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April 19, 2025 51 mins
In today's episode, the Talon guys acknowledge the tragedy that happened on FSU's campus this week, but attempt to still focus on the things that make the show great and that is wholesome stories about hunting, fishing, farming, and spending time outdoors.

Thanks, as always, to Captain Paul Tyre for joining the show. If you’re interested in going fishing with Paul, visit his Facebook page.  

Check out our archive of podcasts here: https://ihr.fm/36mzYjf.  

Follow the Talon Training Group and Range on Facebook @TalonRange.

Listen live to the Talon Outdoors Show from 10-11 a.m. ET on 100.7 WFLA!
WFLA Tallahassee Live stream: https://ihr.fm/3huZWYe 
Follow WFLA Tallahassee on Twitter @WFLAFM and like us on Facebook at @wflafm.  
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
And welcome to the Town Outdoor Show.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
I'm Charlie, and I'm J d oh Ford, Captain Voltaire,
and I'm Grant.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
Yeah, a little more somber tone today. We are sitting
in a studio recording on Wednesday, Thursday, Just Thursday, Okay,
show shine, My week's been going.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
On Thursday.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
We have an event that if you're listening to this
on Saturday, went on yesterday. I know that's confusing, but the.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Day before yesterday today, No.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
No, no, the event, no listen hear me out the
day yesterday. If you're listening on Saturday, you and I
have a fundraiser in Marianna for the FFA from Marianna,
and we have been this week getting everything, so we
had to record early on Thursday. So the day before yesterday,
if you're listening on Saturday, the active shooter situation at

(00:59):
or the active murder situation on the mass murder situation
and whatever that ends up checking out to be at
FSU is ongoing as we are sitting here recording. They
are still We've got little to no information on this. Obviously,
we have all kinds of sources in the community, but
they're all too busy to talk to us right now.

(01:21):
So I could call twenty different cops and get more information,
but they're all busy, not gonna bother, and not gonna bother.
I'm gonna let them do their thing. And as of
right now, all we can say is that the same old, same,
our hearts and prayers, and we're praying for everybody involved.
None that's gonna make a difference. Right now. There are

(01:42):
some people probably in bad shape. There's a bunch of
mess going on. All I know is that whoever pulled
the trigger and shot innocent people, I hope that our
friends in law enforcement find them and if it's my choice,
if it is up to me, they'd get shot. It's
the only downside of that is that we wouldn't know
why they did what they did. Something's going on. It
ain't good. And Fred, you asked a minute ago, ain't

(02:05):
you glad you're not on the white team? No more?

Speaker 3 (02:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (02:07):
I did, and I'm and JD and I's response is
we'd be there right now and it'd be up. If
it was up to me, I'd be clearing buildings right
now looking for that person. But that's not my career
in this town anymore.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
So it is extremely difficult, and I have I've been
retired for over eleven years.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
I have zero.

Speaker 4 (02:31):
Desire to go back to being a police officer or
anything else. But it's difficult. It was very difficult when
this report started coming in. I really wanted to grab
my stuff and go to campus to help them, but
we'd be we'd be the person that got shot at.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
We can't do that anymore.

Speaker 4 (02:51):
But but the desire is still there. So, yeah, Fred,
any good cop is gonna want to be in the
middle of it.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
I was pulling out of my office to go to
lunch by the time it happened, And yeah, I started
to have that direction myself.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
But but what you're gonna do. And the thing is,
there's there's a difference in the protector class of people,
the people with a protector mindset, the people who want
to make a difference. The problem is is this happened
on a campus where you're not allowed to You cannot
have a fire on campus except in your vehicle, and
you know and that. Now the dangerous part is is
if you are an armed civilian and you are trying

(03:24):
to help out, there's a good chance you're going to
get shot because if you're running around with a gun
in your hand.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
They're looking for a guy with a gun in their head,
for a guy with a gun.

Speaker 3 (03:32):
You did see some of the footage with students coming
out with their hands up, and there's a reason for that.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
Well, when we do active shooter training, we stress when
law enforcement responds, you keep your hands up. You don't
do not have belongings in your hands. You keep your
palms palms out and your finger spread so that people
don't confuse that anything. You have a cell phone in
your hand. There are people walking around videotape and stuff
and those are those are people with a dark object

(03:59):
in their hands. You got to be careful when you
turn around. You could get shot by well meaning law
enforcement officers who and the thing is is under critical
incident stress. One of the things that happens to us
is is auditory exclusion. We don't hear things that we
would normally hear. We don't see things. That's that's tunnel vision,
and we experience these things psychological, physiologically. These things happen

(04:22):
under stress. And the problem with that is is that
you might not hear an officer yelling that you put
it down, put it down, put it down. So you
need to be you need to have considered this ahead
of time. And that is that in an actor shooter situation,
once the danger has passed and you were running away
or you were running away from the threat, leave your crap.
Nobody wants your stuff. You know, you had a backpack

(04:44):
on or something that's one thing, or a purse over
your shoulder, but your hands need to be visible or
you could inadvertently get shot. I means, and people don't
consider the fact that the ones the law enforcement officers
responding to the scene have tunnel vision auditory exclusion.

Speaker 4 (04:58):
They have you know, heart's go one hundred and fifty
beats a minute or more, whether they're sitting in the
car or running. It's it's it's the whole bunch of
stuff going on physiologically to everybody involved in this.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
And so yeah, it is very difficult to respond to
these things and be able to go back and remember
because you have critical inns in the amnesia and you
forget in short term what happened. I mean, your memories
may be reforming correctly or incorrectly days later, I mean
your recollection of a critical list and at Fred, your
defense attorney, you've probably defended people who were involved in
things and their story changes and a lot of it.

Speaker 3 (05:32):
I went to one of these we have to do training.
You have to have so many hours every three years,
you have to report them in. We have to go
to these seminars. Went to an eye witness seminar and
they show the studies where you have you know, you
line a scene up and you get six people and
they all come out with a different. Eyewitness testimony is
the most unreliable testimony out there just for that reason.

Speaker 4 (05:55):
Well, and that's not even in the stressful environment, right,
that's the law. You're sitting around a resort somewhere, to
conference room or whatever.

Speaker 3 (06:01):
But I mean what they've done is they've put people
in a stressful situation. They'll say, all right, you know,
come back to tell me ten things you saw, and
some people are listing stuff that wasn't even there.

Speaker 4 (06:12):
Yeah it happens, and yeah, you know with that sometimes
you don't remember the chicken.

Speaker 3 (06:17):
Yeah you don't. Yeah, I remember that. That's why i'd
wear chicken suit of court. But that is uh, I mean,
that's one of the things when you cross examine a
witness because a lot of times the state they don't
have eyewitness tes me. That's what's been so revolutionary about
body cams with law enforcement because they have they have

(06:43):
kept more cases they have body camps have settled more
cases than anything else that I've ever seen in thirty
two years practice in criminal.

Speaker 4 (06:52):
Law, which is another reason why some of the anti
law enforcement groups around the country don't like them. Correct,
because they can create their own narrative if they don't
have the video.

Speaker 2 (07:03):
Well, we all like them. We're all for them.

Speaker 4 (07:06):
Because of because it keeps somebody with a with an
ulterior motive from creating their own narrative.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
That's what it boils down.

Speaker 3 (07:12):
Yeah, I like them. I Mean one of the biggest
cases I had in my career I might not have
had had it not been for a body cam that
caught everything. And that was law enforcement mis conduct, you know,
And that happens too. Sure, so that if you're a
good cop, you got no reason to fear a body cam.

(07:34):
That's your best friend.

Speaker 5 (07:35):
Yeah, definitely, that'd be your best friend.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
Sure, And we've seen just in the last year body
cams that have cleared what otherwise would have been a
controversial race war, all kinds of stuff, and the cop
was clearly in the right when he made the shoot.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
I see these people online that are like police, the
police and all that junk. It's out there, and I'll
be honest with you, these are civilians, activists, but civilians
who are videotaping law enforcement of life, and so they
publish the stuff that is most damning to law enforcement.

Speaker 4 (08:13):
They usually edited and trimmed and taken out of context.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Well, taken out of context a lot. And also it
shows a lot of cops that don't know how to
talk to people, and cops that are not educated in
the law, that don't understand case law, don't understand what
the limits of their authority is. I mean, it does
point out a lot of flaws in the law enforcement community.
But like any other profession, if you hire a builder,
there are good builders and bad builders. There are people

(08:37):
to build you a house that will withstand wins ten
times what it's rated to, and then there's some that
you know you get you go do a post construction
inspection before you get a certificate documency, and the whole
place is about to fall apart. Yeah, I mean, it's crazy.
And doctor is the same thing. There are doctors that
I would trust to do anything mean doctors that don't

(08:58):
need to be touching me. And it's the same thing
law enforcement. We're not perfect and certainly need improvement, but
you have people go out there and they the video
of this stuff. I was always a fan of cameras
on law enforcement politics for it, I pulled for it.
I hated it. I would not have wanted it earlier
in my career, but now times changed. But everybody wasn't

(09:20):
carrying a camera in their hands either, And I remember
all the false accusations made against my staff, people that
I supervised, and now I just wanted a camera view
because I trusted, you know, the guy that worked for me.
I knew he wasn't a lie to any but I
knew the civilian probably had a you know. So it
goes both it cuts both ways. I'm sure there's gonna
be a couple lot of footage come out about this

(09:42):
incident in the FSU, and we're gonna learn an awful lot. Unfortunately,
right now, we don't know, and I think that's what
it'll be.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
Weeks.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
We're hungry and this it'll likely be weeks.

Speaker 3 (09:53):
Whatever it is, don't say now, We'll.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
Be right back. Have you been diagnosed with a herniated
disc or arthritis in your back or neck. Doctor Joseph Miller,
d C at the Tallahassee Spine Center may have a
druglest and non surgical solution waiting for you. Called doctor
Joseph Miller at eight five O five eight oh fifty
two fifty two set up an appointment today. Hi's Charlie
at Tallon JD. And I are proud to be sponsored

(10:17):
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(10:37):
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we're back. What everything going on FSU. I did want
to and this is gonna be a mixed blessing and

(11:03):
a terrible time to do this, But you know, Jason
trump Bauer got promoted Chief of Police FSU.

Speaker 2 (11:10):
He had been interroom, but he got it the permanently.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
Yeah, and so he got made the f SU police
chief on April seventh, and today is ten days later.

Speaker 4 (11:22):
Yeah, I was his, I was his supervisor. I was
a supervisor of the FDU squad when he started working
at FSU.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
I was his. I was his boss once upon a time.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
So yeah, they have grown have ninety one sworn officers
now between Tallahassee and Panama City.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
And probably a couple down in uh Sarasota.

Speaker 1 (11:43):
Yeah, he's uh, he's he's a he's a good dude.
Before him, another friend of ours was was acting. And
before that another friend, the friend of ours was so
Justin Malloy was before Trump Bauer and Justin we On
Justin forever and the same situation, and then Terry Brown

(12:05):
was the chief before that. She and I got hired
the same day at f SU PD, and the it's yeah,
it's that's our home. That's where we you know, we were.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
We didn't have no active shooters back then. That wasn't
the thing.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
No, No, we had we had some craziness going back.
The end of the day, SU was not necessarily safe.
And the thing is is, at that time, our threat
wasn't from uh, an active shooter or something like that.
It was from the neighborhoods around FSU, which have now
been absorbed by all kinds of campus housing. I mean,

(12:42):
if you drive around FSU now, it's getting like some
of these other.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
Yeah, we were, we were.

Speaker 4 (12:46):
We were dealing back then with the crack epidemic in
the in Frenchtown being across the street.

Speaker 1 (12:51):
To go down at the hall and yeah and do
what now.

Speaker 3 (12:55):
Don't forget the streakers.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
Well, we didn't catch you, so, I mean, we didn't
know it was you. I did to have you wanted.

Speaker 4 (13:01):
I caught nineteen of them one night, in one one bunch,
all nineteen of them.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
You met me earlier.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
They'd been twenty I caught. I caught one that that
his fraternity dropped him off. He had to go knock
on the door of a sorority or fraternity or something
naked and then run and and then they left him,
and he was I saw him hiding behind a tree
around there by the vand building.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
And uh, oh, look up.

Speaker 1 (13:26):
I'm like I'll get on the PA and like, amen,
come here, and he takes off, running down towards Mike's
Beer barn and I'm like, that's the wrong way, ain't
if Attorney's down that way? And so I drive around.
I called out on the radio, I said.

Speaker 3 (13:39):
I ran into Frenchtown naked.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
Well, he was heading toward Mike's Beer Born from FSU campus.
He was running down uh what Street, Copeland Street towards
Tennessee Street and took a left at the and went
down to running down the sidewalk. And I'm like, well,
I'm not gonna get out and chase some nicked dude.
But I took that crown victy and I was driving,
and I drove down the sidewalk, in along the wrong

(14:02):
way in traffic, turned on the blue lights, and I'm caught.
Of course, I call out, I'm in foot pursuit, and
I forgot my idea number back It's like fifty four
whatever it was at the time, and I'm like, dispatch them.
I'm in I'm in foot pursuit with a nicked guy
and we're heading in this direction at this location. He
rounded behind the target copy and tried to run up

(14:22):
that hill back there. It was covered. I said, you
got a naked guy trying to climb a cudzoo hill.
That's almost straight up and down and and I just
of course got it. I got out, walked up there
and grabbed it my leg and say, hey, man, come
on down here. I said, I just needed I just
want to get you home. Well okay, I said, well,
which fraternity owns you? And he goes, what I said,

(14:45):
who puts you up to this? He goes, I can't say.
And I said, well, I got to take you somewhere.
Which fraternity would you like me to take you too?
That doesn't have any responsibility for you? And he told me.
And I drove down what was the one in the
in the curve by the oak tree that cars had
hit down south of the Pike house down there in
that Sigma Kappa whatever, Well, that's where it was. And
I went down there and walked up there to with

(15:06):
this dude and knocked on the door like they can
uh uh shuts the door on me, and I'm like, hey,
I need your fratorney president. Come to the door. And
he comes in and the cracks the door. Looks at me.
I said, hey man, thisn't belong to you, and he goes, uh.
I said, will you accept him?

Speaker 4 (15:27):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (15:28):
Man? He opened the door that dude halled because I
told a kid, I said just that, like you got
handcuffs on, and and he ran through the house and
they're all laughing, and you could hear him after they
set the door. Here, I'm laughing, but when the door
was open, I'm standing there in uniform. They were not laughing,
but you know it was. It was. Yeah, I'm surprised.

(15:48):
The what year did you start? Well, you would have
been prosecuting earlier in your career.

Speaker 3 (15:54):
I started prosecuting in ninety three.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
Okay, Well then that was about the time that this
happened in two.

Speaker 3 (16:01):
Okay, so possibly it could have come across my desk
the dad called, Uh sorry, dad, Yeah, sorry, you can't
take his cum call. Uh yeah, I mean I did
have some of those cases.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
Did you start prosecuting straight out?

Speaker 3 (16:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (16:18):
Okay? So all right, so you when did you finish
law school ninety three at FSU was somewhere else? Okay,
So you weren't here. You weren't here during the years
I was over there. You could have been. JD probably
gave you some business back.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
Now I had I think I had handled a couple
of his derise or some some traffic stuff. I just
remember Mike Rhodes, I prosecuted a lot of his cases.
Got to be good buddies with him.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
Well, Mike made a lot of arrest he did. He
made an awful lot of risks, most of them runner he's drinking.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
He did.

Speaker 1 (16:50):
He went around with the task for That's what they did,
went around there.

Speaker 3 (16:52):
And a lot of alcohols related stuff.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Well, we did a lot of judicial referrals back in
the day to the FSU court to where they would go.
And then if when you actually put handcuffs on somebody
and started taking them to the jail, they're sitting in
the back of the car you pull into. This was
one of the things that got me. And I'm pulling
into the jail and they're going, what are we doing
here exactly? And uh, and you going to the jail.

(17:18):
You just camps cop. You can't put me in jail.
This is a real jail. And I said, yeah, I'm
a real cop.

Speaker 4 (17:23):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
And when I was being interviewed by Larry Campbell, the
undershare for at the time at the Sheriff's office, and
he go said, why do you want to leave FSU?
And I said, well, let me tell you what people
say when I take them to jail. And I never
had anybody to ask me that again after I put
on a green uniform.

Speaker 3 (17:40):
Yeah, there was there was one that was I'm not
saying name. He fronted of mine over there and somebody
was the South Florida kids had come up go to
school and they call up the FSUPD want to wake
up call? And they did not take timera to that well.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
How many times you have to go unpload somebody's coffee
maker j D or turn somebody coffee maker off because
some professor forgot to turn the coffee maker off in
their office.

Speaker 2 (18:05):
You have to go to that well.

Speaker 4 (18:06):
They would try, and I never ever had a key
to their office. I don't know why, but my key
didn't work on their office.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
You didn't want to drink that coffee the next day?
If you made me go do it, well, I would.

Speaker 4 (18:16):
Just call them back and say, I don't know what's
going on, but this just key don't work. You might
have to get up and come out here yourself, or
we'll just call the fire department if it gets too bad.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
How many cars do you have to open with a slam?

Speaker 4 (18:26):
No telling, I was professional, I am a professional car breaker.
Enter I was I can get in it.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
I can.

Speaker 4 (18:33):
We used to the only person that was better than
me at slim gym in the car with Don Pearmore,
and he could look at one and make it open.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
But they would call me when they.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Were on different shifts. It's pretty good now that's.

Speaker 4 (18:43):
What everybody else is on my squad would call me
when they couldn't get into it with a slim gym.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
But it's always happened on rainy days, always because people
getting hurry to go to class and they jump out
of their car and they shut the door and then
they forget their key.

Speaker 2 (18:56):
My favorite part was you have to get them.

Speaker 3 (18:57):
You can't use one of those. I still figured out.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
Man, I it in that truck. You or so fast
that it would make it.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
You can? You can afford the lotsmath.

Speaker 4 (19:04):
Well, And here's the here's the crazy thing. You tell
them when you get We had to get a get
them to sign a waiver saying this may damage your locks.
We're not responsible. We're providing a service for you for
free to get you into your car. If we damage
your car a whole harmless here sign here and we
get those waivers signed. You You had them too, You

(19:26):
just didn't go to thet I forgot, but you would
tell them all this and like hey man, And there
were certain cars that you had, no Chevrolets that had
the slide locks. It wasn't a lock that popped up
and down. It was a horizontal lock. And you'd pull
them apart most of the time. But I could get in,
But you're gonna disengage that manual lock from the.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
I always did the passengers door if I could. If
I broke it, at least it was the passenger.

Speaker 4 (19:51):
Door invariably, even after you explained to them, I'm probably
gonna break your car doing this. Do you still want
me to do it?

Speaker 6 (19:56):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (19:56):
Yeah, yeah, sign here? They call up there. Yeah, I
need to pay for my lock.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
First one I got. The first one I ran into
that I could not get into.

Speaker 3 (20:05):
The wicked witch of the website.

Speaker 4 (20:08):
I am so chewed up right now with congestion from
being over at his place setting up that course on
Tuesday and everything's blooming and it got me so stopped up.

Speaker 3 (20:17):
Did he eat any of it?

Speaker 2 (20:18):
Or he was crasing?

Speaker 1 (20:20):
I was every time. I actually I actually went home
at night and I ate Greenbrier, which is the smiles,
and I ate passion flower vine for dinner, I sautage something. Yeah,
I was.

Speaker 4 (20:36):
I was coming to work this morning with all this congestion.
I told my wife, I said, I'm gonna singh Mayby
locked the door and that's pretty good. Yeah, well I
can't get that. I can't normally get there. I'm there today.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
Look at you.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
Yeah that was that's fake.

Speaker 6 (20:55):
I was.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
That's just I dropped about three octaves to wrong my guitar.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
You were just handling of stuff on the farm. There's
two dozen quail eggs.

Speaker 3 (21:06):
Yeah, well so tickle when I walked in the studio
and saw this right right, and they're my size for
Easter egg hunting.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
I bought some of the day. I couldn't get him
to peels, so I don't know, but I bought them
with regular eggs so little. It was a little long
for I think.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
I think you can just pour hot water on them
and they be getting to go.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
Like I fused everything. But those those are those are.

Speaker 2 (21:30):
Raw, eating them raw.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
I'm probably will eat some of them wrong, but I
think I'm on ball. Some have some devil quail eggs.
After I found them in the yard, after I color them.

Speaker 4 (21:40):
Got to get out there with your your wee knife
and your your wee little fingers and yelp, cut.

Speaker 3 (21:44):
Them things and I'll be wearing one of that.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
I could get an Easter bunny seat.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
Yeah, I ordered the one off of eBay that was
in that movie A Christmas Story or whatever that the.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
Kids terrifying Easter bunny.

Speaker 3 (21:53):
But yeah, the one with the kid shot his eye out.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
Yeah, oh the oh the old old one.

Speaker 3 (21:59):
Yeah. An I had to go upstairs and change into
the bunny suit on Christmas morning because his aunt got
it for it.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
The pajamas, yeah, I got the original one.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
I tried my best.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
Size for a twelve year old.

Speaker 3 (22:10):
It fits me fine.

Speaker 1 (22:11):
I tried my best to find you some leelo and
stitch pajamas. Oh cheese, and I just at all you
can find is pajama pants or a stitch comfleet like
pajama outfit where it's a costume. Just could not absolutely
could not find any. But I didn't check the kids
and the girls size, as I was only looking for men.

(22:31):
And maybe I was shopping in her own place for you.

Speaker 3 (22:33):
I got something to say about that. We'll go back.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
I beess you do. A lot of people had something
to say about that. We'll be back in just a minute.

Speaker 4 (22:47):
Is your back killing you from sitting at an uncomfortable
desk all day? Do you have pain radiating down your
leg or down the arm? Called doctor Joseph Miller, d C.
At the Tallahassee Spine Center and ask about spinal decompression
therapy at eight five zero five eight zero five to two,
five to two.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
Are you tired of that chainsaw that never starts when
you need it? Do you spend your whole weekend fighting
your old lawnmower? It doesn't have to be that way.
South Side Mower has been serving to Tallahassee in surrounding
areas for thirty nine years. They have a wide range
of hus Varna, Gravely and ex smart lawnmowers, still chainsaws, tremors,
edges and blowers, as well as generators, pressure washers and more.
If you need parts of service on any of your

(23:22):
outdoor power equipment or it's time to purchase new equipment,
stop by south Side Moors at eighteen eighty five South
in Roe Street, one mile south of the Capitol, or
visit the website Southside moor dot com. Then we're back.

(23:44):
Since this is a wiregrass segment, and folks in Tallahassee
don't here talk a little bit about Dothan. We've got
that guy. We just started building some rifles and stuff
out there, and.

Speaker 2 (23:52):
They've been doing that here for a while.

Speaker 1 (23:54):
Oh yeah, you've been just between other people and you
and a gunsmith and everything else over the year. I
can't count the number that have been assembled here now
in Dothan. If you are in the market for an
AR fifteen bill, we have R fifteens for sale. I
think currently we're carrying to Lift Free Armory brand in there.

(24:15):
And that's a really nice setup for the price. I mean,
it is a cool set up, very good quality components. Yeah,
so you don't have to have one built. But if
you have a special need, whether you want to build
a pistol or a rifle, or you want to build
you know, something in different calibers with different barrels. Jd'
is still probably doing most of the parts shopping down

(24:36):
here for some of those. And but here's the deal
is it can be built for you, assembled from parts
there in the store and you can pick it up.

Speaker 4 (24:48):
And generally speaking, we're not talking about this is not
a five hundred dollars AR, just so people know that
we don't.

Speaker 2 (24:56):
We can't.

Speaker 4 (24:57):
We're not going to build you a five hundred dollars
ar because those are readily available on the market, one
go by one. We're talking about custom rifles that that are.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
You know.

Speaker 4 (25:07):
I just we've finished out a six y five grindle
for first do It Richards and the body of ours
and you know, so we you know this, that's what
I'm talking about, stuff that's not readily available, and we're
only gonna build top top shelf, top quality component guns.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
We don't do Chinese them.

Speaker 1 (25:22):
They're still not expensive though.

Speaker 2 (25:24):
No they're not.

Speaker 4 (25:25):
You know you're not, especially because you're getting one top quality,
American made components there.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
And we know everything's been assembled correctly, it's been a
torch correctly. The difference between a five hundred dollars retail
r is you may have some semblance of a warranty
out there that you can talk deal with the factory.
If we put something together for you, if it was
an assembly there, we're going to fix it. If it's
a part problem, then we'll address that as well. If

(25:53):
it's a part that we sold you, then you know
we we'll work with you.

Speaker 4 (25:56):
We'll deal with the manufacturers on those parts because we
know everything that goes into it, where it came from.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
And you can talk to the person that built it. Yeah,
I mean that's the thing is. And now there again,
go buy you whatever cheap stuff you want. But if
you want something particular in particular, instead of shopping five
different stores and figure out what you want and come
in and say I want this with this on it
and this and this and this, and we can make

(26:21):
that happen. And basically it's going to be we pretty
much charge for the cost of the stuff, and it
is really what are we charging for the actual assembly?

Speaker 4 (26:32):
Really, don't we We If you buy the parts from us,
I will build one out for it. If you're paying
retail for the parts, if you're paying if you don't
want to do that, whatever, then it's it's just, you know,
we kind of play it by ear and like it
will have people bring bring some of their parts in
and want to add to it or take away from it,

(26:53):
or they'll bring in an upper and say I don't
want it to be five five six anymore, I want
it to be three. In a black out, you're looking
at a forty dollars bench fee for me to pull
everything apart, and then whatever the cost of the barrel
is or whatever, it's not, it's not exorbitantly expensive.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Well, we value your business here, and so we know
that there's other peripheral business that spins off of that. Sure,
and so you know, now are we.

Speaker 3 (27:15):
All selling the Talleng juice there?

Speaker 1 (27:18):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (27:18):
Yeah, man, we have been selling Talleng juice here. Like
it's store Talleng juice. You use it?

Speaker 3 (27:23):
Yeah? And yeah, I got my got my fire clean,
but I don't know as I dirted that fire was,
I gotta go clean it some more. So I'm gonna
need some more talent juice.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
Had it work for you on the fryer.

Speaker 3 (27:35):
I had to get the pressure washer out, but it did.
It did break up a lot of there's a lot
of cook cooked up, cooked up stuff. Yeah, and I
used it on some other things. It decreases, all.

Speaker 2 (27:45):
Right, Yeah, it'll get after it. I used it.

Speaker 4 (27:48):
Uh, I cleaned up a uh don't don't nobody have
a fit here now. But I had a cast iron
frying pan that I was that I wanted to clean
up and re season and put some of that on there.
And so a little bit and hit it with a
brush and men's stuff started falling off that pan like
nobody's business.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
So I tell you, then you re season it.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
You know.

Speaker 4 (28:08):
It was just it's one hundred year old pan that
needed to be cleaned.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
Well, they'll last one hundred years.

Speaker 1 (28:13):
It was.

Speaker 2 (28:13):
This is a hundred year old pan, that frying pan
I'm talking about.

Speaker 3 (28:16):
I blackened some fish last night from Southern Seafood. He
had a pretty good haul this week. Gave me a
piece snapper and I'm blacking it on the green here.

Speaker 1 (28:23):
That's a great plug for a guy that nobody in
his market is going to hear that comment.

Speaker 3 (28:27):
Oh they sell, Yeah, they sell all over the.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
Pan and we'll be right back.

Speaker 2 (28:34):
Are you looking for a place to buy quality shoes
but want to work with a local small business that
greets you like a friend and still knows what they're doing.
I'm J. D. Johnson.

Speaker 4 (28:42):
Both Charlie and I use the Shoe Box for all
of our work, boots, casual shoes, and shirt.

Speaker 1 (28:46):
Jeff Weldon runs a great store that carries men's, women's,
and children's shoes and a number of major brands. They
know how to fit shoes properly and can even fit
you in orthotics to make great shoes fit even better.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
If you see us, we're probably wearing a car heart
shirt and bordered by Jeff and shoes from there as well.

Speaker 1 (29:01):
They're located at twenty eight twenty South and Road Street,
just north of the Fairgrounds. Tell them we said hello, Hey,
it's Charlie and j D from Tallan. Do you have
residential or commercial roofing needs? What about a bathroom or
kitchen remodel? How about commercial construction?

Speaker 2 (29:14):
If you do, call our good friend Travis Parkman at
Teespark Enterprises. They do roof replacements, roof repair, and new construction.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
Travis does commercial and residential work. Has come to my
rescue on more than one occasion, so I trust him
to get it right. Find him at Teespark Construction dot
com or call him at eight five O seven six
six thirteen forty and we're back on the Bruk deal.

(29:44):
I cracked a ball joke on you, and I don't
have any Well, I can't grow any more here than
you have, but I don't try.

Speaker 3 (29:54):
Yeah, I forgot my hat.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
Yeah, well, you know we sell hats any time. Anytime
you need a hat. Look on the bottom in my
office in there, and I got a little head. You
can adjust them.

Speaker 3 (30:07):
Yeah, but then I look like Elmer Fudd walking around here.
It's eating up.

Speaker 1 (30:10):
You'd have that strap that crossed over.

Speaker 3 (30:11):
I have to put it on.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
I have to put it in the last two holes
and you would have to cross the holes up, and
I put.

Speaker 4 (30:17):
It in the first two be belly belly twice.

Speaker 1 (30:23):
So we were talking about on the half hour, breaking
about the Italian gun juice. And for the camera up bird,
I know that the little TikTok slash up there I'm talking.
So it's gonna pick us up. Maybe it will, maybe
it won't. I used that on cleaning my tools that's
been in my toolbox that are all greasy. You remember
when you get you to all your ratchets and stuff

(30:44):
like that get dirty. Man, You take this right here
and you can get through there and make that entire tool. Now.
I can't say it's not gonna help me make it
any neater, but it's certainly gonna take all that grease
off real quick like that. In the rag even some
water your place.

Speaker 4 (31:00):
Tuesday, I sat down on them criss poles you got
stacked out there to play with the goats and I
ended up with cris it all over my hands and
I didn't realize. I got home and running. I went
to my mom's house to eat, and I looked at
my hands and I was like, my hands were brown
with that crisode off the fence post. And I happened
to have a bottle of that in my truck and
I just squirted on my hands and man, my hand.

(31:23):
I've never gotten crisoed off of me that fast and easy, boy.

Speaker 2 (31:26):
So it is a powerful decrease or.

Speaker 3 (31:28):
Even strength of cares and that stuff in my truck.

Speaker 2 (31:31):
Yeah, it's a good place to have it.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
Well, we have been selling the fire out of it.
What smell like?

Speaker 3 (31:36):
You don't smell bad.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
They don't really have a ope. Your mouth hit it
from here.

Speaker 1 (31:44):
I mean it's just went off the ship. I didn't
really have a smell smelled of it until I have
researched the products so well. I had to sniff it
to see if it had a smell. It didn't really
have much of a smell, does it. I've usually I
hadn't noticed the smell. I mean it'd be nice, but
had some sort of fragrance in it. We can get to.

Speaker 4 (32:02):
Change the formula formulation and put some put some lemon
oil or something.

Speaker 2 (32:08):
I don't do that. Cannot say that.

Speaker 3 (32:10):
That that is some of the most disgusting.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
You know, you're always talking about justin danger Nune Lee
on the show, and he did one of them. Did
you know, hey, listen, did you know you know when
he does that, that's sound of his tagline. There's only
like twenty cents that are trademarked in the US. There's
only like twenty different products that the scent of the
trademark or the scent of the product is trademarks. Crayola

(32:36):
Crayle of crayons is one of them. Play Doo is
one of them. Hoppy's number nine is one of them.
Hoppy's gun Ol Hops Hoppies Goal. Hoppy's number nine gun
old is a is a patented scent. They use banana oil.
It smells like bananas and uh, but yeah, it's one
of the one of like twenty products, only twenty products
in the in the country that have a patented scent,

(32:57):
so we can't make it smell like Hops number nine
or hop He's number.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
Nine, he's number nine in it.

Speaker 2 (33:02):
Well then probably well, I don't think that makes good
with that.

Speaker 1 (33:06):
You didn't know, now you do, Now you do.

Speaker 2 (33:11):
So anyway, Fred, you were going to tell us about
being a short fellow.

Speaker 3 (33:14):
Yeah. I was listening to Clay and Buck on the
way over the studio today and they're talking about short
guys and versus tall guys and the dating scene and
what women are looking for, and how all these women
calling in talking about they wanted tall guys. And I
did not realize that there is a name for a
short guy who is relatively successful, with a sense of

(33:38):
humor and has a has an extremely hot wife.

Speaker 2 (33:42):
Well that's you kind of describe yourself there, Fred, So.

Speaker 3 (33:44):
I think I did you know what it's called. No,
I'm called a short king.

Speaker 2 (33:49):
A short king king.

Speaker 4 (33:50):
That's why I will not be referring to you that
ever as that ever ever you never.

Speaker 1 (33:55):
You can just call him his highness.

Speaker 6 (33:57):
He is.

Speaker 3 (34:02):
Henceforth, I will be sitting on a throne in this
We're gonna move a throne in here.

Speaker 1 (34:08):
There's there's one right around the corner that's got a
picture of a guy on there.

Speaker 3 (34:12):
And then I'm gonna try and get me a burger
king hat set up here.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
Short King, I will be the short.

Speaker 3 (34:20):
I don't know if they got rid of King's King
Loves Road when he died.

Speaker 1 (34:24):
But I found there's some other names for you.

Speaker 3 (34:30):
F C C gonna get after you if you say something, man,
I'll tell you that. Charlie, listen here your little TikTok
gen z waves.

Speaker 4 (34:43):
Look what I found this A listener of ours, Uh
sent this, sent me a link to.

Speaker 3 (34:50):
This the blue stuff.

Speaker 4 (34:52):
Yeah, And I sent to Charlie and he immediately got
on the two kens of immediately got on the internet
and they have they have the Chris Brown over in
Chattooche You. He heard the show and sent me the link.
And uh that that stuff there will cure everything.

Speaker 1 (35:09):
For horses, ponies, cattle and dogs and pretty much anything else.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
It don't hurt on humans, because I have had this.

Speaker 1 (35:18):
Has other uses. Extremely flammable vapors may cause flash fires,
irritate skin some so so if it don't, don't spread
it in your Ford Explorer and a lot of cigarette
all blow your winners out and set it off your
air bags.

Speaker 2 (35:35):
Well that stuff right, they do make a lotion.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
I remember the lotion had like a Dauber on it.

Speaker 4 (35:41):
Yes, you had old old Wick down in there. That
you could at old That's what we always had, was
that the old cotton ball on.

Speaker 1 (35:48):
The the same thing as you have on your PVC
gluey had the little dabber on the end, and.

Speaker 2 (35:53):
You could daub some of it on there. You didn't
have to pour nothing down.

Speaker 3 (35:56):
You see.

Speaker 1 (35:57):
But that's spray, that spray. She goes. I've got some
pigs that need their private parts cut off, and uh
so I ordered me some. I ordered me two cans
of this, and I ordered me some disposable scalpels because
I found out when I was a kid that it's
hard to keep a knife sharp. Yeah, you end up
having a saw on them by the time, so pig

(36:18):
doesn't enjoy it, neither do.

Speaker 4 (36:20):
I remember my granddaddy taking a wet stone and laying
it up on the top of the fence post, and
he'd hit that old timer two or three times and
cut a couple, and hit it again and cut a couple.
But we was cutting little pigs, that was, you know,
the little bitty things, and always.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
Just when when's the right time to do it? Yes,
but when you buy six month old pigs.

Speaker 2 (36:40):
And you go and they got jangles, you got to
get them job.

Speaker 1 (36:43):
Leave that many boys, they're out there, they're out there.

Speaker 4 (36:46):
I never mind. That didn't gross me out as a kid.
The thing that grossed me out is when they clipped
their teeth. Yeah, I asked something about that sound. It's
just that crunching sound.

Speaker 1 (36:55):
And cutters pick them up and crush that snaps and crushes. Yes,
kind of nasty matter.

Speaker 2 (37:06):
Fred I just y what you obviously didn't grow up
on a farm.

Speaker 3 (37:10):
No, I grew up on a farm. I didn't want
that part.

Speaker 2 (37:13):
You were not forced to participate in the farm activity.

Speaker 3 (37:17):
And they pulled that blue thing out where you put
the cow's head in there. You know you had to
lock them in there. I just like, I'm going home.

Speaker 1 (37:23):
I got one of those. Yeah, shoot, I hadn't picked
it up yet. I gotta squeeze.

Speaker 3 (37:26):
Shoot, you squeeze it on there and do that.

Speaker 1 (37:29):
Man.

Speaker 4 (37:29):
I was I was an expert at taking them. Old
like a pair of plyers with two balls on the
end of it, and you grab that when you get
ready to worm the cow. You can't get a cow
out of the mouth. They don't want to open their mouth,
so you take that pair of flyers had a chain on.
It's not that this was. This was a giant pair
of plyers that you opened up and it had two
big old steel.

Speaker 2 (37:48):
Balls on there.

Speaker 4 (37:48):
What you did is you and had a chain on there.
So when you pull the chain tid it, you got
them pinched, and you pinch them of the nose and
lift their head up, and then you take a cock
gun with some wormer in there and you stick it
down their throat and give them a couple of shots.

Speaker 1 (38:01):
And you want to when when I see when I sleep,
when I sleep, when I see women with those piercings,
that's what I think about.

Speaker 3 (38:10):
Exactly what I think about it, Like, we used to
put those in cows so we can control.

Speaker 1 (38:16):
You ever get in a fight, if you ever get
in a fight with anybody with any facial piercings, special,
that's the first thing that first you win by default.

Speaker 3 (38:27):
I mean, who in the right mind, period you go
blowing your nose?

Speaker 2 (38:31):
Here we go.

Speaker 3 (38:32):
You put a piece of metal in your nose and
you go blowing your nose. Where do you think it's
going to go? I mean, what are you thinking? Putting
a piece of metal in your.

Speaker 2 (38:42):
Bigger filter is attracted? That's that burger catcher.

Speaker 3 (38:45):
Yeah, that's I mean, especially this time of year, you
could start bleeding in the piling and you get the
squigglies all caught up in the knofe. Who does that?

Speaker 1 (38:56):
Well, you just wipe it off on your lee low
and Stitch for jamas.

Speaker 3 (38:58):
I mean, yeah, that's who does that. You would expect
somebody who wears a pair of Lelo and Stitch pajama
pants in public to have if some metal pierce through
his nose, looking like an absolute idiot walk around.

Speaker 2 (39:12):
It just makes no sense.

Speaker 3 (39:13):
They probably got blue hair and a streak of something
of the color in there.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
Comment here comes to comments yeah, well on one million
views on the last one.

Speaker 3 (39:22):
I'm just telling you. I'm just telling you what I think.
I mean, I'm trying to be honest here and funny.

Speaker 2 (39:28):
We're trying to be funny. I know that.

Speaker 3 (39:31):
I mean that's real. I mean, I really get upset
when I see that.

Speaker 7 (39:37):
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important lessons. Other times, the more we resist, the longer
we stay stuck. When a simple change would change everything,
is your bank holding you back? Try my bank, Prime
Meridian Bank. Changing is easy will show you how Prime

(40:00):
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dot com.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
Remember fdi se Hey, it's Charlie and JD from Talent
Tactical Outfitters. Are you in the market for a firearm?

Speaker 2 (40:12):
How about Holster's optics, cleaning gear or apparel.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
We offer all of that and more and provide expert
advice and a one of a kind try before you
buy program.

Speaker 2 (40:20):
We can even help you build your own Talent tac
ops AR fifteen from our huge selection of parts in
our Armors class.

Speaker 1 (40:26):
You can build a nine millimeter for personal defense or
a larger caliber hunting rifle with optics. It's all up
to you, your color, your style. Come see us some
midway right off Ien or call us at five nine
seven seventy five point fifty.

Speaker 2 (40:39):
It's a driving.

Speaker 3 (40:42):
I'm so hugning size. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (40:48):
We talked about fishing. Yes, I don't know we are
We talked my fishing. You've been fishing?

Speaker 5 (40:51):
Yeah, I sure have? They have their still bike? Were
you moving into for the baths or moving into postpawn?
And guys, I had a lady call me Victoria and
Dan Michael.

Speaker 3 (41:05):
Victoria. You don't know, said named.

Speaker 1 (41:07):
Victoria because I thought you should.

Speaker 5 (41:08):
They listening to the show since y'all started listen. Loves
the show, especially, she said, j D and Charlie. But
she ain't known about Fred yet.

Speaker 1 (41:16):
But look.

Speaker 5 (41:20):
But this good folks, they're gonna be come up and
going fish me.

Speaker 1 (41:23):
We still don't know about Fred.

Speaker 2 (41:26):
Jury is still out.

Speaker 3 (41:28):
I'm still wondering.

Speaker 5 (41:29):
But man, I tell you that you got some shell
crackers still still bedding. I haven't seen no brim bedding yet,
j D. I know I got folks interested in coming
doing some of that, but I haven't actually seen the
first actual brim bed Well.

Speaker 3 (41:41):
I thought a shell cracker was a broad Well.

Speaker 4 (41:43):
No, they're technically maybe panfish, but a little bit bigger.
Brim is a little more aggressive brim is a blue
gill and or a red belly.

Speaker 5 (41:50):
There you go, that's right. But a shell crackers on
as a readier.

Speaker 2 (41:54):
Red eer sunfish.

Speaker 7 (41:55):
That's right.

Speaker 4 (41:56):
They get bigger and they're there. They're space is very
special creature. They eat mollusk, they eat snails and mussels
and stuff off the bottom where them.

Speaker 2 (42:07):
Don't do that.

Speaker 5 (42:07):
They let one of them swall your hook.

Speaker 2 (42:09):
You yeah, you go ahead and put you in. Yeah,
put your new hook on there.

Speaker 5 (42:14):
That's one thing I always use, those those gold eagle claws.

Speaker 2 (42:17):
They'll bend and straighten them back out.

Speaker 4 (42:18):
Yest red ir sunfish shell crackers, they have a they
have an apparatus in the back of their throat is
a crusher and it actually.

Speaker 2 (42:27):
Will grind up, grind up small shells.

Speaker 1 (42:29):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (42:30):
I think that's why they're meat is so sweet. Maybe
I don't know, because they're eating those they're eating eating
mussels and little tiny snails and stuff. But there their
bellies will be full of shells. When you clean them,
you'll find it all the one because they have they
have a device down in there, down in their gullet
down there and there before it gets to their stomach,
they got a crusher in there that they mash up,
the mash up the shells that stuff the shell fish

(42:54):
they eat.

Speaker 3 (42:56):
Having conversation on Homi and to day he's talking about
how come it is you always knows all these facts,
And I'm like, I don't know why he knows it.
I just know he knows them. And every time I
come out of here, I get some new fact that
I didn't know.

Speaker 4 (43:09):
I am cursed or blessed. However, you want to look
at it with a if if I read something or
hear something, I just don't forget it. I don't know
why is fact. My head's full of useless, worthless stuff
like that.

Speaker 3 (43:20):
I bought your whole box full of it.

Speaker 2 (43:22):
Y See, I.

Speaker 4 (43:25):
Have tried not to open that box because I'm running
out of space.

Speaker 2 (43:28):
As I get older, you will just get better.

Speaker 1 (43:30):
I fact check him sometimes, just to see.

Speaker 6 (43:32):
When he's either right or he's repeating something that he's
heard his whole life, and that maybe there's some proof
to the but it's fine, but it's okay.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
It's just stuff we all believe. But there's every now
and then it'll be something Pap Paul told him and
it might have been refuted since then based on scientific fact,
but it was a fact growing up. So I don't
recall the time I've ever been able to just absolutely
prove him wrong. So I go of whatever he says,
that's kind and if it's a gun, I just go
with it the fact, because I can't mean I think

(44:05):
I think he I mean, he may be the source
of a lot of gun facts which I found. I
found a series on on one of the streaming things
that is just like all the guns, American guns, there's
all these there's all these things, and going back and
looking at the history and the sources of all the
stuff back to before the Revolution and all the men,

(44:25):
that is just interesting to me. I'm trying to I'm
boning up on some of this stuff. So when JD says, Hey,
come in here, you got to see this, it won't
be completely foreign to me. But I could. He could
show me a gun, a different gun every day the
rest of our lives, and I still wouldn't know mere
fraction of what he knows, and I don't need to

(44:47):
because he does. I go, hey, what's this? A friend?
I was like, Yeah, everyone want to thing? This says
uh historic gun facts for one thousand. I go, yeah,
let me take that. Can I phone a friend? Yeah?
Hang on, hey, j what is it.

Speaker 4 (45:02):
There's a lot of people out there that there are
probably no more than I do there or they do.
I just I tend to listen and read and I
just have the ability to remember. That's just it's just
a memory.

Speaker 3 (45:13):
You should go on Jeopardy.

Speaker 1 (45:15):
I can.

Speaker 2 (45:16):
I do say some nights on Jeopardy. I watch Jeopardy
pretty regular.

Speaker 4 (45:20):
I mean I do it's uh, that's kind of one
of our If we're at the house and the men
and the family sitting around, we watch Jeopardy, And there
are some nights when I could.

Speaker 2 (45:27):
Absolutely kill it.

Speaker 4 (45:29):
And there are some nights when they get into the
paintings and the operas and all those obscure that that
stuff that I have no interest in the stuff.

Speaker 1 (45:37):
It don't matter.

Speaker 2 (45:38):
I'm I'm lost.

Speaker 3 (45:40):
But if it's just a category on things that make
you go.

Speaker 2 (45:44):
Well, you'd win that one.

Speaker 4 (45:45):
At right geography and stuff like that, I do good.
I do good at trivia pursuit. It's just depending on
the category. And believe or not, my wife is better
at sports facts than I am. It's well, she grew
up with an older brother that was all into baseball
cards and sports and all that stuff. So she grew
up around Jack, her older brother, that is all into that,
all into pro sports, because that's where most of your

(46:07):
sports facts are usually professional sports. And I have never
given you know a dang about pro sports. I just
I played sports. I like sports, but I don't remember
facts and figures and sports.

Speaker 3 (46:19):
I mean my middle son, I mean, he looks he
can't tell you the year something happened. But he can
tell you what FSU's record and who they played, and.

Speaker 4 (46:29):
Yeah, and there are some people that are absolutely amazing
at that and they can tell you what. You know,
Hank Aaron's batan average was the year he, you know,
broke the home run record. I got no clue.

Speaker 2 (46:38):
I don't care.

Speaker 4 (46:39):
I mean, it's just not something that ever mattered to me.
So if I ever heard it, I wasn't paying attention
to it. But if something interests me, I pay attention
to it and I tend to remember it.

Speaker 2 (46:47):
So there's that.

Speaker 4 (46:50):
And you know, when I used to do a lot
of I used to do a lot of reloading for
cartridges and stuff, so I could I had load data.
I could tell you exactly how many grains of this
kind of powder for that way to bullet in a
thirty eight six. And there's still loading data that's floating
around in my head and I don't know why, but
it's there. I ain't tell you that five and a
half five point five grains of bulls eye powdered one

(47:11):
hundred and fifteen grain full metal jacket on a nine
millimeters give you about eleven hundred and fifty fet per second.
I don't know why that's in my head, but it is,
so I guess I'm just weird.

Speaker 3 (47:20):
We get that AI thing where you heat.

Speaker 6 (47:24):
There, j DJ T yeah, I want to you might.

Speaker 2 (47:30):
It might scare you too, because well.

Speaker 1 (47:32):
Getting him to write anything down is the problem because
he can't stand to write anything. So hey, write that now.
You just called me if you need you needed, So
I use JD like I used. I'll be driving down
the road and I want to know something. I'll reach
up there and on my phone. I got a mount
there in the dash and I'll push that little microphone
thing on Google and I'll go how old does a

(47:53):
rooster need to be to be fertile? That was a
question I asked the other day and it was like
so many five to five months, four to five months
or something like that, because I'm thinking about putting one
of my roosters in the pen if it's gun related.
I just reach up there and I just pushed that
button and say called JD. Hey what I go, Hey,
what's what year? Yeah? That was just okay, thank you.

(48:15):
So I don't have to ask the internet. I just
use them.

Speaker 3 (48:17):
He's kind of like Marissa Tomay and my cousin Vinnie
when it comes to talking about cars.

Speaker 4 (48:23):
Yeah, because it didn't have positive traction.

Speaker 3 (48:25):
It didn't have positive track. Because have you ever been
stuck in the mud in Alabama?

Speaker 2 (48:29):
You know that?

Speaker 1 (48:29):
You know that when you were listening, when you're watching
a movie like that, and they're the difference between positive
traction and the independent rear suspension and limited slip, and
you're nodding your head going huh uh huh, Then.

Speaker 2 (48:40):
You might be a Redney, you might be a Redin.

Speaker 3 (48:42):
You know, I'm gonna tell you something by that movie,
that movie.

Speaker 2 (48:45):
Of all talking about my cousin Vinny, my.

Speaker 3 (48:48):
Cousin Vinnie, that movie of all of the legal movies
and legal dramas and legal stuff on TV dealing with
criminal law and trials, that movie in the South in anyway,
that movie is actually procedurally accurate, right down to the
objections and the rulings on them and when they struck
his opening statement when he said it was BS and

(49:08):
because it's argumented right, that was procedurally correct. I mean
everything that the rules of evidence were followed. So they
actually had lawyers, must have had lawyers consulting on that movie.

Speaker 4 (49:18):
As a gun guy watching military movies or law enforcement
movies or whatever. It drives me up the wall. I mean,
I tend to watch the historical documentaries and stuff with
my kids when they're studying something in school. I can go, well,
there's a really good movie. Let's go look at this movie.
We were watching one from the PSALM about the Battle
of the som because my daughter's doing World War One

(49:40):
right now in school. But I turn on those things
sometimes and you see the German soldiers and there are
armed with infield rifles, and then they showed the British
soldiers and they're armed with K ninety eight mausers, which
is just exactly the opposite. You know, the Brits should
have had the infield and the Germans should have had
the ninety eight k's and you got to or you
got a German soldier shooting noticed.

Speaker 3 (50:03):
Well, I mean, you know, when you're reading people.

Speaker 2 (50:06):
To get it right, at least to try to get
it right.

Speaker 1 (50:08):
Well, I mean, you know, they hire armors on movie
sets and they end up getting people shot and killed.

Speaker 3 (50:13):
And there's that Yes, you're reading a mystery novel and
it's got some guy in there. That's that firearms expert
who put his glock on safety, and I'm like.

Speaker 1 (50:23):
Oh, I love it when when everything you got to
take his finger off the trigger every time, every time
anybody gets they're ready to go anywhere with a shotgun.

Speaker 2 (50:33):
All right, you're ready to go again.

Speaker 1 (50:35):
All right, let's let's clear this room. What are you doing?
What are you doing? Bad boys? There's sweat guys repelling
out of the ceiling in a factory. First off, had
to get up there. Why are they repelling into a gunfight?
And second off, they always, every one of them always
gets killed. And then the two heroes, you know, yeah,

(50:56):
I ken't sit through this. I sit through it and
I to shake my head.

Speaker 4 (51:01):
And first of all, that should have happened when you
got out of the car. And then not and not
again until you pull the trigger.

Speaker 1 (51:09):
They never unload them, They just loading.

Speaker 4 (51:11):
Them nineteen shot revolvers. Yeah, reload, ain't missing. No bullets
off in his belt. You know, he's got bullets. All
the cowboys got bullets on the belts. And they don't
even getting the gun fights. You twenty five people instead
of bout of all the bute.

Speaker 1 (51:22):
Lying round left. You don't know what I was shooting
at you? All right, we'll see all next time.
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