1 00:00:00,160 --> 00:00:02,760 Speaker 1: So who is going to win the marketing strategy. 2 00:00:02,840 --> 00:00:05,320 Speaker 2: What you've got here is the same company with two 3 00:00:05,360 --> 00:00:10,319 Speaker 2: different marketing approaches talking about the government's shutdown. It is 4 00:00:10,360 --> 00:00:14,040 Speaker 2: the kind of like Casey Show. It's ninety three WYBC. 5 00:00:14,160 --> 00:00:16,919 Speaker 2: My name is Casey. Rob is off today taking one 6 00:00:17,120 --> 00:00:21,280 Speaker 2: extra day to enjoy his extra super happy long weekend, 7 00:00:21,880 --> 00:00:24,400 Speaker 2: and Jim is joining me. Thank you for being here 8 00:00:24,440 --> 00:00:27,520 Speaker 2: this morning. So let's talk about this government shutdown. Donald 9 00:00:27,520 --> 00:00:30,560 Speaker 2: Trump agreed to meet with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries 10 00:00:30,600 --> 00:00:34,760 Speaker 2: and also the Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer today to 11 00:00:35,000 --> 00:00:37,160 Speaker 2: discuss this government shut down. 12 00:00:37,960 --> 00:00:39,200 Speaker 1: The meeting comes. 13 00:00:38,880 --> 00:00:43,479 Speaker 2: As Congress faces this partial government shutdown. The deadline is 14 00:00:43,520 --> 00:00:46,920 Speaker 2: tomorrow at eleven fifty nine pm. By the way, tomorrow 15 00:00:47,320 --> 00:00:49,919 Speaker 2: big day in Washington, d C. It's going on tom 16 00:00:50,040 --> 00:00:52,600 Speaker 2: We have Pete Hegseth, Secretary of War, calling all the 17 00:00:52,600 --> 00:00:56,400 Speaker 2: generals back, and then you also have this potential government 18 00:00:56,480 --> 00:01:00,240 Speaker 2: shutdown looming. So Jeffries and Schumer, they stated that the 19 00:01:00,280 --> 00:01:03,120 Speaker 2: Democrats are willing to negotiate. 20 00:01:02,840 --> 00:01:05,920 Speaker 1: Anywhere, at any time, anywhere, anytime. 21 00:01:06,000 --> 00:01:09,000 Speaker 3: Here's my prediction. The government is going to shut down. Okay, 22 00:01:09,200 --> 00:01:11,959 Speaker 3: there's not going to be some last minute whatever that's 23 00:01:12,000 --> 00:01:14,240 Speaker 3: going to delay it. The government's going to shut down. 24 00:01:14,480 --> 00:01:18,320 Speaker 3: And really because mostly Trump wants to shut the government down, 25 00:01:18,360 --> 00:01:20,119 Speaker 3: because he came out over the weekend and said, look, 26 00:01:20,440 --> 00:01:22,520 Speaker 3: you know, we shut the government down, I'm going to 27 00:01:22,560 --> 00:01:25,840 Speaker 3: fire thousands and thousands of federal employees. That's what he 28 00:01:26,000 --> 00:01:29,680 Speaker 3: tried to do under Doge with Elon Musk, and most 29 00:01:29,720 --> 00:01:34,039 Speaker 3: courts blocked him from doing that. So the Democrats have 30 00:01:34,120 --> 00:01:36,640 Speaker 3: no leverage. They're like, hey, you don't do what we want, 31 00:01:36,680 --> 00:01:38,680 Speaker 3: We're going to shut the government down. And Trump is 32 00:01:38,720 --> 00:01:41,360 Speaker 3: sitting there going okay, I dare you. And then on 33 00:01:41,400 --> 00:01:45,080 Speaker 3: the other side here, because here's the problem, Schumer and Jeffries. 34 00:01:45,440 --> 00:01:48,520 Speaker 3: Most of the pressure they're getting are from the ultra 35 00:01:48,680 --> 00:01:52,280 Speaker 3: left progressives that are coming at them and saying, you 36 00:01:52,360 --> 00:01:54,639 Speaker 3: must stand up for Trump, and if that means shutting 37 00:01:54,680 --> 00:01:57,040 Speaker 3: the government down, that's what we've got to do. And 38 00:01:57,120 --> 00:01:59,480 Speaker 3: so they're getting a lot of pressure not to bend 39 00:01:59,480 --> 00:02:02,440 Speaker 3: to Trump's will either, and they're trying to. Trump is 40 00:02:02,480 --> 00:02:08,240 Speaker 3: proposing a clean CR continuing resolution, sure, absolutely nothing tied 41 00:02:08,280 --> 00:02:10,320 Speaker 3: to it. Let's just keep the government funding the way 42 00:02:10,360 --> 00:02:12,520 Speaker 3: we've been doing it. The Democrats are trying to add 43 00:02:12,520 --> 00:02:15,239 Speaker 3: in all these subsidies for Obamacare and all these other 44 00:02:15,280 --> 00:02:18,840 Speaker 3: freebies and legalized vote buying schemes, and because that's what 45 00:02:18,880 --> 00:02:22,000 Speaker 3: their progressive left wants them to do. So really, I 46 00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:24,240 Speaker 3: don't see any other option here than the fact of 47 00:02:24,240 --> 00:02:25,800 Speaker 3: the matter is government's going to shut down. 48 00:02:25,720 --> 00:02:28,960 Speaker 2: To bond, so Republicans control both chambers of Congress. All 49 00:02:29,000 --> 00:02:32,120 Speaker 2: the House is on recess right now. Senate passage requires 50 00:02:32,160 --> 00:02:35,240 Speaker 2: sixty votes, meaning that the Democrats they're going to need 51 00:02:35,280 --> 00:02:38,360 Speaker 2: a couple of them to go along with what the 52 00:02:38,400 --> 00:02:42,880 Speaker 2: Republicans want. But this is all about healthcare programs and 53 00:02:44,120 --> 00:02:45,960 Speaker 2: continuing on with Obamacare. 54 00:02:46,000 --> 00:02:49,360 Speaker 3: And look, none of the Democrats are going to buck 55 00:02:49,440 --> 00:02:52,320 Speaker 3: the trend and vote against the way Schumer wants them 56 00:02:52,320 --> 00:02:55,240 Speaker 3: to vote. He keeps his Democrats in line. They may 57 00:02:55,280 --> 00:02:57,000 Speaker 3: be mad at him for a lot of stuff, but 58 00:02:57,040 --> 00:02:59,440 Speaker 3: I just don't see what they would need. What nine 59 00:03:00,000 --> 00:03:03,200 Speaker 3: eight or nine eight eight democrats to crossover and vote 60 00:03:03,200 --> 00:03:06,119 Speaker 3: with Republicans on that. There's no way they're getting eight Democrats. 61 00:03:06,320 --> 00:03:10,239 Speaker 2: Okay, So there could be some federal workers across agencies 62 00:03:10,280 --> 00:03:14,640 Speaker 2: like Nassau, the National Park Service could get furloughed. Federal 63 00:03:14,680 --> 00:03:17,720 Speaker 2: courts may close. Grants and services for small businesses could 64 00:03:17,720 --> 00:03:22,600 Speaker 2: be delayed. But okay, how long is it going to last? 65 00:03:22,960 --> 00:03:24,919 Speaker 2: You know, over the past fifty years, there have been 66 00:03:24,960 --> 00:03:28,440 Speaker 2: twenty one different federal shutdowns. 67 00:03:28,520 --> 00:03:30,919 Speaker 3: That's one. It's almost one every other year. 68 00:03:31,120 --> 00:03:34,920 Speaker 2: Between nineteen seventy six and nineteen ninety, there were eleven shutdowns, 69 00:03:34,960 --> 00:03:38,080 Speaker 2: and they ranged from one day to seventeen days. Between 70 00:03:38,160 --> 00:03:41,520 Speaker 2: ninety five and ninety six, under Clinton there were shutdowns. 71 00:03:41,560 --> 00:03:44,840 Speaker 2: They lasted five days and then twenty one days. Obama 72 00:03:44,880 --> 00:03:48,800 Speaker 2: had a shut down that lasted seventeen days. In twenty eighteen, 73 00:03:48,840 --> 00:03:53,840 Speaker 2: Trump's first term there were two, no, three, three. In 74 00:03:53,880 --> 00:03:57,480 Speaker 2: twenty eighteen there were two shutdowns. One lasted three days, 75 00:03:57,480 --> 00:03:59,160 Speaker 2: another lasted a couple hours. 76 00:03:59,200 --> 00:04:01,560 Speaker 1: And then in twenty nine thineteen, who was the thirty 77 00:04:01,560 --> 00:04:03,360 Speaker 1: five day shutdown? 78 00:04:03,520 --> 00:04:06,119 Speaker 3: And that's the record. Trump holds the record for being 79 00:04:06,160 --> 00:04:09,640 Speaker 3: president under the longest government shutdown. All right, three in 80 00:04:09,680 --> 00:04:11,240 Speaker 3: his in his first term. 81 00:04:11,280 --> 00:04:15,280 Speaker 2: Well, let's listen to some talking heads. You had John Thune, 82 00:04:15,280 --> 00:04:18,720 Speaker 2: he was on with Kristen Welker on NBC News and 83 00:04:18,839 --> 00:04:20,680 Speaker 2: he's blaming the Democrats. 84 00:04:20,760 --> 00:04:24,840 Speaker 4: All right, let's talk about the big battle over government funding. 85 00:04:24,839 --> 00:04:27,320 Speaker 1: We're just two days away. Leader, as you. 86 00:04:27,320 --> 00:04:30,839 Speaker 4: Know from a potential government shutdown. The President did cancel 87 00:04:30,880 --> 00:04:34,560 Speaker 4: a planned meeting with Democratic leaders. The House doesn't plan 88 00:04:34,640 --> 00:04:38,320 Speaker 4: to be in session until after the shutdown deadline. Is 89 00:04:38,360 --> 00:04:41,480 Speaker 4: the government going to shut down this week? Leader Thuon. 90 00:04:43,120 --> 00:04:46,240 Speaker 5: Totally up to the Democrats. This is the ball is 91 00:04:46,240 --> 00:04:48,480 Speaker 5: in their court. There is a bill sitting at the 92 00:04:48,520 --> 00:04:50,920 Speaker 5: desk in the Senate right now. We could pick it 93 00:04:51,000 --> 00:04:53,520 Speaker 5: up today and pass it that has been passed by 94 00:04:53,520 --> 00:04:55,400 Speaker 5: the House, that will be signed in a law by 95 00:04:55,440 --> 00:04:59,560 Speaker 5: the President to keep the government open. So this decision, 96 00:04:59,600 --> 00:05:02,400 Speaker 5: in my judgment at this point in time, is up 97 00:05:02,440 --> 00:05:05,120 Speaker 5: to a handful of Democrats. We need eight Democrats to 98 00:05:05,160 --> 00:05:08,760 Speaker 5: pass it through the Senate, something that thirteen times when 99 00:05:08,760 --> 00:05:11,040 Speaker 5: the Democrats had the majority over the last four years 100 00:05:11,040 --> 00:05:14,040 Speaker 5: and President Biden was in the White House, Republicans helped 101 00:05:14,160 --> 00:05:18,320 Speaker 5: Democrats do thirteen different times. We did continuing resolutions in 102 00:05:18,360 --> 00:05:22,200 Speaker 5: the Democrat majority and in every case they passed. And 103 00:05:22,360 --> 00:05:25,800 Speaker 5: what the Democrats have done here is take the federal 104 00:05:25,839 --> 00:05:29,160 Speaker 5: government as a hostage, and for that matter, that by extension, 105 00:05:29,160 --> 00:05:31,880 Speaker 5: the American people to try and get a whole laundry 106 00:05:31,920 --> 00:05:34,480 Speaker 5: list of things that they want that special interest groups 107 00:05:34,480 --> 00:05:38,000 Speaker 5: on the far left are pushing them to accomplish and 108 00:05:38,120 --> 00:05:42,800 Speaker 5: using a seven week funding resolution, which is designed to 109 00:05:42,800 --> 00:05:46,559 Speaker 5: give us time to do the normal appropriations process, they're 110 00:05:46,640 --> 00:05:48,840 Speaker 5: using this hostage to try and get all these other 111 00:05:48,880 --> 00:05:52,360 Speaker 5: things done. So very straightforward argument. In my mind, it's simple. 112 00:05:53,040 --> 00:05:53,360 Speaker 1: Okay. 113 00:05:53,400 --> 00:05:55,520 Speaker 2: So he pointed out that there's already that House pass 114 00:05:55,600 --> 00:05:58,960 Speaker 2: CR continuing resolution at the Senate desk that could be 115 00:05:59,000 --> 00:06:01,880 Speaker 2: taken up and passed immediately. Well, let's talk about that 116 00:06:02,600 --> 00:06:07,080 Speaker 2: continuing resolution. Here's the speaker, Mike Johnson. He's saying it's clean. 117 00:06:07,480 --> 00:06:09,719 Speaker 6: Well, I had a long talk with the President yesterday, Jake, 118 00:06:09,880 --> 00:06:12,680 Speaker 6: and you know, he feels the same way that I 119 00:06:12,760 --> 00:06:16,719 Speaker 6: do about this. He's always open to discussion, but he 120 00:06:16,760 --> 00:06:19,800 Speaker 6: wants to operate in good faith. So he decided to 121 00:06:20,040 --> 00:06:21,960 Speaker 6: bring us all in. He wants to talk with Chuck 122 00:06:21,960 --> 00:06:24,800 Speaker 6: Schumer and haw km Jefferies and just try to convince 123 00:06:24,839 --> 00:06:27,200 Speaker 6: them to follow common sense and do what's right by 124 00:06:27,200 --> 00:06:30,160 Speaker 6: the American people. Jake, It's important to point out the 125 00:06:30,200 --> 00:06:32,479 Speaker 6: only thing we are trying to do is buy a 126 00:06:32,520 --> 00:06:35,760 Speaker 6: little time. You know, the appropriators in both parties have 127 00:06:35,880 --> 00:06:39,520 Speaker 6: been working very diligently over the last many weeks to 128 00:06:39,640 --> 00:06:42,159 Speaker 6: work through the appropriations process. As you know, the law 129 00:06:42,320 --> 00:06:45,400 Speaker 6: requires us to pass twelve separate appropriations bills and to 130 00:06:45,440 --> 00:06:49,200 Speaker 6: be good stewards of American taxpayers dollars. But that hasn't happened. 131 00:06:49,240 --> 00:06:51,680 Speaker 6: It usually doesn't happen in Washington. Everything gets pushed to 132 00:06:51,760 --> 00:06:53,600 Speaker 6: the end of the year, right before Christmas and there's 133 00:06:53,640 --> 00:06:56,720 Speaker 6: a giant omnibus spending bill. Since I became Speaker, I've 134 00:06:56,720 --> 00:06:59,160 Speaker 6: been trying to force back the muscle memory to force 135 00:06:59,200 --> 00:07:01,440 Speaker 6: Congress to do its work, and we're doing it, Jake, 136 00:07:01,520 --> 00:07:04,320 Speaker 6: I'm delighted to tell you in a bipartisan fashion. The 137 00:07:04,360 --> 00:07:07,719 Speaker 6: appropriators have worked through twelve separate appropriations bills in the 138 00:07:07,760 --> 00:07:10,400 Speaker 6: House committee. Three are passed off the floor. In the House, 139 00:07:10,440 --> 00:07:13,280 Speaker 6: three passed off the Senate floor. Those bills don't match 140 00:07:13,320 --> 00:07:16,720 Speaker 6: up exactly, so there's a conference committee between two chambers 141 00:07:16,760 --> 00:07:18,720 Speaker 6: working as they're supposed to do for the first time 142 00:07:18,720 --> 00:07:21,440 Speaker 6: since twenty nineteen. But here's the problem. We run out 143 00:07:21,440 --> 00:07:24,280 Speaker 6: of clock because the end of the September thirtieth is 144 00:07:24,320 --> 00:07:26,200 Speaker 6: the end of the fiscal year. So what we did 145 00:07:26,320 --> 00:07:30,480 Speaker 6: was a simple, clean continuing resolution is twenty four pages 146 00:07:30,520 --> 00:07:33,240 Speaker 6: in length, All it does is keep the government open 147 00:07:33,680 --> 00:07:37,120 Speaker 6: so appropriators can continue to do this work together bipartisan 148 00:07:37,360 --> 00:07:40,080 Speaker 6: Chuck Shechimmer came back with a long laundry list of 149 00:07:40,240 --> 00:07:43,480 Speaker 6: partisan demands that don't fit into this process, and he's 150 00:07:43,480 --> 00:07:45,280 Speaker 6: going to try to shut the government down. The President 151 00:07:45,320 --> 00:07:47,160 Speaker 6: wants to talk with him about that and say, please 152 00:07:47,360 --> 00:07:47,880 Speaker 6: don't do that. 153 00:07:48,320 --> 00:07:52,320 Speaker 2: So continuing resolutions they seem to be Washington's favorite band aid. 154 00:07:52,680 --> 00:07:56,040 Speaker 2: It's always temporary, and what it does, it just kicks 155 00:07:56,040 --> 00:07:58,160 Speaker 2: the can down the road for later. 156 00:07:58,360 --> 00:08:01,560 Speaker 3: Nobody loves to kick the can down the road more 157 00:08:01,640 --> 00:08:05,400 Speaker 3: than politicians, so yeah, they love continuing resolutions. Mike Johnson 158 00:08:05,480 --> 00:08:08,360 Speaker 3: laid it out pretty cleanly there. Look, this is why 159 00:08:09,440 --> 00:08:11,640 Speaker 3: the House is on recess this week because they've already 160 00:08:11,640 --> 00:08:13,880 Speaker 3: passed their clean resolution, so all the Senate has to 161 00:08:13,960 --> 00:08:16,040 Speaker 3: do and pick it up. But the Senate never wants 162 00:08:16,080 --> 00:08:18,520 Speaker 3: to do exactly what the House does. And of course 163 00:08:18,560 --> 00:08:21,360 Speaker 3: Trump wants a government shutdown so he can fire government employees. 164 00:08:21,440 --> 00:08:24,720 Speaker 3: The Democrats want a government shutdown so that they can 165 00:08:24,760 --> 00:08:26,920 Speaker 3: prove that they're sticking up and fighting back to Trump. 166 00:08:27,000 --> 00:08:30,640 Speaker 3: This is why I just don't see any scenario that 167 00:08:30,920 --> 00:08:33,319 Speaker 3: keeps the government running there's going to be a shutdown tomorrow. 168 00:08:33,360 --> 00:08:37,560 Speaker 2: Classic partisan theater in my opinion, but in this case, 169 00:08:37,960 --> 00:08:40,760 Speaker 2: it sounds like the Republicans are winning the argument, at 170 00:08:40,800 --> 00:08:44,440 Speaker 2: least on your Sunday morning talk shows. Last audio clip 171 00:08:44,480 --> 00:08:46,319 Speaker 2: for you, here's JD Vance. 172 00:08:46,760 --> 00:08:50,520 Speaker 4: This government shutdown issue looming next week. 173 00:08:51,280 --> 00:08:54,160 Speaker 3: How do you see this and are you opposed to. 174 00:08:54,640 --> 00:08:56,679 Speaker 4: A shutdown or do you think there would be advantages 175 00:08:56,720 --> 00:08:57,520 Speaker 4: to that potentially? 176 00:08:59,400 --> 00:09:01,880 Speaker 7: Well, look, want to shut down the government, Martha, but 177 00:09:01,880 --> 00:09:04,240 Speaker 7: it's really up to the Democrats. Under our system, you 178 00:09:04,280 --> 00:09:07,600 Speaker 7: need sixty Senate Democrats to vote for the clean continuing 179 00:09:07,679 --> 00:09:11,079 Speaker 7: resolution that the President and House Republicans. 180 00:09:10,440 --> 00:09:13,040 Speaker 3: Have put forward. I think it's preposterous, Martha. 181 00:09:13,080 --> 00:09:15,560 Speaker 7: I think the American people really should pay attention to 182 00:09:15,600 --> 00:09:18,520 Speaker 7: the fact that Democrats are threatening to shut down the 183 00:09:18,720 --> 00:09:22,280 Speaker 7: entire government because they want to give hundreds of billions 184 00:09:22,360 --> 00:09:25,199 Speaker 7: of dollars of health care benefits to illegal aliens. I've 185 00:09:25,240 --> 00:09:27,679 Speaker 7: never seen anything like it. I've never seen a political 186 00:09:27,720 --> 00:09:31,760 Speaker 7: party actually advertising the fact that they want to shut 187 00:09:31,800 --> 00:09:34,719 Speaker 7: down every essential function of government and they want to 188 00:09:34,800 --> 00:09:37,400 Speaker 7: use that as leveraged so that they get more money 189 00:09:37,600 --> 00:09:40,840 Speaker 7: for illegal alien health care benefits. It's such a stark 190 00:09:40,880 --> 00:09:44,280 Speaker 7: contrast between Republicans who are trying to put the interest 191 00:09:44,320 --> 00:09:47,000 Speaker 7: of the American people first and Democrats, who I think, 192 00:09:47,080 --> 00:09:49,360 Speaker 7: which want to take money from the American people to 193 00:09:49,400 --> 00:09:52,280 Speaker 7: give benefits to illegal aliens. We don't want to shut 194 00:09:52,320 --> 00:09:56,600 Speaker 7: down the government, but if Democrats refuse to just pass 195 00:09:56,679 --> 00:10:00,000 Speaker 7: this clean continuing resolution, that's exactly what's going to happen. 196 00:10:00,240 --> 00:10:01,599 Speaker 7: And I think the Democrats are going to bear the 197 00:10:01,600 --> 00:10:02,600 Speaker 7: responsibility for it. 198 00:10:03,559 --> 00:10:06,959 Speaker 2: I believe that that's the winning talking point for the Republicans, 199 00:10:07,400 --> 00:10:12,080 Speaker 2: the healthcare for the illegal immigrants. But approximately fourteen percent 200 00:10:12,120 --> 00:10:15,640 Speaker 2: of the federal budget is non defense discretionary spending, So 201 00:10:15,720 --> 00:10:20,880 Speaker 2: we're talking between six hundred and seventy five thousand employees 202 00:10:20,920 --> 00:10:21,920 Speaker 2: would be furloughed. 203 00:10:22,400 --> 00:10:23,200 Speaker 1: And you know what jd. 204 00:10:23,320 --> 00:10:27,480 Speaker 2: Vance said, essential areas of the government. There are essential 205 00:10:27,520 --> 00:10:32,000 Speaker 2: workers and military personnel that will continue on being employed. 206 00:10:32,080 --> 00:10:34,880 Speaker 3: Yeah, you'll get your Social Security check. Matcare will still 207 00:10:34,920 --> 00:10:37,400 Speaker 3: continue to function and operate. We saw this under all 208 00:10:37,480 --> 00:10:39,679 Speaker 3: the government shutdowns in the last ten or twenty years. 209 00:10:40,080 --> 00:10:42,880 Speaker 3: You know what what makes the most headlines is usually 210 00:10:43,000 --> 00:10:46,560 Speaker 3: the national parks close, and then that usually makes big headlines. 211 00:10:46,600 --> 00:10:48,160 Speaker 3: But everything is going to be fine here is what 212 00:10:48,240 --> 00:10:51,040 Speaker 3: is going to happen. It will shut down. It'll probably 213 00:10:51,120 --> 00:10:53,600 Speaker 3: be pretty quick, and the Dems will likely cave and 214 00:10:53,640 --> 00:10:55,920 Speaker 3: everybody gets what they want. Trump gets to continue on 215 00:10:56,080 --> 00:10:59,760 Speaker 3: with the continuing clean you know, a clean, continuing resolution. 216 00:11:00,160 --> 00:11:02,000 Speaker 3: The Democrats shut it down for a few days. In 217 00:11:02,000 --> 00:11:03,559 Speaker 3: that way, they can go back to their base and say, 218 00:11:03,600 --> 00:11:05,720 Speaker 3: look at us, we fought Trump and we you know, 219 00:11:05,840 --> 00:11:08,480 Speaker 3: played hard and tough and we're not gonna take this 220 00:11:08,640 --> 00:11:11,160 Speaker 3: lying down. But they really have a terrible argument on this, 221 00:11:11,280 --> 00:11:12,920 Speaker 3: and so they're not gonna They're not gonna let it 222 00:11:12,960 --> 00:11:13,720 Speaker 3: last very long. 223 00:11:13,840 --> 00:11:17,040 Speaker 2: This is the Kendallly Casey Show. It's ninety three WIBC. 224 00:11:18,960 --> 00:11:27,240 Speaker 3: Yet baby name, it's nothing yet, there's something name forget. 225 00:11:27,960 --> 00:11:29,560 Speaker 1: Let's talk about what happened over the weekend. 226 00:11:29,640 --> 00:11:34,520 Speaker 2: At the Ryder Cup. Team Europe defeated Team USA with 227 00:11:34,559 --> 00:11:37,480 Speaker 2: a fifteen to three victory, retaining the Ryder Cup. 228 00:11:41,960 --> 00:11:42,640 Speaker 1: There it is. 229 00:11:45,520 --> 00:11:49,640 Speaker 2: Despite the strong us ralliance on Sunday, Europeans held off. 230 00:11:49,600 --> 00:11:50,679 Speaker 1: It's day won. 231 00:11:50,960 --> 00:11:54,520 Speaker 3: We had a great weekend. I know you don't want 232 00:11:54,520 --> 00:11:57,200 Speaker 3: me to say this, but I but it's the truth. 233 00:11:57,240 --> 00:12:00,400 Speaker 3: So I'm gonna speak the truth. Rob Kendall is the 234 00:12:00,520 --> 00:12:03,720 Speaker 3: number one golf handicapper for sports gambling in the United 235 00:12:03,720 --> 00:12:06,959 Speaker 3: States right now. What he is he crushes it. I mean, look, 236 00:12:07,320 --> 00:12:10,640 Speaker 3: I've been gambling for a long time. I'm not new 237 00:12:10,679 --> 00:12:13,080 Speaker 3: to this game. I've been gambling since I was a kid. Okay, 238 00:12:13,160 --> 00:12:14,480 Speaker 3: it was just kind of it was part of our 239 00:12:14,520 --> 00:12:16,400 Speaker 3: family as part of growing up. And now that we 240 00:12:16,440 --> 00:12:20,640 Speaker 3: can gamble on our phones, it's not serious. It's all 241 00:12:20,720 --> 00:12:24,199 Speaker 3: just for fun, sure, But I've always bet Rob's golf 242 00:12:24,240 --> 00:12:27,480 Speaker 3: bets and made a lot of money on Rob's golf bets. 243 00:12:27,480 --> 00:12:30,320 Speaker 3: And so when he posted last week that hey, Europe 244 00:12:30,320 --> 00:12:33,320 Speaker 3: plus one seventy, that's the one to take, send it 245 00:12:33,360 --> 00:12:35,439 Speaker 3: to the bank, I bet it heavy. We talked about 246 00:12:35,440 --> 00:12:38,320 Speaker 3: this on Friday, and I did bet it heavy, and 247 00:12:38,360 --> 00:12:40,360 Speaker 3: so Rob and I were texting all weekend long as 248 00:12:40,400 --> 00:12:44,120 Speaker 3: this was going on, and Europe came out very strong 249 00:12:44,160 --> 00:12:46,640 Speaker 3: on Thursday, on Friday and Saturday they were up like 250 00:12:47,040 --> 00:12:48,840 Speaker 3: eleven and a half to three and a half. They 251 00:12:48,840 --> 00:12:50,920 Speaker 3: were just crushing the United States. And I'm not going 252 00:12:50,960 --> 00:12:52,760 Speaker 3: to get into how they score the Ryder Cup. It 253 00:12:52,800 --> 00:12:54,680 Speaker 3: would take an entire show to explain that, and you 254 00:12:54,679 --> 00:12:57,640 Speaker 3: still wouldn't understand. And then all of a sudden the 255 00:12:57,640 --> 00:12:59,360 Speaker 3: American so when it was in its worst, it was 256 00:12:59,400 --> 00:13:01,439 Speaker 3: eleven and a half, three and a half. Rob sends 257 00:13:01,440 --> 00:13:03,679 Speaker 3: me a text. He goes, hey, on DraftKings, you can 258 00:13:03,720 --> 00:13:06,160 Speaker 3: get the United States at ninety to one odds right now, 259 00:13:06,240 --> 00:13:09,000 Speaker 3: right which he's telling me saying, hey, hedge that Europe 260 00:13:09,000 --> 00:13:10,520 Speaker 3: bet that you bet it's so heavy. So I threw 261 00:13:10,520 --> 00:13:12,160 Speaker 3: a couple bucks on the US at ninety to one, 262 00:13:12,200 --> 00:13:14,280 Speaker 3: so I was guaranteed to win either way. And then 263 00:13:14,320 --> 00:13:18,920 Speaker 3: the United States stage's incredible comeback on Sunday and almost 264 00:13:19,040 --> 00:13:20,439 Speaker 3: end up pulling off what would be one of the 265 00:13:20,480 --> 00:13:23,360 Speaker 3: greatest upsets in all of sports history. They fall short. 266 00:13:23,440 --> 00:13:26,880 Speaker 3: Rob's original bet was good. He and I went all 267 00:13:26,920 --> 00:13:30,200 Speaker 3: sorts of money. Great weekend, Great weekend, Great White Ryder Cup. 268 00:13:30,280 --> 00:13:32,840 Speaker 2: So Europe has now won eleven of the past fifteen 269 00:13:32,920 --> 00:13:35,800 Speaker 2: Ryder Cups and five of the last ten in the US. 270 00:13:35,920 --> 00:13:39,280 Speaker 2: This was Europe's first US based Ryder Cup win since 271 00:13:39,360 --> 00:13:44,760 Speaker 2: twenty twelve. What did you think about the chance? Let's 272 00:13:44,800 --> 00:13:48,320 Speaker 2: listen to one of the ridiculous US Ryder Cup fans 273 00:13:48,640 --> 00:13:55,040 Speaker 2: trying to trying to get the crowd pumped up, slowed down. 274 00:13:54,960 --> 00:13:57,280 Speaker 3: Slowtown, you guys look together around this morning. 275 00:13:57,760 --> 00:14:05,560 Speaker 8: Slow down, here we go one two clown, one two clown. 276 00:14:12,280 --> 00:14:16,280 Speaker 1: Here got the lyrics, Sdies. 277 00:14:15,160 --> 00:14:27,200 Speaker 3: Gody worst type man ever. That was ridiculous. So the 278 00:14:27,240 --> 00:14:29,680 Speaker 3: Ryder Cup does have a history of being a little 279 00:14:29,680 --> 00:14:32,240 Speaker 3: bit rowdy now nowhere near you know, the Waste Management 280 00:14:32,280 --> 00:14:36,120 Speaker 3: Open in Phoenix, which is kind of like peak crazy golf. Look, 281 00:14:36,360 --> 00:14:38,960 Speaker 3: the problem is the golf. Golf has a problem, a 282 00:14:39,000 --> 00:14:41,000 Speaker 3: big problem right now in the fact that Tiger Woods 283 00:14:41,040 --> 00:14:43,120 Speaker 3: ain't ever coming back, and so the salad days of 284 00:14:43,120 --> 00:14:46,440 Speaker 3: golf and everybody tuning in for Tiger long long gone. 285 00:14:46,680 --> 00:14:48,880 Speaker 3: So the great ratings that golf had for years are 286 00:14:48,920 --> 00:14:51,320 Speaker 3: long gone a ton. You know, more than half of 287 00:14:51,360 --> 00:14:53,560 Speaker 3: the great players in the world have shifted over to 288 00:14:53,600 --> 00:14:56,800 Speaker 3: live golf, and so golf has got this problem, and 289 00:14:56,840 --> 00:14:58,760 Speaker 3: so they're trying all these different things to kind of 290 00:14:59,120 --> 00:15:01,360 Speaker 3: jazz up the crowd and get people into it and 291 00:15:01,400 --> 00:15:05,360 Speaker 3: make it interesting. That was a massive, massive fail on 292 00:15:05,400 --> 00:15:07,520 Speaker 3: the hype man's part there, Okay, but things. 293 00:15:07,320 --> 00:15:10,200 Speaker 2: Got a little heated at one point with Rory McElroy. 294 00:15:10,960 --> 00:15:13,840 Speaker 2: You know, the fans were yelling at him and he 295 00:15:14,040 --> 00:15:15,920 Speaker 2: just turned right around and hit. 296 00:15:15,760 --> 00:15:18,480 Speaker 3: A perfect shot and gave it right back to him too. Yeah, 297 00:15:18,520 --> 00:15:20,720 Speaker 3: So those were a lot of stories and there was 298 00:15:20,760 --> 00:15:24,160 Speaker 3: a lot of a lot of cat calls from the 299 00:15:24,320 --> 00:15:26,400 Speaker 3: from the audience in golf. A lot of people thought 300 00:15:26,440 --> 00:15:29,320 Speaker 3: it was inappropriate. Look, this is not the Masters, this 301 00:15:29,360 --> 00:15:33,080 Speaker 3: is not you know, a high level decorum as far 302 00:15:33,120 --> 00:15:35,320 Speaker 3: as golf goes. It's the Ryder Cup. It's usually a 303 00:15:35,320 --> 00:15:37,520 Speaker 3: little bit rowdy. It was a little bit more rowdy 304 00:15:37,560 --> 00:15:39,600 Speaker 3: than normal. There was a video that was shown of 305 00:15:40,080 --> 00:15:44,200 Speaker 3: Rory McElroy's wife getting hit from a beer can. If 306 00:15:44,240 --> 00:15:46,280 Speaker 3: you look at some other videos, it turns out, ah, 307 00:15:46,400 --> 00:15:48,120 Speaker 3: that may have been more of an accident. Looks like 308 00:15:48,120 --> 00:15:50,320 Speaker 3: somebody threw their arms up and knocked the beer out 309 00:15:50,320 --> 00:15:52,520 Speaker 3: of somebody's hand and it just happened to go her way. 310 00:15:52,600 --> 00:15:55,040 Speaker 3: But yeah, there was a lot of talk about the 311 00:15:55,120 --> 00:15:58,080 Speaker 3: rowdiness at the at the Ryder Cup. But hey, the 312 00:15:58,120 --> 00:16:02,000 Speaker 3: important thing is Rob's back cashed. You're a plus one seventy. 313 00:16:02,160 --> 00:16:03,720 Speaker 1: You just had to be on the right side of 314 00:16:03,720 --> 00:16:04,160 Speaker 1: that one. 315 00:16:04,360 --> 00:16:07,360 Speaker 2: Donald Trump was there, him and his granddaughter Kai Trump. 316 00:16:07,440 --> 00:16:11,000 Speaker 2: They showed up, got lots of applause, and then at 317 00:16:11,000 --> 00:16:13,560 Speaker 2: one point people were saying, no, Trump needs to start 318 00:16:13,600 --> 00:16:14,680 Speaker 2: mean tweeting. 319 00:16:14,960 --> 00:16:17,320 Speaker 3: So that, you know, against the Europeans. 320 00:16:17,440 --> 00:16:19,560 Speaker 1: Yeah, so that America starts doing better. 321 00:16:19,360 --> 00:16:21,680 Speaker 3: Starts doing better. Well, it didn't happen. It didn't work, 322 00:16:21,720 --> 00:16:25,600 Speaker 3: and the valiant comeback that the US tried to mount 323 00:16:25,640 --> 00:16:27,800 Speaker 3: on Sunday afternoon felt just a little bit short. But 324 00:16:27,840 --> 00:16:30,240 Speaker 3: it made it interesting. It made Sunday really interesting because 325 00:16:30,240 --> 00:16:31,920 Speaker 3: at the end of the day, Saturday, it was like 326 00:16:31,920 --> 00:16:34,480 Speaker 3: a blowout. It's like being up, you know, twenty eight 327 00:16:34,520 --> 00:16:38,040 Speaker 3: to three at halftime in the Super Bowl, and the 328 00:16:38,080 --> 00:16:41,600 Speaker 3: Americans tried really hard, came really close, didn't get it, 329 00:16:42,600 --> 00:16:43,720 Speaker 3: rob and I won our bets. 330 00:16:44,120 --> 00:16:44,680 Speaker 1: That's everything. 331 00:16:45,080 --> 00:16:45,880 Speaker 3: That's really all the matter. 332 00:16:45,920 --> 00:16:46,760 Speaker 1: That's all the matters. 333 00:16:47,080 --> 00:16:49,280 Speaker 2: Speaking of Kai Trump, I don't know if you noticed, 334 00:16:49,280 --> 00:16:53,480 Speaker 2: but she is now selling a collection some merch right. 335 00:16:53,880 --> 00:16:56,600 Speaker 2: She said, this collection is something I've dreamed about for 336 00:16:56,640 --> 00:16:59,880 Speaker 2: a long time, and I'm so grateful it's finally here. 337 00:17:00,240 --> 00:17:01,280 Speaker 3: About for a long time. 338 00:17:01,320 --> 00:17:04,560 Speaker 1: She's like eighteen, yeah, eighteen or nineteen, I've. 339 00:17:04,440 --> 00:17:06,480 Speaker 3: Dreamed about it since I was seventeen. 340 00:17:06,760 --> 00:17:08,119 Speaker 1: But it's got her initials on it. 341 00:17:08,119 --> 00:17:10,080 Speaker 2: It kind of looks like something that maybe Tony Katz 342 00:17:10,080 --> 00:17:13,320 Speaker 2: could have because this says, you know, TK T K. 343 00:17:13,440 --> 00:17:16,600 Speaker 3: Oh yeahs her logo look similar to the toy in her. 344 00:17:16,480 --> 00:17:22,040 Speaker 2: Case kt KT Right, But she's posting pictures of herself 345 00:17:22,240 --> 00:17:26,639 Speaker 2: at the White House selling this merchandise. So how do 346 00:17:26,720 --> 00:17:28,920 Speaker 2: we feel about that her using the White House as 347 00:17:28,920 --> 00:17:31,000 Speaker 2: a backdrop to promote her brand. 348 00:17:31,119 --> 00:17:34,240 Speaker 3: Well, I mean she's technically not selling it at the 349 00:17:34,280 --> 00:17:36,399 Speaker 3: White House, like you can pull up to the White 350 00:17:36,400 --> 00:17:42,320 Speaker 3: House and buy kai Trump merch. Look all these politicians 351 00:17:42,320 --> 00:17:42,600 Speaker 3: do it. 352 00:17:43,040 --> 00:17:43,240 Speaker 2: You know. 353 00:17:43,400 --> 00:17:44,160 Speaker 3: Is it a good look? 354 00:17:44,359 --> 00:17:44,600 Speaker 6: No? 355 00:17:44,760 --> 00:17:47,440 Speaker 3: Not a great look. Is Nancy Pelosi and her alleged 356 00:17:47,480 --> 00:17:50,600 Speaker 3: insider trading getting her tens of millions of dollars a 357 00:17:50,640 --> 00:17:53,879 Speaker 3: good thing? No, that's a bad thing either. These are politicians. 358 00:17:54,080 --> 00:17:57,560 Speaker 3: They're in it for themselves. They leverage whatever they've got 359 00:17:57,560 --> 00:18:00,400 Speaker 3: to make themselves as much money as possible. Is good? 360 00:18:00,680 --> 00:18:00,720 Speaker 2: No? 361 00:18:01,320 --> 00:18:03,240 Speaker 3: Is it different than what's been happening for two hundred 362 00:18:03,240 --> 00:18:04,720 Speaker 3: and fifty years in this country? Also? 363 00:18:04,800 --> 00:18:08,160 Speaker 2: No, yeah, she's just using you know what her grandfather 364 00:18:08,200 --> 00:18:11,280 Speaker 2: has taught her, use the White House. Make a couple 365 00:18:11,280 --> 00:18:14,240 Speaker 2: of promote, make a couple of fromer merch. Yeah, it 366 00:18:14,359 --> 00:18:17,720 Speaker 2: is the Kendall and Casey Show. It's ninety three WIBC. 367 00:18:22,800 --> 00:18:26,480 Speaker 8: That was cind cool then then she's. 368 00:18:28,119 --> 00:18:29,720 Speaker 1: Another big week for Donald Trump. 369 00:18:29,800 --> 00:18:32,520 Speaker 2: He plans to meet with Hikim Jeffers and Chuck Schumer 370 00:18:32,560 --> 00:18:36,919 Speaker 2: today to talk about the looming government shutdown. Also a 371 00:18:36,960 --> 00:18:40,720 Speaker 2: big week for the Secretary of War Pete hegseeth. He's 372 00:18:40,720 --> 00:18:43,399 Speaker 2: got that big meeting with all the generals tomorrow. Donald 373 00:18:43,440 --> 00:18:46,600 Speaker 2: Trump saying that he will attend that high level military 374 00:18:46,680 --> 00:18:51,440 Speaker 2: meeting Tuesday. It's going to be at Quantico, the Marine 375 00:18:51,440 --> 00:18:54,440 Speaker 2: Corps base in Virginia, roughly thirty minutes south of Washington, 376 00:18:54,520 --> 00:18:57,119 Speaker 2: d C. People that are expected to attend this include 377 00:18:57,160 --> 00:19:01,000 Speaker 2: senior admirals and generals, their aids and security, and potentially 378 00:19:01,119 --> 00:19:05,399 Speaker 2: thousands of military personnel. Of course, the meeting's purpose was 379 00:19:05,400 --> 00:19:09,600 Speaker 2: not disclosed in advance to the top brass and a 380 00:19:09,600 --> 00:19:13,320 Speaker 2: lot of people are questioning what's going on with this? 381 00:19:14,040 --> 00:19:14,840 Speaker 1: What's happening? 382 00:19:14,960 --> 00:19:17,439 Speaker 3: I keep picturing remember when Steve Jobs used to do 383 00:19:17,520 --> 00:19:22,920 Speaker 3: his annual Apple reveal. He would be in this auditorium 384 00:19:22,960 --> 00:19:25,280 Speaker 3: on stage with this big screen behind me. You would 385 00:19:25,280 --> 00:19:29,399 Speaker 3: come out and say, I introduce the new iPhone seven 386 00:19:29,480 --> 00:19:32,480 Speaker 3: with sixteen hours of battery life. I pictured Donald Trump 387 00:19:32,680 --> 00:19:34,680 Speaker 3: or a hegset doing that, standing on stage in front 388 00:19:34,720 --> 00:19:38,280 Speaker 3: of the audience going the new M one Abrams tank 389 00:19:38,520 --> 00:19:43,080 Speaker 3: were featured now with iTunes standard on all tanks that 390 00:19:43,119 --> 00:19:45,720 Speaker 3: we have. It's something like that, like some sort of 391 00:19:45,760 --> 00:19:48,600 Speaker 3: product reveal. Because come on, if this was if this 392 00:19:48,760 --> 00:19:51,240 Speaker 3: was something really really big and really really important, we 393 00:19:51,240 --> 00:19:53,679 Speaker 3: wouldn't know about it. We either they either wouldn't have 394 00:19:53,720 --> 00:19:56,239 Speaker 3: said anything at all, or they would have called all 395 00:19:56,240 --> 00:19:58,479 Speaker 3: the generals here and said, what exactly this is going 396 00:19:58,520 --> 00:20:00,520 Speaker 3: to be the fact that they are keeping the shrouded 397 00:20:00,520 --> 00:20:02,560 Speaker 3: in mystery leads me to believe that this is not 398 00:20:02,600 --> 00:20:03,159 Speaker 3: going to be that big. 399 00:20:03,240 --> 00:20:04,480 Speaker 1: It's just a big nothing burger. 400 00:20:04,600 --> 00:20:08,440 Speaker 2: So Trump described the meeting as focused on military success, 401 00:20:08,760 --> 00:20:10,879 Speaker 2: asprit de corps, and positive messaging. 402 00:20:11,160 --> 00:20:12,280 Speaker 1: He said, it's just a good. 403 00:20:12,119 --> 00:20:16,280 Speaker 2: Message talking about being in great shape, and heg Seth 404 00:20:16,400 --> 00:20:20,600 Speaker 2: allegedly wants to highlight military accomplishments and discuss the future 405 00:20:20,720 --> 00:20:24,879 Speaker 2: of the Department of Defense under his leadership. Of course, 406 00:20:24,880 --> 00:20:28,199 Speaker 2: he's you know, rebranding it from Department of Defense to 407 00:20:28,480 --> 00:20:33,280 Speaker 2: Department of War. This though, amid all the staffing cuts 408 00:20:33,359 --> 00:20:37,560 Speaker 2: that may happen with the government shut down, Trump has said, yeah, 409 00:20:37,760 --> 00:20:39,040 Speaker 2: you know what, we want to get rid of some 410 00:20:39,080 --> 00:20:40,840 Speaker 2: of these people permanently. 411 00:20:41,359 --> 00:20:42,480 Speaker 1: So here's the question. 412 00:20:42,840 --> 00:20:47,000 Speaker 2: Uh, people know now Trump's going, Yeah, the commander in 413 00:20:47,119 --> 00:20:48,960 Speaker 2: chief is commanding. 414 00:20:49,359 --> 00:20:51,160 Speaker 3: Yeah, there's no way that he's going to let this show. 415 00:20:51,200 --> 00:20:53,080 Speaker 3: Be happy about that, right, There's no way he's going 416 00:20:53,119 --> 00:20:55,560 Speaker 3: to let this meeting go without him being there. He 417 00:20:55,600 --> 00:20:58,000 Speaker 3: loves to be the center of attention. It's all about Trump, 418 00:20:58,080 --> 00:20:59,639 Speaker 3: I get it. And if you're gonna have all the 419 00:20:59,680 --> 00:21:02,040 Speaker 3: general from the United States around the whole world coming 420 00:21:02,080 --> 00:21:04,800 Speaker 3: into DC, yeah, Trump's going to be there. And guess what. 421 00:21:05,000 --> 00:21:07,719 Speaker 3: Trump's going to speak too, because he loves a microphone, 422 00:21:07,760 --> 00:21:09,520 Speaker 3: loves the sound of his own voice, and he's going 423 00:21:09,560 --> 00:21:11,800 Speaker 3: to get an opportunity to do this and he should 424 00:21:11,840 --> 00:21:14,280 Speaker 3: just like you said, he's the commander in chief. These 425 00:21:14,280 --> 00:21:16,919 Speaker 3: are all of his generals. What a great opportunity to 426 00:21:16,920 --> 00:21:17,359 Speaker 3: speak to that. 427 00:21:17,520 --> 00:21:19,920 Speaker 1: He should be there. He should be their commanding. 428 00:21:19,920 --> 00:21:22,320 Speaker 2: Now, some people are saying one of the reasons that 429 00:21:22,359 --> 00:21:26,080 Speaker 2: they're calling all of these generals in and not doing 430 00:21:26,119 --> 00:21:33,040 Speaker 2: it over the phone or teleconference is because possibly communications 431 00:21:33,040 --> 00:21:36,840 Speaker 2: have been compromised. And if you're going to tell somebody 432 00:21:36,920 --> 00:21:39,440 Speaker 2: something secretive, you're not going to put it in a text, 433 00:21:39,520 --> 00:21:39,800 Speaker 2: are you? 434 00:21:39,800 --> 00:21:41,400 Speaker 1: You're gonna wait and tell him in person. 435 00:21:42,200 --> 00:21:44,440 Speaker 3: I don't know what was the what was the the 436 00:21:45,240 --> 00:21:48,000 Speaker 3: chat app? Was it signaled the chat app that got 437 00:21:48,000 --> 00:21:49,840 Speaker 3: heg Seth in trouble earlier in the year. I can 438 00:21:49,880 --> 00:21:50,960 Speaker 3: see that, but again he. 439 00:21:50,920 --> 00:21:52,320 Speaker 1: Doesn't want to make that mistake again. 440 00:21:52,880 --> 00:21:55,920 Speaker 3: Trump and heg Seth knew that if they did this 441 00:21:56,400 --> 00:21:58,879 Speaker 3: called all the made public, that they were calling all 442 00:21:58,880 --> 00:22:01,960 Speaker 3: these generals to Quantico but not giving any details, that 443 00:22:02,160 --> 00:22:04,680 Speaker 3: everyone in the world would start speculating about it. This 444 00:22:04,880 --> 00:22:07,880 Speaker 3: is what they wanted. They wanted everybody to speculate about 445 00:22:07,880 --> 00:22:08,560 Speaker 3: what this is about. 446 00:22:08,680 --> 00:22:11,119 Speaker 2: So Trump praised hag Seth. He said, let him be 447 00:22:11,200 --> 00:22:13,960 Speaker 2: friendly with the generals and admirals. Isn't it nice that 448 00:22:14,000 --> 00:22:16,399 Speaker 2: people are coming from all over the world to be with. 449 00:22:16,359 --> 00:22:17,840 Speaker 3: Us, just a nice, friendly get together. 450 00:22:18,040 --> 00:22:20,040 Speaker 1: Isn't it nice that they're coming from all over the 451 00:22:20,040 --> 00:22:22,080 Speaker 1: world to be with it? You ordered them. 452 00:22:21,920 --> 00:22:22,960 Speaker 3: Too, It's nice. 453 00:22:23,080 --> 00:22:24,200 Speaker 1: It's so nice. 454 00:22:24,240 --> 00:22:24,480 Speaker 2: Nice. 455 00:22:24,880 --> 00:22:26,320 Speaker 1: They did not have a choice. 456 00:22:26,359 --> 00:22:29,840 Speaker 3: It's mandatory fun. It's gonna be fun, and you must 457 00:22:29,920 --> 00:22:32,000 Speaker 3: be here. It's like the after work party that you 458 00:22:32,040 --> 00:22:34,159 Speaker 3: don't want to go to, but you feel like you 459 00:22:34,280 --> 00:22:36,320 Speaker 3: got to because the boss says you got to be there. 460 00:22:36,320 --> 00:22:37,680 Speaker 3: And you're like, all right, fine. 461 00:22:37,440 --> 00:22:39,240 Speaker 1: I'll come and make a minimal appearance. 462 00:22:39,400 --> 00:22:42,000 Speaker 3: Mandatory fun. They all sit there with their little cocktails 463 00:22:42,040 --> 00:22:44,199 Speaker 3: in their hand while the boss is talking, and then 464 00:22:44,200 --> 00:22:45,800 Speaker 3: as soon as the boss leaves the stage, you're like, 465 00:22:45,800 --> 00:22:46,639 Speaker 3: we got to get out of here. 466 00:22:46,720 --> 00:22:47,040 Speaker 1: Let's go. 467 00:22:47,280 --> 00:22:49,840 Speaker 2: Don't think they'll have cocktails there at Quantico though, that's 468 00:22:49,880 --> 00:22:50,800 Speaker 2: gonna be a little different. 469 00:22:50,840 --> 00:22:51,119 Speaker 1: Okay. 470 00:22:51,160 --> 00:22:53,879 Speaker 2: So big week for them, Also a big week for 471 00:22:54,240 --> 00:22:59,919 Speaker 2: our Governor Mike Braun. So we've got redistricting talk still 472 00:23:00,160 --> 00:23:04,240 Speaker 2: still see the agenda, and you've also got word that 473 00:23:04,280 --> 00:23:08,440 Speaker 2: he's going to release the audit from the IEDC this 474 00:23:08,520 --> 00:23:11,480 Speaker 2: week as well. Now Governor Mike Broun he warned Indiana 475 00:23:11,520 --> 00:23:14,560 Speaker 2: could face some federal consequences if it doesn't add two 476 00:23:14,640 --> 00:23:19,480 Speaker 2: new GOP leaning congressional districts, and that they are reportedly 477 00:23:19,600 --> 00:23:25,520 Speaker 2: under some pressure from the Trump administration about doing the redistricting. 478 00:23:25,640 --> 00:23:29,560 Speaker 2: So far, really haven't heard much about this other than 479 00:23:29,960 --> 00:23:33,160 Speaker 2: Governor Braun saying, well, I'm gonna let the legislators decide 480 00:23:33,160 --> 00:23:34,239 Speaker 2: if we're doing this or not. 481 00:23:34,440 --> 00:23:36,160 Speaker 3: That's the way Braun likes to do it. Well, it's 482 00:23:36,200 --> 00:23:39,359 Speaker 3: really not my place, so I'll let the legislators just 483 00:23:39,400 --> 00:23:41,840 Speaker 3: die it on this. Look, this does put Braun in 484 00:23:41,880 --> 00:23:44,240 Speaker 3: a difficult position, you know, So I dug into this 485 00:23:44,280 --> 00:23:48,600 Speaker 3: a little bit over the weekend. Indiana receives twenty billion 486 00:23:48,720 --> 00:23:52,520 Speaker 3: dollars in federal funding every single year. So can you 487 00:23:52,600 --> 00:23:54,840 Speaker 3: imagine if some of that gets cut off? Now, most 488 00:23:54,840 --> 00:23:59,199 Speaker 3: of that is for it's for health like Medicaid and 489 00:23:59,240 --> 00:24:02,359 Speaker 3: that sort of stuff, roads and bridges and education. The 490 00:24:02,440 --> 00:24:04,679 Speaker 3: US Department of Agriculture announced that they're going to be 491 00:24:04,720 --> 00:24:07,560 Speaker 3: making Indianapolis one of their main hubs, which will be 492 00:24:07,600 --> 00:24:10,240 Speaker 3: great for our farmers and bring jobs to the area. 493 00:24:10,600 --> 00:24:12,920 Speaker 3: And look, this is the way Trump does business. Hey, 494 00:24:13,080 --> 00:24:14,720 Speaker 3: I want you to do something, you don't want to 495 00:24:14,760 --> 00:24:17,560 Speaker 3: do something, I'm going to exert leverage on you to 496 00:24:17,680 --> 00:24:19,680 Speaker 3: do what I want to do. So it does put 497 00:24:19,760 --> 00:24:21,720 Speaker 3: Braun in a difficult position. 498 00:24:22,040 --> 00:24:24,600 Speaker 2: Now, in Missouri, they did this and Governor Mike Keho 499 00:24:24,680 --> 00:24:27,959 Speaker 2: he signed Missouri's new congressional map into law, and that 500 00:24:28,080 --> 00:24:31,280 Speaker 2: will likely give Republicans seven out of the state's eight 501 00:24:31,600 --> 00:24:35,240 Speaker 2: House seats for the twenty six midterm election. 502 00:24:35,400 --> 00:24:37,840 Speaker 3: But I also see Rob's perspective on this too. And 503 00:24:37,920 --> 00:24:40,399 Speaker 3: Rob's been very against this, and he makes a great point. 504 00:24:40,520 --> 00:24:43,400 Speaker 3: What great? So we're going to redistrict this, so all 505 00:24:43,520 --> 00:24:46,800 Speaker 3: nine House seats go Republicans. What does that do for us? 506 00:24:46,880 --> 00:24:49,639 Speaker 3: That means we get two more Jeff Shreeves in office, 507 00:24:49,640 --> 00:24:53,399 Speaker 3: two more you know, people like professional professional office hopper 508 00:24:53,400 --> 00:24:56,160 Speaker 3: Aaron Houchin. I mean, these are just general milk toast 509 00:24:56,200 --> 00:24:59,240 Speaker 3: Republicans that aren't really going to do anything for people 510 00:24:59,480 --> 00:25:02,399 Speaker 3: other than and exactly what the Republican Party wants them to. 511 00:25:02,560 --> 00:25:06,439 Speaker 1: Okay, but you know what they can do it there's nothing. 512 00:25:06,880 --> 00:25:08,639 Speaker 3: That's the other part of this too. So part of 513 00:25:08,680 --> 00:25:10,520 Speaker 3: me is like, okay, so you know, if you look 514 00:25:10,520 --> 00:25:14,040 Speaker 3: at the Indiana Constitution, there is some wiggle room in 515 00:25:14,119 --> 00:25:15,960 Speaker 3: here from a legal standpoint, So. 516 00:25:16,240 --> 00:25:18,160 Speaker 2: If you don't like it, if you change the constant 517 00:25:18,240 --> 00:25:20,640 Speaker 2: right along, exactly, they can't do this. 518 00:25:21,119 --> 00:25:23,800 Speaker 3: It looks like that the General Assembly may be able 519 00:25:23,800 --> 00:25:26,639 Speaker 3: to do this from a legal and constitutional perspective. So 520 00:25:26,840 --> 00:25:29,320 Speaker 3: if you're against that, then vote people in there and 521 00:25:29,359 --> 00:25:31,280 Speaker 3: write a law to keep from happening it in the future. 522 00:25:31,600 --> 00:25:31,919 Speaker 1: Okay. 523 00:25:31,960 --> 00:25:35,520 Speaker 2: So there was this GOP strategist, his name is Alex 524 00:25:35,600 --> 00:25:38,880 Speaker 2: de Grassi, and he was speaking about this, and he 525 00:25:39,080 --> 00:25:42,120 Speaker 2: mentioned Representative Andrew Ireland's name. 526 00:25:42,240 --> 00:25:42,880 Speaker 1: Check this out. 527 00:25:43,080 --> 00:25:45,920 Speaker 9: Hey, here's the deal, Steve. Let's just be blunt about it. Okay, 528 00:25:45,920 --> 00:25:47,960 Speaker 9: we had the plan. I actually laid it out. The 529 00:25:47,960 --> 00:25:50,560 Speaker 9: White House has laid it out. President Trump's allies have 530 00:25:50,680 --> 00:25:53,359 Speaker 9: laid it out. People know what the strategy is. Okay, 531 00:25:54,480 --> 00:25:56,639 Speaker 9: we just have to know Happy dogs, Eve. I mean no, 532 00:25:56,840 --> 00:25:59,119 Speaker 9: people are not moving hard enough, fast enough. We're not 533 00:25:59,440 --> 00:26:01,840 Speaker 9: seeing what we need to see full stop the posse. 534 00:26:02,440 --> 00:26:05,760 Speaker 9: We have to dig in here and dig deep, frankly, 535 00:26:06,080 --> 00:26:08,119 Speaker 9: and get ready to really kind of push on this 536 00:26:08,160 --> 00:26:11,800 Speaker 9: sea because time is ticking. And you know, the key 537 00:26:11,840 --> 00:26:13,920 Speaker 9: thing about what you just put up that chart is, look, 538 00:26:13,960 --> 00:26:18,800 Speaker 9: all that's done is is Missouri plus one, right, and 539 00:26:18,840 --> 00:26:22,680 Speaker 9: then Texas when we got out of there, and other 540 00:26:22,760 --> 00:26:25,919 Speaker 9: than that, everything else is everything else is you know, 541 00:26:26,080 --> 00:26:29,800 Speaker 9: a few conversations. Certainly the governor Indiana I think wants 542 00:26:29,840 --> 00:26:32,520 Speaker 9: to move forward, and I think we start naming names. 543 00:26:32,960 --> 00:26:36,720 Speaker 9: That's what we're gonna do. I know steam Representative Ireland. 544 00:26:36,760 --> 00:26:39,119 Speaker 9: I connected him with camera and he's in Indiana. He's 545 00:26:39,160 --> 00:26:41,680 Speaker 9: ready to talk and educate people on what's going I 546 00:26:41,720 --> 00:26:42,359 Speaker 9: think that's huge. 547 00:26:42,640 --> 00:26:45,040 Speaker 2: Okay, that's interesting because he just said that the governor 548 00:26:45,080 --> 00:26:47,520 Speaker 2: of Indiana is on board with this, and he also 549 00:26:47,640 --> 00:26:52,400 Speaker 2: said Representative Andrew Ireland is prepared to talk and educate 550 00:26:52,480 --> 00:26:56,159 Speaker 2: people on this. We've had Andrew Ireland on the show 551 00:26:56,200 --> 00:26:58,800 Speaker 2: and asked him about this and talked about this, and 552 00:26:58,960 --> 00:27:01,040 Speaker 2: he said, yeah, this is just it's a political move. 553 00:27:01,520 --> 00:27:04,919 Speaker 2: This has nothing to do with better governance. It's all political. 554 00:27:05,200 --> 00:27:09,639 Speaker 3: And look, that's why they're called politicians. Okay, they're gonna 555 00:27:09,680 --> 00:27:11,280 Speaker 3: do things that are political doses that make it right. 556 00:27:11,320 --> 00:27:11,359 Speaker 2: No. 557 00:27:11,480 --> 00:27:13,000 Speaker 3: Do I agree with Andrew Ireland that we should be 558 00:27:13,040 --> 00:27:15,399 Speaker 3: doing this because it's political. No, But at least he 559 00:27:15,440 --> 00:27:17,680 Speaker 3: was upfront and honest about it. And again, this is 560 00:27:17,680 --> 00:27:19,760 Speaker 3: what's been happening for two hundred and fifty years in 561 00:27:19,800 --> 00:27:25,080 Speaker 3: our country. Politicians gonna politician and that's exactly what they're 562 00:27:25,119 --> 00:27:28,040 Speaker 3: doing with this redistrict thing. And so to sit here 563 00:27:28,080 --> 00:27:31,639 Speaker 3: and expect something different is shame on us. We should 564 00:27:31,680 --> 00:27:34,720 Speaker 3: not expect something different from politicians. They're gonna be political. 565 00:27:34,840 --> 00:27:36,840 Speaker 3: If we have a problem with this, great change the 566 00:27:36,840 --> 00:27:39,520 Speaker 3: state constitution to make sure that it's locked in that 567 00:27:39,560 --> 00:27:41,440 Speaker 3: you can't do this except for the normal ten year 568 00:27:41,480 --> 00:27:42,720 Speaker 3: window when you do the census. 569 00:27:42,960 --> 00:27:46,400 Speaker 1: Former Governor Eric Holcombe was out and about and there's 570 00:27:46,520 --> 00:27:50,520 Speaker 1: also a story that involves a really big octopus. 571 00:27:51,160 --> 00:27:56,320 Speaker 2: Maybe maybe maybebe doubt it probably not sounds legit. You 572 00:27:56,440 --> 00:28:05,280 Speaker 2: decide it's coming up from ninety three WIBC. You have 573 00:28:05,359 --> 00:28:08,400 Speaker 2: the former governor and a former senator sharing a stage. 574 00:28:08,440 --> 00:28:12,040 Speaker 2: So former Governor Eric Holcombe and former Senator Joe Donnley, 575 00:28:12,600 --> 00:28:15,119 Speaker 2: opposite sides of the political spectrum, they shared the stage. 576 00:28:15,080 --> 00:28:15,880 Speaker 1: Are they well? 577 00:28:16,680 --> 00:28:18,760 Speaker 3: Are they good? One? 578 00:28:19,040 --> 00:28:20,040 Speaker 1: I see what you did there? 579 00:28:20,240 --> 00:28:20,479 Speaker 5: Like that? 580 00:28:20,600 --> 00:28:21,040 Speaker 1: Yeah? 581 00:28:21,080 --> 00:28:24,720 Speaker 2: They were at Marion University. They were discussing leadership, civility, 582 00:28:24,880 --> 00:28:28,720 Speaker 2: faith and public service. This was part of a Richard 583 00:28:28,760 --> 00:28:32,800 Speaker 2: Luger Speakers series and it was attended by students, political staff, 584 00:28:32,800 --> 00:28:36,800 Speaker 2: and also civic leaders. Both of them emphasized that public 585 00:28:36,840 --> 00:28:41,280 Speaker 2: service is rooted in staying connected to constituents. 586 00:28:41,880 --> 00:28:45,040 Speaker 1: Okay, just quickly, let's talk about. 587 00:28:44,760 --> 00:28:50,640 Speaker 2: That Governor Holcombe saying that he's connected to constituents. 588 00:28:50,720 --> 00:28:52,960 Speaker 1: The guy who called you a human. 589 00:28:52,680 --> 00:28:56,400 Speaker 2: Petrie Dish, the guy who shut down the state and 590 00:28:56,480 --> 00:28:59,960 Speaker 2: put thousands of people out of work, he's the one 591 00:29:00,040 --> 00:29:02,160 Speaker 2: who's saying that he is connected. 592 00:29:01,920 --> 00:29:03,040 Speaker 1: To his constituents. 593 00:29:03,240 --> 00:29:07,120 Speaker 2: More than anything, he wants to be disconnected. He wants 594 00:29:07,160 --> 00:29:12,880 Speaker 2: to have the velvet rope vip stanchions dividing you from him. 595 00:29:13,280 --> 00:29:16,040 Speaker 3: The best part about being an elected official is that 596 00:29:16,120 --> 00:29:19,400 Speaker 3: you can keep other people out, at least that's from 597 00:29:19,520 --> 00:29:22,800 Speaker 3: Holcome's perspective. He also coined the term it wouldn't serve 598 00:29:22,800 --> 00:29:23,280 Speaker 3: who's yours. 599 00:29:23,320 --> 00:29:24,920 Speaker 1: Well, this is true, he did so. 600 00:29:25,040 --> 00:29:27,840 Speaker 2: Joe Donnelly said returning home to Indiana helped him clear 601 00:29:27,880 --> 00:29:32,640 Speaker 2: his mind and reconnect with common sense. While in Congress, 602 00:29:32,680 --> 00:29:35,120 Speaker 2: he said, when you're in Washington, your ward is your bond. 603 00:29:35,920 --> 00:29:39,240 Speaker 2: And you know, let's talk about Joe Donelly for just 604 00:29:39,240 --> 00:29:39,640 Speaker 2: a second. 605 00:29:39,720 --> 00:29:41,520 Speaker 3: Yeah, I think it's interesting that Joe Donnelly was there 606 00:29:41,520 --> 00:29:44,640 Speaker 3: because he's been pretty quiet for a while. I mean, 607 00:29:44,680 --> 00:29:47,720 Speaker 3: he was the ambassador to the Holy See, which is 608 00:29:47,800 --> 00:29:51,440 Speaker 3: essentially the Vatican. But now he's been coming out a 609 00:29:51,440 --> 00:29:53,080 Speaker 3: couple times in the last year. I mean, there was 610 00:29:53,120 --> 00:29:56,840 Speaker 3: that period where before last year's election, a couple of 611 00:29:56,840 --> 00:30:01,680 Speaker 3: people floated Donnelly potentially running against Mike Braun for governor. 612 00:30:02,160 --> 00:30:05,280 Speaker 3: And look, I don't want to say Joe Donnelley and 613 00:30:05,280 --> 00:30:07,440 Speaker 3: I are friends, but I know Joe Donnelly and met 614 00:30:07,520 --> 00:30:10,440 Speaker 3: him on many many occasions when I ran radio stations 615 00:30:10,480 --> 00:30:12,680 Speaker 3: up in South Bend. That's where Joe Donnelly is from. 616 00:30:12,920 --> 00:30:14,720 Speaker 3: He would come to our studios and we'd have him 617 00:30:14,720 --> 00:30:16,680 Speaker 3: and interview him on our news talk station there, And 618 00:30:16,720 --> 00:30:18,880 Speaker 3: every time he was there, I'd be there and talk 619 00:30:18,920 --> 00:30:20,280 Speaker 3: to him for a few minutes. And I've seen him 620 00:30:20,320 --> 00:30:24,360 Speaker 3: at other events. Joe Donnelly actually the last Democrat I 621 00:30:24,480 --> 00:30:27,120 Speaker 3: voted for. How about that? Joe Donnelly the last Democrat 622 00:30:27,160 --> 00:30:29,800 Speaker 3: I voted for. But look, when you and Rob talk 623 00:30:29,880 --> 00:30:31,640 Speaker 3: about this, you talk about this a lot, and I 624 00:30:31,680 --> 00:30:35,600 Speaker 3: think it's really important. Democrats need real candidates. If we 625 00:30:35,640 --> 00:30:38,920 Speaker 3: want the Republicans in Indiana to be better, we need 626 00:30:38,960 --> 00:30:42,440 Speaker 3: Democrats to start running some real candidates. And Joe Donnelly. 627 00:30:42,800 --> 00:30:45,360 Speaker 3: Look when they floated his idea about running for governor 628 00:30:45,360 --> 00:30:48,560 Speaker 3: against Braun, I guarantee you that got some Republicans puckered up. 629 00:30:48,880 --> 00:30:52,920 Speaker 3: Because Joe Donnelly is pro life, he is pro Second Amendment. 630 00:30:53,400 --> 00:30:56,880 Speaker 3: All of the crazy looney left liberal things that are 631 00:30:56,920 --> 00:30:59,640 Speaker 3: being pushed on candidates today, Joe Donnelly is not. So 632 00:30:59,680 --> 00:31:01,720 Speaker 3: the big question would become if Joe Donnelly wants to 633 00:31:01,760 --> 00:31:04,960 Speaker 3: run for statewide office again in Indiana, whether that's Senator again, 634 00:31:05,040 --> 00:31:10,440 Speaker 3: doubt it. Republican governor again, maybe that's the type of 635 00:31:10,560 --> 00:31:13,320 Speaker 3: candidate that Democrats need to run in this state. And 636 00:31:13,360 --> 00:31:16,160 Speaker 3: that's going to be good for everyone because he is 637 00:31:16,240 --> 00:31:19,840 Speaker 3: a real challenger on the Democrat side and that will 638 00:31:19,840 --> 00:31:21,680 Speaker 3: make govern and that will make the Republicans better. 639 00:31:21,760 --> 00:31:24,640 Speaker 2: Ultimately, during this speech, they were talking about their mentors, 640 00:31:24,760 --> 00:31:28,080 Speaker 2: and Wholcomb sided Dan Coates and Mitch Daniels and Mike 641 00:31:28,160 --> 00:31:32,840 Speaker 2: Pence as his mentors, and Donnelley mentioned Father Hesberg from 642 00:31:32,880 --> 00:31:36,520 Speaker 2: Notre Dame and also Joe Kernan. 643 00:31:36,720 --> 00:31:38,600 Speaker 3: Former mayor of South Bend and former governor of the 644 00:31:38,600 --> 00:31:42,320 Speaker 3: Stadium Indiana. Joe Kernan, there was a guy that just 645 00:31:42,520 --> 00:31:46,520 Speaker 3: really kind of I don't want to say accidentally rose 646 00:31:46,560 --> 00:31:48,440 Speaker 3: to governor, but I mean here, he was the mayor 647 00:31:48,440 --> 00:31:51,240 Speaker 3: of South Bend, Indiana, was their mayor there for years. 648 00:31:52,120 --> 00:31:54,560 Speaker 3: O'Bannon selects him to be his lieutenant governor, and then 649 00:31:54,920 --> 00:31:57,400 Speaker 3: a couple of years later, Obannon passes away in office 650 00:31:57,400 --> 00:31:59,479 Speaker 3: and all of a sudden, Joe Kernan is the governor 651 00:31:59,480 --> 00:32:00,160 Speaker 3: of Indiana. 652 00:32:01,040 --> 00:32:01,760 Speaker 1: Here's a story. 653 00:32:01,840 --> 00:32:04,040 Speaker 2: I ran across this and at first I saw this 654 00:32:04,080 --> 00:32:07,040 Speaker 2: and I was like, what in the world and then 655 00:32:07,240 --> 00:32:09,680 Speaker 2: I read the script on it, and I thought, Okay, 656 00:32:09,760 --> 00:32:13,320 Speaker 2: we have to talk about this. September twenty twenty five, 657 00:32:13,440 --> 00:32:20,840 Speaker 2: Golf of America the largest octopus ever discovered, and tell 658 00:32:20,880 --> 00:32:21,840 Speaker 2: me this sounds real. 659 00:32:22,040 --> 00:32:22,840 Speaker 1: It's it's not. 660 00:32:23,120 --> 00:32:25,040 Speaker 3: It's I mean, let's go, let's give it. But I mean. 661 00:32:25,600 --> 00:32:28,400 Speaker 2: Marine biologists announced the discovery of what is believed to 662 00:32:28,400 --> 00:32:31,360 Speaker 2: be the largest octopus ever recorded, found deep within the 663 00:32:31,360 --> 00:32:35,240 Speaker 2: Gulf of America. The specimen, measuring over forty five feet 664 00:32:35,240 --> 00:32:39,000 Speaker 2: across a tentacle spanning the length of a city bus, 665 00:32:39,560 --> 00:32:43,880 Speaker 2: was documented by a joint research expedition led by the 666 00:32:43,920 --> 00:32:50,080 Speaker 2: Golf Marine Institute and International Oceanographers. They even have a quote, 667 00:32:50,120 --> 00:32:52,920 Speaker 2: doctor Elena Vargas said, this is a once in a 668 00:32:53,000 --> 00:32:57,840 Speaker 2: lifetime discovery. The octopus exhibits features unlike any we've ever 669 00:32:57,960 --> 00:33:01,920 Speaker 2: cataloged before, and they have a picture of it, and 670 00:33:02,360 --> 00:33:06,800 Speaker 2: it's a really, really big octopus forty five feet across, right, 671 00:33:06,880 --> 00:33:07,880 Speaker 2: the size of a butt. 672 00:33:08,000 --> 00:33:10,440 Speaker 3: I wanted this story to be true so bad. I 673 00:33:10,600 --> 00:33:13,440 Speaker 3: really wanted this story to be true so bad because 674 00:33:14,080 --> 00:33:18,320 Speaker 3: in my mind, hey, we were getting world record size octopus. 675 00:33:18,520 --> 00:33:20,800 Speaker 3: When it was called the Gulf of Mexico, all of 676 00:33:20,840 --> 00:33:22,800 Speaker 3: a sudden, you turn it to the Gulf of America 677 00:33:23,040 --> 00:33:26,920 Speaker 3: and we're getting forty five foot octopus. Let's go us hey, 678 00:33:27,280 --> 00:33:28,960 Speaker 3: us hey, us hey. 679 00:33:29,760 --> 00:33:32,040 Speaker 1: But it's not it's not story phone. 680 00:33:32,240 --> 00:33:37,200 Speaker 2: It's totally phony, and the story has now been taken down. 681 00:33:38,040 --> 00:33:40,760 Speaker 2: And boy, that's disappointing, but it does give us an 682 00:33:40,880 --> 00:33:41,880 Speaker 2: opportunity to. 683 00:33:41,760 --> 00:33:42,600 Speaker 1: Play this clip. 684 00:33:43,160 --> 00:33:45,440 Speaker 2: And out of all of the one hundred and eighty 685 00:33:45,480 --> 00:33:49,480 Speaker 2: episodes of Seinfeld, Jerry Seinfeld has said that perhaps this 686 00:33:49,800 --> 00:33:53,040 Speaker 2: was his favorite on account of how they got the 687 00:33:53,080 --> 00:33:56,480 Speaker 2: biggest laugh at the very end, and how difficult that 688 00:33:56,680 --> 00:33:57,480 Speaker 2: is to achieve. 689 00:33:57,880 --> 00:34:01,440 Speaker 3: The great beast appeared before me. I tell you it 690 00:34:01,520 --> 00:34:01,960 Speaker 3: was ten. 691 00:34:01,840 --> 00:34:05,680 Speaker 8: Stories eye of he was a foot, I said. Sensing 692 00:34:05,720 --> 00:34:09,080 Speaker 8: my presence, he let out a great bellow. I said, easy, 693 00:34:09,560 --> 00:34:14,719 Speaker 8: big fellow. And then as I watched him struggling, I 694 00:34:14,800 --> 00:34:18,400 Speaker 8: realized that something was obstructing its breathing. From where I 695 00:34:18,440 --> 00:34:20,400 Speaker 8: was standing, I could see directly into the eye of 696 00:34:20,440 --> 00:34:21,160 Speaker 8: the great fish. 697 00:34:21,840 --> 00:34:27,000 Speaker 3: Whatever, what did you do next? So then from out of. 698 00:34:26,920 --> 00:34:30,440 Speaker 8: Nowhere, a huge tidal wave lifted me, tossed me like 699 00:34:30,480 --> 00:34:32,680 Speaker 8: a cork, and I found myself right on top of him, 700 00:34:32,960 --> 00:34:36,680 Speaker 8: face to face with the blowhole. I could barely see 701 00:34:36,680 --> 00:34:39,560 Speaker 8: from the waves crashing down upon me, but I knew 702 00:34:39,560 --> 00:34:43,440 Speaker 8: something was there, so I reached my hand him, felt 703 00:34:43,480 --> 00:34:46,000 Speaker 8: her around and out the obstruction. 704 00:34:50,239 --> 00:34:50,479 Speaker 2: Puff. 705 00:35:02,920 --> 00:35:07,080 Speaker 3: It is a good life not over pulled up? But 706 00:35:07,200 --> 00:35:08,680 Speaker 3: is that a titleist. 707 00:35:10,400 --> 00:35:14,839 Speaker 1: On one? That was also the episode where a lot 708 00:35:14,840 --> 00:35:15,680 Speaker 1: of other things happened. 709 00:35:15,880 --> 00:35:18,040 Speaker 3: This was so great about Seinfeld. We all have these, 710 00:35:18,160 --> 00:35:20,680 Speaker 3: you know. We remember that as the marine biologist episode, 711 00:35:20,719 --> 00:35:22,520 Speaker 3: but there were also some other things. That was also 712 00:35:22,680 --> 00:35:25,719 Speaker 3: the Golden Boy episode Jerry's favorite T shirt Golden Boy, 713 00:35:26,120 --> 00:35:28,000 Speaker 3: who's slowly dying every time he goes through. 714 00:35:27,880 --> 00:35:29,719 Speaker 1: The walks, to replace it with baby. 715 00:35:29,719 --> 00:35:33,680 Speaker 3: But it was also the episode where Elaine was editing 716 00:35:33,719 --> 00:35:37,239 Speaker 3: the book for the Russian writer You're a Testakov, and 717 00:35:37,280 --> 00:35:41,160 Speaker 3: where she falsely claimed that Tolstoy's original name for Warren 718 00:35:41,239 --> 00:35:44,920 Speaker 3: Peace was war What is it good for? She also 719 00:35:44,960 --> 00:35:47,759 Speaker 3: had that organizer that was beeping where Testikov threw it 720 00:35:47,760 --> 00:35:49,880 Speaker 3: out of the cab and hit some woman in the head. 721 00:35:50,120 --> 00:35:52,719 Speaker 3: I mean, that was what was always great about Seinfeld 722 00:35:52,800 --> 00:35:54,799 Speaker 3: is you remember one big plot and then you go 723 00:35:54,800 --> 00:35:56,320 Speaker 3: back and watch it again you're like, oh, I didn't know. 724 00:35:56,360 --> 00:35:58,480 Speaker 3: This was also the Golden Boy episode I didn't know. 725 00:35:58,520 --> 00:36:00,799 Speaker 2: This was also the ur a test to coffees doing 726 00:36:00,880 --> 00:36:03,600 Speaker 2: lots of stuff going on and well, Jerry Seinfeld said 727 00:36:03,640 --> 00:36:07,560 Speaker 2: that on all the episodes, that was his favorite. It 728 00:36:07,680 --> 00:36:11,160 Speaker 2: is the Kendall and Casey Show. It's ninety three w IBC. 729 00:36:13,800 --> 00:36:25,960 Speaker 3: I'm like, hope, so