Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Thirty mile an hour. Win us today, How diday have
seventy two? Check us out, y'all. It is sixty two
right now and it's gonna be mostly sunny. All right, right,
got it coming up. We're all gonna be out there
to support it. We want you to come out and
join us. Explain where it is, what it is, and
all that good stuff again, Miss Ray.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
So November ninth, it is a sing along brunch to
your favorite songs from the two thousands.
Speaker 4 (00:20):
It's happening at a loure downtown.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
It's on Pine Street, So from eleven to four there's
like two hour blocks where you give reserve your table.
But basically we're eating, we're drinking, and we're singing along together.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
Your friends together, if your couples, get some other couples together.
It's a brunch. So you get out there early, you
get home and be ready for the next day. Yeah,
you hang out there all day.
Speaker 3 (00:41):
I know some people are concerned about football, but I
have a walk through today. I'm gonna make sure that
there's gonna be some football on some tas for you guys.
Speaker 4 (00:48):
So it's gonna be.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Good, something different. You know, you do the same thing
all the time. Here's something different. We're gonna be there.
These songs, songs like this will be on and when
it comes on, you put your glass of champagne or
Momolsa down and you sing out loud yeah, and the
energy in the room is it's gonna be amazing. So
how can they get reservations because it is a reasy
kind of thing.
Speaker 3 (01:05):
Yeah, so Exel one to sixty seven dot com. You
can reserve your table or whatever you want, however many
people you have in your group, so one of six
seven dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
All right, Halloween is tomorrow, and to get you in
the Halloween spirit, we're gonna give you It's called give
us the chills. This is a scary story that you
know about, that you heard about, what happened to you.
You tell us it, we'll be like oooh. Now, yesterday
was amazing the stories that we heard yesterday. If you
didn't hear it, make sure you listen to the podcast
with some really creepy stuff.
Speaker 5 (01:33):
There was a ghost trying to steal a baby. Don't
take the don't take take the baby. Don't take the baby, Kevin,
don't take the baby.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
Listen to the podcast. You got the festival of Trees.
It's Council one on one thirty ninth Annual Festival Trees.
It's gonna be happening November fifteen, two to twenty third
at the Orlando Museum of Art. And we have a
tree that's gonna be sponsored by Aquatica, and you have
an opportunity to bid on that. But today we want
to hear your story. And somebody's gonna go. And if
they're two good ones, we'll get a way two passes
(02:03):
to this. Uh four O seven Now we're nine one
O six seven eight seven seven. Now we're nine one
O six seven. Tell us the story that's gonna give
us the chills. It's Halloween, so we'll hear all about it.
The Halloween's tomorrow from Orlando. Melanie, Good morning, Good morning everyone.
Speaker 6 (02:18):
How is everyone?
Speaker 1 (02:19):
Everybody's good? Give us the chill?
Speaker 6 (02:23):
Okay, So I lived in a big hunted house growing up,
going to high school, and I was working and I
bought my mom one of those uh voice snow recorders
they used to have back in the day.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Yeah, phone answer machines.
Speaker 6 (02:45):
Yes, the answer machine. Yes, I bought my mom one.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
Thursday hoysmail recorder. You know, answer machine?
Speaker 6 (02:53):
You know it's not a long time I got you.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
I know, hey, I was there. I know what it's called.
Speaker 6 (02:58):
I had one, So I bought one for my mom
and her Mother's Day and she was so excited. So
we start playing around with it, my mom, myself and
my sister, and we were recording stupid stuff and then
my mom's like, okay, let's be serious. So we got
serious and you can hear our old messons just in
the beginning before the new one. So my mom's like, okay,
(03:20):
we're not going to record anything. I don't want to
be real, real quiet, don't do anything. We're just going
to record just the background. And my mom had a
cuckoo clock that belonged to my grandmother that did not
work at all, So we recorded, we rewound, repressed play
and then you hear it was a woman crying, and
(03:46):
you hear her, then me, and then you hear a
man call her the B word, and you hear my
cuckoo clock, googoo cuckoo, and then you hear her stream
and then that was the end of it.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
This is recorded.
Speaker 6 (04:01):
It was recorded, and we left that on there. For
one people called that's what they heard you reach blah,
blah blah, and then people will call me like I
heard someone call me the B word, and then they
want to hang up.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
This is the first story, the first ghost story I've
ever heard where the ghost actually uses for fanity.
Speaker 6 (04:23):
Right, wow, Yeah, it was crazy, like so many things
that happened in that house. I had, like funch spend
the night that never returned to my house because they
heard noises or they shallow the rocking chair rocking while
people were sleeping, and yeah, that house was really creepy.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
Yeah, yeah, Melody, if you invited me over to spend
a night and about to sleep in a rocket chair
start rocking and some ghost start calling people to be.
Speaker 5 (04:49):
Worried, I ain't coming back. I'll probably lead that night. Yeah,
I probably had to leave that night. I got no
reason to come back.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
Yeah, I'm not having fun. I'm not having mellot. You
hold on a second seven now one nine one o
six seven eight seven seven now one nine one o
six seven festival trees. You're gonna go, but we gotta
hear another story. See that was very good. If you
got something that's up to that par we want to
hear from you. Four O seven nine one nine one
O six seven, eight seven seven nine one nine one
(05:15):
O six seven honor of Halloween tomorrow, call and give
us the chills on Johnny's house, me too, that's right.
Seventy two is a Hotiday. Is sixty two right now,
and there's gonna be a lot of sunshine and Halloween.
It's gonna be very cool. So those of you putting
on those lit sexy outfits, little jacket, it's gonna be
smuggling skittles. It's gonna be cold tomorrow night, all right,
(05:38):
in honor of Halloween being tomorrow, give us the chills.
Gonna change the Holidays on you and hook you up
with some tickets to the third ninth Annual Festival of Trees.
And let's talk to Valerie from Claremont. Valerie, Good morning,
good morning, all right, Valerie, give it to chills.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
So yesterday I was at my gym and my calm,
and I was on the elliptical working out. And you
know when somebody walked by you and you feel that
like breeze as they walked by.
Speaker 7 (06:09):
I felt that behind me, like directly behind me. And
I was alone in the gym, and I said, Hi,
if anybody is in here with me, can you please
do that again? I did because I'm very interested in
paranormal stuff, and.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
It didn't feel like I didn't feel super creeped out
or anything. So I just said, yeah, Hi, can you
please do that again if you're here? And I felt
that same breeze against my arm.
Speaker 7 (06:41):
Then, and then about thirty seconds later, I was actually
I was listening to you guys through my earbuds, and
there was a commercial, the Damn Kneeling commercial, and I.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Heard a low, like a low frequency grunting coming.
Speaker 7 (06:58):
Through my ear but and it was it was just
it was continuous throughout the commercial, and I thought, okay.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
Maybe it's a glitch or.
Speaker 7 (07:10):
Something like that, and didn't really think too.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
Much of it. But I heard the same commercial, you know,
later on, and uh, when I was outside of the gym,
and it didn't happen.
Speaker 1 (07:19):
Okay, So let me get this right. You're in a
gym by yourself, it's dark outside, and you feel a breeze,
and instead of saying all right, somebody in here, you say, hey,
if you don't have to do that again, yeah, I did,
and it did it again. It did.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
Yes.
Speaker 4 (07:37):
It's so crazy because I'm like, I would just be like,
all right, I'm out.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
Yep, I'm out. No work out, Look I get I
look for any reason, not that worked out. There's a
ghost that didn't need to work out before me. I'm out.
Speaker 5 (07:49):
That's why I don't go to the gym. See what,
That's why I don't even go to the gym, because
they got ghosts.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
Value you hold on a sign from you, Matilla, Jeremy, Jeremy,
good morning, Good morning, Giant's house. How you guys doing,
were good man? Give it the chills? What you got?
Speaker 8 (08:06):
I So, long story short. I used to fly to
my Grammy's house every year. She lived in Kentucky when
I was really young, but then moved to Alabama when
I was probably about.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Middle school age, okay, And so.
Speaker 8 (08:19):
I would fly up there every summer when school got out,
for two weeks to a month something like that, depending.
Speaker 4 (08:25):
On the year.
Speaker 8 (08:25):
What I had going on, Well, while I was up there,
one time, my great aunt, so My, my Grammy's sister,
she married in the money. She married a guy that
was in the coal industry.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
He had money.
Speaker 8 (08:38):
That I couldn't fathom when I was that age.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
It blew my mind.
Speaker 8 (08:41):
And so they were always doing things. They decided that
they were gonna fly.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
I can't.
Speaker 8 (08:45):
They had to fly somewhere for a part of the
time I was there. They were gone for like four
or five days something like that. So I stayed with
my grandpa and my uncle, all of them. I didn't
want to go.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
With the girls. I thought you said, long story, story short.
That already long store.
Speaker 8 (09:01):
Yeah yeah, long story long.
Speaker 1 (09:03):
I guess you're right.
Speaker 8 (09:04):
Anyways, my grammy and grandpa, for as long as I
can remember, they're like Brian and his wife that they've
had separate rooms. My grandpa's snores.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
My grammy.
Speaker 8 (09:15):
Back then, you had cable TV, and she had all.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
The good channels in her room. Ahbo, Cinematic, gotcha, got you,
got you? We know good channel. Cut that part out,
keep going.
Speaker 8 (09:25):
I decided I was going to sleep in her room.
One night, I'm in there watching TV late at night.
I hear the door creak open, and I.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
Hear a heavy breathing.
Speaker 6 (09:34):
Just a it starts.
Speaker 8 (09:37):
To get louder and faster, to the point of where
it felt like it was right next to me. I
jumped there on the second Her bedroom was on the
second floor. I jumped down the entire stairs, jumped in
my grandpa's room and went to sleep for the night.
I was like, man, I'm out of here. But the
next morning I woke up there's hair all in the
shower in her bathroom and nobody was there because I
(09:58):
took a shower there the day before while they were
still going yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 7 (10:02):
I still can't explain it to the day.
Speaker 8 (10:04):
I've tried it.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
So you had, you had a hairy ghost needed you
out of the room. So it to take a shower,
something be anything.
Speaker 5 (10:18):
Let's see excellent mobile power by Attorney Dan Newland interacting.
Speaker 1 (10:22):
You need to check.
Speaker 5 (10:22):
It's a no brainer. Just call Attorney Dan Newly And
someone said, not scary, but it's a guarantee anyone who
starts a story with long story shorts lions.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
Yes, that is It's true. Valerie. We're gonna hook you up.
We're gonna hook you out with those Festival of Trees tickets,
Ray Celebrity News the seventy two thirty a mile an hour, winds,
gonna be breezy and a lot of sunshine one time.
One thing we always wanted to do on the show
is have an underlying theme to keep mind of mental
health and Ray is spearhead and that and where you
(10:52):
wanted to know? What? What was the question you asked
on a scale of one to ten.
Speaker 3 (10:54):
Yeah, So there was like a new survey that came
out in a study that sounds on a scale from
one to ten, how happy you are or satisfied with
your life is how they worded it.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
So satisfied with your life on a scale of one
to ten.
Speaker 3 (11:07):
Yes. In the study on happiness and health, have found
that as long as you're at a three or higher,
you're at least getting some health benefits from it. But
if you're hovering around three for a long time, it's
not good for your health.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
So, if you're looking at your life right now and
it's satisfied with your happiness and or satisfied with where
your life is. If right now you're filling this at three,
if you hang around that period of a three for
a long time, it's going.
Speaker 4 (11:33):
To start it's not good for your mental health, all right.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
So ray, we'll start with you on a scale of
one to ten, how satisfied or a happy? How happy
are you with your life right now?
Speaker 4 (11:41):
I would say.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
A six, okay, you seem surprised or.
Speaker 4 (11:48):
Six seven you did not see that coming toention.
Speaker 5 (11:53):
How how would we going to kill that if you
keep bringing it's exactly how?
Speaker 3 (12:02):
But seriously, I just feel like, you know, my whole situation,
like my kids are seven years old now, and like
co parenting is still you know, we're still trying to
get in the hang of the co parenting situation. My kids'
mental health just kind of isn't concerning. But I just
want them to be on the right path with everything
going on in their life.
Speaker 4 (12:21):
So that stresses me out.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
But also like I'm renting, I don't like, you know,
I want to own my own house again. I want
you know, I just don't like where I'm sitting right now.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
Yeah, okay, so you give yourself a six.
Speaker 4 (12:33):
Or seven six or I'm sorry, I'm done.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
No, no, no, keep doing it because we see the younger kids, well,
going to school right now. I think the cool lady
said it, right, lady to that generation, you're cool.
Speaker 4 (12:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (12:47):
But they also found that, which is crazy in the study,
being excessively happy, like a nine or ten all the time,
also came with or didn't really come with any negative effects.
Just in other words, it's like an overdose of happiness.
But could be annoying to other people.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
Oh for sure.
Speaker 5 (13:01):
For sure, like being drunk. He can't be too drunk. Yeah, yeah,
I would.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
If I looked at my life right now, I would
say about an eight or eight point five. I don't
have any major drama going on right now. The kids
at a point in his life. He's doing well in school.
He now we can talk to each other without you know,
I have to parent. He understands what I say. We
roll with that. My personal relationship is flawless. I mean,
I don't have any problems with that at all, because
(13:26):
I realize in relationships they're supposed to be. If it's
stressing you out, you shouldn't be there, if you ain't married,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 5 (13:32):
Of course, it took me years. It's so funny. My
son's twenty and I tell him that all the time.
I'm like, dude, you're way too young to not be
in any relationship where there's stressing vaulve Yes, you don't
need that.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
No, no relationship is going going well. I worry about
my mom a little bit, but you know, she'd have
health scare but she's fine now. So right now I'm
pretty happy. I sat back and go Okay, things are
going great. I'm gonna just I'm just level off. But
I don't smile a lot because it makes people know
and then they come out to your happiness right to
(14:05):
steal your joe about I try to bring you down.
Speaker 5 (14:09):
I know, man, I keep that little smiling ass over
that I'm gonna bring him down.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 5 (14:14):
Uh you know, I would say probably. I I hovered
between the seven and and eight. Honestly, I think more
eight than seven. When that's seven. It's because I'm in
my own head. But everything's good. I mean, the only
thing that I could say I need to improve on
is finances, and those are out of my hands because
people aroun here don't pay me what I deserve and
there's nothing to do about that. So when I let
(14:35):
that bother me, I drags me down to a seven.
When I then remind myself that all you can do
is what you can do, I get back to my
eight because my life is good at home.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
I got the house.
Speaker 5 (14:43):
I love my son's being, you know, very responsible and
working hard and you know, going after what he likes.
My wife and I have a great relationship. I got
nothing really negative. So I would say seven and eight,
but usually the seven part is because of me.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
Here's the crazy thing. And I'll give you a secret
inside the jobs that we have here. And I've been here,
I think coming on thirty eight years. At any time,
it's like a game of musical chairs. No matter what
you do, they can pull that chair. Yeah, and in
this job you have to just bypass that and go
in and do what we do, and we love to
(15:20):
do every now and then that'll creep in it. But
I guess for me, I see a light at the
end of the tunnel. Yeah, you know, I've been here
a long time. But that used to be make things fluctuate, yeah,
a little bit. But now I'm just like, you know,
it is what it is, and you want to do
it on your own turns. But if you don't, I'm
at a point now where it say you know it
(15:41):
is what it is. Yeah, I'll get there, you know. Yeah. Yeah,
but that's the reality. I mean, if you would put
it in the job. The job is great. Working with
you guys every day is amazing. Love it leave here
feeling happy every single day. We don't control this. I
don't own Johnny's house. Yeah, they can get ready for me.
Tomorrow and it's still be Johnny's house, right, you know.
So with that being said, other than that, everything is cool.
(16:01):
So we want to find out from you how satisfied
are you with your life or how happy you are
with your life on a scale of one to ten.
Uh and they said hovering around three could be affecting
your health the big time. We've just put ourselves out there.
We want you to do the same. It's our mental
health check with you. We try to do it every
now and then. Four O seven now one nine one
O six seven eight seven seven nine one nine one
O six seven XL mobile fort one O six seven
(16:24):
live stream, social media. We want to hear from you.
Some of y'all are starting to feel the effects of
what's happening with the government shut down. You have new worries,
whatever it is. Where right now in your life do
you find your happiness? Be honest with us four O
seven now one nine one O six seven eight seven
seven nine one nine one O six seven. Hit us up.
We want to talk to you. It's about you on Johnny.
How do you are with your life or happy on
a scale of one to ten. Truck driver Brian, good morning, Hey, y'all. Hey,
(16:50):
you sound like you're indoors somewhere. Where are you at
right now?
Speaker 9 (16:53):
I'm in my little temporary apartment across from all Tomnt Springs.
Speaker 10 (16:57):
Mall.
Speaker 7 (16:57):
Oh yeah, out for a week?
Speaker 1 (16:59):
Oh yeah, town. We good good good man? Ye all right.
So on a scale of one to ten, what do
you see?
Speaker 9 (17:04):
So right now I'm a seven or eight. As you
guys know, I'm a roller coaster. August in September, a
lot of people know, it's the worst time of the
year for me, and I actually go all the way
down to like a two or three, holding on, just
trying to go day by day.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
And so it's over.
Speaker 9 (17:21):
Yeah, and then when I make it past that, it's
like seven years now, it's another graduation. I made it.
I made it through, and then it just starts getting
better again. So I've accepted the roller coaster that I'm on.
When it goes down, I know it's going to come
back up. So that's the benefit of that. And when
it's up, I live every second up I can because
I know it's going to go back down again, so
(17:43):
I just I ride it.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Okay, you acknowledge it is that you ever thought about
seeking a professional to talk to about this because you know,
I understand you. You deal with it in your own way,
but you know there are other ways.
Speaker 9 (17:55):
Yeah, I have, and they've helped me to realize that
I have to accept that my life is unusual where
I can't. I have things thrust upon me, and I
have to be able to say, Okay, come on, I'm
ready to deal with it, instead of just soaking it
up and saying, oh, I can't do this, go by
one day at a time when I have to, instead
of weeks at a time, and say I need to
(18:16):
do whatever I can to just make it to tomorrow.
We'll make it to tomorrow, and then it starts climbing
right back up again.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
All right, Well, you stay at the number that you
at right now, man, as long as you can.
Speaker 11 (18:26):
Okay, yes, sir, I'll do my best. I enjoy your
time off. Oh definitely, all right, thank you. All right,
let's go and talk to Ali from Orlando. Ally, good morning,
good morning. All right, first time caller, love your first
time calling.
Speaker 1 (18:42):
And I can tell what the energy in your voice.
You're in the hot numbers. Where are you?
Speaker 10 (18:47):
I'm between an eight and a ken. I'm also an
adolescent psychiatrist. So it's kind of my job to help people,
you know, live their best life. Yeah, and I recently
got divorced and it was the best thing I ever did.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
I have not been happier.
Speaker 5 (19:03):
Well, you can't be afore if you're trying to help
people get you know.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
Yeah, no, that would be good.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
But do you feel like you always have to be
like positive or like you know, mentally right because of
your job.
Speaker 10 (19:16):
Well, I have to like put on a good faith
at all times, Like even if I'm struggling inside, I
have to be able to like separate that when with
my patience and like I mean, I also go to
therapy myself. Like I think it's important for us all
to like work on it every day. And that's kind
of how I live it. I try to be glad.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
Apple, hang a lot, hang a lot. Ali, if I
had somebody complaining, let hold, let me tell you what
I'm going through right now.
Speaker 10 (19:43):
It's sometimes hard not to.
Speaker 4 (19:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (19:46):
Wow, it's so funny you say that, because obviously we
are not as educated or nearly as important as therapists,
but we have to do the same thing and we
talk about it all the time. Like when our life
is in shambles, like on the inside. We have to
come here and like put on the song and dance
because that's what we're here for.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
And it's not it's not easy, it really is. Hey,
we've seen each other before we open the mics be
crying yes, and then when the MIC's open, it's me
doing John. We've seen it in each other.
Speaker 10 (20:13):
Put at your job. We all find our needs.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
But you know, after we always say, you know, doing
that is really know somewhere.
Speaker 5 (20:21):
Out of we should probably schedule an appointment with you.
Speaker 1 (20:28):
Yeah, hey, listen, now, I know you we are old
in age, but as maturity, your adolescent you can help them. Right,
You're in my target range exactly. Ali, thank you, and
you keep that you keep that energy going.
Speaker 11 (20:40):
Okay, they need you, thank you, Thank you you too.
Speaker 3 (20:43):
It'll be crazy because when I go to my children's
therapy appointments, I learned so much from the adolescent therapist.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
Really share with us, girl'll hold back please.
Speaker 5 (20:53):
You know it's probably because those are things we should
have learned as kids that we didn't learn because we
didn't do therapy, because there wasn't even.
Speaker 4 (20:58):
A fat talking to my inner child.
Speaker 1 (21:01):
Yeah, oh no, we did therapy. You ain't crazy, boy,
you ain't going a therapist. Yeah, not realizing that everybody
could use it. Right then therapy they shocked you and
like locked you and yeah they did right what they
saying over there.
Speaker 3 (21:13):
Unfortunately, somebody said they're at a solid two, so hopefully
that gets better. Carry Eileen said seven seven.
Speaker 5 (21:21):
Okay, all right, and b what's carry at that too?
Come on to the sing along brunch. You need to
do stuff like that. At least the four getn't get
out of the element XMO power by Attorney Daniel and
then the wrec need to check it. So no brainer,
call attorney Daniel. And most people here are pretty good.
There's someone that said they're at about a six, but
it's a lot of stuff they know they need to
work on.
Speaker 7 (21:39):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (21:39):
And most people fluctuate between seven and eight, but they
always remember that it's temporary whatever it is. Yeah, And
someone said they're at a eight now and when they
start to go down, they remind themselves of when they
were homeless and sleeping on the hood of their car.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
Yes, now they got a place to sleep. Yes. Yeah,
Well you've gone through some real life experiences like that,
and you see people complaining, You're like, shut up, You'll
get through it. Let me tell you what I've done,
so you know you're hearing what other people are going through.
Don't feel that you're alone in what you're going through.
I think a lot of people who are dealing with
lower numbers aren't gonna call a radio station and say, hey,
I'm going through it too right now. But there are
(22:11):
a lot of people who will not call just dealing
with the same thing that you're dealing with. Just just
keep going, keep moving forward, ray what you're working on.
Speaker 4 (22:18):
Let's see her.
Speaker 3 (22:19):
Michelle Obama, she did that interview and she opened up
a lot about like after the White House, Oh really
coming up on johnnys Houth