Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
So in my family, we waited till the night of Christmas,
or my mom waited to put all the presents into
the tree. And to me, looking back now as a kid,
like it really gave that sense of like magic with Santa,
Like you go to bed with no presence into the
tree and then you wake up Christmas morning and it's
all there. Yeah, and that way you knew he came,
and it was just really like it added to that
(00:29):
idea of Santa.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Yeah, but I mean having some you mean the reality, yeah, Santa, but.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
Having some gifts under the tree I think creates some
kind of anticipation there that makes it even oh yeah,
a little hotter there, you know. Four seven text us
seven seven zero three one. Welcome back to the Jim
Kolber Show right here on Real Radio one oh four
point one. Thanks for joining us. We appreciate that a
lot of chair. Thanks for tuning in. I'm Jim. There's
Deb Hello. Jack is here as well. Yeah, so is
(00:59):
our boy Ross. I'm excited for this. All right, let's
do what'd you do that's new?
Speaker 4 (01:07):
What'd you do that? What did you do that Neday?
Speaker 1 (01:12):
And then something to do?
Speaker 5 (01:14):
I need something.
Speaker 3 (01:17):
That's right Closman Law k L A U S m
an Law dot com offices right there in winter Park
four oh seven nine one seven seventeen eighteen car crash
called Klosman. We will hear from Glenn on Thursday for
Colbert Corp. But this week it is a Santa Clausman.
So tune in on Thursday as Glenn brings in Christmas
trivia and gives out twenty five dollars public skift cards
(01:38):
to people who choose it. Right, All right, what you do?
That's new if you're just tuning in new to the program.
Every Tuesday at four o'clock, one of the members of
the show will choose something for the other members to watch, read,
or listen to. We will do that, reconvene on that
following Tuesday. We'll review that and then move on to
the next member. We we will have no next member
because this is the last week of the show before
the beginning of the year. We'll reboot this when we
get back. So, Rass, you're the last one of twenty
(02:01):
twenty five. What do you have for its big dog Man?
Speaker 4 (02:03):
I really hope I, you know, nailed it at the
end of this Year's what you do that's new because
I chose my favorite content creator so far that the
Internet has spewed at me. And it's not a skateboarder,
it's not a comedian.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
It's actually it's not well produced. It's not well produced.
It's very honest with you.
Speaker 4 (02:24):
It's dead pan and pretty mooring when it comes to
a when it comes to a charming person.
Speaker 3 (02:30):
The delivery aspect of this is very low five.
Speaker 4 (02:33):
It is not anything other than exactly what it is,
which is opinions and takes that you may have never
heard or thought about before, because it's on stuff you'd
never really considered having a take on things that I
absolutely have watched and went, oh my god, I do
agree with that. When he brought up about how special effects,
(02:53):
I brought this up to you guys. He was the
one that put it in my ear that special effects
used to be one of the biggest driving forces of
movies in the eighties and nineties and even in the
early two thousands, and then when special effects plateaued, well,
that is that's just one of the many reasons why
movies aren't as popular or part of pop culture as
they want.
Speaker 3 (03:13):
Like the magic is gone.
Speaker 4 (03:14):
There were I sent you guys just one video to
start off with, and then kind of wanted you guys
to just scroll on his page and see all these
different takes. Here's here's one thing that I enjoyed him
posting that made me laugh, and this is an interesting thought.
He said, the key to understanding capitalism is that dog
treats have shapes like in a steak, even though that
(03:37):
means nothing to the dog.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
Yeah right.
Speaker 4 (03:41):
Thoughts like that that are always original, are always his,
and he is just a fountain of different thoughts that
I find interesting and dare I say, pretty intelligent.
Speaker 5 (03:52):
And by the way that he he's talking about is
Jason K.
Speaker 3 (03:56):
Pargain. That's p A R G I N. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (03:59):
So on Instagram it's at Jason K. Pargan, or you
can go to Jim Culbert Live and the link is
there on.
Speaker 3 (04:05):
The what did you Do?
Speaker 5 (04:05):
That's new pape And it's.
Speaker 3 (04:06):
Funny when you brought this guy up. I had been
kind of tuning in on this dude for about the
last three or four months. He just popped up in
my feet on Instagram, and because I watched his content
so much, I get more of his feed, So I
didn't follow him until last night when I tuned in
to watch the videos. Because I've always just gotten so
much of his content, I've never even thought to follow
the guy, but I did it last night, and he
had one of the most amazing ones. Outside The one
(04:29):
that I chose to watch was one i'd seen before,
and it's crazy and I think devil thing. It's fascinating.
But by the way, I think everybody should follow this guy.
I think he's also very brilliant, fun.
Speaker 4 (04:39):
And change your if your algorithm is just spewing like
the same stuff and it's boring, I really do recommend
following this Jason K. Pargan because it's a really good
follow You hear different thought, Jim, What was the one
that you watched?
Speaker 3 (04:54):
Is the one that he talks about the Day of
the Dead parades? Yes, right during the James Bond movies,
and then all of a sudden, that's a cultural phenomenon, right,
that that parade, the idea that did not exist until
the James Bond movie portrayed in the streets of New
Orleans or wherever it was.
Speaker 4 (05:10):
So I know exactly what you're talking about. So in Spector,
Day of the Dead Parade is the opening scene of
that movie, and the Mexico country of Mexico is like, yeah,
we'll do this. This is going to be great for tourism.
And then you come to find out is that like
there actually is no Day of the Dead parade. They
made that in the movie. And then Mexico off of
(05:32):
that interaction with Doublow seven in the movie, they went,
oh god, people are going to expect a parade now,
and now there's a parade. And then he kind of
peels back the curtain to a lot of corporate impacts
on our culture that we may not know that is
from a corporation a La Santa Claus and Coca Cola.
(05:54):
The reason why he has the red hat and the
big red nose and Burley our red rosy cheeks. That
was a huge part of Coca Cola's campaign way back
in the day.
Speaker 3 (06:05):
Did you find one you like that?
Speaker 2 (06:06):
I did. I found one that had one point three
million views, and it's about one of the things they
don't tell you in childhood.
Speaker 3 (06:14):
Oh really, And it's.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
About how you're gonna have to restart your life. You're
gonna have to start over again at some point.
Speaker 3 (06:20):
Oh wow, Yeah, I haven't seen that one.
Speaker 2 (06:22):
Yeah, it was see, what do you mean either through
divorce or through death, or through losing your job or
your career, your industry of vapurating. He talked about, yeah,
how many times he's had to remake himself again and
again and again. And it's something they don't tell you
about in childhood that listen, life isn't a single line trajectory. Yeah,
(06:43):
you're going to start that way, You're gonna think it's
going to go that way, and then life is going
to happen. And he talks about how, you know, he
went to college for radio broadcasting but ended up becoming fool. Yeah, exactly,
and after two years found out that the thing he
trained for was not the career for him, went and
did something else, built a multimillion dollar business, just to
(07:04):
watch that industry evaporate. Right, So then he had to
restart his life several times. And then he also mentions
that in that piece why KFC, Colonel Sanders is one
of his heroes, and he says, you know, to the
kids watching, you know, Colonel Sanders is not just a mascot,
He's not a logo. This is a man who was
sixty eight years old and living in his car who
(07:26):
had bounced from job to job and career to career,
basically had nothing left and ended up creating literally one
of the most iconic American businesses out there, exactly at
sixty eight years old, living out of his car. So
the idea is, you know, you can plan for stuff,
but be prepared because life is going to happen.
Speaker 3 (07:44):
That's a good one. I haven't seen that one. I'm
going to roll through this dude's content like crazy, Yeah,
what'd you find? This is really cool?
Speaker 5 (07:50):
And it's why he does a quick review on why
groundhog Day the movie.
Speaker 4 (07:56):
I was just about to say that how one, how
good is this take on groundhog Day?
Speaker 3 (08:01):
The minute, because I'm a giant fan of both movies.
The minute he says it, I'm like, this dude nailed it.
Speaker 5 (08:07):
He did, and it's so it's why groundhog Day is
a better Christmas movie and more of a better Scrooge
movie than Scrooge, both starring Bill Burl Murray and even
better then It's a Wonderful Life for for two of
the main themes that those other two movies explore. One
(08:29):
is that change over time, where in Scrooge it's over
a night, but groundhog Day, he changes who his core
character is. And I didn't know this until I heard
it that they estimate that the time in Groundhog Day
he keeps repeating the same day over and over, that
goes on for between.
Speaker 3 (08:47):
Ten and thirty years.
Speaker 5 (08:48):
Yeh yeah, yeah, Okay, So it's like that seems like
a more realistic time frame to really change your entire
person personality. And then as far as it's a wonderful life,
you get to see all the different pathways, like you
see what happens and when Jimmy Sewart isn't there. Well
on this you get to see all the different pathways
(09:08):
based on how Bill Murray acts or waves in Groundhog Days.
Although it's a holiday movie, but that takes place in February,
it's a groundhog Day movie. However, he said, it has
it's more Christmas themed, has more of a theme of
Christmas than ninety five percent of the movie content out
there with Christmas at the time.
Speaker 3 (09:29):
That was a fascinating take. I mean, he wasn't ten
seconds into that thing, and I started yelling, he's got it.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
He nailed it.
Speaker 5 (09:34):
He nailed out one.
Speaker 4 (09:35):
And just because I know a lot of people have
probably seen or heard his voice before, Like tell me, like,
I think we have some audio close enough that we
can pull up, just like, tell me you haven't heard
this guy's voice on your phone.
Speaker 5 (09:50):
Without a doubt groundhog Day. And I am dead serious
about this.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
And in fact, I think this is a better Scrooge
movie than the actual Scrooge movie that Bill Murray also made. It.
Speaker 4 (10:02):
It's that guy, yeah, yeah, you know, the guy, the
nerd who has poor lighting and not great video qualities.
Speaker 3 (10:08):
But it's like if your dad got real curious and
discovered he had a video camera.
Speaker 5 (10:11):
It's like, oh, this is what green screen does?
Speaker 2 (10:14):
You know? His take on the notebook was really fascinating
to you, which was which was basically how cool to
for good? How you know the good guys in films, right,
the boring guy, the one who's got his s together,
who's got a job, who's got a life, is always
portrayed as the antithesis of romance. But the bad boy
who doesn't have his s together, right, he pulled from Titanic,
(10:36):
he pulled from the Notebook, he pulled from Clerks. It
was it was fascinating about yeah, you know, this guy
isn't going to have as much free time to whine
and dine you because having a career takes an extraordinary
amount of energy and time, and yet those are always
kind of portrayed as the villains of the romance movies.
So I found that one is fascinating. And then Ross,
I'm definitely going to check out his take on wal Lee.
Speaker 5 (10:59):
Well, I'll break it down.
Speaker 4 (11:00):
His stance on the movie Wally is that it's real. Well,
it's the worst aging Disney movie and it will it's
aging like milk because when you have robots coming in
to save humanity, which is basically what happens in Wally,
like a robot trying to trying to, you know, save Earth. Now,
(11:21):
look at twenty twenty five, we were terrified of them.
We should and the message of a robot going I'm
here to help, I will save does not feel good
in our mouths.
Speaker 5 (11:33):
We don't.
Speaker 4 (11:34):
That just doesn't work anymore.
Speaker 3 (11:35):
And by the way, this guy's a best selling author
as well, well, yeah, I should say that. Yeah, and
you're probably best sellers should.
Speaker 5 (11:40):
Have opened up with that.
Speaker 4 (11:41):
Once again, we're talking about Jason K.
Speaker 3 (11:43):
Pargan.
Speaker 4 (11:44):
I look forward to reading some of his novels as well.
I look forward to doing that.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
In twenty twenty six, they've just been signed by Saint
Martin's Press for three more titles.
Speaker 3 (11:53):
And by the way, I prepare yourself accordingly, because once
you get on this dude's feed, you're gonna be there.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
Bit.
Speaker 3 (11:57):
You better bring some snacks because I'm telling you, you'll
get a one of these videos and you'll be like, god, man,
this this is amazing. It'll be like you three minutes
of the most blown away you'll be, and then you'll
next thing, You'll know you'll be four hours into this
dude's speed. You know you'll learn more than you can
ever imagine. And it's very entertaining. He does a very
good job. If you can't Jason K.
Speaker 5 (12:15):
Pargain, if you can't find it on Instagram, you just
go to Jimcolbert Live dot com.
Speaker 3 (12:19):
Look up what you do that's new. It's at the
very top of the list with a link to his
y post. Great choice to end the year, buddy.
Speaker 4 (12:26):
Yeah, it's not inflammatory, it's all interesting, and you know,
I think it's time to try to smarten up some
people's feeds, and I think this is a very fun
and entertaining way to do exactly that.
Speaker 3 (12:37):
For sure four oh seven nine six four one text
seven seven zero three. One favorite chain restaurant you Ah,
favorite chain restaurant uh, Peach Valley. Favorite chain restaurant, Yeah,
I gotta come.
Speaker 4 (12:50):
Back to me outback baby, let's rock.
Speaker 5 (12:53):
I do like Texas Roadhouse, but I don't go there.
I don't go to any of these a lot. What
about you? I want go to McDonald's more than nos,
but I wouldn't say it's mush.
Speaker 3 (13:01):
I would think it's Roadhouse or Peach Valley as well.
I go to Peach Valley as much as I go
to anywhere for breakfast. I think it's superb. I'll tell
you why I'm asking this question.
Speaker 5 (13:09):
Next, Got Question Frash proudly sponsored since day one by
Glenn Klosman Closmanlaw dot com.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
Hi