Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
What are you drinking today for Thursday? Thursday? Yeah, today I got
something special. I love to hearthat. What do we got? This
is a diet crystal pepsi. Nowthere's no carbonation or sugar or flavoring.
Quite frankly, is that what that'sall about? Honestly? I bought this
off of eBay for five hundred andfifty seven dollars. It tastes just like
(00:21):
water. Yeah, well that'll getyou. What was crystal pepsi like nineteen
eighty five discontinued? Let's look thatup. I'm gonna guess nineteen ninety six
is when it was discontinued. That'smy guess. I wasn't that pepsi one?
Are you getting that confused with pepsione? I forgot about pepsi one?
Yeah, pepsi one. Yeah,you're right, it's a nineties thing.
(00:42):
What was the pepsi that he talksabout in the Back to the Future.
Crystal pepsi was here for such ashort time. It's pepsi free,
he said. Pepsi free was theeighties one? How many different types of
pepsi? Did pepsi think that makingwould be a good idea Pepsi one.
Yeah, pepsi one, one calorie, a one calorie soda. Again,
(01:07):
I have to ask why, Wow, way to go, guys. You
figured out how to get it downto one calorie. I legitimately think,
forget the zeros, forget forget youknow, the Coca Cola zero, the
pepsi zero or whatever. We gotthe one calorie. Now, that's impressive.
How you were able to make thatwork. I have no idea.
(01:30):
I'm drinking a mountain dew, soI'm patronizing the pepsi people anyway. But
cheers to you. Cheers to youout there. M h. By the
way, the Ivy Happy Hours lateron in the show, Yeah, I'm
gonna learn about some of the greatdeals in their wine and Spirits department Wine
and Spirits section. Always love talkingabout our friends in highv all around the
metro area here in Omaha, andwe want you to save a lot of
(01:51):
money. So stick around. ThatI think is in the four o'clock hour.
In the five o'clock hour, we'llbe talking to Tony Taylor from your
Amaha area Highve stores. So bya boom, did you know Matt that
there is a trial going on inNew York heard about it. Did you
know that they were going to bedeliberating for any length of time? Sounds
(02:15):
like the White Trials go usually.You know how long they've been going at
this officially, well, not officially, it's approximate. But guess how how
long we've been deliberating at this point? Thirteen point five hours, ten hours,
sixteen minutes, saint counting. Okay, I don't think they counted the
time that they were being reread stuffthis morning, because remember they sent a
(02:37):
couple of notes because they needed tobe reread some of the instructions and they
needed to be reread some of thetestimony. What are we even doing with
the procedurals of this? Have Icomplained about this enough? Feel free to
shut me down, Matt, please, please do Did you know there was
a colorless Coca Cola released only inthe Soviet Union in nineteen forty six?
Eh, there's the Soviets again,trying to make everybody seek Marshall of Soviet
(03:00):
Union Georgie Zukov was the one whoasked Coca Cola to make this specific kind
of beverage. It only lasted theone year. Did anybody die at the
end of it not that I knowof. Well, keep looking anyway,
Bah, back to the uh,back to this thing, right. Guess
who's hanging around the courthouse today.Rudy Giuliani, you're you're kind of warm.
(03:24):
Uh, the pillow guy. No, no, no, but you're
also kind of warm. Actually.Oh. John Voight No, John Voight.
Yeah, he's part of that wholeAgelina Jolie's dead. Yeah, the
guy void, John Vod, theguy from National Treasure. Yeah, the
guy who bit the pencil and theneventually Kramer. No, if he's there,
(03:45):
nobody knows, nobody cares. I'mtalking about a guy. It might
be quite substantial that he's there.Oh, it might be quite substantial that
he's there, more substantial than JohnVoy he is. This would have this
would have implications. I mean,I'm wrap in some trivia in here because
you can't help, but just tomake fun of what's going on here.
As the jury continues to deliver guyit is a man, okay, and
(04:08):
his appearance nearby, he's outside thecourthouse. His appearance could lead people to
start making some conclusions about the futureof this country. Wow, he could
be Uh, he could have quitea substantial role if you will in the
future. So he's he's a heavyhitter in politics. Okay, you're now,
you're moving. Okay, you're movingnow, John Fetterman, No,
(04:31):
No, if John Fetterman showed up, what would happen? Was I warmer
or colder? With that way?Cold? I mean you're ice cold now.
I mean you're in the right realmof possibility. But come on now,
man very gold water. No,I feel like I'm getting colder.
Yeah. They think, what isDonald Trump? What has Donald Trump yet
to do? What hasn't he doneyet? I think there's one thing that
(04:57):
generally a person would be doing aboutright now if they were going to be
running for president in November. Oh, he needs a VP. Yeah.
And who do you think is outsidethe courthouse today? Oh? Boy,
is it mister air John Waynes himself. You got it? I knew it.
Doug Eb Doug Eb. Doug Burghamis spotted outside the courthouse, where
(05:20):
the jury is continuing to deliberate.He is hanging out with Trump campaign spokesperson
Jason Miller. A Trump campaign officialalso said that Bergham has been hanging in
the courthouse whold room. No detailsas to why he is there. Other
than the fact that he's just hangingout supporting his bro Now, they didn't
say that specifically, I said that, but you know what I'm saying,
(05:42):
why else would he be there,Matt the smoke is getting thicker in the
Doug Bergham waters. That didn't makesense that the smoke is coming from the
Doug Bergham fire a little bit harderthan maybe some others. And why is
that important? Because whoever is goingto be the VP is going to be
handed the key to the White Housefrom the Republican Party after four years of
(06:02):
Donald Trump, even if the leftwants to make you think that he's not
going to actually leave in four years, which is insane. They just they're
using fear mongering to try to getpeople not to vote for him. And
that's okay. The rights doing thesame thing to the left. It's just
the world that we're in right now. But I tell you what, I
tell you what, Doug eb isthe president of the United States. Somebody
(06:25):
better get those air John Wayne's ready. He's going to bring back the whole
you know, hey, you knowwhat, forget electric vehicles, Let's get
back to some real horse power.HM. Free horses for everyone. It
would be good for the environment.I'd be in Why don't we get back
to that. It take longer toget places, But I'd ride a horse
from home to work, wouldn't youif somebody said, hey, I'll bring
(06:48):
you a horse and we did,and then we have like a stable or
a corral nearby that we can,you know, put the horse in a
stall while we're at work. Theycan eat and roll around and be comfortable
until it's time to go home.That's a tough one, I wouldn't.
I mean, are we saying thatI'm on the horse or is someone riding
me and I'm in Is someone ridingthe horse and then I'm in the carriage?
(07:10):
Are we talking horse and carriage?No? No, no, you
think they ride horses and carriages inNorth Dakota. Come on, man,
you get your your cowboy boots andyou step in that stirrup and you settle
that horse, ride that pony.So I don't have any chance to,
like, look at my phone.I'm not gonna be listening to podcasts or
anything. I'm gonna be bouncing upand down the whole time I'm gonna get
(07:33):
here. It's gonna be a fourhour trip to get to work. I'm
gonna be all sweaty. It won'tbe four hours. What's the term when
you get here and bow? Mylegs are gonna be bowed? Yeah,
well, I mean it depends onif you can stretch well after you got
off the horse. I'm gonna beI'm gonna be limping in here with bowed
legs, all sweaty after a fourhour horse ride. It's not gonna be
(07:57):
four hours. The horse can gofaster than that might be, like fifteen
minutes. Haven't been able to checkmy phone since when I left at three
in the morning. Ah, now, you're just being a big baby.
He'll never make it up there inNorth Dakota. Hey, in North Dakota
they ride horses. In South Dakotathey shoot dogs. Which one would you
rather live in? Two nineteen isthe time, Hey, you want to
(08:20):
talk Dougie Bee, you want totalk about these deliberations which are still happening.
You can call in at four htwo, five, five, eight
to eleven ten. I'll give yousome more of the things that have happened
today in court, even though it'smostly deliberations. Next on news radio eleven
ten, KFAB and He says,I'll take a tab or I'll have a
tab, but the fountain jerk doesn'tgive him one because he hadn't ordered anything
(08:43):
yet. Get it, Tab soda, that incredibly eighties thing? Yeah,
I get it. What happened totab? Wasn't that a coke product?
Wasn't tab a coke thing? Andthen he orders a pepsi free, which
they also just look at him likehe's weird. It was. It wasn't
introduced until nineteen sixty three, andit was discontinued in twenty two. Tab.
Yeah, who saw a tab inthis century? Who would have guessed
(09:03):
that tab was? That's got tobe in Europe? Only there's no way
it was here. We would haveseen it. I haven't seen it.
I've never seen it in my entirelife. Huh. And I like to
think that I'm a very unhealthy sodadrinker, so I don't. I don't
even know what we're talking about anymore. That's it. That that, my
friend, that is messed up.I mean not to pretend like I know
what I'm talking about when it comesto this stuff, because obviously I'm a
(09:24):
little younger than some people. Butyou'll like to hear that in nineteen ninety
two, there was a TAB clear, of course there was, because you
know, we can't just make thesoda everybody likes. You gotta make news
soda to get people. The onetime that worked is Baja Blast. Okay,
Mountain do Baja Blast. That isa that is iconic, absolutely iconic.
(09:46):
You like Baja Blast. I havetried a few SIPs of it and
I thought it was nice. Yeah, for like the first in your little
machine over there. Does it tellyou when Baja Blast became a thing?
Because it was in Taco Bell untillike, and you can only get it
at Taco Well until like the lastcouple of years, which I thought was
like, what a great marketing eploy. You can only get this delicious soda
in one place. The last iterationof TAB before it went extinct in twenty
(10:09):
twenty, it was living its lifedown in Mexico, New Zealand and Spain
under the name TAB fabulous. No, I see, that's what I'm talking
about. When was the last timeanybody in North America saw this thing?
Not in my lifetime, and ifit was, it was before I could
remember anything. Baja Blast launched intwo thousand and four, Dang, I'm
getting old. I remember when thathappened though, And then finally, like
(10:30):
within the last couple of years,they were just like, you know what,
We're gonna go ahead and just letthe public have some of this because
Taco Bell isn't paying us enough moneyjust to keep it there. There you
go. Yeah, so there sheblows the thirtieth of May. Alrighty,
it was just pretty interesting. Cloudsare getting a little darker out there is
your forecast column for some rain herein the next couple hours. It is
possible, and actually thunderstorms this eveningare likely. Thunderstorms and rain and thunderstorms
(10:58):
likely. They've updated it to mainlybefore ten pm. It used to say
eight pm, but they've updated thisforecast, and so basically the window here
we're looking at in the most likelywindow would be four pm to ten pm.
Rain and thunderstorms are possible. Soshe's not just gonna start, you
know, exploding here in the nextcouple of minutes, is what you're saying.
Yeah, my radar over here istelling me very similar to what you
(11:22):
just said. Also, high temperatureyesterday under seventy seeing that is it around
seventy or under seventy four tomorrow.Yeah, high temperature. I'm seeing a
high of seventy one tomorrow, soit will be a little bit cooler.
There are thunderstorms in the vicinity ofFremont right now. Okay, so it's
common. She's knocking on the door, and I don't mind, because you
know, we've had like three orfour solidays in a row here. You
(11:43):
know what I'm saying, right,you got rid of that drought. No
more drought. Speaking of drought,we have a little bit of a drought
in information because while the jury inthe Donald Trump trial in New York City
continues to deliberate, we are leftto know nothing of what they're talking about.
Again, they made a movie calledTwelve Angry Men. It's literally all
taking place basically in one room,the jury deliberation room, and twelve guys
(12:09):
who we are led to believe areangry, are talking about a case and
deliberating on a case, and it'san amazing ninety minutes. Well, what
happens to the rest of the peoplethat are involved in this case? They
literally just sit around inside the courtroom, kicked back, relaxed. My maybe
they're giving each other massages. Imean that'd be I'd watch that. Could
(12:30):
you imagine? What? What doyou mean? I don't know. Susan
Nicholas has given Donald Trump a massage. Who the heck is Susan Necklace?
It's one of his one of theattorneys. That's not a real person.
It is. You gotta look itup. It's spelled weird. It's not
necklace. It's Nicholas. See youknow what that is? What that's a
(12:52):
sign of the matrix. It's aglitch. None of this is real.
Susan necklace. That's an auto generatedname. Neicholas. It's not neckless neck
he less. That e in themiddle of everything is doing a lot of
lifting. Anyways, it doesn't matter. It's a joke. Nobody's massage on
each other. But you know what, I would have brought up a deck
of bicycle cards. How long arethey going to be in there? They
have no idea? And at whatpoint today are they going to be like,
(13:15):
okay, knock, knock, knock. You guys done yet, and
they're gonna be like now and thenthey're gonna be like, okay, time
to go home for the day.How late are they going to let them
do this? And why did theystart nine to thirty to reread the stuff
today, because that's what happened today. If you, if you you don't,
if you do not remember what theday was supposed to look like.
At nine point thirty, they weregoing to talk specifically about the rereading of
(13:39):
the testimony and the rereading of theinstructions that they needed to have done and
when they did that. After that, the jury then went back and did
their deliberations, which we are continuingright now. But as far as the
deliberations and themselves are concerned, youwould have thought maybe they could start a
little bit earlier so we can geta little headstart on this thing so we
don't have to be there all day. But you know what, come see,
(14:00):
come saw. I have no ideawhat exactly or specifically is going on
uh in the jury room, andI wish I could tell you, But
my guess is they're talking about thecase, and maybe my theory, my
conspiracy theory, they're gonna go slowenough to where they're told to go home
and have to show back up tomorrow, get that extra day of pay,
and get into the weekend. Wouldn'tyou who's making them come to a decision,
(14:22):
right now anybody. Nobody's like,hey, deadline four pm today,
They're not doing that to them.Have we heard from another member of his
legal team, Johnny Wristwatch, getout of here, get get out here.
I actually think Todd blanche I thinkhis nickname is Johnny Wristwatch. Ah,
there you go. Always knows thetime. He sure does, he
sure does. Two twenty eight.You can call us four two five five
(14:45):
eight eleven ten. Email me Emoryat kfab dot com. On a Thursday
on news radio eleven ten, Kfab, the reporter they talk to about the
potential penalties essentially nothing but fines andmaybe probation to up to the rest of
is life in prison at the bigthe big prison in New York, That
that big one. Oh, likelike not one of those white collar ones.
(15:07):
Oh no, no, well,I mean it might be white collar,
I guess theoretically. But yeah.So it's like, well, thanks
for thanks for the information. They'rebub right, you literally told me nothing.
It could be anything if he's foundguilty. I got a problem with
the procedures. Is it okay ifI air the if I air these out?
(15:30):
Sure? Why not? Matt?It's important because I need you to
check me if I've I'm going toofar. I need you to check me.
I need you to like, askme questions as to how I feel
the way that I feel. Maybeinterject so I don't get off the rail
so much here, because people reallydon't like it when I get ultra animated
or very angry. And I'm gonnamake myself angry talking about this, So
it's up to you. I'm puttingthe burden on you. The Kimian check.
(15:54):
What do you uh? You knowI made some stuff for the eventuality
that you got a little bit toheat it? Oh? Yeah, like
what made some calm down music.Oh, I don't know if that's gonna
help me. Okay, okay,save that for later. Yeah, we'll
save that for when I get madabout something that doesn't matter. But according
to our our friend who just didthe news, it sounds like it may
not matter. Who the heck knowseven if guilty verdict could be Ah,
(16:15):
it's penalties nothing. Well, that'snice to know. Here's here's where I
start. Matt. Do you haveany idea whatsoever what the jury can and
cannot do within the realm of theirguilty or not guilty verdict? There's like
three things that could happen. They'reunanimously guilty and then he's guilty. Right,
They're not unanimously guilty, they're ahung jury. Or there could be
(16:37):
a like a mistrial, like somethingdeemed mistrial, all right, and that
doesn't necessarily have anything to do withthe jury except they have bad information or
something procedurally was done incorrectly. Whyis it so complicated to get to this?
Did you watch we talked about this. Did you watch Making a Murderer?
Did yep? Okay? So wouldyou say that that is a good
(17:00):
illustration of the questionable nature of ourjudicial system? Well, I'm not asking
you if if Stephen Avery did itor not. I'm just saying, does
that not give you some level oflike, Man, if that's the way
that this stuff goes down, I'mnot sure I can trust our judicial system
necessarily. Well, every situation isdifferent, Every case is different. I
do think that alarm bells were youknow, I think for my when when
(17:23):
I watched that, my biggest takeawayfrom there is is the interrogation tactics that
were used against Was it his nephew, Brendan Dascy. I just that just
broke my heart, you know.Uh. He was asking at the end
of that, when do we leavebecause I got to watch WrestleMania tonight.
Like he didn't understand what was goingon in those interrogations. He didn't understand,
(17:47):
no, and he was he was. Theoretically, it certainly seemed like
he was coaxed into saying things thathe didn't really understand. Sure, that's
part of the jujitsal process that I'mtalking about. It's exactly right. I
saw a video of a guy.I can't remember exactly where this was or
what this guy's name was, buthe was interrogated and they the two interrogators
had him and it was like hoursand hours and hours, and they wanted
(18:10):
him to confess to murdering his father, and they didn't stop. They kept
pestering him, They kept talking tohim, they kept pestering him, and
then they said, you're not cooperatingwith us, we'll kill your dog right
in front of you. Whoa theyhad his dog. We'll kill your dog
in front of you. If youdon't admit to killing your father because we
know you did it, that's horrifyingbecause if he does that, then that
(18:30):
changes the paperwork and the way thetrial goes. Because they have a confession
on their hands, right, they'lldo whatever it takes to get the confession.
Right. Yeah, Okay, turnsout his dad was still alive.
Oh so he admits to killing hisfather so they don't kill his dog.
He's going psychologically insane while in thisroom for hours with these two interrogators,
these officers of the law, thesedetectives who literally their entire thing isn't to
(18:53):
make him feel comfortable. It's like, my job has done if I can
get you to admit that you didthis, but he didn't do it,
didn't even exist. Obviously. Hesues the department and he was awarded nine
hundred thousand dollars in the settlement.The point is, those are some of
the tactics we're talking about in ourjudicial system. And it's kind of a
joke, isn't it, Because it'sall about the procedure. If they have
(19:14):
that confession, then the procedure changes. If they have something like legitimately material
that has legitimate smoking gun evidential proof, it changes the procedure. But when
they have things that are not necessarilyan immediate proof of guilt in this sort
of situation and the defendant says,I am not guilty of these charges.
(19:37):
We do what we are doing now, which is a six week long trial
where we have to find jurors,a jury of the defendants peers by the
way, who, by the way, who defines that does Donald Trump truly
have what we would consider peers?Same with a guy like oj Simpson,
right, incredibly controversial case. Arewe sure that jury was made up of
(20:00):
what you would call his peers?We're letting people who have absolutely no idea
about law. And again people aretelling me, Emory, there's a couple
of lawyers that are on this jury, people who have practiced law, were
pulled and made the jury. Theycould be of some assistance as to what
this world. Well, what ifthere was a jury and they didn't have
lawyers on the jury? Matt,do you think with any sort of confidence
(20:22):
that you could go into that deliberationroom after six weeks of this stuff and
know exactly what your job is todo, what you're supposed to remember,
what you're not supposed to remember,and what kind of things that you're specifically
looking for to try to administer guilton a person, to potentially put them
behind bars for the rest of theirlife. Well, that's why you got
to have a designated person to takenotes. If they would have just done
(20:45):
that, they would have been fine. Every group project, everyone has their
role. Somebody takes notes, somebodydoes the speaking, somebody takes the credit.
The foreman takes the credit. Right. No, but that's what I'm
saying though. It's an overtly complicatedprocess. Yet the people who are making
(21:07):
the biggest and most important decisions inthe entire thing are people who are generally
unqualified to translate or interpret legal easein a very convolct Does half of the
people talking about this case have noidea what the charges are falsifying business records?
We talked about the breakdown, it'slike eleven invoices, it's twelve false
(21:30):
ledgers, right, Like ledgers thatwere incorrect incorrectly reported. Right. This
is like the kind of white colorcrime. It's not like this guy broke
into a bank, demanded one thousanddollars of money, got given one thousand
dollars of money, and then jumpedinto a getaway vehicle with another person and
drove off and hit That's not thekind of evidence we're talking about. Here
(21:51):
we're talking about something that is supposedto be smearing a man's reputation, while
talking about the way that his peoplewere reporting this stuff in his business records,
while he happened to be in acampaign for the presidency of the United
States of America. And despite allof the rumors that were going around to
try to smear the man, hestill wins the election in twenty sixteen.
(22:12):
Right, and now that he's runningfor reelection, we have to rehash this
old story to try to take himdown before the American public gets a chance
to have their voices heard again.There's so much wrong with this, and
you know who is in charge here. Twelve people who have absolutely I'm not
going to say zero because I'm surethere's some smart people there, and there
(22:33):
are two people who've practiced law.I'm not saying they're morons, but these
are the people that are deciding whetheror not this guy either goes to jail
or is found guilty and maybe isnot necessarily disqualified for running for office,
but certainly is going to have amuch harder time running for office if he's
convicted of this. Right, it'stwelve people who you are having to repeat
directions to because your state's rules saythey can't have a copy in the deliberating
(22:56):
room. That's the kind of proceduralthat we're dealing with here. I have
no idea how we can be sucha forward thinking country and have a judicial
system that so often gets it wrong. San Stephen Avery in his first conviction,
and then all the question marks abouta second conviction, which you have
every reason to believe if you ifyou know about the evidence, he did
(23:17):
it. But you have all thequestions in the world because it was proven
that his first conviction before that hewas imprisoned illegally. He didn't actually do
what they accused him of doing.That happens all the time. How are
we this advance as a country?And this is the judicial system that we
have, and the fact that itcan be weaponized against certain people based on
what they're doing at a different time. Donald Trump is certainly not in court
(23:37):
today or for the last six weeksif he's not running for president. I
will die on that hill. Ifyou have some thoughts on this, you
can call this a four h twofive, five, eight eleven ten or
email Emory at kfab dot com.Please don't make me do another roberts of
Nero impersonation that hurt my throat yesterday. But more on the way. On
these radio eleven teen KFAB we weretalking also about the eighties and Tab soda.
(24:00):
Matt. You told me Tab wasstill being made in a variety of
ways around the world, but inthe United States it became rareer and rare
as we were, you know,reaching our soda drinking ages. It seems
to be about accurate, right,Yeah, And I'd like to say that
I don't have that information in frontof me anymore because I closed that tab.
How'd you do that? How didyou do that? Well? Robbie
(24:22):
mailed in and said, my grandmotherwas diabetic. So in the seventies,
TAB was considered a wonderful thing forpeople with that condition because tab was sugar
free and it was advertised as lessthan one calorie. Did that mean it
had like zero point six calories?How does that even work? Can you
have a half of a calorie?I'm sure some lawyers were involved. Anyway,
He says, around nineteen ninety seven, I saw a six pack of
(24:44):
TAB at Albertson's at Soda Creek,California. It was a nostalgia buy.
I purchased a six pack. Igot home and drank one can and then
another cannon. By the time Ihad later gotten to the third can,
I couldn't even finish it. Itwas so horrible. But he drank two
cans, So it means one ofthose things. Yeah, and then you're
just like, well, I'll justpower through this. Dude. GM loving
Omah sent in this says my thirdgrade teacher in the early seventies had a
(25:08):
storage closet in the classroom full ofTab pop. She was overweight. Maybe
it was diet I don't remember,but that was in Minnesota. So tab
was like if you were wanted todrink soda, like it was the answer
if I mean, I guess dietsoda was kind of a new idea,
wasn't it, because he really neededthe sugar and the soda pop right back
in the day. Yeah, Sotab was the first diet soda. It
(25:30):
was like the first alternative to yourregular soda. It was my interpretation.
It's interesting though, it's interesting.Anybody who's got more tab memories, you
can email in Emory at kfab dotcom. Also justin emailed in. As
far as what we were talking aboutbefore and said there was an interrogation once
and the person being interrogated had agunshot wounded their head and the police didn't
(25:51):
notice he had a bullet in hisbrain, and they didn't notice. Nobody's
perfect. Oh boy, like thatis a mess, an absolute mess.
All right. Well, it's atwo fifty four Emery Songer here with you.
Excited to be with you if youwant to chat with us about tab
or anything else, including the DonaldTrump trial and my complaints about the procedures
(26:12):
as we wait potentially for a verdictat some point here today, we'll do
that, we'll debate more of that, you can call in it. Four
h two five five eight eleven ten. Four h two five five eight eleven
ten. Always happy to chat withyou about anything that's on your mind.
And as we gear up for alittle bit of rain, as more and
more people are letting us know thatit's raining and the rain is moving into
(26:33):
the Omaha area, we'll keep youupdated on that as well. So stick
around live and in live in coloron news Radio eleven ten KFAB