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Good morning, all banana ball lovers. Wife and I watched it for a little while. I heard about it. I turned it on. We watched a little bit. And it was funny. The sun came over. We decided, well, let's show him a little bit of it. We ended up watching the whole game. Yeah, a few of the fans are going to hit the foul ball. The bat is out. And if he sits out of the batter's box, he's out. I don't think I saw any of that. There's no walks. They have to run to first base, second base. I don't quite understand that one. But the players have to throw the ball around everybody, I guess. And if you can get to have a four-minute apprentice round, or maybe second base. But yeah, check it out. It's pretty good. I belong to Paramount Plus because they are paying a dollar a month more for no commercials. So anything that's on CBS, I can watch the next day. And I don't have to watch commercials. I love that. I got my remote in my hand most of the time anyway. We never watch. We record everything, pretty much. 99% of the stuff we watch is recorded. I can fast forward to the commercials. Anyway, I'm 83 years old. I don't care about buying the stuff they're trying to sell me. I think their ads are aimed at 20 to 35s or something. Oh, I had a, well, basically a C-Radio, which had fire police and oars on there, maintenance bill. And I set up my radio to scan for fires. Number one, well, no, our channel number one. Number two was fires and three was police. It was kind of interesting to listen to it because they had a guy held up in a building downtown and you could hear the cops talking to each other and it was pretty interesting. Years ago, I had a scanner in plain grass over in southeast Portland. And you could hear the repairers talking to the channel before they went on TV. So it was kind of cool. Just in this Portland place, they went to 800 megahertz, I think it is. And they switch around all the time. So you can't come over here one side of the conversation. But the state police still have the old radios, I guess. And when I travel, I put on my radio, I put the frequency for the state police. That's 150, 390.

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