Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
It just makes you want to smile. This it's December first.
Welcome Friends. The Morning Show with Preston Scott thirteen days,
thirteen shows, I should say, left in the broadcast season,
and it's great to be with you. That is Jose.
I am Preston, and I hope you had a delightful,
(00:28):
wonderful Thanksgiving holiday. I, of course did. I got a
cold while for my trouble. No idea how in the
world I got a cold. I was doing great. All
of a sudden I got a cold. I don't know
if it came from one of the littles. I don't
know if it came from a family member. But we share.
(00:50):
That's what we do in our family. We share. So
playing a little hurt this Morning money Maker, a little
bit under the weather, but that's okay.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
That's all right.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Scripture thought it'd be fun for the several shows to
look at Christmas carols that have a message joy to
the world. I think sometimes these songs that we have
(01:19):
sung since we were children, we don't really think about
what we're singing. Now. I'll be honest with you. I
struggle seeing some of the celebrity pop stars and musicians
that I know, aren't professing Christians because there's no fruit
(01:40):
in their life at all. Doesn't mean their eternal soul
is doomed to hell. It just means that there's nothing
in their life that lines up with someone who's a
professing Christian. And so I struggle, and I think to myself,
are you even listening to the words that you're singing
when you sing some of these songs? You know, when
(02:02):
Mariah Carey, who is an incredible vocalist, sings joy to
the world, the Lord has come, Let Earth receive her King,
are you thinking about what you're singing when you connect
to that verse that the line and the title of
(02:25):
that song. Are you walking in that joy? Not superficial happiness?
Joy says in John twenty one, verse twenty five. Listen
to the words John wrote. Now, there are also many
other things Jesus did. Were every one of them to
(02:48):
be written, I suppose the world itself could not contain
the books that would be written. That's how the Book
of John ends. The youngest of the disciples, John, who
(03:08):
would be considered a great theologian and the revelator. John said,
what I've written down, what's been written down is only
part of the story of what we've seen. Consider that
for a second. Come on ten past the hour, Mosy
(03:35):
inside the American Patriots Almanac, and let's start unpacking the
show known as show number fifty five oh three of
The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 3 (03:50):
And this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right,
let's take a peek here. December first in history, It's
(04:12):
worked backwards. Nineteen sixty five, an airlift begins to bring
thousands fleeing Castro's communist Cuba to the United States.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
Nineteen sixty five, nineteen fifty five, Ten years earlier, Rosa
Parks arrested after she refuses to give up her seat
to a white man aboard a bus in Montgomery. That
is crazy that the Deep South was doing crap like that,
(04:43):
run by Democrats, of course. Nineteen oh three, Thomas Edison's
film company releases The Great Train Robbery, the first Western movie.
Eighteen sixty two, Abraham lincol And reminds the nation that
America is the last best hope of Earth. And in
(05:06):
eighteen twenty four, the presidential election goes to the US House.
Since neither John Quincy Adams Andrew Jackson William Crawford or
Henry Clay won the electoral majority. John Quincy Adams would
eventually become the president because of the House. It's Cyber Monday.
More on shopping later on in the program. I'm going
to help you out thirteen days of shopping advice. I'm
(05:31):
going to start today. I help you out. I am
here k Kringle in the flesh to help you out.
It is Day Without Art Day. Okay, National eat Red
Apple Day, National Pie Day. So there you go. I
(05:53):
know a lot of you are wondering, so, well, what
happened with Orphan Shade? Did we get there? Did we
get to the intermediate goal of forty thousand dollars? Even
though we stop broadcasting on Tuesday, we're at forty three
thousand dollars. I want you to just for a second, first,
(06:19):
give God a round of applause. Go God, give yourselves
a tip of the cap. Friends. We're twelve thousand dollars
away from our goal. We can do this. So my
(06:42):
goal is we have thirteen shows left. I mean I
can do the well if we get one thousand dollars
a day. I want this thing. I want. I want
to challenge you to let's beat this thing by the
end of the week, first of next week. Let's let's
do this. Let's get it done. And so here's my challenge.
(07:08):
I've got Jay Sherlow joining me next hour. He's in town.
He and his lovely wife Stacy had dinner with Cynthia
and me yesterday and we just talked about all kinds
of things, including obviously what's going on with Orphan Shade.
(07:31):
And so we'll talk with Jay. But if everybody listening
to the show today gave a little bit, just do
what you canna, we're gonna take another big bite out
of this thing. We're twelve thousand dollars away from reaching
(07:52):
the goal of fifty five thousand dollars to build home
number six, and you listeners will have been responsible for
building two of their six homes for orphan little girls.
It's not an orphanage. It's a home for girls that
have no mom and no dad. Do what you can
(08:13):
Orphanshade dot com drop down menu. After you decide what
you can do, whether you want to do something one time,
whether you want to do something monthly or quarterly, build
a house and in the notes put house number six.
That's it. Seventeen past the hour, all right, before we
(08:44):
get to the next story here on the program. I
know I sound pretty pretty manly here today, don't I
voice a little more Bisano than normal? I'm laughing the
best I can hand. Had to pop a daquill in
(09:04):
last night. Wasn't wasn't wasn't feeling it and then, uh,
everything just settled down. No fever or anything like that,
just a bad cold, I don't Yeah, nothing, Uh, green
Bay Packers, sorry, Detroit Lion fans that had to sting.
I knew things were gonna be good when when the
(09:24):
ladies singing the national anthem in Detroit was none other
than CC Winings. CC Winings was singing the national anthem
before the Detroit Lions Green Bay Packer game, and she
just dropped a hammer, as did my beloved Green Bay Packers.
That was lovely. But this week it's the Bear's debt Bears,
(09:50):
and it is a massively important game massive so that's
gonna be a lot of fun. But it's just football.
FSU gets smoked by by Florida. That hurts a three
and eight team beat. You ouch that. Yeah. We'll talk
(10:14):
a little bit with Irischafelle about that one in the
third hour, that that just that hurts. It tells you that.
And here's what I can't figure out. How could Florida
State with the same players be more physical and dominate
(10:35):
the team playing for the SEC title? Alabama in game
one and in game twelve looked like the JV squad
and got bullied all over the place by a team
that had lost eight games and was with an interim
coach and had been zero to four with him. How
does that happen? I can't explain it. I'm not I know.
(10:59):
The The argument is their players just aren't good enough.
I'm just I'm not there yet. I don't think they
have enough good players. But they were good enough to
beat the tar out of Alabama. Well, Alabama is first
game of the year, so it's first game of the
year for us too, So what I am mystified by that?
(11:24):
But then there's this, just a shout out to Klaren
Lakes Homeowners Association and homeowners What are you doing? What
are you doing? Burning? Someone had a fire outside over
(11:45):
the weekend? What are you doing?
Speaker 4 (11:50):
What are you doing?
Speaker 1 (11:52):
You lost your ever loving minds? There is a burn band.
We are in a wooded subdivision, you could torch the
whole freaking subdivision. I was dumbfounded. Come on, people, come
(12:13):
on citizens. This caught my eye because it's just a story.
Type of story that catches my eye. The most expensive
Titanic artifact went to auction, expensive because it sold for
the highest price of anything ever. The watch that was
(12:37):
owned by Isadore Strauss, the co owner of Macy's, given
to him by his wife Ada. She famously refused to
get in a lifeboat their maid, their attendant. She gave
her her mink coat and said, get on the lifeboat.
I will be with my husband. She said. My place
(12:59):
is with you. I have lived with you, I love you,
and if necessary, I shall die with you. The watch
stopped at two twenty in the morning, which is the
time the ship went down. It was recovered from his
body and it has been in the family ever since.
One hundred and thirteen years later, it went to auction
(13:21):
and sold for two point three million. Wow. What a story.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
Huh?
Speaker 1 (13:30):
What a story? Twenty seven minutes past back with more.
The big stories in the press box are next more
for your listening minute than anything you might find elsewhere.
We just we pack it. It's like that stuffing you
(13:53):
might have enjoyed on on Thursday. It's just it's just
it's it's it's a cornacopia of conversation. That's what we
got going on. Here was the over there. Do you
Havemini's Thanksgiving? Oh yeah, it was blessed. Yeah, yeah, although
I ruined it. What happened with the turkey? Well, not
(14:14):
the turkey. I made this potato dish that was going
to be the star of the evening, okay, over the turkey, Yeah,
mistake number one. Turkey's the star, buddy. Oh well, you know, okay,
So what happened? I ruined it.
Speaker 5 (14:26):
I put too much salt in there, put the whole
ocean of salt in there, and yeah, it so bad.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
Christmas is now ruined as well. What Yeah it was bad. Yeah,
but I mean you did the injected turkey thing right
with the mohole and the Brian and all that. Yeah,
we had a smaller turkey this year. A couple of breasts,
nothing serious, okay, all right, okay, fair enough big stories
in the press box President of the United States. Any
(14:56):
documents signed by Sleepy Joe Biden with the auto pen,
which was approximately ninety two percent of them, is hereby
terminated and of no further force or effect. His contention
is that Biden was not coherent enough to know what
the autopen signature was going to. And so this is
(15:20):
going to be interesting to see where this leads because
in theory this also deals with the pardons, So I
don't know, we'll see where that goes. Zoa and Mom, Donnie,
it's not taking long for everybody to get a taste.
(15:40):
Listen to what he did over the Thanksgiving holiday online.
Speaker 6 (15:47):
It might be November, but I'm still saying yes to
your donations. So head to Transition twenty twenty five dot
com pitching whatever you can, let's win a city that
everyone can afford.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
It might be November, but I'm still saying yes. What's
he saying yes to again?
Speaker 6 (16:04):
It might be November, but I'm still saying yes to
your donations. So head to Transition twenty twenty five dot com,
pitching whatever you can, let's win a city that everyone
can afford.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
So he's shaking down the poor, the middle class, he's got,
he's he's already got a bunch of the wealthy in
his pocket because that's what socialist cater to. Eh. And
he's begging people for money. Did you see that the
(16:38):
city council's already talking about giving him a raise. Do
they not know his family's loaded, I mean loaded loaded.
So he wants to raise four million dollars by asking
the people that he's supposedly there to help for their money.
(17:04):
This is this is what socialists do. Brace yourselves. It's
gonna be interesting to see what happens as the as
the promises fail and and they will final big story.
This is tough news and a lot of you will
disregard this as you're just an old fuddy duddy who
(17:26):
doesn't You don't you're not into the tattoo thing. No,
I'm not. I'm not a fan of them. It's not
ruining my day. I just it ruins your look in
my opinion, And I've never seen an older person whose
tattoos look good. I think they look really, really bad. Now,
(17:48):
if you're somebody who served in the war and you
went overseas and you fought for your country, and you
decided one night you're gonna go get a tattoo honoring
your boys, that's cool. I don't know, you know, But
but the people that are disfiguring themselves with tattoos. Just
listen to this. This is epic health. New study shows
a twenty nine percent higher risk of contracting an aggressive
(18:12):
type of skin cancer for those who have tattoos. It
was a study in the European Journal of Epidemiology. It
is cutaneous melanoma, the most aggressive form of skin cancer
that can spread to other parts of the body if
not treated early. Tattoo size unrelated to risk doesn't matter.
(18:34):
They looked at the data of twenty eight hundred and
eighty Swedish people diagnosed with that melanoma age between twenty
and sixty twenty nine percent greater risk of the melanoma
developing on tattooed individuals. That is not a coincidence. So
I get that. It's really really it's really difficult to
(18:56):
reverse one. I get it, all right. So here's my point,
because I care. I want to see anybody harmed by this.
Check your check yourself routinely, see a you know, a
dermatologist regularly. That needs to be part of your routine
(19:16):
twice a year, once a year at least, and check yourself.
Know what to look for, all right, forty one minutes
past the hour. Those are the big stories in the.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Press box, dispensing information at the speed of sound.
Speaker 4 (19:30):
It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (19:44):
I'm going to be very interested to see what happens
in New York City. It'll be very interested to see
what happens in Chicago. You've managed to go from a
terrible mayor a succession of terrible mayors, to maybe the
worst in Brandon Johnson. Guys, nuts. Listen to what he said,
(20:11):
said that imprisoning violent criminals is racist and moral and unholy.
He's right alongside the Governor JB. Pritzker, who's nuts. We
cannot incarcerate our way out of violence. He argued that
past efforts have failed. We have already tried that, and
we've ended up with the largest prison population in the
(20:32):
world without solving the problems of crime and violence, the
addiction on jails and incarceration in this country. We've moved
past that, really, have we. It's racist, it's a moral,
it's unholy, and it's not the way to drive violence down.
Do tell, do tell Mayor, as one of the murder
capitals of this country, do tell see he first doesn't
(21:00):
understand the role of the incarceration is not to reduce crime.
The role is to take violent people and get them
off the street. That's the role you don't want to
talk about. And most most democrats and illiberals and some
(21:26):
who happen to be black, don't want to talk about
the real problem. The problem is fatherless Holmes. The problem
is black on black crime, South and West side of Chicago.
It is young black men who are dying at the
(21:47):
hands of other young black men. Do tell us Mayor
when you are going to address that. What's amazing is that,
first of all, he's flat wrong. And all you need
to go and do is all you need to look
at is the nation of El Salvador. Look at the
(22:10):
crime rate, violent crime rate, and what has happened since
they started incarcerating people. It is plummeted. It has gone
from listen to this. It has gone from a high
of better than sixteen hundred murders per one hundred thousand
people to two hundred. Why they started putting people in prison,
(22:43):
Now it does work. They're also dealing with some of
the quote systemic issues inside of El Salvador. But instead
you've got Cook County, Illinois that has now established a
permanent guaranteed income program they're giving money away to people,
(23:05):
no strings attached, indefinitely. Where's that money come from. Don't
come from donors, comes from taxpayers. So they're redistributing wealth.
They still have the crime problem, they still have the
murder rate, they still have black on black crime. They're
giving out five hundred dollars a month, and they said
(23:29):
that their surveying tells them that that money is being
put to use for good things like emergencies and so forth.
Here's what they're not telling you. It has impact the
labor market because there are fewer people willing to work
because that money comes with no strings attached. And you're like, well,
five hundred dollars doesn't doesn't pay the bills, No, but
(23:50):
fraud does, committing crimes does. Just saying forty seven minutes,
I say.
Speaker 3 (24:01):
You are all essential workers. Welcome to the Morning Show
with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
Sadly, over the weekend shooting in Washington.
Speaker 7 (24:22):
D C.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
Guy who we rescued out of Afghanistan, I want you
to get your mind around this. Authorities say this guy
got radicalized here. He's one of the thousands, perhaps of
(24:45):
Afghanis that we did not vet. He worked with us
special forces in Afghanistan and that earned him a free
ride home, well a free ride here, not going to
use his names. An Afghan national who drove from Washington
(25:06):
State to Washington, d C. To ambush some National Guard
members with a three point fifty seven, killed one, seriously
(25:30):
injured a second, and we brought him out of Afghanistan.
We saved his life. The military which makes up the
National Guard saved his life. And this is what he does.
(26:03):
Drove across the country, didn't think about it and go
this is stupid. I can't believe I'm doing this and
turned around. Now. So committed was he to whatever personal
jihad that he wanted to commit, He did it.
Speaker 6 (26:28):
So.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
On CNN they have a guest who says, this is
the worst case scenario for every Afghan immigrant in this country. Why, Well,
because there's people calling for all of them to be
thrown out of the country. Yeah, I understand that. But
(26:53):
buried in these comments was a scary little nugget. They're
deeply integrated into the fabric of communities across the country.
What are we talking like sleeper sell stuff that deeply integrated?
(27:20):
Guys being charged with murder and so Afghans are living
in fear in the United States. How about us? How
about Americans? This is yet another example of the policies
(27:43):
of the left. This isn't just Joe Biden. This is
deep down what Barack Obama wanted. He just couldn't pull
it off. He didn't have the courage to do it.
He did it through Joe. The Obiden administration did this.
Now you look at you look at the rhetoric of
(28:05):
Barack Obama when he was president. Everything that happened that
Joe Biden did was a Barack Obama initiative. He just
didn't get it done. All of it. These are the
policies of Obama. I'll remind you Obama deported more people
(28:32):
than Trump. But that's because he was doing it. No
one complained about it. They cheered when he and Hillary
and other Democrats talked about that. All right, we come back.
We're gonna change gears. Jay Sherlow of Orphan shehad joins me. Next.
(28:59):
All right, friend, it's the second hour The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. I'm Preston. He is Jose December first.
Speaker 6 (29:07):
It just.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
Sounds good, doesn't it. I know, I know the year
has gone by way too fast, but just feels right,
and so we transition now from Operation Thanksgiving to Spirit
of Christmas. And I am joined on the program by
the co founder of Orphan Shade. He is our friend,
(29:30):
Jay Shirlow. Jay, how are you good morning?
Speaker 7 (29:34):
How are you sir?
Speaker 1 (29:34):
I'm doing terrific all things considered. And I shared the
news with everybody kind of where we are. But for
those that don't know much about Orphan Shade, they've heard
me talk about it a little bit. I thought it
would be useful to kind of reset where this all
began for you and how this program and ministry started.
Speaker 8 (29:56):
Sure well, in two thousand fifteen, I live in Houston, Texas.
I had an interesting character come across my path. The
gentleman was a pastor from the country of Malawi. Malawi's
in Sub Saharan Africa, and I got to know him
(30:22):
and over about a year and a half we developed
a relationship, and as part of that relationship, the Lord
started speaking to both of us about a ministry to
orphans that live in Malawi, and so he when he
(30:43):
departed to go back to his country, he invited me
for a visit and I said, yes, sir, I'm coming,
and so I had my eyes opened about what life
is like for people in Malawi. It's one of the
poorest countries in the world, has a population of about
twenty million people and about one million orphans, both single
(31:08):
and double orphans. And so what the Lord spoke to
us about was serving young orphan girls who've lost both
of their parents, who live in a rural tribal village,
(31:29):
again very poor. And we would work with our partner,
his name is Prince Kompomo, and we would in a
village where he has a church plant, we would build
a home and the home would be used as a
permanent foster home for little girls between the ages of
(31:52):
five and ten who lost both their parents and their
guardian and usually a grandmother or an aunt cannot care
for them or will not care for them. And so
these are children who are who have to usually beg
for food to survive and they have a very rough
(32:17):
life at a young age. So we will bring in
eight of these girls from one village and we will
our partner will supply a couple, a husband and wife,
so be the parents, and so we raise them in
this home in the village under the under the leadership
(32:39):
of the pastor from the local church. So it's an
all Malaalian effort. There are no Americans involved except my
wife and I, and so it becomes a ministry of
the local church rather than a ministry of ourselves. And
so we've been at that for nine years now. We
(33:01):
have three foster homes operating with a total of twenty
four girls and the first the first home, we opened
in twenty twenty one. And those girls are now mostly teenagers.
And so the Lord has been with us the entire way.
(33:21):
He is supplied in miraculous ways, have many stories, and
so we're very thankful for what God has done through
us and in us through this ministry.
Speaker 1 (33:38):
Jay, before we take a quick break here, just real quickly,
the girls come in between the ages of five and ten.
How late how long do they stay till they're eighteen?
Speaker 8 (33:49):
So it could be less, could be more. So it
depends on their education path.
Speaker 5 (33:55):
Okay, so for those girls who are academically strong, we
will stay with them throughout their academic pursuits. For those
girls who are less academic, we probably when their age
is sort of a teenager thirteen to fifteen, we will
(34:16):
get them trained on a specific capability through a partner
of ours so that they can earn a living. So
that's our role in the process.
Speaker 1 (34:30):
Jay Shirlow with us. Orphanshade dot com is the website.
We'll talk more about that as we continue here. Leven
past the hour.
Speaker 4 (34:43):
Good morning, and welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
With me on the program for a couple more segments
is Jay Scharlow, co founder of orphan Shade, the website
or Orphanshade dot com. Jay talk about the three homes
that are up and operational, kind of give us a
sense of location and give us a sense of the
type of homes that we're talking about being built and
the need to build them the way that you build them.
Speaker 8 (35:15):
Sure, so the first home was our i would say,
complete experiment. We didn't know what we were doing, to
be honest, yes, and so we God delivered a builder
that was in a very unconventional way and they built
(35:37):
our home. That first home in twenty twenty and it
was opened in twenty twenty one. And it's a four
bedroom home. It's about thirteen to fourteen hundred square feet
and so it's oriented to a big family and has
(35:58):
an extra bedroom for visits. We have people coming from
the city of Blantyre that will come in and support
the family now and again. And so over time we
built the second home in another village called Chipolo Polo
which means bullets, interestingly enough, and we started to tweak
(36:25):
the house design and we've made quite a few changes
over time, and that home opened in twenty twenty three.
Speaker 7 (36:36):
The home that.
Speaker 8 (36:37):
Your listeners will know about is the home in in
Decca and that's north of Blantyre. Blantyre is sort of
the center park, biggest city in the southern region of Malawi,
and so your listeners were extremely generous in twenty twenty
two and twenty twenty three. That hole opened in the
(37:01):
summer of twenty twenty four to eight beautiful girls and
a couple who love them very much. That family has
been very successful. The children are doing very well. We
haven't lost anyone and the girls attend the local school
(37:26):
and are performing very well academically.
Speaker 1 (37:29):
The type of homes that are built, I want to
put it kind of paint a picture for everybody. We're
not talking opulence. We're talking about something that is stable
and withstands the elements. Because most of the homes in
these tribal villages are literally homes at last one season, right.
Speaker 8 (37:48):
That's correct. So there is very challenging weather during the
rainy season, and so so often there are cyclans that
that that come from the Indian Ocean and sort of
stand over Malawi, and it just causes thousands and thousands
(38:11):
of homes that are that are built with uh, with
poor materials just to float away. So we we build
a home that's a bit of a tank, I call it.
Speaker 7 (38:23):
UH.
Speaker 8 (38:23):
It is made to last. It has a very deep
foundation UH and it has a very strong roof made
of steel and so but it is not a fancy
home as you as you say it is. We don't
have water service.
Speaker 2 (38:40):
UH.
Speaker 8 (38:40):
The water comes from a local well. We don't have power,
so it is it is built to accommodate that family
as best we can. UH. We're trying to avoid being
using the word you use opulent to the neighbors. We
want to be part of the community, and so we
(39:03):
build that home to last, but it is not always
the best home in the village.
Speaker 1 (39:12):
All Right, We've got more to come. Jay Sharlow with
me from Orphan Shade, the website Orphanshade dot com. We're
going to give you the update where we are financially
right now and projects that are on the drawing board
that we're looking to fund right now, and how you
can help. Next here on the Morning Show with Preston
Scott twenty two minutes past. Final segment here with Jay Sharlow,
(39:45):
co founder. Orphanshade dot com is the website. This is
not an orphanage. It is a home for orphans, and
there is a difference, Jay.
Speaker 7 (39:56):
Very much so.
Speaker 8 (39:58):
We have created a family rather than sort of an
institutional orphanage. Orphanages that I have observed do a really
bad job of raising children and there are many bad
effects that the child carries with them when they enter
(40:18):
society at age eighteen. We're creating a family that stays
with that child through their completion of schooling, and so
we want them to experience what it's like to have
a mom and a dad, to experience was like to
have siblings and in their own home, have an environment
(40:43):
where they're cared for like a family.
Speaker 1 (40:45):
You have ambitious plans for twenty twenty six. Tell us
about them.
Speaker 8 (40:50):
We do. Our board of directors approved a plan that
I pitched about two months ago, so we already had
approval to build our fourth home starting in December, and
(41:11):
I pitched the concept of scaling our ministry so that
we could reach more children. So we have a plan
to build two additional homes in twenty twenty six, and
one of those is already funded. Sorry, the fourth house
and the fifth house are already funded. The sixth house
(41:32):
is the house that we're seeking funding on and that
house will be will start construction probably in May June
next year, that's when the rainy season is over, and
so that house would be built and opened probably in
(41:52):
November twenty twenty six, and that would be in an
area that we have not we have not operated in,
so this would be a new village and new area
where our partner has multiple church plans, and so we
will We're going to build two homes at the same
(42:15):
time in two different villages, and we think we can
get some economies of scale by doing that and get
the advantage of some time. So that is our plan
for twenty twenty six.
Speaker 1 (42:31):
Fifty five thousand dollars is the stated goal. And with
that money you're able to secure land and build and
put modest furnishings in these homes. For that sum of
money is that.
Speaker 8 (42:43):
Right, that's correct.
Speaker 1 (42:45):
Now where are we with home number six? We started
this effort a couple weeks into November, and where are
we sitting right now?
Speaker 8 (42:55):
Thanks to your listeners, we're sitting at a little over
forty three thousand, all right.
Speaker 1 (43:02):
So the goal between now and I've set the goal
at our final day for the for the season of
broadcasting for us is the seventeenth of December, so we
have thirteen broadcast days, including today. So if we can
raise one thousand dollars a day or just knock it
out in a few days, we've got just twelve thousand
(43:24):
left to reach our goal of fifty five thousand dollars?
Do I have the math?
Speaker 7 (43:27):
Right? You do?
Speaker 1 (43:31):
All right? Tell people the way to give and how
to navigate the website.
Speaker 8 (43:38):
So the easiest way to do it is to go
to our website www. Dot Orphanshade dot com and on
the on the homepage you'll see a donate button in
red on the right hand side on the homepage. You
just click that and then you choose the method that
(43:59):
you want to give. It's very simple.
Speaker 1 (44:02):
What is your favorite part of the website that tells
the story the best? You think when you go to
Orphanshade dot.
Speaker 8 (44:08):
Com so that there is a video on the homepage
that it's about two and a half minutes long. It's animated,
and we did it at pretty low cost, but it
basically tells the story of what we do and how
(44:29):
we do it and just gives the viewer an idea
of how we go about doing this and how we
are melded into the community where we operate.
Speaker 1 (44:43):
So the goal here is one little girl at a time,
to raise a generation, to change a nation. That is right, Jay,
thank you for all you and Stacey and Pastor Prince
are doing to help these girls and to help these communities,
these villages, and thanks for letting us be part of.
Speaker 7 (45:00):
It, and thank you for.
Speaker 8 (45:04):
Making this all happen.
Speaker 1 (45:06):
Well, we know who to trust with all that and
who to thank for all that. Yep, Jay, thank you.
I pray favor over you and Stacey and safe travels.
Speaker 5 (45:14):
Thank you, Thank you very much.
Speaker 1 (45:16):
Jay Sherlow with us from orphanshad orphanshade dot com. You
heard it. We're twelve thousand away. That's it. We started
at zero. We're at forty three thousand dollars. Praise Jesus.
So if you can help take a bite out of that.
If you're a business that's been blessed, orphanshade dot com
(45:39):
build a house in the dropdown menu, select the amount
you want to give and market to House number six.
Twenty eight minutes past the hour, It's.
Speaker 3 (45:54):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott, sipping on my broat coat,
keeping the money maker well oiled.
Speaker 1 (46:12):
And so osay over there in Studio one A. I
am here in Studio one B. It is the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. You know, my challenge when I
have a bit of a cold is to not push
my voice. I have an insane amount of recording to
do in the next two and a half weeks and
can't do it today. I just I will have nothing
(46:33):
in the tank for the rest of the week. So
I've got it. I'm gonna have to really manage this.
But my go to throat coat is keeping me looped up.
And that's good. Doctor Joe moments away an amazing I mean,
a candidate running for office that it's just gonna warm
(46:57):
your heart. I'll just put it that way. It just will.
We'll get to that as well. Irischafel next hour talk
about FSU football big stories in the press box. I
want you to just think about this for a second.
Zorn Mam. Donnie wins the election, he's the mayor. Mayor elect,
(47:18):
take office thirty first or January first, whatever, whatever. I'm
not sure what Trump was thinking saying what he was
saying about him. I'm not into that. Oh, he's just
you know, he's keeping him close whatever. He's the president
of the United States. He has no need to spend
time with a Marxist socialist comedy. He just doesn't, you know,
(47:43):
I want him to do well. No, I don't. I
want him to fail at everything he does. It's like
what Limbaugh said about Obama. No, I want him to fail.
His stated goals. They're bad for this country, they're bad
for the big Apple. But he gets elected and then
(48:04):
he drops this out at Thanksgiving.
Speaker 6 (48:06):
It might be November. But I'm still saying yes to
your donations. So head to Transition twenty twenty five dot
com pitching whatever you can. Let's win a city that
everyone can afford.
Speaker 1 (48:19):
I'm just stunned, but I'm still saying yes to your donations.
What for what You're gonna snap your fingers? Aren't you
going to tax the wealthy or are you? Don't they
have to pay their fair share? Or do they? Now?
(48:44):
There are so many problems come in New York's way,
not the least of which is the exodus, which which
began when he started dominating the polls. New Yorkers voted
for this. You get everything you deserve. Whatever comes your way,
(49:04):
you deserve it. I couldn't be happier for you. President
Trump announced that anything that Biden signed via auto pen
is revoked unless they can document that he was absolutely
cognitively aware of what was gonna be handled by the
(49:27):
auto pen. And I have this image of this magical
pen floating in the air and just going citing his name.
Anything is terminated and of no further force or effect.
(49:48):
That's gonna be interesting. And lastly, tattoos. You know what,
Joe is not called in yet. I don't know if
he's is tied up. So I'll save this last story
for the next segment just in case, because it does
relate to healthy expectations. Forty minutes past the hour.
Speaker 3 (50:10):
Enjoy It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (50:38):
All Right, I've spent so much time listening to doctor Joe,
Doctor David hearts. Dr Matthew Zadaman.
Speaker 2 (50:49):
I'm ready.
Speaker 1 (50:51):
I'm ready to carry the torch. Actually, the third of
the big stories in the press box today, study links
tattoos to twenty nine percent increased risk of cutaneous melanoma.
You're like, what's that? Only the most aggressive form of
(51:13):
skin cancer that there is twenty nine percent greater risk
to those who have tats. Now, yes, I'm not a
I'm not a big fan of them. I recognize that
for many of you, the deed is done. You've got them,
(51:35):
and reversing those tattoos is not an easy thing, if
it's even really possible. I mean, I don't know. I
I know that they there are services that advertise for that.
But here's why I'm bringing it up. It's not to aha.
You know, I don't like them. I've you know, I
(51:59):
understand and the reasons why some do them to honor
somebody that they love that is very close to them
and maybe died, or maybe you know, they served with
somebody in the war or in a war, and I
get that. I get it. I still wouldn't do it.
I understand it. I know that when I see old
(52:21):
people with tattoos, it is unbecoming. Look, we're getting old,
we're struggling to begin with. But then you start putting
a tattoo that used to look kind of cool maybe
in your mind, and all of a sudden, your skin's
kind of you know, it's what is that? Anyway? You
know that's what happened? What is that? Because you can't
(52:44):
tell because you're older. It's it's kind of like wrinkled,
and so your tattoo is accordioned on you, and it's
it's just I just have not seen anybody that is
old that has two tattoos that still look impressive. If
(53:06):
that's what you think, you know a tattoo is. But
I mean I can look at a tattoo and go, oh,
I know what that is, But when you see it
on old people, you like if But let's set all
that aside. Set my personal taste to the side, because
(53:26):
I accept that people don't have to share my taste.
That's fine. Here's my reason for bringing this up. If
you've got tattoos, make sure you see your dermatologist regularly,
and make sure you ask your dermatologist what should I
(53:48):
look for, because that particular type of melanoma that is
the most aggressive kind of skin cancer spreads to the
rest of your body, but if you catch it early,
it can be treated. So this is not that much
(54:10):
different than breast cancer. You know they talk about ladies.
Get your mammograms done, do self examinations routinely. This is
the same thing. Check your skin, check the areas of
your tattoos. One of the things that makes it troubling
is that tattoos make anomalies in the skin harder to see.
(54:37):
So I'm begging of you, if you're tatted up, see
your dermatologists. See a dermatologists, explain your concerns and say
what do I need to look for as I just
check my own skin from time to time. You're welcome. Okay.
I'm not laughing at you because you got tattoos. I
(54:58):
wish you hadn't done it, but you did it. But
I am saying this can save your life. Literally forty
six minutes past the.
Speaker 4 (55:06):
Hour, this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (55:27):
I'll go ahead and say it. When it comes to
Christmas shopping kind of a pretty big deal. I have
I have compiled for you a list of places for
you to consider shopping. Okay, there's always local brick and mortar,
(55:54):
and I advise you to support brick and mortar wherever
you live across the Fruit plane, whenever possible. But I
also understand that sometimes the perfect gift is not available,
and so in either of those scenarios, I'm here to help.
(56:16):
And that's what I'm gonna do. Every day between now
and the final show on the seventeenth, I'm going to
give you some shopping advice. Some days I'll take a
little more time than others. I'll give you lists of
things to buy for the guy that you don't know
what to buy. I got you because I'm a guy,
(56:41):
and I'll throw you some bones. I will strategize with
you as you get closer to the deadline. Oh boy,
I only have two weeks left. What do I do?
I got you, I got you.
Speaker 2 (56:56):
Just it's all good.
Speaker 1 (57:00):
So we've got some shopping stuff coming up, but don't
let that get in the way of helping out with
Orphan Shade. If you had not heard, we are at
forty three thousand dollars, I we were four thousand short.
When we left on Tuesday, we were thirty six thousand dollars,
(57:20):
and I was like, well, I don't know what's going
to happen totose. Hey, we're not on the air. I
don't know what's going to happen. We're going to try
our best. So I put a little recorded and announcement
that ran on our stations that said, hey give doorphan shade,
you know, Operation Thanksgiving, and Wow. All of a sudden,
(57:41):
I get a note from Jay Shirlow and he's like,
we're a forty three and I was.
Speaker 2 (57:44):
Like, what what?
Speaker 1 (57:48):
So we only have twelve thousand to rais just say
it twelve thousand. There might be somebody out there you
want to just knock the whole thing out done. You
want to tax right off. At the end of the year,
you're gonna you're gonna stroke a check for twelve grand.
You're gonna go online. You're gonna give the orphan shade
twelve grand. Some of you might be saying, you know
(58:08):
what I got twenty bucks? Man, Will that twenty dollars
be blessed? You'll be blessed? You will. I don't. I
don't know if you'll get more money. What I know
is you'll be blessed. Sometimes that's missing a car wreck.
Sometimes it's that dishwasher last in another year. That washing
(58:29):
machine going a little more, could be that mechanic finding
Oh no, it's not the engine, it's this and it'll
only cost you a couple hundred bucks. I mean, you
know what I mean, there's all kinds of ways. God
blesses us. So just open your heart up and do
what you can. Orphanshade dot com. All right, do you
remember the sham Wow guy? You remember ShamWow? What you
(58:53):
remember his name? Shamwell? The dude? Then slow me. That's
the guy wearing the microphone with the headset and holding
up the sham Wow. He's running for Congress in Texas.
(59:18):
He is under the name Offer Vince sham Wow shlow me.
So that's the filing. He's doing it as a tribute
to Charlie Kirk, who he called the original wokebuster. He's
had his moments now, Vince has had some time in
the news over the years. But he's going to go
(59:39):
for it. I mean, how do you could you imagine
the debate stage if he pulls out the sham Wow?
Come on, come on, that would be so epically fun. Ah, yes,
all right, we come back. Irischafelle will join us. He
is the managing editor at war chan dot It's our
(01:00:00):
final visit of the season as we talk a little
FSU football. Next on the Morning Show with Preston Scott,
(01:00:24):
we need to listen to something else, some Christmas cheer.
It's the third hour of the Morning Show with Preston
Scott and I'm joined by the managing editor at warchan
dot com. I'm just not feeling the fight song right now. Ira,
How you doing, I'm good.
Speaker 7 (01:00:41):
I can't decide if I want to say by humbug
or be happy that the season's over. I'm not sure.
Speaker 1 (01:00:46):
Well, I was gonna ask you. I caught you and
Corey in your postgame post mortem. I guess is what
we might best refer to that as. So now it's
a few days later, Florida State got embarrassed by three
and eight team that became foreign eight at your expense.
What are you thinking right now as you look back
on the season and that game Saturday night in Gainesville?
Speaker 7 (01:01:09):
Yeah, I mean that game was really to me depressing
from a standpoint of just competing. You know, I thought
some guys competed on offense. I didn't think Florida State's
defense showed up. And part of that is you know,
physically not being good enough. You know, I think Florida,
you know, Florida should have been a lot better than
they were supposed to than they are. You know, early
(01:01:30):
this season, you know, they look like a team that
could compete with with just about anybody. They've got a
very good line of scrimmage. But they haven't played well
all year. Their quarterback has been pressured into making bad decisions.
He came in with thirteen touchdowns and thirteen interceptions. There's
been calls for him to be benched for a freshman,
you know, he's had a really bad year. You never
got any pressure on him. And then their running back
is really good and they're off asive line just ran
(01:01:53):
it down your throats the entire game, and Florida State's
defense just didn't show up. So that that's depressing because
you know, you did get a the confidence in some
degree in Mike Norvel last week where there's you know
that he's coming back next season. You would like to
have seen some response to the team. Instead, they kind
of defensively went in the tank and it's just a
(01:02:13):
terrible way to end the season. You know, it was
a bad season anyway, but that was about the worst way,
in my opinion, you could have ended the season.
Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
Help me reconcile. This first game of the season, they
were physically dominant against Alabama, and everybody who says, well,
that was Alabama's first game, well, it was Florida State's
first game too, and they were better in every phase
of the game than the team that is going to
play for the SEC title this Saturday against Georgia. What happened?
(01:02:45):
I mean, I don't think we lost a bunch of
players to injury, So what in the world has gone south?
Speaker 7 (01:02:53):
Yeah? No, I mean the more evidence you got as
the season went on, you started to think that, Okay,
you have to look at the fact that Alabama, Yeah,
it's the same team that is there now, but they
didn't play the way they're playing now. And I think
that they had spent all off season hearing about Florida
State's two and ten team and watching video of that,
and I think Florida State did a good job. You
had a new coordinator on both sides of the ball,
(01:03:14):
throwing some things at them that they hadn't seen before,
and Florida State made plays. You know, early in the game,
Squirrel White lays out makes a beautiful catch from Tommy Castalana's.
You know, they just made plays. They played with confidence,
and Alabama just didn't before they realized they weren't for
a fight, it was too late. And you know, I
think if they played again ten times, I'm not sure
Florida State beats them more than once. Maybe so it
(01:03:36):
was just their night. But but I think what's happened
over the year is this team just lost confidence. They
stopped making those plays other than Due Robinson and a
couple guys here and there, you know, in the last
game of Lawayne mccoyt receiver, But for the most part,
you've just seen guys not make plays, not catch wide
up and passes, not pickoff interceptions that are there to
be made, not finished sacks that are there to be made. Really,
(01:03:59):
it just seemed like a team that kind of lost
its way from a confidence and just mentality standpoint.
Speaker 1 (01:04:04):
What are you hearing is next?
Speaker 7 (01:04:10):
Well, I mean, I think there's two different things going on.
One is what Florida State plans to do in terms
of you know, from the front office. I think those
are the big structural changes that the administration's pushing Mike
Norvel to make. I think that likely means a new
general manager position with somebody who's got more autonomy or
at least more input into what the roster is going
(01:04:30):
to look like to help Mike Norvel put together a
better roster, and that process is ongoing. I don't know
that we're going to get a quick solution on that.
I think that's something they're working on, but I don't
know if it's going to impact you know, like signing
day is Wednesday. I don't think it's going to have
an impact on that. And then the transfer portal opens
in a couple of weeks, in a few weeks, and
I'm not sure that's going to be in place for that.
(01:04:50):
We'll see. But the other thing we have to be
keep keeping an eye on as the coaching staff and
what changes either Mike Norvell wants to make and also
what coaches end up leaving. And there's a lot of
questions inside the program about whether or not Gus Malsan's
going to be back for another season, Tony White, whether
he'll be back for another season as defensive coordinator, and
then if those change, if there's any changes there, what
(01:05:12):
does that do to the rest of the staff, Because
they each brought in assistant coaches with them, So those
two different things going on. One I think Florida State's
really pushing and the other one they may have to
react to what happens.
Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
Joining me on the program is Irishafelle, Managing editor at
warchan dot com. More to come, one more segment here
on the Morning Show with President's final segment of the
season with Irish Chafell from warchan dot Com. We'll talk
back with talk with Ira after the new year and
(01:05:47):
we start seeing what's going to happen within the football program. Ira,
Not to put you on the spot, but you know,
I've argued to people that as much as i hate
what's happened on defense, and I'm not sold to Tommy
Castellanos really as a quarterback that's going to get you
over the hump. I just I think that's why the
(01:06:07):
offense didn't travel very well away from home. I just
don't think he's physically gifted enough to play that position
consistently well. And that's, you know, I think that that's
the guy you got to have on the road. That
being said, do you think that would you bring Gus
and Tony White back?
Speaker 7 (01:06:27):
I would, man, I started feeling pretty good about Tony
White the last month, you know, after the pit game
mid season, I was, I was, I was not real
thrilled with that that change. But the last month they
started looking better. But then Saturday, they just didn't show
up at all. Yeah, I mean, I don't think I would.
I don't think I wouldn't say that Tony White's the
problem In terms of the defense. I do think they've
(01:06:49):
got to get better, especially upfront. So I wouldn't necessarily
push to make a change there. If he wants to
come back the GUS situation, to me, I don't. To me,
I'm not in love with what they're doing. And and
it was his choice to bring in Tommy Castalanos. That's
the quarterback that he wanted. I don't know if him
going back to being a coordinator is what he wants.
You know, he took this, made this move to get
(01:07:10):
out of his situation at UCF. I think there's a
possibility he might retire. You know, I wouldn't feel really
good about running that back on that side of the ball.
But then again, now you're do you go back, do
you hire a new offense coordinator, or do you go
back to Mike Norbel calling the plays. I actually wouldn't
have a problem with that. I thought he was a
good play caller. I don't blame twenty twenty four on
his play calling because they just had a terrible roster
(01:07:33):
and that's why you're making these changes to help the
front office. But you know, again, I'm not enamored by
the idea of bringing those guys back and running it back.
At the same time, anytime you make changes, you kind
of bring a lot more risk into the equation.
Speaker 1 (01:07:46):
Again, but at the same time, if you look at
them offensively, and you know, the broadcast showed it the
growth offensively that the team put up numbers, they just
couldn't score touchdowns.
Speaker 7 (01:07:59):
Yeah, no question. I mean it definitely put up numbers.
I also would say, again, the roster is a whole
lot better. You know this, you know, And that's the
thing I would just encourage people to think about when
they say, Okay, Mike Norvelt was the coordinator in twenty
twenty four, you saw what it looked like. Gus Malzan
was the coordinator in twenty twenty five, and you made
all this improvement. It's a completely different roster. They had
a whole new offensive line. They had a whole new
you know, new quarterback, new receivers, you know, the whole team,
(01:08:21):
The whole offense was different. And yeah, to me, where
I got frustrated with Gus malzan it wasn't between the twenties.
It was in those crucial situations, the third ones, the
fourth and ones, the red zone. I mean, they just
were terrible in the red zone. And you know again
that there's a reason you were able to move the
ball the length of the field, but you can't move
it in the red zone. And to me, that goes
back to play calling.
Speaker 1 (01:08:42):
Okay, lastly, what are your thoughts on where FSU goes
looking if they decide to bring in a quarterback or
do they just stay with the guys that are behind
Tommy Castellano's namely Kevin Sperry.
Speaker 7 (01:08:59):
You know, I really wish and I asked my Norvelle
about this a month ago. You know, I just when
this season clearly wasn't gonna be what they hoped it
was going to be. You're out of contention for the
ACC and everything else. You need to look at these
young quarterbacks, particularly Kevin Sperry, and see what he is,
see what he looks like in game action. The only
really chance he got was that Stanford game where they're
down on the road and it was just kind of
(01:09:19):
an emergency situation. And you know, they've fe like they
had to stick with Tommy because he gave him the
best chance to win. But my point was, if you
plan to come back in twenty twenty six, Mike Norvel
hoped to and he is, it would have been nice
to know what Kevin Sperry is to how how hard
you have to go after a transfer quarterback. I think
they're gonna have to go hard after a transfer quarterback.
I just think that there's too much riding on this
(01:09:40):
next season. They can't have a third straight terrible season.
But it would be nice to know. But hey, maybe
Kevin Sperry is the guy. They were really excited about
him in the spring. They talk about his future all
the time, but at this point, I don't know how
you could ride with him because he just hasn't done
it in a game yet.
Speaker 1 (01:09:58):
And then that circles right back to though it is
like chicken in the egg. That circles back to who's
going to be your offensive coordinator?
Speaker 7 (01:10:05):
No question? And that's gonna yeah whoever you're that has
to be resolved first, and that person's gonna have a say.
And then the other part of it that's going to
be interesting is if you do bring in a new
general manager and that person starts pretty soon and you
have a head coach who's used to having control over
the roster, and then you bring in a new offensive
coordinator or if it's Gus whoever, but who's gonna make
that decision of who that quarterback is going to be?
(01:10:27):
And again, that decision is going to go a long
way determining you know what kind of season.
Speaker 1 (01:10:31):
You have, Iraight, you're a champ. Thanks so much for
making time for us all season long. And we'll circle
back after the first of the year. Thank you, sir,
Thank you, Preston.
Speaker 7 (01:10:40):
Merry Christmas, Happy Allidays.
Speaker 1 (01:10:41):
Thank you. Iris Chafell, Managing editor, warchant dot com. Subscribe
I subscribe that, Yeah, I subscribe. I get their their stuff.
I think they do a great job war chant dot com.
(01:11:11):
So did you do any shopping on Black Friday? Did
you get out at all? Did you do any shopping
on Black Friday? Did you get out on No, not
at all, stay at home. But I did order a Bible.
Okay for Black Friday for yourself? Yes, okay, what'd you get?
I got a color coded Bible?
Speaker 5 (01:11:29):
Nice it comes pre h Yeah, yeah, I guess they
call it a rainbow Bible.
Speaker 1 (01:11:33):
I know it well, the old school rainbow, the one
that got invented. A good one. Yeah, exactly. All right, sweet,
We've got most of our shopping done, and we were
late this year. We we just we we're doing something
that we try to mix things up every now and
then with all the kids in the littles and uh
(01:11:54):
and and not be too predictable. But but I have
I have a gift for gifts on a house to
put it. I love finding stuff. I pay attention and
so consider these segments shopping one on one for some
(01:12:16):
of you that struggle. Now, others you got game. I'm
gonna tip my cap to you, but some of you. First,
you need to pay better attention to the people you
buy gifts for. If they're on your gift list, they
should be on your radar all year long. You should
(01:12:37):
be paying attention to little things they say, little acknowledgments.
It's like, oh man, that's that is boy, I need
one of those. And you know they're never buying it
for themselves, but they really like it. And I bounce around.
There are sometimes that I buy because I know someone
needs something. There's other times I buy because I know
(01:13:01):
they would really enjoy something, but they'd never buy it
for themselves, but they would really enjoy it. And so
I weigh and measure and make the best decisions. But
you know I've got For example, I've got a list
here best gift ideas for men who claim they want nothing.
I got, I got that one. Trust me. Everybody enjoys
(01:13:26):
getting a little gift. Everybody, Okay, except maybe my dad.
My dad was like the worst to buy for. He
was just the worst. Loved to give, hated to receive.
And honestly, that was a little bit of a of
a you know, a walk with Jesus problem for him.
(01:13:48):
You know, didn't didn't enjoy humbling himself to receive a gift.
It's like, come on, now, don't rob other people of
a blessing, right, don't be that guy that said I'm
gonna give you thirteen sites to shop one a day. Today.
(01:14:12):
It does happen to be a client of mine, but
I recognize I have listeners all over the country, and
you're not gonna walk into the store brick and mortar.
You might, you're just some of you are. If you're smart,
you're gonna walk into Kevin's, whether it's in Tallassie or Thomasville.
(01:14:34):
But what you probably don't know is that they have
one of the most popular best catalogs ever, Kevinscatalogs dot Com.
That's that's number one on my list. It is loaded
(01:14:56):
with all kinds of things, and I mean literally, you're
gonna find something for every single person on your shopping list.
So just remember Kevin's Catalog dot Com. You've got plenty
of time to order, have it shipped to you or
(01:15:18):
sent to wherever you need it to go. But I
can't recommend the selection and the quality that you're gonna get,
all right, you just I can't recommend it enough. It's
just and it's why I've been proudly associated with Kevin's
for years fifteen plus years now. Love working with Kevin's
(01:15:45):
and so Kevin's Catalog dot Com is my first suggestion
to you. If you're struggling, remember I'm gonna have something
for you every single day. Okay, some days I'll take
a little more time than others. This one short, little
sweet segment. Here we come back. We got the big
stories in the press box and a question will ask,
(01:16:05):
how do they know? You know who they are, don't
you them?
Speaker 3 (01:16:20):
Morning Drive version of an audio magazine and keeping you
company as you prepare for your day.
Speaker 4 (01:16:26):
It's the Morning Show with President Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:16:40):
Don't do it, I'll let your kids get tatted, don't
encourage it. And if you've got tattoos, listen up, because
I'm not kidding when I say this. What I'm about
to share could save your life. Okay, this isn't about
(01:17:04):
my personal preference when it comes to tattoos, nothing to
do with it. What it has to do with is
that there is a nearly thirty percent, it's twenty nine
percent greater risk of those who have tattoos getting cutaneous melanoma,
(01:17:24):
which is the most aggressive skin cancer that there is.
It's the kind that spreads to your entire body and
kills people. You know, I've always wondered when you hear
someone died of skin cancer, I'm thinking to myself, how
does that happen? It's that form of cancer. Yeah, uh,
does one small tattoo count? Doesn't matter? Oh yeah, yeah.
(01:17:51):
The study showed. It's a study from Europe study published
in the the European Journal of Epidemiology published November twenty
fourth last week, that the most aggressive form of skin cancer,
(01:18:14):
which can spread to other parts of the body if
not detected and treated early. They looked at twenty eight
hundred and eighty Swedish people diagnosed with that type of
cancer that form of melanoma between the ages of twenty
and sixty and identified a twenty nine percent risk of
(01:18:36):
overall cutaneous melanoma among tattooed individuals. Tattoo size was found
to be unrelated to risk. Larger tattoos do not carry
a higher risk. It's having a tattoo, and if you
think about it, it makes some sense. You are injecting
(01:19:02):
permanent ink into the melanoma, into the skin. I you know,
there are there are all kinds of reasons why I personally,
(01:19:22):
it's just but it's personal I would not because of this, this, this,
and this. In the study, we did not find that
highly UV exposed tattooed individuals had a higher risk of
cutaneous melanoma than tattooed individuals with lower UV. So UV
had nothing to do with it. So there's something that
fundamentally happens when you inject your skin with this with
(01:19:45):
the inks and no not not well, I only go
to a high end tattoo parlor. It doesn't matter. So
my point in bringing this up is this, I understand
(01:20:06):
that for if you've got tattoos or a tattoo, you've
got it. I don't even know if reversing the tattoo
does anything to change this outcome. And obviously it's a
thirty percent greater chance. That may not be that big
a deal to you. Okay, that's fine, But my point
(01:20:30):
in bringing it up is check your skin routinely if
you have been tattooed. That's my point. It's it's not
like I said, I'm sincerely. I mean this, it's not
a thing that I find particularly attractive. But I'm not
(01:20:52):
married to you and I'm not dating you, and I'm
not you know. I mean, it's whatever, it's that's your choice.
But what matters to me is if you've done this
to yourself, check your skin, see a dermatologist. If you
get this type of cancer, it can be treated, but
(01:21:14):
you have to identify it really early. It is a
very aggressive form of cancer and So this is as
much when I said to you, this could save your life.
I mean, it spread the news because people that get
tattoos tend to know a lot of other people that
(01:21:35):
get tattoos. Just be advised and by all means, keep
your kids from getting them. If they want to get
them when they're adults, that's on them. But arm them
with the information, let them know. What's the point. I
don't get it. But again that's not for me to understand,
(01:21:56):
or that's on Everybody has their own choice and free
will on this. I'm just telling you, if you've been tattooed,
see a dermatologist and do it routinely check your skin.
Ask your dermatologist what are the symptoms of that type
of cancer? What should I be looking for? Because honestly,
(01:22:17):
do you really think you're gonna notice it on a
tattooed arm or leg or body part that's got ink?
I mean, are you going to notice a change in
your skin? I don't know. I don't think so, So
I would be asking how do I how do I
detect it? Be armed, be be aware? All right, that's
(01:22:38):
my point. Forty one minutes past that, Yeah, ho.
Speaker 4 (01:22:41):
Ho ho, it's the morning show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:22:54):
All right, came across this list. This time of year,
we gonna get lists, and we're gonna get them in
the first half of the first half of the month
of January. Lots of lists from the year twenty twenty five.
Data America's most used password list is out there. What's
(01:23:16):
the most common password? Admin followed by password, followed by
one two three, four, five six, followed by one two three, four, five, six, seven, eight,
followed by one two three, four, five, six, seven, eight nine,
(01:23:37):
followed by one two three four five followed by password
with a capital P, followed by one two three, four, five, six, seven,
eight nine one zero ten, Gmail one two three four five,
Gmail Dot one two three four five my hitting on
(01:24:00):
any of yours ABC one two three sounds like a
Jackson five song. Welcome one password one exclamation point, password
one lowercase one two three four five six seven one
(01:24:21):
one one one one one one one two three one
two three. Here's my here's now. This is what I
wrote down on this story. Ready, It's how my brain works.
(01:24:41):
How do they know? How do they whoever they are?
It's nord Pass and nord Stellar to cybersecurity companies How
do they know unless they're print unless they're taking people's
(01:25:03):
passwords and printing a list and accumulating a list, how
do they know? Question number two? Why would they reveal it?
Here's a cybersecurity company and its job is to help
(01:25:24):
maintain your privacy, and so they're tracking yours to make
a list, and then they're revealing they've just revealed the
twenty most common passwords for people all over the world.
Why their job is to not disclose that? Do you
(01:25:48):
see my point? I don't, And again I could be
missing the most obvious reason why they're doing this, to
humiliate people into putting harder passwords on their stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:26:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:26:04):
I mean, let's face it, it's a pain in the
butt to remember passwords to all of the different things
you need passwords for. It is do you trust password managers? Honestly?
Most of us do. Most of us rely on whoever
to auto fill our passwords, and it's to the point
where you don't remember because it auto fills, you don't
(01:26:27):
remember what they are. It's just like you don't remember
people's phone numbers anymore. Why you can just punch their
name in? How many phone numbers do you remember? One yours,
maybe a spouse, maybe a kid, maybe a work number
(01:26:52):
or two, fewer than ten. Would it be fair to
say that most of us know fewer than ten phone numbers? Yeah,
I mean it's crazy. So when it comes to passwords
like what are we going to remember? We don't use that. Actually,
(01:27:13):
we don't use that brain power anymore. We we take
the shortcuts. So that's a list. I just thought it
was interesting for the reasons I mentioned. Why would you
reveal it? And how do they know? Forty seven minutes
past the hour? Getting in the spirit?
Speaker 2 (01:27:30):
Aren't we?
Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
Well?
Speaker 7 (01:27:43):
We made it.
Speaker 1 (01:27:45):
I wasn't sure when I was waking up this morning
how I would do. I've hung in there a little
better than I anticipated. Yes, yes, it's good. We got
horrifying couple of weeks in front of me from a
recording perspective. So I'm gonna bag it today. I take
(01:28:06):
it to the house, run an airan or two, and
then take it home and we'll see how things come
out tomorrow. Is good? Yeah, friends, we are at last
count forty three thousand plus. We are less than twelve
(01:28:27):
thousand dollars away from meeting our goal of fifty five
thousand dollars for Orphan Shade to build a home for
children who are orphaned, not an orphanage, to cobble together
a new family with a set of parents and siblings
and create an adopted family a unit we help build well,
(01:28:52):
we build Home number three. We raised the money and
supported that home. We are tasked with trying to raise
the money to build home number six. That would be
just that would be something for you to cherish all
the rest of the days of your life that you
took part in that. So I'm just asking give what
(01:29:12):
you can Orphanshade dot com. Hit the donate button, build
a house and the drop down menu, choose your amount
and build House number six.
Speaker 3 (01:29:22):
In the comments brought to you by Barno Heating and Air,
It's the Morning Show one on WFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:29:31):
Big Stories in the press Box. Zoron Mom Donnie, just
a few weeks into being mayor elect Zoron Mom Donnie
had this to say.
Speaker 6 (01:29:43):
It might be November, but I'm still saying yes to
your donations. So I had to transition twenty twenty five
dot com pitching whatever you can, Let's win a city
that everyone can afford.
Speaker 1 (01:29:52):
Yeah, Yeah, let's you need to give me more money.
It may be November, but I'm still saying, yes, your donations.
What a guy. That's the new polished socialist for you.
We're going to watch, We're going to be making notes,
and we have a long memory. That was one big story.
(01:30:18):
Second big story Trump. Anything signed by Biden's auto pen
is hereby revoked. That'll get interesting. By the way, be
paying attention to what's going on in Venezuela. The president
is essentially offered the head of Venezuela's government, President Madua
(01:30:43):
away out, and he did not accept because he wanted
amnesty for any crimes he committed. I thought you didn't
commit any crimes, but he wants amnesty. Trump isn't offering it.
Nezuela is going to get very interesting. Keep your eyes
on that, tattoos. Just listen back to the show. Okay,
(01:31:05):
if you're tatted up, listen to the program tomorrow. US
Congress win Kat Camick mainly minutes more shopping. Help have
an awesome day.