Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Giggity giggey giggity goo.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
We now take you to Scotland and an update on
the Lockness Monster Full time NeSSI Hunter.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
Day four hundred and twenty six. Nope, still nothing.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
And that's your update on the Lockness Monster full time
NeSSI Hunter.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
This is not headline news.
Speaker 4 (00:34):
A study shows chewing wood may boost your memory, which
unfortunately means you'll never forget how bad it felt to
chew on wood. Domino's finally launched stuff Crust Pizza. Now
the biggest mystery in pizza is how does Little Caesars
charge five dollars and still seem overpriced? Ben Affleck would
(00:55):
reportedly like to get back together with Jennifer Garner. I
say go for it, and I mean everyone deserves his
seventeenth chance. And British singer Kiki d is seventy eight.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
Today her new.
Speaker 4 (01:09):
Duet with Elton John is called Don't go Break in
My Hip.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
No, you shut up.
Speaker 4 (01:14):
This is not headline news.
Speaker 5 (01:20):
Koula, wake up, grab a cup. It can.
Speaker 6 (01:40):
Cannot join the men a call and.
Speaker 7 (01:59):
Cab jam.
Speaker 6 (02:08):
Jam jam.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
In this present crisis, Government is not the solution to
our problem.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Government is the problem.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
This is Charlotte County Speaks. Your chance to let your
voice be heard on local, state, and national which ues
and now broadcasting live from a dumpy little warehouse behind
a taco bell, the host of Charlotte County Speaks Can
Love Joy.
Speaker 5 (02:47):
And the Way we Go.
Speaker 1 (02:50):
Ote He we Go News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred
point nine FM, wc Radio dot com. Charlotte County Speaks
on the air on this Thursday morning at nine ten.
I'm Ken Lovejoy. That's Michael Bessie any right there, good morning,
(03:11):
How you doing?
Speaker 8 (03:11):
I'm good here, yeah, all right, they're good.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
Phone lines open nine four one two zero six fifteen eighty,
toll free eight eight eight four four one fifteen eighty.
You can email us the address. Cc speaks at live
dot com. Miss the show, find them all WCCF radio
dot com. Scroll down to the podcast section, and you
know you can put our podcast right there on your
(03:35):
pre set as well, right next to w CCF so
you can have you get your presets on the new
iHeartRadio app. You've seen those right, Yes, you got your
halfa Yes it is on there all right. Well on
your presets, you can just go ahead and you know,
put the podcast in or put the show right there
and then have all whatever else it is that you like.
Speaker 8 (03:56):
Cool.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
I think, very good. You should just you know, do it,
do it.
Speaker 8 (04:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
It makes it so easy for you if you just will,
cause then you don't miss out on any titillating conversation.
Speaker 8 (04:10):
Yes, And that way it keeps you away from what
was the word of the day yesterday, fatigue? Fatigu No fatigue?
You want to know, don't have some fatigue? Come have joy?
Remember joy coffee?
Speaker 1 (04:24):
Yeah? Yeah, I knew were growing.
Speaker 8 (04:27):
Up person or a feeling. Yeah, I was gonna say,
was that the last time?
Speaker 1 (04:37):
That's about it?
Speaker 8 (04:38):
Yeah, Well, folks, you can experience some joy this weekend
if you come see my band Mike Combassianagin. It's blues rockers.
Busy weekend right here. Yeah, five gigs in four days.
Cool season, folks. So come out tonight Thursday, March sixth
over at Bayside Burger and Beer in Cape Coma on
Hancock Bridge Parkway and great new newish venue hasn't been
(05:00):
open about a year. I think. Yeah, very good food,
nice environment, nice stage inside, air conditioned, very good. Six
to nine Tonight Tomorrow, Friday the seventh, over at TJ
Carnies in downtown Venice from eight to eleven Saturday, bright
and early over at the Sarasota Cars and Coffee right
there across the street from the main big mall, you know,
(05:23):
but right next to the Ford's garage.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Maybe people don't realize, but usually musicians, particularly blues musicians
and comedians, they stay up late, right, So, which I
still do getting up on a Saturday. Yeah, that early.
Speaker 8 (05:39):
To start playing seven thirty. Yeah, that's that's called commitment.
It is my craft dedication, dedications to my craft, dedication
to the fans.
Speaker 1 (05:51):
Probably wouldn't do it if there wasn't coffee.
Speaker 8 (05:53):
And I don't even drink coffee.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
Cool, well, I would, you would drink drink and the cars.
Speaker 8 (05:58):
And there's some have some vendors there. I have the
chick Filla. They show up so you can get a
little chicken biscuit.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
That's cool.
Speaker 8 (06:05):
There's like a little French vendor that they're the ones
with the free coffee. But then they have like the chocolate.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
Croissant cross that's cool. Yeah.
Speaker 8 (06:16):
And I mean supercars, so many supercars. It's very cool.
So that's Saturday morning, seven thirty am to ten am,
right next to the Ford's garage there at the UTC
Mall in Sarah Shota. And then Saturday night again, this
is March eighth, join us at Ortizia in downtown Punagorda.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
Beautiful lace, beautiful place.
Speaker 8 (06:35):
Fantastic food, eight to eleven Saturday night. Sometimes we start
early at seven thirty, so get there early for your
seat fills up fast, great food, a little bit of
a dance floor. It's the weather's been perfect.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
Oh yeah, so looks it looks like it's gonna continue
to be very nice.
Speaker 8 (06:52):
And then Sunday, Sunday, March ninth, we will be again
out at Bar seventeen out there on Root seventeen from
one to four thirty, a nice little afternoon diddy And
somebody said, where is that. I said, it's out on
Root seventeen. I said it's a biker bar. And they
said is it dangerous?
Speaker 1 (07:12):
Dangerous?
Speaker 8 (07:13):
No, it's a beautiful place. They have a nice really.
Speaker 1 (07:18):
On Wednesday exactly so you don't have to worry about it.
Speaker 8 (07:22):
But you can bring a chair. You can bring a chair,
enjoy the sunshine, nice breeze. It's a great place. And
they have a nice stage with a nice uh sort
of like a smaller version of the twisted fork like
the iron. You know, it's true true, So it's it's
a very nice environment. The people there, very very nice.
So it's been there forever. Yes, Oh yeah, the building
(07:43):
itself is really old. You can tell it's been there
a long time. So yeah, that's Sunday Bar seventeen one
to four thirty. Go to Mike Ambassiani dot com for
the full show schedule and check out the video of
this show and yesterday's show. Yesterday's show still isn't uploaded
because Umble and YouTube hate me, so I'm currently uploading
to Rumble right now. But check the out the Freedom Chronicles,
(08:06):
Rumble page, and YouTube channel for those shows.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
Uh now, we're supposed to have Eric and mister John Reep.
John Reap hilarious comedian, great guy. He's been to a
Sauni before, but he was there when Mark owned it. Okay,
we're going back way while going back like six oh
seven and great guy. They're supposed to be here in
(08:32):
the ten o'clock, but we are the bastard child. So
they're they're they're on their way trying to make it there.
I'm hoping, I'm hoping that they're complaining about the traffic. Well,
I'm hoping the traffic's so bad that they don't make
the show in Tampa that they're ditching us to go do.
Speaker 8 (08:50):
So they'll call us from traffic.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
They are, they're calling it ten ten. Hopefully they'll just
and they they're going to be in traffic anyway, because
if they make it up there, that guy shows over
at nine forty.
Speaker 8 (08:59):
Five, Well and did. Speaking of traffic, I didn't hear
about it until after the fact, but I didn't get
stuck in it.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (09:07):
Here the two was two semi trucks, right.
Speaker 1 (09:11):
Yeah, became one. It looked like I was a weird looking.
Speaker 8 (09:15):
I wonder what happened. But it was very windy yesterday,
especially on seventy five, And hey, who's to say that
the wind didn't push one truck into the other truck.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Can happen.
Speaker 8 (09:26):
It can happen. But I guess it's shut down for
it's still shut down, isn't it. I thought it was stretch.
I don't know they were talking about for a while
yesterday because they have they have to. Something was eating
up the road, so that's not good. Some chemical yeah, right, something.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
Not eating up the road, probably yours don't want to
be on it. Okay, well we'll look into that when
we go into the break. But first we have to
celebrate National Oreo Cookie Day.
Speaker 8 (10:00):
You know, I can't find those post malone oreos really. Yeah.
They have them at BJ's, but only in like the
tiny little packets, and then you get like thirty two
of them, you know, and I get the tiny packet.
Yeah maybe that way if you if.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
You get the tiny packet, that way, you're not kicking
out all the money on a bunch.
Speaker 8 (10:20):
But because it's the box, it's a box of thirty
two each in the can you.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
Just get that's okay? Yeah, I don't belong so I
know it's okay. What goes? Would this would be awesome
to dip your Oreo cookies in?
Speaker 8 (10:36):
Oh yeah?
Speaker 1 (10:37):
National White Chocolate Cheesecake Day, yes, oh and National Frozen
Food Day. Okay you have to have the veggies to
justify the white chocolate cheesecake and.
Speaker 8 (10:54):
Oh yeah oo, so you'd rather spend more money on
the cheesecake and then just buy the frozen dinner?
Speaker 1 (10:59):
Yes? And also you need to have a good relationship
with your dentist after all that, because it's also national dentist.
Here's morning show toast to doctor Chuck Crane, Rest in peace.
(11:21):
He uh was the radio dentist. Paid his way through
dental school by doing mid days at Kiss in New
York City.
Speaker 8 (11:31):
Very fun.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
There you go, and came down here. He was the
first morning show host on Beach and he eight point
nine back in oh two did a lot of my work.
He did. He was a great dentist. He was a
great guy too.
Speaker 5 (11:47):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
And then he built a next gen studio in his
house and then just voice tracked and did dental and
just did cosmetic, dentry, dental stuff, high and stuff. And
then I don't know what something happened, came down with
something and passed away way too soon. He wasn't that old.
He was a great guy, doctor Chuck. Great.
Speaker 5 (12:09):
There you fill my head with such some propaganda.
Speaker 9 (12:11):
More propaganda coming up with Ken Lovejoy and Charlotte County
Speaks News Radio fifteen eighty wc C. Yeah.
Speaker 10 (12:21):
So they got all the the stock photography out there,
all the trainers holding their heads, lots of talk about volatility, tariffs,
is in time to sell mortimers sell, Yeah, JP Morgan,
JP Morgan, Yeah, that JP Morgan from a long time ago, he.
Speaker 11 (12:42):
Had the very arrogant statement that I like to go
to when stocks go down, when markets go backwards on paraphrasing,
they returned to the rightful owners, meaning what the common folk,
which he was a little into, we like to say,
the greater fools, the general public do dumb things with
(13:05):
their money when things get tough quote unquote tough out there,
and they sell and then begin smart money picks it up.
You at some point in time need to decide that
you want to be smart money watchdog on Wall Street
dot com.
Speaker 6 (13:26):
Mine, mine, mine, Nothing.
Speaker 3 (13:33):
To do to save his life, God, his wife, and
nothing to save.
Speaker 6 (13:39):
But what a day? How's your goods?
Speaker 12 (13:43):
Nothing to do?
Speaker 5 (13:45):
It's up to you.
Speaker 12 (13:47):
I've got nothing to save.
Speaker 6 (13:49):
But it's okay, coming to let the one go.
Speaker 13 (13:57):
Feeling down?
Speaker 1 (14:01):
Okay? Still relevant News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point
nine FMWCCA Timeless Class nine to twenty five here at
Charlote County speaks with the Beatles.
Speaker 8 (14:11):
So relatable. Yes, And on this day in nineteen sixty seven,
the Beatles recorded the sound effects onto the song Sergeant
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band at Abbey Road Studios in London.
The beginning audience murmurs and sounds of a band preparing
for a performance were added, along with screams from a
tape of the Beatles in concert at the Hollywood Bowl.
(14:34):
So okay, when when you hear stuff like from the
Beatles or even other records where there's just such weird sounds,
sometimes you really wonder, like, A, who thought of adding that?
And b how did they actually achieve that sound?
Speaker 1 (14:49):
Tape?
Speaker 8 (14:50):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (14:51):
Backmasking, yeah, playing it backwards right, yeah, you know, and
then you know how it comes up and then just
stops and stuff like that. Yeah, very cool.
Speaker 8 (15:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
And George Martin, man, I mean, the dude was a genius.
Without George Martin, the Beatles I don't think would have
been the Beatles that we know. Okay two six fifteen
eighty toll Free one fifteen eighty.
Speaker 7 (15:19):
Good morning, good morning, and don't forget it's uh okay.
Speaker 8 (15:32):
Well, because the Department of Education is going to go away.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
Oh yeah, that more good news, good news, and even
more good news. A lot of people. You know, we
were talking about this, this whole deal with you know, NATO. No,
we got to have a forever war, forever war. But
in the meantime, don't. In the meantime, we're going to
have a hundred year deal with Ukraine for the rare
earth minerals, and we want security forces in Ukraine to
(15:58):
protect US Wimpy Britz as we extract their rare earth minerals.
USA is fine, but we're not giving you. Don't, you know,
try to set some false flag because one we're not
sending troops there, and two we're not doing Article five. No,
(16:18):
here's Mike Waltz.
Speaker 14 (16:20):
The US supports our NATO allies. We support Article five.
It is notable that our defense budget is nearly double
all of the other NATO members combined, So we still
need to see that movement. I know a lot of
people make you know, kind of hay over the five percent.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
Ours is three.
Speaker 14 (16:39):
Well, they need makeup money. They have a long and
decades long hold to dig out of. That's very different
than the US committing to militarily support US troops in
a non NATO country. For example, the French had troops
in Mali. We didn't have an Article five commitment to
if those troops were attacked in Mali, nor are are
(17:01):
we looking to have that type of commitment to any
European troops deployed to Ukraine. That doesn't mean that we're
going to not have supporting efforts or things need to
be negotiated. Our point to President Zelensky is, you know,
you don't negotiate all of those details before we even
know if we can get both sides to the table.
I think we've seen movement in the last twenty four
(17:22):
hours that the Ukrainian side will actually come to the
table and negotiate a partial truce, a full truce, and
then a permanent peace.
Speaker 8 (17:31):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
Yeah, that's the thing about and that's good news. That's
good news for us because we don't need to be
involved in that crap.
Speaker 8 (17:37):
No, and.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
What's good, it's even better we don't We don't need
to be involved. And I just don't think that the
money's gone. They're not getting the the radar and aerial intel, right.
Speaker 8 (17:56):
That's the new that's the newest, is that the US
is cut off the inteil ligion sharing with Ukraine, including
through the European allies.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
So that's all all missiles. If a missile goes right now,
it launched from Ukraine into Russia and it hits its target,
we had something to do with it, because that's we
are their targeting the CIA, rather is their targeting intel.
Speaker 8 (18:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
So if so, by pulling that, we've essentially pulled their
ability to really strike deep in What.
Speaker 8 (18:30):
Were they doing? They were hitting residential?
Speaker 1 (18:33):
Yeah, I mean so and again and again our fault. Yeah,
we did this. We're the ones who stirred up the
whole Color revolution in twenty fourty. Jeffrey Sachs again and
is a speech before talking with a whole group of
(18:53):
people of just about that they pay after the as
it was going on, they flew him over there.
Speaker 12 (19:00):
Yeah, now when the Maidan occurred.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
And of course the Madon of course is the revolution
the what do they call it? A dignity?
Speaker 8 (19:10):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Yeah, here it is.
Speaker 12 (19:14):
I was called immediately, Oh, Professor Sachs, the new Ukrainian
Prime Minister would like to see you to talk about
the economic crisis. Because I'm pretty good at that.
Speaker 1 (19:29):
And so I.
Speaker 12 (19:30):
Flew to Kiev and I was walked around the Maidan,
and I was told how the US paid the money
for all the people around the Maidan spontaneous revolution of dignity.
Ladies and gentlemen, Please, where do all these media outlets
(19:53):
come from? Where? Does all this organization come from? Where
do all these buses come from? Where do all all
these people called in and come from? Are you kidding?
This is organized effort.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
Courtesy of the United States. Yes, So really, when Starver
and the rest of these guys saying we want peacekeepers
in there, you know, shut up. As soon as soon
as the war is done, they it's it's the West
who's in my opinion, tried to stir up all this
(20:27):
propaganda that Putin wants. Next, it's Poland. He's gonna conquer
your No, I couldn't. I think that's nothing further from
the truth.
Speaker 8 (20:37):
Because there's already a base up there that Russia accesses.
So if they wanted Poland, they could already get there.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
Well, but he doesn't exactly but going to X some
guy Junker George way too early to even think such
crazy things. But the heck with it? What if Trump
shared that Golden Dome tech with Russia to help protect
it from Western Europe and Sundance posts. You don't even
(21:06):
need to go that far. In the mind of Putin,
he now sees President Trump stopping NATO, EU, CIA and
the UK forces from being able to reach Russia with
any attack system. They don't need to discuss it and
likely would not. But Putin's people clearly see that Trump's
people have stopped the West from their ability to hit
Russia with anything, and unspoken trust is being established through actions,
(21:31):
not words. And that's a radical shift and considered considering
everything else. Pretty cool, Yeah, I would have to agree,
pretty cool.
Speaker 8 (21:40):
Well, and that's diplomacy.
Speaker 1 (21:43):
Yeah, and look at look at Zelensky, zero diplomatic skills
at all. The dudes a comedia. He's a comic actor.
He had to be coached by our State Department people
every freaking step of the way since he's been.
Speaker 8 (21:57):
An auf fill Yeah. Well, and what does this show
you that Trump is right? This headline right here, the
US has cut off intelligence sharing with Kiev, in a
move that could seriously hamper the Ukrainians military ability to
target Russian forces. That ability, well, right, what does that mean?
That means without the US? Just like Trump said, there
(22:19):
is no war because Ukraine has nothing. They have zero.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
And you can thank Luger and Obama for.
Speaker 8 (22:25):
That, right, Oh yeah, exactly. It's like give us all
your weapons.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Every single one. Yeah, you don't even get it. Oh no, no, yeah,
we removed your nukes, but you don't even get a
military no, and then they started wanting to start a
war with Russia, right, so that.
Speaker 8 (22:40):
We have to go ahead exactly exactly. So that's why
this hasn't this started well before twenty twenty two.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
Oh yeah, yeah, oh yeah, no time time. Who else
we have? Oh yeah, I wanted to play this. Did
you see the whole musk on Rogan? Did you watch?
Speaker 8 (22:59):
I don't watch you yet?
Speaker 1 (23:00):
Now you watch you yet.
Speaker 8 (23:01):
Here's a clip on had three hours.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
Here's a clip about sorows and just how a lot
of these NGOs wind up getting funded.
Speaker 15 (23:12):
It's it's kind of a hack to the system where
you know, someone can get an NGO stood up for
a fairly small amount of money. Like George Soros was
really good at this, Like he really George Soros is
like a system hacker, Like he figured out how to
hack the system. He's a genius at arbitrage. I mean
these days he's he's pretty old, but a genius at abertrage.
(23:34):
So he figured out that you could leverage a small
amount of money to create a nonprofit then lobby for
the politicians to send a ton of money to that nonprofit,
so you can take what might be, you know, a
ten million dollar donation to a nonprofit to create a
nonprofit and leverage that into a billion dollar not NGO,
(23:56):
and a nonprofit is a weird word. It's just a
non gounmental organization. And then you can the government can
continues to fund that every year and it'll have a
nice sounding name like the Institute for Peace or something
like that. Yeah, but really, it's a graft machine.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
And what are their requirements with that money? What do
they have to do?
Speaker 15 (24:17):
Just really no requirements at all.
Speaker 11 (24:19):
So they just get grants and the government just assumes
that they're doing good work.
Speaker 15 (24:24):
I think a lot of people in the government know
that they are not doing good work, but they it's
a giant graft machine.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
Yeah. Yeah, they're probably getting a kickback from it, right.
And again, any politician or Supreme Court justice who who
thinks that that's a good idea for our tax tax
dollars to go to, well what should is probably involved
in the graph somehow or I don't know what I think, Barrett,
(24:55):
I don't know what the hell is. She's not anything
like I think what we It's either fear or she
was never what we were told she was.
Speaker 8 (25:05):
I think she was until all of the Kavanaugh stuff
really happened.
Speaker 1 (25:11):
I hope she starts feeling that again because you know, yeah,
and Roberts, my god, well.
Speaker 8 (25:19):
I mean, but really are we surprised with Roberts? No, no,
but still yeah, it's just it's wow.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
That that a tiny little judge here, of course, of course,
can make the determination that two point nine billion dollars
of our money can just get pissed away on stuff
that we know is evil and useless and would be
better of a benefit to America. America. Well, it's very
(25:48):
un American, very un American people, yes, very and and
that she's so scared. If that's the deal, then again, retire,
get off the bench, and we don't need you. Aim
not your job. Then what a crusty broad sheet turned
out to be.
Speaker 8 (26:03):
It's a shame.
Speaker 1 (26:04):
That's too bad. Shame, too bad. Two six fifteen eighty
toll free eight eight eight four four to one.
Speaker 8 (26:10):
And it does seem that the I seventy five southbound
does appear to be open.
Speaker 1 (26:14):
Yeah, I thought it was operating.
Speaker 8 (26:16):
So that is your I seventy five traffic update.
Speaker 1 (26:19):
Thank you very much. Yes, two six fifteen eighty toll
free eight eight eight four four one fifteen eighty. So
we were uh told the other day that, uh, you
got to quit using the Skype. Yes, quit using the Skype,
because the Skype Skype, the pioneering wants ubiquitous free video
(26:42):
calling service, will be history come May of this year.
Shame we've used it here. Yes, Doctor Treona did her show.
Speaker 8 (26:51):
When I'm in the Georgia Mountains?
Speaker 1 (26:54):
Did that be a Skype? A couple of times? It
was so popular that people used it as a verb
all Skype you in the morning. Yeah, you used to
hear it all the time. Microsoft Yeah, which acquired Skype
in Yes. Pervy Bill acquired Skype in twenty eleven for
(27:17):
eight point five billion, announced in a post on X
Friday that the iconic voice over Internet Protocol VoIP service
would soon go dark. It encourage Skype users to instead
migrate to a free version of Microsoft Teams.
Speaker 16 (27:37):
I gotta use it daily because we have the corporate version,
and we love we love Teams, right, I love it,
we love it, we love it.
Speaker 1 (27:49):
It's like a corporate Facebook.
Speaker 8 (27:54):
It's been like hooked in with LinkedIn.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
No, No, that would be bad on LinkedIn. So two
decades since Skype was founded, so it's been it's been
overtaken by all the you know, FaceTime, he got Apple,
you already got FaceTime.
Speaker 8 (28:09):
Well, right, that's what I say. Are they just they're
just shutting it down. It's not like they're going to
sell it.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
It seems to me as if they're just ending it,
migrating whatever good is in it, overdue teams or something
like that, I would imagine. But yeah, it's they've been.
They've been overtaken by FaceTime, what'sapp, Zoom and Slack.
Speaker 8 (28:32):
I haven't heard of the Slack, but Zoom isn't that
user friendly either.
Speaker 1 (28:37):
I haven't had a lot of success with Zoom. I
don't use the Zoom. Teams isn't bad, right, I mean
the free version that you is probably going to be
more like Skype and it won't be that bad. Yeah,
I don't think it's that bad. I never have an
issue with connectivity or anything like that, even on my phone.
(28:57):
So with teams, yeah, it's just a corporate version. Is
like Facebook, and.
Speaker 8 (29:03):
That's an I don't like.
Speaker 1 (29:05):
I don't not like. Uh So anyway, skyps gone, Oh, well,
get your free version of I guess teams.
Speaker 8 (29:13):
Yes. Okay, speaking of wasting money, we have a Gretchen Whitmer.
Speaker 1 (29:19):
Update, Wretched Whitmer.
Speaker 8 (29:21):
Yes. Michigan's governor, Gretchen Wretched Yeah, gave nine hundred thousand
dollars to an evy battery company, of course, that then
packed up and moved to South Carolina. As not the
b reports. Big gretch. That's a good one. Big gretch
gave nearly a million bucks to an electric vehicle battery
(29:43):
manufacturer that was supposed to bring jobs to the state,
only to have the manufacturer pack up and move south. Akasol, Inc.
A subsidiary of Borg Warner, will lay off a total
of one hundred and eighty eight workers when it closes
two separate plans in Hazel Park and Warren in Michigan
on April fourteenth to shift production of lithium ion batteries
(30:07):
south to enable the company to grow above mark quote
unquote Okay, excuse me, I'm alive.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
I'm good.
Speaker 8 (30:16):
They want the febril I'm having a stroke. Uh, it's Michigan.
They want to be the leaders in the future of
auto manufacturing. It's only natural for Detroit to get this deal.
But Whitmer couldn't hold onto it. Akasol was approved in
twenty nineteen for two point twenty four million dollar Michigan
Business Development Program grant to build a forty million dollar
(30:38):
manufacturing facility and create two hundred and twenty four jobs.
That's it, But the taxpayer funding was later amended to
just nine hundred thousand dollars when the plan was scaled
down to ninety jobs. So the company fulfilled its agreement
by maintaining the ninety jobs through twenty twenty three, which
means the company can keep the incentives while it abandons
(30:59):
as Michigan op opirations.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
There's a grift. What was her kickback? Yeah, I'm sure,
well look look into the donations.
Speaker 8 (31:08):
Yeah and see, uh exactly.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
How that goes. Uh? Did you see Apparently President Trump
uh had a conversation with Justina Trudeau over there about
the tariffs in Canada. Uh. No agreement on tariff relief
for Canada is coming because Canada has yet to address
(31:33):
the central issue. What's the central issue for both Mexico
and Canada? Folks. Everybody's crying, crying about tariff tariff, tariff, tariff, tariff,
But what's the bottom line here? We want Mexico and
Canada to stop the influx of fentanyl into the United States. Correct, nobody,
neither one is addressing that. They're just whining, whining like
(31:56):
little school children about Tariff's Tara. It's tara, and that's it.
The central issue, fentanyl still flowing from the snow Mexicans
into the US. That was the basis of the conversation
with Justine at Trudeau. However, within the message delivered by Trump,
he also notes that anti American sentiment in Canada is
being used by Justin in order to try and stay
(32:19):
in power and not have the ritions. Yeah, Justin Trudeau
of Canada called me to ask what could be done
about tariffs. I told him that many people have died
from fentanyl that came through the borders of Canada and Mexico,
and nothing has convinced me that it has stopped. He
said that it's gotten better, but I said that's not
good enough. The call ended in a somewhat friendly manner.
(32:41):
He was unable to tell me when the Canadian election
is taking place, which made me curious, like what's going
on here? I then realized he's trying to use this
issue to stay in power. Good luck justin Trump.
Speaker 8 (32:55):
Yeah, and this will only make his people hate him
more so.
Speaker 1 (32:59):
Yeah, I mean, you know, nobody likes the tariffs. Sorry,
but why is it when other countries have all kinds
of tariffs on us? Why? Why do but whenever we
want to have imposed tariffs for a negotiating purpose such
as this, all of a sudden it's beyond the pale
of course.
Speaker 8 (33:17):
Oh oh it's red. We just can't stand it.
Speaker 1 (33:22):
Suck it up because it ain't stopping yet un till
they negotiate. No doubts about it.
Speaker 5 (33:26):
You have become a great show man.
Speaker 9 (33:29):
Ken Love Joyce coming right back with more. Charlotte County
speaks on news radio fifteen to eighty WCCF.
Speaker 13 (33:37):
I'm still enjoying the single life. Went down to Marti
Grack a couple of years ago.
Speaker 1 (33:40):
That was fun.
Speaker 8 (33:41):
I went with a buddy of mine. Crazy.
Speaker 6 (33:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (33:43):
I went with a buddy who he was another comedian.
There was some girls up in a balcony. A chant
goes up, show you.
Speaker 1 (33:50):
I joined the.
Speaker 13 (33:50):
Chant because I support the cause. The girls show them.
We throw up some beads. I figure that's the end
of the transaction. Turns out they reciprocate with the chance
of their own.
Speaker 8 (34:05):
We want to.
Speaker 1 (34:08):
What do you do?
Speaker 8 (34:11):
Turns out I had some on me.
Speaker 13 (34:16):
Unfastened, unbuttoned, unzip beads showering down on me.
Speaker 8 (34:23):
Best moment of my entire life.
Speaker 13 (34:26):
Cut short, handcuffed, thrown against the wall. My friend runs off,
but manages to get a picture before he does.
Speaker 6 (34:39):
I don't know a lot.
Speaker 13 (34:39):
About prison, but I do know handcuffed with your pants down,
covered in beads is not a good way to arrive.
Speaker 1 (35:03):
I see the rips. I want to into blead.
Speaker 5 (35:09):
Comers and ample.
Speaker 6 (35:11):
I want them to turn blood.
Speaker 16 (35:16):
Girls in song.
Speaker 8 (35:22):
Turned my head until mad darkness goes.
Speaker 5 (35:27):
I see a line of cars of the into blood.
Speaker 1 (35:32):
Hmmm, flowers, No I should have that's just well, it
just it looks dark and black.
Speaker 8 (35:42):
But you know what does it taste like? Happy?
Speaker 1 (35:45):
Nothing? It tastes like hot water. It tastes like coffee.
Speaker 8 (35:49):
Weird.
Speaker 1 (35:49):
I'm gonna go dump this during the next somebody just
made up out of coffee.
Speaker 8 (35:54):
I chose to use the c rig with the McCafe
and well, it's McDonald's guess.
Speaker 1 (36:01):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM WCC,
Charlotte County speaks here on a Thursday with a little
painted black pine of Stones.
Speaker 8 (36:10):
Yes, the Stones on this day. In nineteen sixty six,
the Rolling Stones started recording sessions for their tenth UK single,
Paint It Black, at RCA Studios in Hollywood. It was
originally titled Painted Black without the comma. Keith Richards has
stated that the comma was added by the record label
(36:30):
Decca that then made it Painted Comma Black. So there, okay,
fascinating fact.
Speaker 1 (36:40):
Well, yesterday was National Grammar Day, so.
Speaker 8 (36:46):
There, all right?
Speaker 1 (36:47):
Yes, hey you a leftover eater? Oh yeah, you do
the leftover? Oh yes, Well, here's ten foods that you
should never store in the freezer. I'm surprised that we
actually have to have this conversation when I look at.
Speaker 8 (37:05):
Society.
Speaker 5 (37:06):
You didn't know.
Speaker 8 (37:07):
I'm gonna go out on a limit. Just say, okay,
bagels do not belong in the freezer. People do it.
I don't like it. I think it goes against the
molecular level of a bagel. A bagel should be enjoyed fresh.
You have a week if that, to eat them and
just be done with it. If you don't put them in.
Speaker 1 (37:28):
The if you're freezing me you got, you got them longer.
Speaker 8 (37:31):
Yeah, but then they thaw out and they got like
their wet.
Speaker 1 (37:34):
Well how long? No, you gotta let them thaw out properly,
and you still toast them. Don't you toast your bagels?
Speaker 8 (37:40):
I want a fresh bagel.
Speaker 1 (37:41):
I don't toasted. You don't want to toast it.
Speaker 8 (37:44):
Sometimes when it's that week, that week that you have
the bagel, by day three you're toasting them. But at
least day one and two you have a fresh enough bagel.
Speaker 1 (37:53):
That's a first world problem, my friend.
Speaker 8 (37:59):
Well, yeah, what else they freezing that you should milk? Ah?
Speaker 1 (38:02):
It separates when thought it goes. Same goes for cream
based soups, cooked pasta. Why would you freeze it? Why
it's gonna come out just mush.
Speaker 8 (38:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (38:13):
I mean you can keep it in the fridge if
your fridge is like a forty, you know, toss a
little water on it and throw it in the reactor
covered for a little bit. You're good to go. But
freeze it. Don't freeze raw potatoes? Why why would you
freeze rap it? Someone doesn't get the little the little
things that grow a no off of it. You mean potatoes, Yeah,
(38:36):
cooked potatoes, freeze well, just not raw ones eggs in
a shell.
Speaker 8 (38:41):
No, you're not.
Speaker 1 (38:42):
I don't think you're not supposed to, the inside expands
and it'll crack the shell. If you need to freeze
eggs because you know they're expensive, uh it says here
whisk them first means shell them and whisk them, and
then freeze the whisked eggs.
Speaker 8 (38:58):
And then you could have uh, scrambled eggs at a.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
Later date, yes, or an omelet if you kish.
Speaker 8 (39:06):
And omelet is just a fancy scrambled eggs with stuff
in it. You put stuff in scrambled eggs anyway. And
omlid is just the ability to fold.
Speaker 1 (39:13):
Love with a biscuit crust.
Speaker 8 (39:16):
It's okay, that's the first world problem. I don't have
scrambled eggs. I have kish.
Speaker 1 (39:23):
Well you make keish. What do you think you make
keiche with?
Speaker 8 (39:25):
Well, I know, scrambled, but you have to have the crust.
Then it's usually a lot fancy you.
Speaker 1 (39:29):
Gonna lovejoy you have? It would be love Joy's Pillsberry
forming those biscuits into one big thing.
Speaker 8 (39:39):
You'd go for the Pillsbury. Not just crumpled up crackers.
Speaker 1 (39:43):
No, those go on top.
Speaker 8 (39:45):
Oh, yes, where am I salting soft cheeses. Who puts
soft cheese in a freezer, then it's not gonna be soft.
Speaker 1 (39:55):
Same goes for yogurt. You don't want to do that.
Unless it's the frozen yogurt, then you could probably do that.
Speaker 8 (40:01):
Uh's ice cream.
Speaker 1 (40:02):
Fried foods, don't It'll just wind up real soggy.
Speaker 12 (40:06):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (40:06):
Any kind of pasta salads with mayonnaise, again, it'll separate.
Don't do it. Fresh herbs okay, recks the flavor fridge
maybe for a little while. Cucumbers, why, they'll get mushy.
You'll kill the cukee. And coffee beans I do this,
you do that, Yeah, I put my bean. It says,
it says, it messes with the flavor. I have not
(40:26):
noticed that.
Speaker 8 (40:27):
Well, you're drinking hot brown water right now.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
And I noticed it, and you didn't it. Yeah, you know,
because there was no flavor, right, Yeah, the flavor of
my frozen coffee beans. It's just fine when Kenny grinds
them at home.
Speaker 8 (40:41):
You grind your own beans, yeah, okay, why not? I
don't know. I guess it's it's more flavor that way, right,
because for me fresh?
Speaker 1 (40:51):
Yeah, yeah, I like I just that's that's the way.
That's the way Kenny has always done it. Let oh, yes, yes, yes, yeah,
eighteen sixties handgrinder, Yes, exactly. No, you know I have
an automatic you know, yeah, get that. Uh yeah, so
(41:16):
don't freeze that stuff. We clear on that fun and
again I had why did we even need to let's know? Yeah.
Speaker 4 (41:22):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (41:26):
A new poll seventy of Americans do not feel like
they have enough privacy in public bathrooms because someone could
just peek through those little gaps in the doors.
Speaker 8 (41:37):
You see the you see some of these places, the
slats are like five inches wide.
Speaker 1 (41:42):
Their zeke the guy you okay in there, you need
any help. Fifty three percent of people say that we
should eliminate the gaps in bathrooms. Put some like you
know some.
Speaker 8 (41:56):
Yeah, a little like rubber, rubber, yeah.
Speaker 1 (41:59):
Film or something that flexes with a door whatever anyway.
Speaker 13 (42:02):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (42:03):
Forty percent also they want to so fifty three percent
get rid of the gaps in the stall doors. Another
forty five probably a lot of that fifty three as well,
want doors going all the way to the floor.
Speaker 8 (42:17):
All the way to the floorway to the floor.
Speaker 1 (42:18):
We know that you're hosing up bodies and stuff off
that and it's probably gonna rust those doors pretty quickly,
which is why you have them up so high. But
nonetheless still nonetheless, Yeah, what's that?
Speaker 8 (42:30):
What's that?
Speaker 1 (42:31):
What's that little roization? Henry Sisson? Oh yeah, cis and yeah, yeah,
cism wants doors all the way to the ground so
you don't notice that he's in the stall with another dude.
Speaker 5 (42:41):
Don't look at me. Don't look at me.
Speaker 1 (42:44):
Forty eighty six percent wish bathrooms in high traffic areas
had to display outside that showed how many stalls were open,
kind of like an airport serving number three, serving number three,
kind of like a parking garage. Forty seven percent would
also add to the top of each stall.
Speaker 17 (43:04):
Hey, why do you constipate it in there? You've been
in there for fourteen minutes? Come on, wouldn't that Well, no,
they'll put it on. No, they used to charge you
have to put the dime.
Speaker 1 (43:16):
You know, they used to do that. I think there
was a lawsuit, probably because you know, Homie didn't Homie
didn't have a dime. Yeah, but uh yeah you could
do that. It's too late, you know. It locks you
in the stall and you have to pay to get out.
Speaker 8 (43:33):
Oh yeah, that was it. You've taken too long, someone
would get claustrophobic and soup.
Speaker 1 (43:38):
Public restrooms in China that already have stall timers installed.
You'll take too.
Speaker 5 (43:45):
Long, you won't get out now, yes, now.
Speaker 8 (43:53):
We should get some of the Japanese toilets.
Speaker 1 (43:57):
I usually I'll just I'll just wait I get home. Thanks.
Oh yeah, I'm good. Yeah, I'm good like that. Yeah, bake.
Speaker 9 (44:04):
News radio update on the way you learn to hold it.
Speaker 1 (44:07):
We'll be back with two guys on the phone from
their car on the road. We're in news radio AM
w CCF Punda Gorda and FM one hundred point nine
W two sixty five EA Punda Gorda.