<v Speaker 1>Jarrey, Katy and Josh six one hundred.
<v Speaker 2>I've been sitting here for the past fifteen minutes or
<v Speaker 2>so listening to Katie talk about how her air fire
<v Speaker 2>is not working and contemplating slitting my wrists.
<v Speaker 3>What do you mean that's a big deal going on there?
<v Speaker 4>I used my airfire almost every single yay.
<v Speaker 5>She just said this.
<v Speaker 4>Actually, here we go and it was hot.
<v Speaker 3>You gonna make everyone else.
<v Speaker 1>You've had to go back to the old fashioned days
<v Speaker 1>when you use your oven.
<v Speaker 4>But it is.
<v Speaker 2>Sad oven first of all problems right here, guys, I
<v Speaker 2>had to use my oven yesterday.
<v Speaker 1>You know I'm saying I'm still sad about that air fryer,
<v Speaker 1>like I should have a service for it or something.
<v Speaker 4>Door wasn't closing. Is it every day?
<v Speaker 3>Jeremy Hashtay Katy problems. I just had a day yesterday.
<v Speaker 2>I did something and I didn't like the way it
<v Speaker 2>distill in my ear Fryer's doors weren't closing.
<v Speaker 4>Are you just making fun of me? Are you giving
<v Speaker 4>me permission to vents a little? Because that really happened?
<v Speaker 4>Like I put so much work on a meal, Like.
<v Speaker 5>I mean.
<v Speaker 4>No, but you would have to agree when you make something.
<v Speaker 4>I'm gonna do.
<v Speaker 1>It, make something, and it takes you hours to create it,
<v Speaker 1>and then when it's finally time to eat it, and
<v Speaker 1>you take that first bite and you're all like, it's
<v Speaker 1>not a good feel, and then my air fryer broke
<v Speaker 1>on top of that.
<v Speaker 5>Lord, no, did you break it? Like did you do
<v Speaker 5>something distinctive to break it?
<v Speaker 4>Or I just use it every day. I think that's it.
<v Speaker 1>I think I've just kind of used it so much
<v Speaker 1>it's on its last leg.
<v Speaker 4>But what it does is.
<v Speaker 1>When I close it, the thing the face tells me
<v Speaker 1>that it's still open, and the only way that it'll
<v Speaker 1>actually work is if I open it just a little
<v Speaker 1>bit so it's venting and then it'll come on and
<v Speaker 1>you know, the full on power. I'm like, that can't
<v Speaker 1>be sicke.
<v Speaker 5>This is one of the things that you're too rough
<v Speaker 5>with it when you close it, like how you broke
<v Speaker 5>your fan, because you're still a little rough about things.
<v Speaker 1>Maybe because then to fix it. My my thing to
<v Speaker 1>fix it was I'm just gonna see I'm that door
<v Speaker 1>right into it.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, that's the way to do it. It's not trying
<v Speaker 3>to make it. What were you making in that?
<v Speaker 4>I was putting my chicken kebobs in there.
<v Speaker 3>Chicken.
<v Speaker 1>Well, first I was trying to roast my red peppers
<v Speaker 1>in there, because you can roast your red peppers or
<v Speaker 1>your peppers, your vegetables.
<v Speaker 4>In an air fryer.
<v Speaker 1>And that's when I noticed that it wasn't closing all
<v Speaker 1>the way. So then I had to take both my
<v Speaker 1>peppers and my kebobs and put them in the oven.
<v Speaker 1>And then it was they had to put that fan
<v Speaker 1>on that I broke, Josh, like you.
<v Speaker 3>Know that, Believe it or not.
<v Speaker 2>I used my oven yesterday too, and I was tired.
<v Speaker 2>It was so fine, chicken and broccoli.
<v Speaker 3>Oh gosh.
<v Speaker 4>I don't know how you dealt with it.
<v Speaker 2>I closed the door and I walked away, pretty simple.
<v Speaker 3>I was reading this this morning.
<v Speaker 2>Maybe I'm late to the park on this, but the
<v Speaker 2>Rockies have accidentally created one of the funniest sports traditions
<v Speaker 2>in baseball this season. It is a giant purple home
<v Speaker 2>run coat that players wear after hitting homers. And it
<v Speaker 2>kind of started as a random clubhouse joke and now
<v Speaker 2>it's become a full blown fan obsession.
<v Speaker 4>Yeah.
<v Speaker 3>I don't even seen this coat. It looks like a
<v Speaker 3>big like fur coats.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, he had had a big fancy ritzy jacket and
<v Speaker 2>it's purple. And when these dudes hit the home runs,
<v Speaker 2>they throw it on and it's really funny looking.
<v Speaker 3>It's really is that what it is? That's what they're
<v Speaker 3>calling it.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, anyway, the team treats this thing like a sacred artifact.
<v Speaker 3>It's a traveling with the team.
<v Speaker 2>It has its own equipment bag, and clubhouse staff are
<v Speaker 2>carefully maintaining it like it's a museum piece because.
<v Speaker 3>It's bringing some sort of fun sports energy to Colorado baseball.
<v Speaker 5>This.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, I think it's fantastic.
<v Speaker 5>They look good too when they rocket.
<v Speaker 1>They do, and you know, sports in general, there's so
<v Speaker 1>many superstitions that come with sports, and this, I mean
<v Speaker 1>baseball is full of superstitions.
<v Speaker 4>So I like it.
<v Speaker 1>I like that they can, you know, rally the fans
<v Speaker 1>with something other than their play.
<v Speaker 3>It's goofy. It's kind of an inside joke and are
<v Speaker 3>loving it's fun. I saw the pictures. It looks really funny.
<v Speaker 3>What else is going on in sports?
<v Speaker 5>Well, moving on from the MLB to college baseball, it's
<v Speaker 5>their playoff time right now. And Katie, like you just said,
<v Speaker 5>baseball players are probably the most superstitious group out of
<v Speaker 5>all the Big four sports teams. Well, UCLA freshman pitcher
<v Speaker 5>has gone completely viral, not necessarily even for his pitching,
<v Speaker 5>but what he does before he pitches. They noticed that
<v Speaker 5>UCLA freshman pitcher Angel Servantes kept digging in his back
<v Speaker 5>pocket before he went to go pitch, and then he
<v Speaker 5>would put something on the mound and it turns out
<v Speaker 5>it was a little baby dinosaur.
<v Speaker 6>Oh you might notice he has a little dinosaur with
<v Speaker 6>him on the mound. His name is actually Jerry the Dinosaur,
<v Speaker 6>and Angel keeps him in his back pocket and Jerry
<v Speaker 6>will join him in every single time he's pitching on
<v Speaker 6>the mound. Just a sense of comfort that he's developed,
<v Speaker 6>maybe a little bit of a superstition, but Jerry's always
<v Speaker 6>along for the ride.
<v Speaker 5>Guys, so one of those things. It looks weird, right,
<v Speaker 5>It looks weird that he's going out and reaching in
<v Speaker 5>his back pocket for a little baby dinosaur.
<v Speaker 3>But he says he's been doing it since high school.
<v Speaker 5>It's just because he's a freshman pitcher that people haven't
<v Speaker 5>really gotten to know him and see what he does yet.
<v Speaker 5>And he's like, look, it just brings me a sense
<v Speaker 5>of peace, he says, he calms me down. I know
<v Speaker 5>it might sound I guess childish, but I mean, whatever
<v Speaker 5>works for you, and that's what works for me. And
<v Speaker 5>there is actually some science about this. There have been
<v Speaker 5>studies shown where if you bring a good luck charm
<v Speaker 5>with you, whether it's you know, a placebo effect or whatever,
<v Speaker 5>it helps you perform better.
<v Speaker 4>He has that.
<v Speaker 5>Little comfort blanket, if you will, Yeah, and he holds
<v Speaker 5>onto it, and he really does. He held the opponent
<v Speaker 5>to five scoreless innings. And so it said people that
<v Speaker 5>were able to bring their good luck charms with them,
<v Speaker 5>they were able to perform at a higher standard than.
<v Speaker 2>All right, Well, that that little is Jerry Jerry Sarah
<v Speaker 2>Tops Jerry Bts is the latest artist to get their
<v Speaker 2>own limited edition oreos.
<v Speaker 3>They're coming to stores on June eighth.
<v Speaker 1>Uh.
<v Speaker 2>They're purple, that seems natural with a brown sugar pancake
<v Speaker 2>flavored cream inside. Inspired by a popular Korean street food
<v Speaker 2>called Ho Talk.
<v Speaker 3>You're you're big on street food, you go, you know
<v Speaker 3>what a talk?
<v Speaker 1>I don't know off the top of my head, but
<v Speaker 1>I know it's got to be tasty Korean street food.
<v Speaker 3>It sounds like a dating platform that you might be on.
<v Speaker 2>It's not TikTok, it's Ho Talk.
<v Speaker 4>No, it wasn't Josh.
<v Speaker 2>Speaking of TikTok, there's a woman named Nira and she's
<v Speaker 2>gone viral because she posted this big, long video about
<v Speaker 2>a frozen yogurt place. But girl, you are late to
<v Speaker 2>the party. I have complained about this for years on
<v Speaker 2>this show she went in. The entire place was a
<v Speaker 2>self service experience from start to finish. Yeah, you go
<v Speaker 2>in and this is exactly what I laid out on
<v Speaker 2>the show. You grab your own cup, you fill the
<v Speaker 2>ice creamer, the frozen yogurt up yourself. You wander over
<v Speaker 2>and you put your own toppings. She waited in line. Now,
<v Speaker 2>I will say at this one there was a kiosk
<v Speaker 2>that they just weigh it and then you pay it
<v Speaker 2>right there, and then it asked for a.
<v Speaker 3>Tip, a tip for whom That's what I'm saying.
<v Speaker 2>So she went off on this video and people are
<v Speaker 2>on both sides. They're like, well, there's still somebody there
<v Speaker 2>stalking the topniments, the toppings, stalking the new ice cream
<v Speaker 2>in the back for the machines.
<v Speaker 1>This tipping culture has gotten out of hands. Like you
<v Speaker 1>don't get it.
<v Speaker 3>I don't get it for that.
<v Speaker 2>And my thing was is I went into one of
<v Speaker 2>those places, got my own cup, got my own ice cream,
<v Speaker 2>got my own toppings, waited myself at the register, and
<v Speaker 2>the teenager was like who a dollars or whatever it was,
<v Speaker 2>and then it was like tip.
<v Speaker 3>I was like, yeah, hellse do the No, you don't
<v Speaker 3>do anything.
<v Speaker 1>And it upsets me because I worked for tips at
<v Speaker 1>one point in my life as a you know, waiting
<v Speaker 1>tables and I made two fifteen an hour, which is
<v Speaker 1>why I needed tips.
<v Speaker 4>Now that doesn't.
<v Speaker 5>Happen like that.
<v Speaker 3>Well, unless you're on hotel. She'll work for tips on
<v Speaker 3>ho talk stop.
<v Speaker 4>That was a living wage. I wasn't even a tip.
<v Speaker 5>All right.
<v Speaker 2>Here's one final thing I gotta tread lightly on this.
<v Speaker 2>A woman named Monique out of Michigan. She's forty eight
<v Speaker 2>years old. She's facing chargers for attempting to smuggle contraband
<v Speaker 2>into a correctional facility.
<v Speaker 3>Here's what happens. Happened.
<v Speaker 2>She's been trespassing it as CBS pharmacy, where she had
<v Speaker 2>previously been banned from, so she can't go in there,
<v Speaker 2>but she keeps making her way back and the problem
<v Speaker 2>is is they got a wine section there, so she'll
<v Speaker 2>go in there, steal the wine, go into the bathroom
<v Speaker 2>and chug it. At the CBS, they said, don't ever
<v Speaker 2>come back. Well, she returned the next day, stole another
<v Speaker 2>bottle and was getting drunk. Blah blah blah. Cops came,
<v Speaker 2>took her to the jail. The correction staff was booking her.
<v Speaker 2>And you know when they do that, they have to
<v Speaker 2>do like a routine search on you.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, that's what I'm talking about.
<v Speaker 2>Well, let's just say they found another bottle of wine.
<v Speaker 2>They did it bottle, another bottle of wine.
<v Speaker 1>The mini bottle or the full on bottle bottle of
<v Speaker 1>wine that Monique had snuck into the correctional facility.
<v Speaker 2>I will let you use your imagination on how she
<v Speaker 2>got that in.
<v Speaker 4>I don't want I am impressed.
<v Speaker 3>I am in impressed Monique.
<v Speaker 2>I would hate to be her boyfriend, not want to
<v Speaker 2>be her Boyfriendam.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, somebody's been doing her. Cagles are not locally.
<v Speaker 1>Let's start it up in Windsor. Huh it is an
<v Speaker 1>underwear desert.
<v Speaker 4>In case he didn't, what does that happen?
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, Well, the people a Windsor are like, hold up.
<v Speaker 1>The town leaders say that Windsor is an underwear desert
<v Speaker 1>as residents do not have a local place to buy
<v Speaker 1>many everyday essentials like socks, underwear, and school supplies.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, she snuck the bottle in wear exactly.
<v Speaker 4>This lady that you heard right there.
<v Speaker 1>She's actually talking about how many people have to travel
<v Speaker 1>like fifteen to twenty minutes for those things, those essential things.
<v Speaker 1>So folks in the town are, you know, having a
<v Speaker 1>hard time with that. They're like, we need to build things.
<v Speaker 1>We need more places where we can buy. They need
<v Speaker 1>to target, they need a Target, they need a Walmart.
<v Speaker 1>But other folks in the town are okay with it.
<v Speaker 4>They like that.
<v Speaker 1>They're town of fifty thousand people is a little small
<v Speaker 1>town idealist, right.
<v Speaker 3>I like that too, exactly. I want to live there.
<v Speaker 1>So there's a lot of people who are like, we
<v Speaker 1>don't want all that in our town.
<v Speaker 4>We're okay with driving fifteen to twenty miles.
<v Speaker 1>But some of the town leaders are like calling it
<v Speaker 1>an underwear desert, and that is why it's.
<v Speaker 3>Just get on the zone, right. Yeah, that's a lot
<v Speaker 3>of people are saying today shipping.
<v Speaker 1>And now nowadays, you don't really need that brick and
<v Speaker 1>mortar spot right there in your town.
<v Speaker 4>So they're trying to get around it. So there you go, get.
<v Speaker 3>Down drone delivery with your underpants. Probably at some point you.
<v Speaker 4>Get just drones right to your drawer exactly. So that's
<v Speaker 4>the latest draws right to your draw it, sir.
<v Speaker 1>Down in Colorado Springs, we have the story about Santa's Workshop. Hey,
<v Speaker 1>they're celebrating their seventy at season, seventy years.
<v Speaker 2>Seventy God, we were just down there a couple of
<v Speaker 2>years ago with my kids and my nieces and nephews
<v Speaker 2>and everyone else.
<v Speaker 4>Yes, the famous nephews, the family.
<v Speaker 1>And it always opens like the week of Memorial Day,
<v Speaker 1>and then I'll stay open through smiss down in the
<v Speaker 1>Colorado Springs area.
<v Speaker 3>That place still looks good after seventy years.
<v Speaker 2>It is very well maintained. It is not Janki. It
<v Speaker 2>is in great condition, and it is delightful and charming.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, no, people rave about Santa's Workshop, So they say
<v Speaker 1>you can explore the charming snow dusted village Jeremy that
<v Speaker 1>they keep up. You can watch holiday magic shows. Yeah,
<v Speaker 1>you can see the deer de see Santa, see Santa
<v Speaker 1>ride the carousel and as you said, visit mister Klaus himself.
<v Speaker 1>So oh, there you go, and again the seventieth season.
<v Speaker 4>That's a big deal.
<v Speaker 3>For the folks to sell that place is charming, of.
<v Speaker 1>Course, of course it is just the you know, the
<v Speaker 1>the arm or I guess there, well, because we have
<v Speaker 1>the we have the Santa's Workshop up in the North
<v Speaker 1>Pole that's been going on for forever, right, this is
<v Speaker 1>just like, yes, this is.
<v Speaker 4>The branch, the brananch of it of the North Pole workshops.
<v Speaker 2>That's what they just want to They got a pole
<v Speaker 2>there too that you touch that it's like frozen all
<v Speaker 2>the time.
<v Speaker 5>Yeah, because it's Santa's magic.
<v Speaker 4>I love Santa's Magic. Okay.
<v Speaker 1>And then we have this incident in Errory yesterday her
<v Speaker 1>crazy because cops received a bunch of calls about a
<v Speaker 1>person wandering into traffic, waving their arms and holding onto
<v Speaker 1>a gun tucked into the waistband of their pants.
<v Speaker 4>What exactly. This was right around Coalfax and Billing Street.
<v Speaker 1>So what the cops did is they looked at the
<v Speaker 1>cameras before they went down there, just to make sure
<v Speaker 1>the situation was as they thought, and they realized it
<v Speaker 1>wasn't as dire as they originally suspected. So it turns
<v Speaker 1>out it was a woman with binoculars on coalfax. And
<v Speaker 1>I took this part right from the news stories. That
<v Speaker 1>made me laugh so hard, they said.
<v Speaker 4>After analyzing the scene, officers still went to the area
<v Speaker 4>and spoke with the woman.
<v Speaker 1>Sharing laughs about the actual circumstances versus what was They
<v Speaker 1>shared laughs.
<v Speaker 4>They shared laughs, Jeremy.
<v Speaker 1>The officers did advise the woman to carry the binoculars
<v Speaker 1>in her bag rather than her waistband.
<v Speaker 3>If you're that lady from Michigan, I'll tell you where
<v Speaker 3>you can put them. Is that all you got
<v Speaker 4>Would avoid any confusion.
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