Hour 3 - Objectively Good News
3/20/202637 mincomplete
0:00This is an iHeart Podcast.
0:02Guaranteed human. Welcome in the final hour of the week.
0:07Clay Travis here. Buck Sexton will be back on Tuesday, taking a couple of days
0:12to chill with the family.
0:14The Friday and the Monday.
0:17March Madness underway. I hope all of you are going to have an awesome weekend.
0:22I said that I would get to objectively great news, and that is the plan.
0:30But let me fill you in on a couple of things out there in the
0:33event that you are just starting off your day hanging out with us.
0:37Iran, the situation continues to be basically, what is the strategy to conclude it?
0:46Are we going to decide to be more aggressive and potentially go take Karg Island?
0:52Are we going to get more support from NATO and clean up in the Strait
0:57of Hormuz and allow oil and gas to be able to find its way through
1:02that straight? The price of oil, as I am talking to all of you, crude
1:07oil futures right at $95 .86, basically unchanged on the day, and to a large
1:16extent, not changed very much so far.
1:19During the course of the past couple of weeks, the crude oil futures went up
1:25to $120. That's the one that is most impactful for the United States.
1:29Several weeks ago, then fell back down substantially, and now it is right around $95,
1:35$96, and has not moved a great deal in terms of its final destination in
1:42the last several days, really the last couple of weeks.
1:47But I wanted to give you some great news that is going to get almost
1:53no attention whatsoever. And I wanted to use as my jumping off point three different
2:00places where things are going spectacularly well and you are hearing very little about it.
2:07First of all, credit Wall Street Journal.
2:10They had a graphic this week in their newspaper that I shared, and it showed
2:16beyond a question or doubt that the murder rate in this country hit a 125
2:23-year low in year one of President Trump's administration.
2:28That is, last year, we had a 125 -year low going all the way back
2:36to 1900. We had the lowest murder rate that we have ever had in this
2:40country. Now, if you're a history guy or gal, but if you're a history guy
2:45like me, the data that we have pre -1900 in this country on murders is
2:52not very reliable. But if you have studied rates of violence, for instance, if you
3:00know what used to happen in the so -called Wild West, that's pretty common for
3:05there to be shootouts, if you study history, you know that it was pretty common
3:09for there to be duels.
3:11I actually think we do not have the data to reflect it, but I actually
3:17think it is very likely that 2025 was the safest year in the history of
3:24the United States since we became a nation.
3:27That is, I believe we had the lowest murder rate since we became a nation
3:33in 2025. What we know is that we had the lowest murder rate since 1900.
3:41And that, to me, feels like a pretty stellar, extraordinary detail, and yet we get
3:48almost no discussion about it at all.
3:51So that is point one.
3:52I give credit to the Wall Street Journal for carrying that story.
3:55Wanted to give you super positive stories.
3:59Okay. As I am speaking to you right now, do you remember when President Trump
4:05surged support for law enforcement in Washington, D .C.?
4:10And everyone out there on the left said one of two things.
4:16Either Washington, D .C. is really safe, and I don't know why the president feels
4:22like he needs to do anything, right?
4:24That was one of the talking points that went out.
4:27And that was a lie.
4:29The data actually reflected that wasn't remotely true.
4:32The other talking point that went out was, well, yeah, sure, D .C.
4:38isn't that safe, but President Trump bringing in more support, National Guard bringing in Judge
4:45Jeanine Pirro to be the overall prosecutor, that's not going to have any real impact
4:51at all. You notice that nobody's talking about Washington, D .C.
4:57at all? I went and actually looked up the numbers, and I have them open
5:01in front of me right now.
5:03You can go look at this.
5:04It's on the Washington, D .C.
5:06website right now. Murders so far in 2026 are down 65 % in our nation's
5:18capital compared to where they were last year.
5:22So let me repeat this.
5:24What? What? Last year was the lowest murder rate in the nation.
5:29Overall murders collapsed in Washington, D .C.
5:33This year, through what is today, March 19th of 2026, murders are down 65%.
5:42Last year at this time, there had been 31 murders in Washington, D .C.
5:48So far right now, there have been 11 murders in Washington, D .C.
5:54We are coming up on the end of March.
5:57If you extrapolate these numbers, and I hope that this trend continues, Washington, D .C.
6:04is on pace to crush the lowest murder rate in the history of our nation's
6:12capital in the 250th anniversary of our nation.
6:18So everyone out there, one of the ways that you know things work is when
6:24the story doesn't get told anymore.
6:27Remember when Trump first came into office and egg prices went up?
6:31And everybody out there, she hadn't seen it forever.
6:33Suddenly, there was articles about how expensive eggs were.
6:36And they said, well, this is a response to a Biden policy where they killed
6:41a lot of different animals.
6:43And so we don't have the same number of eggs we would in the past.
6:45And then the price, and it's true, the price of eggs over the next three
6:50or four months collapsed. And I don't remember the last time I heard anybody talk
6:53about the price of eggs.
6:55So something is a story.
6:57And then when it gets better, it's not a story anymore.
7:01We have a huge bad news bias in this country.
7:05Venezuela was a huge story.
7:07You ever look around and say, wait, I haven't heard anything about Venezuela in a
7:09long time. We just reopened our embassy.
7:12They're going to produce more oil and gas than they ever have before.
7:15Our relationship with Delce Rodriguez and the government there has gotten infinitely better.
7:21And now nobody talks at all about Venezuela.
7:26Bad news bias means when good things happen, people just stop talking about them.
7:31This is why I said I want to do the third hour.
7:33I actually want to tell you some good news stories.
7:34Some people say, ah, I feel so negative.
7:36Well, 125 -year murder low.
7:38That seems good. Maybe the lowest murder rate in the history of this nation.
7:43And on pace for our nation's capital, murders are down 65 % since Trump surged
7:51support in the nation's capital.
7:53By the way, it's not just murders.
7:55Murders, we like to talk about Buck and I do on the program because it's
8:00kind of hard to hide typically a dead body.
8:02So you can finagle numbers and make them look better or worse if, for instance,
8:08you just don't report that something that a robbery happened or people are so frustrated
8:12things get stolen so often they don't even bother going to the police.
8:16Sometimes crime is not accurately reflected in the data, and some of you have certainly
8:21experienced that. Murders is typically one where it's hard to hide.
8:25So 65 % decline this year in murders.
8:29Washington, D .C. and the 250th anniversary of our nation is on pace for the
8:33lowest murder rate that's ever existed on record.
8:37Sex abuse down 64 % in Washington, D .C.
8:43Robbery down 29 % in Washington, D .C.
8:47Burglary down 27 % in Washington, D .C.
8:54How about this? Motor vehicle theft.
8:57Remember all the carjackings that were happening in Washington, D .C.?
9:00Down 55 % over last year.
9:05Actual theft from auto. I don't know, like robbing somebody from a car.
9:10Maybe that's good. Down 36%.
9:13Property crime overall down 28%.
9:17Arson down 100%. Everything in D .C.
9:21is getting infinitely better. How many reporters have you heard talk about the data that
9:28I am reading directly off the D .C.
9:30government website that monitors all crime?
9:33This is not incredibly difficult investigatory reporting work that I'm doing here.
9:40I'm just sharing with you the data.
9:42It's not only Washington, D .C.
9:44It's not only our nation.
9:45In my home state of Tennessee, Memphis, Memphis, where also the overall amount of support
9:52for police surged as well, is reporting a 25 -year low.
9:59A 25 -year low overall in the crime rate in Memphis, Tennessee.
10:07Guys, I want to tell you something.
10:10We are potentially dealing with and facing one of the greatest attacks on violent crime
10:20nationwide that has ever occurred in the history of this country.
10:25We are staring here as we roll into the end of March at a situation
10:31where we may be replacing the lowest murder rate on history in 2025 with an
10:38even lower murder rate in 2026.
10:41And almost nobody's talking about it.
10:45Doesn't that seem like something that should be screamed from the heavens?
10:49Shouldn't everyone out there who claimed...
10:52... ... Black Lives Matter, be saying, my goodness, Donald Trump has saved more black
10:58lives by cracking down on violence than any president in the history of this nation?
11:04You said, what do you mean by that, Clay?
11:07That people who are killed in this nation are overwhelmingly black and Hispanic.
11:14The percentages reflect that white people and Asian people are far less likely to be
11:20victims of violent crime. So if you look at Washington, D .C., where almost everybody,
11:26for instance, who dies of a violent crime in Washington, D .C., almost everybody in
11:31Washington, D .C. is black.
11:34Just this year, compared to last year, Trump and his policies and everybody working hard
11:40would have probably saved 20 lives compared to last year.
11:43And by the end of this year, there are going to be hundreds of mostly
11:48young men that likely would have been dead.
11:52But for President Trump's policies, walking the streets, that seems like a hell of a
11:59story deserving of celebration. Heck, it even sounds like we may be making America greater
12:06than it's ever been before.
12:07We're not just making it great again.
12:10We're making it greater than it's ever been before.
12:13It's safer from a murder perspective in this country today than maybe at any point
12:19in the last 250 years and certainly at any point in the last 125 years.
12:25Holy heck, that's a hell of a story.
12:28Why is nobody else telling it?
12:31Ah, because President Trump would have to get credit then.
12:36It's not just the stories that are told.
12:39It's the stories that are not told.
12:41And a lot of them are very good and ignored.
12:45When we come back, I'll take some of your calls.
12:47It is, after all, a Friday edition of the program.
12:50We've got some fun for you as we roll through this program as well.
12:55California can't even build bridges on the flip side when it comes to incompetence.
12:59We will talk about that and more.
13:01However, this is, of course, the Clay and Buck show, and I want to tell
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14:13That's SabreRadio .com. Sometimes all you can do is laugh, and they do a lot
14:21of it with the Sunday hang.
14:22Join Clay and Buck as they laugh it up in the Clay and Buck podcast
14:27feed on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
14:31Welcome back in. Clay, Travis, Buck, Sexton's show.
14:35Just sharing you all sorts of good information on positive things going on in the
14:41country right now. And as I was in the middle of sharing all that with
14:45you, I could hear my kids screaming downstairs, not because something bad was happening.
14:52They are watching college basketball.
14:54March Madness is underway. And I think we're going to have this audio for you.
14:59Absolute bonkers insanity. Santa Clara from out in California and Kentucky have been starting off
15:06the day, and they are now in overtime, and they just had an unbelievable final
15:1110 seconds with three different scores.
15:16So anyway, craziness going on right now.
15:18And in the meantime, this is a fun clip.
15:22The View girls, that is the View morons, just had a guest co -host, Sarah
15:28Eisen, and she said, thought it was important to just school the girls on why
15:34we are doing what we're doing in Iran.
15:38This is cut 34. Listen.
15:40We all agree at the table, at least, that Iran wants to destroy America, right?
15:45They chant death to America.
15:46That's been a cornerstone of their foreign policy forever.
15:49Are they the only ones?
15:50I mean, North Korea would like that.
15:51They're pretty bad. No, but they would be the epicenter of this for decades.
15:54That's been an indoctrination of Iran.
15:56Okay, number two. The majority of Americans do oppose this war, but go ahead.
15:59Okay, number two. Let's all try to agree on these points.
16:02Number two, they have been for decades trying to make a nuclear weapon, a weapons
16:07-grade nuclear facility. Whether it was imminent, whether it's tomorrow, we can all agree they've
16:11been trying to do this.
16:12We can also agree that it was obliterated, apparently, last year.
16:15Clearly not. The other thing we can all agree on, I think, is they have
16:18long -range missiles and that they fund terrorists that have killed americans now all of
16:24that is why we are in this war it is a strategic opportunity so that
16:29our children do not have to face the greatest state sponsor of terror being a
16:34nuclear power pretty well said um and uh the view i mean uh pointing out
16:42that there's actually a massive amount of agreement prior to trump deciding to do this
16:46and we'll talk about that in the context of john fetterman here coming back in
16:51a second but this is what you just missed it sounds like the kentucky wildcats
16:55are going to survive based on the way that this went down this just happened
17:01it is march madness my kids were screaming downstairs uh listen to this um banking
17:33in a running three kentucky had to have it to stay alive and avoid a
17:39first round upset it looks like they are going to win in overtime but as
17:44i was doing the show that just happened i could hear my kids screaming downstairs
17:48reacting to it um and we're going to take a lot of your talk backs
17:52i'm going to share some news on john fetterman here in a moment but first
17:55i want to tell you born on america's darkest day of 9 11 the tunnel
18:00the towers foundation has been helping america's heroes ever since that includes robert welsh new
18:05york city firefighter robert served as a police officer before his appointment to the fire
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18:20to protecting his community coach youth sports shared a great life with his wife jennifer
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18:44your impact with a car or land donation go to t2t .org that's t the
18:51number two t .org welcome back in clay travis buck sexton show uh a lot
18:58of you react by the way kentucky is one we have a lot of listeners
19:01in the state of kentucky santa clara the victim of a last second buzzer beater
19:07that put the game into overtime we're playing uh along with that santa clara for
19:11the pop quiz out there last i believe in the ncaa tournament when they had
19:15a point guard by the name of steve nash went on to have a pretty
19:20good uh pretty good nba career um but that was a long time ago i
19:24think all the way back to 1994 so they waited a long time to lose
19:27in super devastating fashion but one that will be considered quite memorable going forward i
19:33wanted to mention this um we have uh john fetterman who has effectively become a
19:40senator in many ways representing republicans in pennsylvania and buck and i talked about this
19:45on the program by the way buck will be back on tuesday taking a couple
19:47of days to be with his family for a long weekend um we talked about
19:52this this is one of those things that i think i was most wrong about
19:55i thought that john fetterman would be incapable of being a senator and representing the
20:00people of pennsylvania very well i actually think he's done a great job he's the
20:05sanest of all the democrats out there but as a result democrats are angry at
20:11him and this is what the polling now reflects harry enton i believe this is
20:16is this cnn or msnbc or whatever i can't remember where this guy is but
20:19listen to him analyze what the polls say about john fetterman i would just say
20:24that john fetterman is doing as well with pennsylvania democrats as the new york giants
20:28are as like in the state of pennsylvania or the commonwealth of pennsylvania i mean
20:31just look at this among pennsylvania democrats and that approval of fetterman back in 2023
20:36he was a democrat liberal darling he was at plus 68 points look at how
20:41low he has fallen down to negative 40 points he's down there with the titanic
20:47among democrats in the commonwealth of pennsylvania this is 108 point swing this is an
20:53108 point swing very good mathematics here this is i mean i was honestly thinking
21:00is that even possible um okay so harry enton uh they're saying it's been a
21:05huge swing with the likes of which we've never seen before i would just say
21:09fetterman either needs to become a republican which again he would be a uh left
21:15of i mean look he would be a um susan collins like member of the
21:24republican caucus but he would still be a member of the republican caucus i don't
21:28know if he would be capable of winning a uh a primary right now to
21:34represent democrats something to think about fetterman is up team correct me if i'm wrong
21:39but i believe he'll up in 28 so uh that cycle will start itself very
21:45soon uh because he won in 22 If I'm remembering correctly, so he will be
21:49up in 28 and he's going to have a great deal of difficulty winning as
21:54a winning as a Democrat.
21:56So just something to kind of put a star by, is it possible that Fetterman
22:01either goes independent or potentially starts to caucus with Republicans if he's going to plan
22:07on running for reelection? I think it could be.
22:10And by the way, that's Harry Enten.
22:11That was CNN, the audio that we were playing.
22:13But let's take some of your calls.
22:14It is Friday after all.
22:16Linda in Green Valley, Arizona.
22:18What you got for us?
22:20Well, Clay, I think I have a solution to the TSA problem.
22:24What we need to do is we need to supplement where we're missing out on
22:28TSA agents who can't afford to work for us anymore.
22:31We need to bring in ICE agents and fill in.
22:36And I think that that would push the Democrats to sign the Homeland Security bill.
22:44I think it would set their hair on fire.
22:46But I mean, you know, we're already paying for our ICE agents.
22:51It's actually really. They're already funded.
22:54So they're part of Homeland Security, as long as along with TSA.
22:58And I think we just need to bring in the ICE agents and fill in.
23:02And I also agree that the senators and congressmen need to wait in line.
23:06Thank you for the call, Linda.
23:07That's I'm going to say it's kind of a brilliant idea.
23:09Now, I'm sure the TSA agents out there listening to us would say, well, there's
23:16training that ICE agents would have to go through to be able to function as
23:21TSA agents. Right. You have to be trained in order to sit there and analyze
23:26a analyze the bags going through all the X -ray and everything else associated with
23:33it. So there is some element of training.
23:36But are there jobs that the TSA does that could easily be given to ICE
23:42agents? It's actually a really great question.
23:45Now, the other part of this would be I'm sure people would say, well, the
23:48ICE agents are necessary in order to be able to arrest the people who shouldn't
23:53be in this country, particularly those who committed violent crimes.
23:56And we don't want to pull them out of that job to put them on
23:59a comparatively less serious job.
24:02But what Linda is correct about is the ICE agents are being fully paid.
24:07And so if we started to supplement when the TSA agents were not there with
24:13ICE agents, oh, my goodness, Democrats would go absolutely insane.
24:18That's not a bad, not a bad thesis there.
24:21Wes out in California. What's up, Wes?
24:25Guys, I am absolutely livid with the American people about the attack in Iran.
24:32We need to go in.
24:34We need to take care of business and get the job done.
24:39We could be setting up military bases in there.
24:41We could be paid back to oil and we can finally free those Iranian people
24:47that have been oppressed for so long.
24:50So you want, Wes, what people would, sorry to cut you off, but so you
24:54want boots on the ground.
24:56How many boots on the ground?
24:58Yes, sir. How many? It doesn't all have to the Americans.
25:02We can get a coalition.
25:04I get that, but we're having trouble with NATO.
25:07We're having trouble with NATO helping us now.
25:09A lot of people out there would say, I'm okay in this audience.
25:13I'm okay with military raining down missiles with drones, but because of what happened in
25:20Iraq and Afghanistan, I draw the line, meaning a lot of people in this audience,
25:25I think it's fair to say, would draw the line and say they'd prefer not
25:27to have boots on the ground.
25:29So I'm asking you, how many boots on the ground?
25:31Because I do think there's a distinction.
25:33If we seize Karge Island, for instance, and let's say that takes 2 ,500 highly
25:38trained Marines to do, that's one thing.
25:43And it's a short duration designed to bring about peace.
25:46But are you saying you want tens of thousands of troops on the ground?
25:51What to you does boots on the ground mean?
25:55I don't think it would take that many.
25:57You have the majority, it appears, of the Iranian people that want to help.
26:04They just really need to go in as advisors and just get the job done.
26:10Look, thank you for the call.
26:12The challenge I think people have with that is we were all told this would
26:17be an easy maneuver in Iraq.
26:19Remember, everybody tried to sell.
26:22The neocons did. Oh, there's a huge support.
26:24A lot of people want to democrat Iraq.
26:26All we have to do is just have the backbone of support.
26:29And then it was a disaster.
26:30And it cost us trillions of dollars.
26:33And thousands of men and women were injured and or killed.
26:38And so as a result, it was an awful choice.
26:41And I think that's the reticence now.
26:43My point would be, I think Trump has learned the lessons of Iraq and knows
26:48better than to end up in an intractable, never -ending occupation.
26:54I don't think he's going to do that.
26:56But to me, if you want to try to accelerate the situation, you would seize
27:00Carg Island, where the oil and gas of Iran emanates 15 miles off the coast
27:06of Iran, and say, hey, we now control your oil supply.
27:12You're either going to listen to us or we're going to control.
27:15the ingress and egress of your oil and gas to me that's an aggressive play
27:19that actually has some logical sense but it's not an occupation of the country proper
27:24it's an island off the coast of iran that's where i think we might be
27:28going next ashley in south carolina fire away i'm caller long -time listener since i've
27:35listened to rush as a kid in my dad's car well thank you i want
27:39to start off by saying that i think you with the goatee is much more
27:43attractive than the mustache um but i also have a question um going back to
27:48the um shutdown um what genius decided to punish the people who are hard workers
27:54um versus congress who just can't seem to do their job i mean i agree
27:58with you that they should be the ones losing their paychecks versus you know the
28:03people who are actually working hard every day thank you for the call ashley and
28:07thank you for listening and uh and for listening for a long time uh look
28:12this is chuck schumer and hakeem jeffrey's tsa decision taking you back in time there
28:19was an agreement on funding the government it was all set in place there was
28:23no controversy associated with it it was ready to roll and then uh pretty and
28:30good in minneapolis died and as a result governments uh the the democrats decided we're
28:38not going to fund tsa remember ice is already funded they said we're not going
28:43to fund tsa and other parts of the government and then the tsa agents are
28:47essential workers so they are forced to work without being paid now eventually they're going
28:53to be paid this is worse than the past shutdowns to me because in the
28:56past shutdowns you didn't have to show up and lots of people just said okay
29:01i'll see you and they didn't show up for a month and some of them
29:05went on vacation and they knew that eventually they were going to get paid and
29:09they basically just got a paid month or months long vacation from their jobs that's
29:15not somebody who's actually losing out the tsa agents have to show up they're essential
29:20workers and they're not being paid and what ashley's just pointing out is i think
29:24100 right uh to me everyone unfortunately this would include republican and uh congressmen and
29:31senators on the republican side too but i think we have to set the precedent
29:35that when the government is shut down no one gets paid in congress and i
29:40think what you would see happen very very quickly is republicans and democrats would find
29:46a way to keep the government open no matter who is in charge and the
29:50people who are busting their ass and not getting paid very much money again the
29:55average tsa agent makes forty thousand dollars a year if you have ever been and
29:59certainly i've been in that situation where you make forty thousand dollars a year and
30:03you've got kids and you've got a car payment and you may have rent or
30:07a house payment uh and you've got all the cost of groceries and everything else
30:12and you're not getting your paycheck it's hard to live and so that is where
30:17we are and unfortunately now in addition to the tsa agents everybody out there everybody
30:24out there is now having to stand in line for hours because tsa agents many
30:31of them are quitting over 300 is the number that i've seen and deciding to
30:35go find other jobs or they're not showing up for work because they have to
30:40go do other things that will allow them to pay their bills uh joe in
30:44arizona quickly here as we get ready for break my call hey i just wanted
30:50to point something out i spent my time enlisted in the coast guard and i'm
30:55telling you if we didn't get paid we weren't going to go home we weren't
30:59going to find another job we signed a contract we were there getting paid or
31:04not and we didn't all eat on a base coast guard is primarily not affiliated
31:09with a base anywhere i just wanted to let the audience know that yeah thank
31:14you for the call i mean i don't think tsa agents have contracts i i
31:18i could be wrong on this but i i don't think they sign contracts i
31:22think if you're making most people who make forty thousand dollars a year don't have
31:25contracts and i would just ask people out there if you didn't get paid for
31:28a month how many of you would keep going to your job i think a
31:32lot of people would say i got to find something new to do and by
31:34the way this is not the first time this has happened to tsa agents what
31:37is this the third time or something like that in the last couple of years
31:41where they haven't gotten paid and been required to work i'm gonna be honest with
31:45you i would be i would be fed up i would be frustrated my credit
31:49card bill when i'm taking on more interest to be able to pay things if
31:53i even have the limit to be able to do that it's just it this
31:57is a failure of epic proportions and epic magnitude democrats are to blame but we
32:02need to fix it once and for all and i think one way to fix
32:05it would be to say democrats and republicans don't get paid and their staffs don't
32:09get paid when any part of the government shuts down this is a ridiculous ploy
32:14that has become far too common and i think we need to work to find
32:17a solution that ends it once and for all look the international fellowship of christians
32:21and jews does incredible work i saw it for myself entire team working to bring
32:25food emergency equipment care for kids help for the elderly uh they're also supplying bomb
32:31shelters medical centers with critical need critically needed essentials if you've ever wondered what it
32:36looks like to stand for israel and stand for good against evil this is it
32:42right now the iranian government is evil the israeli government is fighting for forces of
32:47good and right now you can give 45 to rush life -saving essentials essentials to
32:52the vulnerable people under fire call 888 -488 -IFCJ that's 888 -488 -IFCJ you can
33:02also go online at ifcj .org this organization does incredible work i've seen it for
33:08myself and you can help make a difference in the holy land at 888 -488
33:13-IFCJ that is ifcj .org keep up with the biggest political comeback in world history
33:23on the team 47 podcast clay and buck highlight trump replays from the week sundays
33:29at noon eastern find it on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts
33:34welcome back in play travis buck sexton show uh we are closing up shop on
33:41the friday edition of the program a lot of you out there uh let's uh
33:47let's see uh as we line up some of these talkbacks and some of these
33:51emails um rosemary uh sends in an email hey guys great show i don't like
33:58talk shows but i enjoy yours we're doctors in north carolina that own a pediatric
34:02clinic government shutdown should end if president trump gives executive order to place all of
34:08congress and their staff on a no -fly list until they vote to fund the
34:13government if you say it he might do it keep up the good work uh
34:17that would be amazing um now there'd be a lot of people have to hop
34:21in cars and drive and i think rosemary's point is likely well taken that as
34:26soon as congress starts to feel the pain that the average american feels uh when
34:32it comes to travel related issues they will very likely get things fixed um and
34:38i don't think that's uh i don't think that's wrong at all uh travis in
34:43durham north carolina 106 .1 fm talk radio d podcast uh talk back let's listen
34:49i'll give a shout out chuck norris greatest of all time he is the goat
34:54it was like losing a family member when i heard he passed i've been watching
34:59him since the 80s i'm 41 years old and i i am seriously upset about
35:03the goat being gone but rest in peace chuck we got it from here yeah
35:08chuck norris uh iconic figure like i said internet meme um we'll share some of
35:13those clips uh on his passing at the age of 86 uh vip email from
35:18jennifer clay how in the world did you control yourself with the shot kentucky hit
35:23to tie the game serious self -control my family is going crazy enjoy march march
35:28madness jennifer i i didn't have the television on in here i i was saying
35:31i was talking about how awesome it is that we have such a low murder
35:35rate and suddenly down at stairs i heard my three boys screaming uh reacting to
35:42the shot that was made so i knew something had happened but i didn't know
35:45till we went to break to see what exactly happened so i think it would
35:49have been harder to do live radio certainly uh if i've been able to watch
35:53some of these uh some of these buzzer beaters uh happening uh let's get quickly
35:57here podcast listener monty cut f play i like the idea of supplementing the tsa
36:04with ice agents and while they're at the airport doing the job of tsa they
36:09can also be ice agents and if they find any illegal aliens flying they can
36:14put them on alternate flights and send them home i think that was to a
36:19large extent linda's intent um and i do think democrats would lose their minds and
36:24might well decide that they need to get things solved in a hurry if that
36:28were the case uh okay hope your brackets stay strong i'll be back with all
36:33of you monday thanks to katie miller make sure you subscribe to the podcast click
36:38like and subscribe on the youtube channel as well and we will keep having fun
36:42with you guys have spectacular weekends enjoy the madness and i'll be back with all
36:47of you on monday's edition of clay and buck