Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Giggity gaety giggity goo.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Well, well, well, looks like someone's been dining off the
dollar menu again. I'm detecting traces of artificial cheese, mystery meat,
and enough sodium to melt the ice on a driveway.
Your fiber count. Let's just say a tumbleweed rolls through
your intestines once a week. Maybe swap the drive through
(00:31):
for a drive past it at a vegetable and no
fries don't count. I'll be here analyzing, silently, judging, and
cheering you on, one flesh at a time.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
This is not headline news. An Amazon outage took down
most of the Internet for many. It led to a
brief but terrifying encounter with this thing called productivity. Cohler
wants to put a camera in toys to analyze the contents,
but just remember the camera adds ten poops. Taylor Swift
(01:07):
avoided cameras while attending Sunday's.
Speaker 4 (01:10):
Chiefs Raiders game.
Speaker 3 (01:12):
The Raiders wish they could have done the same. And
Axel Rose had a temper tantrum on stage during a
show in Buenos Aires. Apparently the door dash driver took
his whopper with cheese meal to the wrong arena. This
is not headline news Hua.
Speaker 5 (01:39):
Wake up the cup.
Speaker 6 (01:47):
Cannot joy.
Speaker 5 (02:06):
Cab jab cab cab.
Speaker 4 (02:27):
In this present crisis. Government is not the solution to
our problem.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
Government is the problem.
Speaker 7 (02:35):
This is Charlotte County Speaks. Your chance to let your
voice be heard on local, state, and national which use
and now broadcasting live from a dumpy little warehouse behind
a taco bell. The host of Charlotte County Speaks Can
Love Joy.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM, WCCF
Radio dot.
Speaker 4 (03:04):
Com and on your iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
Charlotte County Speaks Our number two on a Tuesday. Phone
lines are nine four to one two zero six fifteen eighty,
toll free eight eight eight four four one fifteen eighty.
Email address CC speaks at live dot com. Like to
welcome doctor ramon a gil Thank you.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
Thank you from me.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Parkinson's Disease Treatment Center of Southwest Florida, Thank you. And
we were talking a while a couple of weeks ago.
I wanted to bring you in to your concern with
so many people that you're seeing that are it's taking
too long for people to get diagnosed with Parkinson's when
(03:51):
they have it.
Speaker 4 (03:53):
Yes.
Speaker 8 (03:55):
Well, first of all, good morning everybody, and I hope
you have a great week. And the weather is certainly
changing and getting nicer.
Speaker 4 (04:06):
This is the.
Speaker 8 (04:09):
One of the best moments of the year for us
in Florida, befault.
Speaker 4 (04:12):
Yeah. Really finally, and.
Speaker 8 (04:15):
Just to open with a little announcement, we are holding
our falls in Position for Parkinson's Disease this coming November
twenty first at the convention center at the Sunseeker. So
we will be distributing information flyers and posters. But the
(04:38):
program has always it is free and that is always
limited sitting, although the convention center room is certainly large,
but I would advise the audience to contact us and
(04:59):
arts preserve their space. So, going back to your point
about diagnosed in Parkinson's disease, everybody knows that the frequency
the incidents of Parkinson's disease is increasing around the world.
(05:21):
It is right now the fastest, the fastest growing and
neuro the generative disease certainly a lot less frequent than Alzheimer's.
But if you look at in percentage of new cases,
the percentage of new cases in Parkinson's is higher than Alzheimer's.
(05:46):
Now there are a million reasons for that for a
million theories and potential causes. And you always hear about pesticide,
and you always hear about gumble jew. But as I
always say, most people in the world have never heard
of cambla, joon or and the incidents is increasing everywhere.
(06:12):
So there are many factors, and some of the factors
include things that we don't like to hear about or
are not really popular. For example, many patients or many
people don't know that diabetes is a risk factor for
Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. Now most people may know that type
(06:39):
two diabetes is closely linked to obesity, but that's not
popular to talk about that because then you get into
the issue of exercise improved diet.
Speaker 5 (06:54):
Is the way.
Speaker 4 (06:55):
People don't want to hear that.
Speaker 8 (06:56):
But I don't want to hear that. It was this
joke that I saw some time ago, and it's like
a line of people in the gate for surgical treatment
for obesity and nobody looking for exercise or improved diety.
(07:17):
But anyways, the reality is that that maybe that maybe
one of the reasons why we are having an increase,
a significant increase in the number of patients with Sparkingson's diseases. Now,
the problem that we are bringing to the attention of
the public and the medical community is that there is
(07:40):
no reason for patients with Parkinson's disease not to be
recognized or diagnosed early. And what I mean what I
mean by early is we are still diagnosed in Parkinson's
based on the typical or symptoms of the disease slowness
(08:03):
of movements, tremor or shaking, rigidity, changes in gait. By
the time you get into balance problems, it is no
longer early. Now. When you that knows patients with Sparkinson's
(08:25):
disease early on, they have an array of options of treatment.
There are many interventions.
Speaker 4 (08:34):
You could initiate or.
Speaker 8 (08:39):
Get the patient into that improve the long term outcome,
improve their quality of life, maintain quality of life. But
if you somehow, some way the lady that knows, and
they come to you seven, eight, ten years or more
(09:03):
after this symptom started, there are problems associated with that
physical changes that become irreversible, particularly balanced falls, injuries.
Speaker 4 (09:17):
Yeah you get this early enough, Yeah you don't read
get it?
Speaker 8 (09:22):
Potentially you don't, that is true. Potentially you don't. So
it is the thing that motivated me to call you recently.
Ken I know that things come in serious, but I
have been witnessing this delay that knows all alone since
I've been here. But by now I should see less
(09:47):
of that, not more. And in the past two three months,
I've seen at least seven patients with Parkinson's disease that
by by the time they come to me, they are
a stage four or stage five of the disease. A
stage four means that their balance is impaired, they are
(10:10):
falling and they need a walker or canes to ambulate,
and stage five means when their gate is so impaired
that they are basically will share down.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
Now, why do you think that are gps and er
doctors and.
Speaker 4 (10:32):
Physicians Are they not trained to look for that?
Speaker 8 (10:34):
Well, let's start with a easier and more politically correct explanation.
There is a tendency to assume that we are slowing
down because we are older. Uncle Joe is shuffling. Oh,
(10:57):
that's his back. Uncle Joe is slowing down. Yes, he's
seventy eight. Auntie Mary is kind of shaky. H that's anxiety,
and she's older. And we shouldn't as patients, as family
members or as doctors assume that these type of problems
(11:20):
are necessarily because the patients are growing older. So you're
right in this sense that many times primary care physicians
and their staff don't do something that is very basic
for us in neurology and should be for everybody. They
don't see the patients walking.
Speaker 4 (11:42):
Yeah, that's right. They come and they're already set down.
Speaker 8 (11:45):
They don't. So when you see a patient walking, you
see the Parkinson's very very easily if you pay attention
and if you are thinking about it as a matter
of fact. Historically, in eighteen seventeen, James Parkinson describe the
(12:08):
so called shaking policy. Later on was a name on
his behalf Parkinson's. This is just looking observing of patients
or walking in Queen Square in London. And later on
he saw two of those patients in the hospital for
different reasons and he was able to quote unquote examine them.
(12:32):
But in those days the physical examination was very different
than now patients. I mean, doctors wouldn't touch patients, etc.
But anyways, sometimes that's happening now that's becoming a trend.
But anyways, so I encourage patients to a don't assume
(12:56):
that changes in the gate. Don't assume that a slowness
of movements is normal. Don't assume that you need to
slow down to the point that it takes you longer
to take a shower is normal. There is something that
they need to keep in mind, parking. Some disease always
(13:20):
starts in one side of the body and a few
years later goes to the other. So, for example, when
patients are showering and they are like shampooing and they
try to remember, well, it doesn't apply to you, but anyways,
(13:40):
they will notice that one hand is very good, but
the other one is kind of cannot do what the
other hand is doing. That's a sign believe it or
know that there is something wrong with your motor system.
And it may be, among other things, parking. So dicees
the other thing shaking tremor. Well, the most common reason
(14:04):
for tremo in this country is medication side effect, followed
by a condition called familia or essential tremor, then followed
by Parkinson's and related disorders. The shaking the trembling Parkinsonone
always starts in one side and then goes to the other,
(14:27):
and the traveling parking zones typically occurs when the patient
is not using the hand, but it could also be
seen when you are using it. It's like twenty five
percent of the patients with Parkinson's will have tremor when
they are holding things or they have the hand in
certain positions, but it is also typically at rest. Now,
(14:52):
in terms of my peers, primary care physicians, nurse practitioners,
physician assistants, you have to in our older population, extend
your examination at least, you know, to look at them walking.
Speaker 4 (15:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (15:13):
I mean you don't need to do that, let's say
in a seventy five year old person. But if you're
in Charlotte County where the older population is, you know,
the majority do that.
Speaker 4 (15:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (15:28):
It's like there is a rule that after the age
I believe eighty, primary care physicians always do a basic
assessment of cognition. Well, when you are seventy, why not
to just look at you walking? Yeah, So we have
to really keep in mind that once a patient comes
(15:51):
to us or once the diagnoses delay by years, there
is no way to go back, and they lost quality
of life. And that is the main reason why we
practice medicine to maintain and optimize the quality of life
of our patients. So that's those Those are some basic
(16:16):
advices we have over the years present different educational programs
for the medical community emphasizing early diagnosed diagnosis of Parkinson's disease.
And there are ways to recognize.
Speaker 4 (16:34):
It about very early.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
Is there a blood testers or anything like that?
Speaker 8 (16:42):
Now there is. There are ways to diagnose what we
call pre clinical Parkinsons. But from the practical standpoint of view,
it is debatable what is the quote unquote benefit of
diagnos in Parkinson's before the motor symptoms are recognized.
Speaker 4 (17:05):
And that's showing you might have a predisposition.
Speaker 8 (17:08):
And that is because it is debatable that there is
no quote unquote treatment. However, in the other side of equations,
people say, well, if I know that, I will have,
you know, motor Parkingsone's disease in a few years. Perhaps
I will take care, I will take better care of me.
(17:30):
I will be improving my fitness, I will be improving
my nutrition. But those are, you know, not one hundred
percent practical things, and they are debatable. But at the
same time, it's really not that difficult to recognize parking
(17:51):
zones in the motor stage in the first, second, third year.
I mean this page are seen by their doctors twice
a year, three times a year, for God's sake, sit
them walking, ask questions if they have problems with changes
(18:16):
in the sense of a smell, as then if they
have what we call ram sleep behavior, which is like
they are acting their dreams. You know, there are some
local doctors that are very good and they recognize these
symptoms and they contact me or they contact us, or
they refer to patients suspecting that it may be Parkinson
(18:38):
because well, this person is seventy two and I think
it's slowing down, and he has ram sleep behavior, and
he has also I post me I see medical term
for changing the sense of a smell that became very
popular with COVID because of the.
Speaker 4 (18:57):
I can't smell exactly.
Speaker 8 (18:59):
Yeah, well, that happens to be a very common problem
in Parkinson's because the olphatoy bulbs are the first part
of the brain damaged by Parkinson's. So one hundred percent
of patients with Parkinson's disease if you test the stance
of a smell, which you don't have to, but if
(19:20):
you test, they will have abnormalities. But if you ask them,
then say, you know now that you are asking me
I think it is so those are simple advices trying
to recognize these patients earlier than when the patient in
front of you has Parkinson's written all over. I have
(19:45):
two cases that are particularly striking recently. One is a
woman aged eighty six that he basically came to my
office in a wheelchair. And the story is that she
was slow in down and slowing down and then becoming
a stoop, and then the balance was off and she
(20:06):
started falling and falling until she broke a heap. And
then she went to the hospital and she went through surgery,
and she went through rehab. And in the second course,
in the second place where she was getting rehab, one
of the therapists said, she you're a slow down. You're
slower than usual, and you should be making more progress
(20:28):
in your therapy. You know you kind of don't smile
that much, and that you have a little bit of shaking.
You may have Parkinsons. She was sent to us a
stage five. And then I saw the other day in
ninety one year old gentleman from a local assisted living facility.
(20:54):
Very sharp guy. I mean, to make it to ninety one,
you have to be healthy. And the guy was very
sharp and he comes in a wheelchair sitting, very little movement,
miles resting, tremor in both hands, reduced blinking. And then
the gentleman that broke him, bless his heart, asked me, well,
(21:15):
we are here because they are wondering if he has Parkinson's.
So my reply was the analogy that I told you. Well,
picture this being in the hospital emergency room and they
roach a young woman with a big belly in labor
pain and you say, oh my god, you must be pregnant.
(21:37):
So it shouldn't be like that because we cannot bring
that patient back. Yeah, he will improve, and he's improving.
Both he lost many years of his life. So that's
what I am here to encourage people to open their
eyes and help us recognizing.
Speaker 4 (21:59):
All the signs and checked out.
Speaker 8 (22:00):
Yeah, and the quicker you get it, the better the treatment,
better the outcome. And you know, if you want to
look at it from a different standpoint of view, it
will cost a loss a lot. Less to this system
is the patient is diagnosed and treated early on. Then
at the end there it is.
Speaker 4 (22:20):
And once again, when's your November.
Speaker 8 (22:22):
November Friday, November twenty first, at AH thirty, we start
reached on site registration and breakfasts and so on, And
we go all day long, including launch, and then we
have activities in the afternoon and we should be wrapping
up by three forty five at the Sound Secret Convention Center.
Speaker 4 (22:42):
Oh there you go.
Speaker 8 (22:43):
Yeah, thank you very much.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
Give that doctor ramone a Gill. Ladies and gentlemen, Parkinson's
Disease Street and Center of Southwest Florida. Will be back
right after this.
Speaker 4 (22:54):
It's another simulation gone mad. Who the hell are you guys?
Speaker 1 (22:57):
Maybe you're an extraterrestrial escape from a government side confirmation
code XV two r DM.
Speaker 8 (23:03):
Yeah, I do believe that Oprah has an alien baby.
Speaker 9 (23:06):
Will be right back with Charlotte County Speaks News Radio
fifteen to eighty WCCF.
Speaker 4 (23:14):
All right, some important advice.
Speaker 10 (23:16):
Spend time in the financial markets, in stocks, building a
portfolio rather than trying to time the market.
Speaker 4 (23:29):
Makes sense.
Speaker 10 (23:31):
Yeah, don't time the market.
Speaker 4 (23:32):
Spend time in the market.
Speaker 7 (23:34):
Why.
Speaker 10 (23:34):
Well, let me put it to you this way. The
purchasing power of your dollar over the past thirty years
has dropped by fifty two point seven five percent.
Speaker 4 (23:47):
Okay, not good, No bueno S and P five hundred.
Speaker 10 (23:53):
Adjusted adjusted for inflation is up a one hundred and
eighty seven percent. That's a little low for eight percent
a year, and again adjusted for inflation.
Speaker 4 (24:07):
Get it, don't.
Speaker 10 (24:09):
Time the market. Spend time in the market Watchdog on
Wall Street dot Com.
Speaker 11 (24:30):
The Blue Blue from drama be Away from Home, The
Blue Blues.
Speaker 6 (24:47):
Blues from the drama The Way from Home.
Speaker 5 (24:57):
Man, The Blue.
Speaker 6 (24:59):
Bet Bo's follow me at All.
Speaker 1 (25:06):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM WCCF
nine forty one Here on a Tuesday morning at Charlotte
County Speaks. Phone lines open at nine four one two
zero six fifteen eighty. Oh the tough times that are
in store for John Bolton and his mustache, Joe Hooff
(25:32):
tells us as Vetlana Lakhova is all over the Bolton
indictments and acts, and it's not good for John Bolton
and his family. Apparently, and according to the historian caught
up in the middle of Russia Gate, having her life
turned upside down, John Bolton is in the middle of
it all, Vetlana writes on the X Brennan Cia and
(25:55):
Koby's FBI Ran Anti Trump ops from the UK vs.
F Halper and Chris Steele Gina Haspell, head of the
CIA station in London. Alan Kohler was the FBI liaison
John Bolton knew Halper, and Bolton's aid Fiona Hill, was
a close friend of Steel. In twenty sixteen, to stop Trump,
(26:17):
the false story was fabricated in London by Intel ops,
Halper and Steel that Svetlana had an affair with General
Flynn and that she was a Russian spy. This was
used to investigate the Trump campaign and later the Trump administration,
leading to appointment of Special Counsel Muller, and they were
(26:38):
hoping to impeach the president. President Trump tried to declassify
these documents in twenty eighteen, but Bolton Haspell, Ray and
Rosenstein even though here's where Trump declassified him, so as
of then they were declassified, but Bolton, Haspell and Ray
(26:59):
stopped the declassification, claiming it would hurt relationships with top
ally Britain and endangered national security.
Speaker 4 (27:07):
In fact, the declassification.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
Would have endangered the deep state is who it would
have endangered. So on December thirty, twenty twenty, at the
end of his first term, President Trump declassified documents revealing
that the FBI, CIA British intelops against him, but was
not even allowed by the intel community to declassify words.
Speaker 4 (27:29):
London or the United.
Speaker 1 (27:31):
Kingdom not allowed to. It's it's not their choice to
say no.
Speaker 4 (27:45):
I wonder if Trump knew that anyway. Helper UK documents then.
Speaker 1 (27:51):
Got retroactively reclassified by Biden's national security team, Obama Combe
and the Brennan loyalists in May of twenty twenty two.
The docs were then raided by the FBI team headed
by head of counter Intel, former FBI London liaison Alan Kohler,
who knew Halper and Steel the documents were hidden they
(28:12):
thought forever. John Bolton said on TV that he knows
what the documents are and that they are highly classified
sensitive and that President Trump should be severely punished for
storing them because he endangered national security. In fact, it
was a deep state that was endangered, not national security.
See this is the whole deal spygate, the fact that
(28:35):
they were spying on him as well as hundreds of
other people.
Speaker 4 (28:40):
That was the deal.
Speaker 1 (28:42):
Russia Gate was all to try and cover up spygate.
So President Trump finally declassified the full documents this year,
and now we know Lakova says, looks like she was right.
At Nash Security advisor Bolton appears to have blocked President
(29:03):
Trump's declassification of documents about Steph Halper, a CIA FBI,
British MI six operative who coordinated with Chris Steel. President
Trump was persuaded by his advisors that the declassification would
hurt relationships with London. So in twenty eighteen, when Bolton
was President Trump's NSA, President wanted to declassify the documents
(29:26):
about Stephan Halper and the black ops against the President.
Halper want to russigate architects was a CIA, FBI, British
MI six asset. He was ran by Komy Brennan and
Richard Dearlove A six and coordinated with Chris Steele. President
Trump issued in order to declassify everything about these operations,
(29:48):
and Bolton led the resistance and had the declassification reversed.
Next fact, Lana Lakhova lets the whole world know the predicament.
John Brennan is in his family is in on it.
Time for Bolton to start singing like a bird.
Speaker 4 (30:07):
He's one. Who oh Bolton and his mustache.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
I'm telling you they need to go down hard and
please put them in general population, initiate conversation. You have
some very very bad habits. Well, these people in my
office building are a drain on resources.
Speaker 6 (30:21):
It's a kind of dieting boot camp.
Speaker 3 (30:23):
Oh, it's about in the next two hours telling you
to drop and get me various numbers.
Speaker 6 (30:26):
This is humiliating. It's show business, baby, you got a
start somewhere.
Speaker 9 (30:30):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks News Radio
fifteen to eighty WCCF.
Speaker 12 (30:38):
Door dash is what's gonna kill me. I mean, I
look at it at night like it's tender. I ordered
it one night, so I like McDonald's and so I
got number one with no onions. And McDonald's they do
have a mcflurry, but they only let you do one size.
I don't care for that. So I was gonna get
(30:59):
a blue Wizard and I double dashed it. And double
dashing is when you just keep pepper and the guy.
You know, You're like, what else is open around you?
You know, maybe go see if they got nerves in
that gas station. So I ordered it, but for some reason,
I thought it was gonna be the same guy. But
(31:19):
they put it in two different drivers, so they separated
now I'm like watching the GPS and I'm like, they're
gonna come at the same time, Like it's could not
like in my worst nightmare. So it I look at
I need one of them to get in the wreck.
Speaker 4 (31:36):
It happens.
Speaker 12 (31:38):
I mean I see them both, they both make the
turn at the same time. I'm mortified. The McDonald's comes
in drops it off. Derek Queen has to let him
back out. He was just in the coult De Sack
like I was having construction done in my house at
eleven o'clock at night.
Speaker 4 (31:54):
You're just not going at.
Speaker 6 (32:03):
Part its grease land USC.
Speaker 4 (32:05):
We're going all that long for bout two or three
day centers.
Speaker 5 (32:14):
Some of what up He went.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM WCCF,
Charlotte County speaks nine to fifty two on a Tuesday
morning over to the Conservative tree House. And this is
not a parody either. This is the current reality in
the UK as governed by these gaslighting professional political class
(32:49):
morons that have lost all connection to reality. I mean,
you really can't do anything but laugh at these It's
it's a sad life though, because starverars really destroying the
UK British citizens getting thrown in jail for criticizing illegal
Aliens or Muslims, while the taxpayers of the UK are
(33:17):
supporting all of them, just like here, only worse the
UK's You almost just got to laugh at them. I mean,
Starvar's just such an idiot. But the UK social fabric
is being torn apart as a result of mass illegal
(33:37):
alien invasion that shows no sign of stopping over in
the UK, the people of Great Britain are at their
wits end and the financial status of the government is
near collapse. Nerves are frayed as the British government now
steps forth to claim that they have finally discovered the
cause of their illegal alien influx. It's the Russians, jees,
(34:04):
that's how unserious these people are. Headline Russian Russia flooding
Europe and the UK with illegal migrants and attempt to
destabilize the EU in Britain. Yeah, they had nothing to
do with it. Russia's attempting to flood Europe in the
UK with illegal migrants in order to destabilize the EU
(34:26):
in Britain, a Bulgarian minister has warned the country's Interior Minister,
Daniel Mittoff, claimed Moscow was working with people smugglers to
help them bring illegal migrant migrants to the continent.
Speaker 4 (34:42):
Aren't they a little late to.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
Just now decide to start blaming Russia for their problems here?
Next up, British scientists identify root cause stopping British from
dental hygiene. It's putin.
Speaker 4 (34:55):
Dammit, it's potent.
Speaker 1 (35:00):
He's messing messing with our precious bodily fluids.
Speaker 4 (35:08):
I don't know. That's a pretty weird one.
Speaker 1 (35:12):
Here it gets even weirder here in the US, international
student from China accused of drugging and raping multiple women
on Camper campus at.
Speaker 4 (35:26):
USC SiZ Sij.
Speaker 1 (35:31):
Stephen Wang, age thirty, allegedly committed the crimes between twenty
twenty one and twenty twenty four while pursuing his doctoral degree.
According to Wednesday's news release published by the La County
DA's office, he was reigned September second, pled not guilty
to all felony charges, one count of forcible rape, two
(35:54):
counts of sodomy by controlled substance or anesthesia, one count
rape by controlled substance, and four count sexual penetration by
controlled substance or anesthesia. According he was doing the Bill
Cosby on a lot of these women, sadly, and there's
(36:21):
more of them out there as well. Alan Hamilton, Deputy
Chief of the LA Police Department, said, Wang is a
Chinese national department's been investigating for months. We had our
eyes on him, we were this close. And there's probably more.
(36:45):
They're saying, there's probably more than just the victims that
they've identified thus far. If convicted twenty five to life
plus fifty six years in California, and you'd have to
register as a sex offender because you.
Speaker 4 (37:06):
Okay, Well, I'm just saying there's a lot of.
Speaker 1 (37:15):
Students over here from China that aren't looking out for
our best interest or their neighbors.
Speaker 4 (37:25):
Just throwing that out there for you.
Speaker 1 (37:30):
Coming up, we'll talk Mom Dommy, Cincinnati, Canada, Canada, the
socialist paradise that is Canada. We'll be talking about them too,
and a bombshell study on the vacs versus the unvaxed. Well,
(38:00):
of course, yeah, you're five random facts.
Speaker 4 (38:01):
Where would we be without five random facts?
Speaker 1 (38:07):
Add some extra stupid news and good news too. No,
I'm just I'm gonna go in the break room get
an apple National Apple Day today, grab that
Speaker 10 (38:57):
So we're in news Radio fifteen eighty a m w
(39:32):
c c F Punda, Gordon and F M one hundred
point nine W two six five e A Punda gorda