The Big Weekend Show 10_1_23 FULL - BREAKING NEWS TODAY October 1, 2023

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The Big Weekend Show 10_1_23 FULL - BREAKING NEWS TODAY October 1, 2023

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00:00 The big story tonight, it's Elon Musk versus a San Francisco Democratic Socialist.
00:05 Musk is throwing some big time jabs at a San Francisco supervisor for wanting to prevent
00:10 armed security guards from doing their jobs.
00:13 The tech mogul posting on X, Dean Preston should go to prison.
00:18 Preston introduced legislation to prevent security guards from pulling out their guns
00:22 to protect property.
00:23 A board of supervisors committee just passed the plan last week.
00:27 Is this the right move for the city currently being overrun by criminals?
00:31 Well, Preston seems to think so.
00:33 Preston says, quote, I believe strongly that nobody should ever have to die just because
00:37 they are suspected of stealing property.
00:40 Now that Elon Musk is taking him on and calling on him to be sent to prison over it, Preston
00:45 isn't happy.
00:46 He said in a statement, quote, a billionaire calling for a dramatically elected official
00:51 to a democratically elected official to be sent to prison for no reason is textbook fascism.
00:57 So, Jason, you know, I thought it was interesting choice of wording for that post about calling
01:05 Elon Musk a fascist when the supporting the right to defend oneself and defend one's property.
01:11 That's actually fundamentally American through the Constitution, through the castle laws
01:16 and doctrines.
01:17 What do you take of Musk's post?
01:19 Hyperbole?
01:20 What do you think?
01:21 I think it was a little over the top.
01:22 People don't go to jail just because they introduce a a piece of legislation that they
01:27 don't like.
01:28 But nevertheless, I can understand the frustration, particularly in California, particularly there
01:32 in San Francisco, because nobody seems to be fighting back.
01:36 And so here you have it, a armed security guard who feels like their life is threatened.
01:42 The person allegedly the allegations said to the security guard, I'm going to stab you.
01:48 And that person ends up getting shot and killed.
01:51 Now, the district attorney is not going to charge that person.
01:54 But if you commit these types of crimes, people have the right to protect themselves and the
01:59 property.
02:00 They don't know if they're going to turn a knife or a gun or strangle you.
02:04 And so there has got to be some pushback.
02:07 First of all, there needs to be more of a police presence and there needs to be more
02:10 prosecution of criminals who actually commit these crimes because they just seem to tacitly
02:15 say like Dean Preston, the the board of supervisors.
02:19 He's the guy who's just tacitly letting this happen and encouraging these types of things
02:24 to go on with no consequence.
02:26 That's why so many people, law abiding people are frustrated.
02:28 Well, Joey, so, you know, Jason's mentioning a bank, a bone brown, who is a 24 year old.
02:34 He was suspected to be shoplifting and ended an altercation.
02:39 He sounds like he threatened that he's going to stab the security guard.
02:42 The security guard shot and killed him.
02:44 But one thing I want to talk about.
02:45 So right now, Preston is saying that the answer to this is disarming private security guards.
02:50 When you talk about unarmed security guard, unarmed security guard death has increased
02:54 350 percent since 2007.
02:57 Over 110 died last year.
02:59 And punishments for unarmed security guards being killed is significantly less than a
03:04 policeman being killed.
03:06 Now, we saw what happened when you take a couple of bad apples when it came to policemen
03:11 and then you had the whole defund the police movements because of a few bad actors.
03:16 We saw the consequences from that.
03:18 The answer cannot be to disarm the protectors because we know the offenders will be armed.
03:24 They're not going to disarm security guards.
03:25 Let me tell you why.
03:26 There are more security guards than there are police officers.
03:28 San Francisco is at a huge deficit of police officers.
03:31 And who has armed security guards?
03:33 Not just the Walgreens.
03:34 All the celebrities and tech CEOs and people of affluence, probably Nancy Pelosi and everyone
03:39 else in that city has an armed security guard because they know the police can't protect
03:42 them.
03:43 So, they're not going to disarm security guards.
03:45 What they're saying is, if you look at the regulation, I think it's from 1981 or I guess
03:48 it would be a city ordinance or law, that allows for security guards to use a weapon
03:55 in defense of stolen property.
03:57 The police in state law don't have as easily, they're a little bit more stringent on them,
04:03 which they should be because they are acting as the state.
04:06 And we should have more protections from the state than even each other in a way.
04:11 And also, police have other tools, other techniques, other opportunities.
04:16 They're being called in response to something.
04:18 A security guard is basically your ability to protect yourself at the last opportunity.
04:22 So I'm not saying that a security guard should be able to shoot somebody easier, but the
04:26 idea of using the Second Amendment or using an armed way of defending yourself when someone's
04:31 attacking you, if you're not trained like a police officer, you're not going to be asked
04:35 to do the things like using a taser that a police officer can do.
04:39 And so what they're saying is they're comparing what a security guard can use deadly force
04:41 for compared to what a police officer can, and it's kind of apples and oranges.
04:45 Right.
04:46 I mean, the whole thing seems a bit muddied, but Dagan, one of the things is when you just
04:49 look at California in general, I mean, it's dwindling.
04:53 The first time in decades since 2020, you have population leaving California, you have
04:57 businesses leaving at alarming rates.
04:59 And this isn't just anecdotally.
05:01 A new study out of Hoover Institute at Stanford show businesses are leaving more than they
05:06 ever have before.
05:07 About 300 businesses have left, most going to California.
05:10 And a lot of this is largely due to the lack of law and order, the rise in crime and the
05:13 taxes.
05:14 You know, Elon Musk posted on X, you know, he is blaming Dean Preston and some of the
05:19 other Democratic politicians.
05:21 Dean Preston needs to be fired.
05:22 He is arguably the person most responsible for the destruction of San Francisco.
05:27 So when he's talking about Preston's policies, also add the zero bail policies.
05:33 I mean, it's like they're intentionally trying to get people to leave California.
05:37 Don't they know these policies don't work?
05:41 They treat and these are liberal governors, liberal lawmakers, liberal mayors, liberal
05:50 district attorneys.
05:51 And this is throughout California.
05:52 This is in New York, in Chicago, in Philadelphia.
05:57 They treat criminals like the victims and they treat law abiding residents and citizens
06:04 like garbage.
06:06 And I'll point to Dean Preston.
06:09 He he posted, went on social media to urge San Francisco to launch a campaign to tell
06:17 visitors not to leave things in their cars because they might get broken into.
06:23 So what does that tell you that if you're asking for it, you're asking to be robbed
06:30 if anything is in your automobile and somebody that is in essence, he equated it with the
06:39 buckle up campaign to restrain driver, encourage people to use seatbelts.
06:45 No, it's not the same thing that it's not even.
06:50 But I want to step back because I follow this young woman on Twitter.
06:55 Her name is Manny and she lived in the Tenderloin and would post she posted a video some time
07:02 ago of a fire.
07:04 The bill, a homeless encampment caught on fire and her building almost caught on fire.
07:09 And she was very vocal about there's no one in this city that's protecting people who
07:13 have to live and go to work here.
07:15 She has since left and she when Elon Musk said Dean Preston should go to prison, she
07:21 said, you can say that again.
07:24 So Dean Preston can lose his mind over Elon Musk and try and make the problem about him.
07:30 It's not.
07:31 It's problems that these left wing nut lawmakers created there.
07:36 And I just want to mention one more thing.
07:39 There is a man, Johannes John Tawalde.
07:46 John lost his life.
07:48 He worked in a he was a shopkeeper who worked in the outer Richmond district in the Richmond
07:56 market and he tried to stop a thief from taking beer.
08:02 And he was beaten with a baseball bat.
08:06 And he died shortly thereafter.
08:09 And they they don't prosecute shoplifting.
08:14 They don't prosecute this type of theft.
08:18 And this is what happens.
08:20 He was doing the right thing because in his heart and in his soul, he would not let someone
08:27 steal from where he worked.
08:30 And I just want to know if Dean Preston went to his funeral.
08:32 I want to know if lawmakers in San Francisco went to his funeral.
08:37 But I read I spent all afternoon reading about that man's life.
08:41 He had just become a U.S. citizen a few months prior to his death.
08:46 And he came to this country to make a better life for his family.
08:49 And these so when people talk about nonviolent crime, there is no such thing.
08:55 And when they start treating shoplifting as if it's not a crime, it is a crime.
09:02 And it leads to the death of people who believe in protecting property and protecting things
09:09 around them.
09:10 So to John's family or to Johannes to all day's family, I prayed for you today and I
09:16 hope everybody prays for them.
09:18 Well, that is a horrible, horrible story and not the only one that we hear.
09:22 We keep hearing about a lot of innocents lives being lost.
09:25 And it's not just Elon Musk who is criticizing these policies.
09:28 You actually have 12 cities in California now suing L.A. over their new zero bail policy.
09:35 They know that this is just doing more and more, taking us away from a state of law and
09:38 order and it will promote more violent crimes.
09:42 Coming up, sounding the alarm on the guy who pulled the fire alarm before Congress voted.
09:47 So what does fellow squad members AOC say?
09:51 It's time for the ridiculous.
09:52 To the big weekend show where there's smoke, there's fire.
09:57 The wildfire alarm pulling on Capitol Hill yesterday may remind you of the office.
10:16 Now Republicans are sounding the alarm, pushing for Democrat Jamal Bowman to be held accountable
10:21 for pulling the fire alarm right before a vote was held on the spending bill.
10:26 We'll have a full investigation, but think about how other people were punished who they
10:31 believe done something wrong inside that Capitol.
10:33 The guy was a principal.
10:35 He knows what a fire alarm is.
10:36 The way it looks right now with the video, it's pretty indisputable that he knew exactly
10:40 what he was doing.
10:41 It sounds like obstructing official proceedings, but they did all kinds of tactics to slow
10:47 it down because they wanted the Ukraine funding.
10:49 Well, that's absolutely ridiculous.
10:51 Is he going to be held accountable for obstructing an official proceeding?
10:56 He better be because that's exactly what happened on January 6th according to Biden's Justice
11:01 Department.
11:02 So let's see how they treat their own.
11:05 But fellow squad member, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is coming to Bowman's rescue
11:11 with some predictable spin.
11:13 Let's check it out.
11:14 I mean, listen, I think if you actually do see some of the photos of the signs, the exits
11:18 that are normally open in that building were suddenly closed.
11:21 They're firing, filing a motion to expel a member who in a moment of panic was trying
11:27 to escape a vestibule.
11:29 They are protecting someone who has not only committed wire fraud, not only defrauded veterans,
11:35 not only lied to congressional investigators, but is openly gloating about it is absolutely
11:42 humiliating to the Republican caucus.
11:44 And I think that they should really check their own values.
11:47 So I guess the development from yesterday is that what we learned, I was on Fox and
11:52 Friends this morning, what I learned from Mark Wayne Mullen is that the timing was so
11:58 specific here.
11:59 The White House was telling Democrats stall the vote.
12:02 All right.
12:03 The Democrats are trying to stall the vote because if Schumer drops the bill on the Senate
12:06 floor, it doesn't stop.
12:08 In other words, that would necessitate a shutdown.
12:12 So what I really find atrocious about this is not just how horrible of a person Jamal
12:16 Bowman has to be to pull a fire alarm to stall a vote, but the Democrats were willing to
12:21 do that to create a shutdown so they could blame it on Republicans.
12:25 He would rather.
12:27 What was the statement that he made?
12:28 I was rushing to make a vote.
12:30 I came to a door that's usually open for votes, but not would not.
12:34 But today would not open.
12:36 I'm embarrassed to admit that I activated the fire alarm.
12:40 He's willing to admit he's so stupid that he pulled a fire alarm that rather than admit
12:50 that he did it to stall the vote.
12:53 Yeah.
12:54 OK, we instead of calling them the squad now, we're just going to call them the nine circles
13:00 of hell.
13:04 That appears to be what's going on here.
13:06 But Jamal Bowman has referred to the tick tock ban or the effort to ban tick tock is
13:13 racist and xenophobic.
13:17 A red we're creating a red scare around China.
13:21 I could sit here for the remainder of this hour and recount some of the things that he
13:27 said.
13:28 But the fact that AOC feels the need to play cleanup for him is intensely laughable.
13:35 You take care of your squad.
13:36 That's that's part of our squad.
13:38 That's the sole male member of the other circles of hell.
13:41 Doc, I want to go to you on this.
13:43 So we had this we had this representative in Georgia, Hank Johnson, unfortunately, still
13:47 up there.
13:48 He sat one time in front of the joint chiefs of staff and asked if Guam might flip over
13:53 because they put too many service members on one side of it.
13:56 His excuse for being that stupid was that he was on painkillers or something.
13:59 He was a little bit kind of loopy.
14:01 Is there any chance that maybe Jamal Bowman has some sort of medical excuse for being
14:05 this stupid?
14:06 Let me read what he said.
14:07 This was his best excuse.
14:09 The best he could conjure.
14:10 This is a politician.
14:11 They sometimes make up lives for a living.
14:14 And this is what he has to say.
14:15 I want to be very clear.
14:17 This was not me in any way trying to delay a vote.
14:20 It was the exact opposite.
14:22 I was trying urgently to get to a vote, which I ultimately did and joined my colleagues
14:26 in a bipartisan effort to keep our government open.
14:30 What but possible.
14:31 Well, that just sounds like words of a politician, doesn't it?
14:35 I don't know if you need that.
14:36 That could also be a medical illness.
14:37 But, you know, to Dagan's point, listen, the way that I see this, I work in a hospital.
14:41 I come upon a lot of locked doors.
14:44 If you are doing what he did, you're either dumb.
14:46 AOC says, well, it was he was in a panic and so therefore he did it.
14:51 And so therefore he's dumb enough that in a panic because that's how he handles those
14:55 situations.
14:56 Not sure he should be representing our nation.
14:58 So he's either actually dumb.
15:00 He's lazy.
15:01 He's so lazy he can't just go find another door because I'm certain there are more doors
15:05 to get out of than just that one.
15:06 Or he wanted to delay the vote.
15:08 But honestly, we're not going to unless he sent a text message to his chief of staff
15:12 or some of his colleagues that he wants to delay the vote.
15:15 We're probably not going to know.
15:16 So we know that either we have a very dumb congressman or he tried to delay the vote.
15:21 And if they're going to hold others accountable for similar offenses, hopefully this continues
15:26 to gain some attention.
15:27 Jason, I think that's the conversation comes to you.
15:30 You have insight in how this can be handled.
15:31 There's two paths here.
15:33 There's an investigation by Capitol Hill police.
15:34 There's also what Kevin McCarthy may be able to do, as we saw in the in the intro there.
15:38 He says he's going to look into it.
15:40 He says he's going to ask Hakeem Jeffries to look into it, which I think is kind of
15:43 funny.
15:44 But is there an ethics committee?
15:46 Is there something that they can do within the ethics of Congress here?
15:49 So the ethics committee is balanced.
15:51 Fight people and fight people.
15:52 But look, Congressman Bowen, I was a congressman for eight and a half years.
15:57 And I got to tell you, if you look at where he's actually pulling, that's just a wall.
16:02 There are no other options.
16:04 There's not a door there.
16:05 That is simply a fire alarm.
16:07 And for the former school principal, he knew exactly what he was doing.
16:11 Now, I want to put up the side by side.
16:14 Look closely at that photo, because that photo is different than whoops, those are not the
16:18 right side by side.
16:20 So if you what's up, if you look at it and you look at the two, the media rushed over
16:26 to see what he saw.
16:27 And those two red signs are not in the still photo of the congressman pulling the fire
16:34 alarm.
16:35 They've been moved.
16:36 So the question is, roll the videotape.
16:38 So if you look on the right hand side, see those two on the in the background?
16:42 Those are not in the picture on the left.
16:45 Why not?
16:46 And so why did the Capitol Police just release a still photo?
16:50 I want to see the whole video from the moment he comes up to that door.
16:54 Now, let's also keep in mind this was roll call vote number five one three.
17:00 That means it's the five hundred and thirteenth time this Congress has voted on the floor
17:04 of the house.
17:05 Are you telling me this is the first time you didn't know how to get to the floor of
17:08 the house for the five hundred and thirteenth time they had to call a vote?
17:11 You suddenly had to pull the alarm.
17:13 Oh, how convenient your excuse is to the calls point.
17:17 He knew exactly on top of all this.
17:18 There is a tunnel that will take you straight to the Capitol.
17:21 That's right.
17:22 And because of the irretrievable stupidity in all of this, you know, their cameras every
17:29 year.
17:30 That's that's really the Capitol building.
17:32 All right.
17:33 And I witnesses everywhere.
17:34 All right.
17:35 We're going to wrap this up and we'll let you coming up.
17:38 Oprah Winfrey and Meghan Markle, they project themselves as women of the people.
17:46 I will do everything that I can to make sure that we can implement that for people.
17:51 But it could be time to put their money where their mouth is, because both are being floated
17:54 to fill California's vacant U.S. Senate.
17:57 Welcome back to the big weekend show.
17:59 You know her as the matriarch of daytime talk shows, benefactor and billionaire and quite
18:04 simply the greatest gift giver alive.
18:08 Cue the drum roll.
18:09 All right.
18:10 Open your boxes.
18:11 Open your boxes.
18:12 One, two, three.
18:13 Maybe all those freebies and just giving away money will help her get the spot in California
18:31 as the next senator.
18:33 Rumors are swirling she is on a list of people that Governor Gavin Newsom is considering
18:37 to fill California's open U.S. Senate seat following the death of Senator Dianne Feinstein.
18:43 Meghan Markle is also reportedly putting herself on that list.
18:48 Whatever happens, Markle is certainly well versed on the left's talking points.
18:55 The only wealthy nation in the entire world that does not mandate and have a federal paid
19:00 leave program.
19:01 I will do everything that I can to make sure that we can implement that.
19:04 I had written a think piece of women's inequality because when women are uplifted, the entire
19:09 community is.
19:10 Certainly when it comes to the pay gap, it's staggering.
19:13 And I think it is nonsensical.
19:16 And two of the boys in my class said, yeah, that's where women belong, in the kitchen.
19:20 And whatever it was in me at 11 years old, it sparked this frustration and this desire
19:27 for change.
19:28 It was during the L.A. riots, actually.
19:32 It's hard to get through that.
19:33 Can you imagine her as the next United States senator from the great state of California?
19:38 I can't.
19:39 But Dr. Sapphire, what do you think?
19:40 I mean, Governor Newsom holds all the cards.
19:44 So Meghan Markle, I have to admit, I'm not necessarily a fan of hers.
19:47 I think the only people who like her less than the British are those in the United States.
19:54 But you know, so you can have celebrities, they can be politicians.
19:57 We saw that with Schwarzenegger, you know, Jesse Ventura, many others, even Reagan.
20:02 But the difference is they actually had some experience in leadership, in politics, even
20:07 Schwarzenegger.
20:08 He was a part of Reagan and then also H.W.'s administration.
20:12 And Markle just doesn't do it for me.
20:14 I just, I can't with her.
20:16 She's just, she'd make for great TV.
20:18 But you know, Oprah, I could potentially get behind.
20:21 She loves to give things away for free.
20:23 That sounds like a California politician.
20:25 I'm sure she could get elected by the Democrats.
20:27 I just hope she uses her money instead of the taxpaying dollars.
20:30 Yeah, she has enough.
20:31 She has enough.
20:32 Degan, do you think this really could happen?
20:34 No.
20:35 Although Oprah would not be a bad idea.
20:38 So Gavin Newsom has promised that whomever he appoints to fill Dianne Feinstein's seat
20:46 temporarily will not actually run for the job next year.
20:55 And so Meghan Markle would cling to that for her dear life.
21:02 And there's nothing that's in Gavin Newsom's best interest to name this woman.
21:07 Again, wildly unliked here in the United States.
21:12 And again, she can't even hang on to a Spotify gig for a podcast, like podcasting, which
21:19 she couldn't even do the podcast herself.
21:22 They had other people doing the interviews.
21:25 Oprah Winfrey, I do get.
21:27 She would never do it.
21:28 But money, money, money, money, money, money, money in terms of fundraising.
21:34 People still love her.
21:36 It would benefit Gavin Newsom, not benefit Oprah.
21:39 Well, Gavin Newsom did say it wouldn't just they wouldn't run again, but it will be a
21:42 black woman or a woman of color.
21:44 Yeah, I already narrowed it down.
21:46 Forget that best candidate.
21:47 Joey, that's the point, right, is that Governor Newsom didn't say he'd pick the best person.
21:51 He said it had to be a black woman from California.
21:56 And but Oprah does fill that.
21:58 There's a lot going on here.
21:59 I've got something that's a little bit serious and something that isn't.
22:02 I'm trying to get through it.
22:03 Number one, Gavin Newsom's calculated.
22:05 He wants to be president of the United States.
22:06 He believes he will be.
22:07 Whoever he chooses to fill that role will be of utility to him.
22:11 He doesn't want to choose someone who wants to run for it because he doesn't want to make
22:14 anyone who can be a fundraiser for his eventual campaign mad at him.
22:19 So he doesn't want to create turmoil and turn donors that support this candidate over that
22:22 one off.
22:23 You can't give it to a celebrity because they love attention and power and adoration.
22:28 And if they get in that seat, they're not going to want to not run for it again.
22:31 But I think Meghan Markle is the best choice.
22:34 And let me tell you why.
22:35 I have nothing against Meghan Markle because I was a United States Marine and other Marines
22:40 fought against the British one time.
22:42 And I have never let that go.
22:44 And for an American woman to have a chance to join the monarchy and say, no, no, no,
22:49 I'm going back to America to take advantage or to take part in a democratically elected
22:54 government that stands in spite of your monarchy.
22:58 I give that a thumbs up.
23:00 That's quite.
23:01 That's not why she came back here.
23:02 I can do this.
23:03 That's not why you came back here.
23:04 I can do this picture however I want to.
23:06 Can I add one thing about Oprah though?
23:09 Oprah Winfrey is the only celebrity who has ever mattered to politics in terms of her
23:15 endorsement.
23:16 And she essentially got Barack Obama elected.
23:20 And she probably has some tools in the toolbox.
23:22 She's run a billion dollar organization.
23:24 She understands leadership.
23:26 So she would be almost too strong of a person to be a caretaker.
23:29 And I don't think I don't think Oprah is going to want to fill out that financial disclosure
23:33 form and open up.
23:35 You know, here are all my assets.
23:38 Here's everything that I own.
23:39 I don't think she's going to want to do that.
23:41 But Governor Newsom, you're on the clock.
23:43 You can do it at any time.
23:44 It would be fascinating to see what he does.
23:46 All right, coming up next, he's not a former pro ball player or a prince, but he's the
23:51 most eligible bachelor on television.
23:54 So is the 72 year old, the new 42 year old, thanks to the golden bachelor.
24:00 The weekend show, the gold.
24:03 Golden bachelor may have a bigger impact on our culture than just the love lives of the
24:09 22 single women vying for his attention.
24:13 My daughter sent me a message.
24:15 She said.
24:16 In a moment, but now there's some buzz in the media about Jerry's senior moment as TV's
24:23 72 year old bachelor like Axios, which writes, can the golden bachelor make senior sexy or
24:31 The New York Times that speculating the show is just boomer bait?
24:37 Who's the oldest here?
24:38 Me.
24:39 But I'm going to go to you.
24:42 Did you watch this with your wife?
24:45 No.
24:46 Well, a question.
24:47 What did you watch the bachelor before it was the gold?
24:49 No, I'm sure my sum of watching these types of shows is about 45 seconds.
24:55 I pales in comparison to Joey.
24:57 He's like this show.
24:58 All right.
24:59 So just a little hint and television.
25:02 We don't take up on the segment topic.
25:06 I'm just saying it's just a general rule.
25:10 Like you don't say I don't watch reality television ever.
25:14 Would because I know what we're talking about.
25:19 You have never been on with me when we talked about the Royals, have you?
25:22 Oh, I'm happy to.
25:23 I'm happy to go ahead.
25:24 They'll throw it down the can.
25:25 Listen, we know how you feel about the monarchy.
25:28 You know, I'm not a bachelor fan.
25:30 I'm not a fan of that show.
25:32 I find this one much more intriguing.
25:34 The 72 year old man, the average age of the women on the show among the 22 contestants
25:38 are 67.
25:40 He is a bachelor late in life because his wife passed away.
25:43 There's at least a compelling story here.
25:45 It's not.
25:46 I'm 25.
25:47 I'm beautiful.
25:48 And I want to be a celebrity TV star, which is what all the other bachelor versions are.
25:52 So the genuineness of this may make it interesting.
25:55 I thought it was Harrison Ford when I first saw the little clip there.
25:58 So I wasn't really sure.
25:59 He's a good looking guy.
26:01 You know, it's it's older, older people having fun dating.
26:05 I don't know.
26:06 He'll walk away with a wife, but it might be interesting.
26:09 I I am into it having, you know, well, I watch reality TV.
26:13 I'm not ashamed to say that.
26:14 Do you know what Riz means?
26:16 I do not.
26:17 And I'm ashamed to say that.
26:18 Oh, we had a whole segment on this show about the Riz and he does.
26:21 He has the Riz.
26:22 What is that one?
26:23 Young, it's got to catch up here.
26:26 It is derived from the word charisma.
26:29 So when I heard like I thought Rizzo from Greece.
26:34 And so maybe it was like spunky with like, you know, Dave's charisma.
26:37 OK, great.
26:39 All right.
26:40 I like it.
26:41 Well, you know, look, listen, the man 72.
26:42 He looks good for 72.
26:43 I mean, a little old for me.
26:45 I have to admit, I have never watched an episode of The Bachelor, but that doesn't mean I don't
26:49 like reality TV.
26:50 I watch a good amount of it, but I haven't actually watched The Bachelor.
26:53 I do just to Joey's point.
26:55 I think find this a lot more intriguing.
26:57 I like his story.
26:58 As you say, everyone does seem to try to be an influencer or a reality star these days.
27:03 And maybe this has a little bit more meaning to it.
27:06 But what I want to know is this says the show is sponsoring watch parties for more than
27:11 200 retirement communities, providing sparkling cider and Werther's original candies, which
27:16 happened to be my favorite.
27:18 So I get one of those kids.
27:20 I just may watch The Golden Bachelor.
27:23 The show I actually watched, the reality is alone.
27:26 That's the one I like.
27:27 The survivalist shows that I like.
27:29 Put those people out there.
27:30 No.
27:31 In the break, you said it was naked and afraid.
27:32 Now you're saying now you're trying to clean it up a little bit.
27:35 You know what naked and afraid is?
27:37 Naked.
27:38 Naked.
27:39 Naked.
27:40 It's naked and scared.
27:41 Naked and scared.
27:42 I pretty much watch everything.
27:44 I am curious, though, is that Jerry's real hair?
27:47 I don't think it's a toupee.
27:49 He might have had some implants done.
27:51 But that's pretty good looking hair for a 72 year old.
27:54 So I'm all in for just to discover the origin of.
27:59 When I'm 72, more than my legs will be falling apart.
28:02 I can guarantee you.
28:03 I'm going to be a complete mess.
28:05 I will not be Jerry at 72.
28:06 I promise.
28:07 It'll be tough.
28:08 Hey, when you find out who wins, you don't even have to tell me.
28:14 I watch a lot of reality TV.
28:19 Coming up, lending a new appless private bathrooms for rent.
28:25 Is this genius or just gross?
28:28 The Big Weekend Show.
28:29 You can keep hope.
28:30 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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