All Episodes

November 7, 2025 88 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Friday, November 7th.




Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott. Check out Preston’s latest blog by going to wflafm.com/preston. 
Listen live to Preston from 6 – 9 a.m. ET and 5 – 8 a.m. CT!
WFLA Tallahassee Live stream: https://ihr.fm/3huZWYe
WFLA Panama City Live stream: https://ihr.fm/34oufeR Follow WFLA Tallahassee on Twitter @WFLAFM and WFLA Panama City @wflapanamacity and like us on Facebook at @wflafm and @WFLAPanamaCity
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Bat'll do. What a great way, I'll stop that morning.
Hello friends, how are you great to be with you
this morning? Nine passed the hour. Just getting started here Friday,
November seventh, on the Morning Show with Preston Scott, the
Bible says in Romans twelve, verse nine, let love be
genuine abhor? What is evil? Abhor? What a great word.

(00:31):
You know, that's one of those words that just the
sound of it tells you what it really means. Abhor,
what is evil? I spit on what is evil? He
spit on it. I abhort it. I have hood it evil.

(00:53):
I spit it out to my tongue. And then it says,
hold fast to what is you know what that is
God's word? Hold fast? Let love be genuine, abhor what
is evil? Hold fast to what is good? God? God

(01:15):
is good all the time and all the time. God
is good. You know that goes God is good all
the time, all the time. God is good. That's how
we start the day on Friday, little praise and worship, short,
little devotional and now we begin the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Twelve

(01:49):
past the hour, November seventh. Eighteen forty eight, Zachary Taylor
elected the twelfth US president. First ever nationwide election Day
eighteen seventy four cartoon by Thomas Nast in Harper's Weekly
is the first to depict the Republican Party as an elephant.
I guess that stood better an elephant than a never mind.

(02:17):
Nineteen sixteen, Republican Jeanette Rankin of Montana becomes the first
woman elected to Congress. Nineteen forty four, FDR President defeats
Thomas Dewey to win an unprecedented fourth term in office. Ah, yeah, no,
we don't need four terms in office now, we don't. No. No.

(02:39):
In nineteen eighty nine, Virginia Democrat Douglas Wilder becomes the
first African American elected to governor of a US state, Virginia. Okay,
what's happened to Virginia? I'm not talking about that. That's
like that's that was that was in America that still
had a just a modest amount of common sense, even

(03:02):
though Doug Wilder was not, you know, politically aligned the
way that I would have preferred. Eh, you know, no, Biggie,
Today's National Fountain Pen Day. You ever you ever written
with a fountain pen. No, what I want to do?

Speaker 2 (03:17):
You?

Speaker 3 (03:17):
Oh yeah, a little jar of ink and whatnot?

Speaker 1 (03:20):
Is that what we're talking about? Well, not necessarily that that
would that's a little different. A fountain pen is is
just a little is a step up from the the
the quill of a feather with the point thing that
you dip in the ink and all that. That would
be fun to try, no doubt, But fountain pens. The

(03:46):
most expensive fountain pen ever sold was a month block
my sas Stock Solitaire La Grande with diamond encrusted nib,
sold for seventy three thousand dollars in two thousand and six.
The largest fountain pen ever made was seven feet long,
weigh over two hundred pounds. And but yeah, you can,

(04:07):
you can get one. They're really they're just they they
they don't require you dipping. A fountain pen doesn't require
you to dip in ink. It just it It releases
the ink to a very unique tip in a in
a fashion that allows you did not have to use
an ink a bottle of ink. But but still it

(04:28):
is National fountain pen Day. It is National Jersey Day,
National Jersey Friday, founded by the NFL. You think the
National Football League Players Association. It is a national bitter
Sweet Chocolate with almonds day. Okay I am. I am

(04:49):
a big fan of not the bitter sweet, but the
semi sweet chocolate chip cookies with semi sweet chocolate chips,
to me, are the best. They're not overly, They're just
theyre does dial back a little bit quick shout out
to all the kids and parents that came out yesterday

(05:10):
Turning Point USA home school group out in Woodville Homeschool,
middle school, high school students. I was just blown away.
It was. It was standing room only and parents out
in the outside the meeting room listening in, and we

(05:32):
filled out the room at the Woodville Public Library. We
filled it out and just great group of kids. They
were very kind and polite. I don't think I was horrible.
I think I was. I was certainly informative. Whether I

(05:53):
was entertaining or not. Well, you know, I'm sixty five.
We don't how much how much d you got right,
you know, but no, had a great time with them.
Talked about a lot of different things. Talked about the
first Thanksgiving, the lessons learned from the communal living that failed.
William Bradford used the word communism almost say it's a pejorative.

(06:18):
But had a great time. So my thanks to the parents, Angela,
thanks for having me out there, appreciate it very much.
Had a great time, and perhaps we'll do it again,
do just a Q and A a roundtable discussion. But
we did take some questions and so it was really good.
So maybe we've got a few students listening for the

(06:39):
first time this morning. Welcome, appreciate you tuning in. Seventeen
past the hour, come back with a did you know?
And then some twenty two pass what's to be Friday

(07:00):
an hour? Call in and complain whatever you want to do,
whatever you want to complain about. It's fair even me.
You can complain about me. I told the kids yesterday.
There are a lot of people that do what I
do better than I do it, but there are very
few that are as authentic. This is who I am.

(07:22):
My wife will tell you this is me. I am
no different. You run into me at the grocery store.
It depends on how you run into me. You know
what I'm saying. If you run into me in the
parking lot and I got a dent in my car,
it might not be very happy. But you get my point.
We say hello to one another at the store, we're
gonna this is me. How you doing? But thanks very

(07:45):
much for tuning in this morning. But if you want
to complain about anything, it's it's good. Fine, Just no profanity,
don't make it personal, and don't monologue. All right. If
you've ever seen the movie The Incredibles, they did a
really clever bit on monologuing. He's monologuing, and so yeah,

(08:08):
no monologuing. Did you know an average dog's hearing is
four times better than that of a human, But the
part of their brain devoted to their sense of smell
is forty times larger than ours. Now, that doesn't necessarily

(08:30):
mean they can smell forty times better, though they might,
though obviously there are certain breeds that track that have
unbelievable ability. But their brains are able to distinguish smells,
ostensibly by forty times more than we can. That's incredible.

(08:50):
On the subject of dogs, Tom Brady has announced that
his dog Juny is a clone of his previous dog Lua.
He is an investor in a company called Colossal Biosciences.

(09:11):
It is a venture capital backed biotech startup made and
it made an acquisition of another animal cloning firm, Viagin Pets,
an equine. Colossal aims to fix extinction, among other goals,
said to be valued at ten billion dollars. He said,
I love my animals. They mean the world to me

(09:33):
and my family. A few years ago, I worked with
Colossal and leveraged their non invasive cloning technology through a
simple blood draw of our family's elderly dog before she passed.
The dog's a pit bull mix. The dog died in
December twenty twenty three, and his current dog is a clone.

(09:58):
Now to what extent do they share traits? And look,
and I can't tell you. The article doesn't go into that.
Joseeso there shaking his head. He's thinking of Ian Malcolm
Jurassic Park. I'm thinking of Pitt Cemetery. No, you're not.

(10:19):
You're thinking of Ian Malcolm from Jurassic Park, who said
your scientists were so busy thinking that they could do
this that they never stopped to think about whether they should.
And that's what's wrong. No, I'm paraphrasing, I'm sure. But
allegedly Colossal said it used cloning and gene editing to

(10:41):
birth three dire wolf pups. A lot of groups out
there said no, they didn't. Dire wolves are extinct, but
they believe that they have genetically created and then cloned
through a different kind of wolf, dire wolf. I had
to look it up. Dire wolfs. Dire wolves are bigger, broader,

(11:09):
stronger than a standard wolf, probably the alpha, but they
didn't make it. I'm just saying, there's a reason. Let
it lie anyway, come back, let's do the big stories
in the press box. Twenty seven minutes past the hour.

(11:31):
Good Morning Friends, It's Friday on the Morning Show with
Preston Scott du WUFLA moments ago on the Morning showse
got a phone call and was told that Mick Ribs

(11:52):
are back. Needless to say, the moment he made that announce,
this is what happened in the parking lot of the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Microphone's outside the studio recording

(12:14):
my exit, and then I turned around because I realized
they're not serving them yet. It's not lunchtime, so if
they're back, they're not back till ten thirty. I was
out the door. He'll tell you, I literally sprinted out

(12:37):
the doors. It's true. I thought I was going to
have to sing something to field time, tell that joke.
You know, yeah, no, but I will have to. I
know some of you are like, you've got to be
kidding me. A McRib, Oh, yeah, absolutely, a McRib Yes.

(13:00):
Do you know what it's made? I don't care. I don't.
I'm grateful they do it seasonally at this point, because
if they had a mcgrib year round, never mind big
stories in the press box this morning, I'm just gonna
do a couple headlines here, three of them. According to

(13:23):
a survey from Florida Atlantic, the rising costs are causing
nearly fifty percent of Floridians to consider leaving the state. Okay,
now that is going to come back as we visit
with some guests over the coming weeks. Survey of over

(13:47):
one thousand people eighteen and older find that Florida cost
of living is causing them to consider leaving. Really housing
topping the list affordability of housing, a property tax issues, right,
I got my trim notice. You got your trim notice.

(14:07):
It's ridiculous. It's ridiculous. Nearly three thousand dollars for my
property taxes. That's ridiculous, and so count me. I mean,
I was already in the camp of doing away with
property tax. It has to be done away with. There

(14:30):
have to be adjustments. But here's what I'll say to
those that think that living here is too expensive. Just
remember what happens when you move to a state that
has a state income tax. Careful what you wish for.
That's all I'll say. Story number two Sheriff's Office, Miami

(14:59):
Dade sheriffs saw Office is testing the first self driving
police suv. After the test phase where a deputy is
sitting in the car with it in the passenger seat,
this thing will be deployed on its own to patrol
certain neighborhoods with three sixty cameras, thermal cameras able to

(15:27):
see through vehicles, and the ability to deploy thermal drones
license plate readers. Three sixty views the whole nine yards
and then can call for And it has a pad
on it, a touchpad where people can interact with it

(15:50):
as if it's a police officer. You can type in
a message or whatever. This will be interesting. And then
the last big story of the Supreme Court is allowing
Donald Trump's policy requiring sex at birth on passports. Now
it's a it's it's the Supreme Court is overruled a

(16:13):
district court ruling, which, of course it's one of those
court rulings, but it is in the first Circuit Court
of Appeals, and so this is a it's a temporary win.
We'll see if what the first Circuit does. If the
first First Circuit says, no, it's it's fine, and it
should be. It should be. We need to we need

(16:36):
to solve this whole. You can be anything you want
problem this social contagion, but those are your big stories
in the press box. Forty minutes past they are come
back with a You've got to be kidding the development
on the J six bomber wufla lead research research assistant

(17:14):
on the programs, sent this to me January sixth. If
you remember, the night before, bombs were placed pipe bombs
in front of or near the DNC and the RNC
headquarters in Washington. Blaze News originally founded by co founded

(17:40):
whatever by Glenn Beck, investigative reporter Steve Baker, and Joseph Hanneman. Baker,
you may recall, was arrested by the FBI because of
his reporting. They've been looking at who is this bomber?
Because isn't it interesting? How the FBI just doesn't know.
Do you remember remember me sharing with you that the

(18:03):
video that it had been released showed interaction between the
bomber and Capitol police. Well check this out, Steve Baker
tells Glenn Beck. When I pulled this thread, I was
so shocked by what I saw. I immediately took it

(18:25):
to a source, one of the most important, high level
investigative federal agencies in the country. I immediately took it
to our sources there, and I said, you have to
see this. After they looked at it for about two hours,
the response I got back was expletive and then the
follow up response was she's one of us. So people

(18:52):
inside a federal investigative unit said, she is one of us.
Apparently it is based on Gate analysis, which is how
someone walks. I didn't know this, but the analysis of

(19:17):
the hooded bomber compared the Gate analysis of this individual
in private life and at work, and the accuracy was
at ninety four percent. Match human analysis from the experts
and intelligence is much higher. They looked at it and went,
my god, that's it. We got it. What makes this

(19:41):
really interesting is that the surveillance footage footage was edited
they did a cut and they took out of the
released video that interaction with Capitol Police. Capitol Police pulled
right up, so they likely now know who it is.

(20:07):
And based on this article, the j six pipe bomber
is likely an employee of maybe the FBI. Oh my goodness,
it's one of us, said a federal law enforcement officer
of some kind. And then they've gone further and matched

(20:30):
the gate. It's analysis that's now used in courtrooms because
you can't fake how you can't fake how you walk.
There are things that just happen. There are natural things.
It's like a moving fingerprint, and so it is now
becoming admissible in court. And so they match the gate

(20:51):
on the video with the gate of someone who works
that they have identified but not named. And they're not
going to go take it to anybody at this point
because they don't trust them. Can you blame them? Five
hundred thousand dollars reward for information leading to see this

(21:11):
is where Cash Patel Pam Bondi, President of the United States,
need to get it out. All the things they're promising
transparency about they need to do and oh, by the way,
they need to pardon Tata Domiak Patrick Tta Domiak needs
to be pardoned. Enough, enough needs to happen. How about

(21:38):
that news that courtesy again of Joseph McKinnon with the Blaze.
Forty six minutes past the hour, Matt just called in

(21:59):
from Panama City with his McRib hack. He says, he
goes to Subway, orders the meatball, sub sands the sauce,
and then he drenches it with barbecue and goes from there. Oh,

(22:20):
good lord, son, don't that's not even close to a McRib.
That's a meatball sub with barbecue sauce. Now, meatballs are
Some meatballs have some level of pork in them. Some

(22:40):
are all beef. I would guess that subways meatballs are
a combination of beef, pork and chicken. That would be
my guess mixed in together. But no, I hope it
works for you. Pal. Don't order me one. I'll just
put it that way. I will refuse it Friday. Of course,

(23:02):
on this program is uh is a little different, and
so I just thought, why not a haikup about the
new mayor of New York.

Speaker 4 (23:22):
City, first Muslim mayor Democratic socialist death in the city.

Speaker 1 (23:56):
There you go, there's our haikup for the day. Uh, well,
for the week, I guess here on the U on
the morning show, we have We've got of course, what's
to be Friday coming up? You can complain about that
if you like insensitivity. You know, cultural appropriation apparently is
only only bad when when white people do it. And see,

(24:23):
I don't have a problem period with any of it.
It doesn't bother me when blacks wear like black women
wear their hair blonde, I don't care. That's what you like, man,
go for it. I don't care. You know they're girls
wearing purple hair. Awesome, do your thing. We're not going

(24:48):
to hear, you know, plants out there complain they're appropriating
our color. Whatever. Just know that if you complain about
my Asian acts, it will fall on deaf ears because
I don't care. I'm just having fun And if you're

(25:09):
offended at stuff like that, you need to just chill out.
I don't get offended when people make fun of me.
I don't. It doesn't It might even be funny. But anyway, Tonight,
First Commerce Credit Union, Tallassee Symphony Orchestra. It is the

(25:30):
John Williams Cinematic Celebration. I don't know if there are
tickets still available, but if you are interested, the event
starts at seven point thirty and the park opens at six.
Amphitheater seating tickets start at thirty two bucks. Just go
to theauterly Amphitheater dot com website for tickets. And I cannot,

(25:55):
I mean, I can't even there's nobody. There are some
guys that do good scores. You know, Hans Zimmer's really good.
His style of music is fine. There's just John Williams
is like next level. There's just there's John Williams and
everybody else. The Kevin's Southern Game Fair is still underway.

(26:17):
It continues today Tall Timbers Wagon Tour eight thirty to
ten thirty, game Fair event from eleven to three, and
then it continues tomorrow. For tickets, Kevin's Catalog dot Com
and Capitol Conservatives want you to know that Georgia Kapelman
will be speaking on on November eighteenth. We'll tell you
more about that next week, but there you go, and

(26:39):
don't forget Monday, we will be announcing the giving season
and the recipient this year. Can't wait counting it down
to the third hour when we have what's to be Friday.

(27:01):
Your calls complaints will take you take it to that
time period with some more stories that I think should
be on your radar. Remember, if you're new to the
radio program, The Morning Show with Preston Scott, we do
things a little differently. We try not to abuse one
topic all morning long. That's boring. I leave the deep

(27:24):
dive on a singular topic or two to the other
show hosts. That's their skill set, that's what they do.
I prefer to jump around. I prefer to put the
responsibility on you to do a little bit more digging.
I'll do a little bit of a primer and get

(27:47):
the pump started and turn it loose to you. This
is a story from Red State and the headline is
smoking gun Damning emails appear to show Comy Okayed leaks
expected to work for President Hillary Now James Comy, the

(28:11):
former head of the FBI, is been indicted by the
Department of Justice on federal charges. If I'm not mistaken,
this was a set of charges by a federal grand jury.
Reminding you that a grand jury is made up of
people like you and me. The prosecution lays out what

(28:34):
it believes is probable cause for the arrest, indictment. The
charges and it asks do we have enough to substantiate
these charges. It does not ask guilt or innocence. It
asks do we have enough? And a group of individuals

(28:54):
said yes. Now, his alleged lie is that he denied
that he authorized anonymous leaks to the press about the
Hillary Clinton classified emails case and Trump's concocted supposed ties
to Russian election interference. John Solomon, a writer over at

(29:18):
Just the News, wrote, federal prosecutors revealed Monday they have
unearthed a trove of personal emails showing then FBI director
James Comy openly talked in the days before the twenty
sixteen election that he expected to be working soon for
President elect Hillary Clinton and was being kept prized by
top FBI aids on efforts to anonymously provide information to

(29:41):
the news media. So did James forget about these emails?
The lead prosecutor in the case is Lindsay Halligan. Just
plant that name in your memory bank, he wrote in

(30:04):
his email regarding leak's good job, my friend, that's James Comy.
The notes also show that Comy thought he was going
to be working for Hillary Clinton, So the guy was
protecting Hillary Clinton's emails and knew the fake plan to
frame Trump as a Russian agent he thought was going

(30:27):
to get him a new job. The Department of Justice
is arguing that the emails proved Comy knew about the leak,
authorized it, yet testified otherwise. Halligan's filing says the article
showed Comy was aware of an encouraged Richmond and Richmond

(30:48):
as Daniel Richmond, a Columbia law professor an advisor to Comy,
encouraging Richmond's contacts with the media, contrary to his claims
to Congress, consistent with the above described correspondence, Richmond corresponded
extensively with members of the media regarding or on behalf
of the defendant, James Comy, including in an anonymous capacity.

(31:14):
So it's the smoking gun. These emails in James Comy
his own hand, and there are notes handwritten by Comy,
show that he was dishonest when he testified to Congress,
that in fact knew of leaks, authorized the leaks, approved

(31:37):
of the leaks, and said good job, my friend, regarding
the leaks. And keep in mind, all of this was
based on a product, the Steele dossier. Steele, a former
member of British intelligence that allegedly had all this dirt,

(31:59):
and all of them knew, the federal government knew there
was nothing in it that was accurate. It was all
made up. They knew it. Hillary Clinton rolled the dice
and went after this thing, paid for it, and it
was a nothing burger. And it was four years of

(32:21):
hell for Donald Trump in office and lie upon lie
upon lie by people that we are supposed to hold
to a standard of honesty, not just elected officials, but
the people in charge with the Department of Justice, the FBI.

(32:41):
Oh but we're not done with this story. Wait, do
you hear what's next? Eleven passed the hour? It is
The Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right, twelve past

(33:09):
the hour. Now, this this story involves Jeffrey Epstein. Former
cellmate of his. Not just any cellmate, This is Nicholas Tartaglioni.

(33:37):
Nicholas Tartaglioni is a former police officer. He said that
he was framed. He's a former canine officer in Westchester,
convicted in a twenty twenty four convict in twenty twenty

(34:00):
four for a twenty sixteen killing of four men after
a cocaine dea went wrong. He claimed in his pardon
bid that the prosecution had been flawed, evidence was manipulated
by police to frame him. He claimed in the request
that the man who worked for Tartaglioni, Marcos Cruz, had
confessed to setting up the murders for a Mexican cartel.

(34:23):
What was allegedly convinced to change his story by an investigator.
What does that have to do with Jeffrey Epstein. Well,
he was in a prison cell with Jeffrey Epstein before
Epstein found himself alone in a prison cell. He said,

(34:49):
Epstein told me the lead prosecutors said he didn't have
to prove anything as long as President Trump's people could
not disprove it. According to the prosecutor, the FBI were
her people, not his. He claims that Epstein was offered

(35:13):
a deal to walk free if he simply said Donald
Trump was involved and frequented his parties and gatherings in Ireland.

(35:34):
Epstein refused, Then there's this. Guess who the lead prosecutor
is was Maureen Comy, James Comy's daughter. Well, isn't that

(36:02):
interesting now? Is it true? Can't be verified? Is it possible? Yeah?
Is it plausible? No? Yeah? The effort to get Donald

(36:24):
Trump failed at every single turn, and so in my opinion,
they you can decide who they are tried to kill him.

(36:44):
It is the only way that I can explain the
dereliction of duty in Butler, Pennsylvania. The almost look the
other way. But we'll see, or maybe we won't. We

(37:05):
may never know. Seventeen past the hour, it is the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right, if you've got

(37:34):
somebody in your life that is perhaps been told that
they have early onset Alzheimer's or have a predisposition for it,
this will be of interest to you. Researchers at Massachusetts
General Brigham. Mass General Brigham. I'm guessing massachuse I could

(37:54):
be wrong. Followed nearly three hundred older adults between the
ages of fifty to ninety who showed no signs of
dementia when the study began. Over more than nine years.
The team tracked the participants daily steps and used brain
scans to measure certain proteins linked to Alzheimer's. Small amounts

(38:19):
of walking can slow down the brain changes that lead
to Alzheimer's. Listen to this. Participants completed yearly cognitive testing
to monitor any changes in thinking or memory, and they
focused on those that had a specific type of protein,

(38:41):
a group that faces higher risk of developing Alzheimer's. People
at higher risk who walked only three thousand to five
thousand steps a day roughly one one and a half
miles maybe two miles, experienced a delay and cognitive decline
of about three years. If they walked between five thousand

(39:03):
and seventy five hundred steps daily, the cognitive decline delay
was about seven years. So they found that just walking
was linked to a slower build up of the proteins
that trigger Alzheimer's. I have a theory as to why.

(39:33):
The theory that I hold that makes sense to me
is that the very act of walking, a coordinated movement
of your body that requires balance, peripheral vision, the ability

(39:54):
to see and recognize changes in slope and undulation, even
a crack in a sidewalk, a potential rise, or something
like that. It keeps the brain firing in a way

(40:14):
different than say, doing a puzzle, a crossword, a saduco
or siduco. Is that what it's called whatever those brain
oriented types of games or activities that they try to
get people to do, which is just fine, there's something
else that happens here. This is significant. This is not medication.

(40:42):
This is slowing down whatever might be predisposed to happen
regarding Alzheimer's, by three to seven years by walking. And
here's the other little tidbit. It appears as though seventy
five hundred steps is the plateau, the ten thousand. There's

(41:03):
no recordable benefit beyond seventy five hundred steps. I would
say there's nothing wrong with walking more. That's fine because
you may be wanting to walk more for aerobic purposes
or for you know, further conditioning. That's fine. But from
a cognitive point of view, as it relates to Alzheimer's,

(41:25):
seventy five hundred, there's your target five thousand to seventy
five hundred steps. So if walking a mile and a
half to two miles, if two miles is roughly five
thousand steps, seventy five hundred is a little bit more.

(41:47):
You know, I a mile is roughly what fifty three
hundred feet, fifty six hundred feet something like that, So
clearly a step is more than that. So you know,
your your step is roughly a yard maybe a little

(42:08):
bit less. Like my my pacing is one yard almost
to the inch, because I intentionally, as a young person,
trained myself to walk in one yard increments because of
my love for the game of golf. Before there were

(42:28):
rangefinders and things like that, you would walk things off
and the only way you can do that is to
have it measured. Anyway. For those of you that are
in that world, there's some useful information. Twenty seven pass.
Let's do the big stories in the press box next
here in the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Big Stories

(43:06):
in the press Box time half hour away from What's
the Beef? Here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Sheriff's office in Miami Dade testing the first self driving
police SUV. When they're testing it. As they are testing it,
deputy seated in the front, it's called PUG. How do

(43:30):
you not like that? Police Unmanned Ground Vehicle Patrol Partner
or PUG. Packed with high tech features, it integrates with
police databases, license plate readers, crime analysis software in real time.
Three hundred and sixty degree cameras, thermal imaging sensors allow

(43:51):
it to identify people or vehicles in restricted areas, even
in low light conditions. The vehicle can launch drones equipped
with thermal cameras to monitor larger areas assist in active incidents.
It has a tablet installed on the PUG and it
lets residents interact with the vehicle offer feedback during public events.

(44:16):
So it would seem that automated self driving policing is
going to be enhancing police work. Imagine you're in a

(44:36):
high crime area. You park one of these bad boys
there just looking, just watching, and I know this creeps
out some people. I get it. But there are parts
of almost every community where police don't want to be,

(45:00):
where they might not have the personnel to properly patrol
it as often as it needs to be patrolled. Where
an officer goes by, and as soon as they go by,
the activity begins and they play a game of how
often are they going to come back. There's certain lawn
enforcement jurisdiction that will never tell you how many officers

(45:22):
or deputies they have. They don't want that information out
there because bad guys will use that information and literally
do analytics. Where can they be, how many can be? Where?
How many miles square miles can they cover and patrol?
And they'll play they'll play the odds on such things.

(45:45):
It's an interesting look. I don't have an opinion about
it one way or the other. It's just interesting and
it's I think a story worthy of some time. Supreme
Court allowing the Trump policy requiring sex at on passports,
there still needs to be legislation, in my opinion, that

(46:07):
requires hospitals across the country to give the birth of
a child based on DNA and place it on the
birth certificate. And it cannot in any way, shape or
form ever be altered. Because it cannot be altered, it

(46:28):
doesn't matter what surgeries take place. A male will always
be a male, and a female will always be a female,
no matter what surgery, no matter what hormones, no matter
what injections, it doesn't matter. That person will never be
the opposite sex ever. And I think we need to

(46:49):
settle it. And then this is a story that will
be back. This is a terminator story. I'll be back
it is. It is a poll from Florida Atlantic University
that says nearly fifty percent of Floridians are considering leaving
the state. That is a remarkable number. It is being

(47:11):
driven by housing affordability. Ninety percent of the poll respondents
concerned with inflation. Eighty percent are concerned with housing affordability.
Interesting that almost all of this happened during Joe Biden.
There's only so much Trump can do to roll back prices.

(47:37):
Can't do that. We can hope that it moderates. We
can hope that some areas, because of deregulation, become more
cost effective to produce certain goods and by extension, certain services,
and then the costs drop down a little bit. But
this is what happens when Democrats are left in charge

(47:58):
of an economy bad thing. Forty minutes past, talk a
little bit more about the president and what he can
and cannot do. Next, it's The Morning Show with Preston
Scott counted down what's the beef? In just a little bit.

(48:20):
President of the United States might be taken anail before
the Supreme Court on tariffs. As of right now, analysts
say that the arguments and the questioning would lead them
to conclude that the Court is going to strike down
his ability to implement these tariffs. Now. The case centers

(48:44):
on whether Trump has the authority to impose the tariffs
without congressional approval under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act
of nineteen seventy seven, the administration in voked the Act
Act to levy tariffs on goods coming from China, Canada,
and Mexico. The President arguing that those nations did not

(49:09):
take the necessary steps to stop the flow of fentanyl
in the United States, so he declared the narcotics problem
the trafficking and national emergency, and so by extension, he
says that the the International Emergency Economic Powers Act otherwise
known as the IEEPA gives him the authority to place

(49:33):
these tariffs on these nations because of the Fentyl issue. Now,
group of small businesses filed a lawsuit, and they make
the argument that Trump exceeded his constitutional authority because the

(49:53):
taxes that the tariffs are in fact taxes. The attorney
on behalf of the businesses said, tariffs are taxes because
they take dollars from americans pockets and deposit them into
the US treasury. Okay, you said, our founders gave that

(50:18):
taxing authority to Congress alone. Now, on the other side
of the argument, Solicitor General d John Sower said that
Trump's tariffs are okay and legal because they are regulatory tariffs,
not revenue raising measures. The fact that they raise revenue
is only incidental. Gorstch challenged that. But the challenge that

(50:41):
I think is the most First, let me just say,
there may be a case against Trump on this. It
is hard to argue that when you pay a tariff
and it goes to the federal or government, that that

(51:02):
is not in fact the tax. That's that's fair to consider.
But what smacked me is so remarkable as I read
into this a little bit, this q and A was
Chief Justice John Roberts. He pointed out, this is listen, listen, listen, listen.

(51:24):
That the IEEPA quote does not mention the word tariff,
and that the measure had never been used to justify tariffs.
So Roberts in this case is stating that because the
law didn't say a specific word, you can't apply it. Oh,

(51:52):
the irony. It was John Roberts who authored the Obamacare
ruling who said, even though the word taxes isn't in Obamacare,
it's clearly it meant taxes, and so it's okay. This

(52:15):
demonstrates how John Roberts is an activist when it suits
his purposes. In this case, it doesn't. I would say
that he is interpreting this correctly. If you don't like

(52:36):
the wording is it doesn't express what you want, then
Congress has to change it, just like Obamacare. Remember Jonathan
Gruber written in a tortured way so that it didn't
say taxes. Because of the bill said taxes, the bill dies.
John Roberts said, yeah, but they meant taxes, and that's okay. No,

(53:01):
it's not okay, it's not what's in the law. See,
I would have a field day with this. If I
were the Solicitor General, I would be pointing to John
Roberts and his own ruling on Obamacare if I wanted
to win it. May not win it, but I would
make the argument. I just found it incredibly ironic, unbelievably

(53:28):
ironic that of all people, John Roberts would say, well,
that doesn't say that. Where were you and Obamacare got
in front of you? Forty seven minutes past the hour?
Get you ready for What's the Beef? Next morning show

(53:57):
with Drustin Scott. Just got a note a word from
Steve Stewart. Breaking story coming to Tallassei Reports in about
twenty to twenty five minutes. Huge story that I think
will enlighten a lot of you on Tallasse Memorial Hospital FSU.

(54:22):
It's interesting because this gets back to there's a bit
of a fire sale that's been going on at TMH.
They've been selling off some assets trying to improve the
cash standing because I don't think, especially for a non
for profit, I don't think their cash holdings are what

(54:44):
they probably ought to be. But Steve's got a big
story coming out, So check it out in about twenty
twenty five minutes at Tallasse Reports dot com. We have
What's the Beef coming up in just a few minutes,
So if you're calling in, just be patient. Be patient, Uh,
don't just We'll get to your calls. But we do

(55:06):
have a caller that that called in in the break
and I have no idea what this is about.

Speaker 3 (55:13):
Go ahead, Oh yeah, hello, do you prey think a.

Speaker 1 (55:19):
Dude? We we do English around here. Who is this?

Speaker 3 (55:23):
My name is Bob. I'm calling for the Beefy Show.

Speaker 1 (55:31):
Okay, Bob, for the Beefy Show. I don't know if
you're what's the beef worthy? But okay, what's your complaint?

Speaker 3 (55:38):
Oh Jesse, I want to say thank you for everything
you do. Uh and my beefy is the people, the
driver a night.

Speaker 5 (55:46):
With their bright lights on.

Speaker 6 (55:48):
They hurt my eyes.

Speaker 3 (55:50):
It's so bright. I full sunglasses, but then I can
all see.

Speaker 1 (55:57):
Are you in this country legally?

Speaker 6 (56:00):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (56:03):
Okay, you know you know you sound you're The tone
of your voice resembles Jose. Can you see a lot?
Are you? Are you Jose? Can you see?

Speaker 2 (56:16):
No?

Speaker 3 (56:16):
No, Jose, I'm Bob.

Speaker 1 (56:22):
Thank you, Bob. I appreciate the phone call. Well, that
o't to get us ready if you're if you're calling in.
Maybe that's why Jose couldn't take the calls. Maybe that
was Jose not bulb, and his beefy was headlights in

(56:46):
the eyes. Huh, okay, all right, it's uh it is.
What's to be Friday coming up next. So whatever you
want to complain about, we have two lines taking two
lines open eight five zero two zero five w f
l A eight five zero twoesday zero five ninety three
fifty two. Whatever you want to call in and complain about,

(57:06):
you just go right ahead, you call us. We'll take
your calls. And remember two rules. Three rules really no profanity,
don't make it personal, and no monologuing, okay, no filibustering.
I just get and make sure it's a beef all right?
Eight five zero two zero five WSLA eight five zero

(57:30):
two zero five ninety three fifty two. What's the Beef Friday?
Coming up next here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Even even those of you listening online call us. It's

(57:59):
time for what's the it me Friday in the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. This is your chance to get
it said. Whatever's bugging you. You know the rules. No profanity,
don't make it personal, and don't monologue. All right. We
want to get as many people on as possible, provide
some audio therapy. If you have never called into the program,
this is your chance. Sometime in this next half hour

(58:23):
there will be an open line or two when you
hear us wrap up a call call in. If you're
listening to us online, take a shot. Yeah, we're on
a delay, but take a chance. Joel has been very
patiently waiting. Joel, thanks for waiting through the break. You
are on the air. What's the beef?

Speaker 5 (58:42):
Good morning, pressor Preston My beef is Commissioner Jack Porter.
According to the Tallahassee reports, she is to have said,
I love Tallahassee, but I'm truly ashamed of our city
right now and our complicity in our president and governor's
unconstitutional and more and dangerous agendas.

Speaker 2 (59:02):
She said.

Speaker 5 (59:03):
So while we may little lament what's going on in
New York and be gassed at what's going on there,
we have our own poison right here in Tallahassees.

Speaker 1 (59:11):
No kidding, Yeah, we get wet. The next election is
going to be a big one, Joel, I thank you
for calling in. It's going to be consequential as recent
elections have been, until you get this push back to
a four to one comfortable majority with rational people. They're

(59:32):
all going to be Democrats, but there are Democrats that
are more rational because they're not as extremist as Jack
Porter and Jeremy matt Low. But they're a bunch more
so we'll have to wait and see that. Freeze up
A line eight five zero two zero five to b FLA. David,
thanks for calling in. You're up. What's the beef?

Speaker 7 (59:53):
Well, good morning. Last week I didn't get to listen
to you guys. Their friend of mine was telling me
about this lady who had a problem with her washing
machine installation. Well, I've got one just like that. Bought
a washing machine. They brought it in, hooked it up,
and hooked it up backwards. I called them, so they
came out and reversed the lines. But three weeks later,
when I needed to do laundry again, I realized that

(01:00:15):
they had loosened the line coming into the house. Water
was pouring into my floor. It cost me seven six
hundred and fifty dollars to have the floor in the
laundry room of the place, the floor underneath the water heater,
the floor in the hallway, and the floor behind the
in the bedroom behind there, you know. And they denied
my claim. And why should I pay for the ineptitude

(01:00:39):
or the incompetence of their installer.

Speaker 1 (01:00:42):
Who denied the clam without giving names who denied the
claim the business.

Speaker 7 (01:00:48):
They have a claims management company that denied the claim.

Speaker 1 (01:00:51):
Oh yeah, yeah, you got you gotta fight that one, brother,
that's too big. It's not a couple hundred bucks, No.

Speaker 7 (01:00:58):
It's that's a lot of money. And and well there
is a lossuit forthcoming.

Speaker 1 (01:01:03):
Good good, let us know how that works out.

Speaker 7 (01:01:06):
All right, buddy, have a great.

Speaker 1 (01:01:07):
Day you as well. Yeah, boy, baby, do some research
before you have people hook up appliances and all that,
use good reputable people to do things like that, and
make sure that you have a remedy. Boy that seven
thousand dollars ouch bibble. All right, Moses, I'm ready for

(01:01:29):
you to fire up the masses. Go right ahead, my friend,
what's the beef?

Speaker 2 (01:01:32):
So I see, good morning. My beef is my pinate
brother PAVO three thirty one inst is Andy, not the
old pressor and to none of his ways? So who

(01:01:54):
are the pressors today? Who are the oppressor today? Who
are the oppressor?

Speaker 8 (01:02:00):
Thank you?

Speaker 1 (01:02:01):
Have a nice take, Thank you, Moses. Appreciate the phone call.
Eight five zero two zero five WFLA. We will get
to Bob and then Roger and then Spencer, and we
have a line open. It can be yours eight five
zero two zero five WFLA. I can tell you who
the oppressor is today, Satan. Next back with more of

(01:02:26):
your calls on what's the beef? Welcome to the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. More the calls, more therapy for everybody. Look,

(01:02:48):
there are people that live through your beefs. They're out
there nodding up and down, or they might be just
going you call that a beef. It doesn't matter it's
about you. This is all about you. This is about
helping you feel better because we care. That's how we are. Bob,

(01:03:13):
thanks for calling into the morning show. You're up. What's
the beef?

Speaker 6 (01:03:16):
Good mornings.

Speaker 9 (01:03:19):
It's Bob two.

Speaker 1 (01:03:20):
Hello, Bob two.

Speaker 6 (01:03:23):
Why does everybody complain about the new mayor of New York.
He's just trying to make socialism greats again again. Name
one time it's filled on one time. This government shutdown
is great for socialism. We step in, save everybody. New
Democrat Socialist Party, make socialism greats again.

Speaker 1 (01:03:49):
Hey, thank you very much, Bob too. I think we'll
just go with Bob two. That's Bob two. Now, Bob two,
Bob too, Let's go to uh Roger. These are these
are fun calls here today.

Speaker 10 (01:04:02):
Hi Roger, Hey, good morning sir.

Speaker 2 (01:04:05):
This is you know who I am.

Speaker 7 (01:04:07):
I was gonna be Bob, but I changed my mind.

Speaker 1 (01:04:09):
Oh you could be Bob three. You could be Bob
three instead of Bob two.

Speaker 7 (01:04:13):
Yeah, I can't see that. I put my sunglasses off anyway.

Speaker 10 (01:04:17):
No, I called about this whole time change thing. I
thought we voted years ago to leave it alone.

Speaker 2 (01:04:24):
And it takes me a whole.

Speaker 7 (01:04:26):
Month to get acclimated to this whole thing, and uh.

Speaker 1 (01:04:30):
And then and then yeah, the feds have to sign
off on it, and they're not willing to do it.
You talk about something that everyone should be able to
agree on and they can't agree on that.

Speaker 2 (01:04:43):
Oh my goodness.

Speaker 7 (01:04:44):
Anyway, that's what that's that's my that's my BC.

Speaker 1 (01:04:48):
Thanks very much. I appreciate the phone call. Roger, otherwise
known as B three. Let's see here. Let's go to
uh by the way that that means there's a phone
line open UH eight five zero two S zero five WSLA.
Let's go to Spencer. Hi, Spencer, thanks for calling in.

Speaker 9 (01:05:05):
Good morning, Preston morning. I got two beefs for.

Speaker 1 (01:05:09):
You, okay.

Speaker 9 (01:05:11):
Beef number one is going to be self checkouts drives
me up the wall. They are job killers. And if
I can go to a place and I see a
self check out, I'm gonna hunt or register that's got
a live person standing there. That's beef number one. Beef
number two is these restaurants that are starting to charge

(01:05:32):
gratuity before you've even been served. Like let's say you
go up to the counter and you're going to order
something at the counter, yep, and they automatically tack on gratuity. Yep,
I'm not having it.

Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
Do you do you never give in that setting? Or
do you base it on what you see going on
in advance and how you're treated as you walk up?

Speaker 9 (01:05:58):
Exactly? Want you know, I want to have the experience,
and I want to be able to say, you know what,
this person went above and beyond. I'm going to tip
or I'm going to tip extra because I consider myself
a really really good tipper.

Speaker 1 (01:06:12):
Me too, But when I get.

Speaker 9 (01:06:14):
Mediocre service where you're going to get a mediocre tip.

Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
You know what? I think that, And I'm thinking out
loud here with you. It almost says to me, I
need to just start carrying cash for the purposes of
tips and put a big donut on it. And if
I like what's happened, I'll put some cash in that
tip thing when I leave.

Speaker 9 (01:06:35):
Exactly exactly. And I went to a place a few
weeks back with me and the wife, and we went
and we sat down and the lady says, well, here's
your menu, but you got to go to the counter
and order, and I said, okay, no problem. So we
walked up to the counter, ordered our food and then
got hit with an eighteen percent gratuity tip. And I said,
I haven't even been served, I said, and I had

(01:06:56):
to come order my own food. Well it's automatic. Yeah, no, no, no,
here's my beef to any restaurant owner, just so they
know if they're gonna implement that stuff, they're gonna lose.
I know, I won't go back.

Speaker 1 (01:07:10):
Yeah. Yeah. The only way you go there with that
kind of thing is if you've got a group of
ten or more that kind of deal where they put
it in automatically. But I'm one hundred percent with you
on that, Spencer. Thanks very much for calling in sixteen
past the hour, Jeremy. Then John, we've got room for
a couple more callers. Eight five zero two zero five
w f LA, it's what's the Beef Friday. We're gonna

(01:07:42):
try to fit all four calling We will fit all
We will fit all four callers in what's the Beef Friday.
Let's go to Jeremy. Jeremy, thanks for calling in what's
the beef?

Speaker 10 (01:07:54):
The beef is all the comrades that we have in
various positions in leon Ca I me in the city
of Tallahasseee, like Max Curl and Ryan Ray, on the
County Review Board, mon Domie, Matt Lowe and Comrade Porter
on the City Commission, and Darryl Jones on Leon County
School Board.

Speaker 1 (01:08:15):
Hey, I don't know if you know this, but Sean
Pittman and Daryl Jones have also been named on the
Charter Review Committee.

Speaker 8 (01:08:24):
Wonderful.

Speaker 1 (01:08:29):
I'm glad I could help out.

Speaker 10 (01:08:33):
That's gonna ruin my weekend.

Speaker 1 (01:08:35):
Well we're here to help, Jeremy. Thanks very much for
call again, and I hope you feel better getting that
off your chest. Let's go to John. Hi, John, Europe.
What's the beef?

Speaker 11 (01:08:45):
Good morning present. My beef was with my fellow Georgians
who sat on their hands and didn't go vote and
let two Democrats get in public Service Commission positions. Every
election is important. I don't care there is double catcher.
No Democrat needs to be elected to it. And you
better stay in the fight. It's a participatory government and

(01:09:08):
if you don't participate, you're going to lose all your
rise and quit worrying about what's going on one thousand
miles away in the city that's gonna be run by
a communist Muslim. We survive eight years of waning presidency
So anyway, y'all have a good weekend and another Veterans
Day coming up.

Speaker 1 (01:09:23):
Absolutely, thanks very much, appreciate the call. John. Let's go
to Mike. Mike, you are up, sir. What is thy beef?

Speaker 12 (01:09:31):
Good morning, sir, My beef is with you.

Speaker 1 (01:09:34):
Come on, come on.

Speaker 12 (01:09:36):
I want to give you a chance to redeem yourself
because I might have low information here. I'm wondering listening
to the last two calls, why you don't have more
liberal folks on the show to talk. And I know
Bill Maher has a problem getting them invited, so maybe

(01:09:57):
that's your problem. Well they get them to come.

Speaker 1 (01:10:01):
Oh good god, yes, yeah, that we invite them all.
They just okay, yes, And I.

Speaker 13 (01:10:07):
Take my beef back and I put it.

Speaker 12 (01:10:08):
I put it on the Democratic Party. And I'm a liberal.

Speaker 13 (01:10:11):
Myself, Oh are you? But we're not all comrades.

Speaker 2 (01:10:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (01:10:15):
I'm a longetime listener. I really like your show.

Speaker 1 (01:10:18):
Thank you.

Speaker 13 (01:10:18):
Love local politics, and I.

Speaker 12 (01:10:20):
Appreciate that you are fair and even handed and open
to debate. And that's something I love about telhasseee.

Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
Is what has happened to the Democrat Party in Leon County?
It's been taken over by nothing but it's dreamus.

Speaker 12 (01:10:36):
I'm trying to save them because they don't realize that
it's a zero sum game. But capitalism works for everybody
if we all work together.

Speaker 1 (01:10:48):
Mike, Mike, I'm gonna you know what I'm gonna do.
I'm gonna if you'll make sure to listen next week,
I'm gonna set aside some time to explain the efforts
we go to to get people on the other side
of issues and on the other side of the aisle
on this program. And they refuse. But in fairness, there
are many Republicans that refuse too. They don't want to

(01:11:09):
have to talk about things I see.

Speaker 12 (01:11:11):
They don't want they don't want to get caught in
soundbites and things. But but you know, the Liberals were
not all comrades, and I'm trying to talk them out
of it because I've seen them go off the deep end.
And I've been an old school level for a long time.
You're up with my dad listening to Rush.

Speaker 1 (01:11:29):
And you are you are, you are, And I think
you probably without knowing you, Mike, and thank you for
calling in, you are probably just that you are an
old school liberal, and liberals used to believe in liberty
how they might express it in policy, we could debate,
but those days are gone. Classic liberals are no longer

(01:11:52):
welcome in the Democrat Party because even though the majority
of the party might be made up of classic liberals,
they're scared to death of the left wing. They are
scared to death of it. And that's to their shame.
And you know what, God bless you that is. That
made my day. That call made my day. We got
one more caller here, Gerald, Thanks for calling into the

(01:12:12):
Morning Show with Preston Scott. You are up. What's the beef?

Speaker 8 (01:12:15):
Hey, good morning, Preston. One thing I don't know. I
don't know what the problem is with the air traffic controllers.
In the early eighties, I was either coming from Okinaw,
I don't know where I was going, but they had
a marine, a man in uniform who was there and
he was filling in for the pacco guys professional air
traffic control when they were on strike, and Reagan put

(01:12:37):
him on strike. But they augmented it with military people.
So I don't know what the problem is with the
with the air traffic controllers. There's always something they can
do about that, and that's Oh and the bushes. They
don't the bushes. They still haven't trimmed the bushes. You
got to get right up on a sign before. They's
everywhere men Monroe, the Highway, everywhere. It's not it's not right.

(01:12:59):
It's not luxury, but it's just not right.

Speaker 1 (01:13:02):
Thank you very much for calling in. I appreciate it.

Speaker 8 (01:13:04):
Gerald fiftieth anniversary, O bar but love the Marine Corps.

Speaker 1 (01:13:09):
There you go, Thank you, sir, appreciate the call. Got
to run real quickly. On the issue of the air
traffic controllers. Reagan took action because it was a strike.
It's different than when you're saying to people you need
to work, but you're not going to get paid. I

(01:13:29):
have a little problem with that. I do. But the
unions are siding with the Republicans. They're saying to the Democrats,
sign a bill. Twenty seven minutes after the hour, we
come back. Jasmine Waite will join me from Esposito's Garden Center.
From the ground up, what's blooming out there? Where can
we find a little color for our yard? That's next

(01:13:50):
on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. From the ground up,
It's where we take some time a couple times a
month to focus on the yard. Up in the northeast,

(01:14:14):
they would say the yad. But in the northeast they're
getting ready for snow. We don't have that issue down
here in North Florida. In along the Big Bend to
the Panhandle and joining us from Esposito's Garden Center is
the outdoor nursery manager herself, Jasmine. Wait, Jasmine, welcome back
to the show. How are you?

Speaker 14 (01:14:35):
Oh, I'm doing lovely. How are you?

Speaker 1 (01:14:37):
I'm doing great? What beautiful? We need some rain, but
it's beautiful weather. That said, what's blooming this time of year?
Where can you find some color?

Speaker 13 (01:14:49):
Oh?

Speaker 14 (01:14:49):
That is a common question I get all the time.
What's this and what's that blooming? In the median this
time of year, you'll see those big, slowy pink grasses,
sometimes white, but mainly pink blooming around on the midi ends.
Those are muley grass. Okay, you can go into your
garden center, especially after Vidas, and just ask the mealy grass.

(01:15:10):
They'll show it to you. It's fairly affordable, so durable,
and absolutely gorgeous. And I think the other one I
get the most common question on is the kaffia tree.
They ask me, what is that big blooming beautiful yellow tree.
It's known as the kafia tree, also known as the
scrambled egg tree because if you look at the bloom,
it almost looks kind of like a scrambled egg. It's

(01:15:31):
so adorable and they're so prolific this time of year.

Speaker 1 (01:15:35):
The molelygrass, does that spread or is it contained? What
you plant, It's going to grow from there, but it's
not gonna spread elsewhere.

Speaker 14 (01:15:44):
It's thoroughly contained. Yeah, it doesn't have a tenanty to spread.
It just has a tendency to kind of focus on
itself and become a little bit wider and a little
bit bigger every year. Just gets me a little bit
more gorgeous.

Speaker 1 (01:15:56):
What other plants are we seeing around town that might
put a little top of color in our yard if
we plant them.

Speaker 14 (01:16:03):
Oh, my favorite plants this time of year are pansies,
snap dragons and Biola's and so those cute little flowers
with the faces on them, and that you can freeze
those things to a block and they still come back
and bloom. We best way to buy them are in
flat because you get thirty six of them. They're super

(01:16:24):
affordable and they are just so cute. The Lord knows
my favorite are the pink shades. They come in the
There's little white blooms with little pink faces. They're so cute.

Speaker 1 (01:16:33):
Do the critters like them?

Speaker 14 (01:16:35):
Though, dear love pansies. Yeah, I will say that there
is nothing that is deer proof. There are some things
that are deer resistant, so snapdragons, those tall, beautiful, colorful
flowers you see during the winter, those are deer proof.
Pansies are not. That's dear salad. So if you're gonna

(01:16:56):
plant pansies, make sure that you're putting something down to
keep them out. And I think repels All is probably
my favorite. Comes into granular. It comes in the spray.
The granular is my favorite because I don't have to
do it so often. Yeah, you know, I'm a lazy gardener.
But use the granular repels all and keep them out
so you can still have pansies if you got deer.

Speaker 1 (01:17:16):
What about what about rabbits? Though we have found in
our yard that rabbits are posing a bigger problem than deer.

Speaker 11 (01:17:25):
Believe it or not.

Speaker 14 (01:17:26):
Repels All does the same thing with the rabbits. You
have to apply it a little more often because they're
a little closer to the ground. But that works out
a little bit better, repels all and it works for
rabbits too.

Speaker 1 (01:17:38):
Does it work against people? Does it stink?

Speaker 14 (01:17:42):
I wish well it doesn't. If you get a really
really hard rain, sometimes you'll get a little bit of something,
but nothing crazy. It's it's mainly like a cayenne mix.
It's not so it's it's not so crazy. And it's
not going to hurt your pets. It's not going to

(01:18:02):
hurt you know, the neighborhood kids. It's not going to
hurt nothing.

Speaker 1 (01:18:06):
So pansies and viola's snap dragons good choices for the
fall into the winter.

Speaker 14 (01:18:12):
Oh yeah, what people think, Oh it's winter, it's got
to be brown, it's got to be boring. No, it doesn't.
You can plant color till the cows come home if
you plant the right color.

Speaker 1 (01:18:23):
Are any of them a little more shade tolerant than
others because shade becomes a little bit more prevalent this
time of year, because the sun's moved south.

Speaker 14 (01:18:31):
Most of the time. You need to plant those things
in the now. Viola's are a little bit more shade tolerant. Okay, wonderful.
They're also a little bit more heat tolerant. Which is
also better and they bloom a little bit more prolifically.
So I have a favorite when it comes to that,
I prefer the viola. Okay, So if you guy a
little bit more shade, go for.

Speaker 1 (01:18:50):
That good stuff. Thanks for the wisdom, Jasmine. We'll talk
again in a couple of weeks. Perhaps I'll see you then.
Thank you, Thank you, Jasmine. Wait with s Posito Garden Center.
You can learn more online. They have a little plant
finder on their website where you can sort of pop
in what you're looking for, conditions, shade, that kind of thing,
and it will recommend plants. And it's at espositogardencenter dot com.

(01:19:15):
Forty minutes past the hour. A little bit of a
different good news story coming up here in just a moment.

(01:19:38):
But first Monday on the show, we will of course
talk FSSUE football, the Knowles, Clemson, South Carolina. Clemson's had
a rough season, Florida State's had a rough season. I
feel like Dabbo and coach norval Or just go meet
at the center of the field before the game starts

(01:19:59):
and give each other a hug. I think they just
they're gonna give each other a bro hug and kind
of and it'll be all right. You know. Dabbo is
an interesting character because I like him in a lot
of ways, but I think his sideline conduct needs to
match his faith because it doesn't. And he's probably not

(01:20:21):
going to survive this season because he doesn't talk to
kids the way that kids today demand to be talked to.
So I just but I like the guy on a
lot of regards. I wasn't sure what was going to
happen when Tommy, you might recall, he worked for Tommy Bowden,
Bobby's son. Tommy had a good few years at Clemson,

(01:20:43):
and then things started turning south. They let him go.
They handed it to Dabbo, and they didn't look back. Dabbo,
to his credit, built them into a powerhouse for a while.
But anyway, FSU football. It'll be on the tube tomorrow night.
But the broadcastley on the radio can be heard on

(01:21:04):
ninety four nine, T and T here in the Tallahassee
market in ninety four or five. I think it's The
Rock ninety four or five in Panama City. And the
game's at six o'clock Central, So your pregame will be
at four o'clock in the Central time zone. And the
game is of course at seven o'clock Eastern time, so

(01:21:25):
your pregame will be at five o'clock if you want
to check out the radio broadcast. This good news story
is a little different because I've never seen anything quite
like it. I'm sure it happens. We see YouTube clips
all the time of citizens coming to the rescue of
police that are under attack and things like this. This
was different. Slide El Louisiana Dillard stole store some shoplifters.

(01:21:49):
One a young lady in particular, fled the store as
a police officer was trying to say, hey, what's going
on here? She leaves, her boyfriend drives up, and off
they go. A good samaritan sees what's happening. The cop
is way too far away from his police car, and

(01:22:09):
so she pulls up this lady and says want to
hop in, and he goes okay, And so she goes
on the chase at a fair amount of speed, not crazy.
And he's got his portable radio with him, of course,
so he's radioing officers responding as well, and they track

(01:22:35):
him down because of the help of a good samaritan.
So this lady navigates traffic and with a police officer
sitting next to her, gets the job done and they
catch the shoplifters. So they offered Leslie Smith, a citizen
of slide l, the Citizenship Award during a ceremony. And

(01:22:57):
she's a mother of three. She said, all I was
thinking at the time was how could I help? And
she said, so, I said, you want to jump in,
I'll drive you. I can't remember seeing a story quite
like that. It's I don't know, I just have this
almost this Jim Carrey ace Ventura kind of feel to it.

(01:23:20):
So you want to ride, you want to lift, want
to hop in, Let's go, Let's go get them good stuff.
The fact that there are good Samaritans still out there,
that's good news. Forty six minutes after the hour, you

(01:23:48):
hear that temperatures Monday near fifty. Okay, longtime listeners know,
I have always said Halloween, give or take one week,

(01:24:11):
is when the temperatures change, and it's almost like clockwork.
And here we are. Okay, look, I'm not mad at it.
It would have been nice to have a little more.
Maybe we'll get back to some temps in the sixties.
I love temps in the sixties and low seventies with
the low humidity, no bugs, beautiful sitting in the screen

(01:24:36):
porch or opening the windows up. Man, That's just that's
incredible to me. Love it, absolutely, love it all. Right.
Time for dad joke. We have to get you prepared
for church. Dogs can't operate MRI machines, but cats can.

(01:25:00):
You're welcome. That's courtesy of Ryan. Ryan sent me his
joke list in August of twenty twenty four and we're
still using them. Ladies and gentlemen in these are headlines
courtesy of the Babylon B Dodgers purchase second World Series

(01:25:21):
victory Canada orders Toronto Blue Jays players euthanized. Tragic man
runs out of conversation topics forty five seconds into haircut.
Government once again cast nation into four thirty PM darkness.

(01:25:46):
Nigerian president promises to end genocide if Trump sends upfront
fee of five thousand dollars in Amazon gift cards. Christians
in Nigeria disguise themselves as Palestinians so people will about
them being genocided. And Taylor Swift asked Travis Kelcey how
he did in the World Series. Brought to you by

(01:26:09):
Barno heating and air. It's the morning show one on WFLA.
That was good. That was good. We started the radio
program with a great tune for Lauren Daegel and then
Romans twelve, verse nine. That was our verse today. Big

(01:26:33):
stories in the press box, rising costs causing nearly fifty
percent of Floridians to consider leaving the state. Oh, if
that's you, if you're an illiberal democrat, by all means,
go see you. I think there are many states far

(01:26:57):
more hospitable to you. New York, New York City, Los Angeles,
California in general, Oregon, Washington, Illinois, Minnesota. Go enjoy, live
your life, live your best life, seek your truth. We

(01:27:19):
will visit that one again. I promise you. That Supreme
Court allowing Trump's policy requiring sex at birth to be
on passports, that's like one of the biggest duh stories
I've seen in a long time. But when it comes
to courts, you just never know. But when will we

(01:27:40):
cross over and get to where we settle this at
birth with DNA? And that's what it is, period, and
it can't be changed. If you want to pretend you're
something else, that's fine. But your sport affiliations. What you
can do and participate in the bathrooms you go in,
the locker rooms you go in. That's it right there.

(01:28:04):
That makes a lot of sense, doesn't it. Yeah, Sheriff's
Office in Miami Dade using a self driving SUV police
car loaded with technology. It will eventually be without any
deputies law enforcement officers in it at all. It will
patrol on its own. What do you think about that?

(01:28:24):
I know some people that will be very nervous in
the service about that. One Monday, we're going to announce
the giving season recipient Get started. There, got a great
show already lined up. Friends, have a great weekend and
go Knowles
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Ruthie's Table 4

Ruthie's Table 4

For more than 30 years The River Cafe in London, has been the home-from-home of artists, architects, designers, actors, collectors, writers, activists, and politicians. Michael Caine, Glenn Close, JJ Abrams, Steve McQueen, Victoria and David Beckham, and Lily Allen, are just some of the people who love to call The River Cafe home. On River Cafe Table 4, Rogers sits down with her customers—who have become friends—to talk about food memories. Table 4 explores how food impacts every aspect of our lives. “Foods is politics, food is cultural, food is how you express love, food is about your heritage, it defines who you and who you want to be,” says Rogers. Each week, Rogers invites her guest to reminisce about family suppers and first dates, what they cook, how they eat when performing, the restaurants they choose, and what food they seek when they need comfort. And to punctuate each episode of Table 4, guests such as Ralph Fiennes, Emily Blunt, and Alfonso Cuarón, read their favourite recipe from one of the best-selling River Cafe cookbooks. Table 4 itself, is situated near The River Cafe’s open kitchen, close to the bright pink wood-fired oven and next to the glossy yellow pass, where Ruthie oversees the restaurant. You are invited to take a seat at this intimate table and join the conversation. For more information, recipes, and ingredients, go to https://shoptherivercafe.co.uk/ Web: https://rivercafe.co.uk/ Instagram: www.instagram.com/therivercafelondon/ Facebook: https://en-gb.facebook.com/therivercafelondon/ For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iheartradio app, apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.