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January 8, 2026 90 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 2 (00:19):
Better together now the Johnny's House Entertainment News. That's right,
all right.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
So Katy Perry's Lifetime tour has officially ended, and it
brought in a lot of money, of course, one hundred
and thirty four million dollars, just over a million tickets
sold across ninety one shows worldwide.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
It used to be so big and two until everyone
started doing stadiums, yes, and then it was like billions, yes.

Speaker 4 (00:45):
Until yeah exactly.

Speaker 3 (00:46):
So on top of that, the show did raise two
hundred and six four thousand dollars for Katy Perry's Firework Foundation,
so she is giving the majority, or not the majority,
but she is giving money back to charity, which is
nice to see. So over one hundred and nine thousand
dollars in the UK as well for the Music Venue Trust.

Speaker 4 (01:06):
So seven and a half uh, seven.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
And a half month tour spanned over twenty three countries.
So the album one four three did pretty pretty good
for her, but the tour did was great. So now
that that's wrapped up, you could see the numbers, I.

Speaker 5 (01:21):
Think, give some love to trance. I'll be an orchestra.
Yesterday I got a check for about three grand. Well
baby DJAU when they come to town, they give money
to local charity. Yeah, they screwed up a bunch of.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
The I saw that.

Speaker 4 (01:31):
Did Chad and Leslie get the check and stuff too?

Speaker 1 (01:34):
Yeah, so they do stuff for mel Taylor. Yeah, they
do stuff with Chadd and Leslie and then they give
us some stuff they sent to check.

Speaker 5 (01:39):
I was like, hey, he gave some money down to
real radio as well.

Speaker 4 (01:42):
Yeah, very cool. Bad Bunny his world tour, we know
that he is just massive.

Speaker 3 (01:48):
To begin with, his world tour that launched in twenty
twenty five, immediately made history. The opening show and November
in Puerto Rico had seven million dollars that it made,
becoming the venue's biggest engagement ever. Obviously that was huge.
That was bigger than Justin Bieber Coldplay, Carol g in Puerto.

Speaker 5 (02:09):
Rico because people were flying to Puerto Rico just to
go get a show. Yeah, we could go to show.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
So even Bad Bunny himself earned seven million dollars in
twenty twenty two back of Puerto Rico, so for him
to kind of like outbeat himself again, which is really cool.
But the momentum grew, and again, all these tours have
wrapped up, so we're seeing these numbers. So if you
look at it, it's just like there was an eight
six run, I mean an eight night run in Mexico

(02:37):
City and that made eighty six million dollars. So all together,
if you look at the tour's first twelve shows, it
generated one hundred and seven million time.

Speaker 5 (02:47):
And they were talking about how he's going to be
in Brazil during their connoval Yeah, and it was like
this going to be insane.

Speaker 4 (02:53):
Yeah wow, yeah, so pretty big.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
Sarah Michelle Geller, she is talking about Buffy bringing.

Speaker 5 (03:00):
Back Buffy would be Buffy's mom or something.

Speaker 3 (03:03):
I mean, obviously Buffy the Vampire Slayer and all it's
uff like that was a pop.

Speaker 4 (03:07):
Culture huge thing growing up.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
But now what they're saying is that or she's coming
out talking about how Buffy isn't a sequel or a reboot.
It's not a reboot. It's not picking up all with
all the same characters right away. It's not like a sequel.

Speaker 4 (03:22):
She's also saying, so I'm like, okay, so what do
we do here?

Speaker 6 (03:26):
What I know?

Speaker 1 (03:28):
I mean or I guess it could be a side
story that.

Speaker 4 (03:34):
None of that.

Speaker 3 (03:36):
So she goes, that's why the name was even important
to her, because Buffy New sunny Dale is what it's called.
It's Buffy, but it's also something else. So it's basically
her character.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
So just using the name of a character and whatever
story is going to happen lives in that universe. Okay, yes,
so like whatever that that Sunnydale universe or whatever it is, Yeah,
it doesn't have to do with her or anything.

Speaker 5 (03:59):
Does she gonna be in it? Yes?

Speaker 4 (04:00):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, so she's gonna be in it.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
But it's kind of okay, So the way I'm thinking
of it now, it's kind of like what they're doing
with Yellowstone. Okay, so everything's under the Yellowstone umbrella. Yeah,
but they don't necessarily relate to each other.

Speaker 4 (04:11):
Okay, okay, but there's like a character.

Speaker 5 (04:14):
That lives in that universe.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
It lives in that Marvels the same way like they
lives in that Marvel universe.

Speaker 5 (04:20):
The Buffy universe. I get Buffy confused. What was the
one that used to come on Friday Night and they
had that talking black cat. That's Sabrina. Okay, yes, always vampires.
One's a witch.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
I love that, you know, the worst animal tronics, that cat.
I feel like they did it kind of as a joke,
like they knew it was that. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (04:42):
I used to love all those shows and even like
Bewitched back in the day.

Speaker 4 (04:46):
Yeah, yeah, like Nick at Night.

Speaker 5 (04:49):
Oh yeah, yeah. That was the first time they tried
to switch the main character and not let people know too.
Darren's it worked. Yeah, people like, what are you talking about?
Watch it? Watch it all right? Updates on what we
did you today? Next on Johnny's House again. It's gonna
be cold for the rest of the week. But in
Enjoy today, close to eighty seventy ninees are high. It
is sixty one right now. Let's see yesterday I went home.

(05:10):
I wasn't feeling well, Maybe because I was talking about
the flu so much. You start thinking that you start
to have it, So I took some cold medicine. Feel
up better. But I think now I got a little
bit of a medicine head. Then I'm like, told a kid,
we got to put it in the gear, so we
got you got to learn how to drive. And so
we went driving yesterday. My nerves are frazled. Man, I
think it's just me. I think he maybe be a
big driver. It's just it's just me.

Speaker 4 (05:32):
I mean, it's you need to get somebody else. Maybe
I have He.

Speaker 5 (05:35):
Goes, okay, he's gone to drive in school, he has
one more lesson and she said, schedule me before you
go take the test, so that way we can go
over everything that you want to do. And I mean
driving is you know, it's just I don't know.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
Does driving teacher give an assessment already and they don't
think he's about driving home?

Speaker 5 (05:53):
Then maybe it is just I'm not used to sitting
in the passenger seats and directing. Driving angles off well
and right, and you're not supposed to be directed. Yeah,
that's the whole point, my whole thing. I I'm on
my phone and I'm looking up, and I'll look up
and then I'm like, you didn't see that or where
did that come from no sun seated, and where that

(06:14):
comes from don't happen in real life, in real life
where it came from. I don't want you to teach
me that would be an accident or you gotta. And
I'm like, okay, my.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Son's been driving for three years now and my wife
still won't ride with him.

Speaker 5 (06:26):
It's just like we will.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
We will get a helicopter to pick us up before
I ride up with Jada because she's petrified and I
don't love it. He does follow a little close my tastes.
But you know what I think it is Brian.

Speaker 5 (06:39):
I say, you know what, Brian's sons drives and he's
doing well and he's okay, and it's just me. I
need to let go because I know how dangerous a
car can be and me being in an accident. I mean,
I'm walking for one of those get hit by a
track trail life for I was that guy and I
did nothing wrong. So I guess that's in the back
of my head. But I'm just gonna have to just

(07:00):
suck it up and let's just do it.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
Young drivers don't necessarily realize that it's not just about
the function of the US. It's everything going on in
the world around you, and you've got to be.

Speaker 5 (07:10):
In Yeah, And I'm like, you could be driving perfect,
but another person.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
And I think you take it for granted that it's
just easy after you do it a few times. Yeah,
that happened to my son and then somebody hit him
and he's like, what I did nothing? And I got
hit And that's why I told him, like, see, that's
what I'm talking about. The world around you happens.

Speaker 5 (07:27):
I got to suck it up, and that's what I'm
trying to do. Went home, made dinner, call my mom.
We still haven't found the overnight person. My sister's been
spending the overnight but she got the flu. So my
mom like, I'm okay, baby, don't worry about me. I'm like,
all right, that ain't a word. Huh. You told me
the word ain't gonna word? Right, Well, I mean you
can call every day. Mine call every day every day.

(07:49):
We ain't called Sunday Mine was traveling, Sunday, I was traveling.
I'm sorry. I called twice a day. Whatever you need.
So I'm thinking about having cameras in the house. You
should just all up in. I got them around now
she has she has a she has a security station
that I did use Scars face as as a whole
movie because back then that was the level. But she

(08:10):
has has cameras. Anyway, anybody walk on in the yard.
I know my phone alerts at any time. You should
put them in the house. I need to put them
in the way you get it. Never now and then
just pop up in the living room, see what's up?

Speaker 4 (08:19):
What you would She be okay with that.

Speaker 5 (08:21):
Right right now, she said, I'm not questioning any decisions
y'all make towards me.

Speaker 4 (08:25):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (08:26):
She said that until I tell them to put cameras
in the house, then we might have She might be
cool until the first time you said, Hey, so that's
what we're thinking about doing. Ray, how about you.

Speaker 4 (08:35):
I was good. I had some meeting with some of
the big ladies around.

Speaker 5 (08:38):
Yeah, yeah, Ray on the carpet.

Speaker 4 (08:41):
Yeah, it was good to see them. So it was
really good. You know, it's a new year.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
So we sat in front of each other and we
chit chatted about the holidays and all that stuff too.
So but after that I did leave and I got
the kids. My daughter at a doctor's appointment, and I
just love the do the doctor that they saw yesterday,
just because she was very like straight to the point
and like, I don't know, I just love doctors. I
say what it is, and yeah, so we did that,

(09:06):
and then that's pretty much it. I went for a walk.

Speaker 5 (09:09):
At this age, what are you checking for just to
make sure everything you're growing well?

Speaker 4 (09:12):
And yeah, well they're yeah.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
So but like my son has ADHD and that diagnosis
and all that stuff. And then my daughter obviously I
don't know if I've been talking about it in here,
but she's like having sleep issues, which is also like
on like my fault too for like enabling it. So
I'm learning that and wow. Yeah, so it was all
a learning thing yesterday.

Speaker 5 (09:34):
This is the thing when you become a parent. You
start looking at yourself going I'm going to miss this.
Key it up.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
But you know what parent have been happening since Caveman. Yeah,
I figure it out. It's gonna be okay, Yeah, it's
gonna be okay.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
I've learned a lot of how I've messed them up already,
so I'm backtracking now. But then, yeah, so I actually
just went for a walk last night. I was like,
I need to get outside and went for.

Speaker 5 (09:55):
A walk so the good thing now is that you're
talking to people. Back in when I was growing up,
you just got beat HD.

Speaker 1 (10:05):
Hey, go to sleep. I can't sleep now, quick crime
before I give you something to cry about.

Speaker 4 (10:12):
I mean, maybe I need to go back to like
that time mentally.

Speaker 5 (10:15):
No, back then, it was bad. It was real bad.
It was cool. Just did a bunch of stuff around here.
I got stuck here yesterday. All day.

Speaker 1 (10:22):
I couldn't Nothing would get finished fast. Every day if
I tried, somebody would stop me to do this? Or
why because you got something important you want to watch?
Trying to work way in advance. I was here to
three thirty yesterday, literally twelve and a half hours because
nothing would. I couldn't get anything done because every time
I would start something, somebody else would hit me with

(10:42):
something else. I'm like, see, this is why I come early,
because when y'all ain't here, you can't hit me with stuff.
But the good people from Marley Spoon came by, cursed it,
stop by so you guys could sample it.

Speaker 5 (10:53):
It was good. It is good, right. I told her,
I want to try it. I'm going to do I'm
going to try it. I want to try I'm going
to try.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
Yeah, Marley Spoon com slash offer Slash one O six
seven right now, forty five percent off. So it was
cool to hang out with them a little bit. And
then I got my work done and then I finally
got out of here and it was too late to
take a nap. So we you know, my wife's doing
this seventy five hard thing. So we did two walks yesterday.
So we walked when I got home, and then we
cooked a delicious Marley Spoon dinner. By the way, We

(11:20):
had steak rosemary steak and polenta last night.

Speaker 5 (11:24):
Cheesy polenta. First time in my life I ever had polenta.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
And okay, yeah, I don't think it's very grits, like yeah,
oh really okay, okay, so it's a grain.

Speaker 5 (11:32):
Yeah it feels like it is. Yeah, like it feels
like kind of has.

Speaker 4 (11:35):
Made up almost like a grain or aposta.

Speaker 5 (11:37):
It's made out of corn or something that. Okay, kind
of like grits. Okay.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
So we had that last night, and then I lifted
up some weights because I cleaned out the garage the
weight room, right, So I did that and then we
did a second walk. Okay, So we walked all those
five miles yesterday. Now now next week gonna be the
test because it's gonna be cold. Yeah, we'll see, it's
gonna be cold.

Speaker 5 (11:56):
We'll see.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
So we did that, and then we watched some Judge
Judy to feel better about our situation. I went to bet,
I'm gonna have to watch one episode. You're gonna feel
good about your See what that what it is you're
talking about? You think you messed up your kids? Watch
Judge Judy? Yeah, because I want to real messed up
people I mentioned yesterday I watched it, going dam why
are you so mean?

Speaker 5 (12:15):
Judy?

Speaker 7 (12:16):
Why?

Speaker 5 (12:16):
Yeah, why are you so mean? I used to feel
that way, and I've.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
Now shifted to going, man, I'm way better than that guy.

Speaker 5 (12:24):
We come back. Man. There's a lot of running happening
in central Florida. Started to start yesterday today, Today was
I think the five k this morning at Disney. A
lot of running going on. We don't find out if
you're a runner and you do it for fun or not.
On the way on Johnny's House, round ten and then
it's gonna be mostly sunny. Getting close to eighty is
the high. It is sixty one right now going on today, tomorrow,

(12:45):
Saturday and Sunday is the Is there a name for.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
The Its called Disney Run Disney that's like the event,
and then they each one is different, like this is
the Wine and Dyne half marathon.

Speaker 5 (12:56):
Okay, wait, no, that's in October. They did the five
k today Mars to ten k. Saturday is the half marathon,
and then Sunday is the full marathon.

Speaker 1 (13:05):
And there's people doing all of those. Yes, the Dopey Challenge,
I guess it's called and they're coming all out. We
have Fox thirty five on in our studio because they're
on the same time we are in the morning, and
they're dressed up in costumes. And I would be the
person that's cheering on my friend that's running.

Speaker 5 (13:21):
You know. Now, if you're cheering on your friend for
the half marathon, that's about two hours. They let you
hang out in the park a little bit, you know,
and and then come back and watch, because I don't
expect them to have you stand by that rail for
two hours. Yeah. I don't know the rules anymore. I know,
I know.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
I know some people who volunteer for just that, where
they work for just these events, and so they're at
all these events. I don't know how it works if
you're just a spectacle.

Speaker 5 (13:42):
Right, what do you do? You did the half? You
did a half, right, I did that? That was you
and your girl did y'all have anybody come to support you?

Speaker 4 (13:49):
So we also had our friends there.

Speaker 5 (13:51):
They run.

Speaker 3 (13:51):
They know she ran too, So her mom was there
and her girlfriend was there.

Speaker 5 (13:55):
But what did they do was just standing and just yeah,
they were.

Speaker 3 (13:58):
Just standing there waiting her girlfriend and kind of like
met her, uh like a mile out like to the
finish line. Okay, so she was there and then she
came back.

Speaker 5 (14:07):
And that usually takes about what about an hour and
a half two hours.

Speaker 4 (14:11):
A half marathon. It took us two and a half.

Speaker 5 (14:15):
So what if I was supporting you would be bad
that I said go and then go home? She'll a
little bit.

Speaker 4 (14:19):
Yeah, just as like as you were there for the finish.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
I mean I feel like that's fine, you know, And
there's ways to track you. So like there's apps noways
see like where your runner is and like the pace
that they're going at, and so it's really cool if
you are a spectator, you can see where they're where
they're at.

Speaker 5 (14:35):
Really now, I ran track in college and I never
loved running. I loved sprinting, but running, but you had
to run to get in condition. I just didn't like
it. It just and even when Ray, you know, when we're
talking about her doing the the half marathon, I'm like,
did you get it?

Speaker 1 (14:51):
Did you get that runners high that they talk about?
Because I never got it.

Speaker 5 (14:54):
I ran. I ran from middle school till I got
out of college, and I never felt that sensation like
I just felt him. I don't know I felt that.
I just felt that I just want this over.

Speaker 3 (15:04):
Yeah, I feel like I did get the runners high,
Like there is a point where you do get the
runners high, and then like there's also a point where
your body is like what are you doing to me?

Speaker 4 (15:14):
Like your toes you're start to hurt, or like you.

Speaker 5 (15:16):
Know, what do you think about? Because all I thought
about was just finishing. I'm like, okay, you got two
more apps, Okay, you got three more laps.

Speaker 3 (15:22):
I just listened to music, and I keep telling myself
like I'm doing this to prove it to myself. I'm
proving to myself that my body can do this. I'm
lucky that my body can do this.

Speaker 5 (15:30):
It's nice.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
I only played soccer so so you had to run
for conditioning too, right, But to me it was for
a purpose, Like I couldn't just run to run, and
I hated running. We used to a twenty minute run
to open practice and I would duck into the little
champ and play Mortal Combat and then jump back in
with everybody back around when it came back around because
I hate running.

Speaker 5 (15:47):
Hate it. If I run, you better run because there's
an emergency. Yeah, I've never. I've never. I know it's help.
Walking is a lot better if you have if you
just want to get started. Walking is I mean, you
get the same benefits as as But I never really
enjoyed it. I did it because, like I said, I
had to, I had to be in condition, so I
had to run it. One year after we had a cruise.

(16:08):
I mean it was one of them cruise where I
was just destroyed. I said, you know what, I'm gonna
run a five k. Hired the trainer and the cruise
over in September, and ran the five k in December. Yeah,
and I was running, I'm like, this is five k.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
It felt like it was four hundred miles and that's
what's crazy. So I feel like a five k's long. Yeah,
but it was literally nothing nothing. So they started the
five k today and then they'll do the ten k
and then the half marathon and that's a run, yes,
like yes, five k wow. Wow, I'm sure if you're
running one, it's an accomplishment. And the grand scheme it's
so short. For me, I was just halfway through the

(16:42):
five km, like maybe they didn't market right, maybe this
is about ten miles.

Speaker 5 (16:47):
Yeah, it's craz Yeah.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
I was thinking that during my half marathon though, I
was like, there's no way that they like they crack.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
So they theme theirs like to run Disney. That's why
a lot of people do. Like today today had a theme.
I think it was sci fi, and then tomorrow has
another theme. But they get some really good metals too.
Oh yeah, they do really cool stuff really yeah. And
then like some people run all of them. My cousin
does that the Dope challenge?

Speaker 5 (17:09):
You do them all? Yes? And there's one I heard
it's like an ultra marathon where I think you run
from like Miami to Key West. So crazy, my cousin,
I don't look. Growing up, we were the same. He
didn't love running either, but he became a police officer.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
And he's just something to something click, got in shape
and yeah and yeah he loves to run and so
now he does like that Iron Man stuff. But like
he would do that thing to key West, like sixty
eight hours of running. I'm like, what's wrong with you?

Speaker 5 (17:36):
Wow? That's wild to me. Is y'all get together? Johnny?
We knocked on his door. He didn't answer.

Speaker 3 (17:43):
It's just so crazy though, like, well, how your body
feels after a certain.

Speaker 5 (17:46):
Point really, and then you have to overrunning.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
My cousin would do the Dope Challenge and then I
would see he's here. I'm like, oh, meet me at
Disney And so we would get there and I'd be
like having a drink air and He's like, dude, I
just came to say Hi, I'm going back to the room.

Speaker 4 (17:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (17:59):
I'm like loser.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
Yeah, yeah, he's gonna be healthy. Fine, go run a
half marathon. Fine, I love you anyway. All right, we
want to find out do you run for fun? Is
you you one of those that run as much as
you can? And what's the furthest you've run? Because I
mean this is amazing. Every time I see that, I
see so many people. Yeah, I mean they sell out. Yeah,
all the events are sold out. They have to put

(18:20):
him in waves like okay, first group, second group. Some
lady said, I'm in group Z zoop zoop zone Z.

Speaker 5 (18:26):
What the heck? I think my friends are doing the
dope this time around, like you doing all yeah, doing
all of them? Who four oh seven nine one nine
one O six seven eight seven seven nine one nine
one O six seven x el mobile four one O
sixt seven live stream social media speak up. We want
to hear from you. Are you a runner? You run
for fun? And what's the furthest you run make us
feel bad about ourselves? At least me and Brian Ray

(18:47):
won't get it. Yeah, she's one of you. All we
want to in for you.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
Calls on Johnny's House Oggie, then Sonny seventy nine or
high sixty one right now, don't forget eight o'clock big
concert announcement.

Speaker 5 (18:58):
That's all I can say.

Speaker 1 (18:59):
They say only even I ain't with it with it
big concert announcement.

Speaker 5 (19:04):
I ain't playing with it. I'm not playing with it.
You you can say, do it all you want to,
Big concert announcement, eight o'clock this morning. That's all I
have to say on that. That it ain't big. Oh
it's pretty big. It's pretty big. I ain't allowing. That's one,
all right? Talking about if you're a runner. Okay, I'm
sitting here opening the break and my phone goes off
and it's Jeremy Rice and he sends a photo of him, saying,

(19:26):
twenty six point two miles. Now you know Jeremy Rice.
He is our boss here.

Speaker 4 (19:29):
He is a runner.

Speaker 5 (19:30):
He is a runner. He runs every day. And then
Ray said, Ray hit him back with the three applause,
like yeah, And I said that photo looks twenty years old.
He goes, it was two thousand and five. So I
want y'all all to break up some two thousand, twenty
year old photos when.

Speaker 4 (19:44):
You're five, two thousand and five, fifteen.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
You see what I right, He got next to you
looks like he murders and eats people because he does,
he does, he does. So want do all the fines
for twenty y old photos, folks, All right, So we
want to fight out if you are a runner, and

(20:08):
uh do you get that runners high and you run
for fun and the furthest you ever run for?

Speaker 5 (20:12):
Win of garden? Hey Taylor, how are you good morning?

Speaker 8 (20:16):
I'm good? How are y'all.

Speaker 5 (20:17):
Yeah, I can hit any voice here. Runner, you got
that little that confidence, like I ain't call here to
be playing. You run a lot, don't you, Taylor? No, no,
yes and no, yes and no.

Speaker 8 (20:27):
I'm very bad. I don't train.

Speaker 9 (20:29):
I was never a runner.

Speaker 10 (20:30):
My husband got me into this back in.

Speaker 8 (20:32):
Twenty seventeen when it was Star Wars Races at Disney
in one ten k and then I found out you
can run through the castle.

Speaker 9 (20:41):
And I'm like, oh, that's a half marathon.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
Okay, wait wait wait wait wait wait you signed up
for half marathon so you can run through the castle.

Speaker 10 (20:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (20:50):
Wow, you know a lot of days you can just
walk right to it.

Speaker 10 (20:54):
I mean yeah, I'm a Disney nurse, I'm a passholder.

Speaker 8 (20:59):
I love Disney.

Speaker 10 (21:00):
And then it was a Princess weekend.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
I was like, oh, how cool.

Speaker 9 (21:03):
It's it's dis me, It's Princess Weekend.

Speaker 10 (21:06):
So that was my first half marathon. And then I
had called before telling you all about my marathons. I'm
done with marathons.

Speaker 8 (21:13):
I tried dopey twice and I got pulled at like
my old nineteen and twenty and then I finally just.

Speaker 10 (21:21):
Did the marathon.

Speaker 8 (21:22):
And I'm like, Okay, I'm good, and yet somehow I
did Berlin and New York and now I'm done.

Speaker 9 (21:27):
Done, Like I'm done.

Speaker 10 (21:28):
You a spectator. I will track my husband.

Speaker 8 (21:31):
He's the runner.

Speaker 5 (21:33):
Ran a marathon, my husband. You ran a marathon in
Berlin and in New York.

Speaker 10 (21:38):
Yeah, there's six, there's six World Majors, and you get
like a pretty medal at the end of it. It's
like Tokyo, New York, Boston, Chicago.

Speaker 5 (21:50):
Well, how do you how do you say? How do
you say? You've done all this and you're not a runner?

Speaker 3 (21:54):
You're a runner, That's what I'm saying. In Taylor, I've
met you before. If you are a runner and you
just it's it's funny. It's like when people, you know,
like my girlfriend doesn't think she's athletic, but she.

Speaker 5 (22:06):
Is, you know.

Speaker 4 (22:07):
So it's just like you, you just compare yourself to
other people. And I think that's probably what the problem is, Taylor.

Speaker 5 (22:14):
Taylor, let me let me give you my description of
a non runner's marathon of my resume. Johnny, you're runner,
what's all your none? I ran to refrigerator and there
I drive to the mailbox. You got a resume. You're
a runner.

Speaker 3 (22:29):
Yeah, and you've done some pretty big things that ten
k tomorrow and then going to work afterwards.

Speaker 5 (22:34):
Yeah, you lion, what do you call it? I'm not
a runner, but I'm k you either like it.

Speaker 8 (22:41):
I have. I have been running and somebody was like,
it's a run, not a walk, and I'm run walking.

Speaker 10 (22:47):
That's run walk a mile or a minute. I run,
I walk a minute.

Speaker 5 (22:51):
Taylor, let me tell you something. Last time I ran,
I've told the story before. An eight year old girl
ran by me and said, keep going, Johnny. And she
was so far in the distance when I crossed the tape.
I think she had gotten her car and gone home.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Yeah. I can't worry about them trying to bully you.
The other runners.

Speaker 5 (23:05):
Yeah, you hold on the seconda what they're saying over there.

Speaker 3 (23:08):
There's a lot of runners, but some people say that
fourteen miles was the longest that they've done. Somebody just
finished the five k for this weekend pigs Jomp. Somebody said,
I'm not a runner, but I am a walker. I
walk around seven miles a day.

Speaker 5 (23:21):
Okay, that's a lot. That is great. It is awesome.
Man and Brian.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
XL Mobile Power by Attorney Dan Newlan interact need to check.
It's a no brainer. Just call attorney Dan Newlan. We
got some runners. And then someone said, I like to
run my mouth. I like to run from my.

Speaker 5 (23:34):
Problems, running running trail all what's going on?

Speaker 2 (23:41):
Netlik the Johnny's House Entertainment news. That's rae all right.

Speaker 3 (23:46):
So yesterday I was telling you some things that were
revealed that Netflix is doing, you know, like the WWE
catalog and all that stuff and Star Search.

Speaker 4 (23:54):
Well, they keep rolling out.

Speaker 3 (23:56):
What to expect this year, and they did like a
real called next on Netflix, and it was a hype
reel to talk about things including what's coming out for
the next couple of months. So obviously WWE unrel that
comes out January twentieth.

Speaker 4 (24:13):
Bridgerton. If you're a big Bridgerton fan, I.

Speaker 5 (24:15):
Know a lot Yeah parties.

Speaker 3 (24:18):
Yeah, Season four Part one that comes out January twenty ninth.
In February, they've got the is it cake Valentine's Edition?

Speaker 5 (24:28):
Oh, that's where they bake things and if it's a case, yeah,
that's kind of cool.

Speaker 3 (24:33):
Formula one Drive to Survive, Let's see here. Bridgerton Season
four Part two comes out in February, and then I'll
go into March. The Actors Awards that comes out March first, Nelick, Yeah,
so it's pretty big. Tyler Perry's Beauty in Black that
is season two parts.

Speaker 5 (24:50):
I like that.

Speaker 4 (24:50):
I watched that one that comes out in March as well.

Speaker 5 (24:52):
Did I mention one? Matt Damon and Ben Affleck has
one coming out here in the next couple of weeks.

Speaker 4 (24:58):
Is it a show or is it a movie? Oh?
Is it The Odyssey? That's that's not Damion not.

Speaker 5 (25:05):
Yeah. I saw them promoting that was like the days
of the Friends are back together again.

Speaker 3 (25:08):
I'm like, all right, oh, I know what you're talking about. Okay,
y'a'll have to look that up. But speaking of the
actors red.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
Yes, January sixteenth.

Speaker 4 (25:21):
Very cool.

Speaker 3 (25:22):
So, but anyways, the Actor's Awards March first, that's when
that is coming out, but is formally the screen.

Speaker 4 (25:28):
Actors killed, so they did change it.

Speaker 3 (25:31):
If so, if you're like, what the heck is the
Actors Awards, So male Actor in a leading role Timothy
Chala May, Leonardo DiCaprio. That was for One Battle after Another,
Ethan Hawk for a Blue Moon, Michael B. Jordan for
Sinners and Jesse Plemmons for Bugonia. So those are like

(25:52):
the male actors for female actors, Jesse Buckley, Hamnett, rose
Byrne if I had legs, I'd kick you, okay, Kate
Hudson Song Sung Blue.

Speaker 5 (26:03):
Some of these things I've never even heard of it.

Speaker 4 (26:05):
I know, Emma Stone, you going yet, I don't know.
I can't say that.

Speaker 3 (26:09):
So those are like the big ones for female and
male lead actor. But I mean the there's a ton
of categories this year.

Speaker 5 (26:17):
The only one I've seen is Centaer. I feel guilty
on seeing that because that's Easter. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (26:22):
Oh my gosh, that's so funny. That's right, I forgot
you saw.

Speaker 5 (26:25):
That on going to twice after that.

Speaker 4 (26:29):
I'm trying to see which other ones are like the
big ones.

Speaker 7 (26:31):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (26:32):
Yeah, So a cast ensemble for like a comedy series
Abbot Elementary.

Speaker 5 (26:37):
I want to see that. I haven't seen it, but
I've heard number of good things. It's gonna be one
of those like Two and a Half Man. I'll see
it after the series run and I can see them
back to back to back.

Speaker 4 (26:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (26:45):
Yeah, the bear hacks only murders in the building in
the studio.

Speaker 5 (26:51):
When is the big one the Academy Award, My.

Speaker 3 (26:54):
Gosh one is that I don't know because right now
we're an award season, so there's just so many of them.

Speaker 5 (27:00):
As soon as New Years New Year's War series here
it is right here, all right, first time today, keep
you updated. Brian's gonna give us what's trending next on
Johnny's House. Now it's the high sixty one right now, Brian,
what's trending? What's trending?

Speaker 1 (27:11):
Brought to you buy Pineapple Healthcare locations in Orlando, CASII
and Lakeland Pineapple Healthcare.

Speaker 5 (27:16):
We are better together now.

Speaker 1 (27:18):
Obviously there's a lot of serious stuff going on, especially
up in Minnesota, so there's a lot to pay attention to.
We really don't get into that stuff. So it's not
that we don't know about it, but yeah, like you.

Speaker 5 (27:27):
Know, what, what are we gonna do?

Speaker 6 (27:28):
Ye?

Speaker 5 (27:28):
Like, you know where you need to go for that
kind of stuff and what they us.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
But President Trump did announce something yesterday that's actually pretty
cool and could help a lot of people when it
comes to home ownership.

Speaker 5 (27:37):
Yah, I heard about that.

Speaker 1 (27:38):
So they hope to stop large institutional investors from buying
single family homes in the United States, which.

Speaker 5 (27:43):
Has been a big problem. Oh yeah, just go buy
up all the houses.

Speaker 1 (27:46):
My first house I had to buy from an investment
firm that just went through and bought like patches of
They don't even look at the house. They just say
it's a mess. It's okay about a house. Yeah, the
company about mine was in Texas. They're not even here.
They just saw they just list take that listing number,
buy it by, it.

Speaker 5 (28:00):
By, and then they flip it. And so they're going
to try to stop that.

Speaker 1 (28:04):
Say, they're actually going to do immediate action to stop it,
and they're going to try to get Congress to make
it into law so you you have a better chance
of buying a home as a single family versus competing
against these companies that have huge pockets.

Speaker 5 (28:17):
Say the average age of the first time buyer now
it's forwardy, it's crazy. So that's just one of the
ways they're trying to help with home ownership. So some
of those companies are pushing back because it hurt their
stock prices. Obviously they're going to be upset by it
by but research from the US Government Accountability Office says
that when large investors buy up single family homes, it
drives up both rents and home prices, so that that's good.

(28:39):
That's a good step in home ownership hopefully. But they're
not going to give that up without a fight. Oh,
so be prepared for that.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
Yeah, but it's first step, which is good because I've
heard that complaint for years and I didn't think anything
of it until I bought my first house and I
found out that it was an investment company that I
was buying it from.

Speaker 5 (28:54):
Wow, which is crazy.

Speaker 1 (28:55):
There's a new study that says, basically, we're all kind
of fat. Yeah, they're going to change the way they
define Obesely, when they do that, seventy percent of US
adults are going to be considered obese instead of the
forty three percent that are considered obese now. So they're
going to add in waste size and body fat distribution
along with BMI. They said those things actually are kind

(29:17):
of very critical when it comes to heart disease and diabetes,
even if you appear healthy. So now it looks like
seventy percent of us are going to qualify as obese.

Speaker 5 (29:25):
So if you're doing the whole New Year, New Good idea,
and let me tell you something that don't motivate you
because I've been listing once as.

Speaker 1 (29:31):
Morbidly no way, if you look at the chart, it's
not hard to be considered obese.

Speaker 5 (29:39):
It's really not going to go well, I know that,
but more morbidly Yeah, but you know what that stop me.
That that alone made.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
Me go, now, no, when I told you your thing won't.

Speaker 3 (29:49):
But then also you hear the majority of the country
is morbidly ab so you're like, okay, so I'm not
I'm not.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
Yeah, yeah, general, and there's a lot of things that
need to into the changes to stick that portion control.
You know what we put in our foods, all of
those things things, man, But.

Speaker 5 (30:06):
Yeah, that's that's that's pretty bad.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
So yeah, hey, I'm just trying to do what I
can do. Let y'all know, seventy percent of us myself included.
Oh yeah, senat obese son, let's do something about it.

Speaker 5 (30:22):
Eating ships really wow.

Speaker 1 (30:25):
NFL playoffs have started, so obviously we're working towards the
Super Bowl, which you know called thousands and thousands and
thousands of dollars to go to the game. But you
might be able to trade some blood for tickets to
the super Bowl. So starting now through January twenty fifth. No,
the Red Cross is teaming up with the NFL. So
when you give blood starting now through January twenty fifth,
you're entered to win a pair of tickets to the

(30:46):
Super Bowl in San Francisco, and you're gonna get a
round trip airfare for you and a friend, three night
hotel stay in, one thousand dollars gift card with access
to all the pregame activities.

Speaker 4 (30:55):
How often can I donate?

Speaker 1 (30:56):
So you have to book a time at Redcross blood
dot com or well, see, I think what's gonna happen
is closer to the deciding who's going to the super Bowl.

Speaker 5 (31:04):
That's when the blood thing is gonna go up. Yeah,
because if your team is in it, and that's the
only way, and all I gotta do is give some blood. Well,
you're entered. You don't get tickets just forgiving.

Speaker 4 (31:12):
You get in an entry. Every time you donate blood.

Speaker 1 (31:15):
You should go to Red Crossblood dot org because it'll
probably tell you.

Speaker 5 (31:18):
Right, you're looking kind of sickly girl, You are, right.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
Yeah, every day they're gonna cut you off. Yeah right, no,
we gonna cut you off, Brian, not like, let's follow us,
let's stop it right enough enough and if they don't
even make it the bills.

Speaker 5 (31:35):
Yeah, that's why I think closer the Super Bowl.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
Give wear all that blood. It's for good calls, uh
and it's NFL sanctions, So this is kind of cool.
So yeah, Red Crossblood dot Org every time you I'm
assuming every time you donate after January twenty fifth, uh,
you get entered.

Speaker 5 (31:47):
But they have rules on how often you can donate anyway,
because you know there's some I mean some fan fans
that will change their names.

Speaker 1 (31:54):
Pretty good idea a way to raise awareness for you know,
the blood banks.

Speaker 4 (31:57):
Yes, seriously, all right, it's.

Speaker 5 (31:58):
Time for the throwback game and that's what we ask
your questions. Four different categories movie premises, music, pop, trivia,
and television. And if you win today, like I mentioned
on the promo, got four tickets and pit passes to
Monster Jam, all you have to do is get the
most right. That's all you have to do to win.
And if you want to play first time played before
now you call four oh seven now one nine one

(32:18):
on six seven eight seven seven nine one nine one
on six seven. You can play alone at home and
then one day you can decide to call in and play.
But if you actually want to play today, call us
up because coming up next throwback game on Johnny's House
this morning. Y'all made concert announcement this morning at coming
up at eight o'clock. All right by Sunday today, fog

(32:41):
are gonna burn off after a while. Seventy niners are
high rate. It's still sixty one out there, sixty one
right now. Brian BuzzFeed ask people what.

Speaker 1 (32:50):
They ask people to submit, what jobs they think are
AI proof AI like they won't lose their jobs to AI.

Speaker 5 (32:58):
You know what's funny is I saw a list early
this week and number five on that list were radio
personalities and DJs.

Speaker 1 (33:06):
That they're going to take the job, but that they're
they're going to take because these are jobs that they
You don't think a I could take your.

Speaker 5 (33:12):
About to have something he ain't got something? Well yeah,
I mean.

Speaker 1 (33:17):
We could talk about that, but I believe that it
is true for people who just do the That was
if you just introduced the music, yeah you're in trouble,
But if you have something to say, you're not in
trouble because you create content. So on the list and
the people chimed in with their with their profession undertakers. Yeah, hey,
I can't bury people like. So they said they're safe

(33:38):
hair dressers, yeah, just for sure. For sure, they say
they're safe. Massage therapists.

Speaker 5 (33:44):
Now I've seen the robotic ones. You have seen it.
I think I think they're here in Orlando.

Speaker 1 (33:50):
There are probably a very few that are probably safe.
Those are like the high end clientele, like you know,
the athletes that have a specific person that knows their
needs or whatever. But I think in general I would
say safe. I don't know about safe. Yeah, in general,
maybe not. Someone said people that wax people's intimate areas.

Speaker 5 (34:11):
Yeah, yeah, you don't want you don't want AI doing that.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
Right, you're safe there, So that those were all on
the list. Man, What do you think about about road construction? Yeah,
I think there's a level of it that AI is
able to do. Once they get the machine to do it, you'll,
I think you'll need a person to be there to
super direct, but it's more of a technical person, like
an I T person. I think what's going to increase

(34:36):
is the need for it people, because you're gonna have
to have somebody in case something goes sideways.

Speaker 5 (34:40):
I was having that conversation with my son. I'm like, listen,
I t as much as you think it might be
blah blah blah. That is the future because all these ais,
somebody got a program it. If they break down, somebody
gotta figure this. There's got to be someone there in
case something goes sideways. Hmm. What careers that are a
prof hmmm, personal shoppers? No, I mean no, if you

(35:01):
put you on, it puts you, get your body, put
you on the screen and the AI start putting on.

Speaker 6 (35:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (35:05):
No, and especially with online ordering, like an AI could
actually put together a whole thing for.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
You and it learns you AI, so it knows what
you like. So it suggested what.

Speaker 4 (35:14):
About custodials like like that the vacuum I know, but
like it's not that great, right right, I got.

Speaker 5 (35:23):
This thing now. I think we even talk about an
air where you put your dirty clothes and they have
this vacuum and that sucks it all the way to
where the laundry room and in some cases put it
in the washing machine and then it folds it and
puts it out. Yeah, you know so.

Speaker 1 (35:38):
Well, And like already, like for instance, the dry cleaners
have been replaced with automated you walk there's nothing. There's
no people anymore. You walk in, you put your stuff
in a little box and come back and the door shuts.
They send it out. Now someone does it on the
other end. I'm not sure who washes it, but it
comes back and you come pick it up. You would
have thought that ride share drivers, but you know they're no.

(36:00):
So I saw another WYMO yesterday. Yeah, and that's traffic
bus drivers. You think O bus drive they gotta make
a way more bus, but they got the bus in
the lake. Nola has been going around for years.

Speaker 5 (36:09):
Yeah, but I mean that's the very strict Yeah hmm.
Jobs that you feel are a I proove right, I.

Speaker 1 (36:17):
Mean, and maybe you can make the case as to
why it is, Like if you think your job's a
I proof, I mean, maybe it is.

Speaker 5 (36:22):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
I'm just trying to I always play the devil advocate,
like happy I take the job.

Speaker 5 (36:26):
How could they do that? And I'm just looking through
my everyday life. What is it that nail text they
already have that damn wow.

Speaker 4 (36:37):
I know.

Speaker 3 (36:37):
And then you want to like think medical or like
dentistry and all it's yeah, I know, I know.

Speaker 5 (36:43):
Here's a funny thing In the beginning of the Terminator,
they were talking about how a surgeon could be on
the beach, and you're like, in no way. That's when
the Terminator first came out. Way you doctor could be
on the beach and do surgery.

Speaker 1 (36:54):
Oh they can happening now, happening now, all right, Well,
let's well, we've come through a crossroad where we don't
have any more answers, So we're gonna ask you out there,
do you think your job is AI proof? What you
do no one else can do it, or AI cannot
do it? If you know it's just one of those things.
Gonna hook somebody up with two tickets to see Rosa

(37:15):
Lea at the Kia Center coming up on June ninth.
Is your job aiproof or what is a job that's
AI proof?

Speaker 5 (37:22):
One of you randomly, we'll hook he up with those tickets.
Four oh seven now one nine one O six seven
eight seven seven nine one nine one o six seven
XL mobile four one oh sixty seven. Live streamers, wake up,
We wanna hear from you. Throw it on social media.
Your job is it AI proof or what is a
job that is will make a list in one of
your win right here on Johnny's house. Sorry about it.
Got two tickets at Rosalala at the Kia Center coming

(37:44):
up on June the eighth. Let's go to Orlando. Talk
to Kevin. What's up, Kevin? Hey, what's up? Guys?

Speaker 7 (37:51):
Good morning to you?

Speaker 5 (37:52):
Good morning. What's the job this? You think is AI
proof sales? Sales? Hmm, think about it?

Speaker 7 (38:00):
Yeah, somebody has somebody has to build it. All these
people have to have to build whatever components they have,
whether it's it or whether it's online, and then somebody
has to sell it. Because most of those guys are
very introverted. Most of these guys don't understand.

Speaker 5 (38:14):
And here's a fun component. Here's a fun thing, Kevin.
Somebody has to sell you the AI system that they.

Speaker 7 (38:18):
Have exactly right.

Speaker 5 (38:21):
Yes, everybody has.

Speaker 7 (38:22):
Somebody has to build it, and somebody has to sell it.

Speaker 5 (38:28):
Yes, and no, okay, go ahead.

Speaker 1 (38:29):
Be I can buy a car right now from Carvana
without talking to a person. Now, someone built it, but
probably a machine built it because the assembly lines are
all machines.

Speaker 4 (38:39):
I guess on the products that you're selling.

Speaker 7 (38:41):
Somebody, but somebody's gonna le somebody's gonna call you, somebody's
gonna call you to verify that information, and they're going
to hit you with certain add ons. They're going to
hit you with certain before they deliver that car. Somebody's
going to verify that they can deal with a photo.
Someone calls me every day. In fact, I have one
hundred and ninety miss calls right now.

Speaker 5 (39:00):
Of them are people.

Speaker 1 (39:02):
I'm just saying, like you because like you want to
pitch people. And I think there will be a high
level salespeople that will probably be safe, but sales in general.

Speaker 7 (39:15):
I get the calls all the time, man of the
little robotic call, and you can tell it's a delay
or you can you can tell yeah for sure, look
and you and you hang up on them, and they're
going to lose more than because it's a system structure
that they're doing.

Speaker 5 (39:30):
Kevin. Levels are going to be safe, Kevin. That's a
generation of people that will always want to talk to someone.
My mom and will be, she'll always be. But then
there's a younger generation that don't want to talk to
people at all. Yeah, that's what's happening. Yeah, that's what's happening.
We have a convenience store in our building.

Speaker 4 (39:49):
There's somebody that has to stock it though, and here.

Speaker 1 (39:52):
It's true for now, yes, Waymo delivery truck with a
by the eventually a humanoid robot that can do You
have to think the future down the line.

Speaker 5 (40:02):
We've seen these robots, we've seen them.

Speaker 7 (40:06):
You're thinking down the line. It's not at that level.
And yet now there's going to be something. There's going
to be something, even futuristically, there's going to be someone
that is going to say, hey, goodness. See I was
watching the cartoon Futurama. They had a sales robot, but
the robot was run by the sales guy in the office.

Speaker 1 (40:26):
Oh yeah, so it was kind of like, yeah, it's
the same thing I say, Like, you know, you need
a personal connection. If you make a personal connection, that's
much different than anything else. But that again, I think
it's generational because again this is generation. They don't want
to talk to people, they don't want to go see anybody.
Yeah from Saint Cloud, Hey Nelly, Nellie, what's the job
you think it's safe?

Speaker 5 (40:44):
From Ai Homan.

Speaker 9 (40:46):
Steps we rely on our centuries are snow opening doors
and touching applying.

Speaker 5 (40:53):
Yeah, yeah I can see that. I can see that head. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (40:58):
I mean because like I said, I think the devil
advocate like I'm a I'm thinking AI in the sense
that they're creating robots that can also detect all of
this stuff. Now, I mean as a person, I'd like
a person with experience to look at the house and go, Okay,
I see a problem here.

Speaker 5 (41:13):
So I see what you're saying. But but could.

Speaker 11 (41:16):
Have faced off like judgment.

Speaker 1 (41:18):
But can it AI scan the whole house and detect
stress points. I've also had a home inspector that I
thought was full of craft, and I would have loved
the robot to come in and be like, Okay, this
guy's crazy.

Speaker 7 (41:28):
I'm not.

Speaker 5 (41:29):
I'm not gonna mark that.

Speaker 1 (41:30):
Hold on, let's see here, sorry, just like I just
exited out and.

Speaker 5 (41:37):
What you got.

Speaker 1 (41:38):
Let's see Excel mobile powered by Attorney Dan Neolin Interact
need to check.

Speaker 5 (41:41):
It's a no brainer.

Speaker 1 (41:41):
Just called attorney Dan Nowl And someone said, my husband
actually works in AI and his opinion is that the
only jobs that are safe are super blue collar like yeah.

Speaker 5 (41:54):
Things like that. Absolutely, And what do you have?

Speaker 3 (41:56):
Somebody said, law enforcement and courts staff, the judges, the attorneys. Yeah,
I mean, but I agree with like the court staff,
the judges, and the attorneys.

Speaker 1 (42:09):
No, because a lot of people will want you to
remove the personal part out of judging. What is it
the spit out the answer?

Speaker 5 (42:17):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (42:17):
Now as a as a convict, as a I would
like to have somebody up there I can appeal to.

Speaker 3 (42:22):
But like that's the point of a jury though, because
everybody's perspective, A jury is not paid.

Speaker 5 (42:27):
Yeah, you know Baseball wants to get rid of umpires,
right because I can tell you right now, strike right,
it doesn't we're not arguing. That's what I saw. It's scary.

Speaker 4 (42:39):
It is photography.

Speaker 3 (42:43):
There has to be a perspective for a photographer to
shoot different families, careers, industries, newborns like you.

Speaker 4 (42:55):
I don't know. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (42:56):
I think you guys are thinking all full of like
robo like yes people, and I guess you kind of
have to.

Speaker 5 (43:02):
Yeah, all right, we got wrap it up cause we
got a big announcement. Oh yeah, uh, Ray, what you're gonna.

Speaker 2 (43:07):
Do now the Johnny's House Entertainment News with Ray?

Speaker 5 (43:11):
All right, it is eight o'clock. Well actuals ada one,
we got a lootle I had the discussion going on
about the AI and just kind of took over well
now we're okay, won't get in trouble, all right. We've
been talking about it since yesterday, a huge concert announcement,
and I ain't gonna lie in the past. Sometimes I
said it's a huge concert announcement, and it was just

(43:34):
a big concert announcement. This one I'm excited about here.
It is the concert announcement coming to Raymond.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
James Stadium on Saturday, September the twelfth. Bruno Mars his
head the stage the Romantic Tour.

Speaker 5 (43:52):
We talked about that. I've already said I want tickets,
I want to go. This is a huge concert coming.
I cannot wait. We talked about on the air how
I'm not gonna spends see in Vegas. The timing is hilarious.

Speaker 4 (44:04):
It's really funny.

Speaker 5 (44:05):
We had the.

Speaker 1 (44:05):
Conversation and then literally later in the afternoon we got
an email that said, big announcement, but.

Speaker 5 (44:10):
Be quiet, do not say a word. This is the
most guarded secret that they've talked about. Where Bruno Mars
is coming to town the Romantic Tour Raymond James Stadium
on Saturday, September twelfth. It is a Saturday, which is awesome.

Speaker 4 (44:24):
I love who he's bringing to her.

Speaker 3 (44:26):
Bruno Mars is bringing Ray you know, not me, not
me and Anderson pat. So you know what Ryan said earlier,
Anderson pack together.

Speaker 4 (44:37):
What are they gonna be playing?

Speaker 5 (44:38):
They're gonna leave the tour. Let me tell you something.
I I still get excited about music. And I saw
Bruno Mars when he was in town years ago, and
he put on an amazing, amazing show.

Speaker 1 (44:52):
Yeah, and then we had him at one of our
excellent Christmas shows. We interviewed him in a storage unit
behind the House of Blues.

Speaker 5 (44:59):
I think we got a foe that we do floating
around there somewhere. But you guarantee get your tickets, and
of course we're gonna give you opportunities to win. Right
here on Xcel one O sixty seven, we'll have the
information on when tickets go on sale, pre sale and
all that stuff. But I wanted to let you know
this morning, right now, come in to Raymond Jane Stadium Saturday,
September twelveth Bruno Mars and opening acts Ray and Anderson Pact.

(45:21):
I'm telling you it's gonna sell out.

Speaker 1 (45:22):
Yeah, you have to register to be able to buy tickets.
So Brunomars dot com, Live Nation dot com get registered
because the presale starts on January fourteenth. Okay, and you
know the these tickets usually if you ain't in the
pre sale, yeah you rolling the dice.

Speaker 5 (45:35):
Yeah wow. Sold out many shows in Vegas. This one
is closest Raymond Jane Stadium, Saturday, September twelfth. Bruno Mars
is coming to town, and I am happy. I've already
hit up the boss man and said, if I don't
get no tickets, I ain't working.

Speaker 4 (45:49):
Yeah, I little. It's funny because usually we don't all
reply no we do. Jo is like straight up, I
put my name in now, Okay, okay, right now.

Speaker 5 (45:58):
I know any spokes tell you want im putting yeah,
and I'm putting them in.

Speaker 3 (46:02):
But there's other Bruno Mars news too, so you know
he was talking about he recently confirmed his new album.

Speaker 4 (46:07):
That new album officially is done.

Speaker 11 (46:09):
Well.

Speaker 3 (46:09):
He posted that his new album The Romantic is dropping
dropping February twenty seventh. Oh no, so he now has
that new album February twenty seventh.

Speaker 4 (46:19):
That is true.

Speaker 5 (46:19):
Shure that they'll drop a single. I mean, I don't know,
this is not a secret thing, but I'm sure that
he'll drop a single. In every hour. We'll probably pay it.

Speaker 3 (46:26):
I'm pretty sure tomorrow he's got a new song that's
coming out. Oh really, yeah, yeah, this tomorrow he's got
a new song coming out that album February twenty seventh,
and they're talking about him performing at the Grammys.

Speaker 4 (46:37):
So like this is going to be like Bruno years is.
Bruno Mars is year to come back.

Speaker 5 (46:41):
Like big man. That's exciting. He puts on a great show,
he does, let me tell you. And I can't even
imagine it being on the on the big stage. Oh stadium. Oh,
it's gonna be, It's gonna be huge. So once again,
Bruno Mars September twelfth is heading right the Raymond Game
Stadium and Brian, what you gotta do? We gotta get
your name Richter. Yeah, Bruno Mars dot com, names live
nation dot com. Get pre registered for the pre sale

(47:03):
because that kicks off on the fourteenth, and we'll tell
you how you can win tickets right here on XL
one or six selve. But I ain'tnna lie y'all. If
they don't have a two pair, we might not do
at Johnny's gonna win.

Speaker 4 (47:16):
He's gonna gower.

Speaker 1 (47:20):
The Cardinals sin and radio is taking prices away from listeners.

Speaker 4 (47:26):
Johnny's like, I don't care.

Speaker 1 (47:27):
Back in the day, Hey man, I needed to call,
I need to be called. Never did that.

Speaker 4 (47:34):
Down there forty years. I need those tickets.

Speaker 5 (47:36):
I've never done that. But I've heard stories of people
calling their friends up and telling them to be the
right caller. But it's just too many safe guards in
this situation.

Speaker 1 (47:43):
Yeah, I mean, I mean, technically you don't really ask
for much ticket wise. Yeah, so like technically you would
be at the top.

Speaker 5 (47:50):
I mean, I know, I know the Rice Man's on
everybody's free ticket list. If he can't go and I
can go, that I ain't got no problem with that
because Rice Man goes to everything. I know. It goes
to a concert, took Brian to New York. Hey, whatever, man,
I'm just asking for a little trip down the route.
That's all I'm asking for. Anyway. I mean, you're you
gonna fly me to the Tampa first classes? Do that? Telicopter?

Speaker 4 (48:09):
Brother, if anybody can make it happen, Jeremy good nice?

Speaker 5 (48:12):
If not, I it was all respect alight, no hit
but true about a little bit. Bruno mars dot Do
I wonder if I had to do it. Yeah, I
trust the man, But do I trust you?

Speaker 1 (48:25):
I mean, if you are planning on buying something just
in case, yes, you might want to register.

Speaker 5 (48:28):
Okay, everything's pre sale now, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. And
here's the thing about that is they sell all It's
like all concert dates going at the same time.

Speaker 1 (48:35):
It even has a disclaimer if you don't get into
the pre sale, we can't promise you that general tickets
will be available because they might be all bought.

Speaker 5 (48:42):
Up in the pre sale. DMN. Anyway, eight ten Johnny's House.
Uh Ray has to look out there. The Fox Steelers
a little bit.

Speaker 4 (48:51):
Yes, I'm sixty two.

Speaker 5 (48:52):
Sixty two looking for a hog today of seventy nine
and a lot of sunshine. We're but true, Brian, what's
that mean?

Speaker 1 (48:57):
Well, this is an awesome story because I always dream
of this when I'm out on the water. Someone found
a mystery safe over in Australia. Someone saw this safe
just kind of floating around. So they called their friend.
They got together with their daughter who is like a
you know, a scuba diver, and they retrieved this safe. Okay,
I'm like, this is pretty awesome. It was like a
great story. So they videoed themselves cracking the safe open.

(49:22):
Inside the safe, expired beef jerky was it all that worked?

Speaker 5 (49:27):
Nothing else? You know.

Speaker 1 (49:29):
They were like thinking the whole time, Ooh, we're gonna
find some stuff. And they pulled it out of the water.
They cracked it open. Expired beef jerky is the only
thing that was in the safe. So they turned it
over to the police. You know, I was vacation.

Speaker 5 (49:40):
I was watching this show and it's where people go
and buy these rental units where people you don't pay
the rent on your rental unit. Yeah, like storage war Storage. Yeah,
it was something like that. The guy's like, I spent
twenty five thousand dollars on it because they let you.
It's like they opened it and closed.

Speaker 1 (49:53):
Yeah you can look it, but you can't touch anything,
and so whatever you can see and he said they're
safe in there. So I was like, Okay, that would
be fun. But if that was my hustle, no, i'd
drive me. It's like you looking for gold. That would
just drive me crazy. It's pretty much same thing it
is it is.

Speaker 5 (50:08):
It would drive you. But you do find some good stuff. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (50:10):
Yeah, so that there's a cold front coming through now here,
we won't get too ridiculous, but it's gonna be freezing
in a lot of places. Turns out, if you need
to clean off your windshields from the ice and whatnot,
vodka is a good thing to use. They said, yeah,
so that there's a Scottish delivery driver and he's gone
viral now because he keeps a squirt bottle of vodka

(50:31):
in his delivery truck and it actually de ice is
the windows. Okay, they say, you take take it off
the top of the vodka spreak, and then he goes
out the night before and sprays the windshield again.

Speaker 5 (50:42):
That keeps it from forming on there.

Speaker 1 (50:44):
And he says it gives him an extra five to
ten minutes each morning because he doesn't have to worry
about getting the ice off the windows. If you're listening
on the iHeart app or you end up being in
North Florida where it might get a little freeze.

Speaker 5 (50:54):
Next week, I saw a video of people vodka for
the first time pouring hot water on the windshield and
the windshield was cracking. They were I mean, someone were
just exploding. You don't want to do that, Yeah, you
don't want to do that. I know it sounds easy,
but you don't want.

Speaker 7 (51:07):
To do that.

Speaker 1 (51:07):
There is a big battle going on with some online
gambling sites.

Speaker 5 (51:11):
You know you could bet on anything.

Speaker 1 (51:12):
Well, there were a lot of people that had wagered
on the US invading Venezuela.

Speaker 5 (51:18):
Somebody there was you could bet on that.

Speaker 1 (51:20):
And so when they woke up to the news that
we went in and we took the president of Venezuela
out in the middle of the night, they say, yes,
I've won because.

Speaker 5 (51:28):
We invaded Venezuela. Well you're not trying to pay. They're not.

Speaker 1 (51:32):
They've now said we will not pay because they did
not invade Venezuela. There's no war going on. They didn't
send in ground troops to fight. They said, went and
plucked out the leader. We didn't invade Venezuela.

Speaker 5 (51:45):
Well give me my initial bet back then, because now
you're talking about technicalities here.

Speaker 1 (51:49):
So the the vets on the invasion of Venezuela. People
wanted their payouts, but now they're not going to get them.

Speaker 5 (51:57):
Some big financial guy came out yesterday and said that
the online betting is this direct line to hell.

Speaker 1 (52:03):
Oh yeah, that was I think my man Dave Ramsey. Yeah,
he said it actually opening up the gates of hell?

Speaker 4 (52:09):
Is it okay?

Speaker 5 (52:11):
Because some statistics say young younger generation is more into
online betting than they are investments. Quick returns on that
kind of yeah, the quick losses too. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (52:23):
There was more than ten point five million dollars wagered
on the invasion of Venezuela.

Speaker 5 (52:28):
Nobody's getting their money. No, wow, that's like hitting the
slot machine, they said, not as a malfunction. No, man
has three sevens right there. Yeah, yeah, it does. But
it's a malfunction. Insite about to give me my money.
I mean, I see their argument.

Speaker 1 (52:40):
We didn't invade, persuade they probably they probably should have,
you know, clarified what they meant by invasion.

Speaker 5 (52:46):
I guess, yeah. But ten million dollars worth of bets
they we're not paying you back, all right, Listen, it
is they're saying, is one of the worst flu seasons
that are out there in the last twenty five years.
What we want you to do is call us up
and tell us some tips that we can use to
try to avoid the flu other than the flu shot,
Because from I understand this new super flut that is out.

(53:07):
If you got the shot, it didn't it was not
against super flu, so you'd have got the shot against
the other variants, but not this one.

Speaker 1 (53:13):
So what are some things that we can do? If
you're a doctor or someone out there, you're working in
the medical field, what are some things that we can
do to avoid getting the flu? Four O seven now
one nine one O six seven eight seven seven now
one nine one O six seven. We can help each other,
give us those tips to try to avoid this bad
flute that's out there, and we'll put it out there
on the air right here. Johnny South he is coming
to town, coming to Tampa at the Stadium in September,

(53:36):
and we'll let you know about of course, we'll have
some try to get some tickets to give away. Here.

Speaker 5 (53:39):
It is huge, man, Bruno mouls is coming all right
this saying this is the biggest flu season in twenty
five years. We ain't anybody got the flu right now? Ah,
I do not know. I never know. I've never had
it myself. I've had it twice.

Speaker 6 (53:53):
Bro.

Speaker 5 (53:53):
It's I think a lot of people say I've got
the flu, But you don't.

Speaker 7 (53:57):
Have to know.

Speaker 5 (53:57):
When you got the flu, man, you know you get
to chill in your sweating.

Speaker 4 (54:00):
Yeah, you never bend your finger and it would hurt
like your whole.

Speaker 5 (54:04):
You can't get comfortable. I've been sick like that before,
but I've never had the flu. You're hungry, but you
don't want to eat, and every the taste is bad.
It's bad. Now, here's some things that you should avoid
if you don't want to get the flu.

Speaker 1 (54:17):
Now.

Speaker 5 (54:18):
The first thing is a good GARX neader and and
everybody's trying to push the fascination. That's your thing. But
they said this new big, big flu that's out here,
the new flu shot was not prepared for that one. Yeah,
so they've never got a flu shot either. Now this,
when I do this, wash your hands as often as
you can, frequently wash your hand with soaping water for
twenty second. Now, I don't know if I do twenty seconds,

(54:38):
I get it in now fine, six seven, because I'm
trying to get out of bathroom. And that's nasty in there, right,
it's not even about me our cleansiness. It's nasty in there.

Speaker 1 (54:44):
A lot of people will neglect the thumbs when you
wash your hands because you're like this, you don't realize
you need to also get the top.

Speaker 5 (54:51):
Oh no, I like I know a lot of people
don't know. Now Here's here's one that I do all
the time. And I noticed it because I look at
our YouTube channel of avoid touching your face. One talking
to each other. I'm like hand on chin Oh, I
touch my face all the time. I said, avoid touching
your face. Germs are off the spread when a person
touches a contaminated surface, then touch their eyes, nose, mouth,

(55:13):
and during an entry US virus point. I didn't know
about that one. Another one avoids sick people. Well, yeah,
you can. Fluids highly contagious, so limit yourself close contact,
cover your mouth when you sneeze or cough. I look away.
I guess I should cover it. Clean surfaces regularly. Let's
see Ray does some cleaning. It's not my area. Mine

(55:34):
ame been cleaned probably since before Christmas. And the one
that's gonna get us all sick. Maintain a healthy lifestyle.
Yeah no, that's it. A little bit that's not gonna happen,
but it's out there. Be careful. I see a lot
of people. They didn't say wear the mask, and I
have noticed a lot of people are wearing masks. I
saw a lady in a convertible with the top down

(55:56):
wearing a mask.

Speaker 1 (55:57):
I can.

Speaker 4 (55:58):
I cannot.

Speaker 5 (56:00):
She was by herself, so it wasn't like and I
thought about it, said maybe now, Brian, maybe you can
answer this. You have allergies, would that help with allergies?
You wear the mask with the top down. You want
the top down, but if you got allergies bad.

Speaker 1 (56:11):
Yeah, I don't know that it would really help, you know,
I mean because like sometimes it's my eyes that itch like,
and I don't think that has anything to do with
it covering my flight Okay, oh yeah, because yeah, I
mean yeah, because you have a pollen in any anything's
like dust.

Speaker 5 (56:23):
But it was a beautiful car. I mean, I think
she was just saying, I'm on the top down, but
I'm still a liria of the germs this out in
the world to day at the car in front of me,
sneeze it could jump over. Oh yeah, with my top down.
It hit me in the fract. That's true. Yeah, I
saw that. It was like somebody here was I didn't
want to say it was wearing the gloves and.

Speaker 4 (56:42):
Washing their hands with the gloves on. Oh my dear god,
I will never forget that.

Speaker 5 (56:45):
No one told you you got to take them off
and you're do it, but anyway, be careful. It is
a horrible flu out there and we don't want it
to get you. So I just gave you some tips
right there, and we come back on talks about some
things that were very acceptable back in the day but
accepted right now. You pray read it. Ray read it,
Ray read it. Ray read it. Had a list of
things that are not socially acceptable.

Speaker 3 (57:06):
Yeah, so they were socially acceptable back in the day,
but not anymore. And so people are like, oh, wow,
I didn't know that that was a either allowed or
B that I should not be doing this. And so
some of the things that were big on the list
showing up at someone's house unannounced.

Speaker 5 (57:23):
No, I remember back back in the day, because you
understand I grew up in the time. I got a
whole list that you could probably get arrested for the
things that my parents what had happened, But everybody did it.
You would get excited. You sit down and there like, hey,
so and so comes over, Hey, come on in. We
was in the neighborhood. That was the thing. We was
in the neighborhood. Thought we stopped by, Yeah, yeah, yeah, man,

(57:43):
I wish you well it's known throughout the land. I
can look at you out the window and not open
the door. If you don't let me know you're coming,
I'm not gonna.

Speaker 9 (57:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (57:50):
I mean I checked my app before I even get
off the couch.

Speaker 3 (57:53):
So it's just it's crazy because like in Avalon where
I used to live, a lot of the times like
we would just pop over, but we would send like
a courtesy text message like hey, I'm I'm gonna.

Speaker 1 (58:04):
We'll talk about straight cold I know, like that because
there was no text back in the day.

Speaker 7 (58:08):
Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (58:10):
Leaving your kids in the car for when you go
into the grocery store.

Speaker 10 (58:12):
Yeah no.

Speaker 5 (58:14):
We stayed in the car on a Friday night when
they shopped and it had to be an hour, hour
and a half. Me and my brother in the back seat.
We were up in there. Yeah, yep, it was getting
us out of the house. Y'all want to go? Yeah, yeah,
But I mean my mom always left me in the car.

Speaker 6 (58:26):
You know.

Speaker 3 (58:26):
There's so many times where the twins are like, can
you can we just stay here? Like you got you
run in real cock.

Speaker 4 (58:30):
And I'm like, yeah, no way, no, no no smoking inside.

Speaker 5 (58:37):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 4 (58:38):
A lot of restaurants you know, you could smoke it.
They would have smoking sections.

Speaker 5 (58:42):
You would smoke. Now again, the chief product in North
Carolina tobacco. You can smoke when you go pick up
your kids at the nursery. Yeah, with my key, Yeah yeah,
that was understood. Smoking was just allowed.

Speaker 3 (58:57):
Let's see your baby's sitting at the age of ten.
They said that that's way too young to be another child.

Speaker 4 (59:03):
Yeah, that is to But back in the nineties you
were like, eh, they're ten.

Speaker 1 (59:07):
Yeah, I mean yeah, because if you're gonna leave your
kid home alone rather have a ten year old yeah
yeah wow.

Speaker 3 (59:14):
And then it goes down to like simple things, not simple,
but crazy things like mooning people. Yeah, it was much
more of a common prank back in the day to
just pull your pants down and moon them.

Speaker 5 (59:25):
I read a story just yesterday a kid got shot
doing ding dong ditch. Yes, this is last week. He
keeps pop p out.

Speaker 4 (59:32):
Oh my, but you try that now, like you'll be arrested.

Speaker 5 (59:34):
You're like, yeah, exposure, Well yeah, no, mooning people now
is mad like you you.

Speaker 1 (59:39):
Would get like charged, you'd have to be on a registrations,
wouldn't be able to go in here a school because
there happened to be a child in that area back
in the day it was.

Speaker 5 (59:46):
It was hilarious. Yeah, no, no, Now you gotta stand.
I'm a little bit older than y'all and my parents
just got away with a lot of stuff. One is
not knowing where your kids off for eight to twelve hours.
Oh yeah, my parents had no eye deal where I
was as long as I was home when that street
light came on for dinner. That was pretty normal. Yeah,

(01:00:08):
like my mom never knew where I was, never knew.
Right now, you need to know where your kid is
every minute, every second of every day. Another one going
door to door selling stuff. You don't do that.

Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
When that school gave you that little Hey, this is
a fundraiser, Yes, sir, we're trying to build, you know,
earn some money.

Speaker 5 (01:00:26):
So I choir can sing at so and so pointing
that not a nine percent of time they said no.
Now they got wise. They give it to the parents,
tell them to take it to work. You buy now.
This is one I'm sure y'all didn't do. But we
had a neighborhood store, and I mentioned this before I
was nine to ten years old. My mom sent a
note and some money. I went down to the neighborhood store.
They gave me a pack of cigarettes and I'd bring

(01:00:48):
it home. My dad on a Saturday would give me
the same note. I'd take it down to the store
and they give.

Speaker 4 (01:00:52):
Me a six Pa, you have permission slipped you buy.

Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
Well, if you had the neighborhood store. The neighborhood store,
they knew your parents absolutely. For me, it was the
handyway over Stanford. Ed knew my mom, Yes, so there wasn't.
I wasn't getting pool one over on Ed because he would.

Speaker 5 (01:01:09):
Just talk to my mom.

Speaker 4 (01:01:10):
Yes, that's funny.

Speaker 5 (01:01:11):
Oh yeah. And that kid, the guy looking at me,
ain't no. Wait, this nine year old gondrink the six
pack of meal, so I know he's getting it for
his dad.

Speaker 6 (01:01:19):
Wow.

Speaker 5 (01:01:20):
Until it backfought. Yeah, when I turned seventeen and I
took that same note down the street and they said,
your dad wrote this. Yeah, yeah, my parents out of town.
He hadn't done it in a while. Yeah he wasn't,
you know. He told me come down here and they
sold me to be twelve. That's how it was.

Speaker 1 (01:01:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:01:36):
I would say for me, you would be sleepovers. Oh yeah, yeah,
sleepovers back in the day kidding slumber parties.

Speaker 2 (01:01:45):
Yeah, now, uh uh.

Speaker 5 (01:01:47):
I remember there was a guy on the track team
and we had a track meet and he said, well,
just stay stay at my house. My parents had drive
me off this other night over there and we go
to the meet the next day.

Speaker 4 (01:01:55):
School I would have sleepovers all the time.

Speaker 1 (01:01:58):
I spent most of my high school stand over my
friend Scott's house. I mean almost every night.

Speaker 2 (01:02:02):
That was it.

Speaker 1 (01:02:03):
And my son actually had sleepovers. But this I think
his generation is where it stopped because kids now don't
Oh no, it's got to be family and sometimes family huh. Yeah,
my friend, my son used to sleep over his friend's house.
You have friends stay at our house.

Speaker 5 (01:02:17):
Yeah, my I needs to like, huh, we don't do
the sleepover thing. Yeah, that's not good.

Speaker 1 (01:02:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:02:21):
I think my son's probably the last generation that did it.
All right. I want to find out from you, what
are some things that were acceptable when you were a kid,
But right now you're like, oh no, oh, you do
that now. The whole society had been down on You
got your self paired tickets to Kings of Leon at
the Benchmark International Arena coming up on the thirty first
of this month. Things are acceptable, but right now you're like,
oh no, if I tried that today? What four oh

(01:02:42):
seven now one nine one O six seven eight seven
seven now one nine one O six seven ex El
Mobile fort one oh sixty seven live stream social media.
You want to drop a comment, we'll read it for you.
But we love talking to you. It was acceptable back
in the day, but not now. And I got two
tickets to Kings of the Kings of Leon at the
Benchmark International Arena four oh seven one nine one O
six seven eight seven seven nine one nine one O

(01:03:03):
six seven. Cannot wait to hear you call, so call
us on Johnny's house. It's the things that was socially
accepted back in the day, but you cannot do it
right now. Mess around yourself. Arrested to tickets Kings Leons
the Benchmark International Arena coming up on the thirty first.
Let's talk to a Uh she hung up. That's not acceptable.
She had a very good and call back if you

(01:03:23):
can from Orlando. Ali, good morning, So Mane, how are
you good? Good? Ali? What was acceptable back in the
day and not now? Can't do that now?

Speaker 11 (01:03:33):
Okay?

Speaker 9 (01:03:33):
So I know you guys mention it, but definitely the babysitting,
way too young.

Speaker 7 (01:03:37):
With the thing.

Speaker 10 (01:03:38):
How were you so I had I was probably ten
for sure.

Speaker 9 (01:03:44):
I had twin sisters who were three years older than me,
and so people would ask them to beb sit and
if neither of them were available, then they'd be like,
well do.

Speaker 11 (01:03:53):
You have a younger sister?

Speaker 7 (01:03:55):
Wow?

Speaker 9 (01:03:56):
And what would they were desperate.

Speaker 7 (01:03:57):
To go all on the date?

Speaker 5 (01:03:58):
I guess what would you do? You just sit there
with their kids?

Speaker 9 (01:04:03):
I mean I can remember them being gone so long
and so late into the night, like it was ridiculous
how late I was out babysitting these people first of all,
and they would trust me with like three.

Speaker 10 (01:04:15):
Kids, oh my god, three little kids, you know.

Speaker 9 (01:04:19):
Yeah, and the parents would come home after their dates
they had obviously been drinking, and then they would.

Speaker 11 (01:04:23):
Drive me home crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:04:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:04:26):
And how much would you get paid back then?

Speaker 10 (01:04:29):
I mean Penny's probably that was going.

Speaker 5 (01:04:32):
Right back then. Fifteen dollars, yeah, fifteen dollars for one.

Speaker 4 (01:04:36):
That's a big story.

Speaker 9 (01:04:37):
I was getting the kids ready for bed and one
of the little kids was like hanging from the towel
bar in the bathroom, and I was like, stop doing that,
stop doing that. They kept hanging on the telbar. It
came out of the wall and banged them in the
head and totally cut their head open. And then it
was like, okay, I'm searching the phone book to try
and find the phone number for the rest job where

(01:04:58):
the parents were out to dinner because cell phones weren't
a thing back then.

Speaker 5 (01:05:03):
Wow.

Speaker 9 (01:05:03):
I can remember like watching SNL at like one am,
like waiting for these people to get home, and I'm
like ten years old.

Speaker 5 (01:05:11):
It's just crazy, that's funny. Ten years old, I do that.
I'm running to my house, is what happened? I cut
that kid here. Y'all about to call somebody you hold on? Wow,
ten years old? They really wanted to go out from
Claremont Desiree. Good morning, good morning? All right? What is
something that was acceptable back in the day but you
couldn't do now?

Speaker 11 (01:05:31):
Flying on an airplane at seven years old by myself.

Speaker 5 (01:05:35):
I've seen that you sit up front with the flight attendant.
They have a big sign around your neck.

Speaker 11 (01:05:39):
I don't even remember that. I really remember taking me
at this time. You could go up to the gate
and they would get me on, but I would be
next to whoever and then she would put me on
the flight from Orlando to Miami and then Miami Chworlian though,
and that was it. I couldn't have a ten and
a twelve year old and I couldn't imagine doing that.

Speaker 5 (01:06:00):
So did you have a So it was a straight shot,
wasn't a connection? Just straight shot?

Speaker 8 (01:06:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (01:06:04):
Straight shot? But still like a seven year old and
air playing by themselves.

Speaker 5 (01:06:08):
Country, Well that is crazy. Yeah, well that thing is okay.
Once you're on the plane, none's going to happen, and
the person who's gonna pick you up will be right
there at the gate when you get off the plane.

Speaker 1 (01:06:15):
Problems you don't know who's sitting next to, what kind
of freak you're sitting next you.

Speaker 11 (01:06:20):
Guys think the cell phones weren't as big, So that
would be ideal, except for my mom going to Miami.
I remember having to wait hours because she was stuck
in traffic. So I did to Miami and my mom's
not there.

Speaker 5 (01:06:32):
Oh and how how old are you?

Speaker 1 (01:06:35):
Like seven seven.

Speaker 11 (01:06:37):
When I was seven eight? So quick flight, But like
you said, there's not just text or like hey where
are you? You're just sitting there for a couple hours,
like where's my mom?

Speaker 10 (01:06:46):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:06:46):
So you once you got there, you just hoped that
that she would be there. You had no communication until
somebody came to pick you up, right, Yeah, that's mature
a cell phone at this time.

Speaker 11 (01:06:57):
So I mean usually she was there, but it was
time where she was stuck in traffic and she was
like hours late.

Speaker 1 (01:07:04):
You know, as an adult, I'd be concerned, like, wait
a minute, somebody needed Nobody picked me up after the
first salary, Like, well, I guess I belong to the
streets now, and anybody coming from me.

Speaker 5 (01:07:13):
I had to figure this out. We don't go wrong,
be gonna row up here.

Speaker 1 (01:07:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:07:16):
Used to be acceptable. It ain't no more. Excel, good morning.
Who's this.

Speaker 9 (01:07:21):
Call from a pop cup?

Speaker 6 (01:07:22):
We got this connect?

Speaker 5 (01:07:23):
There you go, Nicole. Now this is my favorite. This
is my favorite, Nicole. What was acceptable back then but
you can't do now?

Speaker 6 (01:07:29):
Riding on the back of a pickup Yeah that was fun, man,
Yes it was. And another thing was we used to
be able to tour the city on bicycles.

Speaker 10 (01:07:38):
That's how far go around.

Speaker 5 (01:07:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:07:41):
Yeah, but on the on the back of the truck.
About six or seven cousins up in there, and they
made a point to stuff the.

Speaker 6 (01:07:46):
Run over a bump, yes, or they would go up
a big hill and down a big hill, or and
then we would be back there with our blankets and yeah,
and just have a grand time riding on the back.

Speaker 11 (01:07:58):
Of that pickup truck.

Speaker 5 (01:07:59):
I wish you would. You get pulled over before you
get a hundred yards down the street. You get pulled over.
That is funny. You hold on right what they say.

Speaker 3 (01:08:05):
Let's see here asking a complete stranger that you just
met at the mall for their phone number. You can't
do that now, Just go straight up because you're going
to think that you're like a stalker.

Speaker 5 (01:08:14):
And I can add I know you can't ask the
stranger for directions. Really no, you just can't say. And look,
I'm lost right now. I'm not from the city. Can
you tell me where it is?

Speaker 3 (01:08:22):
Oh my gosh, Lisa said, my mom brought me home
as a newborn from the hospital and carried me in
her arms in the front seat. No car seat, no
back car seat, no nothing car seat.

Speaker 5 (01:08:33):
I used to lay in the back window. Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (01:08:36):
That was fun back then, I know, until it got hot.
Brian excell move power by Attorney Dan Newland Interact. Need
to check it's a no brainer, just call attorney Dan Newland.

Speaker 5 (01:08:45):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:08:46):
Someone said, when you have to coaches back in the day,
used to hard coach kids. Yeah, curse them out, push them.
Oh yeah, you can't do that no more. Kids get
in their face, grab the face mask and pull it
to yours.

Speaker 5 (01:08:57):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:08:58):
And pantsing, remember Pane, People used to walk up to
you behind you. Yes, your pants.

Speaker 5 (01:09:03):
Down, and it was hilarious. Yes, and everybody would laugh.
And you talk to a young lady and they'd get
your especially after Jim because you had the Yeah, dude,
you were never safe at my high school soccer practice, handsy,
but you get it arrested now yeah, oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
you're going to jail for that.

Speaker 1 (01:09:19):
Alie baby sitting at ten years old, got two tickets
to kings Leon Benchmark International Arena coming up on the
thirty first ray was coming on.

Speaker 4 (01:09:26):
You know that mom club drama with Ashley Chisdale.

Speaker 2 (01:09:29):
It is still going on now The Johnny's House Entertainment
News with Rae.

Speaker 3 (01:09:34):
All Right, So earlier this week we were talking about
Ashley Tisdale and how she basically was suggesting that she
had to cut ties with some celebrity moms because of
their toxic group that they were putting together.

Speaker 5 (01:09:46):
Now, technically, did she cut tied with them or they
just cut tied with her and she's mad about it.

Speaker 3 (01:09:50):
So she said she cut ties with them. But then
she also noted that she saw them get together without her. So,
I mean, she said, she said, right now at this point, well,
Haley Duff, this is Hillary Duff's sister. Hillary Duff was
a part of the toxic mom group. Okay, has taken

(01:10:10):
sides with Ashley Tisdale's in this kind.

Speaker 5 (01:10:13):
Of like schal Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:10:16):
Okay, So she basically Haley not to give like a
lot of things, but she was basically saying that, uh,
you know, she was breaking up the mom group and
all that stuff, and Hailey sided against Hillary, adding fuels
to like the rumor that Hillary could possibly be the
one that's like toxic in the situation. So she was
just saying that there was like family drama that she's

(01:10:37):
comparing to this other toxic mom group drama.

Speaker 5 (01:10:40):
Wow, I just think that for them, they weren't really
friends in the first place. No, No, I mean, so
you know, there was nothing to keep them together.

Speaker 3 (01:10:49):
So and you can't you can't compare family drama to
toxic mom group drama, you know. So, but I could
see how you could characterize a person if they are
in your family and that they are toxic. Possibly, But
Ashley Tisdale's rep include the fact that she did not
call out a person by name, So she's trying to
shut that down. And so I don't know, they're kind

(01:11:12):
of like going back and forth. Uh, these people that
are trying to accuse the person of being toxic.

Speaker 5 (01:11:17):
I bet that little side group that they have that
she's not in it. I bet it's smoking right.

Speaker 6 (01:11:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:11:23):
And then they're like, hey, who brought this girl in?

Speaker 6 (01:11:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:11:25):
Really, you would have brought it in.

Speaker 4 (01:11:28):
So meanwhile, some of the husbands are getting involved as well.
So Hillary Duff's husband, Ashley actually trashed the article that
Ashley Tisdale came out, saying, you're the most self obsessed,
tone deaf person on earth as their moms tend to
shift focus to their actual toddlers.

Speaker 3 (01:11:48):
And so Hillary Duff's husband is going straight for the gut,
you know, like calling her out.

Speaker 5 (01:11:53):
She said, well, it was a mom group. You got
together and talk about your kids. Now you have time
about you. You should have got into a friend group,
not a Mom's group.

Speaker 2 (01:12:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:12:02):
Also a little update on the Rob and Michelle Reiner situation.
I don't know if you saw.

Speaker 3 (01:12:06):
Nick Reiner will not be represented by the public defender anymore.
His attorney kind of abruptly withdrew with his legal team,
saying that they had no choice.

Speaker 4 (01:12:16):
But to step aside.

Speaker 3 (01:12:17):
Obviously, he's facing murders murder charges for stabbing his parents
to death and did not enter a plea, so prosecutors
say that he could face life without parole or the
death penalty.

Speaker 4 (01:12:30):
So as of right now, no decision has been made.

Speaker 5 (01:12:33):
And so so he had that high profile lawyer and
he quit dead.

Speaker 7 (01:12:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:12:39):
He basically said that there's no decision at this point
that has been made. But like they there's no choice.
He has to step aside from this.

Speaker 1 (01:12:45):
Yeah, it's like you ain't paying me. Yeah, I mean,
I'm a high dollar He probably doesn't want to represent
him anyway, So it's like, all.

Speaker 5 (01:12:51):
Right, cool.

Speaker 3 (01:12:52):
Matt Damon, we were talking about the Odyssey that he's
filming and coming out with, and so he said that
he had eved what only dreams are made of because
he got down to his high school weight.

Speaker 5 (01:13:05):
Good.

Speaker 3 (01:13:06):
Yeah, so he's on the new Heights podcast obviously with
Matt and Jason Kelcey and I'm sorry with Jason kelce
Matt told him that I had all these years to
get in shape, and I really wanted to get in shape,
and I always said that I wanted to get down
to my high school weight, but it took getting the
Odyssey roll to get.

Speaker 4 (01:13:21):
Down to his high school weight.

Speaker 5 (01:13:22):
Did he say how he did it?

Speaker 9 (01:13:23):
So?

Speaker 3 (01:13:24):
He said, I used to walk around at between one
hundred and eighty five and two hundred pounds. Right now
he's at one hundred and sixty seven one hundred and
sixty seven pounds. But he said that the diet change
is obviously a big one. He gave up gluten and
so he's like, I'm done with gluten now, there's no
turning back. So once your body like kind of adjusts

(01:13:44):
to that where you don't have gluten, he's like, there's
no turning back from that.

Speaker 5 (01:13:47):
Man. So I'm i gonna slot him a biscuits. It's
gonna be over, I know.

Speaker 3 (01:13:50):
But he was like, I found gluten free beer, I
found gluten free everything, and so that's like kind.

Speaker 5 (01:13:54):
Of like gonna be a gathering. And somebody said it
was gluten and it wouldn't like not a professor. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:13:59):
Yeah, So the odyssey is he's thanking Christopher Nolan for
getting him that role and getting him down to his
high school weight.

Speaker 5 (01:14:07):
One hundred and six. I know, man, I used to
wrestle in high school at one nineteen.

Speaker 4 (01:14:13):
That is so tiny.

Speaker 1 (01:14:15):
My head didn't Yes, his head was the one part.
The rest of his body was nineteen.

Speaker 5 (01:14:21):
I'll show you a photo that at a bobble head
it would be huge. All right, let's go try it
again and get you update on what's trendy one. And
then someone hits me and says, man, that was awesome
because I did it. So I brought this up before.

Speaker 1 (01:14:33):
Broadway has their annual Broadway Week Yes, where you can
give tickets to really big shows for by one Get one.
Basically well begins January twentieth, and so a lot of
the musicals, the plays there by one Get one, Aladdin, Chess,
The Great Gatsby, Hamilton, Mulan, Rouge, The Outsiders, tons of them,
nice and so you could get tickets at nyctourism dot com.

(01:14:55):
There's a code you enter there and it's for performances
between January twentieth and February twelfth, two different listeners say,
we planned our trip to New York around that week
because we heard about it by listening to you guys
it is, So that was pretty cool. So Bradwaye's about
to kick off. So go to NYC tourism dot com.
The code is NYC b W two five zero and
it's pretty cool. So yeah, if you want some culture,

(01:15:16):
you could do that. This is pretty cool. It's going
on right now. It's the Consumer Electronics Show. So if
a lot of see a lot of cees stuff being tagged,
it's the Consumer Electronics Show. That's where they basically showcase
all the new stuff that's coming out. Is here in town, No,
it's going on in Las Vegas, but everything goes viral
because they show you all the new stuff, like yes, yea,
I saw an AI bar that this guy was sampling
and it's basically a full bar you walk up to

(01:15:38):
and it's all AI. It can actually assess you as
a customer and guess your age and then it decides
if it needs to verify your age or not based
on you know, it looking at you. It could also
assess your level of drunkness. Really, it's crazy and then
you order your drink and the bar opens up and
it raises up out of the bar and it gives
you the drink.

Speaker 5 (01:15:56):
Isn't a cruise ship, don't date? One of those cruise
ship have an animated that a robot. Yeah, so this
is like the next step on that.

Speaker 1 (01:16:01):
But one of the things that came out that people
are freaking out about, uh, they are called smart play
Bricks by Lego. So it's a system that's designed to
react in real time as kids build. It plays sounds,
it lights up. There's no screen required, no app required.
The little chip is inside the brick, so if it's
a brick that's supposed to be like a sound like
a sword fight, it'll go whenever you put it together

(01:16:24):
and stuff like that real So it's like obviously to
engage kids who maybe getting tired of building with Legos.
But it doesn't need a smart device to go with it.
It's all part of it. So they're gonna launch March
first with a themed Star Wars set. So it have
like the laser sounds and the lightsaber sounds and I
would like.

Speaker 5 (01:16:42):
To see that. I hate describing it, but it's hard
for me to imagine exactly what it is. I'd like
to see that. Yeah, I watched a little video of it.
So if you go to Lego dot com they have
they have the new videos up of it right now.

Speaker 1 (01:16:51):
So the new ones that the sets are going to
range from sixty nine bucks to one hundred and sixty
nine bucks, which is about the going price for legos anyway,
So it's not like it's overly excessive, but it's kind
of a cool way to keep kids doing old school
creative stuff without having to involve a screen, which is
pretty cool.

Speaker 5 (01:17:06):
This is pretty big.

Speaker 1 (01:17:07):
Yesterday, Jones students went to an assembly that they didn't
know what was going to happen with all of the students,
a surprise assembly in the gym, and when they got there,
they got the great news that all of Jones High
School's current students can go to Valencia College for free free. Yeah,
any student currently enrolled at Jones, it's about fifteen hundred
students right now guaranteed to have their unmet costs at

(01:17:29):
Valencia covered once they enroll.

Speaker 5 (01:17:31):
So this goes always back to the freshman I mean
the freshman's this year. Yeah, so everybody in the school.

Speaker 1 (01:17:35):
Everybody that's enrolled, right now it says so typically two
years at Valencia costs about six grand, So that's basically
wiping away your two year degree, which is pretty cool.
They had the president of Valencia there, Kathleen Plinsky. She said,
you know a lot of you may be wondering can
I afford college? Well, you never have to ask that
question again. So they get took care of it. So
students went crazy.

Speaker 5 (01:17:54):
Obviously.

Speaker 1 (01:17:54):
So it was funded by donations to the Valencia College
Foundation from Lyft Orlando. That's a nonprofit that works to
help the neighborhoods around Camping World. Okay, okay, so obviously
Jones is right next to the camping room stake. Yeah,
I mean you can right outside the door. Yeah, So
that's that's huge.

Speaker 4 (01:18:09):
Man, it's so great.

Speaker 5 (01:18:09):
I was telling Brown, I said, if they had that
when I was in school, my mom like, oh, you're
going to college for something, for something, I don't care
what are you is you going you have genital studies, pottery, whatever,
you're going they gonna give you that for free. You're going, Yeah,
I don't know what I'm gonna do. I'm gonna tell
you what you want to do. You're going to get
that college.

Speaker 1 (01:18:25):
When you might not know, but this first two years
might lead you to the path of what you want
to be, whether it be a police officer or a
teacher or whatever it might be. Your first two years
is really fundamental and figuring out what you want to do.

Speaker 5 (01:18:37):
That's so cool.

Speaker 1 (01:18:38):
That's pretty cool. Yeah, So every jon stay if they
take advantage of it. Yeah, me to take advantage of
it for real. All right, listen, we come back.

Speaker 5 (01:18:43):
They say that something is going away, and we're gonna
do the research to find out if that's true or not.
Now some Bruno Mars, he's coming to the Raymond James
in September, and Brian, you got to get you got
to get preregistered.

Speaker 1 (01:18:54):
Yeah, Bruno Mars dot com, livenation dot com. You want
to be preregistered so you can get the the pre
sale because once it goes on pre sale.

Speaker 5 (01:19:03):
I want to talk to you if you work in
the hospitality industry, bars and restaurants, to see if this
is true. They say, traditional after work happy hours are
on the serious decline to the point that it's almost gone.
And then they say the reason is because of generational shifts.
Say gen Z, I've been reading stats on this. The

(01:19:23):
gen z these are drinking less. They say more people
are drinking less alcohol now than has been in a
long long time. A lot of people are saying because
of the changing corporate culture, and they say people eating
dinner earlier. They said things changed after people working from own,
hybrid and remote.

Speaker 1 (01:19:39):
I think it's because you tell everybody the food's fresher,
so they go to that early bird. Hey, did you
not try Johnny's killing happy hour? Y'all right, did you
not try? It's pretty delicious. Hey, And if you go
to a place that has happy hour, you get early
birds and drinks.

Speaker 4 (01:19:54):
Shut up, it's weird. Do you say happy hours going away?
But that's when more people are going.

Speaker 5 (01:19:59):
I think they say traditional happy hour. I think back
in the day, it was like we all worked together
and about four o'clock somebody said, hey, let's go to
happy hour after work and then have some cocktails and
they ain't go home.

Speaker 1 (01:20:10):
It was usually like five to seven. Yeah, yeah, you
get in and get two for one or whatever because
we're all on our way home from work.

Speaker 5 (01:20:15):
Off. Hey, man, trap is gonna be crazy today. Let's
go over. Let's go to TGI Fridays and go to
happy hour and then you meet with your coworkers and
you have some drinks and then and then you go home. Now,
for me, happy hour has always been what can I
get the tree of drinks? Same, that's what I look for.
It's like, so normally these drinks are ten dollars, and
for happy hour to five dollars. Well, I get out
of work at noon, so I can go, I can

(01:20:36):
go check that out. Yeah, you know. So they're saying
it's over. They said the corporate culture shift that shifted.
They said, budgets for mandatory fund is shrinking because before
it's like the boss say hey, let's all go out
to happy hour. It's on me.

Speaker 4 (01:20:48):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:20:49):
Now if the boss does that, it's coming out of
his pocket instead of he ain't got that card. No
that car? Yeah you remember the car. Yeah, I put
it on the car. Not anymore. And then again they
said people are eating out earlier, where most post work
dinners happened before six o'clock. So you can't go to
happy hour from five to seven if your family's eating
at six, because that means you out there drinking and

(01:21:11):
your family at home waiting on you. And they said
some bars are now doing and we talked about this yesterday,
Brian with your wife and they're doing the non alcoholic
Oh yeah, the mocktails. Yeah, that they're not doing that.
And they said many workers, especially younger wores, prefer to
go home and do their own thing after work then
hanging out with work. But you just like the people

(01:21:34):
that you work with.

Speaker 1 (01:21:35):
Man.

Speaker 5 (01:21:36):
And also that's when people got in trouble after work
happy hours your work wife or your work husband started,
you know, like, wait a minute, what's going on? Brad
was there? Yeah, Oh, he's so funny. So I want
to find out if you work in the in the
hospitality industry or if you work in a bar in
the restaurant has it? Is it gone away or is

(01:21:57):
just changed? And also when was the last time that
you've gone out with your coworkers to do a social
drinking or a happy hour thing like that, because that
used to be. There was some place I can't remember
every Friday. They said that they got together as a
group and they would go to happy hour every Friday,
and they thought it was like team building. And then
we again, if you go back to what we did,
we had that that thing that we did what once

(01:22:19):
a month and we had drinks here, and then somebody time,
and then somebody crashed their car into somebody else's and
then yeah, it kind of like I'll go out to
drinks with y'all. But when they try to do that
around here, because they used to try to do that, hey,
let's all get together, and yeah, that means I gotta
leave my house.

Speaker 3 (01:22:36):
Yeah, because like when they have happy hour, it's different
than our happy hour is at like one o'clock because we.

Speaker 4 (01:22:41):
Thought to work so early. So but for them, we're
like that's winding down time and.

Speaker 5 (01:22:46):
We always go in you.

Speaker 1 (01:22:48):
Yeah, I mean it's all really happy hour. It depends
on your schedule. Really, I ain't not happy about the
four o'clock hour. To me, I gotta get and leave
my house.

Speaker 7 (01:22:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:22:56):
But it is true when you say families though, because
like I refuse to take my kids out to dinner
past seven o'clock. Like we I right like going to
early dinner six thirty so we can go home and
they can decompress the staff time and like you know
what I'm.

Speaker 5 (01:23:09):
Saying, you're slowly getting early.

Speaker 4 (01:23:12):
For early dinner.

Speaker 1 (01:23:15):
Hey, And when that waitress says, hey, you had about
seven more minutes to order an happy hourur oh sweet,
bring you in there yet in the system. I love
it and they do that happily, all right. So I
want to find out from you if you work in
a hospitality industry. Is it happy hours of change or
have you changed to adjust to it? And when was

(01:23:35):
the last time you've gone out with your coworkers and
just got together to socialize after work? Is that something
that's in the past, Because I know somebody's can call
up to me. I love my coworkers, we get together
all the time. I want that call because I got
questions for y'all. Four oh seven now one nine one
o six seven eight seven seven now one nine one
o six seven Excel Mobile four one oh sixty seven
live stream of social media. You're gonna ask you the

(01:23:55):
question now, but we preferred to talk to you. Happy
hours is a thing of the past or just doing
it differently? Call us so we can talk to you
on Johnny's House again time Johnny brokers Mike literally ten
seconds before you're about to come back.

Speaker 5 (01:24:12):
That was a race against time. That was very stressful.
The third got it right there on town. You can't panic.
You just gotta be cool with that. It's nine thirty three.
It's Johnny's House talking about happy hour going away.

Speaker 1 (01:24:23):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (01:24:23):
Some places say they've changed it into doing stuff like
trivia night. It's just I think it's the traditional form
of it. Again. You're working at nine to five. After
five o'clock, going somewhere and have a drink and then
going home. But I do believe happy hours still go home,
go on because for me personally, we get off at
one o'clock. If they Most of the happy hours around
here happened like from two to five. And there was

(01:24:45):
a brand new Mexican restaurant on the corner of a
Popka Island and Conroy. It was open for about three months.
He was put at least a living a million dollars
worth of renovations in the place, and they had happy
hour from like two to six. And I'm like, you
know what, maybe one Friday I'll come up here when
I I don't have a kid and enjoy the half
price so and so so and so. Right, But it
didn't didn't make it. Didn't make it so y'all didn't

(01:25:07):
go to happy hour or nothing, and that kind of thing.
They said. Another thing that is going on is it's
going away in the workplace. It's intentional team building, and
that's what you get together. I think we went bowling
once or twice, but that's no team building in that. No,
it's like you go out of obligation.

Speaker 6 (01:25:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:25:23):
Well, I think they realized that team building turned into
a team venting. Everyone had nothing but negative stuff to say,
and then it's like, wait a second, this isn't going
the opposite way.

Speaker 5 (01:25:31):
This is actually breaking down the team. I remember they
used to I used to think team building is when
you go those retreat and it's like, all right, Brown,
don't stand here, fall back into my trust falls. Yeah, yeah,
I trust you and I'm gonna hold you up.

Speaker 4 (01:25:42):
You have ever done that, right, a trust fall or
done a team building like that?

Speaker 1 (01:25:45):
No, you ever to do a trust fall? Yes, I wouldn'
trust money'll bit just to catch men, not only one
of you.

Speaker 4 (01:25:51):
You wouldn't trust me, absolutely, not not even Johnny.

Speaker 5 (01:25:54):
Now, because I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:25:54):
If there's a video running, there's gonna be for funny TV.
We're gonna get some engagement. I just think the overall
climate of corporate America has changed. I don't know when
it did, you know, being here so long, I try
to think back on when it was I think corporate
America now is do your job, go home. Yeah pretty much,
you know, Yeah, I don't want it to be a family. Yeah,
I'm good. I got my friends, I got my family.
This is a money making venture and then I'm out.

(01:26:16):
They used to even hire someone for like morale. Yeah,
it was their job to make sure that, you know,
the morale in the building was good. Now if the
morale isn't bad, you get fired. It brings somebody, right.
I text my old friend John, who owns tea.

Speaker 5 (01:26:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:26:31):
Yeah, so he said they do happy hour still every
Monday to Friday, four to seven. Really, so three hours
of happy hour every Monday through Friday.

Speaker 5 (01:26:39):
That's a pretty good time.

Speaker 4 (01:26:40):
That is, four to seven is great.

Speaker 5 (01:26:41):
Through Friday, Monday through Friday.

Speaker 1 (01:26:42):
And they're in Metro West, so there is an area
where there's a lot of places you could cut through
on your way home and stuff like that. So yeah,
so I was curious. I'm like, you know, I go
there and I know they do trivia and they do
like music bingo. But I just thinking I've never been
for happy hour, but yeah, four to seven, all right,
Well so people are doing it.

Speaker 5 (01:26:58):
Yeah, I just think the climate in court, but America
has changed to the point where you know, you're not
really trying to get to get to know you. Some
people are like for us, I'm close to you guys,
and I know people in the building I'm cool with. Yeah,
I'm not really close with them. I'd be surprised anybody
outside of Jeremy will come up to me and say, hey, man,
let's go grab a cigar. I'm just like, why why?

Speaker 4 (01:27:17):
Yeah, what issues that we're going to be talking about?

Speaker 1 (01:27:19):
Yeah, well, and when you send it out like as
a calendar, invite no offense, Jeremy, JJ Rice, and then
it's forced. Now it's a forced hangout, Like now we're
not bonding or hanging I've got to be somewhere.

Speaker 5 (01:27:31):
Yeah. I just think that they don't. Corporate America just doesn't.
That's just a climate of everywhere, not not necessarily here,
but everywhere. It's like people want to go to work,
get your job done, go home.

Speaker 7 (01:27:39):
Right.

Speaker 5 (01:27:39):
If I find a friend in the workplace, that's a
plus plus. But if I don't, that's fine. I'm called
you to everybody.

Speaker 3 (01:27:44):
I do my job, and I think the terms work
life balance came into effect and people were like, okay, well,
if I hang out with you outside of work, that's
not really a balance because then I'm bringing home work
and we're going to be hanging out outside of work
and also work.

Speaker 5 (01:27:57):
Now with the workplace balance is some places, at five
o'clock you can't contact me about work. It's over. Oh yeah,
it's emails shut down. I think they tried something round
here once that you don't have to answer the email
after a certain your email shows when you're available. But
that don't mean nothing.

Speaker 4 (01:28:14):
Trust me when I tell you that, yeah, because then
you get text messages.

Speaker 1 (01:28:16):
I love to reply back to people at two twenty
am so they know I'm here at two twenty am.

Speaker 5 (01:28:21):
I yeah, working my girl's job. At five o'clock, she's done,
he's done. Shut the computer down.

Speaker 9 (01:28:26):
You can.

Speaker 5 (01:28:27):
You can hit me if you want to. You ain't
gonna get me. I'm like, they know what the time is.
This is the time.

Speaker 3 (01:28:32):
No, It's like if we don't answer an email at
four o'clock in the afternoon after we've been working, it's like,
what the heck?

Speaker 4 (01:28:37):
Guys?

Speaker 5 (01:28:38):
If I don't answer email and text the call brac yeah,
I don't know, call him.

Speaker 4 (01:28:45):
They're like go to his house. Gon't ask him.

Speaker 5 (01:28:48):
That's the funny thing. I'll be in here. Yeah, I
would be right here and not answer Ambraco. Hey mail.
You might want to take an email. What's going on? Man?
They ask me where you are? I'm sitting next to you.
You might want to right, why am I reading this?
You might want to hit him back. Let's get out
of Yeah, everybody can watch.

Speaker 4 (01:29:06):
Around ten, we start logging in.

Speaker 5 (01:29:09):
I think sometimes, like we had these meetings. I don't
think you're really on Fox. I think you're just over
there trying not come to those meetings. We got a
meeting today, No, I think it was last week. Okay,
it was one time. Yeah, on Tuesdays. So I'm on
Fox Tuesdays and Thursdays and some Tuesdays we have meetings
because I'm like cool, I'm on Fox Tuesdays.

Speaker 4 (01:29:25):
Yeah, I actually need Brian to help me produce it.

Speaker 5 (01:29:28):
We don't have a meeting theren no, no, no, no no.

Speaker 3 (01:29:30):
So I'm gonna do that, and then I'm gonna try
to go over to the gym today. And my kids
have therapy today, so I'll be bringing them to that.

Speaker 5 (01:29:38):
Okay, busy day, Brian Brown.

Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
Nothing does a bunch of radio shows to do, and
then I got to catch a nap because today, yeah,
my Miami Hurricanes, oh yeah, in the college football Playoffs
semi final against Ole Miss. So it's a Thursday night game, man,
but I can'tnot watch it. So I'm gonna get all
my stuff done and then take a nap and then
stay up late and be tired tomorrow.

Speaker 10 (01:29:58):
What it is?

Speaker 5 (01:29:59):
What it is?

Speaker 1 (01:29:59):
The NFL College what Yeah? So cocaine. So that's tonight night.
We had so many big announcements today. Of course, Bruno
Mars next week. You register for the presale at Bruno
Mars dot com. But we also announced the award show
for the fans. The iHeartRadio Music Awards is back. It's
gonna be on Fox thirty five March twenty six. Today
is double voting day, So because yours categories, you get

(01:30:20):
to vote for Broadway Debut, TikTok, Dance Debut Album, best Lyrics,
stuff like that, and today your vote's gonna coount doubley
if you want to get your votes in for your
favorite artists, because you decide a lot of these awards,
then you listen to one account. Yeah, iHeartRadio dot com
Slash Awards. Today is double Voting Day.

Speaker 5 (01:30:36):
This is not a panel behind the closed doors trying
to make sure they make winners of whoever shows up
to the event. This is one actually done that way.

Speaker 1 (01:30:43):
So go vote today, Double Voting Day. iHeartRadio dot Com
Slash Award sounds good right, Seacrass, are you ready?

Speaker 5 (01:30:48):
It's all you'll
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