My World Live, Laff, Whatever

My World Live, Laff, Whatever
TRIM Radio
My World Live, Laff, Whatever

May 02 2024 | 01:01:03

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Episode May 02, 2024 01:01:03

Hosted By

Riscalla Victoria Smith Michael Bahas Stu Shear

Show Notes

Strap on your laughing muscles and join Stu Shear in his unfiltered world! My World Live, Laff, Whatever is a satirical talk show that tackles the absurdities of life with a healthy dose of humor.

Each episode is a freewheeling exploration of current events, pop culture, and anything else that catches Stu's eye (or annoys him!). No topic is off-limits, and his guests, a rotating cast of comedians, commentators, and everyday folks, add their own unique perspectives to the mix.

Get ready for sharp wit, offbeat takes, and side-splitting commentary.  Stu isn't afraid to poke fun at himself or the world around him, and his infectious laughter is sure to have you chuckling along.

But beware, My World Live, Laff, Whatever isn't for the easily offended.  It's a show for those who appreciate a healthy dose of skepticism and can find the humor in the everyday madness. So, if you're looking for an escape from the serious and a chance to laugh at the absurdity of it all, tune in and join Stu's world!

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Episode Transcript

[00:01:41] Speaker A: Good evening, everybody. On this nice, warm Wednesday. I can't believe it. It's the 1 may. Some people would know it as May day, but it's the 1 may and it's 85 degrees here in Ohio. Normally it's about 75, and now it's 85 degrees. [00:02:04] Speaker B: I can't believe it. [00:02:07] Speaker A: You know, you go outside and you can work in the yard, you can mow the grass, you can do whatever, wash the car, have a good time. But it's 85 degrees. I can't believe it. And it's going to be probably about 80 degrees tomorrow. Gee, welcome to my world. Hey, guys. Welcome to my world. [00:02:31] Speaker B: Live. [00:02:32] Speaker A: Laughing whatever. So much stuff has been going on last week we had a heck of. [00:02:37] Speaker B: A problem signing in. [00:02:40] Speaker A: I could not do a live stream last week, and I think we had. [00:02:43] Speaker B: To do a rerun and I just. [00:02:48] Speaker A: Could not get signed in. So we had a problem with that. And then on Sunday, I had a concert night. Remember, I warned everybody that I always play concerts during the summertime and also Christmas time. [00:03:02] Speaker B: So basically the show had to be a rerun. [00:03:09] Speaker A: And luckily, I don't play concerts on Wednesday nights. [00:03:13] Speaker B: That's a good thing. [00:03:15] Speaker A: And so speaking of that, we had a very good concert, but I'll get. [00:03:19] Speaker B: Into that after we do this disclaimer. [00:03:24] Speaker A: So welcome to my world. And nothing in this show should be considered legal, medical, financial or investment advice. Take what we say with a big grain of salt and always do your own research in due diligence. We're not responsible for and expressly disclaim all liability for damages of any kind arising out of use, reference to or reliance on any information contained in this broadcast. Any persons or information or characters or. [00:03:56] Speaker B: Whatever mentioned are for the most part fictional or as close to it as we can get. [00:04:03] Speaker A: So sit back, relax and chill out. You know, if you have your popcorn or your potato chips, your chip dip, your snacks, your cold beverages. [00:04:18] Speaker B: Good, because. [00:04:20] Speaker A: We'Re just going to sit back and have a, have a good old chat tonight. Oh, and by the way, tell your. [00:04:25] Speaker B: Friends about the show and tell them. [00:04:27] Speaker A: To join us on Wednesday night at. [00:04:29] Speaker B: 08:00 p.m. And we do a lot of different things. [00:04:33] Speaker A: And, you know, sometimes I do jokes, sometimes I don't do jokes. We talk about anything that's really going on. And a lot of stuff's been going on lately, so, you know, we'll be talking about that in this show. Also, a big shout out to trim radio network for carrying the show. And we have a good group of broadcasters on the Trim radio network. And if you want to get in touch with us, if you just go. [00:05:02] Speaker B: Wtrmfm.Com, you can contact us. [00:05:10] Speaker A: It's wtrmfm.com [email protected] so you can check us out there. And if you want to be a. [00:05:21] Speaker B: Person that has their own show, you. [00:05:24] Speaker A: Know, I don't care if it's raising aardvarks or my pet moose. [00:05:31] Speaker B: Hey, let us know because you can. [00:05:34] Speaker A: Have a show right here on WTRM. And we have a lot of good shows that are out there. And I'll tell you what, a lot of good people, too. And if you want to advertise, let us know. You just contact us, wtrm fm.com. You know, we also have different types of shows. We had natural marketer podcast with Victoria Smith, and she's on I'm on Tonight with my world Live, laughing, whatever. And we also have adventure awaits around the Bend radio show and podcast. We have ranch it up with Tigger and Beck life walk with Christ God with Michael Bayhas. We've got money and change. [00:06:23] Speaker B: And that's every, every Sunday night at. [00:06:28] Speaker A: 07:00 p.m. We have the Nixie weekly music countdown. We have the take point 22 radio show. We have, of course, Victoria Smith's natural marketer podcast. And we have other shows. And you know, we're going to have offsides coming up. We've got Roscala's red pill reality show. Hey, Roscala, come on, be a good bud here. [00:06:54] Speaker B: You know, you always have. [00:06:55] Speaker A: You can take the red pill or the blue pill. I want the green pill. [00:06:59] Speaker B: You haven't come up with a green pill yet. [00:07:02] Speaker A: Oh, I don't know what I'm going to do with you, huh? I just kid him about it. There is no green pill. [00:07:08] Speaker B: And if there was, yeah, I take a look at it wouldn't mean that I take it. [00:07:13] Speaker A: But you want to check us out. [00:07:14] Speaker B: Wtrmradio.Com or trimradio.com, check us out. [00:07:24] Speaker A: And a good way to support these shows is buy the merchandise. Or as Michael Behoss says, buy the merch. You got to buy the merch. Well, what do we have for merch? [00:07:36] Speaker B: Well, we've got water bottles. [00:07:39] Speaker A: We've got mugs. We've got mugs that change colors. We've got hoodies and t shirts. You name it, it's there. Just go and click on the shop now button. [00:07:52] Speaker B: And hey, it's there. [00:07:55] Speaker A: Every money that we get from that goes back into the station. We don't get paid for doing these shows. [00:08:01] Speaker B: Really? [00:08:02] Speaker A: I don't want to get paid for doing the shows because it just means more taxes. I don't mind paying my fair share of taxes, but I don't like to overly pay taxes. So I'm donating my time, my humor and expertise, I guess. Do I have expertise in humor? Sometimes I've been accused of weird senses. [00:08:23] Speaker B: Of humor because I always see funny. [00:08:26] Speaker A: Things happening, whether it's a politician or whatever. But anyhow, support the show, buy the merchandise. It helps pay the bills, and airtime is not cheap. And so anything that you buy goes directly into the show. [00:08:44] Speaker B: If you want to donate to the. [00:08:46] Speaker A: Station, you can donate to the station. [00:08:49] Speaker B: Okay. [00:08:50] Speaker A: You can do that to help keep us on the air. And we go worldwide. So if you want to advertise with us, hey, that's fantastic because, because we go to Europe. [00:09:01] Speaker B: I've got listeners in Myanmar, India, South. [00:09:05] Speaker A: Africa, oh, gee, the United States, Canada, every place but Iceland. I've never gotten a response back from Iceland. So if you're listening and you're in Iceland, contact wtrmfm.com and let us know that you're listening to the show. [00:09:27] Speaker B: So do that. But a big shout out to the. [00:09:30] Speaker A: Trim radio network for carrying the show. [00:09:33] Speaker B: Also a big shout out to the University of Finley. [00:09:37] Speaker A: Hey, they're getting ready to graduate. [00:09:42] Speaker B: Putting. [00:09:43] Speaker A: Four years in, and now they may end up, some of them will go six years to get their doctorate degree, and that may just be a continuation over the summer. But check them out. University of Findlay at www.findlay.edu. It's a very good school. They have a very good bachelor's program, master's program, or doctoral program, depending on what you want to do. They have three campuses in Findlay, Ohio. [00:10:16] Speaker B: They have the equestrian campus where they. [00:10:20] Speaker A: Do pre veterinarian, and they also do equestrian studies, you know, horses and so forth, animal care and all that kind of stuff. And then you go to the main campus, and the main campus has all of the rest of the degrees except for the hazard materials campus that's in. [00:10:37] Speaker B: A separate area in Finley. [00:10:40] Speaker A: And it's one of a few hazardous materials schools. So you can imagine what's been done with hazardous materials up at New Palestine or Palestine, up in the northern part of Ohio, in the northeastern part of Ohio. They probably had some of the students go up there and do a research project, but they're very good with the Hazmat training school. [00:11:07] Speaker B: So you want to check that out. [00:11:09] Speaker A: But check out the University of Finley. It's a good school. And, you know, I mean, you have 3500 to 4000 students there. And some of them take european studies, some of them do online studies. It just depends on your coursework. And, you know, if you're into sports, NCAA division two, that's where they're classified in. They have good basketball teams, good baseball teams, football teams, track. The tennis team was doing very well, but the golf team was nationally known. I think they ended up like third in the nation for division two. So, you know, you want to check. [00:12:00] Speaker B: Them out at the University of Findlay. [00:12:03] Speaker A: It's a good school, good facilities, great professors. And doctor Kathy fell, she is the president of the university. She has done a superlative job. [00:12:16] Speaker B: Fantastic even. And. [00:12:21] Speaker A: She'S really good. She really is. And if you've ever heard of Hillsdale College, well, Hillsdale's up in Michigan and Finley, of course, is in Ohio. [00:12:30] Speaker B: But they get together on different things. They're kind of similarly inclined. [00:12:38] Speaker A: I think Hillsdale has a little bit different class structure, but they're still very good schools. Very good. So you want to check out the University of Finley at WW Dot find. [00:12:54] Speaker B: Hey, rusty Ducks custom pens and blanks. [00:12:59] Speaker A: You have to check it out on Facebook. And Phil over at Rusty Ducks custom pens and blanks has done an excellent job. And if your company, your school, your. [00:13:13] Speaker B: Fraternity or sorority, or even if you. [00:13:17] Speaker A: Have a pen design that you want to have made for Christmas presents or. [00:13:21] Speaker B: Whatever, you contact Phil over at Rusty Ducks custom pens and blanks and he. [00:13:29] Speaker A: Will work with you to design a custom pen. Now Michael has a couple of his pens and I have one of their, one of his pens. And I'll tell you what, they're beautiful pens. They really are handcrafted. Now the blanks are the center portion. And guess what? He makes those. And so if the, you have a hobby where you make your own pens, but you don't make your center section, he'll work with you to design it and then cast the center section of the pen to match the pen structure normally across pen platform to use. It's beautiful. If you're into second amendment things, he's got a couple of really good second amendment pens. [00:14:13] Speaker B: So you want to check them out. [00:14:14] Speaker A: At rusty ducks custom pens and blanks. And that's r u s t y d u k apostrophe s, custom pens and blanks. They're on Facebook. [00:14:28] Speaker B: Check them out. [00:14:29] Speaker A: You'll like his work. A lot of people do. [00:14:31] Speaker B: He's even sold some down at Disney World. [00:14:37] Speaker A: And that's really a pat on the back. Very good custom work. Well, a big shout out to money and change every Sunday at 07:00 p.m. And this last Sunday, since I had a concert, I had to play. Well, guess what? We had an encore version, and the encore edition happens to be a show from the past. It might be a month past or two months past, but it's still there. [00:15:06] Speaker B: A lot of the shows are prevalent. So what's going on now? [00:15:10] Speaker A: Let's face it, our economy is basically in a world of turmoil. And if you notice that we've had inflation and everything else today I was. [00:15:21] Speaker B: Going to post something because I was. [00:15:24] Speaker A: Listening to an economic thing. [00:15:28] Speaker B: And I. [00:15:28] Speaker A: Was really engrossed in it. And then I had something else happen and I had to get out of. [00:15:34] Speaker B: That page that I had and I canceled it and I was right in. [00:15:40] Speaker A: The middle of it. And we're talking about all the things that are going on with the economy. [00:15:46] Speaker B: With the banks, with maybe going to. [00:15:49] Speaker A: A digital currency, what that's going to. [00:15:51] Speaker B: Do, what are we going to do with the paper money that we have? [00:15:57] Speaker A: What do we do with our investments? What do we do with stocks and bonds? What are, you know, I mean, it's getting scary, guys. [00:16:06] Speaker B: And then we have rumors of war. [00:16:10] Speaker A: And rumors of war and all this kind of stuff because some people are. [00:16:14] Speaker B: Saying that the banks are trying to. [00:16:16] Speaker A: Cover up their mistakes. Well, the politicians, too. And so, you know, we'll get into a little bit of that with money and change slash financially prepped here on Facebook. I always post a lot of stuff there. There are a lot of videos post out that are very pertinent. And prepper princess was talking about saving money and fixing different types of food. And I didn't know that she was a chef. [00:16:43] Speaker B: Well, she isn't, but she made a quesadilla that was excellent. [00:16:48] Speaker A: And she said, you know, why go. [00:16:49] Speaker B: To Taco Bell and buy a taco for $7? [00:16:54] Speaker A: And she lives in California. So I mentioned that's why the prices are up. When you can make one just as good or better. [00:17:03] Speaker B: For a little bit. [00:17:04] Speaker A: More than a dollar, why go out and eat when you can just go and make it yourself? [00:17:15] Speaker B: I don't know. [00:17:16] Speaker A: If I could make myself a quesadilla, I probably could. There are other things I'd want to make, too. But she likes to do quesadillas. She only eats once a day. [00:17:28] Speaker B: And. [00:17:30] Speaker A: She makes her own food. And that's great. [00:17:32] Speaker B: It's fantastic. [00:17:35] Speaker A: I don't know if I could put up with my own cooking even though I have been, believe it or not, I've had chef instruction for some of the stuff that I did when I was in business as a consultant. And I had to take these classes at different universities and colleges, and they may have only been for three or four days, but we're in there, we're learning about food preparation and everything else, and we made a few things that were really good. [00:18:05] Speaker B: But prepper princess, she's very frugal. [00:18:10] Speaker A: Very frugal. I'm not as frugal, but all my bills are paid. I don't owe anybody anything. That's the good thing. And so, like I've always said on. [00:18:23] Speaker B: All the shows, pay down your debt. [00:18:30] Speaker A: Put some money aside. [00:18:31] Speaker B: I mean, every nickel helps. [00:18:34] Speaker A: I mean, I've got a cat food fund for my neighbor. Any change goes into a jar, which counts money as it goes in. And what's in that jar is then converted to cat food. And since her cats have to have a special type of food. [00:18:51] Speaker B: Yeah, I mean, I donate to that. [00:18:55] Speaker A: And so right now we've got, I. [00:18:56] Speaker B: Think, $80 in change and that she. [00:19:01] Speaker A: Can turn in to buy expensive cat food, which it is. It's about $45 a bag. So once I get to dollar 90, then I'll go ahead and give it. [00:19:11] Speaker B: To her, and she can stock up on food for the cats, because in. [00:19:17] Speaker A: A bad economy, you have to count every penny. [00:19:21] Speaker B: Trust me. [00:19:24] Speaker A: A big shout out. [00:19:28] Speaker B: To big family. [00:19:29] Speaker A: Homestead with Brad and Krista. They still haven't said whether or not they're moving from Wisconsin to Iowa, and so we'll wait and see what happens there. I've known them for a long time. [00:19:42] Speaker B: They're very good people, and you'll like. [00:19:47] Speaker A: Them, too, living on a farm in the middle of Wisconsin. And now it's starting to be nice. [00:19:52] Speaker B: Weather, so hopefully they don't get the. [00:19:55] Speaker A: Tornadoes and everything that a lot of other people have gotten. And we'll talk about that here a little bit. Deep south homestead with Danny and Wanda king. Yeah, boy. They're down to Wiggins, Mississippi. It's about 100 miles north of the Gulf of Mexico. And they have two plots of land that they farm, and they just don't talk about farming. They talk about life in general and the economy and everything. And Danny usually does that on his Sunday morning talk. So you want to check out Danny and Wanda King at the Deep south homestead. You learn a lot. [00:20:40] Speaker B: And. [00:20:42] Speaker A: They were talking about different types of jellies that she likes to make. I've never heard of some of them. [00:20:48] Speaker B: But I guess they're good. So check them out, Danny. [00:20:52] Speaker A: Wanda King at Deep south homestead. Great people. Southern prepper one with Dave Kobler. Check him out on YouTube. You have to. All these people are on YouTube. Dave Kobler talks about what's going on, boots on the ground and the economy and what's going on. And he's down in South Carolina, almost into North Carolina. Matter of fact, over the ridge, I think, is North Carolina, where he's living. [00:21:22] Speaker B: Something around pumpkin patch. [00:21:25] Speaker A: He was talking about the pumpkin patch. [00:21:27] Speaker B: Fire department one time. [00:21:30] Speaker A: I looked it up and there it was, a volunteer fire department out in the middle of nowhere, out in the boonies. So it is a life, a real. [00:21:38] Speaker B: Place, a live place. [00:21:40] Speaker A: Yeah, of course it is. [00:21:41] Speaker B: He lives there. [00:21:43] Speaker A: And then we've got Ed Carswell at prepper nurse one. He's still building up his property and fixing his gravel road that winds forever to get to his property. Beautiful sight. I mean, I love to go down. [00:22:00] Speaker B: There and visit because the scenery is beautiful. [00:22:04] Speaker A: I mean, he even has an area where he has artesian wells. [00:22:09] Speaker B: He's also got a running creek, small. [00:22:13] Speaker A: River on the property, and a beautiful view. And one of these days he's going to get that all build up and it's going to look really fantastic. Oh, and then we've got Batara at Appalachia's homestead. You have to check her out. I mean, she's a real honest, down to earth person. And she talks about, yeah, some farming because she raises some animals, but she also talks about the economy. She talks about the way people have acted and so forth. And lately we've had a lot of people acting up around, if you follow. [00:22:53] Speaker B: The news, and then there's LDS prepper. [00:22:59] Speaker A: And I'll tell you what, he talks about communication. [00:23:03] Speaker B: Oh, by the way, communication wise right. [00:23:06] Speaker A: Here, you know, I've always talked about GMRS radios. Dollar 35 for a ten year license. Anybody in the family can use it. The radio I'm holding up here is a pronounced ocean, but it's Wou X. [00:23:21] Speaker B: U N. It's a 935 g. And. [00:23:26] Speaker A: With this I can talk to Dayton, 35 to 40 miles away. [00:23:30] Speaker B: It's great. [00:23:31] Speaker A: And you meet new friends along the way. We're not hams. [00:23:36] Speaker B: But we communicate. [00:23:37] Speaker A: And a lot of it's late night, people getting off work and so forth. They just like to talk on these things, and they can be used in an emergency to contact different people. So if you had a few GMRS radios in your family, then they could communicate during an emergency when the phone lines don't work or the tv's not working or tornadoes are going on, whatever. So it's a good thing to have. So check them out. It's a GMRS radio. You can get Midland or a lot of other radios. Tid radio. Tid radio. H three and h eight are some. [00:24:18] Speaker B: Of you talk about, but it's interesting. And you meet a lot of different people. [00:24:25] Speaker A: Wow, that's a lot of stuff to talk about. And we did back to the concert. [00:24:32] Speaker B: Oh my God, you know, Sunday, for. [00:24:36] Speaker A: Money and change, we had to do an encore edition because there was no way that I could do a show and a concert and a show at the same time. There was no way. And we get together in a place called Tip City, Ohio, at the Tip center. And our practice facilities are there. But also one of our performance facilities is there. And we had a really good crowd. Of course, it's free parking. [00:25:09] Speaker B: And people like to listen to bands. [00:25:13] Speaker A: And it's, it's an or, it's not an orchestra, it's a concert band, if you want to call it that. But we have 70 members, and out of the 70 members, some of them are ex professional musicians, some are professional musicians that play. [00:25:28] Speaker B: And our drummer Joey, he gets called. [00:25:34] Speaker A: To play in Vegas. So he may be around Ohio and practicing with the band. All of a sudden he's got to go to Vegas and play drums. [00:25:44] Speaker B: He's a fantastic drummer and he does gigs like that. [00:25:50] Speaker A: Music jobs, they call him gigs in the profession. And we have other people that are semi retired or retired that have played their instrument for years. I know I played for over 50, probably 55, 56 years. And I have fun doing it. I'm not the best one around. [00:26:12] Speaker B: I don't profess to do that, but. [00:26:15] Speaker A: I have fun playing, and that's great. And I'll play as long as I can and sit back and enjoy the music. But we have people from all walks of life. We've got nurses, we've got educators, we've got musicians, we've got farmers, all kinds of people, but they love music. And we have a good band. We really do. And you can just listen to the applause from the people that are there. And the tip center is a great place, and you can rent offices there. You can have meetings there, plenty of meeting space. It's a beautiful, beautiful setup. I really enjoy that, and I really appreciate them giving the band a place to practice. And then we put on several performances. We will do a street performance in. [00:27:13] Speaker B: The end of June, and so there'll. [00:27:18] Speaker A: Be a encore edition, rewind an encore edition. And then the rest of the summer we're working on olympic music. And some of the stuff that we are going to be using, we play before. And on the other hand, we've ordered new music and it's still in Europe at the publisher there. And so we'll be getting that probably. [00:27:44] Speaker B: In a couple of weeks, hopefully, because. [00:27:47] Speaker A: We have to practice a whole new set of music. And we do, um, basically popular music. We did the mamas and the papas. We've done the Beatles, Barry Manilow, we've. [00:27:59] Speaker B: Done oh, gee, Frankie Valley, that was one. [00:28:10] Speaker A: They were all hits. And we have, we have a blast playing those. And so anyhow, that's why we have encore editions. I just got to tell you that, because I only have six during the summer, so that'll be six encore editions. And we won't have anything on Wednesdays. Wednesdays is open for me. I don't have anything going on Wednesdays. So we'll always have a live show. Unless for some reason our streamyard doesn't let me in. [00:28:38] Speaker B: For a reason, I can't log in. [00:28:41] Speaker A: And that's what happened last week. And hopefully we don't have any more problems with that. [00:28:48] Speaker B: But it's the Sunday concerts, that's, that's. [00:28:52] Speaker A: A b, because the Sunday concerts, there's no way I can do a show. So that's why we do the encore editions of money and change. [00:29:01] Speaker B: Wow. [00:29:02] Speaker A: What's going on with us? What's going on in your world? My world's been crazy. [00:29:10] Speaker B: It really has. You know, I put up something last. [00:29:16] Speaker A: Week and I was ready to do a live show and I couldn't do it. I was frustrated. And normally I post about an hour before the show and saying it's going to be live or it's going to be a rerun. And last week we had planned to do live, but for some reason we could not get into streamyard, and that's what we basically use. There are a lot of people on. [00:29:38] Speaker B: YouTube that use streamyard and it's easy. [00:29:43] Speaker A: To use, but this time it was cantankerous. [00:29:46] Speaker B: I can't have a lot of stuff on the screen. [00:29:50] Speaker A: I can't have a lot of browsers. And normally during the day I'm using a browser called brave. I'm using Firefox. Sometimes I'm using Google Chrome. I just don't stick to one browser. And of course, Microsoft always wants me to use their stuff. [00:30:12] Speaker B: I don't, and I don't always use Google. [00:30:17] Speaker A: I use Firefox and I use brave. And brave is a pretty good one. I like it because once I watch things, it's already in brave. And when I cancel out and close up for the night in the morning. [00:30:29] Speaker B: I can start it back up, click. [00:30:31] Speaker A: On Brave and everything I was watching. [00:30:33] Speaker B: And stunning the night before. [00:30:36] Speaker A: It comes up on the screen. [00:30:39] Speaker B: It's great. I love it. [00:30:41] Speaker A: It's not intrusive, it's pretty good deal. Well, anyhow, wow. Stuff to talk about. How about the weather, man? Have you had the storms? [00:30:54] Speaker B: Man? I can't, I can't believe a lot. [00:30:59] Speaker A: Of the stuff that's been going on with the storms in the Midwest. [00:31:03] Speaker B: Well, even down in Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri. [00:31:08] Speaker A: Or some people say when it gets really hot, it's called misery. And storms in Arkansas, storms in Illinois, some cases Iowa. And they say, oh, it's climate change. A study was done that when Mars gains two degrees warmer, earth gets two degrees warmer. Well, what causes that? [00:31:40] Speaker B: Well, maybe it's due to the sun and the radiation. [00:31:47] Speaker A: Who knows? We don't change all that much. So, you know, if Mars gets warmer, we're going to get warmer. Maybe not as warm, but we're going to get warmer. If Mars gets colder, well then we're going to get colder. It's just the way the cycles work. But you look at all the storms. Have you ever heard of a guy. [00:32:08] Speaker B: By the name of Reed Timmer? [00:32:11] Speaker A: T I m M E R. He's. [00:32:13] Speaker B: A. [00:32:16] Speaker A: Weatherman, if you want to call it that, weather researcher. [00:32:20] Speaker B: And it's really doctor Reid Timmer. [00:32:24] Speaker A: And he has a vehicle that he built called the dominator and it can withstand a direct hit from a tornado. And he drives into tornadoes, he's looking for bad storms. [00:32:38] Speaker B: And you can follow him on YouTube. [00:32:45] Speaker A: And I do that when there are bad storms and I'm notified that he's doing a live broadcast and I can click on that and see the storms live. [00:32:54] Speaker B: And he was tracking a tornado that. [00:32:59] Speaker A: Hit, and I think it was in Oklahoma or else it was in Kansas. But what happened was they were within a mile to 2 miles of a real tornado. That was really wicked, I mean really wicked looking. It was twisting and curling around, doing some damage. And so they got in position and they put up a drone to photograph the way that the tornado was operating. [00:33:28] Speaker B: And live color shots and you could. [00:33:32] Speaker A: See the tornado coming at them and they thought, oh boy, we're gonna get hit. Well, then they pack everything up, they get the drone retrieved, they get back into the dominator, close everything up, and they have a way to anchor it. [00:33:46] Speaker B: Into the ground so it doesn't get sucked up in the tornado and it goes by. [00:33:53] Speaker A: And then they drive over to this space or this place, and houses were. [00:34:01] Speaker B: Just leveled and they got out of. [00:34:06] Speaker A: The dominator and they were yelling at people, is anybody here? Anybody alive? And I mean, you're talking about devastation like you've never seen before. Well, that's what's happening out in Texas and Oklahoma and into Kansas and so forth, even into Iowa. And you can get on weather underground and you can check the radar there. And a matter of fact, after this show, I will probably go to weather underground and see what the weather is for my area for tomorrow. You always have to check this stuff. [00:34:46] Speaker B: Out. [00:34:48] Speaker A: Because it's scary. [00:34:50] Speaker B: I mean, I've been through a hurricane. [00:34:52] Speaker A: Which I never want to go through again. And I've been through several tornadoes that didn't hit me, but they were within 300ft of me. And I'll tell you what, that gets. [00:35:04] Speaker B: Kind of scary. [00:35:09] Speaker A: Especially when the door starts flapping and tree limbs fly by a glass door and you're going, oh, boy. And I watched the tornado actually go across the railroad tracks, follow the tracks. [00:35:21] Speaker B: A little bit, picked up a roof, an entire roof of a factory and disintegrated it. [00:35:29] Speaker A: I mean, it just went up in one piece and all of a sudden, little pieces all over. And we're getting all these storms lately and, you know, I'm wondering about what was going on. And I was checking something on wikipedia, and there was a tornado outbreak in the seventies back in 1974, and it lasted April 3 and fourth and 74, and it was a super outbreak is what they called it. And over 100 tornadoes in a 24 hours period. Hundred. Now, I don't know what happened in. [00:36:06] Speaker B: The last couple of days, but can. [00:36:08] Speaker A: You imagine a hundred tornadoes? And then after a while, we don't have any, and then it gears back up. Well, guess what? We've got tornadoes again. And weather is not basically being kind to us. I don't know about you, but I haven't put my plants outside yet because. [00:36:28] Speaker B: Of number one bad weather, hail and strong winds. [00:36:35] Speaker A: Now, hopefully this next week, I can get my tomato plants in, I can get my pepper plants in, things like that and start growing some cilantro, which I love. I make a mean salsa. [00:36:49] Speaker B: Trust me, it's not hot, it's just tasty. [00:36:53] Speaker A: One of my chef classes that I went to. But I'll tell you what, the weather's been bad, and I've had tornadoes hit. [00:37:03] Speaker B: North of where I live, to the west of where I live, one came. [00:37:09] Speaker A: Within, I would say, about 5 miles, and then it goes around the town. I guess the Indians knew that if you created a settlement between two rivers. [00:37:21] Speaker B: The storms don't really bother the location. And we were lucky here between two rivers, and the great Miami river is. [00:37:36] Speaker A: One of them, Stillwater river is another. And we haven't had a lot of tornadoes, and we had one hit a. [00:37:44] Speaker B: Few weeks ago, but that was farther. [00:37:48] Speaker A: Away, about five, six, 7 miles away. And, of course, you've heard of tornadoes. [00:37:56] Speaker B: At Indian Lake and the devastation that's up there and everything, and it's, it's. [00:38:04] Speaker A: That weather cycle that we're running into. So what you need to do is make sure you have a radio, GMRs radio, like I've got. I can listen to regular radio, fm. [00:38:16] Speaker B: Radio stations, and I can also communicate. [00:38:20] Speaker A: So you take that to your storm shoulder. You get in your lowest place. If you got a basement, if you. [00:38:26] Speaker B: Have a ranch style house like I. [00:38:29] Speaker A: Have, there is no basement. [00:38:32] Speaker B: Ain't none. [00:38:34] Speaker A: So I have to head to the bathtub in the center of the house and cover up. And I had a friend of mine do that a couple blocks away. And I said, well, what's going on? She says, I was in the bathtub. I said, taking a bath at the time? No, I covered myself with the mattress. Tornadoes, tornadoes. She doesn't like them. I said, I don't like them either. I've got a weather radio that I listen to. I've got my GMRs radio to communicate with. [00:39:03] Speaker B: I've got a fancy portable police scanner. [00:39:08] Speaker A: That I can use. It's good for about 18 hours. Battery life, now, that's another story in itself. [00:39:16] Speaker B: So, you know, I, when the tornado. [00:39:19] Speaker A: Sirens go off, I don't take it lightly. I want to find out what's going. [00:39:23] Speaker B: On, because who knows? [00:39:26] Speaker A: Maybe just one tornado will come through my area, even though it's between two rivers. You know, maybe the Indians said, well, generally it'll work, but maybe not. It wasn't 100% chance of not hitting, but so far it's been pretty decent. It goes around us, which I love. But prepare for the storms. Make sure you have plenty of water, some food that you can use, some way to heat the food. If not, you know, you can take a can of ravioli, open it up, and eat it cold. You don't have to heat it. I don't think I'd like it, but if it's something to eat and you had to eat, yeah. Make sure you have your medications. That's a big thing. Make sure you have your medications. Make sure you have water, a good first aid kit, not the cheapies that you get at Wally World. Get yourself a good first aid kit, and you may have to get something off of Amazon or some other source. [00:40:31] Speaker B: But make sure you have one. Make sure you have a tourniquet kit. [00:40:36] Speaker A: An IFAC individual first aid kit. I've got a couple of those, and. [00:40:40] Speaker B: I keep one in the car, and. [00:40:43] Speaker A: I have a travel bag, and I've got all kinds of stuff in that bag. It's an emergency bag I used in the wintertime, and I really should have. [00:40:50] Speaker B: A small one for the summertime with. [00:40:55] Speaker A: Extra water and some extra food if you need it, you know, protein bars and stuff like that. It's good to prepare. [00:41:01] Speaker B: Okay. [00:41:02] Speaker A: You're never totally prepared for bad weather. [00:41:06] Speaker B: Bad things, and, you know, bad things often happen to good people, and so. [00:41:12] Speaker A: You have to survive as best you can. Wow. We talked about storms. How are storms in your area? You know, if you live in Texas and Oklahoma, they're used to stuff like. [00:41:26] Speaker B: That. [00:41:28] Speaker A: And they often have storm shelters. I've known some people that live out in Texas and Oklahoma, and they do have storm shelters. They have backup generators. They're generally prepared even in the wintertime when everything froze. Remember when that happened? I had a friend of mine that I went to school with, and she's a retired police officer from Dallas. They lived outside of Dallas, and their. [00:41:54] Speaker B: Power just went out. [00:41:58] Speaker A: And it was wintertime. And I sent her an email, and hopefully she got the email, she responded back. She says, oh, we're doing fine. We have plenty of water, we have plenty of food, and our generator has. [00:42:10] Speaker B: Been working around the clock, so we've kept warm. [00:42:16] Speaker A: We have candles for light and heat and so forth. [00:42:19] Speaker B: So they, they had a really good. [00:42:23] Speaker A: Deal happening with them, and some people just were not prepared. Oh, what about the protests that's going on? Oh, my God. [00:42:31] Speaker B: Have you watched any of that? [00:42:36] Speaker A: You know, I try to remember back when I was in school at Ohio University, and we had beer riots. Kids would get together and go up. [00:42:47] Speaker B: Richland Avenue, and they would go up and just basically goof around. [00:42:55] Speaker A: And then they would go to the bars, get drunk, come back, study, and go to class the next day. Those were the beer riots. No damage was ever done. There was a snowball riot, which was interesting because everybody in the west green got together for a gigantic snowball fight. [00:43:13] Speaker B: And it was just for fun. [00:43:16] Speaker A: Nobody was damaging anything. The snowballs were flying. [00:43:20] Speaker B: And here comes this van that was. [00:43:24] Speaker A: A university police van and we heard. [00:43:27] Speaker B: This little tiny loud speaker saying, stop the snowball fight or we'll collect all. [00:43:34] Speaker A: Of your id cards and you won't be able to go to events. Well, there were two cops in that van. [00:43:41] Speaker B: There were probably 3000 students on the. [00:43:45] Speaker A: West green having a blast, throwing snowballs. Not to hurt people, but they were just throwing snowballs. And somebody said, get the van. And next thing you know, oh my God, snowballs came out of everywhere towards that van. And the cops turned around. They had their little flashing light on and they were talking over the loudspeaker and scooting out of there. And it was so, it was so funny when they turned from throwing snowballs. [00:44:15] Speaker B: At themselves and just throwing snow in the air and so forth to being. [00:44:20] Speaker A: Focused on that van. And that van was turning around and the cops were splitting out of there. That, that was a, that was a biggie. The beer riots in the spring, that was a normal thing, but no damage was done. They just marched up Richland Avenue and. [00:44:35] Speaker B: Went up there and they split off. [00:44:37] Speaker A: And went to their own individual bars. [00:44:40] Speaker B: That they would go to and no. [00:44:43] Speaker A: Damage would get done. [00:44:44] Speaker B: Nobody would be hurt or anything. It was just something to take the stress off. [00:44:49] Speaker A: And then when I went to Findlay, which is now the University of Findlay, but it was university or it was Findlay College at the time and we had about 2500 students on campus. And it was a good academic campus. It really was. You studied and if you didn't study and your professor found out that you didn't study they would grill you over the coals. Trust me, it happened. The professor wanted you to succeed so much that if you weren't doing what they expected they would call you into their office and have a sit down with you. That's how good that school is. Because they care. Well, when I was at Findlay we never had a protest until the Kent State protest May 4 of 1970. And we really didn't follow it. [00:45:50] Speaker B: We knew. [00:45:50] Speaker A: We knew something was going on at Kent State. [00:45:52] Speaker B: We didn't know all the specifics. [00:45:56] Speaker A: We had a chance to watch the news on the communal tv in the. [00:46:01] Speaker B: Dormitory and we had one on each floor. [00:46:04] Speaker A: And so people would watch the news after they had their dinner and then. [00:46:07] Speaker B: It was off to study. [00:46:11] Speaker A: Except for one guy. We called him TV Tim. And I don't know how many classes he ever took there. I think it was only maybe one or two. [00:46:20] Speaker B: And we'd walk in and say, hey, tv, what's on the boob tube tonight? [00:46:27] Speaker A: And he can name all the programs. We never knew what his major was. He was just known as TV Tim. Well, anyhow, the thing went on up. [00:46:40] Speaker B: At Kent State, and then we heard. [00:46:43] Speaker A: Oh, they had protests at Bowling Green State University, which is about 30 miles to the north. [00:46:50] Speaker B: We thought, okay, that's okay. [00:46:55] Speaker A: Nobody here on campus is going to protest. It just doesn't happen. Finley was an academic school. We didn't really party on campus. [00:47:06] Speaker B: It wasn't allowed. [00:47:08] Speaker A: If you were there to go to. [00:47:09] Speaker B: School, you were there to study. [00:47:12] Speaker A: I mean, it was really academic. It really was. And it was a springtime right around now. Today is May 1. Well, this was like, maybe May 6, 7th or 8th, something like that. By the time it got to Findlay. [00:47:28] Speaker B: And some people came in, and we. [00:47:31] Speaker A: Were all just out, a nice spring day and so forth. And it was warm like it is. [00:47:38] Speaker B: Now, and all of a sudden, it. [00:47:41] Speaker A: Was like 06:00, and I think the. [00:47:44] Speaker B: What they call the old main, which. [00:47:47] Speaker A: Is the main classroom building, it's about a four story building, maybe five story. [00:47:51] Speaker B: Building with all the classrooms in it. [00:47:55] Speaker A: Administrative offices and so forth. It was built back in the 18. [00:47:57] Speaker B: Hundreds, and so people were out and around, so forth. [00:48:03] Speaker A: Now, all of a sudden, somebody saw. [00:48:06] Speaker B: Banners hanging out of a corner room. [00:48:12] Speaker A: Up on, I believe, the fourth floor. [00:48:15] Speaker B: And. [00:48:18] Speaker A: Other people gathered outside, and I. [00:48:20] Speaker B: Heard about it, and I was at. [00:48:22] Speaker A: The radio station at WLFV. I think it's what it was, campus radio station. [00:48:32] Speaker B: And I just finished up my, my. [00:48:35] Speaker A: Show, and I came over, and I thought, well, we'll just see what's going on. And these banners were hanging outside the window, and there were protesters up on the fourth floor leaning out the window and shouting about Kent state and protests, and we're all watching, and it's like, okay, all right. Yeah, okay. Did they know that there's nobody in the building past 05:00 and the building is locked. There are no night classes at that time. And so we're all outside, and we're looking up there, and we're watching in. [00:49:14] Speaker B: Banners and so forth, and somebody said. [00:49:17] Speaker A: You know what room they're in? [00:49:21] Speaker B: And I said, wait a minute. [00:49:26] Speaker A: They're in the fourth floor bathroom, the men's room on the fourth floor. It was known as the stinkiest restroom in the whole building. I don't think I'd go to classes up there. But anyhow, they had these banners out and so forth. And so the dean of students came over to me. He said, hey, stu. [00:49:47] Speaker B: He said, what's going on? [00:49:50] Speaker A: And I said, well, it's like this, I think we got some protesters from Bowling Green down here or Kent State, wherever, and they're up in the restroom up there. And they said, protesting in the restroom? What do we ought to do? I said, just leave them. Protest. They were so stupid to be in the fourth floor restroom, the stinkiest place around, and they lock themselves in there. So let them stay in the stink, and in the morning, have campus security unlock the building, go through and chase them out. [00:50:33] Speaker B: And make sure that they. [00:50:35] Speaker A: Didn'T do any damage in any one of the classrooms in that building. Says, that sounds reasonable. And so we watched a little bit, then everybody left. And here they were in the stinkiest bathroom in the entire campus. I mean, nobody would use that place, even though they had custodians to clean it. It probably had a hundred years worth. [00:50:58] Speaker B: Of stink in it. [00:51:00] Speaker A: That's how bad it was. And sure enough, the building was opened up in the morning, they did a security sweep, and these guys sneaked out. They left, taking their banners and everything with them. They probably had to go find someplace where they could take a shower, because. [00:51:16] Speaker B: I mean, oh, I can still remember how that reeked. [00:51:23] Speaker A: So I can imagine how they smelled. [00:51:25] Speaker B: When they left the building and classes went on about their normal behavior. [00:51:31] Speaker A: That's what it was. And, you know, you go back in the seventies and you have different types of protests, anti draft protests. You've got 100 people protest in Albany, New York, you know, against the draft. We had moratoriums and about disbanding different things. Jim Cairns, a member of the australian parliament, leads over 100,000 people in a demonstration in Melbourne and then the Kent state, Cambodia protest in Washington, DC. I mean, it was protest, and people who don't learn their history are doomed to repeat it. And some people that were really dumb have repeated it often enough, especially politicians. [00:52:28] Speaker B: Okay? [00:52:31] Speaker A: It's like, gee, they graduated as attorneys, but did they actually learn anything out. [00:52:36] Speaker B: Of history, or did they just follow the steps? [00:52:41] Speaker A: And so this is a resurgence of all that's going on with the palestinian protesters and so forth. Are they students there at Columbia? [00:52:52] Speaker B: If they're not students and they're causing damage, wouldn't it make sense to arrest them. [00:53:02] Speaker A: If they were foreign nationals? Wouldn't it make sense to deport them if they were locals and they were causing the problems and protesting just a protest and whatever, or somebody was paying. [00:53:16] Speaker B: Them to protest, wouldn't it make sense. [00:53:20] Speaker A: To go ahead and say, well, guess what? Your government likes you so much that you are going to spend some time in a facility with walls and bars, better known as the Gray bar Hotel or some prison, and you'll be there for 90 days for being a bad person. Well, anyhow, these protests are going on. [00:53:43] Speaker B: And this goes back to 1971. [00:53:51] Speaker A: These protests have to be put on by somebody. [00:53:54] Speaker B: Come on. It's just not one group of a couple people saying, oh, let's protest up at Finley. [00:54:02] Speaker A: I doubt that protests would ever, ever happen because they. They're there to study. Matter of fact, I think somebody told the protesters, no more protesting. We're here to study. And if you don't get your act. [00:54:18] Speaker B: Together, you will be arrested, you will. [00:54:21] Speaker A: Be put in jail, you will be. [00:54:23] Speaker B: Prosecuted, and went through the whole thing. [00:54:27] Speaker A: But it looks like history is repeating itself. Hopefully we don't end up with a Vietnam style war. Hopefully we don't end up with recession and all these other types of problems. [00:54:38] Speaker B: Because people just don't study their history, you know? [00:54:42] Speaker A: I wish they would. Hey, there's something before we leave. We've got a few minutes here. I was looking at some things in Yahoo. And one thing, you know, everybody has to go to the restroom, right? Everybody's got to use the john, right? Or they call it the kibo or the clivis. Is that was one of the terms, but everybody has to use it. [00:55:14] Speaker B: Okay. [00:55:16] Speaker A: Do bears go in the woods? The old question. And then you see commercials with bears with charmin. [00:55:26] Speaker B: That's weird. [00:55:27] Speaker A: I mean, I've never seen a bear walk through and carrying a roll of toilet paper. [00:55:34] Speaker B: I mean, they just do their thing in the woods. I guess maybe they do their stuff. [00:55:41] Speaker A: In somebody's backyard sometimes. It's probably happened. Well, anyhow, there was a thing that was in the parade section of Yahoo. And it said, and this is a public service announcement, okay? This bathroom issue is a common sign of colon cancer, according to a GI document, gastrointestinal doctor. And it was written by Beth Ann Mayer and showed a picture of somebody carrying some toilet paper, you know, and they're saying colon cancer is relatively common in the US. The American Cancer Society, ACs, estimates that it's the third most common cancer, excluding skin. And more than 106,000 people will be diagnosed with colon cancer in 2024. If you do a lot of reading into this, it's because a lot of the diets have changed. You know, we don't eat a lot. [00:56:47] Speaker B: Of raw fruit or vegetables. [00:56:51] Speaker A: It's all packaged. And you take a look at your research, that's why you have cauliflower. Then people say, oh, it stinks. I don't like cauliflower, broccoli. I just don't like broccoli. Brussels sprouts, I don't like those either. Well, it's the raw vegetables that are grown in gardens with not gmo stuff that go through and clean out the bowel. It takes care of any type of malign. [00:57:33] Speaker B: Things, I'll put it that way. [00:57:36] Speaker A: Which can go on to form cancer. And I read somewhere when somebody was saying on YouTube, they said, you know, I was diagnosed with cancer and the doctor told me, he says, you have six. [00:57:53] Speaker B: Weeks to live. I wish I could say that. But I watched it and the guy. [00:58:02] Speaker A: Talked to somebody and they said, well, take Fen. Ben Fenben, man. Sounds like a drug. [00:58:09] Speaker B: Oh, it is. [00:58:09] Speaker A: Fenben's a draw. [00:58:11] Speaker B: And Cliff High was talking about it, too, on his show, but it had. [00:58:17] Speaker A: Nothing to do with this guy's video. And he started that regimen, and in six weeks, he went back to see his doctor and the doctor said, well, you're supposed to be dead. He says, I'm not. And so he tested him and the cancer was gone. [00:58:30] Speaker B: Finbenzedral, I don't know what the dosage was or anything, supposedly cured the guy. [00:58:37] Speaker A: And the same thing with Cliff high, with using finbenzerol and other things. And they're talking about this stuff and I'm thinking, okay, colon cancer, if we. [00:58:48] Speaker B: Start eating vegetables, raw vegetables or even cooked, you know, broccoli and cheese is good. [00:58:58] Speaker A: Cauliflower cheese is good. Just make sure the cheese is good cheese. Maybe we wouldn't have so many cancers. You can check it out on yahoo. [00:59:11] Speaker B: But that's your announcement for the, for the week. [00:59:15] Speaker A: Okay, um, we'll be back with some more stuff next week, uh, maybe with some more jokes. Um, I'm not going to do toilet jokes. I don't do those. [00:59:25] Speaker B: Um, things can get crappy if you. [00:59:28] Speaker A: Do that, if you know what I mean. Anyhow, guys, uh, I hope you've enjoyed. [00:59:33] Speaker B: Tonight and we'll talk about other things. [00:59:36] Speaker A: Next week and hopefully have some more jokes and things. But, you know, have a good week. Check back with us on our facebook. [00:59:46] Speaker B: Page, my world live, laughing, whatever, because. [00:59:50] Speaker A: I always post stuff there. Also check out money and change. We have a lot of stuff there. We've got a lot of stuff going on, guys. [00:59:57] Speaker B: And you have to live with a. [01:00:01] Speaker A: Sense of humor, especially around politicians, if. [01:00:03] Speaker B: You know what I mean. [01:00:05] Speaker A: Okay, guys, have a good week and tune us in on Sunday at 07:00 for money and change. [01:00:14] Speaker B: And we'll be back next week with my world. Okay, have a good week and live a happy life. Okay. See ya. [01:00:36] Speaker A: There it is. Have a good week, love.

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