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January 15, 2025 • 39 mins
Wednesday 01/15/25 Hour 2. With Mike Imbasciani.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's Wenesday.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Gay, I don't know money.

Speaker 3 (00:03):
What do you need?

Speaker 1 (00:04):
All I need is that hat. Don't you think that's
the most beautiful hat You've ever seen?

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Some bad hats.

Speaker 1 (00:09):
I don't think we should wear hot. It is National hat, David.
You know that's some hats. I wear many hats.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
The one I'm wearing currently, I'm an entertain that's up
to you, big bro.

Speaker 4 (00:19):
Hats off to who knows.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
Cat's off to you, sir or madame. Today is National
Hat Day.

Speaker 5 (00:24):
Shoot in this present crisis, government is not the solution
to our problem.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Government is the problem.

Speaker 1 (00:36):
This is Charlotte County speaks.

Speaker 5 (00:38):
Your chance to let your voice be heard on local
state in national wishoes and now broadcasting live from a
dumpy little warehouse behind a taco bell, the host of
Charlotte County speaks, Ken.

Speaker 1 (00:52):
Love Joy, Thank you, Johnny News Radio fifteen eighty one
hundred point nine FM, wc F Radio dot Com. Charlie
County speaks Our number two, Ken love Joy, Miikee Bassiani
along for the ride cyber Truck you sponsored by cyber Truck.
Surprise yourself, surprise myself with that one. You got to

(01:13):
do that with it's just going to pop up randomly, right, Yeah,
just all of a sudden. Well that one, that one,
because this you we're going to be able to use
just about any time, really, because she said so, that's
going to be a good one. So many applications, so
many applicants. Yes, phone lines open nine four to one
two zero six fifteen eighty, toll free eight eight eight

(01:35):
four four one fifteen eighty. Email address. Cc speaks at
live dot com. Miss the show, head to our homepage
WCCF Radio dot com and scroll down to the podcast section.
Mikey Bassi ani uh touring all over the all over
the nation, all over this great nation of ours. You
haven't left the country yet, but all over this great

(01:57):
nation of ours, and you've got the opportunity to work
with some some amazing musicians. And as such is the
case with somebody that you brought on the show with
you who you're going to be performing with do tell Yeah.

Speaker 6 (02:10):
So this Friday again, which is January seventeenth, we will
be over at the Twisted Fork in Port Charlotte. And
now I met this gentleman last April and he came
over from the UK and I got to open for him.
And we spawned a friendship and we got to jam
a little bit then. And he loves coming over here

(02:32):
to Florida mainly because he gets to fish all the time.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
Yeah, and love to fish.

Speaker 6 (02:37):
So we have a very fun show where my band,
Mike Combassiana and his blues Rockers will be opening for him,
and then we will be backing him up as well.
And that is the Will Johns Band this Friday, January
seventeenth at the Twisted Fork six thirty to ten pm.
And Will, is that you on the phone right now?

Speaker 2 (02:55):
How are you?

Speaker 1 (02:59):
My friend?

Speaker 2 (03:01):
Yeah? I'm really good. How are we doing? Like? How
are we doing? Ten?

Speaker 1 (03:05):
Not too bad? Not a great connection, but we can
deal with it exactly.

Speaker 6 (03:09):
And you and Will you just got back from Guatemala too,
so Will's Will's going all over the place.

Speaker 1 (03:14):
Well now he's the one touring the world exactly. How
was Guatemalamala?

Speaker 2 (03:21):
Was hot? A bit hot. I got to perform right
next to a volcano called Fuego Enough and there was
hot magma and lava spewing half the top of it
while I was while I was doing my set, So
it was it was pretty wild.

Speaker 1 (03:42):
Everybody gets to do that, of course, yeah, yeah, really,
I saw the picture of the live volcano behind you can.

Speaker 6 (03:48):
See the stage and then see the volcano with the
red love right at the top.

Speaker 5 (03:51):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
That was pretty cool. Wow, that's amazing. So Will You've
got kind of an amazing background. Really, if he could,
god to tell us about Will John's and how you
got started playing guitar and what you've done with your life.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
Okay, Well, I was bactically born into the recording studio.
I was born the youngest of three. Mom and dad
were both older, and I got fished out, just missed
the recording studio by a few moments at you know,

(04:32):
Rushman Hospital. So I was actually born in the hospital,
but nearly born at Sunset Sounds in the Hollywood. My
dad was a record producer. He was I think at
the time when I was born, and was working with
the Stones on exile on my Main Street. But I
could be wrong, but I think that that's what he

(04:53):
was working on and that's what we did. He was
an engineer and then a producer. He's a brother Billy John's,
who of course famously worked with the Beatles and the
Stones just about every everyone. So between them, you know,

(05:14):
they were serious names. In you know, in music production
of engineering. My earliest memories are of the sights and
sounds and smells of the recording studio, you know, because
you know there's a very particular smell of the smell
of lights and buttons.

Speaker 1 (05:35):
Yeah, welles back then it was tubes.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
Yeah, that's my earliest memory. That smell. You get the
same smell actually when you when you buy a new guitar,
brand new guitar and you open up for a good
one anyway, the guitar pace, it's that same it's that
same smell. So that's kind of like home to me.
And I was like, but I was always a what

(06:03):
we would say, what we would call it where you
go a bloody show off. I was always doing little
shows and performances, you know, for aunts and uncles, that
famili who get togethers and stuff. And it wasn't long
before I mean I always sang. I always sang songs,
and you know, like I said, the little performances and

(06:27):
stuff was in the school plays. And I started filming
around with the guitar probably probably around ten. I think
somebody gave me an old, beat up electric guitar that
had one string on it, and I was in bats
around the house on the sofa and you know, probably

(06:47):
pretend to play with it. And then and then of
course I got the street driver out and took it
all apart and I can't quite figure out how to
put it back together. And anyway, Yeah, and I went
to school and went on to college where I've been
performing arts, which you know, was that it was an

(07:11):
all encompassing course of contemporary dance and acting techniques and music, this,
that and the other. And of course it wasn't long
before I stopped going into college because I was far
too busy with my with my rock bown.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
You were a gigging, yeah, and I.

Speaker 2 (07:28):
Was giving that's it from about the age of seventeen
hours off and apart from a few years in the
commercial fishing sector, which I am also a licensed commercial captain.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Oh really, I am.

Speaker 2 (07:49):
That's my other string to my boat.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
So that's why you like coming out here. You got
a boat out here, you're just a you DEI you'll
go charter a boat and take it out. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
I don't have my own, but but I'm I'm quite
happy to go on other people's.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
So yeah, that's what we're all happy to do.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
It yes, yeah, yeah, we love my fish and well
you know what they say, you know, captain fish, leave
the teach some on the fish and don't forever.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
Yeah, indeed it.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
Was actually my uncle, My uncle Eric taught me how
to fish and taught me how to cast a fly,
and taught me how to cast a normal a conventional
road or a pole as you guys like to call them.
And so that kind of set me up in good stead.
And he also showed me he didn't teach me guitar,

(08:44):
but he showed me the first opening rift crossloads.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
Uh, no better person to learn it from. Yeah, no doubt. Well,
we look forward to seeing you again. Yeah, we look
forward to seeing you again again when that that's coming
on Friday.

Speaker 6 (09:02):
So coming up this Friday, January seventeenth, of the Twisted
Forks six thirty to ten, we're opening for Will and
then the Will Johns Band will be backing him up.
And there are VIP tickets available that include a buffet
and there's a bar inside the VIP area there too,
and general admission is free, so people should come out.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Check it out to Bertsbackporch dot com. I think something
like that.

Speaker 6 (09:23):
Yeah, is the web, it's freshtics dot com and then yea,
so just go to the Twisted Forks website or go
to my website, Micombassiani dot com. I have a link
to the VIP tickets there as well. So it's gonna
be a fun time.

Speaker 1 (09:35):
Awesome Will Johns, thank you, We appreciate the time.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
Thank you for having me on Guys the Show, My Keys.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
Yes, sir, we'll see you then we'll be back right
after this. Right the station is now the ultimate power
in the universe. They have no chemistry at all.

Speaker 4 (09:52):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks on news
radio fifteen eighty WCCF.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
There's a documentary out there.

Speaker 7 (10:02):
It's called Hot Shot, and it basically delves deep into
all of the Shenanganigans, all of the nonsense, all of
the corruption when it comes to wildfires in California. The
makers of the film actually said that they got well,

(10:25):
they got screwed by Netflix in HBO because Netflix and
HBO wanted them to push the idea that climate change
was behind the wildfires.

Speaker 8 (10:38):
I mean, it does a great job of looking back
at the entire region, the entire country when it comes
to the history of wildfires here in this country and yeah,
you know, rather than spend all this money on fire mitigation,
all this nonsense, just clean up the brush watchdog on
Wallstreet dot Com.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
I fear.

Speaker 4 (11:34):
No, no, no.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
Like with a faint tuba in the background. Oh man,
are there any lyrics? No idea, I have no idea
how you find this stuff? It's in the jamming category. Okay,

(12:02):
we're jamming. Have this is the system we're jamming. Yeah.
If it's in the system, in the jaman category, it
was a hit. Wow, there's always a few down weeks.
You know. That was Casey Cason was on vacation that week.

(12:25):
No lyrics, nothing yet, stuck in the elevator, suck right
there for she's got indigestion. I can't tell what it.
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM w
CCF ten twenty four. You're still going. That's still going
since sounds like constantation Taco Tuesday. It is matter of day,

(12:56):
it just keeps going. Just I was kind of hoping
for you.

Speaker 6 (12:59):
Really, you watched this is gonna get the video pulled
off of YouTube.

Speaker 1 (13:05):
This song is this is who do you think now?
You're a musician? Okay, yes, I just play one on TV.
What what band has influenced you more than any other band? Hey? Wait, wait, hey, nope, okay, No,

(13:34):
it's hard because so many things.

Speaker 6 (13:36):
Because I grew up listening to the Beatles and Bob Dylan,
and when you grow up listening to the Beatles, there's
so much. They did so much in that decade span
of music and innovation, actual innovation, musical innovation. And then
when you you take those inspiration things and the Dylan,
you know, rhythm style, and then you travel to understanding

(14:00):
appt into understanding Stevie Ray Bond, understanding Jimmy Hendrix. You
pull a little bit from everybody, even Brian Setzer.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
You hear his rockabilly. Okay, so right there, you said
the Beatles first. Yeah, so you would say the Beatles
in the early days.

Speaker 6 (14:16):
Okay, all right, well I'm just saying as an initial inspiration.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
An indie rocker named Chris Dalla Reva decided to investigate
which band has been more influential. He used Wikipedia's list
of four hundred and seventy nine mainstream rock performers to
see which artists they named as influences. Okay, top ten

(14:40):
Beatles number one, two hundred and ten mentions. Yeah, led
Zeppelin number two really one hundred and fifty one, The
Stones number three at one forty six, Yeah, you two,
and really I don't understand why. I mean, everything after
octug Baby really kind of saw, and even only part

(15:01):
of Octune Baby was really good. Everything after that. They've
had like eight or nine albums since No, especially that
one that got forced on our phone. Remember that one.
Oh yeah, that still pops up and I'm riding Yeah
ship Bowie coming in number five at one twenty seven. Dylan,

(15:22):
yeah at six.

Speaker 6 (15:23):
You know, since the movie Pandora now has a Dylan channel,
I would imagine the dude.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
You know, I only saw, I only saw a YouTube clip,
but the guy did a good job. And I will say,
it is hard to sing like that.

Speaker 3 (15:39):
It is.

Speaker 6 (15:40):
I've been trying to do more of the Dylan stuff
and actually get the right tones.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
You gotta it's so right.

Speaker 6 (15:45):
Gravel, it's not even gravel, it's the inflection. It's his
weird inflections.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
On yeah, thats zame. Yeah, but no, it's hard. So
the movie was very good. Queen number eight at one fourteen,
what's actually a tie? Elton John and Queen both at
one fourteen, Hendrix at number nine. Yeah, with one twelve
and for some reason the Chili Peppers see and and

(16:15):
to that. That makes me think probably flee as a
bass player, you would like actually.

Speaker 6 (16:19):
On what decade you were born in. It depends on
what you're actually listening to.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
You know. Well, still four hundred and seventy nine mainstream
rock performers. The Beatles, right the oldest, well because older
than the Stones, really the oldest band still has the
most mentioned, the most influence because of how diverse they were. Yeah,
that was ay, but George Martin exactly.

Speaker 6 (16:42):
I mean, producers can learn stuff, guitarists can learn stuff.
How when they did that thing about Ringo all they
interviewed all the drummers, it's iconic. That type of influence
comes from that. But when you hear Red Hot Chili Peppers,
when you hear Queen or David Bowie, that's coming from
the people who grew up listening.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
To that or gravitated towards that music.

Speaker 6 (17:04):
One of the funniest things I've found in all the
guitar videos I've been posting lately, all the guitar solos
is people hear who they want to hear. Through somebody's playing,
so I'll be playing. I played some song I don't
even remember, and somebody said, I bet this guy's a
Rory Gallagher fan.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
Wow, he was good. He was good. But you don't
see those You don't see too, you got you gotta
really search for those videos. But Rory Gallagher is fun
to watch.

Speaker 6 (17:33):
He is, and he's fantastic. And I do play a
Rory Gallagher song. However, I was not playing a Rory
Gallagher song in that clip, and I wasn't actively thinking of, oh,
I'm trying to play this like with some Rory Gallagher
flair or like a lick that he played or something
like that. I'm just playing it more so like whoever
I'm covering. If I'm playing like Stevie, I'll play a

(17:54):
little looser, you know. If I'm playing like Hendrix, you're
playing really loose, you know, and stuff like that. So
people who like certain artists also want to hear certain
artists when they're listening to other people too.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
Or they hear that trying to listen for the influence
and then trying to call it say like yo, you right,
So okay, it's all, but it ain't necessarily so is
what you're saying. Correct, Yes, sorry, but it's interesting two
six fifteen eighty, toll Free eight eight eight four four
one fifteen eighty.

Speaker 6 (18:27):
Look at drummers Neil Park for example. Ever, you know
certain people wh grow up listening to Rush Neil part
is the best, well living and can still get it done.
And this has been years ago. So this has been
five years ago. So I don't know if he can
still do it. But they're still playing around here. Phil
Earhart for.

Speaker 1 (18:44):
Kansas, Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, he his kit. When you
look at his kit, it looks as it's not as
big as Neil's was, but it's pretty close and he
gets the job done pretty well too. But there's a
lot with drummers. It's different, right, you know.

Speaker 6 (19:00):
I love but again that's decade stuff. Modern drummers really
love Nate Smith right now.

Speaker 1 (19:04):
Yeah, I well, I love like the drummer for the
Black Keys, just real simple like Charlie Watts. Charlie watched
a very simple kit and he got the job done.

Speaker 6 (19:14):
When I was first learning drums, I had a drum
teacher who's also teaching me guitar, and my dad said,
I want you to teach him to play like Ginger Baker,
And my teacher said, who, so, my buddy Jordan influences
you know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (19:28):
My buddy jj Is was a phenomenal drummer. I loved
to just sit and watch him play because he was
fun to watch. He had that. He had a certain
a style, a bun Ee Carlos type of you know,
flair to it, and if you're listening to blues, you're
learning blue style. Well, he played it all. He played

(19:48):
it all, he did session work, he played it all.
You're playing. Then he gave it up. You're going to
be a rock drum he gave it up. He gave
it up for high end automobiles. Anyone get mad at you?
No one has said how dare you do that? Yet?

Speaker 4 (20:02):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks on news Radio.

Speaker 3 (20:05):
Fifteen eighty WCCF.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
Disco Oh, look at the spinning disco ball. Can you
do that in post production? Pull like a disco ball?
Maybe I'll see what I can do, don't bother Ky
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM w
CCF ten thirty five thirty six. Just about have the

(20:50):
whole screen, just like changing day Wednesday.

Speaker 6 (20:52):
Yeah, and hey, you want to talk about resurgence of
disco YMCA. The Village People are playing at Trump's inaugural
ball like the night the night before, the one the
turning point USA is doing.

Speaker 1 (21:09):
Hey, they know how to make money. They ain't stupid.
The guy, well, you know a couple of them. I forget.
I think the plumber. I don't know. The plumber and
the biker got into it. I forget who wrote it.
The biker wrote it. I forget. Anyway, he was all
about it. He doesn't mind. He's man, I'm making money
off this. I'm getting Royalty's office. Play it all you want.

(21:31):
The one who likes to wear leather. And then he
started getting heat, taking heat from it, and one of
the other YMCA members, Village People members wasn't having it.
I guess, so maybe they got rid of him. I
play it on my break music now, my gigs whatever.
Anyway should it was? That was I mean again iconic. Yeah,

(21:53):
he won with more than just great policies. He won
with fun and humor. Sure, fun again, MafA uh now
we all know me. I've been Canadian bacon and pineapple
on the pizza for you since I was a kid here,

(22:14):
there is a now and I have yes, and now
I have several several issues with this, and we'll get
to this in just a second. H to send Will
to this place when he's back in England. Yes, he
can find out. Uh, there's a pizza place in England
that added Hawaiian pizza to their menu, but owners think
pineapple on pizza is a crime, so they're charging one

(22:38):
hundred and twenty dollars for it. Well yeah whatever euros
US dollars. The other pizza is more like fifteen, so
it's it's National Pizza Week by the way.

Speaker 6 (22:54):
Nice You see their ad it says Hawaiian. Yeah, for
one hundred pounds you can have it, order the champagne
to go on.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
You monster. Who are the Brits? Who are the Brits
to be crapping all over pineapple on pizza? I don't.
Their cuisine is horrible. Their teeth, look at their teeth,
they don't have them. They're horrible their cuisine. That's why
they had to import India to the UK spic so

(23:23):
that they could have an actual cuisine.

Speaker 6 (23:25):
And you would think for the East India Trading Company
for as much as spice as that they got back.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
Then that they learn, then you learn nothing. Yes, British cuisine.
Who are they to be saying that pine is a
crime it Actually, I'm sorry, it tastes good.

Speaker 6 (23:41):
Co owner Fan Wolf mince no words, quote, I absolutely
loathe pineapple on a pizza.

Speaker 1 (23:48):
Oh but we thought we'd added as a joke. Who
knows some stupid individual might come by and pay the
one twenty, especially when they're drunk. Yes, the head chef said,
quote I love a pina colata, but apple on pizza. Never.
I'd rather put a bloody strawberry on one than have
that tropical menace. I'm telling you the pineapple okay, all right,

(24:09):
I don't like it, pineapple, I don't like it. Canadian
baking okay, yeah right, you with me? You're not with me,
but you should be with me. In jalapeno, I'm telling
you the sweet, the pike spicy. But I'm telling you
now it's great pizza.

Speaker 6 (24:25):
No, no, no, no, of course this is all like
a marketing stunt. Yeah there, nobody's gonna you.

Speaker 1 (24:30):
Know, who's gonna pay one hundred and twenty bucks? They
got one can of pineapple in the back, that's all
they bought because they know nobody's gonna especially in England,
cheap as they are.

Speaker 6 (24:39):
Yeah, but somebody will still go there and say, hey,
I support you. Give me a normal pizza, you know
what I mean?

Speaker 1 (24:44):
So maybe Luopa Pizza, lupa delivery menu one hundred pounds,
you can have it. Okay, CNN talk to him. Nobody's
ordered it yet. But it did drum up what they
were looking for. Great marketing. It was a ton of publicity.
That's like, that's like saying that they're okay, we're ending.
They the girl Scouts telling us they're going to be

(25:06):
ending these two cookies this year. This is the last
time you stuck up.

Speaker 5 (25:11):
Now.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
Yeah, I'm not buying them too expensive, I'm not doing it. Uh,
I don't know. I yes, was the winning answer. Does
pineapple belong on pizza in the UK? When they did
a poll, Oh, they did the pole Yeah because this
says yeah, because they know we're just looking for anything

(25:34):
with flavor. The British cuisine has no flavor. They've got nothing.
I'll tell you what. There's this really good food truck
that I.

Speaker 6 (25:43):
Follow on Instagram. That's that's in England. I don't know
exactly where uh, And it's a jacket potato. It's a
baked potato. And but they put the lather with butter
so much. Butter looks amazing by itself with that. But
the baked beans different, all these different topics. Tuna salad.
That's a little strange on a baked potato, but it's

(26:05):
almost like a tuna castle.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
Yeah. But sheese and beans. Cheese and beans on a
potato like that, shees and beans. Yeah, you got me,
You got me. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (26:17):
And they have chili. You can do one with chili
stuff like that. I would do that, That would be
I would do that.

Speaker 1 (26:23):
Yeah. So you've got a nice, a nice meme to
report as we discuss this. This woman with just a hollow,
hollow soul. Oh yeah, only fans woman claims to have
broke the world record by sleeping with one fifty seven

(26:43):
men in twelve hours, which just in and of itself
is totally disgusting. Yes, but apparently it wasn't It was
a world She did break a world record. And who
keeps track of that?

Speaker 6 (26:58):
We don't know, but we do know we have we
have the numbers here, let me uh, I have it
right here?

Speaker 1 (27:03):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (27:03):
The joke I was going to read earlier. A porn
star has announced that she has slept with over a
thousand men in a single day, beating the last record
set by Lindsey Graham.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
Hio.

Speaker 6 (27:18):
But if he didn't tape it in the Senate room
there does it really?

Speaker 1 (27:22):
Do we know that that wasn't him? We don't know,
de we this is how rus get. We don't know
that it wasn't lindsay just say it. We know who
was receiving it, yo, Yeah, but we don't know that.
I still have his security clearance, his job. Hey, and

(27:44):
it turns out this guy that uh O'Keefe nailed actually
did have these did those things, and did have that job.
He wasn't bragging, He wasn't bragging and he was but again,
well yes he was bragging. But again, if that's your job,
you don't blow that out. No, in a dinner and

(28:06):
drinks with some girl you're trying to sleep with, unless
that's it, that's your whole goal. And again that just
points to your lack of integrity, lack of honor. I
mean that you would spill that kind of information. Again, dude,
get rid of him, get rid of him. But that
does point to the fact that something's going on there.

Speaker 6 (28:25):
The first word in security clearance is security.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
Can you keep your mouth shut? And for this individual,
the answer is a resounding.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
Wait.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
Time just flies when you're having this much of a blast.

Speaker 4 (28:41):
They're littering and peeing everywhere and scarfling junk foods. We'll
be right back with Charlotte County Speaks on news radio
fifteen eighty WCC.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
There are a couple of things I will never understand
this world. Microwaves. Don't even talk to me about microwaves.
Don't even try to explain a microwave television. That's the
devil's box. Don't talk to me about that. How did
those pictures show up? Like? And the third thing is craps?
I lost so much money playing crabs. I can't wrap
my brain around what's happening for the pass line. There's

(29:14):
people with sticks, there's people yelling roulette. I can pick
numbers for a bit of a gamming problem. I don't
know if you've ever walked into a casino with a
dollar thirty seven in your checking account and walked out
down three thousand dollars? How does that happen? I was
raised in an Irish Catholic gambling family.

Speaker 3 (29:37):
If you were old enough to hold money, you're old enough.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
To lose that. My grandma took me for three hundred
dollars at Christmas one time. Well, you shouldn't gamble with
money you can't afford to lose. But you gave me
fifty bucks in a card that said see you at
the table.

Speaker 2 (29:53):
What the.

Speaker 1 (30:45):
News radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM WCCF
ten fifty one on a Humpday Wednesday. I brought you
to this world. I can take you out the late
Marvin Gay very nice ladies and gentlemen, uh, ten fifty one.
I guess we need to learn stuff, and time to learn,

(31:08):
time to learn random random facts. This pops up. I
don't know number one of your five random facts. There

(31:30):
is no federal law banning the creation of fake images
of people. Yeah they're well, well they're working on it.
If they're copywritten. Yeah, there's gotta be some a stuff
right there.

Speaker 6 (31:44):
They're working on, especially with the dead actors that they
want to bring back there.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
Any any AI reproduction of me is probably gonna look better,
So go for it. Number two, Yes, heybody give you
a massive coiff can Number two, there are more public
libraries in the US than Mickey D's. We've got approximately
sixteen five hundred public libraries and less than fourteen thousand

(32:10):
Mickey D's. Those numbers have to change. Gotta get rid
of the seat oils. Yeah, I get rid of the
sea oils. Go back to using word, it's tallow whatever.
Number three. Many deaf people with schizophrenia don't hear voices

(32:30):
in their head because you know they're deaf. Some see
a pair of disembodied hands signing in their mind. Okay.
Number four. Dalmatians became firehouse dogs in the late eighteen
hundreds because the fire engines were pulled by horses, and

(32:50):
dalmatians got along with the horses better than any other breed. Nice.
And finally, number five of your five random facts in
speed and drivers are required to have their headlights on
at all times, even during daylight hours. There's your five
r nflus. Because it's always kind of hazy, right you

(33:12):
always every every show because there's a lot of Netflix,
you know, you see a lot of even on Prime too,
a lot of shows that are like coming out of
Sweden and those, and it's always kind of that gray.
Same with New Zealand. Yeah, Gray Dark, that's like, I
don't want to live here New Zealand. Want to live here,

(33:33):
You'd have to really love cross country skiing, right, I
don't know, I mean yeah, the women Sweedish women. I
guess that's what I mean. Hey, at least a vacation. Hey, Hey, hey,
hey two O six fifteen eighty, toll free eight eight
eight four four one fifteen eighty. Where are we? Historically

(33:55):
the rules of basketball? Who cares? We're first printed in Triangle.
It was The Triangle was a newspaper in Springfield, Massachusetts
on this date in eighteen ninety two. Were first printed
in the paper that's where the game originated. We Springfield,
eighteen ninety two. They were devised by a guy named

(34:16):
James Nasmith. Basketball fifty eight years ago, nineteen sixty seven,
the Green Bay Packers won the very first Super Bowl Nice,
beating the Kansas City Chiefs thirty five to ten. Bart
Star Games MVP and the tickets ten bucks ten bucks,

(34:37):
ten bucks five fifty eight years ago, nineteen sixty seven.
On this date, Rolling Stones appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show,
but only after you're agreeing to change the words of
Let's spend the night together, to let's spend some time together. Yes,
aboada about dot dot fifty one years ago, in this day,

(34:58):
in nineteen seventy four, Happy Days, Ron Howard, Henry Weekler,
The Fawns, Anson Williams. It lasted eleven seasons until nineteen
eighty four. Nineteen seventy four to nineteen eighty four, remember
it well, I.

Speaker 6 (35:13):
Never saw it. I had a CD that had like
the top twenty TV theme songs and Monday Happy Day.

Speaker 1 (35:20):
It's on Wednesday. It's on one of those side channels, Friday,
Happy Days, the Weekend. Come yeaes stop it now. It's
banned in Russia. It was coming out of coming out
of Happy Days. Of course he had the Fawns. Yeah,
with all his phrases, up you thse with a rubber hose,
that one that was a good But jump the shark also,

(35:43):
really that's when Happy Days jumped the shark, When Fawns
jumped the shark literally on the skis. Yes, and that
was establishing Ted mcgilly as a ratings killer. Okay, all right,
forty eight years ago, nineteen seventy seven, that's what it says,

(36:03):
Ted McGinley. Yeah, he's maybe he's the one who wrote that. Anyway,
I don't know that episode could be. Forty eight years ago,
nineteen seventy seven, Dan Ackroyd Jane Curtain debuted The cone
Heads on SNL. That was a fun movie. It was.

(36:24):
It was, Yeah, it was. It was an okay movie.
I liked the movie, but I like, I loved it
when they did it on The skits that they did
with it on SNL were hilarious. True. Forty eight years ago.
Forty seven years ago, rather nineteen seventy eight, two students
at Florida State University murdered in their sorority house. Ted

(36:44):
Bundy was later convicted executed for the ground. He was
chased all over the place. My dad chased him up
in Washington, Wow, for a while with the sheriffs up there.
Forty seven years ago, Dallas Cowboys beat the Broncos twenty
seven to ten in Super Bowl twelve. Randy White, defensive
tackle and defensive end Harvey Martin co MVPs after leading

(37:06):
the Dallas defense and recovering four fumbles and intercepting four passes.
Wow Wow, ticket price thirty dollars. Who's doing the halftime
this year? Who cares? I know, I forget so, uh
we got the I guess they just did. We'll be
making room for more chili.

Speaker 6 (37:24):
Yeah, I know who you got for Super Bowl because
I guess they just did the wild Now.

Speaker 1 (37:32):
I screw the wild Cards. I'm still I'm I want
the I'm hoping for the Allions. It's Theirs, that's true. Yeah,
it's the Texans.

Speaker 6 (37:41):
Are playing the Chiefs on Saturday, along with the Commanders against.

Speaker 1 (37:44):
The I think the Chiefs are going to beat the Texas.

Speaker 6 (37:46):
I think, so send the Lions over the Commanders. Oh yeah, yeah,
and then Rams and Eagles.

Speaker 1 (37:55):
Sadly, I don't like the Eagles, but they've been playing
pretty good. Yeah. And then Bill and Ravens. Ravens have
been playing good too.

Speaker 3 (38:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (38:03):
I saw, yeah, I saw a montage and that one
guy just cool. Yeah, you know, he just goes right
through the teams I don't like. Have been playing pretty good. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (38:12):
Oh yeah, all right, we'll do Lions because the Lions
are going to have to go through the Chiefs. If
the Chiefs beat the Texans and the Lions got to
beat the Commanders first, who won their division?

Speaker 1 (38:22):
Didn't they? The Jimmy Dean on this eight on this date.
In nineteen eighty six, ordered to pay his brother Dawn
Dean half a million dollars for causing him mental anguish
in a feud over the family's sausage business, Jimmy Dean's
Purpole Sausage. Have you ever had any Jimmy Dean's Purporle sausage? No?

(38:46):
I can't say he should. No, thank you. It's very tasty.
I'm good he's dead now, but the sausage is still
available in stores. Well, it's been well it's owned by
another company. Now, yeah, who's probably got all kinds of
chef in there. But it's your poor sh it's not
cooked with dallo. We're you gonna get the doll that's

(39:08):
like congested. That sounds like what congested?

Speaker 2 (39:11):
R F?

Speaker 1 (39:11):
Well, what what's he sound like? It sounds like this?
See it almost okay, No, we're talking about I will
anybody got any more jokes? Any funny?

Speaker 2 (39:25):
Nope?

Speaker 1 (39:26):
Nope, all right, see you folks. We're news Radio fifteen
eighty A m w c CF Punda Gorda and FM
one hundred point nine W two sixty five EA Punda
Gorda
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