title 7am Hour - Burgled!

description We have a brand new War of the Roses, Vont's got a list of cases and we have to guess the verdict, and more!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

pubDate Thu, 23 Apr 2026 15:52:57 GMT

author iHeartRadio and 101.3 KDWB

duration 2648000

transcript

Speaker 1:
[00:06] Bailey's trying a relationship.

Speaker 2:
[00:07] I am trying.

Speaker 1:
[00:08] And we, I don't really usually bother you about it, but I'm kind of nosy.

Speaker 3:
[00:14] Sure, very nosy.

Speaker 1:
[00:14] And you met this guy, I don't know, you dated that guy from Northfield. Can't even remember his name right now.

Speaker 2:
[00:21] Tripp.

Speaker 1:
[00:21] Tripp, who I really liked, but you know, sometimes relationships don't work out.

Speaker 2:
[00:26] Yeah, he ghosted me.

Speaker 1:
[00:27] Okay, so, but then you were kind of single for a while. I was. And then you met a guy.

Speaker 2:
[00:33] I did. This one, his real name is Regular Guy. No, it's not. His real name is Eric, but we call him Regular Guy because that's a funny bit. And yesterday, I put into the duration time between two dates online, and I have been dating him for five months and 16 days.

Speaker 1:
[00:52] Wow. Okay, not bad. That's good for you. And you guys are getting along. Tell me, give me a little update on how things are going.

Speaker 2:
[00:57] Yeah, I see him a couple of times a week, not a lot because we're busy, I'm busy. And he also lives in Woodbury, which is so freaking far away. Screw that. But no, I saw him on Tuesday, and we were, we got Taco Tuesday and ate a bunch of tacos and we were like sharing the tacos and it was delicious. And we were like laughing and I was making fun of him because he's really easy to make fun of, but he's a good sport and he has a good sense of humor. So we were sitting there enjoying ourselves. And I thought, man, I still like this guy, which is really nice. And we're like effectively planning. We have, we're going on a trip to Duluth in June.

Speaker 1:
[01:37] An overnighter then.

Speaker 2:
[01:38] Duluth, very exciting.

Speaker 1:
[01:39] Very nice.

Speaker 2:
[01:40] And then in July, because for July 4th, I never have plans on July 4th, but he always does at his grandparents' house with his whole family. So I'm invited to the 4th of July.

Speaker 1:
[01:50] So you're going to go meet the whole family and you get kind of a chance for him to show off the new girl.

Speaker 2:
[01:54] Yeah, like extended family, too.

Speaker 1:
[01:55] Yeah, that's great. That is a sign they like you when they introduce you around to the family and friends, that means they like you.

Speaker 2:
[02:01] Exactly. And then in September, I'm going to be a date to a wedding. And September, that's far away. That's real far away. So we've made plans and everything. But right now we're at, so a five month mark, I feel like this dude should be telling me he loves me and he ain't. And I refuse to say it first. I don't want to say it first, because I feel like women always get strapped with having to say it first, and I don't want to.

Speaker 1:
[02:27] Do you think that's true?

Speaker 2:
[02:28] Well, just because you know, with fair sex, you know, that's what they tell us.

Speaker 1:
[02:31] You think women say it first. I don't really know that that's my experience. I remember I said it to Candy one time, the one who burned down the daycare, spent time in prison. I said, I love you. And she said, no, you don't. Which was not the response that I was hoping for. She was right. But you don't want to say it first because of...

Speaker 2:
[02:49] I just don't want to. I just want somebody else to say it first. Just you tell me you love me first. Because what if I get burned?

Speaker 1:
[02:56] You know, there's a question. Can I ask you a question? OK, but just between us girls.

Speaker 2:
[02:59] Sure.

Speaker 1:
[03:00] Do you love him?

Speaker 2:
[03:01] I probably do. You know, when you're like, I don't know if this is a universal experience, but you'll be, you know, having a conversation or whatever, and then they'll do something. Whoever doesn't have to just be regular. Whoever you're dating, they'll do something that charms you so much and makes you, you know, dazzled, sparkles you, that you'll just want to be like, I love you.

Speaker 1:
[03:21] I love you. Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[03:22] But every time I get that, I'm just like, what?

Speaker 1:
[03:26] Well, let me ask you a question. Do you think he loves you?

Speaker 2:
[03:29] I don't know. I need him to tell me.

Speaker 1:
[03:30] Can I ask you another question? Do you think you do things that make him sparkle with joy that makes him go, I love this girl?

Speaker 2:
[03:38] Man, I hope so, but I don't know if that's a universal experience. Is that something that happens to everyone?

Speaker 1:
[03:44] What would he have to do to make you sparkle with joy? Would it be to buy you a pendant that's shaped like a bird? Or an earring shaped like a turtle?

Speaker 2:
[03:51] Literally, so the other day, so we were getting Taco Tuesday, and he said the dorkiest, stupidest thing, because I was talking about getting beer that had a little line on the bottom that said chug line, and I was like, that's so funny. I think that's hilarious.

Speaker 1:
[04:06] He said that.

Speaker 2:
[04:07] I said that.

Speaker 1:
[04:07] You said that. You're hilarious.

Speaker 2:
[04:08] He said, he's like, you know, I really just appreciate it when restaurants and breweries have glassware that really shows that they put in an effort. And I thought that was the dorkiest thing. Who cares about glassware? This guy. And so when he said that, I was like, ha ha ha ha. And we were both laughing, ha ha ha ha. And I thought, I love you. But I was like, I'm not saying anything.

Speaker 4:
[04:31] See, like Dave said, I think that men, and everybody is different, struggle with, do we say it because we don't want to be presumptuous. Like I definitely said, I love you to my now fiance, Alyssa first. And I do think I might have said it a little too early, but it was within a moment. I think I was dropping her off at college graduation and I was like, I'm proud of you. You're going to do great. I love you. And it slipped out. We had been together for that long game.

Speaker 1:
[04:52] Right. Did she say, I love you back?

Speaker 4:
[04:54] I think I made it awkward because I knew it was early. So we both were like, but then eventually once we, once I did say it again, and I don't know how many, how much later, she did say it back. But I know that we're always worried about like, you know, does, is this too early? Will she feel weird?

Speaker 2:
[05:08] Right. And now I'm thinking like five months, this isn't too early. He should be telling me he loves me at this point.

Speaker 4:
[05:14] Five months is not as early as when I did it.

Speaker 3:
[05:16] Yeah. How early was it for you, Vont?

Speaker 4:
[05:17] A month. Like I said, Alyssa and I had just clicked right away and I was in the midst of being like, I'm proud of you. Go do your thing. I love you.

Speaker 1:
[05:24] I wonder sometimes I think you love somebody right away, but you know, like two weeks in, you're not going to say, I love you. I remember I had a discussion one time. It's like, what are we? Do we say, I love you? Yeah, well, I do love you. I think that was it was almost a discussion, but you want to be kind of organic where he just like, I just love you.

Speaker 2:
[05:43] Right. Well, I don't want us to be like a big thing like, hey, I just wanted to tell you, hold my hand.

Speaker 5:
[05:49] I've been dressing about this.

Speaker 2:
[05:50] I love you. I'm like, nah, I don't want that because that's dumb. But like if we're having a funny moment and I say something and he laughs and he says, I love you, then I'd be like, really?

Speaker 1:
[06:00] But and then you would say, I love you too.

Speaker 2:
[06:02] Probably. Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[06:03] Can I read the text message at five, three, nine, two, one. She has been dating my partner for over four years. If I waited for him, I'd still be waiting. He's a more than words type of guy and won't say it. Oh, is another text says my wife used to say, I like you all the time. I knew that was her way to say I love you without saying it until I was the first to say it.

Speaker 2:
[06:18] See, and that's I think we both both go me and regular guy go back and forth with like, you know, I appreciate your company.

Speaker 4:
[06:26] Wow.

Speaker 2:
[06:26] You know what? He's like, I like baseball and I'll be like, I like you and he goes, I like you.

Speaker 4:
[06:31] I like whatever it says Bailey. I felt the same way about my partner because I'm so used to guys just telling me three months in the special part is when they do, you know, they'll mean it. And he actually and he actually says, I love you so much more than I even do now. And it means a lot more because it took about eight months. And he told me after a little argument and it was like a movie. The spark was so much more special eight months. OK, I'm holding out then you want him to like in the middle of the rain, he puts his coat down so that you can hop over the puddle. And then you guys just go spinning in the parking lot. I love you Bailey.

Speaker 2:
[06:58] That's dumb. Put your coat on. It's raining.

Speaker 4:
[07:00] Oh, your life is a fairy tale.

Speaker 2:
[07:01] Yeah, but I want that's dumb.

Speaker 1:
[07:04] Does he listen to the show? Is he listening right? He does not listen. How do you know this?

Speaker 2:
[07:07] Because he just he doesn't he doesn't listen. I don't I don't know why I don't think it doesn't bother me that he doesn't listen. I don't think it's I get that Susan doesn't listen to the show either as not in many years, but his parents listen sometimes because they like me. So I can't shut it off.

Speaker 1:
[07:25] Well, that's I think it's a dilemma that a lot of people don't know when to say I love you. There's a lot of text messages that said, Oh, my God, Bailey, I feel this so hard. Another one that says, Yes, that happens to me, Bailey.

Speaker 2:
[07:36] Like the sweeping feeling where you're like, Oh, I love you.

Speaker 6:
[07:39] I'm not going to say anything.

Speaker 2:
[07:40] I refuse to say anything.

Speaker 1:
[07:42] Well, I think we all worry about is it too early? And are we going to get an I love you back? Because not getting all that's so sweet. I wonder if you said I love you the first time and you didn't get the response you wanted, what did you get instead? Mine was, No, you don't, which was not what I expected. I thought I'd get an I love you too.

Speaker 2:
[08:03] Right.

Speaker 1:
[08:04] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[08:05] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[08:05] All right. Well, thanks for the update.

Speaker 2:
[08:07] It sounds like, Hey, thank you, guys.

Speaker 1:
[08:08] You know what? It sounds like things are going along perfectly well.

Speaker 2:
[08:10] Yeah. Anytime someone's like, How is he? How's it going? I'm like, Fine. It's fine. Nothing's bad.

Speaker 1:
[08:16] So, I see your response should be, I just really like this guy. Because I ask you probably a couple of times a week, how's regular guy? Fine.

Speaker 2:
[08:25] Yeah, he's fine.

Speaker 1:
[08:26] I mean, it should be, don't you think it should be like, I just, he was so cute last night. He was like making chicken and ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba. Yeah. But I don't really get that from you.

Speaker 2:
[08:36] Well, I'm not that kind of person.

Speaker 3:
[08:37] I feel like we kind of got it from her just now, though.

Speaker 1:
[08:39] We did, yeah.

Speaker 3:
[08:40] She told us about the little moments.

Speaker 1:
[08:42] Got to ask her on the radio.

Speaker 3:
[08:43] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[08:44] The thing about the glassware, you guys.

Speaker 3:
[08:45] So cute.

Speaker 1:
[08:47] All right, we'll be back in a second. One hour commercial free Demi Lovato tickets. We're going to play a little game. Are we playing this for Demi Lovato, the Vont? What's the verdict?

Speaker 3:
[08:55] Nope. We're going to do Demi Lovato at $750.

Speaker 1:
[08:58] $750, War of the Roses coming up. Stay here on KDWB. I love you. Live for the next couple of hours on YouTube DRTV. If you want to watch us, Bailey waving merrily at the camera.

Speaker 2:
[09:19] My mom said this should be my bit, is that I wave when we go live.

Speaker 3:
[09:23] I thought you meant like all morning. I was like, no.

Speaker 2:
[09:25] Oh, no, no, no. Just when we go live.

Speaker 1:
[09:27] And you put on makeup and washed your hair today, too.

Speaker 2:
[09:29] I did wash my hair, but I honestly can't be bothered to style it. I don't want to.

Speaker 1:
[09:33] No, it looks fine the way it is.

Speaker 2:
[09:34] Thanks.

Speaker 1:
[09:34] I mean, who am I to say?

Speaker 2:
[09:35] I got to get it cut.

Speaker 1:
[09:37] OK.

Speaker 2:
[09:38] Anyway, great story.

Speaker 1:
[09:40] Great story. It is going to be yesterday was just glorious and so beautiful and nice. And so many people were out. I saw motorcycles out and people on bikes and with the dogs. It was going to be still OK today. Cloudy early. Maybe some thunderstorms later in the day, about 72, 63 and sunny.

Speaker 2:
[09:56] I nearly walked all the way to Jenny's house yesterday. I almost, Jenny, I almost texted you and I'm like, what are you doing?

Speaker 3:
[10:02] I'm trying to figure out where you were. Were you on a trail?

Speaker 2:
[10:04] No, I was just, I was walking through like neighborhoods and stuff. But then I got on to, I would have literally had to go like four more blocks than I would have been at your house.

Speaker 4:
[10:13] Creep.

Speaker 3:
[10:14] I might have been gone. I had to deal with some van stuff yesterday.

Speaker 1:
[10:17] Some what stuff?

Speaker 3:
[10:18] The van stuff. I had to drop my old girl off and leave her. And as I was driving there, I thought this might be the last time.

Speaker 1:
[10:25] You're going to drive that van to a landfill is what I'm going to do. Drive to a landfill and bulldoze it under.

Speaker 3:
[10:30] Don't talk about be like that.

Speaker 7:
[10:32] She is my love.

Speaker 3:
[10:36] I have had the best memories with her. She's always been loyal to me except for when she breaks down every other week.

Speaker 1:
[10:42] I was up at a hilltop camper up in Fridley getting my camper set for summer. And there was, oh, God, Jenny, I thought of you. There was a beautiful Mercedes camper van that just had everything. Oh, God, it was so beautiful. It was about $250,000.

Speaker 4:
[11:02] Geez, that's a little bit beyond my budget, unfortunately, at the house.

Speaker 1:
[11:07] Maybe you can win that $1,000 later today after 9 o'clock and make a little down payment. Maybe not even maybe pay the part of the taxes on it, not really sure. We're going to do a little game here called What's the Verdict? Vont's going to read us a court case because Vont's a big, he loves like law and order SVU or SVU guy, right? And that you're going to read us a court case and you and I together, I mean, and you listen to the show and all of us on the show, we're going to try to decide who won, but who did the judge find in favor of? So let's get started.

Speaker 4:
[11:38] Yes. Going to kick it off with this first case. And this just happened recently too. There was a Carnival Cruise passenger who claimed that the ship staff served her I think over maybe 14 or 15 tequila shots in the span of eight hours. The woman fell down a flight of steps, suffered injuries and then sued the cruise ship for $300,000. $300,000 because of reckless drinking. What do you think won the lawsuit?

Speaker 1:
[12:00] Well, they over served her. They do have a responsibility. However, if she went from bar to bar, yeah, then how would they know? Or maybe she didn't appear to be drunk. I would say they found in favor of the cruise ship.

Speaker 2:
[12:13] I'm going to say cruise ship as well because they probably also have a ton of money that can make that happen.

Speaker 3:
[12:19] I don't know because when I was a server, it was very adamant about serving people and not serving people who even were a little bit tipsy also. So we had a role that we had to play. So I would almost say her.

Speaker 4:
[12:34] Janie's right, the plaintiff won. She got her $300,000, which I think is crazy because you need to drink responsibly. It's not the cruise ship's fault. You know what I'm saying? If you pay for that drink package, but yeah, okay.

Speaker 3:
[12:44] Yeah, but you think about when someone's caught driving drunk, the place that they just came from is liable a lot of times.

Speaker 4:
[12:51] All right. Guilty. Whoa.

Speaker 3:
[12:54] Let me do it again. Guilty. I was like, wait a second. All right.

Speaker 4:
[12:59] Next case. There was a woman who sued a TV station and its forecaster, the weather person, for roughly $1,000 because they predicted a sunny day, which resulted actually in a storm happening, causing her to fall ill and miss work.

Speaker 3:
[13:12] What? The heck?

Speaker 7:
[13:14] No.

Speaker 4:
[13:14] So false meteorology caused her to get sick. I guess she dressed differently than the weather that she anticipated.

Speaker 7:
[13:20] No.

Speaker 4:
[13:20] She tried to sue the TV station. Did she win the lawsuit?

Speaker 2:
[13:23] No, she didn't.

Speaker 1:
[13:24] No, she did not because meteorology is not an exact kind of science. It's a good guess.

Speaker 3:
[13:30] And the poor meteorologist probably doesn't get paid barely any money and is like, Oh, my bad.

Speaker 2:
[13:36] I'm just reading the map.

Speaker 4:
[13:38] The plaintiff won.

Speaker 1:
[13:39] What?

Speaker 4:
[13:40] The station settled because they just didn't want any more bad reputations, so guilty.

Speaker 3:
[13:46] That's a cop out, though. We were right.

Speaker 4:
[13:48] They were just like, You know what? We don't want no smoke. Here's the money.

Speaker 1:
[13:51] I think that's what a lot of people do is like, you know, they'll sue for a million dollars. They'll settle for, you know, 150 and they'll be like, it's a win.

Speaker 3:
[13:57] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[13:57] Yeah. The station is happy to like not pay a million dollars.

Speaker 4:
[14:00] There was a 2018 class action lawsuit sought for five million dollars from McDonald's because customers were overcharged by between 30 to 90 cents because they ordered quarter pounders with cheese, but we're still paying the same price with cheese. And they sued.

Speaker 3:
[14:15] Wait, they ordered quarter pounders without cheese?

Speaker 4:
[14:17] Yes, without cheese. And they said, oh, it should be less because I'm not getting cheese. I said this a while ago. If I'm taking something off, you should take the money off too. Cause if I say add X, Y, and Z, you're going to add that same charge.

Speaker 1:
[14:26] So it was a class action lawsuit by a bunch of people against McDonald's because they were overcharged for quarter pounders without cheese.

Speaker 3:
[14:32] McDonald's has money though. So I feel like they have lawyers that'll be like, shut up, you idiots.

Speaker 1:
[14:38] That's a good point that the judge could also be like McDonald's has money. We're going to make you liable for it. So I'm going to say in the favor of the class action lawsuit, McDonald's lost.

Speaker 3:
[14:46] I'm going with McDonald's won.

Speaker 2:
[14:47] McDonald's won.

Speaker 4:
[14:49] The judge dismissed the case.

Speaker 2:
[14:51] What the heck?

Speaker 3:
[14:52] So what is that called when it's just dismissed or like both parties lose?

Speaker 1:
[14:57] No, dismissed. I think.

Speaker 4:
[14:58] Yeah, it's just dismissed.

Speaker 3:
[14:59] I don't watch law and order.

Speaker 4:
[15:01] Guilty. I don't know if anyone's guilty. I just like saying that.

Speaker 1:
[15:03] I like it.

Speaker 3:
[15:04] I like it too. It adds dramatic effect.

Speaker 2:
[15:06] You can't handle the truth.

Speaker 4:
[15:08] A woman in Florida claims that she fell over a package that was delivered to her doorway by FedEx and that she suffered from humiliation, mental anguish and severe physical pain. She says it was FedEx's fault and the driver because they did not warn her about how close the package was to her door.

Speaker 1:
[15:25] There is something to it, I guess, because she didn't put it there. And if she didn't see it, she didn't fall over it on purpose.

Speaker 2:
[15:33] She knew she was getting it, though.

Speaker 3:
[15:35] Well, maybe not. I don't know, FedEx might be something where they just deliver something and you didn't know you were getting it.

Speaker 4:
[15:39] I mean, but also, like, could you sue, I mean, I guess you could sue the city if you trip over the curb, if it's messed up in a certain way, right? So I guess the same thing with this FedEx package.

Speaker 2:
[15:48] No, I think FedEx won. That's dumb.

Speaker 1:
[15:50] I think she won.

Speaker 4:
[15:51] Jenny.

Speaker 3:
[15:52] I say FedEx.

Speaker 4:
[15:53] Bailey.

Speaker 2:
[15:53] FedEx.

Speaker 4:
[15:55] The woman won.

Speaker 1:
[15:55] Yeah. Are you kidding?

Speaker 2:
[15:57] This is so dumb.

Speaker 3:
[15:58] Well, I know what I'm doing in my side time. I know ways to sue people.

Speaker 4:
[16:03] Goes to show you anybody can make a lawsuit for anything. But anyway, what's that thing? Oh, guilty.

Speaker 3:
[16:08] I feel like there's so many people out there that that is actually kind of a hobby. They try to like sue someone. Like I know a real estate agent that had his client, and she had gone through so many different real estate agents because she just kept trying to sue every single one because they wouldn't like sell her house for the price that she wanted. And then she'd find one little thing that they maybe did wrong, and she tried to sue them.

Speaker 1:
[16:30] Wow, some people will sue for anything. And there are lawyers who will, there are lawyers who are ethical that won't take it. And I'm going to guess there are lawyers who are like, let's go.

Speaker 4:
[16:39] I'll give you one more. You have to guess whether or not the person won the lawsuit. This one goes a little bit back. There's a guy who, I'm assuming it's a guy, it's a burglar who fell through a school skylight. Obviously he was trying to break into the school, became paralyzed while trying to steal a floodlight. And he sued, but did he win the lawsuit?

Speaker 1:
[16:58] This is one that, if it's legendary like this, I'm gonna say, if we're still talking about it, he absolutely won.

Speaker 3:
[17:05] He totally won.

Speaker 4:
[17:07] And I'll tell you how old it is after.

Speaker 1:
[17:08] Okay.

Speaker 3:
[17:09] Okay.

Speaker 2:
[17:10] I guess, but he's trying to burgle the school.

Speaker 4:
[17:13] Yep, the floodlight in the school.

Speaker 2:
[17:14] So the school should win if he's burgling them.

Speaker 3:
[17:18] Yeah, I'm gonna go with Dave though, what Dave said.

Speaker 1:
[17:21] The guy won, I'm sure he did.

Speaker 4:
[17:22] The plaintiff did win $260,000 settlement plus lifetime monthly payments. This goes back to 1982. It's Bowdean versus Enterprise High School, if you want to look it up.

Speaker 2:
[17:32] That is so unfair. That's so dumb.

Speaker 1:
[17:34] It is, yeah, totally.

Speaker 2:
[17:35] All of these, I feel like every single one of these where the plaintiff won, it's because the plaintiff made a stupid choice and then decided to sue.

Speaker 1:
[17:43] Like drinking 14 shots on a cruise ship.

Speaker 3:
[17:45] That's why we're listening to it because nobody cares about like a car accident where someone shoots someone because of a car accident.

Speaker 2:
[17:50] I know, but like not in any of these cases, did the company whose fault it wasn't actually win?

Speaker 1:
[17:56] I've got a text message at KTLDB1 that's kind of funny. It says, growing up, I remember we never wanted to invite my aunt and uncle over because we were so afraid of something that would happen at our house. They would sue us because they sued everybody for anything and everything. That's probably like couponing. You know, maybe that's your like your hobby is couponing.

Speaker 2:
[18:16] These people file lawsuits like house flipping, like it just seems like a weird way to get money.

Speaker 4:
[18:22] Anyway, that's what the verdict.

Speaker 1:
[18:23] Good one, Vont. I like it. 1.3 KDWB. Catching you up on some dirt before we get to War of the Roses here in a couple of seconds, Charlize Theron is joking that her teenage daughters are hormonal nightmares.

Speaker 5:
[18:43] Have you been horribly injured by a product made by the Acme Corporation?

Speaker 1:
[18:47] Nope, that's the wrong one. Okay. You know what that is? Yeah. That is the trailer for Coyote vs. Acme, which is the Looney Tunes movie that remember the Wile E. Coyote and he always had the Acme products. So that's the trailer for it. But I think this is the Charlize Theron is number six, then maybe.

Speaker 4:
[19:07] Here it is. I got you.

Speaker 6:
[19:08] Yeah, they just turn into hormonal nightmares. I'm getting my hand to me from the moment that I walk into the house.

Speaker 1:
[19:21] No surprise. I mean, seriously, Allison was kind of a nightmare. Everything we did was stupid and wrong. And we were so confused. Like, why did Allison turn into such a nightmare? And then people said, it'll change when she's about 17 or so. And sure enough, it slowly went away. And now she's just the Swedish girl. But let me tell you, you gotta like a 12 year old, be ready. Because the apocalypse is coming, just to let you know.

Speaker 3:
[19:46] I was the apocalypse myself.

Speaker 1:
[19:48] I'm sure.

Speaker 3:
[19:49] Cardi B also an apocalypse, I'd say. Rank says, the female rapper with the highest grossing debut arena tour. Take a wild guess how much the Lil Miss Drama Tour earned.

Speaker 2:
[20:00] Bailey? $200 million.

Speaker 3:
[20:03] Too high.

Speaker 2:
[20:04] David?

Speaker 1:
[20:05] Okay, $100 million.

Speaker 3:
[20:06] Vont, too high.

Speaker 4:
[20:08] $50 million.

Speaker 3:
[20:09] $70 million. Is that a lot? I mean, I think that's pretty good for an arena tour. I think that that only includes ticket sales, right? Like, it's not going to be including merch, and don't they say that artists make so much money off of merch?

Speaker 1:
[20:21] They do make a lot of merch. I don't know.

Speaker 3:
[20:23] So I think that's just the ticket sales.

Speaker 4:
[20:24] Wow.

Speaker 2:
[20:25] Pete Davidson spent hundreds of thousands of dollars getting a bunch of his tattoos removed, and those are also way more painful than the tattoo itself, getting them removed, but he just got a new one on his face.

Speaker 3:
[20:38] What? Oh, really?

Speaker 4:
[20:40] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[20:40] Well, it's like right in front of his ear, and it says his daughter's name. So her name is Scotty. And so he got that tattooed right in the front of his ear. But I think it's funny, after going through all of this pain and money to get all of your tattoos removed, and then you're gonna put another one on your face? Your face?

Speaker 4:
[21:01] Yeah, kind of pointless. Anyway, waste of money.

Speaker 1:
[21:04] I wonder if anybody listening has a face tattoo and they regret it.

Speaker 2:
[21:07] Texas, if you have a face tattoo.

Speaker 1:
[21:08] Texas, if you got a face tattoo and you regret it. Or you know somebody.

Speaker 4:
[21:12] Guess who's dropping an album this summer? Shaboosie is back. I feel like it's been a minute since we've heard from him, but he's got a new album. I believe it's called The Outlaw Sherry Lee and Other Western Tales. Very, very lengthy. Comes out July 31st. And apparently there's narration on it from Jamie Foxx in a Southern accent. I feel like there's a lot of layers there, but I'm very intrigued to hear what Shaboosie comes up with.

Speaker 3:
[21:37] I'm only interested if he has his da, mm, my nose.

Speaker 4:
[21:40] Oh, yes.

Speaker 3:
[21:41] I saw that commercial.

Speaker 1:
[21:42] How does it go? Does it go da, mm, my nose, or is it dom, mm, my nose?

Speaker 3:
[21:47] I don't know.

Speaker 1:
[21:48] I think it's dom, mm, my nose.

Speaker 3:
[21:51] Dang it.

Speaker 1:
[21:52] I don't think, I think there's an M on the first syllable. Dom, mm, my nose. Cause you have to say da, mm, my nose. See the subtle difference, Bailey?

Speaker 2:
[22:02] I do see the subtle difference.

Speaker 1:
[22:03] I think it's dom, mm, my nose.

Speaker 2:
[22:05] This is great radio.

Speaker 1:
[22:07] It sure is. Marconi Award winning Dave Ryan in the morning show. Happy birthday shout out, happy 19th birthday, Tory from Mom and Adam Trigg, Jack and Ruby. Dave Grohl is making the dirt today because he screams his lungs out on stage. What's his secret to keeping his vocal chords in shape? He says the secret is beer, Advil, whiskey, more beer and more whiskey. I don't think that's got to be accurate. I'm going to guess it's probably lemon and honey.

Speaker 2:
[22:41] It's like all hot toddies. All of the whiskey is just a hot toddy. And that's that's could be good for your throat. Right. It's hot.

Speaker 1:
[22:49] My mom used to make me hot toddies. Yes, my mom served me alcohol when I was probably about five years old. I had a sore throat or the flu. She put a little Jim Beam and some tea and honey and water, maybe a little lemon in there. She's like, David, drink this. You'll feel better. And I don't remember what happened next, but I guess I felt better.

Speaker 2:
[23:06] That's because you got knocked out.

Speaker 1:
[23:08] Maybe that's what she wanted. David's sick and bitching and crying and moaning. I'm going to give him some Jim Beam. And she had six kids. She was probably tired of it. D-U-N done by the time I rolled around.

Speaker 3:
[23:21] Yeah, that is the dirt.

Speaker 1:
[23:22] On KDWB, time to get right into War of the Roses, brought to you by Ovo, LASIK and Lens. What do you think? Listen and then tell me what your suspicion rating is before we make the phone call. War of the Roses starts right now on KDWB. He loves me. This is one of those rare War of the Roses where the caller is not checking on their partner. They're checking on their... Is it your sister's partner, Marissa, that we're talking about here?

Speaker 8:
[24:00] Yeah, my sister.

Speaker 1:
[24:01] Okay. So, all right, Nosy Noserson. So you... First of all, I got the vibe that you always thought this guy was a little wee bit shady or evasive. What do you think?

Speaker 8:
[24:15] Oh, my gosh. I can't believe I'm saying this on the radio. But like, yeah, he's always been a little... Just not a part of things, and he'll have to leave early, and I'm gonna be honest with you, I don't like him.

Speaker 1:
[24:30] You don't, you just don't like him. And we've had people in my family where it's like, you know what, I just don't really like him. And you smile and you talk to him at Thanksgiving, but you just get kind of a weird kind of a vibe. Okay, fair enough. But then something kind of comes to a head. What happened that made you say, I gotta find out about this guy?

Speaker 8:
[24:49] So I'm at Old Navy, I'm like of all places. Great store. Shopping and like, but I see him pushing a cart with another woman. Like they're together, but they don't, I don't know. I just, you know, you can tell it's like a vibe like they weren't brother, sister pushing cart. They weren't cousins pushing a cart. Like they were a couple.

Speaker 1:
[25:18] Okay. So like if me and Jenny were like walking through Old Navy, that'll be the freaking day. But if we were, we'd give off a vibe of Dave and Jenny co-workers or friends.

Speaker 3:
[25:27] Like we probably wouldn't be walking close to each other. I might be like 10 feet ahead of you. You'd be pushing the cart being like, wait up.

Speaker 7:
[25:34] Yep.

Speaker 1:
[25:34] Yep.

Speaker 7:
[25:35] Yep.

Speaker 1:
[25:35] And we wouldn't push it side by side together where I put my hand over the top of your hand and we're pushing it together. And we stopped by the by the sweaters and looked lovingly into each other's eyes. So there, did you go up and say anything like, hey, who's this?

Speaker 8:
[25:52] No, no, no, no, I hid. I'm ducking behind racks, like trying to get, you know, see them. I want like the money shot, right? Like I'm gonna kiss or something, but they didn't do that. Like it was a vibe. It was a vibe.

Speaker 1:
[26:11] So, but so your suspicion is he's seeing somebody else and that kind of goes hand in hand with him leaving the party early or not making it to so and so's birthday because he's got, would you go as far as to say a secret life, a double life?

Speaker 8:
[26:32] Not, it would not surprise me if this guy was a secret life guy.

Speaker 1:
[26:38] So how serious is your sister with this guy anyway?

Speaker 8:
[26:43] Oh, she's all about him. She wants to be with him 24 7. And then when he can't make it, she's sad. And then I have sad sister to deal with. I, you know, yeah.

Speaker 3:
[26:56] What is your sister's name?

Speaker 8:
[26:58] Her name's Julie.

Speaker 1:
[27:00] Are they engaged by any chance?

Speaker 8:
[27:02] Oh, yeah.

Speaker 1:
[27:04] Oh, they're.

Speaker 8:
[27:05] Oh, not this summer, but next summer.

Speaker 1:
[27:07] Oh, we left that part out. OK, so they're engaged. So this is like, OK, so he should not be walking around lovey dovey in the Old Navy.

Speaker 2:
[27:15] He's serious with Julie. So he should not be in Old Navy with anyone else other than Julie.

Speaker 1:
[27:22] So Julie is the name that we're looking for, that he should send roses to. OK, OK. Well, here's what we can do. We can call this guy because I hope you have his phone number because we ain't going to do nothing without his phone number.

Speaker 8:
[27:36] I do. I got it.

Speaker 9:
[27:37] OK, good. All right.

Speaker 1:
[27:38] We got his phone number. We'll call him and we'll say, hey, we're from the phone company doing a survey, take the survey, win roses. And then the big tell is who he sends the roses to. We'll take a quick break. We'll come back in a second. We'll make the phone call to the guy. We'll set the trap and see if he chooses Julie, correct answer or somebody else. And we'll do that next. Can you hang on for a second?

Speaker 7:
[28:02] Not everyone deserves closure, but we do. It's time for part two of War of the Roses on KDWB.

Speaker 1:
[28:10] Okay, if you missed part one, you need a little recap. So her sister is engaged to a guy, and she doesn't really like him. The family is kind of like, he's just kind of weird and doesn't show up at things or leaves early, always looking at his watch, that type of thing. She's in Old Navy of all places the other day, and she sees this guy across the store, and he's pushing around a shopping cart, with another woman. Well, I mean, no big deal. But she watches because she doesn't like the guy.

Speaker 2:
[28:37] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[28:37] And then she notices they're just a little too lovey-dovey.

Speaker 2:
[28:41] Yeah, too coupley.

Speaker 1:
[28:42] I don't know if they're standing next to the cart and like, you know, gazing at each other or, I don't know, pushing the cart together side by side.

Speaker 3:
[28:49] Yeah, like they both have like an arm on the little hand rest thing.

Speaker 2:
[28:53] He's taking a sweater, holding it up, like, what do you think about this one? And she goes, oh, I love this.

Speaker 1:
[28:58] They go into the fitting room together and start... Oh, it is, okay, okay. So we're gonna call the guy and see who he sends roses to, her sister or someone else. War of the Roses brought to you by Ovo, LASIK and Lens. Let's make the call.

Speaker 3:
[29:20] Justin, appreciate you taking that survey with us today. As a little reward for doing that, I do have a dozen red roses that we're gonna send out on your behalf. So first, I need to know, who do you wanna send those roses to?

Speaker 9:
[29:33] I'll send them to my fiance.

Speaker 3:
[29:35] Okay, lovely. So I'll just need her name.

Speaker 9:
[29:39] Amanda.

Speaker 3:
[29:42] Amanda. Okay. Got it.

Speaker 8:
[29:45] So you're engaged to two women, Justin?

Speaker 9:
[29:48] Not really. What's going on?

Speaker 1:
[29:52] Okay, let me, let me, let me, let me, not really. Let me, let me jump in and help you out here. Justin, you have been trapped, you've been swindled, and I would apologize for it, but I think you need to do the explaining here. It's, it's the Dave Ryan Show over at KDWB, and we set a little trap for you to see who you would send roses to. Because, because that's your future sister-in-law, Marissa, she thinks there might be something going on behind Julie's back, and you just kind of proved it because you just kind of said on the radio that your fiance is not Julie, it's, it's Amanda, but you're engaged to Julie.

Speaker 9:
[30:33] I don't even know, I don't know what you're doing. I don't even know who you are or why you're calling me or what's going on.

Speaker 1:
[30:38] Well, we called because, do you want to tell him what happened? Marissa, at Old Navy?

Speaker 8:
[30:44] I saw you at Old Navy with another woman and I was like, how, I knew my sister would never believe it and now so I'm like, let's get on the radio. You're engaged to two women? You want Justin?

Speaker 9:
[30:58] I don't, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not. I'm not sitting here doing this, okay.

Speaker 8:
[31:03] Yeah, great.

Speaker 9:
[31:05] I mean, I didn't want to be part of your family anyway. You're so judgy to begin with.

Speaker 8:
[31:11] Oh, he's a judgy to not be happy that your sister is engaged to a cheater. And I'm freaking judgy. God, you're fishy as f**k, Justin.

Speaker 9:
[31:21] You're the one calling me with a radio when these people I don't even know, who's fishy now? I don't even understand what's, I'm not going to do this on the radio.

Speaker 8:
[31:29] Yeah. Okay. Because the method I did it with is the problem.

Speaker 1:
[31:34] Well, let me ask you a question.

Speaker 8:
[31:35] Where does it deflect?

Speaker 1:
[31:36] Are you engaged to two people, Justin?

Speaker 9:
[31:41] Not exactly.

Speaker 1:
[31:42] What the hell does that mean?

Speaker 9:
[31:44] Not exactly.

Speaker 1:
[31:46] It's either yes, it's a simple question. Yes or no? Thank you.

Speaker 9:
[31:53] I mean, I don't even know. This is not even your business. I don't know why the radio is calling me or anything like this. I've never heard your voice before, and all of a sudden, you're setting traps for me.

Speaker 1:
[32:04] That's our job, sir.

Speaker 2:
[32:05] Yeah, that is. I can't believe he bought two rings. That's expensive.

Speaker 1:
[32:09] Did you buy two rings?

Speaker 9:
[32:11] Yeah, I don't have a BS radio degree like y'all do.

Speaker 1:
[32:16] All right. Okay. Hold on a second. I think you got your answer. I think you got your answer, Marissa.

Speaker 9:
[32:23] I mean, what y'all want to do? Now, it's me versus y'all. What y'all want to do? Oh, fight, fight, fight, fight.

Speaker 1:
[32:29] Jerry, Jerry, Jerry.

Speaker 4:
[32:31] Throw a chair. Throw a chair.

Speaker 3:
[32:33] I'm going to take a step back now. Dave, you got it.

Speaker 9:
[32:36] Yeah, go ahead and take a step back. You guys get on here. You think you're all waiting, calling me in the middle of the day, bothering me for no reason. And all of a sudden, you over here trying to set up everybody's life, and you talking about s*** that you can't even afford.

Speaker 8:
[32:47] Oh, my God.

Speaker 2:
[32:51] I don't need to afford it. I would only want to be engaged to one person.

Speaker 4:
[32:55] Yeah, one ring is enough. Trust me.

Speaker 9:
[32:56] Geez. Yeah.

Speaker 8:
[32:58] Yeah. You know what I want you to do, Justin? I want you to eat s***. So why don't you have a f***ing big bowl of that?

Speaker 9:
[33:05] Yeah, it'll taste like you're cooking at that last gig.

Speaker 8:
[33:11] Wow.

Speaker 1:
[33:13] They just don't like each other. He's kind of a clever guy, though.

Speaker 3:
[33:17] No, we're not going to give him that. He has two fiancees.

Speaker 6:
[33:22] That's not okay.

Speaker 1:
[33:24] He says, the biggest head scratcher via text, and you can text in your comments, the biggest head scratcher to me is who shops at Old Navy anymore.

Speaker 4:
[33:30] Don't do that. Old Navy has great deals in general, but also when it's flip-flop season, you get flip-flops for like a dollar. Yeah.

Speaker 3:
[33:36] Tell me where you get your flip-flops for the boat in the summer.

Speaker 1:
[33:39] Old Navy.

Speaker 2:
[33:41] Every time I compliment Vont's pants, he got them at Old Navy.

Speaker 4:
[33:44] That was one time.

Speaker 2:
[33:45] Well, every single time, that's the one time.

Speaker 3:
[33:47] He always compliments the same pants.

Speaker 2:
[33:49] Yeah. Those are nice.

Speaker 3:
[33:50] Old Navy.

Speaker 2:
[33:51] Okay.

Speaker 1:
[33:51] That is going to wrap up War of the Roses for this week on KDWB. If you ever want to trap somebody and to put them to the test, let us know. Send me an email as easiest, RyanShow at kdwb.com. All right. You know what's coming, you guys. It's that time of the morning. Giveaway Demi Lovato tickets. Let's do it right now. Show is on a Saturday night, May 2nd at Target Center. We're going to play a little game that will remind you of when you were in middle school and you didn't really study for the essay question test. So they'd be like, okay, tell us the importance of traveling to the moon. And you're like, oh, good. So you wrote a bunch, hoping that your teacher would be like, well, it's close enough. So we call this game, am I close? So you BS your way through it. You gotta be creative. You gotta BS your way through it. And then hopefully I'll say, you're close enough. Let's try one on Bailey. Why did early pioneers find Minnesota so attractive to settle in?

Speaker 2:
[35:01] Ooh, that's a great question. So the reason early pioneers, mostly people from the New England area, but then also Ireland were coming to Minnesota, it was because of our rich soil, especially around the river, the Mississippi River in fact, where we could really have, it was really great soil for potatoes. And so people from Ireland who were suffering from that potato famine came over to Minnesota and planted all of these potatoes so that they could then have a very bountiful harvest in the fall. Am I close?

Speaker 1:
[35:36] I'm going to not give you that one. You were on it until you said Irish. It's mostly Germans and Scandinavians that came here.

Speaker 2:
[35:44] We had a ton of Irish immigrants.

Speaker 1:
[35:45] Not so much, no. Mostly Germans and Scandinavians, the Norway people and the Sweden people and that type of thing. Sure. But you were right, farming opportunities was one of the many reasons the soil in Minnesota was fertile and ideal for agriculture. But you also forgot about economic opportunities, abundant natural resources, lakes and rivers and community and social structure and escape from overcrowding. So clearly, you did not study for this test. That is a fail.

Speaker 2:
[36:14] Pretty sure I said river, Dave.

Speaker 1:
[36:16] Okay, you did.

Speaker 2:
[36:17] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[36:17] But that you're still not close enough.

Speaker 2:
[36:19] Someone's going to text in and support me. Yeah. I used to work at a farm.

Speaker 1:
[36:26] Okay. Okay. There was like two Irish people back then. It was all Germans and Swedes.

Speaker 2:
[36:30] My grandpa.

Speaker 1:
[36:32] Doesn't count.

Speaker 2:
[36:32] He was Irish.

Speaker 1:
[36:33] We do have Megan on the phone. Megan, you understand the gist of the contest. You got to BS your way through a question, just like you did in middle school, and come close. And you must finish. If you don't finish with am I close, you're automatically disqualified. Good morning, Megan.

Speaker 10:
[36:48] Good morning.

Speaker 1:
[36:49] Where are you calling from? Are you ready?

Speaker 10:
[36:51] Ready. We're calling from Maple Grove.

Speaker 3:
[36:53] Wait, who is we? This is a one person test.

Speaker 10:
[36:56] Oh, it's just me, but I have my middle school daughter right next to me. So you think we're excited and just listening in.

Speaker 1:
[37:00] Because you want to take her to the Demi Lovato show.

Speaker 10:
[37:02] Yes, we call all the time. We're so excited.

Speaker 1:
[37:05] Okay.

Speaker 10:
[37:05] All right.

Speaker 1:
[37:06] Well, don't blow it. Here we go. Tell me the importance of the Underground Railroad.

Speaker 10:
[37:18] The Underground Railroad is extremely important. It's a really great time and not a great time in history, but a really important time in history because it offered an opportunity to give refuge to slaves that were struggling in the South. And I believe it was Harriet Tubman that started the Underground Railroad in a very prominent time in history for her to show up as an individual, that goes out of her way to do things for other people and really demonstrated what it means to be bold and a risk taker, to do good things for others. Am I close?

Speaker 1:
[37:57] You're close enough. Yes, you pretty much got it. If I were a seventh-grade history teacher, I would give you probably 60% credit on that one. You could have expanded a little bit and maybe talk about how the fact that it's not an actual railroad. But when I was in seventh-grade, I thought it really was an underground railroad that went from Atlanta to New York City. Wait, it's not?

Speaker 2:
[38:17] The purpose at all whatsoever behind the underground railroad, but she did talk a lot about how Harriet Tubman changed the face of the history.

Speaker 3:
[38:23] She used a lot of filler words.

Speaker 10:
[38:24] I'm really proud of that one, throwing that one in.

Speaker 1:
[38:27] Tell your daughter that you just won Demi Lovato tickets.

Speaker 9:
[38:30] Woo, I'm so excited!

Speaker 1:
[38:38] You're gonna be busy on May 2nd. You go down to Target Center and see Demi Lovato. Congratulations, Megan and daughter.

Speaker 2:
[38:47] Thank you so much!

Speaker 1:
[38:49] Okay, hold on for one second. I love it. That sounds so cool. We'll have another pair of tickets tomorrow morning, I believe. Right around the same time, I believe. Stay here on KDWB, and let's get right to one of my favorite parts of the show, because you never know what it's gonna bring. Jenny, she's been on Reddit all morning. I can't get her off Reddit. Pay attention. No, she's on Reddit. Let's get it right now. Jenny's been on Reddit.

Speaker 3:
[39:17] I like this one, because Bailey's starting her house hunting journey today. She's gonna be looking at a house, and it was a thread that I found that says, that's a house rule you thought was annoying as a kid, but you swear by now as an adult. So if any of you have one, think about it. You can let me know. But I will start with what people are saying on Reddit. This one says, mine is filling the ice tray immediately after emptying it. I got in trouble so many times as a kid because I would always leave just like a cube or two in the tray, and then it'd be like completely empty. So that's a good one. Another one is make sure the house is spotless before a trip, because there's nothing worse than coming home to a dirty house. I agree to that. Except for a lot of times, I have clothes flung everywhere because I couldn't figure out what I wanted to wear. So that doesn't always work in my favor. But for the most part, like I'm not leaving dirty dishes in the sink while I go away for like a weekend or something. I make sure that that's all cleaned up. Another one is finish a bag or box of something before opening a new one.

Speaker 2:
[40:16] I have so much like cereal that's just like half open. I think I should eat that.

Speaker 3:
[40:20] See, I think cereal is the one that you're allowed to sort of have multiple because it's not like you have three boxes of Captain Crunch open.

Speaker 2:
[40:27] No, no, no.

Speaker 3:
[40:28] Right. So like I feel like that one's okay. But I do agree, like sometimes you start opening things. Like for me, I think I have two bags of rice open right now. And it's like, why didn't I finish the first one?

Speaker 1:
[40:37] Why didn't you?

Speaker 2:
[40:38] Why didn't you?

Speaker 3:
[40:39] Another one is you do not walk into someone's bedroom without their express permission.

Speaker 1:
[40:45] OK, well, I mean, so these are rules that were in place when you were a kid, but you kind of appreciate them now.

Speaker 3:
[40:50] Now, as an adult, you're like, I understand this.

Speaker 1:
[40:51] OK, I got you.

Speaker 3:
[40:53] Another one is laundry needs to be in the hamper or in the laundry room if you want it done.

Speaker 2:
[40:59] Well, who's doing my laundry other than me?

Speaker 3:
[41:01] Well, where are you putting it?

Speaker 2:
[41:03] Before? Well, no, I put it in the hamper until the hamper gets overflowing, and then I stack it up next to the hamper.

Speaker 1:
[41:08] Man, I can't. I can't. When mine gets full, I got to do it right now. So, OK, what are you doing? Load of laundry. You just did one. Yeah, but the hamper is full.

Speaker 2:
[41:15] Mine is so expensive, so I don't ever do mine.

Speaker 3:
[41:17] Having lived with like men before, yeah, when you have to do like apartment laundry, yeah, I always waited. But having lived with men before, I feel like you guys do laundry so often, it blows my mind. It's because you have three pairs of underwear that you've been holding on for 20 years, and so you have to constantly do laundry because otherwise you don't have clean underwear.

Speaker 1:
[41:35] I mean, there is some truth to that, but doing laundry is not that hard. People are like, God, it's laundry day. The machine does all the work, Phyllis. You're not sitting there with a washboard and a bucket. You load it up into the Kenmore, and then you put some tied pod in there, a tied pod, and you go on your way. Maybe a half an hour later, you take it out and you throw it in the other Kenmore, you throw in a bounce dryer sheet, and you fold it. It ain't working that hard. Quit your bitching, Phyllis.

Speaker 2:
[42:02] Whoa, Phyllis, we're sorry.

Speaker 3:
[42:05] All right, last one I have is don't use, this is very specific, don't use the sewing scissors for cutting anything except fabrics.

Speaker 10:
[42:15] I'm so sorry, Mom.

Speaker 3:
[42:16] I get it now.

Speaker 1:
[42:17] Oh, that's funny.

Speaker 3:
[42:20] I'm trying to think if there's anything for me. I think it's a mixture of things I've seen from people who are organizers and things Dave has said, where it's like if you pull something out, put it away right away. If you pull out an outfit and you don't like it, go hang it up right away again.

Speaker 1:
[42:34] Don't put it down, put it back.

Speaker 10:
[42:35] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[42:36] I only learned that later in life. We had rules at my house, but none of them seemed unreasonable.

Speaker 10:
[42:41] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[42:42] Why have to pee off the toilet seat? Me and my brother always got in trouble for that.

Speaker 2:
[42:46] People are texting in about taking your shoes off at the door.

Speaker 3:
[42:48] Yes. That's one for me too. I mean, I didn't have a problem with that as a kid, but now I'm so big on that as an adult. And I feel like the last person I lived with, they never took their shoes off, and it drove me insane because I felt like the floors were always sturdy with footprints. But Dave, you wear your shoes in the house.

Speaker 1:
[43:05] I don't now because of the new house. I don't want to track. We're trying to take good care of it for it's still new. But when I was a kid, yeah, we were in and out all the time. And we never took our shoes off.

Speaker 3:
[43:16] Oh, so that wasn't a rule for you guys?

Speaker 1:
[43:18] It was not a rule.

Speaker 3:
[43:18] See, it was for us.

Speaker 1:
[43:19] Mom, dad never did, no.

Speaker 3:
[43:20] Did you guys have carpet?

Speaker 1:
[43:22] We had a beautiful lime green shag carpet. It was mom's pride and joy.

Speaker 2:
[43:27] Tax is interesting. It says no hair brushes in the kitchen and no brushing your hair in the kitchen.

Speaker 3:
[43:32] Okay, I mean, that makes sense because hair gets into food, too.

Speaker 1:
[43:35] I'm just picturing like a family full of a lot of girls with long hair.

Speaker 3:
[43:39] I was going to say, my mom would do my hair for dance in the kitchen all the time. Like I never knew how to do a ponytail until I was probably like 11. So we would always like I'd sit at the kitchen table and she'd do my hair. Yeah.

Speaker 9:
[43:49] Well, all right.

Speaker 6:
[43:50] Cabinets need to be closed.

Speaker 2:
[43:51] Someone texted. That one is 100 percent.

Speaker 6:
[43:54] And can you close them quietly?

Speaker 2:
[43:55] Madison Hess, my sister.

Speaker 1:
[43:57] Slam. Thank you, Jenny. It is 101.3 KDWB.