[Music]
Now, it's Red Eye Radio, Gary McNamara, and Eric Hurley talk about everything from
“politics to social issues and news of the day, whether you're up late or you're just starting”
your day. Welcome to the show from the Relief Fector Studios. This is Red Eye Radio. All across America, we are Red Eye Radio. He is here at Hurley and I'm Gary McNamara. Good morning. Welcome. Hi. You know, I've just got to start with this. You know, on yesterday's show, one of the things that we talked about was on social media, the response to Lindsey Graham's death. Yeah. And how, you know, you, and I've said obviously, the left is back, especially in the
comment sections. Everything, the left has returned to acts. I mean, they're not, they're insane,
but they have returned. But I mean, the number of, it's, we live. And I don't believe, as I've said yesterday,
every single person that I know, whether they're around the right or left, does and do this. The people that I actually know, they don't, they might do it anonymously on social media. They don't do it in conversations with me or from what I know anybody else. And they don't, I don't see them commenting in this particular way. But it's the, the, the, the speculation. It's coming up with a speculation based on zero evidence. And anybody who criticizes you on the
speculation, no matter how absurd the speculation becomes is all of a sudden, your mortal enemy for life. Yeah. And it's just, you, you shake your head going, what's going on? And, and then
yesterday, I, I had posted both on Facebook and, and on, and, and, and, and, and, and,
on, a picture that my sister took on Saturday night. My sister was in Alcott, New York, which is right on Lake Ontario, uh, south, uh, southeast of Toronto. You know, and about 42 miles right across Lake Ontario. The sun was setting. She took her camera out, snapped the picture, and it's a beautiful skyline of Toronto. Yeah. All right. So I put it on X and, and Facebook. And, you know, if, if I posted on my stuff, it's fine. Well, there was some, uh, a group from
the Toronto area, because they had the, they're based on the zip code, or excuse me, the zip code, the area code of, of, of, of, of Ontario. Picked it up and posted it. They posted it on Instagram. My sister's picture. And, and I was like, whoa. And they said this, and, and I just put underneath and I said, well, I said, yeah, I said, my sister, you know, my, my sister posted that
“the other day. And I said, you must have got it off my X or Facebook account. And they came back,”
you know, and they said, we're sorry, do we need permission? I go, no, no, no, it is. She could care less, you know, and, and then she found out about it. She was thrilled. Well, the comments that I was getting, the comments that, that not that I was getting, but the, the people who posted it, it was like, this proves the Earth is flat. What, what, what are you talking about? And then this huge debate starts of whether the picture shows the Earth is flat. And the best one was, you can't see the
bottom of the buildings. You only see the top, that's the evidence that they're perfect. I mean, yeah, so, so that started, then there was a guy, you know, that responded to my comment where my sister took it. He goes, yeah, our city is much better than what you people have down there. It's like, it's a, if you go to my, if you go to my, my, my, my, my, my, my X page, uh, uh, Gary at Red Eye One, you can see it. It's a beautiful picture. I mean, the sun, I just saw it
when I logged on just a few minutes ago here. Isn't it a great picture? No, it's a beautiful picture. You just, you just snapped it and you can see the sea and tower and everything else. Yeah. But I just, I burst out, now, I don't respond to that. I don't get into arguments anymore in social media. I just don't, well, it's a much less, things like that. You know, you and I don't get into the reason that that we won't, I think I can speak for you, that we don't, we've talked about it
“before. The reason that's why I think I can speak for you on this is that we both have the same”
take on this. I'm not, I'm sorry, with all do respect to our friends Ben Shapiro and others who will, you know, go back and forth with people sometimes, David Limbaugh does it and, you know, these are all brilliant people and they do it. It's kind of what they do though. What we do is radio. And I'm not going to have, so it's not there. I don't spend my life on social media. In fact,
I spend very little of my life on social media, except for the fact that I us...
prep. In other words, I don't, I'm not posting. I'm there looking for things. I'm, I'm looking for maybe, you know, another take on a story or something to see what the chatter is about, right? When something breaks or when a story comes out. I don't want to sit there all day, like Chris Cuomo, and have to eat dirt on what, what did he say? The Constitution doesn't protect
“hate speech. Remember that whole thing? And it just went on for like 15 hours. He's, well,”
and I learned that when Facebook first came out. And I, I told the story on social, you know,
on, you know, my, my take on social media. And it was a well-known actor, you know, from the 60s and 70s, Robby Rist used to play guitar with my, another friend of mine Paul Pope. They had a great band. He's a great guitarist. It really is. He's a great pop guitarist. He's, yeah, he's, you know, because I've seen him live many, many times. Right. And so I knew him and he knew me. I mean, because he played with my, my, my buddy for years. This was in the, the 80s and early 90s. Right.
Mid 90s, I think, might have been even longer. I'm not really sure. And, and so I got to know him.
“And when Facebook first came out, we got into, I never forget. It was the first discussion I had”
on, and this was on Facebook. X really wasn't the thing at that point. Twitter wasn't even a thing at that point. This is so early on. I can't believe I saw the other day. It's like 17 years ago, a memory and Facebook. I'm like, you got to be kidding me. It's been that long. Yeah, crazy. I blew me away. It's crazy. Well, I, I remember waking up on a Friday, you know, waking up on a Friday from the show. Maybe it was 10 11 o'clock, whatever. And I responded to him.
Midnight 12 and a half hours later, we were still going at it. And it was just like you see today. Other people jumping on board, changing the top, bringing up something, going down a different rabbit. Oh, that did nothing to do with it. And I went, this is useless. Well, because, you know,
the thing is is basically it's everybody in the world potentially, I guess anybody with access to
social media or that particular social media forum wanting to have the last word, that's the whole thing. Yeah. It's, you know, they're, they're, they're looking to have the last word because they, they think having the last word means you've won the argument. Right. And you get, that's a great point. You get this illusion of having the last word because I've gone to bed. I, I actually know how to turn it off. In fact, I prefer to turn it off
whenever possible. And, you know, I, I have my alerts set, you know, because of the show. I get, I don't know how many notifications, you know, every hour, every minute. And I've got it set now to where things come to me. I don't rely as much on social media, but social media is one of the ways to see, all right, what's the chatter about? What are people, you know, saying about it? What's the take on it? That's even getting annoying because of the
“tribalism and, and everything else. And as you mentioned, I think on yesterday's show,”
the liberals are definitely back on X. But you look at that, you know, that, that's scenario. And, and wanting to have the last word or thinking you have the last word means you have one, the argument is really the mindset of too many people on social media. They think if you don't respond. Wow, I guess I showed him and or her and that's next thing, you know, you know, it's, it's just become this useless vastness of nothing. It's, it's just, I really don't
Shane Gillis talked about his, like his uncles that that have no following on Twitter at all. Yeah. And then they'll just, you know, aided Joe's pizza today. It was delicious and it's, it's just tweeted into the void. You know, nobody sees it. It just goes off into the void. That's kind of where I see social media. There are some very good points made on social media,
by critical thinkers that we follow. And, and that's the important stuff. It's for comments.
It's, it's, it's, it's the, yeah, it comments is the right word because it's ...
If you can't have, you know, the back and forth and have it debate. And quite frankly, I think the best debate is to have in person. But the liberals won't have that at all. And that's the other thing too. They treated as, you know, the drive by, you know, of, you know, flipping that certain finger
in the air toward you and thinking, well, I'm never going to meet this person. I'm never going to
see that person. And it's embarrassing when you pull up to the same grocery store. And then next thing, you know, they, again, you know, they think they're the king of the road or whatever. They think
“they want the argument, you know, on social media. And the fact is, it doesn't work that way.”
The debate doesn't work that way. And you learn that very quickly when you're in talk radio. If you stay in talk radio for any amount of time and you and I call it a second. What's the date? Tomorrow is 21 years. Not today. It's, it's not today, it's a, not today. Oh, but tomorrow, when it's day to 15, 21 years, there's a team as a team as a team. We have a combined each, if you combine both of our experiences, we have like 370 years combined experience.
But am I 45, 46 something like that? Yeah. And, and, and for me, it's, it's, I always start the
clock news. So for me, it's been 11 minutes. But the, the whole thing. I'm closing in. I start over every month. I know I'm, I'm getting close to 50,000 hours. Yeah. And, and I know, I, I think I figured it out about a year ago. Yeah. And so that's just thing on air stuff, not the show prep. Oh, yeah, just on air. That's actually, yeah, just being on air. I think it's, yeah, closing in on 50,000. And I, I believe I'm over 10,000 radio shows now. Yeah. In my, and I can't. Well, you know, you think about that.
You're like, wow, somebody told me, you know, you're going to end up doing 10,000 radio shows and being on for 50,000 hours. And people say, how can you, you know, five hour shows I've done, I did two shows for a long time. Yeah. First, like, it was five years. I did two different shows. So that was both added, you know, both added on to that. Yeah. Plus in, in other areas, I did, you know, at times, remember in music radio. When I was a music radio, I worked six days. I was on the air six days a week. Well, for, you know,
be on Saturday, too. I used, I was working two jobs for this company. Actually, I was doing a two morning shows on the weekend. I was doing Saturday and Sunday morning show. And then I was working during the week, doing two shows. I was doing this show. And then I was doing voices and comedy with the legendary VLJ at WBAP for 10 years. And so I, you know, it's, I don't know where my hours are, where my number shows are. But yeah, they're somewhere in that area. I, I think of that
“if you, yeah, if you go back to the beginning of my career and say, that's what you're going to end up”
doing. Oh, my gosh. You know, then I run into these truck drivers who have four million accident
free miles. And I'm thinking, oh, my gosh. Yeah, that's a, that's a, that's a, a lot of driving, but just very quickly on, if you're, because people are checking out that the, the, the, the picture my sister took of the, of the, of the sunset and the Toronto skyline. I'm going to go back and share that too. That's just, that just caused all, like I said, the, all this, uh, the hoop one and the flat earthers coming out. This proves that the earth is flat. It's like, what? And I'm thinking to myself,
think about this. These are, these are people that are waiting every single day just to post something so they can say the earth is flat. Yeah. Think about that. Yeah. And, and then like I said, the one guy, I'm seeing as a Canadian, you know, the one guy taking a shot. Whoa, our skyline
“is, is so much better than anything that you have in the United States. Well, yeah. I mean, that's what,”
I'm going to lose some sleep tonight because you believe that your skyline is superior in Toronto, right? Toronto. Toronto. So I, I'll just say to the people of Toronto, yeah, but your buildings are in the water. Well, you're right. It proves, see, this is the crew. It doesn't prove flat earth. What it proves is Toronto buildings are floating on Lake Ontario, float if you look at the picture. I meant I would. Yeah. But none of the stuff is on X. This was all I am hardly ever.
The only reason I'm even on Instagram is because my great nephew's on it. Yeah. And, you know, and so I can, when he was putting on basketball stuff, I think I posted three or four times on Instagram. It just, it doesn't, it doesn't accomplish, really doesn't accomplish much. I just, I don't like the way that it's formatted at all. I just don't like this. Well, it's weird to me, too. It's kind of, it's, I don't know, it's kind of off-putting. It's, you know, it doesn't.
I, I think the news feed on X is kind of more my style. I, I can search for things. I can look at things
There's so much more, that's available.
Yeah, you, you can, you can, you can organize the other day in the way that you,
that you wanted to benefits what you want to get out of it, which is me on both X and, and, and, and Facebook, especially X is different news sources, different audio cuts that are being, you know, promoted. For me, it's a great show prep. One of the many show prep vehicles that we use every single day. Yeah, it's, you know, I have a, I have a daughter who's, who's on TikTok and doing very well. I don't do TikTok either for the same reason. It's just seems, it seems so,
ADHD. You know what I mean? It's like, it's like, it's like, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, scroll, blah, scroll, blah, scroll. And, and that just seems kind of,
I don't know, it's, it's, it's not my speed. It never was my speed. But, you know, that's the thing,
“I think, and, and it's, by the way, it's a beautiful picture. I reposted that on, on my X-page as well,”
at Eric Harley. And it's, you know, but that's, that's a great snapshot, upon intended, of, of kind of where social media is and how they react, you know, it just kind of, everything's got to be, you know, extreme reaction. I've got to have an opinion on this, instead of, hey, great shot. Nice picture. Right, exactly. That's the vast majority of the response. Right. I mean, that's almost 100% of the response I got on X and Facebook. No,
and I didn't know that somebody else posting it, you know, on Instagram, would, would just
set off this firestorm of flat earthers. Right. Exactly. Yeah, it's crazy. We need to go back to Jade Helm 15. Jade Helm 27. Let's start that right now. We are right, I radio. This report is brought to you by Shell Rotella with advanced synthetic technology is designed to help keep your rig running with more mileage and less maintenance. On a hot summer day, the last thing you want to feel is a blast of warm air. When you turn on
your air conditioning, a malfunctioning AC system will leave you uncomfortably shifting in your seat, not to mention it can affect the safety and performance of your entire vehicle and your prototype activity. When issues with your AC system begin to occur internally, your truck will give you some warning signs. Those include a noisy compressor and a lack of water dripping from the cab drain tube while your AC is running. If you experience either of these warning signs,
“you should have your AC system inspected by a professional technician immediately. Listen to your truck”
and invest the time now to avoid spending more time in the shop later on. We'll be right back with more red eye radio with every currently and Gary McNamara. We are red eye radio. I'm Gary McNamara along with Eric Hurley coming up on the bottom of the hour. We will get to the situation in a ran just one more thing about the picture my sister took. So I told her about it. I said, "Hey, I messaged her and then she messaged me back and then I
called her." I was telling her about everything. I said some of the response from the flat earth people on it. Then the one guy said, "I haven't checked it in an hour, so I could care less, but it was just minutes after it was posted." The guy that wanting to insult the United States because of it... Gary, why is this? Well, apparently you haven't been in talk radio for 36 years. Otherwise, you would completely understand. Well, no, I don't know. Sometimes I have to explain things
to my mom when we're talking about things. Well, people react, you know, certain ways. Well, why do they do that? I don't know, mom. I don't know. Give them something to do. I guess. The guy who was in the hospital was a computer-built, focused man, and he had a nice tip of his life.
“But that's not what he did. He just got a lot of money from the gun store and he said, "I think it's good."”
It's very good. With his story, it's about 30 years old.
Trying to jump in just a few minutes before to say hello.
Thank you for helping. But I do it to get all the videos and all the content that you won't find anywhere else. Scrolling with Haley. Dissearch that up, and I will be there. Follow and listen on your favorite platform. You're listening to Red Eye Radio from the Red Leaf Factory Studio. We are Red Eye Radio, and he is there, crawling up during McNamara,
download our Red Eye Radio app today, and you can listen one and where you choose. I was listening to this audio a couple of minutes ago and I went, "Oh, okay."
Basically, covers all the points I wanted to make about the situation in Iran right now,
and it came from Brit Hume yesterday on Fox News. Here we go. Yeah, I wonder if that feed of the president wants forever be paid by anybody,
“but the real question I think tonight is whether the military action we're undertaking now can”
have the effect of shutting down Iran's ability to interfere in the straight-of-war moves. We've heard their military, their regular military. We've taken out a lot of their installations. We've done all those things, so president statements about that, I think, are individually true, but it doesn't take much to interfere with shipping in the straight-of-war moves.
And the question now is whether I'm military can make the straight safe at an acceptable cost to us.
It's risky, it may entail casualties, might even entail ground forces, but that's where we are in my judgment. You know, we had, do we play the audio cut? I don't know if we play the yesterday or describe the audio cut yesterday of the president who was asked a question that, you know, just a month ago, that, you know, you were, well, I, in fact, I haven't, I found it. I just, as I've
scrolling down, I found it, let me play actually play the audio cut in their own words. Here we go. Last month, you said Iranian leaders were very rational people, nice people to deal with, strong people, smart people. Today, you said they were scum, sick people, and being led by sick people. What changed and do you think they got to know? He said, I got to know them, and Marco Rubio burst into a big smile when he, he said that. We know that, you know, from the very, very
beginning, and, and Marco Rubio really on the, was the, the point person for telling us just how
“bad Iran was the president did in the beginning. Yeah. But the, the fact is when you had both the”
president and JD events, they lost credibility, they lost a tremendous amount of credibility, pretending whether you want to call it negotiation or not, you know, the president said on his own. We, we don't have to accuse the president of saying, we got played like fools, the president said it. Yep. Yep. The president said they're playing us like fools, which means they're playing me, like a fool as he continued then to go down the path of the memorandum of agreement and everything else.
Yeah. You know, yesterday, we just, we mentioned it briefly, but with the death of Lindsey Graham and a few other things, you know, that had happened, we really didn't hit it yesterday. And I had said before we went on vacation, you and I both agreed on this. When the president was speaking, I'm paying attention now, is he still going to speak for the nation on Thursday? Yeah. You know, what's interesting is, it's at 9 p.m. Eastern, he said, "Watch it on truth,
social." And I thought, well, is it only going to be on truth, social? I mean, the word was out that he's going to speak before the nation Thursday evening. And at the time, if it's on a ran, this is one of the networks, you know, should carry, but it's gotten to the point with the
president and it may not be the, the point now. Maybe he is finally determined to do what we believe
needs to be done here, but it got to the point when the president spoke on a ran or JD Vance, whatever, it was, and then we know that Marco Rubio stayed quiet for a significant period of time.
“It became blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, whatever. Don't care what you say anymore. What are you doing?”
Right. That's just the reality of when you take something that is not believable. And the president was trying to sell something. You can call it negotiation. Whatever you want to say, you can say it's fifth dimensional chess. It's the art of, it's the art of the castan's a deal. You know, the art of the deal, whatever, it made him look. And he said it. They're playing us like fools. The president said it. And then he continued with
the memorandum of understanding of negotiating it. It was just like my god. This is just, you know, it's getting to be just, you know, ridiculous here. You know, there's negotiation.
Then there's, when you make the statement that our negotiation, our negotiati...
Iranians makes us look like fools, that's not a strong point to go from the strong point. And the, the strong point is the military action. And I don't know. I agree with, uh, bread him. I don't know, you know, you, I saw that, I saw one report that one of the heads of the
Iranian Revolutionary Guard was taken out. That Israel actually, you know, took them out.
I saw that report. I don't know, you know, we, we talk about hitting bridges, hitting infrastructure, hitting military things. I, the, the, the question is none of that has changed the Iranian regime. Is he only thing that will change them as we have stated before as you take out. And, and Trump said it in the speech yesterday. Well, they were more reasonable to deal with than the first level and the second level that they wiped out. Right. Of, of the, you know, of the, the, the, the, the
government, uh, of, of, of, of Iran. Well, it didn't work out because you're back to war again.
You couldn't get a deal. Who's being reasonable. Yeah. So it's still as he's saying, okay, we're
going to go in and there's hell to pay now. Well, well, still there are more reasonable than the
“first to, don't say those things. Well, you can't say those things. Look, here's the thing,”
here's the, the, the condon drum. It's, uh, I don't even know if condon drum describes that fully, but in in war, there has to be a lot of propaganda set out for your enemy to, to steer your enemy in one direction. But I don't subscribe to that 100% and go, oh, that's what he's doing. Oh, that's what he's doing. Now again, I've said this before. If at the end of this, you know, he's been playing this so that he, he can set them up to take the regime out and get
the uranium and it was all a strategy. I don't believe that, by the way, any longer. I don't believe that's a possibility, any longer. But if that were the case and it proves to be the case, I'll say, well, play again. I don't subscribe to that because of the nature of this particular president Trump goes back and forth and back and forth and back and forth because he's trying to do two things at once. He's trying to appease the U.S. citizens. He's trying to calm the markets.
That's part of appeasing, you know, people here domestically and he's also trying to get things
“done with a rant. The problem with war is you have to make the choice. We have said this.”
We said it. You know, and you just heard the audio that mimicked what we have said, it's likely going to require boots on the ground. If you're going to finish this thing, the way it should be finished. The regime gone and the uranium in our hands and those two have to happen in that order, then it's going to require boots on the ground in a big way. This isn't something we can do. You know, when we went into Iraq to to liberate Kuwait
back in the early 90s, they weren't even prepared for war. The soldiers that Saddam who's saying put out there weren't even prepared, you know, they were sitting in there under where eating chapstick because they didn't have anything to fight with or survive on and it's nothing like that. With the IRGC, it's nothing like that. And we have no idea how deep those roots go
“when it comes to loyalty to the regime because here's the thing.”
I don't know how many, I don't know, I'm sure plenty of people, very smart people that we follow,
critical thinkers have assessed it this way. But what the regime believes, the hardliners,
is deeply and these are deeply held beliefs and the way that you govern a people based on their interpretation of their religion and what it is. When it's that deep, you don't know how far the loyalty goes. That's the problem. You don't know who you're dealing with, even if you ran into a group of, let's say, top members of the IRGC and they say, yeah, no, we would love to overthrow the regime and we'll help you do it in blah, blah, blah. You can't trust anybody in that
situation and it would be an ongoing issue. It would be an ongoing problem that you would run into
Day after day after day.
going to have an exit plan. Your exit plan is when the regime is gone and you can say it's gone,
“when you can confidently say those roots have been pulled out of the ground and there is no more”
loyalty to the regime. There's no lasting loyalty at all and there is change and then you can say you've got the uranium in your hands. I don't know how long a mission like that would actually take to get to that point. We had said this in the very beginning that the gamble that the President's taken it again. We didn't know what the strategy was going to be. We didn't know what the military strategy at that point when he started taking out levels of government. We said,
okay, as he had said, the goal is and when they first came out and said, our goal is not regime change. You don't take out the first two levels of government as he claims they've taken out, right, not to have regime change. The whole goal was to have the people of Iran feel safe to come out, get weapons to them somehow. I still wonder about the whole
current situation. That's never been fully explained, you know, by the administration,
“you know, do they steal the weapons? What in the world happened there precisely? The administration?”
Where are those weapons? That's a great, that's a great question. And so you look at this and we said, look, the challenges here, it seems like the original war plan was dependent on the people revolting. And we said at the point, maybe that will happen. I don't know. I don't know what the CIA knows. We don't know what Masad knows over there, what the intelligence is. But it's always risky when you're depending on the end of the war on things that are out of your control. How
a mass of people were spawned in another country. That's always a gamble that you're taking. The one thing that I do like over the last, well there's a couple of things. Number one, it seems like we're not doing this to get them back to the bargaining tale to make a deal. Yeah, no, I think it's
“the talks are over. Yeah. And so that's the entire. So the point may not be putting”
roots on the ground. It may be okay, just keep going after them day in and day out, keep the squeeze on, keep the blockade on. But that was the problem in the beginning. As we have said, don't make it so cash is available to them at all. card island. You've got to, you've got to secure card island. Take control of card island. I don't know. Now, I'm saying this with zero knowledge of what that would take, what that would require and what the risk of that would be,
because because I don't sense boots on the ground at all. I do not sense that. I mean, no, but you could form a blockade and secure that island. And that's chokes out the the regime. Are they afraid that, well, by choking out the regime, we choke out the people of a ramp. If we make the economy worse, we make a tough on the people of ramp. And that's not something. We don't want some massive refugee crisis, you know, to a neighboring country as a
by genre or, you know, wherever we don't want, we don't want the regime taking this out on the people of a ramp as they have done repeatedly and killing people in the streets. You know, I don't know what the risk is, why they don't take card island. The president actually mentioned it, it goes back three or four weeks. He said, we're going to probably take card island today. And then it didn't happen. They were back at the table. Well, domestically, the problem the
president has is in Democrats start, don't be surprised if you start hearing this. We're back in, what's the end game here? If it's not a deal, what's the end game? Is it an end game? What's the exit strategy? Yeah. By the way, well, what's the end of the accomplish? And the reason I bring that
up is Democrats know that will affect independence. Independence will say, because it's always,
all right, we're in, how do we get out? That's where the American people isn't in any conflict that we're in, a significant portion. What's the exit right? Expect Democrats to be saying that because it's like, all right, the president says the deal's off now. We're just going in to get them. What's the exit strategy? What does what does winning look like in this case? What is the goal of the United States now? Are you trying to accomplish that? And I'm exactly, and I'm thinking, is that why Thursday,
he's going to speak to the nation? It's the first thing I thought. Yeah. It's the first thing I thought when they announced it. We are right, I radio. We lined up and for your goals, eight, six,
Ninety-red eye on red eye radio.
We are right, I radio. These are chronic, I'm Gary McNamara. So I'm really interested to see what
the president's going to say on Thursday night. One of the things we have said when you do this, you need to speak to the American people more. He did the eight-minute speech, and then really, there weren't a lot of prime time speeches on this. You're going to be attacked by Democrats now
“saying, what's the end game? I think that's really the, what's the exit strategy? Remember that”
in Afghanistan? And the public went for it. Yeah. And Democrats believe that they can use that again. So don't be surprised when you hear that. Yeah. What's the exit strategy? What's the plan? What's winning? Look like, yep, what's the goal now of the administration? Well, they had momentum going in to Afghanistan if think about it after 9/11, but then after a couple of years, you've got to answer some questions. Top of the our news is brought to you by HowProduct Visit HowProducts.com.
This is Red Eye Radio. On Westwood One. Jim Rome takes on sports. I will always have a
complicated relationship with this game, but people evolve to do sports. Do not make me regret this. Do not make me devolve. Back to that guy that's so many clones, which that I still was, and do not embarrass the entire country. Now, I can go back. I can get there fast, news tonight, and you got a real problem. Do not blow it. The Jim Rome Show podcast has been warned. If I would listen on your favorite platform.
Now, it's Red Eye Radio. Gary McNamara and Eric Hurley talk about everything from Father Ticks to Social Issues and News of the Day. Whether you're up late or you're just starting your day, welcome to the show from the Relief Factor Studios. This is Red Eye Radio. All across America. We are Red Eye Radio. He is Eric Hurley and I'm Gary McNamara. She's what? This story from the Wall Street Journal from when we were on vacation last week.
Yeah, ready for this. Okay. This is actually a story in the Wall Street Journal.
“Why white-collar men are obsessed with the perfect lawn?”
Lush turf can be just as much as an office status symbol as a killer golf swing. Thanks to an article on this. For a lot of authors, office workers, okay, mostly middle age male office workers, a manicured lawn is as much of a status symbol as a luxury car in the driveway, excelling at work in yard work fits the modern professionals' fixation of optimizing everything.
The office biohacker who won't shut up about his golf score may also blab about nitrogen levels in his soil. I don't go that far. I take really good care of my lawn. I don't know what the nitrogen levels are. Yeah, but you, well, you know, I'm just, it's something that you do. You take care of your lawn. I mean, it's just something. If you don't take care of your lawn,
you can't just let it grow. The city's going to come after you, but yeah. And I was realizing this because I tried to make this male centric.
“You know, where my obsession with edging came from?”
Your mom, my mother. Yeah. You know, this is before I had, you had the gas powered edgers or the electric. You had the push thing. You had a push, which was like a weird wheel, which wasn't there, by the way,
it wasn't ever good. It was always horrible. It didn't cut very well. It didn't. It wasn't
you know, it should be razor sharp, you know what I mean? And the rubber wheel next to it, and you had to push back and forth. And my mother would come out. Well, the lawn cut, I mean, come on. Anyway, an idiot can cut a lawn. Yeah. But edging was where my mother really became obsessive about it. She would go along and make sure that the corners were perfect. And if there was a piece of grass hanging over the sidewalk. Uh-huh. Oh, there was
elder pay. Oh, no, no. Yeah, elder pay. I stopped because, you know, they, they, uh, I have sent Augustine in it. It has what some people call runners, but stolen is what they're actually
Called.
And it's like, one will pop over the edge after I've just gone across it. I'm like, what do you think you're doing? I'm having a fight with this little piece of grass. I'm pulling it. You know what? I'm getting rid of you right now. You're a problem, Mr. I'm getting rid of you. No, it's for me. Mine came from, uh, oddly enough, my dad,
who always kept a nice lawn, but it was more of his military background,
you know, where he wanted things to look sharp. And I were a black T-shirt and jeans every day. So I can't look sharp like he did in his military uniform. So I figured I'll make it up with my lawn. And I, the edging for me, that's kind of where it comes from. It's, it's, you know, it's a nice edge. And I edged it every time. I, I see neighbors who don't are city, actually put an ordinance in. We don't have an HOA, but Texas monthly years ago,
did a story on our city, the, the town I live in and said it has more ordinances on the books than any HOA rules in the state at that time. I don't know if that's the case now.
And, and they're very, they put out another one. I remember because people were just letting their
grass grow over the sidewalk. They'd mow and then it would just grow over the sidewalk. I'm like, if your, your lawn looks like a hippie, don't do this. You, you can't grow your bangs out.
“My, one of my neighbors put all new turf. I think he's, I, I believe he's got the, the,”
the, what is it, is the, the live oak, which, which is one that I had the drop the drops he asked it on your lawn and destroyers. Yeah, both live oaks and red oaks both do that. The smaller leaves are the live oaks. The live, the live, the live trees, but yeah. And, and thank goodness they both got to season. I had to cut them down. Yeah. Because, yeah. But, but my neighbor put in all new turf. Yeah. And I don't know, I don't know the grass he put in. It's not southern from you to the
ghost dormant. Yeah. Because he had put it in, I don't think it is because when you put it in, it was absolutely green in, in February when he put it in. Yeah. It's all dead. Yeah. All of this, the acidity is hard to keep on top of with all of his got oaks brand new all dead. But it was perfectly green and like two weeks later. That's hard. Gone. The whole, I mean, the entire lawn. I'm like, oh, he's hearing from the homeowners association. But this is the, this is the sentence
got to me. Now, this was actually in the Wall Street Journal. And I'm like, come, who comes up with this stuff? If weekend warriors can't slay zombies on a dystopian battlefield, at least they can massacre dandelions in their backyard. Like a killer golf swing or rock hard glutes. A perfect lawn is a way for people who make a living with their minds to prove that they are good at something
“physical too. Who are these people that want, look, you can go anywhere. Where are they getting this?”
Yeah. I just like a study. If it's a study, then show me the data. I want to see what they found if this actually is, you know, a mindset that is, you know, runs throughout and and this is actually where are they getting the proof to back this up? Because the, the, the, the, the writer says so. It's like, here it is. It goes a an unlike athletic pursuits that can seem elitous like skiing or wind surfing in exotic locales, mowing the lawn can make accomplished professionals
seem more relatable. It's a way to bond with coat workers, much like chatting about other shared hobbies or the latest World Cup games, being able to banter about blade height and the best time to area, area, area, also gain you access to an office subculture. Alas, I remain an outsider. I have the ugliest lawn in my neighborhood. This is the writer. I mean, the people that are
passionate about a million different things in a free society. Yeah. I mean, when I, if I was the
editor, when I, and I saw this a couple of days ago, and I bookmarked it and said, okay, I got to bring this up because it's just, it's, it's the media, as you said, you know, is it say psychological problems? They've just formed this right people as if it's a scientific fact. Right. Now, when you, you look at, I mean, you can sit there and you work all day, you go, okay, law looks pretty good,
“and then you go and you need to do something else. Yeah. There's nothing wrong with it because”
if you don't have, if you don't have the lawn and a, you know, good green healthy lawn,
It can be held a repair.
I, for me, you know, you wanted to look nice for your family, but you also want to be a good
neighbor. I don't want to be the neighbor with, you know, this author of this story, the writer,
“admits, as the worst lawn. I sent some jealousy here. Because here's the thing, if, if you're not,”
if you're not putting in the work, you can, you can hire people to do it, and it's, it's relatively cheap to get someone to at least mo and trim, right? And then you can hire another lawn service to come out and do the fertilizer or whatever. My dad actually hired a guy that does all the above. And, you know, and my dad will tell him what he prefers. My dad buys the fertilizer, has it shipped
to the house, and then says, this is what I do. And if you'll do that for me, any pace and to do it,
it's just labor. You know, so he's not hiring like, like, like, I think it's true green, which is one of the companies that you could hire to, you know, make your lawn look better if something's going on with it. But it really sounds like the writer of this article is up
“set that other people have a good lawn. Or is proud of having a crappy looking lawn?”
Calum borchers is the, the guys. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So he doesn't look like someone who cuts his own lawn, like, like, there's a look. Yeah. Yeah. That guy doesn't have a lawn mower. Like there's a look to somebody who cuts their lawn. You know, I have two. Okay. See, I've created my own stereotypes. Well, no, that's it. That's it. Yeah. But that guy doesn't have a lawn mower. He doesn't even know what home depot is. You know, it's, but it's the same to me. It's the same as making sure my floors are
clean or the kitchen's clean. Right. Or people are obsessed with clean houses and with upgrading their kitchens and and doing things to make things look nice. This is a status symbol. You know, if we gotten to that point where it's like, I can't believe people are taken care of their stuff. And then every, because we get it twice a week, then there's this obsession of taking garbage out of the house. Yeah. Right. We, what is it? Why, I don't know. It's a, it's a,
“it's a matter of, I don't know, not smelling what you had for dinner last night. I think, I think we need”
it because I, I see this in a lot of obituary's. Yeah. They were an active gardener. Well, what kind of obsession is that? Yeah. Who wants out there obituary? They, they, they, they, they tend to their garden every day. Well, the obsession of these people. How dare they? What is this? What are they trying to prove? They think they're better than everybody else by gardening. My gosh. Now, the question I would have is it more elitist to be a gardener than to have a perfect lawn? Oh, I think so.
I think so. And I say that because my wife is a gardener, a vegetable gardener, as she's doing this year. This year, we had issues with the tomatoes. I think we had too much rain early on and, and it didn't work out. But, but, but man, we've got your privilege. We've got, I know, right? And we've got a bunch of, of, of, of candelips and melons coming in, which is great. They're actually holding up very well. But she did all the, well, I can't say she did all the work.
I do the infrastructure. And then she does the actual gardening and planning of the seedlings. In the winter, our entire office, our home office is filled with seedlings and grow light. So, what you're telling me, you have stereotypical gender roles for your garden? Yeah. Yeah, I thought that was a given. Yeah. And then she comes in and makes me a sandwich. And, and so that is, because I'm hungry. I've been watching YouTube all day, but it's like hurry up with
that. What's taking you so long? Well, I do remember about when I first moved into my house and
the lawn, you know, when I make, it's a new house. So, you know, yeah, and I remember the, I edged it and I remember looking at it going, Mom would really be proud because the corners came together and it was perfectly edged. I mean, it was, yeah, it's got to be a 90 degree. Right. It's a kind of border. And I took a picture of it to show my mom, my mom was alive at that time.
Yeah.
Like, don't you remember? You're the one. You're the one. When I did this, I actually posted it
“on Facebook at the time. Yeah. Saying, look at that. Look at the perfect 90 degree angle. Now,”
and I put in there, this comes from my mother who demanded perfection in edging no blade of grass. That's right. Could cover any part of the sidewalk ever. That's right. No, if, if I, if something happens and I miss one, I'll go back as I'm, because I do a walk around after I'm done. And people will say, well, you're just trying to take pride in your work and, you know, you're just, what guys do, you know, we'll wash our truck and then look at it for 20 minutes.
I'm going to look what I did. But it's, and that's after I drive through car wash. But no, I go back if I'm walking, you know, I'll just, you know, go back and make sure that everything's cleaned up. For me, I wanted to look nice. I wanted the house to look nice.
“But it's part of being neighborly. I don't want, I, I, it's part of helping your neighborhood,”
your street look better is, it's what you do. Well, where they say that it's as much of a status symbol as a luxury cart in your driveway. My car that sits in my driveway is my 23 year old vehicle. So apparently they're wrong on that one in the Wall Street and I'm thinking about buying my dad's 2003 Ford F-250 diesel and so I'm going to put that in my driveway. Yeah. How y'all doing?
Yeah. We are Red Eye Radio. This morning's USDA Farm Report is brought to you by house products tested, trusted, guaranteed since 1920. Highlights from USDA's latest crop progress report includes a fast pace to court, silky. We do see some faster progress in parts of the upper Midwest. With other tidbits from USDA Birologist Brad Rippie, including...
So I mean, exactly half of the crop blooming. That is ahead of the five year average of 44 percent. U.S. cotton crop. One thing that's been notable about this season is just tell average. It has been in terms of progress. U.S. peanut crop. Roughly two thirds of the crop pegging by July 12th. A national number is 65 percent equal to the five year average. Meanwhile,
U.S. rice will pass the one-third mark on heading progress during the week to reach 35 percent
on July 12th. When are we? The harvest is moving along very quickly. Spring wheat numbers for the week ending July 12th. Adding progress is right on par at 72 percent. I'm Rod Bane reporting for the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, D.C. This report brought to you by Senax fuels and loops. Get in touch with Red Eyed Radio, toll-free at 866. Mindy Red Eyed.
We're in our radio, and he's our front-end. I'm Gary McNamara. You know, one thing that we did not mention last week about Lindsey Graham is he served in the military for 33 years. Yeah. Yeah. It's so wild that he's been around in the political scene for so long. You don't think about his formula. You don't think about, you know, his service in the military, which he stayed in, though, because he came in in 94 as a representative. Right.
So he was part of the 94, remember the, yep, 95 last year. And I think he stayed in just till a few years ago. And the reserves? Yeah. He was sent to like 2015 or 2016 something like that.
I saw when he finally got out of the reserves. So, you know, it's watching the left reaction to him
because I've said before, you know, Megan McCain was talking about, you know, that they were the three amigos, Joe Lieberman, her father, the Lindsey Graham. They were cute as the moderates.
“Yeah. Remember? Yep. It doesn't matter. And that's why we said yesterday,”
if there's any evidence that the fixation of demonization is just on Trump, the death of Lindsey Graham proved it's not going to end anytime soon. No, it's not. It doesn't matter who it is on the right, whoever is making the news, even somebody who is fast, it's going to be, they're going to be the target. They're going to be the one. The liberal activists have shown no sign of letting up their, in fact, it's getting worse.
And, you know, here's the thing, it's, it's, you know, when Barney Frank pass...
I didn't have anything personal against the guy. I just disagreed with all those policies and everything he supported politically. But I didn't take joy in his death. I didn't, you know, that's, that's, I mean, it's a very foreign idea. When you talk about somebody who is a political opposite,
“you know, I look at the death of Rob Reiner, right?”
The guy who did incredible work and by many people standards and, and, and, and, and what they said about
him, conservatives who had him on as a guest said he was the greatest guy who's the nicest guy. That's so crazy. That's too crazy on the issues. Totally disagreed on the issues. But I didn't have a problem with him personally. I didn't, we, I don't celebrate death. No. [music playing] Dad, you read I read your lives every night on a red eyed radio app available in the app store.
And he is here, Crony, and I'm Gary McNamara, more on Lindsey Graham coming up in just a minute.
“When it comes to supplements, two things matter the most that it works and that you can trust it.”
But rather than just tell you about really factor, I want to share another customer story,
Jonny shared that before really factor, her husband couldn't open his hands in the morning and he had to give up playing guitar. Wow, I can't imagine. Now, he wakes up with flexibility and his bat to playing music and they're both recommending really factor to friends as a way to enjoy the things they love again. That's a great story, Jonny. Thanks for sharing and I can share my story. They gave me some really factor to try and I'm telling you that the pain I used to
deal with every day, it had me changing my plans on the fly sometimes. That has no longer the
“case, thanks to relief factor. And here's a way to get you started very simple. Your three week”
quick start, just 1776 called 800 for relief, 800 for relief or go to relieffactor.com and their friendly team will get you back to doing the things you love. And maybe we can share your story right here on the show, relieffactor.com. I was watching just in general on TV yesterday, a bunch of different doctors talking about a Lindsey Graham and how he died and again, the talk about blood pressure. Yeah. Oh, it's something you just, you got to and I'm in that
category. Yeah. Yeah. When I was diagnosed, right about now 10 years ago, one of the official diagnosis came in that I typed two diabetes, actually metabolic syndrome, which is again,
type two diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol. And I never had the high and high
normal cholesterol, but I never had high cholesterol, but you know, I'm on the lowest level of medication for that. And now, you know, my super low at the time, you know, you had to take the electrocardiogram and all that to make sure everything is right. But when you're a type to diabetic, you know, twice a year, you've got to go to the doctor. Yeah. Just to, you know, check up on everything. And my blood sugar is lower than it was my average three-month blood sugar is lower than it was
when when I, when I first was diagnosed. And even when I was diagnosed, the my daily blood sugar, because they said it kicked off like in the months preceding, I had, what happened was I had shingles and, and I was up busy in my parents had shingles and my brother and I said, you got shingles. And I went into, you know, the local, you know, the local emergency place there, you know, they've got them all over the place now. And they went took my blood pressure, which was fine
less than six months before when I'd gone to the doctor for my yearly was fine. And when I went in there, two twenty five over one twenty five. Who? Who? Yeah. Wow. And they immediately sent me to,
You know, the emergency room.
the, the, they said, you need to go right now. You know, my, what? I couldn't believe it. I just
was, you know, I, and then after really taking over three week period three, you know, blood tests,
“they said, you've got type two diabetes. But my A when C, I think was six and it's, you know,”
that, that's for the, you know, the three month period, which means in that time is when my genetics kicked off. It went from not having it to boom, having it. Yeah. And, and, you know, so, I'm on the, you know, I'm on the blood pressure medication and I work out and, you know, watch my way. I, you know, do, I do everything that I possibly can do. You know, for the blood pressure, because I know, I know so many people. And when I look at history of people who have died,
you know, over the, you know, famous people over the last forty fifty years. Yeah. The number that died from heart problems relating to high blood pressure, which can be controlled. Yeah. You can control it and live, you know, the average, you know, normal, normal life. And, you know, now my, my blood pressure, like anybody else, it's, you know, it can get to, I've had it, you know, uh, it complete rest, you know, uh, a hundred over fifty, but fifty five, but normally it's, it probably it's around
one twenty over sixty eight. You know, it's just fine. It's fine blood pressure. But I'm just amazed at the number of people. Some that I know that died and friends and relatives of theirs have said, they just wouldn't take their blood pressure medicine, they had high blood pressure, they just wouldn't take care of it. And I don't know about Lindsey Graham. I don't know, you know, uh, whether, uh, I'm amazed the number of people that don't go to doctors that are in their sixties.
Yeah. Well, I'm, I'm just amazed. And in the case of a Lindsey Graham, so here's the guy who
just got off the plane from your crane. He's always on a plane, you know, traveling somewhere.
It seems like lately, especially between a ran and the crane and everything that's going on. And then he's having a conversation with a president on the phone, you know, shortly before he passed. And I would have to believe that if there is a blood pressure issue, you know, that would be something that would, I know for me, you know, I could see that raising your blood pressure to a great extent. In fact, one time I was in the hospital for my lung. And I was on the phone doing
work related things, answering emails. And the nurse comes in and she looks at the, you know, at the monitor, she goes, put that down. She goes, you're, you're, you're not here to work.
“You know, and yeah. And she said, and my sister was there visiting, she goes, you need to”
tell him that that's, you can't do this. Because when he's, and, and they noticed it a couple of times, it was a pattern. I actually, they, they come in one morning and same thing had happened. Lated that day again, worked related things. And because there was a big event that I missed because my lung collapsed. Normally, I would just, you know, walk it off and go do the event. But this time I couldn't do it. So they, you know, they, they could see it visibly because I have
the monitors right there. And they could see it. And so you don't think about that. I remember being in a doctor's office. My blood pressure problem didn't start until I had a, what's called a branch vein occlusion. I have a blind spot in my right eye. I'm deaf in my left ear and partially blind
“in my right eye. So that's why I'm so kind to. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Because I'm always bumping into walls”
and going, huh? And then so I can't, you're, you can say anything you want about me. I'm not going to hear most of it. But I don't care. But if you flip me off with the right finger, I won't even see it. But, you know, but I, you know, they, the treatment for that for the branch vein occlusion in my, in my right eye is a needle being stuck in your eye every four weeks with, oh, actually a cancer drug called a vast end. And when that started, I developed
white coat. I never had white coat with dentist, with doctors with, I never had that problem ever.
Then it started to become an issue.
kind of sleepy. It was weird. I was like, oh, I feel like I could kind of go to sleep. But actually
my blood pressure was on the rise. And when they went in and took my blood pressure before getting a needle stuck into my eye, they, they said, no, your blood pressure is high. And I said, I guess I have white coat now. And then it started to calm down after a few minutes. And that would be the pattern, right? White coat only. And then it was like, oh, okay, we need, you know, we need actually a treatment. And so I started on the medications years ago. And, and it can be,
it's, you know, there are a lot of people doing a job like what a Lindsey Graham did. I can't imagine surfing in the Senate or in the house. It would just drive me back soup crazy. Well, he was driven, obviously he was, he was, he was driven by it. Oh, yeah, very passionate.
And it's, when you talk about because I have, I've always had white coat syndrome. Yeah.
And, you know, it's interesting because when I go in, you know, before I have my six month a week before I go in and, you know, they do all the blood work. I have white coat syndrome going into the lab to get my blood taken. Right. So my, you know, they know, my not only, when I go into the doctor, they don't take my blood pressure. They just take the blood out. But my blood sugar's always higher because that drop of adrenaline is what happens when you've white coat syndrome,
that just a little drop of adrenaline gets in your blood system. It increases your blood pressure and your blood sugar. So for me with white coat syndrome, you know, I keep a history, you know, everything's got an app now. My blood pressure, blood sugar, everything else. I go in and, all right, doctor, here it is right here. So he can follow it because he'll sit to go home. Every time I walk in he goes, your blood sugar's high when you get to, oh, that's right. I forgot.
You got white coats syndrome. Yeah. And it raises your blood pressure and, you know, that. But yeah, blood pressure is such a deadly thing. And I don't know. I'm not making a judgment on him.
“I'm just saying, I think it was Dr. Oz was saying, you know, one of the things that, that people”
don't really focus on enough. And he wasn't making an accusation that was Lindsey Graham, but he said, watch your blood pressure. And I'm amazed a number of people that don't. I have somebody who that I know a good friend of mine who's got high blood pressure and just says, well, I take the pills, but whatever I want, you can't do that. One of the biggest things I know when I travel so much is you just can't find low carb food. If you're eating out, it's almost impossible. Now you can
find it online. You know, that's why I hardly ever go out to eat at a restaurant. Almost everything I do is made at home because it, I want it to be as low carb as possible and working out. But I mean, it's, and, and I say my focus is, I want a quality of life. I want to be able to do this. I don't want to stop doing this. But I know because of the time that we're on and just what it takes to do this, I want to make sure that I'm as healthy as possible because I love doing it. So really that's my incentive
and maybe some people don't have that incentive. And so they don't watch it as much or just figure they can get away with, you know, cheating a little bit or the pills are all I need. And that's
“going to take care of. That's what I was about to say. That many, I think far too many of us say,”
well, you know, I've got the medication. You know, that will help keep it in check. And if I need to, I'll increase the dosage of the doctor or degrees or whatever. But the fact of the matter is is that especially the thing with blood pressure is that it goes up and down throughout the day. There are things that can make it spike, you know. And so one of the keys to that really is exercise. The simplest thing you can do is walk if you're able to do it. And if not, find
something that you can do just to stay active and keep that blood pressure. And it also, you know, any anxiety or whatever you got going on in life, it kind of helps to, you know, tame that a little bit too. Well, that's the good thing with getting older. You've worried about, you've worried about things, your entire life that you look back. I don't go, why don't I worry about that? You don't worry
“about that anymore. It's like whatever. I remember when I first got, you know, type 2 and I was”
first diagnosed. And, you know, my doctor had said after about a couple of years, he said,
"We want the good news of the bad news." I said, "Well, give me the bad news first." And he said, "Type 2 diabetes is going to kill you." I go, "What the hell is it good news?" He said, "You'll be
120 when it does if you keep doing what you're doing?
and he said, "And when I first got it," they said, "You know, this will kill you if you don't take care of it." And I said, "Well, I'm not worried about the death because there's nothing I can do about that down the road. I'm worried about the quality of life in between. And I've known people that had toes cut off and everything else. What my doctors told me is, if you try and continue this,
you'll never have your toes cut off. I still, I'm not, I've never been, I think my last A1C was
5.7, I think. Something like that. So I'm under a 6. Over a 7 is when you're doing damage to your organs. Yeah. And so I'm still, and that's my whole goal. Just keep staying beneath that. I'm still, my medication doesn't change, still on the lowest level. But it's something that you pay attention to. If you want that quality of life, and it was heartbreaking to see that he said, you know,
“they said, "You need to go to a doctor," and he just said, "You know, I think the quote was,”
I can't die, I can't die yet because I've got stuff to do when it was feeling sick earlier in the
night." Yeah. That story came out yesterday. Yeah. And it was like, "Oh, I just so said one of those." It is. We are right, I radio. We'll be right back with more Red Eye Radio with every currently and Gary McNamara. We are right at Renew, and he's our company and I'm Gary McNamara. And by the way, no problem with his sister taking over for the next, to November. Right. Yeah. She's not going to
be running, but if there's anybody close to, if anybody there, they, you know, the, you know, South Carolina elected him. If there's anybody who knows what his wishes would be, it would be her. Oh, no doubt. And you know, the funniest thing is what I heard. She doesn't have the experience. It's Nessa, blah, blah, blah. Shut up. Yeah. This whole thing that being a congressman or Senator
takes such incredible experience. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Now, she's very close to him.
This is Red Eye Radio on Westwood One. The United States soccer Federation presents the U.S. soccer podcast. The place we're at Megan Klinger, a World Cup expert teaches you everything that you need to know for this summer's World Cup. How special is it that we've been able to follow this
“young group of guys? It's been such a roller coaster of the motion. Did you go feel the intensity?”
White a bit of time, energy effort, everything along the way on these guys, making a country proud. And I think they will be a song. The U.S. soccer podcast presented by Henko, and listen on your favorite platform. Hey, I'm Chris Fanfleet. Go behind the scenes and beyond the headlines with the biggest names in Pro Wrestling and beyond. Mr. Sandman. Oh, I ever wanted to be as a pro wrestler. So I got to live my life and make people really happy. No heartbreak, kid,
himself, Shawn Michaels. Do you think there's anybody better than you were? I think I was great at
“what I did. And I think other people were great at what they did as well. Great, Mrs. Moore,”
of mindset. I think that anything else. Mindset, motivation, insight with Chris Fanfleet. Follow and listen on your favorite platform.


