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Joe Getty
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Jack Armstrong
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio.
Joe Getty
Studio at the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty. And now, here's Armstrong and Getty.
Katie Green
An important youth sports question. We'll let Joe Getty be the judge. Coming up.
Jack Armstrong
Do I have to?
Katie Green
No, you could just say, eh, I don't know.
Jack Armstrong
It doesn't sound very entertaining. I. I see your point. I will be the judge. A lot of good stuff to squeeze into the final hour of the week. But first, it's the Friday tradition. Take a fond look back at the week that was. It's cow. Clips of the Week. Clips of the.
Michaelangelo
Tonight, we have breaking news as we come on the air. Ozzy Osbourne has died.
Jack Armstrong
Scotty Shepl has his Open championship.
Katie Green
So please, if you haven't done your makeup, do your makeup now.
Jack Armstrong
Well, again, we hope it gets a.
Joe Getty
Little bit more competitive because like a girl's trip to Cancun right now, there's no need.
Jack Armstrong
Would an untalented man be able to compose the following satirical wittic Go yourself. I still think about Kamala. I had to come back for the insurance because they informed me earlier this year. I'm on Cobra.
Katie Green
As I am.
Jack Armstrong
There's someone that's been so focused on trying to understand all of that. Can a man become a woman? Can a man become a woman? Not. No. Thank you.
Joe Getty
Convicted killer Bryan Kohberger, forced to face the families of his victims and a survivor.
Jack Armstrong
He chose destruction. He chose evil. In my view, the time has now.
Michaelangelo
Come to end Mr. Kohlberger's 15 minutes of fame.
Joe Getty
You may have received A's in high school and college, but you're gonna be getting big Ds in prison.
Jack Armstrong
Whether it's right or wrong, it's time.
Katie Green
To go after people.
Jack Armstrong
President Obama and his leadership team effectively launch a years long coup against the sitting President of the United States.
Katie Green
You ought to take a look that.
Jack Armstrong
And stop talking about nonsense.
Michaelangelo
Attorney General Pam Bondi told President Trump that his name appears multiple times in the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Jack Armstrong
Some Democrats are joining Republicans in Congress demanding the files be released. People ask me if it's gonna cost me politically and I say, well, sure it is. How do you get cracked? And it's everywhere. Mainly for that reason, I learned how to make my own. I know exactly what happened in that debate. He's tired of. Give him Ambien to be able to sleep. You. How do you think your hotel room gets cleaned? How do you think you got food on your table? Your crack is whack.
Katie Green
Hulk Hogan, he dropped the big leg on him. He's down for the COVID of the leg. One, two.
Jack Armstrong
He got a lips of the.
Katie Green
Okay, a couple of quick things before Joe's hot take on youth sports. One, and I'm not gonna talk about Epstein anymore today. Nobody can make me other than what I'm about to say. Mark Halperin put out a video today which I will watch. He says in my reported monologue, I break down why the Trump Epstein scandal might be the most politically dangerous controversy Trump has ever faced. Well, I want to hear him explain that because I don't get it. So stay tuned for that. Saw this yesterday. I didn't listen. Hulk Hogan's cardiac arrest. 911 dispatch audio came out. I hate that sort of thing. I understand why transparency is good with government agencies, but that's not the way it's used. It's used for celebrities and just all kinds of.
Jack Armstrong
I get it. It's. It's a public record and we're the public, but yeah, it's distasteful. Yeah.
Katie Green
Not cool. Okay, this so A, they're into Little League, World Series time, I guess. Little kids playing little kids. Kid hit a home run the other day, flipped a bat, got suspended. And that's. I guess that's become a problem nationwide. Not just this one kid who they reinstated, which I think might be just because he's such a good player and they need him, which happens also at all levels of sports. But what do you think about bat flipping for kids? Because in Japan, for instance, you hit a home run, you flip the bat. It's kind of an art form and people love it and they cheer. And the United States, we've frowned upon it for many, many years, seen it as showboating, although it seems kind of crazy the way all sports are now that we have any limits on showboating.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, I would agree. I've got to get over my learned and long held belief in not showboating because I was brought up to not do that. I hated people who did that. I thought it was dumb. Unnecessarily, like, look at me, look at me, look at me. You just hit a home run. Everybody is looking at you. You don't have to do a dance. So my, my personal distaste for it I will put aside because I am like that old Solomonic in my wisdom.
Katie Green
And you're also old.
Jack Armstrong
That too. You could make a safety argument because the, the rules of baseball make it very clear you have one option with your bat, that is to drop it, to have it no longer be in your hand as quickly as possible before you run to first base, before you do anything. So you could make that argument.
Katie Green
I get that. But the controversy is mostly around do we want the showboating or not.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah.
Katie Green
I'll tell you, when my son was playing youth football because it's just, it's just the zeitgeist. It's not good. I don't like it, but I don't see how you're going to stop it because the pros do it and the kids watch the pros and it's a TV show, a for profit TV show. And the TV show is better when they showboat. It just is. I mean, it just is. But all the kids, young kids, my, my son was, what was he, 10 at the time. Every play, every mundane play, there'd be the, you know, pop in the jersey and the high five and the chest bumps and the, oh, flexing. Just every play that was like half the fun of being in sports, it seemed, was the.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. After every. It's like, okay, yeah, I really dislike the trend, but the kids didn't come up with this again. They're imitating their heroes. Yeah. You know what? I think this is the sort of thing that works itself out if the, it reminds me of the great. I wish, I wish I was as good as, like Tim Sandifer, remembering sayings and who said them. But the idea that if, if the people have the constitution in their hearts, there's nothing that can take the constitution away. And if the people don't have the Constitution in their hearts. There's no defense of it. So if the people, the players, the coaches, the fans are like, there's nothing wrong with flipping the bat. The bat flipping will come, then become semi permanent. If the consensus is no, we don't like this, or it's unsafe or whatever, it'll go away.
Katie Green
Well, now, let me sound like old school 90s talk radio conservative.
Jack Armstrong
Oh God, we're not going to take calls, are we?
Katie Green
But there's no doubt the whole showboating thing is a selfish act. It's a, hey, look at me, look at me, look at me. And as, as a whole, is society more selfish now or less selfish now?
Jack Armstrong
Oh yeah, vastly more selfish. More selfish. And kids frequently, when you ask them their greatest goals, they say to be famous.
Katie Green
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
Even more than rich, they want to be famous. And that this feeds into that tendency. I just think, you know, it's such an enormous societal trend. I'm not going to stop it through forbidding the bat flip, but I could easily be convinced. No, there's no positives here to have young kids flipping ball bats around. It hit somebody in the head. No. Drop the bat and run to the base.
Katie Green
Quick political thing before we take a break, I found this funny. So the dnc, the Democratic National Committee, is doing an autopsy on the last election. This is what parties do after they get their asses kicked. They, they do what they call an autopsy, which seems like an overly grim term to use for an assessment of why you.
Jack Armstrong
I would say given the state of the Democratic Party, it's pretty accurate.
Katie Green
It's dead. What did it die of? But this is the funny part. Well, I was about to go off on this tangent. I'll do the tangent first before I get to the funny part. The tangent being the most famous political autopsy. I think the first time anybody ever heard the term was after Mitt Romney lost in 2012. The Republican Party did an autopsy. Every single thing they determined. In the 2012 autopsy, Trump did the opposite of and won two terms. So, so much more.
Jack Armstrong
The notable example of the Republicans decided we need to go softer on immigration. Much softer. And not only did Trump go in the opposite direction, but he won the Hispanic vote in a way Republicans never have. So nice autops.
Katie Green
Part of that is because parties and committees just want to win the election. They don't care about actually satisfying voters. If they can satisfy voters and win election, that's just, that's fantastic. But.
Jack Armstrong
Right.
Katie Green
But the DNC said off limits to the autopsy. Autopsy is reviewing whether Biden should have stepped down early or not or whether Kamala Harris was a good candidate.
Jack Armstrong
That is the one thing we're not going to consider is whether those 32 gunshot wounds played a role in the patient's death. That's off limits. It looks a little fat to me. Why don't we say he died because he was fat?
Katie Green
How funny is that?
Jack Armstrong
I know. It's. It's. It's beyond funny. It's bizarre. You can't even imagine what they're thinking.
Katie Green
I don't know.
Jack Armstrong
I mean, I get that that's not likely to happen again, but it's like, you know, getting back to sports. If. If you have a pretty good idea why you lost a game or why something went wrong, you don't blow everything up. You. Because you don't want to undo everything that was right. So wait a minute now. If, for instance, the Democratic party and I do not believe this, trust me, was doing more or less everything right, but Joe Biden's brain took a downturn. Kamala seemed like the obvious choice. We were in a hurry, so we went with her. Turns out she's a dud as a candidate. I mean, that. That's clearly true, but. But to. To ignore that and say, let's just take apart or examine everything else we were doing. I don't. I don't get that. Why are you bothering?
Katie Green
So Joe was regaling us with an amazing story last hour about pilots crashing planes on purpose, which seems to happen more often than we thought. Big commercial airlines. I would have thought that might happen once every 50 years, but it happened a number of times in recent years around the world.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Katie Green
And there's some talk about what we can do about that.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Yeah. Automated planes ought to be way easier than cars.
Katie Green
I'm gonna start walking in. You know when you're walking in the little doorway and you're waiting for people to get to the seats and the pilots there.
Jack Armstrong
Hey. Hey.
Katie Green
How's it. How's it going? How you doing? You having a good day or a bad day? How's your marriage? How's your career?
Jack Armstrong
No, when I say, how you doing? I really, really want to know in depth.
Katie Green
Huh? You and your wife still getting along?
Jack Armstrong
Okay, if you were to describe life in, say, two or three words, what.
Katie Green
Would those words be? Yeah, no kidding. Okay, we'll get to that. Coming up.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and get.
Joe Getty
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Hulk Hogan
You really don't want to split your audience, you know, you don't want to say I'm a Democrat or I'm a Republican. You want all kind of people come to see you perform. I stayed silent for so long, it was killing me. I watched the border crash and burn. I watched the economy crash and burn. I watched Trump's family be compromised. I watched his business. I watched him try to put him in jail. I was silent and I hardly could hold my tongue. And then when they took that shot at him and tried to kill our leader, that was it for me, brother.
Katie Green
That's the man who played the character of Hulk Hogan in his real voice and attitude. Clearly a conservative and why he joined the whole let's get Trump elected crowd.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. And gave that surreal and electrifying speech at the convention. That was quite a moment.
Katie Green
Finally came across an article in the New York Post that mentioned his lifelong steroid use in contributing to his health problems. Because 71 is not that old for a guy who's obviously into physical fitness.
Jack Armstrong
Right. Yeah. Yeah, clearly. Yeah. That, that stole years from his life. Interesting. If you could talk to him in the afterlife, I wonder what he would say about the bargain he struck.
Katie Green
I bet he was okay with it. It's one of the most famous people in the world. That'd be a pretty cool ride.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. But when your heart is skipping beats, you might think, well, who knows? That's why he's. Well, he's not here. We can't ask him. So, talked a little earlier about pilot suicide. Essentially where they take the plane down with them.
Katie Green
I like calling it mass murder. You, you did at one point. And let's, let's lean away from the suicide and toward the. You're a mass murderer, you scumbag.
Jack Armstrong
Right. A suicidal mass murderer. Yeah, I think both are worthy of mentioning. But anyway, in how the third world countries, including China, feel like they have to deny it. Which was an interesting aspect of this. Whereas the Western democracies are like, no, that's what happened. A couple of notes. First of all, a friend of mine who's knowledgeable about this stuff says it's usually the systems or the processes. Processes that let the pilot down, not the pilot's fault. He's talking about a book that claims it's easy to blame it on the pilot instead of digging much deeper into what actually caused the accident with the systems. This editorialist I'm writing, I'm reading over here says actually frequently, if the pilots would have gotten out of the way and let the airplane do what it was supposed to do. So he's saying, yes, it is pilot error. I am not an authority on this, but he gets into a really interesting thought, which is the fact that having a pilotless airplane in the style of a driverless car. What do you. Autonomous car, whatever you want to call it. It'd be way simpler with airplanes because the hazards and complexity of driving along in traffic are way worse than go along the Runway, you know, accelerate, go aloft, hit 30,000ft, then land in Omaha. There aren't nearly the hazards to avoid.
Katie Green
I think we got.
Jack Armstrong
And there could be active ground control when it was necessary.
Katie Green
Oh, true. I think you're gonna have the same psychological problem, though it'll be interesting to see how we receive this because it's gonna happen over the next couple of years. I think there'll be cars out there driving on their own. Occasionally they're gonna make a mistake and kill people. But. So if we, if, if everybody was an automatic driving car, but highway deaths went from the current 35,000 a year to 5,000 a year, would that be. Would we all just celebrate the win or doesn't it seem extra weird and awful if a computer driving car kills.
Jack Armstrong
You and then we ought to go back to people driving because this is obviously not good.
Katie Green
Picture a loved one, you know, horrible as that be your loved one dies in a car that was being driven automatically. Doesn't that seem sort of worse than if it was their error?
Jack Armstrong
I don't know why I see what you're driving at and how difficult it would to get people to trust it, especially if you can surround a Waymo and make it stop. What the unforeseen airplane similar incident is Armstrong and Getty.
Joe Getty
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Jack Armstrong
Well, switching gears, I saw that Miller Lite is celebrating its 50th anniversary by offering 50,000 free beers at bars across the country.
Katie Green
Oh, people are running up to the.
Jack Armstrong
Bar like, can I get a Budweiser 50,000 Miller lights? Which is about the number you need to feel anything. Jimmy Shots at light beer.
Katie Green
Jimmy Fallon, a big drinker with that one because he's a known fairly big drinker. So that's kind of a funny joke.
Jack Armstrong
You know what, now that you mentioned it, yeah, I'd forgotten the given his.
Katie Green
Lifestyle I mentioned earlier. Today is the 60th anniversary of what? The 60th anniversary. It was featured in a major Oscar winning Hollywood film last year. Bob Dylan went electric 60 years ago today to booze and craziness and mayhem and left the stage after only three songs because the crowd went berserko. I never thought about this till I read the Commentary magazine piece about it. The, the, the important part about that was not musically, you know, whatever, but the fact that he broke with the hippies. He didn't give a crap. I don't care about. I'm not, I'm not here to be your hippie leader. That's not, I'm not. That's not what I'm doing.
Jack Armstrong
You think he was a socialist is, you know, one of the takeaways from the biopic of recent days too.
Katie Green
Yeah, Pete Seeger, the, the banjo player and everybody else wanted to be part of the hippie social and he just wasn't interested in that whole thing. Glad you like my songs and you're using them however you want to use them, but I'm not into your hippie things. Because if he had continued down, if he'd done like a lot of artists do. And if this is what the crowd wants, this is. I'm gonna give him more of it. That would have just made it even more powerful and more annoying. Right. I mean, he continued down that path.
Jack Armstrong
Right.
Katie Green
Breaking hippies.
Jack Armstrong
I don't think he had the capacity to do that, honestly. No, he's not made that way.
Katie Green
No, definitely not.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, that's.
Katie Green
So. If you haven't seen that movie, it's really good. What was the other thing I wanted to mention? I don't remember.
Jack Armstrong
I don't know.
Katie Green
I want the week to be over. Is there any chance we can come back next week and the E Word is not part of the show? I suppose there's no chance of that. Right.
Jack Armstrong
I can tell you how to end it.
Katie Green
You mean for us or just. Just national.
Jack Armstrong
The Trump. Trump administration, because the FBI is. The Justice Department, have already made detailed statements about it that no further disclosure is appropriate. Sensitive information relating to the victims is intertwined throughout the materials. This includes specific details. They go on in quite some, you know. You know, specificity. Who is this? Writing? Doesn't matter. Says, if Ms. Bondi and Mr. Patel are now telling the truth about the contents of the Epstein files, then what's needed are officials who will take the responsibility, then take the heat for declining to publish documents that could hurt victims and ruin reputations. Without a criminal case, they point out, a Bill Bar type wouldn't have given a crap what the angry mob thought. He just said, no, we can't do this. And these are the reasons why. The problem is that Bondi and Kash Patel are, to some extent, a creation of the very crowd that's now yelling about the Epstein thing. And they fed into that creation, too, by egging on the crowd. So they're the wrong people to say, look, I know you don't like it, but this is the right thing, and that's what we're doing. But somebody needs to say that and say exactly why.
Katie Green
Dylan only played three songs. What were the three songs? If you've seen the movie, you know, he played Maggie's Farm.
Jack Armstrong
He played like Davita.
Katie Green
He played like a Rolling Stone, which is my son's favorite song. And he played an early version of it. Takes a lot to laugh. It Takes a Train to Cry, which is an awesome tune. I just want to be your lover, baby I don't want to be your boss.
Jack Armstrong
Heard that.
Katie Green
Why do you think Mark Halperin, in his newscast today. I'm going to watch it later, said, this is the most. The biggest vulnerability Trump has ever had in his presidency, in his political life.
Jack Armstrong
The upstream, I suspect, predict, and I would love to follow up with you over the weekend, that it is because he will lose the incredibly energetic popular support that has fueled the whole Trump machine, that he will actually have shot somebody on Fifth Avenue, to paraphrase Trump himself, but the base will say, no, not cool.
Katie Green
Yeah, he shot somebody in a MAGA hat on Fifth street, which is different.
Jack Armstrong
Get out of my way. And shot him down.
Katie Green
Yeah, that fits in with. So today's Wall Street Journal poll that's out, and that's one of your respected polling organizations. They have Trump a little higher than a couple of big polls have had him in the last week. They have him at 46%, 46% job approval rating. And as they point out, that's with a number of his policies not that popular right now. This is Obama, like, where Obama's policies would pull fairly low, but his personal approval rating would be pretty high. Even though, by the way, Trump at 46. Obama was at 40 at this point in his presidency. He ended higher, but he was at 40 at this point while Trump is at 46.
Jack Armstrong
I was going to say 46. Pretty healthy.
Katie Green
Yeah. Heck, yeah. Heck, yeah. You'd take that any day. But as they point out, he's got an almost 90% of Republican voters approving of the performance. Historically, that doesn't happen. Even Ronald Reagan was in the 70s.
Jack Armstrong
We didn't.
Katie Green
We just didn't used to be this way. So Trump, to your point about the Epstein thing, at 90% of the Republican voters, if a whole bunch of those are super hardcore MAGA and they believed, you know, the story about Epstein being one of the goals of the second Trump administration, and they feel like fu.
Jack Armstrong
That could drop off quite a bit pretty fast.
Katie Green
Yeah, that's the.
Jack Armstrong
That's my only guess what Halpern's talking about. Because in terms of actual political significance, there isn't.
Katie Green
No, there's zero political significance. I mean, from a real policy standpoint.
Jack Armstrong
Or affecting people's lives.
Katie Green
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
Standpoint.
Katie Green
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
Speaking of which, and I'll keep this short, but I still think, speaking of popularity, in spite of the unpopularity of policies, the tariff thing has yet to actually land.
Katie Green
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
When it does, that one's the least.
Katie Green
Popular of the ones that they pulled. I don't.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, is that right?
Katie Green
I don't think I hung up. Hung onto that one. That one's really unpopular. Let me dig that up real quick while you're talking.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, just Let me know when you have that. But, and this is, this is worth listening to Trump's various trade wars thing and then individual deals with individual countries and blah, blah, blah. Trump trying to discourage auto parts for American cars being built in Mexico and Canada imposed a 25% tariff on, on autos and parts. Okay. He just came to a trade deal with the Japanese. They will pay a tariff of 15%. So because American auto plants rely heavily on parts from Canada and Mexico, the tariffs on American made American cars could be higher than on Japanese imports and European cars. Depending on what is worked out there. We would have higher tariffs on American made cars than Japanese cars because we tend to have parts factories on the other sides of the border. What does an American made car mean, Joe? In that case, it's a reasonable question. But the UAW is freaking out and they are as they should be. This is not what Sean Fain was hoping for when he, you know, threw his lot in with Trump by not endorsing Biden.
Katie Green
That's interesting.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Katie Green
Trump's upside down 17 points on tariffs. And that's as you say before, they've really hit.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. It's also pretty chaotic.
Katie Green
What are, what are people even upset about? It's got to be the, the, the feeling that I'm not sure this is going to work out well. What if it actually doesn't work out? Like you've got the proof in front of you.
Jack Armstrong
I'll give you the crazy short version of this. Peggy Noonan, brilliant had article about Trump and what makes him tick. And I think she's absolutely right. And again, this is the crazy short version of it is he just loves being in a fight. He likes to fight guy, as radio host Jim Rome used to talk about, the guy who likes to go out to the bars and he wants to get in a fight. Trump loves conflict and particularly, and that explains a lot of what he does and a lot of who he is. And like the tariff thing, he's not worried that it's probably damaging or too chaotic or doing more harm than it's worth with like our closest friends. He just loves being in a scrape.
Katie Green
The big beautiful bill does not poll particularly well. I don't know if that matters at all. Do you call it a legislative achievement if it doesn't poll very well, like right after it happened, although Obamacare pulled horribly for a long time and then became just everybody got used to it and now polls fairly well.
Jack Armstrong
When you combine the complexity of the bill, the big beautiful bill and the misreporting of it and the misperceptions people have of what was in it.
Katie Green
Oh, wait.
Jack Armstrong
And the enormousness of it. I don't know. I don't know a tenth of what's in it. It's difficult for me to answer that question. I don't know what to make of any of it.
Katie Green
I don't remember which one of my favorite reporters said this was when. Right when they were voting on it. Said you could walk through halls of Congress and you'd be lucky if you found anybody that could name five things that are in the bill. If the people who voted for it, don't know, didn't know what was in it, what's the average human being across America be able to tell you about the big beautiful bill? The only thing I could really tell you is that the Trump tax cuts from 2017 continued. I don't know if I got much else than that. They rolled back some of the green New Deal stuff. They kicked some people off Medicaid kinda well.
Jack Armstrong
And professional politicos would tell you none of that crap matters that you guys are talking about. The only thing that matters is the perception in the poll numbers.
Katie Green
Right?
Jack Armstrong
That's how we make our living. That's how we get people to vote and that's how we get power. So I don't care. What was in was the worst steaming pile of excrement ever generated by any legislative body in the history of mankind. But polled well. That's a win.
Katie Green
True.
Jack Armstrong
That's a legislative achievement.
Katie Green
Isn't that nice? Well, that's a Good Friday story. Well, democracy doesn't work clearly. We'll finish strong.
Jack Armstrong
Next Armstrong and Getty.
Joe Getty
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Michaelangelo
The grandmother, an army veteran restraining a woman allegedly trying to storm the cockpit. It happened on a Delta flight from Atlanta to Tucson. It happened about 20 minutes into the flight. The pilot returning to Atlanta where authorities were waiting.
Katie Green
Well, okay, she was a grandmother who restrained out of control passenger, which is nice, but Was she like 35? Is it one of those kind of grandmas? I mean, because you're kind of implying that she was old, but she. Right, I'm guessing she wasn't as old as the normal grandmother.
Jack Armstrong
I think she was younger.
Katie Green
By the way, we have a clip.
Jack Armstrong
Of the woman that I pulled yesterday. Okay, cool.
Podcast Announcer
She didn't want to be on the plane anymore. She said God told her to do it. She had a calling. And I'm just like, wait a minute, I don't know about this conversation you got going on, but not today. Nobody else was doing nothing. So I just literally knew I had to do something. I got to make it home to my kids, my children, you, my grandchildren.
Katie Green
Yeah, cool. Not today. And nobody else will do anything, so I guess I will.
Jack Armstrong
Way to go, sister. Yeah, it's gotta be done.
Katie Green
I was having a conversation with somebody the other day, a woman who was around 50, about how 50 year olds are so much different than 50 year olds. Years ago, using the example of Aunt Bee from the Andy Griffith show was like 54. I mean, that was the age she said as the character. So I mean, and so there's plenty of women that aren't looking like Aunt B at that age anymore, right?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Katie, this grandmother is a whopping 26 years old.
Katie Green
26 year old grandmother number one.
Jack Armstrong
Where does David Muir get off describing her as a grandmother that week?
Katie Green
So two 13 year olds had babies.
Jack Armstrong
If the math is mathing on average, Jack. Yes.
Katie Green
Yeah, thank you. Thank you for verifying my difficult math complexity there.
Jack Armstrong
Yes, we've checked the figures, but yeah.
Katie Green
Okay, come on, David, that was the, the truth. That tells a lie. You were factually truth, but true. But that was a lie and you.
Jack Armstrong
Know it was a lie.
Katie Green
Come on. Yeah, she's 26. A 26 year old woman restrained somebody on a plane is not as good a story. It's still kind of interesting. But you could even just go right.
Jack Armstrong
20, 26 year old army veteran, that's fine.
Katie Green
But Grandma, Grandmother.
Jack Armstrong
What a punk.
Katie Green
That's funny. In my mind there's like a shawl and the little glasses down on the nose.
Jack Armstrong
Young people help rescue this flight. Beating them with a cane, right.
Katie Green
Exactly.
Jack Armstrong
26 freaking years old. She. You know, by modern standards, I had my kids fairly young. I was a year older than her when I. We had our first kid. Right? And she's a grandma at this point. All right, let's.
Katie Green
That's probably push her to the ground with your walker. And you got your big black orthopedic shoes. You're stomping on their face.
Jack Armstrong
You need to stop doing that.
Katie Green
Sitting here with an old timey purse.
Jack Armstrong
Throwing hard candy at her.
Katie Green
Throwing hard candy at him.
Jack Armstrong
Her dentures fly out in the midst of it all.
Katie Green
26, you say?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. I'll give it to you like I gave it to the Kaiser in WW1. She's not even 30.
Katie Green
Threw her soup on the guy.
Jack Armstrong
David Muir, you lying professional liar. Bastard is right. I haven't been. Go ahead. Sorry. I was gonna say.
Katie Green
How much time we got, Michael?
Jack Armstrong
About a little under a minute.
Katie Green
Okay.
Jack Armstrong
Okay. I was gonna say I haven't gone real heavy on the whole reforming the universities thing lately. Couple of good signs. Columbia University, who's among the worst of the worst, actually disciplined at least 70 of the students who took part in that library takeover. I hope that a lot of them.
Katie Green
Out of school, did they boot them completely out. I saw. Suspended some suspended. Was that.
Jack Armstrong
Well, in Columbia has a history of reversing certain sanctions against schools. So my point was going to be, yeah, let's keep an eye on this, because those scheming Marxists, the first thing they do is say, absolutely, yes, we've. We've suspended Everybody. We've kicked 15 people out. And as soon as the cameras go away, they reinstate all of them. Right. I will also say this George Mason University, which I would only be paying attention to because one of my kids went there. And it's actually the biggest university in the University of Virginia system. Their Marxist president is finally coming under fire for still doing DEI stuff in flaming violation of federal law. Progress is being made, my friends. Let's keep up the good fight. Hey, kids, it's that time again with Armstrong and Getty.
Katie Green
Here's your host for Final Thoughts, Joe Getty.
Jack Armstrong
Hey, how about a final thought from everybody on the crew to wrap things up for the week? There he is, Michelangelo, pressing the buttons. Michael, what's your final thought? Yeah, yesterday I tried to rip a T shirt like Hulk Hogan, you know, and I felt something popping my back. And so it didn't go real well. The shirt stayed and. Yeah, not good. Oh, how lovely to have our esteemed newswoman Katie Green back With us. Katie, a final thought. It is so good to be back. And IVF is not for the week. Maybe I'll do a one more thing with you guys about it.
Katie Green
Okay? Next week. Okay. Monday sounds very interesting.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, terrific. Jack, a final thought for us.
Michaelangelo
The grandmother, an army veteran, restraining a woman allegedly trying to storm.
Jack Armstrong
Really?
Katie Green
David, Mirror. Are you proud of yourself? That's good. Seriously, how do you consider yourself a journalist? You put that in your 30 minute newscast. You lying. I have no respect for you.
Jack Armstrong
So, Katie, you'll totally get this. High five. I was thinking about what I could do with the rest of my day and I thought I could go to the gym and instead of I ought to, but crap. My emotional response is oh, that would be cool. Yeah, I think I've turned a corner. Oh, oh. I've got the habit. That's it. Yeah.
Katie Green
If you can make it a habit. I feel bad if I can't get to the gym as opposed to the other way around.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah. If I have a day that I don't do something exercisey, it weirds me out. So you just gotta stay with it. I love it. It's not that I'm better than anybody, folks. Trust me. As Jack taught me, habits are hard to break. Good ones too.
Katie Green
A grandmother, an army veteran. Armstrong and Getty wrapping up another grueling four hour workday.
Jack Armstrong
So many people to thank, so little time. Go To Armstrong and getty.com for the hot links for Katie's Corner for the swag. How about an ang T shirt or hat or hoodie for your favorite ang fan. Maybe it's you. Helps keep everybody on the payroll. And if you see something over the weekend we really ought to be talking about, email it to us, would you please?
Katie Green
Mailbagarmstrongetti.com Will the Epstein scandal please go away before Monday? We will see you then. God bless America.
Jack Armstrong
We want to thank you for listening.
Katie Green
To the Armstrong and Getty Show.
Jack Armstrong
Jack and Joe return on Monday with Katie the news lady and Michelangelo. From the Epstein drama to immigration, even the he Dome, we'll have every story that you need to know. That's Monday on the Armstrong and Getty Show. The Armstrong and Getty.
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Armstrong & Getty On Demand: "You Lying Bastard!" – Episode Summary
Release Date: July 25, 2025
Hosts: Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty
Producer: iHeartPodcasts
In the "You Lying Bastard!" episode of the Armstrong & Getty On Demand podcast, hosts Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty delve into a variety of pressing topics, blending political analysis, societal observations, and current events with their characteristic wit and candid discussions. Skipping the usual advertisements and introductory segments, the hosts get straight to the heart of the week’s most significant issues.
A significant portion of the episode centers on the contentious issue of bat flipping in youth baseball. The hosts discuss whether encouraging young athletes to celebrate their successes prematurely instills selfishness or fosters healthy self-expression.
Katie Green introduces the topic:
"What do you think about bat flipping for kids? In Japan, it's an art form, but here it’s seen as showboating." (06:26)
Jack Armstrong reflects on his changing perspective:
"I've got to get over my learned and long-held belief in not showboating because I was brought up to not do that." (06:58)
The conversation explores cultural differences, the influence of professional athletes on youth behavior, and the broader societal trend towards increased self-centeredness. They ponder whether such behaviors are merely mimicking professional idols or indicative of deeper societal shifts towards selfishness.
Katie Green summarizes the concern:
"The whole showboating thing is a selfish act. It's a, hey, look at me, look at me, look at me. Is society more selfish now or less?" (09:09)
The hosts transition to a robust discussion on the Democratic National Committee's (DNC) retrospective analysis, dubbed an "autopsy," of the recent elections. They critique the terminology and efficacy of such assessments.
Katie Green critiques the DNC:
"The DNC is doing an autopsy on the last election. Parties do this after they get their asses kicked. They say it's dead. What did it die of?" (10:11)
The conversation shifts to the Epstein scandal's political repercussions, discussing its potential impact on President Trump’s administration and the broader political landscape.
Jack Armstrong comments on political transparency and accountability:
"Attorney General Pam Bondi told President Trump that his name appears multiple times in the Jeffrey Epstein files." (03:42)
Katie Green expresses skepticism:
"If Ms. Bondi and Mr. Patel are now telling the truth about the contents of the Epstein files, then what's needed are officials who will take the responsibility..." (24:09)
A segment of the episode is dedicated to the alarming trend of pilots deliberately crashing planes, raising questions about aviation safety and the feasibility of autonomous aircraft.
Katie Green brings up the issue:
"Joe was telling us about pilots crashing planes on purpose, which seems to happen more often than we thought." (13:25)
Jack Armstrong explores potential solutions:
"Automated planes ought to be way easier than cars. It'd be simpler with airplanes because the hazards are fewer." (16:09)
They discuss the psychological barriers to accepting pilotless planes and the potential reduction in accidents versus the public's fear of computer-driven tragedies.
Katie Green poses a poignant question:
"Picture a loved one dies in a car that was being driven automatically. Doesn't that seem sort of worse than if it was their error?" (18:14)
The episode touches on the late-life political activism of former wrestler Hulk Hogan, highlighting his support for Donald Trump and the implications of steroid use on his health.
Katie Green remarks on Hulk Hogan's speech:
"That's the man who played the character of Hulk Hogan in his real voice and attitude. Clearly a conservative and why he joined the whole let's get Trump elected crowd." (15:40)
Jack Armstrong discusses Hogan's health:
"An article mentioned his lifelong steroid use contributed to his health problems. 71 isn’t that old for a guy who's obviously into physical fitness." (15:57)
The hosts reflect on Hogan's legacy and the personal costs of his political stance and lifestyle choices.
A detailed analysis of the Trump administration's economic policies, particularly tariffs and tax cuts, forms a core part of the discussion.
Jack Armstrong critiques the tariff policies:
"Trump imposed a 25% tariff on autos and parts. He just came to a trade deal with the Japanese with a 15% tariff." (27:18)
Katie Green notes the public’s confusion and frustration:
"People are upset because they feel it might not work out well, like you have proof it’s not effective but policies need more time." (28:40)
They debate the popularity and practical outcomes of these policies, comparing them to past administrations and examining their long-term impacts.
Jack Armstrong cites Peggy Noonan’s analysis:
"Trump loves being in a fight. He likes to fight, which explains a lot about his policies." (29:52)
The hosts express concerns over perceived Marxist influences in higher education, discussing recent disciplinary actions at Columbia University and George Mason University.
Jack Armstrong speaks on university sanctions:
"Columbia disciplined 70 students involved in a library takeover, but history shows they might reinstate them." (36:16)
Katie Green adds:
"George Mason University’s Marxist president is under fire for continuing DEI initiatives in violation of federal law." (36:36)
They emphasize the need for vigilance against ideological biases in academic institutions and support ongoing efforts to reform university policies.
In their concluding segment, the hosts share personal anecdotes and reflections, maintaining their signature blend of humor and insight.
Joe Getty offers closing thoughts:
"We talk about habits being hard to break, good ones too." (38:50)
Katie Green humorously critiques media reporting:
"David Muir, you lying professional liar. Bastard is right." (38:27)
The episode wraps up with reminders to listeners to engage with the show’s content online and a tease for the next episode, promising continued discussions on hot-button issues.
Jack Armstrong finalizes:
"Go To Armstrongandgetty.com for the hot links for Katie's Corner for the swag." (39:17)
The "You Lying Bastard!" episode of Armstrong & Getty On Demand offers an in-depth exploration of contemporary issues ranging from youth sports ethics and political scandals to aviation safety and higher education reforms. Through candid dialogue and sharp analysis, hosts Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty provide listeners with insightful perspectives on the multifaceted challenges facing society today.