Nina
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You know, because I'm a grandma now.
Well, a lot of things I think are just going backwards where we're banning books, but people are obviously getting their information online instead.
And we're also trying to make oil the big thing when we have solar and all these other things that we could be doing.
It's just it seems like a little bit backwards.
Yeah, we're going backwards.
We hit a point for free.
All right, here's your next headline for Real News or Fake News, the segment where I give you a news story from the week that's gone viral and you have to tell me if it's a real news story or a fake one that people actually believed.
Here's your next headline for Real News or Fake News.
Reclusive billionaire meat collector pays $100,000 for decade-old steaks discovered in Idaho freezer.
Wait, is this YouTube old?
Here's the story.
Out of Nampa, Idaho, what started as a routine freezer clean-out turned into a six-figure windfall after a local couple sold a stash of 2014 T-bone steaks to a mysterious wealthy collector who specializes in historically significant proteins.
Interesting.
Weird.
Aaron and Tyler McGraw had just discovered the decade-old beef in a freezer gifted by Tyler's father.
The packages were dated clearly 2014.
Most people online suggested that they toss them, but instead, Tyler jokingly listed the meat on a luxury collectibles forum under the title Pre-Pandemic Heritage Beef, Fully Frozen, Untouched.
Within 48 hours, they actually received a serious inquiry.
The buyer, who requested anonymity but is remembered to be a tech magnate with a temperature-controlled protein vault in Wyoming, reportedly collects rare and unusual meats the way that some people collect vintage wine or cars.
A representative for the buyer issued a brief statement saying the 2014 beef predates global disruption, supply chain instability, and influencer farming.