Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Due to the graphic nature of this program, listener discretion.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Is it lies.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
The Woody Show?
Speaker 2 (00:19):
I believe.
Speaker 4 (00:23):
This is the Woody Show.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
Insensitivity Training.
Speaker 5 (00:37):
Class is now in session.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
A good morning, everybody, Happy new year. Today's Wednesday. It's
January the first, twenty twenty five. My god, we are
the Woody Show. My name is Whatdy. That is great gory.
Hey what menace? He is a social media director. We
have Gina Grant, the newest member of the show. SeaBASS
(01:05):
is here. We got Sammy Bort and Caroline Woody Show
Production department.
Speaker 6 (01:09):
We got Morgan our.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
Associate producer, Vaughn our video producer. We are not live
here today. We are on our holiday break, but we're
gonna be back to start a brand new year of
The Woodi Show on Monday morning this coming Monday, January sixth.
But there's some really good stuff lined up for you today.
And Greg, you know what we say. If you haven't
heard it, it's new to you.
Speaker 6 (01:32):
That's right.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
That said, we'd still like to hear your thoughts on
anything that you hear on the show today. If there's
an opinion or a story you want to add. There
are a lot of ways to do that. Best way
would be the after hours voicemail. Anytime you can leave
that message. Just call eight seven seven forty four Woody.
That's eight seven seven forty four Woody. Email us email
at the Woodieshow dot com and of course on social
(01:53):
media find us, follow us on the social media platform
of your choice at the Woody Show yep, coming up
free on the show today. And so Gina is the
newest member of the Woodies Show. We've done this with
everybody who works in the show, getting to know you,
so we're getting to know Gina grad just a little
bit better. Also, you have to do these trainings every
(02:15):
year when you work for whatever company. There's all these
different ones, but around here one that we look forward
to the most is the sexual harassment training.
Speaker 4 (02:23):
It's such good acting because.
Speaker 3 (02:25):
The acting and the scenarios that they have are just
so bad. So, yeah, one of my favorites was the
one where these like two chicks, younger, hotter looking chicks,
we're sitting around the office and the one ship goes,
so did you get me this weekend? Well, yeah, you
know I did, because they're trying to get pregnant, right,
you know I did. We did it all weekend on
and then here like a weasel, some dork, some dork
(02:47):
from the other side of the cubicle pops his head
up and goes, excuse me, this conversation is making me
very uncomfortable. Is good?
Speaker 6 (02:57):
So dumb?
Speaker 3 (02:58):
So yeahre the sexual harassment training, and we do have
some of the scenario. We have the audio from these
different badly acted to that's coming up for you this morning. Gina,
maybe a little bit nervous about getting to know Gina
Gradges because of you know, she's gonna really put herself
out there, not that she hasn't already for the most
part with us. But look, we all have. We all
have some strange things about us. Yeah, I'll tell you,
(03:20):
even somebody so straight laced, well seemingly straight laced, like Sammy,
But what would you say is your weirdest The bacon thing?
Speaker 5 (03:28):
The only people I know it doesn't like bacon.
Speaker 7 (03:30):
Why genetic defect?
Speaker 8 (03:31):
I think, Yeah, I smell this smell of bacon. I
really don't like bacon, and I want to love it
because so many people do, and it is somewhat disruptive
to my life that.
Speaker 7 (03:40):
I don't like it.
Speaker 9 (03:41):
It's the candy of meat.
Speaker 8 (03:42):
I think it's disgusting and I wish I I wish
I liked it.
Speaker 9 (03:47):
But do you eat turkey bacon?
Speaker 10 (03:48):
No?
Speaker 9 (03:49):
Wow, no bacon it no?
Speaker 11 (03:51):
Yeah, But you think it's like a genetic thing, like
with me with cilantro, it tastes.
Speaker 9 (03:55):
Like so rightly.
Speaker 3 (03:56):
But I've never heard of anybody I've heard the cilantro
thing or there it's a genetic thing where just people
who have that For all those people, I've never people
that don't like they don't prefer bacon for whatever reason,
like sometimes it's religious.
Speaker 5 (04:09):
They don't think there's a.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
You know, like uh, you know Jewish people that want pork,
no pig, pigs a dirty animal, you know, things like that.
But I've never heard where it's like, oh I have
this genetic thing that makes it taste rotten. It doesn't
taste rotten. I feel the same way though, that you
do about coffee, you know, Like so for me, I
want to like coffee. I've tried it a thousand different ways,
and for whatever reason, if I have ever ingest poison,
(04:33):
all you got to do is give me like a
sip of coffee or a coffee flavored chocolate or ice
cream or anything coffee flavored, and it's immediately lot.
Speaker 9 (04:40):
It's the flavor that you don't like.
Speaker 7 (04:42):
It must be because you like the smell.
Speaker 6 (04:44):
I love the smell.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
I bought a coffee pot one time when I was
a single guy, and it's set up every morning to
brew coffee just so I can wake up with that
smell in the house and I come downstairs, I pour
it out and go to work.
Speaker 9 (04:56):
That is insane.
Speaker 3 (04:57):
Yeah, I mean, there wasn't expensive coffee. It's the cheapest
crap I could find. It was just so something would broom.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
That's weird.
Speaker 6 (05:03):
That's weird.
Speaker 9 (05:04):
So I get it. But but I might start doing
that and just don't it the.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
Other weird thing that I do. Apparently that's super weird.
I stand to wipe.
Speaker 7 (05:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (05:14):
I mean you've gotten some support on the text for that. Yeah,
from fellow weirdos.
Speaker 5 (05:20):
I'm told. I'm told that's weird.
Speaker 9 (05:21):
Have you been doing that since you're like a kid.
Speaker 3 (05:23):
Yeah, I didn't know you did it any other way.
I was never taught. It was just all you wipe
your butt.
Speaker 7 (05:29):
You were taught.
Speaker 4 (05:31):
No, I don't remember being taught to white. Does anybody
remember getting potty trained?
Speaker 11 (05:35):
I don't, But there's a bunch of videos on my photos,
a bunch of photos photos and video actually of kids
in like grade school learning the wipe but they sit
in those chairs and they have like the balloons.
Speaker 6 (05:48):
Really yeah, super cute.
Speaker 11 (05:49):
I guess it was a thing like people were never taught,
so now they're teaching in school.
Speaker 7 (05:54):
Yeah, you should have been taught.
Speaker 9 (05:56):
Yeah, and not like school.
Speaker 8 (05:58):
I remember already being potty tend and like, but still
calling for my mom to wipe.
Speaker 3 (06:03):
The only thing, the only thing I remember is being
told that you wipe until the paper is clean and
that's it.
Speaker 9 (06:09):
How many wipes is that for you?
Speaker 6 (06:10):
Usually it depends how many roles do you mean?
Speaker 5 (06:12):
Well, it depends. Sometimes it's a miracle no wiper.
Speaker 4 (06:16):
Right, those are a total miracle.
Speaker 6 (06:18):
Yeah, those are.
Speaker 5 (06:19):
Cool, Like what happened? Man, It's much the weirdest thing
about you.
Speaker 11 (06:22):
It's a kind of an ear thing as well. So
you know, I love cracking every bone in my body.
I can even crack my nose all that kind of stuff.
But just by thinking about it, I can crack the
inside of my ear and thinking about it. Just by
thinking about it, and I'm able to like record it
with my iPhone before. But I don't know if our
microphones are sensitive enough.
Speaker 4 (06:44):
He's probably probably not here and you can't hear it.
Speaker 6 (06:47):
Hold on, hold on, I'm gonna turn I'm gonna turn
his microphone way up.
Speaker 4 (06:51):
Hold on, yere right.
Speaker 11 (06:55):
No, oh, man, I can see something moving.
Speaker 4 (07:02):
No nothing, No, I think I've heard it in personally.
Speaker 3 (07:06):
How you think about it, You're not doing anything. You're
not like any kind of like a thinking about it ear.
Speaker 11 (07:13):
And it happened once after I went to the doctor
when I was a kid and got some ear drops
put in my ear, and then ever since then, I
could do this like weird cracking noise in my ear
just by thinking about it. It's odd. I'll record it.
Maybe we'll do like today and audio. Well, I'll record
(07:33):
it with my iPhone because the iPhone will will pick
it up when I put it right next to it.
Speaker 3 (07:37):
So I said, my weird thing, I'm taking my clothes off.
I always take them off right side in and half
fold them before tossing them into the hamper.
Speaker 5 (07:46):
My husband thinks that's weird.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
Right side that is weird.
Speaker 7 (07:49):
Why would you fold them before tossing them into a hammer.
Speaker 6 (07:52):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (07:52):
I say that drives me nuts. Like my wife, my kids, like,
they won't turn stuff back right side out right, you
know what I mean, before they put it into the hamper.
This is why I stop folding the cloth. I'll take
my stuff out of there because it's ready to go,
ready to folded or put away, hung up. But like
my wife's, my kids stuff, everything socks are inside out,
(08:15):
shirts are inside out.
Speaker 5 (08:17):
I'm not I'm not going to flip them back in
the other way.
Speaker 9 (08:20):
You're not.
Speaker 7 (08:22):
That's how it's supposed to be washed.
Speaker 3 (08:24):
Huh.
Speaker 7 (08:24):
You're supposed to wash your clothes inside out, says who.
Speaker 8 (08:27):
Well, it's yeah, yeah, everyone knows that.
Speaker 3 (08:31):
But also we're also talking about people here who do
like a load of whites and a load of darks.
Will you put everything in the same yeah, put on
extra cold, Yeah exactly.
Speaker 4 (08:40):
And you're good.
Speaker 9 (08:42):
Huh.
Speaker 4 (08:43):
Yeah, it's just an extra step.
Speaker 9 (08:45):
I thought doing it right side out is what you
do when you fold it. That's just part of the
folding problem.
Speaker 3 (08:51):
No, I want things coming out of the dryer. They're
already ready to fold, ready to hang up, and that's
it the whole extra step.
Speaker 5 (08:56):
I'm not turning everything back the right side out o
doing that.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
Maybe I well, maybe is that because like chick stuff
has like sequence and like all the kind of.
Speaker 5 (09:09):
Yeah, it's not like just plain.
Speaker 8 (09:11):
Well, I do think it has to do with sometimes
if there's like graphics on stuff other things so it
can't get on other stuff. And I thought it had
to do with like, I don't know, fading exactly.
Speaker 9 (09:22):
You're supposed to always turn your gens you are, Yeah, yes,
I never do.
Speaker 5 (09:27):
I never done that.
Speaker 9 (09:29):
And you're still here to tell the tea right exactly.
Speaker 4 (09:31):
Our closes are still alive.
Speaker 5 (09:34):
Greg, What would you say is the weirdest thing that
you do?
Speaker 4 (09:36):
I just realized I've never shared this with you because
there's never been a reason to. But I think I
have a physical thing that is weirder than genus throat thing.
Bring it, and that's why I want to share it,
because I might be the only person on earth. Have
you ever gone to the doctor. You have to do
a urine test, but you don't really have to pee.
I discovered something that makes me pee, and it's if
I like if I'm when I'm standing and I take
(09:58):
my hand and right at the top of the my
butt crack like your coin slot right right up stand
right above it, just kind of gently rub it or
tickle it, like really, that'll make you. It's just like.
Speaker 2 (10:12):
Pete.
Speaker 4 (10:13):
No, I'm not really trying to do.
Speaker 9 (10:15):
It, Greg, just slight little An ex boyfriend used that
was the only way he could pee. Really, you would
take his whole pants down.
Speaker 6 (10:25):
That's weird do that.
Speaker 4 (10:27):
And I don't know how I even discovered it. It
must have been during a urine test or whatever.
Speaker 3 (10:31):
I judge people that like a dude that drops his
pants to his ankles to peek. It's like a little
year old, a little boy that's hard too, but like
a grown ass man dropping their pants to their ankles.
Speaker 5 (10:44):
Then talk about kindergarten.
Speaker 11 (10:46):
They went to a certain areas.
Speaker 3 (10:49):
That's so weird of the school. That's right, Take the
classes and the short box thing arrived so weird.
Speaker 9 (10:55):
The helmet, take the pants.
Speaker 3 (10:57):
Exactly all right? Eight seven in forty four. What he
hit us up with the text you can send that
over to two to nine eight seven.
Speaker 6 (11:05):
I don't even know what that means.
Speaker 4 (11:07):
No one knows what it means, but it's.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
For fox.
Speaker 6 (11:13):
People going going, you're kind of saved.
Speaker 3 (11:15):
What I would think would be the best for lasts
of all the weird things that you do, Like, what
would you say is weird? Like if you had to
self identify, like, what's the weirdest thing about you?
Speaker 6 (11:24):
Yeah, I'm trying to think of something that's like maybe
more of a physical deformity or thing, you know, genus
throats something that you do. Like all my stuff is behavioral,
but it's all very smart and efficient and based on
right and so logical in order of your discovery on
the show. And I didn't even do this till I
started the show. It's like one day I was like,
why am I carrying change around? That just goes on
(11:47):
the ground outside gena.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
If he's given change, If I do use cash, Although
don't you keep quarters there?
Speaker 6 (11:54):
I keep I have like three quarters in my car
in case of a parking meter. Most of those are
cars now anyway, So who cares? Obviously the pooping in
the shower, Yeah, it's not again, I want to clarify,
not pooping in the shower. I'm pooping in while in
the shower. I'm pooping into the sewer just like the
rest of you people do. I just take a different route.
Speaker 5 (12:16):
Yeah, oh yeah, okay, true.
Speaker 9 (12:18):
I don't think there there it's to handle that. I
don't g know.
Speaker 6 (12:21):
This is correct, and it is has been addressed. Yes,
it's a different sized pipe. However, the way mine's set up,
I'm in an upper floor of an apartment building industrial
it's not again, it is too inches and this is
why I'm campaigning to increase the size of because it's
a two inch or it should be a four inch er.
You know, people, it's cleaner. It's more the poop doesn't
(12:42):
go on the floor.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
Doesn't It reek even more? That doesn't because if you.
Speaker 6 (12:47):
Worse, I see what I hear what you say, Greg,
it reeks less than a than a than a toilet.
Speaker 3 (12:52):
Poop maybe in a single family home or something like that.
But he's in an apartment building. Everything is getting like
washed down right. It's the floor, like how many floors up?
Speaker 6 (13:00):
Are you? Five floors up? That's a straight shot. But yeah, Greg,
I thought that too. It might stink, but it could
because in a toilet, and then it's under the water,
which I get. Here's to pick one thing the weirdest
thing about you. Obviously it's the shower. Okay, all right,
but it's done for a good purpose.
Speaker 11 (13:18):
And bringing up baffle stomping because it's an open hole.
Speaker 6 (13:22):
It's an open hole.
Speaker 5 (13:23):
He took the thing off.
Speaker 6 (13:26):
I remember this fifty years from now. Guy on the radio.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
Yeah, here's the innovator for thinker more Woody shows.
Speaker 5 (13:33):
Next this this gets hot.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
And then they just wanted Joe and mexing, you know,
And we are into another new hour insensitivity training for
a politically correct world? Are the Woody Show? That is great?
Gory Menace is here?
Speaker 12 (13:52):
What is up?
Speaker 3 (13:52):
We got seeded as we got Sammy in. Our newest
full time member of The Woody Show is Gina grad
Good morning Gina. Now, ever since Gina got announced as
a full time member of the show, we've had people
who are hitting us up. And this is how I
know you've been around for a while, because we have
done those getting.
Speaker 5 (14:09):
To know you segments.
Speaker 3 (14:11):
Yeah, exactly for a lot of people over the years,
like I've done one, Greg's done one.
Speaker 6 (14:15):
Menace.
Speaker 3 (14:16):
I mean, everybody, all the all the people, we've always
got to know them. And there was a long time,
I forget how many years ago, it was a while ago,
at least seven years ago, where we heard about that
thing where they were making this argument that if you
sat down and you talked. You took any two people
and you sat them down and you had them ask
all these questions.
Speaker 6 (14:35):
To each other.
Speaker 3 (14:36):
Yeah, that any two people, regardless of their background or
anything else, any two people could fall.
Speaker 5 (14:42):
In love or you would fall in love, right Okay,
after old for sure, it was.
Speaker 6 (14:49):
But it was also kind of interesting because you're.
Speaker 9 (14:52):
Like creating like vulnerability and connection or.
Speaker 3 (14:55):
Yes, and you just learn stuff about each other right exactly,
So like you would sit and listen to their sign,
then you would then be able to share all of
your stuff.
Speaker 9 (15:03):
Interesting.
Speaker 3 (15:04):
Yeah, And so we didn't have time for all those questions,
but we did. We narrow them down to tenkay. And
so each person is taking a turn answering these questions.
It's just a chance to get to know you a
little bit better. I love that, all right, So, Gina Grat,
are you ready to go on to the microscope.
Speaker 6 (15:20):
Let's do it all right?
Speaker 3 (15:21):
Question number one. Just take a couple of minutes and
tell us about your story, your life story, as much
detail as possible. We've all managed to do it.
Speaker 9 (15:33):
Okay. Let's see. Well, I was raised in the Midwest
in Kansas City, and my dad was a sportscaster on TV.
I did like some sports in school, but no interest. Oh.
My kindergarten soccer team was called the sugar Babies.
Speaker 6 (15:49):
Oh good, Okay, that interesting.
Speaker 5 (15:51):
They think they're still called the sugar Babies, doubtful.
Speaker 9 (15:53):
It was foreshadowing for some of my teammates, but not
for me. But I was super into like dancing and
singing and plays and musicals, and that's all I cared about.
I hung out with like like theater and like hippie
kids in high school. That was kind of like my people.
I wasn't a big drinker. I'm not a big drinker now.
I wasn't really then, but I think I smoked pot
(16:16):
the first time when I was like fifteen, and uh,
love affair began.
Speaker 5 (16:20):
It's kind of struck.
Speaker 9 (16:21):
Yeah. I met my my best friend who's still my
best friend of this day, when I was two. She's
still very much in my life. That's yeah, she's a girl.
My parents got divorced at a perfect time for me,
when I was like becoming a teenage, like twelve years old.
You know, when everything else is.
Speaker 5 (16:38):
Going right right, Oh it's and.
Speaker 9 (16:40):
It was like in like right in the middle of
my butt, mitzvah. So that was tough. And but back then,
like you're Jewish, Yeah, I'm a big jay dub. Back then,
like you didn't go to therapy and ask the kids
that they're okay, just kind of dealt with it. So
I manifested all these like problems because nobody jecksy if
I was okay. I became agoraphobic. Didn't leave my house
(17:00):
for three weeks. You don't go outside, couldn't leave my house.
I was pulling my hair out. I had panic attacks
all the time, but like nobody cared, Like nobody asked
about it. Do you have siblings, Yeah, I have an
older brother and he didn't care. Oh god, no, he
had his own issues. But we got through it. Went
(17:20):
to the University of Kansas major it in theater with
a concentration in something that I knew I would use,
Japanese mask work.
Speaker 6 (17:29):
Oh okay, yeah, all right, Jesus christ All.
Speaker 9 (17:33):
Met my other best friend who's also my other best
friend of this day when I was eighteen and did
a lot of shows in college. Found my first real boyfriend.
When I was a freshman in college, I did hair
fully nude. It was before people would bring their cell
phones into the theater. So I mean at eighteen, Wow,
come on, amazing for me.
Speaker 5 (17:53):
And that was your first real boyfriend.
Speaker 9 (17:54):
Yeah, that's where we met Jean.
Speaker 5 (17:56):
So, were you like late to lose your virginity?
Speaker 9 (17:59):
Well, what's late?
Speaker 5 (18:00):
I was eighteen eighteen.
Speaker 6 (18:01):
Oh it seems a little late.
Speaker 9 (18:04):
But here's a fun fact.
Speaker 5 (18:06):
I am not abnormal, but like on the late side
of normal.
Speaker 9 (18:09):
Yeah, it didn't occur to me to do it before that.
But I lost my virginity before I ever used a tampon.
Speaker 6 (18:15):
What yep?
Speaker 8 (18:17):
So you were just using pads, you had a period,
you just use a tamp I didn't know.
Speaker 5 (18:20):
What to do.
Speaker 9 (18:20):
Nobody told me. Nobody talked about anything in my family.
Speaker 6 (18:22):
That's what my wife said.
Speaker 3 (18:23):
My wife said that her mom never had a conversation
about like periods or anything.
Speaker 11 (18:28):
Well, you probably learned that in school because you have
health class.
Speaker 3 (18:31):
Yeah, but also knowing my mother in law, she just
didn't want to have the conversation with my mother.
Speaker 9 (18:36):
And it had a great time, so much fun in
college that I left early when I thought my fund
was done, and I did not complete my bachelor's degree,
which I am currently completing right now.
Speaker 4 (18:48):
Because a lot left.
Speaker 9 (18:49):
No I have three classes left. I've already done four
of them. Moved to New York right before nine to eleven,
and like Woody, I was there in the city, saw
everything go down and it was it was intense. Got
locked in the city, stayed there for two years with
my other boyfriend that my next boyfriend that I met
on a trip to Israel. Because of course make a
(19:13):
first birth thread group. I was literally the poster child.
It's me like like swimming in the dead sea. Yeah,
I thought I was going to marry this guy. Super
glad that I didn't, but I really I was. I
was crushed when we broke up and I came out
here just to kind of like get my mind right.
My dad had been living out here and I forgot
to go back. And that was like twenty one years ago.
I just I kind of just never went back to
(19:35):
New York. Got a radio job where I had to
scream calls in the middle of the night for their
public access channel. I still worked my shift at the
retail store, and then I would drive two hours away
to do a show for free, just to learn how
to do radio. Yeah, and I forge.
Speaker 5 (19:54):
Right, Yeah, it's a different version of the same stores.
Speaker 9 (19:56):
Yeah, and then just like bounced around on radio for
a long time and landed here with you. I mean,
and I got I got married later in life. I
have no divorces under my belt because they didn't get
married till I was, you know, forty something.
Speaker 3 (20:11):
So as far as like radio goes, like what you
were like a phone screener and then and then okay.
Speaker 9 (20:17):
And I would do bits. On one of the shows.
I asked if I could do the news and the
host said, you can only do it if you do
it as Robin Quivers from the Howard Stern Show.
Speaker 4 (20:28):
A character.
Speaker 9 (20:29):
Yeah, so I could. I had to that, but I
had to deliver real news like oh, or you're gonna
hate this. And I was giving like the real news updates.
So it was wacked.
Speaker 4 (20:39):
It was weird.
Speaker 6 (20:39):
And then we worked with our friend Mark Thompson, worked with.
Speaker 9 (20:41):
Mark Thompson, Carolla, Tim Conway Junior, all these wonderful Arsenia Hall,
all these really amazing people, and uh, and I'm very lucky.
And then my dad got really sick from like a
freak like a freak illness, and I spent two years
dealing with that and dealing with the family and what.
Speaker 5 (21:01):
Kind of illness was it he had.
Speaker 9 (21:04):
He was diagnosed with something that's like very curable called
Harry cell leukemia, and they just put a little port
in your heart and all as well as I don't
want this terrifying, but they said it's easy peasy, and
I don't want to freak anyone out because the chances
that is happening to you are very low. But while
he had the port, he got like an infection and
(21:24):
his immune system was bottomed out. So he got this
like like tropical illness, like something insane, and he went
downhill so fast. He couldn't move. He couldn't speak for
a long time. And I was just like the twenty
four hour nurse maid. While I was working, while I
was doing this, while I was doing that, while I
was trying to deal with the family. It was insane.
So the plan was for my husband and I to
get married in his hospital room, but it was during COVID,
(21:48):
so didn't allow that. He passed away. It was dev
I was beyond devastated, but I still had so much
like planning energy and dealing with stuff and like paperwork
and care. I still had all this energy. I didn't
know what to do with it. So I said to
my husband.
Speaker 5 (22:03):
Was that your way of coping?
Speaker 9 (22:05):
Yeah, well, if somebody nobody else was doing it.
Speaker 5 (22:06):
Any day you get busy and stuff, that's your way.
Speaker 9 (22:10):
And I was dealing with all the everything, and so
I said to my husband, like, do you want me
to plan a wedding? Like, I don't care either way,
but I'm happy to do it because I still have
all this energy. So we did, and every vendor said
they have never worked with a bride as easy as me, Like.
Speaker 11 (22:25):
Because I do.
Speaker 9 (22:25):
I give an f what the colors of the flower are?
I just buried my dad. I don't cares. Just pick
a color.
Speaker 4 (22:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (22:31):
And by the way, that was your reputation easy, easy,
you know, easy to work with.
Speaker 5 (22:34):
I should clarify it.
Speaker 9 (22:35):
I was going to say, even though if I didn't
put out easy to work with, it easy to work with.
So it was. It was a crazy time. And then
I moved. Well, I had already been living with my
husband and my step son and that's been like six
years and we just live in this little little house
together and that's my life.
Speaker 5 (22:51):
And then here she is here.
Speaker 9 (22:53):
I am here today.
Speaker 5 (22:55):
Yeah, and just just a few minutes she got right here.
Speaker 6 (22:58):
Yeah, for the word show to them.
Speaker 5 (23:00):
All right, So we're getting to know Gina Grad.
Speaker 3 (23:02):
And what we're gonna do is we're gonna take it
because that's like the most like that's a long one,
that's a longer in depth one. And so we'll take
the break and we'll come back and we have some
of these other questions. We'll get to know Gina Grad
some more after the break. All right, Welcome back, everybody. Yeah,
so our newest full time member of the crew is
Gina Grad. And we're getting to know Gina better with
(23:23):
those same questions that we've all answered.
Speaker 5 (23:25):
We've all gone under.
Speaker 3 (23:26):
The microscope over the years for these things, and we
heard a little bit about her life and how she
ended up getting here.
Speaker 4 (23:33):
To this point, a little background on her.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
But the next question, Gina, for what in your life
do you feel most grateful?
Speaker 9 (23:41):
It's cliche for a reason. I would have had a
different answer a few years ago, but after seeing everything
my dad went through, and he was healthy as a horse,
and he was a jogger and he was fine, and
then he wasn't. I am so grateful for my health.
I can't even tell you. I'm i every day that
I can get out of bed and somebody else can't.
I know, I'm lucky.
Speaker 4 (24:01):
That's nice.
Speaker 3 (24:01):
Yeah, yeah, I heard that. I was watching that documentary
Becoming Warren Buffett. He goes, what if I told you
that you get to pick out one car and that
car needs to last you the rest of your life.
You know, you would take care of that car. You would,
you know, put the best gas, and you would, you know,
keep it clean.
Speaker 5 (24:22):
He goes, Well, that's that's.
Speaker 3 (24:22):
Your mind and your body, right, he goes, you only
get one mind and one body. I'm like, hmmm, that's
pretty jeloppy, all right. Get to know, Gina Grad What
is the one thing that people always misunderstand about you?
Speaker 9 (24:35):
I always think about like whenever you see like a
new artist, like new music artist or whatever, and people
just think like, like, what's the phrase they they woke
up on third and think they hit a triple, you know,
like like they came out of nowhere. We never stop
and think like how much work, how much blood, sweat
and tears went into them, like breaking through? And I
feel the same way, like I know, you know, people
(24:55):
know my dad was in the industry, but he was
in a totally different format. He was a sports guy
and people think like, oh, your dad did it? Do
you just get handed everything on a silver platter? I
was like, no, No, it doesn't work like that.
Speaker 3 (25:06):
Like you may get the first opportunity that way, like
by who you know or whatever. But if you're going
to stay in any I don't think any industry for
any amount of time, it'll become based on your own
Like you got to know what you're doing at some.
Speaker 11 (25:17):
Point unless your family owns the company, that's.
Speaker 4 (25:19):
Your family owns the radio station.
Speaker 9 (25:21):
The only nepotism, the only nepotism I ever got was
he got me an interview for my first job, which
was phone screening overnight for a public access Okay, that
was it.
Speaker 6 (25:31):
Yeah, with that point for.
Speaker 9 (25:33):
People don't understand like how we've like scraped and worked
and sacrificed to get where we are, Like this doesn't
this does not happen like anybody.
Speaker 3 (25:41):
That's had a career, yes, or it's involved in a career,
you know, it just doesn't happen.
Speaker 9 (25:45):
It's happen that way, such a slow roll.
Speaker 3 (25:47):
Yes, what did you say, Greg when somebody said the
about being lucky or.
Speaker 4 (25:51):
Oh just how that bothers me all the time? You
guys are so lucky, and I was like, what A
lot of it was not lucky.
Speaker 11 (25:57):
Exactly, Like my grandparents came to visit on Thanksgiving at
the radio station and bring me food like we all.
Speaker 4 (26:05):
Worked, Yeah you didn't work or whatever.
Speaker 3 (26:09):
Getting to know Gina grad Question number four, What if
anything is too serious to be joked about?
Speaker 9 (26:14):
I got nothing. I mean, I've heard horrible jokes about
like that I should be insanely offended by, but they
were clever, so it was funny.
Speaker 5 (26:24):
If it's funny, like one topic or no.
Speaker 9 (26:27):
I mean, if it's if it's if it's a well
crafted joke, you're gonna get your props from me. It's
just if it's not funny, then I'm offended.
Speaker 6 (26:34):
I agree, it's it's contact, it's intent.
Speaker 4 (26:36):
Yeah, it's into said if it's witty.
Speaker 9 (26:38):
And that's the thing like with with a certain type
of person, like I would imagine, you know, people in
this room, if you're saying something brutal, it's because there's
like there's a certain amount of love underneath, you know,
you can't really get offended.
Speaker 5 (26:50):
By the way the brutal comedy.
Speaker 3 (26:52):
That's my favorite comic, Like the more inappropriate the more
it makes something other people angry or uncomfortable, that's the
stuff I love.
Speaker 9 (27:00):
And if it's funny, oh my god, you're not going
to get an argument for me.
Speaker 3 (27:03):
And we've all made plenty of jokes that if it
was just written down on paper and somebody ran there like, oh.
Speaker 5 (27:07):
My god, they would freak out.
Speaker 3 (27:09):
But it's all about the tone and the context of
Some people disagree with that, and I can appreciate that,
but it's not necessarily what's in your heart.
Speaker 9 (27:17):
I'm not looking at a right, it's just a style, yeah.
Speaker 6 (27:20):
That you just might not appreciate. Yeah, all right.
Speaker 3 (27:22):
Question number five getting the NOE Gina grad Share an
embarrassing moment in your life.
Speaker 9 (27:27):
Oh, I got one, and you were there, Woody.
Speaker 6 (27:30):
I was, yeah, oh I.
Speaker 5 (27:32):
Know this story.
Speaker 7 (27:33):
Oh what happened?
Speaker 5 (27:35):
Do you want to tell the story?
Speaker 9 (27:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (27:37):
By the way, I was unaware of this the entire time.
Speaker 9 (27:39):
Thank. I was so terrified that he saw something and
didn't say something. So when we were talking, like, you know,
read about this job, Yeah, about this job, and I
got to meet the you know, the wonderful program director
and like just having this really interesting business line.
Speaker 3 (27:57):
So we yeah, so we went off campus, so and
we went and had this meal and it was myself
and Gina on the program director because it was part
of the process of you know, hey, is this something
that might work out or whatever, just kind of getting
like we're doing now, kind of getting to know you right, And.
Speaker 9 (28:13):
It was all good and it was so much fun
and it was fantastic. So the program doctor leaves and
Wood and I go and walk across the street to
get a coffee. And because he's a gentleman, you know,
I'm walking in front of him, and you know, like
you know, he opens a door for me, and it's
all very nice, and we sit and we have a conversation.
About halfway through this. I'm listening and I'm trying to
(28:33):
focus on what he's saying, and I'm trying to play along.
But all I'm thinking is I one hundred percent I'm
having my period. Oh no, like, and I was not
prepared for this. So I'm like, and sometimes it's a
false alarm. Whatever. I get home, I take my jeans
off and it looks like a very violent crime has
(28:54):
been committed on the back of my pants. And I
was so mortified. I didn't know what to do. I
didn't know. Should I reach out to Woody and be like,
I'm not.
Speaker 6 (29:04):
I can explain that's chaotic.
Speaker 10 (29:08):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (29:09):
He to this day he claims he didn't notice.
Speaker 5 (29:12):
Probably I had no idea. I probably would have said
something like.
Speaker 6 (29:15):
Hey, did you get shot?
Speaker 5 (29:18):
That would have been that would have been more of
my style.
Speaker 4 (29:20):
Okay, you know, Yeah, he didn't see.
Speaker 9 (29:22):
I was pretty humiliated.
Speaker 3 (29:23):
I'd be looking around for bears and sharks and he
would have told us about it.
Speaker 6 (29:27):
Yeah, it was pretty bad.
Speaker 3 (29:28):
I definitely would have told so he did not see.
Speaker 9 (29:32):
He didn't say anything, and he did so he did.
Guess he didn't see it.
Speaker 6 (29:34):
She's like, oh my god, can I tell you something?
Speaker 3 (29:38):
And uh, yeah, because we were walking across from where
we had this breakfast to the Starbucks that was across
the parking lot. She was convinced because I was walking
behind her that I saw.
Speaker 6 (29:47):
This ply bath.
Speaker 9 (29:49):
I was so humiliated.
Speaker 3 (29:52):
Uh. Question number six Getting to know Gina grad Regill
appreciate this question? When did you last cry in front
of another person? People or by yourself?
Speaker 9 (30:01):
These all involve you people in front of Sammy and
Morgan last week?
Speaker 7 (30:06):
Yep, I was there.
Speaker 9 (30:08):
This was that.
Speaker 6 (30:11):
Friday.
Speaker 9 (30:12):
Yeah, where I was not well. Bort said, you know,
there's like a patio out there. Do you want to
do you want to go out there get some rans? Like, sure,
I go out there. I'm totally alone. It's like three
forty five. I literally curl up the field position on
that couch out there, and I'll start couch balling my
eyes out, which is yes, which is always preferable to puking,
(30:34):
which I knew something had to come out. I thought
I was too and then I start crying and then
I come in and I'm like breathing, and then I
start crying in front of Morgan and see me. But
it felt so good. I was like, I think I
just need to get this out, like I just I
just I'm okay, I'm okay. That was last last week?
Speaker 4 (30:51):
Wow?
Speaker 3 (30:51):
And then what what kind of stuff typically makes you cry?
Greg will cry pretty much? Anything song does it for fun.
Speaker 9 (30:57):
I'm any easy to cry. I'm an easy cry too,
But anything that has to do with like certain members
of my family or my kid, I get like real
emotional about my step son. He's my little guy. Okay,
yeah all right. Also like if I feel that anyone
is wronging him, Oh, I get crazy.
Speaker 3 (31:18):
Yeah, yeah, have you had to deal with any kind
of like bully stuff or We've had.
Speaker 9 (31:22):
To handle a couple of situations, but like overall we're
more about like getting him to stick up for himself.
But you know, I'll uh you know, if I have
to drop a kid what happened?
Speaker 6 (31:33):
Sorry? Not sorry?
Speaker 5 (31:34):
What are you most unapologetic about?
Speaker 9 (31:37):
I am so sick of stepmothers being villainized as like
wicked and evil, Like I am just do I seem evil?
Or am I really good at hiding it?
Speaker 5 (31:47):
I'm the surface exactly find out later.
Speaker 9 (31:49):
You'll find out. But I am. I am an unapologetic,
like super involved stepmom. Like I'm so sick of like
the the Disney movie stuff and the fairy tale like
get over at people. We're just like random chicks like
you know, hell, we're joining these families already in progress,
like give us a break.
Speaker 3 (32:09):
I feel like people question the sincerity of like you know,
you say, oh I really love them.
Speaker 6 (32:12):
Or what like like do you really love that?
Speaker 3 (32:15):
Are you just trying to like, uh, you know, look
good for your partner, Like oh no, like you're really
into them, but you kind of put.
Speaker 5 (32:21):
Up with the kids.
Speaker 9 (32:22):
Well this this kid, Like I think.
Speaker 3 (32:24):
That's where people question. I agree, because not your child
is not your flesh and blood, So that's what people
will question.
Speaker 9 (32:31):
He's my guy. Now that being said, there is this group,
this movement online called Nacho parenting and it's for step parents,
as in Nacho kid, Nacho problem. So I try. Yeah,
like it's like a healthier way for some people to
step parent. Like, I'm just gonna take myself out of
the equation. This is not my problem with them. Figure
(32:51):
it out. And I've kind of adopted that a little bit,
just so I don't drive myself crazy. But like I'm
a really involved parent. I love this kid. He's my guy,
like I love my husband, Like, you know, this is
our family, and like I'm not gonna apologize for for
you know, being involved in his life.
Speaker 3 (33:06):
All Right, we're get to know Gina grad a little better.
The ten questions. We're gonna wrap up the last three questions.
We come back after the break here on The Woody
Show eight seven seven forty four. Woody text over to
two two nine eighty seven. Maybe you have a random
question for Gina and we can get to that as well.
It's The Woody Show. We'll be right back.
Speaker 5 (33:31):
The Woody Show, A.
Speaker 9 (33:35):
Wood Woody Money, Money, Money, money, money, money.
Speaker 4 (33:38):
Money, Woody Show.
Speaker 3 (33:40):
All right, wrapping up our getting to Know Gina Grad
segment here segments.
Speaker 4 (33:47):
Yeah, do you.
Speaker 5 (33:48):
Guys feel like you know Gina a little bit better?
Speaker 4 (33:50):
For sure?
Speaker 13 (33:50):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (33:51):
Yeah, absolutely would.
Speaker 6 (33:52):
I've never pegged you as as much of a crier.
Speaker 9 (33:54):
I'm a crier. I'm any I know she does not.
Speaker 6 (33:57):
It seems like she like swallows her feelings more than
I do, and I eat them or I laugh them off.
Speaker 9 (34:02):
I'm an easy laugh for an easy crier.
Speaker 3 (34:04):
All right, So we got the three final questions here
getting to Know Gina Grad. What's the one thing you
would like to change about yourself?
Speaker 9 (34:11):
I wish I wasn't so shy.
Speaker 4 (34:13):
Shut.
Speaker 6 (34:14):
She's the queen of oversharing, it's true.
Speaker 9 (34:16):
But like I have declined three people's invitation to officiate
their wedding. Yeah, I am way too shy. I don't
want the responsibility. I I can't do it.
Speaker 11 (34:28):
I've seen I wouldn't want the responsibility.
Speaker 5 (34:31):
Yeah that's different.
Speaker 3 (34:32):
Yeah, I think that's different because I just recently saw
you get up in front of all the salespeople here
at the radio station and you.
Speaker 5 (34:38):
Were completely comfortable.
Speaker 3 (34:39):
I was and just like really connecting and making them laugh,
Like you weren't weird about like people have to get
up in front of a class or no, that's addressing
a group of people.
Speaker 9 (34:47):
But I just feel like if I was like called
upon to like give a speech or you know, officiate
a wedding, I'd be like, oh no, no, no, no. I didn't
even want to give a eulogy at my dad's funeral.
I mean there are things I'm just a.
Speaker 5 (34:57):
Little bit so understandable the circumstances.
Speaker 11 (35:00):
That's important stuff.
Speaker 3 (35:02):
Yeah, question number nine, if a crystal ball could tell
you the truth about yourself, your life, the future, or
anything else, what would you want to know?
Speaker 6 (35:11):
One thing?
Speaker 9 (35:11):
I don't understand how people say they don't want to
know this. I want to know when and how I'm
going to die. Yes, I don't want surprises. I want
to know. I would be so at peace with that
just knowing in advance.
Speaker 5 (35:22):
Yep, I agree one thousand percent.
Speaker 7 (35:25):
That never even occurred to me.
Speaker 5 (35:26):
You don't want to know that, why.
Speaker 8 (35:31):
Because then you're kind of anticipating it, Like if I'm
gonna get hit by a bus, then I get nervous
every time I see a bus, like is it?
Speaker 5 (35:36):
Because you know she's like when and how?
Speaker 4 (35:41):
This would know?
Speaker 3 (35:41):
Like I said, I wanted to, I would want to
know like how and then how old I was.
Speaker 9 (35:47):
Going to be exactly that's exactly what I want.
Speaker 8 (35:49):
But then wouldn't you be like counting down like I
only have three more years?
Speaker 9 (35:52):
I would appreciate.
Speaker 5 (35:54):
Then you know how to manage your time, right, I'm
going to be.
Speaker 7 (35:58):
Stressful manager, don't go perfect. You're like, oh no, that
was the last time. I'm not going to do this.
Speaker 5 (36:03):
You know how to manage your time. You know how
to manage your money.
Speaker 10 (36:06):
You know.
Speaker 3 (36:06):
I mean like you could like always talk about like
you don't have to worry about like, well, what if
I live X number of years? What you go, I'm
going to live this number of years. This is how
much I need and then this is.
Speaker 4 (36:15):
What I'm going to do.
Speaker 7 (36:16):
Sure you enjoy your last Christmas with your family?
Speaker 5 (36:19):
Yeah, exactly right.
Speaker 4 (36:20):
Favor it?
Speaker 5 (36:20):
Yeah, yeah, because the people think about the people who
didn't know.
Speaker 9 (36:23):
Oh, that's the biggest regret everybody has. That was the
last time I talked to We got in an argument.
Speaker 5 (36:28):
If I would have known this is the last time.
Speaker 7 (36:31):
Just be nice all the time. Just enjoy the moments.
I mean, not nice all the time, but still try
to enjoy those moments.
Speaker 9 (36:37):
Me and what you are down?
Speaker 6 (36:38):
Yeah, Greig's down.
Speaker 4 (36:39):
I think because a week in advance, if you know
your death day, then you start having apple fritters for dinner.
Speaker 9 (36:44):
Yeah, exactly right.
Speaker 6 (36:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (36:47):
If you know you're not going to die from any
kind of like you know, the heart attack or something
like that.
Speaker 6 (36:52):
You just eat what you want.
Speaker 9 (36:53):
You know you'll be okay.
Speaker 3 (36:55):
Yeah, right, Heroin, there are last getting to know you
question for Gina Grad if you could have anyone in
the world as a dinner guests. I know it's a
very cliche question, but I think it's very insightful. If
you could have anyone in the world as a dinner guest,
who would it be?
Speaker 9 (37:09):
Dolly Parton?
Speaker 5 (37:11):
You did say that you were.
Speaker 9 (37:12):
I am a true, true mega fan from back in
the day. I love her voice, I love her songs.
I've seen her in concert with multiple costumes and wig
changes many times. Never you've never met her. I walked
by her and everyone's sort of pushing me. I couldn't
do it. Talk about being I froze.
Speaker 6 (37:29):
I couldn't do it.
Speaker 9 (37:30):
It was too scary. But she is. She is my
shining I just.
Speaker 11 (37:34):
Love Dolly because the way that she's conducted herself for
her entire career.
Speaker 9 (37:38):
Yeah, and she even says like, I don't do politics.
I'm an entertainment.
Speaker 4 (37:43):
Good for her, No, I love that.
Speaker 6 (37:44):
Good for her.
Speaker 3 (37:45):
Well, there's a getting to know Gina grad do that
by popular demand.
Speaker 6 (37:50):
I'll having some computer issue, no network, I'll do it live. Well,
it's another new I'm onding. That's Greg Gorey.
Speaker 4 (38:03):
Good morning.
Speaker 5 (38:04):
We've got Gina Grant. It was our newest full time
member of the show Menace is here.
Speaker 11 (38:09):
He's got morning.
Speaker 6 (38:10):
Another delivery from Sea Bass.
Speaker 4 (38:12):
We'll get to here.
Speaker 5 (38:13):
And just a moment there is Sea Bass already lead frogged.
Speaker 6 (38:16):
By Gina Gratt, and the name mentions, well.
Speaker 3 (38:18):
It's kind I've been mixing it up, and I've been
switching it up every wild card, every couple right exactly,
there is sammy morning. Phones are open eight seven seven
forty four Wooding. You can hit us up with a
text over to two to nine eight seven. Those are
some very fragrant donuts, Yeah they are. He just opened
the box and have filled the room.
Speaker 6 (38:36):
Well, it is Greg's favorite brand, Krispy Kremere. Again, this
is supposed to be a treat for Menace because I've
been shape, I've been disrespectful to him by buying, bringing
in vegetables and things smell.
Speaker 5 (38:48):
I smell maple.
Speaker 6 (38:49):
Well, I was good and Menace, I wanted to get
you the Barbie joints. The Kristy Creme had a Barbie collab,
but those have retally just ended. This is a new
fall seasonal, so.
Speaker 4 (38:57):
There's got to be maple in there.
Speaker 9 (38:59):
Yes, spice.
Speaker 3 (39:02):
By the way, Greg, just in case you're curious, there
are some pumpkin spice milk bone dog treats for the babies. Yeah,
I saw they had in case your In case your
dog wants a fault treat, I would need to get
some dogs love that pumpkin.
Speaker 9 (39:19):
Asked for it?
Speaker 3 (39:20):
Ask ask if I ask if I bought some and
brought them home and buy you some new fault treats.
Speaker 5 (39:26):
I sure, did you bet?
Speaker 4 (39:29):
I did? Do like pumpkin?
Speaker 6 (39:30):
Yeah they do.
Speaker 11 (39:31):
They actually good for their stomach.
Speaker 6 (39:33):
Canned pumpkin and their food, but not the spice. Right,
It's called pumpkin spice because vast go good with your
dog'sgs and like.
Speaker 3 (39:43):
Yes, well, guys, we have some very serious business to
attend to here. It is that time time for the
annual sexual harassment training workplace harassment that we have to complete.
Speaker 5 (39:56):
That's the music.
Speaker 3 (39:57):
Yeah. You know what's cool about it is it used
to be easy, used to be a like log on,
start the stupid stuff, do your other work, and then
wait for the video to burn out, and then you
go there, answer the.
Speaker 5 (40:08):
Stupid question to move on. I just put it on mute,
of course. But now if.
Speaker 3 (40:12):
You go to another window or whatever, like it will
just stop. Yep, that's what you have to have.
Speaker 6 (40:17):
Like I have the double wide monitor, so you open
it in its own window to the side, let it
run again on mute. Yeah, as soon as you see
that it stopped, just click a bunch of buttons. Still
it moves.
Speaker 9 (40:25):
But for the silent masses of us who don't have that.
Speaker 3 (40:28):
Yeah, they're like, oh, we'll only take a few minutes
of your time, and some of these are like yes,
like sixty plus minutes, an hour and a half plus hour.
Speaker 6 (40:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (40:36):
But another hack that I that I do is if
it's an old white guy in the video, I don't
have the audio on.
Speaker 3 (40:43):
I know he did something bad. Yeah, so who does
the fault? Heretimes the person that did the wrong thing, old.
Speaker 11 (40:51):
White guy, and you fly through that.
Speaker 4 (40:56):
All right.
Speaker 3 (40:56):
So these are clips that we pulled from the actual
sexual harassment training video here at the company.
Speaker 6 (41:02):
Like these set up the scenario because we all ignored it.
So this is actually a chance for us to take
the train actually first for the first time. This is
like the set up the scenario.
Speaker 5 (41:10):
It's the worst acting you've ever heard, dare you?
Speaker 3 (41:13):
Well? There was that one from a couple of years
ago that I always pointed to as an example. It
was like these two chicks that one was hot, sitting
at their cubes and like, so did you get me
this weekend? Goes you bet I did, and blah blah
blah blah blah, and try this with your and and
like like a gopher sticking his hat out of a hole,
here comes the guy with his head over the top
of the divider of the cubicle and goes total square.
(41:35):
Yeah you guys, uh, this is making me uncomfortable. Yeah,
two chicks talking about banging all weekend.
Speaker 4 (41:41):
Change the subject, I would say, can you speak louder.
Speaker 6 (41:45):
Yeah, what's his first scenario? This is a supervisor is
disciplining two ladies. So hot supervisor is disciplining her her report,
as they call it, so the person reports to her.
Speaker 5 (41:57):
Sounds like someone's going to get a spanking.
Speaker 6 (41:58):
Right, she's disciplined, bad bad product, she's heared bad reports,
she's turned in, and then someone else pops up on
a zoom style call.
Speaker 12 (42:06):
In the following scenario, Janet, a supervisor meets with Shenie,
an employee whom she supervises.
Speaker 5 (42:13):
Shenise, we've discussed, by the way, all the right.
Speaker 3 (42:15):
I can already tell that Janet is in trouble. All right,
between Janet and Chanie, Janet did wrong?
Speaker 10 (42:20):
Yeah, janit several times that the primary focus of your
role is to provide financial reports. Every report that you've
submitted for the past three months has included inaccurate numbers
and analysis.
Speaker 12 (42:31):
As the meeting is about to end, another employee joins
the video call. They also have a meeting scheduled with Janet.
Speaker 11 (42:38):
Oh, sorry, I think I'm only for the meeting, but
I'll rejoin in a few minutes if you'll all stay
finishing up.
Speaker 10 (42:44):
No, it's okay, Ren Actually, while you're here, maybe you
can give Shanie some pointers with her finance reports, as
she is always making basic math mistakes. Given it your
mom came from Asia, I'll bet she made sure that
you will create it math.
Speaker 11 (42:57):
Why how would you ask?
Speaker 9 (43:02):
Wow?
Speaker 12 (43:04):
How would you classify Janet's comments?
Speaker 6 (43:13):
Wow, Asia's great actude? This is just your reports have
been filled with errors.
Speaker 3 (43:24):
Guys, the super stereotypical, like you know, accent, they're using
like things.
Speaker 6 (43:31):
Oh and by the way, prompting on time too, not
a bad stereotype either.
Speaker 3 (43:34):
I can do it. I'm telling you, I'll take any
positive stereotype. They alway, they always say like all stereotypes
are bad. But again, somebody wants to think I have
a huge penis because I'm a particular race, or I
think I'm really smarter good at math because of a
particular race.
Speaker 6 (43:46):
Eight. By the way, that doesn't sound like that guy's
mom came from Asia. It sound like he came from
Asia exactly. All right, So what's what How would you
classify janets to a comment there? Too?
Speaker 5 (43:58):
I mean it's probably reason totally.
Speaker 11 (44:01):
Yeah, problematic for sure, Yeah, very problem sounds like a
typical day at the workplace.
Speaker 5 (44:05):
Okay, let's see what they say.
Speaker 12 (44:07):
Janet's derogatory comments are inappropriate, they could also be evidence
of unlawful harassment as they relate to the protected characteristic
of national origin. This is true even though Janet refers
to the national origin of Wren's mom and not Ren
or Sheniice's own national origin.
Speaker 3 (44:26):
So what if she didn't say Asian? What if she said, well,
you're probably smart.
Speaker 6 (44:31):
There's a question because she didn't say anything about national origin.
Speaker 9 (44:35):
Yeah, I think she'd be in the clear.
Speaker 4 (44:37):
Yeah, you an accent, you're smart.
Speaker 11 (44:38):
Ye, clearly from Germany. Yeah, she didn't tell accent, she
didn't say race. I mean, it would be implied, but
I don't think they could get her.
Speaker 3 (44:48):
For This is from our annual sexual and workplace harassment
training video.
Speaker 6 (44:53):
All right, so guys, what should you be doing with
jokes at the workplace? Should you be telling them what find?
Speaker 4 (44:58):
Well?
Speaker 6 (44:59):
Yeah, I mean, and.
Speaker 5 (45:00):
That's kind of our job around here.
Speaker 11 (45:01):
Right, I don't know about that.
Speaker 6 (45:02):
Let's see what the scenario presents.
Speaker 12 (45:04):
In the following scenario, Noah is in a video conference
call with a group of co workers.
Speaker 2 (45:10):
Okay, everyone, thanks for joining today's meeting. Before we get started,
I've got to tell you this joke I heard on
TV last night. A rabbi, an Asian guy, and a
blonde woman. You get on a bus together. The rabbi asked,
the blonde.
Speaker 6 (45:23):
Guy's making a combat Asian guy.
Speaker 11 (45:25):
Wow, all right, before we start, I have to tell
you this joke I heard. Yeah, that television.
Speaker 6 (45:31):
Generic television program and what program from nineteen seventy? Are
you watching? A rabbi and Asian guy and.
Speaker 5 (45:39):
A homosexual stuff onto a bus?
Speaker 11 (45:44):
Who?
Speaker 5 (45:46):
Geez, do we have the joke? Well, here's the thing.
Speaker 6 (45:50):
This this training is so PC that they set up
the joke right there and they like then.
Speaker 9 (45:57):
They kind of give you half of the punchline, but
not really here it's lazy.
Speaker 4 (46:01):
They tease it. Yeah, right, Like, tell us the joke,
because now I want to know what did the Asian
guy do.
Speaker 12 (46:08):
Neither the law nor workplace policies are meant to prevent
people from telling jokes or having fun at work. But
how do you know when a joke crosses the line
into harassing behavior?
Speaker 2 (46:19):
And so the bus driver says, that's not a speed bump.
Speaker 12 (46:24):
Well, we didn't hear the entire joke. The joke appeared
to involve risky topics. At the moment Noah told the
joke and everyone laughed. What do you think he was thinking?
Speaker 6 (46:33):
Hmmm, yes, I think it's a pretty good joke. I
want I looked up all those like there's no joke
I could find that involves rabbi, Asian guy and blonde speedbumps.
Some guessing is the blondes boobs at some point maybe,
but there's no there's no actual joke out there, unfortunately,
So write your own commit out again. So here's the
problem is that you heard that there's a laugh amongst
(46:56):
the ies. So what was Noah probably thinking?
Speaker 5 (46:59):
Let's find out.
Speaker 2 (46:59):
They all laughed. I feel like they think I'm really funny.
I should find another joke to tell at the next meeting.
Speaker 12 (47:05):
Oh No, do you think Noah intended to offend anyone
by telling the joke? It doesn't seem like it. He
was just telling a joke he thought was funny.
Speaker 5 (47:13):
He's just dumb, Yeah, just an idiot. He's just a
legal R word.
Speaker 12 (47:18):
However, comments and behavior that involve religion, race, age, or
other legally protected characteristics can be considered harassing.
Speaker 6 (47:27):
To all the good ones.
Speaker 5 (47:28):
Yeahh is that saying all the good jokes are off limits.
Speaker 6 (47:32):
Whatever you do. Don't look up truly tasteless, tasteless jokes people.
It's yeah, it's almost if.
Speaker 12 (47:38):
They reasonably offend others.
Speaker 6 (47:40):
Okay, okay, I'm Chris.
Speaker 3 (47:43):
This is our workplace harassment sexual harassment training that we
all just had to take. And we go through the
because it's new scenarios every year, these different things.
Speaker 6 (47:52):
And number three, what is is you walk into an
office and you see a photo?
Speaker 4 (47:56):
What do you do it?
Speaker 10 (47:58):
Or do you?
Speaker 5 (47:59):
Okay?
Speaker 13 (48:00):
Mary has a picture on her desk of her son
competing in a swimming competition. Could this photo be evidence
of a sexually hostile work environment?
Speaker 6 (48:08):
Yes, yes, we don't got here at work.
Speaker 3 (48:14):
Was it the underage naked swimming competition aroused this photo?
Speaker 6 (48:19):
Was the photos shot through a people?
Speaker 4 (48:20):
Perhaps?
Speaker 6 (48:23):
Yeah, I was a hidden camera in the locker room toilet.
Speaker 3 (48:29):
You could see he's taking the dump. Was he doing
the elephant walk with the other kids on the team?
Said Greg Shower. Briefly, you had an oil sessions with
your old water polo.
Speaker 6 (48:40):
That's right. Photos of that circulation somewhere I wish there
were So is that sexually in appropriate that Mary has
her hot sun and his swimming it is all right.
Speaker 14 (48:51):
It is.
Speaker 4 (48:52):
I'm going I know, no, because it's discrimination.
Speaker 6 (48:55):
It's her son.
Speaker 3 (48:56):
It's clearly a sport, right, but he has nips out? No, okay,
but male nipples are not offensive because it's a guy.
Speaker 6 (49:05):
It's not offensive, right, suggest.
Speaker 13 (49:08):
Well, the photo of Mary's son likely would not offend
a reasonable person. What if Mary instead hung a photo
of a male swimsuit calendar in her office? Could that
contribute to a hostile work environment? Of course it could.
So what's the difference between a photo of Mary's son
in a swimming competition and a male swimsuit calendar? Oh?
Speaker 4 (49:27):
No, six?
Speaker 5 (49:29):
A question for three year olds?
Speaker 6 (49:32):
Easy?
Speaker 5 (49:33):
Did they say how old the sun was? I'm assuming
it's like a child, right.
Speaker 9 (49:38):
Sposed to be like a teeny it's hotter.
Speaker 6 (49:43):
I didn't watch any I don't know.
Speaker 11 (49:45):
Dudes aren't complaining about that five n swimmers body.
Speaker 5 (49:52):
So it's also very different.
Speaker 6 (49:54):
I think it's the sun.
Speaker 4 (49:55):
I mean her son.
Speaker 9 (49:56):
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (49:57):
This sounds like way too logical and easy, but somebody's
a I got to see other people.
Speaker 5 (50:01):
There are pictures of their kids, like you know, with
the soccer ball or something.
Speaker 6 (50:05):
That's not nearly as hot. You can look at this
as kids playing with ball. Okay, here's what they say.
Speaker 13 (50:11):
In essence, the difference is that the swimsuit calendar is
designed to be sexually provocative, whereas the photo of her
son in a swimsuit at a swimming competition is not.
Speaker 6 (50:23):
That's not the intent.
Speaker 5 (50:24):
But again there's an unattendant boner.
Speaker 11 (50:28):
Again, who's complaining, right, I mean the people.
Speaker 3 (50:32):
There are people in the office who are looking probably
the people who aren't making their budget.
Speaker 6 (50:36):
Well, it's the person who's in HR who's like, that's
what they do. They look for problems because they are
the problem fine solver he quote unquote, So that's their job.
Well who does this?
Speaker 3 (50:44):
And I mean I've been witnessed to it a few
different times in my career, the people who suck at
what they do, and so they're always the ones who
are like, you know, looking for these things, and so
in a way that protects them.
Speaker 13 (50:57):
I do it.
Speaker 5 (50:58):
I did say, was offended by whatever, do.
Speaker 6 (51:02):
You make your numbers this week?
Speaker 13 (51:04):
No?
Speaker 5 (51:04):
Nope, now, but you were offended.
Speaker 6 (51:06):
So that's something.
Speaker 9 (51:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (51:09):
Yeah, Also that I mentioned that I'm a homosexual in
a wheelchair. I got a great joke about that. All right,
we're gonna take quick break there. There's a couple more scenarios.
I think, I really, I think that we are really
kind of embracing this, yeah, and really taking it to heart,
and I feel like we're going to be better employees
for it.
Speaker 9 (51:28):
Yeah. Sure, oh yeah, that's the spot right there.
Speaker 3 (51:35):
We're doing our sexual harassment workplace harassment training that we
have to do every year. We always play the clips
from some of the very poorly acted scenarios that they
just to really kind of drive the point home and
what is appropriate and not appropriate in the workplace?
Speaker 6 (51:50):
What are you talking about?
Speaker 3 (51:52):
Yeah, somebody on the text here said, I got in
trouble one time during a CPR certification that I was
doing for work.
Speaker 5 (51:58):
I made a joke that even made the teacher laugh.
Speaker 3 (52:00):
The dummy, of course, had no arms or legs, and
I said, finally a man who can't run away from me.
And I got reamed by my boss, who was going
through a divorce at the time, because she assumed that
I took.
Speaker 4 (52:11):
A jat.
Speaker 11 (52:14):
I'm like, who would be offended by that?
Speaker 5 (52:17):
Well, some check who's going through a divorce and her
husband left her some right.
Speaker 6 (52:21):
That's a hacksworthy joke, Greg, wouldn't you say kind?
Speaker 4 (52:24):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (52:25):
All right, Well back into the training. We have two
more scenarios to go through. What is what's his next one?
Speaker 6 (52:31):
Sea? Best be careful. I know we talked about jokes
and hot sexy children. Be careful around the office with
your compliments as well.
Speaker 12 (52:40):
Oh, verbal harassment can happen, not just in the context
of telling a joke. Let's watch the following scenario.
Speaker 5 (52:48):
Hey, Vera, how you doing great?
Speaker 3 (52:50):
Matt?
Speaker 9 (52:50):
How are you good?
Speaker 4 (52:52):
By the way, I.
Speaker 12 (52:53):
Wanted to tell you congratulations on your new baby.
Speaker 3 (52:56):
Thanks Matt.
Speaker 6 (52:57):
It's my first chat, so it's been a big.
Speaker 12 (52:59):
Change, I bet. By the way, I can't believe you
only had a baby eight weeks ago. You've already lost
all the baby weight from your pregnancy.
Speaker 4 (53:07):
You look amazing.
Speaker 6 (53:08):
Thank you.
Speaker 12 (53:09):
Do you think Matt's comment was inappropriate?
Speaker 3 (53:12):
No?
Speaker 6 (53:12):
Make out?
Speaker 11 (53:13):
Oh god, this is where he made the mistake. He
was unattractive when he said.
Speaker 6 (53:21):
Yeah, yeah that.
Speaker 5 (53:24):
Ladies, ask yourself this question.
Speaker 3 (53:26):
Honestly, would you be offended if it was a guy
who looked like your celebrity crush, yeah, Chris, or a
guy who looks like you know me.
Speaker 9 (53:32):
Well, he can still be creepy. That doesn't mean we
don't want to do him.
Speaker 10 (53:35):
Right.
Speaker 6 (53:35):
If I said, oh, hey, how's it going. Yeah, oh,
by the way, by the way the way, he was like, here,
do you.
Speaker 9 (53:43):
Want me to give you a workout plan to lose
the baby weight? He was like, damn, girl, you lost it.
Speaker 6 (53:48):
You kept lying on air all day, lost the gut.
Way to go, girl, Yeah, that's awesome.
Speaker 4 (53:53):
Matt in accounting thinks I'm hot. I see you're still breastfeeding.
Speaker 11 (53:57):
The problem is I'm unattractive and therefore.
Speaker 6 (54:02):
Well, okay, let's see if that's the answer. MENACE's answer
he was he was not hot. Yeah, yes, Menice to
get the point in the certificate for that one.
Speaker 12 (54:10):
The law does not prohibit employees from politely complimenting each
other on their appearance. However, in this scenario, while the
words Matt spoke may have been intended to suggest a
polite compliment, the statement might make Vera or others uncomfortable
in the workplace.
Speaker 5 (54:26):
Yeah exactly, he thinks I look good. Yeah, Greg, oh
my god, are you sick? You look so skinny?
Speaker 4 (54:33):
What do you think you see? That's the appropriate response.
Speaker 5 (54:36):
I mean, I could say to Greag, Oh, my god, Greg,
you look like you have AIDS. You're so skinny.
Speaker 4 (54:40):
My god, that's my goal.
Speaker 5 (54:41):
Yeah, is Greg offended?
Speaker 2 (54:43):
No?
Speaker 5 (54:43):
No, I don't only have to be hot to say.
Speaker 4 (54:45):
That, bouncing off the walls.
Speaker 5 (54:46):
Yeah you think I look ill? Yeah made, Greg's weak.
Speaker 6 (54:50):
I shouldn't cough around you because your lower immune response.
Speaker 1 (54:52):
Greg.
Speaker 4 (54:53):
No, I don't have as I've just lost wing.
Speaker 3 (54:59):
Talk about having your cake and eating it too at all.
All right, let's do one more from the HR training videos.
And you might have heard all these and thought, well,
you know what, I'm in a minority.
Speaker 9 (55:10):
I'm cool.
Speaker 6 (55:10):
Nobody ain't nobody coming from me?
Speaker 13 (55:12):
Right?
Speaker 6 (55:13):
Wrong, that's right. Let's listen to this scenario.
Speaker 4 (55:15):
All right.
Speaker 12 (55:16):
Fernando, a Mexican American employee, has worked in the same
position for the past three years and has never been
disciplined for any misconduct. Let's hear from Fernando.
Speaker 15 (55:27):
So, I've got a friend who work named Dre. Dre
is also Mexican American, and I joke around with her
a lot. Last week, though, I made a few jokes
about her having darker skin than me, and she got
really offended. Now she's complained to my supervisor about it,
and I'm afraid I could get in trouble.
Speaker 12 (55:47):
Could Fernando be disciplined for this comment?
Speaker 6 (55:50):
Yeah?
Speaker 11 (55:51):
Yeah, sure, isn't that that's the thing, right, I mean, yeah,
I have family members where they talk about each other
and who's darker, who's not, and it becomes very people
get very offended.
Speaker 6 (56:03):
In that scenario.
Speaker 3 (56:04):
Just for my own education, Yeah, we're learning. Yeah, so
what is the preferred lighter or darker? Which one gets
ripped on? The darker gets ripped on?
Speaker 11 (56:15):
Yeah, and even though everybody's Mexican, even though everybody's Mexican
family and get the same.
Speaker 4 (56:20):
Family, siblings, and the whighter one is like one favorite
one of the puppies in the litter come out darker
and then the other one, and you know it's same mother,
same father, same emory.
Speaker 6 (56:29):
Then it's drama. Yeah, I noticed that. I noticed that
in Japan menace. But like Japanese and some Korean people,
they're lighter skinned than white people are.
Speaker 9 (56:39):
And they and there's a lot of pride in that,
you know, they really protect their skin for that reason.
At least my friends.
Speaker 16 (56:46):
I was talking to her and she is also a
Mexican American and I made a crack about how she's
so dark because it comes up a workplace personally, I'm
Latin X like, so he's in the clear.
Speaker 5 (57:02):
No dog, you know what, I'm gonna go out on
the limb on me. I'll say, he's totally fine. Why
wouldn't he be fine?
Speaker 4 (57:12):
Come on.
Speaker 12 (57:12):
Even though Fernando and Dre are both of the same
race and national origin, Fernando's comment could be considered harassment
based on the color of Dray's skin. Any harassing behavior
violates workplace policies and can result in discipline.
Speaker 5 (57:27):
Man, these hate R people are going to hate the
whole use of the N word rule kidding.
Speaker 6 (57:32):
Oh yeah, does that fly in the workplace. I've been
called that around here, so have I I was offended.
Speaker 5 (57:40):
Yeah, in fact, that just happened recently. Are yeah in
a bad way?
Speaker 2 (57:45):
It was?
Speaker 3 (57:46):
It was it?
Speaker 5 (57:46):
Yeah, it wasn't like in a bad Yeah.
Speaker 6 (57:49):
I felt so. I actually kind of felt kind of cool.
Speaker 3 (57:53):
Because we got the hip hop station and their studios
are right next to ours, and uh, you know, saw
somebody that I hadn't seen in a while in the
hallway and I got tapped up, and it's super cool.
Speaker 5 (58:03):
Man, I've made this whole guy feel awesome.
Speaker 6 (58:06):
Menace of the past few years, you know, just how
I've used I've noticed people using the N word a
lot more, or certain Asian folks like like the guys,
Yeah yeah, like they embraced it.
Speaker 4 (58:14):
You'll see it on on social media.
Speaker 3 (58:16):
I think it's a generational thing because I've seen a
lot of those, like where it's a video of like
two white teenagers fighting and they're saying that, like yeah,
what you got and where what you got, and like
every like everybody's throwing around white dudes, Asian dudes, whatever.
But I think it's just because that's what they see
in the videos of other people. It's like they're they
(58:38):
think it's okay, but it will not fly.
Speaker 6 (58:42):
Fly Are you sure?
Speaker 4 (58:44):
Yeah?
Speaker 11 (58:45):
Will not go well?
Speaker 5 (58:47):
Uh, this is uh, this is very helpful.
Speaker 4 (58:52):
Sammy would like to point out if we did have
an issue with somebody and found something to be offensive
and wanted to go to HR, where would we go?
Speaker 7 (59:00):
Where is HR? How do we call them?
Speaker 5 (59:02):
There's nobody in the building.
Speaker 6 (59:03):
We don't have a Toby.
Speaker 9 (59:04):
HR is just a state of mind.
Speaker 5 (59:09):
It's like things being in the cloud exactly.
Speaker 7 (59:11):
The answer to almost all of these questions is what
should you do? And the answers always call HR? But
where is HR?
Speaker 6 (59:18):
That's the problem.
Speaker 3 (59:20):
There is a link on this like work day thing
that we have or whatever, Like I wouldn't even exactly
know where to find. It's like, if you told me, like,
where is exactly the link? I would say it's online somewhere.
Speaker 11 (59:33):
But Sammy, why are you always looking for HR?
Speaker 1 (59:36):
I'm not.
Speaker 7 (59:36):
It was just the answer to all of them.
Speaker 3 (59:38):
You know, if we ever do need makes us think,
if we ever do need HR, you know who we
can ask c Bass. He's been the one that has
contacted HR the most. You know what, Sammy, I can
answer your question. Complain about somebody bringing a dog in
the office.
Speaker 5 (59:51):
Okay, so that's one. What was the other thing you
complained about that.
Speaker 6 (59:55):
I've complained about dogs two or three different times.
Speaker 5 (59:57):
Right, wasn't there another thing? There was something else for HR?
Speaker 1 (01:00:00):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (01:00:00):
Oh, yes, yes.
Speaker 6 (01:00:01):
I know what you're talking about. Okay. So, and this
was also for the show. This was supposed to be
a bit. But I was complaining about UH the inaccurate
and false liatudes told about my my personal UH hair
appearance on the show. And so I submitted that to
HR through that online portal thing. I ended up on
(01:00:21):
a zoom call with somebody like in the middle of
Texas somewhere that I've never met before. I've never been to. Uh,
and they and I and I said, uh. I was
trying to get them to come on the phone with us,
like I'm live on the air. Yeah, she wouldn't do it.
Speaker 11 (01:00:33):
Unfortunately, no fun.
Speaker 6 (01:00:35):
I know, no fun. And it's like HR sucks or something.
Speaker 4 (01:00:38):
Your complaints not valid because.
Speaker 5 (01:00:49):
Going with his hair so you can see what's on
his mind.
Speaker 6 (01:00:57):
And because I was on a zoom called Greg the
HR mana he said, well, clearly you have a case
thicking lustrous.
Speaker 5 (01:01:03):
Oh yeah, absolutely, no.
Speaker 1 (01:01:05):
Telling to the mountain baldist. You gotta loose hairs all
over your headphones, get a limp roller and brush your
shoulders up, getting mass. Go on, brush your shoulders off.
Just get away, dude, go on, brush your shoulders off.
See that's a crazy Maybe he should just give up
(01:01:26):
and shave the kid hair upy shoulder.
Speaker 6 (01:01:29):
You gotta kid, get that hair upy shoulder. You gotta
can't get that hair uppy shoulder.
Speaker 11 (01:01:35):
Ball.
Speaker 6 (01:01:38):
Thank you everybody. Three years it's funny.
Speaker 3 (01:01:40):
Because it's radiculous. It's we're gonna take a quick break
more when he shows.
Speaker 6 (01:01:45):
Now, boy hottey, that's your got a tasty kid doing
the Woody Show.
Speaker 3 (01:01:48):
We'll be right back.
Speaker 6 (01:01:53):
The Woody Show.
Speaker 3 (01:01:54):
It's the Woody Show, as you know, Woody, Greg Nice,
this is Gina Grass. We got Sammy, we got Sea Bass.
And another question for you, let us know what you
think on this one. Hit us over the text over
to two to ninety seven call in eight seven seven
four people were asked, what is a bad habit.
Speaker 6 (01:02:12):
You're not willing to change?
Speaker 4 (01:02:15):
Oh boy?
Speaker 3 (01:02:15):
And for by the way, a lot of people their
bad habits were things that we consume. So sugar and sweets,
min is on here, soda. I'm sorry, but I'm just
not giving up. I give it up the sodis Yeah,
I'm just not on yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:02:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:02:29):
Because here's the thing. I've lost considerable weight a few
different times, you know, in my adult life. It won
over the last few years, seventy pounds at a clip,
and I drank. I drank it the entire time. Really, Yes,
it doesn't make you fat. It makes you maybe crave
other things. But if you avoid those other things, you're fine,
so I'm not giving it up. Few Yeah, so good
energy drinks, pizza, you know, binge, eating too much alcohol,
(01:02:53):
smoking too much weed.
Speaker 6 (01:02:54):
So what would be.
Speaker 3 (01:02:56):
All the fun stuff, all the good stuff. But like
so for you, like, what's a bad habit you've got
you're not willing to change. I'm gonna I'm gonna go
with cracking my knuckles, cracking your out. I can't stop,
won't stop. I mean, you haven't stopped vaping. You're still
you're still hitting that vape dog.
Speaker 4 (01:03:09):
But I would like to stop. Yeah someday, Gina.
Speaker 9 (01:03:13):
I mean i'd say my noises, but I'm trying.
Speaker 11 (01:03:16):
To do better starting today.
Speaker 6 (01:03:18):
Weird noises, Yeah, I met us?
Speaker 11 (01:03:20):
What with yours being probably like fingernails toenails, I just like,
you know, rip them off because I'm a man, instead of.
Speaker 3 (01:03:26):
Right, instead of clipping them, you just peel them off.
You's so dainty to clip them, Sammy.
Speaker 7 (01:03:32):
I truly can't think of.
Speaker 2 (01:03:36):
You.
Speaker 6 (01:03:36):
You're the person I'm gonna.
Speaker 5 (01:03:37):
Start going to less and less. I can't think of anything.
Speaker 9 (01:03:41):
I don't do this.
Speaker 6 (01:03:43):
To me.
Speaker 7 (01:03:44):
I'm sure that it does, but I'm trying really hard.
Speaker 8 (01:03:46):
That's why I did lent every year and I've curved
so many bad habits that I can't think of any.
Speaker 3 (01:03:52):
Well besides the stuff we're consuming. Refusing to delete old emails.
I won't do that, procrastinating, taking your nose, But that.
Speaker 7 (01:04:02):
Wait, is keeping old emails a bad habit?
Speaker 6 (01:04:04):
Yeah? Why then?
Speaker 2 (01:04:06):
I guess that.
Speaker 7 (01:04:06):
I mean, I heard them like crazy, but I never
considered it a bad habit.
Speaker 5 (01:04:09):
Gambling, twirling your hair, that was a lot.
Speaker 4 (01:04:12):
Of ladies said that, Oh yeah, that's annoying.
Speaker 3 (01:04:14):
Hitting snooze about five times every morning, staying up too late,
just scrolling through your phone, that's the one. Yeah, social
media in general, ignoring text messages, Sucking your thumb. One
person said that they're thirty six and they occasionally still
do it because it's self soothing? Is it?
Speaker 9 (01:04:33):
Wow?
Speaker 6 (01:04:34):
What a loser?
Speaker 5 (01:04:35):
Wasting too much time gaming?
Speaker 6 (01:04:36):
What is it for you?
Speaker 3 (01:04:38):
What's the bad habit you've got you're not willing to change?
Eight seven seven forty four?
Speaker 6 (01:04:42):
What Dennis? What is today's word of the day?
Speaker 12 (01:04:46):
Idio secrecies.
Speaker 5 (01:04:51):
In a sense, his idio syncrecies are are multitudes?
Speaker 10 (01:04:56):
What?
Speaker 13 (01:04:57):
What?
Speaker 4 (01:04:57):
What mult.
Speaker 6 (01:05:02):
Multin Norman The Woody Show.
Speaker 3 (01:05:05):
And we are into another new hour Insensitivity training for
a politically correct world. It's midweek, It's Wednesday. I'm Woodie.
That's Greg Gory. There's our newest full time show member,
Gina grad Hey, good morning, Gina Menace our social media director.
What is that?
Speaker 6 (01:05:25):
Boddy? Find us?
Speaker 3 (01:05:25):
Follow us to it on the social media platform of
your choice. At the Woody Show, there is Sea Bass Morning,
Sea Bass. Sam's here. Phones open for you at eight seven.
It's another way you can be part of the show.
Say some of the text over to two two ninety seven.
Set us an email email at the Woodyshow dot com. So, uh,
(01:05:48):
let's see we got something here from Menace.
Speaker 4 (01:05:50):
Oh sweet?
Speaker 3 (01:05:52):
A new nessy hunter okay claim to report on Okay.
This says they have identified a strange hump in Scotland's
lock nests, which this guy claims could be proof that
there's not one, but two lock ness monsters out there too.
Speaker 6 (01:06:10):
You can't prove the one. What makes you think there's two?
Speaker 11 (01:06:13):
Go double down?
Speaker 9 (01:06:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:06:15):
A video captured from a webcam showed a large wake
moving south across the water with what appeared to be
a hump near the front.
Speaker 14 (01:06:24):
Possible I mean yeah, right, yeah, focus on absolute has
been those wake videos for years where there's like a
little bit of a wake in the middle of of
that that lake.
Speaker 11 (01:06:38):
So that's nothing new. But we need some hard evidence,
and we need some divers to go into the underground
caves and just get a photo of this thing already.
Speaker 4 (01:06:48):
A recent poll, Yeah, come on, let's get it together, yeap.
Speaker 3 (01:06:52):
A recent paul found the top things we would do
if aliens invaded Earth. Twenty six percent of people said
they would find friends, family, twenty percent said they would
gather supplies, eighteen percent would just run or hide, but
one in ten said they would try to make contact
with the aliens. Others say they would have asked the
Martians to take them back to their planet with them, like.
Speaker 4 (01:07:15):
Get me off this thing, I'll join your team. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:07:18):
Five percent said they would get intimate, oh.
Speaker 4 (01:07:22):
With them noise.
Speaker 3 (01:07:24):
Four and ten people said they would save their children
or their partner first and then they would save themselves.
But a fifth of people said they would save their
pet before anybody else buy it, because it's super important.
Speaker 11 (01:07:35):
More and more every day I'm reading up about bunkers
and like how to get bunkers installed and where to
put them, or like, did you.
Speaker 5 (01:07:43):
See the one where someone had it installed under their driveway.
Speaker 11 (01:07:45):
Yeah, I love that one.
Speaker 6 (01:07:48):
That's great. That is my dream.
Speaker 9 (01:07:50):
And there's luxury community bunkers.
Speaker 11 (01:07:52):
There is, but there's in such a remote area. I'm like,
if things go down, like, how am I even get
to those things? I want something that's in my backyard.
Didn't we know somebody that like discovered one?
Speaker 6 (01:08:03):
Yeah, I mean the house was.
Speaker 3 (01:08:04):
The house had been built, I mean decades ago, and
it was during the Cold War, and so when this
house was built, they had something sunk into the backyard,
like a fallout shelter or whatever, and so they didn't
even realize it was there until they were doing some
work rule in the yard and they're like, hey, there's
something back here. And then they found where the like
(01:08:25):
the hatch was, and they went back, they went down
in there, and I guess they didn't want to tell
any of the neighbors because they were paranoid that there
would be a big rush on them should something happen.
Speaker 4 (01:08:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (01:08:36):
Sure.
Speaker 4 (01:08:37):
Did they end up keeping it or filling it in
or no?
Speaker 6 (01:08:40):
They kept it.
Speaker 3 (01:08:41):
That's cool because they figured it'd be a good selling point.
And they eventually didn't sell that house. I don't know
what they got for it. But it's pretty good.
Speaker 6 (01:08:47):
I mean it's a very nice neighborhood, so uh huh.
Speaker 9 (01:08:50):
And now it's marketed as I'm sure a man cave
underground man cave.
Speaker 5 (01:08:54):
Yeah, super cool, a lot of Neon signs. Yeah, but
I do get paranoid.
Speaker 11 (01:08:58):
I'm like, Okay, well if I like get this thing
installed and then all my neighbors see waste of money,
and then you know, the installers know it's there too.
Speaker 6 (01:09:07):
Yeah, here's my thing.
Speaker 3 (01:09:10):
When it comes to alien invasion, nuclear fallout, or what's
left that you want to stick around for so bad?
Speaker 6 (01:09:18):
Yeah, there's no TV? What am I doing?
Speaker 4 (01:09:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:09:20):
I do have an internet access.
Speaker 9 (01:09:21):
I'm with you.
Speaker 3 (01:09:22):
Our internet was out until about five thirty last night,
and it was like weird, this is this And I
lived a lot of my life before the internet.
Speaker 9 (01:09:33):
Did you feel like a pioneer?
Speaker 3 (01:09:34):
It was just weird, like how much you really rely
on it? And it was just a service outage and
they were working on it. There's texting updates and stuff,
but yeah, it was. It was very strange.
Speaker 9 (01:09:45):
And if there is a full on nuclear fallout around Earth,
I do not need to be one of the survivors.
Speaker 3 (01:09:51):
Yes, I'm not going to emerge from my shelter that
I had buried under my driveway plowfields.
Speaker 6 (01:09:58):
What is this crap?
Speaker 5 (01:09:59):
Yeah right, I'm a man of luxury and convenience.
Speaker 4 (01:10:02):
Okay, I'm the utter opposite when I see stuff like
twenty eight days later, twenty eight weeks later, the rest
of Us or whatever that one is called those first
scenes where they have the whole world to themselves, Last
Man on Earth, dream come true?
Speaker 6 (01:10:16):
But how is that a dream? If?
Speaker 4 (01:10:18):
Like, because you can go any Hey, you know what
I really want to driver rolls Royce. Okay, go get
go to the dealer and get.
Speaker 3 (01:10:24):
It on a bunch of damaged roads and everything the
dealership road, all the things you're thinking you're gonna do
or not there. There's no services, This grocery store is
not being stocked. You're talking about a Twilight Drill episode.
Speaker 4 (01:10:36):
And you know I'll make it work. You know I could.
I could fulfill my childhood fantasy.
Speaker 5 (01:10:42):
It's a really easy time getting that reservation.
Speaker 4 (01:10:44):
Yea, I would take you know, my childhood fantasy. Get
a baseball bat, go to the department store and go
to the fine china section, smash it all.
Speaker 6 (01:10:53):
Yeah, but it's something. The nuclear weapon already did that
for you.
Speaker 4 (01:10:58):
But I'm talking about these things where things are still intact,
like twenty eight days later. He's walking through. There's money
on the ground, there's cars everywhere, everything's intact.
Speaker 9 (01:11:06):
That would be awesomeg have his fantasy.
Speaker 5 (01:11:08):
Yeah, it gets off the White House.
Speaker 4 (01:11:10):
That's awesome.
Speaker 6 (01:11:11):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:11:12):
Why would I want to live tonight? Yeah, that mansion,
I don't.
Speaker 3 (01:11:15):
Know i'd want to survive under those circumstances. I'm with
you every and gets wiped out by some nuke.
Speaker 9 (01:11:22):
Like Greg have his little dream.
Speaker 6 (01:11:24):
Gina is going to.
Speaker 3 (01:11:24):
See if she can convince us of this talent about
finding the silver lining in these Grace got a couple yes,
and he's gonna he's gonna bring up these stories and then, Gina,
your job is to show off your talent that you
claim you have to being able to find a silver
lining in any situation.
Speaker 9 (01:11:42):
I'm not gonna lie. I mean, I've been pretty confident
in this my entire life, but I'm feeling shaky today.
So I feel like a lot of pressure all start
pre excuse me, what a pre excitse was? I feel
a lot of pressure to prove myself.
Speaker 5 (01:11:55):
So I should, you should. It's a lot of talk
to this point.
Speaker 3 (01:11:58):
Yeah, and then we've done this with Greg a number
of times over the years, where Greg finds like a
really good story and we got to see if we
can shoot holes in it.
Speaker 5 (01:12:08):
We're pretty we're pretty good at that. But see that's
been proven oh many times.
Speaker 6 (01:12:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:12:13):
Now Greg keeps thinking like, oh, this will be the one. Well, yeah,
we'll see, Yeah, we'll see. Today's the day eight. Well
we're gonna put Gina to the test. Yeah, all right,
she's been bragging.
Speaker 9 (01:12:31):
Blah blah blah blah blah blah ba going on.
Speaker 5 (01:12:33):
And you know, I'm just really good at finding the
silver lining something.
Speaker 4 (01:12:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:12:40):
And I would say also, without even really trying, I
think that Sammy's kind of.
Speaker 6 (01:12:45):
The same thing. Yeah, I am he who starts with
the well comes.
Speaker 5 (01:12:49):
In with something.
Speaker 7 (01:12:50):
And you guys just call me an apologist.
Speaker 6 (01:12:52):
Well depends on.
Speaker 5 (01:12:53):
What you're talking about.
Speaker 8 (01:12:54):
Well, it could be the silver lining, but you call
me an apologist for it.
Speaker 4 (01:13:00):
A silver lininger.
Speaker 11 (01:13:01):
I know, all right, he did murder a guy, but well,
you know he can make childhood.
Speaker 7 (01:13:09):
You don't know, you don't know, Yeah, you don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:13:17):
All right, So Greg's got a story, okay, and it's
not going to be like, it's not going to be
a good story. It's not it's not a it's not
a pleasant story, very unpleasant. Yeah, and then you have
to try to see if you can find the silver
lining in that story.
Speaker 4 (01:13:34):
Good luck with that, all right?
Speaker 5 (01:13:36):
So, h story number one, Greg, what do you got?
Speaker 4 (01:13:39):
So this is out of Pennsylvania. The lawsuit just got
settled for sixty five million dollars and it was a
lawsuit against Lehigh Valley Health Network. And now why were
they sued because last year they had a cyber attack
and then in that cyber attack, photos of naked cancer
(01:14:00):
patients were stolen by a cyber criminal gang. They demanded
payment from the health network. Health network said, naw, Doug,
we're not paying you. So these cyber criminal gangs released
the nude photos of cancer patients and they said that
they were totally humiliated, totally embarrassed. A chief executive of
(01:14:22):
the cybersecurity firm said, if you're protecting health data as
a crown jewel, images are going to need another level
of compartmentalized protection. And these poor people did not get
that level of protection. At all. So the hackers ended
up releasing these nude photos. The patients are humiliated, The
health network is out sixty five million dollars in this lawsuit.
(01:14:45):
Lawyers got rich out of all of it. There's no
win here.
Speaker 6 (01:14:49):
I think I found a silver lining. We'll see how
you do that.
Speaker 9 (01:14:51):
Yeah, well, okay, I understand. I want to first validate
your story and your feelings. This is very difficult, difficult
time for all of us, and I get it, But
have you considered that. I understand nobody wants their naked body,
you know, without their consent, put on the internet, and
especially when they're struggling so much. But think about the
(01:15:14):
awareness this brings to how much we need to secure
cyber security. These people are their their saints. These people
have already been through so much, and they're on the
front line saying, look, if this can happen to us,
this can happen to anyone. Let us be the example
of why all of this needs to be fixed. Remember
(01:15:34):
the fappening, Remember all these people, Oh you guys are.
Speaker 6 (01:15:40):
Come on, I've seen pictures.
Speaker 5 (01:15:42):
Sounds it sounds familiar. The fappening was they.
Speaker 9 (01:15:44):
Broke into all those celebrities naked posts, and nobody cared,
and everyone thought it was funny because they're celebrities and
they deserve it. Whatever. There is nothing about a cancer
patient struggling to deal with this, to deal with survive
that anyone could ever say, Oh, well.
Speaker 6 (01:16:02):
They deserve it.
Speaker 9 (01:16:03):
Who cares? No, no, no, no, The buck stops here.
This has to be fixed immediately. And it's because of
these amazing people being so brave. Okay, and they got
sixty five million dollars.
Speaker 6 (01:16:14):
I have a silver lining.
Speaker 3 (01:16:15):
Okay, Yeah, at least for the moment they weren't thinking
about how they had cancer.
Speaker 5 (01:16:21):
Yeah, yeah, because you know, they were focused on something else.
Speaker 6 (01:16:24):
Yeah, they were.
Speaker 5 (01:16:25):
Focused on something else.
Speaker 11 (01:16:26):
I think I have sixty million reasons not to be
thinking about cancer in that moment.
Speaker 9 (01:16:31):
Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 6 (01:16:32):
All right, what do you think best? Well, I think
that's it's sort of a plug and play silver lining.
What do you mean because literally any crime you could say, well,
that brings awareness to how this crime could occur.
Speaker 4 (01:16:44):
Yeah, bank robbery.
Speaker 6 (01:16:45):
So did I do a better job than Gina? Yes, okay,
all right, I just got victimized because Gina made me
remember the happening and made me remember that. Leslie Jones
had nudes and sex videos. Yeah, yeah, that's right.
Speaker 9 (01:16:58):
That hurt me.
Speaker 7 (01:17:02):
Yeah, my silver lining. I don't know if it's like
inappropriate or not actually, but.
Speaker 8 (01:17:09):
To say, because yes it all of this sucks obviously,
and uh and to do to cancer patients is really horrible.
And my thought was because it's the cancer patient's naked
bodies out there on the internet. But when you're going
through cancer, your body doesn't really look like your body.
So when you beat cancer, you're never gonna look like
that person again.
Speaker 7 (01:17:28):
It's not really what you look like.
Speaker 8 (01:17:32):
Yeah, so when you're healthy again whatever, like, that's not
even you. You're not going to look back on that
really and go, oh this is me.
Speaker 3 (01:17:39):
You won't.
Speaker 7 (01:17:40):
You'll beat it and you'll be healthy again any different.
Speaker 9 (01:17:42):
You're going to take the real, the real Greg Appa
should be like I've never been skinnier exactly, That's what
I was thinking. But I think, I mean, if we're
going to let this happen to cancer patients, this is
done well, well, the security is going to go crazy.
Speaker 3 (01:17:56):
Now, Okay four eight four very clearly tuning into the
middle of a gone Gina is an idiot. You Jesus
shut up saying think about the awareness you bring is foolish,
insensitive statement. The whole the whole thing is trying to
reach and find a silver lining in an otherwise very
terrible story.
Speaker 6 (01:18:15):
That's the bin. Yeah, that's the bit, but they probably
tune in halfway through. That's the BIG's attacking cancer right now.
The statement is disgusting.
Speaker 5 (01:18:28):
You guys are all right, Let's let's try one more here.
Speaker 4 (01:18:32):
Okay, So this is out of Long Beach, California. It
was just after midnight. Fire department gets an emergency call,
so they do what they usually do. They have to
jump in the fire truck, put on the sirens, and
head out of the station. But as they're pulling out
of the station, a man just so happened to be
walking by and boom, fire truck hit him. Firefighters jump
(01:18:55):
out because we need to administer first aid, but no
first aid to get because the man was pronounced dead
on the scene.
Speaker 9 (01:19:04):
Very sad, very very sad.
Speaker 5 (01:19:06):
But this raises awareness for well, no, no, not understood
in that.
Speaker 9 (01:19:11):
Do we know this guy's story.
Speaker 4 (01:19:13):
They believe he was homeless.
Speaker 9 (01:19:15):
Well, there's Greg's silver lining, right, Okay, this is Greg.
Speaker 4 (01:19:21):
This is on you.
Speaker 6 (01:19:22):
Yeah, no, don't drag me to this.
Speaker 9 (01:19:26):
You told us what we know, I'll tell you what
we don't know. This person could have been a murderer.
This person could have been a you know what. To
know how many serial killers we don't know about in
the United States right now?
Speaker 6 (01:19:43):
That's always wondering.
Speaker 9 (01:19:45):
Literally think there's like over one hundred active serial killers
in the United States as we speak, and if Karma
took care of one, I think that that is a
blessing for all the people whose lives get to be saved.
We don't know. We don't know this guy. You guys
are you know you could feel sorry for this person,
and there's part of me that does. But we don't know.
This could have saved a lot of people.
Speaker 6 (01:20:07):
So homeless people are serialis.
Speaker 7 (01:20:11):
Who he was, we don't know.
Speaker 9 (01:20:14):
We don't know this. It's part of this segment for
me to do my job and then for Menace and
Sea Bass to try and undo my job.
Speaker 6 (01:20:21):
No, no, I think you're doing a great job. I
didn't know if that was questions appropriate and exploring.
Speaker 9 (01:20:28):
I know, I just didn't know if we're shooting in
my bit or in the next.
Speaker 6 (01:20:32):
Bit shoot holes in the story.
Speaker 11 (01:20:34):
Then holds me.
Speaker 9 (01:20:35):
Yeah, no, that's okay.
Speaker 6 (01:20:36):
I just want to make sure all the same holds back.
It's a whole shoot off.
Speaker 9 (01:20:40):
I'm saying we could have saved a lot of people,
and you know what, that could be a blessing in disguise.
Speaker 10 (01:20:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:20:47):
I think the fire truck probably did more for the
homeless situation than any of the politicians.
Speaker 6 (01:20:54):
Maybe.
Speaker 5 (01:20:54):
And he's not homeless anymore.
Speaker 6 (01:20:55):
That's he went home. He's not homeless, he's in Jesus. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:21:01):
See, we are very clearly just trying to find the
silver lining in these stories.
Speaker 9 (01:21:05):
You don't know.
Speaker 6 (01:21:05):
I could see where people might tune in halfway through
and go, oh wow, that's not the bit.
Speaker 3 (01:21:11):
And I think what Menace is doing over there is
playing three D chess, because Menace is always very concerned
about how he's going to come out looking, and so
he just wants to make sure it's.
Speaker 6 (01:21:19):
Clear that these comments, yes, always three steps, this is
this is just three D chess.
Speaker 4 (01:21:31):
For the new person.
Speaker 6 (01:21:33):
Three D chess like don't worry or don't worry.
Speaker 5 (01:21:37):
I get it, it's all good.
Speaker 11 (01:21:40):
Your cape on site for the new person.
Speaker 6 (01:21:41):
I understand this. Deflection.
Speaker 9 (01:21:43):
I get it.
Speaker 11 (01:21:44):
Deflection hashtag facts.
Speaker 3 (01:21:46):
I'm the best umpire in this room, balls and balls
strikes and all right, well, nice work, Jake.
Speaker 5 (01:21:52):
I mean you're not as great as I thought you were.
Speaker 9 (01:21:54):
Going to be out it because those are some top stories.
Speaker 3 (01:21:56):
Yeah likes. I think won that last round is no
longer Home was right? Oh yeah, he was called home.
Speaker 4 (01:22:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (01:22:03):
I don't know we could make him that simple.
Speaker 4 (01:22:07):
No longer home.
Speaker 13 (01:22:11):
Right.
Speaker 5 (01:22:11):
Now, we have some stories from Greg.
Speaker 3 (01:22:13):
We're gonna do after the break good News with Greg Gory,
and we're going to see if we can shoot some
holes in it. It's the opposite, and we'll see how
many people tune in halfway through that. Yeah, all right,
Next on the Woodie Show.
Speaker 6 (01:22:24):
Hang on a wood Show, a bit.
Speaker 14 (01:22:28):
Show.
Speaker 5 (01:22:30):
Okay, let's see we're gonna shoot some holes in Greg's story.
Speaker 4 (01:22:34):
Now we did and try.
Speaker 3 (01:22:35):
We did the Silver Linings with with Gina Greg. Yeah,
and now let's see how we do. Greg's got a
good news story. Greg's always said, all no, it's always
cool this, yeah, babe, And let's see if we can
shoot some holes in it.
Speaker 11 (01:22:50):
All right.
Speaker 4 (01:22:50):
Well this is out of Cedars, Pennsylvania. A woman named
Maureen has a son named Nick, and he's very autistic
and she was worried about his future, as are a
lot of parents of kids with disabilities at Nick's school.
So to help out, Maureen made her dream come true
by opening up a restaurant to employ people with disabilities.
It is called So Much to Give Inclusive Cafe. They
employ sixty three people. Eighty percent of their employees have disabilities,
(01:23:15):
and it's not just a restaurant, it's a safe space
for people with disabilities to hang out and dine. And
Maureen says that her son Nick has learned to be
social and restaurants now. As little as a year or
so ago, he would hop around like a bunny or
clap and yell when he was out in public. But
at so Much to Give, nobody cares if he even does,
because it's a safe space for them. And then, to
top it off, across the street from the restaurant, she
(01:23:37):
also opened up Inspiration Studio, where they teach music, crafts
and life skills to people with disabilities.
Speaker 11 (01:23:44):
I got one, I got it already. This yeah, Oh,
this one is just Oh, let's piggyback off this other
place so I can promote my place.
Speaker 4 (01:23:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:23:54):
Also sounds like somebody who's just using their own child
for their own game. But they're spinning it to say like, oh,
look how it's benefiting him. Oh him, it's about him,
by the.
Speaker 11 (01:24:05):
Way, check out my spot.
Speaker 4 (01:24:08):
Right. No, she opened both.
Speaker 5 (01:24:09):
Yeah, that's what I mean.
Speaker 3 (01:24:11):
She opened both, but she's using she got that. She
got the attention from the one. Yeah, and she got
for it correct.
Speaker 6 (01:24:19):
Taking over the whole block.
Speaker 9 (01:24:20):
This is a restaurant, right, yes, you are not allowed
to complain when they screw up your order, and that
would make me furious.
Speaker 6 (01:24:30):
This is a little overdod.
Speaker 9 (01:24:31):
I know it's fine, yeah, like, oh, this is literally
nothing on this plate is something I asked for? But
you know it's fine, this is nothing I ordered. But
you know, what, what are you gonna do?
Speaker 6 (01:24:40):
You checked a review on it, So what are you saying?
Speaker 9 (01:24:44):
We do this properly? No, No, it's great, it's great.
Happy to be here.
Speaker 3 (01:24:49):
Yeah, I mean I think it's great that she managed
to find a way to get attention for herself. Gez okay,
But I mean there's also the side benefit of like, yeah, okay,
well her son also benefit sure, right, but she could
have just kept her with the one place and now
she's got the second place.
Speaker 5 (01:25:06):
And Nina, you don't want to be too hopful.
Speaker 6 (01:25:09):
And how much was the full name of this place?
Speaker 2 (01:25:11):
Again?
Speaker 4 (01:25:11):
So much to give?
Speaker 9 (01:25:13):
What else?
Speaker 6 (01:25:14):
Inclusive cafe?
Speaker 11 (01:25:15):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (01:25:15):
Inclusive cafe?
Speaker 6 (01:25:16):
Okay, a little little wordy there.
Speaker 4 (01:25:18):
Yeah, Oh the name of the restaurant. Yeah, the name
might not be the best, so much to give? Inclusive cafe.
Speaker 9 (01:25:24):
I would just be really worried about my order, so selfish.
Speaker 5 (01:25:30):
Please write it down?
Speaker 6 (01:25:31):
Yeah please?
Speaker 5 (01:25:32):
Okay, so it does?
Speaker 11 (01:25:33):
It does have a four point nine.
Speaker 6 (01:25:35):
Of course it does.
Speaker 5 (01:25:37):
She's not gonna be able to complain about the meal.
Speaker 11 (01:25:39):
Oh but I'm trying to see. Okay, there's one review
that has four stars instead of six.
Speaker 5 (01:25:45):
Six narcissistic.
Speaker 6 (01:25:46):
Really okay, I'm trying to see what the complaints disagree? Yes,
a grade, of course, that's your job. Wait, give me
one more story here, Greg.
Speaker 4 (01:25:54):
This is from Birmingham, Alabama. Adorable little eight year old girl, Sophie.
She was diagnosed with severe aplass tekeonemia a couple years ago.
Doctor said she only had one option for a cure,
and that was a bone marrow transplant. Her family searched
and searched for a match, and then, luckily, a woman
named Macy had registered to be a donor. Three years ago,
she got word that she was a match for Sophie.
(01:26:15):
Nervous but went through with the donation. Now that was
early last year, and then just a couple of weeks ago,
after recovering from all of it, Sophie met Macy for
the very first time. Broke down in tears while Sophie's
mom explained that she can finally enjoy childhood. She even
signed up for her first dance class, something she couldn't
do before because she would get so much bruising. Even
(01:26:35):
the hospital staff cried tears of happiness. This is the
first time they had witnessed an in person reunion between
patient and donor, and now Sophie has a healthy and
normal life.
Speaker 3 (01:26:47):
So sweet, bit, I'm actually having a bulletproof this didn't
have a really hard time with bulletprop.
Speaker 9 (01:26:54):
Okay, Macy's the donor, right right. She is going to
feel really good for a while because the attention is
still on her and oh my god, she's a saint
for doing this. But when that attention goes away, she's
down in Oregon and she might end up needing that.
And guess who doesn't care anymore?
Speaker 6 (01:27:11):
Everybody, I didn't I didn't.
Speaker 3 (01:27:13):
I didn't think about that. Like you hear about people
who make a donation and whatever. I think, like, I
might do that, but then what if I need it?
I see, that's the thing I would donate, and then
I would end up needing exactly, I mean something like that.
Speaker 9 (01:27:26):
Nobody cares because the spotlight has a long past.
Speaker 4 (01:27:29):
This is a bone marrow transport.
Speaker 6 (01:27:31):
Yeah, oh yeah, can.
Speaker 9 (01:27:32):
You make your own bone marrow?
Speaker 6 (01:27:33):
Yeah, that's a question for seb Well, I think I
think the reason she probably needs it for a good reason.
Your body's not producing it properly. Well, Greg, I think
you might have succeeded that. It's kind of cheating though,
but okay, not at all.
Speaker 4 (01:27:47):
It's a great story.
Speaker 6 (01:27:48):
Yeah, I think it's kind of cheating.
Speaker 3 (01:27:49):
I think Greg picked that story just because you know,
all well, let me get some kid with cancer.
Speaker 9 (01:27:53):
Okay stories for Greg?
Speaker 6 (01:27:56):
Ye mind the one that you can't in and I
did success.
Speaker 3 (01:28:03):
Shame on, shame on you, Gray for exploding this kid
for your own, for your just much like that first
one that you're saying.
Speaker 4 (01:28:11):
Is I nailed it?
Speaker 6 (01:28:12):
Yeah exactly using kids plus Yeah, all right, well it's
the only show. We'll be right back so what do
you know.
Speaker 3 (01:28:20):
We're retre