of violent, not violent but dangerous racing. they re trying to pass an ordinance, we got some video there. they re trying to get the penalties raised. it s already illegal to do that. they re trying to increase the penalties so there s a big movement to crack down on all drag racing and so far florida governor de santis is in fave of that because he doesn t understand what drag racing this is not. this is not that. greg: you know what, what a great idea to combine both. rob: the ultimate penalty should be if you re going to drag race you re going to have to do it in heels. greg: exactly. at least these guys indriseses can drive. dane in dresses can drive a sexist would say. disgusting, kat. kat: i don t drive. greg: you don t drive. what s your story? it s michigan. kat: warren, there s these ladies and they do all this
greg: if you don t have a garage you don t have a second freezer or a second fridge where you keep the tall bottles of pepsi. [no audible dialogue] greg: kat? nick: this is a guy who grew up in the california of the american dream. that was the american dream. greg: you had the second refrigerator, you had the 1968 camero, blue, convertible, you had the freezer and in the freezer you had the tall pepsis up in the front, some beer in the back. the second fridge was a sign of status. that was the blue checkmark of your rant-style home in melno park. kat? kat: that should have been your monologue. greg: it should have been. kat, what do you make of this story? do you believe it? kat: maybe. yn wouldn t aunt to live in the white house myself. greg: why not. kat: there s people woo visit greg: tours. rob: not anymore, i think it s pretty much closed down.
people pretending to be me, unless they re funnier. [applause] greg: at 33478 she s the perfect compliment to your daddling, host of the story, martha mccallum. [applause] cheers, that s what hollywood ads when they toled him to leave. tv writer and producer rob long. [applause] greg: he s like the fonz because he wears a leather jacket and lives over your parents garage, editor at-large and reason, nick gillespie. and final she is like the united states bomber, writing prolifically without bathing fox nies contributor kat timf. [applause] rob, there s this fien debate going on or should i call you professor rob? it s a fien debate you can
our customers don t do what they do for likes or followers. their path isn t for the casually curious. and that s what makes it matter the most when they find it. the exact thing that can change the world. some say it s what they were born to do. it s what they live to do. trinet serves small and medium sized businesses. so they can do more of what matters. benefits. payroll. compliance. trinet. people matter. astir in five words. greg: a story in five words. bear, spray, instead of guns, kat, new york times columnist nicholas kristoff says you should use bear spray on a home
want to pay for it because although i am concerned about maybe the limited reach of my fiery hot takes y don t want people to know that. greg: i want to make a correction, that i actually have 2.4, not 2.7 million. nick: you lost it. greg: i was going to talk about how weak it is that people are so attached to things that give them status, but in your face. a can the: i was like what is he talking about. greg: in your face. kat: you made that clear. greg: look at that. see that right there? kat: i can see it. greg: it s a little blue check. it s like the opposite of a malignant mole. it s a beauty mark. kat: you should work in marketing. emit s really pathetic. we re talking about it. the only people i impressed with my blue check were my kids. her? she has a blue check? greg: martha, you look like a doctor from the future.