The official replay of the weekly KBear 101 live call-in show featuring Viktor Wilt and Lieutenant Marvin Crain of the Idaho State Police. Join the show with your questions live every Friday morning at 8:45AM at RiverbendMediaGroup.com!
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Speaker 1: always forget where Viktor puts that music bed. I need to start off the show just like him, you know, to keep it going. Oh no, no, don't. I was setting you up for that, Lieutenant Craig.
Speaker 2: We actually, you know, we got a call, a radio, you've run the board well. This is going well.
Speaker 1: Here we go. Hey, you're live on traffic school, powered by the advocates. Who's this? This is Ryan. How's it going? Doing great, Ryan. What's your question?
Speaker 2: Oh, sorry, Ryan, you got to hang up till Crazy Carl calls our show doesn't officially start. Sunday, Sunday, Sunday. No, we'll let you go, Ryan. Go ahead.
Speaker 3: Hey, let's say you're a contractor. You're doing work on a highway. You do the work at night. You're overlaying. You're driving the road. You're overlaying. You're going to have a little bit of rock, dirt, debris, whatever from your construction site as you do the job. That loose debris on the highway. Rock, dirt, debris. Who is liable for that if it causes damage to a windshield?
Speaker 2: All right. So that's a great question. And the way that works is I'm sure if you have been, it sounds like you may have done some kind of work like this before in your life. With that being said, in your contract with ITD or the county or the city, they're going to put in that contract that you're responsible to clean up that area when you're done, not leave it loose and in harm's way for the motoring public.
But once you swap it and things like that and you open it up, it's still reduced down to 35 or whatever. Anything that comes up off of the road is called road hazard. And that's on the owner of the vehicle. Now, if you have trucks that are hauling material and the material falls off the truck, bounces down, hits the road or bounces down, hits the car, bounces down, hits the road and then hits the car, then that's on the truck guy for not having a secure load. But just because they come through a construction area and it come up, it's the responsibility of the driver. Now, I will tell you, several years ago out on Highway 26, they done a seal coat.
Speaker 3: Oh, yeah, I remember that deal.
Speaker 2: They didn't have the right mixture for it to seal. And we had hundreds of windshield cracked. And so they come up with a settlement. Everybody got their windshields fixed and they went out and fixed the seal problem. But yeah, that one fell back on because it wasn't properly installed.
Speaker 3: Gotcha. Yeah, I got a Highway 20 this morning. It was taken off down the road and I just got a brand new windshield in my pickup because it's spring and summer. I didn't even think about construction season.
Speaker 1: That are kids just throwing rocks at your car. That he knows.
Speaker 3: Yeah. One thing about Idaho you can guarantee is the wind's going to blow and you're going to get a rock chip in your windshield.
Speaker 3: That's no kidding. Well, I appreciate clarifying that for me.
Speaker 1: Thanks for being our first caller.
Speaker 2: You've got a lot more to the table than crazy Carl.
Speaker 1: Oh, there he goes. All right, let's see. Traffic school powered by the advocates are live on the air. Who's this?
Speaker 4: Keep on rolling, man. There
Speaker 2: he is. I knew it was him. You slept in this morning.
Speaker 4: I did. I was all the way. Oh, I sleep in. Well, I mean, I try to get up on time. That doesn't mean I'm going to.
Speaker 2: Victor said you wanted to move this program to noon. Right.
Speaker 4: Oh, no, that'd be awesome. I'd pay you guys.
Speaker 1: Should we keep that thing going where we, you know, play the Yoko Ono song?
Speaker 4: Man, that was horrible. I got so many people with that, man. I freaked people out.
Speaker 1: Could you get in trouble for that, Lieutenant Crane? If Crazy Carl is going around pokey, playing that Yoko Ono song, just antagonizing people with the speaker. It's disturbing my piece.
Speaker 4: I mean, like if I was on Main Street, you know, people walking by, you know, put the speaker in the bushes, you know, filming them.
Speaker 2: Okay, there we get a problem. Yeah, I was going to say. Hey, and so the question becomes, Carl, can you film somebody from a public street?
Speaker 2: You can. You absolutely can. Yes, sir.
Speaker 4: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, no, it's freedom of freedom of speech. Yeah, freedom of freedom of speech. I'm blanking right now.
Speaker 2: Mike, hold my camera on my phone at you and I'm freedom of speech.
Speaker 1: And you buddy, I was going to say that's okay, Carl. I was going to say the same thing.
Speaker 4: So there's yeah, there's a there's a guy rolling around town. He's like he's like filming people in traffic and stuff. And he drives a black truck, older dude.
Speaker 2: And remember when I asked asking for a friend.
Speaker 4: Yeah, he's an old dude. Yeah, drives a black truck. But yeah, there's nothing there's nothing the police can do. I mean, that's the constitutional right. Yeah, so there's there's nothing they can do about it.
Speaker 1: So those people that, you know, when they're walking on the sidewalk and somebody walks up with their phone recording them and they go, I don't want to be on camera. I don't want to be on camera.
Speaker 2: They get out of public.
Speaker 1: I was going to say it right. They have to like hide their face or something like that. Okay, okay. Right, right. And we get that law enforcement too, right? We train about that all the time is hey, they got the right to film us. And when somebody says that to me, that's perfect. I got a camera going to both get rid of you. Yeah, absolutely. Like and subscribe.
Speaker 4: You know, don't go without cameras.
Speaker 1: Well, crazy, Carl. Traffic school is not the traffic school is not the same without you. I'm glad you called in.
Speaker 4: Oh, man, oh, absolutely. Oh, dude, I look forward every Friday, man. I live for this. I don't have friends. What?
Speaker 1: Carl needs a pal. Carl needs a comrad. There we go. Let's call it that.
Speaker 4: No, yeah.
Speaker 2: All right. So we're done with our counseling session. Let's move to the next column. Absolutely.
Speaker 4: Speaking of pals, we had a state trooper stop into work today. No, you didn't. And I pulled up and I was a little concerned at first, you know, and I'm like, well, you got to be a little more specific is like, I don't know how many laws I broke in the last week, man. Anyways, he, uh, uh, he was looking at my car and he goes, dude, where's your tags? And I said, well, I wait for July 1st for my boss. I was buying a truck for my boss. I got the plates for the truck. Uh, the truck deal fell through. So I kept the plates and I put it on my other car. Well, in between that one month long, that whole month long process, I lost my tags. And I said, uh, come July 1st, you don't need tags and he still needs proper plates.
No improper place to end the guy was cool about. And he goes, yeah, your windows look old, dark too. They're buddy. I'm like, Oh, I bought them like that. He's like, yeah, that's what everybody says.
Speaker 2: Where's your sign? Good for you. Oh yeah. Yeah. I have the wrong soundboard pulled up here.
Speaker 4: No. So, so my question is I asked him, I said, okay, come July 1st. You don't need the tags, but he was thinking that if you register it after July 1st, you're okay with no tags. That's great. If you're registered before you got to have them. Oh, okay. So I mean, violation then.
Speaker 2: Yeah. Well, that's not the only thing.
Speaker 4: You want the whole hunter or just the top 10?
Speaker 1: Oh, that's great.
Speaker 5: I'm glad you asked that, Carl, because I was curious with the same theme because I just got my stickers in the mail and there was a lot of confused people on Facebook asking, I thought they were getting rid of them. What's what's going on here?
Speaker 2: Not tell July 1st. It can't take effect tells you life first. So once July 1st hits, you don't have to have, but anything up to that date, put them on your plates, leave them there until they expire. Okay. Well, there we go. Yeah.
Speaker 4: Yep. So I have to, do I just go into DMV and get new tags?
Speaker 2: Well, I would first transfer those plates to the right vehicle.
Speaker 1: No, no, Carl, you get a marker and you just write down whatever month and year you like.
Speaker 4: Can I just steal them off my coworkers?
Speaker 2: You just put a piece of paper on there and says you're a sovereign citizen and drive it wherever you want.
Speaker 1: I can do it. Yeah, exactly. I'm above the law.
Speaker 4: Sergeant crane gave me the green light. That's right.
Speaker 1: Just pull out your I know Lieutenant crane card of some sort out of your wallet.
Speaker 4: Oh, that's awesome. Right on. Well, sleep man. Yeah, I appreciate you guys time man. Look forward to next week, man.
Speaker 1: Absolutely, Carl. You have a great weekend. All right, you guys have a good one, man. You too. Man, we got full lines here. That's awesome. Hey, you're live on traffic school powered by the advocates. Who's this? This is Beckett.
Speaker 2: Hey, he's not a procologist, is he?
Speaker 3: Hey, no, I was going to say Victor is doing a full not to see. Beckett, you should have seen him on the toilet for the past few days. Okay.
Speaker 1: Becca has been calling Victor out nonstop and it's absolutely amazing. I was talking about how that should be against the law.
Speaker 2: There was one time I swear I saw Victor in his office eating sushi with a fork and just dipping it in ketchup. And I mean, full on dipping it in ketchup and he's like, no, no, I have never done that.
And then Beckett calls in right after I talk about that yesterday and goes, yeah, Victor just bought a whole brand new bottle of ketchup. We already have a full one in the fridge.
Speaker 3: He buys multiple and then he'll buy more to bring to work with.
Speaker 1: Yeah, he has a whole ketchup drawer in his office. Yeah, it's his favorite condiment.
Speaker 3: He has to have ketchup on absolutely everything.
Speaker 2: Well, Peach is just looking forward to the action photos that are coming.
Speaker 3: Oh, I will get some and I will post them.
Speaker 1: See, see, Becca's our TMZ here, you know.
Speaker 3: Yeah. Oh, thank you.
Speaker 1: Thank you, Becca. Appreciate it. Okay. Hey, you're live on traffic school powered by the advocates. Who's this?
Speaker 5: Well, this is Steve-O, the mud-vene guy again.
Speaker 1: Steve-O the mud-vene guy. I love the nicknames.
Speaker 5: Um, my, isn't a law question per se. I just wanted to know.
Speaker 2: Thank goodness, because we're not very good at those ones.
Speaker 5: Freedom speech. My law questions are always awesome. No, um, I was wondering if Peach has ever found out why he can't say DVD, his name, the, you know, Forsed, Timmy Sweeper guy.
Speaker 1: Oh, he's a famous celebrity, Lieutenant Crane. I'm sure you're familiar with Mary Poppins and Cheety Cheety Bang Bang.
Speaker 6: Yeah, I'm sure. I'm sure you know the choreography. That's what we watch on Sunday afternoons.
Speaker 5: You're not able to say his name. And I was just wondering if there was a reason behind that, or if you ever found out if you could or couldn't.
Speaker 1: I personally don't know if I can. Do you know who we're talking about here? No. It's a famous celebrity that's now a hundred years old. He's literally, but his, his name's a little, uh, off. Like if you were to say his first name just by itself, uh, there would be an alternative to Richard.
Speaker 5: Yeah. Yeah. And there would be a Jade Pucker alert if that was, if I were to say just his first name on the air. So I jokingly call him D Van D, but I do like the DVD even shorter.
Speaker 2: Even shorter version. I'm with you now. I think. Yeah. There you go. Yeah. Yeah. I see. I, I never, I've never asked. I didn't want to go into Jade's office with a serious face and be like, Hey, can I say a D Van D on the air?
Speaker 1: Cause I've made it a joke this entire time with like highway to heck in hex bells and we're allowed to say like the real word. If we're saying a song title, but the rules are just saying it by itself. It's, it's very weird.
Speaker 5: So am I able to say his name on the air?
Speaker 1: No, I was going to say, I was about to press the button here. If you were, cause I don't know. I'd be, that'd be a good question to ask Jade if he's walking around the, the, the hallway or I'll ask him after this, uh, program here. Okay.
Speaker 5: Well, I look forward to hearing the answer to that question.
Speaker 1: So I'll just, I'll just say his name to kickstart the afternoon show. If I'm allowed to say it, that's all I'll say right after my pick of the day, just D Van D hit the button.
Speaker 5: Right on, right on. Yeah. I just thought I'd call and find that out. I just was wondering if there's a reason behind that or if something happened to him, you're not able to say his name or curious minds want to know that. That's right. That's right.
Speaker 2: We do. We, the people need to know out of all the things we got going on, this is one of the most important.
Speaker 5: Yeah. My questions are always awesome.
Speaker 1: Appreciate it. Steve, oh, you're, you're right on.
Speaker 5: Let's get a team on this. You guys have a good day. Hey, you too.
Speaker 2: Yeah. Let's get a team on that.
Speaker 1: Oh yeah. For sure. Jade, if you're listening, uh, let me know if I'm allowed to say that name. Uh, here we go. One more caller here. Hey, you're live on a traffic school powered by the advocates. Who's this? Patrick. Patrick, what's your question?
Speaker 7: Uh, first I like to get in the car. I, uh, it's a favorite drug bust last week for the, uh, tons of meth.
Speaker 2: Actually, that goes to Fremont County Sheriff's office. They done that. It was an amazing stop and amazing arrest. I really glad to see that.
Speaker 1: They ruined next year's promotion for what's in the box.
Speaker 2: Like I was going to put in there. 150 pounds of meth. Oh man.
Speaker 7: And then Patrick, what was your question? So I have a question about stocking statutes. What constitutes as stocking before it becomes, uh, I can say. Okay. Get to the point where a law enforcement isn't willing to do their job.
Speaker 2: Alright, now Patrick. Give me a scenario because it depends on a bunch of the totality of the circumstances. Okay, I'll tell. Well, you consider stocking that they drive by your house every morning at eight o'clock and we find out that they actually work just two blocks down the street.
Speaker 7: Oh, no, no, that's not talking. I'm talking about following you to grocery stores, following you around town.
Speaker 2: Yeah, are they making contact with you? Are they making any threats to you? Are they contacting you on any social media sites or phone calls?
Speaker 7: No, it's more of a presence and taking pictures.
Speaker 2: Okay. And I will tell you this, I have had people get a hold of me and I said, hey, I'm getting stocked and these people are taking pictures. I mean, what I found is they're doing insurance fraud claims and somebody's on a workman's comp claim, not supposed to be doing anything active, getting paid for having a bad back, but yet they're out doing weight boarding and BMX bike racing, right? So they're getting pictures of that to falsify that claim.
Speaker 7: Hold on. Jim Nasty.
Speaker 2: Jim Nasty. Well, what I found is there's been people in the past that have complained that they got people following them and taking pictures and what that is is they filed a workman's comp and then the investigator on the comp claim has followed them around because they're claiming they've got a bad back or something like that and they're out doing MMA fighting and weight boarding and stuff like that, but they can't work. And so they're taking pictures to prove the claim wrong.
Speaker 7: Okay, how can you tell if it's not a private investigator that's falsified?
Speaker 2: Well, that's a good question and it sounds like you have reported it and they've told you it's not a concern.
Speaker 7: Well, they go to the lawyer's office, an attorney's office that for a loss.
Speaker 2: Yeah, what I would suggest, Patrick, I didn't get that, but what I would suggest is this, I get it that he's went to an attorney's office, but first, so you can get any kind of regulation on that, like a protection order or restraining order, need to go file a report with the local agency in which it happened within the jurisdiction and then take that paperwork up and try and all your evidence of what's going on, present it to a judge and he will decide whether or not to put in place a restraining order or something of that nature. Okay. Okay.
Speaker 7: Well, all right, that's all I needed to know. All right, good luck.
Speaker 1: Thank you, Patrick. Thank you. It is traffic school powered by the advocates and the phones have been nonstop this morning. I love to see that. Oh, they moved to the other line here.
Speaker 2: Look what happens when Victor's not here.
Speaker 1: Absolutely. Hey, you're live on the air. Who's this? Hello? Hello? Hey, we can hear you now. What's going on?
Speaker 4: Oh, nothing. I had a question. Sure. What's your question?
Speaker 8: You guys still doing the traffic school questions, right? Definitely. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2: Yeah, we're thinking about it. Yeah, maybe. Well, if you got some time, go ahead.
Speaker 3: Hypothetically speaking, if you were asking for a friend, yeah, you're speeding on a college campus and the college place to you, would you be able to go to the public road because they won't be able to pull you over?
Speaker 2: Okay, so that would be just like, am I speeding in Idaho? Can I drive into Wyoming real quick? And the best ones, the ones I like the most is, hey, I'm drunk driving. I'm driving DUI, but I just drove into my driveway.
Sorry, safe. Right, exactly. Exactly. I'm safe, right?
You can't get me here. It's where it occurred, where the incident occurred or where the violation occurred is where the action can be taken. So if it takes you, if you do it 50 feet within the college campus and drive outside of the campus before you stop, they can still write the citation. If you're in Idaho and you drive into Wyoming, we're still going to write you the citation.
Speaker 1: The next time something like that happens, you got to pretend there's like a force field or something like that.
Speaker 2: The guy pulls in his driveway and you're like, what is this? I can't get past this line. Pull right up to the Wyoming sign, get out and just point at it.
Loser. You want to put a sticker on it? Oh man, that's great.
And you know, if you just come from Oregon or going into Oregon, you can jump out and then grab your dubi and sit there with your dubi. Oh, really? Yeah. All right. Now what do we do? Well, you just left Idaho. We can still cite you for that too.
Speaker 1: I don't even know about that. That's knowledge to me. That's new to me. So there we go. Appreciate the question.
Speaker 3: Thank you.
Speaker 1: And Chris Spedin. Yeah. Never. Never.
Speaker 2: He says. Do I go back to my campus housing? Man, I'm getting tired of walking three blocks to get back home.
Speaker 1: Hey, you're live on traffic school powered by the advocates. Who's this? This is Colin. Colin, what's your question?
Speaker 8: So this is a fairly common occurrence here, but I got stuck behind a tractor on Highway 26.
Speaker 2: Okay. I was going to say, Peaches and I don't know exactly where here is.
Speaker 8: Our general area. All right.
Speaker 2: So 26 tractors.
Speaker 8: So my question, are you allowed to pass an extremely slow vehicle like that? I think the top speed I got behind him was about 17.
Speaker 2: Are you still supposed to wait for a passing lane?
Speaker 8: Are you still supposed to wait for a passing lane? Or can you use your judgment to know that you can hop around them safely on a double yellow?
Speaker 2: Colin, do you have good common sense?
Speaker 8: 80% of the time. At least he's honest. Yeah. No.
Speaker 2: So this would be the rule of thumb on that, right? Discretion is the big thing. Legally. Now, if there's a double yellow line there or it's just dotted and you decide to pass, you take that risk. If a collision happens, that's going to be your fault because you, you tend to pass without clearance. Now, couple of things in place, even though that's a tractor and if he has a place to pull out of the way, some of those are so big, they really don't have a place to get out of the way.
But anytime you got three or more vehicles behind you, you're supposed to pull over so you're not delaying traffic. He probably doesn't have that chance. Now, if it's a double yellow line, common sense is like, okay, he's doing 18.
I can do 60. I can get a rounding without impeding traffic coming the other direction. Discretion is going to be the rule of thumb there, right?
But if an accident was to occur, that would fall on you because you went over a double yellow line to pass. All right. Does that make sense? Yes, it does. Okay. Yeah, a little common sense goes a long ways. Cool. A good one. Hey, you too, Colin. Thank you. Just know whether you're in that 80 or 20% range.
Speaker 1: Well, there was a story that I wanted to talk to you about, Lieutenant Crane. There was this dog in Scott's Bluff in the back seat of its owner's truck pulled the trigger on a loaded shotgun and a pellet from that hit a woman at a nearby stoplight. Luckily, she's okay. She didn't die or anything like that, thankfully. But is it illegal here in Idaho to have a loaded shotgun or gun of any sort in your vehicle?
Speaker 2: It's not illegal, but what happens is it doesn't matter how that happened. You're responsible for that gun, right? Yeah, absolutely. You owned the dog, he took action, and now you're responsible for that. So you could be charged for involuntary. Gotcha.
Speaker 1: Yeah. So it could definitely be illegal to have that type of thing in your car in other states.
Speaker 2: It could be illegal in other states to have. Some states, most definitely. Idaho were pretty leaning in on that, right? Yeah, exactly. And so with that, but if somebody becomes injured because of the gun being loaded, not on safety, and whatever reason that goes off, it doesn't need to be your fault, you could be held reliable for that.
Speaker 1: But it's crazy to think that somebody could get arrested for their dog shooting a gun. They have to separate the dog and the owner in that situation kind of thing, send the dog back to like a shelter of some sort.
Speaker 2: If the owner goes to jail. If you look at a lot of these shootings now, they're going after whoever bought the gun and didn't take care of it, right?
Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah. Interesting. Yeah, there's been a lot of stories about dogs accidentally shooting people. It's been very weird. There's been like three of them in the past couple of months.
Speaker 2: The people look for the ducks, the dogs look for the people.
Speaker 1: I think animals are taking a stance because Victor and I were just talking about how orcas are tipping boats in the ocean. Victor's cats are peeing everywhere in the house.
Speaker 2: That's why I wouldn't have a cat.
Speaker 1: Oh, yeah. You got rid of, it was on this day two years ago that Victor got Lucy. Has it been two years? Two years. Wow. Yeah. And this day? This day.
I completely forgot about that till now. I saw him post about it this morning. Wow. Yeah.
Lucy was a little kitten back then, and now she's fully grown and full on cat. Wow. How about that?
Yeah. Well, if nobody else is calling in for traffic school powered by the advocates, it seems like today was a success. Non-stop calls. No, we ended on cats.
Yeah, we ended on cats. I mean, it's the same thing happens at Victor's show all the time. It's what happens here. But yeah, also just a reminder to people, K-Bare 101 and Brent Gordon-Law Care that you have a great and safe summer. It's 101 deadliest days of driving, and hopefully soon, Lieutenant Crane, I can get confirmation on that basketball game.
Speaker 2: Oh, whatever. I've been waiting for years. I've been playing as of late at the local gym, and I suck. It's been a terrible grind to realize, yeah, like I can't run anymore.
I need to get myself back into it. And then plus the gym has all these mirrors all around you, so then you have to see, like, what you look like from the side and what you look like from behind. It's like, jeez. All right, we got one more color. I'm quite a specimen. The blob.
Speaker 1: Hey, you're live on traffic school powered by the advocates. Who's this? Oh, it's me again. Crazy Carl. My laptop. Would you rather end with cats or crazy Carl?
Speaker 8: That's a conundrum.
Speaker 4: He woke up and finally decided, oh, I remember what I called for.
Speaker 4: Oh, we did it. So, I don't know if you guys saw this story on the news, but there were some. No, we didn't, but thanks for calling. No, all right. I gotta go, man. Calling in last minute for.
Speaker 1: I'll play the Yoko Ono song just for you, crazy Carl.
Speaker 4: Oh, do it. Oh, and actually, oh, I can't remember a name of song. Never mind. That song you played yesterday, Sirens.
Speaker 2: Yeah, you remember that one song you played all day?
Speaker 1: As soon as he said Sirens, I knew what he was talking about. Sleeping with Sirens paralyzed.
Speaker 4: Yes, paralyzed. Love that tune, man. That's a, oh, that's a sweet tune, man. I love that breakdown in the middle of it.
Speaker 1: Yeah, good song there. Thanks for your comment there.
Speaker 4: If you can play that, man, that'd be awesome.
Speaker 1: Sure. Was that your question just to get a song requested? Yeah, actually, so, so down in Florida, there was a woman who doesn't have a right hand. Oh, yes. Hold her over for using a cell phone and she lifts up her right hand. She's like, I was not on my phone with my right hand. And so are we done here?
Speaker 4: And so he's like, are you sure you didn't have a phone?
Speaker 1: Are you sure you don't have a hand? Have you seen the video going around? Oh, it has millions of views. And I'm glad Carl reminded me because this lady goes, yeah, like, I need to go to the court about this because the cop is pressing her hard about like he swears that she saw her texting on the phone while driving with her right hand and that she lifts up this no hand and it's just a no. And she's like, I'm not texting at all.
Like, what are you talking about? And then he gave her a ticket. Like he gave her a ticket for the overall same the charge, even though she has no right hand. But luckily it got dismissed because obviously with common sense rule, common sense. Plus it also got millions of views.
Speaker 6: And so I'm wondering what's going to happen to that cop's career once once once they kind of sit down and evaluate it kind of thing. Yeah.
Speaker 4: Yeah. No, it's not.
Speaker 2: You know, we don't want to violate anybody. Right. Anybody's rights. But Carl's. No.
Speaker 4: So it's kind of funny. My boss was born with no right hand. So of course I had to send that video to him.
Speaker 1: Is that why you're his right hand man? Hey now.
Speaker 4: Well, I tell you what, that dude can do more with one left hand than most of these guys in the shop here again with both. Well, that's because you're on the phone all the time. Yeah, I mean, some of these guys. I don't know how my boss out worked me.
Speaker 1: I bet his boss loves every Friday when he calls into traffic school by the advocates.
Speaker 4: Oh, exactly. Yeah.
Speaker 1: Honey. Well, I appreciate it again, Carl. Thank you so much.
Speaker 4: All right, sweet. You guys have a good one, man.
Speaker 1: We'll see you. All right. And thank you, Lieutenant Crane, for joining the show as always. And crazy Carl, your song's coming up after the break here.
Speaker 6: Traffic School is a production of Riverbend Media Group to get more info on the show or to contact us. Hit up our website, riverbendmediagroup.com.