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Show Log For Monday, October 25, 2010

Bob Green, CEO of Frazier Foods talked with Phil about his strong belief in family during these trying times. That’s why any woman with a stroller containing more than one kid is not allowed in the store until she ties the kids up to a “colorful hitching post” outside. Mr. Green believes that a woman with lots of kids in a stroller is looking to lure a man in with her helpless and overburdened “act.” It happened to him with a girl named Ashley. “I’d rather leave a kid of 6 months home a lone for an hour than risk a half a million in cash because that’s what she cost me.”

We welcomed Bobbie Dooley of the Western Estates Homeowners Association on the program to talk about Facebok. Ms. Dooley’s sons Seth and Dylan and her husband Steve appeared in a photo on Seth’s Facebook page. In it Seth and Dylan were laughing at a girl seemingly tied up nude on a bed and Steve was grinning at the camera with a beer. “It was a satire for ‘Be Funny Or Die,'” said Bobbie. “The girl was supposed to be Rosilyn Carter.” Bobbie says she isn’t the kind of woman that would approve that kind of thing. “I’m well dressed, I have a large home, I own an Escalade, I’m a great interior decorator. Do I look like the type that thinks its funny to see her husband on Facebook in a jockstrap?”

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Show Log For Friday, October 22, 2010

Doug Dannger, Orange County Courier entertainment reporter and self-described “gay man and gay journalist” told Phil he’s surfing Surf Beach, near Lompoc, California, as soon as it’s reopened. The beach was closed Friday due to a shark attack that killed a young man from Riverside. Doug said that if you get into the water and show “human authority and humaness” the shark will think tiwce about attacking not wanting to look bad. However Doug has also made sure he’ll have spotter craft and look-outs on scene in case a “retarded shark” decides to make a run for him.

We spent an hour with Raj Feneen as well this evening, an Egyptian-born businessman living in the States with his wife and son. Juan Williams saying he felt “skittish” when he saw people in Muslim garb felt like a betrayal to Raj since Mr. Williams is an African-American and “should know better.” But Raj also said he too felt skittish but only because seeing Muslims in religious or traditional garb means you’re seeing ones “just off the boat” and more likely to be fanatics.