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April 22, 2025 166 mins
CONGRATULATIOINS!!! You Made It To Tuesday!!! We Learned Some Things Abuot The Movie Deliverance, Shplifting Gone Wild, Never Mind About That 911 Call I Just Made, If You're Blind You Can't Be Schitzo, Listener E-Mails, To Tell The Truth, & Things Dead Bodies Do!!!
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
You are about to witness as amazing emo has comes
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be listening for that que every hour with us. I
was just reading about the movie Deliverance. Have you ever
seen Deliverance?

Speaker 8 (04:50):
Zi?

Speaker 1 (04:50):
Yeah, yimb oh Yeah, I actually own it on DVD.

Speaker 9 (04:55):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (04:55):
Yeah. When was the last time you pulled out that
DVD and slipped it in the DVD player that's not
hooked up to your big TV play right? It's been
ten years, maybe maybe less than that, more than five
because I had a girl. Yeah that's never seen it before.

(05:17):
And I'm like, oh, you got to watch this hillbilly movie,
you know. So I sat her down, taped her to
the chair, and forced her to watch it. Yeah, my
wife had never seen it. I was like, well, we
got to watch it. It's maybe one of the best
movies of all time. And we get to the uh,
the squealing part, and she's like, I'm not watching this.

Speaker 8 (05:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
I was like, it's just as it's just a movie,
right right, it's.

Speaker 10 (05:42):
Probably it's one of the most memorable parts of the movie,
if not the it's either that or the dueling banjo
scene with the two most memorable parts of that movie.
You gonna get down on your knees and do your
mighty fine prey and now aren't you boy? And then
he and I was one guy and then the other
hill billy chases ned Bady up the hill.

Speaker 1 (06:05):
You're going you're gonna squeal like a pig. More we
squeal man, And then ned Bady had to go on
acting after being known as the guy that got butt
raped and deliverance. Yeah, for those who know this movie,
the cast is like wildly Oh Burt Reynolds is in it.

(06:25):
John Voight, amongst others. But in the movie, these four
men are getting having a guy's weekend anyway, So they're
having a guy's weekend, and unbeknownst to them, they are
stumbling into a real guy's weekend. Yeah. Yeah, to say

(06:49):
there is rape in it would probably be an understatement.
Goeh it is. Uh. I don't think it's a good
date movie. Nope, it's not a good Valentine's Day movie.
It's not a good Christmas movie. It is it is.
I can't really tell you a time that that movie's appropriate, Like,

(07:09):
for example, Silence of the Lambs, House of a Thousand Corpses,
there's an appropriate time for that movie, single White Female, right, right.
But there are a few movies that are not. There's
not an appropriate time for you to put it in

(07:32):
the player or call it up on demand. There isn't,
and Deliverance is one of them.

Speaker 10 (07:36):
The only time is like when you say, hey, I've
never seen Deliverance before, that's the only time it's proper
to put it in and be like, all right, we're
gonna sit down and watch this.

Speaker 9 (07:46):
It's more of a I dare you to watch it.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
It's not that bad though, it's not that bad. Minus
the rape scene in the hills. It's not that not
right there, Let's let that hang. Besides the rape scene, right,
needs to see that, that's not that long.

Speaker 10 (08:05):
It's like, what maybe two minutes of the entire movie.
I've I've never I've never been raped, but two minutes
feels like a long time. They say it only takes
two minutes for a guy, but hey, whatever, that's neither
here nor there. The fact of it is is that's
not a as it is a very memorable part of

(08:27):
the movie. It's not what the movie is about. You know,
that's just a part of it. And it doesn't take
that long. I mean, hell, they're just trying to float
the river and have a good old time.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (08:38):
You know when someone says, oh, gosh, I can't unsee that.
I think that phrase came about after seeing that movie.
It's one of those movies that once you see it,
you can't unsee it.

Speaker 1 (08:51):
Now, I've got plenty of movies that I have stopped
watching the movie because I'm like that, I don't need
I don't need to see this, right yeah, right, that
that movie with Jennifer Lawrence, Baby or whatever it's called
around where they killed the baby. I don't need to
see that. The Babysitters where the the dads are having
sex with babysitters and she's calling for her mom. There

(09:11):
are movies that I'm like, I'm good, that's fun. I
don't need to see it.

Speaker 9 (09:15):
A couple of scenes from Saltburn one.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
Hundred percent, don't need to see it. Yeah, I've never
seen that. If I never see that movie again, totally fine.

Speaker 9 (09:23):
Absolutely.

Speaker 10 (09:24):
I've watched the Deliverance several times, own it, own it
on DABD. I don't own Babysitters. I've only watched it
one time. I haven't gone back because of that scene.
It's it's so weird. And I haven't seen this other
one with the baby or whatnot it's or Saltburn. So
maybe I'll have to check those two out to see
where they stand on Would I watch that again?

Speaker 1 (09:47):
Yeah? Top five movies you would never watch again? Deliverance
probably could be on that list, Okay, Human Centipede one
hundred percent, all three of them, even though I watched
all three of them, only watched all three of them. Yeah,
we're not need to go back, and we're not talking
about movies that are bad right, right, we're talking about
movies that have a scene and you're like hard pass. Yeah, okay,

(10:10):
so yeah, Deliverance is definitely a movie. There's not an
appropriate time for you to go, oh, okay, I'm never
watching that game. But there's a scene in the movie.
We've talked about it a couple of times where Billy Redden,
who plays the banjo player, and I know this, he
doesn't know. He didn't know how to play the piano.
They found this guy literally for his looks. It's the

(10:34):
squinty eyed kid, right correct, y, yeah, and he didn't
know how to play the banjo, but they needed him
to play the band the banjo. And so what they
did is they had a guy who was a banjo player.
He Billy Redden held the banjo, but the other hand
is the banjo player from behind him playing the banjo.

(10:56):
Now these type of things are this little trickery not
uncommon in movies, right, But imagine you now have to
learn how to play the banjo because you're gonna be
playing movie cons and whatever, and they're gonna be like
playing the song man. And now I don't even know
how old he is, but he's not young. Obviously anymore.

(11:19):
And he's still this is what he is known for. Yeah,
and he still is like like any picture you find
of him, he's holding a banjo, but he didn't know
how to play the banjo. He literally was on there
because he looked like, sorry, this isn't gonna be a
fun thing for some of you to hear. He looks
like a nick knark. Yeah, he looks like an embred

(11:40):
because that's, you know, the hillbilly kind of cliche. I
guess you could. And that's what they're going for in
the movie, is to scare people out of ever going
into the Appalachian Mountains. Have you ever been to the
Appellation Mountains since you've watched The Deliverance? I have, and
I have also been to parts other parts of the

(12:02):
country that give that same vibe. Looking at you Lebanon, Missouri,
looking at you pretty much the whole state of Mississippi.
Just drive through as fast as you can. I'll never
forget driving to Golf Shores, Alabama with my wife who's

(12:23):
pregnant and my newborn as we were having this baby
moon thing, right and my kids like to At this point,
I think we'll ste and we're driving to golf Shores,
Alabama and following ways and it takes us through this
shortcut and I'm talking dirt road town and people in

(12:45):
the like their house porches next to the road, right,
oh boy. And I'm like, geek, geet, washed field, let's
get out of here. We cannot get out of here.
She's like slow down. I'm like, ahhh, you and your
fancy ass right blonde from the front, right, yore, do

(13:09):
not ask for direction? Sure it was fine, yeah, yeah, true.
They could have brought you in and fed you, you know,
good southern wholesome food, corn bread and pork chops, and
you know, maybe raped you and killed you later. But no,
what's the movie with Batista? And is it called the Cabin?

Speaker 9 (13:35):
Yeah, the Cabin in the Woods?

Speaker 1 (13:36):
I think is it called Cabin in the Woods. I
don't think it's called Cabin the Woods. Maybe it is.
And they're like, hey, yeah, no, it's all good man,
And oh no, they're staying in a cabin. It might
be called Cabin in the woods. Knock at the cabin,
knock at the cabin, and they come and check on them,
their neighbors or people in the area, and they're there
to kill them.

Speaker 9 (13:56):
Yeah, m Night Shamalama Dingdong movie. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
and it's creepy. Yes yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
A young girl and her parents are taking hostage by
forearmed by four armed strangers not a forearm stranger, who
demand their family make an unthinkable choice to avert the apocalypse.
It's a really fascinating movie. Yeah. The idea is that
they one of them must die to stay alive or
whatever stupid thing. But Batista plays like the calm person,

(14:28):
tries to be the nice person, but he's a menacing figure.

Speaker 9 (14:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
Sorry, it was a menacing looking figure. But I was
thinking about here's having this movie. You know successful movie.
You're one of the most iconic scenes from the movie.
You go from being a nobody to like everybody knows
who you are. You're so recognizable because of how you look.
And then you're like, I gotta play the band jo.

(14:53):
Like I've tried to play the guitar many times. I
just can't wrap my head around it, and and I
can't imagine I suddenly have to be forced to play it.

Speaker 10 (15:04):
That's how you get a stranger's arm coming out from
around you, and you will reach around for the banjo.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
It's a couple I mean to say, there's a reach
around in Deliverance. That's just the first one. It wouldn't
be that wouldn't be what you expect. No, you would
think I would take you to a different part of
the movie, not in the banjo scene.

Speaker 10 (15:23):
I never knew that he didn't play that. I thought
that was I thought he was legit playing like they
found this kid. He looked funny, he knew how to
play the banjo, and I was like, all right, we've
got a spot for you, just on the porch pick away.

Speaker 1 (15:37):
Imagine you do the movie and they're like, hey, who'd
we get for the kid on the porch playing the banjo. Oh,
you're gonna love him. He's perfect. Great. How good is
he with the banjo? Oh no, he can't play. All right,
we'll figure that out. And think they're like, oh, yeah,
the man I don't know, just put his arm around.
We'll change the camerang a little bit so you can't
see the human being behind this child. Right.

Speaker 10 (16:01):
He was in Big Fish as well. I knew that
he didn't do a lot of movies.

Speaker 1 (16:05):
I mean, I think you can stop right there because
the movie's a Tim Burton movie, So anybody in Tim
Burton looks weird. I think that one of the main characters,
coe main characters in the movie is this nine foot
human being, right right, right. So this guy, this Billy
Redding guy. He's done four movies.

Speaker 10 (16:23):
He's done Deliverance and Big Fish Outrage, Born in Terror,
and a movie called Banjo. Three of the four movies
he plays the part of Banjo Man. That's his character's name,
that's his stick. Yeah. The only real name he has
in the movie is Deliverance. His name was Lannie, but

(16:47):
otherwise he's just known as Benjo Man.

Speaker 1 (16:50):
What do you think Billy Reddan who's sixty eight his
net worth easily one of the biggest movies of all time.

Speaker 10 (16:58):
Yeah, but we say it all the time. We don't
know what kind of you know, deal he had. He
was a child. It was the time of the movies.
When when did Deliverance come out? Like seventy eight something?

Speaker 1 (17:09):
Wow?

Speaker 10 (17:09):
Okay, so early seventies did they have deals like that?

Speaker 9 (17:14):
Lendsey, Yeah, let's say he's probably worth one hundred grand.

Speaker 10 (17:22):
I'm going to say I think it's less than that.
Twenty five is what's popping up in my head. But
I'm going to give him seventy five instead.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
How many motorcycles do you on? Givebe three four? You
have a bigger net worth than he does. It's fifty
thousand dollars, all right.

Speaker 10 (17:40):
I didn't think it'd be that much. No, no, as
he hasn't done anything. But you know those four movies,
and I didn't even know about two of them. One
of them is a documentary. I think I think Kill
Billy is a documentary. Well, I mean, well, yeah, what
the banjo?

Speaker 1 (17:56):
That that one? Yeah, I think kill Billy is a
documentary about that stereotype. Uh, this one here, banjo. It's
a horror movie. A couple's weekend in Wisconsin woods to
rekindle the relationship turns more than deadly when they are
faced with an old American supernatural secrets dating back to
the eighteen hundreds. So that's that one. What's this outrage

(18:19):
Born and teara another. We don't need to go through
all of them. I'm just saying there's a movie in
there about called Hillbilly that's in his arsenal apparently. Okay,
but imagine, like he's getting all this notoriety, he gets
himself an agent. I want to do something. I am
better than just I'm more than a banjo player, are
you listen? Listen here in bred you're born a banjo player.

(18:48):
You are a banjo player. You'll you'll be a banjo player.

Speaker 9 (18:52):
So learn how to play.

Speaker 1 (18:55):
You want to get far in this world, kid, learn
how to play a banjo. Listen, you better just take
the bit and run with it. I imagine like if
you did a Saturday Night Live skit and then you're like,
we gotta just have Billy Redden. I'll have to play
the banjo. I would wager sixty percent of the audience
viewing and in in there wouldn't know who he is. Oh. Now, one,

(19:19):
he obviously doesn't look like a child anymore, right, And
two you go, oh, I know the song? Right? Yeah,
if he was on a porch just playing the banjo,
but you wouldn't. You'd be like, I don't know, right.
His eyes aren't even squinty anymore like there used to
be when he was a kid. Yeah, No, he's he's
sixty eight, so they're a little saggy. He needs that cream.
I keep seeing being trying to be sold to me

(19:40):
when I get up in the morning. Right, it doesn't work,
that's trick. All right, we got tickets to Lincoln Park
and VIP tickets to smoke and guns we're gonna give away.
We've got listener emails, We've got to tell the truth
and more qualifying for see them all.

Speaker 11 (19:53):
Tulsa's Morning Show is coming right.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
Back, a big morning show. Tulsa's Rock Station ninety seve kmod.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
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News quikies are stories you may have missed in the news,
but we cover them here and put a link on
our Facebook page if you it's time for news quakies.
World news, local news and news that just makes you.

Speaker 5 (20:42):
Say, what the Here's Corbyn, Gimbe and Lindsay with what's
going on?

Speaker 1 (20:46):
News Quakies from the Big nd Morning Showing ninety seven.

Speaker 9 (20:48):
Five Bougie Bandit disrbed mannequin while pilfering Prada and more.
This happened to New York City where forty eight year
old Jeffrey Guns, who has seventy six arrests on his record,
allegedly stole fashion merchandise that included pricey coach bags, a
twenty three hundred dollars f Falcnary coat and a thirty

(21:14):
four hundred dollars Acne Studios jacket. In his most stunning heist,
he strolled into a Zadig Voltaire boutique on Washington Street
in the Meatpacking District on February third and allegedly stripped
the clothes right off of a mannequin. He disrobed the dummy,

(21:35):
he made off with a bag worth about five hundred dollars,
a list in leather jacket worth eight hundred dollars, for
a grand total of one thousand, two hundred ninety six
dollars in mannekin mugging. Gonzalez was suspected in a pattern
of nine heists that began back on December twentieth, when
he walked into the Falconary shop on Fifth Avenue the

(22:00):
Flatiron District and swiped a jacket worth twenty three hundred
dollars and a vest priced at four hundred and seventy
five dollars right off the rack. Then, on January twenty seventh,
he strolled into a coach store in Soho and removed
sixteen hundred dollars worth of bags. The following month, he
picked up the pace hitting Acne Studios in the West

(22:23):
Village and grabbed thirty four hundred dollars coat. He also
pilford around the three thousand dollars in Prada merchandise and
other designer shades from two Sunglass huts. He walked into
a Gucci store at one World Trade Center on March
twenty fifth and stole a handbag that was selling for

(22:43):
nearly four grand and a silk scarf worth two hundred
and forty dollars. And then on April thirteenth, he walked
into a Machino store and with a female accomplice. The
woman ran out of the store, but Gunzalez was nabbed
with a perl worth about twenty two hundred dollars and
he was arrested. He is now in jail on Rikers

(23:06):
Island on fifteen thousand dollars bail on three counts of
grand larceny. They say that retail theft is down eight
percent so far from seventeen thousand to fifteen thousand citywide,
but it's up fifty seven percent over five years ago.
According to the New York Police Department, is.

Speaker 10 (23:27):
That one of those we're not busting shoplifters in the
act so let them just go ahead and steal. You
know how you see those some people just brazenly walking
into a store, filling up carts with whatever, yeah, and
then walking out like it ain't nothing.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Well, it is not more of the we're not punishing,
though there is some of that. It's more of the
criminals have gotten smarter and understand that loss prevention and
they build a case on them. And so they know
that there's a certain amount they can steal before there's
a reality to the situation, and so they do that

(24:04):
and then try never to go back to that. Then
that case isn't getting built right, right, So like loss
preventions attitude has always been, we'll let you steal and
then we'll just build a file on you. Right. And
so instead of getting you on one charge of five
hundred dollars, we're gonna get you on seven different charges
of five hundred dollars each. Right, So now it's a

(24:27):
completely different charge that will be of some more severe punishment.

Speaker 9 (24:33):
Now they got him for larceny instead.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
Of well grand larceny. Yeah, yeah, sounds like this guy
just went to the mall and just started taking whatever
the hell he felt like it regardless. Well, and that
is the other thing is you see people that don't
know that that's what the criminal mind is doing, and
they're just like, Okay, well they're doing it, why can't
I Yeah, it spends out of control, right, they're not
scheming like the others.

Speaker 10 (24:56):
Man calls nine to one one report he shot his
mom and then call back to try to call the
whole thing off. Comes out of Arizona, where earlier this month,
a fifty one year old guy named Aaron Morse, he
called nine one one because he shot his seventy four
year old mama, Susan, right in the head. And as
he was sitting there waiting for police to show up,

(25:18):
he calls him back and I'm just kidding.

Speaker 1 (25:21):
She's fine, she's in her pottery studio.

Speaker 10 (25:26):
I don't have the police show up anyway. That's where
they found Sue with a gunshot wound in her head.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
Wow.

Speaker 10 (25:33):
Took her to the hospital. That's where she died. Later
on they went ahead and arrested Old A Ron here.
They say that when they got here, he had blood
on his hands and blood on.

Speaker 1 (25:44):
His shoes, and he smelt like booze. They say.

Speaker 10 (25:47):
When he asked him about it, he just simply said arguing,
and when he went to court, he acknowledged the severity
of his actions and just said, I have committed a
heinous crime.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
Hey, hey, remember that call, but the mom and I'm
just playing. This is a classic example of what we
say when you hear a story like this. You think
your mom and how much you care for your mom,
not not that this person's mom was that this mom
could have been a horrible person, right right, She could

(26:22):
have been a saint as well. Shot her in head.
Itchy hand signals big lottery win. This happened to Maryland,
where a man said his inchy hand inspired him to
buy a lottery ticket and he got forty thousand dollars.
The Baltimore man told lottery officials he was shopping at
the grocery store when his hand started itching. The player

(26:45):
said a superstition about itchy hands meaning a large sum
of money is on the way, inspired him to stop
and buy a keino ticket at the lottery kiosk with
super bonus, using a few numbers he had seen earlier
in the day. The man scanned his ticket and at
a lottery terminal and was shocked to learn he had

(27:07):
scored a prize so large that the readout said, quote,
see lottery. The player collected forty thousand dollars prize that
he said, we'll go into savings. Listen. I feel like
the technology is good enough that if you have a Kiosk,
the answer shouldn't just say see lottery, right, It should
say contact the lottery for more information about your winnings.

(27:28):
Are right, here's a phone number. Are hey, you know
you're gonna need security. Right, bring your right, you better
have a valid ID. I'm just saying the more than
like ce lottery feels like an incomplete statement. Right, see
about what? Right? That's not clear? You want? Right? Could
have been a default in the machine the kiosk. Yeah,

(27:49):
I guess that makes sense, because maybe that's just the generic. Again,
if you have a Kiosk, with all the way the
things that they can do, I feel like you should
advance the statement a little bit more. Yeah. Well, think
about it.

Speaker 10 (28:01):
When you're at the guest pump and your card gets
blind to the decline, it just says, see cash here.
It don't tell you you'll broke gas, ain't got enough
money and bank to pay for gas.

Speaker 1 (28:10):
It just says, go see the cash here. Right, except
there's somebody that can help you on premise where the
kiosk is not that, And I feel like, see lottery
is that what it said? Yeah, See lottery isn't a
person where see cashier as an individual? Right, the lottery

(28:32):
is an entity and people work there and people live
on earth and we breathe air. Absolutely all right, We
got to take a break. We'll be back.

Speaker 11 (28:42):
Telsa's Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
Oh yeah, he's coming right back, Your Big Bad Morning Show,
Telsa's Rock.

Speaker 11 (28:48):
Station ninety seven KMOD.

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For Balls to the Wall Sports.

Speaker 9 (29:29):
The NBA postseason rolls on cade. Cunningham and the Detroit
Pistons put an end to their MBA record fifteen game
postseason losing streak with a one hundred to ninety four
victory over the Knicks in Game two at Madison Square Garden.
In other actions, Kawe Leonard and the LA Clippers took
down Nikola Jokic and the Denver Nuggets one oh five

(29:51):
to one O two in the Mile High City. Both
series are now tied one to one. The action continues
tonight at six the Milwaukee Bucks visit Indiana, where the
Pacers lead that series one and nothing, and our Oklahoma
City Thunder our home at six point thirty where they
lead the series one and nothing against the Grizzlies. And
Game two for the Minnesota Timberwolves takes place at eight

(30:14):
in Los Angeles, where they currently lead one to nothing
against the Lakers. The Hawks are making a major change
to their front office. The team fired general manager Landry
Fields on Monday. The thirty six year old was promoted
to GM in twenty twenty two after holding the assistant
title two years before. Atlanta went one seventeen and one

(30:36):
twenty nine during his tenure and never made the playoffs.
Owzi Sala was promoted to general manager in a following move,
and the Hawks are now looking for a president of
basketball operations candidate.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
Did you see what the GM for the Dallas Maverick
said no, so you might remember they traded their star
yeahed their star player away, And he said, quote, I
did not know that Luca was important to the fan base.
I didn't quite know to what level I had no idea. Huh, Lies,

(31:15):
I don't know, I don't know. I think it's entirely
possible that his head could have been in the clouds
or in the sand, out.

Speaker 9 (31:26):
Of touch with your team and your fans.

Speaker 1 (31:31):
That's a I mean, that is massive to me, to
show like how dumb he is.

Speaker 9 (31:38):
He's the number one selling jersey.

Speaker 1 (31:41):
Yeah here here, here is the actual quote from him,
so you know, I'm not just making that up.

Speaker 13 (31:45):
Didn't know that Luca was important to the to the
fan base. I didn't quite know it to what level.
But really, the way we looked at it is, you know,
if you're putting on the if you're putting the team
on the floor, that's Kyrie, Clay, PJ, Anthony Davis and Lively.
We filled that's a championship caliber team, and we would

(32:06):
have been winning at a high level, and that would
have quieted some of the outrage.

Speaker 1 (32:11):
Had they not all gotten hurt. No. I mean, I
think it's fair to say if they were winning without Luca,
then that nobody would have been upset, right except everybody
knew Luca was a key part. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (32:25):
Yeah, he's a dominant player. He won their games, and
then they got rid of them and everyone else that
they got got hurt. I don't know. Number one, Jersey
sales should speak for itself.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
I think sometimes it does.

Speaker 9 (32:42):
Yeah. Jets general manager Jarren Mogi said Monday that cornerback
Sauce Gardner, wide receiver Garrett Wilson, and defensive end Jermaine
Johnson will have their fifth year options exercised. All three
players were taken in the first round of the twenty
twenty two draft. The first round of the twenty twenty

(33:03):
five NFL Draft is Thursday night in Green Bay. And
that's your Balls to the Wall Sports. I'm Lindsay A
ninety seven five kmovie.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
Good morning, It's the Big nine Morning Show. Toll free.
The phone number is eight three three four six oh kmod.
You can also text BMMS and then what you want
to say to eight two nine four five Good morning, Lindsay.

Speaker 9 (33:45):
Good morning Corbyn. We want to hook you up with
some free cash this spring season. Rock the Bank is
back thirteen chances to win money throughout the day. One
thousand dollars could be yours beginning at eight o'clock this morning.
Listen to that nationwide keyword and when you hear it,
enter it. Online at the website that rocks kmod dot com.

(34:06):
Your first chance is at eight and it goes until
eight o'clock tonight. From Tulsa's cash station KMOD.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
Good morning, Gimpeep, Good morning, Corbin. First responders are duking
it out for charity this Saturday at the Bok Center.
We call it smoking Guns ten. You can get your
tickets at to Bokaysinto dot com. Congratulations to Jeremy Brewer
of CATUSA. Jeremy heard the Q and is qualified for
See Them All twenty twenty five brought to you by
Yingling Flight. Make sure you're listening for that queue every

(34:34):
hour with us and then throughout the day with Mel
and Jyrod as well. See Them All twenty twenty five
a chance to score pair of tickets to every kmod'd
concert for the rest of the year. Make sure you're
listening for that queue every hour. I heard a useless
fact yesterday and I can't stop thinking about it. Okay,

(34:55):
and useless facts are I really like them. I think
they're really fun and enjoyable. Everybody's got one like. One
of my favorites is the Statue of Liberty. Can fit
in the rotunda of the capitol. That will benefit you
in no way, but it's really fascinating to think about it.
You're like, wow, that's really big, right some of the

(35:17):
other ones I know, alligator and manatees hang out together.
Who thought alligators see manatees? Is that's a little more
than I can eat, right, And manatees aren't scared of them,
so they they're buds.

Speaker 9 (35:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
Buttload is an actual form of measurement. One hundred eight
gallons of wine the medieval measurement to al buttload. Again,
these are all useless things. I don't know if you
ever need to know. Sure if you being a winemaker
or a brewmaster, that you what a hundred and eight
gallons would be called. But one that I heard yesterday

(35:57):
has really warped my brain. And when I tell you it,
you'll go okay, huh, and then you'll probably move on.
You won't hang on it like I did. But I'll
explain why I'm hanging on it. And that is a
person born blind has never been diagnosed with schizophrenia, okay,

(36:21):
but plenty of seeing capable of seeing people have been
diagnosed with schizophrenia. Okay, I take it. Ayes are the
key to schizophrenia. I mean, people that are blind have hallucinations, Yeah.

Speaker 9 (36:41):
But why wouldn't that make them schizophrenic.

Speaker 1 (36:44):
I don't have the answer to this. This is so
either the vision, as you said, is the key to
unlocked schizophrenia, or not get it right, or we go
people that have hallucinations that are born blind are like, wow,
they are born blind, yeah, and capable of seeing. People
will go, well, they're crazy because they're just making stuff up.

Speaker 9 (37:08):
Everybody is No, I'm tripping on it too.

Speaker 1 (37:13):
I think it makes no sense to me. No, I'm
not gonna sit here and say schizophrenia frennia isn't a thing.
It's clearly a thing. I have known people who's schizophrenic
and the episodes they go through, and it seems disturbing
to have to go through that. But I can't. How

(37:35):
do we not know what the magic is here? Right?
What makes somebody schizophrenic? And by the way, there's no
real test for schizophrenia. It's all based off of symptoms
that you think the person has or the person tells you. Right,
It's not like cancer. It's more of like gluten.

Speaker 9 (37:59):
Your voices in telling me to do crazy things or.

Speaker 1 (38:03):
Keep are you describing me. No, I hear voices, right,
I hear people telling me to do crazy things. I
have hallucinations. I might be schizophrenic. I don't know. I
wonder if only like people that say they're schizophrenic or like,

(38:28):
they do a behavior that doesn't correlate with how you
think a person should act, then gets diagnosed with schizophrenic,
or they start believing the symptoms they're being told they have. Right.

Speaker 10 (38:40):
One possible explanation. The brain development is influenced by sensory input. Yeah,
the lack of visual input and congenital blindness may lead
to different brain reorganization compared to those with normal vision.

Speaker 1 (38:53):
Yeah. Listen, I've been down the rabbit hole. I've read
all those things. They're not real compelling, right, they're not.
They're pretty boring audibly. I'm sure there's some smart people
that figured out, but there is no consensus overall, there's
no consensus on why. They're all just guessing. To me,

(39:14):
the real question is because you're blind and you have hallucinations,
it's okay, yeah, But if you are capable of seeing
and you have hallucinations.

Speaker 9 (39:30):
We're like, oh, then your schizophrenic.

Speaker 1 (39:32):
Pump the brakes, right, So if.

Speaker 9 (39:38):
Someone's blind kill someone because they hallucinated, they would get
away with it.

Speaker 1 (39:48):
I don't think you get away with killing people. I
think overall you don't get away with killing people. If
they point you as the person that killed somebody, you're
held accountable for that due process. That would be the
only way you would get away with it.

Speaker 9 (40:02):
But someone who is diagnosed with schizophrenia might get away
with it.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
No, no, unless you're defining getting away with it as
being locked in a menstal mental institution. For that's not
getting away with it. Getting away with it means like
they never caught me.

Speaker 10 (40:18):
Right, tex says, how can a blind person visualize anything
if they've never visually seen anything? And even if they
tell you they're seeing something or visually seeing something, what
to say that what they're saying they think they saw
is actually anything if they never actually seen anything.

Speaker 1 (40:38):
So what you're saying is, if you see something, you
don't see something, then how do you know exactly exactly,
like what's the color red? Well, here's fire out right, right?
I think that there's a little I think it's naive
to think that people that are blind don't have visions
in they head. They don't have visions the way you do.
They see things differently. Of course, they come to their

(40:59):
It's like a book. When you read a book, you
and they describe a street, You vision a street in
your head, right, because we've seen it before that you
think you've seen before in the book. Right. I would
imagine blind people also see things in some capacity. Right?
Do we know anybody that's one hundred percent totally blind?

(41:21):
We know the blind guy that's legally blind, but he's
not really blind because he dries. We know someone who's
blind who can drive. We know someone who is paralyzed
who can walk. Like we live in the matrix. I
don't know what you're talking about.

Speaker 10 (41:33):
Wondering if any of us, like know anybody who is
like legit walks with a white cane. I am blind
af can't see nothing at all whatsoever. Because I like
to sit down and ask him those questions when I say, tree,
what do you vision in your head? What do you
see in your head? Because clearly you've never seen a
tree before. You may have been described what a tree is,

(41:55):
you know, by somebody who does have sight, But how.

Speaker 9 (41:58):
Do you even describe something if they've never even seen
anything before?

Speaker 1 (42:03):
But this is exactly to me. This is the argument
of like kids have these memories, You only have memories
of pictures, right, You only have memories of pictures someone
took of you or described it to you. You don't
have the memory, right. Hey, Corman just did some googling,
and while being born blind seems to prevent schizophrenia, going
blind later in life increases your chances of schizophrenia. I

(42:26):
could see that.

Speaker 10 (42:28):
At least going crazy anyway, because you know, you lost
something you had.

Speaker 1 (42:33):
Yeah, I think grief if you will spiral spirals, you
kind of like tenanitis tanitis, right, Like that constant high
pitch will make people go crazy. Right. Of course, our
blind friend that drives you know, they run in packs,
he says, it goes to meetings. If you want, I
can introduce you to a full on blind person. Always

(42:55):
got a guy. Do blind people when they see other
blind people and their have in a conversation, go, I
see for sure, probably not, probably not? I don't see, right,
that would mean the same I don't know. No, I mean,
I see, but beer Ling, It's like, mister Magoo, get

(43:16):
what you mean. I also come to the place with
this weird fact that how did they find that out.
Did somebody go wait a minute, well, we need only
people seeing. People that can see are going skits? What's
going on here? Hold on, we'll get cancer later. Let's
figure this. How did they come to that conclusion? How

(43:37):
did they I want to know the person was like,
hold on, this is sus Yeah.

Speaker 9 (43:45):
How many cases of schizophrenia do we have diagnosed? And
what type of person were they? Could they see? Could
they not? Were they blind? Were they not?

Speaker 1 (43:55):
Yeah? And if you go back in history and see
how crazy people were even dealt with, right yeah, since
his date killed has killed, probably the more likely answer.
You had a brother or sister who was crazy or
even had like a deformed limbs sorry get pee, like
you would send them up state. They would not be

(44:19):
a part of the family because the family was too
worried about shame. Right yeah. And if you were crazy.
I'm always fascinated by the definition of crazy and like,
what makes somebody crazy? What's the behavior that puts them
on the outskirts? Because you look at someone like Britney Spears,

(44:41):
who's been in the media, she does post very odd videos.
Is it because her hair looks unkept? And is it
because we've seen her life spiral that we just go
to her being crazy, right, or because she's because we
know plenty of outspoken people think of Kanye Yeah, because

(45:04):
what he's outspoken about puts him on the outskirts. Yeah,
you don't agree with what he says and it sounds weird.
That doesn't make him crazy. He he's just got to
he sees things in a different light. Takes serial killers, right,

(45:24):
I think we can all agree that if you want
to kill people over and over again, you're a madman. Yes,
But if you think you're doing God's work exactly, or
your higher powers work, why is it we go, Well,
no one's talking to the guy who's killing all the prostitutes.

(45:47):
God isn't talking to him. He's talking to the guy
with the white thing on his neck, right.

Speaker 10 (45:52):
Right, right, Well what about the guy that rubs poop
on his face? Well, he just sees things differently.

Speaker 1 (45:59):
Yeah, But we let singers drink bodily fluids that I'm sorry,
animal fluids that we were like, ugh, right, because it's
not normal to us.

Speaker 9 (46:13):
What was the one that Billy Bob Thornton and Angelina
Jolie did when they were married? They did something with
each other's blood.

Speaker 1 (46:19):
Didn't they Okay, yeah, it wasn't nothing special, if I
remember right, that wasn't even really yeah, not the just
catering to the they were trolling before trolling was trolling.
I forget who the comedian is, but he has got
this bit like we're all just standing in a psych
hospital staring out the window. Going very well possible, especially

(46:43):
if we're all in a simulation. We'll get to it Thursday.
I'm working on it, all right. Oh, I've got you
thought this blew your mind, lindsay, I dropped a bomb yesterday.
I'm confident, Gimpy thought about it multiple times. I totally forgot.
Actually after that, that doesn't surprise me, don't I know it.

(47:03):
I get hold on to it till the end for
what you learn. But after that, all right, we got
to take a break. We'll be back, tell says Morning.

Speaker 2 (47:09):
Show, The Big Bed Morning Show, The assaultic Engenius next
ninety kmod.

Speaker 1 (47:27):
Good morning, It's The Big Man Morning Show. Toll free
eight three three four six oh five six sixty three.
That's the phone number. Because it's time to play a game.
We've got tickets to see Lincoln Park and tickets for
smoking Guns Club seats for Lincoln Park on Monday, VIP
tickets for Smoking Guns that is happening Saturday. Smoking Guns

(47:50):
an MMA boxing event between firefighters and police officers, all
to collect money for the Special Olympics of Oklahoma and
the Oklahoma Firefighters Burn Camp. It's a great night, charity, fun, laughing, excitement, brotherhood, camaraderie.
It's it's a good time and it's happening on Saturday

(48:11):
at the Bok Center. Get your tickets to each one
of those at bokcenter dot com. We're playing Sing Sing
current record is you're leading this one with six. I
have five and Lindsey has one. Last week's winner you
so Gimpy and Lindsay at nine one, eight four six,
oh kmod call up, decide who's gonna be the clue giver?
Who gets the most ride is gonna win those tickets

(48:32):
to Lincoln Park and to Smoking Guns. Eight three three
four six oh five six six three. Good morning, you're
on the air. What is your name, John, John? How
are you today? All? Good? Good John? What category do
you want? I'm sorry? Who do you want to give clues?
Lindsay or Gimpy Gimby? I'm all John? Sixty seconds are
on the clock. Timer starts after the first clue. Here

(48:54):
we go, uh okay uh. Sitting on a corner in Winslow, Arizona.
Such a fine sight to see. It's a band from
the seventies named after no name after birds. No, the
band is named after birds. What's no? Jesus Christ? What's

(49:18):
the opposite of hard? No? Like it's this this, this
me giving you clues right now is really hard? Okay.
What is the opposite of give? There? There you go,
Jesus Christ. Okay. So this is from the Queen of

(49:38):
pop and this is what you do when you put
your hands together and talk to God. Yes, that is
part of it. That's part of the last one. Here.
Some valley girls would be like blank as if whatever? Whatever?

(50:01):
Exactly John? Exactly? Oh? When you when you have something
on Facebook and time time? One is what you got? John? Now,
well listen, some people have one with one before. So
hang on the line. We'll see what happens. All right,

(50:21):
good morning, you're on the air. What is your name?

Speaker 6 (50:24):
Man?

Speaker 1 (50:26):
I'm sorry? What is your name?

Speaker 2 (50:28):
Chad?

Speaker 1 (50:29):
Chad? You and turn your radio down. You and Lindsey
have to beat one. Are you ready?

Speaker 2 (50:35):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (50:35):
Serve here we go.

Speaker 9 (50:38):
Rob Van Winkle sang this song and it sounds like
under pressure by Queen I baby, Yes, this is jay
Z's wife. And if you are yes, and if you
are taken, then you're not one of these. If you

(51:01):
have if you have a significant other, then you're.

Speaker 1 (51:04):
Not a single lady. Yes, uh, plural single ladies.

Speaker 9 (51:11):
Yes.

Speaker 1 (51:12):
Uh.

Speaker 9 (51:12):
This is the artist from Minnesota loved the color purple
and singing uh huh and singing about a specific bird
when it weeps. I said, uh, yeah, this is uh
the song girl we were talking about earlier. She went

(51:35):
nuts and this was a another song by her.

Speaker 14 (51:43):
Uh.

Speaker 9 (51:44):
When you're an infant, you are considered all right.

Speaker 1 (51:48):
Time time time. Congratulations, man, you're gonna get those tickets
to see Smoking Guns on Saturday and then Lincoln Park
on Monday. Hang on the line so get me can
gets your info. Okay, thank you, good job, Chad John.
I'm sorry one was just not enough today. All right.

(52:15):
This is the one she actually actually said part of
the title.

Speaker 10 (52:18):
Yeah, this is that weird guy lives in Minnesota, loves purple.

Speaker 6 (52:22):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (52:23):
Song about birds that you know aren't happy, tears rolling
down from their little birdie faces. What's the name of
his compound in Minnesota? Yeah, compound in Minnesota. No, there's
he's got a special name. Yeah, I couldn't tell you. Yeah.
Have you seen that thing on TikTok where they take
people that died and then age them to what they

(52:43):
look like today? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (52:44):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 1 (52:45):
Sometimes they're okay, a lot of times they're not. But yeah,
they did one at Prince. Yeah, he just celebrated his
death diversary, yesterday's death aversary, right, you know? And then
this is the one she ended on kim Be. Yeah,
she's on the right track. Crazy Lady Shaved her head
pop singer from the early two thousand's late nineties. Another

(53:06):
word for an infant okay, and then the number before
two yeah, and then a time a clock tells what
m Yeah yeah?

Speaker 9 (53:18):
And then this one she sang the Virgin song holiday
and this is Life is a misstuy.

Speaker 1 (53:30):
Uh.

Speaker 9 (53:30):
The music video was in a church she had the crucifix.

Speaker 1 (53:37):
I always get this song confused with Papa Don't Preach.
I get the video confused as well.

Speaker 9 (53:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
Another oh yeah, body of Evidence, leave of their own right,
but Donna like a prayer? All right? The record now
move keeps you with six keeps me five moves Lindsey
to two tell us.

Speaker 2 (53:58):
This morning show continues next The Big Man Morning Show
on Tulsa's rock station ninety KMOT.

Speaker 1 (54:20):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Come up,
listener emails need advice. We can help you get your
email to a show at KMOT dot com. Let's see
what Kimpi has in his four x four. Well hope
it says here that Instagram is cracking down on teens

(54:42):
lying about the sons of bitches. How well, let me
tell you, Lindsey. Instagram is using artificial intelligence in order
to crack down on teens lying about the age. That's
always worked out well. It's parent company, Meta bounced yesterday
that it's currently in the testing phase in the US.

(55:03):
The software is designed to find accounts that are believed
to be teenage profiles, which would then put them into
the teen account settings. The tech Giants says that it's
been using AI to verify ages for a while, but
this is the first time this specific method is being used.
Well super works mean good?

Speaker 9 (55:24):
Yeah, yeah good.

Speaker 1 (55:26):
I guess you could make an argument that our parents
not involved, probably not, or they let him do it anyway,
Why you want a Facebook, but you're not old enough.
Come on, I want to do it. Fine, And they
set them up, make them older than what they are,
and then when the birthdays come around on Facebook, you're like,
congratulations every birthday you're thirty, when you know you're only

(55:48):
you know, eighteen or whatever.

Speaker 9 (55:51):
My son asked for one when he turned thirteen, and
I said no. Now that he does have a Facebook
account at fourteen, and whats do for him?

Speaker 1 (55:59):
What was different between thirteen and fourteen that made you
feel more comfortable?

Speaker 9 (56:02):
Nothing much was difficult, right, right? Nothing much. I just
felt like, nah, I still just don't want you to
have it.

Speaker 1 (56:10):
But he got one anyway.

Speaker 9 (56:12):
A year later he was allowed to according to meta
whatever the rules are, thirteen. But then his friends were
on there, and he's like, but my friends are on there,
and I want to be able to keep in contact
with them that way as well, and load up pictures
and have football reels and things like that. So yeah,
and I'm friends with them, so I can see what

(56:32):
he posts and that he.

Speaker 1 (56:33):
Lets you see, right, because he can't hide things from people. Yeah, right,
absolutely not my children, Well, when they're eighteen, they can
do whatever they want. What else we got here? The
FTC sues Uber over Uber one subscriptions. The agency accuses
the ride sharing and delivery company of deceptive billing practices

(56:54):
tied to Uber one subscriptions. The FTC's lawsuit a lleges
Uber one doesn't give subscribere is a simple way to
cancel their membership and charges them without their consent. FTC
Chairman Andrew Ferguson says that Americans are tired of getting
signed up for unwonted subscriptions that seem impossible to cancel.

(57:15):
Thanks Sheriff, he as the Trump dvance, FTC is fighting
back on the behalf of the American people. It takes
twelve steps to cancel that program. Really, that's too much.
It should take one. It should take one. That's it,
click of a button, boom, I'll accept two. Okay, I
want to cancel. Are you sure that? Ye? Yes, that's

(57:37):
all it really? All at twelve is wild. That's what
it should be for anything that you want to unsubscribe to.
But yes, you know, they bury it underneath all the
jive and that's how you end up with this. I
want to quit the bank, right right? What else we
got here? Pope?

Speaker 10 (57:53):
Election to begin soon. The College of Cardinals will soon
hold several meetings. That sounded weirdly. College of Cardinals put
no poop.

Speaker 1 (58:02):
Election almost like a band name and if you hung
on the O a little long Pope election poop election prophylactic. Eh.
The College Cardinals will soon hold several meetings at the
Vatican to start the process of selecting a new pope.
They will prep for the upcoming poppole election called Conclave

(58:22):
fifteen to twenty days after the pope's death, depending on
how long it takes for all the cardinals to arrive
in the Vatican City. Sorry, the flight was late. Yeah, babe,
I'm sorry. I gotta go. Right, the Pope died. I
have to get to the Vaticain right now. I know
they're cardinals, they don't have one. I get it. It
was a just sorry, little boy, I gotta go. Meanwhile,

(58:46):
the movie Conclave Yeah debuted on Amazon Prime Yeah Yeah,
which I implore everyone to watch. Yeah. I had seen
the commercials. I'm like, oh, look's kind of interesting and
well how about time smart? Right, they probably had to
put on for later. He dies, You're like, bam, hit
it man, or let's go. They killed him. To push
their movie, just saying listen, all I know is something

(59:10):
big was supposed to happen on Sunday, and something big
happened on early Monday morning. I'm sure it was Sunday somewhere.
So it depends on how long it takes him to
get to the Vatican. Conclaves are held in the Sistine
Chapel and half historically lasted an average of four days.
The candidate needs to be two thirds majority to become

(59:32):
the Pope.

Speaker 10 (59:33):
The ballots used in the last round are burnt and
used to create smoke signals. Black smoke means oh, there's
no election, and the white smoke means we got one.

Speaker 1 (59:43):
All right. Then they put a tablet in there. They
got to put something in the right, like, don't put
the wrong one it Like, you know, I've seen those
baby unveilings, tender reveal parties go wrong. Anything could happen.
You're like, damn it supposed to come back. They should, Yeah,
they should totally troll us with like, p God, let's
go lastly here.

Speaker 10 (01:00:06):
Rogers County hosts their annual Trash Off event as part
of the Keep Oklahoma Beautiful program. Rogers County's hosting their
annual trash Off event for residents on Thursday, April twenty
fourth through Saturday the twenty six The event will take
place over three days at several different locations in Rodgers County.

Speaker 1 (01:00:23):
The trash off event is for residents only, so if
you don't live in Rogers County, don't we dump in
your trash over here. Businesses and enterprises are asked to
not bring their trash. Those living in Rodgers County will
be responsible for unloading their own trash. This event is
not for any household hazardous waste. The event locations except furniture, mattresses, carpeting,

(01:00:44):
Television's medal, and appliances that have had their refrigerant or
CFC's removed.

Speaker 13 (01:01:00):
Wow.

Speaker 9 (01:01:02):
On Easter Sunday, a Jane Doe lawsuit against NFL Hall
of Famer and broadcaster Shannon Sharp was filed, asking for
fifty million dollars over claims of sexual assault. In the suit,
the anonymous plaintiff claims she was brutally sexually assaulted by

(01:01:23):
Sharp several times at the end of twenty twenty four
and the beginning of twenty twenty five. Jane Doe claims
she met Sharp in a gym in LA in twenty
twenty three, where he told her he would buy her
fake boobies if she won a weight loss competition with him.
That was allegedly followed by Sharp pursuing her relentlessly, texting, calling,

(01:01:48):
and demanding she come to his Beverly Glen mansion. Eventually,
she says they got into a consensual relationship what she
describes in the suit as controlling and verbally abusive, and
that Sharp demanded complete control of her time and body.
At one point, she says, there was an argument that

(01:02:09):
terrified her and there was a gun visible in the room.
She allegedly tried to text friends her location and said
Sharp threatened to kill her if she ever did that again.
The relationship continued, however, she says the first instance of
assault happened in October of twenty twenty four, a second

(01:02:30):
a few weeks later. Jane Doe is represented by Tony
Busby the same attorney that rounded up all the accusers
who eventually filed lawsuits against Cleveland Brown's quarterback Deshaun Watson,
and as of now, there's been no response to the
suit from Sharp or his legal team.

Speaker 1 (01:02:48):
This is an excellent time to remind you that a
year ago, almost a year ago, not even a year ago.
I guess maybe six months ago. He put out a
video on Instagram of him banging some girl. Yeahbody never
owned up to it, right, It's very uncomfortable to watch
that fifty six year old man bang somebody, or to
hear I guess yeah.

Speaker 9 (01:03:07):
And that's your balls to the wall sports. I'm Lindsay
in ninety seven five.

Speaker 1 (01:03:11):
KMOD, Good morning, it's the Big Mad Morning Show. Nine
eight four six Oh, KMOD. You can also text bmms
and then what you want to say to eight two

(01:03:32):
nine four five, Good morning, Lindsay.

Speaker 9 (01:03:35):
Good morning Corbyn. Hey, let's have lunch together once a month.
I'm gonna hit the road in our new Chevy Blazer
EV and I will bring lunch to you and your coworkers.
All I gotta do is sign up to win right now.
Kmod dot com.

Speaker 1 (01:03:48):
Good luck, Good morning, Gimpie, Oh good morning. If you
didn't score those tickets to Smoke and Guns this morning,
well that's okay. You can still get them the fight
you're going down Saturday at the b ok or go
to b okasnder dot com and get yo ticketted All right,
Time for listener, emails. You can always email us show
at kmod dot com. We read an email on the

(01:04:09):
air and then you guys get to give advice bmms
and whatever that advice is to the phone number eight
two nine four five. This email says, I'm trying to
figure out how to meet people, but I'm broke. It's
not like I'm lazy or not trying. Money's just tight.
Paying off old debt rents high. I've had to pick
up extra shifts just to stay above water, and dating
feels impossible. Everything costs a lot of money, drinks, dinner, gas,

(01:04:34):
Even the app wants a subscription. I feel like a
lot of women only go for guys with money. The
first questions are always about what do you do and
what car do you drive? It feels like if I
can't afford a certain lifestyle, I don't get a shot.
How should I meet people? How should How do you

(01:04:54):
meet people when you don't have anything to offer but yourself?
Oh god? How do you stay confident when you feel
like you don't add up to the others. I'm loyal,
I listen, I care, but none of that fits on
a dating profile. I just don't know how to date
when you're broke. I've said it before, I will say

(01:05:17):
it again. I can't imagine what it's like to date.
The idea of it terrifies me. I'm happily married, but
if it went south, I'd figure out how to be
happy because there's no way I'm dating. That just sounds
so challenging.

Speaker 9 (01:05:37):
Yeah, the are not all of the dating apps. You
have to pay for them.

Speaker 1 (01:05:43):
You have to pay for they have premium subscriptions. What
does that get you? Do you know? Oh? I have
no idea. I don't know what the premium stuff. No way,
how a cheap ass? Come on? Now? Like? Do you get?
Do you see more pictures? I think it's unlimited like
passes right, because as you know, some of them, most
of them, you can only swipe left or pass on

(01:06:05):
this person X amount of times, or swipe on somebody.
That's what it is.

Speaker 10 (01:06:10):
Unlimited swipes. It's like, all right, you're gonna pay for it.
You can swipe as many as you want left or right.

Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
This says in Bumble. You get to see the premium
gets you, You get to see who's liked you first.
You find exactly what you're looking for with unlimited advanced
filters you get to swipe in other locations with you
travel mode. Yeah, I want to be in Boston. Who's there?

(01:06:36):
Wants to bang? Vacation d You get to backtrack on
accidental left swipes, and you get a limited extens for
when you need more time to message a new match. Okay,
so I think you're right. It don't sound like you
need it. No, you don't. Really. You could be just
fine with the free stuff, you know.

Speaker 10 (01:06:56):
But hey, if you want to pay the fourteen ninety
nine month or whatever the hell it is, go for it.

Speaker 1 (01:07:03):
He says. Oh, yes, I've met that girl. Stay away
from that girl. Another one if one of the first
questions is what kind of car you drive? She probably
a gold digger anyway, I don't know. Small talk be
small talk, right.

Speaker 10 (01:07:17):
Maybe she wants to make sure you're not driving a
beater like it will get you if I go out
on a date with you. Is the car gonna break
down on the way to wherever?

Speaker 1 (01:07:27):
You know what I mean? I think that makes sense.
Not not all of thems are like, oh, you drive
a Ferrari or whatever.

Speaker 9 (01:07:36):
I went on a date like that. The car broke
down while we were on the date. We had to
get out and push it through the intersection.

Speaker 1 (01:07:45):
You pushed it or he pushed it.

Speaker 9 (01:07:46):
We both, we both did.

Speaker 1 (01:07:48):
You got broad shoulders, get back Who steered?

Speaker 9 (01:07:51):
He did?

Speaker 1 (01:07:52):
Then he wasn't pushing. He was barely pushing. That's like
three people holding, you know, moving a couch.

Speaker 9 (01:08:00):
Right in the moment, though, it was like, okay, let's
get this out of the intersection. And I actually thought
it was kind of funny and we actually went on
more dates.

Speaker 10 (01:08:15):
The fact that he made you push while he steered,
says Volumes.

Speaker 1 (01:08:19):
I think I think you know. The woman said, I'm
sure you can handle it. I'm sure you could push
a car. This isn't about that. This is more of
a one.

Speaker 10 (01:08:28):
This is my brokedown pos right, you go ahead and steer.
I'll get back there and push.

Speaker 9 (01:08:34):
And it may have been like, no, you sit tight,
I'll get this, and I was probably no, no, let's
get this. We are in the middle of a busy
intersection in your car.

Speaker 1 (01:08:42):
Just I believe that about you that you'd be like no,
let me help push, yes, let me probably said no, no, no, no, yeah,
and ried no, he said no.

Speaker 9 (01:08:50):
No, please stay seated.

Speaker 1 (01:08:55):
Yeah. Maybe that's also maybe asking what kind of car
you drive is a placeholder to me, make sure you're
not a robot. Maybe to make sure you can drive right?
Who knows. I just don't think when someone goes what
kind of car you drive, they automatically are hoping you're
loaded right. Right?

Speaker 10 (01:09:10):
If it's followed up with how much money do you make? Yeah,
that's probably a good chance. That's what she's in it for.

Speaker 1 (01:09:16):
And I have a hunch that dating population knows that
people can be car poor, right, that you could have
a nice car and be poor, yes, because you spent
all your money on your ride. Yes, or you're in
over your head. This says without subscription, no communication with others,

(01:09:37):
that's a bunch of crap. It says I recently had
to start dating again. I've had the most success with
Facebook Matchmaker no cost, and have had the most responses
true statement, what do you mean? Oh, that's what I used.
That's what I use.

Speaker 10 (01:09:51):
And it goes based off of like your friends friends
of your friends people you know. It's like, oh, well
you know Corbin, Well, Corbin knows you know some or
you know Sally over.

Speaker 1 (01:10:01):
Here, Sally over here, Maybe you guys should link up
and talk or whatever. Okay, yeah, this tex says you
don't need anything to offer other than yourself. Bud. You
may not have money, but at least your bills are paid.
Get out walk the grocery stores or Walmart type of places.

(01:10:23):
It seems like nobody actually physically meets anyone anymore in
public spaces. Just be yourself and be honest. Real woman,
real women, sorry, real women are looking for a companion,
not a corvette, buddy. It's free to walk around in public. Okay,
old man, you go to church and meet women there.

(01:10:47):
I'm sure you're convertible. Corvette's awesome. Nobody. Just dude, If
you're in the groce store and you walk in, you're like, hey,
you're gonna get massed, seems like good you very well could,
because there's been too many creepers out there that's ruined

(01:11:07):
it for everybody else. What does that mean? Like walk
the grocery store like to force a meeting, right right
to accost a female while they're buying they're groceries past
up and down the half on. I saw you getting
some dannin and I noticed you didn't buy any tampons,

(01:11:32):
right you on a date? How do you do that?
That that that is the craziest thing to say that.
I see you like eating too right. I noticed you
push a cart too right. It's the most awkward and
archaic way to think that that just because it works

(01:11:54):
for like one person, right, doesn't mean it works for others.

Speaker 10 (01:11:59):
A lot of people when they're in the grocery store,
they probably don't want to be bothered. I'm getting my groceries,
you know, while trying to listen to a podcast or whatever.
You know, it's like, come on.

Speaker 1 (01:12:11):
See you got bread? That good bread?

Speaker 9 (01:12:15):
Like to make sandwiches?

Speaker 1 (01:12:17):
You ever had French toast for breakfast? Right? You know,
if you take some eggs and some milk and some cinnamon.
My mama used to be. There's no good way to
approach that. You you want to envision like something you
saw on TV or a movie that's just not reality. Right,

(01:12:38):
you bump into the grocery, spill all over your car
at the end of the aisle. Hey, oh you're so cute,
So sorry? Would you like to go out? Sometimes no
reasonable answer. Church is still free and usually have lots
of activity activities for singles. Nuclear answer, you get yourself

(01:13:00):
a sugar mama. She may not be exactly what you're
looking for right now. But you can ride that for
a while, save some cash, and move on to a
newer model in a year or two. Yeah, church has
a lot of places do stuff for singles. Absolutely. I
know bars that do stuff for their single audience. So
I don't any place you like to hang out church

(01:13:23):
or bar whatever that is, Pokemon group whatever. I didn't
even think about that. Pokemon goes still huge, right, yes,
And I'm sure that there's places out there groups that
get together, you know, maybe singles, maybe not, but you
could start with the Pokemon group. You all get together,
go to the park, hang out. This is my advice.
It just it made sense.

Speaker 10 (01:13:44):
The light bulb goes off, right, and then you could
simply meet some chunky woman there who likes to, you know,
catch Pokemon.

Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
There's a page on TikTok that is so fun to watch.
It's like the Bismarck's Soul Club or something like that,
and it is a group of people younger than me
dancing to like classic soul music. Sounds like a great
time and they're just cutting a rug right, having a
good old time, not really dancing with each other, but

(01:14:13):
dancing by themselves. And just feeling the music r right,
And I always watch it because I'm just fascinated by
the individuals in the group. If that's your jam, find
someone who's also into it. It makes it. It's the
easiest way to bring the gate down. Right. You already
got something in common besides buying grocery. Yes, and breathing

(01:14:34):
and your carbon molecules all stacked. Right. I talked to
everyone in public, and I'm only thirty nine. Funny that
it worked for one hundred years, worked for one person.
Wonder how many people met before the internet. Yes, we
also used to bang rocks together for fire. Just because
that's the way it used to work doesn't mean that's
the way it works now. And if you want to

(01:14:55):
meet some old listen, you can talk to all the
people you want in public you want, that's fine. Not
everybody likes that. A lot of people don't. I get
in the elevator. You have to have some small talk
conversation you don't want to have. I'm always grateful when
I go down the elevator with GIMPI. He'll handle that
for me. Got you, I'll make him feel uncomfortable. I

(01:15:16):
don't need to say hi to everybody that feels like
you think you're the main character. Maybe join a cosplay
or find a furry group if that's your thing. All right,
you could unlock a kink you never knew you had,
get a bike, and stop being a cry baby. I
don't know how those two are connected. I know plenty
people that don't bikes that cry about. How many cry

(01:15:39):
babies do you know, little baby? At least two? I've
got eggs want to hook up. I think that's funny
and somebody might find that interesting as well. But the
idea that you're broke and you want a certain individual
s tex says, I'm sorry, This email says I'm trying

(01:15:59):
to figure out how to meet people, but I'm broke.
It's not like I'm lazy or not trying. Money's tight
because I'm paying off old debt. Rents high and I've
had to pick up extra shifts just to stay above water.
Dating feels impossible right now. It feels like everything costs money, drinks, dinner,
gas just to get somewhere. Even apps want a subscription

(01:16:21):
to actually get seen. I feel like a lot of
women only go for guys with money. First questions are
always about what car do you drive, what do you
do or where you live? It feels like if I
can't afford a certain lifestyle, I don't get a shot.
How do you meet people when you don't have anything
to offer but yourself? How do you stay confident when

(01:16:42):
you feel like you don't measure up to what the
world expects from you? I just don't know how to
date when you're broke.

Speaker 9 (01:16:50):
Lindsey, It sounds to me like he doesn't need to
be dating at all right now. He's working on himself.
He doesn't have time, he's picking up extra shifts. So
when he says all I have is to offer myself,
you really don't even have that because you're just gonna
end up. Even if you meet someone right now, you're
gonna end up pissing her off because you're working all

(01:17:12):
these extra shifts. Money is tight, so your time is
being used up with work right now and paying off
debts and things like that. You're working on you right now,
and it doesn't seem like that is where you want
it to be. So in order for you to be
happy with someone else, you have to be happy in

(01:17:33):
your own life first, And it doesn't sound like he's
is right there. And women love a confident guy, and
he just doesn't sound very confident right now in any situation.
So maybe get your finances under control and where you
want them to be, where you might have some more money.

(01:17:55):
And if so you can't afford to go to the
bars and meet someone organically or to a public place,
maybe have a friend introduce you to someone. I'm sure
you got some friends that like to play matchmaker, maybe
even buddies that you spend so much time with that work.
But right now it sounds like you're working on you,
and I would continue doing that.

Speaker 1 (01:18:17):
Gimbi, you know what I think.

Speaker 10 (01:18:21):
I think he's shooting a little too high, going for
out of his league, gets on the dating apps and
see these smoke shows, and I like that when I
I like that, when the guy's probably a troll, okay,
and obviously he doesn't have the confidence that it takes
to get.

Speaker 1 (01:18:40):
One of those. How about lowering your bar a little bit?

Speaker 10 (01:18:44):
You ever think about that, m because the same hot
chicks that are on. For every hot chick that's on
though that's apps, you've got a behoga wolf just as well,
all right, So maybe stop shooting so high bar a
little bit there's plenty of free stuff to do around town.

(01:19:05):
You don't have to have money. The gathering place is
very nice and it's a great date worthy place just
to go walk around, you know, talk, get hang out whatever.
Disc golf is free.

Speaker 1 (01:19:26):
And you're out in a park, you know, and again
you're walking around, you're doing stuff like that. The hell just.

Speaker 10 (01:19:34):
Walking around downtown and people watching is free. You don't
have to have money. All right, Well, what if I
want to take her someplace to eat? Okay, fine, fantastic.
You know what, most places have like a value menu
of sorts. Okay, and if the chick really likes you,
then she ain't gonna give a damn about a m

(01:19:55):
of chicken.

Speaker 1 (01:19:56):
Okay. It's the time that you're spending together. I think, honestly,
this person is shooting way too high and he needs
the lowest standards a little bit and then kind of
just go from there or or or you just stop
in general, and when it's gonna happen, it's gonna happen regardless.

(01:20:20):
Just airdrop pictures of your penis to everybody, and whoever
takes the bait, there you go, right, That's how you
get muskoozie. Yeah, I mean, I think what you guys
are saying are all accurate. I also think you don't
like yourself. I don't think you like yourself, So why

(01:20:46):
would anybody want to like you if you don't even
like yourself. You don't like that you're paying bills, you
don't like your job. You seem like the kind of
guy that if a girl doesn't talk to you, you
go bitch, right, bitch, she smells funny. So ah, you
just gotta start working on your stuff. Just do stuff

(01:21:07):
you like and let everything happen. You have no control
over that stuff. If you go, I want to dat
a hot girl, start doing the things you think you
need to do to day a hot girl. Not just go.
Why isn't it happening right? Like take a shower, clean
up the acne, you know, stuff like that. You can

(01:21:27):
work hard and not have a lot of money and
find somebody that's awesome, right, But you don't lie you
that's the problem. Also, don't go. Don't let your friends
set you up. Why not, Ah, somebody's gonna get mad
in case it goes south, Yes, it goes against your

(01:21:47):
friend made Why do you hook me up with that psycho? Bitch?
Let me pay a scenario. They set you up with somebody,
it doesn't work out. Everything's cordial, you know, it wasn't weird.
I'm gonna give you the least obvious scenario, opposite of
what Gimpi's painting. And it just didn't work out, and
everybody's like, ah, that's all good. Fast forward. You find
somebody you're happy with. This person comes around and they're like,

(01:22:08):
what do you mean you used to date Carol? I
was like one day, why did you date Carol? Ah?
I don't want none of that smoke. I have to
explain all that stuff. But you gotta like you, man,
because I don't think that that's what's happening. All right,
we got to take a break. We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (01:22:26):
The Big Mad Morning Show returns next Tulsa's Morning Show
ninety seven KMOT.

Speaker 1 (01:22:42):
Good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Eight three
three four six oh kmod toll free is the phone number.
You can also text bmms and then what you want
to save eight two nine four five All right? Listen
to emails you can always show at kmode dot com.

(01:23:03):
Some says, I think my husband might be addicted to pills.
I don't know what to do a year ago here
at his back at work and was prescribed pain meds.
Since then, he's changed. He refills his prescriptions too often,
disappears into the garage, sometimes off nods off in the
middle of the day. I found empty pill bottles hidden

(01:23:23):
in strange places, like under the sink in the car.
When I bring it up, he gets defensive, says I
don't trust him. He's missing work now too. He says
he's sick or tired, but he looks off, pale, spaced out.
Our daughter, our daughter is starting to notice that he's

(01:23:47):
not around much. I want to help him, but I
don't know how to talk to him without him shutting down.
Part of me is wondering if trying to help is
even worth it. How do you get someone help when
they don't think they need it? Or is it better
to just leave before it gets worse? Sorry? Can people

(01:24:09):
come up beside you. It's a very sensitive topic for me.
It gets me choked up sometimes. Yeah, my girlfriend's cookies.
Uh yeah. Getting finding out there's a problem, potential problem
in your house. It is dangerous and you think you

(01:24:33):
got to do something right.

Speaker 9 (01:24:34):
And how I wonder how they're getting the prescription refilled
more frequently than necessary. When I thought that that has
been you know, looked upon so hardcore lately.

Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
Well, let me tell you a little story. Lindsay, I
recently had surgery and where I get my prescription filled?
The doctor the nurse was like, hey, we'll send the
prescription there, but they're not gonna let you get the
number of pills we're prescribing. Okay, so you're gonna need

(01:25:15):
to find another place that will give you the number
we think you need. Right, And I'm sure not all
doctors are on the up and up. I'm not saying
that what they were doing was nefarious. I'm just saying
there's ways around obstacles. And just because he's getting them
filled or she thinks he's getting them filled, doesn't mean
he's doing it legally. True. He may know a guy

(01:25:38):
who knows a guy and then's just putting them in
one of the empty bottles. Maybe state getting it filled
when he can. Yeah, I can't. I'm sure there's a
doctor who's down on his luck that would gladly write
our script and jeopardize his whole career. Uh, this text

(01:25:58):
he's addicted was him. I've been on opiate's hardcore in
my life ivy user, and it sounds like she hit
the nail on the head. Okay, how do you do
opiates intravenously? Melt him down with a spoon and some

(01:26:18):
water and a needle so the pill burn it up.

Speaker 10 (01:26:22):
Same way you would you know with math and heroin?
Why hit you hard or faster? Go straight to your
bloodstream so you're impatient too?

Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
Okay? Pretty much? Basically, Uh, this text, that's a tough deal.
There are a lot of places that can help that.
My spouse, My spouse had to go get help eight
years ago, best thing that ever happened. But the first
step is him admitting that he has a problem. Don't
abandon him yet. Everyone I helped, I've helped through a
program needed someone behind them giving him a push.

Speaker 10 (01:26:52):
Right, because not everybody is going to be like, yes,
all right, I know I have a problem. I'm going
to handle this on my own. There's a bit a
shame that goes with it. There's the denial. No, I
don't have a problem. I can quit any time I
want sort of things.

Speaker 9 (01:27:11):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:27:12):
I think I have issue with the giving them a
push person. I don't know if that's your job in life. Well,
if you love somebody, Corbin, you will help them. You
push them to do something they don't want to do. Okay,
being supportive and giving a push aren't the same thing, right, right, right? Right?

Speaker 10 (01:27:32):
But I think what you're saying is you're forcing them
to do something that they don't want to do, and
not nobody really reacts kindly to that sort of thing.

Speaker 9 (01:27:42):
No, But I think when they admit that they do
have a problem, it's easier for them to get help
with their problem.

Speaker 1 (01:27:50):
But them admitting they have a problem doesn't mean you
get permission to push no and force them.

Speaker 9 (01:27:55):
Right, that is true?

Speaker 1 (01:27:59):
You know what?

Speaker 10 (01:27:59):
Always have to want it ultimatums. That always works every
time have a kid? Right?

Speaker 1 (01:28:06):
Have you considered cannabis as an alternative? That doesn't say it,
but that's definitely a possible solution for someone who thinks
their partner is addicted to pills, right, and just be
addicted to pot instead. And I think with this email,
this isn't a question of I mean the email are
sending enough things to go for me to go? Yeah? Yeah,

(01:28:30):
this person is definitely reliant on something. I don't know
if I'm ready to jump to addicted. Why dependent? Yeah,
there are definitely some boxes of stereotypical things that are
getting checked. But I think sometimes when somebody's in a rut,
we quick to go they're addicted, right, I feel like

(01:28:51):
you've got to leave that to someone who knows what
they're doing, yeah, and not just jump in. And like
the person who text in it says that they've everyone
they've helped, implies there's a lot of people they've done
this with. Unless you're a rehab specialist or rehab counselor
there shouldn't be in everyone. Yeah, in their circle, though

(01:29:16):
it could be everyone.

Speaker 10 (01:29:18):
It could be everyone addictive, parents, siblings, because that's what
they're grown up to, that's what they're used to. Maybe
this person was as well, but they, you know, realize
this is the life for me. Their friends are that
way just because that's the only thing that they've ever known.
I could see how this person in there, you know,
everyone in their circle, not everyone on the planet, but

(01:29:39):
everyone in their circle is has been addicted or whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:29:44):
Yeah, there's some codependency things that start kicking up when
you when you're involved in a lot of that. Right,
ask him if he would rather have his family or
the pills. Another one, Run, bitch, run. If they've advanced
enough in they're a to hide empty bottles, then you
need to run.

Speaker 10 (01:30:04):
Do you, though, Do you really need to run just
because you know they've advanced to hiding empty bottles?

Speaker 1 (01:30:11):
I don't think you do, not if you really want
it to work out. I think run is the wrong
term to use. Look out for yourself right, Run implies
that like if you I'm out of here, rather than
looking out for yourself. Is I don't want to be

(01:30:31):
a part of this. Yeah, he's addicted, been there, recovered,
and still struggle. The chains of addiction are too light
to be felt until they're too heavy to be broken.
Age thirteen of the book The pamphlet. I have known

(01:30:53):
plenty people that have been addicted, and that statement of
it isn't easy. Is They all say that in different ways,
So I'm use the chains of addiction or too light,
and others say this is hard.

Speaker 9 (01:31:08):
Yeah, it's sad.

Speaker 1 (01:31:12):
Listenering oult from somebody who thinks their husband might be
addicted to pills. About a year ago, he heard his back,
which prescribed pain meds. Since then he's changed. He refiels
prescriptions too often disappears into the garage, sometimes nods off
in the middle of the day. I found empty pill
bottles hidden in strange places, into the sink in the car,
his gym bag. When I bring it up, he gets

(01:31:34):
defensive or says I don't trust him. He's missing work
now says he's sick or tired, but he looks off, pale,
spaced out. Our daughter is starting to notice he's not
around much. I want to help him, but I don't
know how to talk to him without him shutting down.
And part of me is wondering if trying to help
is even worth it. How do you get someone help

(01:31:54):
when they don't think they need it, or is it
better to just leave before it gets worse?

Speaker 9 (01:32:01):
This is tough. I don't know. I would say a
professional she would have to seek help from a professional
drug counselor, but he would have to be willing to
speak to someone too. Maybe an intervention, but that is

(01:32:23):
also going to be really hard, getting more family members
involved or friends. Maybe reaching out to a coworker someone
else that they're close to that her husband's close to,
But an intervention might be the way if they can't
see that they have a problem and if she wants

(01:32:47):
to stay in the relationship, then I feel that that's
probably the best way to go. It's an intervention, Kimbi.

Speaker 10 (01:32:57):
Interventions, unsouling general talking. No, that's going to do any
good the person themselves. In this case, the hosband has
to be the one to want to do it.

Speaker 1 (01:33:14):
You can talk to him so you're blue in the face, Hey,
I am finding these empty bottles. You're worrying me, blah
blah blah. But until he gets to that point to
where it's like, oh man, this is what I've been
doing has not been been anything good at all, whatsoever.

(01:33:34):
Nothing good has come out of what I've been doing.
I lost my wife, I lost my kids, I lost
my house, I lost my job, I lost my friends,
I lost this, I lost that. In the lot of
the other I would suggest maybe, I mean, you can
talk to them, Hey, what's going on here? Everything all right?
He's gonna shut down, and I it's unpopular opinion. You're

(01:33:56):
probably not gonna like it, but you will probably end
up having to in order for him to see the
light and to see what has what he's doing has caused.
If any of that makes sense at all, whatsoever, It's
one of those oh damn, okay, well, and then he'll

(01:34:19):
have to make a decision.

Speaker 10 (01:34:20):
Then Even then, ultimately, what I'm trying to say is
there's nothing you can do. There's nothing you could do
for that person that's going to make them straighten up,
all right, because even if you do leave, he has
to make that decision of Okay, well I clean up,
get my s together, and then try to get my

(01:34:42):
family back, or they'll just keep on going down the path.

Speaker 1 (01:34:47):
That they're already on.

Speaker 10 (01:34:50):
Either way, the person themselves that's having the issues is
the one that's going to have to figure it out.

Speaker 1 (01:34:56):
There's nothing you on the outside can do. This text
is interesting. She's right, he is hooked, but until he
is ready, there's nothing she can do about it except
watch it get worse before it gets better and stock
up on some narcan. It's not your job to save him.

(01:35:18):
You could argue having Narkhan around would save his life
should he ode, But he could also argue that having
Narkhan around saves him from his consequences. Not a he's
not a medical personnel and an emergency personnel. Not a doctor.
You're not a doctor, none of those things where that
would be I get why. I'm not saying you shouldn't

(01:35:39):
do it. I'm not saying it's not a good thing.
His addictions none of your business. Decide what your boundaries are,
what you'll tolerate, what you want. Hey, you got to
go to work five days a week to help support
this family because I'm not working, and if you're not,
I can't be with you. Hey, you you can't. The

(01:36:03):
only thing that I noticed that to me is like
you can't go. In my opinion, you can't go. You
can only have one pill a day, and I'll monitor him.
That is not that's not a boundary. That's that's a
rule for an adult. Who's an adult. You got to
decide what you'll tolerate, worry about your side of the

(01:36:24):
fence and hold him don't and hold them accountable, and
don't be afraid to move your boundary should you need to.
But his addictions none of your business. It is not
your job. I think we sometimes confuse like I love
this person, so it's my job to get them sober. Right,
they're drowning and you don't know how to swim right

(01:36:47):
right right, and so they'll pull you under. Maybe not
with pills, but you'll there'll be another thing that will
cause you problems and it sucks, and I'm sorry that
person suffering for whatever reason. And now they're throwing you
a ticket on the crazy train and you're thinking about

(01:37:09):
taking it. Yeah, that's sad. I'm sorry. Life comes at
you fast, man. I know so many people that have
been living great lives and they're thinking they're so happy,
and then the next minute they find out, no, they're not.

(01:37:30):
The other person isn't happy, right, And they show that
many different ways, divorced, cheating, addiction of some sort, and
you had no idea. Now your life's upside down. I
think it's the same answer as the first one. You've
got to love yourself more than you love the other person,

(01:37:52):
and you got to love yourself and go, listen, I'm
worth this. You can't. I'm not gonna be in a
relationship with this is happening. You knoww what an intervention
has cost? It's like a couple grand, right, you know
much rehab is over grand? Try ten twenty depending on

(01:38:13):
where you go. Right, that's a lot. Not saying nobody's
worth it, but it's suddenly it's like, well how much
for the vet thing? Well, here's what you do. You
take a big chain, you wrap it around his waist,
and then you chain him to a radiator in your
living room. It worked on Black Snake Moan. It definitely

(01:38:38):
did for that movie. You can want them sober, but
if they don't want to be sober, then you're wasting
your time. Attics are great liars. That's not me. That's
a text that came in. We got to take a break.
We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (01:38:51):
If you're listening to The Big Man Morning Show, this
is Tulsa's Morning show.

Speaker 1 (01:38:58):
Kim, Good Morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Tell

(01:39:21):
free eight three, three, four to six. Okmod coming up
to tell the truth. Your chance to get to know
the show better. Ask any question you want.

Speaker 9 (01:39:41):
The Eagles are locking down their Super Bowl winning center.
The team extended Cam Jurgens on Monday to a four
year deal worth nearly seventy million dollars. The contract includes
almost forty million guaranteed. Jurgons was entering the last year
of his rookie contract and is now the second highest
paid center in the league, behind the Chiefs center Creed Humphrey.

(01:40:04):
A star player on the Eagles, is getting his stolen
car back. Aj Brown posted on social media that someone
took his car in a matter of minutes early Monday morning.
Police say the vehicle was eventually recovered in Camden, New Jersey,
and one person was in custody. The three time pro
bowler joins a long list of athletes that have been

(01:40:25):
targeted for thefts and home break ins over the past year,
and Miami men's basketball is adding a key player. Shelton
Henderson announced on Monday that he's transferring to the school.
The small forward de committed from Duke last week. Henderson
is the thirtieth ranked prospect in the ESPN one hundred
and follows former Blue Devils assistant Ji Lucas, who was

(01:40:48):
hired last month as Miami's new head coach. The senior
is now the second top fifty recruit for the Hurricanes.
Metro Balls to the Wall Sports. I'm Lindsay on ninety
seven KM.

Speaker 1 (01:41:09):
Good morning, It's the Big NAD Morning Show. Toll free
eight three three four six okmod can also text BEMMSS
and then what you want to say to eight two
nine four five Good morning, Lindsay.

Speaker 9 (01:41:24):
Good morning Corbyn. Happy thirty first porn star birthday too.
Taylor Gunner you can watch this Midwestern minx in Horny Hostel,
tickle Monster and Oiled and Spoiled at the garage. She's
a nerd who loves to have a good time.

Speaker 1 (01:41:42):
Good morning Gimpie, Oh, good morning Corbyn. There's still plenty
of chances for you to get your tickets to smoking
Guns this Saturday at the Bok Center. Watch the police
fight the firefighters and the firefighters fight the police, all
raise money for charity again. Get your tickets at bocasino
dot com.

Speaker 5 (01:42:01):
Time to tell the truth. This is your opportunity to
ask anything you want. Just remember keep it clean, no
bodily fluids, nothing sexual, and don't forget. We can and
will pass on a question. Let's open up the phone lines.
Here's Corbin in the Gang with all the truth you're
gonna need.

Speaker 1 (01:42:17):
Eight three three four six oh kmod is the phone number.
You can also text BMMS and then which you want
to say to eight two nine four five. Is it
okay to open food and eat it in the grocery
store before you pay for it? Is it? Whether it's

(01:42:39):
you or your kids or whatever, is it okay to
open food and eat it before you pay for it?
In the grocery store.

Speaker 9 (01:42:50):
Yes, say more because you're going, well, I've had toddlers
in the grocery store with me and they can be
a major pain in the Yeah, so I want them
quiet while I do my grocery shopping. So I have
I have absolutely one hundred percent grabbed like the popcorn

(01:43:13):
chicken that you get from the deli. I have absolutely
gotten that and given it to them and just saved
the cup and purchased it afterwards. It's already got the
price on there, So sure, I think that's fine. I've
even gone. I've even tasted a grape. I've even a

(01:43:35):
grape just to make sure that they are sweet enough
to purchase.

Speaker 1 (01:43:38):
Yeah, but that's not what we're talking.

Speaker 9 (01:43:39):
Yeah, No, but absolutely, I think as long as you
are saving the package and it's not yeah, because there's
really nothing anything that you get from the deli or whatever.
They put the price tag on there. They weigh it
and everything. So if you've got the container, Sure.

Speaker 1 (01:43:57):
What do you do if you taste a grape and
it's not up to you're liking? Do you put the
entire bag back or just I mean I just pick
one and eat it exactly already had your hands all
in there. Yeah, I mean I'm grabbing one grape. I'm
not rubbing it on my genitals.

Speaker 9 (01:44:12):
Right, And I would hope that when you get your
produce home you're washing it.

Speaker 1 (01:44:16):
Anyways, A lot of people don't, I know. Give me
what about you? Is it okay to open food and
eat it before you pay for it in the grocery store. Yeah,
if you're an honest person, for sure, Because Lindsay's got
a great point. I've done the same thing, you know,
But not everybody's honest. There's a lot of people that
would just put that empty container back on a different shelf,

(01:44:38):
down a different aisle somewhere and not pay for it
at all.

Speaker 10 (01:44:41):
So yeah, if you're an honest person, have at it.
But I honestly I don't think you should. I think
you should.

Speaker 14 (01:44:48):
Wait.

Speaker 1 (01:44:48):
Yeah, I'm with you. It's kind of stealing, right, you
haven't paid for it yet. I'm sure anybody who's stolen
something said has said I'm gonna pay for it, right,
I understand. Yeah, the point you're making, I totally see.
But you can't contain yourself for another twenty minutes famished.

Speaker 9 (01:45:14):
You shouldn't grocery shop hungary, then you overspend.

Speaker 1 (01:45:19):
Uh. Have you ever regretted getting into the radio industry Lindsey.

Speaker 9 (01:45:25):
M No, not really. There was a time where I thought, man,
this is people in this industry can be really really mean.

Speaker 1 (01:45:38):
Uh.

Speaker 9 (01:45:39):
And if I would have known that, I may have
chosen something else. But that was that was when I
worked for one certain company and the people that I
worked with, it was like I lave people, they sucked.

Speaker 1 (01:45:57):
Have you ever regretted getting into the radio industry, No, Gimby, No, Yeah,
I'm not regretted. I don't know if I was aware
or my eyes were open to how unstable it is.

Speaker 9 (01:46:11):
Yeah, it's true.

Speaker 1 (01:46:13):
We've been very lucky. I was thinking about this this morning,
that Gimby and I working together for twelve years, working
on thirteen this year. I'm up, friend, maybe thirteen in June.
Like that's not common. There's a lot of changes on
the TV world right now, and like anchors leaving and whatever,
and it happens fast. Yeah, so twelve years we're pretty lucky.

(01:46:37):
But regret No. If you could turn into one monster
every full moon, which one would you pick? Lindsey?

Speaker 9 (01:46:51):
One monster every full moon? Probably a vampire. I think
they're sexy. There's something said about a vampire. Uh, I
wouldn't want to be a werewolf just real hairy and yeah,
biting someone on the neck isn't so bad.

Speaker 1 (01:47:13):
Hey, give me based up.

Speaker 10 (01:47:14):
It isn't there a griffin? A griffin if you don't
know what that is. It's like the body of a
line with the head of an eagle. I got's a
pretty badass.

Speaker 1 (01:47:24):
I've always been amazed by that, the monster creature whatever.
So yeah, every full moon, fly around, pick up a
couple of sheep, eat their ERDs, dump them back on
somebody else's house, maybe like a you know, an ex
or something like that. You're like, where did this goat?
Where did this happen? Eat and goat come from?

Speaker 13 (01:47:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:47:48):
A dragon? It's another good breathe fire. Yeah, once every
so many months. I get to flyer every month or
where I get to fly around people like just dragging
in the air right land and be like, no kidding,
right right, be up in a mountain by myself, sure, right,

(01:48:11):
or in a cave underneath the castle somewhere right. Yeah, Yeah,
I think that's pretty good. Uh, this one's interesting. What
makes someone a bad ass?

Speaker 9 (01:48:27):
Hmmm?

Speaker 1 (01:48:28):
I think the question you have to answer is what
is a badass?

Speaker 14 (01:48:31):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:48:31):
Yeah? Right? Right?

Speaker 10 (01:48:33):
That's all arbitrary, right, what you think is a badass,
I may not think is a bad ass.

Speaker 9 (01:48:38):
Yeah. I think when you have the ability to brush
stuff off your shoulders, that's pretty bad ass when you can.
But also when you can kick someone's ass that deserves it,
that's pretty bad ass, you know.

Speaker 1 (01:48:53):
No, I don't know if that's true. I don't know.
If you're being able to physically harm somebody makes you
a badass. So Jeffrey Dahmer is a bad ass? John
Wayne Gay sees No, you said.

Speaker 9 (01:49:09):
Maybe in someone's eyes, not mine, Yeah, it's yeah. What
is a badass? Is a good person? Someone that sticks
up for the little guy. Maybe yeah, someone that doesn't
need to be defended. Maybe, Yeah, I don't know. John

(01:49:33):
Cena Rock is a badass right now?

Speaker 1 (01:49:35):
John Cena is not. But yes, but he's turned heel.
But I think Gimby hit it like. It's pretty arbitrary,
because what's a good person?

Speaker 3 (01:49:47):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:49:48):
Right? It's very arbitrary. You can be a good person
who did bad things, right right, Martin Luther King's the
best exam. Yeah, uh, the Pope is a good example. Man,
stole across off a dead body. Uh, what about you, gimpeople?

(01:50:10):
What makes someone a badass? I don't know. When they
just lay there and they're not into it, bad ass
not bad peace, So got it? Got it? You know?
I don't know.

Speaker 10 (01:50:20):
I think I think being able to jump over the
Grand Canyon on a motorcycle is pretty bad ass.

Speaker 1 (01:50:24):
That makes you a badass.

Speaker 10 (01:50:25):
That's something that not a lot of people can do
or are willing to. So to have the balls to
get up there on a bike of some sorts hall
ass down this ramp and then buzzing all the way
across to a major giant crack in the earth, I
think it's pretty badass.

Speaker 9 (01:50:44):
It makes you a badass, yeah, or adrenaline junkie.

Speaker 1 (01:50:48):
Sure, I don't know. Travis Pastrana skydiving from the edge
of space probably wasn't Tras Pastrana. And then it wasn't
Pastrana that did it with the parachute and he went
into a death spind uh huh. And he did that,
and then he didn't call himself an astronaut. And then

(01:51:09):
the women did it on Blue Origin, same location and
they're like, we're astronauts, We're so lucky to be back
on earth. I've got a good understanding of everything. Felix
Bumguard Yah nice. Yeah. Travis Pastrana is a badass though,
because he does again that goes along with you know
me thinking, you know, jumping over the grand can. He
does things that nobody else is going to do, right,

(01:51:30):
He's got the balls to say, you know what, I'm
going to attempt and execute the stunt. So I think
somebody who can restrain their emotions is a badass.

Speaker 9 (01:51:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:51:52):
Current TV show you were watching and enjoying, I'm needing
something new, Lindsey.

Speaker 9 (01:51:57):
Now, then watch The Last of Us on because it
is a must see.

Speaker 1 (01:52:06):
I love it and.

Speaker 9 (01:52:08):
I was blown away by episode two of the second season.

Speaker 1 (01:52:12):
I haven't seen it yet, Corvin, have you watched episode
I know what happens, but yeah, GIMPI what about you?

Speaker 10 (01:52:19):
Just to be different, because yes, as I am watching
The Last of Us and I can tell you about
Righteous Gemstones and all that stuff, I'm gonna go with Mobland.
I recently started watching Mobland with Tom Hardy. Tom Hardy,
that's a good, solid show right there.

Speaker 1 (01:52:36):
Man. It's modern times. It's not like you think, you know,
Godfather Mafia ish set back in the Day or whatever. No,
it's got Piers Brosening in it, old ass Piers Brosening,
and it's good. It's a good show. Yeah. I can't
wait for it to hit outside of Paramount Plus. Yeah, right,
because yeah, I mean, I've got someone's logging, but I

(01:52:58):
don't use it. We've talked about the pit Last of
Us is good. I'll pick something we haven't talked about,
and that is Deli Boys on Hulu. It is a
thirty minute satirical. These kids their Indian descent, and their

(01:53:21):
dad owned a chain of convenience stores and he dies
suddenly from a golf ball to the head. And they've
enjoyed the lifestyle that the dad has provided as this
immigrant coming to America and this chain of convenience stores.
And unbeknownst to them, the dad was about to be

(01:53:44):
rated by the FBI because he's selling cocaine now of
the community Deli Boys and they now are being named
the successors and have to figure out how to run
the dad's drug organization. And they don't think of Harold
and Kumar type of situation, and some really silly moments happen.

(01:54:08):
It's pretty good. And then what's the show on Netflix?
Lindsay with Heather not Heather Graham. What is her name?
Goldie hans Kid? Oh?

Speaker 9 (01:54:24):
Yes, prime is that what it's called her? Prime Time?

Speaker 1 (01:54:30):
Anyway, it's on Netflix. She is the runs a basketball team. Yeah,
I get the girl's name, the running point, yeah, running
running point. Yes. And the main character she's pretty good.

(01:54:53):
And then the other characters have some good one liners.
It's good absent entourage. You don't have to really follow
along storylines. Yeah, Kate Hudson, that's what it is. Yes.

Speaker 9 (01:55:08):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:55:12):
If you could turn any chore into a competitive sport,
which one would you dominate? You could turn any chore
into a competitive sport, which one would you dominate.

Speaker 9 (01:55:27):
I'm pretty good at hand washing dishes, drying them and
getting them away in a timely matter. Also I can
clean them mean toilet, either one of those.

Speaker 1 (01:55:43):
Gimp. I like the idea of competitive vacuuming. It doesn't
seem like, you know, it'd be that hard, but you
gotta think about the obstacles that could you know, come up,
vacuum gets clogged, whatever, You've gotta quickly unclog your vacuum

(01:56:03):
and get back to vacuuming. The mess before the other
person finishes, like I might have something there. Put that
on the Oak Show. I was gonna pick folding, you know,
I was gonna pick cleaning bathrooms because I can clean
all three bathrooms in less than an hour. But then
I was thinking, well, one bathroom could be more dirty

(01:56:24):
than the other or create a stubborn stain. So I'm
picking folding laundry. I'm getting the same thing every time.
It's all pretty much the same. There's no new challenge
with folding laundry. There's always towels, there's always sheets, there's

(01:56:44):
always socks to match. There's there's no big surprise with
laundry that it's gonna inhibit my speed or my timing.

Speaker 9 (01:56:53):
Until one missing right and.

Speaker 1 (01:56:55):
That still gets put away. I still fold that. That's
not my that is beyond that is before me. That's
like a bat breaking like I didn't break them. It
was defective right right right, a ball going foul like
right right? I did listen the dry rate the sock,
I didn't.

Speaker 9 (01:57:10):
Lose it, right, Or who put this white washcloth in
with these dark clothes?

Speaker 1 (01:57:16):
Does that happen a lot anymore?

Speaker 9 (01:57:18):
In my house? If if one of the kids are
doing laundry.

Speaker 1 (01:57:22):
They really, they don't.

Speaker 9 (01:57:23):
Know they they Yeah, they avoid separating.

Speaker 1 (01:57:27):
I can't stand we ended segregation a long time. I
think I'm being honest. Short of just whites, I don't
think separation is the thing anymore with laundry.

Speaker 9 (01:57:36):
Then, why does my washing machine have a thing for uh,
your regular wash of clothes and then your whites and
then your towels.

Speaker 1 (01:57:46):
For the same reason, it has hot and cold because
you don't need hot to do your laundry.

Speaker 9 (01:57:50):
Anymore, because when I do it all in cold.

Speaker 1 (01:57:52):
But I'm just saying that to say that there's a feature.
There is the reason why you should I short of
using bleach, I don't I think you have to worry
about your clothes and a very delicate item. I don't
think you have to worry about that anymore. We're number one,
by the way, rock Station still do. Yeah, I do.

(01:58:16):
Like I separate any heavy clothing, so like Jeane sweatshirts, underwear,
socks only because I don't want my my skid marks
rolling around with my other stuff.

Speaker 9 (01:58:24):
Right, it all.

Speaker 1 (01:58:25):
Comes it literally, there's a phrase for it. It all
comes out in the wash. Well, it doesn't mean run
the baby out with the bath water doesn't mean you're like, well,
that happens sometimes, but again, I don't have to. I'm
totally comfortable putting everything in and just running.

Speaker 9 (01:58:41):
I just I can't, especially when it comes to uh
like Marcus's socks is for game days and stuff. Oh
they're nasty. They're nasty, nasty, that's its own.

Speaker 1 (01:58:55):
The laundry doesn't get it clean.

Speaker 9 (01:58:56):
Huh. Yes, but I'm not trusting it to do it
with any of them.

Speaker 1 (01:59:00):
How many times does it let you down?

Speaker 9 (01:59:03):
I've never tried it, to be honest.

Speaker 1 (01:59:06):
All right, we got to take a break. We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (01:59:08):
You're listening to the Big Mad Morning Show. This is
Tulsa's Morning Show. Ninety KMOD.

Speaker 1 (01:59:25):
Good morning, It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Six oh KMOD.
You can also text bmms and then what you want
to say to eight two nine four five. I saw
a picture this morning of the Pope in Tune, Okay,

(01:59:47):
lying in state Okay, and it made me think. I
was like hearing it, I'm looking at a dead person,
and why we are okay with some seeing some people
dead on TV, but others we don't allow to happen.
What do you mean by that? Exactly? What I said.

(02:00:07):
We allow some people to be seen dead on TV,
and some people we don't.

Speaker 10 (02:00:10):
Well, they're not famous enough to be seen on TV.
I think that's where it's at.

Speaker 1 (02:00:17):
I don't know. There's been plenty of other famous people
that have died. We don't see them open caskets. True, Okay,
typically we as society have said it's not ok I'm
fine with it. By the way, I think there should
see be more video of dead people so we know
it's a real thing. We know it's real. Corbin, I
don't know if some of you do, right. Uh did

(02:00:41):
they show the body of the Queen or Jimmy Carter?
Jimmy Carter, No, the Queen, I can't say with certainty.
I want to say no.

Speaker 10 (02:00:53):
I don't think so. I can't remember, but I don't
think so. Maybe it's just religious figures that we like
to show dead on TV.

Speaker 1 (02:01:02):
But I can't remember. Back when John Paul the Second died,
I can't remember if they ever showed him on TV.
Surely they did. Now, a lot of inside the Vatican,
there are a few places where the person in there
you can see and they're you know, decomposed and stuff.
But all right, because they're all buried whatever underneath the

(02:01:25):
some are, some are, but some of them have like
a glass thing and you can they're like, yep, there's
a there's a body right there. I'd be neat. I'm
telling you. The Vatican is one of the most amazing
places to visit ever, so much to see. I wonder
if I can get a plexiglass tomb like that. Sure,

(02:01:47):
you can definitely tell the people you would like that.
Whether you'll get it or not, you won't know, right
of course. But I was just seeing that. I was like,
that's so weird that we're seeing that right now. Like
even the fact that they're what what like once they're
through you know the mortician. Now we're okay with it. Yeah,

(02:02:13):
now it's fine.

Speaker 10 (02:02:15):
Yeah, And maybe it depends on the severity of their death.
You know, Hope here just stroked out overnight, you know,
so there was it wasn't as bloody and gruesome as
it could be, as opposed you know, somebody who blew half.

Speaker 1 (02:02:30):
Their face off. Sure, yeah, which, okay, I get that. Yeah. No,
it makes sense that if you know, you there's part
of your body missing, we're not gonna have an open cast,
right right, not much to look at.

Speaker 10 (02:02:40):
Or even if you hung yourself right, there's still you
know exactly, button up the shirt. Yeah, put a scarf
around it, maybe make up. There's another way to get
around it.

Speaker 1 (02:02:51):
I'll never forget going to see. The first funeral I
ever went to was a friend of the family's dad
died and we went to that funeral and walk by
the casket and you could see the wire in his
mouth to keep his mouth shut. Right. Yes, weird. Yes,
that's why I don't want to go see dead people.
That's why I don't walk up to caskets at funerals.

(02:03:13):
They'll hear me from back here.

Speaker 9 (02:03:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:03:16):
Uh. I learned this too recently that when you get
a body cremated, it is not uncommon. They call it this.
It sits up inside the furnace, right, it's not really
sitting up, but that there's a moment where the muscles
constrict right from the heat, and that the body will

(02:03:38):
kind of sit up, and that the lore is is
that it wakes them up, right, it wakes them up.

Speaker 10 (02:03:45):
I always say, that's even happened in you know, non
cremation services.

Speaker 1 (02:03:51):
Open casket. You know, muscles for whatever reason just tensed
up and then they stay up straight out of the coffee.
I I don't know of any that's ever happened in
real life. Now, there is times when a body is
open casket and a little right the gas and gases

(02:04:11):
being not farting, but like gas is being released from
inside the body. But as far as like you may
be recounting a story our boss told us about a
dog being put to sleep. Yeah, right, that the dog
was you know, they were like goodbye spot and then

(02:04:33):
the dog came to life for one final yelp.

Speaker 10 (02:04:37):
Went to give him the injection to put him down,
and it's well, I scared the piss out of you.

Speaker 1 (02:04:44):
Definitely zombie dog because they sedate the dog go to
sleep and then they give the killer the final shot,
so it's not supposed to go.

Speaker 10 (02:05:01):
Ten creepy things bodies can do after death. Move is
one of them, Okay, I mean moves a pretty loose term,
right exactly exactly.

Speaker 1 (02:05:11):
I twitch my finger. That's moving.

Speaker 10 (02:05:12):
Yeah, And are they actually moving or is that just
you know, the mortician or whatever that's you know, dealing
with the body. Maybe just mind playing tricks on you or.

Speaker 1 (02:05:22):
The muscles relaxing right.

Speaker 10 (02:05:24):
Give birth is on this list. Unfortunately, death does not
have moral compass in anyone. Even those who are pregnant
can fall victim. Giving birth while alive is beautiful experience.

Speaker 1 (02:05:36):
Da da da da.

Speaker 10 (02:05:37):
These births are referred to as coffin births due to
them happening inside confidents. Basically, the pressure of the gas
is building up within the deceased pushes the fetus out. No,
the fetus has to be positioned in just the right
or wrong way for this to occur.

Speaker 1 (02:05:56):
Okay, well that's misleading. Yeah, that's not a fetus earth.
That is the muscles relaxing, right, And how would you
know that that happens? When I thought, yeah, but you're
not it's in the ground. Well yeah, I think this
is like at the funeral in the funeral home. No,
come on, I thought you were gonna say that people

(02:06:17):
give birth after they've died, which is totally a thing
like people sit in a car accident or whatever. They
may try to keep them alive, just to say, artificially,
to let the baby be born. I thought that's what
you were going for, right, No, apparently apparently not.

Speaker 10 (02:06:33):
Of course, there's the eliminade is what they call where
it's the excretion of bodily fluids. Corman kinda hit on
that earlier. Make noise with a little toot, gassing, expoles,
illusions of growth. We've talked about that before with the
hair and the fingernails.

Speaker 1 (02:06:50):
Right, A lot of people think the nails keep growing.
It's a misconception. The cuticle beds received self digestion is
another one.

Speaker 10 (02:07:00):
Feeding on itself. Aiden decomposition, Okay, that's what that is.
What else we explode?

Speaker 1 (02:07:05):
Oh god, oh god? Could you just imagine your poor mother,
she dies, you have the service, you're lying there, you're sad,
and then all of a sudden, I cannot think that
is only a thing where you are not treating the
body through like a funeral home or whatever. It's being

(02:07:26):
taken care of in the correct manner.

Speaker 10 (02:07:29):
Like the exploding whale, you know, the dead the whale
that beaches itself and now it's dead and then explodes,
appeared appeer aroused, so death boners.

Speaker 1 (02:07:41):
It cuts called briga mortis.

Speaker 10 (02:07:45):
Once the hop starts beating, all the blood that was
previously circulating trickles down and collects to the lowest part
of the body.

Speaker 1 (02:07:53):
An orgasm.

Speaker 10 (02:07:55):
Okay, don't need to explain that one and the number
one here is know that they are dead.

Speaker 1 (02:08:03):
I think there's an important factor in all of these
of time frame, right, like the Coffin death thing. From
what I quickly found was that it was all based
off before there was modern embalming, gotcha. An explosion was
all before modern embalming, gotcha, And that they dug up

(02:08:24):
the caskets later and there'd be like a baby fetus
in there, like not a fetus, but like the remnants
of another person that wasn't there originally. Right, that's not
the same as the implication. Right, we've kind of gotten
past all those times. We need to figure out how
to stop all these casket berths from happening. We're bodies

(02:08:44):
from exploding. Why'd you dig it back up? Right right?
What was your plans to do with that dead body? Sir?
Leave it? There no reason to go and get.

Speaker 10 (02:08:56):
It, roll of your dad or whatever. And you're sad,
and all of a sudden that closed part of the
casket just kind of opens up a little bit.

Speaker 1 (02:09:10):
Where are you here? I death boners.

Speaker 9 (02:09:18):
This text says my sixth grade teacher. Her dad was
a corner and he picked up a body up on
the way back to the funeral home. The body rose
up in the back of the car.

Speaker 1 (02:09:27):
Oh damn, oh damn, stop it your sixth grade teacher,
what are we doing? Well? Yeah, that was her dad
to tell the story to scare the kids.

Speaker 9 (02:09:38):
Yeah, there's another one. Dad knew a guy who drove
the meal there it is corner. He went to pick
up a body from a car accident. The body had
been in the car long enough a rigor mortis to
set in, and he'd been sitting up. The rescuers had
flattened him out enough to get him on the gurney,
but on the way to the morgue, one of the
straps gave way and the body sat up in the

(02:09:59):
back of the van. Driver saw it in the mirror,
and Bails.

Speaker 1 (02:10:03):
Just open up the door and tuck en rolled. Huh,
I'm out of here. Yeah, otn't I understand? That's probably
part of the job. You know, you've got to flatten
the dead body out to get it on the on
the gurney. But it's like, I feel that seems to
like it should be wrong. Can you flatten a body

(02:10:25):
with rigor mortis? No, these are stories that all have
the same thing. I know someone who knows someone. Uh
huh uh, that's what it says.

Speaker 10 (02:10:35):
Visiting my cousin at work who was a mortician, used
to be interesting.

Speaker 1 (02:10:39):
I don't know if I would go visit that personal work.
I don't know, maybe once just to see how it was,
but I don't know if I would continue to go back.

Speaker 9 (02:10:50):
I take your kid to work day, I want no
part of well.

Speaker 10 (02:10:53):
I think if it's to take your kid to work
day and you're in that industry, your kid's already in it,
you know what I mean?

Speaker 9 (02:10:59):
Possibly? Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:11:01):
How do morticians deal with rigamortis by manipulating the bodies
joints and muscles to break down the protein, causing stiffness,
allowing easier positioning for embalming. This is called breaking the rigor,
which is not a movie Lindsay promoted at nine. So

(02:11:22):
it seems like if you're this person's friend's dad was
a mortician, they would actually be the one to know
how to flatten the body, not the fireman, right right,
it won't go. They're like stand on it like it's
a suitcase. You get on that in You're like do

(02:11:51):
that on set? Or like when we were kids, we'd
take a big stick and we wanted to be a
shorter stick and you prop it up against the tree
and hi yakat yaw with your butt. Sure, no, no,
thank you. All right, we got to take a break.
We'll be back.

Speaker 11 (02:12:08):
Tulsa's Morning Show continues.

Speaker 2 (02:12:11):
Next Jax the Big Mad Morning Show on the Tulsa's
rock station ninety seven km O T.

Speaker 13 (02:12:34):
I'm a.

Speaker 1 (02:12:36):
Good morning. It's the Big Mad Morning Show. Make sure
I hit this because I forgot, did not Brian Riggs
if Wes Tulsa hurt the que and got qualified. Jared
Wislowski got qualified. You can get qualified to listen for
that queue every hour at the Big Mad Morning Show
for your chance to get qualified for seem all twenty

(02:13:00):
twenty five tickets to see every concert that Cambodia is
a part of are up for grabs. But you have
to get qualified, and to get qualified, you got to
listen for that cue. Another chance is coming up very soon.
Mel's going to have your chances. Jay Rott will have
your chances, and then we'll be back tomorrow with more chances.
Every hour. Lindsay, what'd you learn today?

Speaker 9 (02:13:22):
I learned that if you can sit through and watch
Deliverance in its entirety more than once, then you might
be a bad ass. And also, breaking the rigger sounds
like a job of a true badass.

Speaker 1 (02:13:35):
Give me what'd you learn today?

Speaker 10 (02:13:37):
I learned that death Boners aren't somebody with a lot
of STDs. And I also learned that Lindsay still believes
in segregation.

Speaker 1 (02:13:49):
I learned, Hey, I Shot my Mom is a movie
Lindsay has promoted at nine. And I also learned that
Rigger is a good band name. Corpin Say makes that
Dishwalkers loaded right.

Speaker 9 (02:14:01):
It's Lindsey stopped tracking my cycle?

Speaker 1 (02:14:03):
Yes is campy and I'm.

Speaker 8 (02:14:08):
Maddy.

Speaker 1 (02:14:10):
Can I get a call?

Speaker 14 (02:14:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (02:14:19):
Now? What the hell you way back? I mean it
would be no.

Speaker 11 (02:14:24):
Make noise.

Speaker 1 (02:14:29):
Interpassword Gordon new Messages. The Big Madden Morning sho would
like to take a minute to thank troops from Oklahoma
and all over the United States. These soldiers have sacrifice.
Did the Big Mad Morning Show before you to back
like the total douchebags that they are total douchebag bag,
little incomplete douchebag. We honor and respect you. We honor
and respect you.

Speaker 14 (02:14:48):
We honor and respect you. Stop less rock and Roll.

Speaker 11 (02:14:53):
Blessed Tulsa.

Speaker 6 (02:14:54):
We tried. Boy.

Speaker 1 (02:15:10):
I saw this online, and I think it's You're gonna
have a name come to mind immediately when I say it.
But who's an actor who ruined their reputation in a
single act, like a single situation? Easily? Will Smith comes
to mind right with a slam. Yeah, assaulted a man
on stage and then won an Oscar. Yeah, imagine his

(02:15:30):
whole life he'd been because he'd been winning and probably
deserved an Oscar for so many movies that he had
done that are great movies, and then he finally wins one,
and nobody's talking about that. They're just talking by you
assaulted a man because he said a joke about your wife,
who you're not even really with anyway.

Speaker 9 (02:15:47):
Yeah, who treats you like shit?

Speaker 1 (02:15:53):
Anytime we bring up this broad Lindsey fucking hates this person.
You any time we bring up Will Smith, she does
not miss the chance to dog on Jada Pinket Smith.
Are you jealous, Lindsay? Is that what it is?

Speaker 9 (02:16:07):
No? What's there to be jealous of?

Speaker 10 (02:16:09):
She's got millions of dollars, she's successful, lives fucking Bill Smith.

Speaker 9 (02:16:13):
For all millions of dollars. But yeah, I mean she
does treat him like shit. She cheats on him, then
talks about it, makes him look like an idiot, and
then makes him look like an even bigger idiot when
she expects him to go punch someone in the face
or slap someone in the face. You go in hen defense.

Speaker 1 (02:16:30):
Right, It's an interesting take you have because I'm I'm
a believer of Like you have fifty to fifty in it,
Like he lets that happen. He lets another individual forget
that it's his wife or a woman or whatever. Like
he lets another individual have that power over him. Yeah,
I mean when you have to, you know, you have
to move from Philly. Yeah, you need to, like you

(02:16:53):
get raised by your own uncle, like you have a
kind of a weird childhood. Yeah, that makes sense. But
can you think of another person Jesse Smollett. No, I
think that's a fair one too. He was definitely an actor, right,
He was definitely on a show that was quite successful.
But I don't know if more people know him because
of that than they do because he was on Empire

(02:17:14):
or whatever that show was, right, which that show didn't
last that long, not after he left it. There's a
lot of them out there. I didn't realize, and I'm
trying to stay away from like the Cosby's, Arnie Hammer,
the Danny Mastersons, the Harvey win No, but I think
that those are fair to bring up. Right on the

(02:17:34):
other one, I thought of o j oh yeah, right,
oh yeah, right, the greatest thing ever. And according to
the thing I read that he was, James Cameron wanted
him to be Determinator, but they thought he was too
likable and ink people would think he's incapable of killing
something new. He could never do that. Um okay, I

(02:18:01):
think Danny Masterson's a good one. That's fair, I guess.
I mean he had a he had an alright reputation,
and then then that come down. I think people were shocked. Roseanne. Yeah,
Roseanne's another one. She's always been edgy, you know, but
once she made that you know joke that got her
cut from fucking you know, the Connors, and it just

(02:18:22):
went downhill from there.

Speaker 9 (02:18:23):
Arnold Swartzenegger for a minute when he was stupid his maid, I.

Speaker 1 (02:18:28):
Don't think that ruined him. I don't think that ruined
his career at all. I don't think that's the same
like cheating on your partner. I don't think is the
same as I don't even know if Roseanne's good, Like
she did a lot of fucking crazy things. I never
got canceled, Yeah it wasn't. She got canceled twice. To
be honest, Kanye is a good one. Kanye is a

(02:18:51):
good one. Kanye belongs on that list because he used
to have a good rep, you know, and then he
just got fucking weird, you know, and continues to be weird.

Speaker 9 (02:19:03):
Maybe not so much anymore. But Chris Brown when he
punched Rihanna, I.

Speaker 10 (02:19:09):
Don't think it ruined his career, Yeah, because he still
went on. He's still doing shows, He's still still selling records.
People still be buying that shit.

Speaker 1 (02:19:17):
So a lot of people turned the other look the
other cheek, look the other way, turned their cheek. Somebody
wrote on this list, John Wilkes Booth, it all went
downhill after they shut the president in the head. Yeah,
the brother of the most famous actor in America. After

(02:19:37):
the brother saved the life of the President's kid, even
like a month before that. It's kind Amanda Bindes on
this list. What did she do?

Speaker 9 (02:19:46):
She just I mean, she went fucking nuts.

Speaker 1 (02:19:49):
Did she? Yeah? Suffering from mental illness is what it says, Okay, yeah,
she had a mental breakdown. He had breakdowns.

Speaker 9 (02:19:58):
Yes.

Speaker 10 (02:19:59):
I feel like a lot of them, you know, or
celebrities are susceptible to have a mental breakdowns, especially young ones. Yes,
you know, because they can't handle all that shit.

Speaker 1 (02:20:09):
I don't think it's just child actors. I'm a big
believer in this. I think you turn anywhere between twenty
seven and thirty five, there's something that happens in your
brain and you like to simplify it. You have this
moment of like, I don't know what to fucking do
with my hands. I'm like, you've achieved so many things.
Maybe you're married, maybe you've finished your college, you've got
a career, you've got all these boxes checked more than

(02:20:30):
you ever have, and then you're like.

Speaker 9 (02:20:34):
A Bill Cosby.

Speaker 1 (02:20:37):
Yeah yeah, I mean, don't I think it's fair to
have that on the list. I think he did a
bunch of things over time, right, Yeah, that was his
norm and it just got caught up. Yeah, because if
we say it all the time, fuck, we say it
with all of us all the time, marrying fucking twelve
year old. You know, it was a different time back then.

(02:20:58):
It was a different time when you could, you know,
slip somebody of Mickey and then fuck him on account.

Speaker 9 (02:21:03):
With all of it, with all of these celebrities, people
end up getting over it and they moved past it.

Speaker 1 (02:21:08):
Well, yeah, something else comes up, right, we end up
talking about that instead.

Speaker 9 (02:21:12):
People have moved on from Will Smith.

Speaker 1 (02:21:15):
No, but they're still not doing stuff like he's gonna
go on tour. He's trying right right right, But Chris
Brown still sells out arenas Charlie Sheen, for example, what
has he been in since he had his little fucking meltdown? Yeah,
you know, and not mine. They did the roast after that. Yeah,
so he I don't think it killed him, No, it

(02:21:37):
didn't kill him, but he still hasn't gotten any work
from it. I'm gonna looking old Charlie here half off.

Speaker 9 (02:21:43):
What do you mean when he when he was drunken
on the floor.

Speaker 1 (02:21:47):
Yeah, I don't think that.

Speaker 9 (02:21:49):
Alec Baldwin when he called his daughter Ireland, the voicemails
of him calling her a selfish.

Speaker 1 (02:21:54):
Pig or he was in Mission impossible after that, and
he's still getting work.

Speaker 10 (02:21:58):
I mean he killed somebody, yeah, at work and probably
will still continue to get more work after that. Right,
His fault or not.

Speaker 1 (02:22:07):
He did. It was out his hand, but he's the victim. Yeah.
I think you're bringing up a point though, and that
is what is the uh what is it hurts their career?
And well she's dead, so yeah, definitely, you're definitely right
though that.

Speaker 9 (02:22:25):
After she got drunk and drove into someone's house.

Speaker 1 (02:22:28):
She died, Lindsay, Yeah she died, Yeah she did. She
fucking died.

Speaker 10 (02:22:33):
Did She lasted over like maybe a couple of days,
and she ended up she died because of that event.

Speaker 9 (02:22:38):
Yeah, I thought that happened and then with something else.

Speaker 1 (02:22:41):
No, she had a lot of things happened in her
life that were catastrophic, and if you read about her life,
you're like, damn, she's had some shit happened to her.
But yeah, I'm pretty sure she died in that event.
August eleventh, twenty twenty two. Died on my son's birthday.
She said that, Oh no, that's your son's birthday, got it? Yeah? Yeah, yeah,

(02:23:03):
Charlie Sheen. I was just trying to look at the
IMDb as to like, when was the last fucking movie
he was in, and looks like there was a He
was uncredited in a TV series called Bookie from twenty
three to twenty four. That doesn't count if you're not
credited in it, right, didn't count. Yeah.

Speaker 10 (02:23:23):
In twenty twenty he was in Grizzly Too Revenge. Hey,
our friend Tim Montana had him in a music video.
Oh yeah, mostly stoned in twenty nineteen.

Speaker 1 (02:23:38):
Uh yeah, yeah.

Speaker 10 (02:23:42):
So far as movies, there's not much. Twenty seventeen was
the last last movie.

Speaker 1 (02:23:48):
Really. Nine to eleven was the movie. What did he
do that got him being a fucking rock star? Right? No,
I'm just trying to think of, like, I cannot recall
what the issue he was. He just went looney Tunes man.

Speaker 10 (02:24:02):
He fucking did a bunch of cocaine and fucking was
banging you all the hookers and shit like that, and
didn't give a fuck about it because he's fucking Charlie
Shane and he's got all the money.

Speaker 1 (02:24:11):
Yeah, and people didn't like it. He he publicly he
made publicly offensive comments about the creator of the show
he was currently fucking on, okay, and that got him
blacklisted from fucking Hollywood. If I'm it's starting to click
and he anti semitic, I think is he used some
sort of term associated with that he starts with a

(02:24:34):
jade ends with a new I get it. I maybe
I don't know. I want to see if I can.
I'll see if I can find out what it was.
But uh, yeah, they shut down production and he called
Chuck Lorie a little maggot and referred to him as
a stupid, stupid man. Oh come on, because he got

(02:24:55):
called him maggot, fucking pansy. But I think there's that
was also, like, you know, the straw that broke the
camel's back. I don't think it was that he called
him a maggot. I think it was that this guy's
been a pain in the ass to work with, and
they're like, Okay, fuck off and get rid of them.
Then fire the guy you know, and fucking bring Ashton
cut your in. But that doesn't that's no reason to

(02:25:16):
blackball somebody in an industry. You create your own thing.
And if he was hard to work with and he
publicly outcried his boss, that's not a good look. Like
there's a story in the news this morning about Caleb
Williams and he did something. I don't know what the
details are, but the article headline implied that he did
something to put a you know, a nail in the

(02:25:38):
coffin of the grave of Eberflus. I don't think that's
a good fucking look. Okay, he like coaches come and go. Man.
Granted he was not a good coach and had some
bad calls, but you are an individual that has freedom
to make decisions right, right, So you were complicit in
some of that too, and you're bad mouthing somebody that.

(02:26:00):
It's a small world, man, he could be a coach
on your staff again, for sure. For sure. You know,
when I was going to uh fucking broadcasting school with
a teachers like, hey, be nice to everybody because you
don't know who your next program director is gonna be, right,
You just don't know who you're gonna be fucking working
for in the industry. And I totally get that.

Speaker 10 (02:26:16):
However, I feel like Charlie Sheen's path could be corrected
and he's a good actor, he really is, and I
think he can he can correct his path and get
back into doing and get get some more work. Besides,
you know, being in a Tim Montana video, nothing is Tim.

Speaker 1 (02:26:34):
He's great.

Speaker 9 (02:26:35):
Who's the oh shit, the old man who's always drunk
and looking and talks crazy.

Speaker 1 (02:26:40):
And are you still talking about Charlie Sheen.

Speaker 9 (02:26:42):
You know the other guy blond Harry's always talking gibberish nowadays,
Bucy Gary.

Speaker 1 (02:26:54):
He's not He's not drunk. No, he's got a brain.
Oh yeah, he had a accident, a motorcycle accident without
a helmet, hit the curb. He's not sounds fucking drunk, yeah,
but he has a medical situation that has caused that. Okay,
also a Tulsen Randy Quaid uh drunk, had a seizure. Okay,

(02:27:18):
made a sex video with the dog barking in the back.
I'll never forget that. Uh. Apparently he was constantly doing drugs.

Speaker 9 (02:27:31):
She was.

Speaker 1 (02:27:31):
They had to shut down production sometimes because of it,
because he could go to rehab. Yeah, he was just
a pain in the was hard to work with.

Speaker 10 (02:27:38):
He was partying too much, spending his money, live in
the Hollywood lifestyle.

Speaker 1 (02:27:43):
And you know he got out of control, right and
when and when he when he went questioned about it,
he said he wasn't bipolar. He was by winning. Yeah, drugs, Well,
fuck with your brain. And he called Crier a turncoat
and a troll. He went scoredtirth on everyone. He fucked

(02:28:03):
all this shit. Yeah again, though he can make good,
he can turn around and he can get back to work.
And then he went on tour to talk about it
all all right as a money grab and he got
booed and people would walk out or solid good time
right there? How old? What do you think Charlie Sheen's ages,

(02:28:26):
and what do you think is networth is?

Speaker 9 (02:28:29):
I would say that he's probably sixty two, maybe sixty
three even, and his net worth is probably he's probably
not worth that much anymore. He's probably only worth probably
twenty five mil.

Speaker 1 (02:28:46):
At the height of two and a half men, he
was getting one point eight million dollars an episode. Yeah,
that's a lot of and he shit the bed. Yeah,
fifty three is the number that popped in my head
for age, and I know that's wrong, so I'm gonna
go sixty three. He's fifty nine, Okay, Maynard is older
than him, ain't That's something? And his net worth according
to this is three million dollars.

Speaker 9 (02:29:07):
Yeah, wow.

Speaker 1 (02:29:08):
Yeah, he lost a lot. He lost a lot when
he fell off the wagon there, but.

Speaker 9 (02:29:14):
He snorted a lot.

Speaker 1 (02:29:15):
Yeah, I think it's that. And then he invested in
things like Tiger Blood.

Speaker 9 (02:29:19):
Tiger Blood that's right.

Speaker 1 (02:29:20):
Yeah, and he had like a DNA thing that he
was like trying to promote. His ex wife, Denise Richards
has said he doesn't pay child sport.

Speaker 9 (02:29:27):
Yeah, okay, I don't even think he has a relationship
with his daughters.

Speaker 8 (02:29:31):
Now.

Speaker 1 (02:29:33):
They're all grown, aren't they.

Speaker 9 (02:29:35):
I'm sure I think the youngest is like sixteen.

Speaker 1 (02:29:37):
Okay, Well that I didn't even think about, like kids. Yeah.

Speaker 14 (02:29:43):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (02:29:43):
And of all the Staves, he's not my favorite. He
has five children. Holy shit, let us I mean, I'm
sure they're from all different right people. Sammy Sheen, Lola
Rose Sheen, cassand Red Jade Estavez, Bob and Max so Charlie.

(02:30:06):
She was engaged to Kelly Preston, who an actress, and
she was hit by shrapnel after a gun went off
in their house and then she broke off the engagement. Yeah,
shrapnel usually could you know in the relationship?

Speaker 9 (02:30:23):
There wasn't Kelly Preston. Wasn't she married to John Travolta.

Speaker 1 (02:30:27):
Uh, Kelly Preston. She was in Jack Frost Battlefield Earth.
She's been in a lot of a lot of stuff.

Speaker 9 (02:30:38):
It's dead. I think she's dead.

Speaker 1 (02:30:42):
She died.

Speaker 9 (02:30:43):
Yeah, she was married to that was Yeah, that.

Speaker 1 (02:30:47):
Was John Kelly Preston were staple of any red carpet. Yeah,
she's the She's the Tom Cruise banger. In the beginning
of Jeremyguire, that's Kelly Preston. Show you the boy sit.

Speaker 9 (02:31:00):
In Arnold Howarzenegger in Twins.

Speaker 1 (02:31:05):
In nineteen ninety five, he married Donna Peel. That same
year he was named as one of the clients of
an escort agency by Heidie Fliss. They got divorced. He
met Denise Richards in two thousand. They started dating, they
got engaged, They got married, of course, and then four

(02:31:26):
years later she filed for divorce, accusing him of alcohol
and drug abuse with threats of violence you don't say,
as well as accusations of him participating in gay pornography.
He of course denied any of those claims, and the
FBI apparently was involved in searching his computers.

Speaker 9 (02:31:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:31:49):
Yeah. Is married to Brooke Mohler. She gave birth to
their twin sons and November he filed for divorce. Police
moved the couple sons from his home and social services
took the children after she they had a bad drug problem.
Both of them did if I remember correctly, and then

(02:32:13):
he was with Briolson who if you know who Briolsen
is porn star. I mean she is definitely a porn
star and known for quite the uh some pretty crazy
things if I'm not mistaken, and she would tell stories

(02:32:36):
about other porn stars. Yeah, okay, Yeah, he's quite colorful.
His second daughter, Sammy, created an OnlyFans account. He later
changed his mind from his disapproval, signing that it was
a good thing. Yeah. Man's got some problems, but nothing

(02:33:03):
that can't be fixed. Get back to work. Charlie on TikTok,
I saved this video because it's such a fantastic video.
I wanted to play it for you guys. And this
is an old man telling some people off. You Ready

(02:33:27):
to all.

Speaker 14 (02:33:27):
Of you Asian women out there, most of you are
young and good looking, that is superre, even real, and
most of you are nothing more than just scammers. Some
of you may not me, but most of you are
just scammers. And I don't have time for that. So

(02:33:50):
if you're an Asian lady and you think you're gonna
scam me, forget it. I'm not even gonna talk to you.
Going down the road somewhere else. See if you can
find somebody else that's stupid enough to leave it, you're
even real. So kiss my ice and goodbye.

Speaker 1 (02:34:11):
That sounds like a man who's learned.

Speaker 9 (02:34:12):
To listen right, trial by fire?

Speaker 10 (02:34:19):
How much anti Asian videos do you watch to where
that pops up? No share, you mentioned before you don't
find Asian women attractive, which is okay. Now, there's a
lot of things about women I don't find attractive, and
I typically am not attracted nor I've ever did in
an Asian woman.

Speaker 1 (02:34:38):
It doesn't mean I hate Asian people or Asian women.
I get it. I get it. I don't know how
this showed up anyway. I just think if you saw
this video of this man, there's no way, like, what
do you what are you talking about? He's been burned before.
Imagine you're caring for your elderly parents and you're just
you know, fucking swiping and then this coming. Damn it, Dad,

(02:35:02):
what are you doing? What are you doing? That's funny?
I hate Dad. You're TikTok famous now right for what
for hating Asians? I get it. He's just trying to
make sure that he's he's got his bases covered. Now, Yeah,
I'm not falling for your scams anymore. And apparently he's married.

(02:35:26):
Oh yeah, there's a lot of fucking videos of him.
Just I don't know how this showed up on my thing.
All of his videos only have like a couple hundred videos.
It's not like one just got populated because it's got
you know, seven million or something like that.

Speaker 9 (02:35:41):
Everyone was like this, but this one, this is good
advice right here.

Speaker 1 (02:35:44):
Yeah, this looks like his most popular one.

Speaker 14 (02:35:47):
Oh, he said we could take him by surprise if
we didn't far muscuts that would look them in the eye.
So we helped our far to which the inderpace as
well the open upper squirrel gun is really getting whoa
wear our gun in the bridge? Keeper coming wasn't not
as many as it was a while to gold Ford.
Once more, they begin to running on down the Mississippi

(02:36:07):
to the gouvern of makes Cold Well with fard r
cannon until the barrel leveled down. So we grabbed an
alligator and fallow another round builder his head with cannon
ball and powderings behind. When don't we set the powder
off the gator and lost his mind.

Speaker 1 (02:36:20):
Now there's not a dick in his mouth or anything
that that's just he's the way.

Speaker 14 (02:36:25):
In the British Keeper coming wasn't not as many as
it was. A while to gold Ford once more and
they begin to run.

Speaker 1 (02:36:31):
It nothing like the Battle New Orleans. Many out right,
thanks man, appreciate it.

Speaker 14 (02:36:41):
Hey, y'all, this is another great Sunday. It may be
a little cooler that we'd like, and it's cloudy and overcast,
but all in all, it's still going to be a
great day.

Speaker 1 (02:36:55):
Let's all get out there and enjoy it.

Speaker 14 (02:36:56):
Okay, okay, Grandpa, I would like to say a few
words in response to all of my videos that I posted.
I'm overwhelmed with all the support that I have been getting.

Speaker 1 (02:37:11):
I fucking TikTok is wild. Why someone would want to
ban this app is beyond me. Yeah, it's very entertaining
this The guy's got like seven hundred fucking watches on
his videos. There's not like, yeah, his overwhelming sport. Meanwhile,
he's just like, I'm fucking I'm making videos.

Speaker 9 (02:37:27):
I love He says, let's get out there and enjoy it,
when every time you see him he's sitting in the
same fucking chair as Spy. He never fucking moves.

Speaker 1 (02:37:36):
Heart just overflow with joy.

Speaker 14 (02:37:42):
As long as y'all keep lacking them and come in,
and I guess I'll keep trying to put a few
old Okay, but I am overwhelmed with all the joy
and support I've been getting.

Speaker 1 (02:37:54):
Probably just a fucking lonely guy, probably is. And he's
getting comments on his on his page. He enjoys the uh,
the attention. There ain't nothing wrong with that. It's not
like he's, you know, raping little kids on his on
his channel or whatever.

Speaker 9 (02:38:09):
Why doesn't post those videos?

Speaker 1 (02:38:12):
This is from yesterday. I think we're gonna watch him
fucking eat.

Speaker 8 (02:38:17):
Hey everyone, this is from Rays Kitchen today. We're making
up fried pach pass m hmm. From dried peaches. You
take a pound of paches.

Speaker 14 (02:38:36):
And cook them in two cups of water for about
thirty minutes until it gets.

Speaker 1 (02:38:40):
Soft like dehydrated peaches.

Speaker 9 (02:38:44):
Is al he's talking about dried yeah pass.

Speaker 1 (02:38:49):
Yeah, fucking amen. I can't peaches exactly or frozen ones
for fox sake. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (02:38:55):
Then add a cup of shirt and about a tablespoon.

Speaker 1 (02:39:02):
Of car and starts, car and.

Speaker 9 (02:39:04):
Stars, car, cars go anywhere, car and starts.

Speaker 7 (02:39:13):
That's to begin with.

Speaker 8 (02:39:14):
You want to take them after they get cooked the patch.
If you've never had a fried peach pith from.

Speaker 7 (02:39:25):
These, you don't know what you're missing.

Speaker 1 (02:39:29):
I feel like I know, crunchy fucking peaches is what
you're missing out on. If I'm gonna go through all
that work, I gotta be honest, I'm just gonna go
fucking buy one at fucking the market. Said that's it,
I ain't gonna make a fried, dehydrated peach.

Speaker 10 (02:39:44):
Well, listen, you're boiling them up for two hours or
whatever the longest set, so you're softening them.

Speaker 1 (02:39:50):
Sat did you say two hours? I don't know if
it was that long, but it seemed like you got
to boil them for a while and now they're not
dried anymore. They're they're they're fucking So just get peach.
If you are gonna make fried peach pies, how would
you make it? I mean I would, I would. I
would follow this old man's instructions. I have no idea.

Speaker 9 (02:40:13):
Probably buy can the can peaches in the in the
cans like you know, the pie filling, peach filling, and
then buy like the.

Speaker 1 (02:40:23):
Or fresh, which frozen.

Speaker 9 (02:40:26):
I like frozen, but I love the pie filling in
the can like that suber, the apples peach. Okay, so
then you buy like your uh, the croissant that you
have to explode in the cans, you know, to open.

Speaker 1 (02:40:42):
Them up fucking gross or Grand's Biscuits, pizza dough from
roll it out or just in size pie crest.

Speaker 9 (02:40:53):
And then roll it up and make like individual ones
and then deep fry that ship.

Speaker 1 (02:40:58):
I don't know what he's doing, but he's got a
assive can like an industrial pudding can.

Speaker 7 (02:41:02):
Several different steps to this. I watch you want you
get a bite?

Speaker 1 (02:41:09):
They're well worth it. That's the form.

Speaker 15 (02:41:13):
Okay, you got somebody. You can cook these pitches the
night before and let them cool down before you try
to make the them.

Speaker 8 (02:41:25):
That works.

Speaker 1 (02:41:25):
Got a better way to do that, man, than than
some fucking industrial pudding can. Right, he's struggling with it.
For a guy who knows what he's doing right, sometimes
just doesn't cut it like you wanted to.

Speaker 8 (02:41:39):
This is a process.

Speaker 3 (02:41:42):
That we use.

Speaker 1 (02:41:44):
The mess of that place gives me so much anxiety.

Speaker 9 (02:41:47):
I know, I wouldn't need anything.

Speaker 16 (02:41:51):
Agent with a little milk, milk, water, okay, milk, well yeah,
they'll like close it and instead of an egg wash
or fucking water.

Speaker 14 (02:42:04):
I said, you can cook your pictures the day before.

Speaker 1 (02:42:11):
It looks like goddamn chewing gum he's putting on.

Speaker 16 (02:42:17):
This.

Speaker 9 (02:42:17):
Dude's just a fucking cheap bastard. That's the problem.

Speaker 1 (02:42:21):
They fucking look good though. Look at those fuckers. Dude,
you'd eat one if that was your grandpa. You beat
the ship out of that like a little butter fuck. Yeah, yeah,
you better smell that ship. There's no way that brush
is fucking cleaned. No, just rinsed out. Oh what the

(02:42:44):
getting good? Editing sugar? He had his camera up on sugar,
just sprinkled all sugar over. What's what's sugar?

Speaker 9 (02:43:02):
It's sugar. Gotta watch out for those sugars when you're
out in the woods.

Speaker 1 (02:43:09):
Put it there.

Speaker 8 (02:43:12):
I don't think I've missed anything to take you. But
if you've never had grown pitch pis.

Speaker 7 (02:43:19):
You need to cry.

Speaker 9 (02:43:21):
When the fuck did he fry him?

Speaker 1 (02:43:23):
Well? Yeah, I skipped a head, Okay. I was just
looking at the people that commented, you know, people saying amazing,
Marvin the Martian saying they looks great. Uh, my name
is Pete and I beat my meat right on.

Speaker 14 (02:43:37):
Man.

Speaker 1 (02:43:38):
The next one a very big dick three says it
looks yummy. Another one, mad Duck says, looks amazing. That's hilarious.
That's the funniest part of the whole video. Yes, ah shit,
do I click this and fuck up my algorithm? Yes?
Yes you do. Okay, it's private a very big dick.
Those are children.

Speaker 9 (02:44:01):
I wonder if you could make him in the air fryer.

Speaker 1 (02:44:03):
Amazing. I don't know, lindsay when you make anything in
the air fry you make your biscuits in the air fier,
don't you. Then your cinnamon rolls, you can make it. Yeah,
you can mail eggs in the air fryer. Try to
think of the last time I used my air fryer.
It's been a couple been a couple of months. I'm
every day, my my poor fucking char in the bottom

(02:44:24):
is like not again, right, I'm a clean person, but
not my air fry I don't give a fuck.

Speaker 9 (02:44:31):
I bought one of those silicone inserts, get out and
rinse it out every time, but so much cleaner.

Speaker 1 (02:44:38):
Except an airfoer supposed to have air all the way
around it. When you put that down, it blocks the air.

Speaker 9 (02:44:43):
But it's still works. It's working still.

Speaker 1 (02:44:45):
Clane clean it out. You want to see Mike from
Adeline's Get Worked Up talk about how good something was
in an air fryer. Oh yeah, yeah, he fucking can't
stand it. I'm gonna when he comes in Oscar. How
do I reheat your pizza in an air far You
fucking don't you throw it in the fucking trash and
use it oven like a real person. That's funny. I

(02:45:09):
don't keep it in mind, all right, listen? Uh yeah,
I don't know what else to have to add, just
taking there. If you want to call, you got to
do that toll free thing. The number it's freeze.

Speaker 9 (02:45:20):
It was free, well if you if you live out
of town, it wasn't free.

Speaker 1 (02:45:26):
Sure, I don't think long didn't you do it long
distance anymore?

Speaker 9 (02:45:29):
I mean, if you have a landline?

Speaker 1 (02:45:31):
Who the fuck has a landline? Your grandma? Yeah, she
called you from the landline. She only call you from
her cell phone.

Speaker 9 (02:45:38):
She only calls me from her cell phone. And if
I call her landlord line, she's like, what the fuck
is there an emergency? Why are you calling my house
phone because you didn't answer your cell phone?

Speaker 1 (02:45:50):
Get are on the pager next.

Speaker 9 (02:45:52):
I had a landline until twenty ten.

Speaker 1 (02:45:57):
I don't even know the last time I had a landline.
It's been a while. The only reason I had it
because it's part of the bundle, but they got other
bundles now. I don't even think I had a landline
when I was married to my practice wife mom. I
literally can't tell you when I had a I don't
even remember what my last phone looked like.

Speaker 9 (02:46:17):
Mine was U cordless even had an answering machine on it.

Speaker 1 (02:46:22):
You didn't even have voicemail. They had voicemail. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
But you're like, no, I'm fucking digging in and I
think this is going to hang on. We'll get rid
of Remember call idea was like a fucking thing. You're like,
You're like, shit, you got caller ID mask Now that's
standard everywhere and waiting. You're right, all right, guys, have
a great week. We'll see you later.

Speaker 14 (02:46:42):
See

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