Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:12):
All right, glad to have you here, Good morning to you,
hump Day, halfway till Friday. Jimmy is my name? How
wouts your name? Everybody's introduced herself, Thank you, say hello,
polite to each other, and let's do this in the next
four hours together here on the radio show, that Jimmy
Leaky program here at six hundred kcol and glad to
have you. I really am hump Day, say again, halfway
(00:34):
till Friday. That makes it a little bit dem It
makes you happy to move forward, does it? It makes you
kind of thrilled to say, well, we're almost there. We'll
get there. And then many of you got a three
day weekend, some of you take off Friday as well,
So yeah, it's moving right along, it is. Somebody explained
to me, some of your Kamala fans out there, why
won't she do an interview by herself. She finally agreed.
(00:57):
Now all the networks say and they will say this.
She was shopping around for the best deal making phone calls.
Her people were trying to say, hey, here's the rules,
what will you do? And CNN finally said, okay, we'll
give you Dana Bash and she says, well, I evidently
the negotiation was she doesn't want to do the interview
by herself. She's got to have old Timmy there, tampon Tim.
(01:18):
She got to have him there. Does anybody can you
think of why you would? What is she afraid of?
Have you ever known George W. Bush to sit there
and say, well, I can't do a Jed interview without
Dick Cheney sitting next to me. Doesn't this show that
she's not a strong woman like she portrays herself to me?
Does this show that she just needs a man standing
by her or something? It just doesn't. It's not a
(01:41):
good look in my estimation. Anybody ever remember Barack Obama saying, well,
I'll do the interview, but I better have Joe Biden
sit next to me. Boy, if I don't have Joe there,
I can't do the interview, Dana. Anybody remember the Orange
guy Donald Trump say well, I just can't do the interview.
I've got to have Mike Pence sitting next to me.
And even think Ronald Reagan ever said well, you know,
(02:01):
Barbara Walters, I'd love to come on your program, but
I've got to have I've got to have George HW.
Bush next to me, I can't do it. Is this
the weakest wi I thought I thought we were supposed
to say, is woman power, woman power. She's going to
get out there and take on the world. It is
time for a first presidential woman. And yet in her
first kind of debut in an interview, she says, I
(02:24):
can't do it by myself. I'm a weak person. That's
how else are you going to interpret it? What else?
How do you interpret the fact that Kamala has decided
that she'll do an interview, but she can't do it
if she doesn't have a man. There is a comfort blanket.
I mean, I you know, that's what I'm interpreting as.
Pardon me if I'm wrong, but it's not a good
look for the whole woman power thing. We're supposed to
(02:46):
vote for her because she's a woman, Well maybe she's
not much of a woman if she didn't have a
man next to her. What else are you going to
interpret this thing? As? Kamala is a weak, weak woman intellectually, mentally,
she's weak politically, she's dangerous, and she knows that she
cannot stand on her own intellect, she cannot stand on
her own merit, and so I guess she has to
(03:08):
have Tampon Timmy there to prop her up. So if
you'd liked to climb the water tower of radio and
defend Kamalo's air, defend her honor, feel free to do so.
But I don't know how else you're supposed to interpret
it is. She won't do an interview by herself this
Thursday night. She's going to do it with Tampon Timmy
(03:29):
sitting next to her, and that way he gets fifty
percent of the questions. It's kind of like talk show
hosts Clay Travis buck Section. They have two guys that
do it and they brag they what a great job
they do. Well, you only have to do an hour
and a half each because you split three hours. I
sit behind this microphone, slave and slave and sweat and
slub and the salt mines here of radio, four hours
(03:51):
all by myself. So just be very clear, in a
very serious manner, I'm not running for president. And I
could probably sit my butt down in front of Dana
Bash or somebody and answer questions to say, hey, let's
pretend I'm the president. Ask me some don't go try
to ask me about policy, and you bekistan because I
(04:12):
haven't studied it. But I could sit down and have
a general and I could probably answer every question that
they will give Camel up on Thursday, and I wouldn't
have any problem and I wouldn't have to have prapp
Er script or anything. It's just when you know what
you know and you have some principles that guide you,
then you can just kind of answer some questions. But
she cannot do that. And I'd like to get some
(04:34):
feedback from women out there. Do you not see that
this might look a little bit weak that the first
woman want want, the woman that wants to be the
first female president of the United States is saying that
I can't do an interview by myself. I can't sit
one on one with a reporter, a journalist from a
friendly outlet and have a conversation. I got to have
Tampa on Timmy next to me. It's really bizarre. My
(04:56):
friends and I don't think it's a good look at all.
And we'll see if it's lost on the American people.
Another thing that's often interesting is she decided to do it,
but she's doing it on the end of the month.
She's doing this on what Thursday tomorrow night. It will air.
I guess it's going to be taped in advance. That's
the other thing. Tape it. They're required that it be
pre recorded. They required that it be pre recorded. I
(05:18):
know some people are calling on CNN. Hey, if you
air it and you're going to air the pre recorded
edited version, we know you're editing stuff. You should put
the unredacted, unedited version up at CNN dot com. Now
will they do that? I don't know. Did they agree
not to do that, I don't know. But you have
a president or want to be president that says I'm
going to do an interview, but I can only do
(05:39):
it with a man sitting next to my side. But
I'm a strong woman, don't you fear me? And I
got to have the man sex next to me because
I'm too weak to go on my own. I don't
know how else to interpret it, my friends, I really don't.
And let's edit it. You got to make sure we
have it. Don't air it live. We don't want to
do a stream. We want to, you know, give me
the best of And so what CNN do if CNN
(06:01):
lacks journalistic integrity most of the time, if not all
the time. So I'm doubting we will get the unadacted,
unedited version, but we shall see. What say you eight
six six triple eight fifty four to forty nine. The
other thing in doing this interview to airing it tomorrow
night is a Thursday night, and we're heading into a
three day weekend. So as I said, some of you
(06:21):
are gonna take a four day weekend. Some people take
to take off Friday, and then you get Monday off
automatically for labor that you get a four day So
in other words, I'm sure people will watch it, but
it's not going to necessarily even with flubs or not flubs,
it kind of reduces the opportunity for there to be
traction As a talk show host. I know that on
(06:44):
a day like a Friday, volume wise, as far as
any kind of interaction, emails, et cetera, those will go
down on Friday because people just are engaged heading into
a three day weekend. They've got other plans, and kids
are back in school in football games, so it's people
are going to be distracted on Thursdays. So they picked
it wisely from a hide me standpoint. But the fact
(07:07):
and what does it tell you and what are the
nonverbals communicating that what are the nonverbal communications that are
coming out there that say she can't do the interview
without a man next to her. I thought she was
a very strong independent woman, but evidently she's not independent
enough to do an interviewer by herself. See Jack Smith
has come up and he's reindicted. Donald Trump reindicted him.
(07:30):
It's the same indictment that he got thrown out of
the last time. And evidently Jack Smith didn't remember that
they judged threw it out the last time, saying I
threw this out because you're not legally appointment. The appointment's
clause in the Constitution say you've never gone through Senate confirmation.
And so Trump is moving to have that dismissed immediately posthaste.
But if it doesn't show the politicization of Jack Smith,
(07:54):
nothing will prove that to you, because again it's not
that he had to get re indicted on the election
conspiracy charges. It's they said, you don't have standing to
bring this. You were not appointed properly, and because of
your appointment and not going through the Senate confirmation hearing,
you can't bring these charges. You lack standing. But evidently
(08:14):
Jack Smith that Merrick Garland don't give a rats but
tuty about that? All right, what else do we have
here to get to on the program? Football season kicks off.
I get to announce my first football game of the
season Thursday night. I hope you are there. No, you
probably won't be unless you go to your kids go
to that high school. So are we announcing so the
(08:36):
football seasons here, isn't it? In an exciting high school football?
College football kicked off this past weekend. Anybody watched the
game in Ireland? I did. I watched it and I
was just excited to have some football as even if
it's not all I like to have the background noise
that has just said. So it's always a comforting time
of year for a Texas boy to have some football
going on the background. So God bless, God bless the
(08:58):
football season. God bless the ball season. I had this
on a stack yesterday I didn't get to it. We
can dive into it. We've talked much on this show
the last four or five years about the state of
public education in the state of Colorado and also how
COVID and the Polish policies in the state of Colorado
and the Brian Kingsley policies at Puter School district really
(09:19):
destroyed a lot of hopes and dreams and academic excellence
for a lot of students across Colorado and respective districts. Well.
Chalkbeet dot org, which reports on education news, showed the
twenty twenty four the last sea Mass test Colorado. I
believe it's mathematic Academic standards or minimum Academic Standards testxcuse me.
(09:41):
It shows basically they're getting better measures of academic sea
mass Colorado. Measures of academics. Students in the ninth grade
through eleventh grade take the pat SAT test to evaluate
English and math. Students also take a science sea Mass
test in fifth, eighth and eleventh grade, So it's just
the measures of academic success, and it does show that
(10:02):
there has been some improvement. Let me pull from it.
Among the middle school grades, rates of students who met
or exceeded expectations aren't yet higher though than twenty nineteen,
but the rates have continued to improve. So we're in
twenty twenty four. The last pre COVID test was twenty nineteen,
and even we went down so much that even though
(10:22):
the testing scores among middle schoolers and high schoolers have
gone up, they have not gone back up to where
they were at. Now, in politics, what you have is
you get great unemployment and you start adding jobs back
and you say we've added X number of jobs. Yes,
but you've still added fewer than what we had before.
(10:43):
We're still not backup to snuff. And that's what's happening
with the Colorado Public schools. High schoolers taking the new
digital PSA and SAT test and percentage of students meeting
expectations on math fell significantly, including up to seven percentage
point drop for the ninth grade students, where just thirty
nine and a half percent of ninth grade students met
(11:06):
expectations this past year. Now that was a significant drop
because in twenty twenty three testing, ninth graders showed forty
six point five percent proficiency and in their mathematics and
now it's gone down below forty percent. And so while
the headline might say state show more academic recovery, when
(11:27):
you dig into the actual meat of the story, it
doesn't show that the recovery is near what it needs
to be. Let me read it again. If you have
a ninth grader, so this is high school kids, the
percentage of students that can meet expectations. Minimum expectations on
math test has fallen again significantly. It's up to seven
(11:48):
percentage point drop for ninth grade students. We're only thirty
nine and a half percent. That's less than four kids
out of every ten are proficient at grade level in
mathematics in ninth grade Colorado last year. Let me say
that again, four out of ten, less than four out
of kid to ten kids threely three out of ten,
but we'll round it up to almost four. About three
(12:10):
of the four kids out of every ten kids it's
proficient in math in ninth grade last year. That's a
seven percent drop. Part of the reason maybe the new
digital format. They say it's the format of the test.
The state had to do further analysis to ensure the
tests were similar enough to previous years to growth scores
to be calculated. Ultimately, the state cautions though the state says,
(12:31):
hey be careful, the math scores are likely down due
to the format. That possibly is true, but the problem
is we're still not back up in Colorado to pre
COVID levels. And has Brian Kingsley, the little feckless leader
of Pooter School District Or has Jared polis As, anybody
ever came out and just done the Maya Kulpas said,
you know what we were wrong. We screwed kids up,
(12:53):
We screwed up this academics. We're fighting our best. And
I said, when the schools started going back into session
in twenty twenty one or so and three, I said,
these school districts need to come out with their plan
and say, here's what we're going to do, here's what
we're going to adjust, here's how we're going to do differently,
because we've cost the kids a year or two and
(13:14):
it's now time for us to really catch them up.
And here's the plan. And nobody ever released a comprehensive,
published plan about how they were going to make up
the stupid stay at home learning and sit in front
of an iPad. And Brian Kingsley still has a job,
and he's still the feckless little whiny man that he
always was, and you know, lying about mask and lying
about he had science behind him. But these people really
(13:36):
destroyed kids in their academics. And so let me put
this up. It's from chalkbeet dot org and the state
says a lot of the testing is probably on format,
and I know, I don't disagree, but the format can change,
et cetera. But the bottom line is still a very
bad trend. And whether it's a format of a test,
we're still not moving in the right direction when it
comes to academic growth and pre pandemic level is getting
(14:00):
back to post pandemic levels. And Jared pol Us, that's
a legacy that you you know, the legacy you get
to wear in Colorado. You know this guy, Jared. I
just I was thinking of this the other day talking
to friend. He's one of the second second, second, second
special session. They're having to fix the property tax thing,
try to, and I'm not sure they really want to.
(14:22):
They passed a couple of bills from the legislature, three
or four swipes of the apple, and we still don't
have property tax relief, and overcoming the repeal of the Gallagherment,
we still don't have that. And yet Jared is fully
pretty much the dictator of the state. Jared owns the
state as far as he owns the party. He owns
his Democrat colleagues and may be more progressive than him,
some people say, but you know, Jared righting the bus
(14:44):
here here, Jared's driving the bus here. And Jared is
such a poor leader that he can't even get real
tax relief measures property tax relief measures passed to a
legislature that he pretty much has carte blotch rule over.
What does that tell you about his leadership? And then
look at the academic scores that have happened under old
Jared because of his COVID COVID overreaction in his COVID dictatorship. So,
(15:09):
anybody nationally listening on this radio show, maybe you're in
town on business or vacation, or maybe you're listening on
the esteemed iHeart radio app Jared Polus does not have
a good track record. I asked this question earlier this
week and I mean it, and I'll put that as
a standing question. If anybody can tell me any great legacy,
great accomplishment, great improvement that Jared Polus, in his almost
(15:31):
six years now of office has ever has made in
the state, please step to the front of the line,
because Jared's a list of accomplishments are really few and
far between. I mean, I'm trying to think of one
big measure, one big thing that he's done. We have
Chew Choo train, he wanted when he campaigned, he wanted
chew choo trains. Not any closer to chew choo train,
(15:52):
but a set still a mess. Yeah, somebody name it.
The academics in the state of Colorado still not looking good.
They're even gone down since Charit is in office. And
so I just throw that out there and put that
seat in there, because every once in a while somebody
will pop up and say, oh, jaredtt wants to be
the president. He'd be a great candidate. He'd be an
awful candidate. And take my advice. Nationally, your Democrats, don't
(16:15):
you would not want this. This track record here is
also the track record is not good. All right, let
me put this story up, especially if you're a parent,
you want to see how your kids are doing. Here's
another bit of this chalkbootbeat dot org story. Sixth, seventh
and eighth graders had slightly higher rates of students meeting
exceptions for the language art tests. So that's good and
(16:38):
six raders improvement is now is looking better. It's the
mathematics of the high school. The high school kids were
the ones that a couple of years ago were really
pre really harmed most by the COVID shutdown the elementary kids.
Some of the younger elementary kids weren't even in school then,
so you can't. But so the high school numbers are
(16:58):
reflective of what during COVID, and we're still a seven
point drops in this last year. Just shows that, as
you know mathematics, it just keeps going and going, and
once you're about nineteenth grade, if you don't get it,
you're gonna you better get it because it's just going
to keep building on itself. It's really interesting to see
the numbers. The headline on this story at chalkbeat are
(17:20):
a little bit misleading. The headlines say test results, so
continued recovery and math gains, and then yet you dive
into the meat of the story and it shows that
math has declined among high schoolers. So the headlines might
be a little bit more optimistic than it should be.
But as a parent, as your kid gets back to school.
This is from chalkbet dot org. It is the state
(17:41):
of the Colorado education system based on some standardized testing. Now,
don't get me wrong, I'm not a huge standardized test guy.
I know that it is a measure. I think it's
one of the only measures, but My problem is when
you have the standardized test is your only reflection, you
start teaching to the test, and therefore you don't teach
the basic common sense principles because it's not on the test.
(18:04):
And I had a teacher the kids today. If you've
seen your kids write it, they write as if they're
in a It could be hieroglyphics on on a cave.
Sometimes they're print and there's no cursive taught. And I
asked my son's teacher in about seventh grade. Sixth grade
started the middle school up, and I said, do you
guys work on penmanship? I make him work on it
at home, but do you ever work on that? Because
(18:25):
they give him an iPad, they don't have to write much.
And she says, no, we don't. I said, could you?
Why didn't you add that part of your class? She goes,
I can't add stuff to my class. I said, a
weekly lesson on penmanship, maybe a little extra credit for
some penmanship. And she told me. The teacher told me,
she goes, it's not on the test. We only teach
the things on the test, And therefore we have a
bunch of kids that if they needed to write a
(18:46):
hostage note, back to their parents. Most parents wouldn't be
able to read the thing. He's like, I don't know something.
He's doing something. I guess he's on vacation, myrtle. You
wouldn't know what to do anyway. Good to have you
here on the radio show. Up. I'll put this up
on my Facebook page, Facebook dot com slash lakeyfanpage. Facebook
dot com slash Jimmy Lakey fan page. The tweeter is
my name, Jimmy Leakey. The truth Social is my name,
(19:07):
Jimmy Lakey. My phone numbers eight six six, triple eight
fifty four forty nine, eight six six, triple eight fifty
four to forty nine. Being a bonny bury your saddle.
I'll talk to you about it, I really will. Everybody.
Good morning to you, Good morning Colorado. Six hundred k
col All right, ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the show.
(19:45):
Goodn't I have you here? It's a leaky on the radio,
Jimmy Lakey to be precise, six hundred K, cool, pleasured,
pleased and thrilled. Let's switch gears from some of the
topics we normally hit. And I don't know if you followed.
This is a big story for those that follow it,
but those who didn't didn't know what it meant. There's
an app called Telegram out there and the CEO of
(20:09):
the app Telegram, it's a social media time communication app
that this is the founder of that company. The ceo
it was arrested at the Paris airport this past weekend,
and some people say that this is the French cracking
down on free speech. There's even speculation that, hey, if
they can go after they can go after his name
(20:30):
is Pavel. If they can go after Pavel Drov, then
they go after Elon Musk. Lock them up. I don't
know if there's a correlation, not exactly sure the charges,
But let me bring in Jason Sheppard. He's the founder
of a social media platform called Wimken and also the
Fentanyl Test is donating twenty percent of all wimcan platform
(20:51):
profit and twenty percent of sales proceeds to the Trump
campaign for its efforts and reelection. But let me bring
in he's got a social media platform kind of understands
the world that Pavel Drov lives in and Elon Musk
lives in. Jason Sheppard, welcome back to the show.
Speaker 2 (21:06):
Thank you so much. For having me. It's always a pleasure.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Well, let's dive in what happened and what are they
charging Pavel d Rob and the telegram guy. The telegram guy,
what are they charging him with?
Speaker 2 (21:17):
Well, so I haven't actually seen this morning, but they
haven't till today the twenty eighth. Obviously, France is certainly
ahead of us in terms of time zone. But so
essentially what they detained him for was for an investigation
and the fact that they were being let's say, elusive
to you know, coop with some European authorities in France.
(21:39):
Authorities in first and foremost, France is extremely hardcore. Right now.
There's a gentleman by the name of Pieri Brittin that
we've actually received letters from. He's the one that sends
musk letters all the time demanding you must take this
down or you have to change this. You're you know,
have to come up with different moderation tools to take
this down from misinformation. If not, we're going to find
(22:01):
you ten percent of your annual global revenue. So this
is coming from there first and foremost. But my understanding
is the investigation is for the very lack of moderation
that's on Telegram and the fact that there is and
this is true. You know, I've not seen it myself
because I'm not searching for these types of things, but
there is a cesspool on Telegram due to the lack
(22:21):
of moderation in terms of child pornography, human trafficking, trafficking cells,
child sex trafficking cells, they call them channels on there.
And also there's you know, a huge illicit drug market.
So you know, if have al Dorov knows about these things,
which I believe he does and is not trying to
(22:42):
change that, there's a very good chance that these charges
are going to stick and this man's going to sit
in prison for a very long time, and it could
definitely stem to more of the Telegram's you know, executive leaders.
Speaker 1 (22:53):
The voice of Jason Shepperd and founder of the Womkins
social media platform and commenting on pav to row as
the rest in France who the Telegram social media platform.
So it's fascinating, you know. Evon Musk has called for
the release of Pavel Durov and said this is a
violation of free speech or an attack on free speech.
(23:14):
What do you think of the Elon Musk saying let
the guy go.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
Well, you know, first and foremost, especially as a you know,
individual that could offers free speech to the world and
has fought for such, you know, the first instinct would be, yes,
this is a complete violation. And you know, I'm ninety
nine percent on that train, so to speak. But you know,
we just have to see, really what's there when it
comes down to it. Now, I'm at the point where
(23:39):
I think these leaders would probably even try to plant stuff.
They would lie. They don't want this app to be
in existence because of the place where people can tell
the truth. They can you know, go against the narrative.
And you know, we saw first and foremost Jimmy with
with ourselves, you know, right, And we launched in September
of twenty twenty. By January twenty one, we were banned
by the apps. We were blamed for the alleged in directions.
(24:02):
So you know, there these people do this. We had
nothing that we should ever should have been banned for
first and foremost, and then even more pushed back. Once
we actually won our eight months fight against uh Apple
and Google Play, we got back in the app stores
in September of twenty one. Two months later, the House
Select Committee on January sixth, came in and tried to
(24:23):
get a shut down and you know, demanded to have
every piece of information on every one of our users
on our platform, which we did not cooperate against. So
you really have to when you go through that, you
don't trust anybody, I can tell you. And it must
goes through that on every single day, just because he
allows people to say what they want to say. So
I just hope that there's nothing like that on Telegram
(24:43):
for any further and that they've cleaned that up and
then this can go away today.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
Jason Shepard is my guest. He's the founder of whom
Can social media platform. I'll tell you how to access
that because as you can tell, there's been an on
and again off again the relationship with that app store
because they don't like the women. So you might w
I M m KAYI N you can look it up yourself.
We'll give you a link here in just a minute, Jase,
let me ask you, speaking of social media guys, we've
(25:10):
many of us know that under Jack Dorsey and then
Mark Zuckerberg, many of us were censored and called conspiracy
theorist in fake news on the Twitter platform. Under Dorsey,
and the Zuckerberg's Facebook page pages. Yesterday we were letter
was released from Mark Zuckerberg to the Congress and basically said,
I kind of screwed up here. We censored people, We
(25:32):
did not allow free thought. We we did the government's bidding.
We were pressured by the White House or of the
Biden and Harris administration, the FBI. We were pressured to
do some things even about the Hunter Biden laptop, that
we shouldn't have done. We won't do them again. What
did you think of that? Zuckerberg? Maya Kulpa and any
guests on why it happened? Why now? Why is he
kind of coming clean? Now? Does it mean anything?
Speaker 2 (25:55):
Well, I'll tell you this, timing is everything. So it
is pretty interesting to see that you know right now
that this is happening to where you know we're what
sixty eight eight I believe, So it it's certainly something
that helps you know the Republican side of things are
conservatives to where you know we we know that we
have been shut down on media social media for the
(26:15):
last oh geez, probably going on twelve years, maybe even
a little bit more than that, and we've all been
called conspiracy theorists, for this. So the timing is definitely interesting.
It certainly helps Republicans, but you know, I think you
just have to start start telling the truth at this
point in time. And I believe personally, I think that
every single social media owner right now thinks that Trump
(26:37):
is going to win this election. And when that happens,
you want to be on his good side, because I'm
telling you, he's going to come scorce Earth and you know,
come back at these individuals, especially try to repeal Section
two thirty of the American's Decency Act, which doesn't allow
us to take any you know, post down and such
that the least aren't you know, criminal in nature, because
(26:58):
women can already adopted that years back when we first
in twenty twenty. You know, our policy is to only
censor any type of pornography, nudity, and any criminal acts
on our platform. That's the only thing we think should
be censored. So I think that realistically, they're trying to
align theirselves to be okay with Trump, especially when you
see X you know, doing as well as it is
right now, and not in terms of financially, but in
(27:20):
terms of how popular it is, and you know, you're
seeing a I forget what they call them, I'm sorry,
where they sit down and do the Uh, let's just
say Trump's interview with Musk is easier to say that
got two hundred and seventy million views or listens. So,
you know, I think that also is a little bit
of a threat to Facebook and Meta and they're a
(27:41):
little bit you know, let's say envious at this point
in time that they have that relationship with Trump. So
I think that's probably the only aspect I can see
is why the motivation was to do that yesterday?
Speaker 1 (27:51):
Yeh. Jason Shepherd, founder of wim can social media. Jason,
are you back on the app store now? And if
folks want to find wim can, what do where do
they go and what will they find when they get there?
What do they need you for?
Speaker 2 (28:05):
Yeah, so we are. We've been back on the app
store since September of twenty one. They've taken us down
one other time before, but that was only for about
two weeks. But what you'll find is you'll find basically
a free speech version of Facebook. You know, we have
a lot more than X offers, we have way more
than truth offers. You'll find essentially that you can go
live do your shows, podcasts, or even stream from any
(28:27):
device if you're on the scene at a local or
you know, breaking news story, but you can stream for
four hours proposed. You can upload up to one hundred
gigabyte videos, which is a huge video, but you could
pretty much put upload your higher podcasts, groups, pages, Marketplace.
You can pay users on the platform for anything you're purchasing.
(28:47):
I mean, it's really honestly, very very advanced and something
that the world needs. So if anybody wants to check
us out, they can certainly do that. We are on
Apple and Google Play and also at Wimkin dot com.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
W I M ki N. Jason Shepherd Founder. I appreciate
your perspective on the Pabald Rob situation the Elon Muska
news yesterday. Thank you very much, Jason Shepherd, Wimken, w
I m k I N. You can find him at
the Google Store, the App store, the Google Play and
all that fun stuff. The interesting social media network. If
you looking for that option and you don't trust Zach, well,
(29:21):
I'm still baffled by that thing. The timing of it
is just very very interesting. All right. I gotta take
this break. Ladies and gentlemen, please stand by, we will
come back and to continue this morning's radio broadcast six
hundred kcul don't go anywhere all right here, We are
(30:12):
glad to have you here on the radio show. Jimmy
is my name? Great line up, a guest still coming
up today. Everybody wanted to confirm today, Melkay podcaster or extraordinaire,
gonna be with us, Steve Laffy with us next hour,
The Barefoot Gunman, Steve and Wilifri are going to be
the show. Michael. Let's Gretchen Walllert's going to be on
(30:33):
the program. Pastor Mark Blitz. I mean, we've got a
cast of characters extraordinaire. Don't miss a portion of it
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(32:02):
All right, I've got this story and it kind of
annoys me. It really, Okay, a lot annoys me. The
ten most acceptable reasons for a phone call to in
twenty twenty four. Have you noticed we live in the
world of it. It's always a text message. Everybody's got
text and I text. I do plenty of texting as well.
(32:23):
But there's times that I've thought, I said, well, should
I call or should I text? Is this a texting
or is this a calling? I don't know. Well, they
surveyed two thousand people and they found out that well,
first of all, the poll said the average person only
spends five and a half minutes on the phone per day.
Five and a half minutes on the phone per day,
that's the average. How some of you work in different
(32:44):
jobs and you have to do more. The most acceptable
reason for calling someone instead of texting them, they've had
to come a young people hate text and so they
pull A recent poll of twenty three twenty three percent
of people under thirty five never answer their phone, So
if you're calling them, you better have a good reason.
They're not going to answer it. You're going to send
you to voicemail. Let me say that again. Twenty three
(33:06):
percent of people under the age of thirty five never
answer their phone. Two thousand people ask the name the
most acceptable reasons for someone calling them instead of texting them,
And now the list of reasons is not that dramatic,
so it's kind of it's a loss. Like number number one,
people can call me for general chat, so you just
(33:28):
want to catch up, no, and you know they're not working.
But if you're under the age of thirty five, you
may want a text first and say hey, can I
call you? Do you have time? Now I do that
with my son, I said, Well, my said, I's got
classes and I can't keep up with that in football
practice at the university. So I say, hey, give me
a call today when you get a chance, okay, Dad,
And usually randomly he'll call. Sometimes you'll call you around four.
(33:51):
Isn't it weird that you have to have a list
now to know when you're supposed to call someone versus
when you're supposed to chat with someone. I'm telling you.
Sometimes I'm like, can we just pick up the damn
phone and solve the problem instead of texting all day
on one issue. These hundred thirty five year olds, you
need to understand that texting is not the most proficient
way to solve your issues. Yeah. I have grown adults
(34:11):
that won't answer the phones either. They prefer you to
leave a voicemail or text him Yeah, I'm I, We'll talk.
I'll be back now, SOARX six hundred case he w