Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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The naplan is on his National Napping Days.
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Nap time.
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No, it's not, It's time in this present crisis. Government
is not the solution to our problem.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
Government is the problem.
Speaker 6 (00:40):
This is Charlotte County Speaks.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Your chance to let your voice be heard on local, state,
inn national issues, and now broadcasting.
Speaker 6 (00:49):
Live from a dumpy little warehouse.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
Behind a taco bell, the host of Charlotte County speaks,
Ken Love.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Joy, thank you, Johnny Batten down the hatches. We're heading
into spring. News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine
Fmwccfradio dot Com. Charlote County speaks on the air at
ten twelve as we head to the phones at nine four, one,
two zero six, fifteen eighty and toll free eight a
eight four four one, fifteen eighty to talk shop with
(01:20):
Dan Perkins. Dan, how's it going, big guy?
Speaker 6 (01:23):
How was the weekend?
Speaker 2 (01:26):
I was at busy weekend. I was doing a lot
of research over the weekend. So I've got some numbers
for you, okay, and for your your audience. Okay. First
of all, the Small Business Administration issued fifty five hundred
COVID loans to children eleven of age, eleven years of
(01:49):
age and younger. Fourth total of three hundred and twelve
million dollars or an average of fifty five thousand dollars apiece. Wow,
fifty five thousand dollars for eleven and under. And there
seemed to be a problem. The names didn't match social
(02:09):
security numbers, but the government went ahead and made the
loans to minors with false data. Anyway, three hundred and.
Speaker 6 (02:19):
Twelve g Maybe there was kickbacks involved.
Speaker 2 (02:26):
Well. VOJE also found last week that in twenty twenty one,
the SBA Small Business Administration issued three thousand and ninety
five loans for a total of three hundred and thirty
three million dollars ready to borrowers over one hundred and
(02:49):
fifteen years of age.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
I'm telling you it's a total ripoff. It's a grift,
and the government's in it because.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
The issued to one hundred seven year old individual for
thirty six thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (03:03):
Thirty one hundred and fifty seven years old. No possible
way for the ghost to be able to repay said loan,
but they aired on the side of caution.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
Yeah, And you know, as a person who pretty much
lost my business because of COVID, and I got a
COVID loan which is not forgivable, and I look at
all the people who ripped off for hundreds of millions
of dollars and I'm struggling to try and figure out
how to pay that loan. I pay it off each month,
but I don't understand why I'm paying it. And people
(03:37):
rifted it off for three hundred and twelve million dollars.
And by the way, those eleven years and underage people
were the only people on the application. There wasn't a
parent code signature. It was an eleven year old and
younger in those applications, and they took them and process them.
(03:57):
And you know, you're right, maybe maybe that it's part
of that fifty five thousand dollars loan to the eleven
year old. I mean when I was doing financial planning
in my practice and I was dealing with young parents,
and I would talk to them about their children, and
(04:18):
we talked about their ability to have the confidence that
their children, at eighteen, which was the legal age, could
handle significant sums of money. And they all said, I
never had anybody say yes they could. But we're talking
about supposedly eleven year old children are going to get
(04:38):
fifty five thousand dollars and they know what to do
with the money. It's just just amazing to me. So
that's government loans. Now. Other number. I researched and went
and spent a good period of time. North Korea sent
(04:59):
to rush around ten to eleven thousand soldiers to fight
on the behalf of the Russians against the Ukrainian forces.
They lost four thousand casualties, which is forty percent of
the force that went there. And so I said, now,
(05:22):
wait a minute, that seems awful high forty percent of
the soldiers who came from North Korea either or injured
or died in battle against the Ukrainian military. And then
a question came to my brain, I wonder when the
(05:42):
last time was that the North Korean army was ever
in combat. Yeah, found out seventy five years ago in
the Korean War.
Speaker 3 (05:51):
Yeah, I mean, and they probably don't train what do
they train on cats and their own people?
Speaker 2 (05:58):
You know, that could be But my point, you're kind
of somewhat making my point. They were never tested. After
the Korean War was over, the military and North Korea
never was engaged again in combat for seventy five years.
And so those people who were sent over, by the way,
they got paid two thousand dollars a month from the
(06:23):
Russian government. However, the Czechs went to the government in
North Korea. The soldiers never saw any of them.
Speaker 3 (06:31):
Yeah, I mean, come on, they're communist. It's got to
filter through the bureaucracy first.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
Right, So, so the the article that I was reading
about it said they can't sustain those kind of losses.
And I'm saying to myself, really that was a keen observation.
What you send more? You would you send more troops
(06:59):
after you saw what happened how your own troops got massacred.
Speaker 3 (07:02):
No, I think I think if I'm Lil Kim, I'm
I'm firing my generals and hiring new ones. Who can
train my troops.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
But training your training as the next infantry guy. Training
your people are one thing, but put them in live
compat situations where they're fighting for their lives. You can't
simulate in You can't simulate that in training. That is
(07:33):
a that is a life lesson learned and perhaps perhaps
could be fatal depending upon what happens. So if you
your army isn't hardened, hardened, this is what happened in
this In the Civil War, the neither army was hardened,
and it took several years of the war to harden
(07:55):
the soldiers to be able to fight with no food
and low ammunition and have to fight hand to hand combat.
They've never had that. They had the military that never
had to fight anybody.
Speaker 3 (08:08):
What makes it even worse is that look who they're fighting,
you know, a bunch of kidnapped teenagers off the streets
and conscripted and old men and while drones right, the
drone attacks.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
But the idea that that the training that they were
getting in North Korea did not did not prepare them
for the rigors of vicious combat in an urban setting.
Apparently they weren't trained for it, and so they didn't
know how to deal with it, and they're trying to
(08:45):
retrain them on the ground and send them out and
they're getting killed. So I don't think that I don't
think that that North Korea is necessarily going to be
interested in saying anything about sending more troops after that,
that that debacle. And and you know, the President said
yesterday on Air Force one coming back from mary Lago
(09:07):
that two thousand people were killed this past week in
Ukraine between the Russians and the Ukrainians, and and you know,
he's he's he put a stake in the ground, which
I thought was in It was smart, uh and a
(09:27):
and a great idea. It's about stopping the killing. It's
not about what who should win or who should lose.
It's about stopping the killing. And we're killing thousands of
people every week, and we've killed over a million Russian
shoulders and over a million a quarter Ukrainian citizens. And
it isn't about counting your chest you're the better army.
(09:50):
He's made this an issue of stopping the killing. And
that's a very very very strong position for an international
lead to take. I'm involved in this because I want
to stop the killing.
Speaker 3 (10:04):
Yeah, and look look at the people who are screaming
for the war to continue. Little effeminate Lindsey Graham. All
these people who don't have kids, or whose kids are
old enough that they won't be sent over there. They've
got no problem sending your sons and daughters over there
to die for their corruption. And it's it's disgusting anybody
(10:26):
standing up is in these people online, these morons online
standing up for Ukraine, blah blah blah, have no idea
why we're there and what got us there, and they're
just you know, there was one on x this guy
was literally in tears crying, and I'm like, dude, you
look young enough. Ukraine is more than willing to take
(10:47):
foreign mercenaries. Suit up and get your ass over there.
Put your crying on social.
Speaker 6 (10:53):
Media, right it is.
Speaker 2 (10:56):
It's amazing. And when when he did his addressed to
the nation and he got to the point about the
Democrats would likeness to continue the war, they were actually
applause on the Democratic side, And and you know, it's
really amazing to me that that we're talking about. Uh.
(11:20):
Here we are over almost a week since the president's address,
and the world, not just the United States, the world
is still talking about the behavior of the Democrats at
the speech. I've never seen anything like that. I don't know,
maybe you have, but I've never seen this much after
(11:40):
in the news cycle, they're still talking about the paddles.
They're doing it on late night late night talk are
being critical. It's still they're still talking about it. And
you can go on and find something every day still
talking about the Democrats. And they don't seem to understand
(12:01):
that they screwed up big time.
Speaker 3 (12:02):
No, they're doublin.
Speaker 2 (12:03):
Nobody still want to admit whose idea was it to
wear the pink dresses and the paddles? Oh thank you,
though he's willing to admit that they did that.
Speaker 3 (12:14):
I appreciate the paddles, the memes that have come off
those paddles on X their legion, and they're not going
to stop. They hold those paddles up and we put
whatever we want on them. There's several of them where
there shows a picture of the whole group of them
holding their little paddles up and somebody put the Soviet
hammer and uh you know, red and yellow hammer and
(12:37):
sickle on each one, and all kinds of other memes.
I mean, look, they be clown themselves. They're idiots. They're
just idiots. They have no creativity, they have no individual
thought process whatsoever. It's all group think, and they refuse
to go outside the group think, and they seem to
be just hell bent on psycho Fine by me. You
(12:59):
want to continue to commit party suicide, We're just going
to stand back and let you do it.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
I see, and I agree with you. But I honestly
believe that the leadership, whoever it is in the Democratic Party,
doesn't believe that they're wrong in what they're doing.
Speaker 6 (13:15):
I know who is that?
Speaker 3 (13:16):
Who is that?
Speaker 6 (13:16):
Who is the leader?
Speaker 3 (13:17):
I don't think, I don't think.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
I don't know who it is. It was interesting there
was an article out of UHH. I thinks back here,
but I could be wrong about They went this out
independent organization uh went out and collected as many as
the documents that Joe Biden would supposedly have to sign
(13:43):
into law during his firm as president, and they found
the vast majority of them were signed with a hot
o pen. So so when the Speaker of the House
was talking about he had a meeting with Joe Biden
to talking about a piece of legislation and he didn't
(14:03):
remember signing it, and they found the document and was
done with an autopen.
Speaker 6 (14:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
So now the question is asking, then, who's in charge
of the auto pen.
Speaker 6 (14:12):
It wasn't Joe.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
Who's who's in charge that ESUS says, go ahead and
use the autopen to sign this executive order or to
sign this congressional law past law into effect.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
Hey, Dan and Dan, Yes, what if just posing a
question here you you you would probably know the answer
to this. What if those pardons were all signed by
an auto pen and not Joe.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
That's a great question. I haven't seen anybody talk about
those particular documents. But because theoretically, in order for the
president to issue the pardon, he has to, as I
understand in the language of the pardon, to to indicate
(15:00):
that he has reviewed the facts of the case and
has decided that it merits a pardon. So that's I'll ask.
I'll go to some of my contacts in Washington and
ask if anybody asked the questions whether the pardons were
signed by an auto pen, and does that negate them
if they were not signed by the President himself, because
the auto pen can't testify, can't test that are attest
(15:26):
to the fact that the President reviewed the reverb reviewed
the case files. So I I think it's that's a
great question. I will I will get on that this
week and I will try and find you an answer
by next week. Thank you, sir, my pleasure. Now we
had we it was interesting. We had a little little
(15:47):
dust off between Pambondy and and Kesh over the release
of the certain documents that were supposed to be released,
the the JFK and the RFK Martin Luther King assassination documents,
(16:08):
the uh Epstein stuff that was supposedly released. And there's
apparently somebody or somebody in the FBI and the Justice
Department who tried to override the Attorney General and the
and the and the person in charge of the FBI,
(16:32):
Pash Fattel. So she was a little pissed off at
him but not delivering on a time frame that he
was supposed to do. And I guess he was a
little pissed that somebody and his staff decided that they
weren't going to supply it. So I don't know what's
going on. I supposedly there was a truckload of stuff
that was picked up at the Southern District of New
York office on the Epstein file, but no, no further discussion. Uh,
(16:58):
And that was supposed to be released yesterday. I haven't
read anything that said that it actually was. And I
haven't seen anything on the other leaders and their assassination.
So there's still some people fighting against what's going on,
change leadership within with the breocracy of the federal government.
Speaker 3 (17:17):
Oh, particularly in the DOJ and the FBI. Yeah, without question,
they got to isolate these people, find out who they
are and crap, can them immediately get rid of them,
eliminate them from the federal payroll. And I'm i gotta say,
I gotta say I'm getting a little sick and tired
of Bondie on TV every freaking day. How about how
(17:43):
you know? Because no, because it just makes it look
like she's she's there for her or she's there as
a distraction. She's not actually accomplishing anything. She's just there
to tell us all why she can't do her job
or what's in her way, or you have no idea,
how about your shut up, go do your damn job.
The less we see of you, the more we're gonna
(18:04):
think maybe you're actually doing your job. But when I
see all I see her doing is getting made up
for her close up, I'm like, you know, what the
hell are we doing with her?
Speaker 6 (18:13):
As ag That's what I'm thinking.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
Wow, you turned on her? Huh.
Speaker 3 (18:18):
I was never really a fan. I didn't want I
would never have picked Pam Bondy to be Attorney General.
Speaker 6 (18:25):
Ever.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
I support her only so far as President Trump likes her.
If he likes her, that's good enough for me. But
I'm not a fan.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
Okay, all right, that's that's fair. So we had another
situation where there was a raid at a leak out
of Homeland Security that had lerted some terrorists that the
FBI and Homeland Security was coming. And apparently they finally
(18:57):
identified who those people are. Good, but they're not telling
us who they are or what's going to happen to them.
Maybe they're going to disappear into the darkness of the
night and never be heard of again. I don't know,
but it every day. I mean, I I look when
I when I saw that article over the weekend on
(19:21):
the SBA loans to children at eleven and an age
and under, and they didn't match in terms of names
and so security number. As somebody who went through the
hurricane firsthand, lost his house, all of his belongings. I
was just I was just pissed.
Speaker 6 (19:40):
Yeah, you should be everybody should.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
Be just just amazing. And I looked at it and said, man,
it's just it's crazy. I did an interview on Saturday
just I wanted just to share a little bit with you.
By the way, I forgot to tell you, I've taken
our show that you send me each week and I
(20:05):
put it on my network AMFM twenty four to seven,
and I got my program numbers last Tuesday from AMF
in twenty four to seven. I have a show on
Friday night and a show on Saturday night, and I'm
drawing one point one million listeners a month, so I've
(20:25):
expanded your audience. Drumatically.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
Oh well, thank you very much.
Speaker 6 (20:29):
Dam Well.
Speaker 2 (20:31):
You know, it's always it's been fun and it's always
interesting to have conversation with you, and I'm trying to
provide interesting content. So you're on probably every other week,
you're on and for the whole show, and it's it's
a way for me to say thank you to you
for putting me on early on when we first started
some time ago, and your support of the nonprofits that
(20:55):
I work with, but also you, you, you you make
a lot of great sense. So I think you're out
of perspective that I want to have on the air.
Speaker 6 (21:02):
So well, thank you, Dan, Thank you for coming very much.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
And I'm trying to push your program for you.
Speaker 6 (21:08):
Well.
Speaker 3 (21:08):
I appreciate that very much. It's Dan Perkins. Ladies and gentlemen,
go check them out. Listen to my show on his
place at Dan Perkins Media dot org. Dan perkinsmedia dot org.
Just like last week, anything else pops up, feel free
to call in and otherwise we'll talk to you again real soon.
Speaker 2 (21:27):
Thank you very much, sir, Take care you too.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
Quick break, will be right back. It's another simulation gone mad.
Speaker 6 (21:33):
Who the hell are you, guys?
Speaker 5 (21:34):
Maybe you're an extraterrestrial escape from the government facilty Confirmation.
Speaker 3 (21:38):
Code XV two r DM.
Speaker 2 (21:40):
Yeah, I do believe that Oprah has an alien baby.
Speaker 7 (21:44):
We'll be right back. Which Charlotte County Speaks News Radio
fifteen eighty WCCF.
Speaker 8 (21:50):
Another cr another continuing resolution. This reminds me the New
York Giants offense, run run past punt as. Basically what
Republicans do. Trump's pushing for this too. And I'm done
too happy about this nonsense. He wants to push back
(22:10):
any sort of budget government spending in this and everything
to September and saying, oh well, just do another continuing resolution,
freeze spending where it is which is nonsensical, and work
on our agenda, you know, hard until some time. I
don't like any of this. This is what happens again
and again again. By the way, Mike Johnson. Mike Johnson
(22:34):
promised he wasn't going to do anymore curs. You know,
this stuff should be done, It should be ready to go.
We shouldn't have to wait to September to start balancing
our budget. Watchdog on Wall Street dot Com have all.
Speaker 9 (23:20):
My friend.
Speaker 5 (23:22):
Sid say, Okay, I'm so alone, I'm so I just
gonna make it.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM, WCCF
ten thirty eight here at Charlotte County Speaks. Phone lines
open nine four one two zero six fifteen eighty, toll
free eight eight eight four four one fifteen eighty. These
people still going pedal to the medal to the left.
(24:00):
Sweden's globalist left is now pushing for state mandated multi
cultural neighborhoods. What could go wrong ford hood Uh. Former
Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Anderson, leader of the left globalist
(24:25):
Social Democrat party, has thrown her support behind a radical
proposal that, if enacted into law, would see the state
mandate the redistribution of migrant populations from alien cultures into
areas with higher numbers of native Swedes. These are going
to make them maybe a little bit to get the
(24:47):
you know, acclimated to the speeds here, assimilate as if
The controversial plan, which sparks significant backlash, pitched by socialists
to Sweden's people under the guise of combating segregation by
forced integration and calls for the demolition of apartment buildings
(25:12):
in migrant heavy areas and the relocation of foreign born
residents to neighborhoods with larger native Swedish populations.
Speaker 6 (25:19):
The Swedish newspaper.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
Expressing reported the former prime minister stated during her twenty
twenty two election campaign that Sweden should work towards becoming
a mixed and equal society without ethnic enclaves such as
the so called Somali towns. I get that, but you
should have done that to begin with, because forcing it
(25:41):
upon them now is only going to create you more problems.
Speaker 6 (25:46):
I think I would suggest that it would if.
Speaker 3 (25:50):
The Social Democrats managed to regain power from the center
right in the upcoming twenty twenty sixth election. Anderson has
signaled her intent to move forward with what she calls
Sweden Negotiation. The initiative would pressure municipalities to dismantle so
called vulnerable areas populated by migrants by using a combination
(26:13):
of financial incentives and penalties to ensure compliance with the
radical vision of multiculturalism. Critics of the plan, however, called
it a blatant attempt at social engineering that seeks to
dissolve traditional Swedish neighborhoods and impose government mandated diversity. That
nobody in Sweden voted for.
Speaker 6 (26:39):
Sweden.
Speaker 3 (26:40):
They well, they just can't help themselves. They keep going
further and further to the left. And speaking of further
and further to the left, you'll note Romania had their
elections where the pro liberty, pro freedom, anti EU didn't
want to supp did want Romania be in some base
(27:03):
for Ukraine for a Ukraine operation. Then us US USA
eight along with the opposition party in Romania, partner together
to try and throw a color revolution. They called the
initial election, oh, can't do it, can't do that.
Speaker 6 (27:23):
Oh there was a Russian interference or whatever.
Speaker 3 (27:25):
And now and then before the next election they arrest
George Escu, the guy who won, who was leading with
over forty percent of the vote. Intention and now they
have prevented him. They say he can't run for president anymore.
(27:47):
Can't run for president. The EU is very quickly becoming
just the new Soviet Union. If you've been paying any
attention at all.
Speaker 6 (27:59):
Initiate you have some very very bad habits.
Speaker 3 (28:02):
Well, these people in my office building are a drain
on resources. It's a kind of dieting boot camp. Oh
Whi's about in the next two hours telling you to
drop and give me various numbers.
Speaker 5 (28:10):
This is humiliating.
Speaker 3 (28:11):
It's show business, baby. You gotta stat somewhere.
Speaker 7 (28:14):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks News Radio
fifteen eighty WCCF.
Speaker 3 (28:21):
That's right.
Speaker 4 (28:21):
I nap after sex. Every guy does right, fellas two guys,
every guy falls asleep. It's like a chemical knocks you out.
Speaker 2 (28:29):
Come on.
Speaker 4 (28:29):
Guys ever start nodded out after sex. It's always when
your woman is wide awake and wants to share her feelings.
You're trying to be a good boy. Keep your head up.
It's like driving on a long highway at three.
Speaker 9 (28:40):
Am where I heard you.
Speaker 4 (28:51):
You're all af because that's true. Every guy falls asleep.
It's not going for two gay guys. I'm done me too.
Ooh that's convenient. One or two lesbian stay up all
night sharing her feelings.
Speaker 10 (29:08):
I'll investigate and get back to it.
Speaker 5 (30:00):
The call of stumbing Monday. But two this justice bad wow.
They call it the collar storm. But two to this
(30:22):
justice bad.
Speaker 1 (30:28):
Wow.
Speaker 5 (30:28):
With this one.
Speaker 3 (30:33):
And birs this.
Speaker 5 (30:35):
All also said.
Speaker 3 (30:38):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM wcc
F ten forty eight Here at Charlie County Speaks. Phone
lines open nine four one two zero six fifteen eighty
total three eight eight eight four four one fifteen eighty.
Uh hey, check this out. You're looking for a gig.
(30:59):
This is a weird gig. Would you like to be
the roadie for Gene Simmons? Would you would you pay
twelves to be the uh no, be the roadie? Or
well that's a that's what you can do. Do you
(31:22):
want to rock and roll all night and eat meta
musel all day? Uh, well, you can find out. That's
how much Gene Simmons will allow you to pay him
to join the road crew on his upcoming tour for
one day. Yeah, just one day, not the whole tour.
(31:47):
You got a load gear help set up the show,
but you also get some perks. You get to eat
with Gene, sit in on the sound check, receive a
signed set list and a bass guitar that he's used
during her plus a cruise shirt and hat. Gene will
also bring you on stage and introduce you, and you
(32:08):
get to bring one guest. You can also bring up
to four items for Gene to sign. Another hitch though
the twelve five hundred dollars does not does not include
your ticket to the show. You have to buy that separately.
(32:34):
I huh oh, you know there's probably gonna be some
takers who you know, who got money like that to.
Speaker 6 (32:39):
Just pee away on one day. But we'll see.
Speaker 3 (32:45):
I don't even have to open this item up. All
I have to do is just read the headline. I
don't have to click on it at all, because I
think we all know the answer to the question, what
song does Kevin Baker and not want to ever hear
at a wedding. I'm assuming it's putlose. You are too,
(33:10):
and we would be correct. Yeah, yeah, he says.
Speaker 6 (33:16):
Quote.
Speaker 3 (33:16):
My worst nightmare is to be at a wedding and
the DJ puts on footloose and suddenly the wedding becomes
about me and people form a circle around me, and
I become a trained monkey. So I've gone to the
DJs and said, don't do it. Just don't do it. It's
not that I don't like the song. It's just, you know,
(33:38):
everybody want to see a recreation of a movie that
I did what forty some odd years ago. I don't
think he can do the dance moves like he used to.
Speaker 2 (33:51):
What.
Speaker 3 (33:52):
This is another weird one too, because and when this
list comes from the Hollywood Reporter, now you can get
it the moment that the Hollywood Reporter just don't understand
baseball or baseball movies and.
Speaker 6 (34:05):
Why we like them.
Speaker 3 (34:10):
Hollywood Reporter put together a list of the ten best
baseball movies, the three movies that aren't in the top
ten Major League, You idiot, you could have at least
made it number ten. But what do they do? They
put some Japanese movie from nineteen ninety called boiling Point,
(34:34):
who Cares Anyway? Number nine, The Pride of the Yankees.
Great movie Sugar from two thousand and eight. Never heard
of it. Bang the drums Slowly. Number seven. That's an oldie.
It was good, a league of their own, of course,
the Natural at number five.
Speaker 6 (34:55):
Of course.
Speaker 3 (34:56):
Fear Strikes Out nineteen fifty seven.
Speaker 6 (34:59):
Never heard of it, Bull Durham number three, Great.
Speaker 3 (35:02):
Movie Moneyball, number two, another great movie, eight Man Out,
Number one, Field of Dreams, not in it, Sandlot, Naked Gun,
Major League again.
Speaker 6 (35:19):
They're idiots over there. They don't understand that.
Speaker 3 (35:22):
And now the don't get it. They're killing me small
random number one of your five random facts. Ian Hunter
from Matta Hoopel All the young dudes. Remember that. He
(35:43):
recorded the original version of Cleveland Rocks before the cover
by the Presidents of the United States America became a
theme song for the Drew Carey Show. Unlike Drew, Ian
was not from Cleveland, he was from England. In his
original version of the track in nineteen seventy seven was
England Rocks. Number two. The Bugatti veyron O sports car
(36:09):
that hits two hundred and fifty four miles per hour
and at that speed it got three miles per gallon, but.
Speaker 6 (36:17):
It's so cool.
Speaker 3 (36:17):
Have you seen the videos of that the Bugatti in
that German speedway?
Speaker 6 (36:23):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (36:23):
Insane? Number three have you ever seen dryer sheets labeled
as vegan? One of the key ingredients and a lot
of dryer sheets is beef fat. The dryer sheets are
coated in beef fat to make the clothes softer. Number four.
During SNL's first season, That's.
Speaker 6 (36:44):
Saturday Night Live.
Speaker 3 (36:46):
It was just known as NBC's Saturday Night because ABC
had a show called Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell,
and when that show ended, NBC changed it to Saturday
Night Live. But that's why they still say live from
New York, It's Saturday Night.
Speaker 6 (37:04):
At the beginning of every episode.
Speaker 3 (37:06):
Number five of your five random facts when The Truman
Show weird movie. When The Truman Show was coming out
in nineteen ninety eight, the director Peter Weir wanted to
have hidden cameras installed in every theater showing it, then
have the movie cut to the audience watching it. Uh,
(37:29):
that didn't happen, though, There's your five round in twent.
Speaker 6 (37:35):
Just sounds a little weird, do you think?
Speaker 7 (37:38):
No?
Speaker 6 (37:39):
All right?
Speaker 3 (37:40):
Two six fifteen eighty toll free eight eight eight four
four one, fifteen eighty. Well, sadly, sadly, we know now
how Gene Hackman and his wife died, and it's weird.
Apparently Betsy went first of HANTAVI. There was pulmonary syndrome,
(38:01):
severe respiratory illness he get from contact with infected rodents.
Why wouldn't he have it because he was ninety five
and on a pacemaker, You think he'd be susceptible too. Anyway,
Jean survived about a week afterwards before succumbing to severe
cardiovascular disease. And also Jean was apparently suffering from advanced Alzheimer's,
(38:25):
so he may have not even known she died or
how to take care of himself.
Speaker 6 (38:29):
There was no food in his system at all.
Speaker 3 (38:32):
He also showed signs of multiple heart surgeries and prior
heart attacks, so authority say February eleventh was the last
day Betsy was.
Speaker 6 (38:42):
Known to be alive.
Speaker 3 (38:43):
She was seen on surveillance cameras at a CVS. An
analysis of Gene's pacemakers suggested he died on the seventeenth
or eighteenth, and then the bodies discovered on the twenty.
Speaker 6 (38:55):
Six just.
Speaker 3 (38:57):
Yeah, sad way to go the whole thing. But now
you know, but yeah, just sad, but an otherwise great life.
But he did decide to go out with a bang.
Do your kid, Ye, we got some good news. We
(39:17):
got to have some good news out there, isn't there.
Here's a couple community in East Texas pitched in to
help a thirteen year old name Case and Snyder hang
out with his friends more. A car crash back in
twenty seventeen left him paralyzed from the waist down at
five years old, so he's in a wheelchair. So people
donated him enough money to buy him one of those
(39:40):
all terrain wheelchairs. Very cool, so you can go hiking, fishing,
and hunting with all his friends. And they surprised him
with it on Saturday. It costs about eighteen thousand dollars.
Very cool that they did. That guy in England tried
to rob a convenience store last week, but a forty
two year old woman was buying cann and happened to
(40:00):
be a fifth degree black belt. She also trained in
Brazilian jiu jitsu and boxing, so she just kicked a
crap out of him with one big kick chased him
out of the store. Local police gave her commendation for it,
so congrats, congrets to her. Thanks anymore, Well, here's one
(40:23):
two high school golfers. This is weird. Two high school
golfers playing a tournament near Dallas last week. One of
the high schoolers ended up saving the other guy's life.
High school senior Angel Lucio heard his opponent yelling and
found him in a water hazard that he fell in
(40:44):
while he was trying to get his ball and he
couldn't swim, so Angel pulled him out safety and he's okay,
even though they're soaking wet. They finished out their match.
Angel won well, you know, just saying his opponent probably
a little little shaken after that, so Angel one. But
(41:05):
cops came their Hero of the Month award. Very nice.
You lose your match and your opponent saves your life.
It's around the golf he'll will remember for the rest
(41:26):
of his natural life.
Speaker 6 (41:30):
Have a great day, kids.
Speaker 9 (41:40):
Anybody got any more jokes, any funny?
Speaker 6 (41:42):
Nope, nope, all right, see you folks.
Speaker 3 (41:46):
We're in news radio fifteen eighty AM, WCCF, Punda Gorda
and FM one hundred point nine W two sixty five
Ea punda Gorda