AT&T Store is now open in New Haven. Phil was there Saturday to kick off the Grand Opening!

Car: Edsel (Ford) Villager Wagon
Year: 1958
What makes it special: The Villager wagon was produced and sold by Edsel from 1958 to 1960. Like the two-door Roundup and premium Bermuda station wagons, the Villager was initially built on a 116 in wheelbase shared with Ford’s station wagons, and, throughout its lifespan, shared Ford’s wagons core body stampings. The Villager and the Ranger were the only two model names that existed throughout Edsel’s three-year life span as an automobile marque. The Villager represented the lower trim level available within the Edsel brand for station wagons, but differed from the two-door Roundup by being offered in six and nine passenger styles. The Villager was available in a four-door configuration only.
What made it famous: To differentiate the wagons offered by Edsel from their Ford counterparts, they were fitted with Edsel’s front fascia and grille assembly. The wagons also received unique boomerang-shaped taillights for 1958. In terms of interior and exterior trim, standard features included black rubber floor mats, ashtrays, cigar lighter, arm rests, chromed rear-view mirror and crank-operated rear windows. Like all other Edsel wagons, the Villager came with a two-piece tailgate. Seat belts were optional. All 1958 station wagons shared the Ranger’s engine choices, with a 361 cu in V8 as standard. All wagons came with a 3-speed manual transmission. Buyers also had the option of a 3-speed automatic transmission with a standard column-mounted gear selector, or during the 1958 model year, they could choose Edsel’s highly touted but trouble-prone Teletouch automatic, which placed its drive-selection buttons in the steering wheel hub.
Why I would want one: You don’t see too many Edsel’s nowadays, let alone a wagon. Most find the Edsel to be an ugly vehicle, but I enjoy its uniqueness.
Fun fact: The Villager name resurfaced at Mercury on a wood grained Comet station wagon from 1962 to 1967, and on similarly trimmed wagons in other Mercury series, including the Montego (1970–1976), Bobcat (1974–1980 Canada, 1975–1980 U.S.), Cougar (1977 and 1982), Zephyr (1978–1981) and Lynx (1981–1984).
6:00. Chaz and AJ News. Another day, another politician resigns. This one over face licking.
6:13. Chaz and AJ Sports Buzzer powered by Road Ready Used Cars.
6:20 – 6:50. Call in your funny freak accident: 877-764-2535. Everyone on gets in the running for Heart Tickets.
7:00. Chaz and AJ News. There was a protest in North Haven over the weed billboard.
7:13. Chaz and AJ Sports Buzzer powered by Road Ready Used Cars.
7:20. Dumb Ass News. Senior citizen week. Grandma and grandpa love you. That’s why they are yelling at you.
7:30 – 7:50. The organizer lady, Christine Thorn, Certified KonMari Consultant and Owner of Sage of Interiors LLC in studio.
8:00. Chaz and AJ News. Tim Restall, President of the Hartford Yard Goats calls in to talk about their peanut ban.
8:13. Chaz and AJ Sports Buzzer powered by Road Ready Used Cars.
8:20. Dawn from the office is collecting our shoes to post online. She’ll report back in 2 weeks to see how much $ we made!
8:30 – 8:50. Why are you at court today with Street Pete.
9:00. Chaz and AJ News.
9:13. Chaz and AJ Sports Buzzer powered by Road Ready Used Cars.
9:20. Dumb Ass News. Senior citizen week. Elderly couple burn down house during sex games.
9:50. Call in with your 4- second final thought.
It seems like the Hartford Yard Goats are becoming a little unorthodox with how they handle baseball traditions. The Hartford Yard Goats announced Wednesday that they would no longer sell peanuts, including Cracker Jacks, at Dunkin’ Donuts Park. Chaz and AJ were a bit fed up this morning with the stadium’s apparent intention to take the peanut fun away from all spectators.
Not only would this new change affect the concession stand, but it would also switch up the whole vibe of the 7th inning stretch. Chaz asked, “So are they going to replace the words to the 7th inning stretch at Dunkin’ Donuts Stadium?” Well, the Yard Goats are one step ahead of us. According to nbcnews.com, the Yard Goats is holding a contest for fans to replace the lyrics “buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jack”. A listener called in and recommended AJ to partake in the contest using his parody writing skills. “I don’t think they’d take the colored language though.” AJ replied. Regardless, wouldn’t it be fun to sing AJ’s ridiculous lyrics at the game?
The show tossed around the idea of having partial bans, like a “peanut free” section, or a few home games scheduled as peanut-free like other stadiums do. The Hartford Courant reports that the Yard Goats hosted two peanut-free games last season, and the team wanted to go all in for 2019.
What seems to be the underlying issue for many fans is that the Yard Goats are forfeiting a true baseball tradition in order to accommodate for a small group of people. “Baseball is THE sport that is DRIPPING in tradition,” Said Chaz. Maybe it’s more so the novelty of the tradition they‘re worried about losing rather than the initial opportunity to eat them at a game. “Do people actually eat just peanuts at a game anymore?” Pam asked.
Comedian Jim Florentine does, in fact, love eating peanuts at baseball games. He showed up to hang out with the show and join the conversation. Whenever he goes to a baseball game, he will “always get the peanuts, always, you have to.” He’d choose not to budge from his seat if he’s caught eating peanuts near someone with the allergy. “If there’s someone in front of me that’s got a peanut allergy I’m like, ‘alright, well, I’m sorry [not sorry]’.”
Dunkin’ Donuts Park is presumably the first stadium in the country to completely ban peanut products. With everyone suffering allergies these days, this could be the start of a peanut-free revolution whether you like it or not.
Bill Cosby and a Tribe member calls about life in jail (0:00), another Tribe call about what it’s like in jail (11:16), Hartford Yard Goats ban peanuts (18:55), comedian Jim Florentine live in studio (31:16), Dumb Ass News with Jim Florentine’s Crank Yankers call (48:25), and Boss Keith’s Top 5 Grammy Fails (51:32).
Car: Pontiac GTO “Judge” Hardtop Coupe
Year: 1970
What makes it special: The first generation of the GTO was a muscle car produced in the 1960’s and the 1970’s. Although there were muscle cars introduced earlier than the GTO, the Pontiac GTO is considered by some to have started the trend with all four domestic automakers offering a variety of competing models. The GTO became a separate model from 1966 to 1971 (VIN 242…). It became an optional package again for the 1972 and 1973 intermediate Le Mans.
What made it famous: For the 1970 model year, hidden headlights were deleted in favor of four exposed round headlamps outboard of narrower grille openings. The nose retained the protruding vertical prow theme, although it was less prominent. The GTO retained the Endura urethane cover around the headlamps and grille. As originally conceived, the Judge was to be a low-cost GTO, stripped of features to make it competitive with the Plymouth Road Runner. The package was more expensive than a standard GTO, and included Rally II wheels without trim rings, Hurst shifter with a unique T-shaped handle, wider tires, various decals, and a rear spoiler. Pontiac claimed that the spoiler had some functional effect at higher speeds, producing a small but measurable downforce, but it was of little value at legal speeds. The Judge remained available as an option on the 1970 GTO. The Judge came standard with the Ram Air III, while the Ram Air IV was optional. Though the 455 CID was available as an option on the standard GTO throughout the entire model year, the 455 was not offered on the Judge until late in the year. Orbit Orange, which was actually a bright canary yellow became the new feature color for the 1970 Judge, but any GTO color was available. Striping was relocated to the upper wheel well brows.
Why I would want one: It’s a special variant of the GTO, and is just cool.
Fun fact: The name came from a comedy routine, “Here Come de Judge”, used repeatedly on the Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In TV show. The Judge routine, made popular by comedian Flip Wilson, was borrowed from the act of long-time burlesque entertainer Dewey “Pigmeat” Markham. Advertisements used slogans like “All rise for the Judge” and “The Judge can be bought”.
6:00. Chaz and AJ News. What should Bill Cosby expect now that he’s been released to the general population. Call in! 877-764-2535
6:13. Chaz and AJ Sports Buzzer powered by Road Ready Used Cars.
6:20 – 6:50. Loser of the Week. Call in with your nomination: 877-764-2535
7:00. Chaz and AJ News. If you like peanuts and baseball you won’t be happy.
7:13. Chaz and AJ Sports Buzzer powered by Road Ready Used Cars.
7:20. Dumb Ass News. Tinder hook up leads to robbery and high speed chase.
7:30. Scot Haney with the Channel 3 WFSB weekend weather.
8:00. Chaz and AJ News. You can name a cockroach after your ex and then watch it die. Plus comedian Jim Florentine joins us in studio. See him at Comix Mohegan Sun tonight & tomorrow night.
8:13. Chaz and AJ Sports Buzzer powered by Road Ready Used Cars.
8:20 – 8:50. Dawn from the office has a story about the weird people on the internet. Call in with your thoughts. 877-764-2535
9:00. Chaz and AJ News. Now you can be judged on the contents of your refrigerator.
9:13. Chaz and AJ Sports Buzzer powered by Road Ready Used Cars.
9:20. Dumb Ass News. Man fakes own kidnapping to scam his mother.
9:30. Boss Keith’s Top 5.
9:50. Call in with your 4-second final thought. 877-764-2535
Who do you believe to tell you the benefits of legalizing recreational marijuana? Dr. Kevin Sabet from Smart Approaches to Marijuana or Joe the local “weed guy”?
Chaz and AJ had Dr. Sabet in this morning to give his take on the debate.
“Today’s weed, it’s not the same weed from before. It’s not only producing paranoia and panic attacks, but acute and long-term psychosis,” Sabet said. “It’s 99 percent THC.” THC is the main ingredient of the cannabis plant that creates the high. The price for weed is going down, and would decrease even more once CT legalizes it, but Sabet claims that it’s not for our benefit. Cigarette companies, E-Cig companies, and even Wall Street are heavily investing in weed, and Sabet claims that this is dangerous.
“They’re genetically breeding it to get the THC much higher,” said Sabet, “They’re taking what might have been a benign plant in the 1960’s and making it super strength. That’s what’s being proposed in Connecticut.”
We all know that large cigarette companies like Philip Morris have been accused and later proven to add additives and chemicals to their cigarettes and other products that have taken thousands of people’s lives for decades. Sabet claims that Big Tobacco companies are planning to do the same thing with weed: monetize it using additives and GMOs, potentially making marijuana as life threatening, if not more, than cigarettes.
“I don’t think [Ned Lamont] has cynical reasons [for legalizing weed], he just doesn’t know,” Sabet says. Sabet’s goal is to educate states around the country on the risks of legalizing weed.
Sound convincing? Well, of course Joe LaChance the local “weed guy” called in.
“If he finds 90 percent weed, then please tell him to send it over to me,” Joe said, “There is no thing as 90 percent marijuana.” LaChance claims that there are many publicly funded health advocate groups like Smart Approaches to Marijuana and ties to “big-pharma” that are advocating against weed legalization.
“Legal weed would hurt their business, big time,” Joe said. He claims that medical groups want to invest in medical weed (legal in CT) instead and create their own product for profit. They want to invest “on the medical side, but the problem is that they want to control it.” And let’s face it; users pay enough for weed, medically and for recreational use, as it is.
LaChance believes that Sabet is a “shill for big pharma.” So, what does that make LaChance? That makes him “a shill for the people” that wants to see legalized weed in Connecticut.
For a typically stoned man, he makes a valid point. Who do you believe is more credible, the doctor or the experienced user, or a little bit of both?
Idiot politicians (0:00), Dr. Sabet, the weed doc (12:51), George Colli from News 8 and Joe LaChance the weed guy responds to the doctor (19:36), Jimmy Koplik with stories and a concert announcement (30:27), and Francis Ellis from Barstool Sports (44:04).