Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
She gets stuck on
repeat.
It's like let me see, you know.
The roulette in her mind landson the talking point, and then
it's like just repeat that.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
What's the unburdened
line?
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Yeah, she's
unburdened by what has been.
I mean, it's just it's alwaysthat though, that she only has a
few things that she can drawfrom, and it's not a deep well,
and I worry about that.
Speaker 4 (00:19):
I get you know Whoopi
Goldberg and all these other
numb nuts that can't stand Trump.
I get it.
But the one that baffles me isMark Cuban.
I don't get that.
What's his beef with Trump?
He's a smart guy, I thought.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
But I feel much
better about 2024 than I did
2016, even, I think we were allshocked at 2016.
I was shocked, I was alreadykind of ready to accept that
Hillary was going to be ourpresident.
And then the victory.
And Donald Trump, I think, wasalso stunned.
Speaker 3 (00:51):
The Try that in a
Small Town podcast begins now.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
All right, everybody,
Welcome back to another episode
of Try that in a Small TownPodcast we got some of the
usuals.
Tk, Neil, or do I call youThrash?
Speaker 3 (01:11):
Thrash TK goes by.
Thrash now K-Lo.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
Yeah, and we do have
a very special guest with us
today.
She is a Fox News contributor.
She is the host of Tommy Lahren.
Is Fearless, let's go.
Tommy Lahren and the.
Speaker 5 (01:24):
House.
Thank you, thank you.
Host of tommy larin is fearless.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
let's go tommy,
you're so thankful you're here
speaking of small towns, I don'tknow where y'all are from, but
I probably come from thesmallest, at least, state of the
group small.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
Uh, I might get in
that conversation yeah, neil and
I were just there.
Speaker 3 (01:47):
We went on the
governor's hunt with Governor
Noem, which you-.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Were you careful yeah
.
Speaker 4 (01:54):
There's a few Tim
Waltz hunters out there that use
their shotgun.
Speaker 3 (01:57):
We had a big line,
like if it's with the governor.
Your line is huge, like you'relike this far apart.
You're like, oh man, I reallygotta be ready, right and uh,
but I shot my first bird, youdid, you know?
Speaker 1 (02:10):
I've been there four
years, three years, really four
years, and shot my first birdyour first pheasant yeah, yeah
so in the eastern part of southdakota you pretty much hit
pheasant when you drive down thehighway so it's not, I mean
it's not
Speaker 4 (02:22):
a horror thing I
agree.
He just killed his family.
I know he was feeling like sucha dude, so you know, let's.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
Let's start with this
.
Uh, you're on the try that in asmall town podcast.
Did you know of, or had youheard of, jason aldean before
the song try that the small towncame out?
Speaker 1 (02:40):
well, come on no I
mean that would be wild not to
hear, even if you're not acountry music fan.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
I would hope
everybody well, it would be
familiar.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
But yes, absolutely,
absolutely.
And you know, britney and I areinstagram friends.
We we share, you know,like-minded feelings and ideals
you do so I have not met her inperson, but we communicate on
the gram, of course, andobviously you showed my support
numerous times the marin morrisattacks, the insurrection
barbies, and then the try thatin the small town smears.
(03:09):
So I'm I'm friends with theentire family by proxy of
instagram well, and that's good.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
As writers of the
song, we appreciate you sticking
up.
Speaker 5 (03:19):
For us, that was
amazing absolutely.
Speaker 3 (03:21):
Thank you, tommy,
going to bat for us.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
It's silly to me that
it was so controversial.
To see the controversy of it,but we live in a time where
people are outraged or theypretend to be outraged at about
everything, but I think sincethat came out, so many worse
things have happened on behalfof the left that it's like this
and also the song has come trueover and over and over again.
(03:43):
So I don't understand thecontroversy, but I was happy to
be an early supporter.
I think that would just be ano-brainer for me.
We appreciate it, yes and afantastic song, just anyway, oh
thank you sincerely.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
We appreciate it,
because it was a time when there
wasn't a lot of support.
Uh, there wasn't the song did.
Well, the song ended up doingwell, but you know, it was just
kind of doing its own thing, itwas kind of minding its own
business.
The video came out, of course.
Emt took it off the air, andthen that's when everybody
started going with it, andGovernor Noem was a big
(04:15):
supporter of ours too, so weappreciated that.
Speaker 3 (04:18):
But you interned
right, I did intern for Chrissy
Noem.
How was that?
Speaker 1 (04:22):
Well, you know, I was
my first year of college.
I was still in college, I was afreshman, so I was her very
first intern.
So yeah, it was a goodexperience.
I'd much rather be on the mediaside than working for or with
politicians.
I will just put it that way.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
Yeah, did you see the
underbelly?
Speaker 1 (04:37):
I just saw that that
really wasn't the world for me.
I'd rather talk about it thando it, and you know I give
credit to people that want to bein politics.
They want to run for something.
It doesn't seem like a lot offun to me just being around it.
Donald Trump makes it look fun.
Speaker 3 (04:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:53):
And he's probably one
of the only people that has fun
with it, but everybody elsejust seems stressed out all the
time.
Speaker 3 (04:56):
It's not for me.
Yeah, that's fair.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
They go great, really
quick presidents.
They get in there instantlygreat, within like a month,
completely great.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Look what happened to
Joe Biden?
Speaker 3 (05:11):
The decline was
already declining.
There's no decline,everything's fine, he can run.
Speaker 5 (05:20):
Sorry to interrupt.
I am going to miss the run thegallop.
He tries to be like I'm in tointerrupt.
No, go ahead.
I am going to miss the run thegallop.
He's not.
So he tries to be like I'm inshape.
Look at me.
Yeah, with that little run.
Speaker 3 (05:31):
He does.
I'm going to miss that.
He's so in shape.
Speaker 4 (05:32):
I will miss that.
I will miss talking about Joe,I think because we have Kamala
now.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
We all miss Joe.
Speaker 4 (05:39):
Oh, for sure.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
I think, fondly upon
Joe when, I see Kamala, because
I look at Joe and I see hismoments and his seen on moments
and I think this is bad.
Speaker 5 (05:47):
But he has an excuse,
he does, he has no excuse, she
cannot claim the same cognitivefailings or the age.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
She just cannot.
It's just.
This is her, it's all her.
Speaker 5 (05:58):
Tim Walt's had a
moment this last week.
He has a lot of which one.
Yeah, playing Madden.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
Oh yes, last week he
has a lot, of which one yeah
playing madden, oh yes it's so.
Speaker 5 (06:09):
Can you run the pick
six?
We're gonna run the pick six.
Adam, you should run a pick six.
Speaker 2 (06:11):
I'm like yeah, I'm
like wow, whatever he said, you
know, it's a fourth quarter.
We're gonna take it one inch ata time.
Speaker 5 (06:16):
Yes you mean yard.
Okay, so did you it's veryconfusing panic mode.
What football did you coach?
Okay, let's, let's get to this.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
We're recording we're
recording this on a wednesday,
the election is next tuesdaythis comes out monday, so we'll
have a day.
By the way, if you're watchingthis on monday, go out and vote.
Very important.
So tuesday is the election.
I got a question at midnight.
Tuesday night will we have aprojected winner?
Speaker 1 (06:47):
I would certainly
hope so.
There's no excuse not to.
However, I could see thisrunning into Wednesday.
I would hope it doesn't go muchfurther than that, but I could
see it running into Wednesday instates that are close.
But the way it's looking now,trump could do so well that it
is so big a victory, like it wasin 2016, where there's just no
(07:08):
dispute.
I don't think it's going to bethat way, just because of the
way things work now and the waythings come in late and whatever
they got to do.
But I'm very hopeful thattuesday night we will know,
because there's no excuse not towe gotta know right, we're
gonna.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
Our producer, jim,
says no way.
He says it's out.
Speaker 4 (07:24):
But see, I'm
predicting what they're saying.
I'm saying it's not going to beclose.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
Too big to read, just
from what I've witnessed.
Speaker 4 (07:30):
It can't be close.
Speaker 3 (07:31):
Well, you hope so,
but you feel like there's
lawsuits in the night, Like, oh,he's winning and it's like no,
there's lawsuits.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
And then, how long
does it take?
Speaker 3 (07:46):
for the president to
take the mail to come in, and
different things like that,which is a stressor.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
It is, you know, but
I feel much better about 2024
than I did 2016 even, I think wewere all shocked at 2016.
I was shocked I was already.
Yeah, I was already kind ofready to accept that hillary was
going to be our president.
And then the victory.
And donald trump, I think, wasalso stunned.
I actually talked to to SeanSpicer, his first press
secretary.
I had him on my show, myoutkick show, today and Sean was
(08:10):
saying they thought that theywere going to lose so much so
that they were kind of like in asmall room in Trump tower.
They didn't hire an officialphotographer, they had a cash
bar at the Hilton.
Speaker 5 (08:21):
Midtown.
They didn't even pay for, youknow, cash bar at the Hilton
Midtown.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
They didn't even pay
for, you know to have a free bar
, an open bar and he was goingaround with his iPhone taking
photos to commemorate themoments, because they just
didn't think they were going towin.
And then, when he won by themargin that he won it was
incredible and it was such agreat time.
We're hoping that it looks likethat, because 2020 was weird.
People were scared of COVID.
Still, people were still upsetthat Trump wasn't locking us
(08:46):
down and keeping us in masks andpeople went into hysterics over
that.
So I think that that largelycontributed to it.
And then you had peopleRepublicans didn't want to early
vote.
Then they didn't want tomail-in vote, which I understand
, but we had a few years torealize that we had to do
something and we have to playthe game, and the early vote
numbers are looking very goodfor Republicans.
Speaker 3 (09:03):
So you know you're
always going to lose a game you
don't play.
Speaker 1 (09:06):
It's encouraging.
I like what we're seeing now,but we cannot get too confident.
I'm a little superstitious.
Speaker 5 (09:12):
We have to just Well,
the people that in the swing
states you know, inflation hascrushed them I think the people
that are going to go out andvote are those people.
We're going to see that we'regoing to feel that these people
have felt the pinch and I thinkthey're going to get out and do
(09:32):
it and vote.
I think they're coming out.
I think the swing states, likePennsylvania, I think it's going
to these people have reallysuffered.
Yeah, and the left, they're notaccounting for that.
The people that actually feltit, yeah, you know.
And the left, they're notaccounting for that.
The people that actually feltit, you know.
So I feel good today.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
You feel good, this
is yeah, because usually I have
it.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
A couple of weeks ago
I was not feeling so good.
A couple of weeks ago it wasn'tfeeling great yeah we were all.
Speaker 5 (09:59):
We were all.
I feel way better now.
Speaker 4 (10:01):
I just can't believe
there's that many people out
there I still can't that halfthe country is for all of the
illegal immigration that'shappened, and I just can't
believe there's that many peoplethat are for, you know, drag
shows in front of children andall these things that they're
okay with Neil?
Speaker 2 (10:22):
I don't know if they
are.
I still think most of thosepeople are just Trump bad people
.
I just think they're Trump, badpeople.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Yeah, I don't know if
there are many people out there
who are voting for Kamala forthe sake of Kamala.
I think the people that willvote for Kamala is because they
hate Donald Trump and they haveit in their mind that they hate
Donald Trump and they arewilling to cast a vote against
their own interests and theinterests of their friends and
neighbors rather than vote forDonald Trump because it's a head
thing for them now.
Speaker 5 (10:48):
It's like they just
will not do it.
There needs to be a study doneon that.
I'm convinced you hate Trumpenough to affect your own family
your own grandkids your ownchildren.
Speaker 3 (10:58):
That's what gets me.
Speaker 5 (11:00):
You let the media—
Okay if you don't like someone,
that's fine, whatever.
But you let the media.
Okay, if you don't like someone, that's fine, whatever.
But you're voting, like youjust said, against your own best
interest.
Yeah, because the media saysTrump bad.
Actually, there needs to be astudy done on it on how that can
be.
Yeah, what is that seed that'splanted?
Speaker 1 (11:22):
Well, it's emotional.
There are people that vote juststrictly based on emotion and
they'll always vote based onemotion, and I would argue there
are republicans that vote basedon emotion as well.
I mean people that are outthere.
They're single issue voters,they're very religious, they're
going to vote for that one issueand it's an emotional
attachment.
It also happens to be that thepolicies are in our favor, but I
get the emotional voter.
I think this year might bedifferent, though I because I
(11:42):
think that, as much as you mighthave emotions, that's a luxury
now.
It's a luxury to to beemotional and to vote
emotionally, because if youcan't afford your groceries and
you can't afford your mortgageand you can't afford to take a
family vacation a lot offamilies they can't do anything
extra and I don't know if theyhave the luxury or the privilege
of voting based on theiremotions and not liking donald
(12:03):
trump, and they might outwardlysay it.
But that's why I think thepolls right now, the fact that
they're this close, there's alot of people that are not going
to tell a pollster that they'revoting for donald trump,
depending on where they livehe's not going to say it, but
when they go in the voting booththey might sit there and think
to themselves you know, he waspresident before and he didn't
do all these awful things andthings were actually pretty good
.
I've got to make the bestdecision because I just want
(12:23):
things to be less expensive, andDonald Trump will deliver that.
Speaker 5 (12:25):
And you don't have to
.
I mean, you can just list thethings that were better than
they are now.
Right, it's not even really.
There's no confusion there.
It's like you know we're inwars and we're involved in wars
and can't afford anything Overhere.
Times are.
You may not like Trump, buttimes were good.
Times were better.
We were safer times are.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
You may not like
trump, but times were good,
times were better.
We were safer, peace andprosperity.
That's really it to me.
It's like how you can see pastthat.
No wars, financially doing well.
Now we're not doing well and wehave wars.
The middle east is right indanger.
Like I don't even see thecomparison there Go ahead.
Speaker 3 (13:04):
Well, can we pivot
for a minute?
I'm interested to see you knowor hear why you came to
Nashville.
You know, like your move.
I think the listeners would beyou know, want to hear that.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
Well, I was in LA for
three years.
I've been a little bit ofeverywhere.
I came from Dallas to LA andwhen I moved to LA I was kind of
done with Dallas.
I love Dallas, I love Texas,but it was done with Dallas.
Speaker 3 (13:30):
That's a good title.
There you go.
Feel free to use it.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
There you go.
I did love living in Texas butI wanted to go to California
because I wanted to impactchange.
I thought, you know, maybe if Igo there and I see these things
for myself and I learn, maybe Iwon't change minds.
I'm not going to makeCalifornia red personally, but I
wanted to see things and Iwanted to document things and
there were several times I wouldgo, like Santa Monica Boulevard
, and I would interview peoplefor Hannity and just to watch
(13:55):
the derangement.
This was in the height of Trumpright, when people were really
deranged and California wasground zero for it.
No, place worse in America thanCalifornia during that time and
I learned a lot.
I also learned a lot abouttheir voting system.
I learned about mail-in votes.
I learned about the homelessindustrial complex.
I learned about Gavin Newsom.
I learned a lot of things.
And then I realized, when Istarted seeing just how much I
(14:16):
was hemorrhaging in tax dollars.
I thought this was a funexperiment, but it's time to go
and Tennessee is a great placeto be, so I left.
I was planning to leave anyway,but then, when we locked down
in March of 2020, I saw thewriting on the wall and I
thought, if I don't get out now,like they might lock us in here
and they're not walking me inCalifornia yes, I moved here.
April 1st of 2020.
(14:37):
But you know what?
Here's the kicker Nashville wasalso locked down.
Yeah, so then I dedicated myfirst six to eight months of
being here warning people innashville.
Obviously, davidson county isdifferent, nashville proper is
different than williamson or theother areas.
But I dedicated myself towarning people like what are you
doing with this mayor who's gotmask mandates?
We have a curfew funny story.
(14:59):
I was actually with clay travis, I was with the pop-offs, the
band lit.
Oh yeah, we were in a house ineast nashville because things
closed down at 10 pm.
We had the little covid curfewsand so we went.
Probably 13 of us went to theirhouse in east nashville just
after the saturday footballgames.
Their neighbors called the copson us.
(15:21):
The cops came, arrested aj popoff for having a gathering of
more than eight people, put himin the back of a cop car for
having a gathering of more thaneight people.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
And this is nashville
, tennessee wow, well, and
you're right nashville proper isa little different than
williamson county, but yes, forsure a lot different and you
know that the whole thingaffected us.
You know we have kids andschool and that was I mean, it
was a big deal.
How can you lock?
The whole thing affected us.
You know we have kids andschool and that was I mean, it
was a big deal.
How can you lock up the lip?
Speaker 5 (15:46):
boys, come on,
they're our friends.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
I mean they just want
to have a good time.
15 days to slow the spread.
What was it In?
Speaker 1 (15:54):
Nashville.
They took it very seriously inNashville.
They really did, and I reallyrefused to go anywhere that
required it, because I'm notgoing to give my business, but
it's just the way that theyapply these and I think people,
just going back to the electionof it all, people forget 2020
ever happened.
I think people are so quick toforget what happened because we
want to forget it.
But think about what they putus through.
They locked healthy people intheir homes because of covid,
(16:18):
which had a what?
The survival rate of over atleast over 98 percent and
children they knew they had lowrisk.
Oh, you're going to be remotelearning.
There are kids now that wentthrough generational learning
loss.
They will never be on par witholder generations or even
younger generations because theylost that time and we forgave
them for it, like nobody wasever held accountable for COVID,
when you think about it.
(16:38):
Nobody was ever held accountablefor going back to try that in a
small town.
Nobody was ever heldaccountable for burning down
entire cities and smallbusinesses and attacking people
and attacking law enforcementofficers.
Nobody ever paid the price forthat.
Speaker 2 (16:51):
Go, tommy, tell them.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
And then they want to
talk about January 6th.
And these people cry aboutJanuary 6th I'm like it was one
day, One day.
Speaker 3 (17:00):
Preach, girl Preach.
Okay, so hearing you go on.
Speaker 2 (17:03):
It's not a rant, but
it's just speaking passionately.
It brings up like how you gotstarted, which I think is really
interesting to me, Because Ithink the first thing that I saw
you on was probably was it theFinal Thoughts segment?
Was that with the Blaze?
Is that right?
Speaker 1 (17:18):
So I've always done
that.
One blew up a little bit.
Yeah, I've always done.
Final Fox I started off at OneAmerica News Network in.
Speaker 2 (17:23):
San.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
Diego when I was 21.
Ah, San.
Diego.
Yeah, so I did California, thenI did Texas for the Blaze and
then, when that Blaze saga ended, I went to LA, and that's when
I started at Fox.
Speaker 2 (17:34):
But it's so
interesting to me because, like
I don't even know when that wasmaybe 2015 or so Yep, like
that's a.
The political, especiallyconservative world is dominated
by older white guys, whatever itis, you know, and they were
good, but Rush Limbaugh or BillO'Reilly or Glenn Beck.
And then here comes Tommy Idon't how old were you at this
(17:56):
time.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
Well, when I started,
I was 21.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
21, this blonde girl
coming on and just spewing about
Colin Kaepernick.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (18:06):
Is that the most
viewed video?
Speaker 1 (18:07):
you've had that is
yes, that was the most viewed
video.
Yeah, that was when Facebookdidn't throttle conservative.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
Right.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
Before they caught on
to that whole thing.
That was when Facebook was likethe wild, wild west If you
could just put content out thereand people that wanted to
listen to it actually could.
So that was the heyday, andthat was going into the election
actually could.
So that was that was the heydayand that was going into the
election.
That was like I was full fortrump, like that was.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
That was a great time
, but you were like the og.
I mean nobody was doing that,especially your age, you know,
or females, I mean that was.
It was like oh my god, who isthis?
Speaker 4 (18:37):
girl, I know.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
The first time I saw
her I was like oh crap, these
libs are in trouble, they're introuble it was was it a
conscious effort to be in thedigital space, or was that just
kind of a product of what youhad available to you?
Speaker 1 (18:50):
Well, for me, kind of
growing up in the digital era
of media, I like to think I'mone of the first people that did
it from a young person'sperspective, that I was on
networks, but it really wassocial media where I blew up
because people were sharing itand watching it and commenting
in this, that.
But I never did it consciouslyto try to go viral.
It was just listen.
You know, when I was 21, I gothired at one American news,
(19:12):
which is wild to me even, but Iwas never going to get hired at
Fox news at 21.
Right, I didn't have the same.
I wasn't Megan Kelly.
Right, I didn't have.
I'm not a lawyer, I didn't.
I'm not, you know, don't havethis experience.
I didn't go to an Ivy leagueschool, like, what
qualifications do I have to benot only on air at that level,
but who's going to take meseriously?
But what I can do is I canspeak from an authentic place
(19:34):
that young people maybe canrelate to, or maybe just people
like that from a small town,like people that are just
average people.
We don't try to talk over orabove people.
You're from South Dakota, likeI am.
You just kind of say it like itis, and I have a little bit of
sarcasm and I don't try to bebuttoned up because I can't be
that.
I'm not a lawyer, I didn't goto Harvard.
This is kind of just who I amLike.
(19:56):
I'm educated but it's not.
I can never be that.
And it worked because a lot ofpeople don't want to be that and
they don't want to speak thatway and they just want to be
themselves.
Speaker 3 (20:05):
Well, so it's not an
accident that, like you wanted
to do this, like you wanted tobe out there and be forefront
with your ideas and your wisdomand all those things, right,
yeah, yeah, I've always wantedto do this and I never thought
it would go as quickly as it did.
Speaker 1 (20:21):
But I just took every
opportunity and I tell young
people now and I'm sure you knowthis and me saying young people
, I'm 32, I still feel like I'mthe young one in the room.
But I tell the youngergenerations that want to do this
, like you cannot be afraid topick up a phone and you cannot
be afraid to talk to people andto talk to people that are older
than you.
Like you can't just send a text.
You're not going to get a jobthat way.
So social media media haschanged.
(20:43):
A lot of people can beinfluencers or whatever, but if
you want to get the street cred,like you're going to have to go
through the process, and I wentthrough the process while also
cultivating like an influencervein on social media.
Speaker 4 (20:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
But there's a lot of
people now that just try to do
the influencer side of it.
Speaker 2 (21:00):
It's like there's
political influencers.
Speaker 1 (21:02):
I guess Right.
Speaker 2 (21:03):
Yeah, that'd be a
correct term, but that's to me I
don't see you as that, likeyou're I appreciate that yeah, I
mean, you're a commentator, youknow what you're talking about
oh, we mentioned colinkaepernick not a fan, not a fan
of that guy
Speaker 5 (21:16):
but he might be
better than will levis.
Oh boy, so let's get on thehorn.
That way, I mean again not afan.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
Do you follow?
Speaker 1 (21:25):
the.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
Titans at all.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
So I am not a
football fan.
Speaker 2 (21:28):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
Football other than
the political aspects of
football.
I am not a football fan and Iwork for OutKick, which they're
obviously heavily into footballand SEC and all that.
Speaker 2 (21:38):
You let them handle
that.
Speaker 1 (21:40):
I let them do that
Because I would sound like Tim
Walls if I tried to talk aboutfootball and it would embarrass
people.
I don't know what that is.
I thought a pick-sick was likelottery tickets.
Speaker 5 (21:50):
But I would never
proclaim that I did right Like I
wouldn't.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
I am a baseball fan.
Speaker 5 (21:53):
There's no way to
look at Walls and not be
slightly creeped out.
I don't care what side you'reon.
Speaker 4 (22:06):
You got to say like
even if you're a democrat,
you're like damn, I don't know.
Well, something's not right, isthat who?
Speaker 3 (22:10):
he picked.
Speaker 4 (22:10):
Look, look who picked
him.
Speaker 5 (22:11):
Yeah, this is where I
mean talk about, like you know
he was, didn't he do that inminnesota like tell everybody,
like rat out your neighbors anda call line.
Yeah, during covid, like at thetip line, I mean wow, let the
police precinct burn that's.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
It's bad.
My wife's from minnesota, soyeah, she's got a unique
perspective.
Speaker 5 (22:31):
There's people in
minnesota, though I mean most in
minnesota no, there's a lot ofpeople in minnesota that do like
.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
It doesn't seem to
bother them but I will say that
there are people in minnesotathat are rural of course you
know farmer rancher people thatare very, very, very red.
But you look at Minneapolis.
I mean, I vowed really never togo back to Minneapolis,
speaking of them putting atarget on the back of Trump
supporters.
I went to Minneapolis in 2018.
(22:57):
And with my parents, I wasdoing like a theater type
political speech show and wentto dinner or to brunch with my
parents and they threw water onme and they screamed get the f
out of here.
F you this I mean in my face.
Speaker 2 (23:11):
It was, it was wild
it's just I don't get this right
.
If you can disagree with a lotof people like whatever say, if
I'm trying to even think ofanybody van jones or bill maher
or the Morning Joe If I saw thatperson in the street I'd be
like, hey, cool, there's VanJones.
Like I wouldn't have thatseething disdain that they have
(23:32):
for conservative people.
What is that?
Speaker 1 (23:35):
It's really a
derangement.
But if you think about it, ifyou watch these networks just in
the last couple of weeks Trumpsupporters are Nazis, trump
supporters are nazis, trumpsupporters are fascist, trump
supporters worship hitler then Imean it's easy to see how the
psychosis can set in.
If you've been told over andover and over again that people
(23:55):
that like trump are this, youfeel licensed to attack those
people physically.
And that's why I'm reallyworried after this election.
I hope we win, but I'm worriedabout what trump supporters are
going to face after thiselection because all of these
people have been told for thelast eight years now longer 10
years, 12 years that DonaldTrump is the worst person and
that he is all these.
He's going to put you in camps.
(24:16):
All this.
He wins Trump supporters likehead on a swivel because they
are so.
They've had so many years tostew on this and I think it's
going to be worse than it everwas.
Speaker 3 (24:26):
Yeah, If he wins,
like don't you think there'll be
fire in the streets?
Speaker 1 (24:30):
Yes.
Speaker 3 (24:31):
You know, for a
little bit.
Speaker 4 (24:33):
Yeah, I do Not in the
small towns, not in the small
towns, but you know, I mean.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
I think a couple of
weeks it's depends on where you
are like.
I would want to be in new yorkcity.
I wouldn't want to be inwashington dc.
I I went to trump's firstinauguration and that was
horrifying, with the blm riotingthat was going on.
The the next day, the women'smarch, which was also violent,
like violent women hissing inyour face.
I mean, they were literallyhissing your face also.
(25:00):
I can't imagine what it wouldbe like but they're so tolerant,
they're so tall yeah, I knowthey're so.
Speaker 5 (25:05):
They're so tolerant
of just only the people that
think like they do yeah, buteven what gets me is they accuse
, you know, conservatives andtrump of inciting hate right now
, but the rhetoric that comesfrom that side, um, is so much
more negative.
And we're looking at you, youknow assassination attempts and
(25:28):
they still continue it, you know, after multiple assassination
attempts.
So they keep their rhetoricgoing.
If that was the other wayaround, oh my God, I can't
imagine.
Speaker 4 (25:40):
When he gets elected,
I worry about that even more
Well and Neil and.
Speaker 3 (25:44):
I were talking about
this Like what do you think?
Do you think that firstassassination attempt, do you
feel like that was a God momentfor Trump?
I do.
Didn't he change a little bit?
Speaker 1 (25:56):
I don't know if he
changed.
Maybe for a day, we all thought,when he came to the RNC, we're
like, oh my God, it's a moredemure Trump.
It wasn't, it wasn't.
But for me that's what gave meconfidence and I it sounds, you
know, kind of cliche, but whenhe survived that and when you
saw that moment, the fight,fight, fight, and you saw his
(26:17):
life being spared by millimeters, to me that's like of all the
people that were really worriedabout this election, because
they're worried about thecheating, they're're worried
about this, and I understand it.
People are very worried aboutthat and it's okay to ask
questions, but when he survivedthat, I thought, you know what?
There's a chance he might winthis thing because God
intervened once.
Maybe God will intervene againyou know, Maybe there will be
(26:38):
divine intervention.
I'm not saying that God will winthis for Trump, but maybe when
he wins fair and square, he'lljust win.
Speaker 3 (26:49):
Yeah, that'd be nice.
Yeah, and Neil said the samething.
He said he's, he's supposed tobe president.
I said or you know, he said Godsaved him for that.
I said or he saved him to.
You know, save an orphanage, um, you know years down the road
who knows why he saved him, butsure enough he was saved.
Ain't no doubt about it.
Speaker 5 (27:03):
Well, there's no, you
know, like I said, there's no,
you don't escape a bullet likethat by accident.
You know we've had experiencewith that and so it's you know,
it's you definitely, hedefinitely.
I remember Aldine telling usbecause Aldine was hanging out
(27:23):
with him there in C and we werethere and he came up to the
suite after and was like youknow, he's, he was definitely.
It changes you to the extent oflike it makes you think about
how, um, things can change soquickly.
And I do think it changed himin the sense that he, he knows
he's here for a reason.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
Yeah, I agree it's
because I think he thought okay,
there's god's plan is at workand a purpose is at work.
Yeah you change him in thatsense?
Speaker 5 (27:52):
yep yeah, for for
sure he was.
You know um, I hope.
I hope he wins too.
I think we all, I think, forfor all of our sakes and our
kids, and he's gonna win, he'sgonna win.
I feel good about it we'refeeling better.
Yeah, we feel better, we feelbetter.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
Last couple weeks and
also I do remember, in the
height of things in 2016remember how wonderful
thanksgiving was.
I mean, I don't know if you're,if you've been a trump
supporter and through thethrough the whole thing.
I remember just thinking likethis Everything's great, you
(28:28):
didn't have a bad day, it's likeTrump won.
Every day was like we don'thave Hillary, we don't have
Hillary, and it was such a great.
It was like Thanksgiving wasgreat.
And I don't have any liberalsin my family, but I imagine the
people that did have liberals intheir family, like how great
was thanksgiving.
How great was christmas thatyear.
Speaker 3 (28:46):
It was just great.
I would love to just relivethat this year.
Oh yeah, and how?
You know how much would yourjob change?
Let's say kamala somehowmiraculously won, and wouldn't
your job suck for the next fouryears?
Just talking about that?
Speaker 1 (29:02):
right.
Well, I think it would justsuck for us as a country, like
our job doesn't really change.
When we're commenting on things, it's like there's always going
to be something right, and sopeople often say, well, the only
reason that you have a job isbecause of Trump.
It's like, well, I had a jobbefore Trump, so I had a job
during Obama.
So no, but honestly, for ourbusiness, being able to talk
(29:23):
about what a disaster democratsare for the country gives us
endless content.
Biden gave us endless content.
Like there's plenty to talkabout kamala endless content.
So it doesn't matter, trumpwins, we're gonna have you know.
There's always something eitherway there's.
We're long past the days ofboring politicians where they
just do what you do and thenpeople just, unless there's
something major, nobody reallytalks about it.
(29:45):
Like politics is at the centerof conversations now, I would
argue, more than sports, moremore than culture, more than
anything.
I would just like to see trumpwin, because I really think this
country desperately needs itand I don't know if we'd ever
win again if we lose this timedo you think she will ever
answer?
a question.
She can't, she won't, she Ijust want to know.
Speaker 5 (30:05):
Let's have Kamala on.
Maybe you and her can come on.
Kamala come on the podcast.
My question is what's she?
Speaker 4 (30:10):
going to do when she
loses?
Where's she going to go back toSan Francisco?
I just want to know she'll befine, is someone telling?
Speaker 5 (30:16):
her.
Hey, you should actually answersomebody's questions instead of
.
Speaker 2 (30:20):
I don't think she can
.
I don't think she can either.
No, I don't think she has it.
I thought they would havepre-written something?
Speaker 5 (30:26):
A miniature
teleprompter?
They do, and that's why sherepeats her talking points over
and over again.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
She was just asked
yesterday, or the day before,
and she started talking aboutwell, I come from a middle-class
family.
It's like she just gets stuckon repeat.
It's like let me see theroulette in her mind lands on
the talking point and then it'slike just repeat that.
Speaker 2 (30:44):
What's the unburden
line?
Speaker 1 (30:45):
Yeah, she's
unburdened by what has been, and
I mean it's just it's alwaysthat, though that she only has a
few things that she can drawfrom.
Yeah, and it's not a deep well,and I worry about that.
I said this on my show HillaryClinton, I never wanted him to
be president.
Joe Biden never wanted him tobe president.
He was diminishing before.
(31:06):
People thought he wasdiminishing.
He was diminishing in 2020.
But when those people gotelected, I, at least, was like
this is going to suck, but we'llget through it, like they can,
at least.
I can't stand Hillary Clinton,but I could see Hillary Clinton
talking to Putin, or you know, Icould see her navigating
international waters Maybe notlike the way I'd want her to,
(31:27):
but I could see her doing it.
She's got at least the depththere, Kamala.
Speaker 2 (31:31):
Yeah, I agree with
that take.
I agree with that take.
Speaker 5 (31:35):
Surely not, surely,
this can't happen.
Kamala and Waltz, what's thatgoing to be?
I mean, that's the worst casescenario.
I actually can't imagine.
It can't get any worse.
Speaker 1 (31:43):
It cannot get any
worse than that.
Speaker 2 (31:46):
All right, y'all
Listen.
This is actually fascinating.
We're so thankful for Tommybeing here.
We're going to take a quickword from our sponsor.
We'll be right back, Hold withus.
Speaker 3 (31:59):
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Speaker 2 (32:32):
All right, y'all,
we're back.
Uh yeah, you can only hear theconversations in between.
We're back with fox news.
Contributor.
The host of tommy larin isfearless.
Did you come up with that titleor did somebody else that?
That's great.
Speaker 1 (32:45):
I would never just
call myself fearless.
It was given to me, I would.
Speaker 3 (32:49):
I don't have that big
of a nickname?
Speaker 1 (32:51):
I don't have that big
of an ego but it's perfect, I
will take it.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
But it's perfect.
That's a great show name.
Neil, you were talking duringthe break.
What were?
Speaker 4 (32:59):
you going to ask?
I get you know.
Whoopi Goldberg and all theseother numb nuts that can't stand
Trump.
I get it, but the one thatbaffles me is Mark Cuban.
I don't get that.
What's his beef with?
Speaker 2 (33:12):
Trump.
Speaker 4 (33:13):
He's a smart guy.
Speaker 3 (33:14):
I thought Very smart,
very smart.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
I think he, like many
others before him, trump, has
broken his brain and I thinkwhat it is is.
It's an ego thing entirely.
You've got two billionaires andI think that he probably wanted
trump maybe to lean on him more, or maybe he he wanted trump to
ask for his lofty advice.
And then I think the way itreally changed is when elon came
(33:39):
over and I think cuban has athing against elon and then when
he saw trump and elon it waslike, well then I'm gonna go for
Kamala then.
But if you listen to him, hesays he doesn't like really any
of her plans or policies and hesays that he's like oh, I'm not
for the unrealized gains and ifshe does this, I'm not for that
and I don't believe ineliminating the filibuster.
So you don't really believe inany of her agenda items, but you
(34:00):
you know, maybe there's a diddyconnection, or yeah, what have
you with cuba do you have a hottake on any of the diddy stuff?
I think the diddy stuff wassupposed to be a big distraction
for people and it didn't panout because people still cared
(34:22):
more about the election yeah, itwent away.
Speaker 3 (34:26):
Yeah, it went away.
Speaker 1 (34:26):
I mean we see stuff,
but right now everyone's just
really really dialed in on theelection.
After that then all theconspiracies and all the
everything will come forward.
But I mean right now it's justelection.
Speaker 4 (34:38):
Everything will come
forward.
You think names and photos.
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (34:42):
I think it'll get
buried, just like epstein, I
think eventually, I think he hadto be the fall guy and maybe,
but I think that there are toomany people that are going to be
compromised in high places thatI think that it'll be covered
up.
Speaker 5 (34:53):
It'll affect
everybody in certain circles and
they they don't want that well,and we know that you're a jason
aldean fan you know of hismusic and everything, and these
two guys on stage every nightplaying with him did.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
Did you ever sing?
Did you want to sing?
Speaker 1 (35:08):
no, I'm not.
That is not my talent.
That is definitely not mytalent.
Trust me, if it was, that'swhat I would love to to do.
No, I'm not, that is not mytalent.
Speaker 5 (35:12):
Part of your.
That is definitely not mytalent.
Speaker 1 (35:13):
Trust me if it was
that's what I would love to to
do that I envy people that havethat ability, but no hold on
hold on, hold on.
Speaker 2 (35:19):
I gotta interrupt.
You are a rap collaborator thatis true did you guys know?
That is true that tommy isfeatured on a push of t and
jay-z verse I sure am so this isamazing to me.
They they sampled your voiceright, or they used it in a
verse, jay-z's verse first ofall, uh, drug dealers, anonymous
(35:42):
, right?
Yes, did they ask yourpermission and did you get paid?
Speaker 1 (35:49):
no, they did not ask
my permission.
They illegally sampled, butbecause they ripped it from a
final thoughts that I did forthe blaze, the blaze technically
owns it oh but the blaze nevertook action.
The blaze tried to make a dealwith push a t.
Hey, we.
They asked for a you know a fewthings, a few credits, and then
(36:10):
they to push a t.
They said we will let youcontinue to sample this, that we
own our property, but you haveto fly to dallas and do an
interview on tommy's show.
So that was supposed to be thedeal and we were ready.
I was like push it to this wasgoing to be huge, you're right
he made it to his.
He had a connecting flight.
He flew from wherever tobaltimore yeah.
Speaker 4 (36:30):
and then I think,
yeah, get him out of the truck.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
I don't know where he
was coming from.
What's his connection?
I don't know if he was from asmall where he was, but he flew
to Baltimore and then he flewback and he never came and the
Blaze never did anything aboutit.
Really, they never sued, theynever did anything, they just
let it go, they just dropped it.
Well then they fired me monthslater and then we had a legal
battle so I mean that's thelegal battle they chose to fight
(36:55):
.
But no, and you know what,honestly, whatever, it would
have been nice to get paid offof that, but it was just more
like that was the street credit's actually kind of cool.
You get a little yeah, yeah,yeah I mean, there's been a
couple different rappers thathave used not my voice but have
mentioned me or said somethingabout me, and these were the
days when they were really likeI've had feuds with nikki minaj,
(37:17):
cardi b, the game joiner, lucaswale, I mean the jay-z, they,
the list goes on 21 savage I am.
I am a rap fan, I you know, soit doesn't bother me.
I think it's kind of funny likeI enjoy that part of it.
Speaker 2 (37:33):
Who do you like?
What kind of music?
You obviously like that.
So who do you like?
Do you like any country music?
No pressure, no pressure.
Speaker 1 (37:39):
Country music
primarily is always first and
foremost country, but growing upin the heydays of rap, I would
say for me driving around in myChevy Malibu in high school.
Every girl had 2001 ChevyMalibu driving around the mean
streets of rapid city, southDakota.
You know listening to like 50cent and the great, the great
(38:00):
days of, you know pop lock anddrop it and Laffy, taffy and all
that.
That.
Speaker 3 (38:04):
That was the what
every super super white
Midwestern girl was listening to.
Every now and then I'll move mywife's car out of the driveway
and I'm like, and was listeningto.
Every now and then I'll move mywife's car out of the driveway
and it's just blaring.
It's rap music and it's filthy.
I'm like, oh my God, baby,you're representing us.
How are you listening to that,going through the neighborhood?
Speaker 1 (38:24):
That's how we live
out, and she knows every word of
it.
Yeah, and that is the heyday ofwhen rap was.
And Because it's the heyday ofwhen rap was, and you know, I
don't listen to as much rapanymore because it's gotten so
filthy and it's gotten, you know, it always has been, but it was
at least thinly veiled, maybemore so back then.
Speaker 4 (38:41):
Now, it's just a
little too much.
Did you see that time whenTrump Jr compared?
Speaker 1 (38:44):
a.
Speaker 4 (38:44):
Cardi B lyric to our
lyric oh, yeah, yeah.
And we're getting all the flack, and we're getting all the hate
.
Speaker 1 (38:48):
He A the hate.
Speaker 4 (38:50):
He beat our lyrics.
Speaker 2 (38:52):
You're talking about
the WAP, and there's worse and
there are worse.
Speaker 4 (38:57):
When you think about
it, you hear nothing about that,
what it's doing to the youth,but our song is destroying the
planet.
It's amazing.
Well, since we're on popculture and songs and stuff.
Speaker 2 (39:11):
By the way, you
mentioned you were a baseball
fan.
Is that because your husband,jp aaron sebia?
Is that because of him, or wereyou a baseball fan previously?
Speaker 1 (39:21):
I've always loved
baseball I used to really love
college baseball that was mything and then obviously being
around it um through my husband.
I now I'm like a I'm a big metsfan now and we had such a good
year.
But I know all these guysbecause when you're a triple-a
coach, you know he affected thatteam so much and I spent so
many days freezing my ass off inSyracuse watching triple-a
(39:43):
games in May and June and thenyou know, in July, august, being
hot sitting there at a triple-astadium like you get invested
in these guys and then a lot oftheir team went up and made huge
impacts on the big league teamlike.
Mark, vientos and Iglesias andothers, so I felt like a really
big part of that team for us wasbig time they were crushing it
(40:06):
during the World Series, and theWorld Series would have been so
much better this year, if itwas.
Yankees-mets.
Speaker 5 (40:10):
And I hate the
Dodgers, yeah.
So what's he thinking about theworld series going on right now
?
We?
Speaker 1 (40:15):
just, I mean, he's
watching.
None of us care anymore, though, now that it's dodgers, yankees
, and now that it's like ablowout and I just we can't
stand the dodge.
No, I can't I when the metswere out, I was done and I like
I was pulling for the yankeesbecause I don't like the dodgers
yeah but right now it's well.
The Mets are out of it, so nowwe're in full election mode,
like the game that matters iscoming up.
Speaker 2 (40:33):
I got you.
So my wife has a question andthis is I'm sure Tully's wife
would have the same question.
So your husband is a baseballcoach.
He's up in Syracuse.
He's probably gone half theyear, right?
Yep, this is like Tully and IDoes.
He mess up your system when hecomes home.
Speaker 1 (40:52):
All right, so we can
do another hour Because I know
my wife I mess up her system.
Yes.
Speaker 5 (40:59):
I'm pretty sure my
wife is probably calling Aldine,
saying book some shows.
Speaker 1 (41:05):
Yeah, when he went to
tour start.
Yeah, where are we?
Speaker 5 (41:07):
starting Starting
early next year, oh good.
Speaker 2 (41:09):
So how does that?
Speaker 5 (41:09):
work at your house.
Speaker 1 (41:10):
Yeah.
So, as your, your families wellunderstand, and for you, it's
your back and forth, when myhusband's gone for the baseball
season, he's gone februarythrough the end of september and
he's gone, gone like he cancome home.
They don't really get days off,so he has a seven day span that
he can come home and then allstart breaking.
That's really it.
So he's not home for seven anda half months and then he's home
(41:32):
solidly for several, and thenit's like when I gotta try to
find something for him to do,like.
I try to think like what, whatcan you do?
Find adult friends, dosomething, get out, but no he
messes up all my stuff and I getI'm very ocd anyway and I like
things a certain way, and sohe'll just come in like a bull
in a china shop and just yeah.
Speaker 5 (41:53):
Well, some of the
problems, too, is for us.
What happens is, you know, weget used to things.
We get used to catering and weget used to just things being
done for us most of the time.
Speaker 1 (42:07):
You know, what.
I mean no, yeah, and then I comehome and her major complaint is
I treat it like a hotel roomokay, yeah, so you just kind of
throw things everywhere I don'tmean to, but it takes me a good
three months to get back intohome mode, and by then we're
ready by the time you leave Ialways tell him I I try, try so
(42:28):
hard to train him and I try, andthen we get almost there and
then the season starts and hegoes back to his feral ways and
it's just, it's like he justgoes back and then it's like
everything is unlearned and bythe time he comes home again we
got to do it all over go easy onhim I can't.
Speaker 2 (42:44):
It's a tough
transition for us.
Yeah, go easy on him it's noteasy.
Speaker 4 (42:48):
This is sad.
It's not easy.
Speaker 5 (42:50):
It's very true,
though it's not easy to slide
back into the home life.
Speaker 4 (42:54):
My wife never gets
tired of me, ever, and I'm here
24-7.
Speaker 1 (43:00):
She's used to it.
She's acclimated.
Speaker 2 (43:03):
She's acclimated.
Speaker 1 (43:04):
When you get used to
being by yourself and then
there's somebody just there.
All of a sudden it's like oh,Even if it is your husband.
Speaker 3 (43:14):
Hey you, hey you,
yeah, I love you so much.
I wish you wouldn't do this andthe uh all at all baseball
athlete.
Speaker 1 (43:23):
You know family, they
can all, they all have the same
thing.
Now I know musicians, familiesfeel the same thing, but there
could be a complete wives clubof discussing this, because
everybody has the sameexperience?
Speaker 5 (43:36):
I think there
definitely is.
Yeah, it is a tough go easy onthem.
It's hard to slide, you can'tOkay.
Speaker 2 (43:41):
So so give me a show
that, like on Netflix, that you
guys binge together and thenmaybe it's something you watch.
You probably watch murdermysteries.
All women watch murdermysteries.
Speaker 1 (43:53):
No, I'm a big Bravo
person.
Speaker 2 (43:54):
I'm a big reality TV
person.
Speaker 5 (43:56):
Housewives or
whatever that is.
So that's what.
Speaker 1 (43:58):
I do on my own, and
then it's a struggle to find
something we can watch togetherbecause it's like, well, it's
either baseball, which is fine.
Speaker 3 (44:11):
I'm happy to watch
the Mets Um.
I won't watch Tennesseefootball.
Speaker 2 (44:14):
She's talking about
college, bro, hold on, he went
to.
Speaker 3 (44:16):
UT right?
Yes, he did.
Speaker 2 (44:17):
Yes, he's a big ball.
Speaker 1 (44:18):
Yes.
Speaker 5 (44:19):
So was Gaylo.
Speaker 1 (44:20):
Are they playing
Kentucky this weekend?
Yes, so go Cats.
Speaker 3 (44:26):
So every time who
matters?
I was born in Paduca, weirdtown.
That is a weird town.
Speaker 1 (44:30):
I've never met anyone
normal from Kentucky well, the
streets continued.
Speaker 3 (44:34):
I was only there for
three months I got tired of it
and I asked my parents to leave,even though I couldn't audibly
talk Kalo real quick your voiceis incredibly, credibly deep
this episode do you like it?
Speaker 2 (44:47):
I don't know, have
you been taking testosterone?
No, I just haven't slept.
Speaker 5 (44:52):
It's that J J.
Speaker 3 (44:53):
Jones thing.
I'm sorry.
Just get back from Baltimore,raise money for the kids, the
one city I would not want tocome home from is Baltimore.
Speaker 2 (45:01):
Okay, do you?
Guys watch anything together.
Speaker 1 (45:05):
We'll watch, I mean
we used to watch Yellowstone
together before Yellowstone gotbad.
We like competition shows.
We'll watch those and the JackRyans and that.
But it's hard.
Yellowstone got bad.
We like competition shows.
We'll watch those, okay, andthe Jack Ryans and that, but
it's hard to find something thatwe can both watch together.
Yeah, definitely not like theNetflix my husband would never
watch.
Like the Nobody Wants this orwhatever, like that's so good,
jp's not going to watch that,it's too sappy.
(45:27):
It's too sappy for me.
Like I can't no.
We watch Fox News.
Speaker 3 (45:33):
And are you doing
exactly what you want to be
doing right now?
Because you seem like you are.
Yes, right, yes.
Speaker 1 (45:39):
There is nowhere else
.
I'd rather be than doing whatwe're doing, and now.
We just need a victory, andthen things will get real good
for everybody and you feel goodabout it.
I feel good about it today.
Speaker 3 (45:48):
Right Yep.
Speaker 5 (45:49):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (45:55):
As we sit.
I feel good about it, I feellike a britney.
A britney episode with her on,oh my gosh, badass, that'd be
amazing.
I'm gonna say a word.
Would you do that if britneycame in?
Speaker 5 (46:00):
because that you guys
would.
I mean we just go to thecouches and that's right, hang
out.
Oh yeah, we just sat over therejust hold up questions there,
you go happy to do it
Speaker 2 (46:11):
that would be
incredible oh my gosh, we're so
appreciative of you being here,so thankful.
Listen, we know that you've gota lot going on.
Uh, we're very appreciative.
We're very thankful from all ofus to try that on small town
podcast tommy larin.
Speaker 1 (46:27):
Watch her on fox
watch our own podcast at outkick
.
Thank you guys, guys.
Speaker 2 (46:31):
Thank you, we're
there, thank you.
Speaker 3 (46:32):
Thank you guys, thank
you very much.
Speaker 2 (46:35):
That was pretty
awesome, right, you see?
Tommy doing her thing when youget her in person, you feel the
energy it makes me feel good tooabout our.
Speaker 5 (46:44):
you know, she's young
, she's what?
Speaker 3 (46:45):
32 years old, I think
.
So, yeah, it makes me feel goodabout younger people like they
they are.
Speaker 1 (46:52):
They are not you, but
they're younger.
Speaker 5 (46:55):
I know no, seriously
though.
Yeah, like passionate goodvalues, you know wisdom.
Speaker 4 (47:01):
I feel good about it
and it's great.
She's a great leader for thenext generation.
Speaker 2 (47:05):
Very smart how many
people we had on here probably
all that are smarter than us.
It's like everybody's smartermostly.
It's a pretty low bar, though.
What are you talking aboutExcept?
Speaker 3 (47:15):
for Britt Saberhagen
probably.
Speaker 2 (47:16):
Oh gee.
Speaker 3 (47:21):
I mean he's a pitcher
.
Speaker 4 (47:23):
You're exactly right.
Speaker 2 (47:24):
Neil, but while Tommy
was here, I couldn't help
thinking about this and I thinkwe should implement this.
You know, she got famousbecause, well, I didn't say this
is why she became famous, butshe had like a two-minute rant
at the end of the show.
It's called final thoughts.
We should have at the end ofour show, neil, do it like a
two-minute thing.
Speaker 4 (47:44):
We'll we'll figure
out what it's called.
Speaker 3 (47:45):
No, no, it won't make
the cut thrash talk thrash,
talk, thrasher basher likethrash talk it won't, what
thrash talk, do I?
Speaker 4 (47:51):
get to pick.
I like thrash talk.
Speaker 2 (47:52):
It won't Thrash talk.
Do I get to pick the topic?
Actually, thrash talk isamazing.
Speaker 4 (47:54):
Thrash talk and you
get to go off.
Speaker 5 (47:56):
No, seriously, just
have your two-minute bit.
I love it.
That's done, it's implementedand actually you can start it.
Speaker 3 (48:03):
We can all have a
part of thrash talk like
whatever we're irritated about.
I think it's just Neil Kalo,and if you don't get the two
minutes, then we fill it in Ifyou get it.
Speaker 2 (48:13):
I don't know.
I think it's only Neil, I thinkit's called.
Speaker 5 (48:16):
Thrashtalk and it's
just Neil's rant.
Speaker 3 (48:19):
Does this mean I
don't know if he can go for two
minutes is the thing.
Speaker 4 (48:31):
Oh, I could go for
two minutes.
Most of it will get edited.
Speaker 2 (48:34):
No, unedited,
unfiltered, scared and afraid,
terrible Neal.
Speaker 4 (48:41):
For the first time
ever, I want to be known as
Amazing Neal, amazing.
Speaker 2 (48:47):
I'm thrash.
Okay, you are to us.
Speaker 4 (48:48):
You're still hurt.
It went quiet, didn't it?
It went real quiet, no, butyou're Okay, you are to us.
You're still hurt by that onefan.
Speaker 3 (48:53):
It went quiet, didn't
it?
It went real quiet to her nobut you're still hurt by that
one fan.
Speaker 4 (48:57):
No, I'm not hurt.
I'm not hurt that one fan Dude.
You don't even know myconfidence level is, so I could
give a rat's ass about whatanybody thinks about me, Is that
?
Speaker 3 (49:06):
why, we don't.
Speaker 2 (49:14):
I don't give a shit
hit, and that's my whole point.
That's my whole point.
Neither does tommy, and that'sthe beauty of it, right?
You gotta respect somebody, andto me it's funny that people
call her far right or extremeright.
She's really actually not.
She's just very direct.
Yeah well, let's be honestyou're far right.
Speaker 5 (49:29):
If you believe
anything that's not messed up,
yeah right, you're far right.
You don't want men and women'ssports, you're far right.
Speaker 1 (49:39):
I mean, this is
stupid.
Speaker 3 (49:41):
This conversation is
ridiculous.
It really is.
I can't believe we're talkingabout it.
You're definitely far right Ifyou don't want men and women's
sports.
Speaker 5 (49:48):
You're far right.
Speaker 4 (49:50):
If you don't want men
dressed as women dancing in
front of children, you're farright and you're crazy.
See, this is part of the.
But you're far right if youwant a safe border.
Speaker 5 (49:59):
You're far right.
That's weird to me, but that'sthe reality of it, I know you're
far right, bro.
Speaker 2 (50:06):
Wow, you really are
kurt.
Accept it all right.
Is this an intervention really?
Speaker 3 (50:10):
you're far right.
We're gonna talk about it for27 episodes.
Speaker 4 (50:14):
I tell you what dude.
I don't even know what y'allcreated.
It's like if y'all want to dothrash talk.
Oh my God.
I'm going to spend the wholenext week in between writing
songs.
I'm going to spend the wholeweek Starting next episode I'm
going to come up with so muchstuff that I've been wanting to
talk about.
I mean With so much stuff thatI've been wanting to talk about.
I bet my gut goes down.
Really.
(50:35):
It's all bottled up in my gut.
You think you'll lose weight.
Oh yeah, I'll lose weight.
Speaker 5 (50:40):
I'm so excited about
Thrust.
Speaker 4 (50:41):
Talk.
I'm going to unload so muchshit Really.
Oh yeah, it's going to be crazy.
We may be out of business in amonth.
Speaker 3 (50:48):
I love it.
It may be good for we're noteven in business.
This is great uh, listen this.
Speaker 2 (50:56):
It's been an awesome,
fun day.
Um, listen, if you're uhwatching on youtube, like we
always say, just comment.
We love interacting with youguys.
Do that, give us a like,subscribe, follow us at try that
podcast.
Uh, we're very appreciative ofyou guys.
We're appreciative of TommyLaird being here in her time For
(51:16):
TK, for K-Lo, for Thrash Talk.
Speaker 3 (51:19):
Kurt, I'm Kurt.
Download download downloadthere you go.
Speaker 2 (51:23):
This is Try that in a
Small Town.
Make sure to follow along,subscribe, share, rate the show
and check out our merch atTryThatInASmallTown.