Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
WXXL HD one so Veri's Orlando.What's up? So Dojiacat. It's Taylor
Swift Johnny's House Mornings, Orlando's numberone hit music station All Day Orlando.
This is Johnny's House. Excel Windowsix seven Direct from Hollywood with Ryan Seacrest.
(00:21):
Jojikat is pretty open about how muchof an isolator she can be at
times, being more than just comfortablewith spending time alone, she actually thrives
in it, but she also cherishesher friendships and just revealed how one of
her closest relationships came from a fairlyunlikely source, a coworker's assistant. She
tells the Therapeya Gecko podcast. Mycreative director is one of my closest friends,
and his assistant was the funniest,coolest girl. But she was just
(00:44):
his assistant. She wasn't being creativealong with me. But she has a
great style. So I started askingher stuff about fashion and we just became
best friends. She's the funniest thing. I even started making music with her.
She's not musical at all, butshe has a really good scream,
a beautiful, gut wrenching, bloodcurdling screen. So I had her to
do that on a song. Gojacat there who haves that song isn't out
yet but should be soon. GoreHills is out now, that's direct from
(01:07):
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to operate in Virginia by Chef.Johnny's House is having a listener appreciation party.
It is happening at Island Hduol WaterPark Saturday, August tenth from seven
to Johnny's House on Orlando's number onehit music station. One of those things,
(01:49):
right you say you like to door people like to do? Is
there a list of something that peopleconsider boring what they like to do them
yeah. So there's like a pollthat they did and they were talking about
like some things that Americans like todo, like as a grown up that
are boring, but you actually enjoythem. So like for me, I
enjoy doing the dishes, like Ireally don't know why. It's like soothing
(02:10):
to me, like the warm waterand like cleaning up. I don't mind
doing dishes. I don't like puttingthem away, yeah, put them away.
Yeah, So like I don't minddoing the dishes really. But another
thing is is that like paying mybills, like I think it feels I
think it feels good to pay mybills. I like paying my bills.
I pay my bills and I justwatched my account. Can't stand it.
(02:31):
I mean, I don't like lookingat my account, but like I feel
like when I hit like process andI pay them online, it just like
it feels good to pay my bills. It feels good to be able to
pay my bill. Yeah, that'sprobably what it is, because it's like
I don't have to ask anybody formoney. I don't have to, you
know, because I mean I don'tknow I don't know a lot about your
your history in the reice. Butthere's time where you send the go,
(02:53):
well, this one'n getting money thisweek? Yeah, exactly there, but
I get it. Yeah, likeI'm gonna have to pay a late fee
on this X one because I can'tpay it right now. And I definitely
know my like my how long Ihave my grace period? Yes on everything?
Yes? Oh. I remember wayback in the day when you had
to mail your bills in and myparents like put the water bill an electric
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bill, and when they get it, it looks like it's a mistake and
we get another week. We usedto have to go drop ours off at
the power company in downtown Sanford andwe would put the wrong stuff in there
and drop it off. We usedto go to that same building. Yes,
oh, Like on the list wasshopping for groceries. Like people thoroughly
enjoy doing that, don't. I'mtrying to think, what is something I
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enjoy? I don't even like driving? What about like do you like pressure
washing? Or like you know whatI feel? Like I show you something
on my leg I was last timeI was pressure washing. You know when
you pressure wash, your legs usedto get dirty. Yeah, And I
was pressure washing my shoes and Igot close to my leg and I have
a line and I'm on my legand like, is that the white meat
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you? Yeah? I did before, So I enjoyed that until that happened.
But no, I can't think ofanything that. What about cooking for
your family or cooking? Okay,okay, when I'm upset about something,
I bake and now I do enjoybacon when I'm upset. When I'm not
upset, I don't enjoyed bacon.One weekend I made a cheesecake, uh,
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rice, Chrispy Trees and homemade icecream. Wow, I was mad
that you eat all of them.No, I usually don't eat it here.
No, it's like in the freezingstuff and then it gets holding I'll
throw it out. I can't bringit in. No, I ain't gonna
do that. You got any ofthose things? I actually liked the vacuum.
I can see that I do becauseI like getting it all the lines
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perfect and making sure everything's like whereit's supposed. Yeah, I actually enjoy
I do have the little rumble onethat I like sometimes turn loose and let
it go. But even that,I just sit there and watch it,
make sure it's doing the lines likeI like it. So yeah, I
don't. I don't mind doing that. I like cleaning my bedroom, Okay,
I like doing that. I likegoing in, you know, and
then you know, pulling the sheethalfway back so when I get in,
I can just jump in. Ido enjoy doing that. I don't mind
(05:10):
doing it. But there are daysI won't uh nuiza or anything. Yeah.
Editing videos, yeah yeah, yeah, So like it's fun creating the
videos with you guys, you know, when we're like recording and whatever.
But when it comes to sitting downand editing. I know a lot of
my friends they find that so dreadful. I find joying it. It is
a little tedious. But when Itake a step back and I look at
it the final product, I'm soyou're happy about the final product that comes
from there. Yeah, yeah,it feels good. Things that other people
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find boring, you enjoy doing them. Let us hear about. This is
Orlando's most listened to morning show.More Johnny's House coming up next. This
is Johnny's House. Hey is Johnny'sHouse on Orlando's number one hit music stage
in It's Xcel. Well six toseven. Things other people find boring,
you enjoy doing them? Calling usall the way from Utah, Tessa,
(05:53):
Tessa, good morning, Good morningTessa. You know what everybody wants to
know right now? You have perhapsgirl, we hit you coughing right now?
Bye? What do you like todo with other people? Don't?
It's two things. One I liketo clean out my snake's cage. I
(06:15):
like to keep it clean on mysnake's cage. Wow, okay. And
what's the other one? I liketo take my dog out. People find
it boring because they go either goto the same park every day or I
take my dog to throw the ballthat he's a painter in the ass with
the ball and you have to chasehim forward each time. Yeah, now
(06:38):
mine was. It was the timesI enjoyed it, but most time it
really didn't. You know. Byyou hold well, you know you can't
win. You call from Utah fromOrlando, Ellen Ellen, good morning,
Hi, good morning. What issomething everybody else finds boring but you seen
to enjoy doing it? Okay?So this my husband finds really boring,
boring. I just turned thirty,so he doesn't get it. But I
(07:00):
love making tiktoks at These tiktoks oflike making basically edits of movies. And
then like the songs with it,so like I just made like Michael Scott
the office with like Olivia Rodrigo songin the background, and I just signed
those soothing He's like, I don'tget it, Like this is like we
did this for like ten or liketwelve. I'm like, I just signed
(07:21):
those soothings. Like having to getall the videos from YouTube and then like
transferring it to the app and thenlike downloading this song. It's just like
it's so fun of me. Letme tell you something. Listening you describe
that does not sound funny. There'sa lot of steps in. Yeah,
yeah, but she enjoyed. Youenjoy doing that? All right? You
hold on a second here for OrlandoGeorge, Good morning, Good morning everybody.
(07:43):
Who are you guys? What issomething that you enjoy but other people
might say boring? I absolutely enjoylaundry dry holding stuff away, my goodness,
because our wet clothes are like ourhangar space is limited. Uh huh.
You know it's my alter date maybeone day, towels the next day,
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and it's a lot of fun.You know. I do it by
myself. And do you do itonce a week? How often do you
do the laundry about three times aweek, and you like putting them away
and stuff. That's the worst part, I know. I sure do okay,
music on or how many people?How many people are in your household?
Three? And you do laundry everyother day just about whether its owls
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or bed sheep. Yeah, wow, that sounds about right. I got
stuff in the dry right now.Yeah, because I ain't getting put it
away. Look, I haven't.I have a laundry band, and I
just stumped down today put that stuffright down. Wow. You hold on
a second and uh ken druff wenta haven. Good morning? Take good
morning? Uh something other people findboring, but you enjoy doing so.
(08:58):
I love taking an app Do yourealize I have time to take a nap
before doing anything. I'm a takenap, absolutely one thing about me.
My friends know, if you leaveme on a couch or on a bed
for a minute, I'm out.I'm going to take a nap. I
love taking a nap. But whatI don't like is having to wake up
from that now because it doesn't runits course. Yeah, it is too
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long. They throw your whole dayoff power naps, Oh my god,
refresh your whole night every day,I'm taking a nap. I gotta get
to the car line. I'm havingconversations with myself. That's why I like
weekend naps. Yes, they theyend. Yeah, any wake up and
you go, okay, we'll goahead and get up. Somebody said,
I do thoroughly enjoy the laundry.Uh, And I agree with this one.
(09:43):
I'm mowing the lawn. I lovethe lawn. I was forced to
do it as a kid. Asan adult, I hate it with a
passion. Be x Power by AttorneyDan Newlan Interact Need a Check called Dan
Newlan. Someone says they like cleaningtheir car. Really, they enjoy doing
that. And someone said when theylived up north, they loved breaking leaves
and shoveling snow. No, andthen so once they loved writing their schedule
(10:03):
out in their planner in different colorhis house. On Orlando's number one hit
music station, all right, listen, I mentioned this yesterday. I've never
ever changed the diaper before, andI just realized that we were talking about
something yesterday, and I'm like,I've never Paris Hilton waited a couple of
weeks or a month or so beforeshe changed her baby's dapers, like ten
months or something. Yeah, shenever changed. I'm like, well,
that's pretty cool if you got somerich people that you know, you're rich
(10:26):
enough that you can hire nanny whenthe baby start having uh you know,
the smelly butt. Yeah, yousay, hey, handle this. And
her sister went to like go andlike be like, oh, the baby
needs a dayer change And Parais Hiltonwas like, I've never changed it.
And so her sister, Nikki hadto show her how to change it.
And I'm thinking to myself, waita minute, No, I've never changed
one. My son had just turnedthree when I met him. But it
(10:46):
makes sense that you wouldn't have.No, I don't have any lived there.
No, like, hey, hey, whenever I was playing with my
nieces and my nephew when they werekids, are like, oh, and
you know how you put the armsunder? Think you just had them off.
But I've never sat down and actuallychanged I don't. I wouldn't.
I mean, I know the basics. You know, it's pretty simple.
(11:09):
You know, clean it up,put the diape on it away. Did
I miss step the instructions? Right? Yeah? I mean but you had
a wipe, you know, Yeah, it is I just get maybe some
power might be necessary. Get abig warm rag and just roll over.
You know how you like mess,Get up a big mess on the floor
(11:31):
the big child. Just go throughit just you probably shouldn't change. Get
all done, and then you goand you put that away. You may
end up going your entire life withouthaving to do it. That's crazy.
Is there anything you've never done that? I mean, it's just an average
person. It's just something I've neverhad. And I thought about it,
I was like, no, Iwouldn't. The only thing I knew was
when it was time or the butthe child was crying, they said they
(11:56):
need a diaper change, And atthat point I just leave the room because
I think it would be creepy ifI'm sitting there. I don't have Child'll
just sit they watch anything we cantalk about. We can pick it up
in about three to five minutes wheneveryou've done with that task. Yeah,
I don't think there's anything like thatI can think of that I've not done.
Yesterday, when we were talking aboutit, I was like, huh,
it's pretty fascinating because I changed adiaper in high school when my my
(12:18):
brother had a kid, when Iwas still a senior in high school.
Huh. And so my nephew,I changed his diaper when I was in
high school. So I knocked thatout way early. Well, see you
he was here, you were here. I was visiting in Pensacola, so
when I was staying at their house. Oh no, no, uh,
I mean I've never like changed atire. What. I did that for
the first time ever last year,first time in my life because I've never
(12:39):
had a flat tire before. Yeah, so that was the first one.
That was my first thing. I'venever done it, never changed a tire.
What did you do? I've neverknocked on wood. I've never really
had a flat tire, right,same, I've never had one before,
so I just never had to doit. Yeah, I've done it.
There's a lot of work. It'shorrible. It's like you rather culture.
(13:00):
Yeah. I thought it was simple, and it's so easy. With my
truck. It has a little thingthat pops out the back. You put
it in. You just crank,crank, crank, put it up,
take it off. Done. Ittook me literally, once I decided how
to do it, took me twentyminutes. Wow, do you say anything
you've never you've never done? Yeah, been in a serious relationship. I
guess at this point I'm just playingno no, Listen, if we open
(13:20):
up the lines right now and ask, hey, call us if you've never
been in a serious relationship, thenthe lines will bring off to herobly.
So I thought you were you werebeing serious A little bit of it,
yes, and a little bit ofnot, because obviously I want to take
every relationship serious. But like,it always gets to the point where I'm
like, I've never been married Aproposed to I have, but I never
go, oh, nothing special,I'm not missing. It is very special.
(13:41):
Marriage is a beautiful thing, itreally is. It doesn't always work.
Yeah, that's all. Yeah,that's all that matters. I want
to find out from you something assimple as changing a tire or or changing
a diaper, something that everybody's donebut you've never done before in your life.
Call us right now, because wewant to hear from you. On
Johnny's House from Mount Dora to theBitch Kingdom. You're waking up with Johnny's
House on Xcel Win O six sevenmore next Excel j Live from our Farah
(14:07):
and Faris Studios. If you've beeninjured and make it a feara fight.
This is an iHeart Radio station,the exclusive audio home of NBC's coverage of
the twenty twenty four Paris Olympics.Excel one O six seven, Orlando's number
one hit music station. I willlove SA to play XL one oh six
point seven on iHeartRadio. Take uswherever you Go Excel one O six seven,
(14:30):
Orlando's number one hit music station.Johnny's House in the Morning Excel one
O six seven mentioned I've never changeda diaper. I might go my whole
life without changing a diaper, andI hope I ain't jinx myself. What
about other things that you've never donebefore? Orlando, Katie, Katie,
good morning. What is something you'venever done before? I've never eaten sushi
(14:56):
or really any seashoods. Oh youare mess? Where were you born?
He just freaks me out that it'sbeen in the ocean, and I just
don't think I would like the teesteof it. So have you ever had
it or just had it by accident? No, I've had tuna and salmon.
I've tried those. I didn't likethem, so I kind of just
wrote everything out off. Wow,So you shrimp lobster? No? No,
(15:24):
so you just disgusted, like therethey still have their entire body in
tat So I just don't like theidea of that. N break your legs,
snatch the meat right out. Tellyou there's a there's a restaurant in
China. They get the fish,it's fresh, and they put them in
a deep frier up to his head? Did they put on your plate in
the head's going? Looking at thatfresh? It is? Look at it
(15:56):
all right? You hold on asecond. She's written off seafood at all
from all to mind a net?Good morning, good morning, net.
What is something you've never done alot of people have You've never done it.
I've never changed the oil my cars, and I've never been on the
radio. Well there you are,okay, okay, changing oil? I
(16:19):
understand that air and the tires.Never I'm a bad girl. And how
old are you? I mean,are you married? Nope? Boyfriend yeah,
Oh, she's like, I'm likedisappointing. Yeah, she never really
(16:44):
like him, but he and thefires. Wow? And hey, now
you've been on the radio, sotake that one off your list. Okay,
okay, all right, wow,is it possible not put air in
the tires? Yeah? Because whenyou change if you take your oil to
get it changed, A lot oftimes they check care take care of before.
Yeah, but what do you doif that little light comes on?
And drive until you change oil?Also from Orlando Alley, Good morning,
(17:10):
Good morning, Ali. What issomething that you've never done before? A
lot of people have, but youhaven't. I have never been skinny?
Right, let me take a pollaround the room. Ray, Yes,
did it my pool? I wasn'tthere. I was out of town.
There's chlorine in that, so Ifigured it was say, yeah, of
course at the beach. Yeah,I've done it too. Wow. I
(17:32):
feel like there's just never been agood opportunity. I'm open to it,
but it just hasn't come around forme yet. Very free. I was
gonna say that, do you havea pool or a friend that has a
pool? I have a friend thathas a pool. But I feel like
it to be like a group decision. I don't know. No, no,
no, no, no no nono no no no no no.
I was with I was with someone, but asked the house set for him,
and you do it at night?Maybe, I mean my honeymoon's coming
(17:56):
up, so maybe that's yeah,absolutely yes, Now you might have to
where are you guys going for yourhoneymoon? You know yet? Yeah,
we're going to Europe. Okay,I was gonna say, if you're going
to somewhere, I don't know.I'm not sure how they do. I
feel like I feel like anything goesin most places in Europe. I feel
like I maybe won't be the onlyone. You might be able to find
(18:17):
a nude beach in Europe before youcould do it and be careful though,
because because there's another couple just rollup with you. Also, hey,
you might get locked up abroad thoughlocal laws. First. It is very
free and I'm not one of thosethat, like, you know, there's
some people are excited about the possibilitygetting caught. That ain't me. Yeah,
you know, when I did it, it was it was on the
(18:38):
long end of the beach and therewas nobody there and it was no hotels
or anything. Well, mine's alwaysbeen in my own pool, so I
can't get caught. I don't eventhink I've done in my pool always.
It's like an often thing. EveryTuesday. I take a little bit,
No, not every Tuesday. Butyou know, I don't know how it
is for women, but for menit's very freeing, bro. You know
(19:00):
what? Yeah, I don't knowhow. I can't express for ladies,
but for gods, it's just likedo they sink right by? What means
up to you if you've sink orfloat? Exactly? Good? NAEs right
egg from Davenport Sue, Good morning, Johnny's town, Good morning? What
(19:21):
do you say? What's up?What's up? Is I'm about to turn
twenty one again? Yeah, andborn in seventy three, so I'll be
twenty one again. Do you knowwhat? The topic? Never tuk?
Yah? Yeah, and I sayI've never changed the tire. Okay,
okay, I'm going to be twentyone again. I got you all right
right? What it's saying over there? Somebody said that I've never seen snow.
(19:45):
I've never lived on my own andwent from my parents' house to a
dorm to an apartment with friends,and then I got married. Living loans
overrated. I've never driven a stickshift. I've never done that either.
You never know, Scot never,that's fun. I loved it. I
mean, certain cars you don't wantit, but some cars are like necessity.
First time you do it, youburn down to clutch. Yeah,
sure, it's forty seven. They'venever learned how to ride a bike.
(20:07):
Yeah, a lot of people.Yeah, I've heard that one. Somebody's
fifty and they've never burnt a CD. Well, that's you know, that's
the skilled that's gone. Yeah,it's over I mean that was great.
Hey, you bring me a copythat? Yeah, I got yeah,
man music And they say, no, we got to put a hold on
that one. Man me what they'resaying. Excel mobile Power by Attorney Dan
new One, interrect need a jetcalled Dan new One. A few people
on the mobiles said they've never cutthe grass. Overrated, never moti,
(20:30):
I love it. Yeah, Irated overrated. Someone said they're thirty five,
they've never been drunk or drank alcohol. Good for you, good for
you, overrated, overrated. Iknow, I think it's very underrated.
Actually, someone said they've never seenthe live concert before. Oh wow.
And then multiple people said they've neverridden in a taxi or ride share.
(20:52):
So I've never really had any sortof public transportation of any issues. For
sure. Not even a bus saysno bus, no must be great to
already the always have a ride,No bust, no train, no uber,
no lyft, nothing, and thereason A lot of streams what they
talking about over Someone says I've neverbeen arrested skydiving or got in a tattoo.
I'd got an attacked. I don'tknow what you have tattoo saying yeah,
(21:15):
I'll get one though that I've beentwo of the three of those.
Right, you've done all three ofthose? Or no, you've never been
scotten either. Guy saw WXX Orlandonumber one hit me all day, Orlando,
(21:40):
Orlando's number one hit music station.It's XL one O six seven,
and you are listening to Johnny's HouseJeff Epstein. That came out breaking news.
They released them, and people arejust reading, read and read and
read reading. They got names thatare popped up all over the place.
Scandal, shady people, very richpeople, rich people hanging out And I
thought about this. I want tofind out you admit in the past or
(22:00):
have you hung out with shady people? And I'll go first. I have,
Yes, you have, I have. I'm just gonna tell you I
have Lou Pearlman who started in Syncand Backstreet Boys, and he had a
Ponzi scheme where he had scammed olderpeople out of their retirement money and banks
and everything. If they had alist of who went to his parties.
(22:22):
Johnny Magic Thing would have been rightup on that list. Multiple times,
Yes, multiple times. Wow,Hey, I need I needed something from
from Lou Perlin for the show.Went right up to his offices down on
Church Street. They said, Lou, Johnny's here, let me write in
his party. I mean, hey, damn, I didn't know he was
(22:44):
Like, I knew he was doingthat my great grandma shrimp. I did
not know he was shady. AndI ain't talking bad about him now because
the man was cool with me.I didn't know he was shady. Once
I found out he was shady,I kind of backed off of him kind
of. But we talked about it, and I'm not trying to like trying
to bust over. We talked aboutthis off the air. When you're hanging
out with someone shady, you kindof know there's somewhat shady. You've not
(23:07):
seen it and they've never been shadywith you, but you're a good judge
of character. When you're around ashady person. You could see the shade
absolutely. When I went into office, I'm like, man, it's the
next office, Hey, Johnny,have a seat. I need. He
needed something from me. He changedhis birthday party so he can attend something
that we were doing to me.You cold with me, bro, You
know that he's a very nice guyin that in that respect the shade.
(23:30):
Once I found out, I hadto back away and there was another cat
I know he's talking about. I'vebeen with him. I sat down and
asked him, a man, nooffense, but are we gonna kick it?
I need to know where you gotyour money from? And he told
me and I cut him off.I stopped, I know what you're talking
about. Where where do you getfrom? It's my new favorite term.
(23:52):
The math wasn't math in and itain't just one. This ain't just one
shady thing. It is the wholepark full of shade trees. When I
backed it up, yeah, Isaid, I do know that I can't
kick it off ray you hang outwith shady baby, absolutely absolute. When
I was told to drive somebody's caraway from their house and hide it somewhere,
(24:18):
that's when I knew it was shady. But did you get anything out
of it, like other than justhaving with shady people? Because parties with
giant shrimp? I did, Whatdid you get? Because I you know
what I was just like, yeah, I'll do it for you. You
were trying to none of it shade. Well, I knew it was shady,
but that's why afterwards I kind ofdistanced myself from it. The shadiness.
Yes, that was their street thugera. No, actually maybe after
(24:41):
hiding them some things under my bedafter that, after that time, did
you know that they were shady?Yeah, okay, but you know what
I said, I had to hidesome things under my bed for this person,
the same person, and after that, I was like, this is
the last time. I'm done.Okay, So you got out of the
shady and you got your stuff outthere. Then just three minutes ago,
Hey, it was shaken. Youain't. You ain't because yours was on
(25:04):
a federal level. Mine was justin Seminole County. Yeah, yours ended
up hiding at a resort under thename Incognito Jones. Mine was county Wise.
We're talking levels of shading. There'sdefinitely levels to this. I'd be
grimes now. In high school,I hung out with a lot of shady
people, but I think everybody kindof did, but I do. I
(25:26):
didn't hang out with a shady person, but I know of separation from friend
of mine's parents were very very shady. Okay, were you at their house?
They were the real slim shading.Oh yeah, okay, didn you
hung out with shady people? Yeah, you hung out with shades, not
just their house, hotels, themeparks. Why is everybody trying to be
a little the shady nice dinners.You knew shade was going on. Oh
(25:49):
gosh when I was. When Iwas in the house, I got raided.
I was kind of like, probably, hey, and I do believe
had mine a crumbled, it wouldhave been on a federal level. But
mine there's never fell apart, probablybecause they weren't stealing from old people.
But I didn't know that. Ididn't know all of the tills. After
over and I saw the documentary,I was like, there was a documentary
(26:11):
on him. Yeah, Johnny magicate shrimp paid for by your grandmama.
You may be entitled the compensation.Let me tell you nouris way back in
the day when I went to thatparty and I mentioned it on the air
after that party was somebody on theair with Brown They had shrimp your hands,
and I said, at that pointthen I called shrimp, they're called
(26:32):
prons yeah, lurise, Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, But like it
was one of those where like itdidn't affect me personally, even though I
knew she was kind of shady,but it was nothing like, yeah,
okay, but like we were cool. We were cool. Like she was
(26:52):
just like she was like a Bword. That's just what she was more
than anything until once the bit sheuntil one time it kind of like affected
me where she kind of like threwit at me like that, and I
was like, all right, holdon, this is going to stop right
now. We're all talking about howgets people put in prison trying to be
hanging out with aner. I can't, I can't relate to you, and
(27:12):
just like you can't. But nonethelessshe was kind of she just mean that
ain't shady the shadow federal law hidingat a result assumed name. I guess
at this point. I mean,my family kind of a little shady like
way way way back to the daywhen they made it here to Cuba and
they discovered a way to make moneysuper quick, and they were living that
(27:33):
nice life. They paid their duesdecade raised, we didn't go down and
raised family line. One of myuncles actually got blown up in a car,
but that's way back in the I'mgonna have to disagree with y'all.
I think shady shady. You shouldbe happy that you don't have shady friends
talking to all the bad and you'rejust trying to be bad. I was
(27:55):
like, I don't even think Ishould say my story. Listen. I
would love to say that I ain'thave no shade and it's in me,
but I'm not shady myself. Idid know it was a little shit.
Yeah you knew. You knew alittle bit. It's a little bit.
I just he just had his feelingssomebody. Right to this day. He
was nice to me. I'll alwayssay that Luke Perlman was always nice to
(28:18):
me. I'm not dogging him onthe ready because he's you know, he's
long long. But he died injail, but he was always cooling with
me. Died in jail. Hey, my people never went to jail,
so my people probably are dead.I don't know. I just can't touch
your any story. I mean thatin the nicest way. Will you admit
you have or hung out with someshady people? We have have you?
(28:38):
We want to find out now inJohnny's house, hang with us at work
at EXCELU sixty seven dot com.Click listen live Orlando's number one hit music
station, EXCELU sixty seven. It'sJohnny's House, or Orlando's number one hit
music station. It's Excel one Osix seven. Now we knew it was
gonna have a hard time asking ifyou hung out with shady people before,
and because nobody wants to go inthe air, say yes, I have
(29:00):
hung out with shady people, eventhough we went first. Now somebody are
on the mobile said, Johnny,was this the same year that you were
calling as your assistant book at hotel? That's not shady? Is that a
shady act? What does this persondo? Okay, no, Johnny did
it. Back in the days,I used to call hotels as my own
assistant to get some hookups and discountedrates. I mean, that's just trying
(29:22):
to be slipped. I don't thinkthat's not shady. If the hotel figured
out was a big wig and theylet me in for cheaper rate and gave
me an upgrade in the room anda basket with a card and all that
stuff, you're working smarter. Yeah, yeah, I don't think. I
don't think it's shady. No,No, I'm all about getting a good
deal. Yeah, I don't.I don't, especially with we're talking on
(29:44):
the scale. We're talking, we'retalking federal crime. We're talking pretend to
be your own assistant. Yeah,and on during the break, we're reading
up some stuff on one of thepeople you were talking about, and it's
way worse than we ever imagined.Yeah, that's awful. Wow. They
have a lot of shady people outthere, and you know that, shady
or not. And that's thing ray, what they got, what you got
over there. So some people aresaying you're only as good as the company
you keep. Okay, okay,Oka, there's the difference between like,
(30:10):
for example, you and the personwho was hot and out with that wasn't
your everyday friend, was it?Or just somebody you saw it on occasion?
He was a part of my everydaycrew. Okay, see that this
person, Lou, was not apart of my every day crew. I
might saw Lou maybe once or twice. You got the invite, yeah,
yeah, three four times a year. So again Semino County fateral. Uh.
(30:34):
And then somebody said that I'm notgoing to throw anyone under the bus.
Wink, wink. I think theyknow some shady people. They just
don't want to xl MO Power byAttorney Dan Newlan Interact you need a check,
called Dan newl And someone said theirkids hang out with someone shady all
the time, got a wrap sheetsixty two pages long, but never served
time. So I had to puta stop on that one. Yeah,
(30:55):
that's tough when your kids are hangingout with someone shady. Yeah. I
would even or or pull that personto the side and say, hey,
listen, the kids like you,you're cool, but don't get my kids
involved in the criss case. Isee you. I know what's going on
and the reason what he's saying onthe last rim. Yeah, we got
someone who says I had an unclewho you know what you can say their
names this year? Oh okay,now go ahead. Sorry DJBC. He
said, I had an uncle whowas in the kitchen, brist twisting like
(31:15):
a surffry in the kitchen. Thatthat wasn't hanging out with a shady paper.
You want to paying a drug dealer. He's making Johnny's House on Orlando's
number one hit music station. Minimumwage in Florida sent to gradually increase to
fifteen dollars an hour by twenty twentysix. Another change is going to happen
(31:36):
this year. In twenty twenty,Florida voters approved Amendment Too that would change
Florida constitution allows states to increase minimumwage by a dollar each year until twenty
twenty six. So at twenty twentysix, it'll be at fifteen dollars an
hour. And so I said,you know what'd be funny is that we
can guess your age by by theminimum waye that you was making when you
(31:57):
started working. Now, I lookedit up a little bit. They had
the nineteen thirty eight Act one thatwas that's when they told the employees you
got to start paying people a certainamount of money because by then they throw
knuckles at you. You work allday of the knuckle you go present.
So here's the around you guys.In October twenty fourth, nineteen thirty eight,
(32:17):
what was the minimum wage? MissRay? How much was it?
In nineteen thirty eight minimum wage?It was one dollar hand, one dollar
b I'm going thirty five cents,thirty five cent noice, fifteen cents.
It was twenty five cents. NowI did the math that mister math over
there isn't that ten dollars on aforty hour week? But if it's twenty
(32:38):
five cents, you said twenty fivecents an hour? Yeah, yeah,
ten dollars, that's what four tacks? Yeah, ten dollars before tax.
Yeah, but that brought you alot of stuff back then. Yeah,
that's true. You get soda fora nickel good nash. Yeah. Well
yeah, So what we're going todo is we'll go around the room and
find out how much minimum wage wasfor your first job. I'll start,
(33:00):
and I'll start. Now, goand get your left at again. My
first job was in nineteen eighty andI remember making the minimum wage then was
three dollars and ten six an hour. Damn three ten. But by the
time I left there, I feltgood and rich because I made three sixty
(33:22):
five. I got eighty eight dollarsevery two weeks working in the kitchen of
back then we called the old Folkshome of the retirement community, bussing pots
on the weekend. Eighty eight dollarsevery two weeks. All right, ray,
what was minium wage? So whenI started working in two thousand and
five, I was fifteen years oldat a car wash in minimum wage was
(33:44):
seven dollars and thirty one dollars.Wow? Are you serious? And since
I was only fifteen, I hadto take a break every so often?
Oh yeah, every three hours?Yea, yea yeah. What year was
this? So two thousand and five? Wow? And when I left the
car wash that was good money.It was. It was for a fifteen
(34:05):
years, but it could only workso many hours a week and so many
hours a day, so it waslike, you know, again, what
was that? I'm sorry two thousandand five? Okay, because two thousand
and seven minimum wage was five dollarsand eighty five cents. Really, yes,
no, I remember making seven dollars, seven dollars and thirty one cents.
Wow? Was that in Florida?Are you looking at Florida in Florida?
Okay? Wow, no, no, I'm looking at the United States.
(34:27):
Yeah, ok so I was alittle bit more, was it?
Wow? Seven dollars? Me?How much was it when you started working?
My first job? Well, Iunder the table job. I made
way more than minimum wage. Butmy first actually like federal paying job was
four dollars and twenty five cents andnow five was that? Puzzlic That's not
bad? I mean it's not good. You gotta stay. And I made
three thirty sixty five was literally almostfifteen years later because it was nineteen ninety
(34:54):
two. So it's a damn shanethat you have to you have to go
to the government and say, y'allmind raising our pay for real. But
even when I started here, andthis was in two thousand, my pay
wasn't very good pay. My paywas five dollars an hour. Yeah,
yeah, yeah, the reason whenhe started working, what was was your
minimum wage? My first like legitofficial job was at Public's also a cashier,
(35:19):
and I think it was like twentyeleven, like ten dollars an hour.
Really, yeah, yeah, that'show much I got paid when I
got hired here, dag how muchis how much? Is? How much?
Is ten dollars an hour for theyear? Okay ten thousand hours?
If it the same applied with metoo, It was like you can only
(35:39):
work so many hours because I thinkyou made more than I started when I
did when I started working, becauseI'm an write down how much I started
making. He a meet on themath on that one. Do you I
think w hour for what for ayear? Forty hours? And for the
for the week and then for theyear. It's got to be like twenty
thousand, right, yeah, twentyjust over twenty thousand. So at that
in half I was okay, Yeah, I started here making twenty three five.
(36:02):
Yeah, but it did feel goodwhen you go on that pagecheck and
insad one hundred dollars. Su.Well, my first contract here was for
under twenty dollars. When I gotmy first contract, and actually I got
I took a pay cut. Y'allsigned them? Oh sure, I want
everybody, I signed a contract.Yeah, I signed the contract, that
first contract. Lend me know thatthat contract was not for me. Took
a pay cut. It was forthe company. It always is. We're
(36:24):
gonna guess your age by how muchyou made minimum wage when you started working.
I'm not really into talking. Textfor Winnow sixty seven brought to you
by Attorney Dan Newlan in a wreckNeeda check Just google Dan Newlan Excel line
from our Farah and Faris Studios.If you've been injured, make it a
(36:46):
feara fyte. This is an iHeartRadiostation, the exclusive audio home of NBC's
coverage of the twenty twenty four ParisOlympics. Excel win O six seven,
Orlando's number one hit music station.This is Johnny's House. Hey is Johnny's
House, or Orlando's number one hitmusic station. It's Excel well six seven.
Guessing your age by according to theminimum wage you made when you started
(37:08):
working, Florida increases by another dollarthis year. Trying to get up to
fifteen dollars an hour by twenty twentysix, so we not need to find
out minimum wage? And what didyou do? From Kassimi Alexandria? Good
morning, Good morning, Johnny's House. How are you, Alexandria. Oh
how are you guys? I'm soexcited? Oh are your first time caller?
(37:30):
Ill? Oh? We gotta fighttime? Well, we got something
new. First time callers. Youget a you get a Johnny's House member
number, Nourice. What is hernumber? Your number is two three four
eight. Remember that number, Alexandria, that is only going to go to
you two three four eight. Yougot that? Got it? So when
(37:51):
you call it next time, it'sAlexandria. Remember two firmul eight? Anything
would say, hey, all right? Got it? All right? So
how much was minimum wage when youstarted working? Five dollars and fifteen cents
five dollars and fifteen cent And whatdid you do? I worked at a
movie theater. This would like tobe the coolest job if you're in school.
Yeah, I think so. Yeah, you get down, do you
(38:13):
hook your friends up with tickets?And you have free free popcorn? Saw
the movies free? I did?I did. I can go anytime I
wanted. Wow? And what yearwas this? It was like two thousand
and five ish, two thousand andfive. Really yeah, yeah, because
I started here in two thousand andthat's when I got five dollars an hour?
Wow? And how old on,Alexander thirty five thirty five wow?
(38:37):
Fifteen dollars an hour? Man?When I started, I just dreamed,
no dollars in fifteen cents an hour? Yeah, back then you'd have been
rich. Bawling drive a corvette?Well not close, but I did feel
over it, that's for sure.Coming home with a dollars every couple of
weeks. How much did you makeevery two weeks? It was not a
(39:00):
lot, but I thought it wasthen. I don't know, maybe two
hundred Oh bawling, Well, highschool kid, that's bawling, all right.
I thank you, Alexandra, andcall anytime you remember now right,
thank you, have a good dayyou too, Bye bye, let's see
and from Lake Mary, Erica,good morning, good morning, all right,
(39:20):
Erica? And how much were youmaking an hour in your first job?
I also made five dollars and fifteencents an hour at a yogurt shop.
Yogurt shop? Did you hook yourfriends up? I can't recall.
Look if you look your friends up, you knew if you hook your friends
up you did? Yeah? Wow? And what year was this? It's
(39:40):
two thousand and what was that?What was your paycheck? What did it
looked like? Do you remember?I want to say about eighty eight to
one hundred dollars a week a weekfrom Connecticut? Okay a week? That's
not bad? And how old areyou not? Erica? Thirty nine?
Thirty nine? You missed a littleyoga shop job even though he didn't make
a lot of money. Oh youknow, it was fun making cones,
(40:04):
making cones, all right? Allright, Erica? Thank you? I
have you as well, all right? Trying to find out your age by
your minimum wage from Kassemi Patrick?How you doing? Hi? Patrick?
How much you make your first job? Seven thirty five? Seven thirty five?
That's like recent. Yeah, andwhat did you do? I was
(40:29):
it working at Sea World. Nicereally cool job too. I'll tell you
in your late twenties thirty one.Oh okay, okay, did you like
that job? I did it forfifteen years, gave it up. I
love like that. I had togive it up. I had a chance.
(40:49):
I go back and do it allover again. I'll do it all
over again. I got you,I got you. Be what it's saying
over a man Xcel Mobile power byturning Dan Newlan in the wrect need a
check called Dan Newlan. Someone saidin two thousand and four they made seven
to twenty five an hour at thetaco bill. Okay, someone said their
minimum wage first job six dollars andfifteen cents. And then someone Diana so
way back in the day, sixteenyears old, her first job one dollar
(41:14):
and seventy five cents an hour.Holy, we love the senior citizens when
they listened to this show. Welove y'all. We do love y'all.
Reason what say we got to Shawna. She says she made four to twenty
five at the age of sixteen,okay, and Tricia she made three twenty
five at the age of thirty.Even Johnny's House Morning, Orlando's number one
hit music station all day Excel oneO six seven, WXXL HD one.
(41:36):
So Very's Orlando. This is theweekend. Hey, it's Oliver Rodrigo.
Johnny's House Mornings, Orlando's number onehit music station all day. Oh Orlando,
Johnny's House in the morning, Excelone O six seven. So there
was a person that got stuck ona plane. Yeah, there's this year
and he was on a flight andI think it was in Indian and he
(41:57):
went to the bathroom normal, andthen he didn't come out for a little
while, and they were like,what's going on in there? And he
was trying to get out. Theyheard him trying to get out, so
I guess the lock malfunction. Sothe flight attendants were I know. So
the flight attendants came over and youknow, they have somebody who specializes in
maintenance on the plane. They triedto get it open. They couldn't get
it open, so eventually the guywas like locked inside. He started to
(42:21):
freak out. They actually wrote anote and slipped it under the door and
said, hey, we know you'restuck in there, just relax, We're
trying to get you out. Hewas in there for over an hour.
Whoa in the battle on a flight? Yeah that's nasty. Wow, But
I mean I guess they eventually gothim out and everything was fine. But
that would totally freak you out ifyou were stuck in that little tiny because
it's a box. Man. Wow. So I guess that question is have
(42:42):
you ever been been stuck somewhere orlocked in or trapped? I mean the
closest I ever got was the elevatorhere, but it was only for like
maybe two two minutes. We didn'thave to wait on anybody to come.
It just started working again. Wehad the elevators here. I guess they
had him redone is it started malfunctioningdoing baby DJ and we had people with
boxes and toys. And I geta call Johnny, some volunteers stuck on
(43:07):
the elevator. So I'm proud todo them. Are y'all all right?
Yeah? Help is on the way. They had to come? Yeah?
Oh wow, So no, minddidn't They didn't have to come. Eventually
it just clicked itself out. Guessit was just off track and it just
started again. It's why the olevatorshere freaked me out. Luckily, it's
only four floors, so if Ifall, probably won't die. But there
is a and they said our flooris hydraulic, so you would not follow
(43:29):
it just kind of just kind ofgo down one organizations who help us out
tremendously with a baby DJ program hiselevator engineers. Yeah, and they told
me everybody has this key. Yougonna get this little key and it usually
just quick fixed. You can blahblah blah. I got locked in the
locker room and I did it onmy own, by mistake. That's how
thin I was back then. Iwas running from you know how, you
(43:51):
messing around and with the team,and I ran up the locker and they
was trying to find me, andand I locked the door, but I
didn't know it wouldn't set up toany It's not set to open on the
inside, right, Somebody on theoutside got to pull it up and let
you you out, Yeah, AndI'm like, uh huh. And so
I had to let them. Icouldn't let them know that I was stuck
because they would have left me inthere. Yeah. So I'm looking at
(44:13):
the look at those those little holesof the half of the air I was
like, there go hey, man'sJohnny Man. I was trying to rough
open this up, man, allright, because if they had any indication
that I could not get out,Oh yeah, you give it a power.
I'm telling you. I was.I was locked in and I'll never
forget that feeling. And you knowyou're trying to I was in there and
oh, come on out, man, he's gone three. I've been trapped.
(44:36):
The only time that's happened is backin the day at the Cummeral Town
Center mall. You know, whenthey start closing down the stores that night
time, they literally start putting thosegates down. Yeah, and every single
gate was down, and my friendand I I remember, we were like,
so, how are we supposed toget out here? And we were
like, we're walking around the wholeentire mall. And then they started turning
the lighting and we sat there andwe're like, we're sleeping. We're sleeping
(44:57):
in the mall. And we wereprobably like fifty teen at the time,
and so we sat there and somedude that was like walking the mall like
security or something. He was like, you guys are supposed to exit over
past the food court, like onthe side door, probably for like a
good thirty minutes just walking around.People don't understand. And most of those
stores they have a back door,yeah you know, so they they look
around the store, close the gate, go out the back door, which
(45:20):
leads to the parking. But wetried everything. So in some malls,
those back doors just lead to corridors. Yes, I got trapped in one
of those ones because a lot ofthem only have handles on one side.
Yes, yes, they don't wantto Yeah, and I got stuck in
one and we were in a corridorwhere we couldn't find one that had a
handle for me to get out.Oh no, Because I used to work
in like when I was a constructionhelper, we used to do mall stores.
We used to like rehab on themall stors. Me and my friend
(45:44):
walked around the corridors of the mallfor a good forty minutes, see what
I'm saying, And it's like wejust sat there and finally some dude were
like, thank God, because wewere like we were planning on just staying
here because we were fifteen, andwe were like laughing about it, laughing
about it, yes, because Imean we're kid, And they were hot.
See, you got to staying.We come from two different experiences.
I'm like, take them, thinkI'm stealing. We're closed. You couldn't
(46:07):
get in down the door, right, I'm like, hey, let us
help you out me. What's hedoing? Him and his gang? Sad
but true? Sad but true?Uh Nurie Evan Troup. Yeah, the
the subways in New York when theygo under the tunnel. First of all,
I already feel claustrophobic just being onthat train. But it's stuck.
It got stuck one day, andlike when I was visiting a friend and
(46:30):
she immediately saw my palms sweating becauseI just started freaking out. I was
like, oh man, this happensevery day. This happens every day.
Hello, how long was it?Like? Five minutes? Maybe? Yeah?
For real? I want to findout if you've ever been trapped or
stuck somewhere you're locked in, couldnot get out, And I ain't talking
about jail. Asked Surrey to playExcel one oh six point seven on my
(46:50):
Heart Radio Music all day, Takeus wherever you go. Excel one O
six seven, Orlando's number one Hitmusic, Orlando's number one hip music station.
It's Excel one six seven, andyou are listening to Johnny's house.
Someone's stuck in an airplane bathroom forabout an hour, and we're trying to
find out if you're one of those. You ever been stuck? You ever
been trapped? We want to hearyour story. Let's go from Jacksonville.
(47:12):
Lola, Lola, good morning,good morning. Hi. Where were you
trapped? Where were you stuck?Listen? I heard this story yesterday and
I could help a laugh because thesame thing happened to us. I was
on a tour bus once with myson. We were going to the field
trips, you know, from Orlandoto see in Augustine that they taking Fourth
Street, okay, And on theway back, he was like, I
have to go to the bathroom.And I said to him that buck bathroom
(47:36):
is nexty, I said, butif it's an emergency, go for it.
Huh. Well, he went inthe bathroom to handle fell off.
Oh, trying to get out.Oh, he got stuck in the bus
bathroom. Oh. He was poundingon the door and everybody was yelling at
him open the door, open thedoor, but he was like I can't
and the handle fell off, sothey had to pull over. They had
just like this little basic tool kitand they were trying to take the door.
(48:00):
We're off the engines to get himout. You can stalk at the
side of the road in that bathroomfor about an hour. Oh, in
a nasty bathroom. Were like,please help me. I'm not set in
like got bad Mother of the Yearbecause I couldn't help it. Johnny,
I was laughing. So I toldyou, next time you listen, I'll
(48:20):
tell you guess it. What anemergency. He's twenty three year old.
Twenty three years old. Now westill laugh about that. Oh yeah,
Oh that's a funny story. Youhold on a second, Okay, I
got a pair of tickets at thevan. Screen of Argyle is going to
be Tuesday, Janguary thirty at theAMC eighteen. Let's see here from Orlando,
Chantelle Santrel, Good morning, Goodmorning, Johnny, good morning.
(48:45):
Shut down. I stop. Hell. We know it's something new in first
time college. You now have ashow member number. Remember this number there,
reason, what is that show Remembernumber? It is twenty three forty
seven, three forty seven. Writeit down. What's your number? Twenty
three forty seven? All right,whatever you call it? Say to Chantelle
(49:06):
remember twenty three forty seven. Allright, all right, Johnny, I
just want to say thank you.I did benefit from your dress. You're
from Operation Princess Project years ago.Yeah, yeah, yeah, and I
did meet too. I think itwas in like a corporate building or something
like that. Okay, I justwant to say thank you man. My
mom appreciated it. Then. It'sbeen like ten years since I graduated,
(49:29):
but I still remember it to thisday and I just want to say thank
you for that. Well, thankyou. Thinking about doing it again sometime
this year, you know, maybefor PROMI season. We're thinking about that
if we probably get enough dresses in. All right, well, thank you,
ma'am. All right, So wherewere you? Where were you locked
in? Where were you? Whereare you starting? So my uncle used
to work for Cisco, like acorporate office, and we went there on
(49:49):
this op date. I don't evenremember what he had to go grapp from
there, but he went to gograb something and it's like a big glass
building. I'm in Atlanta visiting fromOrlando, and I myself like one of
the rooms and he's only me andhim there, So he's like looking for
me, and I'm freaking out likescreaming. Yeah. Man, I'm like,
dang, should I call it police? But I'm like, day,
(50:09):
I want my uncle to go tojail. I'm so sad, and I'm
like, oh my god, whatare my mom's gonna things? What did
you think someone kidnapped me? Like? How is he gonna tell my mom?
There's like I am freaking you hadthoughts going to your head? Yes,
I am just like losing my mind. I'm thinking about him and my
mom. It's even me and I'mjust freaking out and thinking of all the
(50:30):
worst possible scenarios. And I'm justlike, oh my gosh, Like what's
gonna happen? If I caught thepolice? Are they gonna take my uncle
jab? Then? What am Igonna get home? Like? I was
just good. Wow. I finallywent outside locked myself outside of the glass
building at this point, so he'slike looking for me. I'm just like
running around in the sex was likelosing my mind. I'm like, dude,
(50:51):
like what am I going to doat this point? So somebody,
somehow, I guess he's seen meout of the buildings, like out of
the glass and he came outside andhe thought it was the funniest thing in
the world. But I did notthink. I know it was trauma.
It was traumatizing. You're like,what the world is going on? Yeah?
I was like, he's older,you know, but you have we
(51:12):
had a great relationship. He's gonenow, but like before he passed away,
we thought it was a funny thing. Every time he's seen me,
he brought the situation up like itwas. They got plenty as I was
older, but when I was agent, your thing was Look, I'm trying
not to get him in trouble,all right, Colin us all the way
from Utah. It is Tessa.Tessa up from Utah. Tessa, good
(51:32):
morning, Good morning. Do youknow what central Florida? I want to
know? They want to know,are you high? How do you live?
And you have to go to workwith in a couple of hours?
(51:54):
Yeah, not like two hours.Yeah you'll be good. All right?
So, uh so you ever beenstuck? Yes, A couple of years
ago, I used to drive fourhours south to meet this guy because he
had been seen it and so wewanted to meet halfway. And we met
at this place and it's like desert, and I had a jeep at the
(52:15):
time, and I was like,oh, we should take my jeep through
the sand. I've never done thisbefore, but it'll be fun. And
I drove pretty far out into thesand and then they got stuck and it
was like a hundred degrees out.We couldn't dig We couldn't dig my car
out. We sat there for liketwo two and a half hours out it
(52:39):
tuck. Even my dog was helpingus try and dig the wheels out until
we got rescued. Eventually. How'dyou get rescue? You had to call
somebody. There's no service within themiddle of the desert, So how did
you get rescue? Somebody just drivingaround in the middle of the desert and
saw it aliens Yep, exactly,I'm not necessary xl MO po by Attorney
(53:04):
Dan Newlan Interact need to check calledDan Newland. Someone said their dad one
time got stuck in one of thoseroller coasters simulators. A number one hour
went out and so it was trappedinside. They had to be because it's
a gate is Yeah, they lockyou in. Yeah, they had to
pry it open. Let's see.Someone else got stuck in the elevator for
about an hour. Someone said,they're actually trapped right in this very second
in their marriage. You know,hey, am Johnny madded Johnny's house.
(53:30):
How about spending the weekend with Johnny'shouse? Would you like that it's Johnny's
house or Orlando's number one hit musicstation, it's Excel one O six seven.
Ray has this crazy fear? Andhow long have you had this crazy
fear? Ever since I knew thatthese things existed? So maybe aliens?
No, not the aliens since middleschool, even though those do exist.
(53:50):
Uh huh okay. My fear ofsinkholes, like one just opening up right
in front of you, sucking meinto the earth and I never see anybody
ever again, and then just andit's something that just floats around your brain.
I would say at least once aday. I think about it.
Like sometimes when I lay down fora nap, I'm like, what if
a sinkhole opens up underneath my houseand then like my bed gets sucked in
(54:14):
and then I'm just gone. Andthen I'm like living in the earth until
I die. Live it? Youknow, Yeah, that would not be
very long. I couldn't get it. Work it out. Yeah, don't
worry about that part. But likeI think about and then this morning I
saw a sixty foot like a sixtyfoot deep sinkhole opened up in Polk County
(54:34):
and I and it was just likebecause it happens a lot all the time
in Florida. So it was astory a couple of years ago. It
could have been a couple of months. It runs together of God feeling a
sinkhole just swallowed me in. Yeahit's done. And once you're you're gone,
Yeah, just gone, you disappear. And I like think about it.
Even when I'm driving down the roadand I see like a pothole,
I'm like, that could be openingup to sinkhole. I used to have
(54:57):
that problem with my shower that Ialways took when I went to take a
shower, I had shower curtains thatI thought it was something in there.
So the motor house is a walkin there's no curtains. You walk in
there. It is because I alwaysthought, you know, if I can't
see it, it's somebody in there. Is there something in there? Now
it wasn't something like you that botheredme all the time. It's just every
(55:20):
now and then I'm like, somebodygonna be up in there. And then
it get so tired sometime like well, look, if you're in there,
just come on out get stuff snow. Yeah, well, I still check
underneath my car and in my backseatevery single time I get into my car,
every single time, because I'm like, somebody's hiding underneath my car and
gonna cut my achilles. Oh mygosh, somebody's hiding in my car and
they're going to count. I knowthat you go to therapist. You never
(55:40):
brought this up, but it's likeon the back burner for some you know,
previous stuff that you're dealing with.Now. I think it's the backburst
because I'm like, I feel likethese are irrational. Yeah, yeah,
well the under the car thing isirrational. But like my other therapy,
my therapist actually needs to hear aboutmy other anxiety stuff. But yeah,
I don't know. He's a funnything about it. It's weird you say
(56:01):
that about achilles. I saw somethingabout somebody slicing their achilles, and then
I had a conversation with a guyfor no reason how to blue and goes.
You know, when they cut yourachilles, it rolls up into a
ball and then they gotta pull itback. Yeah you can't. Yeah,
Yeah, it's like Alasta and I'mlike say what, Oh, yeah,
they got to pull it all theway down. It's very painful, and
they pull it down. I'm like, imagine it is, like why do
(56:22):
I know this me any irrational fears? I think the closest thing I have
to that is I always am afraidI'm gonna choke, like on whatever I'm
eating too all the time. Ilove I love Anti Ann's pretzels. I
can't not get them anytime I goanywhere. But I'm afraid to eat him
in the car by myself because Ialways think I'm gonna choke and then who's
gonna help me? There's nobody there. Yeah, I don't know. It's
(56:42):
just I feel like when I goto swallow and like here comes, I
always have my drinks standing by,and I'm always afraid of Like even the
other day, I was walking throughhere and I was the only one here
and I was eating something and Ithought, man, I I choke right
now, Where am I going?Like there's no one to help me.
I'm so glad that you said that, because I think the exact way.
I'm in my house by myself,I'm like that food could kill me all
(57:04):
the time. Here's a funny thing. You say that. I don't fear
that, but I know something happened. I saw how to do the self
help Heimlich. You just get ona chair and just about to punch myself
in the stomach, like you gottaget on the chair, Like there's nobody
here. I was like, thelady downstairs can't hold me, she's too
old. I think soft pencils arethe worst because I sawt pretzel. If
(57:28):
I chew it, I'm like,this is not going down right, and
I start freaking out, like Inibble on my pretzels now because there's no
one there to save me. That'sone of the reasons why I don't like
to eat Mozrela sticks. I'm afraidI'll choke on it. Ray wasn't new
when it's open up. I knowwe're right after what he just said,
choking. I never even thought aboutthinking choking. Yellow weird. All right,
Listen, what is an unusual irrationalfear that you just happen to have?
(57:50):
Is Johnny's house or Orlando's number one? Hit me the stage in It's
excel well six to seven talking aboutirrational fears that you have. Somehow it
just drifts into your thoughts and youthink about it all the time, and
as you find out if you're listening, this room is very weird. From
Orlando, James, Good morning,Hey John, Hey James. What's going
on? Man? Oh? Nothingmuch? All right? You remember you
(58:14):
called us? Right? Yes?I do? Okay, So what is
your irrational fear? My irrational fearis getting in the water here somewhere in
Florida and getting bit by a gator. The gators in the water man,
that is they know. I knewthat. Yeah, everybody of water has
a gator in it. I thoughtyou were going to says no, non
(58:36):
ut. I'm from Louisiana. I'mfrom the Bayou's Louisiana, So I dealt
with gators all my life. Yeah, we used some haunt them. So
if I can't if I go,you know, I go out on the
coast, even even the ocean.If I can't see the bottom or around
me, I don't get no,I don't get in that area. Now.
Has this come from growing up inthe Bayou? You just know it?
Or you know somebody that got beenby an alligator? Well, I
(58:59):
know the guy that that little kidthat got his leg completely taken off by
alligatory. I've been bitten by analligator. A little baby one. Now,
step dad lost one of his fingersby trying to stab the back of
an alligator. Well, yeah,yeah, you got, you got,
you got a pretty good you havea reason to fear. Now what part
of what time? What time?What part of louising on on your front?
(59:22):
The value? Get down by themouth of the Mississippi River in that
area, you have a go,you have a go noodling? No,
no, I will never go noodlingbecause there is what they call it snapping
turtle. Oh yeah, no,no, completely off. Yeah. You
you dive in the water, nono oxygen. You see a branch and
(59:45):
your jammy hand in there, andit's in the mouth of a catfish.
It's a huge catfish and your jammyhammer in it, and then you pull
the whole thing out of it withyour hand. I thought, like,
what, y'all are different animals overthere? What that's what they make fishing
rods for little kids down there doingit? What they make the seafood section
that public's for. And the fishis halfway up their arm and they're just
(01:00:07):
pulling it all the way out andAwoman, go down and do it again.
All right, all right, Jay, thank you? Man standing at
water bro all right, bye bye, yeah water. I can't see the
bottom of it. I'm also veryYeah, Dan yell from Orlando. What's
your irrational fear? Fainting and public? I've done it before. It's all
right. People look out for you, People come to your people come to
(01:00:27):
your rescue quickly. It's just thefact is like walking, I'd be like,
for example, in target shopping,thinking, oh my god, if
I just say it right now,how embarrassing would that? It is quite
embarrassing. But after a while,the embarrassing part is when you come to
a there's a million people looking atyou, going all you're right? Are
you're right? That's what embarrassing part. And then you want to get mad,
and then you want to get mad. You get mad, get out
(01:00:49):
of me. You can't find fine, but they they're not. No,
they won't leave you for a while. Exactly. I've been there. Public
can't do it, okay, allright, Danielle, thank you, thank
you. I'm not bragging that I'vedone it. It just happened. It
happens, It just happened. Goodmorning you for some color. Yeah,
(01:01:09):
we have a first time calling numberfor you. This is your number for
life. No one else will havethis number. Remember it next time you
call in the reason what is hisnumber? Twenty three fifty one, twenty
three fifty one is your number.Don't ever forget it. Write it down.
This is twenty whatever else fifty one. She just said, all right,
twenty three, all right, twentythree fifty one. What is your
fear? My irrational fear is justdying in traffic? Yeah, d in
(01:01:35):
traffic, like specifically, no noreason other than just I'm from Atlanta.
I'm used to driving on bigger highwayseverybody. You know, it's more organized
chaos. Yeah, you know,I'm down in Florida for the past five
or six years. I'm still afraidto ie for I never know what's going
to happen people. I'm angry onI for see, if you've driven in
Atlanta, y'all got traffic all thetime, That's just what it is.
(01:01:57):
But here people act like they've neverhad traffic. We had somebody's shot yesterday
or road rage shot and yell yeah, and I'm just going down the road
and it's like I'm already having issues, you know, remembering where I'm supposed
to. Yes, yes, Andit's like, wow, somebody just gonna,
you know, ruin my day.It seems like everything's going good.
The traffic really just ruins everything.I swear in a lane and this guy
(01:02:21):
looked at me like he wanted tomurder me. And I'm looking at him,
going, hey, my bad.You know the double pad on the
chest, bad, he said?He said, that'she shoot you dud My
bad him? Bro? Alright,alright, don't you guys listen every day?
Thank you? Don't forget the number? All right? Right? What
they say? I feel like Ishouldn't have pitched this topic because now all
(01:02:42):
these fears are like going through myhat, like I didn't know I had
that fear soil I took this call. Somebody said birds. Birds are so
unpredictable. Man, they're sketchy.Yeah, let me tell you a secret
behind birds, y'all. They're allmechanical. That's why they line up,
line up on power lines to rechargeto stop pooping on my car. Birds
aren't real. They're not real.They're all mechanicals. And the h had
a spy on us. Somebody saidthat a cruise ship is just going to
(01:03:05):
sink in the middle of the ocean, roll Star. I can't sleep on
cruises. I think about it all. I see where the lifeboats are one
of those. This ain't a Titanicsituation. I already know what to do.
Hey, my kids didn't know.Somebody said chainsaws very I'm not afraid.
I don't like them. Be whatthey said dangerous. XL Mobile Power
(01:03:27):
by Attorney Dan Newlan interrect need tocheck called Dan Newlan Bridges. They're always
afraid they're going to drive off thebridge, and they're always planning their escape.
Someone said, how long is thesun going to be around? I
mean they say it's going to bearound forever, but who knows. Well,
it could actually turn off right now. But they'll tell you now in
eight minutes, we're all gonna die, right because that's all it takes from
the beams to get in someone's head. Growing up, it was spontaneous human
(01:03:51):
canbustion because of an episode of UnsolvedMysteries? Could it not Happen? At
four one o six seven, Broughtto you by Attorney Dan Newlan in arec
Nita check Just Google Dan Newlan excelja Live from our Farah and Faris studios.
(01:04:11):
If you've been injured, make ita feara fight. This is an
iHeartRadio station, the exclusive audio homeof NBC's coverage of the twenty twenty four
Paris Olympics. Excel one O sixseven, Orlando's number one hit music station,
WXXL HD one so Veries, Orlando. What's up, Sojacat? It's
Taylor Swift Johnny's House Mornings, Orlando'snumber one hit music station all Day one
(01:04:36):
six seven Orlando, Johnny's House,or Orlando's number one hit music station.
U Ram sure you can relate.I'm relating to it now myself. Childcare
in the US costs more in Floridathan in state college tuition. New numbers
from care dot com shows that parentsbeen twenty four percent of their household income
on child suppair, child's board,I mean, on childcare. Half of
(01:05:00):
parents survey say they spend eighteen thousanddollars in twenty twenty three. And they
have a story of a teacher whohas three kids and she says twenty percent
for monthly incomes three hundred three hundredbucks a child. She says she pays
eight hundred dollars a month. That'skind of cheap for actually that's actually very
cheap. Yeah. A new reportfrom care dot com says the average parent
(01:05:20):
is paying three hundred and twenty onedollars weekly for childcare and some things that
parents are having to do to makethe sacrifice for childcare. He is working
multiple jobs twenty eight percent, reducinghours at work so you can go pick
up the kids twenty seven percent,moving close to the family twenty five percent,
going into debt nineteen percent, andactually leaving the workforce because a lot
(01:05:44):
of parents have to lead the workforcebecause what they were working for was to
pay for childcare break even. Soyeah, it's like I'm working just to
pay for with childcare. So ray, how do you do it so you
don't get a discount because you haveto win. They give us like a
tax this time for the second child. Yeah. So, but before they
were in VPK, they were indaycare all day long, you know.
(01:06:05):
So right now they're on VPK.So a portion of it is free because
it is Florida, and the stateof Florida gives you a free VPK,
but that's only until like I thinktwelve ish or one ish or something like
that. So but nobody gets offwork around that time unless you work our
schedule, which is nice. Solast year we spent twenty two thousand dollars
on two kids in childcare. Good, And that is more than tuition because
(01:06:29):
I just paid my first round oftuition for my son, and so for
his first semester, it was onlygoing to be like twelve hundred dollars.
Yeah, and that's for the wholesemester. So if I did that for
two semester, we're talking about twentyfour hundred dollars. Yeah. Yeah,
I have child care, and it'sto get someone to get up at three
in the morning to get to myhouse so I can come to work,
yeah, and then take the kidsschool and make the kid breakfast. Yeah
(01:06:54):
yeah, but it has to bedone right. It's not something you can
think of about. I mean,what what do you do. I got
lucky. I had. I hadthe bootleg neighborhood nanny for my son,
and she was great. She wasawesome and she's still like a second grandmother
to him. So like they stilltold you that for until she was reasonable,
oh gosh, I mean she wasnext to nothing because she just loved
(01:07:14):
it. I told you me growingup, it was a lady named missus
Claireman and all the kids stayed there. It was about eight of us up
in there, and all and allyou had to do was take a nap
when the stories came on. Oneo'clock came the soap operas. Y'all know,
it's time one o'clock, nap time, so she can watch the you
know. She made sure we ain'tgo out. Her job was to make
sure that we were safe. Yes, I ain't learning damn thing. Oh
(01:07:40):
my son did, though it's great. She wouldn't feed him no food that
wasn't like straight up fresh, sowe'd send them with baby food. She'd
send it back because she'd make itfresh and mash it up herself. He
started eating rice and beans at areally early age. He learned a little
Spanish. He would come home clean, smelling like baby cologne. I'm like,
man, when he went to regularschool, I'm like, well,
this is a racket. This isback to Irish. It's so true.
(01:08:01):
We had a nanny like the firstyear for the twins, and it was
our friend Gabby. So we luckedout on that. It's like the younger
they are, the more expensive theyare too. So like once they hit
one or something, we put themin daycare, and it was like,
I don't. I don't have kidsobviously not yet, but like I definitely
don't take it for granted that Idon't have to spend a time on anyone
(01:08:21):
else other than myself. Yeah.Yeah, that's the thing, you know.
Babies and children are beautiful things.Of course expensive, yes, and
I see the struggle with my friendsand my family. What happened a couple
of years ago. Childcare just wentthrough the roof. But somebody, someone,
someone broken down and say, listen, so we got to watch the
(01:08:43):
kids. It's necessary. Yeah,and if you want the good ones,
you're gonna have to pay, right, you know. I wonder if they
still have like those neighborhood because Ithink they shut down on it a couple
of years ago. If you're watchingmore than certain number of kids, you
can be reported as a well yeah, you got to keep it quiet because
it's under the table, which meansthey're not reporting it. Yeah. So
you also don't get tax credit forit. That's one thing that everyone's like,
(01:09:03):
Oh, you get a huge writeoff because you have a kid.
I'm like, no, I don't, because I pay under the table childcare.
I don't get to write off anythingbecause if I do, it's gonna
get shut down. So they usedto always say, man, you get
great taxes. I mean I didn'tget I get nothing for taxes. Taxes
is not a reason to have kids. It ain't what you think it is.
I want to find out what doyou do and how much do you
(01:09:23):
spend on childcare? And do youhave a family member or someone like my
sister. She watches my niece's kids. She's like, she's retired and they
bring over there and she watched sheloves it and blah blah blah. She
don't even take pay. She's like, that's fine, I'll watch it.
And my nieces are like, yes, that's nice. Yes every day.
(01:09:45):
I was talking to my mom yesday said yea, I'm watching so and
so he's here, said she needsbreak, so I'm watching it. I'm
like, okay, everybody's happy.It's free, no money change hand.
My mom was a pre K teacherand so when my when she retired,
she was built in childcare for myson because she she would call me and
be like, can you guys makesome plans so I doesn't take Jayden for
three or four days. We absolutelycan. Do you feel great because that's
(01:10:05):
your mama. She loves it,he loves it. She's actually certified as
a teacher. This is beautiful,This all works out. They said childcare
in the United States costs more thanFlorida in state college tuition. So I'm
trying to find out how much howdo you do with what do you do
with childcare? And how much areyou Johnny's House is having a listener appreciation
party. He is Johnny's House,or Orlando's number one hit music station.
(01:10:27):
It's XL well O six seven.They say it is cheap bud to send
your kid at the college and itis for childcare, so which is kind
of nosy. Want to know whatdo you do about childcare? And how
much are you spending a month?Tiffany, Good morning, Good morning,
Tiffany. How many kids you gotfour? And what are the ages seven,
five, three, and three?And what do you do for child
(01:10:49):
care? So I don't have achoice. My kids are in vaguer.
I'm a teacher, so I gotand my son doesn't go to my own
My know doesn't go to my school, so he has before and aftercare,
which is like sixty two a week. So and then my three kids are
in daycare, and I did themak. I'm sorry, princess, I
(01:11:11):
get sorry. That's okay, wegot you. So I did the mask.
I get four c for my littleones. So I paid all together
three hundred dollars for child care.If I did not have worky, I
would pay seven hundred dollars a weekor three hundred months, even hundreds a
week, you would have to payseven hundred dollars a week. A week.
(01:11:32):
Yeah, i'd pay seven hundred aweek if I did not have four
CEE. They pay most of itbecause I got lots of kids, because
I go sevens. We got cometo your house and watch your kids.
I'll quickness. When I was whenI had my when I had my when
I was pregnant with my twins,I couldn't work because I couldn't afford daycare.
I couldn't afford dacare for my twokids. And so yeah, it's
(01:11:55):
in the daycare. Raach just keepsgoing up in my daycares. Raises Ray
three times this year this year.Yeah in a year forensic friturday. Wow.
Okay, but you don't have anoption. So you just hope that
they get get age so you cansend in the school. Yeah, they're
eventually going to come to my schoolwith me, because then I won't have
to care. There you go,I'm a kid sitting in the classroom.
(01:12:19):
The kid looks kind of young,he's a student, leave alone up in
there every day. My son's inDPK, and so the daycare rate shot
down. There you go, thereyou go, all right, well,
hanging hanging that, Tiffany, allright, bye, bye man, My
goodness. Uh Keana from Saint Cloud, good morning, Hi, good morning
(01:12:40):
guys. How much you spend onchildcare? So I spent six forty a
week? How many kids you got? That's for two of them in daycare.
I've got a one year old anda three year old and it's twenty
a week. Yes, and Idon't qualify for fourty twenty weeks. So
wild that's a card, you know, mortgage, a lotage. That's like
(01:13:05):
a Ferrari pair. Huh No.There was another daycare that we were going
to put them in, and itwas brand new, it had swim lessons
included. I was like, howmuch for both of them? They wanted
like seven hundred and change for theboth of them. I'm like, this
is just crazy. Whoa six twentya week? And and the thing is
(01:13:28):
the thing, and I learned thisfrom a from from Ray, is that
if your kid is sick and theycan't get there, you still got to
pay the whole spot. Oh yeah, absolutely, you can't let your kids.
They'll give it to someone else.Now, my when I you take
up all right now, back whenI was paying for daycare for my son.
He's older now, but you ifyou weren't going to be there for
a while, you would get alittle bit of a discounted rate for X
(01:13:50):
amount of days if he wasn't goingto be there, But you got to
give him. Notice my goodness,it's true. And then you know Christmas
break the school closed down for afew days. That ask them, are
we still going to get charged?They're like yep, yeah, oh yeah,
they said it like this silly lady. Yes, of course we need
(01:14:10):
our six twenty a week every weekhere or not, vacation or not.
We need at six twenty Wow.Alright, well you too, Ken You
hang in there, girl, Thankyou for sharing that. Good allow it.
WHOA Let's see Saint Cloud Jazz,Good morning, Hi, good morning's
on his house. Happy Monday,Happy Monday to you. Now, how
(01:14:32):
many kids do you have? Ihave three as well, seven, five
and three. Ooh, you're rightup in there. Yeah, thank God
for the birthdays, because you're right, but younger they are the more expensive.
I currently pay five six zero,one hundred and sixty a week,
(01:14:53):
week a week. It's my mortgage. Yea. I was gonna say,
that's more than your house. Oh, my goodness, more than And that
doesn't count the registration. And eventhough my kids attend for a couple of
years, there's an annual registration,and then there's annual supply seat and then
uniform says wow, yeah, mykids their uniform. Yeah, the clothing.
(01:15:21):
If the school is closed or they'restaking them homestick, you still have
to pay the full amount. Yep. And look, he's gonna be sick
today. Can I get like fifty? He's not there, he's not eating
because there's a list of people waitingto take your spot. We'll tell them
to come in. There's two daysand then good nest, all right,
(01:15:41):
jazz you too. You hang inthere, girl, Thank you, guys,
thank you. And what if thegovernment wants to do something you should
do. Government sponsored childcare, allright? What they say? Somebody said,
have three kids in after school care, and I pay about two seventy
a week. How many kids?Three? Okay, two seventy. Yeah,
according to the list that we're goingby, that's a discount. Yeah,
(01:16:02):
after school though, that's not allday, all day after school.
Yeah, so so somebody can watchthem till you get home from work.
Right, Oh wow? Yep.And my daughter's day care is about thirteen
fifty for the younger kids in aboutone thousand and five for VPK, we
say thirteen fifty. Probably a momfor a month. Yeah. Somebody spent
almost thirty thousand dollars last year inchildcare. Thirty grand Yeah, I beat
(01:16:25):
me. I wonder how many kidsthey have? Woos for two? We
did? We did twenty two thousand, and that was like, wow,
I was growing up to let mewatch the rest of them. Yep,
yeah, only watch the rest ofwhoever the oldest kid in the neighborhood was
watch them get everybody else. Allwe want to do is come home and
they don't have any bones broken.That's it. The same what they excel
(01:16:47):
mo power. My attorney, DanNewlan Interact need a check called Dan Newland.
Yeah, there's a lot of peoplethat're paying more for childcare than their
mortgage, Like you know, twentyfive thirty thousand dollars a year. It's
child can diapers child pay if you'resending them to childcare in diapers, it's
both. They don't provide any ofthat. Wearing new sneakers today something thirteen
(01:17:09):
month. I think you can throwon a diaper here in one a date.
That's all a man. This isOrlando's most listened to morning show.
More Johnny's House coming up next.SERI to play x L one O six
point seven on our Hearts Radio musicall date, take us wherever you go.
Excel one O six seven. Orlando'snumber one hit is Johnny's House.
(01:17:31):
Orlando's number one hit music station isExcel one O six seven. So Brian
your cars about your truck's about tohit a milestone? Yes, sir,
it looks great, though I neverwould have thought you had to that many
miles on it. No, Ikeep it. I keep it up pretty
nice. Yeah, and I youknow, I'm on top of the maintenance
and whatnot. I paid it offearlier this year. Okay, So My
goal is to you just run aroundwith equity, keep it. Yeah.
My goal is to keep it foreverdriving equity. Yeah, but I'm about
(01:17:55):
to hit one hundred and fifty thousand. In the day you had to sell
your carfoy Head, one hundred thousandwas unheard of. Oh you got to
sell it. Yeah. I stillthought until I came in here today and
you guys were like, no,no, there are people spending right now.
Twenty five thirty forty thousand dollars fora card has one hundred thirty thousands.
Yeah, I believe, especially trucks. We looked it up. Trucks
(01:18:16):
hold value forever, Like I mean, I looked at my trade value up
and I could go and get somethingnew. I got friends at Jennkin Sunday
at Lesburg. But I was like, you know what, I don't have
a payment right now. What's youryear? What's the year on your twenty
seventeen. Yeah. I drive alot. I mean it's fifty miles a
day just to it from work,so that's a lot. But then also
I used my truck to pull ourboat. So if we go down to
(01:18:38):
the keys, I've driven it downto the keys before. You know,
we've driven it up to the mountains, like we go to Miami to tailgate,
so I drive it a lot.I have a two thousand and three
SL convertible with sixty seven thousand myluck nice, really good. Yeah,
I think seven thousand original mile thone. My son's mini is the reason we
(01:18:59):
bought it. It's two thousand andseven, but it only has When we
bought it, it had forty twothousand miles on it. That's wild.
It's got so said, it's gotforty five. Now he's driven it around
a little bit, but still it'sit's got a third of the miles of
mind has and it's ten years older. Way how many? How many mon
My car is a twenty seventeen,okay, I think, and I've got
one hundred and twelve thousand, andit's given so nervous. I was like,
(01:19:24):
oh my gosh, I gotta tradeit incause I own my car.
So I'm like, I'm going torun this car into it, like into
the ground, you know, ButI don't know. I am still so
nervous. But it's a Toyota.So Toyotas they're saying, are like,
you know, reasonable, my lastcar before this one had one hundred and
sixty and it looked like it hadone hundred and sasty. It was gonna
(01:19:45):
causset me more to get it fixedthan to trade it in. Yeah,
And so when I traded in,I'm like, y'all can give me this
much. And that's where I amwith my truck. That's what will happen.
I will run it until it becomesto a cost effective to get a
new one, versus I could getthis one fixed. Yeah, Because here's
the thing. If you if youkeep the interior clean, they'll give you
(01:20:08):
that value like for my For me, when I turned it in, I
said, y'all gonna check it out, and they said, we'll give you
this for it. And I ain'ttelling them that. Look. On my
way over here, I hit thegas. Ain't nothing happened. Yeah,
I wasn't supposed to close that right. No, that red light that was
over there, it was my cargoing. Yeah. You know when we
(01:20:29):
were in we were the first tobroadcast in the morning, still broadcast in
Cuba when it opened up for thattwo weeks, and we were in taxi
cabs that had nine hundred one millionmiles in Because they don't get they don't
get new cars. Yeah, youknow, I was like, hey man,
how many how many miles that hewas happy? I got nine hundred
and eighty seven thousand? What's insane? Well, I mean they also have
(01:20:50):
no regulations, so you're literally breathingin gas. Yeah, like from the
second you walk in, you justfuel the gas in your lungs because there's
no like regulations. They had likeinspections or any of that. They had
fans that they had like taped tothe window to move that gas mail around
in there a little bit. Butyeah, these cars were really old,
(01:21:12):
all right. We want to findout what is the oldest. I mean,
how many miles do you have onyours? And what's the largest amount
you've ever had. I think Ihad a brother that had two hundred and
fifty thousand on his car. Thisone is the most I've ever had.
Hundred fifty the most I've ever had. Mots good, take care of it.
Four O seven nine one nine oneO six seven eight seven seven now
one nine one O six seven.The Xcel Mobile is four one O sixty
seven social media live stream Onelnados numberone hit music station. It's XL one
(01:21:38):
O six seven and you are listeningto Johnny's house. Brian's truck has got
into a hundred and fitted thousand miles. We want to find out from you
how many miles on the vehicle thatyou are driving right now? Boy,
y'all got some big numbers. Gooduh from Orlando Ashley, good morning,
good morning. My car has onehundred and eighty nine thousand miles on it,
(01:21:59):
that's right? And how long yougo keep it? I'm trying to
get a new one, and hey, that's big business in the car industry.
Man, that that tax refund hit. You're going in to get another
one? What are you thinking aboutgetting? I'm trying to get a Genesis.
Okay, okay, you know whatyou want. See my friends at
Chickens Sunday Lesberg. There you go, there you go. Now, if
(01:22:21):
you want a Nissan, I gottatell you my boy Suttling Nissan Orlando.
Get the subtling to today and tellhim Johnny Magison's or if you go with
Brian said, tell them Bronson.Yeah, you can check it the entire
inventory on line Chickens at Lisburg dotcom. Yeah. Yeah. If you're
a car endorsement place and you wantto endorse me, please feel fare pedaling
(01:22:43):
herself right, like, hey,forget, I'm trying to give me an
indorsement. Whoever is. We'll havefun shopping for your car, actually I
will, all right, by bnice car. The Genesis is real nice
they have actually they have their owndealership. Now, yes, yeah.
From Orlando, Tanta, Good morning, good morning. How many how many
(01:23:04):
miles you got in your car?So I have a grand total of old
line. There is three hundred eightthousand two miles on the car. What
are you driving? They say?Two thousand and five Excel seven that nobody
makes. Sorry I never heard ofthough. Oh yeah, yeah, oh
(01:23:27):
I remember. Look you had themsidekicks and this summariz yeah wow. And
how long are you gonna ride itout? Well? It was inherited to
me from my dad, so I'mgoing to probably ride it until I get
a new car. There you go. We'll keep writing. Now. I
thought you had a lot of miles, but I want you to hear from
somebody got more miles than you.That's crazy. Okay, all right,
(01:23:49):
thank you, all right? FromOrlando, Corey Corey, Good morning morning,
Corey Corey. How many miles yougot on your van? Four hundred
and eighty four thout, why doeseverything work properly? Every if you jumped
in sight of it, you wouldn'teven know that it has that kind of
malage on it. So you mustdo a lot of over the road driving.
(01:24:12):
Uh. Yes, Well, Iown a transportation and I got a
couple of these, but this isthe first one that I've ever purchased.
So yeah, I mean, thecustomers are surprised and they get inside and
they see the mallage because if youdon't look at the maleedge, you don't
know that it has that kind ofmouth on it. But everything works properly.
Been through two transmissions, and wow, it's actually the FluTEST right out
(01:24:33):
of all of them that I have. It drives the FluTEST out of all
of them. Showing it your fanslike show me love, I'll show you
the love black back. I gotyou, player, I got you all
right, Well, thank you youwan this morning. All right, Take
care man. I was talking toa cab driver in New York once and
he was telling me he gets allchanged once a month, and the breaks
(01:24:54):
changed every two months. I believethat in New York. Yeah, and
their car runs twenty four hours aday. Yep, it's like O Drive
twelve then Brownie did and Drive fortwelve. Aren't transmissions expensive? Yeah?
Can be. Yeah, I feellike at that point i'd feel like,
yeah, but I mean, thinkabout that. If you just say you
pay four thousand dollars to fix yourtransmission, you don't stretched that out versus
a twenty three thousand, twenty fourthousand dollars car. Like you know what
(01:25:15):
I mean, it depends. I'venever had any major repairs on my track.
Yeah, thank you goodness? Rightwhat he saying? Somebody said,
I've got three hundred and forty eightthousand, seven hundred and eighteen miles and
I'm still going. They sent mea picture of it. Yeah, I
do you see the check engine lighton that? That's just a suggestion Xcel
mobill Power by Attorney Dan Newlan interrectneed a check called Dan newl And there's
a lot of people with a lotof miles going to Ford f three point
(01:25:39):
fifty with three hundred and seventy ninethousand, seven hundred and forty eight miles.
But then this dude said he worksat a car dealership and someone just
traded in a Yukon with a littleover five hundred thousand miles. Hi,
this is Harry Styles. Hey,y'all, it's Ariana Grande waking up with
Johnny's House on XL one O sixseven for XL want a six seven X
line at four one oh six seven. It's brought to you by Attorney Dan
(01:25:59):
New. Interact me to check.Just Google Dan newln J live from our
Farah and Farra studios. If you'vebeen injured, make it a feara fight.
This is an iHeartRadio station, theexclusive audio home of NBC's coverage of
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