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January 29, 2025 • 32 mins
Number, Word and Song of the Day. The great Tony Robbins joins Great Sports Talk. Dead and Alive Guy Birthday of the Day.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
How's the stream stream commencing broadcasting on AM five to
seventy LA Sports and streaming on the iHeartRadio while.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
The longest running afternoon sports show in the city.

Speaker 3 (00:09):
No congratulations necessary.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
All traces of Fred Rogan have been removed.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
This is Petros in Money, Thank You, Thank You, hosted
by Petros papadae Gas terrible person, He's the worst and
Matt money Smith.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
The pipes, the pipes, the pipe.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Don't miss an episode. We're with you.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
Yeah, follow the petros in Money Show wherever you get
your podcasts now Here's Petros Papadakus and Matt money Smith.

Speaker 4 (00:42):
A thing is not necessarily true because a man dies
for it.

Speaker 2 (00:47):
Going and I've been le trust money. Hour two of
a two hour show. We're off at four. We've got
Clippers basketball coming up. Adam Ausin with the pregame at four.
Tony Robbins, Yes that Tony Robbins will join us on
the very next segment.

Speaker 4 (01:01):
Is there any other kind? No, you said danger? Is
there any other kind other than grave danger?

Speaker 2 (01:08):
Tony Robbins given four and a half million dollars to
the cause, partnering with the Dream Center as well. You
can donate through either our website AM five to seventy
l a sports dot com keyword donate, or through the
dream Center website, which is dreamcenter dot org.

Speaker 4 (01:25):
Well, we appreciate James Worthy, a wonderful guest and a
great person joining us in the last hour. Like Matt said,
tr that's what we call him because we know him
so well. Tony Robbins will join us next. But right
now it's time for the word of the day.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
His words, the.

Speaker 2 (01:44):
Word of the day.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
Today's word of the day is mermaid. As you know, Matt,
there's a lot of people now that like to put
on those mermaid pants and make it look like they
have a big ass fin and flap around in an
aquarium or at least like in water, and people take
pictures of you. Sometimes it's a BBW. Sometimes it's like

(02:05):
a hot chick.

Speaker 2 (02:06):
Maybe you're the ones you're searching for.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
Well, now I.

Speaker 4 (02:08):
Don't search it for anything, man, I just see but
in the New York Post that in China there is
a primitive forest park aquarium in Xishuang, Bana, and they
had some Russian chick, twenty two year old Russian mermaid
in their Masha who was flapping around, and a giant

(02:28):
fish not with teeth, but you know, still got a jaw.
It's a big ass fish, looks like a big ass
catfish or something like, tries to bite her head off.
Oh no, and yeah, and it doesn't like she wriggles away,
but somebody's camera is rolling. It's a gone viral today,
this mermaid chick getting bitten in the head by a

(02:49):
huge fish, and they have offered her the forest park.
They've offered the Russian ninety six dollars in moral damages.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
Okay, sounds about right.

Speaker 4 (03:01):
So you felt those fish lips around your ears, so sorry.
Here are ninety six dollars in damages and a video
that is going to go down in perpetuity of this
woman having her head swallowed by a giant catfish or
something terrifying.

Speaker 3 (03:21):
If it had teeth, she'd have no head.

Speaker 2 (03:24):
I mean, damn, I'm looking at it right now.

Speaker 4 (03:26):
Yeah, pretty right, Like that thing really wraps its lips
around her head and she's able to get away. I
don't know if she went back and finished her shift
in the tub.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
That word, what are you doing back?

Speaker 3 (03:42):
I am a flapping mermaid in a Chinese aquarium. Get
back in there so big news there. If you want
to check that out. It is time for the number
of the day.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
Here's my number. Number of the day. Number the day
is four hundred. That's about what it cost to get
yourself a YETI cooler. Not gonna take shots at yet
the big one, the real legit yetti big about.

Speaker 3 (04:09):
The collapsible one or like the one that.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
I'm talking the one that weighs like yeah, it's like
it will keep ice frozen for a week. They're great.
I have the beast coolers out there.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
I don't know if the backpack was that that expensive.

Speaker 2 (04:23):
They're all nice, they make nice stuff. So I'm not
doing this to say, hey, boycott YETI f them. But
you know what, you.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
Already attacked Stanley earlier in the year.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
Well, you know, Stanley used to be a man's I'm
just saying, you know, you've taken the green lunch box
to the site.

Speaker 4 (04:39):
You've got an automatic weapon pointed at all these people
trying to drink. Uh.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
If you yetti, what's wrong with yetti? The Utah Yetti's.
Remember the Utah Hockey Club as in its inaugural season,
the fans voted. They voted for YETI of course, because
it was the best the best name out there exactly,
so Utah Yeti's win. They file for trademark application with

(05:08):
the United States Patent and Trademark Office, and on January ninth,
just shared today in the Salt Lake Tribune, YETI Coolers
rejected the trademark for likelihood of confusion. Oh come on,
get over yourself right. The ownership group of the Utah

(05:29):
Hockey Club, Smith Entertainment Group said that behind the scenes
they were trying to strike a coexistence deal, right, both parties,
and then you get the one with the guns that
says co existence. It's like, oh, I get it. Both
parties to use the trademark in the commercial market, but

(05:50):
YETI Cooler Company would not agree. Quote, we engage with
the Yeddie Coolers extensively. The NHL has helped engage with
Yeti Coolers extensively.

Speaker 4 (05:59):
There the Yetti is a thousands and thousands of years
old legend.

Speaker 2 (06:04):
Yeah, they say when it comes to merch when stamping
the name Yetti on jerseys and hats and mini sticks
their brand, yet ti uh Yeti Coolers determined that that
there would be confusion. So uh that sucks. That really

(06:26):
does secondary name. So here's here's their final three. Now
not soakers, not jump umpers, but instead it will be
either the Utah wassatch Okay, the Utah Mammoth I like
the Mammoth or the Utah Hockey Club.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
Is it Mammoth Mountain going to sue them?

Speaker 2 (06:49):
You would? You would think, you know, but it's a
hockey team. YETI you're a cooler brand. I get that
maybe some people out there are buying hats with your
yetti logo, with your Yetti logo, but who gives a rip?

Speaker 3 (07:02):
Wouldn't that be good for Yetti?

Speaker 2 (07:03):
You would like to think since Stanley's kicking their nuts, Yeah,
you'd like to think, Ronnie.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
Song of the Day.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
Search the song of the day.

Speaker 5 (07:18):
Freddie Fender was a singer, songwriter and musician famous for
his text mex musical style, providing today's song of the
day called wild Side of Life. Because the Petros and
Money shows on a super flex alert living the wild
side of life, We're two hours of great sports talk
will get us to the Clippers, who've made their way

(07:41):
into Texas to tangle with Victor wimbin Yama and the
San Antonio Spurs at Frostbank Center and Adam Oslin will
be here ready to bring you that Clippers countdown show
that begins right here at four o'clock.

Speaker 3 (07:54):
What about the Salt Lake City? Thank you, Ronnie.

Speaker 4 (07:56):
What about the Salt Lake City? No drama, Lamas, I'd
be into that right if you get the lava, make
of that little noise. I mean, that is unfortunate, There's
no doubt, no doubt about it. Tony Robbins is gonna

(08:18):
join us next. Avoid a giant fish biting your head
and beware of trademark rights.

Speaker 3 (08:25):
We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (08:36):
Petro sand Money five seventy LA Sports Live Everywhere on
the iHeartRadio app your home of the World Series Champion Dodgers.
Don't forget Dodger Fest is this Saturday, twelve to three.
If you can't make it out to the stadium, you'll
hear everything live right here with David Vase on AM
five seventy. And a reminder of the relief and recovery
efforts continue for those affected by the wildfires. The Dream Center,

(08:58):
LA our partner for a decade plus and iHeartMedia teamed
up to make sure people are getting the necessities and
support that they need. You can continue to donate now
at a five seventy la sports dot com keyword donate.

Speaker 4 (09:11):
Matt joining us right now maybe one of the most
famous men we've ever talked to here on the show.

Speaker 3 (09:17):
And we had David Beckham on True he's.

Speaker 4 (09:20):
Already committed four and a half million dollars to wildfire
relief efforts. Who he knows the area, He went to
Glendora High Let's go Tartans.

Speaker 3 (09:31):
And of course he's.

Speaker 4 (09:32):
A New York Time best selling author, Life in Business strategist,
one of the most well known Americans in all of America,
and he's helping us with the Dream Center.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
And the power of unity at a time of crisis.

Speaker 4 (09:48):
That's what we got going on and here to discuss
it and how great everybody's been in a community and
what everybody can do is the great Tony Robbins on
your Southern California Toyota Dealer Celebrity Hotline on the Petrosen
Money Show.

Speaker 3 (10:00):
What's cracking, Tony? How are you?

Speaker 6 (10:02):
Well, that's quite nice to meet you, guys.

Speaker 3 (10:05):
It's nice to meet you. Tony.

Speaker 4 (10:07):
First and foremost, you have personal experience when it comes
to fires. You know what it's like and you've really
mobilized here to help people.

Speaker 6 (10:17):
Yeah, I lost my own home about twenty years ago
in California. I've and got out with nothing but the
clothes on our back. So it's not something I'm thinking
about intellectually. And you know, you have to be able
to deal with it financially. You got to be able
to figure out your home, and you got to figure
out food, and you also got to figure out your head.
So originally I was there on Tuesday and Wednesday when
the fires broke out. Many of my friends lost their homes,

(10:38):
and so I wanted to donate about a million dollars,
but I've made it four and a half because the
need is so high and I love what you guys
are doing with the Dream Center. I've given a million
dollars the Dream Center, and anyone who wants to go
to Dreamcenter dot org and donate money, I'll double whatever
number you have, so it's a chance to double your impact,
and I know you guys are doing such an amazing
job there. I'm also given a million dollars to Airbnb,

(10:59):
and that's for five thousand room knights. They're going to
dedicate a bunch of those to the Dream Center, and
also the Be Good Foundation, which is Beyonce's charity. They're
also working with people, so everyone's schipping in. And then
there's the need for food, So I've got Feeding America,
farm Link and Sharing Access. I'm donating thirty five million
meals so that when the media goes away, the food
is still going to be needed. We're there, and then
we've got some tools for people that are free to

(11:20):
help them deal with the emotion as well.

Speaker 2 (11:23):
Tony Lyot, It's incredible, right the amount you're able to
financially commit to this, and as you said, when the
media goes away, those problems will continue to exist. But
as someone that's so good, it kind of conveying to
people what they can do, Like, what would you say,
what is important for this community to come together to
make sure this thing is not forgotten in a week

(11:43):
when the media is on to the next thing. What
can we do as a community to make sure these
people get what they need? Why.

Speaker 6 (11:49):
I think you guys are doing the most important thing,
which is constantly putting it out there. But I think
it's I think La gets a bad rap. I haven't
lived in La for twenty five years, so you know
when things get rough people come to and I think
you're going to see that at the concert that's coming
up tomorrow. People from all over the country, all over
the world, they're coming into support and Angelinos are supporting
each other. But I think the most important thing is

(12:09):
discipline your disappointment. It's like, you've got to manage the
emotion of this because we're gonna get through this. You're
geting to the other side, and it's it'll take longer
than we want probably, but on the other side, it'll
be in New La. I mean, it'll be rebuilt, it
will be better than it was before. And you've got
all these great events coming up. You know, you've got
the World Cup, You've got Super Poll, You've got you know,
the Olympics, and so there's a big push from the outside.

(12:32):
Also it's going to bring additional money to the table.
But I think the most important thing is taking care
of people right now at home and looking as you know,
love is action. What can you do? A lot of
people think, well, of rich people can do this. You know,
I'm fortunate enough to do well now. But I used
to teach people if you don't give a dime out
of a dollar, you know, I had no money I
was donating. You won't give one hundred million, a f

(12:52):
a billion or some number like that. So I really
hope that people will step up and take your invitation
and find ways to support. But I also want to
more people in another way, which is, you know, when
my home burned down, it's like, Okay, how do I
help my kids? You know, this is traumatic for them.
And I'm sure everyone's heard obviously of various forms of
energy medicine. You may know it, ever heard of it?

(13:13):
Really more as acupuncture, but there's a study for the
last twenty years where they can literally tap on the
spot's acupuncture points, and there are three hundred scientific studies
and it releases trauma and emotions so fast it's unbelievable.
So we did this in Sandy Hook with families that
were totally traumatized, and it was so effective. So I
built an app and I'm doing at a year of
it for free to anyone in southern California. There's no

(13:34):
strings attached, but literally we know we've got twenty seven
million completions of that app. In nine minutes, you can
get your kid or yourself and you can do this
nine minute tapping and then you rate what it is.
On average, people reduce you know, their fear or their
pain by about forty percent just in nine minutes. And
then there's another company called newcom that I don't know
what any part of, but I went to them and

(13:55):
I bought six months worth of supply for them and
got them to put up six months. It's usually six
hundred dollars a year. It's an algorithm that plays a
sound that literally combs.

Speaker 2 (14:04):
Your nervous system.

Speaker 6 (14:05):
I use it every night to go to sleep. They
have one that wakes up in the morning. I don't
really need that one, but they sleep when I do
need and so I got them to donate that as well.
And then thirdly, when COVID broke out, I decided, you know,
I was doing these giant stadiums and they all shut
down around the world and people needed help. So I
built the studio and I said, you know what, I'm
gonna eliminate costs. I'm gonna laminate travel, eliminate everything and

(14:27):
do a free event, not for like an hour, but
for three days, for just three hours a day, and
show people how to take their life to the next level,
not for anybody. And I do that every January starts
at two pm Eastern. Anyone can join and you can
go to for all these things. If you have somebody,
for example, that you know needs housing, you can go
to tr helps LA dot com or Tony or Tony

(14:49):
helps la dot com either one and I list all
the organizations were supporting, so you can donate or you
can send people who need help. Same thing with food.
And then also these three that I'm talking about you
can download there for free as well. So we're just
goring to help people on every angle, you know, the
mental side, the emotional side, of the financial side, the
housing side, the kid's side, everything we can possibly do,

(15:10):
because this is something we all have to step up
for and if we do, everything is going to be
better than it was before. Eventually, anyone can deal with
the difficult today if they have a compelling tomorrow. So
we just have about the division. When LA is going
to become, it's going to become better than before. But
right now, we've got to take take care of people
during the crisis time.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
As someone Tony who's done it as long as you have,
and Tony Robbins is with us right now, what's the
key to getting people to do it. You know, you
have the best sellers and for and I read money,
and I remember all the things I wanted to do
after I got out of reading Money, and I got
to a couple of them. But like, what's the key
to getting people to get into time to rise, to

(15:47):
take advantage of what you're offering them the tapping solution?
Like how do you do that? The action part of it?
You know what I mean? Like, it just seems like
a lot of people are hearing this going, yeah, I'm in,
but but how do you get them to really be in?

Speaker 6 (15:58):
Well, it's interesting. Stanford did a study during the middle
of COVID where they came in and studied a six
day program I did because they had several professors that
went through. Two of them that came out were both
were clinically depressed and now off drugs, you know, have
been no drug treatment. So they did a one year's
study and they found that we were able to eliminate
you know, average person being depressed. If they go for

(16:19):
therapy and drugs, the average return is sixty percent don't
get better at all. That's what the meta studies show.
Forty percent improved and usually about fifty percent we were
able in five days. They followed up six weeks later.
The best result they'd ever seen was using psilocybin at
John Hopkins University in magic mushrooms and therapy, and if

(16:40):
they did that for a month, six weeks later they
got fifty four percent of the people to the longer
have depression symptoms. Nothing's been like it. Well, we did it.
And when I say, they did the study at Stanford
and we had ninety three percent of the people completely
free at just five days. The other seven percent improved
and nineteen percent had to silo ideation and at the

(17:01):
end none of them did a year later, seventy two
percent reduction and negative emotions never met them again fifty
one percent positive emotions. And what got it there is
we do a process of immersion, rewire what's going on
your body, so it doesn't take the will power. It
just becomes like a habit, like anything else you get
in your body. And that's why I still do events
after all these years, and why I do immersion events.

(17:23):
So the three event is just three hours a day,
but it's enough to get huge momentum. And I think
you've got a million people of one point two million
people are joining us go it from around the world,
one hundred and ninety three countries, all supporting each other.
So I think it's support, it's and it's conditioning. It's
not enough to understand, you know, intellectual understanding, and five
dollars almost buys your Starbucks, right, no one cares what

(17:44):
you understand. Can you get in your body? So you're
doing it and that just requires like learning a language,
it requires some immersion, but it can be done very quickly.
And that's what we do for people around the world.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
Tony Robinson is our guest.

Speaker 4 (17:56):
You decided to work with the Dream Center and with
us here at iHeart. When you heard about the Dream
Center and what they do, what did you think?

Speaker 3 (18:05):
Well?

Speaker 6 (18:05):
I was blown away because they're doing every First of all,
they've been around thirty years, so it's not somebody just
jumping on the bandwagon. And you know, they're doing diapers
for babies, food for adults, pet supplies for the family, animals,
getting people housing. I mean, they're the real thing, and
they've been duplicated around the country. Now that one in
LA was the center of it all. I think what
they're doing is phenomenal. So we gave them you know,
this first million dollars, but again we're looking for matching

(18:28):
funds for as many people as possible. I've personally gotten
two of my friends to join in. Another group did
so we've had already seven hundred fifty thousand of matching funds.
So you know, our four point four million is going
to be over five and a half million pretty shortly here,
So we're really happy about that. We hope other people
will join in, and some people will go there to donate.
Some people go there because we've got resources to help you.

(18:49):
I mean, they're really phenomenal people and they care deeply.

Speaker 2 (18:51):
How last thing for you, Tony, and we certainly appreciate
it means a lot that you come on. You get
the message out to the people that listen to our
show every day. You know, just the idea of the
community versus the government. And I'm not suggesting like there's
any right or wrong way, but why it's important for
what you're doing is an individual as an American citizen,
as a Native Californian, versus waiting for perhaps what you

(19:15):
think is ultimately going to be the only way you
get help the people in power that guide you. And
why it's important that we do it this way as
well as leaning on those in power in our elected office.

Speaker 6 (19:26):
Well, I think we all know that there are a
lot of challenges and how the government has been operating
us where some of these problems came from, and government
is slow and people need help right now. And so
the one of the reasons I stepped in is these
fourteen day vouchers have just expired, So all these people
are going to be displaced with no home unless we
act now. So I think it's you know, you've got
to look at it and say, I'm looking for helping hand.

(19:47):
I got to look at the end of my own arm.
Right the government can come in and we got to
push them and probably, you know, some of us make
new votes on who we put in control of some
of the things that we think have not been handled properly.
That's an individual decision for voters. But that's off right now.
People are desperately in need, and I really encourage people
wherever you are, if you're listening in.

Speaker 3 (20:05):
To dropping in.

Speaker 6 (20:06):
And by the way, I'm really proud of you know,
I'm a small ownership with the Dodgers, and you know
Freeman On TONI Kershaw they're all out there. Our Dodgers are,
our LAFC teams are donating. Everybody in this community is rallying,
and I think all of us can do it. If
you even do it little and get your kids to
do a little, it teaches them that there's more than enough.
It teaches them a sense that we're a community and

(20:27):
we're not just individuals, and I think that's what takes
away a lot of the pain for people. So I
hope people participate, either by volunteering or you know, offering
anything whatsoever. It all adds up, so every little bit
makes a difference.

Speaker 4 (20:39):
Dreamcenter dot org and of course AM five seventy LA
sports dot com keyword donate. Congratulations on the World Series victory,
Tony part ownership of the Dodgers. We didn't get that
in the intro. We got some other things. And thank
you for all the wonderful work you do. It goes
without saying, and thanks for partnering up with iHeart to

(21:00):
the Dream Center on this one. Have a great day, you.

Speaker 6 (21:02):
Two guys, and thank you for what you're doing. You
guys are a huge force in LA. Thank you so much,
appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (21:07):
There he goes Tony Robbins Tony Robbins dot com. Slash
fire Dash Relief is where you get all the links
to everything. He is offering, the Tapping solution, membership, the
new Call mobile app subscription, the time to rise some
at all of that available at that one spot, and
of course matching up the four million bucks of your
donations at Tony Robbins dot com.

Speaker 3 (21:28):
We'll be right back with your dad and alive guy.

Speaker 4 (21:31):
Birthday of the Day, Petrosen Money Show over today at four.

Speaker 3 (21:42):
Well, thank you for listening. Everybody.

Speaker 4 (21:44):
The petro Say Money Show is leading into and this
is how it was put to me.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
Exciting Clippers press. What do you mean? Come I's back.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
Come on, they're playing some good ball.

Speaker 3 (21:56):
Come on.

Speaker 4 (21:57):
Yeah, man, at least he didn't dribble the ball off
his leg like Allie and Hoosiers like Brownie last night.

Speaker 3 (22:03):
Yeah, we're cool.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
Hey, he flew in Huh he had to fly into Philadelphia.

Speaker 3 (22:08):
What bothers me is like?

Speaker 4 (22:09):
If he doesn't fall down, if he doesn't fall down
on the play, Billy Mack and Stu compliment his defense.

Speaker 7 (22:16):
Right, maybe put him in a tough spot, you know,
flying up yesterday and flying up yesterday nationally tell by
his game and Philly all that stuff. It's you know,
he didn't play well, but he's been playing great, you
know in the stay Ready games, and he's been playing
great in the G. So I have confidence in him,

(22:37):
but obviously didn't provide that at a high level.

Speaker 4 (22:44):
Matt and I do a big get Ready game before
the show starts. We play all kinds of like we
do like a like improvisational exercises, you know, like young
actors in the drama club, except we don't have any
cute chubby chicks, which makes it, you know, less desirable
for me.

Speaker 3 (22:59):
But get Ready games, Matt.

Speaker 2 (23:01):
Get Ready to get Hey and the G. Don't forget
about the G, all.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
Right, Matt.

Speaker 4 (23:04):
For your dead guy Birthday of the Day tonight, we
celebrate Troy Donahue, a gigantic sex symbol of the sixties
in the eighties, but a real woman beat her Matt, Yes,
the one that beat up his way.

Speaker 3 (23:25):
And a lot of other chicks.

Speaker 4 (23:27):
He would have been eighty nine today, born Neville Johnson
from New York. His father was a producer of films
for General Motors, mother a retired stage star. Now this
young guy wanted to act blew his knee at the

(23:53):
New York Military Academy. He also met Francis port Coppola
while at the New York Military Academy. His knee kept
him from playing sports and military service. He went to Columbia,
moved to California as a film cutter. Did a screen test, Matt,
That's how he used to happen. He do a screen test,

(24:15):
and your life changes. He did a screen test for Colombia,
but on his way to the test, he was super
drunk and he drove different times. Yeah, well he didn't
go on stage without a big buzz. He drove off
of a road and plummeted forty feet into a canyon

(24:36):
and was hospitalized. Okay, so never got that screen test.
He did start getting small roles either way, heavy drinker.
His big break came oppo Sandy Lee in the nineteen
fifty nine Warner Brothers film A Summer Place and this
theme song, of Course, has taken on a life of

(24:57):
its own, and it made him a huge, huge sex
symbol and star. Troy donahue. Was he a celebrated actor
by the critics. No, he played the King like somebody
already played the eighth But he was tall, blonde with

(25:17):
blue eyes. He even had a brief tenure as a
recording artist, much like our dear friend Pat Swayze and
Jennifer love hewittt beautiful. He did ABC's detective show Surfside six,
which was pretty popular. A lot of shows, then big

(25:39):
movies like A Parish. Donahue said, they pumped me till.

Speaker 3 (25:45):
The well went dry.

Speaker 2 (25:48):
That's one way to put.

Speaker 3 (25:49):
It, all, right, Matt. Four wives pumped four wives.

Speaker 4 (25:55):
The first wife said he pushed her face into a
glass picture. The second one he hip tossed into a pool,
like Jim.

Speaker 2 (26:05):
Brown, seems like pretty bad guy.

Speaker 4 (26:08):
Well, at least the pool was there. Jim Brown just
threw the lady off the balcony.

Speaker 2 (26:12):
Second four, Yeah, the shrubbery.

Speaker 4 (26:16):
The third wife in him fair enough, just admitted to
it was a fistfight. He found him, she found him.
He found her in bed with another or she found
him in bed with another woman and they got in
a fist fight. His last marriage was to an opera singer.
No hip checks or anything like that. He had one

(26:39):
random bastard child floating around and then another one Double up,
Double up. Got sober finally in the eighties, Aaron Spelling
gave him his first role post Sobriety, and as a
nod to heart throbs of the sixties, John Waters put
him in Crybaby. He said he never went on camera

(27:05):
without getting a real puzzle, perhaps some of the reasons
for his lackluster relationships.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
Crybaby Johnny Depp, Oh, yeah, you know it man. Yeah,
that's I want to make sure. I didn't know if
it was a different version of Lake. Yeah, Averriky Lake,
the blonde Chicken.

Speaker 4 (27:22):
Cry Baby, much like the girl from Can't Buy Me Love,
ended up having personal props.

Speaker 3 (27:27):
Didn't become a big a big.

Speaker 2 (27:29):
Star, but a great baby.

Speaker 4 (27:32):
Iggy Papa is great and cry Everybody's in crybabyec Lords
exactly right.

Speaker 2 (27:40):
A loud guy birthday today. Scottish News. It's Coltish news news.
It's a Scoltish what's your wished?

Speaker 3 (27:50):
Hi?

Speaker 2 (27:50):
Do you have an understand the word that I'm saying?

Speaker 3 (27:52):
God? Your sal I.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
Owned with the Scoltish news.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
Riddy frame. I really love that.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
I really love that intro camera.

Speaker 3 (28:06):
I haven't asked tech camera T shirt.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
Yeah, all time great band name. The real new wave
is asstech camera. If you want to watch pretty cool.

Speaker 3 (28:15):
That's the real that's the real new wave. Uh.

Speaker 2 (28:18):
You want to watch a pretty cool half hour or
so of music. Uh pulled this from the Roddy frame
Neil Finn, Graham, Goldman songwriter Circle Finn of course, Crowded
House and Goldman of course ten CC. Uh it is great.

Speaker 3 (28:33):
He Uh.

Speaker 2 (28:34):
Well for those that liked the if you know the way,
if you know the real new wave, you know the
tenn CC and the Crowded House.

Speaker 4 (28:39):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
I grew up in Scotland. Older sisters got him into
music Beatles Stones, but he loved David Bowie said when
he was still in single digits, he would walk around
the house strumming the guitar, playing Space Oddity for his mom,
over and over and over again.

Speaker 6 (28:54):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
Then found the punk scene. Susie New York Dolls, Sex
Pistols arted a band Neutral Blue when he was sixteen.
A year later he changed the name to as Tech Camera.

Speaker 3 (29:04):
You're the best. You know why because the ads text
they could see they had.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
They had, they had the first telephoto low budget self produce.

Speaker 3 (29:13):
You They ripped people's hearts out.

Speaker 2 (29:15):
That's right. Just like Gold was a song, Mattress of Wire,
another one got the attention. To John Peel the Peel
Sessions and Peele would play ASTech Camera self released low
budget independent music on BBC Radio One. M E started
writing about him. They got to deal with rough Trade
and in nineteen eighty eighty three they released Thaighland Hard Rain.

(29:37):
This was their first single and went to number one
in the UK, made its way over here, got some
alt rock play on stations like K Rock and Not
Anyone X and XRT crowd Enough Not Enough. Cream published
a review following that release that read quote, the world
ain't perfect, but Highland Hard Rain comes close. So Frame

(30:00):
moved here, not La, not New York, New Orleans, New Orleans.
Warner signed him to do a US deal. Mark Knopfler
produced our second record, Knife And when it started to
get traction and it seemed like Aztec Camera was ready
to take off, well, Roddy lost it, disappeared for three years,
no one could find him, but then he came back

(30:21):
to record nineteen eighty seven's Love and Somewhere in My
Heart from Love became their biggest hit, their first top
ten released two more albums before calling it quits. In
nineteen ninety five. He went solo. That's when he did
this deal. The songwriter circle thing was a little bit
of a success. His second solo release, Surf, is considered
pretty special well by you. Well, here's a review pee quote.

(30:43):
It's hard to think of it.

Speaker 4 (30:44):
You love surfing so much, and I love the waves,
those big New Orleans waves and lot like patch of train.

Speaker 2 (30:50):
Just two peep you get the fat people to do
a cannonball did a sweet way his most recent release,
twenty fourteen. He still plays occasionally, I think like some
festivals and Chunk married since nineteen ninety.

Speaker 4 (31:09):
I follow him on Twitter and he literally sends one
tweet a year yeah at Roddy frame, and the tweet
again says thank you for all your kindly birthday wishes.

Speaker 3 (31:20):
They are very much appreciated.

Speaker 2 (31:22):
He pretty much just disappeared.

Speaker 4 (31:24):
And then last tweet before that one was was one
year ago today in twenty twenty four and it says
it's annual tweet time, thank you for the kind birthday wishes.
They really are much appreciated. I hope you're all well.
We'll hope Roddy.

Speaker 2 (31:40):
Roddy is tagged by PMS dead and alive, and perhaps
he'll respond to our celebrating ass tech camera Roddy frame
a real new way.

Speaker 3 (31:53):
Nobody celebrates a real new wave like us. The Swedish
Eagle could eat it.

Speaker 4 (31:59):
I like how you go to is a website and
there's a Ladyshi no Roddy frame, and then there's a
link to his Twitter where.

Speaker 3 (32:07):
He tweets once a year. Thanks Roddy. That's a real help.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
If you look at my Facebook page Facebook dot com
slash Swedish Eagle, you'll have recorded interaction with.

Speaker 4 (32:20):
I mean, you know, let's get let's put Richard Blaine on.
Why can't we put the Eagle on?

Speaker 3 (32:26):
We'll be back on tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (32:28):
Show starts at three. Thank you to Tony Robbins. Don't
forget to donate. Enjoy the Clippers podcast the show on
the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 3 (32:36):
Good Night,
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