Today's Issues features Steve Paisley Jordow on American Family Radio
>> Steve Jordahl: Today's Issues continues on AFR with your host, Tim Wildmon, president of the American Family Association.
>> Tim Wildmon: Hey, welcome back, everybody, to Today's Issues on American Family Radio. I'm Tim Wildmon with Wesley Wildmon, and in studio now is Steve Paisley Jordow.
>> Steve Jordahl: Good morning, everybody.
>> Tim Wildmon: Rocking the paisley kind of.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah, it's my Madagascar shirt.
>> Tim Wildmon: Is that paisley or. No?
>> Steve Jordahl: there may be a little bit of pain. This reminds me of the salad. You know that sometimes the lettuce you get with salads, it's more for looks.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Than it is eating.
>> Steve Jordahl: Tastes very good, but it looks really kind of cool. Yeah, that's what this spirit reminds me of.
>> Tim Wildmon: So it's, a. It's a, It's almost paisley.
>> Steve Jordahl: Almost.
>> Tim Wildmon: Almost.
>> Steve Jordahl: It's close to paisley, right?
>> Tim Wildmon: Hey, Ray. Ray Pritchard. Go ahead, Ray.
>> Tim Wildmon: Hey, let Steve.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yes, sir.
>> Tim Wildmon: Your shirt is groovy, baby. Groovy.
>> Steve Jordahl: Okay. Do you guys remember this one? I. I remember in the 70s using the word boss. That is so boss.
>> Tim Wildmon: Boss. I do. Yeah. That wasn't around a couple of years, though.
>> Steve Jordahl: Well, it was in Madagascar where I grew up. Everything was boss.
>> Tim Wildmon: Ed will tell you, in the. In the NewSong England area, the word and this word has survived. Wicked.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Yeah, that's right.
>> Tim Wildmon: Wicked. Wicked was wicked good. Yeah, wicked meant. Wicked meant awesome. It didn't mean wicked like evil. It meant wicked like good. But, if you go up there.
>> Wesley Wildmon: They have a wicked great lobster.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah, they do. They have a restaurant called Wicked Lobster.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Made that up.
>> Tim Wildmon: All right. Yeah, they do. All right. So talking about words that have made it and have not made it, when we did say that, the word that we could think of that has survived the 60s to today is cool.
>> Steve Jordahl: Cool. Very much so.
>> Tim Wildmon: Cool.
>> Steve Jordahl: That's a boss word.
>> Tim Wildmon: now, awesome. Now, Michael Jackson turned the word bad into good. That's right.
>> Steve Jordahl: The Bible talks about that, doesn't Ray?
>> Tim Wildmon: Book of Isaiah.
>> Tim Wildmon: I don't think Michael Jackson. The Bible in mind.
>> Steve Jordahl: I don't think so either, but I'm just saying.
>> Tim Wildmon: He's just bad. Bad meant good.
>> Steve Jordahl: Did you see the, what's the.
>> Tim Wildmon: I really didn't need that, Steve.
>> Steve Jordahl: But the guy that plays your accordion, Will now.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yankovic.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah, he did a. He did a parody on.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah, he did. It was called I'm Fat, I think.
>> Steve Jordahl: Right.
>> Tim Wildmon: I'm. Anyway, all right, we digress. Which is rare. Yeah, Hardly ever happened.
A bear has taken up residence in a Southern California home
All right, before we get into some, some of the news stories, there is a story, Steve, out of your home state of California.
>> Steve Jordahl: That's Right. Southern California.
>> Wesley Wildmon: It's worth noting.
>> Tim Wildmon: It's worth noting.
>> Steve Jordahl: It is kind of.
>> Tim Wildmon: It's breaking news. So. Over to you, Steve.
>> Steve Jordahl: Breaking, breaking. In the town, of Altadena, which is in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, north of Los Angeles, we have a bear sighting. Not only a bear sighting, but this bear has taken up residence in a home. This is, Keith Johnson's home. That's right, Keith. Kenneth. Kenneth.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Sorry. Kenneth Johnson.
>> Steve Jordahl: 63 year old Kenneth Johnson has a bear in his, in his, crawl space and, basement area. He's asked the state of California to come and get it. The Fish and Wildlife, came and they got a bear. The wrong one.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Yep.
>> Steve Jordahl: And took it away. And he. So he's still waiting for them to come back and get the right one.
>> Tim Wildmon: And he's more than one bear. How could that happen?
>> Wesley Wildmon: We're a month into this.
>> Tim Wildmon: Wrong bear.
>> Wesley Wildmon: We're a month into this.
>> Steve Jordahl: They set up a trap and the wrong bear responded to the trap. They thought they had the right one.
>> Tim Wildmon: This fella. This fella. Seriously, it's funny if it doesn't happen to you.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Okay, that's a good point. That's a good point.
>> Tim Wildmon: Then everybody laughs. Oh, you're the guy with the bear at his house. This bear is squatting and still is, I think underneath, the house of this fellow, what's his name?
>> Steve Jordahl: Kenneth, Johnson.
>> Tim Wildmon: So the bear goes and comes. It's it. And, and the California Fish and Wildlife came to try to. And I don't know, I don't know how you trapped the wrong bear.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Said it's terrorizing his home.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yep.
>> Wesley Wildmon: I mean you could imagine. Yeah. 550 pound brown bear.
>> Tim Wildmon: Oh, wow. I mean that's such.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay, so it's living in, underneath.
>> Tim Wildmon: It lives underneath the house in the crawl space, which is amazing to me. I don't know how.
>> Wesley Wildmon: please, if y' all could help me here and use the word squatting.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Squatting.
>> Tim Wildmon: It's a squatting bear.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Thank you.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay. You know like an Indian chief.
>> Wesley Wildmon: No, a little different. Like squatting as in taking up residence.
>> Tim Wildmon: Probably an Indian chief named Squatting Bear somewhere.
>> Wesley Wildmon: That's true.
>> Tim Wildmon: But, you're on your own here now. Okay, well, did I offend somebody? I didn't mean to.
>> Tim Wildmon: You offended the bear.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay. I mean, I mean, we did have Sitting Bull, am I right?
>> Tim Wildmon: That's exactly.
>> Tim Wildmon: They named themselves. I just said there's a squatting bear somewhere. That's right. But this, bear. This bear lives under the house in this in the crawl space area which.
>> Steve Jordahl: Looks like a bear cave.
>> Tim Wildmon: And then it goes out and feeds.
>> Steve Jordahl: Uh-huh.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Goes back to squat and then it comes back.
>> Tim Wildmon: It's. So basically it's using the house as it's Without permit.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Without permission.
>> Tim Wildmon: Without permission. It hasn't paid rent in.
>> Tim Wildmon: No, no. As it's using it. It's using this fellow's house basement, as its cave. Now can't. Okay. Count now does.
>> Tim Wildmon: Has the bear gotten loose inside that?
California Fish and Wildlife trying to evict squatting homeowner with 550 pound bear
>> Tim Wildmon: That's a. Look at. You can read this story. It's a, that's a massive bear. what.
>> Wesley Wildmon: So they came December 9, failed, got their own bear that was like half.
>> Tim Wildmon: The size come out. The California Fish and Wildlife, he calls them, says, come get this bear. They come out there, they get the wrong.
>> Wesley Wildmon: They come out there at their own pace. Then when they come out there at their own pace at that point, then they've got it wrong. They got the wrong bear. And so this has been going on before. This had been going on for about a month now.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay, you know what?
>> Steve Jordahl: Just 550 pound bear.
>> Tim Wildmon: You don't, you don't, you don't you don't go out there and say shoe. No, no, you don't, you don't try to shoot. You don't get your, your, your you know, broom out and, and stoke underneath the house saying, come on bear, get out of here. This this is a huge bear. Go ahead, Ray.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay, so. Still didn't get an answer to my other question. Has the bear ever gotten inside the house?
>> Steve Jordahl: So far as we say that it does not.
>> Tim Wildmon: I don't think so. I don't think so.
>> Tim Wildmon: I think you'd have a problem on another level, but okay.
>> Steve Jordahl: It's not your average bear.
>> Tim Wildmon: So is this, is this guy going to sleep at.
>> Steve Jordahl: Kenneth.
>> Tim Wildmon: Is Kenneth going to sleep at night knowing there's a bear?
>> Wesley Wildmon: That's why he's infuriated.
>> Tim Wildmon: Really bother me.
>> Tim Wildmon: He's upse think so. I don't, I don't even know. It may be pointless to do your deadbolt with a 550 pound bear.
>> Wesley Wildmon: I remember we need audio from this.
>> Tim Wildmon: we're gonna, we're gonna move on to some depressing news in just a minute. But this is depressing for. What's his name?
>> Wesley Wildmon: Kenneth.
>> Tim Wildmon: Kenneth. Kenneth. But he can't shoot the bear, right?
>> Steve Jordahl: He cannot shoot the bear if he goes good in many states.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Oh yeah, almost, every state except for California, NewSong York and couldn't shoot.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah. That's the consequences of living In a. In a. In a very liberal state is you can't shoot the bear and you're not.
>> Steve Jordahl: Supposed to evict squatters. They have legal rights, you know.
>> Wesley Wildmon: That's true. That's fair.
One time we had a snake on our patio and I locked the door
>> Tim Wildmon: Well, I better just stop right there. I just got problem. A deadbolt in the door. This is all one time I was at, home and we had a snake on our patio. And I don't. I won't tell the whole story, but.
>> Steve Jordahl: it didn't end well for the snake. I have a feeling it.
>> Tim Wildmon: Well, that snake had just eaten two frogs, and he didn't want to leave my patio more. Normally, snakes are. They'll. They'll flee, right? Yeah, but I, but he wouldn't leave because he couldn't. He was like digesting these frogs that he had consumed on my patio. But, he. He lurched back. Can a snake lurch? I don't know. Anyway, he. He like, was snapping by. He was about six feet away and he was trying to lunge back at me, like, quit. Quit doing what? You. Because I had a blower going on him. Like, you know what I'm talking about? I had a blower. I was trying to use a blower to get him to shoe, right? But then he started coming at me and I. I shut the door and then I locked it. There you go. Just for good measure. that's right.
>> Tim Wildmon: Don't let him. Don't let him.
>> Tim Wildmon: My wife was with me. I said, you do realize I just locked the door to keep the snake out, right?
>> Tim Wildmon: Definitely show him.
>> Tim Wildmon: So we're not gonna tell anybody you did that, but I guess I just.
>> Wesley Wildmon: I know we gotta move on, but it gets better or worse.
California man loses hot water because bear destroys his hot water heater
>> Tim Wildmon: You mean back to the story in California?
>> Wesley Wildmon: Yeah. So here's.
>> Tim Wildmon: It's slow news day, so we gotta have something to talk about.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Go ahead. And I think you will, I think you'll take Kenneth aside even more after you hear this.
>> Tim Wildmon: Kenneth is the man in California with.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Hair on his house.
>> Tim Wildmon: Kenneth.
>> Wesley Wildmon: One of the ways he discovered this shortly after Thanksgiving is he lost hot water because the, bear destroyed his hot water. Hot water heater.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay, we've gone too far now.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Could you imagine. I know you and your hot water and shower.
>> Tim Wildmon: Living.
>> Tim Wildmon: That's too.
>> Wesley Wildmon: In all seriousness, the. Just to pile on the cdfw. the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, they actually bout. They backed out since December 9th and they've now again, I.
>> Tim Wildmon: Maybe they're just reading the story. Yeah.
>> Wesley Wildmon: They may have limited resources. They may have their reasons. For it, but they've backed out and they said they're not coming back on vacation. Yeah, we'll be. We're done for now. So.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah. So he's on his own with this 550 pound bear.
>> Steve Jordahl: She hadn't tried the blower yet.
>> Tim Wildmon: That's good. Steve. I know you were mocking me, but I still thought it was good there. Using. I was using a blower on a snake, which normally might work, but, this snake, like I said, he didn't want to leave.
>> Tim Wildmon: Well, it's a great question.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Who do you call December and anyway.
>> Tim Wildmon: Who do you call?
>> Steve Jordahl: Bear Grylls.
>> Tim Wildmon: Ghostbusters.
>> Tim Wildmon: Ghost.
>> Tim Wildmon: All right, Bear Busters.
>> Wesley Wildmon: No hot water.
>> Tim Wildmon: All right, Steve, what's your first story over there?
Franklin Graham criticizes Democrats for supporting men in women's sports
>> Steve Jordahl: Let's talk about, Franklin Graham continuing to speak the truth. He is accusing Democrats in Washington of selling their souls for power. And he's speaking out against lawmakers who are signing on to an amicus of the Supreme Court in favor of men in women's sports.
>> Tim Wildmon: So Franklin Graham, the, well known evangelist.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yes.
>> Tim Wildmon: Who I've met and in fact, we were at a White House event back in the first Trump administration. I was at a White House event and he was there and talked to him for a little while. But, so he said he's criticizing the Democrat Party because they've signed on an amicus brief. This is a, in other words.
>> Steve Jordahl: Friend of the court.
>> Tim Wildmon: Friend of the court. They're saying we, we as a, we as a party are in support of.
>> Steve Jordahl: Transgendered or.130 members of Congress signed it. So.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah. Of Democrats.
>> Steve Jordahl: Of Democrats.
>> Tim Wildmon: And they're saying we support at the Supreme Court level the right of males to play female sports. Right?
>> Steve Jordahl: Yes. And says Franklin Graham, quote, if you believe men should be allowed in women's bathrooms and to undress in your daughter's or granddaughter's locker, then you should vote Democrat. This is sick. It turns your stomach. Beware.
>> Tim Wildmon: That that is all true. It goes beyond just competitive sports, which is insane.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Right.
>> Tim Wildmon: The idea of males being able to play female sports. But also this is a violation of privacy because they let these same, quote, athletes, into the women's changing areas and showers. They have full access, to. So that's how insane this idea is that the, that not all, but a majority of Democrats, at least nationally, support. And that is basically, if you call yourself a girl, you can go wherever girls go. That's all you got to do is. They even use this for prison now.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: Somebody, a man will be convicted of a, Of A crime that requires him to go to prison or jail. And this is true in some states, blue states. And then he says, I, feel like I'm a woman. Okay, we'll put him in the women's.
>> Steve Jordahl: Women's prison.
>> Tim Wildmon: Just prison.
>> Steve Jordahl: Even if they're maybe convicted of a sexual crime.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's. I mean, it's insane. But this is how it's, Well, someone once said, liberalism is a mental disorder.
>> Steve Jordahl: Boy, howdy.
>> Tim Wildmon: And in many respects. Absolutely. All right, you're listening to today's issues. Well, good for Franklin Graham there.
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt has a chilling warning on AI's future
Next story.
>> Steve Jordahl: I'd like to introduce you to former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, who has a chilling warning on AI's future. He was talking in about a three minute video, which were, audio, which we're not going to play the entirety of. But he said, that AI is making some strides, including, how, you ask the prompts, how it's learning and how it's programming. And he says eventually this is going to end up bad. So. Well, pull the plug. Let's cut. Listen to cut 11.
>> Speaker E: But at some point these systems will get powerful enough that you'll be able to take the agents and they'll start to work together. At some point, people believe that these agents will develop their own language. And that's the point when we don't understand what we're doing. You know what we should do? Pull the plug.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah. They develop their own language. So they're talking to each other in a language we don't understand.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah.
>> Wesley Wildmon: And, the thought there, I guess the end game, so to speak, is then they become, they outsmart the human. And I mean, that's what he would be.
>> Tim Wildmon: This sounds like a sci fi movie.
>> Steve Jordahl: It does. He, seems to prescribe to what I would call the terminator version of AI's future.
>> Wesley Wildmon: I mentioned this before when we talk about AI, but everything he's saying and the progression of AI, is identical to the movie of Eagle Eye. Ah. Which I watched years ago.
>> Steve Jordahl: That's a great movie.
>> Tim Wildmon: Who was that star of that star.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: And what happened in that movie, there.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Well, I could give it away for those hadn't seen it, but that's fine.
>> Tim Wildmon: Spoiler alert.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Spoiler alert. Yeah. there was a brother. There was twin brothers and one was working with, the government on, an AI project or. Yeah, an AI project.
>> Tim Wildmon: This movie was made, what, 20 years ago or so.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Okay. Yep. And one of the twin brothers was, Was wanting to whistleblow. Who was the twin brother? Working for the government. Whistleblow on the AI being exactly way the way that Google guy just described it. We got to pull the plug. Well, the government took him out and then his twin. But the twin brother was approached by the good side, a few people working in government that were the good people, and asked him to basically pick up the trail or pick up the mission of his brother that was killed. And he. And he picked up the mission only to find out that is the AI that everybody he was talking to on the phone was an AI voice. Everybody that he was working for was, work was the AI computer. And he didn't know anybody. He thought the whole time he was working for a human. But he was working. But he was actually working for the. The AI who was re replicating people's voices through text. It was. They were communicating through text.
>> Tim Wildmon: Oh, wow.
>> Steve Jordahl: It controlled every bit. It controlled the red light cameras, the stop lights.
>> Wesley Wildmon: You got to see it.
>> Tim Wildmon: But it was a futuristic movie 20 years ago. But now that's reality, right?
>> Steve Jordahl: Oh, yeah.
>> Wesley Wildmon: AI works. AI works in the same way that the movie portrays it, except for the government hijacks and it uses it for evil. Well, I'm sorry, A.I.
>> Tim Wildmon: The government AI, hijacks the government.
>> Steve Jordahl: In the movie, A.I.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Says that the president says so and.
>> Steve Jordahl: So that the danger to humanity, to the people, is the government. And so it had determined to kill everybody in the government at a joint session of Congress. It was going to use a bomb.
>> Wesley Wildmon: So he. So what did he do? He actually literally pulled the plug and killed the AI. It was the end thing of. Because he had a choice.
>> Tim Wildmon: That was his choice.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: Either humanity dies.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Right. Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: Have you seen this movie, Ray?
>> Tim Wildmon: I've never even heard of it. What do you say?
>> Steve Jordahl: It's a movie.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Yeah.
>> Steve Jordahl: Quite the. Quite the thriller.
>> Wesley Wildmon: After we get off the program, you got to go watch it. That's that same.
>> Tim Wildmon: But at the end he pulls the plug.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Yep. He does the right thing.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah.
I'm not sure pulling the plug is possible in reality
That's. Spoiler alert. We just. But you know, I'm not sure.
>> Tim Wildmon: I'm not sure that's going to be possible.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: Tomorrow.
>> Tim Wildmon: Oh, you mean in reality.
>> Wesley Wildmon: No, that's right. Yeah, I agree. Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: Not the movie. But in reality.
>> Tim Wildmon: In reality. I'm not sure it's going to be possible to, quote, pull the plug.
>> Wesley Wildmon: I would agree with that.
>> Steve Jordahl: I tell you what, so many plugs are.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Did you hope though? Some hope there if you.
Elon Musk says AI will take over many jobs in the world
>> Tim Wildmon: Well now, Elon Musk, is Elon Musk one of the smartest guys in the world like him or not he, I like him but you know, but he, he he has he's got, is he a mixed review guy on AI He's a little.
>> Steve Jordahl: He wants to emphasize the positive, the, the Star Trek version of I call it. Because there's very little he can do to stop the bad stuff. So you might as well go with the good while you.
>> Tim Wildmon: But he's saying AI is going to take over many jobs in the world.
>> Steve Jordahl: He, his robots are going to take over many jobs in the world. It's not just AI he is building robots, the human robots that will be able to do almost anything that humans could do including pounding nails and fixing plumbing. and at 20 bucks a piece he's going to have a 7 trillion dollar company.
>> Tim Wildmon: So how does this work? All right, I'm asking for a friend, for a friend. How does this I understand what robots are and I have seen his robots that look like humans and that.
>> Steve Jordahl: Act and move like humans.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah, yeah. So do you know, would you like call up a, a plumber or. You don't call them up, you order one. Over and over comes a no.
>> Steve Jordahl: You own one of these twenty thousand dollar robots. It's your personal valet or at least.
>> Tim Wildmon: It starts and you just program in what you want to ask it.
>> Steve Jordahl: You don't have to program because it's AI it's already learned. You just tell it, fix the faucet or vacuum, vacuum the rug man, do my laundry.
>> Tim Wildmon: I guess honeydew is just gonna go away.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Well, I, I was, I watched a futuristic TV series. I'm sorry, I watched a TV series.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Similar to Law and Order and what they did. What happened on that one, The AI ah, a guy behind a screen was, was manipulating AI to pretend like he was another officer to, to another officer and got that officer to do something that ended up costing that officer his life. But similar to the What is it, what is it, what is it called nowadays where people call and say there's a, there's swatting. What's it again?
>> Steve Jordahl: Swatting.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Swat. He's swatting. But he did AI using the his officer friend's voice.
>> Steve Jordahl: I remember watching the documentary called the Jets.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yes, there were many episodes of that documentary.
>> Steve Jordahl: That's right.
>> Wesley Wildmon: We need a board.
>> Tim Wildmon: This is, ah, but anyway this is, you know, so what's ahead for us? The next five to 10 years is going to be.
>> Steve Jordahl: We have no idea.
>> Tim Wildmon: We have no idea. the prediction is going to be a lot of good but potentially a lot of Bad too. Right.
>> Steve Jordahl: We might not. We might not be around.
>> Wesley Wildmon: There's very little legislation and laws on this stuff, too. That's. I mean, that's.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah, you keep guardrails on it.
>> Steve Jordahl: Well, President Trump, issued. Did an executive order trying to, encourage the development. Doing. It's kind of the new space shot, as it's called, where he's asking, putting together all the AI concerns in this country, the private businesses and the government research and everything. And he's hoping to control the market. But control is a very loose word. We don't know who's going to control who. I got to tell you, the things that I'm hearing, we have to have. In fact, I'm going to ask you, Brent, to maybe see when we can, book, Colonel Bob McGinnis. He's got three books out on AI. He is scared to death, too. But he. He has a, He says it's really tracking closely with prophetic, scripture.
>> Tim Wildmon: He.
>> Steve Jordahl: He sees that all over the place. I think we need to. It's about time we had him on.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: Can a, a college football fan manipulate AI? m. that would cause your school to make it to the finals?
>> Tim Wildmon: We're working on it.
>> Steve Jordahl: I would take her bowl right now. I would think that it could, on that put disinformation.
>> Tim Wildmon: Oh, right, right. We're working on Ole Miss Rebel. Right.
>> Tim Wildmon: We're working on it for the Sugar Bowl.
>> Tim Wildmon: That's right. Sugar bowl is, Thursday night.
>> Tim Wildmon: Thursday night. Right. Working on it hard.
>> Tim Wildmon: So we got some big, games ahead, then. College football world that AI is not going to have anything to do with.
>> Steve Jordahl: Not yet. Not this year.
>> Tim Wildmon: Then I'm. If AI takes over college football, just. I'm just going to, an island somewhere.
>> Tim Wildmon: Any of it could be replaced.
>> Steve Jordahl: You can go to France like, like George Clooney or, George Clunet, because he's now a French citizen.
>> Tim Wildmon: Take an island. But if I stayed on the island too long, I'd be the end of me anyway, so, I want to, congratulate. We'll maybe talk to Ray. You won't be with us again.
Four big college football games coming up on Thursday, New Year's Day
You won't be on the show tomorrow.
>> Tim Wildmon: Right, Right.
>> Tim Wildmon: And then we're. Okay. So Thursday, folks, you know, our offices and studios are closed, so we'll have special programming on, including a special by Ray Pritchard.
>> Steve Jordahl: That's right o him in this.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yes, in the show. So stay tuned for that. We've got that coming up on Thursday. But, tomorrow night, Ohio State in Miami play and then big, game and then stay and then Oregon and Texas Tech play.
>> Tim Wildmon: Be a big game, too.
>> Tim Wildmon: That's the first game on Thursday, NewSong Year's Day.
>> Tim Wildmon: Right.
>> Tim Wildmon: So we're back to having big games on NewSong Year's Day. I love that.
>> Tim Wildmon: I like that.
>> Tim Wildmon: That's an American tradition. Remember, we all grew up watching the bowl games. That's right.
>> Tim Wildmon: Then Indiana and Alabama in the Rose.
>> Tim Wildmon: Bowl in the afternoon.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: They're saying that's going to be slog fest because it's rained so much in Southern California. They're going to tear up the field there. It's a Rose Bowl. But then you got Ole Miss and George as the nightcap.
>> Tim Wildmon: Right.
>> Tim Wildmon: In NewSong Orleans. Sugar Bowl.
>> Tim Wildmon: Four great games coming up.
>> Tim Wildmon: And Ray, did you go to Ole Miss? Are you just a Rebel fan?
>> Tim Wildmon: My dad went to Ole Miss back in the day.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay.
>> Tim Wildmon: So it's just been passed along from my dad to me and now my boys. I got you family.
>> Tim Wildmon: Well, Ole miss, o. Mrs. They've arrived. They're playing with the big boys on, if we're. And you know, playing with the big boys. Now, is that a song?
>> Steve Jordahl: That was from a movie called, M. About Moses.
>> Tim Wildmon: Give me a spoiler alert to that.
>> Steve Jordahl: Moses. Moses takes the children of Israel out of Egypt.
>> Tim Wildmon: Steve, you're groovy, brother.
>> Tim Wildmon: So, boss, we'll pick that up.
>> Wesley Wildmon: You got a prediction on the Ole Miss score?
>> Tim Wildmon: Oh, Ole Miss. Enjoy Georgia. I may. I'll predict it tomorrow maybe.
>> Steve Jordahl: Okay.
>> Tim Wildmon: That's right.
>> Tim Wildmon: Ole Miss in Georgia.
>> Tim Wildmon: Last second or at halftime.
>> Wesley Wildmon: Right.
>> Tim Wildmon: Couple of SEC schools going at it on, on Thursday night. All right, hope you have a great afternoon, everybody, and we'll see you back here tomorrow with more of today's issues.