Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Now if that sounds familiar, that's for good reason. Yes,
(00:21):
it's Christmas putting a holiday spin on summer from the
old time Great group War and joining us now one
of the founding members, Lonnie Jordan, along with Jerry Goldstein,
who was responsible for putting this group all together, and
they're joining us here with this holiday tribute once again
on Ryan Schuling Live. Gentlemen, thanks for joining us.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
Oh, thank you? So now they're having us.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
Yes, now, Lonnie, I want to take it to you
about what inspired this.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
Twist on an all time hit.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
You go back to nineteen seventy six with it, and
all these years later here it is.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
You made it into a Christmas song.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Well, Jerry, can you more about that, because it's his fault,
that's my fault. It's actually the record company's fault. They
kept bothering me all these years, you know, every year
to wait, come you you guys do a Christmas record.
You should have a Christmas or I think you know
you've got all the success, you know, and most everybody
else has a Christmas record. So eventually it's sunk in.
(01:22):
And we talked about it a lot, and we just
don't do other people's stuff. You know, or through this
and no christ We you know, we do our own thing.
So in that respect, I was sitting home one night
and thought about, gee, what if we take summer And
I started writing some lyrics that work for Christmas, you know,
and put Christmas instead of summer and all the things
(01:43):
that happened around Christmas instead of all the things that
happen around summer. And the lyric basically wrote itself, you know.
And I called Monny and I said, hey, I got
this idea that I think we should do this, and
I'm singing the song damn and lyric and he's going,
I don't know, you know, like you know, you know,
I said, look, we're going to be in the studio
a day like that. We're going to be in the
(02:07):
studio next week anyway, so why don't we when we
try it, you know? And he said yeah, okay, and
got any and I saw him a lyric and he
rewrote some of the stuff and they actually had it
typed up, you know, which is just very different for us.
Had him put on the computer and it cleaned up
and came in and sang and it was sounded incredible.
(02:29):
And I took it back to the record company and
they flipped out and they said, let's go make a video.
Speaker 4 (02:35):
So it made a video.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
And now we just made a lyric video and here
we are.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
Yes, It's Christmas is available now at Amazon dot com.
You can stream it on Spotify or all other digital
streaming services. So, Lonnie, taking this now from your side
of it. As you mentioned Jerry, it's his fault, it
is his idea. He comes to you with it. And
this duo, it has lasted all these years, over the decades.
(03:01):
How would you put into words your collaboration with Jerry.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
Well, we pretty much think in the same box. We
we think the same way, and it makes that makes
life easy when we're collaborating uh music and uh and
we learned from each other and uh and and and
we just were non stop, so we are. I would
(03:31):
I would call us a what do you call those
uh fast things that Japan has? What are those fast trains?
To a bullet train? We are a bullet train, yes, yes,
And we were non stop and sometimes we're out of control.
That depends on what time of day we're in the
studio though, but we are out of control. And that's
(03:55):
a quick thing. And and and and I love the
fact that we we can still create. I mean, that's
a gift, man. We can still do what we did
back in the day, and yeah, you know, and the sift.
But you have to keep in mind that our rock
and roll hall of fans, they're the ones that inspired
(04:16):
us for a reflection of the people that they put
us here and they can take us out. And that
that's why we're also organic. Every song that we've recorded,
they're all different from each other. So you can't really
categorize us in any department in the music other than
(04:40):
we are wore exactly. So we have our own sound,
their own style and the wrong way of doing things. And
Lennie and I just hit it off from day one,
and we basically directed the music of this band since
the beginning. Yeah, and wrote most of the songs, you know,
all the songs basically, Yeah, and created the music in
(05:02):
the studio, you know. And I used to take these
forty miny jams and made four minute workers at home.
That's part of what I do for five minutes. And
Lowrider was forty five minutes. See, I found eight minutes
in the middle of it somewhere, and we created the
Lowrider group. And you know it. And we got the
(05:24):
lowrider idea from being out on the road and you know,
being lowriders, you know, and go to different cities and
you know being you know. Still the one was a
long jam too. But the only the only way we
were able to write lyrics to it, Uh, to that
jam was uh, that guy Lonnie Jordans, Oh that's me.
(05:44):
And it accidentally still wind into the console the recording
studio consoles. I couldn't believe I did that. And uh,
and those guys there, Burton and Jerry goes in the
and the engineer christ Us, and this big light bulb
went off in their heads and they filled the wine
and that was the beginning of that song. After we
(06:05):
after we crashed the studio, we went into a different
studio in the same building, you know, thank guard he
had there. There was a new studio just built in
the same building as we destroyed the other studio.
Speaker 4 (06:17):
And and we had said we're laughing about it later,
not when it was happening, And we actually wrote still
the Wine that way, and that's the that's the inspiration
of still the Wine.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
And we had the group he had to and it
was already because we're working on that, we couldn't figure
out exactly what the lyric was, and then spill the
Wine happened, boom. You know that That's pretty much how
how we created music. We just damn it and then
we do a whole jam long exam and then, uh,
(06:51):
either we get inspired by our fans, you know, or
we something happened like an accident, like just anything. We
just take situations and put it into music. How we
do it.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
Legendary collaborators Lonnie Jordan, who of course founding member of
the group war lead vocalist, keyboardists as well Jerry Goldstein,
who his catalog goes back the decades, a tremendous producer
in his own right, and he is the one that
put this group together. Seven of their hits in the
top ten. The World is a Ghetto, the Cisco Kid,
(07:30):
Gypsy Man, Why Can't We Be Friends?
Speaker 3 (07:32):
All?
Speaker 1 (07:33):
In addition to the ones that they mentioned, Low Riders,
Spill the Wine Summer turned into this, Yes it's Christmas tune.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Jerry.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
I'll ask this question to you first, because I'm not
sure how comfortable Lonnie would be answering it.
Speaker 3 (07:45):
But I've watched.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
As I'm not Comfortable'll say everything you need to know.
It's this fault.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
But I've watched these last several years and even over
the last couple of decades as the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame induction have been announced, and to me,
it's a notorious absence that War has not been included. Jerry,
do you believe War deserves to be in the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame? Have there been any whispers
or hints along those lines that it might happen.
Speaker 2 (08:15):
Well, we've actually been nominated three times. Yeah, we just
haven't gotten the votes to get in. I think eventually
we'll get in. And we just got a star in
Hollywood Boulevard on the Walk of Fame, which and you know,
George Lok said the same thing, by the way, in
introducing us. He was brilliant, and he said this time
(08:37):
that we get in the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame too, because you know, the band has done so much,
you know who contributed it, you know, so much time. Yeah, well,
I think eventually we will and and hopefully soon.
Speaker 3 (08:53):
And Lonnie, what would that mean to you personally if
it were.
Speaker 2 (08:56):
To happen, Well, it would be good. I'll be able
to show something to my grandchildren. They'll be able to
see some contributions that I've left or have. Yeah, But
other than that, I'm good either way. Like I said,
my fans are my Hollywood Rock and Roll Hall of Fans,
(09:16):
and that really means a lot to me because they're
the ones I see more, you know, every day every
time I go play, those smiling faces man. And then
the new generation coming around, you know, my Googlers, when
you're the younger kids, the newer, newer fans. That means
(09:39):
a lot to me. But that award, you know, that's
cool the fans on my reward, But that award, you know,
I can handle it. I'll break down and cry and
say it's about time. But other than that, Hey, you know,
I'm not mad at anyone, uh I, you know, as
(10:02):
far as deserving an award, uh you know, that's all fine.
But I I you know, I never thought we would
ever get played on the radio back in the day
because our music was so different, you know than what
I would here on the radio. Until you know, being
uh voted, not voted, but being inducted is that it
(10:26):
not not inducted, but just being on the list to
be voted on the uh, you know Hollywood Walks. What
is it, the Hollywood Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Yeah,
you know that was good enough for me right there.
Three times we were in there. To me, we already
(10:49):
wanted we'll get it. We'll get an interventional. I did
do it.
Speaker 3 (10:55):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
Lonnie Jordan joining us along with Jerry Goldstein, co founding
members of the group War Now. They're going on tour,
starting up on December twentieth in Inglewood, California, at the
YouTube Theater. They're coming as close as Cheyenne, Wyoming here
to Denver, that's just a short trip up twenty five
on April seventeenth at the Civic Center there. I guess
that'll be my next question for the two of you,
(11:18):
you know, putting this all together, taking the show on
the road. What goes into that and why is it
so important to have that interaction with the fans in
a live setting.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
That's part of our life. I mean we've been on
you know, the Gypsy Men, you know, Yeah, we've been
We've been on the road for since nineteen sixty nine,
you know, six fifty nine, okay, and that's just part
of our life. We're in the studio or we're on
(11:50):
the road. I mean that's to fifty five years so far,
say almost fifty six, and it's just it's a blessing. Actually, yeah,
we still do the same thing. Still on fire, our shoulders,
still on fire. And we'll get to Denver too. We'll
(12:11):
probably get to Denver this summer.
Speaker 4 (12:12):
Okay, oh no, we haven't been there in.
Speaker 2 (12:14):
A couple of years, so we'll get there.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
But when you do, you'll come back on. We'll have
that conversation. Lonnie Jordan, Jerry Goldstein joining us. And just
a final word is we're going to play out to
break with this song in its entirety. Yes, it's Christmas
now people are going to go at This is the
group War and they were founded, like you said, nineteen
sixty nine in the midst of a very unpopular war
in Vietnam. But you guys have always been kind of
(12:37):
pushing those boundaries, doing things that people don't expect. What
is it in your mind that makes war so unique
in the American culture and why it's lasted all these years.
Speaker 2 (12:50):
Well, because this is a different kind of war. There's
a musical war. This is the war that rage war.
Back in the early seventies, against the wars that was
going on, and and our choice of Whatman's was and
still is our musical instruments. It doesn't shoot bullets, it
(13:11):
doesn't kill, but what it does shoot out is melodies, rhythms,
and most of all harmony. And that's what we're about.
Without saying peace, we're just raising war against wars. The
piece is a big word man that people used to
(13:31):
too much and it never happened procrastinating what I called
it peace procrastinating There he's talking to you.
Speaker 5 (13:45):
Word.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
We are keep on going and make more music. We're
making a new album right now and oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
and you'll be hearing it soon. And we're very still excited.
We're still fresh, and you know, we just level. We
just still on fire. YEP, fans on fire.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
And you can do a cover version of that on
the next album, that would be great. The immortal and
legendary Lonnie Jordan, of course, founding member of the group
War lead vocalist, keyboard is still after all these years.
And Jerry Goldstein, a musical legend in his own right,
longtime manager, producer, brought it all together and brought together
this song that you're about to hear yes it's Christmas.
(14:32):
It's a holiday spin on Summer one of War's top
ten hits from nineteen seventy six.
Speaker 3 (14:37):
Free Purpose for the Holidays. And here it is as
we go to break.
Speaker 5 (14:41):
By loun down my friend playing song, the meeting chang
(15:03):
at the mall, Christmas tree.
Speaker 6 (15:11):
Can standing tall cause the schools.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
Crystals dream, I.
Speaker 6 (15:36):
Chose the best time.
Speaker 7 (15:45):
Your soul dreaming sand on this wall, lots of special goodies.
Speaker 8 (15:58):
The moldy side, Christmas Morning, magic Field.
Speaker 6 (16:12):
With Christmas presents, Boden everywhere and colors Crims Tea and
(16:39):
call the cream Ristos Cream.
Speaker 2 (16:49):
Cram I find my dream.
Speaker 9 (17:29):
Joey Ramone started cold calling me. I mean he was
emailing me and I always respond to viewers, and it
was just a viewer named Joey.
Speaker 3 (17:36):
I didn't realize.
Speaker 9 (17:37):
And then over time we were talking and talking, and
then we became friends. He was this huge rock singer,
but people didn't realize that he was also an avid
investor and he used to call me and ask me
all about stocks. And he called me once and he said, Marie,
I wrote a song about you. And I said, wow,
are you serious? He said, come to CBGB's tomorrow night.
(17:57):
I'll be getting up on stage at midnight. And I said,
oh my goodness, I'm on the air at six in
the morning.
Speaker 3 (18:02):
There's absolutely no.
Speaker 9 (18:03):
Way I can be at CBGB's And he said, send
a crew tomorrow night to roll on it, and I said, okay,
and I did.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
This one's called Maria Barcheromo.
Speaker 9 (18:12):
And when they came back with the tape, I couldn't
believe it. There's Joey Ramone and the Ramones singing a
song called Maria Barcheromo. And I was so lucky to
(18:34):
know Joey. And I regret not pulling it all night
or that day to go out see him sing my
song and then go to work, because unfortunately he died
a few months later. We found the lyrics that Joey
wrote on little scraps of paper, the original lyrics, and
I bought it at auction. My name is Maria and
I'm one of the lucky ones.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
What a cool, sweet story. Maria Bartiromo, now she's a legend.
Otherwise she's absolutely fantastic.
Speaker 3 (19:04):
I adore her. I know many of you do as well.
She's fantastic.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
But Maria, if Joey Ramone writes a song about you
and asks.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
You to go to CBGB's. You go to CBGB's, You
do whatever it takes, and I know in.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
Retrospect it's easy twenty twenty being hindsight. Sadly, Joey was
sick at the time and he didn't tell a lot
of people about it, and this is probably how I
would handle such an illness as well. Nor MacDonald's same thing.
He had lymphoma and he would die not long after that.
But he got that song. It's a good song too,
(19:43):
so Maria Bartaromo part of pop culture fame as well.
And the Ramones who were great, I mean punk rock
legends obviously, and true punk rock is what.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
Well.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
It might be conservative to a point, but it's certainly libertarian.
And they were big fans of Bonzo Ronald Reagan. They
were big time critics of socialism, communism. There's a famous
photo of them thumbs down about you know these morons
who are wearing Shay Guavara shirts and sing a Viva
(20:17):
lads of your communists, get.
Speaker 3 (20:18):
Out of here.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
And sadly, each of the four original members of the
Ramones have passed, and they all passed at relatively young ages.
Joey from lymphoma Johnny Ramone had prostate cancer, did Ramone
died of a heroin overdose, and Tommy Ramone had bio
duct cancer, so cancer for three of them and a
drug overdose for the fourth. But legends they are, and
(20:43):
that song the stuff of legend honoring Maria Bartiromo. A
music themed hour. I like these, appreciate you being along
for the ride at five seven seven, three nine and
Patty digging Deep.
Speaker 3 (20:56):
This is Peppermint Patty at her finest.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
Ryan did War work with the lead singer of the Animals,
Eric Burden on Spill the Wine, Ding Ding Ding. You're
exactly right. I know I'm turning to Wikipedia here, but
it's good shorthand. And these are facts because I've spoken
with Jerry Goldstein about this, and he is mentioned, along
with Lonnie Jordan, who you heard in that first portion
(21:22):
in the segment that I just had that conversation with
War and they should be in the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame, by the way, you look at some
of the recent inductees and that that's fine. It's fine,
but War should be in the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame. And Lonnie Jordan was so magnanimous in his
response to that question. Jerry Goldstein, this guy, I mean
he is gold right. He is a living, breathing legend
(21:45):
in American music. Why because it wasn't just War. The
band changed their name from night Shift to War. Night
Shift was conceived by record producer Jerry Goldstein, who I
just spoke with. He also wrote Get This the following
tracks big hits going back to the fifties, My Boyfriend's
(22:06):
Back and Hang On Sloopy and I Want Candy, I
Want Candy and to Patty's points singer Eric Burton, the
former lead singer of the British band The Animals, another
great group. In nineteen sixty nine, Goldstein saw musicians who
would eventually become War playing at the rag Doll in
North Hollywood.
Speaker 3 (22:25):
Backing Deacon Jones.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
Yes, it's not the American football player that many people
think of, but that was his name.
Speaker 3 (22:34):
He was the blues artist and Jerry was attracted to
the band's sound.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Lonnie Jordan claimed that the band's goal was to spread
a message of brotherhood in harmony, using instruments and voices
to speak out against racism, hunger, gangs, crimes, turf wars,
and promote hope and the spirit of brotherhood. Eric Burden
and War began playing live shows to audiences throughout so
cal before entering into the studio to record their Day album,
(23:00):
Eric Burdon Declares War and the album's best known track,
Patty Nailed It Spilled the Wine and that was the
hit that launched the band's.
Speaker 3 (23:11):
Career for War. More of your texts at five seven
seven three nine.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
I truly admire John Kennedy, and I will tell you
that I am embarrassed to be a woman nowadays.
Speaker 3 (23:21):
What a bunch of stupid bees. Don't be a bee?
Like David told Alexis and chit's creek. Don't be a B.
What a bunch of stupid bees? And you know what
that B means, or perhaps that's C is more appropriate
here when you go from B to C. Oh, that's
a big leap.
Speaker 6 (23:41):
Guys.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
Everybody has a day where you're a B, right, But
to be a C, that's a special level of depravity
right there.
Speaker 3 (23:52):
God Trump was the.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
President at the time of rbg's death. He was actually
boarding Air Force one, not Trump Force one. Texter, You're correct,
I stand corrected, you are. He was running for reelection.
That would have been during calendar year twenty twenty, and
I thank you for sending that in because you're right.
It was in the wake of Rbg's passing that President
Trump was able to appoint Amy Cony Barrett and that
(24:16):
went through the Senate confirmation process, and it prompted a
lot of leftists to be up in arms and to
beg Joe Biden to drop out of the race and
not pull a Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Many people thought that
Ruth Bader Ginsburg should have stepped down before Trump assumed
office and allowed a Democratic president, Barack Obama to appoint
(24:37):
her replacement Bran And by the way, the left are
not liberals. They are demon rats rats as they're in
their name. Being a liberal means freedom. Nothing that the
demon rats do is for freedom. I have a lot
of friends that I would call classical liberals, and these people,
by and large, and I'm talking in massive numbers, have
(24:57):
kind of come over to our side and may've been
red pilled. And it's not that they're necessarily in the
traditional sense conservatives. But I say it like this, like
a Joe Rogan, maybe even eventually at Bill Maher, but
late comers to the party, but we welcome them with
open arms, and they look at the far left and
what the Democratic Party has become. They go, well, I'm
(25:18):
not that I don't agree with everything the Republicans say.
I would cite maybe Cheryl Hines is an example here,
and certainly RFK Jr. Look how the Democratic Party treated
RFK Junior. And look how the Maga movement, Maga Republicans
who are so berated by Joe Biden and other leftists
welcomed RFK jor, Hey, buddy, appreciate you being here. Let's
(25:41):
go win an election together immediately. And Cheryl Hines, who
played Larry David's wife on Curb Your Enthusiasm.
Speaker 3 (25:49):
I would say she's a classical liberal, and I think
she would say that, And yet she.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
Talks about how the moment RFK Junior joined forces with Trump,
she became persona non grata.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
Liberals so called friends abandoned her.
Speaker 1 (26:03):
Meanwhile, she shows up to you know, Trump rallies or
various get togethers that include Trump World, She's treated wonderfully. Oh,
we might not agree on everything, but you seem nice.
It's kind of how she describes how she was greeted.
And that's the kind of tone and tenor that I
hope most of us are able to strike with people
who are like maybe skittish, maybe they have preconceptions or
(26:26):
stereotypes about who they think we are. But it's up
to us to extend that olive branch, to open that door,
to construct that bridge for them to walk over, and
to win hearts and minds, turn those into votes, and
win in the battle of ideas with kindness, with openness,
with a welcome, Matt. We don't have to agree on everything.
(26:46):
This is where I'm coming from because I want to
win and I like winning a lot, and we are winning,
and that's the good thing. The same Texter who is
trying to, I think, CounterPunch on the initial sell thrown
at me. When we have a president that lacks the
traits you mentioned, class signated Korum shows the world he
approves of bullying and using disgusting language. What do you
(27:09):
think is going to happen? Follows up with this one
and let me just make sure, yep, same number. I'm
not going to say it over there, don't worry, Texture,
I would never do that. So because he said something
nice five years ago, you excuse all the crap that
comes out of his mouth now.
Speaker 3 (27:24):
And I would not compare the behavior of Trump to RBGS.
Don't think I compared the two.
Speaker 1 (27:31):
What I'm saying is Donald Trump said much nicer things
in that very moment. He was just informed of her death.
He could have said anything, but he was magnanimous and
he was kind. Find me the Democrat. And there were
some but let's say I don't know Adam Schiff, Eric Swalwell,
some of Trump's fiercest adversaries on the left. The day
(27:53):
after the assassination attempt on his life in Butler, Pennsylvania,
were their kind words coming from the left, then, Texter,
and when Donald Trump dies, and that day will come
and he talks about it off.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
And it's gonna come for all of us, and one
day it'll be me. But I'm better than I was
twenty five years ago.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
Maybe you can't tell me that there are members of
the media and the left that are just going to
set aside their Trump arrangement syndrome and say kind things
about Trump without qualifiers, with a saying, yeah, but he
was a misogynist, racist, xenopho.
Speaker 3 (28:28):
Bad person. You're just wrong here, Texter. It's okay to
be wrong and you're wrong. Embrace it.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
Lead into it, Ryan texting you again, please explain why
the economy under Biden was so bad? Sixteen million jobs created. Okay,
first of all, shut the hell up. This is idiotic.
COVID happened, people were laid off, jobs were lost, and
a lot of those jobs that were regained was because
COVID stopped being a thing.
Speaker 3 (28:55):
So stop, just stop. I'm doing an intervention today. I
did it early.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
Hear about Candice Owens. I'm doing it again. Now take
your phony numbers and stuff them where the sun don't
shine their phony Trump two million jobs lost, seventy thousand
manufacturing jobs destroyed.
Speaker 3 (29:12):
Again, this is the same texture. It's got to be.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
Cite your blanking sources. Give me the publications where you
procured those numbers. You're a coward if you won't talk
about it. I talk about every time your idiotic ass
sends me a text message.
Speaker 3 (29:30):
So again, stop with the bs your nuts, Patty.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
One of my guilty pleasures is watching real reaction videos
on YouTube. Eric Burden belting out House of the Rising
Sun surprises the younger generation. It's one of my favorite
music videos. Great song, phenomenal song. We'll close up shop
here and sends you into the Dan Kamplish Show upon
our return.
Speaker 3 (29:56):
More of your text five seven seven three nine.
Speaker 1 (29:58):
After this, I just sent a text to my sister
asking her for a Christmas list for herself, my brother
in law, my two nieces.
Speaker 3 (30:09):
And it's that time of year.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
You want to get the perfect gift, right, Yeah, I
want to be a good uncle, you know, let me
the funkal for my nieces and I'm going to give
them an opportunity maybe go shopping for themselves. That's what
my sister requested. But what better gift for you and
your family this holiday season? Then the peace of mind
a tailored investment portfolio provides. And you can call my
friends at Trajan Well today for your complimentary consultation.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
It's just that easy.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
Broomfield, Greenwood Village, er Loveland at seven two oh nine,
fifteen three thousand. If I said that number two fast
here it comes right at you again seven to two
oh nine, fifteen three thousand. What happens when you sit
down with the fiduciary advisors at Trajan Wealth Well. They
understand the importance of diversified portfolios focusing on capital preservation,
(30:54):
growth and low cost investment options. And if you let
Trajan Well's Fiducia advisors help you craft a plan to
meet your goals. Today you will be on that path
to retirement, to secured wealth building to sound investment options
based on your level of risk tolerance, what your end
goals look like, and how much.
Speaker 3 (31:15):
Time you intend to take to get there.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
Between now and then, it all starts at Trajan Wealth
that number one more time, seven two oh nine point
fifteen three thousand, or online at Trajanwealth dot com. Trajan
Wealth a proud sponsor of Ryan Shulding Live Advisory services
through Trajan Wealth LLC, SEC Registered Investment Advisor, Client paid advertisement.
Speaker 3 (31:37):
Additional disclosures at Trajanwealth dot com.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
Oh, the great Bill Withers, we lost him a little
over five years ago. Ain't no sunshine when she's gone.
Now here's a bit of trivia for you can use
with your friends. Another song by Bill Withers entitled Lovely Day,
one of my all time favorites.
Speaker 3 (31:57):
Such a great song.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
Now, toward the end of this song, on Bill holds
a high e note for eighteen seconds, think about can
you hold any note, let alone intunor in key.
Speaker 3 (32:08):
For eighteen seconds? Time yourselves.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
It's the longest note held in a song of any
top forty hit in the history of US music and
the charts on Billboard. Use that on your Friends five seven,
seven thirty nine. Two of the text lines we go, Ryan,
you're doing something right. That grumpy texter listens to your show,
and I'm grateful for it. Winky face emoji. I like
(32:34):
that one too. All I'm asking for is that you
come correct the whole candae owened thing to start the show,
the BS meter. I'm at my full level. Okay, It's
like rowdy Roddy Piper, he said. I came here to
kick ass and chew bubble gum, and I'm all out
of bubble gum.
Speaker 3 (32:50):
I'm sick of it.
Speaker 1 (32:51):
If you don't have your facts straight, if you don't
have your sources sighted, if you're throwing blank.
Speaker 3 (32:57):
Against the wall and just hoping it sticks that, I
don't have time for that.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
Ain't no gut, buddy, got time for that. And when
I present to you, if it's formulated and rapped is
my opinion. I mean, that's what you're gonna get. But
what I try to present to you are either verifiable
facts or I will say, go check out the facts
for yourself. Don't just take my word for it, not
just throw a number out of thin air and expect
you just to believe it.
Speaker 8 (33:18):
I'm not.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
That's not how I roll. Ryan.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
Thank you for all you do for Colorado, keeping us
safe and on point with what we need to do
to fix our situation. Very kind words, Brian, and much appreciated.
And this loyal text Ryan. See the demon rat Texters
just prove my case.
Speaker 3 (33:35):
They are all sees love your show. Thank you now.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
I don't like using those names like demon rat. They
are Democrats now. Whether they've been commandeered by the far
left and the socialist communist elements of their party, well
that's another conversation. Talk to you tomorrow. Right here, I'm
six point thirty km