Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
This program is designed to provide general information with regards
to the subject matters covered. This information is given with
the understanding that neither the hosts, guests, sponsors, or station
are engaged in rendering any specific and personal medical, financial, legal, counseling,
professional service, or any advice. You should seek the services
(00:23):
of competent professionals before applying or trying any suggested ideas.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Hey, there's Brian Sebash of the movie reviews and more.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
And if it's Tuesday, Hey, first of all, you have
to always give to your favorite.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
Charities, no matter what they may be.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
And around the world, support the arts, support women empowerment
really really important. Obviously we're streaming on KFOHT Radio Talk
for Media, Talk for TV streaming on over one hundred
outlets right now as usual around the world, and Women
on TV dot TV IV two four seven out of Franklin, Tennessee, where.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
We have forty views and counting.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
And as I always do, I put everything on the
record every Tuesday. This is show one hundred and fifty
eight live shows in a row. Mike Wagner from South
Dakota's good to hear him. I love having Michael when
he's on the show. It's good to be on his show.
It's always about sports. So the reason why this show
is special not only because some surrounded by women as usual.
(01:57):
Not only is it about women as usual, not only
is about fitness, health and manifesting things Carol Waern being
a euro coach or a great cooking out of Houston,
Texas with chef Rachel Roberts. And then we have our
friend Angela Karen goust A NonStop. You can't Laurie, you
can't go wrong with all these women. I know you're
loving this and you're in the Center Square today knowing
(02:20):
about this. Here's the thing about this whole thing. You know,
Let's see it, Karen. I mean everybody, everybody knows. I
do this off the top of my head. So Laurie,
let's see. She's an aries.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
Her favorite film is Hook. What else?
Speaker 3 (02:34):
Uh, she's that fan favorite. He is that former American gladiator.
Not only was she sexually, she is very tough and determined.
Speaker 2 (02:43):
That's why I liked the.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
While watching American Gladiators back in the day. It's still
relevant as it was back then as is today. And
you know, I just remember when I was talking to
Leila Ali and jhul Cogan on when it came back,
I'm like, this is not an American Laddy.
Speaker 4 (02:56):
It is.
Speaker 3 (02:57):
They were American gladys. I know, but this is what
we're doing new. I said, Okay, yeah, it's not the
same thing made it work. But here's the thing about this,
you know, not only I like this podcast chilling the
eyes before I you know, I reached out to Rarely
do I reach out to people unless Rachel wants me to.
I don't have that kind of happy you need to
(03:18):
reach out to someone like Rachel.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
I don't want to now when I have to. They
were't got him out of coffee talk.
Speaker 3 (03:24):
So it's one of these things where I actually reached
out to Laurie because I had watched her doc twice.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
I said, I wonder what she's doing. And you know, I.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
Never felt that the women got to do and Laurie
the reason and Angela in Terror the reason why I
started all movie reviews more back in the day was
it was because I didn't feel the women in the
massage and Terry knows this. Women in the worlds are
fitness weren't getting their due. They didn't get the exposure
that they deserved. They were spending all kinds of money
and not getting anything back. And I thought it was
(03:56):
an injustice back then in eight and I still think
the way it is today still So because of women.
This is the reason why we're one of the best
outlets in the world. It's because of women, not me
how it helps, but no, it's because of women.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
So what all that, Carol Register, tell them who you are?
Were you coming from?
Speaker 5 (04:13):
Followed by Rachel Hey, there, I am Carol Register. I
am the creator of the neural wealth methods. So what
I do is I take women from especially female leaders
from six to seven figures with alignment with heart centered boy,
because you know how many of us know people who
(04:35):
are wealthy and miserable, and right now in history exactly,
it's more important than ever for great women to have
great wealth for great impact. We have not really cross
close ap for what women deserve economically. So I'm right
(04:55):
there on the front of taking women across the slo
I love what I do. We do it by healing
limited money stories and really getting to the root of
what's standing in the way so that women can continue
to grow and develop. And this is a part of
what I do, and I love it. The other thing
(05:18):
is I'm a co host of the Unleashed and Unstoppable podcast,
which Brian you always stand in such huge support of.
We talk about the neuroscience of leadership, health and wealth.
So I'm so excited to be here with you guys.
I'm so excited about our connection, our collaborations, our camaraderie,
(05:44):
and I'm super excited to hear your stories.
Speaker 2 (05:49):
I haven't we haven't seen you in a month because
you've been busy doing all.
Speaker 4 (05:52):
It's more than a month.
Speaker 6 (05:53):
I think it's more so you keep saying chef.
Speaker 7 (05:56):
But you know, I've been with Brian for so many
and you know, Brian is so much fun to work with.
Speaker 6 (06:07):
We all love him, and.
Speaker 7 (06:08):
Everybody that starts as a co host ends up staying
with him for years. Terry has been with him for
I don't know, like over ten years. So I, Terry,
can you believe it? I've been with Brian. What is
it for now? I mean, so I identified as a chef,
but I'm I mean year's ago.
Speaker 2 (06:27):
She's a healthy chef.
Speaker 6 (06:30):
I've done cooking shows. I don't work in restaurants or anything.
Speaker 7 (06:33):
I actually am an actress and I have a morning
show called Coffee Talk, and I do you know, I
work on films and movies and stuff like that. But
Brian has got it in his head that I'm this chef,
which is hilarious because I'm like, there's a lot less
cooking and more, you.
Speaker 6 (06:46):
Know, doing other stuff.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
But that's cool.
Speaker 7 (06:49):
Yeah, we are. Every morning you can watch me have
a show called Coffee Talk and it's a lot of fun.
And I've been doing that for long longer than I've
been doing the I am.
Speaker 6 (07:01):
Like I said, it's always.
Speaker 8 (07:03):
Very Hi everyone, I'm Terry Murray. It's my birthday month officially. Yeah,
so I'm a leo. I'm on the CUSP July thirtieth,
so I'm gonna start celebrating my birthday today. I've been
(07:25):
with Brian Rover ten years. I have a lot to
look forward to in the in the next in the
next chapter of my life, I guess I'm putting I'm
putting it through. I just dealt with a year of
dealing with my mom with dementia who just passed away,
So I kind of want to help educate people on
(07:46):
going through that. I want to start talking more about
I'm a fitness junkie. I've I've competed in several fitness shows.
I've won first place at uh let me see MP
n PC, I've won Master second place, first place. I've
won Muscle Beach first place.
Speaker 7 (08:04):
You started this your forties, and that's really what's interesting, right,
weren't you like forty seven?
Speaker 8 (08:09):
Maybe you no, I was forty six. The first trophy
I got, and that was a Muscle Beach. It was
my first show and I went over all the twentyeen
year olds and so.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
I was very happy.
Speaker 8 (08:18):
But the thing is is now that I'm you know,
getting into my you know, later fifties, which I want
to start talking more and helping women and maybe, like
you know, I can start Carol with this is to
talk more about menopause issues and skin and hair and
what happens to us after menopause, because it's a lot
harder to keep that muscle and to stay in shape,
(08:41):
and I think a lot of women give up, and
you don't have to. It's just that you've got to
change your diet to deal with those hormone issues and
you don't need to do steroids all this stuff.
Speaker 4 (08:51):
It's gonna be on nutrition.
Speaker 8 (08:53):
So with that said, I also have been acting off
and on my whole life. I'm non stop hearing Marie
for is In because of fitness, acting.
Speaker 4 (09:02):
I also, you know, do a little bit of art.
Speaker 8 (09:04):
I've been doing Red Heart Red carpet hosting with Brian
for over ten years. I love talking to celebrities. I
love interviewing people and finding out, you know, what they
liked or you know, you know what they enjoy and
it's just fun to get.
Speaker 4 (09:18):
People to laugh.
Speaker 8 (09:19):
And I you know, I'm a little bit of a
comedian as well. My friend Maya got me up on
stage to do an open mic and so I'm probably
just the thing is is that you know, anything that's
out there dealing with a loved one that has dementia,
I give you props. It's probably the hardest thing that
I've I've gone through in my whole entire life, and
(09:41):
I helped that basically now that I can time, you know,
help people with that.
Speaker 4 (09:46):
So with that said, well, you're.
Speaker 6 (09:48):
You know what you're You're beautiful.
Speaker 7 (09:50):
And I think I as a woman who's all be
fifty two in August, and I think the face of beauty,
you know, it's it's surprising, and we're all beautiful women
here and we should be celebrating and get the voice
out there and saying, you know, being fifty, being fifty five,
being sixty, being sixty.
Speaker 6 (10:09):
This does not mean that you have to look like it.
Speaker 9 (10:12):
You can know, Yeah, am I am I the am
I the oldest one in this group right now.
Speaker 10 (10:20):
We don't look it.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
I'm sixty two years old.
Speaker 5 (10:23):
Well yeah wow.
Speaker 2 (10:25):
It's like I'm.
Speaker 9 (10:26):
Listening to you guys, gone okay, you know, talking about
you and the fitness and everything else, and it's like, wow,
this is thing. And Terry, Yeah, I want to talk
to you because I am going to compete this year.
I'm going to go back on stage. I'm going to
do Masters. Why don't we see together?
Speaker 6 (10:40):
Why don't we do together?
Speaker 8 (10:41):
Because I want to get back on stage. I've been
on stage the last four years because I'm like, I
was so excited.
Speaker 9 (10:46):
I haven't been on stage for thirty five years. I
don't even know what it's like. I was competing.
Speaker 4 (10:50):
I competed in body building when that's all they have. Yeah, wow,
that was it.
Speaker 8 (10:56):
That's connect because I want to talk because I really
want to do this and I and I have a
different mission this time because I'm it's hard for me
to say I'm trying fifty eight. I don't feel fifty eight.
I don't think I look fifty eight. I just it's
just weird.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
Didn't you just hear what I said? How old she was?
Speaker 5 (11:17):
Thing?
Speaker 4 (11:18):
It doesn't matter, no, no, My.
Speaker 8 (11:19):
Point is just inspire people, or just by other women.
You know that you still can do it, you know
what I mean again, it's just it's a motivation. It's
how you think. A lot of it is mind over muscle.
I mean, it's just like it's the mindset, you know.
Speaker 11 (11:33):
And when the mindset there, whoa, that's awesome.
Speaker 4 (11:43):
Yeah, it's kind of crazy. I mean, yeah, you're right.
Age is just a number, and I can't believe you're
exactly and.
Speaker 9 (11:50):
Thinking about getting on stage thirty five years later.
Speaker 4 (11:53):
You need to do it. I want to.
Speaker 9 (11:55):
I want to challenge myself, you know. And honestly, you're right.
Speaker 4 (12:00):
All of you.
Speaker 9 (12:01):
Nobody looks their age nowadays, and I absolutely love it.
And I think that is contributed to all of our
good eating, drinking, while sleeping, I mean, the whole thing,
keeping the hormones balanced as much as you can, you know,
and it's just insane. I literally just put a post
out and this is three days ago. And I've never
(12:21):
by the way, I'll let you guys know this, I
have never hit a million views on Instagram. TikTok, that's
easy Instagram. That's a whole nother story. I hit a
million views on one post news day, thank you. I
took my one photo from twenty eight years old and
I went all the way to sixty two and people
were just like mind blewn.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
Yeah, mind blowing.
Speaker 9 (12:45):
And I'm like, you know, this is this is what
women are looking like now.
Speaker 4 (12:49):
You know we're we're not looking like the grandparents.
Speaker 5 (12:52):
No, Laurie, I'm sixty one, so I'm right there with you.
Speaker 4 (12:57):
Yeah, it's amazing, you know. So I just wanted to
chime in.
Speaker 9 (13:02):
Go ahead, I know everybody's talking and doing their introductions.
Speaker 3 (13:05):
Oh, I got to get into Karen at this point,
followed by Angela.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
The reason for that because I met Karen. Laurie is
telling me.
Speaker 3 (13:11):
About inviting you to a gifting toe September eleventh, where
Terry was doing Red corpor with Heathern Mariana, and I
love Karen's booth. She's the first person I went up to.
I love that she had yellow. It just stucked me
a lot of If anybody doesn't notice in the audience,
influences love the color of red and orange. They could
be scrolling down everything and those two colors get their attention.
(13:31):
How do I know that? Because our original influences. I
would stop them and say, why did you stop with that?
Speaker 2 (13:36):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (13:36):
The color orange, the color red, and you know, stuck
out to them. Yellow stuck out to me. At her booth,
I thought it was great yellow paint. Learning to Live Again.
I thought that was great helping people with grief, anxiety, depression,
you know, you name a trauma.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
I thought that it was a really good book. Karen
talk about that. Yeah, thank you so much.
Speaker 10 (13:57):
It's great to see you again, Brian.
Speaker 11 (13:59):
I loved me you in February, and yeah, I do
remember You're like looking at the booth going wow, look
at that the black and the yellow, and it just
stood out. And you know, honestly, I was just so
proud to represent my book at the oscars and at
heather'sting lounge. So yeah, it's been my passion project. I'm
been a psychotherapist for over thirty years now, I'm in Toronto,
(14:22):
and you know, I've just it's been my life calling
to sit with people and have intense, meaningful conversations, and
it's been my own personality and on my own mission
with the work I do, that the therapeutic conversations I
had or have won have to make a difference, because
the biggest complaint I hear from people is that they
(14:43):
will have a therapist who's listening to them where they
won't feel judged, They'll feel good for a couple of
hours after their session, and then it kind of floats away.
And so I started, you know, many years ago, now
crafting my approach to make sure that it was accountable.
And now since I've seen you, we've now trademarked KG
(15:04):
Accountable Therapy method. And several years ago I shared my
own story with my daughter and honestly, she looked at
me and went, Mom, you need to write a book,
because she always knew me kind of as I'm showing
up here today. You know, successful, ambitious, you know strong.
But there was a whole backstory there. We are, a
(15:25):
whole backstory to how I got to where I did,
and I knew that it was a story where it's
sharing in terms of how I got to where I did,
but also how it informed the work I was doing
with clients, and so yeah, that was you know, when
I put put pen to paper, and Angela and her
team at a Mayor Press, you know, made it happen.
(15:47):
And I'm honestly, I'm living the dream. This is something
I've wanted to do for a long time. And if
only one person picks up the book and it makes
a difference in their.
Speaker 5 (15:57):
Life, then it'll be worth it.
Speaker 4 (16:00):
And I already know.
Speaker 11 (16:00):
I'm already hearing from readers the impact is making on
their lives.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
And now you're an award ward er too. You just
want something, didn't you? I did.
Speaker 11 (16:08):
Yeah, we won the Golden Quill Award, so we got
the five star review, and then last week got noticed
that we won the Golden Quill, So I guess we're
now getting nominated for the Crimson Quill. But you know,
it's a literary piece. It has a little bit of everything.
If you want to hear a brave story about how
(16:29):
somebody hit rock bottom and almost gave up and then
not only didn't give up, but actually rebuilt her life
to well beyond what she ever thought was possible, read
the book. If you want to hear about what vulnerable
therapy is and how your therapy to conversations with your
therapys should actually land on something that you know you're
going to be different tomorrow morning.
Speaker 2 (16:49):
Read the book.
Speaker 11 (16:50):
If you want to hear about how to you know,
take painful experiences and grow, read the book. I mean
this is just how I stand by it.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
Wow, Lloyd coming back to you and Mente Angela talk
about this. I talked to you almost every day, like
I talked to Carol almost every day, and Terry every
day in Rachel every day. Who would have known I'd
had the four people I talked to to most are
on the same show. You can't plan this, even though
it kind of did. It was centered around Lord get Away,
(17:20):
which was interesting. Andrew lot about this because you've been
rejected what was it sixty eight times?
Speaker 10 (17:25):
Eighty six times?
Speaker 12 (17:27):
Wow, Rember, I what you call resilience, And actually I
have every one of those rejections. I started my journey
about twenty years ago in British Columbia, when I was
studying to be a middle grade writer at the Institute
of Children's Literature.
Speaker 10 (17:44):
I had a lot of stories to tell. I had
a lot of grit pen in my hand.
Speaker 12 (17:48):
And I was doing this with my dad because we
both are writers, and so I thought to myself, you
know what, this is a hard industry to break into.
Speaker 10 (17:59):
I got to figure out some way to go in there.
And so I gave myself and my dad a pen name.
I started my own literary.
Speaker 12 (18:06):
Agency, and I put on like a true trainy, a
literary agency PAP without any knowledge whatsoever. And I went
and I talked to every publishing house out there, and
it took me from two thousand and five to two
thousand and eight and I finally finally got recognition. And
it was actually one of the first opportunities of independent
(18:30):
publishing vanity publishing, because nobody knew that I was actually
promoting myself. So I made it through, and I said
to myself, up to that, like, I need to also
help other writers break in. Breaking into the publishing industry
is almost as hard as getting into Hollywood. It is expensive,
(18:53):
it's commercial. There are gatekeepers, your editors, and your and
your agents, and then there are trends that change, like
the win in algorithms today.
Speaker 10 (19:01):
It is so hard being an independent author.
Speaker 12 (19:05):
I decided that in twenty twenty two I would start
my literary agency over again, but call it Omera Press,
and I transformed it into Amera Press as a marketing
platform for independent authors who just have leveled up in
their book production, but they just need help in marketing.
And I've been marketing and doing sales for fifteen years,
(19:28):
so I'm okay with your rejection.
Speaker 10 (19:30):
I have no problem with that.
Speaker 12 (19:32):
But there's something funny about when you're a self published
author and you're.
Speaker 10 (19:39):
Now promoting not just a product, you're.
Speaker 12 (19:41):
Promoting yourself, and there's something raw about that. And you
have to have a lot of grit and a lot
of guts to go out there and sell yourself, and
these creative people hardly are.
Speaker 10 (19:52):
Able to do that. So I built my marketing.
Speaker 12 (19:55):
Platform as a professional platform for indie authors who really
need and deserve to be seen in this very, very
competitive market.
Speaker 10 (20:05):
I'm funny enough, I guess in twenty.
Speaker 12 (20:08):
Fifteen, when Amazon built Kindle Publishing India, authors were actually
given an opportunity to thrive in this in this fierce
competitive world.
Speaker 10 (20:17):
So I'm here now.
Speaker 12 (20:19):
When I read Karen's story, I had to take it
on and we have flown with it ever since.
Speaker 10 (20:26):
And this is what I do.
Speaker 12 (20:28):
I'm out there helping people who are authors who need
to be seen?
Speaker 5 (20:33):
Angela. If you have a book, what's the first step
to work with you?
Speaker 10 (20:39):
So see this, this is my award winning book. I'm
actually award winning children's stories writer. Like I said, I needed.
Speaker 2 (20:48):
To do this and to show that book again.
Speaker 5 (20:52):
You have stolen dreams.
Speaker 2 (20:55):
I love it.
Speaker 10 (20:57):
Thank you. It's you know.
Speaker 12 (20:59):
I had.
Speaker 10 (20:59):
The funny thing is is it's kind of like about
me when I was ten years old. So I'm actually
writing about myself as I was going through trying to
fit in in school.
Speaker 12 (21:09):
I was a bookworm, I loved music, played guitar, and
I did sports very ill.
Speaker 10 (21:20):
It was me and I loved the supernatural.
Speaker 12 (21:24):
I love quirkiness, and I absolutely love mysteries. So this
is where I started off. And my dad and I
actually wrote this together because my dad was very cheeky.
He grew up with the Irish Christian Brothers in England
and he was up to menace.
Speaker 10 (21:39):
So yeah, sorry, I just went off topic there.
Speaker 12 (21:48):
Excited about that one because that one was actually it
won the International Impact Award for Children's Literature and it
was compared to the Diary of a Wempk and The
Magic Tree House.
Speaker 10 (22:03):
So I'm very very proud of this series. And I
did something special over the last couple of months is
I was touring at different middle grade schools. They engage children.
Speaker 12 (22:15):
In reading and writing as well. I'm actually asking them
to help me write my third book. So I've written
off of it and they're going to help me break
the latter hop.
Speaker 10 (22:26):
So I have seven schools that are engaged in this.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
And hey, Laura, you have an e book that you
both the kids to talk about.
Speaker 9 (22:34):
That well, actually, yeah, and I'm listening to your story
and you're absolutely right. I mean, publishing a book is
like it was like pulling teeth. It was a joke,
is what it really came down to. Because I had
an idea and I actually do have a book, and
it's called The Playground Warriors, and it's really cute. It's
just it's some animation. It's about teamwork, it's about kids
(22:59):
getting out playing more on the playground.
Speaker 4 (23:01):
And I went to a.
Speaker 9 (23:04):
Couple, you know, obviously agencies, and I've got turned down
all over the place, and finally I just went, Okay,
I'm gonna just write it. I'll just do it myself,
you know, I'll self publish it. I'll find some illustrators. I'll,
you know, find I need. Obviously, I'm not a writer,
so I had to find somebody to help me with
the writing. And I mean, it's out, it's done, it's out.
(23:25):
It's called The Playground Wars. I'm very proud that it
put it out. But you're absolutely right. It was like insane.
Speaker 4 (23:32):
I was. I was like forget it.
Speaker 9 (23:34):
You know, there were so many times I just went
forget it. I'm just forget it.
Speaker 12 (23:37):
Well, you know, don't realize today too is not It's
not just putting yourself out there online.
Speaker 10 (23:43):
You actually have to go and meet your readers. It's
it's a two way thing.
Speaker 12 (23:47):
And people want to know what you had for breakfast
and then let me tell you a shout of it.
To me, I'm not actually really excited I'm going to
read your book.
Speaker 9 (23:57):
Oh it's cute, it's short, it's it's you know, it's
not like something that's I mean, I'm very proud of it.
Speaker 4 (24:03):
You know, I'd love to do some more with it.
You know.
Speaker 9 (24:05):
I wanted to do like a series of it and
do some animation and things like that.
Speaker 4 (24:09):
That was my goal. And it's still not. I mean,
it's I haven't let's put it this way. I I've
gotten and I hear you.
Speaker 9 (24:17):
I got rejected so many times that after a while
you're just like, Okay, give me a break, and then
I'm going to hit it again.
Speaker 4 (24:24):
You know.
Speaker 9 (24:24):
Sometimes you need to read that regroup, that kind of thing,
you know, And I've done that throughout my whole life.
Speaker 4 (24:30):
I am. I always considered myself I'm like the hustler.
Speaker 2 (24:33):
You know.
Speaker 4 (24:33):
Everybody's like, oh my god.
Speaker 9 (24:35):
You know you've been, you know, doing gladiators and in
Hollywood and doing as much as you can, you know,
but yet you're not working a nine to five job.
I'm like, I probably have worked more hours than a
nine to five job being the entrepreneur and just hustling,
you know. Yeah, but yeah, I'm I love your story
and that's that's amazing.
Speaker 12 (24:56):
I love it you And you know what, I'm honestly
on this mission to uh for every independent author out
there who has done it. Just like you said, you
got the illustrators, really creative illustrators, You've got a really
great book cover, you've got the editing done. When you've
worked that hard and put that much money into producing
this beautiful product, it deserves to be seen. And it's
(25:18):
such a competitive industry that I am here to I
call it because I live up in the country. I
call it standing out like a cornstalk.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
In a beanfeld.
Speaker 9 (25:30):
I want to talk to you so much more because
you're absolutely right, it's not being seen.
Speaker 4 (25:35):
I'll be honest with you.
Speaker 9 (25:36):
And it's just like, God, I put so much time
and effort and money into this thing.
Speaker 4 (25:41):
Yep, I'm sitting there now, you know, come talk to me. Yeah,
I can talk about that. I'm sure.
Speaker 10 (25:47):
It's it's exactly like what you do.
Speaker 12 (25:50):
It's consistency and the hustle and as you're as an entrepreneur. Yeah,
you get out there and you just do what you
have to do. And it's about knowing where you're book needs.
Me because you just said you're on TikTok and you're
on Instagram, that's actually where children's books lie. And it's
just getting yourself out there to talk to your audience.
Speaker 9 (26:11):
Yeah, that's where I'm gonna get to pick you.
Speaker 7 (26:15):
Also, I was gonna say, also giving it to people
like you know, other people that have shows like Carol
and I we have a show, so you know, I'll
talk about it on coffee Talk and then you're in
in the right place, because Brian will take your book
all over the world every time he goes somewhere different,
which is every three to four days, and he will
hold that book and he will tell everybody to read it.
(26:37):
So like I'm telling you, you're in a good place.
Speaker 4 (26:40):
That's awesome.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
Yeah, Or Laurie, we've helped a lot of international best
selling authors. Yes, before they became that, and then after
they became that, which is why Angela was here with
Karen coming in.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
It was pieced together like that. Like I said, it.
Speaker 3 (26:55):
Was centered around you, but I didn't know who the
other person was gonna be, and then all of a
sudd and then unfolded like that. And then again Rachel.
When Rachel does a coffee talk, she goes gangbusters on stuff,
which is kind of funny. I couldn't talk what Rachel
talks about. I just couldn't do that a neuro coach.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
I am not a neuro coach. So that's Carol's you know.
Speaker 9 (27:16):
And I'm all, I mean, I talk to Carol talking
about hormones.
Speaker 4 (27:20):
Oh my god, that is what I mean. That's what
I'm all about right now.
Speaker 9 (27:24):
Me too, Me too, hormones because you know why, because
of the fact that you know, obviously being our age
and going through the menopause, and when we were going
through Perry menopause, nobody was talking about it. There was
no social media post telling us what was happening with
our body, that we were insane, you know.
Speaker 7 (27:44):
And you know what when we have husbands or boyfriends
that are in there some out there. I talk to
women all the time about this stuff, and to hear
that their husband is at home and that it's bull
is like, you.
Speaker 9 (27:56):
Know, okay, but now, but now, Rachel, the story change
because now when I'm actually doing comic cons and signings
and out talking with you know, the people in the public,
they're like, hey, you know.
Speaker 4 (28:08):
I love you to talk to my wife.
Speaker 3 (28:10):
You know, I would love to talk to you one,
you know.
Speaker 9 (28:16):
And it's just like all these different things, and it's
like there are so many marriages actually saved because the
women are now starting to seek out what can I
do for my hormones? Yeah, there's a whole backstory of that,
as every all the women know. Yeah, so now the
men are starting to kind of come around going, oh,
(28:37):
they're not crazy, you.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
Know, you know, they just they just never understood or
never bothered to.
Speaker 9 (28:43):
Absolutely, and nobody was out there talking, you know, And Marie.
Speaker 5 (28:47):
I think it's I think it's interesting to know too.
Like so much of our like you mentioned hustle, and
so much of our culture is focused around that. It's
focused around a twenty four seven testosterone cycle. We're on
a twenty eight day moon cycle, right we ebb and flow,
(29:08):
and when we get into that groove, it is exponential
what happens.
Speaker 9 (29:13):
For us, right, absolutely, you know, and you're right you
before I was talking about diet and exercise, and you
know what supplement you can take to help support your
hormones if you don't want to go on hormone therapy.
Speaker 4 (29:28):
I'm sorry, but I'm I'm not. I tell you know.
I take that back.
Speaker 9 (29:31):
I was gonna say I'm sorry, but I'm not. I'm
not sorry about this. I am on hormone replacement therapy
and I feel fabulous.
Speaker 4 (29:38):
Which one you're thirty years old?
Speaker 6 (29:41):
Are you doing the pellets like I did that?
Speaker 9 (29:43):
I switched over to the pellets about two years ago,
and I'm absolutely thrilled that I did. I have the leftosterone,
the estrogen, and then I have my progesterone at nighttime. Yes,
And I'm going to be honest with you, every single
person's like, oh.
Speaker 4 (29:58):
My god, how do you look the way you look?
Speaker 9 (30:00):
I started when I was forty ish, probably forty three,
forty four, like Terry Mrie, just very subtle, just very subtle,
I you know.
Speaker 4 (30:10):
And then when I hit fifteen, I started getting hot
flashes that they're like, oh, hell no, I'm not gonna
do this shit. And I really do.
Speaker 9 (30:20):
Between my exercise and the consistency and the nutrition and
the hormones. That's why I feel as though I have
been able to hold on to my youth me too
young as I have.
Speaker 7 (30:31):
Yeah, exactly, every day I'm happy and I there's something
to it, you know.
Speaker 4 (30:38):
Oh there is?
Speaker 9 (30:39):
And then and and the women out there that are
afraid of it because of the fact there was this
bogus bullshit study out there done years and decades ago
about how hormone replacement therapy causes cancer. Yeah, and all
of a sudden, it's like they jumped on it. And
I can't tell you how many women still believe that,
And it's rind blowing and I'm just going like.
Speaker 4 (31:01):
Wait a minute, you just got to have them balance.
You know you're not.
Speaker 9 (31:05):
I mean again, I'm not saying or advocating, but it's
like I always tell have your have everything.
Speaker 4 (31:10):
Checked, go get your plead done.
Speaker 7 (31:12):
Yeah, the pellets are you know they you don't. You
can't just go in and get pellets. You know, they
did extensive blood work onensive. Yeah, and they find it
exactly what you need and you know it's and if.
Speaker 9 (31:24):
You're not a candidate for it, they're not going to
give it to you.
Speaker 6 (31:27):
No, they knocked you out.
Speaker 7 (31:28):
I was actually knocked out, you know, because the biot
they came up with a new thing and I was
taking them for years and all of a sudden they
were like, you know what, We're not going to give them.
Speaker 6 (31:38):
To you right now. So I haven't had them.
Speaker 7 (31:41):
What is it?
Speaker 6 (31:42):
Brian was December. I've not been on them. And you
know what, I'm still okay. I'm surviving.
Speaker 7 (31:47):
I'm a little you know, I get a little emotional
around here and there.
Speaker 9 (31:51):
But when I start crying at commercials is when I
know to go.
Speaker 10 (32:00):
Right right.
Speaker 3 (32:01):
I got to ask this because someone was asking in
the chat Karen, where is your book sold at?
Speaker 2 (32:07):
Yeah? There we go? Where can you get your book?
Speaker 11 (32:10):
Oh yeah, that's on Amazon, so we've got so in
the States. Yeah, Amazon dot Com will be your go
to for the hardcover, it's softcover and kindle. We're going
into production on Friday for the audio books, so we'll
be back down in Los Angeles for the Emmys to
launch the audio book.
Speaker 10 (32:27):
So we're thrilled to get that going.
Speaker 4 (32:29):
That's awesome.
Speaker 2 (32:30):
Yeah, and Angela yours too, right, Oh.
Speaker 10 (32:33):
Yes, I'm I'm going to be down there as well.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
I'm also I have.
Speaker 10 (32:37):
A few other clients.
Speaker 12 (32:39):
Actually, I have this kick ass thriller book that's coming
out there from one.
Speaker 10 (32:45):
Of my from one of my clients. I actually wasn't
even going to take it on and then I read.
Speaker 2 (32:49):
It and I couldn't put it down.
Speaker 10 (32:50):
I'm like, oh my god, this is so sick.
Speaker 12 (32:53):
So I'm bringing that down there too and speaking to
a couple of producers because I actually think this one
should be in film.
Speaker 10 (32:59):
So I'm going down for me, I'm going down for Karen,
and I'm going down for my clients.
Speaker 12 (33:03):
And I'm just like Brian, I go all over the
world talking about my client's books because sometimes they can't
be there either.
Speaker 10 (33:10):
So it's a it's an interesting. It's an interesting time
for the indie.
Speaker 3 (33:17):
Authors now, so you know what that's You're going to
see all of us, you know, Laurie, I'm going to
make sure you come to get things Sweet too, because
you and your partner deserve to come there.
Speaker 2 (33:25):
You'll like it.
Speaker 3 (33:28):
I love that Terry will interview on the red carpet.
Rachael will be there, Carol, Well, we'll all be there,
you know.
Speaker 2 (33:33):
So there you go. That'll be a good thing.
Speaker 7 (33:36):
Answer that woman's question that popped up, she wondered, LORI,
where can we.
Speaker 4 (33:39):
Get you can?
Speaker 9 (33:40):
You can get it on Amazon. Same thing it's on
Amazon called The Playground Warriors.
Speaker 5 (33:45):
Yeah, okay, And Angela, what's the name of your book again?
Speaker 10 (33:48):
Mine is called A Case of Stolen Dreams. The series
is the chronicles of burning Candles.
Speaker 3 (33:56):
When we talk about this, this is not enough. It's
talked about when those a cancel. It's one thing to
have that hot show and everybody, everybody thinks it's going
to go for seven, eight, nine years, but you never
really know, and nobody is prepared when the show goes
off the year.
Speaker 2 (34:13):
And then all of a sudden, what do you go in?
Some people go into panic mode.
Speaker 3 (34:19):
Some people unfortunately commit suicide because they're not prepared for
life after when the show's canceled.
Speaker 4 (34:25):
I wasn't prepared them.
Speaker 2 (34:27):
What did you do after?
Speaker 4 (34:29):
To be honest, I was not prepared. Well.
Speaker 9 (34:32):
The thing of it was is we kind of knew
the run of the show is starting to kind of
slow down. And that was around year eight, okay, and
we were doing the live show in Orlando, Florida, So
we weren't sure if we were going back into production
or not. We're hearing rumors that we were not going
back into production, but we were doing the live dinner show,
(34:53):
and so that lasted for almost about I'm going to
say eight to nine months, almost a year, and one
day we showed up to do the live show and
there was chains on the door.
Speaker 4 (35:03):
No phone call, no email, no.
Speaker 9 (35:06):
Text message, no nothing, just chains on the door. And
it was just like we sat there for about.
Speaker 4 (35:12):
An hour going hmm, so.
Speaker 9 (35:14):
I guess no show tonight. And same thing, same thing
with the production company. I mean, I don't know, Rachel,
you might hear this more than me, but it's like
there was no Hey, we're done, Hey we're gonna have
a rap party. Hey, thanks you guys, great job, made
us a shit ton of money, paid you guys like shit,
(35:34):
but thank you, we got nothing.
Speaker 4 (35:37):
We got nothing. We didn't get a letter, absolutely nothing.
That was it.
Speaker 9 (35:41):
And so you at that point in time, you just
at that point in time, you just go.
Speaker 4 (35:48):
Oh shit, you know, what do I do?
Speaker 10 (35:50):
What do you do next?
Speaker 9 (35:52):
And at that moment, to be honest with you, I
had to hustle very quickly and think about my next
move because again, American Gladiators, as we all know from
the document entry, we really got paid shit. I mean
it was like four hundred dollars a show. Yeah, I
mean we're not talking thousands, one hundred, five hundred.
Speaker 3 (36:09):
Show and lloid what documentary it is the name of
the documentary so people can see it who haven't seen
that on Netflix.
Speaker 9 (36:16):
H The documentary is amazing on Netflix, and it's called
Muscles and Mayhem. And we're in the top ten, in
the top five actually for the first three weeks of Netflix,
and then we're still in the top ten for almost
six to seven weeks. And so Muscles and Mayhem is
a series that goes behind the scenes of the American Glidiers,
what happened, how it's transpired. We went on the show,
(36:39):
I mean on the road for a tour till Alive
Shore tour for about eight to nine months. I have
video footage of being on the bus the whole thing,
so it's great footage. But at the same time, it's
it was nobody was prepared when it ended.
Speaker 4 (36:56):
Nobody.
Speaker 9 (36:57):
So I actually went and bartended for a year because
it was quick cash. You know, nobody saved any money
because we couldn't save any money.
Speaker 4 (37:04):
We didn't paid enough to save money.
Speaker 9 (37:06):
So I bartended for a year while I was opening
a fitness facility in the middle of Orlando, Florida.
Speaker 5 (37:12):
Incredible.
Speaker 9 (37:13):
So that's where it's like, you know, I just kind
of like gathered everybody up, found some investors, and opened
this ten thousandsqure foot fitness facility right.
Speaker 4 (37:24):
In the middle of Orlando. That's awesome. So that's kind of.
Speaker 9 (37:28):
I mean, I just went into action very fast. I
didn't have a choice.
Speaker 4 (37:32):
You know, that's so cool.
Speaker 2 (37:36):
I don't know, great, you did have.
Speaker 4 (37:40):
These different voices going on.
Speaker 12 (37:42):
Go ahead, Angela, Oh, I just said, that's that's the
story of resilience. So like that is brilliant, and you know,
kudos to you for overcoming all of.
Speaker 9 (37:51):
That, and wow, see, Angela, I just need a ghost
writer to write my story, right, she will, she will
find one.
Speaker 12 (38:00):
I would any day of the week, and twice on Sundays. Honestly,
you are an easy easy really.
Speaker 9 (38:06):
That's interesting because I had Crystal Hefner on my podcast
and you know, she just wrote her.
Speaker 2 (38:14):
Book and everything.
Speaker 4 (38:15):
By the way, thank you. I love Crystal too.
Speaker 2 (38:18):
She's such a love heart.
Speaker 9 (38:19):
And she turned me on to her her her editor
and her agency and everything, and I guess I just
wasn't big enough.
Speaker 4 (38:27):
So I was like, right, well, you know how some
agencies are. I mean.
Speaker 10 (38:33):
True.
Speaker 12 (38:35):
I actually just did one for uh, for a client
that I had I met at the London book Fair
and this guy is a coach from the Premier Soccer
League and one of the one of the publishing companies
here in Canada turned them down.
Speaker 10 (38:53):
And I'm just like, you know who this is. I
grew up on soccer Saturday. I didn't watch cartoons.
Speaker 7 (38:58):
My dad was a.
Speaker 4 (39:01):
Yeah, it's really.
Speaker 12 (39:04):
So yeah, but you know what, I'm looking at your
I'm looking at your book you're online.
Speaker 2 (39:08):
It's super cute.
Speaker 4 (39:09):
It's cute. It is cute.
Speaker 9 (39:11):
I would though, I would love to find a ghostwriter
and write. I think I've got something there. I mean
from getting fired in the middle of American Gladiators and
sitting out for a year and hitting depression.
Speaker 4 (39:23):
Karen, I.
Speaker 11 (39:29):
Things because when you said I didn't have a choice,
you did, right, And this is where you know, you you,
you know, created something and who knows, maybe having the
show ending was exactly what you needed to kind of
go up to the next step, right, So you had
a choice. And Uh, the other thing that you're saying
(39:49):
is about a story. So one of the things I
say at the very beginning of my book is we
all have a story, right. We have all had imperfect childhood's,
imperfect histories. We've created, you know, developed things along the way,
absorb different ways of believing about ourselves, and we project
those onto our current life and so we will easily
(40:13):
get in our own way. But every time we do,
it's an opportunity. So you took that crisis, you know,
which is an opportunity to grow and if you yeah,
and then having a story to tell about all of
that exactly, because none of us have it all figured.
Speaker 4 (40:29):
Out, not yet.
Speaker 5 (40:31):
I know.
Speaker 9 (40:31):
I'm still trying, still still there, trying to figure it
out what and.
Speaker 12 (40:35):
All you have to do is write an outline and
you get the right right editor to go strite your
book for you. It is super easy, and you don't
just go with anyone. You actually have to sit with
somebody and took to them and figure out if this
is the right one to tell your story.
Speaker 4 (40:51):
Becausekay, well this is where I need a little guidance.
Speaker 3 (40:56):
When I've actually I actually nominated you. Angela and I
were talking about this probably three weeks ago. I said,
Laurie is perfect for you. I tend to do stuff
like that because you just kind of know and I
just had to get you on the show. So now
that we've swooped all over you, so help parents book
is just an award when her book is kick ass
(41:18):
or what she's written, you know, I can't wait to
see Rachel write your book and I actually want them
let's see.
Speaker 2 (41:26):
Yes, I do, mm hmmm, that actually impe thing.
Speaker 3 (41:34):
Oh but Laurie, there's one other thing that you had
to hide too.
Speaker 2 (41:38):
You had to hide who you kind of really were.
People didn't understand.
Speaker 3 (41:41):
And I thought that was great and that wasn't easy
at that point, and I knew a lot of people
that were doing the same thing.
Speaker 2 (41:47):
Author do you just you being you? You know what
you what you really wanted to be. I don't have
to say it, you have to say it. Story.
Speaker 4 (41:59):
I think it's funny.
Speaker 9 (42:00):
It's so everybody's it's so like, if you do you
mean gay. No, it's so funny because my sister tells me,
she goes, you're the straightest gay person I know.
Speaker 4 (42:11):
I know I am.
Speaker 9 (42:13):
Because I just I never I never carried it on
my shoulders.
Speaker 4 (42:19):
I was.
Speaker 9 (42:19):
I was never the you know, let me let me
hype everybody up and carry the flag. I was just
living my life, literally, just living my life. And who
I slept with was my business. It didn't define me,
It didn't change me. Didn't tell me who I was
in my life. It was just who I slept with
was a little different, that's all, you know.
Speaker 3 (42:38):
Yeah, it was about the performance of what you were doing,
because you guys worked your asses off.
Speaker 4 (42:43):
Yeah, you know.
Speaker 9 (42:44):
But yes, I had to hide it back then when
I was on the Gladiators. Absolutely, that was not the
time to come out and say, hey, guess what you know.
If anything, I just wanted my girlfriend to come on
the tours, and you know, things like that, and they're like, well,
you know, gott to hide it, you know kind of thing,
and it's just like, are you serious.
Speaker 2 (43:02):
And nobody had problems with it when you who know, didn't.
Speaker 4 (43:06):
Entire Everybody on the team. They love me, they didn't care.
They love my girlfriends.
Speaker 9 (43:10):
Because again, it's not it doesn't define who I am.
And that's that's the biggest thing to where It's like,
I think sometimes even myself, when I'm around certain gay people,
they're just so in your face about it.
Speaker 4 (43:24):
I'm like, is that who you are?
Speaker 6 (43:26):
Is that it?
Speaker 9 (43:27):
You know? And it's just that's that's what I think
some people expected of me at the time.
Speaker 4 (43:32):
And I was like, no, you guys, that's not that's
not even no, I'm just living. I'm just doing me.
Speaker 9 (43:37):
So I think a lot of them appreciated that, you know,
because of the fact that I wasn't just shoving it
down their throat, you know, I wasn't in their face,
and and I guess that's just you know, I was
never that person, but yeah, it was. It was accepted
throughout the team, the producers, the everybody else. Absolutely know,
you cannot don't let anybody know. It'll ruin your career.
Speaker 4 (43:58):
I mean blah blah blah blah.
Speaker 5 (44:00):
Yeah, so many of us don't know who we are.
We have no idea, we've never defined it for ourselves.
And sounds like you were super grounded and centered in
knowing this is not me the snee and knowing our
identities is absolutely foundational. So I really love that.
Speaker 9 (44:20):
I mean, if anything, my identity got wrapped up in Ice.
Speaker 4 (44:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (44:26):
Yeah, why did they call you Ice?
Speaker 4 (44:28):
What was that all about?
Speaker 9 (44:29):
Because it's awesome because Rachel, when we got on the show, obviously,
you know, we had the character names and everything, and
I knew that if I didn't come up with a
cool name, they were going to come up with something
like Sunflower or you.
Speaker 4 (44:42):
Know, something that wasn't going to fit me, you know.
Speaker 9 (44:46):
And that was the year the top Gun came out
and somebody goes, oh my god, you look like Belkilmore's
sister Iceman. And so as we were sitting around, somebody
said Iceman. We were talking, we were laughing, and somebody
just goes, what about Ice?
Speaker 4 (45:00):
And it just kind of fit. And that's how that's
how my name came about.
Speaker 3 (45:05):
We got a couple of minutes talk about chilling when Ice,
leading into the Chilling.
Speaker 4 (45:08):
With Ice podcasts doing great.
Speaker 9 (45:11):
I started with the Gladiators introducing them because a lot
of people didn't know who we were. You know, they
just knew the character, they knew Nitro, they knew Zapp,
but they didn't know who these people were. So I
had this great idea to go have my own podcasts,
you know, introduce all of them, get to know them. Personalities,
went through all the Gladiators, and then when I the
(45:32):
The Muscles of Mayhem came out, I started doing signings
again comic cons. I started meeting a lot of the
eighties and nineties old fans, you know, and some of
the celebrities out there. So I started going, hey, you know,
do you guys want to be on my podcast? And
I mean I saw somebody with Tom Arnold, I had
him on my podcast, so all these different things. So
it was just it's transpiring just like a lot of
(45:52):
shows do. And right now it's just kind of like
building up my YouTube and that is you know, it's
going to be really honing in on some you know,
nice beautiful exercises for people to do at home and
things like that, and just kind of getting in that
area a little bit, But yeah, I love the podcast
has been a lot of fun.
Speaker 4 (46:12):
It's still evolving, it's still going.
Speaker 5 (46:14):
You know, you'd love to have you on so oh anytime?
Speaker 3 (46:18):
Oh my god, yes, absolutely, all right, got to take
a clip of this clip real quick. We'll get it
in because you've got a couple of minutes left.
Speaker 10 (46:29):
The Cavin Club, Liverpool, ninth November nineteen sixty one.
Speaker 1 (46:33):
The moment my life changes forever and everything suddenly becomes
so clear. Touch rumble.
Speaker 5 (46:45):
Back in.
Speaker 2 (46:46):
Ooh, if you do want of those loves to come out,
why don't you come by the office. Why don't you
come to our office?
Speaker 4 (46:52):
I think I should manage the bloody joking, aren't you.
Speaker 2 (46:55):
They've gone manager, these boys and the office of me.
Speaker 9 (46:59):
I think all the way, and I promise I will
look after you.
Speaker 12 (47:03):
Absolutely.
Speaker 2 (47:08):
Those boys will be bigger than Elvis.
Speaker 1 (47:11):
Just going to give up.
Speaker 4 (47:12):
What did you do when you fell off your mind?
Speaker 2 (47:15):
Asked you and Daddy for Carr.
Speaker 4 (47:17):
We could do well together, our roster of.
Speaker 3 (47:20):
Artists, spreading the Liverpool sound to every town in the country,
and of course my beloved so time to shine?
Speaker 2 (47:29):
How is that, mister Martin?
Speaker 4 (47:30):
I think there's some promise some promise.
Speaker 2 (47:34):
I'd say one.
Speaker 4 (47:35):
Three consecutive shows, got a lot.
Speaker 9 (47:38):
You almost bestruck by at home because of my boys.
Speaker 2 (47:40):
Crib was so big at the airport you thought the
queen must have done it. They called that beetle mania.
Speaker 10 (47:45):
Several things can happen when you're forced by law to
live in the shadows.
Speaker 12 (47:51):
He's not coming down.
Speaker 10 (47:52):
There's no time to feel sorry for myself.
Speaker 2 (47:54):
I'm fouverty busy, got so much heart.
Speaker 1 (47:58):
Give it to someone.
Speaker 2 (48:01):
Very nice back here.
Speaker 3 (48:03):
And if my private life badly chance, my professional one
is one hit after another.
Speaker 4 (48:12):
You're a hard act to follow, No, you are.
Speaker 3 (48:22):
So that was my This Man, which opened the Los
Angeles Jewish Film Festival Ryan Epstein, who had to hide
that he was gay, and takes the Beatles to guess.
Speaker 2 (48:33):
What, Wow, fabulous film.
Speaker 3 (48:38):
Yeah, I don't know where it's going, but it was
a wonderful film.
Speaker 2 (48:41):
And Jonathan Leeds plays John Lennon. He looks exactly like him.
Speaker 3 (48:45):
When I talked to him three years ago about his look,
I'm like, you have an age it looked just like John.
Speaker 2 (48:49):
He goes, yeah, mate, just funny. But uh, that was that.
Speaker 3 (48:54):
Unfortunately we're out of time, so Carol Richards just give
you give you real quick it up.
Speaker 5 (49:01):
Follow me at Neural Coach Carol on ig By the Way,
I have amazing retreats that we run at my little
boutique hotel in the Andes Mountains. You're interested, contact me
and contact me about my program taking you into seven
Figures as well.
Speaker 7 (49:20):
Rachel, you can find me Rachel Roberts Recipes or Rachel
and Roberts on social media platforms and watch me in
the morning with Coffee Talk.
Speaker 11 (49:28):
Karen right, you can find me on Karen gooslinspeaks dot com.
All the information about Yellow Paint Learning to Live Again
is on that website. Look at us at the Emmys
for our audio book. Later this year, we'll be putting
a yellow Paint therapy program together with a downloadable workbook.
So we're just gonna keep spreading the Yellow Paint.
Speaker 6 (49:48):
Kerry Kerry Marie NonStop.
Speaker 10 (49:56):
Oh, I'm at o'marapress dot com.
Speaker 12 (50:00):
Look at that right now because it's on the it's
actually being reconstructed.
Speaker 10 (50:03):
So go to at O'Mara press on Instagram.
Speaker 2 (50:06):
Laurie you get the last word Laurie.
Speaker 9 (50:09):
Dot dot Patrick on I g TikTok and follow me
on chillin' with Ice And.
Speaker 3 (50:15):
As I always say, it's always about women, it's about
the arts. Always support them by their books, go to
their website, listen to the podcast, and as I always say,
have a good night, tonight, a better day tomorrow. You
see someone without a smile, please give them one of
yours because the world needs it. And Brian Sebastian is
this movie revis and more? And we will see you
next week right, Thanks