker 2 (01:54:39):
Is that a talking animal movie?
Speaker 1 (01:54:41):
That's a talking baby movie? It was, yes. And then
in the third one, oh god, there's three of them.
Speaker 7 (01:54:47):
They got pets, they got dogs, and the dogs talked
to one another you can do the baby bit, and
the voices of the dogs were Bruce Willis and Diane Keaton.
Speaker 2 (01:54:58):
Oh god, I know there was third.
Speaker 1 (01:55:00):
I know about the two of them, yeah, but a
third goh what a third?
Speaker 6 (01:55:05):
John Travolta brings home a dog.
Speaker 1 (01:55:07):
For the way, it's not even the real people that
were in the first two.
Speaker 6 (01:55:13):
Yeah, it's still John Travolta, and its still Christy Alley.
Speaker 1 (01:55:16):
Right, it's just a voice of the pet, isn't Ted Dan?
Speaker 2 (01:55:18):
I thought, confused? Yeah, baby movies, we'll save that for
the next list.
Speaker 7 (01:55:26):
John Travolta brings home like this scruffy dog who is
voiced by Bruce Willis. And then because their kids want dogs,
they want a pet dog, and so then so then
Chrissy Alley's character also brings home a dog, and it's
this poodle played by Diane Keaton.
Speaker 6 (01:55:45):
And now both kids are.
Speaker 7 (01:55:46):
In love with the dogs, and they're like, well, now
we have two dogs, and they end up having to
keep them, and then the dogs end up falling in love.
Speaker 2 (01:55:52):
I have a movie rule.
Speaker 1 (01:55:53):
In a movie with Charles Barkley not a good movie.
Speaker 2 (01:55:55):
Does that have Charles Barkley in it?
Speaker 6 (01:55:59):
I remember him that.
Speaker 1 (01:56:00):
I don't remember him doing any movies.
Speaker 2 (01:56:02):
He might be in.
Speaker 7 (01:56:06):
What was that North three Number two? Doctor Doolittle. And
you could choose either Eddie Murphy or Robert.
Speaker 2 (01:56:14):
Downe on this because they are very different movies.
Speaker 7 (01:56:17):
Very different, but I did enjoy them both. I probably
liked the Eddie Murphy version better.
Speaker 2 (01:56:24):
It's funnier.
Speaker 6 (01:56:24):
Yeah, I think it was funnier.
Speaker 1 (01:56:26):
I think the Downey Junior one is more close to
the book.
Speaker 6 (01:56:31):
Yes, yes, And then the number one on my list.
Speaker 7 (01:56:37):
And this again a movie I grew up with, and
this is I'm going with the original, even though the
remake was good as well. But the Witches, and that
was with Angelica Houston and she was the head witch
and they would turn children into mice.
Speaker 6 (01:56:53):
Okay, and this oh really okay, So these children they
were at early recent movie.
Speaker 2 (01:57:00):
Well, the remake is okay, there's two okay, twenty eighteen
that that's the house the clock walls.
Speaker 1 (01:57:08):
Okay, I keep going. The original I believe was nineteen ninety.
Speaker 7 (01:57:13):
Yes, yes, So Angelica Houston plays this headwitch and they
go to this hotel, fancy hotel, and they can't stand children.
Speaker 6 (01:57:24):
They will eat children and some of those gals.
Speaker 7 (01:57:27):
Yeah, and they're act and they turn into cats, these witches,
and they turn children into mice.
Speaker 1 (01:57:34):
Mister Bean's in it.
Speaker 6 (01:57:35):
Yeah, mister Bean is in the original, All the.
Speaker 2 (01:57:37):
More reason for me to watch it.
Speaker 6 (01:57:39):
Then, Yeah, it's great.
Speaker 2 (01:57:40):
In the mice.
Speaker 6 (01:57:42):
The mice talk and it's cute. I loved that one
growing up as a kid.
Speaker 2 (01:57:46):
It feels very obscure.
Speaker 1 (01:57:49):
It was, it was, and it came in a number
one over the Lion King.
Speaker 2 (01:57:53):
Yeah, yeah, over the five o one with America's huge
memory in your life even look who's talking. What makes
it supersede those two pivotal ones that you argued are
have huge parts in your life.
Speaker 6 (01:58:09):
I shaped you because it.
Speaker 7 (01:58:10):
Was just another one of those. If it's on, I'm
watching it and again, and I remember watching that one.
I think my dad introduced me to that, But like,
this looks like a good one. Let's rent this one
and watch it.
Speaker 1 (01:58:20):
And then yeah there is Yeah, it's got the dad memory.
Speaker 6 (01:58:24):
Absolutely.
Speaker 2 (01:58:26):
All right, we're doing our top list talking animal movies.
You can text yours to us bmms and whatever that
is to eight, two, nine, four five, give me what's yours?
All right? Coming in at number five for me is Homeward.
It's one of my I watched it as a kid,
I'll watch it nowadays and there's just something about it,
you know, it's it's what is it like two dogs
(01:58:48):
and a cat go Because the family's moving and then
they can. Of course, they're stupid animals and they don't
know and and they're trying to catch up with the
family or whatever. And it's just a good wholesome movie.
And I think Michael J. Fox plays the part of
was it the pit bull or something like that? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
he was because he was the rowdy teenager dog or whatever.
(01:59:10):
And then you had the Golden Retriever with the was
the old man with the sage advice and then some
prissy ass cat or whatever. Yeah, so that number five
for me. Number four is a relatively newer one and
it's called Strays. Yeah, that movie is hilarious. It's got
(01:59:30):
Jamie Fox in it. And I think he's the main character.
Uh you know, he's one of the characters in there.
Will Ferrell's in it. I think Will Forte is in it.
He's the owner of the the main dog, you know,
the scraggly old mutt, and he treats that dog like
garbage or whatever, and the dog just wants to be loved.
So he ends up kicking the dog out and that's
(01:59:51):
how he becomes a stray and he runs. It's got
a it's got a great Dane in there, you know,
a couple other different animals. And at one point in
time in the movie, they're they're going through the forests
and they started eating shrooms that they found on the
forest floor, right, and they don't know that it's mushrooms
until they start tripping or whatever. They're like warre gor
and they like go into this log and they're like, ooh,
(02:00:13):
toys and uh so they get the toys and they
start playing with the toys. You know how dogs are
with toys, are rough with them, and they're ripping at
the shreds. And when they finally come down off of
their mushroom trip, and it wasn't toys that were in
the log, it was actual bunnies and they had slaughtered
an entire family of bunnies.
Speaker 7 (02:00:32):
We had when that movie came out. We were when
it came out on television, when we can watch it
on TV. We were at a patio party. So I
was working and Kevin was home with the boys and
they did a family movie night and I came home
and I.
Speaker 6 (02:00:46):
Said, what did you guys do?
Speaker 7 (02:00:47):
Like, oh, we watched the new uh animated or not
animated but talking animal movie Strays. I'm like, you watch
strays with the kids.
Speaker 2 (02:00:55):
Yeah, he was like, yeah, I didn't know. Is it
not supposed to be four kids?
Speaker 6 (02:01:02):
It's full of adult content, Yeah it is.
Speaker 2 (02:01:04):
It's not quite Sausage party ar. Yeah, it's it's pretty rough,
it's pretty brutal. But I'd watch it with my kids,
you know, I guess, depending on how all they are.
But I mean, my kids sit down and watch platoons,
So what does that mean to you? How were they
when you made and watch Paton nine?
Speaker 8 (02:01:20):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (02:01:20):
Eight nine, something like that. But any anyhow, Number three
is one that you probably wouldn't expect to be a
talking animal movie, but it totally is. And it's Planet
of the Apes. Oh yeah, Planet of the Apes. I
love the newer series. The older movies not so much.
Was a Charlton Heston, get your damn dirty hands off
me with your ape whatever. But the new ones, the
(02:01:44):
new ones, I thought, I think they're amazing. It's a
great series to sit and watch. And that's what got
me into it. I watched the first one, I was like, oh,
that is cool, and then so I had to go
and watch all of them after that. Planet of the
Apes comes in at number three.
Speaker 1 (02:01:58):
Number two for me is Doctor Doolittle two.
Speaker 2 (02:02:04):
Why over one because I quote lines from Doctor Dolittle too,
not so much Doctor Dolittle one. Now this is of
course the Eddie Murphy version of it or whatever. The
first one's fine or whatever. But again the with the
with the movie, when the beaver offers you a fish,
you take the fish. If you've ever heard me say that,
which I'm sure you have, that's where I got it from.
(02:02:25):
And it's you know, it's the whole mafia thing in
the woods, and you know, you got the beaver who
is in charge of everything. And the beaver tries to
offer Eddie Murphy's character a fish, you know, Doctor Doolittle,
a fish, as you know, Hey, this is a token
of my appreciation.
Speaker 1 (02:02:39):
To and he's like, I'm good, I'm good, I'm good.
Speaker 2 (02:02:42):
One of the other animals like, hey, when the beaver
offers you a fish, you take the fish.
Speaker 1 (02:02:46):
Those are words to live by.
Speaker 2 (02:02:48):
Man. The beaver could be anything, and the fish could
be anythings. But when somebody offers you something, you take it.
Speaker 6 (02:02:54):
And that was the one where they find out his daughter.
Speaker 2 (02:02:56):
Has got right exactly exactly, you know, kind of goes
through she knows she has, but she doesn't tell anybody
about it until way later on because she thinks it's weird.
Speaker 1 (02:03:05):
And was that Raven? I believe Raven Simone.
Speaker 2 (02:03:08):
Whatever's in that one? Yeah, yeah, and the number one
for me, All Dogs Go to Heaven. I loved that
movie since it came out in the nineties. I have
it on my tv R, so I can watch it
anytime that I want to.
Speaker 1 (02:03:22):
Not so much. All Dogs Go to Heaven too, but
it has to be the first one. Man, it is Cranchy.
Now that's the Simpsons whatever it is she and Charlie b. Barkin.
Speaker 2 (02:03:32):
If you remember My old Dog that hung himself, That's
where I got the name from Burt Reynolds. It's got
dom Delauise and it as well. It's got who was
that gal that Bert was married to, that hot blonde
Lonnie Anderson in it as well. Yeah. A lot of
lot of big names in that movie. And it's just
(02:03:53):
always been my favorite talking animal movie. All Right, we're
doing top List and this week it is Talking Animal
Movies BMMS and whatever yours is to eight two, nine,
four five.
Speaker 1 (02:04:03):
I started up with an honorary one and that is up.
Speaker 2 (02:04:07):
Okay, thats okay. I don't think I've ever seen that
moviefor to be honest with you, I know it's about
an old man and he has a relationship with a
little boy.
Speaker 1 (02:04:17):
Yes, but there is more context to it.
Speaker 2 (02:04:20):
They're trying to take his house and he puts these
balloons on his house and moves his house, and they
go to this place where these dogs are, and the
dogs can talk because they have little boxes on them.
You've seen the commercial or squirrel Okay, not really talking,
but they do talk. So that's my honorable mention. But
I'm putting at number five. Number four Charlotte's Web, great book,
(02:04:40):
great story, young Dakota Fanning, Julia Roberts as Charlotte. Great
great movie, classic classic. Number three Shrek, Donkey, Donkey, Come
on now the Donkey. Every animal talks in that movie.
Great scene when and what is it in two when
(02:05:01):
the woman's trying to turn in the turn in the
donkey and he won't.
Speaker 1 (02:05:05):
Talk and then she gets yeah, Puss in boots.
Speaker 2 (02:05:09):
That's also a movie.
Speaker 1 (02:05:10):
Yes, well, yeah, that's where he came from.
Speaker 2 (02:05:12):
Yeah yeah.
Speaker 8 (02:05:13):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:05:14):
Number two Uh, the two and one are easily the
best kids movies animal talking movies of all time, I think,
and number two is Zootopia. This is where the animals
live amongst each other in metropolitan cities. And a young
rabbit tries to be a police officer, and everybody knows
rabbits camping police officers, and who do they Who does
she team up with to solve a murder? The fox
(02:05:36):
of course, the nemesis, yes, and uh, the whole thing.
You're not supposed to trust foxes, and foxes are sly.
And there's a famous scene with the slosk and they
work at the DMV. And that's a great movie. It's
a great movie. And then number one star studying cast.
I love the soundtrack. I think this is a great movie.
They've done a sequel, the rumors they're going to do
a third. Matthew McConaughey and that is the movie scene.
(02:06:00):
I love that movie. Great songs, great character building, it's
got suspense.
Speaker 1 (02:06:07):
It's just a great movie.
Speaker 7 (02:06:09):
I was a little disappointed in the first one, only
because I felt like they didn't sing enough, Like the
songs weren't long enough.
Speaker 6 (02:06:16):
I felt like they weren't they were too short.
Speaker 1 (02:06:18):
The songs were too I think there's like twenty songs
in it, right, But they didn't they.
Speaker 2 (02:06:22):
Didn't all right exactly.
Speaker 6 (02:06:24):
It was too Yeah.
Speaker 7 (02:06:25):
I felt like, what did they only use a small
portion of the song because.
Speaker 2 (02:06:30):
To save money? Maybe they get in trouble if they
used the entire exactly.
Speaker 7 (02:06:33):
But then in the second one, I felt like they
extended the length and they used even better music.
Speaker 6 (02:06:39):
It was awesome.
Speaker 2 (02:06:40):
Complist talking animal movies, BMMS and whatever yours is to
eight two nine four five, We'll be back.
Speaker 10 (02:06:47):
You're listening to the Big Mad Morning Show.
Speaker 2 (02:06:49):
This is Tulsa's Morning Show ninety seven KMOD Good morning.
Speaker 1 (02:06:54):
It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Till free A three
three four six oh K m O D.
Speaker 2 (02:06:59):
You can also text BMMS and then what you want
to say to eight two nine four five makes You're
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Speaker 1 (02:07:24):
Lindsey, what'd you learn today?
Speaker 6 (02:07:26):
I learned for just thirty cents a day. You can
have clean dishes. Don't neglect your kitchen, run your dishwasher.
I also learned that Pete Rose was removed from the
Baseball's permanently ineligible list. It's just too bad that Baseball
waited until he was permanently ineligible to care.
Speaker 2 (02:07:49):
Kim B what you learned today? I learned how we'd
treat our history like I can't treat its turns just
bury it. Also learned I want to be at CJ.
Maloney's nine from five to seven, getting you qualified for
see them all twenty five. I learned the guy that
got in trouble at home depot as he was leaving
the they were arresting him, he did say it is
a tool shed. And I also learned that Sunset Sasquatch
(02:08:13):
was noticeably absent from Gimpy's list. But they did talk
in that at all, Well, they did in their own way.
Speaker 1 (02:08:22):
O Corbyn saying make sure that dishwasher is loaded right.
Speaker 6 (02:08:25):
It's Lindsay stub tracking my cycle.
Speaker 2 (02:08:27):
This is gimpy and I'm sorry