This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human. No one knows what the future holds, but you deserve a weather app that can help. Weatherbug is easy to use and provides forecasts for your every need, from storm warnings to pollen levels, right at your fingertips. Get the fastest local alerts and comprehensive 10-day forecasts wherever you are.
It's hyper-local, real-time, customizable alerts. Make sure the weather never takes you by surprise so you can plan every day with confidence. Download the free weather bug app from the App Store today and start getting accurate weather forecasts 24-7. You won't see the engineer that slams the Nissan Rogue's door 13,920 times, or the corrosive chamber that simulates 15 years of life in five months, or the rogue heat-baked for over 300 combined hours. What you will see is a vehicle that can take punch after punch and keep rolling.
Nissan, number one in new vehicle quality among mainstream brands by JD Power. We put it through the worst, so you get its best. For JD Power 2025 US Initial Quality Study Award information, visit jdpower.com/slash awards. Awards based on 2025 model year, newer models may be shown. Support for the show comes from Public, the investing platform for those who take it seriously.
On Public, you can build a multi-asset portfolio of stocks, bonds, options, crypto, and now generated assets, which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI. It all starts with your prompt. From renewable energy companies with high-free cash flow to semiconductor suppliers growing revenue over 20% year over year, you can literally type any prompt and put the AI to work. It screens thousands of stocks, builds a one-of-a-kind index, and lets you backtest it against the SP 500. Then you can invest in a few clicks.
Generated assets are like ETFs with infinite possibilities, completely customizable and based on your thesis, not someone else's. Go to public.com/slash podcast and earn an uncapped 1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio. That's public.com/slash podcast. Paid for by Public Investing. Brokerage Services by Open to the Public Investing Inc., member FINRA and SIPC.
Advisory Services by Public Advisors LLC, SEC Registered Advisors. Generated assets is an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation or advice. Complete disclosures are available at public.com/slash disclosures. Lots of support through telehealth, but it feels overwhelming and rushed.
Check out orderlymeds.com now. Orderlymeds.com was built to be different. Here, you connect with real doctors who take the time to understand your goals, review your eligibility, and guide you through a plan that's right for you. Orderly Meds provides access to proven GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and terzepatide, including both name-brand options and personalized compound versions when appropriate.
So you have choices backed by clinical oversight, not guesswork. It's a simpler, more supportive telehealth experience designed around people who want clarity, care, and confidence in their weight loss journey. And your medication is delivered directly to your home in discrete packaging.
So your experience stays private from start to finish. Do your research, ask the right questions, then visit orderlymeds.com slash podcast for an exclusive offer. Again, that's orderlymeds.com slash podcast. Individual results may vary not medical advice eligibility required. See site for details.
There's a difference between liking a house and actually getting it. Redfin is built to make up that difference and close the gap between finding and owning the home for you. Redfin agents close twice as many deals as other agents.
So when you find a home you love, you're not a step behind when it comes to making an offer. That means less of watching great homes disappear and more focus on the one you'll call home. Redfin helps turn saved listings into real addresses. Get started at redfin.com. Own the dream.
This is Lee Habib, and this is Our American Stories, the show where America is the star and the American people. If you search for the Our American Stories podcast, Go to the iHeartRadio app. to iTunes or wherever you get your podcasts. Most everyone over the age of 50 has heard the name Will Rogers. His quotes ring as true today.
as they did in the 1930s. Congress opens with a prayer and closes with an investigation. Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment. Make crime pay. Become a lawyer.
Here to tell the story of Will Rogers is Tad Jones, the executive director of the Will Rogers Memorial. in Claremore, Oklahoma. But first, audio from Lux Radio Theatre. You'll be hearing a lot of it over this hour. Let's get into the story.
From Hollywood, the Hollywood Radio Theater. Starring Jane Wyman and Will Rogers. Jr. in the story of Will Rogers. Ladies and gentlemen, your producer, Mr.
Irving Cummings. Greetings from Hollywood, ladies and gentlemen. If a vote were taken, or the most popular American of all time outside of public office. I'm sure Will Rogers' name would head the list. His keen perception, gentle humor, and simplicity made him one of the most beloved men of our time.
Tonight playing his original role in the story of Will Rogers. We have the perfect choice. Will Rogers Jr. And as his co-star in this humorous drama from the Warner Brothers studio, their glamorous Academy Award winner. Jane Wyman, in her original role.
of Mrs. Rogers.
Now, Will didn't become Will Rogers just overnight. You've heard of the Trail of Tears. The Rogers family came over a few years earlier. They had a deal to get some property, so they were what was called the early settlers.
So that was Will's granddad that came over. Clem, Will's dad, was very involved in everything in Northeast Oklahoma and was a very prominent Cherokee citizen. He was a judge in the area, also a Cherokee senator. When Oklahoma was becoming a state, Clem Rogers was one of the delegates at the Constitutional Convention for the creation of Oklahoma State. Willie, how'd you get here, son?
You ought to know, Pa. You sent me the money to come home. Oh, that's right. I did, didn't I?
Well, it's good to see you, son.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I've got some news for the folks here. Ladies and gentlemen. Ladies and gentlemen. As Senator of the Cherokee Nation, it gives me great pleasure to tell you that we've just smoked a pipe of peace with these congressmen from Washington, and in the not too distant future, Oklahoma shall become the 46th state of the Union.
So the county we live in and where the memorial is and where Will is born is called Rogers County, but it wasn't named after Will Rogers. It was named after Will's dad. He was married to a lady named Mary America Scrimpture. Both of them were about a quarter Cherokee. Also, he served in the Civil War and he served with a gentleman in the Civil War named William Penn Adair.
And when Will Rogers was born, that's where his name came from, William Penn Adair Rogers. He liked to joke that he was born on Election Day, November 4th, and he said his mom had nothing better to do because women weren't allowed to vote, so she just stayed home and had him. Will Rogers adored her. Clem and Mary America had a number of children, and unfortunately, only four of them lived to adulthood. Three of them died when they were young.
Ma died when I was 10. Hmm. But his three sisters really loved On Will and spoiled him, and that's kind of. Kind of who raised him. And um who's this little boy?
Well, that's me. All of these are me. Each one was taken when I started a new school. You must have run out of schools early. No, ma'am.
Those schools, they kept cropping up like mushrooms. Will's dad was a very hard worker. He did not care much for Will's work ethic, which wasn't much. Will did not do very good in school, and he went to a number of schools all over northeast Oklahoma and into Missouri. I just didn't have much luck.
This one here is Paw's last flame. Kemper Military Academy. I was there for two years, one in the guard house and one in the fourth grade. His dad even tried to get him in a military academy to try to get him some discipline.
Well, Will wasn't there very long and earned 150 demerits.
So he left the military academy. He liked to joke. I think it was the, he didn't pass the fourth grade, McGuffey reader. But Will was highly intelligent, make no mistake. I mean, he was an avid reader.
He knew things. He had a great memory. His thing, he had so much energy. He just loved to joke. Kind of was a class clown.
He learned to rope by a former slave named Dan Walker. And so Dan Walker worked at the ranch, and he taught Will Rogers how to rope. And that is what Will loved more than anything. And so Will roped at the ranch all the time. And when he was at school, he roped the kids and he roped the girls.
He wanted to be a cowboy. He just wanted to rope. And an opportunity came for him to leave the ranch and go out to Higgins, Texas. And he worked as a ranch end out there for several months. I then came back to the ranch and his dad ended up giving him the ranch for a couple years.
Will Rogers called it the Dogiron Ranch, but that is not what Will Rogers wanted to do. He didn't want to be a businessman. You know, it could be a cowboy, but when you're running the ranch, that's a different responsibility.
So, after three years of that, Will Rogers said, You know what? I'm not too excited about this. I think I'm going to leave and go and be a cowboy in Argentina. He'd heard that there were no fences in Argentina. We're in here, and this was Indian territory, it wasn't Oklahoma at the time.
So, Will Rogers was not born in Oklahoma, he was born in Indian Territory. And grew up in Indian Territory. And in 1901, he sold it back to his father and said, I'm going to Argentina with a friend of mine just to be a cowboy, what they call a gaucho. When we come back, more of the story of Will Rogers here. On our American stories.
Folks, if you love the stories we tell about this great country and especially the stories of America's rich past, know that all of our stories about American history from war to innovation, culture, and faith, are brought to us by the great folks at Hillsdale College, a place where students study all the things that are beautiful in life and all the things that are good in life. And if you can't get to Hillsdale, Hillsdale will come to you with their free and terrific online courses. Go to hillsdale.edu to learn more. No one knows what the future holds, but you deserve a weather app that can help. Weatherbug is easy to use and provides forecasts for your every need, from storm warnings to pollen levels, right at your fingertips.
Get the fastest local alerts and comprehensive 10-day forecasts wherever you are. It's hyper-local, real-time, customizable alerts. Make sure the weather never takes you by surprise so you can plan every day with confidence. Download the free weather bug app from the App Store today and start getting accurate weather forecasts 24-7. You won't see the engineer that slams the Nissan rogue's door 13,920 times, or the corrosive chamber that simulates 15 years of life in five months, or the rogue heat-baked for over 300 combined hours.
What you will see is a vehicle that can take punch after punch and keep rolling. Nissan, number one in new vehicle quality among mainstream brands by JD Power. We put it through the worst, so you get its best. Yeah. For JD Power 2025 US Initial Quality Study Award information, visit jdpower.com/slash awards.
Awards based on 2025 model year, newer models may be shown. Hello, hello, I'm Malcolm Globwell, host of Smart Talks with IBM. I recently spoke with IBM's new Director of Research, Jay Genbada. We discussed his vision for the future of quantum computing. At IBM Research, what we always do is answer: what is the future of computing?
Whether it's coming up with new algorithms, coming up with better AI, coming up with quantum, or coming up with just how do different accelerators go together. It's our DNA to answer the question of what is the future. Isn't it a perfect problem for IBM because you kind of need to have a legacy of building stuff? Yes. building actual Physical machines.
Yeah, it's why I came to IBM. I wanted the experience. The culture of building hard things. that others have not done before. Where do you imagine we are in the timeline of this technology?
There will come a point. When it will mature, right? My cell phone is a mature technology at this point. How far are we from that point with content? By 2029, we'll build the first fault-tolerant quantum computer.
That is one that can run a very, very large large problem. To learn how IBM is building the future of computing, visit ibm.com/slash quantum. Support for the show comes from Public, the investing platform for those who take it seriously. On Public, you can build a multi-asset portfolio of stocks, bonds, options, crypto, and now generated assets, which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI. It all starts with your prompt.
From renewable energy companies with high-free cash flow to semiconductor suppliers growing revenue over 20% year over year, you can literally type any prompt and put the AI to work. It screens thousands of stocks, builds a one-of-a-kind index, and lets you backtest it against the SP 500. Then you can invest in a few clicks. Generated assets are like ETFs with infinite possibilities, completely customizable and based on your thesis, not someone else's. Go to public.com/slash podcast and earn an uncapped 1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio.
That's public.com/slash podcast. Paid for by Public Investing. Brokerage Services by Open to the Public Investing Inc. member FINRA and SIPC. Advisory Services by Public Advisors LLC, SEC Registered Advisor.
Generated Assets is an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation. or advice. Complete disclosures available at public.com/slash disclosures. Lots of support through telehealth, but it feels overwhelming and rushed?
Check out orderlymeds.com now. Orderlymeds.com was built to be different. Here, you connect with real doctors who take the time to understand your goals, review your eligibility, and guide you through a plan that's right for you. Orderly Meds provides access to proven GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and terzepatide, including both name-brand options and personalized compound versions when appropriate.
So you have choices backed by clinical oversight, not guesswork. It's a simpler, more supportive telehealth experience designed around people who want clarity, care, and confidence in their weight loss journey. And your medication is delivered directly to your home in discrete packaging.
So your experience stays private from start to finish. Do your research, ask the right questions, then visit orderlymeds.com slash podcast for an exclusive offer. Again, that's orderlymeds.com slash podcast. Individual results may vary, not medical advice eligibility required, see site for details. And we return to Our American Stories and our story of Will Rogers with Tad Jones, the director of the Will Rogers Memorial in Claremore, Oklahoma.
When we last left off, Will Rogers, looking for direction, had decided to head south.
south to Argentina to become a cowboy. rejecting a life of running his powerful father's ranch. Let's get back to the story. Here again is audio. from Lux Radio Feed.
Sit down, Willie. Glad to have you back, son. And I hope your foolish days are over. But, Pa, ain't you kind of tired with all this to-doing? Certainly not.
I found it very stimulating.
Well, you've been gone for two years. I'm interested to learn what you've accomplished.
Well So Will and his buddy took off. They thought they'd just go to New Orleans and then make their way down to Argentina, but it wasn't that easy. They had to take some boats to go to New York and then over to London and finally got to Argentina.
Well, when they got down there, life wasn't near the glamorous thing that they thought it was going to be.
So Will's buddy came back home. Will Roger was by himself in Argentina, virtually dead broke. He wrote some letters back to his dad, which were his first published letters in the newspaper. When the family, when he got some letters back, the family published them in the Claremore Progress, and people got to kind of keep up with Will Rogers, mainly because of his dad was well known in the area, and his son was kind of well known. And so he probably didn't know what was happening, but kind of his first foray of being in the newspapers.
So what was Will going to do with his life? He's stuck in Argentina, virtually has no money, and there was a big cattle run that was going to South America, a big boat. And so Will jumped on the boat to take all the cattle to South Africa. And uh got to South Africa, got the cattle off. Still wasn't sure what he was going to do with his life, is broke in South Africa, and he saw a sign for Texas Jacks Wild West Show.
This was the game changer for Will. Mm-hmm. Yes, sorry folks, the original Santa Fe jacket is well. Show the greatest assembly of prairie daredevils ever gathered under one tent. You'll see Honeygirl Kate, you'll see Chief Big Hoss of the Untamed Apaches, and the one and only Cherokee Kid, the foremost roping artist in the world, fresh from Triumphs before the Wild West Show was looking for somebody that could do what was called the big crinoline, which is the big rope trick with a huge rope that you rope with, and Will Rogers happened to know how to do the trick, and he could do a lot of other tricks too.
So now there's the first full-ran show business. Did it for a little while and then decided he was ready to go and try to make his way back to the States. And he went to, he got a letter from Texas Jack recommending him as a great performer. He went to Australia and New Zealand and was in some Wild West shows there and then came back to the United States and came back home.
Well, I worked a lot of ranches, Paul, met a lot of fine people, gotten some practice with my rope. I even had an offer to go with a big Roundup. If that's your ambition, that aimless drifting life, there's no use my even talking to you. Sent me a hundred bucks, Pa. Don't seem like you're getting your money's worth out of this conversation.
I ain't with a roundup. I'm here. But are you any different than when you left? Paul, you and me have been making this same mistake for 20 years. You wanted me to be Clem Rogers' boy, and I've just stampeded away from it.
I might do better is just playing Will Rogers. Why not give it a try?
So Will had, when he was here, he ran into a lady at the train stop and she was there, he was working at the train stop and or he went to pick something up at the train stop and there was a lady there named Betty Blake. Will rode into my life just after the turn of the century. Oklahoma was still Indian territory and Ulaga one of the few cow towns that boasted a railroad. If it weren't for that railroad, I wouldn't have been there at all. My sister's husband, Dave, was a station master, and I'd come for a visit.
I saw Will tie his horse outside the station. Just another saddle-weary drifter. And then he wandered into the baggage room. And when he went to pick up his guitar and his long underwear, he saw her and immediately fell in love. And he was so nervous he took off and left his stuff there.
For eight years, Will Rogers tried to get Betty to date him and marry him, and she just wouldn't have that much to do with him because Will didn't have a stable life. Will was all over the place and traveling and. Wasn't going to make a lot of money. She was from a very well-to-do family from Northwest Arkansas in the Rogers, Arkansas area. And so she really didn't think much, Will, but Will just kept after her and kept after her and sent her letters and those kind of things to try to let her know that he really appreciated her.
Well, Will then start went to New York, started doing, or he went with a Wild West show to New York and was doing this show in New York. And this is where his big break in the States came.
So they were in Madison Square Garden doing a Wild West show. He was just one of the troop. And a bull got out of the arena and went into the crowd. And the story is that Will Rogers got his rope, got up there, roped it, and brought it out and got and saved people's lives.
Well, you know, there might have been, there's some other stories supposedly that might have happened, but the one that the newspapers went with was, you know, cow puncher from Oklahoma saves the crowd, you know, Will Rogers.
So now all of a sudden he's front page news, and people up there, you know, in New York, they want to see, you know, what's this cowboy from Oklahoma?
So all of a sudden, Will is a little bit famous and people want to see him.
So he gets picked up to be in vaudeville. You know, those were all the trick, you know, the jugglers and the comedians and different things. And Will went in there just to be a trick roper.
So Will got into vaudeville and started doing trick roping. And during this time, he's still courting Betty and eventually convinced Betty to marry him. Betty? Yes, Will. What would happen if I was to quit gallivanting around and settle down?
What would you like to have happen?
Well I haven't any money. That isn't important. I love you, Betty. Ever since I first saw you, I ain't um I haven't had always say ain't, well. I ain't been able to think straight about nothing except that I love you.
Is that important? Oh, it's awfully important. Then you'll marry me? Yes, Will. Golly Moses, I feel like hollering.
Well, why don't you? Yo-hoo! Yo-hoo! So she moved up to New York and they started having a few kids.
So he ends up having four children. One child died in infancy, unfortunately. His son, Fred Stone, died when he was just two.
So Will Rogers now is doing the follies. He's very popular. And then one time he missed a rope trick and he made a joke and the people laughed. And he was kind of offended by that. You know, he's a professional, professional roper.
You know, you don't laugh at the professional roper, even though he grew up joking and trying to make people laugh. But this was his, you know, his serious business. I was having a pretty bad time myself, but nothing, I'm sure, to what he was going through. He couldn't blame the audience for laughing at it. Yeah.
Mighty nice of you to laugh at me. Of course, it ain't no use to pretend I ain't nervous here tonight, because I sure am. You know, horses are smarter than humans. You never heard of a horse going broke, betting on people.
Well, when he came off the stage, they kind of told me, no, you ought to, you know, the people laugh, they like that. You ought to do that a little bit more. And so he started writing jokes and would miss rope tricks on purpose so he could tell a joke. You know, he'd mess up and go, oh, I got both my feet in but one, you know, or whatever the joke might be. And so now they're laughing at him.
And he was liking that.
So now, you know, it added a little bit to his show. But then, you know, there were other rope trickers that were showing up, and so he was such an avid reader that Betty told him, he said, you know, you ought to start talking about the news of the day. I see where they got a new governor back in my home state of Oklahoma. He's a real fine governor, too, and the folks back there sure love him. Especially some of the folks who've been spending their time behind bars.
You see, this governor's been sending out a lot of pardons and kind of getting the wardens sort of worried. Anyway, he sent out so many that one old boy sent him back an answer. Why, shucks, governor, he said, thanks for the pardon, but they ain't caught me yet. And we're listening to the story of Will Rogers as told by Tad Jones, the director of the Will Rogers Memorial in Claremore, Oklahoma. And again, special thanks to Lux Radio Theater.
You're hearing excerpts throughout this piece. When we come back. More of the story of Will Rogers. Here. on our American story.
No one knows what the future holds, but you deserve a weather app that can help. Weatherbug is easy to use and provides forecasts for your every need, from storm warnings to pollen levels, right at your fingertips. Get the fastest local alerts and comprehensive 10-day forecasts wherever you are. It's hyper-local real-time customizable alerts. Make sure the weather never takes you by surprise so you can plan every day with confidence.
Download the free weather bug app from the App Store today and start getting accurate weather forecasts 24-7. You won't see the engineer that slams the Nissan Rogue's door 13,920 times, or the corrosive chamber that simulates 15 years of life in five months, or the rogue heat-baked for over 300 combined hours. What you will see is a vehicle that can take punch after punch and keep rolling. Nissan, number one in new vehicle quality among mainstream brands by JD Power. We put it through the worst, so you get its best.
Yeah. For JD Power 2025 US Initial Quality Study Award information, visit JDPower.com/slash awards. Awards based on 2025 model year, newer models may be shown. Hello, hello, I'm Malcolm Globwell, host of Smart Talks with IBM. I recently spoke with IBM's new Director of Research, Jake M.
Bata. We discussed his vision for the future of quantum computing. At IBM Research, what we always do is answer: what is the future of computing? Whether it's coming up with new algorithms, coming up with better AI, coming up with quantum, or coming up with just how do different accelerators go together. It's our DNA to answer the question of what is the future.
Isn't it a perfect problem for IBM because you kind of need to have a legacy of building stuff? Yes. Building actual Physical machines. Yeah, it's why I came to IBM. I wanted the experience.
The culture of building hard things. that others have not done before. Where do you imagine we are in the timeline of this technology? There will come a point. When it will mature, right?
My cell phone is a mature technology at this point. How far are we from that point with content? By 2029, we'll build the first fault-tolerant quantum computer. That is one that can run a very, very large, large problem. To learn how IBM is building the future of computing, Visit ibm.com slash quantum.
Support for the show comes from Public, the investing platform for those who take it seriously. On Public, you can build a multi-asset portfolio of stocks, bonds, options, crypto, and now generated assets, which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI. It all starts with your prompt. From renewable energy companies with high-free cash flow to semiconductor suppliers growing revenue over 20% year over year, you can literally type any prompt and put the AI to work. It screens thousands of stocks, builds a one-of-a-kind index, and lets you backtest it against the SP 500.
Then you can invest in a few clicks. Generated assets are like ETFs with infinite possibilities, completely customizable and based on your thesis, not someone else's. Go to public.com/slash podcast and earn an uncapped 1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio. That's public.com/slash podcast. Paid for by Public Investing.
Brokerage Services by Open to the Public Investing Inc. member FINRA and SIPC. Advisory Services by Public Advisors LLC, SEC Registered Advisor. Generated Assets is an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation.
Or advice. Complete disclosures available at public.com/slash disclosures. Are you trying to get weight loss support through telehealth, but it feels overwhelming and rushed? Check out orderlymeds.com now. Orderlymeds.com was built to be different.
Here, you connect with real doctors who take the time to understand your goals, review your eligibility, and guide you through a plan that's right for you. Orderly Meds provides access to proven GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and terzepatide, including both name-brand options and personalized compound versions when appropriate.
So you have choices backed by clinical oversight, not guesswork. It's a simpler, more supportive telehealth experience designed around people who want clarity, care, and confidence in their weight loss journey. And your medication is delivered directly to your home in discrete packaging.
So your experience stays private from start to finish. Do your research, ask the right questions, then visit orderlymeds.com slash podcast for an exclusive offer. Again, that's orderlymeds.com slash podcast. Individual results may vary not medical advice eligibility required. See site for details.
Mm. And we return to Our American Stories and our story on Will Rogers with Tad Jones, the director of the Will Rogers Memorial in Claremore, Oklahoma. When we last left off, Will had finally found relative stability as a professional roper. Let's return to the story. The curtain rises on Act 3 of The Story of Will Rogers, starring Jane Wyman as Betty Rogers.
and Will Rogers Jr. in the title role. Yeah. Yes, Will had a brand new career. He just went out on the stage and kept talking, never knowing what he was going to say until he said it.
and always surprised at the success it brought him. In a few years, Will was a headliner, a star. And what people seemed to love most was to hear Will talking about politics and Congress. And then one day, the United States Secret Service ordered him to Washington. The request of President Wilson.
Uh They took a trip to Baltimore, the show did, and the President of the United States Woodrow Wilson came in the audience. And Will was super nervous. I mean, the President's there, and he's really come to see Will because he'd heard about this guy that makes political jokes. Which wasn't a thing that happened much. You know, Mark Twain did a little bit, but his was kind of bitey.
When Mark Twain joked about it, a little more serious. Will was doing it in a funny sense. And so now. The president's in the audience, and Will was so nervous. They literally said had to grab him, push him out on stage.
So you got to do your show. And he got out there, he did his all shucks thing, you know, and roped and talked about how nervous he was. And then he told. Started telling his jokes. He made a joke about trying to catch Poncho Villa, but they couldn't get him because when they started to go south of the border, they got caught up in all the red tape.
And, you know, people were looking around to see what the president would do. And the president laughed. And that really helped Will Rogers. He said, Now, you know, if the president's going to laugh at me, it's okay. And Will never said anything to make people mad.
I mean, that was, I think that's what endeared him to everybody. You know, you never hear him say negative things about any people. He'll joke about the institution. You know, Congress has this and the presidency has this. But the individual, he always said nice things about.
You know, that's such an impressive thing. I know I've said a lot of things about Washington, Mr. President. If I've offended you in any way, I'm sorry. I didn't ask you here to censor you, Mr.
Rogers.
For a long time, I've wanted to thank you for your war work and everything else. That's mighty nice of you, Mr. President. And to be perfectly honest. I've always wanted to see the master of the verb ain't.
Yeah. I've heard you've had several offers to write. How is it I've never seen you in print? Why, Mr. President, as the next college professor, you ought to know that I can't put two words together without making them come out wrong.
That may be, but from the quotes I've heard your meanings come out pretty right. Mr. Rogers, uh Will. If I may.
Now I feel like I can cross my legs. You You say for people the things they'd like to say but can't quite express. And then helping them think things through. You're also making them laugh. That's a rare gift.
That's why I think you should write as well as speak. Whether you like it or not, Will. You've become a voice from the heart of the people. Our country wants to hear it more often. And so he did that and earned respect from people all over the country.
And so now there's a new medium that's showing up and it's the movies. This was just silence, but Will Rogers wouldn't buy to be in the movie. They filmed it in New York, and they said, you know what, you need to move out to Hollywood and make some more of these. Will went on to make 50 silent movies. Then in 19, that was 1919 when they moved out there.
In 1922, here comes the radio. Also in 1922, he started writing a weekly article for newspapers. And in 1927, he also started writing a daily column. You know, peck it out. He wasn't a great typist.
He would peck his daily column, hand it to the Western Union kid by five o'clock, and they would go and send it out to Western Union to all the newspapers. You know, he'd be out a movie, you know, doing a movie, he'd take a break, run over here, type out his daily column. and uh you know and then send it out so just Incredible, you know, that he could write stuff that was always interesting, too. I mean, just you know. Here in Germany, they got a fellow named Hitler.
He began in a beer hall, and he'll give the whole world a hangover before he's through. The whole thing as I see it all over the world is that the little nations has just got no business being little. How you could do that every single day is you know you're looking at 365 days a year roughly. times, you know, what is that, seven, eight years? How many daily columns is that that you spit out, you know, and weekly columns too that were longer.
And he had joked in 1928 about running for president. He called it the anti-bunk party, and he had this. Presidential run that he was doing. It was in the life, it was in Life magazine. It was just really cute.
But anyway, the talkies came in, and this is where Will's movie career started to blossom. I mean, Will, it was his talking that got it. The silent movies, you know, he just had to act, and he did have some funny commentary. But Talkies is what happened that really got in the movies.
So he really is this world figure in the 30s. Of course, the Great Depression hit in 29 with the stock market crash, and Will was there as his comforting voice for the country. You know, again, daily talking. Spell back, I did a newspaper piece on George Washington. how proud he'd be of his country if he'd lived till his 200th birthday.
Guess I didn't know what I was writing about. If old George was around today, I'd bet he'd sue us for calling him father. Maybe you don't make no sense, Will, but you sure make a fellow feel better, even if he is on his way to the poorhouse. I think one of great characteristics too is his empathy. He said, you know, until you understand from another person's perspective, you know, where they're coming from, and that's what he did.
I mean, he saw, for instance, there was a. Herbert Hoover was president, and he wanted to give a talk about some relief that he wanted to do during the Great Depression. It was, I think it was 1930. And he needed an audience to listen to his speech. And so you can't imagine doing this today, but he asked Will Rogers to be his intro on the radio.
So Will Rogers did that, you know, and he joked in the radio deal about, you know, when I was asked to do this, I had to ask some people about it. And, you know, whatever negative, it just, you know, wasn't enough. Um, I I'm kind of particular, I think. Who do I? Who's go who's gonna be the other speaker?
Who else is on the who else is on the uh. You'll win me. And he said, well, I'll uh He said, how would Mr. Hoover do?
So I looked into Miss Hoover's record and uh inquired of everybody. And uh after I had uh Kind of thrown out about two-thirds of what the Democrats said about him. Why? I figured that I wouldn't have much to lose by appearing with Mr. Hoover, so.
You know, I got nothing to lose. I'm going to go here and I'm going to talk.
Well, in that speech, it became a famous speech. We call it Bacon Beads Limousines, where he said, Here we are in the country with More wheat, more corn, more. More Money in the bank. The more cotton, the more For everything in the world, there's not a product that you can name that we haven't got more of it than any country ever had and on the face of the earth, and yet we've got people starving. Hey.
You hold the distinction of being the only nation in the history of the world that ever went to the poor house in an automobile. We're going to be the only country in the history of the world that's going to go to the poorhouse in an automobile. And it was a very heartfelt. Speech. You know, there was a little humor in it, but not much.
He got into a very serious tone. And he also talked about the goodness of the American people. You know, yes, things are tough, but we're going to give and help people in our communities, and we can do that. And he talked about the big boys that got him into this mess, which is kind of funny. I mean, the richest people in the world loved Will Rogers.
I mean, Henry Ford. Thought Will should run for president and Will thought Henry Ford should be given the keys to Congress and solve all the issues because he was such a good businessman, you know.
So it was a very poignant speech. And after his talk, then Herbert Hoover got on and gave his.
Well, you know, it was like 10 to 1, whatever the numbers were, people that wanted copies and transcripts of Will's speech versus the President's speech. And we've been listening to Tad Jones, the director of the Will Rogers Memorial in Claremore, Oklahoma. More of the story of Will Rogers. when Our American Stories continues. No one knows what the future holds, but you deserve a weather app that can help.
Weatherbug is easy to use and provides forecasts for your every need, from storm warnings to pollen levels, right at your fingertips. Get the fastest local alerts and comprehensive 10-day forecasts wherever you are. It's hyper-local, real-time, customizable alerts. Make sure the weather never takes you by surprise so you can plan every day with confidence. Download the free weather bug app from the App Store today and start getting accurate weather forecasts 24-7.
You won't see the engineer that slams the Nissan Rogue's door 13,920 times, or the corrosive chamber that simulates 15 years of life in five months, or the rogue heat baked for over 300 combined hours. What you will see is a vehicle that can take punch after punch and keep rolling. Nissan, number one in new vehicle quality among mainstream brands by JD Power. We put it through the worst, so you get its best. Yeah.
For JD Power 2025 U.S. Initial Quality Study Award information, visit jdpower.com/slash awards. Awards based on 2025 model year, newer models may be shown. Hello, hello, I'm Malcolm Globwell, host of Smart Talks with IBM. I recently spoke with IBM's new Director of Research, Jake M.
Petta. We discussed his vision for the future of quantum computing. At IBM Research, what we always do is answer: what is the future of computing? Whether it's coming up with new algorithms, coming up with better AI, coming up with quantum, or coming up with just how do different accelerators go together. It's our DNA to answer the question of what is the future.
Isn't it a perfect problem for IBM because you kind of need to have a legacy of building stuff? Yes, sir. Building actual Physical machines. Yeah, it's why I came to IBM. I wanted the experience The culture of building hard things.
that others have not done before. Where do you imagine we are in the timeline of this technology? There will come a point. When it will mature, right? My cell phone is a mature technology at this point.
How far are we from that point with content? By 2029, we'll build the first fault-tolerant quantum computer. That is one that could run a very, very large Large problem. To learn how IBM is building the future of computing, Visit ibm.com slash quantum. Support for the show comes from Public, the investing platform for those who take it seriously.
On Public, you can build a multi-asset portfolio of stocks, bonds, options, crypto, and now generated assets, which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI. It all starts with your prompt. From renewable energy companies with high-free cash flow to semiconductor suppliers growing revenue over 20% year over year, you can literally type any prompt and put the AI to work. It screens thousands of stocks, builds a one-of-a-kind index, and lets you backtest it against the SP 500. Then you can invest in a few clicks.
Generated assets are like ETFs with infinite possibilities, completely customizable and based on your thesis, not someone else's. Go to public.com/slash podcast and earn an uncapped 1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio. That's public.com/slash podcast. Paid for by Public Investing. Brokerage Services by Open to the Public Investing Inc.
member Finra and SIPC. Advisory Services by Public Advisors LLC, SEC Registered Advisor. Generated Assets is an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation. or advice.
Complete disclosures available at public.com slash disclosures. Are you trying to get weight loss support through telehealth, but it feels overwhelming and rushed? Check out orderlymeds.com.
Now, orderlymeds.com was built to be different. Here, you connect with real doctors who take the time to understand your goals, review your eligibility, and guide you through a plan that's right for you. Orderly Meds provides access to proven GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and terzepatide, including both name-brand options and personalized compound versions when appropriate.
So, you have choices backed by clinical oversight, not guesswork. It's a simpler, more supportive telehealth experience designed around people who want clarity, care, and confidence in their weight loss journey. And your medication is delivered directly to your home in discrete packaging.
So, your experience stays private from start to finish. Do your research, ask the right questions, then visit orderlymeds.com slash podcast for an exclusive offer. Again, that's orderlymeds.com/slash podcast. Individual results may vary not medical advice eligibility required. See site for details.
Mm. And we return to Our American Stories and the final section of our story on Will Rogers with Tad Jones, the director. of the Will Rogers Memorial in Claremore, Oklahoma. You've also been hearing historical audio from Lux Radio Theatre. Featuring Will's son, Will Rogers Jr., playing his father.
and Jane Wyman playing Will's wife. Betty. When we last left off, Will had become a guiding voice during the Great Depression and virtually inescapable. Whether on radio, in print, or film, it was because of this that he was called the most dangerous man in America. But Will was anything but He was different.
Let's return to the story we start yet again. with Lux Radio Theater. It's been my lot in life to play the fool and to make people laugh. I've kidded an awful lot of big men, but I've had mighty few complaints. I guess that's the sign of a big man.
I've tried living my life so that whenever I quit, I'm ahead. I've been an awful lucky fellow. I've been all over the world. I've met kings and rickshaw boys, senators and farmers, more people than most people had meet in 10 lifetimes. And I never met a man I didn't like.
His famous line is, I never met a man I didn't like. And that's exactly true. Didn't care what race you're from, your religion. You know, treated the kings and the common man the same. He was a man that I think is maybe the greatest role model citizen that we have.
We have great role models like in politics, like Abraham Lincoln and George Washington and these kind of people. But as a citizen, a good person that treated people right, his credibility was just through the roof because he You know, he was so genuine. It was all him. I think he never talked negatively about people. He'd joke about the institution, he would joke about different things.
But when it came to people, he always treated him with respect. And even if he thought he hurt somebody's feelings, you know, he would apologize. And that's so rare because in comedy today, you know, if you're not really gigging them and almost making them mad, and then our personalities today are such that you know you hear something you don't like, and your immediate reaction is to get angry and why are they thinking that way? And Will saw you know everybody's perspective so well, it was so ingrained in him. Yes, he liked to joke.
But it was a calming way and also in a way that showed empathy towards what people are going through. And even in his movies, there were scenes of, you know, they were about the Great Depression, some of them, and, you know, where he's cutting his stock certificates into little paper men, you know, that. Because they were worthless. But I'll tell you: my all-time favorite, though, is one he does right in front of Calvin Coolidge. I think it's one of the dams in Arizona that was being dedicated.
We have this video of it. And Calvin Coolidge is there and Will Rogers is there to give a talk. And with Calvin Coolidge there, he said, Will said, you know, Calvin Coolidge, one of our great presidents, he goes, he didn't do nothing, but that's what we wanted done. And it just gives this great laugh. And I just, I love it because it cuts to Calvin Coolidge.
He always kind of frowned a little bit, but he goes, he didn't do nothing, but that's what we wanted done. I thought, man, that's just such a witty, funny quote, you know, with a president, you know, sitting right there and everybody laughing at it.
So anyway. Oh, Will. What's that plane doing over there? That's old Wiley showing off his new ship. I forgot to tell you, honey, he's dropping in tonight for supper.
Not just for supper. Wiley's like Paul, he doesn't drop in unless he has something on his mind.
Well, maybe. We have been kind of figuring on a little trip up to Alaska.
Well, why way up there?
Well, you see, honey, when I was a kid, I flunked a geography exam, and ever since then I've had a hankering to go up there and find the right answers. Look. If you don't want me to read the letters you get from Washington, then don't leave them open on the dining room table. What letters?
Well, for instance, the one about the appropriation bill for Alaskan Defense. Huh?
So he had a good friend, or a friend, and they weren't great friends, but they had known each other, and a guy named Wile Post. He was a one-eyed pilot out of Oklahoma, an amazing character himself. Landing his airplane right in range of our cameras. Harry! Go tell that bullhead it just cost us a barrel of money.
Who is that spendthrift, Tom? Oh, some half-wit aviator they hired to fly the film to the laboratory. One of your Oklahoma boys, hard Indian. You and that fool played! You're costing us a young fortune!
What's your name, son? B. Wily Poles. Us Cherokees are a long way from home, aren't we? Oh, we sure are, mister.
He lost an eye in the oil patch of Texas, and just a short period of time in his life, four or five years, he taught himself how to fly. He found the jet stream. He created the very first pressurized airsuit that was basically the beginning of the space airsuit. He was the first person to fly around the world, him and another co-pilot, and then he was the first person to fly around the world by himself with just basically a plane and a compass. I mean, just an incredible feat.
And you've heard everybody's heard of Charles Lindbergh and most people haven't heard of Wiley Post. But Wiley Post got two ticker tape parades in New York City because he was flying around the world.
So an incredibly respected pilot.
So he wanted to fly to Alaska. And find a mail route to Russia. And Will Rogers loved to travel.
So they got to talking. Wiley needed somebody to fund his trip. Will Rogers wanted to travel and see the world.
So he said, Man, I want to go with my fellow Oklahoma. Let's go to Alaska.
So they piled in a plane in August. It was a plane that Wiley kind of built himself. He put pontoons on it. The whole time, Will Rogers is still writing his daily columns, talking about politics and the people that he met and these kind of things.
So they fly to Alaska. They're starting to head to Point Barrow. It's August 15th, 1935. And again, this year, Will Rogers was number one movie star in the world. They get lost in the fog.
Wally finds a lagoon to land in, and there were some Inuin Eskimos that were there, and he asked them, you know, directions to Point Barrow. And they said, you know, you're not that far away, you know, just about 12 miles away.
So as the plane started to take off and turn, the engine died. And because the plane was built the way it was, it was very nose-heavy.
So it immediately went straight down, and it killed both men instantly in the lagoon. The whole world went into mourning. You know, just every newspaper was a headline about Will Rogers and Wiley Post that died. The movie theaters went dark, the radios turned off, Congress went out of session, and everybody was just couldn't believe that Will Rogers, their best friend that was in their house, that they were listening to and reading about, had just died. And it was very, very difficult on the country.
And so the president and others created a commission to what are we going to do to honor Will Rogers. Congress actually passed $2 million in funding to do something for Will, but it was vetoed by President Roosevelt. Not that he didn't have any respect for him, but it was during the Great Depression and there wasn't a plan for the money. They were just doing it. And that was his reasoning, you know.
And so, but the Oklahoma legislature stepped up in 1937, created this commission, and in 1938, they built the Will Rogers Memorial. And um Will Roger was originally buried in California. But the crowds that came to the memorial after it was built were so huge that they eventually moved Will Rogers here in 1944. And that's where Will and Betty and three of the children are buried here at the memorial in Claremore. Amazing, amazing character.
You know, it learned by School of Hard Knocks. You know, he just. grew up in tough area and learned how to You know. How to do it and uh He did. I mean, he wrote a million words in his weekly articles, his daily articles, wrote his own stuff.
And today, you see you're Conan O'Brien's or whatever, there's all these writers around him, and all they're doing this to get the best jokes. All that Will did, even his stand-up in vaudeville and the follies. Everything was Will Rogers. Will Rogers never came back from that flight. And yet in a sense He never left us.
There's a statue of Will Rogers. at the Memorial Museum in Claremore, Oklahoma. It says Will Rogers. 1879 1935. And the simple legend.
I never met a man I didn't like. And a terrific job on the production by Monty Montgomery. And a special thanks to Tad Jones, the director of the Will Rogers Memorial in Claremore, Oklahoma. And my goodness, this is a quintessential American story, born in Oklahoma before it was Oklahoma. and a Cherokee.
And of course, he dies with a fellow Oklahoman. and a fellow Cherokee. They say when Buddy Holly died, it was the day the music died. And when Will Rogers died, it was the day the Laffs died. There was never one like him before.
there would never be one like him again. The story of Will Rogers here. on our American story. Um No one knows what the future holds, but you deserve a weather app that can help. Weatherbug is easy to use and provides forecasts for your every need, from storm warnings to pollen levels, right at your fingertips.
Get the fastest local alerts and comprehensive 10-day forecasts wherever you are. It's hyper-local real-time customizable alerts. Make sure the weather never takes you by surprise so you can plan every day with confidence. Download the free weather bug app from the App Store today and start getting accurate weather forecasts 24-7. You won't see the engineer that slams the Nissan Rogue's door 13,920 times, or the corrosive chamber that simulates 15 years of life in five months, or the rogue heat-baked for over 300 combined hours.
What you will see is a vehicle that can take punch after punch and keep rolling. Nissan, number one in new vehicle quality among mainstream brands by JD Power. We put it through the worst, so you get its best. Yeah. For JD Power 2025 US Initial Quality Study Award information, visit JDPower.com/slash awards.
Awards based on 2025 model year, newer models may be shown. This is Julian Edelman from Games with Names. I want to take a second to talk about something that's personal to me. I've had the privilege of working closely with Robert Kraft for a long time. And one thing I've always respected is how seriously he takes up standing up to hate.
As a Jewish athlete my identity is something I am proud of. But I also know what it feels like to be singled out for it. That's why this new commercial for the Blue Square Alliance Against Hate that aired during the big game really hit home. It's about showing up for someone when they're targeted, even if you don't have the perfect words. And sometimes standing next to someone is enough.
And you can show support by sharing the blue square. At CVS, it matters that we're not just in your community, but that we're part of it. It matters that we're here for you when you need us, day or night. And we want everyone to feel welcomed and rewarded. It matters that CVS is here to fill your prescriptions and here to fill your craving for a tasty and, yeah, healthy snack.
At CVS, we're proud to serve your community because we believe where you get your medicine matters.
So visit us at cvs.com or just come by our store. We can't wait to meet you. Store hours vary by location. Kids, pets, life, your sofa sees it all. But with a washable sofa, stains don't stand a chance.
All of our sofa collections come with fully machine-washable covers and cushions, making cleanup effortless. Liquid and stain-resistant fabrics provide extra protection against everyday messes. Plus, with modular designs, you can rearrange your sofa however you like. Perfect for growing families and changing spaces. Starting at just $699, it's time to upgrade to a stress-free, mess-proof sofa.
Visit washablefas.com today and save. Offers are subject to change, and certain restrictions may apply. This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human. Mm-hmm.