Wednesday-05-10-2023 - podcast episode cover

Wednesday-05-10-2023

May 10, 20231 hr 46 min
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M all right, Good morning everybody, and welcome to your Wednesday. You're at six h seven case O Dave Radio program. For some reason, why I have now two bud light stories. Well what, well, I should say this. I have one and a half. I have one that's actually about bud light and more numbers. It's not going well. Uh. And then I have a Florida Man combo bud lights worry. So yeah, that's a thing, one of our favorite genres of stories now rolled into one of

the current events stories. And let me tell you, it's not doing bud Light any favors. I don't know how the Florida Light, the Floridaman one is their problem, but I don't care because it's hilarious, all right, So we'll get into We'll get into that story. We have another book that's secretly been racist all this time, a book that I'm sure many of you have read, or at the very least you are familiar with. You have consumed this intellectual property, and you had no idea that it was racist.

This didn't go through the prep packet. Kyle is in for Ross all this week, so he's hanging out in there. Good morning. Let me ask you a question. Can you guess the new book that's a racist according to today's rules? Yes, and I'll give you some hints about the book. Okay, it's it's I know you've heard of it. It's an incredibly popular book. Okay, the book was written in the early eighteen hundreds, eighteen eighteen to be exact. Well, that's already dangerous, isn't it. Yeah?

Come on, you got any guests you wanted me to guess from that? I was waiting from. All right, ready, female author? Okay, is it something by Jane Austen? It is not something by Jane Austen. No, so female author eighteen eighteen secretly racist this whole time that's to be canceled. I give up just finding that. Come on, man, how many early eighteen hundreds female authors? The genre is horror? Oh uh? The is it a vampire story? It is not a vampire story.

And I don't think she's that old. Um, I have early eighteen hundreds horror. Female author. Literature is my weak category, and you're asking me female literature. This is why I hate Jeopardy, because I could dominate Jeopardy if they wouldn't have an opera category. Every now and then you know what I'm saying. I'll sit there and I scream out all the answers and they're like opera and I'm like, yeah, screw all, y'all. If the answer is not Pavarotti, I don't know. No, early eighteen hundreds,

horror genre. Um, I'll give you the the original title. Sure, sure, not the title that most people know it. The original title is The Modern Prometheus, the Modern yep, the Prometheus. Okay, Um, what is her name? Oh, we don't need her name. I just see the name of the book, Frankenstein. Wait, no, seriously, Yeah, I was trying to find try to get my buzzer. I hit throw it. Well whatever, that's that's the buzzer. Y hang on, it's on the other page. I just fl I didn't flip the page because

I'm lazy. No, I'm looking this up. I was right, look at that Mary Shelley. So what did she do? What? What did what did she do to? Well? She wrote a racist book. You, I mean, obviously, even if you don't know that, if you've never read the book, I know a lot of people, there's probably people have ever read the book itself. But you know the story of Frankenstein. Right, Frankenstein is not the monster, that's the doctor. And so it's

Frankenstein's monster, and he's obviously a mad scientist. He creates this. There's the whole scenario with the townspeople. There's the I mean, think about the illusion, the illusionary aspect of this story as you're sitting there and you're you're just watching it in your head. Eventually, the townspeople what do they do? They form a mob? Right, the mob comes, the mob has fire. Uh huh does the does the mob lynch the monster? Is this?

Is this the problem? According to the University of Florida's head of African American Studies, professor Julia moling teal um, who are all familiar with obviously uh, In fact, she wrote a book. Hold on the name of this book is great. Let me scroll down here. Um the power. Yes, she's also she's not just she's not just your friendly college professor they're in Florida, but also author of the Power and Horror of whiteness. And um, it's from that at that she has decided that a lot of old

school horror is actually allegories for racism. So Frankenstein being chief among them, although not the only She says, at its core, mary Shelley's Frankenstein is a book that is wrought with racial identity and oppression being an allegory for the black experience of her era. Wait, she's she not us. She is referring to a certain category of people as monsters. So basically, here's here's

what she says. She's saying that, So the college professors is she obviously Mary Shelley's a free So the college professor is saying that Mary Shelley wrote a book, but she didn't want to say that the monster was was black people.

But that's what the monster is. It's it's it's basically remember that the college professor over at wake Forest, who was on MSNBC all the time, who who dipped in albeit kind of you know, half I don't know, she was half job give her half joking maybe, but she was partially serious. Where she's talking about how Darth Vader right black evil. But see, but there's also when the when he's good, then all of a sudden he's

white. Yes, they take the helmet on, all right. So this is the level of insanity that you need to be able to rot through your brain. So secretly because the early eighteen hundreds obviously was not a good time for black people here in America. Never mind that Mary Shelley's not from America.

Um that that's really what that was about. So Shelley was praying on people's fear and hatred already of the monsters that were obviously still slaves in many instant, many parts of America. And so so yeah, so that book is that's what it's about. And you all are idiots for not knowing that. So I didn't know that. So there you go. So book bands are are good. Again, Well, it's not a band unless at the

collegiate level. So she's she wants to make a point, so she's teaching this obviously it has to it. It's not a band, it's a it's a lab specimen. Now do you know what I'm saying. So this is how they differentiate, like when they ban John steinback novels in California, which they did in schools, and again, book bands strung because anyone can go buy of Mice and Men if they want, but they didn't want to taught in schools. She wants this taught, but she only wants it taught as

a prime example of racism, along with several other things. So also you're ready for this, ready for another book that is secretly about racist by racist? Um, I'll give you hint. This author did live in America, wrote many books also same genre, and resided in Baltimore, balt author from Baltimore wrote horror novels secretly wrought with racism. I bet I can guess this one. Yeah, go ahead, Edgar Allan Poe. You are correct, sir? We go So, okay, what what's what's racist now? On

this one? Uh? Specifically, she takes issue with murder in the Rue Morgue. Um, let's see you here. I scrolled past something here because I was I couldn't try to see if there was one other book listed in this article. She says that Poe was haunted by black people based on his

fiction writings. So she basically just making a broad claim that he was he was a big fat racist, and so certain elements of his books where they're where they're where they're talking about fear is about embracing the fear that white people feel from Uh, you know, essentially that those who they see as animals of their time in the in the in the form of black people. Oh yeah, yeah, Poe. I thought Poe was just high all the time. Well, now the paranoia and fear of the Telltale Heart makes sense if

he's if he's terrified. What do you think that Raven was supposed to me? I mean, I'm just saying. So she's paid, she's decided she's got to pick apart all of the the old horror genre here and um, lets you know about all the racism. However, because she works at the University of Florida, and this is a extracted information from a syllabus that she put out for the class she teaches, and at the end of the syllabus

she's added the following paragraph. It says, quote no lesson is intended to espouse, promote, advanced inoculator, compel a particular feeling, perception, viewpoint, or belief. The disclaimer likely because of the rules in the state of

Florida that you're not supposed to be teaching this garbage. And so somehow, if you put a disclaimer at the end of a course where you've decided that every you know, major old school novels and works of literature are secretly you're the only one who is privy to the secret what they were secretly meaning was people of color instead of maybe she just means a monster eight in the same

way that Dracula was intended. And uh and but people would argue that Dracula was extracted from you know, legends of former rulers and uh, you know in the Romania and people you know and you so you get that whole composite there. But again, when people see Frankenstein, they think Frankens, they think, they think monster. There's no racial component there. I think I like the she found one. Sometimes a monster is just a monster. Let

it go. Yeah, But when you're the author of the power and horror of whiteness, you see monsters behind every monster in the mirror every morning, I guess right. As She also criticized it iinteen thirty one Frankenstein film, saying that it put it it parallels the racial stereotypes of the age. She's just chicks off her rocker man. But if you go to University of Florida, I mean you want to get indoctrinated. That's an option. The entirety

of the course. It just explores the relationship between horror and black literary modes and traditions, focusing on key moments where she says that authors have depicted blackness as terror, as terror, and then associated this terror with being black in America. So basically, these movies are about monsters. She knows in her

heart of hearts that they meant black people and not whatever monsters portrayed. And because it's during a particular era, you know, early eighteen hundreds up to nineteen thirties, that attitude, because it was pervasive, means that anyone who wrote about monsters was secretly trying to write a racist he book. So there you go, which makes you wonder what other old school monsters out there like,

because is the Mummy racist? If anything, the Mummy would be portrayed as black instead of h you know, like they're doing with Cleopatra right there. That's only because Disney got ahold of it. But I don't know. So there you go. We learned something new. Good morning to you eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four back in just a few two very show after the show is on the iHeartRadio app. Searchs Casey O Day

for the podcast on the iHeart radio app. You know the irony is too then like, um, when I'm sitting there and I'm looking at the description of them, of how the syllabus frames frank and say the book Frank people, if if you've never read the book, you don't realize that the monster

part of that is an internalized part of the story. The larger novel which sets all of it up is basically it's about some dude who's not Victor Frankenstein and not his monster, and his travel buddies who essentially decide they're going to go to the North Pole and they go. This is not a spoiler, this is how this This is how the whole book is framed. They go to the North Pole and they literally they think they see something and you know,

like the monster. And then shortly thereafter they find a dude who's on the edge of death and it's Victor Frankenstein. And so then the story and the narrative of the monster part of it and how they got there is then told in a flashback form basically doctor Frankenstein relating his life story to these individuals. So, yeah, but if you take that class, you'll find out that secretly they just wanted to use a lot of racisty stuff and so they

did they hit it or something. Yep, everything's dumb. Everything's dumb. And um, we'll get we'll get phone calls on this coming up. Also, oh, I mentioned the butt light Florida. Manthy you know what? Somebody corrected me because they actually knew which story I was going to talk about. The story it was on WFLA, which is a Tampa website, Tampa TV station, So I assumed it was in Florida, but it's not.

It's in Florida's Midwest cousin home of the Super Snake. I believe you don't remember that story, so Kansas. But still it's a good story and we'll tell it. One oh six one at them Talk and n w PTI, two stations driving the best in talk. This is Casey O Day and Carolina's

Morning News. Now, I understand that from time to time people go online, they coach stuff, and they start to evolve theories some would refer to as conspiracy theories, and a lot of time they ain't right, But there's lots of people like myself who enjoy reading them, digesting them, and attempting to understand them, and occasionally they are right, or at least it's a

variation of correct. That's that's why people are fascinated by it. Whether it's you know, a John Edwards love child and a tabloid nailed it, or you know, uh, you know, the bat boy stuff. You never know what you're gonna get. You never know what level of truth will be there. And sometimes it's just wholesale uh, you know, fiction people making

connections where it's easily debunked. But a good conspiracy theory is one of those that maybe has some elements of truth and that it's somewhere in the middle there, but you recognize things that they're elements of it, right, And one of the big elements, and a lot of them is government involvement. So let me let me tell you when I start reading about the Texas shooter who,

Um, just to be clear, we don't we don't. I use the name to describe when they first identified for the purpose of m making sure you understood that the purported white supremacist has a very Hispanic name. H. Going forward, we're just going with Carlos Bigsby, Okay, So that will

be the name that we use going forward. Um. The amount of information that came pouring out yesterday, much of it being proffered by an author who may or may not work for an outline, a journalism outlet that is actually run by government, and perhaps even the CIA that in and of itself it is its own thing that predates this whole story is just bonkers. And the information gushing forward while we still are not being allowed to even attempt to understand

what may have motivated the shooter in Nashville is pretty amazing. So we'll do a little compare contrast here in just a moment. Let me grab a call real quick on our Frankenstein's racist topic, because why not. Donna, good morning, what's up? Good morning, Casey morning. Hey, the monster

is really the fear of reanimation, of course. And then back then before Mary Shelley wrote it not too much before though the medical uh, the field we're working with reanimation or resuscitation, the the idea of reanimation and bringing to bringing forth to soulless being also as religious implications. Sure you're going back to necromancers and I mean stuff, This stuff goes back forever and there was this and I'm sorry, go ahead, but I want to tell people how she

got the idea because it was a real thing. Yeah, well I know I agree with you. Now you made me lose my thought. Why don't you bought a cat? Why don't you pet a cat? Calm down? All right, you know what I'm saying though, I mean right. It's also there's a lot of fear back then of what was going on medically, and it was she was almost saying, don't fool around with mother nature. It's the Jurassic Park. It's Jurassic Park just because we can, should we

kind of thing right? Had had nothing to do with racism. Oh no, she secretly she was. She was scared of people who didn't look like her. Well, you know what it is, these professors, they have to write feces and to get published, etc. Did you did you say feces or feces? Yeah, feces come up with a lot of feces. My professor used to say, PhD stands for piled higher and deeper. Yeah, exactly, all right, thanks for the call. Don't you get back

to all of your cats? Um what? She sends pictures of cats, and she was one of the key figures in this conspiracy to pretend like I ever owned a cat, so along with Ross and I'm sure, Kyle was probably in on it, and a few others. I got my own conspiracy theories. So Shelley. So she's eighteen nineteen when she's writing this, right, and basically she's writing it in competition with other authors of the era like Lord Byron and Whatnot to see come up with the best horror story. And

she was motivated by a story she'd been traveling in Germany and Switzerland. I believe Geneva. Yeah, she was in Geneva, and then she was in Germany too, and there had been an incident literally in this juror in this Swiss valley, this town where I believe the guy was an alchemist and was doing some really really weird experiments and kind of deviated into some human experiments,

and it was a it was a it was a problem. It was like a scandal, and so she kind of took the fear that was welled up and the people around there of this guy who lives just outside of town. He's doing these crazy experiments. Obviously, the gossip mill turns it into certain things, and eventually it ended horribly with people confronting him because there was some disappearance or something, and like it's it's a it's a story all in of

itself. And so as as an author sitting there pondering what to right about, she's reminded of this story and she uses it as the basis and then crafts it to as Donna was pointing out the fears of the day. And obviously it was very successful, so that you know, two hundred years later, some woke college professor has got to come up with something to teach students at the University of Florida so that they can self loathe. She found a good use for it there. Yeah, it's all it's it's all a giant

dumpster fire. But you know that's this is you know, this is also part of history. This is why it's good to understand this stuff. All right, let's go ahead and get into this. So, the Diary of the Texas Mall shooter, a one Carlos Bigsby, has pages of it. Photographs have been posted. And what's crazy is so they posted these journal entries and in the pictures there's hundreds of pages. But in the pictures our photo of the photos of the journal and next to it are dude's ID cards.

Right, Because as you know, what you do is you keep multiple forms of ID next to your diary journal pages, or you keep the IDs in there so if there's ever i don't know, a government agency or an investigator who's wanting to not only prove that this is you and your motivation, they have handy forms of ID sitting right there next to them for photo purposes.

It's just strutting. That's strike you weird because I see that photo and I'm like, so way to say, so, he's got the he's got he wrote down why he did everything, and then he put ID next to it so that nobody would question they were his words. Does that make sense or

does that sound like just like a really lazy conspiracy theory. Well, every evening as I sit down to journal in my diary next to the fire in the armchair, I make sure I always have a camera set up to take a photograph of myself as I fill out my diary, right because you and what Kyle will do is he's writing with one hand and then the other hand he's holding the day's newspaper absolutely so that we have the and again it just it just smacks of come on, he's got his ID solved. His churn?

What are you talking about? But you know, collectively, perhaps they just partied it all together. I don't know. It's just one of those things that where I look at it, I'm like, Yeah, people are gonna start going. They're gonna have a lot of theories based on this photo. So anyway. Other photos provided include pictures of mister Carlos Bigsby with Hooters waitresses, his guns, racist tattoos that klea. Do you have any tattoos? I got a few. You saw the pictures of the shooters tattoos.

Mine look nothing like that. I'm not saying that you have white powered tattoos, but what I am saying is did you notice anything about his tattoos and their crispness, the freshness of them. That's like those look like tattoos that are about a month old. Yeah, the swelling had just gone, but they were still like raised from the surface a little bit. They were they

were new. Also included his profiles from a now a since deleted Russian social media account because we all right, he sits there every night next to his journal with his stack of IDs and new tattoos and goes on a now deleted Russian social media site and post rants about supporting Nazism and reminiscing about when he became a full blown white supremacist. Let's see here, all right, here's some actual quotes according to the the social media and journal postings, which again

have his IDs, so you know it's him. Quote. They don't care about the future of their race. Wake up, white people. They're like children. Everything has to be done for them. When are you going to grow up? Can't you arians do anything by yourselves? Darn those arians? Darn is the words it's used. I did not clean that up because when you're a lunatic, would be mass shooter, white supremacist, you you know, you want to be the language matters. You don't want to you don't

want to say a word that the kids might hear. And when you're on you know, racial superiority ramble um, maybe they're not worth saving. Arians of the world. Raise your hands up right now, or you're all going to die. And again, all of this journal, all this motivation with

IDs is through there. And uh, these the sourcing of a lot of these pictures and whatnot actually came through what is a quasi government site that people people feel that the US intelligence agencies may or may not be using as a way to put out information, which I understand why that actually makes sense. And I don't even know that anyone defends that there's not a governmental apparatus to that particular news organization. I'm not I'm not telling you who it is,

and I'm not giving them an ounce of effort. But just understand that there's a lot of people who wonder how much it's just you know, Joe blow bureaucrat that's using it as an outlook to publish stories about you know, heating oil costs versus intelligence agencies funneling information through it to spin narratives because there had been those accusations. But there's also the part where you know, back in the day, the CIA readily admitted in that famous congressional testimony that they had

multiple journalists that were under their employee at major organizations. So you know, that's a thing that existed back in the day, and you know, is it hard to think that it exists now? I don't know, and I don't understand fully like the whole message here. So is the guy a white supremacist because he has to think white people are stupid? Because he's got to

quote unquote do their work for them. He can't do anything themselves. However, when he went to do the work in this tragic shooting, he neglect did to actually kill anyone who traditionally white supremacists would want to kill if they were murderous, I e. People, Jewish people, and or black people. And none of the victims were that. Garcia, excuse me. Bixby, who killed eight before being shot dead by police, later said quote I used to how did he later say? I guess you mean later in the

narrative, because he didn't later say anything he was killed by police. Said, I used to think of myself as Benny from the sand Lot, an all American kid who just happens to not be white. I'm a visitor. I'm Hispanic, whether I like it or not. I think Benny went on to play from the sand I think Benny was the one who went pro right. This whole thing is crazy, dude, crazy, crazy crazy, All right, hold on, got it, all right, tell budd Come on,

buddy, buddy. If I pick up this phone again and you say another bad word, all right, ain't I ros Ross has say he's got a gilly suit. He may be in your yard in moments. All right, so don't do it again, buddy, all right, no more bad words, sir. I apologize. I caught myself, okay, but it happened before every election cycle for the big one. All this crazy stuff happens. And what they do is they just take it like a snowball, and he gets bigger and bigger and bigger. And we are the people. Man.

Most people are sheep. They believe what they sing, believe what they here. They won't think that's sure, he's got it. He's got multiple forms of ID. And there's Russians involved. I mean, yeah, yeah, hey, hey, it's like the FBI has uh the laptop for three years, but in like an eight hours they saw they saw the Nashville Obama in eight hours. Amazing, right, I mean, you know, you win some you lose something exactly. Hey man, great show, and I'll

pot us to a potty mouth. I apologize. Now. Know Ross is in your yard somewhere. It looks like a bush shirt. It's not gonna end well for you. So hey, ask you questions. What usually you didn't tuck a costion? Did you did? I? What you did not talk about Ross? Did you? Did you took a Ross. Is he gone our or is he getting paid? You saying I was going back Carlson Ross vacation. You know he is actually actually we Dylan mulven need him, sir, really yeac wait tc Rose? Hey is when Rose gets back?

Yes? All right, A good you have a good day. All right? I got a roll? All right, No we didn't. He's just gotten this week. It's okay. By the way, I called the Tucker Carlson thing, I'll tell you what I'm rambling about. Coming up case O Day radio program. All right, six fifty eight long segments there, so coming up. Let me just give it a little rundown. I'll get that. The double Bud life stories. Also, I know they like putting the

term TikTok challenge into these stories. But what a horrible, horrible human being that we have in our midst we will share. I'll show that story coming up here in just a little bit. And uh, and Ross isn't here. We didn't tucker him or anything like that. Although we do have a Tucker story, but we also have a Bill's story. And it's not just about the football. I have some questions, so we'll get to all that and more as we bling ourselves through the next two hours eight eight eight nine

three four seven eight seven four back after the news. Hang on, all right, good morning everybody. It is seven h seven. Here on the DCO Day radio program, Robert de Niro is gonna have a baby's seventy nine, so kids graduating college when he's one hundred and two. There you go. Obviously, the child's mother, as says a wee bit younger, he's got do you got kids? He's got kids with like five or six different women? Old on, Sorry, just saw this. Oh yes, all

right, get out of my face. Yeah, six kids, and this one's number seven. Well no, I think this is funny too, because the way that it came out is he's being interviewed by who is this, Brittany Blair. I don't even know who that is. So he's promoting his upcoming some movie. So it's just you know, standard puff interview, and Blair said, I know you have six kids, and then he stopped her in correct her and said seven. Look at that. Unlike somebody, he

knows that he has seven seven kids and or grandkids. That's a Biden joke because apparently they still don't count the Hunter's latest and he confirmed it he just had a baby. Ope, it says it's unclear who he welcome the baby with. Okay, well, I'm going to assume that she's younger than seventy nine because science and stuff. But as as we know, you can't always can't always fall back on things that that are known. So there you go. All right, let me flip Louis flip over to a couple other things

here. Yeah, it. We'll get into the whole Trump thing here in just a little bit too, because I the the whole aging Carol story and the jury thing yesterday, and I have I have some questions considering what they did to say he was liable for and versus what they didn't, and I'm not sure how it all works because I'm not a lawyer. But we'll do

a little analyzing. Okay, So a couple little bud Light things. Um, A lot of people have talked about bud Lights distributor numbers and the more of the wholesale numbers, you know, store store numbers basically bud Light six packs, twelve packs whatever that to find themselves into your local grocery store or beer shop or whatever, and how they have been down year over year in the twentieth percentile twenty one percent, twenty six percent. The latest new numbers

out or a show twenty one let's see twenty three point four percent. Week before it was twenty six percent year over year. The week before that it was twenty one and a half percent year over year. So and keep in mind too that those are year over year numbers. But if you look at progressive loss on kind of a running total that continues. However, harder to quantify, at least from those numbers is when bud light is sold via the keg right at your local bar or perhaps even to some extent, bottles in

your local bar. Well, they're starting to get a sense of those numbers, and they ain't good. And the numbers are not simply limited to bud light. In fact, one of the things when you start delving into on site consumption via keg, one thing your record. There, one thing that you're seen in those bar room settings is it's not just bud light. In fact, Budweiser, just the regular bud not the bud light itself, is

showing an eleven point four percent sales hit. Michelobe Ultra, which is the third biggest selling brand in the US behind But do you know what, I didn't know this until I saw this. So Bud Light's the number one selling beer. Michelobe Ultra is the number three selling beer. Kyle, can you guess what the number two selling beer in America is? Regular? Bud Nope, Coors Nope, not Miller either, Modelo. Really yeah, a lot of people drink Mode and obviously a lot of people, a lot of Hispanic

people drink Modelo. It's when you look at market share by ethnic background, it's it's not even a test. Although my neighbors who are they are second check a generation from Mexico. Um, and that dude every time I every time I went over to his house, he always has tacatte, which I'm not a big fan of. I'd rather drink bdello. But at each throne, although I remember I remember going, I remember getting invite. This was one of the This was a guy who worked for US. Um and uh

yeah, basically for doing some drilling, directional boring and whatnot. And his um, he he was from he was from Mexico. He he came here legally. I would like to point out too, um yes, um, but uh I remember when I first met him, cool dude, and it was like, so we're sitting there and we're doing we were doing we were literally boring a pipeline up under a road and it was really really hot for whatever reason there, and he's just like, hey, my granddaughter because his

daughter. It was so his granddaughters was having a birthday and he asked me if I want to come to his granddaughter's birthday. And I thought it was the weirdest damn thing. I was a kid from Wyoming. I don't know any better, but it was He's like, Noah, there'll be food and all that, and the adults are sitting around. I'm like, okay, all right, just trying to I show up, and sure enough, there's like a little three year old baby right and it's the baby's birthday. Baby

doesn't know crap because it's three, it's baby whatever. And it's seventy two adults just sitting around killing kegs of takati. It's just an adult party. And I'm like, this is the This is not the child's birthday party I'm used to. And so it was one of my big cultural realizations that sometimes a three year old's birthday party is not a three year old's birthday party, and then I immediately liked him more so, but yeah, they were the

first time I had to Katty and decided I didn't like it. But yeah, MODELO is the number two. So anyway, so Michelobe's taken ahead, Budweiser full full Steam is taken ahead, and several other Anheuser Busch brands are also getting named. Natty Light is Budweiser, I don't know if you know that, and bush Light obviously both Natty Lights down five percent. What do you college kids doing? Do they still drink the Natty Light to college?

I don't know, Maybe they don't. So it's it's far worse. And when asked why people when they're trying to figure out consumer behavior, to figure out why brands that are not in and of itself bud Light get hit, people are referencing the incident with bud Light because they rightfully recognize that the company

is still a company. If you if you stop drinking bud Light and start drinking Budweiser regular, it's not very impactful if you're wanting to send a message, And social pressure seems to be one of the biggest drivers and This is what I told you. As soon as something becomes a meme, that's when that's when success can be found in changing, you know, permanently behavior,

and that permanent behavior change is death to companies. It's what they seek obviously when they're advocating for you to come get on their you know products bandwagon, Right, make the switch. Uh you normally you drink Miller, Try Budweiser taste better. And then so they put all the ads out. They got more horses, more frogs, and you're like, oh, give it a try. And so now they're changing behavior. Let's see here is as Yo,

you're talking about seventy seventy five Mexicans drinking kegs? Do you party more than Mexicans? Magic? What I can't. I don't know what you're saying, sir. I wasn't making a contest of it. I was talking about the first time that I ever went to a three year old's birthday party where it was basically a kegger and tried to katy, which I didn't like. Don't read too much into it. I was just surprised Madela was the number

two beer in the country. Anyway, back to this, so um, yeah, no, when you get the changing behaviors and you're doing it from a that's I mean, that is the holy grail of marketing. The problem is when it goes the other way, because now people's behaviors are they don't want to get they don't want to get busted on at the bar with their buddies. I don't want to be walking around a grocery store with a bud Light twelfth pack in there. Right or wrong, it doesn't matter whether you

agree or disagree. This is just pure human nature and analyzing what's going on, and the numbers don't lie. Once you've achieved that, you're going to be successful in whatever your boycott is. It's not the stupidity of people going, all right, we're gonna stick it to the oil companies. Nobody get gas on Monday. Monday. We're gonna send them a message on Monday.

And you know why they don't care because you do that because a bunch of you idiots will go and you'll fill up your tank Sunday, so you don't get gas on Monday, or you won't get gas on Monday, and then on Tuesday, you know what you'll do, you'll go get gas. So if you're a petroleum company. What message is being sent here? It's getting baked into society. That's gonna be so hard to overcome. So that's bud Lights story number one. Number two, we had to bud Lights. Cousin

weird Midwestern cousin cans this. I believe it was Kansas where the guy was trying to make the super snake. Do you remember, Kyle, do you remember that story that dude they pulled over? It was that Oklahoma. I remember, I don't recall the super snake at all. Oh remember, so the dudes drive and they pull it over, and like in the vehicle they find like they find a gun. I don't think he was barred from having a gun, open bottle of liquor, some uranium and a snake and yeah

Stephen Jennings, Oklahoma. Oh wow, you remember the guy's name pulled it up? Oh I cheated? What all did he have in the car? We we just if we we we thought he might have been trying to make a super snake. Yeah he had well started with the rattlesnake. But you add the rattlesnake plus whiskey, plus uranium and throwing a gun. Yeah, and the guns for if the super snake gets too super too quick, right because your uranium experiment was too much? Yeah? So uh well this time?

Okay? Was that Oklahoma or Kansas? Oklahoma? Oh? Damn it? All right, Well Kansas is nearby, so um here we go. Uh. Franklin County Sheriff's office said that they made a rather interesting dui arrest

the other day. Uh. Then the photos posted from the from the security cam or from the excuse me, the body cam or the dash cam, I guess in this case, Um, you can see the sheriff's deputy there putting a thirty something year old driver through this through the paces right, walk and put your feet next to each other, walk in a straight line, touch your finger in your nose, all this stuff. Meanwhile, the dude is wearing a full body bud Light beer can costume. He's dressed as a

bud Light can, and he's hammered. This is on I thirty five. The suspect once he failed roadside sobriety and was given an intoxicalizer or breathalyzer, blew well over the legal limit and was booked under for driving under the influence of alcohol. Dude, you're dressed as a bud Light can. Did you think that? Like, was it some reverse psychology? You're like, I'm

hammered or drive home. I hope they don't notice. You know what, what if I wear this giant bud Light costume because that would be too obvious, right, you would like they would look at there, go there's no way that guy's drunk because his job apparently is bud Light can mascot costume thing. So he you know, that would be too obvious, so I don't have to worry about it. I don't know if that line of thought went through dude's head, but it didn't work. But you know, if you're

bud Light, at least you got a fan out there. Unless there was some you know, dark dark humor surrounding why he was dressed like that, But the story doesn't say all right. Seven twenty case O Day Radio program hang on a near decade on the calendar and celebrating ten years on the air. This is one oh six one FM Talk in the Triangle and News Talk nine four five WPTI and the Triad. Well looks like a body of US

medical experts out there is recommending new screening guidelines for breast cancer. And it's kind of a big deal because one of the things that they've tried to weigh, not just with this screening for breast cancer, but cancer screenings at all, is you don't want to create a scenario where you're knocking the availability of screening methods for people who are in the higher risk elements. So, you

know, traditionally it's women over the age of fifty. However, now they're saying that they should start at forty and are also encouraging women even younger than that to more thoroughly do home screening, you know, self examination or other screening methodologies. I don't know exactly what those are, but basically to be much more. You know, I had a friend in her twenties who who went through this. It was that whole thing was messed up. Man.

Her husband was such a piece of garbage. She ended up leaving her. She ended up having a preventative double bestectomy. And by the way, I know I can talk about this because she herself was in radio and got into this as well. It was interesting though, because she was after that she obviously went and she was going to following the the medical side of that surgery. She was going to get restorative surgery and implants and all that, and

she was awkward. She was asking her guy friends for recommendations of like Hollywood girls. That. Yeah, so I had some. I may have offered a suggestion or two. So now she's cool lady. She got a great husband now, but yeah, that piece of garb. She was married with bitten Hacketts. So but anyway, that's a thing. So I wanted to throw that out there for you. All Right, more to come. News

is first, though, so stick around. We'll be right back. Ten years of news twice an hour and smart talk all day nine four five WPTI in the Triad and one oh six one FM Talk in the Triangle. All right, seven thirty six, Good morning. It is the case O Day Radio program. Oh number eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four.

We got us a little mystery to solve. We'll get to that here in just a moment, but first I want to dive into this, uh this build Buffalo Bill's story, even though Ross is on vacation, because I to some extent, it's about the position that he plays, I'm sure, but I have to wonder what the hell the prosecutors thinking in this case. So do you remember who matt araiza Raza is. Maybe you don't. You

may mel him as his nickname. The guy coming out of San Diego State University earned the nickname punt God. And it's pretty crazy if you watch videos. I mean, this dude, I mean, this guy's hitting like seventy eighty yard punts. So I would think that that would be a pretty good benefit to a professional sports team, especially you know, if you're pin back in your own end zone and you're able to get a punt off that across

his midfield significantly, that's pretty good. However, just before he was set to take the NFL by storm by being signed by the Buffalo Bills, so news came out. And the news was a woman who filed a civil complaint claiming that this punter and two of his teammates gang raped her when she was just seventeen at a party, a college party which she had attended. And

so as that was being investigated, news came out. It took him ten months eventually, and by then the Bills had parted ways with Punt God. Nobody would touch him, right, Nobody's going to sign, especially a punter that has a giant off the field issue that may have to do with sexual assault of a minor. Right, that's a hot potato nobody wanted even though he hadn't been proving guilty of anything. It was merely an allegation, and it was one that was part of a civil lawsuit and not a criminal suit.

And eventually, on the criminal side, the district attorney opted not to file charges. However, never explained why they opted not to file charges. So this hung over him and continued to hang over him until recently the civil lawsuit became public and based on the allegations, obviously you know all of this

moved forward. But now the recommendation and the reason for it. A two two hundred page transcript of a nearly two hour meeting that was obtained by reporters which goes into detail about why prosecutors didn't file charges was because upon investigation, they determined the dude wasn't even there. So this guy was accused of committing a crime with two of his friends, a heinous crime, underage sexual assault, sexual assault, and forced sexual assault of a minor. Right then they

investigate and they find out he wasn't at the house where it happened. He had been much earlier in the evening, but according to investigators, they were able to determine that he had left well before. It sounds like even before the seventeen year old may have begun parting. So whether she's mistaken as to which of the players it was, I mean, I don't know. They don't really get into a ton of detail on whether whether the two would ever

talked to each other. But there were two points as to why they didn't get into filing charges. One the one against him as he wasn't there, And secondly, they didn't prosecute the other two because they felt that there was video recordings of the incident that appeared to show that it was not non consensual. And I think maybe because of the age, how close an age they

were. I don't know that it violated California's laws as far as her being seventeen, because you're dealing with college students too, and there's uh, you know, it's Romeo and Juliette stuff. So I'm not I'm not one hundred percent on that. But they didn't file charges, but specifically with him, it's not even this murky. Did they or didn't they he's not even there, and they didn't feel that at any point they should literally bring this up.

So this guy's whole career, potential career is just was just destroyed over this allegation, this allegation that now, according to what the District Attorney's office figured out, wouldn't have been physically possible due to the fact that he's not anywhere in you know, in the house. And they don't mention this to anyone. It's I'm telling you, there is some baffling stuff, man, with the way that prosecutors go around this and juries obviously Donald Trump yesterday.

So this Egene Carrol, this this lawsuit, which is again it's a civil thing, which is why you know, Trump apparently is on the hook at least penning appeal probably for five million dollars. It was a civil thing, but there was no criminal thing, and it happened decades ago. And you know, in most cases this is the kind of stuff where you'd have the

Statute of limitations. But New York is part of all that me too stuff, decided they were going to have this window where they those didn't count anymore. I'm not sure how that works, because how are you supposed to, Like, how are you supposed to know where you were on a particular day in your movements that day. Now people would say, well, you know, whether you rape somebody or none. Well, he denies that he did. And remember, it's innocent, will proven guilty from a criminal standpoint.

From a civil standpoint, it's preponderance of the evidence. But you still tend to start in the same place. And the jury said that they she didn't prove that he did rape her. However, they said that he did he did do something basically sexual battery, So like groping, I guess is essentially what they're referring to. And I guess my question is, if you can't determine that a rape happened, how the hell are you determining that he groped

her? And I think a lot of them might have to do with the fact that they were able to bring in the inside edition or inside edition or the you know, the the classic tape of him with Billy Bush there and the grabbed him by that, you know what, as well as have other women come in and say that he also did it to them, just unsubstantiated,

Like I don't understand how that gets into a courtroom. One of the other parts was libel, and basically the libel was based on Carrol saying that Trump did this, him saying that he didn't, and by saying that he didn't, he was libeling her. But if you found, if you did not find by a preponderance of the evidence more likely than not that he raped her, how is he How is it libelist for him to say that he didn't do something that you the jury said that you couldn't. You couldn't find

that he did. The whole thing is bonkers. Reportedly happening in a dressing room in the mid nineties. I mean, you know the details of this or at least what's being alleged, and the lawsuit literally is being paid for by a uber rich Democratic donor. It doesn't surprise me at all that it went as far as it did and we had the result that we had. I mean, just look at the Kavanaugh stuff and how far that went.

Sure, and obviously in New Year, if you're in New York or Washington, DC, where it's eighty six percent in Manhattan and ninety percent within the district of left leaning voters, how the hell do I know, man, that you're gonna get a fair trial. Okay, how would I ever I would ever assume that that's I mean, I don't know exactly what the answer is, because if you committed crime in those particular places, or you're suspected of or in this case a civil lawsuit, there is going to be some

jurisdictional stuff. But I also don't think that people, you know, because I don't think necessarily in every case you should be able to just a shop where you want, because then if you ever come if you committed a crime and you and you want to not be convicted of it, and you could just unilaterally pick some jurisdiction where you have one of these woke das who doesn't do anything, then every criminal defendant would want to be there instead of you

know, in front of you know, Roy being the hanging judge. Right. So I don't know, but that was what the jury came back with. Is you can imagine they'll appeal. In a statement, Trump reiterated that he doesn't even know this woman. Quote, I have absolutely no idea who this woman. I mean, he knows her now, but he didn't know. The verdict is a disgrace, a continuation of the greatest witch hunt of all time. And yes, the illegal team says they will appeal the case.

But you know that's the kind of stuff too that they'll be shopping around come election time, whether it's his primary opponents or if he bakes it through and it's the nominee, then you know, Biden or whoever it is. Well, I found, I found that you were guilty of this, well kind of and once you're explaining, you're losing kind of thing, all right, seven forty six Ray Stage Hicks explaining the weather. But he's not losing because it's his job. So yeah, we're gonna win a lot. Okay,

the next couple of days in real good shape. Yesterday, those bigger storms just to the east northeast is where most of them went. The triangle where we expected, did have a handful of wind and hail. Reports come in. Didn't see a lot of damage those, so that was good news. And lots of clear sky around this morning and mostly sunny over the next few days. Been upper seventies today, tonight near fifties, so a little on the cool side. There'll be some forties around then most of us will

get out. Are just above eighty tomorrow and again mostly sunny, load of mid eighties on Friday, start to see the humidity start to creep up, leading us into the weekend, and we'll see temperatures in the mid to maybe the upper eighties over the weekend Mother's Day. Maybe a few showers around, but other than that, I think we're gonna stay mainly rain free. The change coming and be a little uptick back in the humidity after a little bit of a drop here today and tomorrow. But all in all case, not

a bad forecast over the next four or five days. So hopefully everybody get out there and get a little time to enjoy it. I have a question if yeah, let's say, let's say it's your neighborhood where you live. All right, if some dude wants to walk down the street wearing a full latex leather body suit, m should they be arrested? No? Right, Yeah, that's That's where I'm at. How I Well, then we got a story, man. They cops picked up themselves a gimp, so they

did yep for basically gimping. Well, America is falling apart. Yeah, so yeah, we'll get into that story coming up. Thank you appreciate it. Yeah, wait for that weirdness. It's next hang on one oh six one FM Talk w PTI, two stations driving the best in talk. This is case O Day and Carolina's Morning News. All right, welcome back.

It is seven fifty two here on the CaCO Day radio program. Nicknamed the Summerset gimp oh Man a thirty, a man in his thirties has been arrested for quote plaguing the community and scaring residence because he liked to walk around at night wearing a full body black latex gimp suit. A couple of different versions of it, one where the eyes are basically xed out on that and it's got the zipper mouth. Also, I think there's a one with a ball

gag thing, but he's fully clothed. In fact, you can't see an inch of skin in at least one of the photos here that I'm looking at, and you walk around the middle of of the night. However, they say that in some instances he was creating a public nuisance, quote stocking stocking the community for years doing this. They regaled us with an incident where in one instance, some teenagers were walking by him and he was rolling around on

the grass in the leaves and stuff in his gimp suit quote grunting. Another incident is described as him quote jumping out in front of a woman's car. But you know, I'd like to know the details. Was he laying in wait to jump out and try to cause an accident or is it nighttime? He's dressed in black and he's crossing the street and the woman almost didn't see him, and don't pedestrians have right of way? I don't know. Again,

I don't know exactly what it is. However, authorities say they received more than twenty calls about this dude who like to walk around in his gimp suit at night, And I don't know if that's part of whatever this whole role play fetish thing is for this dude, right where like whoever his partner is wants somebody to go out in the public because it's you know, it's a punishment or Yeah, I'm not going to get into the psyche of what's

going on here, but if he's not physically grabbing people, he's just rolling around and leaves acting weird or you know, walking down the sidewalk, I'm sorry that you find it terrifying, but I'm not sure what dude's doing wrong. Public nuisance is one of those catchalls like disorderly conduct. Sometimes the man who was let's see taking when did they rest him right after midnight yesterday morning, so twelve or seven am yesterday morning? For acting bizarrely. He was

placed in police custody on suspicion of causing a public nuisance. I remember the public said that a man wearing black latex had jumped out in front of her vehicle. Again, I'd like to know the details there. It's at night, dude just walk in. She almost didn't see him, or did he actually do something, because it sounds like the other stuff from previous incidents was just him acting like a weirdo, which isn't inherently illegal until you're threatening violence

or you know. This is that great nuance that we're having to digest with the train incident up in New York. If a guy just wants to, you know, act weird or act strange, yeah, people may find that threatening, but it comes down to are they threatening to do stuff? And the guy on the train is clearly threatening violence. Now, whether he means it or not, I don't know, but they couldn't have known the forty some past incidents which did include him getting physical with a seven year old and

others. Claude elderly woman wants right, but you know that's that threshold, simply walking around in a gimp suit. I'll defend your right to do that. I mean, I think you're a weirdo and I don't want to talk to you, so right, don't even come. I don't want I don't want to interact with you. Do your thing, but it ain't none of my business. Yeah, it's not real smart walking around at night and all black. You may very well get struck by a car. But yeah,

so that's the thing. Also, here's another thing ready for this. So there's a new dating app that's very popular. I guess it's called Widows Fire. It's a no strings attached, it's a hook up app, right for widows and widowers. How does that? What do they check? Like? What happens? I was? I want us just gonna go look at it? What if I see some hotties on there? Do I have to like I have to go out and get married first and then like not pack her

parachute correctly? I mean what filter by suspicious circumstances involving the death? Yeah? That would be gonna have stuff in common, right, so like you know, oh, your spouse also died taking a selfie. Now you got something to talk. Although it doesn't sound like this is about talking. So now they do. You can put an example in the story. Um, they say that this was prompted by a COVID widow and widowers. So just you'll just throw that nugget into annoy some of you. So there you go,

hey, farmers only widows, widows fire. Everybody's got their thing. Man, even the gimp guys probably got a dating nap. They probably mostly text though, and had a lot of phone calls if you catch my drift. All right, good Morne and everybody, and welcome. It is eight o seven here on the TCO Day radio program. Oh my goodness, Well that wasn't much of a boxing, Matt, Sorry, I'm looking at this

is up in Pennsylvania U a train accident yesterday afternoon. Officials say, a backho thought how again, the whole concept of how in any movie or TV show you know, where somebody's vehicle automatically breaks down on the railroad tracks, I'll never understanding how it happens. In this case, a backhoe was attempting to cross the railroad tracks and either didn't cry. They don't even say whether it got stopped or didn't cross. It lost though. Tell you what freight

train is undefeated, man, freight train is undefeated. That backhoe got messed up, to say the very least. That's a decent sized backhoe. It's not a huge, huge back one. So just in case you're wondering who'd win in that contest, now you know? All right, So what's Department of Homeland Security up to? Well, well, well, they're out there putting together instructional videos to help I will say de radicalize because that's the term

they like to use. Yes, America First Legal reveals the Department of Homeland Security. It's producing training videos that to help get bystanders to intervene against radicalization of their peers. And the target, well, the target of this video is probably some of you. That's right. Welcome to Cybersecurity one oh one classes in session today's lesson countering Disinformation on social Media. Since twenty twenty,

there has been a lot of false and inaccurate information about COVID nineteen. In many cases, the authors of this misinformation are simply misinformed, but some misinformation is deliberately created to mislead, harm or manipulate. We call this disinformation, all right. So that's the intro. This is just one video. There's a bunch of videos or scripts for videos that were dumped as part of this this Freedom of Information Act request. So they have they have all these programs

out there to help deradicalize and counter disinformation on all that. And of course they're in those weird, you know, company training video formats. But let's get into specifics, all right. So talk to me about somebody I need to intervene with. Consider this post from Susan's feed. It's from her uncle Steve, who claims everybody knows COVID is no worse than the fluid. Statements like these often commit the fallacy of mob appeal by appealing to the emotions of

a crowd for an idea to be accepted or rejected. Comparing a pandemic virus to a sea an o virus also commits the fallacy of weak analogy. Because the two viruses have telling differences, Steve fails to share those differences, committing the fallacy of suppressed evidence. Finally, unless Steve is an infectious disease expert.

He is also committing the fallacy of appeal to authority. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention website should be favored because they are a trustworthy source due to large government funding, and Susan eventually tracks down a fact based source that compares flu and COVID deaths during the same period. All right, so this

is like a little scenario best case scenario. So which is weird too because I sat there and watched a guy who happens to be an infectious disease expert, or at the very least a doctor who studies diseases and be scolded by some idiot network anchor. The other day Chuck Todd going off on the over this exact issue, and it's like, well, way to say, you're not even you're committing the fallacy. And I like how they say committing like

the word crime, But it's the fallacy. You're committing the fallacy. But that's the that's the soft stuff. When you start reading into some of this other stuff, it gets so orwelly and creepy so quickly, Well, there's these examples and you're looking, I'm looking at this. I'm waiting for the creep factor. Yeah, and it's like, oh, you're pro life. Oh well that's what you yet know. But you use that word, you use the word baby killer. All right, So wait, this is what

Kyle's talking about. Let me get let me get down to this. Uh. The this is part of the Department of Homeland Security's Office of Terrorism and Violence Prevention, who's putting these videos out so you're paying for them, and so they have these like Choose your Own Adventure style videos to help deradicalize friends and family, and in that they refer to people who are saying things they don't like as quote, radicalization suspects. Aren't you glad we created the Department

of Homeland Security? Isn't that working out great? So they could in the educational materials, the DHS constructs detailed profiles like ann An as a middle aged pro life advocate described as a suburban mom surrounded by stock footage of laundry and a minivan who has become increasingly more concerned about the welfare of other children. So they're writing this out in the same way you'd write literally a Hollywood script,

and you're doing descriptors of the various characters. So middle age pro life advocate, radicalization suspect and mid forties women bystanders, preacher, bakery employee, primary care doctor. And then they set up a they set up a bunch of scenarios and they have like a photo. Now, this is an exercise that that is not uncommon in corporate environments, not from not in this way, but like um one of the exercises that I've done over the years with

various managers is they'll sit us down. They'll be like, all right, we need to figure out who our core listener is, right, and so we utilize data that we have to figure out who's listening because we have a we have a we have a decent sense of demographics there that's not one hundred percent. I'm often surprised, uh, usually happily surprised. But yeah. So you sit there and you get a stock photo of a band in his of a particular age, an income level, and hobbies, and you write

about him. You create a narrative this is Bob, and Bob likes going to the beach, he likes traveling with his family. He's got two basically two kids. He's probably college educated. UM or he works in an advanced trade, right and so we put all this stuff together because the banishment wants us to have a thought exercise about who, you know, who's out there listening, so that we remember to taylor stuff that they find useful. Right,

it's fine whatever. I think it's a little too finite sometimes, and I feel like we do a good job of covering all the all the different aspects of who likes to listen. So that's good, but it's it's a reminder, this is your tax dollars, and it's videos on how to manipulate you. And how this doesn't like turn into a First Amendment violation is absolutely

beyond me. So they got Anne. Visually, we see a portrait of our protagonist Anne along with stock footage you would associate with a suburban mom ie laundry minivan to help build her environment a. Anne is a resident of Elkville in rural America and has always been religious, but since the death of her mother, she's become increasingly devout. She's a regular and her small town community

active in several groups. While she's always been protective of her four kids, she's now become increasingly more concerned about the welfare of other children, including the unborn, and you have to say that in an ominous way because that's her thought crime, right, that's why she is a suspect here a quote radicalization suspect. She's she's more religious than she used to be, and that religion includes the unborn. And then they go through all these scenarios like, all

right, what should you do? Like in one scenario, Anne is at a public ribbon cutting event for a new local bakery and she's talking to she's talking to a friend, and in course of her conversation, she uses the phrase baby killer in a discussion about a planned parenthood or something that's nearby. What should you do? And then the DHS requires you to pick a choice.

Should you contact Anne's husband, what contact Anne's preacher, or stop by Anne's house to have a discussion with her and explain why baby killer is not an appropriate phrase to use. Yes, this is what the home their yell. This is this is what the Homeland Security folks are working on with your money. You're an employee to so in this scenario, you're an employee at

the new bakery about to open. Blah blah blah blah blah. And I think basically they get into a whole story where she utters the phrase baby killer. So that's one. That's one scenario, and another scenario. Anne is at her hairdressers and while at the hairdresser, they're having a conversation, which is not uncommon. During the course of the conversation, Anne brings up pro life arguments and at one point even attempts to show a video of violent protests

on her phone, basically clashes between protesters. Bystanders are then given three choices about what they should do as somebody who's helping to combat disinformation, which include calling the sheriff on Anne, explaining Anne's behavior to coworkers, or attempting to do more research and gather information about groups that Anne may be associated with.

So let me let me, let me break this down. So what they want you to do is either if because she's she's giving you pro life arguments and showed a video off of a Twitter thing where protesters both four and against her are you know, scuffling, they want you to call law enforcement on and act as a spy by gathering information about groups and may be associated with, and going to her co workers to try to get Anne fired. You

see how really really dark this gets really really quick. Choice like five is re education, Like that's that's the next logical step, right, this is nuts. M Yes. Choice four c One call the sheriff to ask them about when you should be concerned about radicalization. Talk to co workers and staff about the conversation, and or go online research the groups and gather information also from Anne based on the voices they discussed the path and how you can make

the situation better. This it's a state funded instruction video for creating a Stazi class, right, this is the talk to anybody back in the day, who who who lived in any of those communist countries, you know, the Moldovas of the world, the Romania's back in the day, whatnot, And they'll tell you that one of the things that was utilized to keep people in order was the was the gnawing fact that your neighbors, your co workers, people around you, they make a phone call to you know, to the

tip line, and you you, you and your family could get disappeared or at the very least have your life turned upside down. So you never know, you never would say these things to anyone because you never knew who was informing to the to the police. Or the thought police anyway. That's that's this is how they would operate. Like they're literally telling people, all right, if you're a hairdresser and she's in you're talking about pro life stuff,

we'll go figure out who she's associating with. We'll get them all on the radar. They also build a stock profile for another woman named Courtney, an old high school friend who is a quote budding conspiracy theorist. She gets wrapped up and let's see, she too is your standard mom, suburban mom with laundry, minivan, all that, but following her divorce, she's become fixated on conspiracy theories regarding governmental connections to child abuse or trafficking. Oh no,

so she is the radicalization suspect. Divorced mother of two, late thirties have children always been her world, But after moving to a new city, she's made a new group of friends and has volunteered for groups for underprivileged youth, but become fixate on conspiracy theories regarding government connections to child abuse and trafficking.

Well, what are those connections? Do you mean? Like covering up some of this stuff given people like Jeffrey Epstein's Sweetheart deals Because he's connected, all right. So here's the scenario. Your Courtney's high school friend, and you scroll through your social media feed and start noticing some strange posts from Courtney. She's beginning to spread conspiracy theories and appears angry in some of her posts.

Here's what you should do. Monitor Courtney's posts and other conversations. Check in with her ex husband to see if he's noticed any changes in her behavior. She has the kids, so that's why you're calling the husband, because maybe she shouldn't have the kids around, right, So that's a polite way of saying, get her kids taken away from her, and send Courtney a private message asking how things are going in the new city, perhaps to garner more

information. This is more of spine on who she may be associating with. There's also Pete. He's an anti government, anti authority father in this suburban dad, lawnmower, lazy boy, that kind of stuff for imagery. He's a quiet guy who mostly keeps to himself, works nine to five, has two small kids, but doesn't really know any of his neighbors. And according to the scenario here, you're sitting in front of your Pete's friends, sitting

in front of your computer looking at pete social media. You've been friends for years, but Pete seemed a decent guy. However, now there's changes. You even see him post on some radical sites. Well what are radical sites? Then you should contact Pete's wife and ask if she's noticed anything. Wait until you see Pete at the softball game next week and ask if he's really

interested in these new groups. Challenge him through peer pressure. But also you should keep closer tabs on pizza online activity and pass it along to authorities if you feel concerned. All right, you get the gist of this. I could sit there and read these for days, and you heard an example there. But yeah, they have a whole office of propaganda that's putting this crap

together. Absolutely bonkers, man, and you're paying for it. And I promise you if Republicans got in there and flip this is why when they suggest that there needs to be more positions that serve at the pleasure, it's because this is the bureaucracy that's embedded. And as you can imagine, it's really really creepy to most thinking people. All right, eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seventy four. Back in just a few celebrating ten years keeping

you connected. This is ninety four five WPTI in the Triad and one oh six one FM Talk in the Triangle. All right, a thirty five welcome back case O Day radio program. I called it on the Tucker Carlson saying, Oh, though people might be overestimating the details, we'll get to that here in just a little bit. Let me grab a quick phone call on all of that Department of Homeland Security craziness, de radicalization stuff, spying on

your fellow citizens. And oh, by the way, the instructional videos are being paid for by you, Christina, go right ahead, good morning. Hi. Yes, I was calling about the Homeland security situation and my spots are on that are just basically fired with fire. How about we just turning the who are advocating the death of babies. That would be a new idea, you know, then, Christina, Christina, Now I'm required by security to call your employees and call your husband and uh and monitor you. So

yeah, let's start monitoring the big sailers. How about it? Oh you're going to Guantna. I want to say one quick thing about Tucker Carlson, real quick, if I could, Yeah, sure. So here's the thing. He did his job. He brought in the listeners. He brought in the most listeners ever. Right, Fox didn't do their job. They didn't get there at his advertisers. They didn't do it. So they fired him

for the failure to bring in as which is ridiculous. So in my humble opinion, he's got every right to do whatever the heck he wants to do with his life because they fired him for no good reason. They field well, I mean it comes down to some extent like entertainment contracts are interesting.

I have to deal with this, not at the level Tucker does, but um, generally there's gonna be some non competition stuff in there, and there's gonna be there's a whole list of things that can cause you to be fired, but fired, but you're not necessarily fired in the same way. There's cause, there's without cause, there's gold, there's retention stuff. I mean,

it gets pretty complex. I suspect his contract is pretty complex. However, Um it's it's with that knowledge that I theorized that he was going to bring his stick to Twitter, and it looks like that may be the case, and it would be and I think that perhaps maybe that contractually wouldn't violate a non compete. But I'm not a lawyer, so I don't know. We'll find out, so all right, cool, cool, thank you very

much. I'm sure the homeless crew will be by to pick you pick you up a little while, okay, all right, yep, yep, yeah, don't worry. They'll be kicking in your door here in just a little bit. You know. The other thing I noticed on that DHS story is these these women that have the gall, the gall of being pro life. Yes, the government's answer is calling their husbands. Yes, the the the uh. It's possibly one of the most fifties era sexist things I'm told that

you could think of. And that's it. Maybe their husbands will paddle them like in that those remember the old ads they have where the woman's getting spanked or buying the wrong detergent or something. I mean, we laughed, but again, look at I was, you know, during the news break, I was, I was kind of reading this again, and every choice starts with carl Ann's husband to discuss what you just witnessed, right as husband called

Christina's husband. Well, but that's not just about that. That's about that's literally because in that scenario, she's divorced. That's about. That's about she shouldn't have possession of her kids. That's how I read that. Right, So she's a primary caretaker following the divorce of the two kids, called the husband and say your wife's a loon and you should get the kids away from

her. That's how I read that. So it's a little bit of the sexist and a little bit of the you know, just the relationship insanity stuff. So from Tucker Carlson perspective, he I called it. You know, we mentioned the psychic nature of members of this show, but it just made too much sense. Now, whether it's an official thing, it doesn't sound

like that because it's a couple posts that Elon Musk has made. But once Twitter expanded the ability to post, you know, up to an hour of video, high quality video, and figured out a way to monetize that for Twitter users, they have a monetization. Now it opens up a world of possibilities. You know. One of the things out there. We talk about it obviously with Ross and Twitch, but Twitch is twitches seemingly doing everything in

their power to kill their own their own product. In many instances they'll ban people they're they're very woke, but they'll also ban people without telling them why they're banned. They have a giant set of double standards, and um, there's there's a whole lot if you dig into it, a whole lot of real weirdness around there. And that's why other outlets are trying to become those

streaming platforms. Kick is one, There's been a few others. YouTube would be YouTube's interface isn't that great, But they have the infrastructure to do this. And if Twitter decides that they too want to have that, um,

they're going to be quickly able to compete in that realm. But you're gonna have to train people to come to Twitter, not just for snarky one hundred and forty four character tweets, although that's the thing in the past, but rather, um, you have they have to come there seeking entertainment in the same way that people do go to a like a YouTube. There's a lot of the amount of hours, especially among younger generations, spent watching YouTube versus

traditional TV is significant. So if Twitter can bridge that gap and do so perhaps with Tucker Carlson is one of the flagships where he's he's going to go

all in and show that it can work. That could be a very that could be a significant game changer for Twitter, and that's also something that Twitter could monetize if others decide to make that transition, and if Twitter's you know, kicks appeal for those who stream like the Twitch stream guys that do the video games, but it's not all just video games, but have these you

know, these streaming relationships. Some of these cats are making millions and millions and millions of dollars and kick kick odd doesn't take as much of their revenue and they are less concerned earned with going through and trying to limit what people can say. Now, there's always going to be that dividing line. You don't want to be the brand associated with the White Power Hour, right,

some dude on there who's meeting all the definitions of racism. Some people would say, you know, let that exist so people know and then they don't have to watch it and let the marketplace deside. But they're still going to be advertising concerns, So it's a tight rope they're going to have to walk. But if Tucker Carlson is able to monetize that and Twitter is able to not just monetize it, but create a new way in which creators can put

stuff up. I think that there's a lot of people because of Twitter's willingness to not sit there and play woke politics with everything, but perhaps provide a freer can be a town square or however wish they wish to describe it, that could be something that people would go to. There's a lot of people that are big YouTubers and twitch streamers who constantly have to self regulate when they shouldn't have to. And I one of the guys I've mentioned on the show

before his YouTube account. I like it's Donut operator. Guy's ex military, ex police, but he's funny dude, and he does like he does police shooting breakdowns, and I think he does a very good job of it, and he calls out crap when he sees crap, but he provides the technical background to maybe understand why certain decisions are being made. They demonetize every one

of that dude's videos. I don't know why he's sitting there and he's providing the same analysis that CNN, if they brought on a law enforcement expert might provide. Now, granted, there might be a little bias and who CNN chooses, but the fact remains that that's all he's doing, and he's getting

demonetized every time. So he has to figure out other income streams. So if if you can have those other income streams also do what it is that you do, and you're not going to have somebody from the you know, the the Woke Advisory Board demonetizing you, trying to kick you off, giving you strikes when you're doing clearly nothing wrong but perhaps having an opinion that doesn't jive with leftist politics. People are people are going to gravitate towards that.

So this is a bigger deal. I know people are freaking out on both sides, but they're they're pretty close. They're pretty close to what I think most people want from an eye if they remove the politics from ideally what they would want. They want to be able to challenge ideas and they can do that. And Tucker Carlson, if he's able to really make that work. Man, watch out all right, forty five raced agent from the Weather Channel. He's here, yo, yo yo, what's going on, sir,

what's up? What's up? Yeah? They solved the pasta stuff. By the way, did you remember the pasta story right the woods, somebody dumped five hundred pounds of pasta always yeah, yeah, right. They couldn't figure out what was happening, so they figured it out. Now, Apparently some guy his mom died and lived in a house near the woods, and he was emptying the house and apparently took all she had. She was hoarding pasta, five hundred pounds of it, and he took it in a lot,

dumped it. He dumped it all in the woods, thinking that it would be edible for animals. And basically the way it then looked like it was cooked is because you know, it's wet out sitting outside, it's absorbing moisture. Yeah, who the hell has all that? That is a lot of pasta, And being half Italian myself, we always have a maybe a higher that average amount of pasta in the house, but certainly not five hundred pounds of it. Yeah, it's a lot. I've got ten pounds at a

time. That's even a lot. I guess maybe it must have been expired too, because I can understand how you could donate that, but they didn't. But you gotta take it all out of the boxes and stuff wasn't in the boxes, So did she have like just freeloaded in like giant toads or something. There's some questions I still need Yeah, I've got questions too, Yeah all right, oh well yeah, anyway, we're looking great, good, good pasta dumping day though, huh yeah good. Did you want to

no rain so to stay raw for quite some time? Maybe the weekend? UM looking good, real nap right now. A few clouds as you get around the Triad, but a lot of sunshine elsewhere. It did have some storms yesterday, many of them east northeast, even at the triangle. Um

today, no storms, Tomorrow, no storms. Basically upper seventies, low eighties both days, comfortable humidity the Lozi settle upper forties to low fifties, so pretty pleasant nights coming up Friday, the next noticeable change, maybe a little increase in temperature and humidity lotimate eighties, but still sunny, and then we may get some showers thundershowers over the weekend. Uh. The coverage not great, mainly during the afternoon and evening hours. Really don't see a whole

heck of a lot of rain. It'll be warm and humid. Middle eighties. Try it triangle, probably gonna get into the upper eighties. Would be surprised if somebody it's ninety degrees, especially on Saturday, because we have a little better chance some storms on Sunday, so not bad. Over the next couple of days the storms are turned probably for the upcoming weekend. Better chance toward the tali end of the weekend. And by the way, actually i'm

looking here. It was it was pasta especial expiration date, so I can make a pasta pun there. Oh all time. Yeah, And the neighbor lady one is said that they're polluting the creek and he should be arrested, so because she's crazy. So that's the rest of the story where you left it in the boxes? Send him to the Penny tentry. Let's see what you did there. I see what you did that, asta puns man. All right, I gotta roll. Thanks. A chat with Jeff Bellinger next

news show after the show is on the iHeartRadio app. Search case O Day for the podcast on the iHeartRadio app in fifty three lib up Day Now with Jeff Bounder. Jeff, what's going on? Good morning, Casey. Just got word that the month over month increase in the latest Consumer Price Index was right in line with forecast. The CPI rose four tenths percent in April, and the year over year increase was four point nine percent. That was slightly

less than expected. Stock market futures are pointing higher after that news. Now futures are up one hundred and sixty four points. Mortgage bankers reported this morning there was an increase in request for home purchase loans last week. Applications for new mortgages increased almost five percent as interest rates ticked a little bit lower. A lot of anxiety on Wall Street now over the debt ceiling standoff because neither

side has shown any sign of blinking at this point. There are just six days in which both chambers of Congress are available, and President Biden scheduled to be in Washington. The next high level meeting is set for Friday. Cineo's health is changing hands. Wanted to get to this because it's local. The Raleigh based drug research company is being bought by a consortium backed by Elliott Management.

It's a deal valued at nearly four and a half billion dollars. Cineos had just over twenty nine thousand employees as of the end of last year, and Casey the Victorious Secret Fashion Show will be back this fall, not as a live event, though the lingerie retailer has not had a show since twenty eighteen. The company says the twenty twenty three show will be recorded. It will be made available on streaming services as a feature length film. Casey,

oh okay, all right, thank you very much. Talk to you tomorrow, sir. Okay, have a good day. All right, there you go. Now the question will be if it's coming back, is it going to be the Victoria's Secret Show of old or is it going to be more the woke stuff? Right, I'm going to the angels and we want to accentuate all body types, which is fine, people coming all different body types. So if you want to do business and sell for that, then more

power to you. But that's not what people are tuning in for. Look at their website, look at their app. You know it's why are you on their website? Because I got a hot wife that I want to put in hot lingerie? All right, that's one valid excuse. I was on their website to just be creepy, you know what I'm saying. So no, dude, not shopping better websites out there, So all right, or is that just the excuse you use? Oh no, it's totally from my

wife. I mean it's it's fine if that's your thing, you want to walk around in a gimp suit. I've stood up for a year earlier. Now we were talking about it, actually just just a couple of days ago, because I was lamenting that very thing. I was kind of looking at the app again, and it's no offense to the models featured, but it's not what I personally want to see when I'm well, no, no, no, here's but here's where it makes sense, like on an app.

So if the app, you know, like the shot, if you're there shopping, having people in outfits that more that are that match your body style, I understand could be helpful, right because you know, if if everything everybody runs into this, who's not you know, running around with five percent body fat and perfectly muscled. The model that that piece of clothing is on,

that piece of clothing ain't gonna look the same on you. If you're overweight, or if you're even if you're taller, right, your frames bigger, like, it could look different. So I get that in a shopping thing. But when you're putting on your illustrious fashion show, there's a reason people are tuning in, and it's not all like perfectly innocent reasons like yours where you're just shot and for your wife because you love her. There's people

watch it for a variety of reasons. But then when you and it's it is, I don't know, it's escapist, mindless entertainment. Do you know what I'm saying? It's not there for political purposes. So once you jam politics into something that's so far removed from it, people aren't going to care. But I at least get the model on a shopping site if you're buying, if you're buying some sort of lingerie it comes into women's size sixteen? Do you want to see a size two modeling it to know what it's going

to look like? If your intent is shopping now, if you're intense not, then yeah, you want to see the two. Probably unless sixteens your think, God bless you. I'm not picking on anybody. I'm just pointing out that that's the reality. Well anyway, all right, they sell gimp suits there, They probably don't. I've never done the research. Anny, who will be back tomorrow right and early, see you that

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