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October 15, 2023 • 53 mins
Josie Show Special Edition #636 with guests Deborah Allen, Cledus T Judd, and Jimmy Wayne
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Rong Roy casting around the world on the world Wide
West Leading Journey.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
He Show.

Speaker 1 (00:19):
Shoes, Oh Yeah, broadcasting live in the Joseih Networks Studios
in downtown Ma Dinah toennes Sieve, It's that time a
week again. It's time for the Josie Shoes, bringing you

(00:40):
the most exciting music, news and deaths from around the world.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
Right here on the Josey Show.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
Please make Walking.

Speaker 1 (00:52):
Beautiful, Hammity, He Loved Americans, Riady Else, Sweetheart Business, Josie
Lass and ven Over.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
Hello everybody, and thank you all so much for tuning
into The Josie Show. We have a special show for
you all today because coming up in about oh my goodness,
like seven more days now, nice Annuel Josie Music Awards.
So I'm so excited. We're gonna talk to three guests,
three special guests who will be a part of the

(01:28):
ninth Annuel Josie Music Wars. So I'm going to talk
to them about their appearance at the JMAS this year
along with also their projects, their current projects. So we
have as guests today, Deborah Allen, we have Kletis T.
Judd and Jimmy Wayne. Before I share these interviews with you,
I really quick. Want to just go over what the
ninth Annuel Josee Music Awards consists of. So, like you

(01:49):
see on TV, it's going to be award presentations and
performances in between. We also, of course have some special
guest presenters and some wonderful, wonderful surprises in the mix
as well, so you never know who what may happen
after joking music Wars, It's always a surprise every year,
which I think is kind of what adds to the

(02:11):
excitement for sure. But I do want to mention all
of our performers. So we have Deborah Allen, Jay Allen,
Sarissa McQueen, Sammy Sadler, Travis Bolan, the Justin London Bands, Hasting,
Audie Lee Newen and Leah A Duro Corton aka Lady
Leo with mix Cy Hodges. And then when it comes
to presenters, our special guest presenters, we have so many

(02:33):
this year I'm so excited about. So we have Mister Tossbox, Klitis,
p Judd, Dallas, Wayne, Jimmy Wayne, Jimmy Bowen, Mary Sarah,
tim and Roxanne Attwoods, Sadler and Leon Everett and Clarence Jay.
So I'm so excited about that. We have so many incredible,
incredible people coming in joining us at the ninth Dannel

(02:54):
Just Music Wars to add a little special sprinkle into
the show. And then of course this Lifetime Career Achievement
Award is going to Debrah Allen, so that's gonna be
a special moment. So I'm just so excited. And tickets
are still available if you want to attend the live,
full production show at the Grandell Opry House on October
twenty second. Tickets are available at Josiemusic Awards dot com.

(03:15):
If you go to opry dot com, we're on their
website as well. If you go to their full calendar
and scroll to October twenty second, you will see us
and you'll be able to purchase tickets there. Just a
little reminder, the blue dots you'll see the blue dots,
those are normal Opry House pricing. So looking forward to
seeing everybody seeing our JMA family. Of course, the award

(03:36):
show is October twenty second, However, the JMA Weekend actually
starts on Friday, October twentieth. October twentieth is our second
annual JMA Fest and we're going to be at the
Nashville Zoo which is so thrilling. So we're gonna have
great performances around the zoo along with our private JMA
tent to vocal competition vendors and so much more good stuff.

(03:57):
You can go to jmafest dot com to see all
them information there along with the map of where our
performers will be, all of our locations there in the
Nashville Zoo. And then of course, the next day will
be our JMA Pre Party gala, which is currently sold out,
but if you do have tickets, you're in for a treat.
For our pre party gala, we have five incredible performers,

(04:17):
Carrie Brockwell, Macy Tavor, Sam schmid Zuber, Noah Hunton, and
Nate Venturerelli performing for our pre party gala, and that's
gonna be a great time to mingle around. There will
be food, a cash bar, there'll be raffle, giveaways, prizes,
all sorts of fun things there and that's gonna be
October twenty first, the day before the award show to

(04:38):
big events on October twenty seconds, And just a reminder
for the pre party gala that is inside Studio A
inside the Grand ol Opry House and then the next
day for the award show is the main stage of
the Grand ol Opry House. Just a clear up any
confusion of where everything is going to be. But we're
so excited, and tickets are still available for the award show.

(05:00):
That's the only that's the only event for Jamie Weekend
that tickets are still available at currently, So you can
get tickets at Josie Music boards dot com oropry dot com. Alright,
so back to back. I have these great interviews that
I want to share with you, So let's get started.

Speaker 4 (05:18):
Quit.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
Welcome to Josie Show for our Joking Music Awards special.
Zebra Allen. Hello, see hey girl. I am so excited
right now that it's getting closer and closer to showtime.
It really is. It is just feeding by. The countdown
is on and we are so excited to have you.
You are going to be performing. Let's first start with

(05:40):
a performance. So I'm really excited about you performing because
you're gonna be performing BABYY Lied, because we're celebrating the
fortieth anniversary of Baby I Lied. Is that's just unbelievable
to me. Forty years it's hard to believe that it's
hard to believe that forty years has gone by since
the day we recorded and released that song. Just it
was such a pivotal turning point in my entire life

(06:01):
and has just opened so many doors for me that song.
And you know, I'm just so thankful that my signature
song wound up being one that I still clearly love
to sing every day and never have tired of it
at all. Oh absolutely, absolutely. And it's one of those
songs that when you hear it, when you hear it
on the radio, you just feel just a great You

(06:22):
just feel like so much love for just the song.

Speaker 4 (06:25):
You know it.

Speaker 3 (06:26):
It's such a signature staple. Everybody knows the song, so
it's just such a fabulous song. We're so excited to
hear you perform it live at the Jokey Music Awards.
But on top of that, it was also recently announced
to media and also on social networking site, so everybody
already knows we're going to present you with a Lifetime
Career Achievement Award. What was your reaction when you first
found this out? Oh, my gosh, Well, first of all,

(06:50):
I was just thrilled to be invited to be on
the show because I have seen how great you guys
are with all the artists from all over the world,
and I've just seen it's just amazing what you all
are doing with the Awards show. But so you really
caught me by surprise because I was just like so
thrilled to be on the show, and then suddenly, you know,
I found out what you guys are doing for me,

(07:12):
and I was just like, I was so floored. I mean,
I was so happy, I couldn't stand it. But it
was like I just got kind of quiet, and I
was like, oh my gosh, I cannot believe this. I
cannot believe they're doing this. What a wonderful gift, And
thank you so much. What a beautiful way to recognize
really and remind me of how long and what a

(07:33):
beautiful journey this has been in my life. And a
lot of it really started with Baby out Light. So
it's so so wonderful to get to sing that song
for everybody, and I just can't thank y'all enough. It
just just touched my heart and just forored me. Yes, well,
it's gonna be like a full circle moment really when
when you perform Baby Eutlight as well, and it's just

(07:54):
so amazing because you know, our Litime Career Achievement Award,
it is such a special award to those who made
such great contributions music. You have been at it for
so long and you have just such great music out
there that everybody knows and loves. It was the right move,
it really is, and so we're really excited and you
won't want to miss this anyone. Everyone You're gonna want
to you kinda want to be there to see this
special moments and we're just so excited about it. Also,

(08:17):
what's really cool about it is, you know, since announcing it,
you know, so many great you know, supporters for you
have been coming out with great congratulations and support, and
also some artists who have said that there is you know,
you're you're their inspiration, which is really cool to see
all the love that you've been pat once. Yeah, yo,
see Quints. The way y'all announced it online was amazing
if that's what just bored me. And then you know,

(08:40):
I was just kind of watching it and it was
like I started getting a lot of congratulations from that
I don't even know, but I love and appreciate so much,
and fans and also some super close friends who are
amazing talents themselves and saying wonderful nice things, you know,
I mean, And it's very humbling to come from to
hear those things from people that I love so much

(09:03):
and that I've been inspired by too. It's just been
really really sweet. I just can't It's really weird because
I am a songwriter. You would think I would know
exactly what to say, but it makes you feel kind
of speechless. It quiets your soul and just makes you go,
oh my gosh, thank you God, thank you, go to award,
thank you, you know, Tina, Marie and Josie and just

(09:24):
everyone who's commented and said a single word about it.
And it's just a beautiful thing. It is a very
unusual business. It's it's a very wonderful business, but it
has it can have its disappointments along the way, but
you know, stay with your passion throughout the years, no
matter what comes at you. It creates who you are,

(09:44):
turned you into who you are. But a moment like this,
it just validates that, Hey, God, thank you for giving
me the spirit to follow my path with you, and
it's led me to such wonderful people like Josie and Tina,
Marie and everybody the Josie Awards. It's just so so sweet. Well,
we're looking forward to it and it is well deserved

(10:06):
and we're so excited about it. If anyone wants to
attend to see Devor Allen perform and also receive the
Last Time Career Achievement Award, tickets are still available at
Josie Music Awards dot com and also Oprey dot com,
so you can go to both websites and find tickets there.
But I also want to talk about a couple other
little things I wanted that I've seen, so a little

(10:26):
Birdie tells me, I did some research. I'm so good
with research. Let me tell you. I seen that you
are going to be doing like a little bit of
a like a cameo in a movie coming November called
Christmas at Keystone. I believe Marty Raybond is also doing
a cameo in there. Can we talk about that?

Speaker 4 (10:46):
You know, we get that. I love.

Speaker 3 (10:49):
First of all, Keystone Theater is not far from where
we live, a couple of hours away, and they have
an amazing theater down there, And actually I was the
first show in that theater and it's a beautiful theater.
Called the Stone Theater. Our friend William Keelan built it
and just did an incredible job, and my husband Raymond
Hicks also helped come up with some great design ideas

(11:12):
for it. So we've been friends with the theater. But
then one day William calls up and said, Hey, there's
gonna be a movie shot here and we would love
for you to do a cameo. And you know, Marty
Raven from Shenandoah is gonna be in it and it's
gonna be great. And I went, oh, my gosh, I
would love to. So yeah, and it's gonna be a
great Christmas movie. It really truly is. It's just one

(11:33):
more great thing that's gonna be out there to celebrate
the Holidays with. I'm excited about it, yes, absolutely. It
has said on their IMDb that it's actually going to
release November twenty third, so we're really excited about that.
I can't wait to see it. Yeah, I'm glad. See
you always know more than that, dud. You get your
information advanced. See, I didn't even know what the release
date was. So it's November twenty third, right, Yes, Yes,

(11:56):
that's what it says here on their IMDb. For the
for the movie, so it says releasing November twenty third,
twenty twenty three. Is we're really really looking forward to it,
and it has such a great cast. Corbyn Burnston. Bernston
is gonna be in it, which is gonna be exciting.
And yes, make sure you check it out, y'all. I'm
really looking forward to seeing it as well. It sounds
like it was a lot of fun filming. It was

(12:17):
a lot of fun. It was so much fun to filment.
And also, since we're talking about movies, there's going to
be another movie out that I was in a few
years ago with Taylor Lynn, that is Loretta's granddaughter, and
I did wind up getting fun songs on it. I
sang on three of my songs, and then a couple
of other people sang a couple of my songs. But
my music's not the only music, and it is chock

(12:37):
full of great songs to Tayla has a great song,
you know. Just a lot of artists are on it.
And it's a great faith based movie too, and it's
gonna be I'm not sure what the air date is it,
but it's also going to be being shown at the
Franklin Theaters this holiday. That is wonderful. I cannot wait.
That is so cool. Ah, I love it. Well, we'll
definitely be checking it out and I hope everybody else

(12:57):
oh to oh both these Oh yeah, I forgot to
tell you this. Also, Dwayne Allen is in that movie
as well. That mean I'll play I'll play Dwayne Why
in that movie. And you can see that online too.
It's been out for a little while, but it's something
I look forward to every year too. So there's two
Christmas movies out and I'm really excited about the new one,

(13:20):
but I haven't gotten over the last one.

Speaker 4 (13:21):
Right.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
Oh my goodness. I love that. Is that something that
you're really into? I mean what you loved you It's
like someone came up to you and was like, hey,
we have a movie or a TV show we would
like to have you in. Was that something that you'd
love to doublin? Yes? Absolutely. I always have had fun
on movie sets and videos myths. You know, if there
is a lot of waiting for you know, your turn
to do whatever you do. But I just like it.

(13:45):
It's it's a very creative atmosphere. And to be honest
with you, someday I really want to do a Western.
I love it, you know, I mean I think it
would be so much time. I love old movies like
I love the Turner classic movies, and I love the
Western channels. You know, anything you can watch some old
classic Western.

Speaker 1 (14:04):
On, you know.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
And of course Raymond and I fell in love while
we were watching Lonesome Dove while we were out on
the road.

Speaker 4 (14:10):
That was.

Speaker 3 (14:11):
That was the movie that kept us company all the
time when we were first out there promoting my song
rock Me out on the Road. And we've probably watched
that thing a thousand times. I see going a Western,
I can see that. I don't love it.

Speaker 5 (14:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (14:25):
I used to ride horses. I had a horse named Pepper.
I used to ride in the horse shows. I would
do well. He was really an American chaddle horse, and
he held his head real high and picked up his
seat real tall, and it was very beautiful. But one
night I thought I would try him out the speed race.
So I got in at the gate and he was
just kind of prancing in place. I could say, oh gosh,

(14:47):
he's excited. He asked like he knows what to do,
and I just kind of barely leaned forward, and I
mean he took off like a rocket and he ran
down there and he did a real tight turn around
that barrel and race out, and I went, he asked, like,
he's done this before, and he's just so good. So
then the next thing, you know, we were doing barrel
racing and pubble bending, and a lot of the a

(15:10):
lot of the real purists, they would kind of fuss
at me and going, you're going to ruin that horse,
And I said, we're having fun, and he's good at
both and he loves to run. Oh, we just had fun.

Speaker 2 (15:20):
You know.

Speaker 3 (15:20):
That's part of my childhood. Got him when I was
eleven year old for my birthday and have so many
fun memories out at the Fraser Wrench in Memphis, Tennessee.

Speaker 4 (15:29):
It was so much fun.

Speaker 3 (15:30):
Song that is so much fun. I love that you
have many talents.

Speaker 5 (15:35):
That's wonderful.

Speaker 3 (15:36):
Anybody who's doing a West, makee someone who's doing a West,
or will call us up, make you. We'll both get
to be in it, Josie. Wouldn't that be fun? That
would be fun anytime I could work with you. Let's
just do it. I'm ready, Hell, let's death do it.
Oh my god, this is the beginning of a great
long friendship. Can't wait to see you in person. Give

(15:57):
you a big hug and your mom too, Seena Marie, Guys,
we can't wait. We are definitely gonna give you a
big hug. It's gonna be so much fun spending time
with you, you know, on October and before we go.
I do have a couple more questions for you. So
first of anything else going on? Yes, is there anything
else going on musically that you are able to share?

(16:17):
Are you've worked on anything, writing with anyone? For anything?
You could tell us? Gouts, There's so much going on. Actually,
you know, I'm a huge fan of my buddies Chapel Heart.
They are so sweet. They're out on the road a lot,
so I don't get to see them a lot, but
they sent me the cutest video yesterday. Sam. We love you.
We cant wait to get back with you. We wrote

(16:38):
a song together that I think that they are probably
going to be recording. They were just they were telling
me how much say we reminded, how much they loved it.
They were gonna be put some dates in the books
here real soon. I'm writing with a couple of new
artists who I also have. I have plans to do
a gospel album. I would like to do that, and

(16:58):
also kind of a vision for a new album with
doing some duets too. You know, I can't tell you
any real details on it because they're just it's just
swirling around in my mind right now. But I'm still
still really digging into my current album. My current album
is called The Art of Dreaming. It's believing that led

(17:18):
to me meeting a wonderful conductor who I think I
may wind up doing some symphonic type shows with. It's
still a pop type stake through your music, but you
get to do it with an orchestra, so that's gonna
be neat. But we're gonna be doing a couple more
videos off of that album, so I haven't stopped loving
that one yet completely to let it go, I mean,

(17:39):
I can't wait for people to continue to hear that one.
Oh and you might. I might as well throw in
there if you do want to hear it or get it.
Definitely Deborah Allen dot com as a place you can
go there and you can also connect with all my
socials from there too. Yes, please do. It's such a
great album. We absolutely love it here. It's just so

(17:59):
much fun. And I just love your voice. We just
love everything about it, the production, and so everyone please
make sure you check it out. And I can't wait
for any new projects that you have coming out. Just
let us know, and we would love to have you
on the show to promote it. We would absolutely just
love that. We're just so excited and I'm excited to
hear about some music videos that might be, you know,
coming out here soon from the album because I'm such

(18:20):
a visual person. I love music videos. So I'm ready, well,
thank you love ready too, and I can't wait. I
probably won't dive into it until after the award show
because I've got kind of some things going on this
bleing that too, But after that I probably will be
calling up my good friend Martin Nicolosi and saying, okay,
we got to get busy, Yes, get busy. Definitely definitely well.

(18:42):
I cannot wait for those who want to keep up
with you. Of course, make sure to go to the website.
All of your socials, like you said, are linked there,
so to keep in touch with deebra Allen. Make sure
you do that and see what projects come out of
the woodworks. You're always working or thinking of something, which
I love. Your brain is always working on something just wonderful.
And you know what, ill too. I feel like then,

(19:04):
really like I have things that I know I'm working
on and I know I'm planning on doing. But it
seems like when we all stay busy doing what we do,
there are always be things that come up kind of
out of the blue, or you'll something will come across
your path or into your life that you didn't even
plan on. You know that, it's so exciting and just

(19:24):
you know that. That's what I do love about being
in the music business and writing songs and just the
arts in general, is you make some wonderful friends and
you just never know what's gonna happen next. As long
as you keep on keeping home exactly, that's a great
way to end end this actually, keep on keeping on.

(19:46):
We love we love it, We love you so much.
Thank you so much for joining me here on our
special and well we'll definitely have you back on here
at the Josie Show anytime you have anything you'd like
to promote. We can't wait to honk you on October
when a second. I cannot wait. It's gonna be a
fabulous show. And listen, I know that you have some
amazing talent. It's gonna be performing there that night from

(20:08):
all over the world, and a lot of other great
awards going on, and I cannot wait to witness that
and just soak it all in. It's gonna be fantastic.
Oh yes, absolutely, it's gonna be so much fun. And
I'm so honored that you're gonna be a part of it.
And we'll see you real soon.

Speaker 5 (20:23):
I'm so excited.

Speaker 4 (20:24):
Me too.

Speaker 3 (20:24):
Okay, we'll have a good day and I'm gonna be
a counting the seconds so we're together. You got it,
me too, I'm telling you. It's Debrah Allen everyone.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
I can.

Speaker 4 (20:47):
I'm still.

Speaker 5 (20:54):
When you think about me, and do you think about
comedy TV, Black White Day to be Gosh. You may
not like charity, but they're funny as hell to me
all the way back. Gift you now mine?

Speaker 3 (21:16):
Please just Tea.

Speaker 2 (21:19):
Please.

Speaker 3 (21:20):
Welcome to the Josie Show for our Josie Music Awards.
Special pleadis Teachud.

Speaker 4 (21:25):
Hello, Hey, good morning. How are you, sweetie?

Speaker 3 (21:28):
Oh I'm doing great. Thank you so much for joining me.
I've been looking forward to talking to you.

Speaker 2 (21:32):
Well.

Speaker 4 (21:33):
Thank you very much for having me on and I'm
looking forward to seeing y'all in a few weeks. It's
gonna be a lot of fun.

Speaker 3 (21:38):
Yes, it's going to be so much fun. I cannot wait.
Thank you so much for a group to be a presenter.
We're also going to have you do some fun stuff
during red perfect time. Everyone is so excited to be
able to get the opportunity to run into you and
meet you.

Speaker 4 (21:53):
And have a good time. Yeah, it's gonna be a
lot of fun. I'm looking forward to it, and hopefully
I won't mess it up too.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
No, you cannot mess it up. Don't worry. You got this.
This is there's nothing to mess up. We're kevin good
no time, that's for sure. And we're at the Grandell
Loppry House. So it's going to be a wonderful a
wonderful time and a beautiful So we're really looking forward
to having you so thank you, Thank you Dano.

Speaker 4 (22:16):
Oh absolutely, it's been a long time since I've been
down to the grand O Lopry, so I'm looking forward
to it. It's it's gonna be a lot of fun.
Can't wait.

Speaker 3 (22:25):
Oh us too. So first off, before we really dig in,
I need to know how the home improvement is going.

Speaker 4 (22:32):
Oh, you know, it's just constantly. I think this is
about I don't know, maybe the seventeenth or eighteenth house
that I've remodeled in my off time, and I always
say I'll never do another one until I go do
another one and I sell that one. So it's it's
hard work, but I enjoyed doing it. I really do.
It's it's creative and keeps me kind of keeps me

(22:54):
busy when I ain't out on the road doing some shows.

Speaker 3 (22:57):
Yes, definitely. I love how you make, you know, things
that super normal though so funny. Your videos are just
always hilarious. We love following you on Facebook and I
hope everyone does the same. But something more on a
serious note, and we absolutely love this video. It's for
wounded like me, and you did this with a couple
of friends, Don Couch and Dave Clark. I hope I'm

(23:18):
saying those names right. Can you share a little bit
about the inspiration behind this very real song. It's beautifully done.

Speaker 4 (23:24):
Yeah, you know, I wrote that, like you said, with
Don and Dave, and it was kind of just my
story along with millions of other stories, you know, as
in the video. You know, I kind of kicked my
sobriety off September eleventh, two thousand and four, and celebrated

(23:45):
nineteen years of being clean as this past September eleventh,
and I just wanted to write something, you know, that
was my story in somebody else's. You know that no
matter how far down the the wrong of the ladder
you are, how low you think you are, there's always
a place that will welcome the wounded. And whether it

(24:06):
be church, whether a ministry, whether it be counseling somebody, somebody,
and thank goodness, they'll welcome the wounded, just like I am.
I think to a certain degree, we're all wounded. Some
wounds are worse than others. Some can be taken care
of at home, some can be taking care of a hospital.
Some are a little bit more entailed than that. That's

(24:27):
kind of where I fit in and a lot of
other ones fit in. And we just did a quick
video on it a few days ago, and my buddy
will Champlain from the Boy sing the demo with the
record that's on there, and I think it's got maybe
twenty five or thirty thousand views just over the past
couple of days. Yeah, I was real proud of that.

Speaker 2 (24:45):
One.

Speaker 3 (24:46):
Yes, it's so well written and we'll also have such
a beautiful voice. It's such a great song that can
be relatable to so many different people. And congratulations of
nineteen years Sobriety, that's so amazing.

Speaker 4 (24:58):
Oh, thank you very much.

Speaker 2 (25:00):
Get that.

Speaker 3 (25:00):
Oh that's fabulous, And I hope everyone goes and checked
out Wounded like me. It is on your Facebook page.
For those who do not follow you yet what is
going on? They need to please give out your Facebook
handle if you could for us.

Speaker 4 (25:13):
Yes, I'll at Cleves PJA. You know, it'll say fan
page on that and then I have a personal page
as well. But you'll you'll see the video. I think
it's pants at the top or whatever. So yeah, go
on then and take a look and hit that like
butt and then hopefully it'll touch you as much as
it did.

Speaker 3 (25:28):
Make for sure, that is for sure, So please make
sure you go and check it out. I have to
say because my husband is like you better tell him.
He is a huge fan of yours and has been
for a very long time. Thank you, You're welcome. But
we we did have the opportunity to both meet you
at Brian Orr's party, which was wonderful it was so

(25:48):
wonderful to get the chance to meet you, and you
are just the one of the nicest guys. So I'm
so so looking forward to seeing you again, that's for sure.

Speaker 4 (25:57):
Well, my wife and kids probably wouldn't say that, but
you know, I try to be you know, I've always
said even during the right in the middle of the
highest of the career, you know, I was never one
to kind of want to hang out on the bus
and hide from people. I like to get out there
amongst the crowd say hello. And there's not a big
mistake to clean to see Judd, I can tell you

(26:19):
for sure, Yes, that.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
Is for sure. I love it and that's what we
love about you over the years. And you know, one
of the reasons that we wanted you to be a
part of the Josie Music Awards is that you are
an independent artist. You know what independent artists go through,
but you've also seen both sides of the coin. So
I wanted to know, you know, first off, what's you
enjoyed most about being an independent music artist and also
what are some of the difficulties that you have faced

(26:43):
and rent across.

Speaker 4 (26:44):
Well, I tell you, you know, I started my career
out as an nd artist way back in the day
with a company in New York called Razor and Tye
was there for several years and then left there, and
then I went to my first major, which was Sony,
and I was at Sony and Warner Brothers Curve, and
then I came back to to some indis with coch

(27:07):
and some Audium and some different places. And I can
tell you, over the course of my career, I sold
more records as an indie artist than I ever did
as a major label artist. And I think not that
that's a knock on major labels, because lord, I love
being there, you know, And there's definitely pros and pros
and cons to a major and an indie. But you know,

(27:30):
an indie you tend to have more creativity. You don't
have as many people to answer to, so you can
really go with your gut instinct. You know, you live
and die by the swords.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
You know.

Speaker 4 (27:41):
When you're an indie artist, you know, you're usually the
captain and if the ships thinks, you're the one that
thinks it. You know, when you're on a major, you
tend to have, you know, some more powers that be
that has a little bit more tolled and a little
bit more connections, which definitely doesn't hurt either. But at
the end of the day, I was proud to I'm
proud to be an indie artist. I was proud to

(28:03):
be a major label artist. I was just glad to
be able to be a part of all of it,
because I would never knock the majors, nor would I
ever think it's I think it's great to be an
independent artist, you know, because you tend to have to
be a little more creative and you have to, you know,
resource it out differently than if you're on a major
you know, the funding is unlimited. Usually as an indie,

(28:24):
you know, you have to be more creative and you're
a little bit more frugal with the money that spend.
Hey listen, whatever it takes to make you happy and
to be successful, and you know it doesn't necessarily you know,
I don't really judge it by money made or record,
So whether the one's successful or not, it's whether you're happy,
if you're happy with your art, if you're satisfied at

(28:46):
the end of the day that you gave it all
you had, and whether it sells one or a million
at the end of the day. You're the ones got
to lay in bed and live with it. And that's
kind of where where my feelings are on the independent
and the major artists.

Speaker 2 (28:57):
For sure.

Speaker 3 (28:58):
Yes, love that, and I think you know, so many
intindent artists that are you know, coming to the event,
are going to be able to relate to you and
also find you very inspiring, you know, throughout your work
and your career, and that you just keep doing what
you love. You love this so much. I could tell
in you that you really do enjoy what you do
and meeting the people, meeting fans, meeting everybody is just

(29:19):
I did put the spark in you, and that's what
it's all about.

Speaker 2 (29:21):
True, Yeah, it does.

Speaker 4 (29:23):
I have a gold record on my wall that I
walk by daily, you know, on my way to do
whatever I'm doing or whatever. And I have a couple
of gold records that songs that I've written for other artists.
And you know, when you look back at my sound scans,
which I don't even know if they still have sound
scans or not, but if you know, that's where the
when you would buy records, you know, it would show

(29:43):
up on a scan and say you how many of
you sold? And I think as of today was a
couple of million records sold and probably sixty or seventy
percent of those were done as an independent artist. Don't
ever think that you can't put a gold record or
a platinum record on your wall just because you don't
have a Warner Brothers or a Mercury or a Sony
behind you. You can do it, and you can be successful,

(30:06):
and you can make it as an indie artist.

Speaker 3 (30:09):
For sure, Absolutely absolutely, you really can. And your definite
testament to that. And for those who want to check
out more of your work, and also you know, find
you on social networking site old people website. You give
out your website because I believe that's the best place
that people can find your shows and everything.

Speaker 4 (30:26):
Right, Yeah, I freyocjud dot com. You can jump on there,
and you know, the shows are up there, they're updating.
And now we just got a new guy that's doing it.
And I'm getting ready to head to North Carolina in
a few weeks and then Jackson, Tennessee, and then following
week I'll be heading down to the Grand Oopry. So
I'm looking forward to seeing everybody.

Speaker 3 (30:44):
We cannot wait to see you. It's going to be
so much fun and thank you again for doing this
with us and we're just gonna have a good old
time there. If you want to check out, please us
p Judd Present with Us. Tickets are still available to
the Nathaniel Jose Music Awards. You just have to go
to Josie Music Awards dot com or you can go
to opery dot com. I'm their say as well. I
have some fun questions for you if you're ready.

Speaker 4 (31:04):
Yeah, hit me perfect, I love me some fun questions.

Speaker 3 (31:07):
Okay, So the first one is so looking back at
all the parody music videos that you've done in the past,
which one stands out in your mind? You have like
a favorite charody video that you have done?

Speaker 4 (31:17):
Probably my favorite that I've ever done, which I enjoyed
doing them all. But Every Light in the House is
Blown was probably one of my favorites with Treact and
I really love doing that. That was probably my favorite
out of the thirty or more that I've done.

Speaker 3 (31:29):
Yes, absolutely so. One that we played, oh for sure. Yeah,
we love every single video that you have done, and
we play in quite a lot. Like I said, we
are fans, so for really thank much. We think you're fabulous.
And what has been a highlight in your career that
you can recall, like a memorable moment that stands out
in your mind.

Speaker 4 (31:47):
Well, you're probably not gonna like this answer, but I'm
gonna tell you because over the course of a career,
I've been asked that, and I mean, I hate to
say it, but they're all highlight because I never thought
I'd get to do any from Georgia, you know that,
you know, had some struggles early on and move to
Nashville and don't know hardly a soul and sleeps and

(32:08):
walk in closet and takes baskets YMCA until you wake
up one day on the tour of US with Brooks
and Dunne and Toby Keith and Rascal Flats and Keith
Urban and you know. So they're all highlights because you know,
they're not just one pinnacle where I could say, oh
I got a gold record, Oh I got a platinum record,
Oh I got this, or I got to do that.
Everything that I ever got to do was more than

(32:29):
I ever thought I would ever get to do. So
therefore they're all highlights. And I feel like my entire career,
up and the down are all still highlights. Some low light.
You know, it's a journey and it's a struggle and
there could I do it again? I don't know, I
don't know. I know I did it one time. I
hope that that one time was enough. But I still
want to do more and try to do more, and

(32:51):
the people will dictate when it's time to go home,
you know, when when you no longer think, you no
longer feel your relevant, or that sort of thing. But
I hate to say it, but there was not just
one thing that I ever done that was a highlight,
because they all work.

Speaker 3 (33:05):
Yes, that's a great answer. Actually, because you've had so
many great moments, you really have. That's a really good answer.
Another question that I have for you, because this is
just this video and just you and Ginger Billy together
was probably a highlight his time.

Speaker 4 (33:19):
Oh yeah, that was a lot of fun.

Speaker 3 (33:20):
Yeah, I like that video.

Speaker 5 (33:23):
It was so good.

Speaker 4 (33:24):
You know, Ginger's been a friend of mine for a
long time. For the last four or five years, we've
been good friends, and we'd always tried to get something together,
you know, to do together, and never did have the
right song. So I sat down and wrote this thing
and got with Ginger and we pulled it off. It
was a lot of fun. Bill White another guy that

(33:45):
helped me ride it, and it was working with Ginger's
a lot of fun. He's the sweetheart, the guy and
a dear friend for sure.

Speaker 3 (33:51):
Oh definitely. He seems like it. It seems like you
two died along and great friends. And it just shows
through the video. And I hope everyone goes and checks
out all the music that you have and everything that
you have to come and please make sure to go
to the website everybody cleat ustjud dot com. And also
you're on Facebook and Twitter and Instagram. You're on old socials.

Speaker 4 (34:08):
Yes, you go check them all out. And uh, I
appreciate it, and I can't wait to see you in
a few weeks. It's gonna be a lot of fun.
That's right.

Speaker 3 (34:15):
We can't wait to see you. It's gonna be so
much fun. And thank you. It's been so much for
doing this interview with me. I truly appreciate your time.

Speaker 4 (34:21):
Oh it's my pleasure, and thank you so much. And
I'll see you in a few weeks. Have a great week,
oh you got it.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
Yes, have a great week and see you very soon.
Thank you, all right, all right, bye bye bye bye.

Speaker 4 (34:33):
Bye Byeie line.

Speaker 3 (34:35):
In my house alone, I love them.

Speaker 5 (34:38):
Sell my place, buddy can't be shown.

Speaker 4 (34:41):
So just like where the plan fits filled before and.

Speaker 5 (34:45):
They passed up and moved up Ember the Ammery line
in the house, loan no more roote contry weeklyase while
I'm on the room, please welcome toward meet the board.

Speaker 4 (35:00):
Thanks you all.

Speaker 3 (35:01):
On the Josie Show, Jimmy Wayne, Hello.

Speaker 2 (35:03):
Hello Josie.

Speaker 4 (35:04):
How are you.

Speaker 3 (35:05):
I'm doing great? Thank you so much for joining me.
Thanks for having me, my pleasure. So I am so
excited to talk to you because you will be with
us for the ninth Annuel Jose Music a Burds this
year on October twenty second at the Grand Oprey House,
and you will be one of our very special presenters.
So we are so thrill that you'll be joining us.
Thank you, thank you.

Speaker 2 (35:23):
Well, I'm excited. I'm looking forward to the show and
just being there and being amongst all the wonderful talent. Yes,
it's gonna be very exciting.

Speaker 3 (35:31):
Yes, And I do have to say, the moment we
announced that you were joining us, everybody got so excited.
Everybody just adores you and your music and also your books.
People know you from different facets of your life, which
is really cool. It's gonna be a lot of fun.
But I do have to say you're no stranger to
the Grand o Opry Show. You performed there over two
hundred times, is that correct?

Speaker 2 (35:50):
That's correct, And I'm glad you called it the grand
o Opry Show because that's what it is. And I
always remind folks that the Grand o Opry is not
a place, it is a show. And played there on
the show two hundred and twenty four times, and every
single time was just an amazing experience. I filled in
for you know, legends like Little Jimmy Dickens, Porter Wagner

(36:12):
when they couldn't make it or called in at the
last minute. They would call me, and I remember I
used to have a pair of pants and a shirt
already ironed, and it would be hanging on a coat
hanger and a clothes hanger. And then as soon as
I'd get that call, they would say, can you be
here in twenty five minutes, And I'm like yes, And
I'd grab my already freshly pressed clothes and my boots
and my guitar and I'd run out the door and

(36:33):
I'd get there and sometimes do something with my hair
in the Opry House bathroom and I'd run out on space.

Speaker 3 (36:39):
And when they call you answer, I think that's amazing.
It's so great. These actually see footage of a lot
of your grand Ole Opry shows and performances on YouTube,
which is really cool, so everyone could check those outs.
But you are just an incredible music artist. But you know,
not only that, you are an incredible person, you are
a great voice in the change in support of children
and foster care, and you actually lobbied have the age

(37:01):
changed from eighteen to twenty one in California and Tennessee
for foster care children. Can you share with us a
little bit about your mission to raise awareness for children
and foster care.

Speaker 2 (37:10):
Well, in twenty ten, I walked from Nashville, Tennessee to Phoenix, Arizona,
to raise awareness for foster children who reached the age
of eighteen in the system and age out, become homeless,
sex traffic, imprisoned, and unfortunately some of these children end
up dying. It is an easy fix. It saves the

(37:31):
state money if they would just extend foster care to
age twenty one. And also these children, these young adults.
Three additional years to transition into adulthood and become productive citizens.
Now this isn't a handout. It so if you're going
to school or if you have a job, we're gonna
meet you halfway. We're gonna help you as long as
you're helping yourself. So that was the goal. Twenty three
states have extended foster care. We obviously still have the

(37:54):
other half to go and my own home state, North Carolina.
What a honor and a privilege and a blessing to
be able to stand on the House and Senate floor
and share my story of growing up in the foster
care system in North Carolina. I ended up eight migrating
out and becoming homeless, just to be able to go
back use my resources and experience and stand there and

(38:17):
look at these lawmakers and actually inspire them to create
a bill. And the governor past age was extended to
twenty one talk about I mean to see a full
Circleah like that. It's just amazing. You know, God has
really blessed me with so many amazing resources, opportunities, the

(38:37):
people I meet and continue to meet, and just the
way I look at it is just what I'm supposed
to be doing, is using these resources to help these kids,
just to inspire people to get involved and help out
a foster kids like I was helping.

Speaker 3 (38:50):
Yes, absolutely, and I love that you use your voice
and your veryan to help other children out there. It
is so important. I absolutely love what you do. I'm
just in all of everything that you do. And you
also talk about, you know, helping foster hits, I mean
through books as well, which is great. You're an amazing author.
So I want to talk about Paper angel first. So
it's a selling book and it also later became a film.

(39:12):
Can you tell us a little bit about Paper Angels.

Speaker 2 (39:14):
Well, it's a great story because Paper Angels was inspired
by the Salvation Army Angel Tree program and I was
a recipient of that program back in nineteen eighty two.
That's a very important number. My sister and I both
were and my mom signed us up. They provided us food, clothes,
and then I was a recipient again in nineteen eighty
seven when I had just gotten out of the foster

(39:36):
care system in North Carolina, they provided me my first
guitar and through this adletry program. So when I got
my record did in two thousand and one, my goal
was the first song I wrote, I said, I want
to write a song to give back to the Salvation
Army for what they've done for me and my family,
my mom, single parent, and my sister. So I co

(39:56):
wrote a song called paper Angels with a songwriter named
Don Sampson. He's just incredible songwriter. And I submitted the
song to the record label. It was turned down. It
was turned down three times, and then yeah, and then
the head of promotion there, Scott Burshetta, allowed me to
go in the studio and of course, you know there's
a lot of talking and going on around the record label. Okay,

(40:19):
let this guy. He's not gonna quit asking us. He
just let him record it. We don't even know what
a paper angel is, but he seems to really be
passionate about this idea. Just let him record it. And
I was told, we're gonna let you record it, but
it's never going to be on the radios. Don't ask,
all right, So I went to the studio and recorded it. Well,
it didn't make me out, and I went back to
Scott and was like, what happened? He said, well, it
needs a bridge the song is it kind of it

(40:41):
just it kind of dies after the second verse, we
need a bridge, and so I went back to Don
and wrote the bridge, went back and we went back
in the studio. They allowed me to do this, go
back in the studio and play the song in the studio,
and the musicians just kind of segued into that song seamlessly.
You can't even hear where they attached bridge onto this song. Anyway,

(41:01):
song makes it to the album, and then I did
my radio tour, and then toward the end of that
year two thousand and two, I think it was that
radio stations started playing the song on their own. They
didn't even get permission from the record label. Next thing
you know, it becomes the most added first week, most
added country Christmas song in history, which beats now. I'm

(41:22):
saying this very humbly. I don't think it's better than
the only song that held that record was Dolly Parton's
song Hard Candy Christmas in nineteen eighty two. Yeah, that
was a yeah, it was just the I think of
just of godwink if you will, like, Hey, you were
paper Angel recipient in eighty two and here's your song.

(41:42):
So anyway, this is a song that it ended up
becoming a book author named Travis Thrasher and I wrote
Paper Rangels during my walk halfway across America. And I
got to give Travis ninety nine percent of the credit
for writing Paper range He was just the flagship author,
if you will. He's the one who really just worked
at it very very very hard. I was walking halfway
across America, so he would call me and we'd talk

(42:04):
of the phone about chapters and stuff like that. So
we never sat down at a table and actually wrote together.
Well after that, I have this book. And then I
went on LinkedIn and I just contacted a director, a
movie director, and I said, Hey, I have a book
you need to make a movie out of. Now, what's
the chances of that. Well, she called me back or
sent me an email back about a month later and
said we're interested. And they made a movie in Vancouver,

(42:25):
Canada called Paper Rangels and it's been played every year
since twenty fourteen on Inspirational networks and you know other networks. Yeah,
and that evolved into an opportunity to write my book,
Walk to Beautiful with Ken Abraham. And Ken Abraham is
a master author. He's just incredible. After my walking halfway
across America, I started just writing my story now, and

(42:46):
I had written the entire story down on an iPad.
It had it all written out chronologically, and when Ken
Abraham and I met, I just handed him everything that
I had written and he went to work. It was
amazing how he could take seven pages of my note
and create a paragraph. You never felt like you lost anything,
and he was just He's just an extraordinary writer. That

(43:06):
book ends up becoming a three time New York Times bestseller,
which evolved into the children's book that I wrote by myself.

Speaker 3 (43:12):
That's amazing.

Speaker 2 (43:13):
Yeah, it's just it's an incredible little children's book. It's fun,
it's inspirational, educational. It's for kids who are eight to
thirteen years old, but anybody can read it and learn
from it. It tells the story of my walk halfway
across America through the eyes of a little dog that
I adopted on the walk. Her name is Ruby, so

(43:34):
she tells she narrates the story. So yeah, that's what
I've been doing.

Speaker 3 (43:37):
Walk to Beautiful is amazing. And then of course Ruby
the foster dog. The children's book is just brilliantly written
as well. Honestly, everyone needs to go and check out
all of your books and they can find it at
your website Jimmy Wayne dot com. And when some of
the words a book, are they able to get it
figned as well from you at any point?

Speaker 2 (43:54):
Well, I do speaking speaking engagements all over the country.
Some of these are open to the public. So if
anybody has a book and they want to want me
to sign it, please come out to the shows. I
do acoustic concerts and those are open to the public,
and bring your books, bring your old CDs and I'll
sign every one of them.

Speaker 3 (44:13):
Yes, come on out to a show, y'all. That's what
it's about. Show you for it stuff. Yes, And Jimmy
Wayne dot com is of course the one stop shop
and you can find all of your shows there. Everything
that they need to know about you, which is lovely
and you you do stay incredibly busy. Are you working
on any new music or projects that you could share
with us?

Speaker 2 (44:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (44:33):
What has been going on in your world?

Speaker 2 (44:35):
Well, I'm working on a couple of projects. I've been
writing a love album for ten years. It's just so
hard to write love songs because it seems like it's
been written and rewritten and rewritten, and so I'm just
really taking my time coming up with great melodies and
you know, just different ideas. I'd like to have an
album that I can sing anywhere. I have a lot
of story songs, and those songs go well at certain events,

(44:58):
but I want songs that I can sing, you know, anywhere,
any venue, and a love song you can take that anywhere.

Speaker 3 (45:05):
I love that. I love that any music that you
put out, I know it's going to do wonderful. I
do have a question because you know, as you know,
our award show is for independent music artists, and you
know a lot of independent music artists probably gonna be
listening to this interview. So if you have any advice
for independent artists out there who are trying to reach
their own dreams and but you know, do it independently,

(45:27):
is there any kind of like words of wisdom that
you can you can share it to them.

Speaker 2 (45:31):
I heard someone tell me this. I don't know if
it's true, but it sounds true. They said to me,
don't worry about trying to be the biggest artist that's
own current radio and have that massive fan base, because
at the end of the day, if they're signed to
a record label, you know, there's so much overhead, there's

(45:51):
so much there's so many people commissioning their earnings so
to speak. When they go to a gig, they might
end up having a paid eighty five percent of that
to you know, uncle Sam, personal manager, business manager, touring manager,
all of these people, and they end up with fifteen
percent of what they charged, and sometimes that's not even
enough to fill up the bus with fuel. So if

(46:13):
you can get ten thousand, now that's a lot of people.
But if you can get just ten thousand loyal fans
and you make sure you take care of them. This
individual told me, they said, you can tour and you
can stay in music business the rest of your life.
Ten thousands. Just focus on yeah, focus on that. There's
a artists out there that I know of that own

(46:34):
their own music, They own their own their own bus,
they owned their own everything, and they bring home. It
comes down to this. I heard someone say, well, it's
not about money, and I was like, well, it is.
When you're trying to pay your mortgage. It's about that
you're trying to put food in your refrigerator. So don't
tell me it's not about making money to survive so

(46:55):
that you can do what you love to do. And
thank God for the fans out there, because it's truly
them allow us to do this. You know, obviously God does,
but the fans keep us in business. So we got
to take care of the fans first. Always, always take
care of the fans. Take time to sign stuff for them,
take time to take pictures. Never think you're too busy.
If you think you're too busy, you're going out of business,

(47:16):
I promise you, because they will not go into that.
And build that fan base and build your numbers on
social media. That's extremely important. People who say I don't
do social media, that's a schoolish. You gotta build your
numbers because everyone's paying attention to your numbers.

Speaker 3 (47:30):
It's true, it really is. Yeah, and we and social
media is out there now for a reason.

Speaker 5 (47:35):
Right.

Speaker 2 (47:35):
It was so much suffer back then to do it,
So we see that's where everybody is. We can learn
a lot from Taylor Swift. And I was there on
the beginning of her career. We were signed to the
same record label and I watched her. I watched how
they built that career. And I can tell you when
she was fourteen, she was the first artist in the

(47:57):
Nashville and as far as I know, in the music
business that capitalized on social media back when you had MySpace,
remember that. Yeah, she would, Yeah, she would talk directly
to her fans because you know her fans and she
was fourteen or fifteen. She couldn't drive yet, so they
couldn't drive, and they're home and they could not believe

(48:18):
for the first time an artist was talking to them directly.
And to prove that, she'd say, oh, I love your
boots that you wore to the radio station today when
I was there doing my you know, live person performance,
and they were like, that's really her, and then they'd
tell all their friends. It was just amazing to watch
how she capitalized on that social media platform and just
absolutely blue everyone away.

Speaker 3 (48:39):
It was amazing, amazing you can learn, You could learn
so much from artists like that. You know, Before we go,
I had a few fun questions for you. Are you
ready some quick fun sure question? All right? Perfect? So
the first one being while performing, have you ever had
any embarrassing on stage moments? You can recall anything that
happened that was not playing.

Speaker 2 (49:02):
Well, it's probably inappropriate, but yes, I have had some
embarrassing moments. I realized that my my pants were not
zipping zipped up and that was embarrassing. Yeah. I was like,
when kiss me, yeah, stuff like that. You know this
stuff that you know one time, Well, I'll skip it
now I won't skip it. I'll tell you. I can't

(49:24):
even believe I'm telling you this story. I asked the manager.
I said, we're getting ready on stage and we have
like twenty minutes or whatever. I'm like, man, I got
a used restroom and he's like, it's outside. The portajohn
is outside, and I'm like, okay, So I get off
the bus and I take a right turn. I never
looked to my left. I just took the right turn
and darted for the bathroom. When I came out of
the bathroom, the door opened on that portajohn and it

(49:47):
was facing the audience. You're kidding, and they all cheered.
I was so embarrassed, man, I dropped my head. I
was like, why didn't you tell me that portagohn almost
facing the audience?

Speaker 3 (50:03):
Come? Yeah, they that, Oh I'm sure, Oh my goodness,
that's yeah, that kind of funny. They started hearing though, Well,
what a great support. That's hilarious. I love that.

Speaker 4 (50:23):
I love that.

Speaker 3 (50:23):
The next fun question that I have for you is
there a venue or a place anywhere around the world
that you'd love to perform that you haven't yet.

Speaker 2 (50:32):
That is really tough one. Like I've been hearing about
these venues that are in caves to do something. One
of those performed, you know, tons of places that there
is really truly nothing like playing the small intimate settings.

Speaker 3 (50:49):
Absolutely great answer. And then the last question that I
have for you is probably the craziest one you've ever gotten,
but it's all good. So if you could be, if
you could be any animal in the wild or not,
what animal do you think that's personality wise suits you?
What is Jimmy Wayne? Give them? You know.

Speaker 2 (51:07):
I love dogs, and I think I just their personality.
I try to think that maybe my personality is much
like a dog that I just try to I don't know.
I just no matter what somebody does to me, I
always seem to kind of forgive immediately and yeah, yeah,
just forgive and just yeah. And growing up in the

(51:29):
false care system, there was a lot of times I
had to forgive, you know, and I'm glad I did,
because you know, when you forgive somebody, it's not you're
not really releasing all that off your shoulders and it's
really for you, and it really makes you feel better when.

Speaker 5 (51:44):
You do that.

Speaker 3 (51:45):
That's a great answer, it really is. And we learn
a lot from dogs who really can forgiveness and loyalty
and all of that for sure. And I want to
thank you so so much for joining me and I
can't wait to see you at Cover twenty second. Looking
forward to it.

Speaker 2 (52:01):
Well, thank you, well, thank you very much for the invitation,
and I look forward to presenting. And I just wish
everyone that's coming to the event, that's up for any
kind of nominations and everything is good luck. And remember
that you know, when you get an award, it's I
believe this that when you get any kind of award,
especially if you get an award for helping people. I've

(52:24):
always been kind of you know, I don't need an
award for helping kids, because we're supposed to do that.
But if you get an award for helping someone, you know,
accept that award, but use that award to awareness help
somebody else. I mean, just don't think you did it
all by yourself. Just use it and say, man, I

(52:44):
got this award, but this award is for you and
to help you and to that's what that's for well said.

Speaker 3 (52:51):
Absolutely A stimulate everyone, and I knew.

Speaker 5 (53:03):
What I want to copy inbound Jimmy kind of sound down.

Speaker 3 (53:09):
In a.

Speaker 5 (53:14):
Jemmy, I'm missing you wit alltown you mow.

Speaker 1 (53:32):
The Josey Show was copyright and property of the Josie
Network of brands. It may not be duplicated, althor credited, sold,
or aired without rip consent from the Josie Show owners.

Speaker 3 (53:41):
Any copyright Tranchan or The Jersey Show will

Speaker 2 (53:44):
Be subject to legal actions.
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