who, are you i really want to know who, who, who, who? ainsley: wisconsin, they still have the christmas tree up with all the christmas lights. look at the star on the building there. steve: keep it up until the epiphany january 6th this year. brian: i thought epiphany sudden idea you weren t expecting. ainsley: like i just had epiphany. steve: that isn t capitalized this one little christmas capitalized january 6th. ainsley: since you are catholic do you keep your lights up until epiphany? steve: absolutely. ainsley: how about you? lawrence: after january they come down. steve: end of january? brian: everything came down last night. most credit belongs to dawn. lawrence: did you help? brian: of course. bag ever the tree does not work. whose idea was that put the bag underneath the tree? it didn t work, there is a stand there. so it s underneath the stand. so you got to undo the stand, because my guy did it. in the customersry and he hammers
posture if the person is going to be in prison for life or something like that. lawrence: my first job was in a juvenile court working for a judge. in tv you see all the time that the bailiff is right there next to the judge. and most courtrooms it s not the same. the bailiff is onto the side making sure people don t disrupt the court with their cell phones and everything. they have already been checked for weapons and all that they may need to relook at how they have the bailiff positioned going forward. todd: also to your point, lawrence, the bailiff often has other jobs within the courtroom, not just security. they re helping with administrative, they are bringing paperwork, processing. yeah. so maybe we need to rethink that maybe have the court clerk do the processing and the bailiff focused 100 percent on security. again, i m not faulting the bailiff in. this please don t misread. this oftentimes they have other things that they re doing. fortunately this situation the bailiff